ji DIA (BOUVARDIA FLAVA, DNE.) 
UTTE, Frorist, at ‘Ghent gers 
ants of 
Pippie Fiants) 
ase d& Son, York... M‘Grayson, Mr., Bury 
= & fone, Vauxhall. L mimoni 
ry, Tho sn S Esg.» Swin- | Maj osthor pe. 
4 gl) molto Sa ee? 1 
b `” Ghis- | Mountjoy. & Son, Ealing. . 
Se . 1 | Nant, Mr. T., Guernsey . 
| Rendle, Mr. W. E., Piy- 
Snok 
| 
| Rollisson x E ‘Sons, 
‘Upper 
figerson : 3 
| 
i | who ve eld it. 
Decaisne) j serve 
5| in 
Tree-Rose, which was last year the admiration of all 
The proportions are carefully ob- 
d, and tiere is n not the slightest exaggeratio 
e effect 
hoop by the spread of the iron reds, and 
press alga is baad n id secured i in its place 
n|few turns This 
g fram 
co: cd en Bis 
e-work, hic B so so tiene by the secon nd hoop 
o find a 
Leila: a this pe -old ; 
Its branches are vi ‘soit 
splay: tood so firm, that nothing shor: 
Perrio Bdr disturb it ; and on whichever 2 it 
bese as k wed, still the Pergo" of its form was 
it v 
her Roses nea also extrem ely 
beautiful ; but this was ži nest, 
| e manner it was anag was this: —W Lien | 
| die ae A et a cir s dra 
rawn round i 
round, say with a u radius of i ft. In 
dade Hie 5 lon 
2 5 A 
of ‘he B ose-tree in as wa perpen me cular 
Laik sdh on. To effect this, ae sp a wooden 
in the ¢ cut, upo: 
| are plac ed e eros sswise, as n the lower 
the 
oop. Th t op on the one 
haha as the em 3 ae Tree at the 
ere ‘they cross bt other; and this being done, 
ee Tree requires no further aid till the pruning 
season, when it is tr woud 
as usual ; 4 its branches 
bent down over the hoo di 
iron 
poe obliquely, at canal distances, thoir upper 
ree. 
att blacksmith will m hy uch yaad 
era A Peckham. . 3e ends leaning towards the of the The jis Ba the iron rods included, and hey wil inst 
night & Perry, tp te RY zE Ries ot & Chat a ‘el - | Upper en nd of these rods was a fom: i thin and for r. But itis needless tostat e that stakes 
ht, Mr. eo- age | flat, and then turned down so as to ee see, bent ety wooden hoops may be usodi the pia efe à. 
j Wood:& Son, Maresfield. ... 4 | “at > y ae gis 
ont: sen Edinburgh... a Wooler, suntan ton.. 1/ still further. Then an oop w ded, 2ft. It is plain, too, that the „details of this 
—— ., Upper Clapton. 4'| Young, Mr. C., Epsom...... 6 ie iameter, and “placed a a ies: below ‘the level of scheme m may be varie 
Frey e piace The size of the $in the relative 
‘ he he Gardener > “@pronicle. | by applying] hi ameter of the I the cone, and the 
= wn forcing the ae downw oy hg a pair of oe hicks of the frame-work, will admit of obvious 
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1845. nippers s, it w et „and the agit modifications ; indeed the effect of dwarf Tree 
fee it was securely fastened. The sam e process bein ng r oses hus is even better than that of 
Moraan, Oet. é—Entomologiot at aa r TESA eated with the two par’ rods, the Apop was finally standards, because the whole of the Howers are 
pits meena irinn xed in a ho rizontal posit . Fig. 1 a the ann exed | below the eye. All that is indispensible to the 
e happy to announce the y ld be triangular 
DEFA 
n a new expedition, on ‘bel half of 
cca- 
ual and perennials, beautiful bushes, and noble 
es, all of which will b ecards enough to bea r the |3 
e n oi H is to last pipás ee 
very strong stakes a 
uired to 
rigt pa po sitios, sa a dong brittle ETRE are 
the contrivances that have been thought | 
SEGDTERIPDER: stat A bending 
over wire-wo to force 
ne 
$. kin of skeleton euneated e gon 
the, 
asit is pee for clipping the hoop fic required. 
aa erati n bei cing performed, the Tree 
i a triangle, forming a 
, the base of which | 
5 feet across, and 
S Th e next thing t | 
conical ; for so only will the apparatus be able to 
pand iy an ai resist TS ae 
onfidenc those who Fight doubt 
ass of 
8 feet in diameter, on this kinke g cone. will 
be detained at a short distance below the pii 
_=— 
H 
Pig. 1. 
‘this sort of treatment, although apeable t to pe 
Tre Ro oses, A os oara 
t 
but in the 
persons tha ane ‘int may 
e rem use of 
moy e e iA ge o! 
thatch, which might be sọ 
bushes during winter. 
Roses are well worth Bs 
care, hie Sila mply r - y 
us for giving it to them 
j We do not as = iit 
to co 
toa _ consideration of ~~ 
ean b 
: is res in a dail 
and soake 2 how 
After which ther “ae to he 
ried in the sun, when they 
will again white 
with a healthy-sa and 
will keep moc jea e. 
We have tried this operation ma and | doubt Ben value. 
is 
| 
| It.as mot sai 
et water es i is ri thari is 
Lu 
Ww 
actly.. The result. 
white by the time. they are ee 
n Gaia and exp 
| to-the air:to be ria they ehange ur, e 
livid, and have so sors a an nee, that no 
English peasant would eat them unless pressed by 
actual famine. 
ofa glittering hit. 
s i od not starch itself. 
is found.a ‘thin n brown crust, and below the crust the 
Potato s obe exactly whatit was before being 
J i ep, or fi » as livid as the surface 
was dher e exposure ok place. While, 
the tr to 
wever, some of the Gee es dry in this manner, 
