PICTORIAL CULTIVATOR ALMANAC. 
2d Month. 
FEBEIJARY, 1852. 
29 Days 
MOON'S THASES. 
BOSTON. 
NEW-YORK. 
baltim’re. 
charles’n. 
SUN ON MERIDIAN. 
Grafts may be cut this month. 
They should be kept in a cool, 
D. H. M. 
H. M. 
H. M. 
H. M. 
D. 
H. 
M. s. 
moist place, and care should be 
taken that rats and mice do not 
Full Moon. 
6 
2 9 ev. 
1 67 ev. 
1 46 ev. 
1 33 ev." 
1 
0 
13 52 
injure them by gnawing the bark. 
Cows and ewes which are for¬ 
Third Quarter. 
12 
5 19 mo. 
5 7 mo. 
4 56 mo. 
4 48 mo. 
9 
0 
14 30 
New Moon.... 
19 
8 19 ev. 
7 58 ev. 
7 47 ev. 
7 34 ev. 
17 
0 
14 19 
ward with young, should be 
Carefully attended to, and have 
First Quarter.. 
28 
0 47 mo. 
0 35 mo. 
0 24 mo. 
0 11 mo. 
25 
0 
13 24 
strengthening food. 
M 
I 
o 
i>» 
1 I> 17 
2 Monday.16 
Tuesday.16 
4 Wednesday .... .16 
5 Thursday,.116 
6 Friday.15 
7 Saturday___ .15 
8 I> 15 
9 Monday.14 
10 Tuesday.14 
11 Wednesday_14 
12 Thursday...... 18 
13 Friday... 13 
14 Saturday.18 
15 S> 12 
16 Monday.__ 12 
17 Tuesday.12 
18 Wednesday .... 11 
19 Thursday.11 
20 Friday.11 
21 Saturday.10 
22 ft* 10 
28 Monday.. 9 
24 Tuesday. 9 
25 Wednesday .... 9 
26 Thursday,. 8 
27 Friday. 8 
28 Saturday. 8 
29 I> 7 
m 
« 
CD 
ncs 
CALENDAR 
For Boston, New* England. 
New-York State, Michi¬ 
gan, Wisconsin, and Io¬ 
wa. 
CALENDAR 
For New-York City, Phi¬ 
ladelphia, Conn., New- 
Jersey, Pennsvl’a, Ohio. 
Indiana, and Illinois. 
CALENDAR 
For Baltimore, Vir¬ 
ginia, Kentucky, 
and Missouri. 
CALENDAR 
For Charleston, N. Caro¬ 
lina, Tenn , Georgia, Al¬ 
abama, Mississippi, and 
Louisiana. 
Sun 
Sun 
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HEATING APPARATUS FOR DWELLINGS. 
The substitution of stoves for open fire-places, lias effected a great saving of fuel, and in a pecuniary view 
is an important improvement; but it is more than probable that in our efforts to secure this advantage in the 
greatest degree, an injurious sacrifice of health has been in many 
eases sustained. A serious objection to close stoves is, that they tend 
to prevent the renewal of the air of the room, and give off, more 
or less, noxious fumes. The injury in the latter particular of course 
depends on the nature of the fuel employed. Anthracite and bitumi¬ 
nous coals often contain sulphur, and sometimes arsenic, and when 
burned in stoves without free draught, evolve gases which contami¬ 
nate the air. Dr. Ure speaks of such stoves as “ pseudo-economi¬ 
cal,” and says —“ There is no mode in which the health and life of a 
person can be placed in more insidious jeopardy, than by sitting in a 
room with its chimney closed up with’such a choke-damp-vomiting 
stove.” Of late, attention has been directed to obviating the objections 
to close stoves, without incurring a large loss on the score of economy. 
Considerable success has in several instances been attained in this re¬ 
spect, but so far as the writer is acquainted, the object has been most 
perfectly accomplished by the “ Franklin Coal Burner,” represented 
by the accompanying cut. It possesses the advantages of the Franklin 
Fire-Place, or open grate, with the additional advantage that it may be 
set in any part of the room, and connected with the chimney by pipe. 
It is neat and tasteful in design, and superior in respect to finish and 
quality of casting,—and affords the cheerful light of an open fire, with 
sufficient ventilation for health, making, at the same time, but a com¬ 
paratively small consumption of fuel. We have tested it for anthracite 
coal, with which it operates in the most satisfactory manner. It is 
equally well adapted to burning bituminous coal. It was introduced 
here, and is made by Messrs. Jagger, Tradwell & Perry, Eagle Air 
Furnace and Machine Works, Albany. 
