38 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
[JAN.: 19, 
so split up that the wood remains bare and the 
separates from it. 
k person who can guarantee effectiveness and N 
“Ap 
fro In the same kind of tree at. ie — 
times the — and cellular tissue will be slit, 
whilst the stra‘ — of bark and parenchyma will remain 
but different degrees of the 
— 2 I know of any variations 
which are much 
entire. 
malady. 
the two 
ffe ected i pe» s invitilo 
ases; 
A ‘the Ae e 
very late. W 
= 
in confirmation of what I have eiat or 
Ses 
THE FIRST SIGHT OF TREES. 
80 to do, for searce he In- 
tants ever had “the opportunity of, Travelling soo) "am 
great a way into the W 
rved m — — things in the course | for 
hav that 
* They o 
of their Travels s but the a Notion 
erfluon 
One of the ae they wondred most 
ae Trees ; 
at, was the | Pro 
y thought the Beauty of the 4 
— admirable, and how they grew to 
such a a ig above Plant as far above their Con- 
i their 
Kilda; but upon second 
iy being through the grea I 
Sky, det them from this uudertaking,”— A late 
— 10 a: Kilda, by M. Martin, Gent. 
— —„—- 
Home 
araea fone ge Roses.— cult vated’ a 
th rots 
nosegay 8 months out of 
uring the last five years I have noted 
this fact; in the one instance the 
e | their position, — leading th 
is joi so delightful that 
beh d t 
tleman” oa considers himself entitled-to the profit 
arising from 
ve profit by it, altho ant’s tim 
| his by — cab becoming a trades esman. 
lg 3 or nur seryman by herefore, is the 
who can legally, or ought i in good faith i 
be — is grounds 
and skill are 
T 
> 
ue-apron 
The — and expert hus 
e weaver 
businesses as 
the ir situation in n life. 
An 
an very co inju- 
rious Gaar of pam — by auy bab: their right 
anslation of it 1 uld: run thus 
3. 
, & 
8, 
e tight terms 
a 
in hand e hav 
of the ‘discussion of apprentice fees i in ast w week’s: Chro- 
nicle, 1 compa- 
low salaries” received by gar 
ra vely ardene Why, 
ee — certainly should Tape; at leash, 
4007. or 5001. a-year, I must own, though very e in 
on 
wish 60“ 
u pea — in 3 nor could | re 
esently che hall have our | i 
8 
e only to look to the third — 
as ey and wealth afford you sopa for the 
an your humble talent, and means of an honest 
e ample bree . Elpidophorus, mi ull. [This oer 
ires more we give it to- day. 
3 = will 2 our — of the writers 
Sie = ae and efficacious: way ＋ a? Glass houses. 
with 2 Tobacco to kill Gree 5 ae gi 
Eg 
ir to ug el. Such a aratus 
is war, r ee and eng? ager vill last and 
ausw. e purpose perfectly ry many years. 
aes Comes Florist, 1 
oll. 
lime a est way of Felling Larch 
t 
d up), whilst the page p standing, all the 
on t the tree remain 
5 grubbe 
k and mpna ae = 
ing z until late in the 
ession: 
solid, but pemn more 
ctation “of bei — eld in great 
ade of great importance by 
| th — ; 
but only of the gardener, my servan ow, really 
this Wee by lau A except that we see in it matter 
hat these useful labourer ers ‘fo or o 
oe 
— 
dg 
of edu 
can em without ecstacy, n 
— — exqu 
quis 
—.— But thoe ecstacy and ‘the satisfaction. ay se 
honest 
n for u 
is- 
re summer, and I doubt 
me will f. = 
r in your columns, perhaps 
y 
dry, and 
other. way. 
— “thus treated. would: become season ned, 
se sooner than when felled in any o 
B” has 
of them as I suggest; im 
ow, and the other third part at Mid- 
not but Bat th the pa suggested 
y best &, [These 
opinions are not w the 3 Sa. we re- 
quire facts and e 9 * 
Tortria paara (see p. 20).— fact communi- 
ated. by “ Ruricola” relative to tne discovery ko 
larva of this moth in the month of uary in 
—— to the withored 3 yx of a 1 is in 
as provipg that that asses te winter in the 
state, ready to comme yp aor the 
uds and leaves as soon as. developed 
"iog g: Isay young paie and Tek because I 
think 1 e reading  Ruricola’s” nope unt will come 
to the aodalo that this i mac t feeds n the Pear 
itself, op that it is na ly i . 3 that fruit, The 
nature of the large brown patel is 3 and 
ubt whether this was 
‘we do te ca 
away by dark yee p spun mo de 
insect. F cannot but think that this an 
wri ilar. 
i hard which: have by well digging, d unging, 
baee e a month later, and ceases a Kc.) for hire supplied ed them 3 hy as long as they —— 
their humble place, a re respe y — — 
tumm on 5 K i 
= ale sets — “ae a oire — — a the means of li velihood vouchsafed them, they 
nt co — 
crimson very brillia 
— and a strong grower, about 10 feet high on its 
nothing in 
enjoy a slight reflection of the pleasure theta iia | 
ardens 
which hab he en mistaken Dye ke "os waka 
y | the- case with the erus nes 
deseribed by him in this work, 1848, p pp: 452) 4 22 as 
insect; 
res to their employers: The g natural feedin 
am — a is called a 5 ` i} ma and even many — e p — really the —. 0 2 py the insect betas l 
origin to very different and pome — y~ —— of ‘of all grades of proficiency, and — long ago 3 but such a situation, even as 2 
looks almost like a “st —— aes | these e. — — — but no one h contrary to ordinary economy of 
our common D “rose, and I ams d tha ES 11 ot lif it th e Pear were left in its natural state it 
— urprised that. no at. is profession as a gardener At least, we must — — — and the larva would find 
os A oe new Roses show any signs of affinity with: barer beate 97 the a Seat 1 rpg — — the ground, 3 2 
it, oleate R ne aad he bestowal of it the graduates in the midst of its real food e young leaves and buds. 
very well as a dard, but does not flower so earl — ee — e es. Weare not | Instead ever of the economy of this insect 
and its pr I e — ee ountain our. We have no — ito bestow digni- hitherto: unknown, as stated. by „ Rurieola,” 1 beg to 
ee plase a grow up 3 p vereign | refer him to Loudon’s“ Gardeners’ Magazine, vol. 14, 
per a — below,. it should be in this instances. Every. cobbler: nowa. days where he will find that 12 years ago I published a 
is bottar, than — g else, 2 Gin - isa“ reverend, ifthe pounds and ’splains | Skripter r (to detailed account of 2 of the great 
years wae . ee — some 15 or 20 Every man who has a „dirty boy under him in a hoy i is a buds op of the pone Me. W. Wing also 
reared this moth. from cater 
ago, and procured nurseryman 
J. R. S. ae (ine ote ornament: of the trellis at 
Spotted oe following are six excel- 
lent * e varieties’ on llow — 
Dido, 
Indicator. h 
is a “ gemman ;” P and ovory oo wh bas s Sonday lt 
is w squire. What t has not King Hu 
for 1848, has been 
or Curtis in t 
urite 
That is the state of life in whieh it has pleased your 
— > ig an! de rightly, though impiously, addressed to Him- not 
——ç — a sort of consolation. 
who stated his wrongs con 
— 7 
=e OES 
to the 
the rat in 
. 5 
ozen or so of my all of a size, let 
f that c : 
hape deposi sit some “thus converted i in the albur- 
Ce i 
