13 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,  [Avevst 99, n. 
her. d a case that Belladonna b 2 
Lusor, we answer it by a ne him whet erries ma = 
~ A Dt = iem I zr Na invisible processes of digestion w e: = T se = roots of plants; we are hs jutild 
zew relate some- | stomach need not be adden es be use t Site at the utmost care is not required 
SK ^ ether it is petty rer rent s ser erve t eir young points from injury M 
" valent of a | plants succeed perfectly well w without care . 
1 is to be found in the yen he grows But it is not merely on account of 
mechanical fame. e four ne o t | nra 1615 impossible for him to view either the | delicacy and importance of their Mu 
pe built an Orchard House on Mr. nd | processes of assimilation themselves or the minute require to be handled with th 
i 5 
692 
t proposed to so by à ife and h. e a 
of the same size parallel with it and forming à t that the roots of plants increase | root-fibre, nothing is seen exce 
it. Had this ad x scaly by the continual ] addition of new |level uninterrupted surface, pt an a 
ints. Were it S 
e 
1 2 ied dd i the 3 — “thi thy i bk À 
art is incessantly renewed during the * ey are mostly invisible ty the n 
= i -a in CE e it m es of cu wth : 1 and which, acting like a ad eye, and thei omms : ehiefly ome by 
what is 
g all ro 
ired at one tim pongiol di 
& border next the side mda a bed i p: the ^ middle, a as Sean little sponge. But there s ned | fring glass their s mer are seen Yay 
s, hinged remained these questions: how does the soft young cle and on uch r bots as those of t Buy A 
i i 0 nage y 
since | exist in contact wi e earthy particles that i e dee Er unsuecessful Do 
Nee FEY Ny Saye bemi any an and ae is is perpetually displacing ? and why does it never t| firn these important faets over in their mt 
| catch up such particles 1 entangle them in its and to consider wall whether they have always 
3 substance? To this an I is now returned; thought about them. eni have a very lum 
uin e there has been this year a prodi-|it is not, it is never, in absolute contaet with applieation, to some Lig ok which we must. 
giou of Peaches, Nectarines, Plums, and|the earth, but is screened from the earliest | after address ourselves 
hares, all of the highest excellence; we| moment of its secon y an o n, which 
doubt indeed whether Jeffreson Plums have ever it pushes forward, and gradually renews, forming CEA NOBI 
befo i i n | its a of grow eat 
42 0 hich is ES the Eu p" uti 
while we are writing a goo pA dui of fruit remains | Mr. HENFREY compares the skin tot d of an a — Firs, has r Diak in us tiful a 
to be gathered. What quoe vu note- | arrow, which can be pushed forward by the grow- admired and sought after by lovers of Conf, — 
"worthy is -— this hone seid the full effects | ing force behind. e would rather compare it to the small number of seedlings raised when it was im. 
ed the a screen or mantlet such as troops sometimes |; : 
f so see — — walt thoug unheated | 800 in their advance towards an ene good trees are scarce, and 
ial means no nor at We may safely assume that this cap, hood, | growers. Since i 
This shows | coif, screen, or reer else it is called, is 
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influe the cold | necessary t to the rot and that its removal must | withstanding the m 
warded pA the blossoms, but the sap be injurious, inasmuch as the forward growth of thé | from cuttings or grafts, yet, from the b; 
towards the roots de that the | root Vill be be prevented me its e. That being of growing them in pots, 
to ensure the | so, —— what imme ce it must be to expensive and difficult to be me 
The gentleman who a few weeks 
stoning. WB WE this. delicate Jo 
If we look N an explanation of this most i im- parem on the unm of TE so much h | beside ght mel? had wp xi Y 
portant fact, it seems to be found in the presence depends. In the rude hands of ignorant persons puit es c RE effect that two TE 
of the very great volume of air previonaly heated x transplant a bush dT pulling 16 np, as if the ey | respondents have young plants now raised i 
the sùn, which had not lost its temperature | were “pulling a rnip," “i M. is im mportant | produced last year. I need noti have added 
