tion to to the Rosa-, with com post, &c., as ma 
ecided gum 5 car a aboy re. him, | renew d oF the bed. 
This , though it may a 
1 x mri n : E 
370 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Aveusr 1 „ u m 
67 ed b f y be needful, al ths 
remembered that severe frosts, — ry ald 
tations. | rium,” wks : 
snowstorm, greatly diminished our expeot: n ii ee a simple and eff Ppear compli 
Apricots, then about the size of ate à ere killed 'm d "gene Appert (to i s OE mot ah is a very xs x a ‘np Nr — process mes 
in many places, and suffr h mew den und the EM tifu sing ac of the atey colouring which | poses bed at a small expense of labour. 
i se y 
blossom: in many 25 
instances killed. shor & many ‘regarded — 
frui e 
ried ecla: red him to b be “a de 
and fin ally inscribed "p 
$ 
eat 
= 
8 
8 
8 8 
a 
o 
8.8 
A 
E 
8 
S 
enriches the flower of that name. 
the t 
"C 
the i 
arrangement o iti 1 de» 
m the robust honlhfalness heavily to such a degree as will preven nt thei: 
31st of March and during part of ik there ean Vega it anty of its foie p 7 Eugene Apper > cedes of — "e — TA "i d 
^ 10s gr ti 0 8 SO treate 
ff = ie as than of other goods eee ‘to. Vi ctor — E his combina ion Deu, aes rd. l prove; to be 
EERI de def 1 never sur ds di bl 
he abundance or trength ng, E 1 oie ae 
convey a pretty accurate idea of t 4 ith | yeah aid bv. (US ertet d 
s ue of the supply, we have prepared the fol- |: in eee dolls, Peanut in = vs vit ; ot tomes cc ‘hia P 
lowing tabular statement, by which the prices| nothing to supp sort their bodies of bran bu 5 i ts N^ erations for mark 
3 5 in Covent Garden market = the 48 E yeon dr ilte ty legs, which cannot be induced arge op "e pes 
week in August ene season” may Compare? | stand at any pri ery Apr Jd ch fo — tion upon this alternating or ri 
wh iiss of tho s vcl in the Suh Marini some, not glowing with tha dus nic 1 055 perfect acres -— planted A spring, 2 
beginning wit S. bles "eh v which keeps "e flowers benutifu 1 for|tance each way, van — spa 
| 1841. | 1845. | 1850. | 1855. Esa x es alter they have been e plan 
ESET I iac di | s. d and this du Je one especially valuable to Ve. — are kept clean with the 
Apples, per doz. 2 2 who grow for exhibition je on fore winter tha 
„„ per half sieve F — 8 Y cover t] 
perde 3 ^ 1 1 ` CULTIVATION OF THE a and as —— as the crop is mar 
m half sieve | 25 IN N. ANE spring, the whole patch is ploughed u 
nne! 3 
-— nici ope ve Titnakero haino dnn eons of cultivation— | crop of st —— — the land. If the 
Cherries — er Ib. , 1 th hillin pans the Sera the | are made in the fa „ whic is undesirable, the 
if the one may be called the hilling, to th f th bs 
sieve ui E te In hath systems, so far den | runs over to the spring o e s Mi 
x ii s stone e deepest and dll: d it | crop. Weston’s pev A Home 
Goose he plants set out in ————— 
ards should ae een €: the pla 
Raspberries, perl lb.. " d a foot apart in therow,| NORTH AMERICAN SCALE INSECTS 
o doko I vil be ln dat FFV = THEIR ENEMY. am 
exceptions prices Th higher than ‘hee ar any farti and fifth r à ind m ville — — — a im 
P P ith which they are compared, and Im the hilling vitem the beds thus formed are kep tu me — of New York —— 
eu b t ith. th of 1845 the | perfectly clear of weeds, e - runners from the plants | f Aspidiot “Scale ” insect mentioned is not 
that iay RARE est wl s ial The in fer abo are cut off as soon as they 3 this $ — ‘nevertheless . — acts connected 
1 R € 2 course - 4 
therefore is clear, even if we had a gg dats g overru the beds form Ree branched o or ulli | IN those sections of our country w [ 
: ved 7 m is scar Th e fruit is produced | common as a — of the forests there is se 
go by, that fr crowns, * — which, in its season, p : 
however the c a greater extent t than the —finest and most abundantly i in mie first full-bearing tree which is more esteem ro 
above re t. es ; for in addition to that of year, 2 Ge bel € until in our or grounds around a wen than es white 
home growth we have weekly importations from five cially is it a favouri e, an 
Po „Spain, and France, all of which tend to A aer 2 — ia — it, — — onses upon : 
ke wn prices. Apples come from Lisbon large | crop is e ad Bently i: in wit e à — 1 -— om — aS — 
of a qe ens . ae oe 3d p he spring hoeing of such beds they are care- | sweep over those — * den is the ri a e 
à whil t b of t esiden ere i 
largely "pe Aoi ‘he bates a and we EE by laying — s litter, or tan, or Moss whilst by many er nthe 2 
N are 
aw 
White Fa 
berries, per half sieve | 
s ^e 
* 
. ries t, y 
by its own Weight « $e rv dashing rains, will not early life, and thus 8 pleasant 1 
] use. For this purpose a "eco 1 hom 
9 to . is t t agere 
— subject to the attacks y" t 
iti is fece inir spontaneonsly. At Teast w w 
some kinds of these depredators 
which we have — n able di 
trees when Bowing wild i = our 
us infesting the be 
Ne x coat of 
" Barly Julian, -— will be found exelent and — applied. 
