Decemper 29, 1860. | 
of food and shelter. Since then there has been a wonder- 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
1155 
these one with another, and with our bodily wel- 
takes place within the atmosphere, quite 
that 
a l Esha: a apa we are ain to PLA for the better. The | fare, ~ a chapter to be called the ‘ Chemistry of} dis ease from that which occurs at and near to the sur- 
vided and the fences finished 10 ae es feces face of the earth through the direct shige. . solar 
sof miles o fapa n dra shi: a few clos ose t will be seen, the principle of this arrangement | rays.” This is the basis of the ai 
d h acne es, een Pays from,—s ome of the py oe + only “ Clo often produced by condensation of 
lesen and the “natural Grasses are eee! having been altered, to insure a more correct termin- | vapour within limited localities; those p must, 
the refore, be to some pee war ama € gases 
ture. within the cloud wi in arts, 
e shee cep, &e., now piri Pages aici not fog a single 
rotten spec n has been e yea Asa 
f nt mt 
proof of a improve me 
of the 
and. its pir a thai 
ang 
On Winds and Storms; with an Essay on the Weather 
By Thomas Hopkins, M.B.M.S. 
w La 
adjacent par 
lled ng adoning heavier 
gases to as cend and PERES farther, all owin other and 
sheep, we may mention Fo on one of ne highest | Pp. 260. n & Co. heavier to take their plages, thug pe rodne ing atmospheric 
es: taring the whole of last erinamely: fenáre at 1854 } d 1 ‘ust bazor 
winter the she a to „the public a plese ph a work, iho — of | meter in the Her a nd a in 
bite ol on or anything t at h was to show that aqueous vapour was the great operation Pretty is saree of crating d datog om in 
they scraped for and pulled, t they traced a disturber of the atmosphere. ni he thea , and of putting it into n, and, at 
good crop of lambs, and not a dele: ikee hai ending = overflowing tropical cu: rrents, as|the same time, PAE Re atmaspharip ae in the 
The inland, too, has been greatly ated the represented i in me nied aan theory of - altho’ ugh locality so much less as to produce a fall of the 
shepherds who, a dozen years ago, did n oth ing but | they d id not p. he great t miog that blow over | barometer—the fall of that i prop 
lay behind a crag, or mossbreak, I e glob et ave a real existence. The collection tioned to on condensation 
bour’s tunity, ofl, and hounding t Se whe a larger num f fact cu n ature reflec- | The gas the tr 
tion ro 
am a 
ae 
Hs fash ee obi Bee ‘obtained | 
erfi nalogies 
as.they probably had it others, to wrong 
MeN 
vithin ss than 
to 1 of the weight of me. whol panut rites 
therefore, which either ands or contracts them in 
dist bs th 
e atmos pheric equilibrium, 
restore 
ions; 
at ue Wighanes TEN on sg Featherston Estate. | continue to sanction the Hadleian theory, he is now | and originates moveme which maye- 
The pioneers in tile rainin a proper depth, ped R| convinced aer is erroneous. paue yry the vapour with the gases; [by gases is 
* e influ ennf. Hioalak Aeerortriak Surfaces in dis- | he Si those pean the atmosphere, essen- 
some are, rather, a litle iahndud yet, while ot turbing t phere is treated of in the first place. | tially oxygen and nitroge mi), “but „khe VAROPE itself, 
„and a NEN ea Aig crainage of = he author sI t l eeble to bear away 
| the gagan. with it. The vapour, yen is instenmuental 
nug p ave 
allowed up Pilg by ee sar ghee oan of 
farming —tallowi ing with Tarnips, well manage ed with 
ime, iiaa d 
at solar heat acting “on 
otk is the great es rag iof the atmosphere, pr 
the surface of the 
| ducing all the winds t rt 
W 
smore than doubled them i in valne 
and man: pangainont ha has 
n less th years. Some of the Jow-la, ying m 
land, 
over the 
eare told tat the a son not og heats por 
tions of the eart and A ear to i ae rface, but 
that heated tropical ai teow flow: apay in 
a rom which 4 t 
a 
the | this 
winds only by 
of the en of water] at one time and 
g it feom them at another 
'and it 
