ams] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE 
SSS a a a a a a == 
In your last N ad you call the notice | ficial effects derived from crossing <né true Indians SO 
a ek ee trade in manure at Plymouth. As | for the production of a cotton well exited to the saat have thereby been greatly injured; or 4th, from the ad. 
fare extensively engaged in that business at wee .F. R. y- |Ye icone effects of the late severe and protracted winter, 
k you todo us the favour and justice to Gardeners’ Cheracte a obseryed the eta k oF sia been, in a vast number of instances, such aş 
r Chronicle that we knew nothing of | printed cireuiar two o eras months ago at Mess s. | Vi E ada and render inert the sap of transplan 
it noti your Paper, e ue and Perry’s ; A as, in your Leader, at p. 455, | less to moo” Thi extent as to make it, hitherto, power. 
ii an no guano but ak pe direct as you h ave drawn the Attentio ion of gardeners to the active opens his last cause, indeed, has been in more 
<, Gibbs, seat, & Co. things f f them upon some occasion ps =e Pas sing Se. > ‘ign, and to a far greater extent during 
firm, me oe names o | Many hundreds ° than I ever before remember. 
guy customer = choo: tv then ri his own, AR ice gate is iet in pret cases ; . with the | lately dea brought pore g transplanted Vines have 
aa vag ag e ntey, Rowe, & Co. from it, a a Rese Notice, that are now 
is well-condueted, may act as a spur to their prai fons, ent, have been ae nigh, up E Toer apre 
è feel ip er tions.—The Annual Meeting of th re general ado bs ion of a if "the Droenk unfavourable wea 
Society tgs pomar the Condition of the Poor in the uiry. I have only to add that this pre- ardeal is Jon er ‘the will be inca able f ines = itio 
8 ey w. pi of prò 
Oswestry, was held on pop atone yd 31, followed up by further examination on the SEa aN 
the ea See ig te when practical topics mentioned, and | by giving prizes to Kira above causes, gprs singly or $ a Se The 
s 9 g g ave no 
of Henlle, for exhibiting 25 Ibs. of | edifices, s0. | th $ Times s pie prodati 
ure Wax a! a honey, obtained t this year in the e pra actice | We, the undersigned Proprietors of this e stablishment, being | ¢ ito ey are all pA obviated, and as they do age pasie 
Bi ones of ae iv The prizo waa | a i pn aa A E Sa ataa Siapa | wn trench oor See growing Vines in pil 
p sovereigns.—C. A. A. Lloyd, Whittington. ulin , to the re: sapos ctable members of the profession, ad vt rfl lars, nor on the advan antages arising th rom, I propose 
Cultivation of Cotton in India.—I am much pleased, selves, t to recommend n whom in nplicit confidence cannot | to meet the case by the following dreton which if 
i iey nyo others i in nterested i in the i improve- be repose, not only for perfect professional ality, ut is observed in reference to such a a ilar erections 
n of : f its | up the following form, which we earnestly request of those re. | C@0not fail t use no bones but 
ilture, at ure iett i seatmetiben tion: as well as with commending persons to our notice, to fill up faithfully and | Such h } ll l boiled, and thereby freed from 
Br Witout oncriagat preneti ito Citar pein | apestan fe men natta daan aa the [all portions of fe materials to 
b Without entering at present poe other poe iie the intelligent, zoo od, fot gy Aineen rving gardener, ‘ca a by ai aise discard the use of ae and to substitute ee E _~ 
coo acer n aiee tk which | countenancing the ia and worthless one. — JOSEPH ve which ehete sed to excess, 2. To plant such 
ndent has wn attention, and to ascer- | Kyreur and Tuomas 2a ike nes only as have been raised i pots, and are om least 
whether any pga eal | mgt au E filed ag eee sche ¢ | three years old, and to insert them with their balls of 
Ín corro rrobora tio a of his opinion. = or ed to arrive | if Married, how many Children ?— Where Eonenni to whee: earth enti and undisturbed. 3. To plant only when 
the subject ought | and how long ?—Where employed as Journeyman, un om, | actual growth is in p , or not earlier than 
Bt to be investigated T a general manner, s to | and long ? A ad Sope on ae on ie: Ist of May, nor later the Ist of ber. 
