pe eae bably Fast he ve been emitted inert leaves ai Soal efieacioas anā there are ae ouly to add that I ar org of 3 0 
ounces b, 
nch on which ar are sonar oe > bee = localities where these cann t be obtaii ned, | whereas | cutting them into sets of an slig each, letting 
3 produced 2 to the sponge. ue b> all o rl ” ‘Thus argued one of my y tena, Thave 
ae 
hment being ca to the | chloro for rm is both d diffi t 
mote L the gr = nul is from th iese shoots that is very possible i then that these might be cbt being cut they | hn ey a sry room abd were 
sreristo be ote tong eyed and many of them | barium. ‘Possibly the process, on a saul ial ss may be} Name fe 
ot tecome bat A iy the” strongest, in order to | useful also to LIVING pe pn It often happens that a cond mi Aa ssn The plato e hgsss the sprig I 
s es; se few isola te d plan nts sin the conservatory become affec ted garden, the origin vet its existence ihera ma pa 
he fer ner year ga ra so wee hey or o pols È iar ch y is d ae owner. I have applied to several 
y; ther SE or not mi q b hough it m may n t be et puc belonging to a neighbouring nursery for its 
uner, and a fresh supp. name, but 
ent out by ke pe fruit the ce a lıttle box haa. easily be ngs in Atei s Laurel | the little wale © een eeraa “we Peet ped ge be 
Th shoots should be sho rtened back | leaves or bisulphuret might be used, and in which a} have the kindness to enlighten me on the subject by 
saa yenr. lant mien at be placed for such a Enë as might effec- | supplying its name? And while I am in the way of 
Filbert, as is well known, produces male and tually destroy the insects, shen ae injury to itself. | soliciting information, permit me to bring under your 
alo aus 00 parately on the same tree. In| This would occasionally be extremely acceptable to | notice one of the many instances wherein those 
tak i hint as one that m i i 
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; rere prani o ve; sable life, bat f n all probability no rte to meand many others: I have looked into 
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appens that a shoot springs ` from | wou s as would prove some more simple or En 
Not and eos ie of the ha be t year’s or leading | destructive to the iaeia. This, however, is matter failed to. find anything "more ex ie. Tn dig a 
h eayed or bec one unproductive of bearing for inquiry. At any rate the bruised Laurel leaves | that your time will cee rmit F u to ta ake notice of thesi these 
Pm te YT avisable cut that begins a would not be attended with any doubt. ae have, | inquiries ? Va 
pa t the new shoot to supply its place. we believe, never proved injurious in frames used | smith i te, * [Origanum Disinni. Ke Dittany sagi 
my easily be induced to in this inion y for the destruction of thrips and other Dato and Crete, a very nice old- nana u gnani plant. The 
a suffici ent number of the main branches probab ely the korr sa reason oe the ey ar e not more other name is well kno 
the side shoots off nearly close, excepting h p ses is the Isabella t Gray Rose. ase seems "to me a a fut with 
should be so situated as not to interfere y that they speak of novelties 
and there should be no main branch directed to | cases. F. M. 7. B. in too unqualified terms before sufficient iguiortealiaat 
that particular part. It will, however, be two or three t . A thing is 
experienced, 
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art of pruning is to produce the greatest Home Correspondence. no such thing as a via media. The remark of 
of frait without gka to the crop of the Ornamental Flowering Shrubs.—I can corroborate eer A “ Eglantine” on the Isabella Gray bene 
year, and in order to ners n the tree as Mr. Duncan’s statement as to, the surpassing, beauty of isa case in point. Were this Rose of any other colour 
much as Fonte care should be taken t we could well Hafod to dispense with it; but it m 
y exposing -the | is also of A was duration than vind sec a ‘lowering remembered that it is of a deep golden yellow, 
the frosts | shrubs of | si uch is wort thy of Speci ial culture. teat I have 
of winter. The ex excavation thus yeri is filled in| Rhod y and hav 
spring with man —grows upon a lawn here, and a more orname nama fide ence that it will do wellina warm soil if p nted 
The distance at a chads Filberts should be planted | object than it oe teen for nearly two months this | against a south wall. For such purposes I should cer- 
apart depend upon whether ca are T or not summer could not be found in the whole vegetable | tainly prefer it to the Cloth of Gold. The flowers are of 
with other fruit trees. - It is n Kent to m. nt kin igom. „Another a b, or rather a diminutive tree, | a much deeper hue; the plant is almost evergreen ; 
Hops le, Pear, id Cherry t n gardens, is scarcely less orna- | fi fi di hardy. Th i 
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among them. Aiter the Tape have ae a crop thay ntal, fer has the advantage of coming into to bloom more than cream- -coloar i in ti “sammer-time, which has 
are destroyed, and the fruit trees are allowed to 2 BRN still later in the summer. This is the Pavi ri sap that there are two varie- 
The ground is then planted with Gooseber ries and | stachya, whose long spikes of snow wh ties sold under r Bs nt pd It griet but if so 
Currants, and an under crop of vegetables is likewise ee blossoms are only aie Sisi (angst 15) T have not ag able ith tl d variety 
offen obtained from it. M. ing their beauty. Trained to tem, the| the plants originally felie from 
avia fois a symmetrical small tree e; pan pos Pra blooming in the nurseries here side by sde with SAt 
admirably with standard eA m sgh and such-like | received from Messrs. "He nders son, an aricties are 
lants. Some of the Spi are a et effective | identical. th Gal ta, ii believe 
DEA’ BATH TO co CTS. pire 
_AMErHOD ae a short time since by Mi in the front of 2 shrubbery, the ‘fine of all, in my the treatment for flowering it o Mr. 