| fair exclusive 
xpani 
I 
Jon 
ay carry as many sheep to the acre. PUPA the 
crops of ‘Grass, Turnips, Potatoes, ane corn, mark 
e 
it 
in the lower regions ~~ go through the same course in | 
perpetuity. _ That solar. heat i is in some way the e great 
+ 
an 
vapour is, heey ig ge a 
breezes is shown, as u dry countries ae eae are 
tee 
ly were, are pari ieularly pure, and many 0 
than a local exhibition. Thorn hedges and belts of 
a ita epi pinnien on a great many firms, 
pe mae, ital giving t the district a clad 
ted to give | the whole 
eat 
a) it pends; Lut 
ENE E E 
it does not follow Poe it —_ over 
one part of the atmospheric space to another, i is also aa whatever way, then, we trace ace alteration of 
faily | acknowl as A ne, ae t the i ‘essure and movement of the air, we 
which s, how or in what arrive e at the same result, Whether it is the daily 
way does wind ar sae ‘aerial, pi that are ofeais produced by the sun, or the influence of various 
Tainio ‘sa 2 di farant om "of the world ? mperatures resulting from cond ensation of repo in 
ted air near t £ Sete, ye co me f ibs 
same general conclusion, ” which 
ug anf poe, * ‘ee The idea 1 as intimated. * * * diatunber of the p.atmospherp å is ee ni = tug 
not grow on lands has been pie Rabe a No one asserts that the existence of this supposed | aqueo —the sometimes leaving $ 
exploded here. Aid all this itt ana s tnproveent stream has been acia acartained- ana therefore | vapo ty attaching its -to the gases, and at other 
education has not been forgot. Ad at Garbut | that which has been assume d as a fact, remains to be | times leaving she g to join watery particles of 
cloud ve con them in nto vapour. it appe 
this world, and sions A school, p wid rect ting cd se,| “The atmospheric gases are highly elastic fluids, | that b the ci 
a them When, Sias: ich it p rau froe diurnal as well as 
and fixes 
gy a simplicity and 
s in Wi p TES, Da the frie: igi in Seng 
he 
he 
which sugars mg are peg by heat. 
however, portions of 
preeions of the young, 
dly eh the he 
g thelr days among the ay and 
ope o iar wie ‘ou 
clo: lds of mh e atmos 
itie a n narar losing sight of the aplot of their 
wep 
— house, nor the pew 
oundation. Carlisle P. 
Notices o of 3500] Books. 
Sat 
s Rose aa for 1 
ld maxims which laid its 
860-61 contains 
open car ne Per ‘ey ume on adjoining gsi but 
not hey mere 
pen portions, as 
against; à. this 
An ` equ 
presune may. þe established i superior Benny in 
latitudes, compe nsating for inferior apie an 
e thus expanded in the | 
do 
nilibrium of'| duced, 
ga 
wh 
anomal changes s in the solar in 
| for tho 
ndens oj. DE o 
0 occ! mE hye cit 
es ot en a oR dont ey ates Seay 
e | the a nt of condensation, e great areas of 
Iet 
Pd of the Empereur de Maroe, a bye rere have different temperatures.” In e pee observes pe: pe 
wit! as dark as those of the E ai any; „1n iste of “ The Action of Aqueous pane im | th 
Vic Verdier, waa H.P. much like i ine anther OAT ral know, | tion of atural powers or nes that disturb ni 
@Hebe; Duc de Mage a grand looking Tes scented fro hat dist: e alm nosů atı nah p so as to cause its 
sort with delicate si coloured Bonera ma the Com- constantly taking, io in the atmo hic 5 and, 
‘tessa de:Chabrillant, another .H.P., eae Mr. tl has d Sa Bena tain 
WwW. Paul speaks wildest hurrricane; and th gto e winds vary i es subject more plain and 
“Such a ower a A S tho ‘Comtesse de Chabrillant ? ihe of their duration ar Bo "puffs t 2 the soul tha insitherto hoon the case The publication of 
nto existence. It ceasing winds, yet who ar M point p othe fhe volume might have been delaye a, fe 
in advance of t in diet for oe Ra hese PONAR of he a If hor pe pe a Inter ce h ra t he had re to 
p a gt career of public A nes vour, such as has b the Hadlei an theory is no longer recognise tha ferred, he might be A A to 
enjoyed b; Pre “Caroline de Sanal > | ean be said to disturb the atmosphere, so as to pr eon execute the task he ed imposed ane mself Ags. 
