4 
420 
THE ie so bru ind sss hill 
more ¢ e conspicuous, the colours 
d to brilliant valle e IAA 
E an ag volume of this | 
Journal or Mr. Dawson of 
Totte: ar tree, which he 
Satoi ports the gable end t a coachhouse, and 
cata tee higher than it could be on an 
ordinary wall. One of the age ion with | 
ts jun it 
at a l 
hi fC YG! that 
any Leal injury fi followed the Gertie “tt eae 
pon the Shits, a 
of the evide 
ni eiat pihta the "operation, the practice J of 
lost grou MAk Ki | 
pera- 
the main stem, was cank 
on one side, and for more ya an v inaen on the 
d was about an inch and a 
mference Ther arom ‘the |g 
tion. 
a i ‘ace sti in a great measure 
aher far iaer injurious con: 
and ke 
“toms or principal 
re to be fore ed 
lower parts of the brane oh: the ised part being 
black and the ee extrem hard. 
igi) 
o that grown 
on the other "ranches, but i € ripened earlie P. 
b 
E his sc h 
Nevertheless | 
wi es-wax, if the b 
ast four years, githonal 
There 
gate ‘of wood durin 
| or of M pac ekthoas 
f|there was space s 
seen that the Royal George, wi at 
ca a 8 ee i ny ‘ound eve 
lo 
of opinion that i 
y. r po 
wall, at interval of pEr t4 feet ; t 
the co hich d 
t apart for 
riety in these parts, was just 
les 
d, hae! 
to rn the space from css 
the 
tof the tree was ste: vigorous. 
? 
under observation fou there was 
reason to believe that the wound was much older. 
Ringing fruit s was one of the subjects of 
experim ch our great countryman, 
Kyienr, directed his attention for many years ; 
and much information upon the subject i beg 3 
tered through hi is numerous works. The in 
which tion to take effet 80 | 
hich the 
By such means th e mreno and conse- 
dtan death of the parn surface i the albur- 
he ught it not 
mental ghssiologist, ‘but when a a Wiot 
well explains his views of 0: Anil 
om logy that it may be iota Ski in this 
tru "r of trees is wholly generated = 
which it äescends e ca their | 
r etrdiitibs of their roots, depo iting | 
in its cou 
added to the tree, whilst whatever portion of su 
sap is not thus expended sin Seg the 
and joins the ase Lem curren 
municai oix y posse a 
fluid. When the course of the desce 
ys 
cated 
the the matter which i eee im a 
M. 
ing been the first experiment he 
ever trie 
en. 
O |saficient for ae fam mily 
doz = and if 
able 
p rolistie that the the o ition mi htt be pene But as Bellegarde is comparatively new, it is 
with Avantiie a operat “he ss rags notice that Ab more merits than 
other fruit trees to which it has hitherto boen ie iig ga E robust, and is a g 
found destructive. He s lied with ‘the most | this vari 3 ety eae 
ample success ” a sh a or rage upi 2S a ies pat 
branch of a Fig not onl while exp The cr 
7 
to pay ‘me a fai anyi in September of 
with i 
he Fre nch Committee, however, report again 
binding t the Vine, as will hav et een seen, and we 
tely below the first bunch, 
peA recommends, 
ent of fruit. 
pear eR varieties of Apricoi 
c 
exactly as | ab 
hme of an 
ENTHAM, the celebrated | 
military engineer. The deceased lady, who had | 
WE 4} 
YY a 
Lady BENTHAM, relict a the i eit: | 
| rE Sir SAMUEL | come ripe at 
s pa sees pat should be planted (as it prety generaly 
e same season, I con: 
district. 
accum 
whente 1 is 
expended i a sti indreasel production of cass 
of her illustrious husband’s inventions, died o 
oa the 18th inst., at her jidan: 
st | 
pi Gi fruit : and d that part of tl with these co nelu- | H 
Se ey PA 
c gravity very considerably that which Ties 
ae it. ies Be sags ae 
therefore: jak 
, and, more 
: 
wi and ceases almos 
; it in conse sequence operates less actively 
endin sap, 
ie r 
sorely oe For 
of o table corr: 
vnia signed “ B.” still show. 
y years s 
NEW GARDEN FERNS. 
34. NePikopiom MOLLE var. CORYMBIFERUM, 
ae Moore. 
