uod 
s conne 
© paras 22, 1862.) 
"abs 
г. 3 E a bakers oven, and when I hear of propagated E means of them. The. method ado opte 
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 165 
ed 
hothouse plants appearing in Жыш їп the еле is. therefor e exactly that кошу Жок 
i FIT placed u upon na | a chimney- piece, or over some hot | ps little ot the endless number of varieties of this | gated variety), has | 8 tood- the winter well here, in the 
lenty of such contri- —there are no less than 50 in th a Island f 
_ Wh waterpipe. There are pl in the ау slands | county of Durham. Norton, Stockton-on-Tees. [What 
xe br 4 опе who will think V them; indeed ru vois e do know, that by e greater | species of Tortoise was it? Aponogeton is notoriously 
B 1205 f some arrangement for forcing bulbs | number do velope cm and n ak Ен Ъе pé 
villea spectabilis.—l herewith send yon a 
e bl. lossoms of this ошаш whose о 
jen Rabourdin is a well-known flower, with a crim- | are these people wanting in , Phyll om ania, as I Br 
sm Пос on its clean white petals, and there is a new | call the fashion for leaf fanda 
Marie, which is said in the aforesaid list to | of the mind of the Local ansa well as that of the in c 
named i ut this I hav 
I always guess that some your Correspon nde: nt, ап nd I һауе | уі doubtless : {soon Speta as much a matter of cer- 
ж E ыд. often seen tlie South ESR tainty as that of a other чш от аа т ама 
ri dioi соган like the lovely Lilies, require | and setting the different. pieces ш order that young | Our plant here i 
ut d they are hs gay with their great trees might grow fro om them. veke m could 1 ly, i 8 
gis of dim that any one with their aid “may obtained the would d have the hot- water pipes geo is the houses i it is trained 
ire a bright win window-garden. "These are also first-rate | he start of them Љу а few weeks, Tzor pical ithin 8 inches of the glass of the roof of a lean-to 
towns. y rall stove. I am of о inion p" the la nt trained 
ES o ties of the last two years in a list І | suppos и to be. In the Fij ijs I he enrd once an is wi) velli ciam d en 
jure just seen, Һе 21 Мен ssrs. Hooper, include | animated discussion on the best method M ing | th shoots must be. thoroughly ripened «ым 
s geat number o of beautiful and delicate shades of| Yams, which gave me rather Non idea of th ns | dull winter weather sets in. 16 i is indeed a beautiful 
m алй white, and of white and р ipie арке regulating the field work of a people w зы dra objeet when in full bloom, and is well deserving oi of 
Сове, Vesta, and Madame d: Valy are ed pretty. | Yams, a single root of which i и Жыш 10 feet long. Nor extensive. cultivation. Joan Smith, Syon Сат 
R 
file " Zinnias.-— Your critic (see p. 144) is wrong 
Bur the illustration of Double Zinnia in Barr & 
ed in beauty, is I have not Chines ese, and о арев previously to its infesting EN Os Онморпа exaggeration. Isaw exhibited 
u er, to be ver 
S ata 
eties 
of names is endles S, and it has before tion. Berthold. See 
fh D 
ю be quite 
mà tings to p 
te 
ndoor Ga ere I think miy friendly anta- x Fat 
vexatious. The best way 
r show last EA 12 bloo: ms, each of 
indOW | gus 
E in ordering these flo ers to avoi » to prove that tr opi ical was 3 inches in depth, a fully as double and Relig cs 
- aire ^ very distinct varieties," very much alike ! gar fa Жыш could soon dure than receive mueh instruc-|as the порота а is an inferior kind which 
erhaps he alon 
esi ев. be: arks were much nee 
ata, eeded. 
кўе во 80 | much re sembling n ma шу І possessed 7 кош y шша us my remar ki n your paper of the | A friend suggests for a new kind of Celery with a 
blotch i 
ut down alway e names ofi ra y,in order г to afford e supply 2 plants where- | finger had bee: сп ut, „the following паше—“ Apium 
pants one has, and to request the seedsman with to КАТ our rooms. E wish it to b t 
end that a greenhouse has , many айу prd atroc 
Жау 
TTE TR 
r pig with so I 
have never seen the flowe e s t | of fl «Е. А. М.з? remarks on the нек are | has bee 
in m: ^ much to ("o commended as containing many useful | from 
b avoid i immediate MS тз тй bes ides, S, of ишеге роп that I want to d mes with. room pena Surely, Diabolus the Perverter must have edited ден 
ез. 
