540 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE es i 1858 
ry it in an oven or before the fire previous to m damp summers or in variable | from 15 to 20 yen ago, such às Nogo, 
bo ha it. This is insisted upon by ae aki p in | cs Pe pes disappeared. is would and Kensall Green, possess a athe ber of prepa, 
the instructions which accompany his powder. = seem to show that the “ARE apre which AES ad are in many respects well teresting 
in good condition it will certainly act, unless some | interfere with vegetable organ ee not gos aye mph fats tha at all will allow, “4 
samples are less ski ae rii nane than | nected with sudden nk ey weni pores such as criticith these § e object of the follo Owing Temarks 
others, Upon this poi t Mr. Rrvers’s evidence > pam rain following hot dry weather, or with an ese m any way, but re g them to 
pon this point vy G ed d now ate, and making every allowance fi u he 
mpl conclusive, | unsuitable climate, such as long continu pi time vhich has passed since then 2 i 
u awp when th d some consecuent growth of t i 
little is required in aP i Tia a countries. Instances however ot — ° malfor- E ag aay tora ee ee 
aphide-¢ pa crowded on the under Side" of leaves mation meteries formed within the last few ta the 
they will not die because the powder fal such as the follo ing. the present time, what progress Tad bene to 
er side; nor, indeed, do we believe rér one| At ne lls Pans S Bidii, a Jasminum | Have the 15 or 20 years which have elap at 
application will ever suffice to clear a tree. Under florum has rudenly produced flowers like | extranural inte e dered necessary Sites: 
concei tances can the pow those represented in the ann t ach |a corresponding ncement in the art of lang 
destroy every aphis; some will always escape ; | corolla hi ed to expand, and ha wed a | and pag ‘tad public cemeteries ? Ts our taste 
and considering the prodigious rate at which these | small rows shoot to batak phe its a i oh whia al will al all "th been a general improvement (ge 
insects multiply, a few individuals will soon re- | shoots are clubshaped, fleshy, rather "long er i to be foaea tute these respects 
ople a plant. Repeated vgs are there- pros the corolla, <6 clothed with short ian e ‘ied so ere can be no hesi 
ore required in order wn — enemy. | spreading scales which become closely Beary e as of ering these qu Tive in the n rative, fop 
ge it will plaster plants if + uals a2 wet when | near the points. Towa rds the lower „part of the | such specimens of the fo rmation of hed many 
it i applied, or wetted feel at hens is no|shoot-the scales are thin, flat, and in irregular | wey mal nd ada it, a 
Sout: Te it should never be used except when | tubes as if the remains of attempts orm 2/indnce us to ask—Who h da: tak t munity, 
everything i is dry. That “tt will destroy leaves is | corolla ; a little higher up such scales occur as at | these affairs, and who tee beet Tae the opr 
also most true; the vital aoe of a leaf is/ fig. 1, with a deformed stamen growing from its | of setting every principle at e 
« destructible by i , just as much as | upper side; but the Eeo n of the shoot is bey ond the possibility of remedy ery which ie ard 
that of an aphis, although ae quickly. pa: | s covered by abortive stam nly, tough, thick, » might have been 
powder should therefore Pi ee ead as soon a sh ted as at fig. 2 r ha aving a recurved verted i into'a place that would be admired i bend 3 
supids are dead, which an hour, as point, or T. ngof a very "ial size a: ‘a 3, a unned, po be made at the same time ne to rai | 
a slight shaking or tapping rei hilekoen is suf- | which represents bir of the enea is a =| the Sh cele Hs ired e ae no means attained in 
ficien would do any injury. | lected round ints, What makes tina he majority arith UNNA there are some 
Iti t especia intereatiig is that “the ie AF tata 5) Pich stand a ge y as regards 
are fedeko rie Asm arts are directed to em- | consists in a a oe ney to produce a ver Soci Chase to which they form such an entite maaan 
oy the powder; as indeed is usually the case | number of stamens, althoug ttention has be as at various tim i 
among the unreflecting. A cook is ordered to use | relations are b etre a ditingtished by never | Builder and other papers to the Terien an 