Fronds an iyo gar til 
This beautiful v: arity is analogous ca chaeater sabe 
ee multifid-cristate varieties of the common Male 
whi ch form suc 
grow 
impelling =e g current of s which 
impeded in 
and Lady Ferns, 
col ns o 
ust also be 
d 
of Foot’s C 
corticated sp The parts w. bove it 
must, therefore, ta er.  Shoneey supplied with 
and dro uch cases alwa: 
operates ve Ty Sieh sa in pina a 
a 
When the aea ` small, or the space from whi béi 
ff is considerable, it 
almost abby operates in 
of SAT. maturity is induced and the fruit i 
G we If this view of the > effects of Partial Catan 
WAYS) Ss to 4 
semblin 
excess; a morbid ree 
re 
Mr. 
solitary p 
t, an accident 
plant appears 
species is found widely Arnal bo 
temperate e regions, and, at lea 
‘alt he gh 
and although it is not advisable to 
fae sig ri fit until 
an 
d 
es mt! ts, as the many 
fin 
-| been i aring for 
wag worthy pene vi the best 
the 
Novem! aa 
Of ear 
prisingly early on the wall, ani nd is good, G giri 
TEA 
ground. Imperi 
r | freely g a 
Belgian 
a first-rate Plum ; 
Victoria, 
Apricots last only till theendof 
tht 
October, yet we have eaten in. 
t delicious Plums both in ene and Ne 
some ver: sent 
the 
me years on 
aed 
h October, and lasts well i 
Plums, Rivers’s Early Favourite 
ripens al 
leis a eg undan: 
perp it is about a month e 
espect it exceeds it. ‘Gisborne’ 
Jon, or ringing, ; Porn <a ci idered a k in every r 
ss of ei: ‘ope: erat must be d dent The fact of the species occurring t -second-rate Plum, but for ejteni EN 
upon the selection of proper seasons, and upon the the tropics w would however suggest caution in the expo- seems 2 a Age peg EAE ae oe 
performing it being well sda gt the | Ste of this charming novelty. We believe Mr. Sim | Preserving. bái = mn a 
object of the operator. If that be the production [intends to let out thie valuable addition to-our culti- |} few ob wo Mas irk’s Plum promises 
of blossoms, he of E lonas K these fine cr ia. | highly esteemed. Kirk’s Plum 
set more freely, the ring of bark should be taken Poors Reb normal forms s of the species, hitherto | Sivan e our earli 
off early the summer preceding the od at | occur in tropical tise S valde Eh Lemy, appar to try who ee odia the 
which blo: e required ; but if the ge- | Ferns for Apeere iee soin ees ret view sd E tri S 
ment and y maturity of the fruit be the | them.. ides the plants just noticed wat have en | Wall. ‘The 
objects, the operation should be delayed till the | specimens of a Nephrodium tnitum var cristatu’ Bai | ruined by the wind, ‘and of AA yoy 
bark will rea art from the alburnum in the fe Pacific, — : multifid variety of the Fern known | Set another half dro z 
pring. The breadth of the’ decorticated space | ™ gardens ium trichodes, but which more | Early Black-heart, sim 
dapted to the-size of the branch; but I property belongs | £ Lastræa, having a very distinct but | 20thing to compensate f 
ssed any except injurious effects, fragile indusium visible in the younger states of the | 20d constant 
enever the experiment has been made upon very Ei H. | been found to be 10 
young branches, for s me E ith Mayduke, pee To 
sickly, long beb the fruit can ete ca a or NORTH € “es ae ofsa SR SATIA all thé usual 
proper state of maturi ki 
marked that the latter part of this |“ a i bi Sour Se publish in aoe Pape | EEE aA nad oe 
Tii at variance with the report of x the “Ist May, I am emboldened to make a fur-| are not to be found White-h 
E ite upon M. Bourerors Vines; | e report id oh Y co. vext o Pears, 100 years old wit 
oe hat his plants sus- ss aleve are ws cage ee, fruit that can | Red Hw n a believe 
from being genes It is how- | garden wall bein E rebut ahont “ub yom wall. Our | Geans, or what in England 1 
that imbs of the Vine entirely of stone, and i ete in part) Fig tr the “Elton,” which Mr. 
