36—1852. | 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
and — this must be n 
n grown 
an average - sized toad, 
eral, and feeds well. 
| ve e or e 
like those of a white 
albino; I do not remember 
oi inism am: A 
with a similar freak 
pruning till after the g 
the growth by stopping any over-luxuriant ex hig Tipke 
22 far wo soa — 
attacks 
ied. Th 
last 
ug dep 
—— filed in to the depth of h “inches with — 
dung. These trenches were thoroughly 
in, and the duly distributed t through them 
eas were sown. In the early part o 
they were soaked with — water, a 2 drill drawn | 
along the centre of e single 
| perfec ly to be 
| evidence — * to the du 
une but w it be otherwise. 0 
Paul say! y not the Manetti a “hybrid 2 Rose? 
netti Rose. 
o borders w 
ybri 
| examinati: 
s | nearly all, “of — vigorous growi 
the Manetti Rose, th 
SF 
né, &e. 
why 0 
deposited about 4 — r owe They cam 1, 
and received two moderate dressings of soot, and when 
ts appearance, and 
ae obtained the mastery ; so — so, that I have 
e — — at — ar have 
the SUCC: — 1 
r e greates 
cannot say too 2 in “their favour, as — nue 
* ay sense of the word, till the frost — in 
80 permanently and severely that they can no lo 
contend T it. 
ager | er 
ut little do 
race! 
a bud of a hybri 
os to add, that the the pillar. 
are growing in a cold w 
Nature 
ee at 1 think, than 
? William 
—Some eight or mgd years a 
rinci pally « 
. Sara 
e Prevost, Charles 
The. are now 10 years 
e union of the bud with 
have hitherto thought the Manetti better adapted 
light sandy soils, in which I have always observed 
yaar ir this 
| succeed 
summer with a e Rose 
en of Mr. Mickle, of Folkestone, 
| three or four years o 
Two — — ane 
was 
og 
Manetti Rose — 
time of budding, and —— not 
I remem 
so I think i 
FESS 
require on 
length; they are this season 
. Grison’s Cure re for Mildew (see = 419. oe FA eatin 
to thank you for publishing M. Grison 
mildew on G 1850 and 2 two tot, sen ba: 
sm ouse y 
— aon I — my 4 
ines ir tomed 
supply of soapsuds and other liquids When the 
of small — 
were the size w was discov toa 
ag 
and the Grapes are quite clean, 
gn f 
e shall lose 
t Briars, and then for standard Rose 
When all our Briars — “ gone paes * 
Manetti will be ezcelien 
Thomas Rivers 
Permit me to bear te 
ces astoni 
on the 
y belief is, 
of years. 
uires some attention 
ving it too rich 
some little diffieu 
b ea the Reptilia. Have k of your | joi 
oth 
tock is so 
— on ed, 
rable b e of th this nok: 
ill Messrs, Lane 
stock. 
Roses, escribed, | 
wet soil on a . of — 4 15 
* 
og ost remarkable. w, the 
soil at Palsaan i is s0 light and sandy that — on 
the Rose sel eceed well, The 
as to the 
culty in its 
soil, | 
it will be well for 
riends and 
Kaen and docile I ad treat them kindly ; 
this stock as well 
not been pruned, and are swelling 7 rapidly. l bon 
3 riara 
1.9.28. 
erits of the | So 
Manetti Rose in es locality (Faikeatone) * it pro- 
ore 
climate tl be 
— for 
on of r * thin soils, it will prove ae ead 
Ta GE aa par n the fact 
in page 350, vm rene d rough p 
a conservatory, i 
am 
oI 
late glass, I can sta 
in a which the whole of oy e top 3 
re successfu 
an absence of that 
eget has, I think 
very scorching g 
have said something in its ne John ‘Chynoweth. 
1 
E of this glass, which we are glad to 
of Birmingham, and Mr. Pilkington of st Taada, ove have 
now taken licences of Mr. Hartley to manufacture 
Tedgehog.— Under ordinary crcumstanec n implicit 
on t are admitted 
cannot however 9 on the faith 
Cutting o 
a t difference in the meaning o off 
pulling up Potato baal lonii nd tho vat of ‘the former 
ractice fs lost by the ad of the latter, which 
er, ea of“ oft” 
F 
the green tops as before — in 
pn s is to kill the aes fiari —— drainin 
life i is extinct ; 
— vitals istinin, 
mable jui d occasioning the tubers to rot. 
L a 3 r ‘ary earth be placed over the stump of 
any green plant that has recently been amputated, and 
| — N effects of the practice will no longer be 
ted. A. Hardy and Son, Maldon 
iak to Settlers i in New South Wales. — The ount 
you give of the meat biscuit, made by Gail “eg may 
turned to vantage in New South Wales, 
where millions of shee = quite a drug on the market, 
and they know not 
this 
is now as hard as Vines 
might be planted on land — 3 or 4 feet deep, anda 
wine made, which would meet a ready consumption 
Mr. Borden uses beef, 
„ not mutton, and 
Shoots of 
8 
and loud, 
8 
be altogether v 
The 
my notice on the morning of the 
am inclined to 
are full flower. 
T troubled you with an 
extraordinary w 8 in — ee (and 
account of ae 
also’ heir skins. 
I can scarcely say if I — righ be 
cure to the sulphur or the liquid ; but atthe i former, having | i 
been to | upo 
palm to 
Tenacity of — e in a Sow TRistle.— For ten successive | 
a Sow Thistle in layi 
sirocco, that three months out 
coast from Deal ‘olkestone. r M., 4 
h Plate Glass.— I have 
1» months’ trial, and I find 
lass 
have in use ; the 
it quite as freely as on 
new 
been 
fen near Ely. 
f the Scotch n Firs, the y. 
es 1 piere bent towards the n 
re than o! 
Philli 
I shall thie son Hartley’s rough plate. 
set une bad ot ail ps and 
glazed with it, which can at any 
Surrey-lane 
series of 
7 
only, | but t every Scotch Fir 
d | of half 
ers, and not the 5 „ tree 
tree that I 
mile had their 1 
during the 
