ND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, [Seam i 1 
he roots, -— penetrate | our Hop gardens. Similar mE 
i ealt i ila -— 
just bee tated. Ie ee has remained he vhs i 
n po suffe sid severely from | most deeply ! , 
ir : gi tert, 10 em iita du arne best zm to pir ti by a noxious subsoil, E to as much as 17 p 
in A! : a 
of the evi ach tho s sae under the or by excess of the mildew to become a formidable maintain land in a permanent state) and tha, 
Uds 5 bes sted i gib as my. 1 the co — a deep and | Moreover they keep the soil open, ni fi 
te = on gana Y A - lo duke ick to fertile dry loam "permitted th e roots to extend to them preferable to blood. We conce 
and s hat it would take a pi heir proper depth, and wher the situation was mul sing may be pa rticulany am MS 
wx thi laben respecting an e not so * as to be much infested with. fogs, he ee e us in autumn, to be forked Bs ui 
er 5 E. Tuoxrsox in the Ga det "t found little of the disease: and in a foreing-hous sprin — th pe 
because of its great im- | he found it equally easy, by approp? Aa New B 
with its rendant ment, to introduce or prevent the appear dit. 226. Msosormim en ox 
breake the soil in m yo 
S 
the Hortieultural So —— 
portance. Never was mildew ld very dry, and the air in Bot, 
evils more — km uring the present When he "um the ind unchanged Vine plants den «py; 1 ie 
season ; first of all fruit trees, Roses, and — the house lamp a vem tha movi bad been ‘Kite P Mi ard Borage plank we im 
d by incredible numbers 0 min e ite Forget. 
Ahides and grabs, which could only be subdued Rote pun sier abundantly watered, not à | Europe, inhabitant of Ch: V m 
we ion; ee now their leaves and | vestige of the diese appeared. Ze aland, & p 445, whence it was introduced 
vh ry “branches are becoming hoary with the These are groat pz ep —.— Res age t have sched = pes Wa tson, of Eyre 
ild f autumn. Both these be the true value of the explanations whon ing plant was exhibited af 
feline ar probaly refe able x Gant wer M th n x x hite poeta mildew gti oat eder d Tanon d ? l 
ig flicient t ble trees to med in wha ne com 2 iiu ion, ume 
pda vobia. - ds x — si 8 coubequgtnde máy be prevented, or at nt least "nitigated. It must Caeci of a Nye it has a fruit w à 
This, at least, is the inference to be drawn 1 85 nof, however, be supposed that the Vine mildew C no ens: pev ^ Pr Hog er to refer 
ihe Co the ooi before us. An round London dm and dia me Potato blight will yield to the same bert of both, id Au, Ben 
art of the soil i in which the roots of trees extent | ér- i — res. een Abbe u the 
bobina p , however, must be remembered by dE roro: 
Rainfall is enormou sly in arrear; no ing at the nuts attached to the style, that 
fallen in sufficient quantities vs saturate the vn T this article. The water “empl Jed must be | fol ny spec E the $ 
ground when thawed ; and what rain does fall t early so as that of the 16 may j consi dered EAN 
largely and rapidly draine away | in consequence roots. In the spring the heat of the water Ru wells tr very n et-Me- 
of the inability of the hardened soil to absorb it. and that of the soil same, and there- | stock of ti "choice plantis is (re bei) S 
When LATA is opened deeper than a few inches fore any water may be used to soak the ground; of Mr. Standish, who sent the plan 
itisfound to be beyond the action of the spade. | but as the season advances the i of the in April, 
The earth which is loosening round the roots of soil is much higher than that of wells, and then it | Descr.—Roo a t perennial. Stem hi We 
trees preparing for removal in another year must | becomes necessary to draw water from Ape or 1 e i » na d » Stout, succulent, E 
be broken up by pickaxes, even in worked garden bands, ¢ — Cold water in July and August a : leaker ^ ow, pu tens above w 
ound. The ope: effect of this is to in rive | ys e harm to roots than — absence meren, Very "Arg arga as v 
8 of their - ful food; for water is tha t food ; of wa J. D. H.), cordate, very obtuse and even retus 
and it is un —.— em say that when 10 od is eee ed pt m Sich“ deen w 
wala | plants “ieee feeble and exhausted as A NEW KIxD oF MANURE is coming into the | side, “sometimes tinged with purple: upper x 
arket which seems T Dew the serious atten- gradually smaller, at ng M sessile and denis 
1115 is — e doctrine, although very little ed of gardeners. It consists of w ee ae rymb terminal, large, 4 inches acres, 
