1842.] 
ES ee 
THE GARDENERS’ FE RONICLE. 
Mrs. Seer mi erneaee + might 
always form a part. 
e whit 
oath white and blue, Mrs. Lawren 
» too, that well grown an 
w ery legitimate avicen for a 
i in what has ares done oe the 
og plese 
not as muc e for th a 
pecncitl tribe of Roses. Exam te onty id sie d; p 
4 BD tronage will follow. I — = ‘hin k the. Horticultural 
4 Society ied so high, and h mea its power, 
ffor 
achin ns mater some 
ntroduced for, Detifal as sap ie 
rowing stale 
are in ee ind g 
like “ongeatte ag cae er anci “i 
he s of a Good Rose.—Mr. She hears, of th 
The Qua 
Boriatt Society of eae on ag 21st inst. gives a 
ilver cup for 36 — sy to be apg in 
his is ‘the fi 
ea ould suppose the 
the soil, in some respect je other, to be the 
1 for i de tababdand ode -—A correspondent has ex- 
= as to have an a of the os “83 the 
He will find it in ‘* De Setiss 
ion.””? The arpek 8g gt tical ” 
38.63 
14 
hosphates - . . . 
Earthy pie car : F “ 
“ones 3 8 
0.12 
Orie of i iron sed man 5.757" 
n the che ches 
Mog is 
in 
th, it is not oe pe asi oa may 
‘Ia applied some, about a 
dendron plants 5 but the piotine 
ner has gay ook: it from taking any effect. 
ae iron not 
of p 
solution of 
cipita allow it to an a co away the liq id 
Re et this until the water becomes tasteless. The 
phospha may now be dried, or, what is better, applied 
to the ez in its game po 
oking 
ulbs.—In lo = late m mber (Apri 30th, 
842), of the Gates “Chroniel eT ‘find a ong the no- 
fea of ne xtract frox r ert’s work 
on the Amaryllidaceous order. This pon pas it appears, 
has lost many of hi from having exposed them 
above the surface of the soil; the 1 e says, being 
lbs imbibing moisture from the at 
tion of moisture by the bulb. is 
natural, perhaps, for some of the ree to "gabe "yok 
have dug up bulbs o which we x9 
half ae their substance wai 
d this too at t heir tative 
regards burying the ain banboth a surface 
wd in this a. a 
countr vo aa’ 
ete quantity of bulbs, than “the 
b 
2 
ae] 
rap expedient, by which bulbs 
may be partially, it sik Cy, preserved from injury, 
whilst they n inactive state. Take as much 
m es like ely to require, 
a fable, smear it all over 
as_it. will abso 
I 
=) 
t=] 
oo) 
as 
completed their growth, soil 
ite dry, cover the rafaoe of rd “poil with dry silver 
possible round thet bulb, if 
ae 
on round the 
that a housewife ties ati pots o 
preserves. The gardener Perey -keeps his bulbs in 
the hothouse the risened , and may be troubled with 
ter dri ; thi 
] bs runs 
other Wi peters, piers putting the a suite 
o the pte th e 
Ef lar 
better way, therefore, with 
‘to bury them 
r 
bulb 
Shortly Solace the buibs be 
e way that I iadbetnieads 
oved, - prese eierved 
gin to grow, “on ee a be rem 
for another y 
also 
iL per t cont of the oxides of 
t shoot of reat F pin on the same branch. 
A further sake gs towards tinction of its hybrid 
character, appears, nea rr ons been effected since 
last year, and 2 em ‘ se int sl sero 
retain their h sigh 
tains a flo 
of one of th 
e wings, of a bright 
<q 
. 
a 
nog is that 
parts of a nig are always proportionally 
han the r parts which retain the dingy 
and ed wets a pope standard which I examined, 
hc iehag ell as 
ore me, premeats a very distorted appearance on one 
side of the middle nerve, which is yellow, ex- 
to twice the size o: the other side, 
retained—Z, W. ‘ 
5 | Solgab-ie 
rge pots are bt they are sciniahda the | 
lar, 
enter 
| “Hellebore Powder and Gooseberries.—1 
different opinion to that ex 
caterpillars, ooseberries and Curran gar- 
en were perfectly overrun by them, and I d va- 
rious methods for destruction, but without effect. 
t last-I purchased a parcel of the powder recommended 
in the nicle; an ving mixed i th soap- 
suds, I applied it to the bushes with a g-pan, 
under strong suns bus now perfectly 
rew pretty well. Altho 
curl in their hearleaes, 
freely as the remaining five ; 
ring how 
row 
may also he 
e latter was nearly in flow 
m 
os 
is] 
@ 
5 
° 
= 
@ 
e particular a 2 manu 
Spinach: in fact, sO 
has been sow 
a 
g, I am convinced that the 
1 better than from the man- 
which pees is generally grown. I think gar- 
eners will soon be enabled to feed mg vegetables, 
render them ‘fit for om, mene er they think proper, with 
as much certainty as can ta bee his pigs, 
grazier his cattle.— 
Pruning Forest 
~" gat “a raving b 
r you 
a late num 
thinning eos attended to, i 
accelerate the growth 
ected. of 
hinning, pruning is 
sid value of Kester 
al 
oo 
sh 
gu in those who practise the different 
mely, to keep the rene within duet 
The difference he 
arge than from the small 
each tier of b 
ing in bre 
