+ 
660 TH 
_ amean aa 
fact it cee e to decompose entirely this vege- 
table g 
decay, 
ount o 
r 
cu, send a pena showing the 
g further 
an acco 
and “at, I found what I believe to be the myce 
lium the mrs as that which I dis- 
at Berkhampstead. 
roots upon erinan 
can be distinctly traced. The o 
arising ng rom that fungus yo eh to be iden 
Ten “yards dista: 
cause 
in most other pets that T product 
Pa pe at Dr. Orea found 
legraphi ny ia sent out to India, even when 
first 1 te had ooun ngn conseguen 
changes that occur 
pps for i 
a matter of lievas to all cultivators, 
ani i the 1 qu ci of vem ne rcha 
now used for various purposes in gardening and 
farming. dh is tne ark the A pe Komori? 
valuable w very far from being so | 
peincslabable ef Wo) iy supposed. 
sy a 
SOME pe le have a rather extraordinary idea of | m 
horticultural liberality, and ey certainly lose no 
The demands made 
ish i chile, Lye rita 
Cattleyas, Victoria regia, Hieni, Nymphæa 
including gigani 
Sarsa terrace sa r that he may experi- 
mentalise 
Can. am secre go further ? 
oe » with pale } 
j Im s specimen for teri 
aptain Trevor Clarke, 
stem is kani À 
ed a Jock} in diameter at 
the Aes 
two e 
it ors disti rtf ssh it ita pa tals bei 
writers — i a t 
recurved; ity iape ae me 
and its leaves narrow 
petiole. co is ae to lto ahabi prip a places on t 
uvergne, Jura, the 
en mdg shove th the falas of bath ‘gona Telephium and 
prerese aoee 
NEVER BUY : PEANT THAT zog HAYE NOT 
whoa ne difficult 
F , yes! 
its | don’t you think that lower petal rather too small?” | so 
d is your 
ng at the same time coming over you. 
ak lower petal oo 
all. You G Koer ibl 
te | would be that her fer A baby didn’t get a ay at the mera rica. 
e | have it wit its fault, pemk a Ana no way in advance of 
mar 
um of a fun will 
mposition i in Gutta perede, and Scobatty Ch 
Sardinia Ve 
ce of 
ke 
ted | men 
er ced ey immediately |" 
ntea, pe aes Apple plants, Vanilla, |q; 
S., | re 
inserted above the eat third of | th 
the petals, its ovaries es shorter ee any dorsal furrow, | as 
more tapering into pe 
whi 
E GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 
seedling will ET he As to determine one it is good 
for nothing. By A are pretty sure to be swans,’ 
one does like ye ndemn one’s own c ildren. 
It is like a setae pen an ugly child; it | against ve 
the ugliness seems ff, | result 
it is yan ‘ flower of 
[SEPTEMBER 26, 1857. 
sence of correct means 
r emed, which in anima 
of t neertai ie 
lp cannot fairly be charged with fi ally. " 
sof su 
Empirical. —A lar 
t the o 
indignant reply, a slight qualm whi es has been obteined a "the oe of 
Another comes in, | mi has been achie 
and pronounces it “capital; you think him a much 
eet Pog ye and wonder what No. 1 pat have been 
| eon pmu tene him a bit of a muff. | are 
You send it it off to the me journal, one that 
r| You know to be red penal Sas you get a flattering | the sa 
notice. You now venture a step kaiaa n submit it | rica 
to ho Turn ry fae ea and read on the cover of 
He's te nothing ; 
