246 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [MARCH 14, 1863, 
- ————— 
he conclusion, that they ане поё пани been | Dr. Wy experi , 33 in number, and con- Schacht, and Pitra, а pe in stating that the Jounm 
Mess with the precautions necessary ure the| we id even asenti cure than Pasteur” 8, organisms, | | plant bark of the nourishing шш 
t 
result Z., Vibrios, Bacterium: very n single or suoker, which pressing inwa 
- gom d advise viai rige io be planted in the end of dc and in some cases бөк Spirillums, and | comes A diner relation to the woo p 
August, or in September, or better still, between the | Kolpoda-like bodies were seen, some of them ui the nourishing plant, in the cambium layer of 
lst and 15th of October; Ee Men phe the months | ciliary movements, Не states that Pr ofessor Asa| which the point rests, and безг, — to grow, 
ot March or April. Those who advocate the former Gray witnessed the «рин o of some of the Masks, and Іа its passage towards the wood, it gives off Severa] 
period say that the plants put out "wen the end of|satis&ed himself of the presence of iníusoria in the | — or side roots, which run iol the branch in 
summer or beginning of autumn have time to naoa e bark, o r upon the su rface of the woo These side 
establish themselves in the soil betore winter and| Dipsads.—The io wer M your corre- ред, give origin to perpendicular suckers, which come 
to gain sufficient strength to bear a crop in the spondent t *X. S ж-а not a plant, but a fabulous into contact, like cs бүр лс root, with the surface of 
following summer. Thisreasoning, it recur БААЛО gs а d x included among the pre serpents by | the wood ; while wood and bark of the mother 
appears plausible. The success of plantations pars plant, in their periodieal increase, form layers around 
je Lib: in SEC ü e suckers, which grow у эин и same manner in 
Aspides, ^ erm t es undis," | the cambium stratum, and thus the hardened 
soil being жеп iei and in proper condition as The supposed «1 заа амь roying come e Хеч ided i thio body e UR 
Eos furnished with good roots, and on their being care- its m by iutelerable thirst is гудача И in the в d him to the conclusion that 
fully transplanted. I agree with the opinion of thos —1 gratified the horizontal ена of the Mistletoe are con 
who Aey spring planting. For more than a раа P Pialenopsis Schilleri riana.—I am extremel hrs tained entirely i in the bark, and do not as represe hte] 
of a century I have [eed м all seasons, but the|in being able to state that this Y? plant ма MI by Schacht run upon t the surface of the Wood, and 
spring plantations hav proved the, Lo The |sprroscied the point I affirmed it would do this ' consequently do not * become embedded, like the other 
e of this success lies i in the following fac e last year in your columns, in Which I ne that roots, in the wood, by means of the growth of 
The plants established round the eom since jas Ir. had received dried spikes, E of several stem,’ аз із stated by Unger; but unless the layer 
summer without being detached from their bed Le and bearing upwards o f 100 lowers. Mr. R. bark which intervenes between these roo 
plant, will be found much stronger after winter than | Warner of Broo — Chelmsford, has at the | esent surface of the stem be e Vila LÍ , 
those that have been separ ated before winter, either for | |ti en: б magni t specimen of this plant in bloom; continuall «сбн nies from of 
on out in nursing beds, or а once in the planta- | its spike, vi is 3 feet и биш: consists of eei - by the formation of the new ies sh T 
m еу soon take root, ап grow куна» in well expanded flowe which are in perfection, the. author calls roots, Owing to the m 
prepared newly dug ground; and in June or July they | The plant i t ant 4 
uce as much fruit as those that have been detached | ; although only imported about I8 parasite have a corresponding regularity of distributic 
in a young state and planted before winter. | months ago, it jn y me a foot in length, and 4 inches each регрепдіс@аг root invariably occupying ¢ 
On taking up some young Strawberry NS it will | in зоа 24 In the same collection I also saw two position of a medullary ray of os xl pla 
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that in iiid he ought to extend the roots in | pel among plants of P. Schilleriana ; Mad Gave! it grows, and this relative position ае 
а similar oblique direction, covering p successively | Hus age un » b uch v | wn ag n others, and some оЁ reg gard to the мон of the p "cms which M. viis 
i dn о à The 
їз M i ied inan a permeablo apad manures эма Arden for many yes, said he had n from the cred ary canal, some be 
suitable to the nature of the They катуу | den fore. Your Irish correspondents wr нев | UR чч А ngit. Ther soe si pl with the 
ol — more than a foot and a half i in all directions | as to the size of the баны; those I saw were , hardly | | contiguous medullary rays. rtical — of the 
round the plant. If they are planted so closely that bigger than a grain of Wheat. The nourishiug nt 
the akra entangle each other in g tain | duced the berries in question was, like those in Ireland, | rays, divides. x roots e the йч н at right a angles to 
nourishment, it may be ed conceir E that the |in the shade. I had other т plants in more open parts of а eir long The majority о of the sections have, 
pues аз ї uxuriant, but bo i аре, and the 
ез 
the Reve ncticed bs P din n 
арт in the bird ун year after rere] “ву Жаа hat some of our “correspon ndents а at Bas Like the me iy rays the roots tend to 
this is ascribed to the plants being Een X this ling tl Aucuba japonica im in "rit, 1 | become confluent in the long itudinal direction ; and. 