ЖЖ Ж 
У case. When So n Bre Өтүн —боше weeks since inquiry was made 
TE 
much exactness I even | window 
5 
e sts, e . еу 
te, ug produce a brilliant variety. | very different the and ids is on the Continent from Тео 
2 : 3 
substance. As no сабабу т answer 
given allow me to se d you some extracts 
Наше» лопату ч йиш aic and Provincial 
ir wn 8 irie us 
One nI АЧЕЙ, а however, | hints. r. Lindley's етта оа of window plants | Words, &c., trom олд h century, a work printed for 
me so long $ to Bus pus ог Tw plants jt is is which he saw abroad no doubt gives a prestige to the | private cireulati on ply :—* ЕКА, Anything eaten 
think t in all cases Mud subject; but still, alas for the London and Dublin | ms bread (чол). ything used to flavour bread, 
or im i t it how | such as b В : 
utter, cheese, & is called ** Sowl? in Pem- 
e < Tytter* (sooner) want уе sowlle then 
("p 
ü 
Воће 
b y be brighter, or the white іп | аб in any of our towns or cities. I should be Sorry ped » (Tow vneley, Myst. p. 87). Hence comes 
u hat our varia- ie [ру a “damper” upon the efforts of any lover of | * soul,’ * Edulium, Anglicé sowylle," nominale, 
& to be looked at closely; as seen even e, being myself an ardent admirer of i iem ent. 
к y produce a general rose effect ! e n E ч, Itrust I may not be E idered Kam he nevere hom hand bar 
Inland white, T think, are always very eautiful ; uncourte f I again di ffer fi from my frie Р he пе broucte bred and sowel.—Hav elock, 767. 
dee well with the UN and rose. d rien т’ (1) To "T with food, e doubt derived 
Sn is pretty and peculiar, ead the | of cime my ge when ч can't but : AE! did n 2 from a or sool, q. 2) The black spongy р 
№ : hting up. Ganda-|find it by any means so diflieult to шет plants in adhering to the back of fowl. * Soule of a capon h 
mass, scarlet and yellow ; floribundus, white and pink | our conservatories as І do at present. Æ. , Dublin. , аш Pal Subst. f. 65. (3) To soil or 
, rose colour, are very cheap, | Figs.—If your correspondent “S, Y. C." attends to | di -A Н Я rem сум d fe окун 
р 
tive kinds, even for cottage windows, | your suggestion and pinches the shoots of his Fig tree * So 
LING.' ouling is ‚ 28 boys do, 
о go 
Gli m chosen, the ey may be potted | instead of аж pruning, then һе Ms IN um ndance | repeating с аш rigmarole TET sen Fand begging cakes, 
„ће Ја арап 
Ьу allo 
n a bed of cocoa-nut siu or soil. the ends of the shoots are pinc en а 
pinched off when about | ——* Sor 
т the plants should be placed i ina cold | 6 inches in length. The trees are covered with well- | All So 
Lilies there is no tree with which Iam nted or money in commutation for them, "n the eve of АП 
11 ГЕ t dislil E" "th Soul's Day. Th ese cakes are called Soul-eakes (Wil- 
ir great convenience where | some lar ge kæ here literally covered "ith fruit, dins braham 2 th person who 
ае шш e dea. 5р Иш, апа а all, thousands appearing on each tree. They аге ines received them pa to the benefactor, 
e mots genera rally wi up a е tablo wall, with a south-e Bo со bol 
Aa ttl ing Ms pots | aspect. They are pruned just as ed recommend, i. e. 
h). somas cake," 
ripened spurs from top to bottom, and the fruit even | a sweet cake nis on the io of November, and always 
pue coal Им about 4 inches « деер. They | thus «шу appears to be swelling fast. G. A., Finedon |in a triangular fo form.-——* Sovrwas Dav." Re Soul's 
Day. *Le 
carcely any water, but after a time, as | Hall, Ne orthamptonshire. 
