a 
Ne ee TETEE ee ee, ee ee a, a T T ETE E ee A ĩð P ee rr en ae ee a 
= ee ee ee ee ee a ee ee a TF — at 
—— 
which ch e greater he greater number of * 2 hose for whom 
Awat irea witness, and 
e utility. 
The most careful observations of Oram have shown | m 
t 
ies of ser Be that 
e e 
for which they invade them 
nourishment for themselv: 2, to — their offspring 
in safety ; 3, to protect apt te he mies, 
and insure own safety whilst — — * — of 
the functions to whic ey are destined by nature 
Plenck is the one of all others w ted of these 
ith the t accuracy. He places ng 
ulcers the ulcerations caused b s, and the dis- 
diseases a 
mentions the albugo of e their honey dew ; in 
that of cachexies he inclu chlorosis from insects, 
biotches, phthi thiriasis, vermina 
4 — * aad of shee by soy .— ; 
he Rose galls [bed 
e me it appears that the 
ong e 
guar r1) » scaly 
whole 
us Strangulati 
1. t is not the epider only | 
which with t the Marras ofi its web suffocates s 
Many other insects, re 
of lepidoptera, either 
or to beh se them a” ons r ene 5 
in order to e possession of | 
roll them n, lle a little horn, — having,” to facilitate 
the operation tehing 
eaves 
the preceding year iiss about the trees, which 
are all nests of insects, and burning eon immediately. 
us of Lacerations belong — 
y beetle 
cockchafer, feed in the thoes way in their perfect state ; 
— er is particu y fond e e Maple, any 
rate with us. Thus es es of 
so eaten by insects that — a remains but the 
fibres, whilst in othe the internal substance is 
ne remains, The 
Phalena Bombyx . destroys meadows by 
eating the Grasses. 
3. Fall of buds. — — same manner the young 
buds of plants are attacked by insects such as the larvee 
axe res oe pci ils — of coleoptera which live 
undergroun 5 r 
larva which li lives on the roo 
eaten away and the — alo 
er 
hat they contain 
2 substance ‘of the vai 
where it a broken off. This on eee 2 nue 
hemp field oo. by a pyralis, deser 
Special memoir. One year = e, of grafted 
trees, and in the espaliers, oung — were 
broken off from the ravages — 1 . — the Cossus 
æsculi of Fabricius, Naturalists 
larvee certain insects are 
well know 
of the 
e of plants. 
— be fonnd in 
Ch vice from — name is given to a wi 
THE GARDENERS’ 
h, I flatter W te morrow, 
fro 
in is te 3 
winter. 
| ao over the ere 0 
— — caused | as 
- | given to keep them 
in 
— There is i 
that the | j 
pro 
te , planted 95 some fresh candidate for our esteem on the 
and however undeservedly, it ost van 
This has 
rom our gardens. been the fate of the onee 
uch priz „ a ci ma 
part be attributed to the difficulty amateurs have ex- 
rienced in g it e frequently heard 
ve wintered peg nan ise wise >a ona 
t the 
— a 
n gree 
of the pa oka | to the — 
to them 
water. Just enough Should be 
rom flagging until they show signs 
of growth in spring, kes they should be repotted at 
once into the pots in which they are destined to bloom. 
The plants may then be placed on the shelves of a well 
eee nd w 
mon frame ; in 
appearance with the naked eye, and that prevention | 
oil, I have found a fibrous 
aE 
n 7 eee pr a rpos 
r. and the pots 3 
loo 
a 
d, and the 
— Yy, wil 
ction o 
mode of propagating t 
be treated of in a future annie, Pharo. 
TRADE . 
WILL any one inform us w r. W. B. Doling. 255 
Forest, Lyndhurst, Hania is, 2 8 nurserym 
with large orders for plants! 
Home Correspondence 
i American Plants. rs have been 
o and other stron 
th 
rding to the w 
continues dry, water is given once a week, but if damp, 
only once afortnight. I also vary the quantity 3 each 
time, according to the size of the plant, taking care that 
way, with ~~ exception of giving ng them a sho 
a fortnight or three weeks after flowering, when Seay | 
receive but little water of any kind. I then a them 
tie k 
Firs. 
cres are also 1 
— Seabee? such animals feed 
e nestled i 
be a case ‘oft ‘he results of. laceration, 
VILLA = or GARDENING, 
Purno tast in plants is exceedingly 
k 3 
r, but now rare one, * Flo: nt 
is an e gt and . — 2 the most delicate 
ill bear any of 
the more N kinds. 
e 
is 3 b 
of Azaleas, it will bear guano water 
When it not been conve- 
nient for me to have the segs: er er previously pre- 
the Azaleas, I have aan: ee “es 
about the size of a walnut, — ee the soil, 
upon it from time to pe I never 
—— “Henry Bundy, 
CHRONICLE. 
c 
ishes 
g | ce to be 
yra ee Lge . B., 4 
e manure and half 
it 
l| with a 
gr 
| pasa 
act ts roots at each 
node, which strike into the mud, and after a time it 
the 2 root. The 
t the“ 
8 
3 and for what j vagen: > at any one 
time keepa the ae so shut, and th te he finds 
re-opening it; as a —.— 
respecting the “ air holes” he . Will he also 
e the distance “ within 
e, though I am 
e o not ‘i entertain some 
particles, as in conseq 
quick evaporation of the watery portion of the drai 
of stables „ leaves 
be more agreea shes them, and thereby cause 
reject the plain b 
A . 
e| The Rotting of the Flowers da aes nsia ree og 
i ob- 
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— 
s 
o 
— 
=] 
ow 
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eo 
= 
0 
ic] 
BE 
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a 
S, 
e+ 
Er 
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a 
8 
oO 
$ 
— 
2 
~ 
tj 
from the greenho se in May, and replace 
3 and it = Bowes abundantly, without ** liable 
o disease; nest plant I have seen was grown in 
this locality (York shire) in this manner; it was covered 
a profusion. of its in ing 
-n part — the su ail tes ; it was in 
loam, havin sm uantity of 'decayed ve 
— incorporated with it; it requires a liberal — 
of water. F. 
Winter 8 and Spring Covering of Wall 
Trees.— In early winter I have my wall trees unnailed, 
so that the old ds 
Under this 
trees had not bloomed, As 
led to the wall I —— rough bagging, ee 
night ; and, to 
t an e 
gainst the wall below them 
ttom of These 
by a stick werd a nail 
ots, s, and 
a good crop, while my nei kr 
bloss as dead as the broom boughs that 
intended i pio tect it. 
Bleeding of Birch- pAg ‘Roots. —1 peti e ob- 
served Hamog f Bi t had been 
0 
layed the thinning y p! and con- 
e e a e eee of Bireh iad bier tr trees have been 
cut The ls of the Birches 
N bled most eee 1 ese ou a specimen 
P the f Syeamore, but the stool of 
5 
rile 
N. 
English h Plora,” Sir 25 b. Smith, adds: 
y the celebrated M. -Chatea 
capricious, T The favourite — so to speak, is sup- 
— 
account of England, for its wonderful powers of in- 
roots bleed only whe en cut at certain seasons of the y 
—perhaps about the time thatthe sap begins to ascend; 