*Duches and,’ "Madame Vidot, ‘William its yari ious moyem ents? That sorse , though Feely he adds, = “many details ReneS the « complica d 
-Griffit es sa aneg well-know entle manner in z ërjal ocean remain to. be 
pink, v eet, in their oat arate lovely in colour, li ined and discussed ; but this, labour it is prp 
ani of patie form. The petals als. are of g = sub- | and a his pais over large portions of ie ate And sumed may, 
„stance, silvery beneath : the foliag ha bi re good, | when we ask „Where is the immediate source of thi 
i inr an i | Every one who reads the present ingenious work will, 
‘flo onsieur Marest, a Rose-grower of Sa to| be a tael from AREL -d works on meteorolo ogy.” doubtless, appe w ith ns that he ries el may be able 
whom we re indebted for ‘Prince Leon’ and other| According to the author's ney. the disturbance | enter upon the investigation of the ails to sa 
pia i ie] honour of aTa ie sie are 3 Be refers. 
ent flower, whi been already figured i eof sation of aqueou j 
‘the French Journals of Hor ticultare.” E i mmediate cause e TEA an oid oh ssrs. Walton & Maberly have issued & new 
There is also tl usual critical account of New Sie yee 
‘Roses and poga sti re: tables relating to the Rose ‘x nh e energy ef Pega reo Mr. Dankin, of ‘the oy 
base. dengation. sf ft f the %, Prp, as ant tii n Gernwich s mii 
| both cases from $ e Lok 0 asus yS. nd i 
Every-day Chemist istry, by A. Sibson (Routledge), is | is communicated acon atmosp pe Misc a a 
‘a vere Reap ie se of the apial Pri gg theory before us, chien oy, means of aan Faia he t Cacti are Like when at ab 
„connected the operations of aa day will te see! niy thë lowipe extra | Ce eas. fit the oe of Fame ve can tt 
contained. i in losely printed 4 "Me. Sis on “Evapo ion 0 ater a cr g process, th 
says of the analyses he h liquid be; tiy f Petahaya. The ie. 
Performed berscmally, and makes the = riren a state: | absorbed by the vapour i thus made latent. But]! tl and the pe oe He ae 
ment of th of his wor | the heat seg absorbed and made later ti f th f the Petaha: ard „and 
‘ aa a Et enterta ned w was ote classify every is given t and made active by condensation. _/This of whe natives of the country pane it for foo 
“ki mmonly so ealled, under the i i iar’ bran ilos, 
title of * Sold T Fant. a beverages ender the title o f | water ; the I hic? absorbed and rendered latent | but no 1 d tl AA y 
* Liquid Food,’ an ything appertaining to t aS dik e girt The wildest and 
i buiosphero i an ‘elation: oe ourselves, anaes the title p | aut Body made Ee ai EF ci gh is re- i So | most Aaka in regions ampia to be the yecctar 
“Aërial Food ;? and, finally, te trace the connection of} into cloud. This latter change is therefore a warming | home of this plant, and its fles oot, 
