THE 
4 H. H.” has ‘indi icated th 
y 
usely 
urbed; but is b; means 
as a little consideration wal shew. Astand 
taken up, roots, and skilfully 
ituat o inti- 
ost koe 
to 
not 
able rule, 
Rose, 
unnec: 
* I have rl been annoy 
its most important root fibres. rhaps this was 
appearance.” 
verous hue if some 0 
eut 4 until the natural process of 
planted last a , the lon ara ht of the present ever, 
spring was wfc ent to v fa ong a i want of vigour, | work hard, a 
unless watering and muleh had been dale ke ept 
up. Many gard eners were | ae pe gig! by the wet | take 
weather of Mare h, and fan 
let us 38 When. is 11 
a to find a tree 3 ally aaler cr 
Pe 
payor the standard of “ H. H.,“ and this will | vere praca, 
his hou 
transplan ee = ae bell reset 
GARDENERS’ 
weather. 
de 
panying sk 
acre allotments. 
one roof, each. occupant havin 
very small, the lean-to being t the k 
The holders came into posses 
a 
kee 
nyin his ock 
iy no TE mone - 
did not PEI 5 5 lot; te had had always. to 
nd he o do the same now, With this 
difference, ‘that he iad se own master, that hë could 
r though he had nothing to an 
im to labour when the 
d the 90 00 was past, and ee e 
ne atu 
dinner 
belie 
Certainly not arned that way in bier allotments were ob- 
root-fibres, s destroyed è = transplanting, h tained was this. y, when this estate was 
formed. Now r the Rose g nerally, ya makes bought, consisted of between 7000 and 8000 members, 
no fibres until 8 temperature ey h, and ce li o had deposited 57, which entitled him 
tainly not, in unti Transpfanted “ draw,” e result to t out of these ee 
Roses, 88 which k looked eal in March, and by 36 got allotments !! It asked what became of 
the ap quite safe, would the rest; for all to some time. bey 
be likely to ge was wri “daring A April and | have to wait until another estate is purchased, and again 
May. 1 oved last to run the chance of losin to win is to find a 
They had no artificial nics por many of | needle in a bundle of hay), paying 18. a year till they 
them are only pe to hosp buds. | are lucky enough to get au allotment, 3 
ter all, I. H.“ is but a tyro in ing, if | tained holdings pre osses- 
; b 
r may have been an 
set them a-going E received from the Company a 
was t 
are innumerable; their att nck are often sum of 307.. which 
o be laid out to the best 
pe v or 3 and whil ʻe More scientific Seb adván for necessaries, making the total out- 
Ade tree! Tronk thé ay rag cll land, ey somewhere about 3007 
case once (and even thats is s doubtful, n o garden 
culture, in dne inherent 
opes, 
æ blooming E tides. leaves us blasting an 
remedy is, to have as as Many various objects of . 
ws posta 
Or if you hear the stricken mother wail 
For one 33 who is dead, 
—— 
wail alone, but also hear 
still has children, still sh e is a mother.” 
So advises a transe rman poet, and if 
“H. ny. and others similar any situated, wish to be 
ding a particu an 
for fin ar Rose tree with 
4 uncomfortable and diseased look,” 8 a must bring |P 
aroun 
ions shoul vail, sorry to de on 
the p u extensive is I was informed that one of th . i 
the way, I cut deve 10 a plump bud the Perpotat raffled for in eee e ee peel re — > erter . W ain 
suffer as abovi described, and e a good but that ne tickets had as yet been sold. > cons sarg F * i gar enag of 7 system wh 25 
N This i is a pone time to strike cuttings 80 their crops I think upon the whole they H 255 hes s ip paon 
Roses. ers, ne , 
stocks, will root if planted in a n HB" m farmers’ fields, but in m pains er sonata — — — 3 45 3 y n . 