jour d mors? (Palsgrave, 1530).—— 
come up, more may be desirable. Tt is бане Gishur нон Сотона собр Correspondent © Мі ісго- | * SOULDIEJ Pay, or wages (A. N.), “ CEN 
ч d ages 
M ане any dryness after their | sulphur in its „most active form, and if fe ed w a| 
pots dry later in the t but | scope ” has found that ‘this does not destroy tho vitality | ——* Sour Srr The whole or a parha 
oi es, that this very simple нод | rities, washed trees have 
visable. perty of soap, and at the same time it айша нари | possible 
either balconies or win of red spider's ‚258%. With other experienced a utho- of a retainer or Y servant, originally е EE aee but 
en. Therange of materials is at | those left unwashed as to convince them that the pest| Serpentine Incubation. © "Nota n sd —The 
and even where expense is no ан! | мав checked. І believe the action of а to be | gorilla farce "Pn ng ended, w now treated bí d 
M of plants effected by this | threefold ; its composition gives it the detergent pro- | interlude of a serpent batehing i its own Anim 
proc cess! Dam e Na ture cann not sanction it 
Ө D |F 
t. 
Веб in in earnest. „Even now, pos 
at T 
If they exam 
may find it тр for the | ago I had an сап Apple-tree in an orchard house | sit on 
утте 
it. The body of a snake is hard and cold and 
e 
; qualiti hing h 
ine the soil Т o vien ir e in depot Et years | require warmth and softness and pliability when birds 
them; к heat of iar sun and dryness, - 
m Northern 55); ; jo m looking it over in winter, at abc the atm mosphere acts the of a parent. iw th 
La good | watering | fork there was the suspic cious red appeara mag-|upon it, the eggs of the P D d were hatched 
Ta this [by the warmth of the artificial оздон, иг 
uch stronger application of alere 
for her own existence in ese cold 
е I used а 
lere remarking one curious instance Мын the pref tried by “Microscope,” ingal and dreary regions. Likely enough too, hs e coils of 
onmentioned—Arumas in summer | strong lather by me means of а wetted painter’s rush on | the snake might have added a trifle by condensing the 
f 
e dew beautiful fruit was figured in the Florist and P 
е point о o is M rubbed into | surrounding heat of the den. 
rely in recesses of the bark, and did check the red sie | The Pythoness herself would comprehend nothing of 
s but also. s much oves Tho t tree last year was eis healthy; one of ite | what was going on - og time. Nature has hs 
e those 
learn to g 
still more to trust to the | above to make third trial, may 1 caution him that i i [оѓ ге 
г eggs wher eggs can 
| logist for last dA If “ Microscope ” Бе led by the | be assisted in their ouch of vivification by the rays 
— inthe warm countries ; and by the dung-hill, 
eated atmosphere, or even by the warmth 
is оп 
in fact useful to the plant. exposed to so very strong an application with im- fion cim own bodies in these unpropitious climates. 
ufum p ry g pp 179 1 T 
the too much water | punity. G. W. When I was a lad at school in the year 
eir natural irejee e d Төче zt boug atching the a barn-door 
seeing | summ tortoi к к тани it to qe Aen secured ya in м.д тара: of = arm-pit. But, a cime 
ced it A a greenhouse; but 15 soon found its way | о! ushed me down, and the egg was 
to a small pool of water n the end of the garden, where асби іп чаа Pd s Waterton, Walton Hail, 
it swam about with gold fish, eating no vegetables, bus near Wakefield. 
ondence pieces of raw meat. In autumn it —— neige 5 | — xus ger he E meanings oi Vin word 
it T'ree.—A. ОШОН mud, and was only seen 10 days ago e а | Titter :—(1) SOONER, — er Nori) Dp up kâ,” i. e, 
whi ch this tree may be grins of stone—but it ead nothing ! bes уйа му —À the earliest, riser call t ple is taken from 
which a fortunate | food should be given to it now? From what of бту» Ma nee A oen сз, 
bservant eye of “C. W. С., | е world it comes ? e if unusual to live over our For with the unt ан agis I wie, 
those nations to whom | winters us Ж : s also rhi сүтүү. м water a ma luke i eil T daro dare by ydo; 
ife. been | Lily making for flower, which has s e winter; 
from а it epa ans ," from the Cape; I salle Lm detis 4 od me I А-7 
9 them would simply be carry- lit ids be more hard y than i is commonly imagined. 
EUN 
Castle, or owls to Athen БИ We know | L may also add that. Thujopsis dolabrata (not the varie- | (2) To tremble (Suffolk). (3) To seesaw (East 
TS 1. 17. f. 103, 
