 NovemBer 29, 1856.} 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
789 
E-E turating 
a: 
truis 
z, and at the same time so many 
ot some disturonnce Ol ther 
3 
J 
F 
r of bodies either actually 
iscovered 
power, of impregnation, or repr esen tative of such 
gans, it is € curious that as regards th the higher pol re- | 
e pre 
the è case of raed ancient structu 
bave b been ii 
ch has either 
kitle areen 
This is indeed in keeping kas Dae 
et, that while in the higher Cryptogams the org 
Ta 
served, for Sir Samad to rane A that in 
thei interior beams 
} 
J 
1 
Settin 
spondents es give ive their ' experience as to the best mode 
offi xing, 
e inte erior 
: oon so low in the scale as Algæ exhibit vital 
n this s respect ol of a cpr S than a any 
as sinstanced i in nthe Ga rdeners? Chronicle. 
Will; 
to preserve the fiavour of iy ng 
The e Mr. 
ly the conical boilers; piegne 
to fix them on bricks, so as to allow o nly a flue to pass 
= to have an opporteniay 
und; I mean ss though 
erent vial pee should 
ere be from the Ta of om bars to the bottom of 
al 
Pacer ea bout to alter my boiler, which 
ish to d 
ba 
p distinct i indications of sexual distinetions than 
favestigations are given in the "Botan ische, Zeit tung of 
h 1856. His Attention was firs t directe d to the 
3° 
v known by the name of 
however like his predecessors, unable 
p h our hou: o it in the best possible 
practised yh the father of the late Mr. ya man ‘he in the Sd ie 
Prosser of aes who cor eager the mea Stes of P: — When taking up the 
of an edifice, of which the timber was still Paai ing. Leather deck rouna) “Potato, „Which had flo wered 
n ri daunted y this circumstance, s hed 
his a steam, and it sti bea ars evidence of I he } d pely 
correctness of his views. t th Is pth detrimental to the main crop, 0} 
this day it it has not been epic leic whether the preser- —" Will these all tubers if po 
vatives act mechanically, or chemically, or conjointly. ona ae I have observed this also in the 
S. B: Walnut-leaf a iy but to a less extent ; it is com mon 
“a Jor Boilers.—Afi spe 
meg 
ky 
i “He as 
ii which m 
ny sexual function. 
peed in n one species 
as he very p 
m takes place so often ‘in other cases 
of little Sickel He th 
ker maceration for 
monads gene’ 
ie days 
ra seh in thee pari, 
, th me phen 
© 3 the 
myself unable to make ou 
ing y 
t he means. In the 
Qy. W 
season on an old set of the Irish Lamp ees pro- 
ich he calls Polimania, are of 
first place, he says, “ The iy suitable for of tubers ? aA = Beee stem 
boilers is either house cinders, gas or oven coke. re very common, and will do perfectly well 
We Ish_ coal. _ These, ” he adds, “are valuable in "the mE 
hi y 1.” House cinders are there- ds r Gourds.—It may only be partially known 
next coke, and last Welsh coal. that. the roasted seeds of many of the Gourd tribe 
Sotaan, mt tr howe are in fact mere modi- 
iy 
Farer o ou he says, 
“a 
t. parti cularly 
inferior 
P 
ations of the s sporop! 
“a 
e there a AN ob 
ong bo dies iens 
e tos vat a en 
e fro their 
oe threads hate bg last 
tachment, These bodie 
coke.” 
boiler i is that it should be fille d full of fu 
ove’ 
Aga in, 
ut superior to ordin nary gas 
T he principle of a conical 
el.” In another 
he pes ae 
Cucurbita ror gigantea, whi ich are pro- 
| Guced in in prarasi and possess a nice nutty flavour. 
Amicus. 
__ Incomparable White Celery—In t the first week of 
d Cole's og re White : Pi 
nitted t i 
is most powerful when i 
baining any Patete and he o concludes 
full. 40 
psa naik; who has had all sorts and Sizes of boilers 
Now, as an old stoker of nearly 
sorts were planted out in ee e last week in May 
and treated alike in every respec 3 the seen wos in 
th y in favour ak ie eir beng to deal with, I t prac I p e Cole's 
me spermatia. certained however in Agari feny a ra with those matters to “fight shy ” | Crystal White was not for he fortnight , and 
E dus that the Pas gives rtainly e thks, dorai bollas" any stokehole boy comparison with t geo 
A these so-called spermatia, and that thei bony s hedde ¢ be told that he had only to make up | parable during the whole two sorts lasted. 
efore, if exerted at all, t be dizea to the faint his fire som wd every other day. Such state-| The Incomparable caw no athe! ptoms po! a. 
le wijkution of the mycelium, after the fashion of the higher | ments as those rs and “ Sigma’ to the | to seed, but kept perfectly solid, crisp, a white. 
e @/iyptogams, point if they wer Sah PN entirely to orchard houses, | The C Crystal White showed a great va omic seed, 
On the ites the result obtained i is not of si great | but their eater te is to induce a “beli ef that the erec- | and was eede The Incomparable 3 about 
rtance, but the id ga r irak far 18 ineł igh, and is very bulky. It iei little 
without their w: g i in earthing up. This 
s best object to whieh attention can now be t d, Eee rea as far as forcing is concerned just on con- | is jagon e first season in which I have grown this sort ; it 
ha view to en pee of Hoffmann’s notions, | trary is the fact. D. A., Devon as sent here with other seeds from Mr. Vei iteh of 
unfortuna’ of SH occurre e = Petunia imperialis—Mr. M i} d h t 
of fruit, alee one Tike of an nary Agaric, | what soil I grew this plant on its Sap ‘turned out,” I future grow any other White eg a ‘Sam 
other like that of a Sumen are pee snouts beg to inform him that in the autumn of last year I | Patshull, Tilrighton, Wolverhampton. 