“Oh, dear, no thi 
ved fi 
nature and s toms. As m ight h t have been oy ott 
he most 
' s No. 1 was a then, after 
y irate, as irate as the mother 
bab rS ye ki beauty. e case may erent ; aN success 
and al your Pansy be defective some one wi 
"i 
t Onion certainty 
that the salt sat which promotes the jasa of the em 
wth of the m 
pony ie out is on the ket. It may may not also prom 
have, a be gee habit T a s seedling, and this may be 
a reason nts or i 
Again, so 
wade 
gz 
ot 
J 
in 
bis 
5 
© 
m 
is irical an 
nitrOgenoge matter in 
: oe ithe that the potash may be us 
In repressing 
some chemical tendency to store up ae 
M. J. B. 
perso: 
pr obabiy “grow it, as it omen him with a 
admi 
is short of, an OBSERVATIONS ON | THE PLANTS 
WHICH ua” THE fora 
hi hives 
(Read before t ha take pe e wad aan 
On reading the different rey Aeae" of = Com 
were thie Sy ointed to examine into 
e 
mt 
t in, and ha p 
| perhaps have got up to boiling 
Again, tastes vary: w 
“4 plea me; he wants l owers—I neat o 
fond of sombre agree I of bright ones, a 30 on; | i soquaintad B: ith ¢ 
therefore, takin thin to acco hose acquai be 
Aa ing a paR iy Son a this ta bez ai | imple details of the ageet hire growth “a decom, 
oie sith. | position constitute the inds of bog therein 
let me tell d 
I 
now. Some three years |! 3 ; s : 
ago at Lincoln, and going into a ig ew | aan particularly in a tory point of 
there, I saw in his greenhouse some pita bt Ra view. But surveyors are not often and pro- 
pots, and among them two of Cloth of Gold ‘about | bably do not consider it aiy gart vi 
wo feet high, with a fine claster of b Oh! | into such minutiæ. Besides, a a good Sa eae 
thought I to myself, here is th ge patting here is th the | Written a various times on the subject of Irish peat 
pher’s stone. I looked at it; “What is this | bogs, without any one having filled up the hiatus I have 
b ded on RER Bg ah it fnar ar freely | | tng to, so far as I am aware. a t 
Mac Culloch’s report, oe 
n u Oh, yi do several every nd in 
never miss.” And so, my prize care fally packed i = 
wn paper, off I siae u to the railway. Wit 
jealous care I gu it! How pleased I w 
fellow-travellers admired it, ue only can “tell who 
tere Jnd Cloth of Gold in n bloo I reac e, and | oft the slow PE aia 
etailing m aig ipee ore occurred to 
cours the S = fea of Cloth of ee i bloom w end, A has so large a portion i its bes nrc i 
oned. With a a pride I stepped sera sid, and where a considerable prt 
Ther re, look at that!” I believe his mouth p me bly | Productive econom my, a short paper on the plants ¥ 
watered at the sight. But alas! "u a Hade ey spirit goeth | a ortncipafy into the formation of our ie 
| before a fall.” My Rose never bloomed afterw I| gsn yri pe an n approp E gi for being 
ii it out of the pot; it grew for 1 a nag and th cussed a s m of ars 
| then Aat aS E ile, and the A e different eae bog which h have been chiefiy 
sant on oe subject in 
lac 
he peat bogs d 
pai 
Scot fland who has particu niar sition 
the plants which form the different kinds of tat 
paar ieee by him, and has based some of his princi 
ngs o! wile 
and tela he Florist, Fruitist, 
Garden Medai ‘for September, etails, and first ii 
ere aa of colout igi 
ieee d 
—VEGETABLE PATHOLOGY.—No. C tencies of ma te 
of which the substances 
d depend chiefly Ye localities where 
- | produced, accordin: ey vary m a 
ost Lanmens, temperature, and altitude, wie ae 
upon | and de bles are affected. pd 
ional grounds, and sprin Knowle, it is at that iron and some other aeiee tos 
oe least foe eria Sulphur is, for instance, an approved | gen, i affect o colouring t 
the case of white mildew, where the myce- | small extent, but the, former rair of bey sd 
lium is for the most part ex to its action. Where | duces = re pa ly. 
myc issues,| B portion of our ex extensive b 
it is difficult to t in co with it. 
position, Pardons to apply bees fs the cut tubers fi 
nted rests tional grou unds, whether it | 
ro- | bel Bait i 
nel, and kamiri varies in depth fro: 
40 n 
of plants are now mici ee e 
or | the ney W Hehe owing to the elevations "f 
s of the bogs have Bites! ren! the levels eof 
ot y ex 
“Teen ae only amoun 
or | ing over bogs I have a rea t 
Citan wli pett urf itm 
pa 
acquire a me he hue, 
rtially filled Soe 
some of their statements cn erett 
alf decomposed m 
and IfA left pegat will er reco The causes 
of such „a chlorot; Nagar r t strictly the 
me analogous condition 
is, however, seareely « irrational, in n the áb- | o 
* It may = jected that a Fy tel smut, 
the “>. We ingore that. anor ny the case. ca home that balk 
as to ke of material tee 
those pe riet are of tos 
1 act Wherever 
, and remain in nearly their 
2 = 