isan error arising from mistaking the effect the | beg to inform them that I bave gathered beautifu ul | they are arranged in line эм. series up and down the 
cause, It would be more reasonable to say ibn the | berries veri times from plants in the — here —— „ап arrangement which corresponds to that of 
elements of nutrition in the soil become insufficient for during these last six or рез years Тһе edullary rays themselves, с wie finds that 
the demand. These observations show the necessity of | fruited grew in shade даб der the drip of le Elms, | th medullary stem of x e X 
plastig widely apart, so as to pre event the roots of. and other ug inclose two clusters for your ins confluent, a nd rir her más 
Strawberries and other plants from coming in contact | ыз which I have this yt obtained from one of x со cells of the бре ian as тт. 
with each other if we wish to obtain fine PN [s ts about 5 feet high; the S is however much to suppose that 6.9 --- which form the sarface р à 
f Viscu 
wit * | the roots о 
to obtain the fruit in full perfection cut off торе Tenn | a itchell, Gardener to P Р. Smith, Esq, Tremorvah, | the nourishing Pini > Tn ng to the medullary icd 
s the je ие, Corn mm the latter rather than to - pes с 
in spring and summer а 
h a view to and нагуй than та t gathered previous years. J. 
roduced, 
EB 
fewer runners a variety of KTT Pene out, А Leafless Cedars A пен —Іа опе part of our cellular root of viscum m 
А v 
easier t 
ety n p o Cedars of Lebanon, Ade 
f 
тапу 
that ac nel Lu ifin | other eel it bosses equi healthy appearance AA last autumn, when еу began aufhor s observ: vati ns have gone, co 
merit, a which is becoming ке ар эр ‚ to lose their leaves, and they have decre do so 
iind case, ee T ever since, "which has pf them naked. My employer eres thins away t disappears towards ee qeu 
ffe. Los анай desired m ask if you have heard any | surface of the parasite, so аз to be entirely absent ab 
apprec 
was rather astonished that Mr. Radely 
maker the Apes DE : ion of runners а po ed mplaints from Life quarters respecting | the line of junction between the two plants As 
onstante ; M this 
J. 
Les Брас Fe р. 2 
Нот е Correspondence Geographieal рака of the а 
Sponta neous Generation.—In the “ American Journal ptera, collected bv Mr. A. В. Wall К-ту бы Tos rra rs two plants ma weder 
of Sto " July 1862, or rather in an extract | Archipelago,” by Е. Эши, Esq. —2. * On the Para- | Poplar, the kif acts of i corres 
fro there is a по а» A “ Experiments on sitism of the Mistletoe (Viscum album)? by John with those of i m e 
"o са of infusor boiled solutions of, Harley, M.D., communicated ду Dr. Hooker, After tical systems xa the asite and i 
Organic matter, enclosed in "her netically sealed vessels | alluding to the e fragmen superficial nature of | author ait Un 
and "dar ed E *. ейтїез Wyman е m deo to be found r^ our Judge od the | specimens, finds the contiguous bark 
r 
eurs, 
to €— 
ed that in тя (Pasteur's) ex- the hope e that it might thro lt on the cause 
height, ; which have ын айа | The woody fibr: res - tne two plants 
asa prolongation of the vc Же pu of the parasite. 
egarded e nerally 
"n as far as the 
[гене е 
» 
"T" а 
еп&, Бу ра а ed узу! оп the vessels of ec two plants do n 
E 
о pla 
е | the reticulated ducts of Viscum in 
orizontal} 
Тһе 
sai 
readily 
, L , Esq., President, | ducts run parallel wit. 
in the а" Dr. W. Carm x impr elected | of he ong rera cells 
unbur à cupy the 
Б 84' E 
The following papers were read:—1. * Notes on the section Hero b 
tomy in Harvard 
investi in | the line of H 
he с; 
€ been submitted to | of cancer and analogous AiAi), me ди proceeded | t 
of tl 
Dr. 
the general arrangement of that | essen it 
ал, unaltered an | part of the Mistletoe which lies within the сонии ing л. 
x гө | Cedars m cer in the manner just described. 4 | regards the rclation of the vascular system of the two, 
i beir inosculation 
do not hos 
ts, which was at t ill, in the of a goodly | culate, and that their aere maas wm 
а The circum- | iid of the inhabitants of this Duith including. the dental a contingent - the relat 
>а superabundanee ву the two plants, nppears ev 
meritorious ch sh 
bereit. affair went P s "n vil I deem be Es to the surface of the E in which — 
m is named the Princes PN Its vertical roots 
| subject of the parasitism of the mem i o other |a e Dus — with each о sad thus to 
Whereas in | plant. Most writers, e.g., Hens hi Griffith, Unger, plant; and that the roots of the parasia э 
to be ш 
variably 
б 