wW ma ere employed as ea ardener, Ww 
and weigh the influence of the several Sap mg, and hi eft his situation %?—Whether honest, sober, sd run the pil up after the h 
ra : lar 
Pi lo: h „ Sobe as 
ise ‘which ok operate on both the quality and | moral, and of strict integrity in word and action ?—Whether | Planted, about three courses of brickwork above the 
ity of the products of every cultivated plant. In | attentive to the Religion he professes ?— Whether industrious | ball of earth containing the poor of the Vine, and then 
: iti t 
for granted that the American | 224 attentive ?—Whether a good and quick Workman ? — | aftep £7); 
hia It or tT Bii det . = sake Whether clean in person, and of methodical habits ?—Whether k, ed tiwag soe pä briek” 
when cultivated in India, deteriorate in quality of good address, pleasing, and obliging E er a | Wor to let it remain in that e itato open to 
n to inqui r the | good Writer and Leora EAW hethen t well acq rit at the expiration of om $t will 
ate in is these cottons are cultivated in tesa) ead a oy n Ai rden A bts bags totale sa e seen by the growth of the shoot that = fibres of the 
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id ming a to the soi oa imate 10 | Whether well acquainted with forcing Pines, Grapes, Peaches, roots have pushed themselves in all directions in 
tons are cultivated in America. Cherries, and other Fruits ; as also Vegetables ?— Whether well alegre ormed by the body of t the materials, and whe 
À ita Sop ffer ent parts of India acquainted pe the pa agement of the Flowe fig A ?— | that is the case all will be safe, rar future growth of 
i : aether well acquainted wit! e management of Hothouse 
climate they nd Greenhouse Plants ?— Whether well acquainted with Plant the Vi ang will then be s ecured, a d the pillar ued be 
al 
n ? wi nt of x 
; alae 9 the 2 Aneias mode of culture | Pleasure Grounds; as also with the names of hardy orna- be attended to, every possible cause ot failure i in growth 
ihe equ ally well suited to ever ry part of India. otal Trees and Shrubs ?—Whether well acquainted with the 
be rmatio: i 
se may ry iiba = the use „of urine as a ‘saturating liquid mg for I 
operation, which must nece ssarily ‘affect the | with the laying out of the Pleasure Ground, Flower Garden, yt best and most lastin 
its, and assis wf in hg tog the tio ee Fos and Kitchen Garden ; as also ground work generally, as Drain- | of mea shm n be kora: up for the f rien 
yi till more the ¢ e if an the | 128, R &c. ?— Whether well e a the con- | use of a Vine ay ie hichets been discovered, but it is 
; o 4 vee —Whether acannon with Surveying, Mensuration, and capable of being applied i in 50 Many ways oe 
| it ie poner this cult ture, indeed, is so | Drawing ?—Whether at all acquainted with Farming, and to | that there is no alternative but that of reco 
it tn or vi 
neted tha ede f x i di nee. r i 
of garden than of field culture, that is, where | [This plan merits the wa Sage est commendation. It) ence to pillars that have already been erected. In such 
ual plants may be attended to instead of the mass | Mig gat be improved, but in anos es state it offers an of these se as the Vines bare not grown, fresh plants may 
at ould be the case, the neglect of any | adm rable eo of the qualificatio ons of a gardener. All d higher up the hat the within a 
this Particular culture would of itself cause a | reerym n shou Id kee ens such | forms, and recommend | couple Or ‘three courses ri the e top ; and if the shoot of 
iginal or wild s i 
the Refrain- gro 
T, from the discussion of more general Destroying Weeds on Gravel Walks, ĝe. —The fol- nearly so, round the pillar, it may, at the autumnal 
e may inquire whether there are g facts to |! which I| pruning, be trained direetly downwards, either straight 
in favour of, or opposed to the view, that have been ‘told is excellent, I intend trying it, and | or in a serpentine manner, to the bottom of the pillar; 
ton in India is ue to J +} + ‘ean, + alt sas E except t 
ising Siasa aA the Indian species. The esult. Puta bout an ounce of arsenic in a gallon of | lowermost ones, the future shoots will spring from the 
are indigenous in India are Gossypium haf water, and pour it through the rose of a pot on | bottom in precisely the same manner as they would do: 
a, and G. pea he American species, | walks or pitching —W. were the Vine planted there.—Clement Hoare, July 30.: 
ar vianum, yield the Brasilien Pernambuco,| Hoare’s System of Vine bapa ee a in wb Blister of the Peach-leaf.—Until this year, five Peach- 
2 he a while G. _Barbadense, originally or four late N umbers 0 sin my garden have been more or less affected by 
Mexico, app ll th ov a that ad Tan o TENI N in} the blister. The soil in which they growis a very 
e cottons of the United Sta red marl, alm g z 
y be other species x het ey are | on the € Roots ‘of Vines? I i to offer the following bricks, and vith er Ss could it be induced to gro 
tinct, os can hardly be confounded with observations i in reference thereto :—From the tenor of many of the c n: gard en vege ra itis on rth 
they have been so even by Last autumn : had 
T Et e American species have | of the writers that, because in some instances Vines so | the soil taken | out, 16 or 18 feet from rn wall, to the 
ced into India, they still retain ong planted have not struck root, the ene of growing naa of 2 spits, and burned, whi ch s irora la 
rs. Thus the T Tinnivelly c n getables, including 
m Bourbon cotton, which is RNE a| Th t f this i how afy ; ; and, moreover, there is 
badense, has been cultivated for up The numerous an nd ipa nt ad- sare a a “istered "Peach leaf = be found on any of 
“ars in that southern district of the Indian vantages Talee from Vines growing amongst hard | the trees, which e me of the securney | of „tho 
and it is still as distinct as ever ; but it has porous s substances „ and their capability 1 under such cir- arinin of Sevel lof y y 
Mr. Hughes’s skill as a cultivat it-bear- | buting'this di Y of molten to tab 
as not of late been so carefully sent to | ing wood, are not in the least ga by tees roots.—G. wna nator near " Warwick. 
