rather be rage ong red Currants 
— « iuis Cat "being a * wort las e from 
rho had tti eani; 
is a correct statement of my own case, | 
eparatio: it requir 
s follo wis as a 
neighbourhood. I should hope such sights are not rar 
in any part of the eser a Apri ril, bat 
fine house in the depth of winter is another oir a very 
different thing. According to Mr. Fry, “the principi 
| secrets. in Cucumber "ipeum aa area g open ous 
and I know that nearly all those w 
tions to protect from the severe fro: irre il well drained thraigh: 
well. know that tari aeia x out abu ndance of “heat, air, pari moisture." It may | 
julled into a false sec by the r Mia iiy 1 mild | surprise him to ey that de eri use peat, and rarely 
weather, have had their crops very — injured. eaf mould, and as to “ e" the roots of my 
asa p^ 
plants are standing constantly in * — and forming a 
So do doctor: 
zu; | ind ss 
SIT 
"he pr great skui 
„and j cm iride 
he Soy or Sooju is thus prepared. ual quantities of 
W heat or Barley and Soy Bean are boiled 3 A nme 
ther. Themtxturels enen, urs. 
s 
times a day 
s. The e mass is T filtered 
close and s 
se two or — mon 
pr eS! 
complete web in the tan ors differ, and 
ej yet I shave not the slightest doubt that is about 
wood w was unripe: 
invariably Dies nio; * i 46m vigorous growth 
aelmas 
and Lady- day, through the dead of winter, [o some 
: ths of the 
which rarely suffers from the attacks of gree 
is therefore a matter of — os ost 1 
well ripened wood; attention, I may repeat, 
should be immediately paid to thinning of the trait, to 
disbudding, — peu a stopping i tioma ots. eee 
mly what ar t year. It is good prac 
to thin — ty hat fruit is left ig ipen will row 
be the finer [A its the and will 
in ordinary s s ripen well. Wit ell matu 
wood and Side there i is alway a cy prospect of 
a crop. When the er pruning is not properly 
attend goes crowded with young 
e fir 
rear. Therefore let me -€ ise them to leave the 
eatin trick, which has no come very “rutty,” and 
take a shorter and easier eat to success. W. P. Ayres, 
Orchardleigh Park, From 
Home Correspondence. ; 
155 Pty improves, ‘while it becomes clearer, with 
age. Fresh water is then — to the mare, which 
is again squeezed after ixture has a well 
shaken for e — ^s 
The Sy i is A 0 ed 
Canes.—The 
— — — cuit us shelves of my old grandm 
In fact it savours more of Wee rede 
rye — nkey. We are informed that ‘ 
Eng lishman ” manage ed to approach so 
wi 1d monkeys, à 
rea - canoe 
near 
colour when prepared from Wheat than fie m 
M. J. 
„Tombstone er by a Fig Tree ing rea 
ur columns Mr. Waterton’ iio statement "n^ a huge min 
| — Mir: supported in the y à Nut tree, I beg to 
inform E me in the — - at Watford there is 
| large tombstone supported by a Fig tree in 
way. 
A from Amateurs.—We, th 1 
whose name is legion, and whose p^ ence " 
called, 
— world of flowers is evidenced * the host of nurser 
«er 
young wood w ere organised 
matter which is ghee A in the bod; "and pisi nem 
it on the frui x 
and finer ; and the 
of p 
ere spring frost, we may mers ee, c 
in on 
e seasons out of ten. M. Saul, Stourton, Yorkshire. — 
NIGHT TEMPERATURE OF FORCING | HOUSES; 
nd y e wood the y y b Pio t: EK ok 
em. What an e 
could 
— 
must hav to tarry in the tree 
Why, 
3 good, bad, and indifferent, who have sprung - 
as Mushrooms at our Wing, humbly petition 
den 25 come to our aid under difficulties a — trials no 
longer to be endur r case stands : devot- 
callings 
| tion of our comm 
| gra! 
Xe they 
s task. ese mar and mutilate 
pem ‘of the “roth enin. I take this s opportu- 
to suggest “R. F., Polesden Lacey, mr, d 
is rent Beech 
the 
nity 
M +. 