; the strength, available being unequal to the work to be 3 e 
MR. FEARGUS O°CONNOR’S LAND Bre : eee h one A mands wife, gdi a stout are, however, not of a sublunary 
Tus following communicatio n will serve as an duce to market, some idea of the wicking of Nhe any pe fa art. Oat 
such notice as we after take | Ystem will be he crops chiefly consist of 
of the Allotment project (or, as it is usually called, Wheat, Barley, d Beans, Tares, Potatoes, a therefore 
i y of Me, Pia Sone, As a kitchen garden 1 etions. Some of the four · aere allot- ‘a i 
question of garden probabilities labor. po 1 are thus 3 ioned : 2 acres Po “ at, It should 
become ssary, 2 sake 72 the s moten — Beans, Onions, Pars. | the knife, and ev 
3 erstood... The ry Barth: che pi crops bein now, | least, a corresponding amount of 
e 
' be fally relied upon as being the result of inquiry l 
À stiga t 
t. interest, or 127. a year 
be paid in ae shape of rent (1). As the first outlay is re 
et nor | 
CHRONICLE. 
dep therefore poor, remarkably sum of 20. on seeuity (which we Trur acre Boll 
upwards of 10 feet in — — poor, remarkably sum — 20“. on security (which we ene 
isle cor 
. | allotted to the school, sai; among other things, 
are to be t 
however, 
master has 
parts, a 
3 
poor pore chiefly 2 5 together from al 
rates (for I imagin 
latter), will be Sa, and then 
this will turn out to be the 5 5 is the e ip 
your Staffordshire Subscriber ag 
(Extracts from Mr. P. McGra 
PSI = Lat Pie Hall: 
[Jury 1, 
eat we holders ean 
and pay it out of that !.!” 
Pe nat wade informed i 
ready be 
the 0 Ve for t A piece of ground ig 
taught to wor 
e num ber Fe 
I fear, will sms but 
few, for, as 
the 
9 5 
tants— 
and located o hungry soil, which 
i. was well man 
bey will not te. exempi a e 
who 
H's e taken 
ane iamentary Che bs aft 
d consequently none has = 
upon 'the 
24th of | this month: they will owe “years or but the 
ment is that they will pay half a year’s rent upon that 
But t they do not yet know what teen they are to ie 
w 
e fect his Sodioa f he knows what the land of fs 
they know a t all the amount 105 
5 per cen 
his bar 
Soon 
1 
expense of bis hou hae 
stand that they rato that they are t 
ey * * mia — — „ 2 are o 
1 i— 
for 
not — 88 en taking it. 
upon taking” n ; he 
(3) „Ar. 
Is the 9 under. 
o pay 5 per cent, - Tes. 
only to pay 4 per 
ror decidedly 
been. 
9 
Ila 
* 
Are 
st saw him h 
ou aware that I have built 55 
A sage» 
. 
s of a T des cription at Herringsgate?—I 122 
Are re you awaits that T liste built æ splendid aleo te 
Hise 
duced, o e this rent is reduced in rtion, DISBUDDING bade TREES. ce es 
when up oe are rent-free, 3 ated * miss, * attainments in gardening 
he 4 acres of land and cottage are to be their own, and wont 3 an amateur, com 
cording to promise, are to be handed 5 that the es of disbudding, as applied to frit 
over to 2 least so they expect. But will ever trees in i been 8 of ins 
the ee able to pay off this 3004? Time will | satisfactory way ; mere dry rules will not suffice, ret 
are re He complains that even gardens 
" Coming events cast their shadows before them.” not 5 as to tlie ent to which such oper 
One or two have already sold their allotments, and tions should be Th rtainly true; but 
nine more are willing to sell, but cannot get buyers, even | we of the crooked knife are but ona par with doctors 
although they offer a three-roomed cottage (new) and in such matters e i diate as well as ultimate 
915 acres of the best land on the estate under crop for / influence of 
with the prospect of its ultimately b 
it he 's own 29. ee ee 
expect to pa 
Lander (for 5 I 
— a exactly what it wil 
I mean to sell a portion of m 
wil 10 
F : 
of its 
5 e a channel of this p 
my. ge “at ded ho, © “i + tie orent ee of the ptr bet 
near 
* | 17 
or wrens way, Twi borrow off the Company the the | Colmar, are P y go ee ae 
rest tree into 
an rigidly 3 such a course for the 
One of the first po ints to appreciate, 
cially to trained 
te, with 
trees, whether by 
ae | 