> A few years since Dr. Burn now | failures. "Inde te my f every Vine which has been planted | Alströmeri inducement to the more eee 
East India Company's experimental | in these substa: in pillars had failed to strike root, | sive culture, in men ape air, of arer beautiful ~~ : 
ton In Broach, grew some cotton at | even that would iot shake the principle i in question, it beg to mention that we have w in bloom 30 
eres Pronounced by the e Bombay Chamber | would only prove the e : vd ado ag by g idth, 
Bets nce quite equal to the best New | mode of transplantation. It is one thing for the roots tinea, the fi $ 
ens let collected his seed from hedges where | of a Vine to create new s Pongola s after | having I ith fi h or gies 
oR, grown vi Eo ea cotton in 1817. So |removed when in a Aan state, and another and one mass of Divai bes we are confident that no flow wer 
collector o utnagher latel ie Pn 3a Pat cy Se t g 4h afi 
Eer which was Hem ace a Ly the | new spongioles have “been generated. The former re- of July. This bed was planted. in 1838, | in gravelly 
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beautiful cotton, in staple. i tł f diti + ne. ), and has bloomed 
and who PRES that it | ces to insure the latter. For it so ha pens that the every “year since most luxuriantly, ‘without any protec- 
per cent. above the market seria een fl pted any soil P y t prod ; the situation is rather er moist, being about 5 feet 
of = was afterwards proved rapid creation of new fibres from the | roots of a Vine above e the level ofa r which sometimes overflows 
: one ot " American species Piar t & H. Haycroft, Victoria Nur- 
mse—which had been man years | afterwards a superior fruitin growth of the branch : 
aa the district. So Dr. os. and vice versd. PTs mu ane way of sing “Fie ‘Seoteh Thistle.—I have the above growing in 
e of G. acuminatum, describes principle in question is not shaken by t the failure | my garden, about | two miles from Bolton, of the follow- 
is ti t nes a entioned. 
: e g 
} tal the north and w tward of pene: to whet Sige of a failures, and of T aa s seen it. I wonder if any of your correspondents has 
p i imi to believe that | grown it more successfully :—Height, exactly 8 feet ; 
aor ua er show i to za thi by 2 fer emerge in in m thei fVi numb flowers, 102 ; length of leaves, 32 inches 3 
: um, ‘i 
character e even in 
I 
of 
w per- rat were not E aeien strong an in their | breadth of pper. 16} ine inch ; 5 feet 3 in. 
Ppa: paves ara do no o den the tions of flesh remainin x on a Sue, which, from the pu- | acanthium, and not the Carduus lan mn mS 
ing efets o ice eos pane Se El lace, ften understood to 
ese facts show d vigorous in 
the sepa md the Indian | growth ; or 2d, from the use of raw bones kavme i por- pain emical Jack. [This must wena Onopordon 
| trefactive process that afterwards takes p. have | oi o be the aati Thistl 
7. of i pling ger Bat proved — to the roots A 3d, from an exces- | Hand-glasses. s’ Chronicle, 
: saturati materials, b 
by Dr, Burn, of the the ‘ene. | th the roots ag Tere aad in n ata Oni contact with it, and | cultural purposes at a gp ‘and reasonable rate. I 
