170 



TRANSPLANTING TREES IN SUMMER. 



Fig. 49. The True Red Antwerp Raspberry.* 



ket. It cannot be beaten for product, and I 

 am sure will, in the long run, be considered 

 the more worthy of cultivation of the two 

 sorts." 



The foregoing opinion is doubtless based 

 upon the truth. The Fastolff, though a 

 splendid fruit, will not bear carriage well. 



We think, however, that it is a somewhat 

 larger fruit, and it appears, so far as we 

 have tried it, rather the hardier of the tAvo, 

 but this is not yet fully established. At any 

 rate, there are no tioo varieties of the small- 

 er fruits better worth a place in the garden 

 than these. 



A Successful Mode of Transplanting Trees in Summer. 



BY S. G. PERKINS, BOSTON. 



lTo the following article, from the pen of i of our readers, as one of unusual novelty 

 S. G. Pekk ins, Esq., we ask the attention and interest. 



• Our fijrure. in llie July number, of ihe Fastolff Raspberry, Mr. PeRKINS, aS OUr readers are alread\ 



tras ver>- badly executed. In outline it shows tiie genuine g^are, we esteem as a Veteran horticultu- 



fruit correctly, as it appears in common garden culture; but _ . j t. u 



the engraver failed in the cut as a portrait of the fruit. j "St, whoSO practice IS nOt SUrpaSSed by' that 



