50—1850.] 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONI 
CLE. 
789 
it. Beet- root, fruits, the Sugar-cane, &c., show 
of the stem, joint by joint, or, to speak 
propery, grt by phyton, an EK that the lower internodes 
sen., of the 
ical | 
t| should be 
requirements of the family should be 3 po on a 
sheltered south border. In ordinary cas space 
5 feet by 10 will be ample. gt ke should be taken 
3 rid til the ouh exhibits 
a cavity 18 or 20 inches deep. be heated man 
be placed i 
— —— 4. 
prospective recognition of its capabilities, and now, like 
a “blot on the ’scutcheon,” a constant so FR 
its owner; deformed in its hab 
plante nsively, due having been 
given i to to allow for the grein hey of fall their 3 
ſine 
Turnips, and a sprinkling of Ra 
y be cast over tthe whole. The latter 
gathered before they injure | the other crops. 
wil’ be 
Here th 
are planted -oo age A in ‘alt, ‘esting each other even 
in in their infancy. P. Hartwegii is smothering Pinsapo, 
ins, which m may be expected if these things are so 
| in ind anuary or February. The bed can gere- be atar 
over and covered with : mats i in the us 
green 
that of the ripe cane ; but, looking only at the quantity 
and not at all at the quality, we were induced to use their 
able losses. 
“The syrup of the green cane marks, on Baumé’s 
areometer, from 8° to 10° ; 
quantity of syrup is greater in the ripe than ın the usually 
cane, then advantageous, both with respect — 
to quantity Er to quality, to allow the canes to ripen 
In the green cane the Matk Ws thuk addi hard, 1 the 
longitudinal 3 Meer the cells are not dis- 
and without empty | Y 
nchyma forms 
us, 
when it comes from the 
3 most violent pressure, its 
pun shape, 
the ripe cane, on the contrary, the bark is seen’ 
threads are qui 
he letter from which the oe is taken 
a Gee tai table, which, from its evident 0 * 
think, to to be laid er the public: 
on a T rods, giving it a slight inclination, to throw off 
ry 
y were ripe, and thus suffer dend pri 
the ra In ve: 
tection will be required, 
and the iy sown, th 
22 it may remain on until the seed germinates, 
hen the bed should be exposed in all genial weather. 
Pharo 
THE CULTURE OF EH VINE A HELPMA' 
TO THE CULTURE OF THE MIND; 
OR, TWO BIRDE ETAD WITH ONE STONE. 
No. VII.—Opps toa CULTURE OF THE 
height of stem before the — arm — 
arms ted to branch off, | 
The measure 
wall ; next children’s trust- 
worthiness. 
— 2 can be 
em. In eres es than 
Of Muslin Bags.— To protect the  tostudy house 
fruit from wasps and birds, muslin ical oe 
will be necessary. And the e making of 
these will — te — — to 
the good wifi 
instead of — 2 aly destroying a man, 
Diligenti 
her clothes, neglecting her hom . — 9 — — 
The business 
that he can 
d in no wyse 
To enterpryse 
Another faculte. 
of planter 
— For nothing 8 
Wyse men al- Pines, such 
wi 
Affyrm and say, mass 
That best is for | 
th Thomas More, 
bably see some “ crates” 1 89 * 
which, if they Sig succeede amaged from con- 
ff | fined space or overtopped by ale and rank herbage. 
It is but justice to observe that s ditions are en- 
tirely to the Sg of ej Prema och and not to those 
8 
O, 
bis have them 
In almost ev 
and this state of “hinge is not, and 
till the i individual plants 
5 t will render 
tally imp — — e, “it their 
cognised, ‘leaving out of the 
the remaining trees must 
It is doubtless possible to 
od effect i 
to 
question the deformity kiok 
© 
1 
gP 
8 
3 
and a too great pro: 
and regre 
It 3 would be well for those who so liberally p pur- 
5 h time 8 
rry sac e —— its at td body and 
neighbour. | Temptation to 
pointed scissors, which — put be overcome by 
Physical state 
of the Canes. Seas 
Months of work. 
Cons eyed by two 
Mules, mean 
size. 
Quantity 
obtained from a 
mill of 12 
horses. 
Degree marked 
by 
Baumé’s are- 
ometer. 
only 
5 | State —— the 
an 
into the hands of well- trained children, promised re- 
` ] ‘i W: 
they should not Ante The happiness of 
life, likethe light 
of day consists 
Green Canes. 
— 
E 
— 
Cold and 
rainy. 
Ditto. 
A aa 
Do. 
Yellowish do. 
“ey ge 
‘Rene 1 
—＋ rari 
11. 30 Hot and dry. 
It is not the leaves, which in the Beet, 2 Palm- | i 
-canes, yi saccharine m 
but the tissues of the atem, of the root, or c . — 
layers, and 5 the oldest * lowest, as in * 
Sugar- cane, or of the centre of the lower portions, as 
the Beet, Pan. trees, &e 
een AND SUBURBAN 1 
r our memories require jogs! EN I ental | 
departament t of gardening, they * need it in the 
We often forget that a little ae 
Naarlerine do Oot 1 89 c. 
i “erate Horn t, an — Dateh 
Turnip. Yet even by the possessors 
are seldom thought of, until wo bo are observ 
— ers’ Immedia Aromit then 
ns these 
are made to get them sown; gia we ought, in 
them, To accomplish 
‘in our own 
There we. ew persons who do not enjoy a ring selec 
Carrot, and an 
o| regard to the 
likely to oceupy, with utter disregard to 
and beco tempered 
Thee should — as nearly as possible, 
ering, of a single leaf 
er the * 
impudent leuk 
entails sour 
fruit. 
space of 
c 
that eaoh COLTER oF a 
—_ it n — 
e berries. 8 
ee an cae the diseases of ject all things 
the plant, as, since I have pursued the 
system 1 set forth, I have had no 8 
due re in anything o the — phy 
ming in 
lovers of th 
Iti is ainfal t to witness, in man ces, | 
valua le 3 oe about 3 nooks 
and corners a proche easure grounds, without 
future — — the individuals are 
appropriation 
character ulti- 
oe — and 
wef to be given 
with no Joins to the 
en to the sce: 
so! 
ext to — e hee remove. * 
there when a — 1 
—— which they are toe 
we see a fine speci- | 
to th their future appearance There is something worth: 
rvance in old ich asserts that every 
Sill raf do wht he wills with his own ; but I doubt if fwe 
can w 
is to partic cipate in the results. And in the development 
of the newly introduced, or newly planted species of 
Pines, 83 a . be uncharitable as well as un- 
just e planters will not derive a large 
fi posterity 
uring the following planting 
w at its po and to those about to forma 
Pinetum, 1 would say— consider, some suitable 
esign bef ou commence. G. L 
BADA 2 A. 
person of the name of 
ae pi cage edyan application alae be made. 
Cornhill can probably give the required inf 
Home 80 0 rrespondence 
Effect . bg ex Plants.—Since — i 
which races 
bearing on the subject. The 
is from a letter Wee from a friend in Port 
2 for whom, when leaving this 
n 
eeds over quite and 
le -trees lived ; 9 Kn 
gland. The leaves are not 
like the leaves of oss ges at home; 
* I mean grouping such as will allow the branches of each to 
commingle with the other. 
— 