asce: ertain whether the excavate: da about two as and then fill ulberry ł geta 
tree trained on a south wall to bear fruit? 
it would be in patero 
in 
Enor t wou aait 
1 | 
ortion of ma 
plan described as new 
Saints. E ot ‘ys Tulasnei, H 
bed in the volume of the = 
i Beamin Society, adit i the nam 
glioniformis, and 
oir on allied species ; and if a name 
mted Bremia lact 
r 
of Botrytis 
rally use 
is or gage in Sr gents s| = re apg a red ir ina hava state 
n May 
a 
0- Mulberr 
Y T 
rry tree 
Mine is about 11 years 0 old, and covers a Jargish extent 
of wall. 
| dee mpose sed c 
offmann, | | eatha I should ce the ashes fi rom culm formed kito 
urnal of balls with an 
erp to gh bor en of fuel apo n 
ed in jeny papah The airt 
small fruit, a ye that gen nerally falls off before ri 
was indu t it from seeing one at Down 
Castle i in a yn Ae station which bore splendid fruit 
I have root-prun ine severa! ae 
e Tad 
3 without eft. 
wad an 
Should | it be cut to spurs in the 
t b 
i 
ucæ, Regel, is the. same ages ` a 
s moreover Breage i the Bota TEA zai Zeitung 
in with r to i 
| other varieties, some of which were turned o 
ut of 
ores wall kn Page a genus Apo- 
was propoued for its keep ion many years since, | 
ides Ek it Aon been long ago shown that Greville 
of Spheria 
the ep 
itm: 
cuta, Whether 
| seed pre 
blosso’ 
lie, 
deol 
most luxuriantly, an 
med 
gree 
SEN nee your Gaus aie 
pot 
struck in the autumn, and the rest from 
viously raised in a hot bed. Every | aaas gre 
Fy RA 
W. ad [M 
make nothing of it. 
pise his in the following m: 
ing to a Mu ulberry belonging to “the ake Mr. Willia iams, 
and with the 
splendid By it, nothing ut mpty 
n cups wen produced; precisely a as 
“IG.” 
or 
branches, as spurs, several inches from the wall; and 
in n mg ana climate of Pitmaston (both of which are 
ex favourable), the fruit ripens in t 
ti fet But in cold i 
it is 
in = orori for that 2 
i o the pi erm 
Ai im a mere Perih of th Torá is 
oy "MI, Bs 
{testion 
ome Correspondence. — 
nnd have 
tld me 
r nga gn od.—Y our P 
eribes a eh mpregnating w 
to adoptit. I must however beg leave to deny | 
asserti hate of iron has been found 
eap and easy mode of i = 
ù preservative liquids, and it will probably faeces | 
a 
to 
ree 
n the open border. 
f 
f k ig to met nag no cae from those 
It is far my wah 4 o dis- 
tions go 
Mulberry tree will be found to 
a south wall), little fruit will be 
less the e bearing 
chiefiy i in such that the 
deserve a place upon a 
produced, and that will ripen but ill, unl 
nc plant, et, oe may 
occurred in 
© 
leaves, and 
ce, and ae the failure in my 
th of the | vigorous habit of the 
some difficulties to the cultivator, when 
this ‘mode eof training and pruning is aye It will be 
case 
Mr. Milner states, from improper 
i havi 
n | tree, and at the same time 
leads | bear fruit. a effects us eam be eare 
differen 
pti iN 
duced by several it means ; by destroying a st small 
say, however, 
“ths not any i the dry rot but pre- 
e window for many years. So satisfactory a 
A : preservation W: 
considered by the late Sir S. a 
ta thorough impregnatio 
by which its durability wold 
out a patent for effecting this 
i pears to be the only | 
p he apps are of 
Scantling, but the cheapness of the apparatus 
oa ed in the Gardeners? Ohvonicle i is Sacidadly in i oa 
A critic of Gasp >r, On the Bit T Fruito 
f C Moulds, Diaper poder. On f of the Botanische Zeitung, say | 
Spary’s sporidangia This 
not | 
tno ae peaa a o ened galego bo 
ot e from sporophores, but are generated like the sporid ia j 
rit spore Soe 
s parna 
kind 
or large roe or ringing, | by i — and long-continued 
| these ma; 
my dou 
ag i 
os and then a: out, 
TLA mea beng 
some of 
mee En md but I have 
1 A563 
or sid = g branches almost 
papeemanety dy opted tl ae 
ioned toena, bisak it pber increases the dis- 
positiona in the tree to to bear fruit, without pair its 
any 
doin ah its no mi 
used. Nevertheless cz Mr. Milner will be so 
most ems distributed. 
a 
lad: to him 
mend my adopting, I shall feel ex 
aioe trying i 
md 
h We 
of 
it next a pee in i him 
experience in the Pe: A 
‘ales 
ceedii 
will have much pleasure not only in 
the result 
al 
at Teenie contained six 
hich been trained m 
ea ee 
a Mii 
a ame with an p aoina of about 45°, another with 
f piel and another of E Hons hese 
n the wi 
tree grows plentifaily ders, though gen 
slender wood of these 
— 
wn ns, the P 
“Are 
a oaei and stunted form, owing no 
ently lo “lo pped to tain wood for charcoal. 
ranches 
| was ean beer as I found practicable, Bes a the ‘whole = 
w trees bore, “aa thickly as Oak Percy 
E 
ir positio 
hich I sen 
n on fei branchlets they most uprig ght large branches, 
he exception only of a small part, near the tops of rie 
ps a 
ds, t 
P the central ae the ab allotted to each 
In the I had n sonen 
nka 
hen, owing 
2 > 
