. vi r^'Tiev^, Towr r..¥"" 



'^'■W7«i ■ J .^* /tf I n^ ji 1 1 y '.* WW*. ' i^iT f ^ '•j^'/'j" r. ■ ""^ '■ ■ -^v • " yu ' ' " ■ 



<■ "f-."^ fvi'Wfwi^itw^— 



AVQVBT 8, 1912. 



The Florists^ Review 



87 



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 Commencement Flowers, Table Decorations and all cut flower 

 work where it was not practicable to show the customer the 

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508Dearb»rnSt. (CatinBldg.), CHICAGO, ILL 



DYNAMITE FOS TH£ GBOWEB. 



In a recent issue of The Review there 

 appeared a note regarding a Philadel- 

 phia rose grower using solid beds who 

 was breaking up the subsoil under a 

 greenhouse by means of dynamite. It 

 was the first recorded instance in which 

 a high explosive has been used under 

 glass, and it aroused much interest. A 

 comment on it in an English trade 

 paper, the Horticultural Advertiser, 

 brought that publication the following 

 letter from Robert Holmes, of Norwich: 



' ' Under the above title, ' Land Work- 

 ing with Dynamite,' you describe what 

 you call 'the most interesting and sen- 

 sational of all labor-saving methods 

 adopted by our cousins over the water.' 

 You don't seem to be aware that a 

 system of cultivation by dynamite is 

 already in use in this country; indeed, 

 an American market grower, who uses 

 dynamite to a large extent on his own 

 land, has recently come over from 

 U. S. A. to Norwich, to use his own 

 words, 'for the express purpose of tak- 

 ing lessons in the art of growing toma- 

 toes free from disease, and to see how 

 we use dynamite here for sterilizing 

 and other purposes.' It seems plant dis- 

 eases flourish, 'over the water' to such 

 an extent as to warrant a journey to 

 England in quest of a remedy. 



"Having qualified suflBciently to be 

 allowed to use such a 'toy' as dyna- 

 mite, and having had some experiieace 

 in handling the article, I can recom- 

 mend it as fascinating work, although 

 perhaps not so sensational as your no- 

 tice leads one to expect. My informa- 

 tion as to the practice of cultivation 

 by dynamite, derived from correspond- 

 ents residing in three continents, 'leads 



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me to think it has hitherto been mostly 

 used (a) to bring new lands into culti- 

 vation; (b) in dry lands to conserve 

 the reserves of moisture by breaking 

 up the subsoil and rendering thess 

 lands more retentive; (c) for prepara- 

 tion of fruit lands for planting. 



"I have already given practical les- 

 sons in cultivation by dynamite to emi- 

 grants going abroad to plant orchards, 

 and I should be pleased to show the 

 method to you, Mr. Editor, if you should 

 happen to be coming this way, but 

 don't omit to insure your life in the 

 meantime. My foreman at first could 

 not be induced to come within fifty 

 yards of 'the thing,' but has since said 

 he would not mind 'sitting on it' when 

 exploded. 



"We (English, not Irish-American) 

 have become so far advanced in the 

 'gentle art' of the dynamitard that it 

 is not now a question for comparison 

 of the utility of the gelignite cartridge 

 with the steam plow or manual labor, 

 but rather it is a matter for considera- 

 tion as to which gives the better re- 

 sult, a low or high grade article; the 

 uninitiated might consider 'the stronger 

 the better,' but this is not so neces- 

 sarily with dynamite for breaking up 

 subsoils. Or, again, when using dyna- 

 mite for soil sterilization purposes we 

 have to consider the composition of the 



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article, i. e., as to gases given off on 

 explosion, etc., because an object has to 

 be attained beyond paralyzing certain 

 deleterious soil bacteria with a 'fit of 

 nerves'; it may be these micro-organ- 

 isms are asphyxiated by gases under 

 the considerable pressure of an explo- 

 sion of dynamite." 