Nonesuch. he famous Ne wtown Puri, n the bedding syste Uv un Can 
whieh was wont to mu: ts e te in the € | required, provided diy 6 din on pe proper pon 
market soon after this time, now om arrives pnm The | peds hjd sbo annually renewed in the pieng 
until about Christmas, Earlier Es that there is nne Abu ends of the rows, when firs plante d, 
little demand for it. — a peur Locus Nera: Chesnut, or Cedar stick 
We may add that ieee Be sieve contains into the ground to the ngs of E ie ^y more. irl pid blight, was conl ar ia 
— 5 pecks, and a C Dem t sieve 21 pecks. any time — to = of another insect of the 
punnet is a round ut Mem that holds from 12 before the middle of Jun ne, “ead: wal — bet hoed — ch fixes itself upon the on i 
to 18 good-sized Plu en ind carefully till —— Sa cie to run. after- | t of ein ay juices and thus g dio 
ward hand-weeded if requis d all run — that an fall, and the ends of the limbs her 
— - These insects pertain tain to the 
THE EUGENE APPERT ROSE. in, the whole surface ne the bed val be covered befor No species of this 
IT willdoubtless be remembered that i n recording | winter with stro young — crowns of the —— — any tree 
the last National Rose Show in London, very favour- parent plant, instead — immediately around | infer this to frs 
able mention was made by us of this undoubted novelty. | it Teself, as in the ling $ P will sHs spread and | which — been as yet deseribed, and zt 
We are happy to find our opinion confirmed by the planted themselves cp dalas e in independent Posi- it the — n A Aspidiotus 
ng Roses, “S. R. H.,“ who thus tion ns. In es Vllowing "s om bed E yield its size and sha 
amo ape t 
speaks of it in the last number of the * Florist." crop in n, and the mat of eat: -growth upon it will | to those of the Appie — lon (A. 
“Now, what must have been the feelings of a bashful | keep the frui se clean. Gar d. i: for „ p. 718), 
. young Rose suddenly introduced into such an august| As the crop is gathered, begin on id 
society ? Young ladies at their first ball, young gen- | and fin tand, of a — — i (ty) rather than 
tlemen in their first tailed coat, may form some feeble | and — a line exactly midway between the first oyster. Their ioreover 
©onjecture—feeble, because they have had some previous | iw: of them from end to end of the bed; then, with a | any of the our! Ene 
— of the world; but in the case to which I f the line so|to me, it being pure 
no such No, it is a fact | * at 2 — [o 3 roceeding thus | spot u i 
zugene — — the until you ha we gone over the bed, d vidoe it into four cerned by the naked 
5 Mp. Standish, strips of about 11 2 width, in which the X — The leaves of the 
and | rows stand, and three strips of 4i occupi a prism, and it is al 
ne, by yo plants. If, on looking at it, yon ‘dank | | leaves that the — are 
have As rows in your mew bed | ones, Meere freq n 
T an three, though t —— ot her — n the 
al odii re. Ru gree pet crowded as closely as t ig 
| outside A 1 oie Be narrow rim of young erant 2 one scale overlaps the 
plants standing on each side of your bed. are arr ise Í 
If - wish plants for pi. ut erc id 2 may whole length 
E with your spa ade an inch or two all the| to that of the leaf. 
wide I e out the youn pa che for | the base, in others towards the ape 
ble, | resting —.— ES deir or 2 = pate the wide When i ith a 
; | being par under if are full wn appear : 
aw near to 5 ? | they are not needed far use — i Stict 'epresenti 
Or 4 ; thus retaining —— in the | three distinct. scales, r ing 
r r who, on the other h hand, shall essay to tell o is | bed dm manure "we — zo com- | thorax, and a em of oe 
he eo ar u i 
p ae tu spoken p leasantly to his li listening ear, — ould or ine. aad ethor dig t the A -— 8 — the tiles of a T 
E eard, t ria A sa; is € Ko $ uv his papa, the rer ^ —— fork or hook them over deeply with a Potato- | these three segments is of 
— — hey were inti- hook; 7 did let the narrow strips of young plants be somewhat lus 
> y aeq wi — ad E Ten master, M. | well perfectly cleaned from weeds an Grass, | small. obl 
„an re y seen his rela- | and you will leave 1 curved 
tions, his sis Alice Leroy, Rebecca, and S ephanie | when it was just eris but with Serer — of R T — 
pee ; thers Mmi 1 — nd | plants, and these undisturbed and r ready to grow right | yellow pe a third or fou 
2 = Er ds rudem ven seme e, — etonneau. om. Place your mark-sticks at the centre of oud ends | raised line along i 
wn, the ve culminated verflowed, | of your new rows, a ind keep the bed clean as before until | half the size of the preceding, i 
" their positive —— that be the runners corer it again pre to yóur next being — aba yellowish, and o? 
e himself ‘a better man than his fa ther;'|erop; and so 
alternate from year to year, manuring!transversely. Beneath, this scale it 
