apart, and 
beer 15 peere very large. roots are 
its flower, 
Whepehow (Hwuyehow), the following otis were 
* But the oo beautiful tree eth 1 . district is 
eiw 
tree, about 60 feet i in height, having a stem 
eni Pine, ye pen . 
branches like the ping 
i with the main —— — described 
ublic in Euro 
t peat ys it be? It evidently belonged et Bre 
Pine tribe, and was more nd ornamental 
as perfectly i a ve the . as 
known Crypto oleae and its ed lik 
those of the Arbor. vitze, — watts —— * oi 
The tree was growing in an inclosure belonging > e 
kee 
m; ve us 2 of its 
＋ peg giv 
readily kpene with our request, ese seeds wi 
up and sent honie to bee where, 
THE GARDENERS’ 
0 afte and 5 Iba weight cach, 
ose | formerly — ip in 3 i 
ees in large | 
t te e pea si young trees 
us V 
who was 
evidently E * red our ar admication of it, sem 
B 
ety This is the best 
for gene 
of a ee A ie Sided Malad 
— — arsnt ip, 1 un ip. 
Panais 1 Leaves few, root chie fly 
in form int erme ediate between the round and 
> | * 2 a 
CHRONICLE, 
been grown to between | 
„ | tural visionary, 
variety | subject will vies least induce 
the long 5 
to 
t eer to affect them, but rather that by 
3 wring eatedly in one and the same ronen 
u 550 a n 
t the youn e 
against ack other, 
cannot be wor — But a careful cultivator can mirar 
against wan o of similar and especially 
he can pre he en mischief 8 pÀ cattle: — 
1 give this name to all 
sorts 0 es observed on plants. They may be 
3 re “lows, euch as the fall of hail, or by The: 
Hence 
s the injuries inflicted by 
n they are bn ced by the agg. s 
nes, he is apt to attribute them to some specifi 
iple in the storm. 
by contusions that the plants are woun: 
completely! broken up and destroye ed. _ The parts 
uisition in the successful culti 
delicately rooted plants is, the absolute necessi 
certain amount of moisture in the soil. 
urate The soil emplo 
. to the py — of water — a gi — — 
parate the individual par. 
¢ „ physic st 
n ratio to its r — ty 
ontusions from blows, and 
n 
e merely M 
r ev 
is 
that evaporation produ 
or copiousness, 
much insiste — 
the soil should b. 
em e same material, me 
I would coat the arb d with a dense glaze, and aleo 
the are rs the pot for an inch or two from the sur. 
fac 
other than at the surface. 
plan the labour of watering is i 
o ultimate benefit. On the con — ary, 
f water is calculated to deteriorate the as deprive it 
of its inorganic constituents, and to rob it of its porosity. 
in small ones—the | arger ones, on apopua of their thick- 
er to the escape of 
ually 
it 
ith a 12-light pit Sd H row of hot-water 
often more or less affected = N, spreads, “Therefore | 
body wi 
pipes might enjoy his Pine-apple, with less expenditure 
ilstorm, tedious as it may be, t 
should be visited, the a flected parts cut out and — 
with Forsy t de S. 
Fiacre. “This applies to the larger 
becomes impossible for the Baller e which are the 
the most 3 and which after m: ee hailstorms do 
much damage to many trees, remedy is a 
good pruning the following ean al lti — — trees only z 
but herbs also that suffer from 
Contusions of the secon * 2 eed 
In tying stakes to trees or Vines, in banding — 
4 fruit trees, the ligatures are often made so tigh 
ruise them and bring on ulcers, the general result of 
il. woun re 
on sap stagnates, and black spots indicating contusion 
1 am gl * tn h 4 
Afterwards as we journeyed w 
ceme 
PARSNIPS. _ 
THE varieties of these that “ow been described or | 
| th 
cultivated are the followi 
mon e 2 alias “Swelling Parsnip, Large 
Parsnip. Roots from 3 to to 4 inches in diameter 
* tapering regularly to the — — of fro 
20 to 30 inches. Crown generally below th 8 
level of 
a i rsey Parsnip, Panais 
An — — 
plant being larger er and finer ; roots 
e bante x 
allow drills, 
desired 
seed — difficulties — hi 
| woode: 
always be observed. Cultivators cannot be too 
in | frequently: reminded not to tighten a seria more than 
—— ely necessary, an or bandaging 
uled, but 
the exoties lost from the 1 dies of them, 
ON THE CONDITIONS ESSENTIAL TO THE 
MOST PERFECT CULTIVA ATION — XIII. 
VERY day witnesses some 
th in men and thin, 
of 
onder that we were so long blinded 
of the eee not essential to 
perfeet ee — — is a porous pot. And the day 
— shall wi —— m our 
an era, even 
d plants arise from the necessity o 
measures 
nf -4h. 
onguen 
8 It ex 
and it is not too much to say that the onli of every 
ie tion 
et by a 8 applica 
olving 8 unt of labour Ngee 
a a Br Mie usef ain ei It is 
asing the amount of labour and 5 — 
ness, however, that the employment of glazed pots would 
ect a benefit, but in the general appe ce of the 
pots themselves. o green lichens could obtain & 
a and any dirtiness could be so readily removed 
by pint or — Fog th 
wn dsom 
| Scenery than bright red 
I would . Mr. 3 mea idea ex 
artiele in this Pap 
fi 
ndseape on fire, and it might be n 
propriety that red garden 
3 Surely the time has 2 5 for Lang 
some slight attention to taste in matters, b 
Ho 5 
Victoria Regia; a at miter plant isat 
vigorous health, the leaves a 
using p 
to combat the deleterious quilities | 
p Jam 
| Fapidly 3 in size, and have already 
same dimensi the largest which was on 
last season, A flower opened 