ee by 
| two iron bolts driven through it; one of them 1855 out a 
mo 
him — to — his of t 
N too numerous 
o the Án in which our most c 
e stove vid: — in the 
eee of these. men, implies h houses. heated to 
* re especially eve 
cranny is cl venil up, and steam put on 
| boil a Cabbage, : and thus yellow leaves, spot, m 
guor, 
| dwindling, | flowerless, and at last leafless s 
hot de to 
dew, lan- 
pe 
aware that ould eall into action th g 
querulous disposition of some of your correspondents. from the top. As the tree must I have received its injury | 
Disbelief appears to be the order of the present time, 
and any attempt to — si — — — foliage, a repetition may occur to the 
by-gone usages is at once mbat ed a of the tree i tself. The bolts woul E this — 
ege DER he who has — th tually stitch in time Carles 
s limited understanding, Th us den Walton — — 
D S.” would attribute all the success to a comfortable | mune — elliptica on » Aucuba — (see 
ile Mr. Fry and his friends ignere the | p. — 859). The authority of M. Carriére 
Success Pye 2 note rat an aer genae No 
a very essential | 
hunt atth 
e of any remark . de Editor, give — for 
stat 
the 
ded, with the plea A "y "were 
ML sent | badly established, or some such bosh ; whisper 
supposing th —— "Y ent is not — extra 
J 
“M.S.” that nm 
unlearned 
ret 
il y are not accustomed 
1 
per 
“at the inn. habits of the tin 
markable enough. Perhaps un would ial 
CC 
1 — ee 
opportunity of pointing -o 
to be a rid Mr Nov. W, aie petitioners are but 
of ordina si flesh and blood, — ean but 
y pray 
lation betw 
which the p 
the early f March, 
sort of — Phenomenon, s ins had the 1 — to 
En d to all * 2 — — a aae ity | 
to show was no 
tits essary to 
de ip" of dung toot for — growth E 
Cucumbers in the winter season, I lished 
been hitherto suspe 
, , Flow er Bed 
station 
ively "etin. | 
dis- | 
and Mi earn you to indite, i in 
comprehensi ble to — en of 
— — or little wit, some — code of 
ure of stoves and hothouses for tap and nd . 
on vi pay set ion by night as well as by da; 
|and on Tet and shading. We know hove veal English 
gardener horoughly u understands ae to n a 
ed near 
| Loranthacee), w. 
e relations. The experi 
exactitude of which we suppose e there is no — wi 
| doubtless cause the value of the order Garryacem to be 
further consider Its affinity to Cornacem 2 not 
seo have 5 to lay out my beds for 
| witness rine i prosa of their skill rr our —— — 
e | they espect ; 
but th 
| men professi ga 
fill their watering pots, and these be they who create 
havoe with us little fish. 
t us with testimonials of ability in all 
novel principle, for 
I am indebted to the r Monde — patter hook of 
ess and less anxious about 
bottom-heat; in moderatio — say never to exceed 80° 
for any plant, it is very well, but to iy it asa 
ien for all the ills that plants are heir : to is 
tly to do evil that may come, 
as | sketches that the chief novelty in them 
— of * — lines and — ular forms hon parallel | an 
e of t 
Messrs. Maw & Co. You will observe from the annexed 
he substitu- | 
= parallelograms, though a m the 
82 — — e of the finest effect, — is shown in 
| crafi 
| Dec pray you to give ear to this not un: 
Mr. Digby Wyatt’s aoe for Maw & Co’s 838 
Geometricus, Salop. 
may de fo for some . 58 W 
et 
e stoves 
bottom- heat, accompanied hi ih 
y a high night temperature, 
I — as the root of all evil in plant cultivation. 
that his Pi iren — swell in 
eee of A n, 
ing out on all sides 
y flat, and see 
y while from 
sketches 
me | kep Vier than i is usually the e case, a and t that 
—— by pass ing over pi 
"ite — moisture of the house pai 
Sean temperature at night should — 
— 
differ ren nt spec ies of Doli ichos cultivated i in 
ass — 
ure. We deem 8 — m 
A the r sprouting 
foliage of early su idedly — to 
and 
w 
uscats, ob, tot gee Chasselas M 
al epee pee and yet when I was E 
be ind did the s stoking, the penalty of wing 
J 
jne air. 
“Tt is very doubt however, whet: 
y Bean would sui cold su: 
0 
Amen 
of its preparation for cu purposes. Itis used princi- 
sg asa o for butter - as the well-known 
Soy. The hese pr A is called Miso, and is 
made i in the s followin wing w a 
to get below E. would have been instant dismissal, and 
as well as could be desired, and |a 
man to 
bi fri r the 
and in "i b t 
or “shall I J allo past 
keep so long. A quantity w added 
equal to that of the Soy Be vans, and intimately “pounded 
d for 
night ts rest, save fael 
yet achieve results as 2 E — 
jt 
one or two days and nights in a warm 
mixture is then 
contained the beer. the country, known under 
the name of sacki, and and left for one or two months before | 
i Mr. Fry speaks of fine houses of Cucumbers in his 
— and the ev . 
er's e than th 
t thin 
J 
Ati ded in sien 
added in lesser 
T e of js yields pe best — bnt = will not | raised 
steamed ri 
the — 
with — more prejudici 
warm cellar. Tas | On examining it 
put into a wooden vessel which has | On 