before the snow arrived. Ina smaller house the structure must nec e be destroyed. It is Here as many of the cons rs of the Ga 
temperature would certainly have fallen too low, | no wonder then if so — 3 — — under the Chronicle are aware, that ives : 
as it did in so many pe - could scarcely hands of common labourers. Only see how they | rg id i time three years 
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of glass ayat to the end. for in ‘‘Srema’s” | the seedling taprooted crops; it is no wonder if "T thin ‘without egotism : Ve EE E 
dares sing le span house the glass surface is the they find great gaps in their rows. Instead of having been the most extensive promi mo 
same as if it had been low E a double span. wreaking their —— on ‘the grub” they should | 1 have also been the most succes à P 
In e of the heig! E was gained it | blame their own ungentle ways. my y e 
possible to plant s rd Peaches and But it « t j 
ern well the middle border of «8reata's” wll qu sid sia that pi o nen rented deg 
as well as trees in and 1 bv and that the care . by n i ir, or some tt 
house reri is i aot really | between nobilis and the Silver Fir, or n 
‘be more satisfactory than tho result, , The "venient d by practice. TRIN thoved shrubs, or species.” Seeing that few people like to gun 
ag eke lifted in August without mistakes, and that the author of 
so that one would suppose tliem ail to owing I d 
; * in support of — — — us with his name, allo 
LL — border. This has doubtless ——— — B I instance do not Phally affe t untrue, as In 
z e success of. the house. > These | the question, dry weather of Au t fertilis "the cones o 
Standards are untrained; their pruning is of the such plants as the Rhododendron and its lies 5 | gathered f — 3 
: NUM; their ess would be the consterna- are not win ud 5 eir roots are ripened, The year (1851) in in n whieh ter 
% ‘ i 
pos M 3 [S it is "gross" in the hard, and tough to the points of the fibres: of P.nobilis Thad cones 
el and they will * much rou . sage without n E es ds m ai E 
et age; moreover, a large part of their most n P. monticola witht pollen II from 
;|delicate fibres is so firmly imbedded in earth that and 1 had as the result three small trees distint 
|they come xe a = ball,” and are not at all each other, and from ‘hei ipei T 
3 disturbed, winter, when trees are removed, | ex been tion 
it is well ripened, for there is not at hour zo seme crea map Nor is it to be Sear avs ao bee i W 
fime. When frost are gone iat this weed i: argo T ants have a wonderful power | been confounded h P. nobilis or 
exposed to the full glare EO the sun, andis iL. repairing injury, if they have once Danai It is gencaly anid b 
tual currents of ait No shades an ted got woody orga sation, and time is given them, | table economy, that unhealthy PP 
ere; there is no Burning, P — a E e Soom — a winter- moved tree are broken | diseased progeny. uw I pe: 
: of the en ay close up, and on the sides Hii ang e Vy ran 
That ard Honses, when skilfu y treated, | repr 
most amply repay their Coat idi is thas lace bond 2 prey x 5 * eng zn er all eir- e existence of this law 
Nah. doubt. We hope one day to see them 20 fee vitality: 25 we — i * is salted —— — believe it equally applies 
ose wands H had cones on t : 
dd D cei . ive Sige earth, 'althongh they | benna could d succeed in dé 
i Ta MET Chien 3 * ue M T Rud in “Tt is not to bad such as these that gp Aby 1 to — "ms 
: n have any practical | will look 
importane, “That no ROOTLETS form a skin at their | resist a blow that would smash that of a Toenis | : 
pee wh ich the process of growth is | but no one would form an opinion of the general pas 
carried Ter d ^ t, but what is | power of omm — the skull from the case of a ery dist e 
Y im at consequence can it be|negro. We on w a man who ate Belladon a} fast to thee who plant Por dps 
Pt MI > 3 xir and a | berries with it impunity ie was his —— wish AERE joco M scales 2 85 
es Tun this has ces peculiarity ; his stomach was able to resist that 
correspondent | dangerous pid: but we cannot infer from such 
tn one collected by 
of a dee; . tolead and 
tinge. 
having t 
Dargie 
