THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE, 
[JUNE 22, 
believe that we express the opinion. of a 
classes of society ; an opinion in 
that 
—— 
seeing 
pted words have already esta- 
senses a in common languag 
theo fe 
e 
In the fourth lame of the Journal of the rom 
cultural Society is a remarkable paper by 
rend on the m of the 8 in hich 70 5 
LARGE —— In 
bree she wees inions upon this subject, ie alec end the 
driest’ month of the year, His words 
ven 3 
op Soak be travelling over a k to 
enter into any general detail respecting the ascent 
and descent of the fi ids in plants, and the formation | į 
and deposition annually of new wood in all ligneous 
vegetation. It will be sufficient for rite purpose to 
ension and formation takes place 
mer, i 
the solar action i 
decline, that I should Err and ae with all | 
1 852 the operations 
ed to be e e 1 ‘should |} 
nd of Au ood time to 
im- 
ir shoots, Another 
w bandage round the stem of 
in | Holly, ino in onl to keep x a little moist. 
This experiment is, we think, conclusive i in favour | 
a the advice given by Mr. GEN DIN NIN; and thus 
>. Si n wish ta to 
plantati 2 
with napere Ae 1 e for it is probable that 
much greater loss 
in November. 
* n ROSE- AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY. 
ear 1836, or it might be sage ay 
climate fo: ening) I was gı 
his head to cake and bud Seas deli 
a b> aa ture. as, 
such ingratita tude in man ; for ‘we belov: 
ursing, immediately 
— eats 
r, a ‘parks 
| enem part, of Sve sso with those unlucky roots attached, 
Er aad | ~ 
would have been sustained even to four 
pac ked in a s 
e village, so I understood 
living in a small 
it i Alas! my beloved Como,“ 
t to be, in 
, although 
the pN to a considerable degree an and depth, 
that the mutilated roots are comparatively situated aut 
on a ose ye ere 0 aid napi promotes bes 
aids ipi of 
young ene We . — — p curren 
That the season which I have . e to 
000 tree l evergreen, 
varying in size a s to 40 feet high, during 
one autumn. The trees were prepared as formerly 
ribed the 3 spring and as the under- 
Jakini was ra work w in 
follow- 
wa 
August and Sale 3 che — The result was = 
rest, 
„ 
we said “that some experiments were in progres | £ 
with a view to dnp " — of Mr. GLEN 
DINNING’s advice; and we now proceed to 
result. Bay: September, 1 1849, s 
i Some hundred feet of a Helly he 
nsplan 
dryness of the: soil, we -s poets, and o 
as great reason ear the result, “ens 
boat are 2 now iene 20, 188), with a very small 
e and growin 
h 
days with its zoots covered by a mat, and was 
all heat i 
lighted with my deli that I should re 
ose maf making friends al ail over — world, my eo 
o report the eo 
„ work | a 
ted, and although poe ie 
mile and replanted | 
was m a aiit 2 cannot write the re- 
mainder), my being unpacked by a regular enthusiast, 
and my transferene: ry pleasant locality and 
e soil. The 9 of f the clima 
mi — ‘thay know not what 
! I thou — mas 3 e 
lested, but no; the moment he found it out t (for, 8 his 
planting a small rg of me the first season I cam 
pos Leere I put forth all the roots I 2 be a 
me absolutely all 
a * bookseller’s ’s pare), y — sub- directed to a Mr. Rivers, tra 
En land. 
ould not help saying, “ ams I then 3 bre Oy scopi 
3 no, it cannot p 
‘hope for tance from y 
erer wah to bud me 1 wil 
fingers. Rosa 
178 3 but I oye 
Senator meat OF 9 
this mi 
rrosive humidity, 
drops acting on the — young p 
vegetation of 
epidermis of corn ; and, Reco 
figures of them. Finally, Tessier, treatise on 
es of corn, attributes rust to a stoppage of the 
transpiration o of plant, cai by mists, and he re- 
marks that it x precisely the most vigorous plants 
ir more copious tranpiration, are the 
others see differently, 
It appears also 
they mn a morbi 
e plant to 
= on difficulty i in the explaining these 
being the result of cryptogamic, 
vegetati 
cutaneous v 
incipl 
impartial pe 
instance, some will have it that it is one plant, some 
0 and the manner in which 
set of life 
or evil.” aid sor TEEM ie 
than myself, but I 
annot trouble you with 
| for be it ‘understood, al 
me very frequent 
lted me 
“© What occasion Aios we for any 
h for 
verything. I think, Mr. Manetti, you are a humbug, 
like your Italian fiddlers and your English master who 
sent ch i u to me are.” Here I | he remainder of his 
O me, 
tise explain its ap is e same as 
that which those adopt who consider it an ani 
through the organic pores o 
themselves ses kt th it, and take 
ch 
its mode of production, gece founded also on the 
Bauchs and C ri, With all due 
still 
blights amongst 
etermin 
ephemera on is wished that I should add 
by remarking that 
i 
! has not been attended | 
ashing , yell. 
transplanted 
n Laurels and 
Sow, 4 to 6 feet high, 8 
7 
g 754 
teig 
Vitæ 
ge 
15 
$ 
and tast * It ‘may also be that t 
the particles of wet (and 
ith 
checked 
seas it may be. 
ap aay aaa 