of salt and she employs a table- | having more than two in a natural state. It is | taste usually displayed in pat monuments and tombe 
spoonful, s iling her dish. A garden 1 4 stones, and in the 
; = pe Ay bank h his rt; next the doo ao ee often wm- 
ar bac! a Ban; bateti intelligible nonsense in 
is flue; another is directed to syringe and aie the way of epitaphs 
in the evening, instead of which he does it in the thereon i 
morning, producing prag instead of benefit, Why,” asks a 
A third is ordered to plan ovate on the top pondent of the Balde; 
pai ~ pe nena A which lants iton the the ting 
evel ground, losing his crop. n vurth is told to i 
his flower seeds die al doors in the ea terien. AATA ‘may 
week of als but he chooses nk ge agia week i e asked, are 
s he kills his w many there sacred 
ea <r whe re no Mas for the 2 shunned by the man of 
me Sake Unn to Dinta rid be the berger ord 
of the a ms | 
h Bae ‘a 
e giim three things are a > ast i gs pe feng 
flowers of salinus upon the plant as soon as the is offi and every 
akes its very first À to insult o to the eye 
t the dusting the ‘instant that it reappears and the es 
3, to syringe the Vines before the dusting takes nie ‘with re 
lace. But some emen : 1, allow the dise +o tee Siaa 
to overrun their Vines before they think of sil- epitaphs, but may Ë 
er of? looking for its re- ot be asked, “Itt 
Ppearance ; and 3, apply the dusting without y hand of taste has 
ringing, and then, when the disease overpowers been employed in te F 
t pa cry out “ Where is the use of r A > | also REE M singular, and as far as we know first instance in the re and formation A the 
So it is with aphis powder, and every else | Without parallel, that t notwithstanding t ube- | grou J: 
which oth any from best i = telligent | rant displ: ay S Stam was no trace of any in th aie | i 
ory tendency to hie Tanl on the parts that rer ay Bu cane Sei i "Selecting the ig pd i 
e writin these hasnt wre the follo naturally coi se thet important or, entrance to the ground (a matter, ae 
little e E ingon at our ores | The cause ps this steiner BiR i is inex- | 8nerally neglected), and especially in the arn 
At i had po 15 a a B of a Rose loaded with ga fly | plicable, nojhing can be more re! omg ii poanion, ta SEN apiy Or MR K 
diat n heat diy yrn seii ga , ani tly | | ad hac | will be ie in the designs for primair and grave 
onr 11.30: great |in a mi are 0 peat and loam, i fied bata i a | stones; or would it even be desirable to erect monu- 
pambers of Toph athe dropped off an and lie Aiwa house in which there was aly Fre enough to} a of zais good design in such wretched places 88 à 
eir backs ; they have no power to crawl ; | keep ou a modi bro M 
others hold on, Sa are mightil ortable, | an: p Almost every flower upon the | as as they are ate and by no = means inappropriata 
an n under similar ati designated ?” 
_ For the present it adds fresh difficulty to a solu-| The To of improvement in sepulchral momi- hte 
cil ;| tion of the problem, what causes transformation | ments, &c., h blaine see eived he ha ar 
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isaga ba the type of all organs, is not sufficient ; | i™™ediately belongs ee Nore Tai that a ceme- | 
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the tendency, and secondly, in the case before us tery should partake too much al 
aract ld of course 
be tendency is really confined to the production oP an ngs po very ray at 
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Mr. e fo mos me has been a: pointed marked. with rise that the subj 
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exhibited in cem 
LAYING OUT OF CEMETERIES, requently be apparent to the mere casual 
_ Suxce the ca of ae and burial-grounds ragga uf bee of ts ney i y those 
a the metropolis and other large towns, the providing | who are so piese m as to have relati 
suitable places for the burial of the has been a | interred in any of these places, the 
ac of very important considera’ Generally | peculiarly deep and painful. 
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always possess tist ar GE Se 
a h f 2 places should not 4g 
in any adequate degree ‘with x oat Gay mint pe ie = GaN Aer erg are s0 oy 4 
That some of the cemeteries which have been formed caleu! Siaa ts poi: J. W. Chapman, Dulwich, 7 
18 | quiet walk may be enjoyed. There is no 
fore, why these 
