i the kind- permission ot 
Mr. Reed, t one ouses ein ins jT understand open to 
visitors, Sundays excepted. Viator. 
ilso in ex 
scellaneous. 
—Cloth " Gold —Isabella Since —As might 
nataraliy be expect 
s rà as 
ide The Gardeners Susans T em —— ade 
bas a notice of the two Roses, wan by — 
fro om two aipe un me buit hom has been blessed 
ecess with the fair — 
1 f all 
P^ — it -one wen oe pinched by th 
cold ees rs ng unmistakable indications of beaut; " 
an ening bud, “tether heic rop o of a vigo —À 
men pitted in — The othe 
a more cause r joy; her x bella (at Tonus) i in | 
ts third year, — which — immensely last yea: 
havai now about bu it, most of which are 
rapidly expanding. The specimen sent to € aper 
— M Gardeners’ Chronicle is dese ribe d by him as a 
Mannheim, in 1497, which was nearly 19 feet i in length, | removed altogether. the breast i 
and weighed 350 lbs. The skeleton of this extra aor- and other. wall or espalier t trees elosel ee on Peg 
dinary specimen was for a lon ng time pi eserved, and | attend to thinni ng the fruit where 50 PPed in and 
bore a brass ring with t that | for f th bree. Look to eons too heary 
the fish was put into a pond by the ha of the|berry runners for for ing next spr Stray. 
Emperor Frederick II. the 5th of October 1262. From|done a good adth of Brussels Sprouts oho Alte 
this it is inferred that it was upwards of 235 y ears be planted on rich deep soil, for if not Should gy 
old. 2 m the Encyclopedia Britannica — New| the crop will be poor, and it is v Bot in 
Editio secure a good supply of this most useful y Eni fo 
5 A fair supply of Savoys roccoli, &e inter green 
Calendar of Operations. or m. gis, d. to plant ca Should i 
B B e spare ei H x * 
(For the ensuing Week.) water. Cauliflowers and hen elle 
N w ur bo T ben efited by an oc i 
LANT DEPARTMEN v! y ional ining vik s 
Doris slit &c.— This house RN now be g weather; and j 
with such iy thin ngs ^ Achin menes, Clerode ndrons, Alla E uni and Leo 4 Lees ius 
d. Gard enias. teph anot is, If Ci t 1 sd ie d 
from the stove, for ir iuri the assistance of these it is arrots care ailed a vg bed pi t 
d sid poss ssible to pr roduce a first- rate display at this | may te be s own. Co paa o fill i aly in 
season. various winter greens. Yor abbázes ground 
of our most des stove plants w ill be more at home | for autumn use; they ya do to p ntl aya be sown 
her re y while n bloom than they would be n the stove, card may exist amon er crops. Stake up 
1 T7 
time which and retain their ej a 
[n 
g o 
hedges, pipe Pinks, 
cho 
iden, sent scd 4 la dy. However, , 90 bads, opening 
oice Roses may be m 
5 
1 
into even blooms, is so omet] in encouragi ng 
In each case tlie fact that no pr Fa P — been allowed | o 
and t t ae cae 
is attributed the | success, One of ‘the e corresponde ents, 
H h 4 14 
pa do th M RARI 
and a second about to open, hasalso a Cloth of Gold, 
which has been treated in dos — way as the Isabella 
regulated for Ericas and auch like plants. If e P 
wever, 
June. 
t, also, was planted in — iow, în rapidly in 1858, 
u 
Passifloras, 1 e e suaveolens, 
e gro u for coveri the 
are such as r the hous 
must not be ke ept 80 bat as 19 injure tai bat w — 
e | Be 
Tecom as, | M 
roof, a "iE 
day 
Satur. T 
| Sunday 12 
—À 13) 
and A Carnations, Y e 
6, choosing the 
ho T, 
——— 
Ericas ye such plants as are soon injured by a pe STATE OF THE WEATHER AT C 
—— atm Wg ere so as fn able to keep it repos Forthe en Jüba 15. 1999, ae a 
and moister than would guit these, for very few of o — 
"s good in a temperature that is EE Meinen a. Ur 
; Overcast and 
. sear po ae fne 
"below the 
OF TEE WEATHER AT URSI, 
g Week, naa 
Fain ui 
be covered with A dy the mouth of July ! ay it B Bignoni: nias, &c, a xt 
thy. dark. purp e 1 th: joy a fair A:uotuiu 
shoots” are d deceivers f o ofen finishing their career | of warmth and moisture while ‘making their wood axe — UNS — 
with — — m ot the ` isgus ve the disappoin nted | occupy the beds, the hardier stove plants will form es = N—Overcart; elo peed iy and te 
grower, whether pról vr - amateur. The inference t — 12—Uniformly overcast; cloudy; 
to be drawn fro arks of the Gardeners’ | over the twiners disp iae and regulate — growth 2 ia fine; overcast, 
ic xl rere those of its correspon- before the shoots g ngled, but avoid keepin — 16—Very 8 1 
dents, is that “pro ection from the pruning knife" for “the er are never iuis to advan- 
(cou : um ine ET bb ct) is dn pe tage unless they are allowed to hang in a natural and — — . — rem, e Ug 
séeret in getting Cloth of Go 1 and probably graceful manne 
lla 3 and w FORCING DEPARTMENT. FAPEP 
varieties. Perhaps it may be i e sae EF dem f INERIES.— Attend to keeping cool and moist where June. El E 1 i i E 
i h of this Paper that on the 10th une, tie fruit has been cut in order to ee the — | —Tà 
"last year, a deseription was given of a Cloth of Gold | j a healthy state as N ip s poss e laterals Sunday 19..| 705 | 490 | 598 
Rose groving at the Rev. R. M. Atkinson's, on the need —— = XE Mei closely stopped. after the fruit | es — us nil n 
is cut not be allowed to shade or injure | Web x 133 | 495 | 614 
- be or 300 blooms fully expanded, and a far greater | the lacie p^ T there is any —— nee of red Ender 2i. 127 » i 
a hen Beso) bg in ie . Bosa health. Now a good washin ng with the — — ACT — F 
ev s ore the fruit is — ats this: as long | $24 224, 1346— erm. 