sieur Louis Doy formerly daas in the Agricul. opinion, bein ng riæfolia, which, ch nowithstanting its | Ayres will only answer as a rule after a warm | 3 
tural Institute at Ve of preserving Wheat from euro oie no means $0 it deserves to | like the last and present, William P 
e have rec 
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y volatile flui is- i rin g i a 
pre pega an extremely offensive smell, resembling ral ae yellow, flowers of which contrast finely with | but not expanded and much smalle 
of putrid Cabbages. This method has been em- = rich pipe > of Cydonia japonica. I have not | mentioned last week. Let us add t 
Ployed successfully in Algiers, where an account of it served in | epi any particular allusion to the | selves been growing both Isabella G: 
es 16, 1857, in a J i în which the flowers of all kinds of Gold against a fot south wall; that most 
ore Though the use of this substance is | trees ai nd “tral e been p this season, the | vigorously, but neither have up to th ee a 
requires some le oaio as it is ex- oS m0 sabe i the fine summer of 1857.| shown any na of a flower. Old wood is probably ie 
inl, ‘nanoabe an A ae es, ka all concen- | J. B. Whiting, the Deepdene Gardens. ired, and for that we tee rr men a aa 
jurious to health, it is fund in practice x ASE our 32d Number for this ae a oe ae ermit me to correct one Or — 
toa. EERE Ea E e om Seh for ota ki From his own wn experience and | tw n my article at p. 638—for “merely” in 
labourers. docs eat, and bg the health of the observation, reiterates his maxim that small whole sets line four frora the top read “scarcely ;” after “ Mexico” 
at Parisi ot suffer. It is now, indeed, manu- | should be used, and I can produce the unanimous testi- | place “<.” and read, “In the Northern States Cosatog 
it in a, in a vr i uch purity that it is | mony of nearly 100 Potato — allotment tenants, | made from it.” I gather from the pages of the 
iy wed ag 4 a point of some consequence, as it is | that portions of large tubers answer the best on soils of | Gen n, an n agricultural paper, that many 
Sis fh o under the name of sulfine and | moderate fertility. Perhaps the trath j is that on certain | farmers made last autumn syrup in quantities E. 
a a tome mak and with certain species the small whole sets are | from 50 to 150 gallons, a gt tent of thei 
beginning of the present year Monsieur Doyére preferable, n under different circumstances Aat seta crops of um. This syrup is used in American e 
so favourably k : ; produce thi t valuable = But an intelligent | cookery. I have a new Sorghum “Im- 
i tiful way in wh bh h botanists for the aout F two years s bo the = = plan which m] pert: 
in which he ares specim advantages 0 t! e objections to | more apres mete 
mi ae f L das ee ed a e are Tndebted | on one Eny = re nwoithong (2 ffers teshtly i the shai shin of ts leaf, which is more 
able i infomation, Sa the presence of a consider- | stems a multitude of weak ones often rise, on which ta nceolate than that of the atten. It is growing 
attracted ren Ry insects in „his frie nd’s herbarium | grow a progeny of small worthless tubers. | I know of n no a in an ene but is not at "octet to 
modification of hi Iti an 8. um, owing, I am in 
10n of his method of treating Wheat might be | t that there is dan er of ‘a rot. Now | think, to the plants being transplant 
roe geously applied in the ease of dried plants ae e a excep! g HA in thy opinion k fo rtnight’s growth wi 
which ged ieee teddies a false botto otatoes are raise a w skin, he said, would be | ceived it from par as a “new 
para uret might be placed upon py s| fort ie aa O0 roof against dry rot as and it was charged a rather 
mip other convenient way, and of such a size nge |f | the = w and ‘dint it vould be equivalent to ha: lb. Ihave heard that it is an African 
es of plants laced in it wi with one or two large eyes. Ihave|from Caffraria. Y 
the 
ite for three days, whee oc the apparatus left to 
completely a oo mite tard and larva was 
tn n- dency growi power | fs 
o e or A ya, kð the others are pe ra- > 
tively late and ble. By the early i xpressing 
to sets this is prevented, and each cutting must be 
as its share nf M ing rci R separ: ation the phate 8 
incre e juices T 
evaporating sa tl rlier (see | being a fair 
Tuy of jiortiesitare, 34 2d edition, page 512). on light land. 
eg This will eure my wife oben 
th ig y seed Pi "Potatodl: I thought * greening’ 
of spoil otai 
& Sk gt do, bat ihe wasted & he greened ones rather than tance nh 
have none. However she will not try these, for they will pote $ 
igh. Tho Sorg 
R for inetinoe full account of M. Lenorm: E S e A the Ma R ier een è od: 
met T Se Bulletin de la Société: Botani tangas do séance du 26 hare prea ae Menti it i hey mg other 
$ any time in $i M. in EE tO ANGA 
a room where there wig de ea ee yore, athe “food or hay, which is important oe 
