. Cassell's popular gardening. Gardening. 272 CASSELL'S POPULAR GARDENING sweetest of all, and for this reason, as well as for their many associations, deserve to be gTOwn in pots, either for forcing or otherwise. Other Roses for Pot-culture or for Forcing. Noisettes. Celine Forestier. Lamar que. Solfaterre. Teas. Catherine Mermet. Comtesse Eiza du Pare. Homere. Isabella Sprunt. Innocente Pirola. Jean Duclaer. Wm. Allen Richardson. Caroline Kuster. Eeve d'Or. Madame Bravy. Madame Cusin. Madame Margottin. Madame Welch. Marie Van Houtte. Souvenir d'Elize. Syhrid Perpetuals.—In addition to those
. Cassell's popular gardening. Gardening. 272 CASSELL'S POPULAR GARDENING sweetest of all, and for this reason, as well as for their many associations, deserve to be gTOwn in pots, either for forcing or otherwise. Other Roses for Pot-culture or for Forcing. Noisettes. Celine Forestier. Lamar que. Solfaterre. Teas. Catherine Mermet. Comtesse Eiza du Pare. Homere. Isabella Sprunt. Innocente Pirola. Jean Duclaer. Wm. Allen Richardson. Caroline Kuster. Eeve d'Or. Madame Bravy. Madame Cusin. Madame Margottin. Madame Welch. Marie Van Houtte. Souvenir d'Elize. Syhrid Perpetuals.—In addition to those abeady named for their fragrance, (fcc, the following are a few good varieties for pot-culture:— Abel Carriere. Baroness Eothschild. Catherine Souiiert. Comtesse de Serenye. Duke of Connaught. Edward Mon-en. Fisher Holmes. Madame Lacharme. Madame Clemence Joig- neaux. Mile. Marie Eady. Prince Camilla de Rohan S^uateur Vaisse. GLASS STEUCTURES AND APPLIANCES. By William Coleman. ALTHOUGH heating by the circulation of hot water through metal pipes dates back to a period prior to the Christian era, when the Romans heated their baths by means of coils of pipes which passed through the fire, the method does not seem to have made much progress until the latter part of the last century. More than a hundred years have elapsed since a Frenchman employed hot-water pipes for warming incubators, but the system did not reach this country until 1817, when M. Cham- bannes introduced an apparatus for heating a con- servatory and the rooms in his house. From that time until the removal of the duty on glass, and the introduction of cheap foreign timber, its progress was extremely slow, and the principle being im- perfectly understood, many mistakes and failures were the stepping-stones which led up to the gradual perfecting of a science which now forms the great moving power in our forcing operations. Until within the last few years, the old brick flue was the only heating apparatu
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade18, booksubjectgardening, bookyear1884