The Gardeners' Chronicle and Agricultural Gazette . ir should be given everj- fine day, and a sprinkling of waterevery morning before the sun is powerful enough to scorchtheir leaves.§ CnRisANTHESiDMS—^ SubscrOjcr—VTocure the following- sorts •Tictory and Defiance, white; Celestial, blush- Aristidesorange and buff; Tellow David-, Adventurer and Conductorlilac ; Loui-5 Philippe and General Laborde, brownish purple •Campestroni, Annie Jane, brownish red ; and Bertram rosypurple.*= Climbers—Qiwmf—Hardenbergia monopbylla will suit yourpurpose. Plant it inside the bouse. 5 FauiT-WALLS—PhiUdiHS—As y


The Gardeners' Chronicle and Agricultural Gazette . ir should be given everj- fine day, and a sprinkling of waterevery morning before the sun is powerful enough to scorchtheir leaves.§ CnRisANTHESiDMS—^ SubscrOjcr—VTocure the following- sorts •Tictory and Defiance, white; Celestial, blush- Aristidesorange and buff; Tellow David-, Adventurer and Conductorlilac ; Loui-5 Philippe and General Laborde, brownish purple •Campestroni, Annie Jane, brownish red ; and Bertram rosypurple.*= Climbers—Qiwmf—Hardenbergia monopbylla will suit yourpurpose. Plant it inside the bouse. 5 FauiT-WALLS—PhiUdiHS—As you intend to cover your wall forPeaches and Nectarines with glass, you cannot do better thanplace the glass as near the face of the wall as you can, leav-ing room for a man inside to dress the trees, say 3 you to place it so as to form a plane to which the sunsrays would be perpendicular in September, the lower part ofthe trees would be too far from the FocBSiAa—4 5—Tenus victrix is a tender yaxiety, which, to. Kennedta nnBicUNDA—4 5-This is a greenliouse twiner,which may be potted in rough sandy peat, but being a plantof free growth it will succeed better where it can be putout in a consei-vatory border.§Labels—We have received from Messrs. Minton and Co. someearthenware labels having the names of plants burnt in uponthem. We cannot, however, imagine that they will super-sede the use of wooden labels, for many reasons, andespecially on account of their brittleness. A large quantityof earthenware labels, prepared in a similar manner, wasbrought into the market some years ago, but they wereeventually thrown away as of Fruits—i? 4 -4—1, Beurre Diel; 3, Gansels Berga-mot; 4, Bezi de la Motte ; 5, White Doyenne ; 6, Crassane ;7, Brown Beurre; S, Napoleon; 9, Forelle : 10, Chaumon-tel; 11. Colmar ; 12, Winter Nelis; 13, Beurre Bosc ; 14,Marie Louise; 16, Beurre de Capiaumont. 1, Kh-kes LordNelson ; 2, Alexander ; 3, 4, 20,


Size: 1639px × 1525px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, bookidg, booksubjecthorticulture