bug st iene Q e (alt h blooms every year, | as sa vesti y to n. Give 
tton: i the thinning of the fruit in 
940 aa aA h et ende from the severe blight) upwards | succession houses uses, = — many other jobs this is | 
x 180 read OF deep — colour r and | | easily and expeditiously done when taken in time * ‘whore the 1 soil is rich oF 
DA m auty, with twice or thrice Xx at number rend k well to the state. of the borders “ee the fruit — 
to burst fort rth, i is, and alway has — regularly pru 
every shoot being cut back tot two or three eyes, — 
irá en fill up pany 
Ing | st; 
k ELS 
DER 
d —— —. whet runed | col 
ther 
or unpruned, the rule is, no blooms; the exception a 
"few "agens, so that pruning no more seems to preven 
001 
to maintain a moist 
ve the fruit i is swe Tracked fel. 
Proms. 
and this 
pare. 
af an. ndent who i 1 m — rat 
f er vk the teel t ne e experiment thal enny but give air sufficiently arly 
Isabella Grey, Mr. Mould, the well-known garden in ied 
nd florist izes, has ti . ta yore FLOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIES, 
ducing a very fin igh coloured bloom, under be thinned out as soon as 
easy he Bicom vas of goo inp ane and of | they are well above d, for i 
exquisite fragrance. That plan Js 
d on a Banksia) from 1 fo 4 feet in 
1 wood and foliage a deep red, 
he me ec on, dr a single | hude 
— 
that pruning has 
shire Independent, June 9. 
ile. —The pike is one of the lar 
water fishes, and indeed, if the accounta which sop. oe 
writers give are not rue seme it occasionall bya i 
i y etnies soakin t i 
a size not greatly er o the gigantic i inhabitants finer specime l pipe 
of the ocean. Indiv: dud i are rec de the roots moist during pee . "Attend to 
from 5 to 9 feet in length. They frequently i velt the propagati riet : 5 
above 30 Ibs. in n the lakes of the north of England; and which are i ts. 
Dr. Grierson ntions one taken in Loc e 
n — weis 
a nent of Tobo'sk in Siberia nourish 
multitudes of pikes which eue the size of between 30 
and 40 Ibs. In North Ame which seems to be the 
à since not only the common 
"i me 
ropean species, but 8 5 in the great 
akes of that 1 30 Ibs, is considered a legte a size 
though doubtless some individuals attain a g ter 
e un Most sel (23 cited the accounts 
sai 
= 
to have been ca: = at Kaiserslautern, near | of all the la 
rely pong to do wi . Fe 
in ebiet d Cuttings 
whieh are invaluable for cutti ot these 
x Rat in before the wood gets —— oF these 
HARDY Y FRUIT AND KITCHEN G 
al with nailing in t. "ey young wod of o Y. wall trees, 
8 s that they are ot a did — of insects, Also 
; endeavour to secure a fai 
supply oi ri all over th jő tee. toss N 
eyi in the season should be divested | 
sy. eu 
E 
et 
e 
& 
= 
IT 
& 
terals except; one, or if the 
f left 
spoil one another, and never make half the 
a. pon do that 5 [^r i of space and 
h RET stron: — the first. Attend t 
n be spared 
so i of s 
TIONS : d 
2 ag e rece with this 
dem m examinees a 
i: ing pianta in in technical s 
they have . 
than — * other for testing the 
— 
2 
3 
it 
= 
© 
8 
jl 
gen i i 
N. 2 
: We have been so oft 
tantly — naming heaps of dried ^ ot 
venture to est ne — 
never have z v could h 
this kind. nig irdeni 
* 
ers, to whom these 
in mind that, ved 
especially —— should bear i pem other mes 
us for goer they 
. We them the I" 
examining ‘and thinking for themselves; 3 ra 
lesirable if w ll we can do is to er futs d 
HISWICK, NEAR LONDON, 
served at the „ Gardens, 
T1 
cher plants, tat 
to revollect that 
in the & 
will, 
withthe ant f d 
> puras is far better st te 
ve powe im 
aswel o 
eod 
en obliged to 
0 0. Carex distans and intermedia. —Anonymom 2, 
a morsel of some Zichya, apparently T ! 
re ; 3, Galium cruciatum; 4, loo! BG, hut. 
odiola rosea.—Galway. Lavatera Froticosim:- 
gate. Tamarix germanica and Bupleurum us? 
— — prs the Bes trees last Dn " 
$ 7 e ‘others a 
— hich e e x 
nning into wood, loo! healthy, Sou to 0 ‘al 
vigorous as those about we a 7 
eren. to € — —— xt peer Piel ain lars bare tho of 
— — sí — foto the branches. 
— in which * are reco 
liar circum 
can be sad. You will have no eno didiculty in your] 
— cred itg seek by iig 
Tue SLDING RULE: . 
that with this instrum 
might put into their — Re ned 
pati poc! s ku 
PUE of have vin their UP 
eee cmm as they e Tae 
rost- Te bas mi 
inquiry among 
ipti 
. 
e M 
SER E tne 1839 ; or ju may obt 
u n 
else Bs ees of Mathematics.” For prices inquit 
rate, n. These are now selli nig te Pa a 
unica 
made. We must - eee the indu 
ents 
the insertion 
ose contributions 
dcc 