thought o of. 'ressings, and is so o asker of by M pou und, leafless. Calyx deeply. m into fr, dm 
The late Mr. ANDREW Kwrenr long ago stated | | Soott o of Crouch End, H — E Mob 
that the causes =. — EE eaten appeared | t orthy amateur . ye are induced to give and large > spreading limb, m ore s M halfan s 
naaran went o t ly of of five rounded lobes, of a blue esloun, gll è 
= A^ soil a il at "s same time ralisided — i — e subject m prominent a plaoe as coming paler and almost white kon hes 
with ext of busty ix the ar * N dard te 1 4 ; 
. ] gentleman Who recently scales (as in Myosotis, &c. close the math tate, 
exposcu v0 a ten — below that to forwarded you a sack o T anu, the combings or em os bey vn uem short filaments, arising from 
sine 
whic ich they have mp | dressings of wool, has ed me your letter | near the mouth of the tube. Ovary 4lol 
LT eold weather in July succeeds that which has SL to be informed the quantity required and quite flattened at the UR. Style very 
been warm and bright, without the inter vention of d of ground. I have mace no exact experi- | Stigma two-lobed. Fruit of four, dorsally«mpesel, 
the Wheat m eb but should say that a ird of a cwt. would | nearly erect, sub-cordate, broadly-wingt ms ot 
p, nen pci is AT much injured by be ample. Whils t rating a ‘the subject I may as | achenia, attached P M xem receptacle, 
mildew. He sus that, in such cases, Eperien of this stuff, ed by the short remains of the RENE 
jurious Prde sc of moisture by the Toa ien. and la maus petore Sali nary compost for the | ovate, cde laterally attached.” 
stems es Under such circumstances much | growth of Vines, 5 oec being wo Ay in or out This is the handsome peren nnial P 
d be absorbed by leaves and carried of the Vinery and — ots, is most satisfactor noglossum nobile by Dr. Hoo ii 
downwards through their alburnum ; although the | Its us ü la twofold = finely, M » volume, p. 240. It is quu M the exci 
h this sub e un other 3 h mis ia that have been — upon 
n a non-co it t h : P tty of Chichesth 
-C0 ps the warmi ^ y the city o 
r within n the border, pe p an ‘to a very con- SF ss on TX ii of the South es i 
t|is situa 
emesne of 
—.— Impossible to iat in mol materials used also containing as it does the beautiful classic 
isi W of the subje ct, whether true or false i$ manures. d bave this sammer lop-dressed all of Ri — * „ toed ae 
N " — roa 
led him to ‘the AM method of eultivating the suited. = in pol wi swith X “nat ption 2n " EN — highly caltvated, 
Pea late in the autumn, by which his table was of those zn was most  marked—the ordinary character, 
arn as Stee supplied during the months ft — the mulching being to peeps . gn of the aie ai trees. a 
m T i nd Jul and os 
and ees} yii warm and moist, an nd to encou rage ed. ; 
= uci co sd Tw as free from d inest extent the wth of ps on the ig ie io : peint —— emos 2900 acres o a ligil 
way, ad 
iets is der aal lavage € acre 
up in e sl y, and havin, g thes appear arance of | to, f the D —a chain of hills w ji 
* | bristles, so thick and compact were the roots under — — of Su ssex —the — — er | 
or surface of the . — s. a Viner inside th of — — the according to “ Mantell ” is nip i 
th 
pnd for ; 
found » “difoulty in i —— the of turf, composed o epe Grasse ^ tion t P. 
9 s into a sufficiently de ele fod no the mountain — i e chalk A The 
rto ux M — rs ok this remarkable. It is magnificen MY od with mati i 
wits aR CiS ois- — xi. deep, water only | of some of 2 hills are well clothed with. aimi 
ure. Wate pee tor profusely on ce, where, without the mate CH), I should|*nd Oaks; that on the e f Scotch Fin ” 
every week or nine days, even if "a m have had to have watered at least thre lent specimens d 3 
roves showery ; but if ^ fidam g 5 weather or four times. It is also very servi ble pa this ended of § e season wear à C9. ier 
in ed with w b : ie autumna oroughly in the growth of Scarlet Rinia l^" I iae i andareat 8 contrast they e 5 
further trouble is — Under this mode of ur say any kind of crop w. where the roots 17 ing gend 2 a. native w p 
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experien e however goes no further than its Ae ; man 
e remarkably fine trees; ™ : 
be are destroyed by frost; and their produce Been to Vines I have vein no hesitation | dered with, evergreen Oa whi dae 
retain NE. flavour, which is always | fruit tree 2t sorbet erly.” be equally applicable to hee. trees and thrive remarka bes, too, 
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milde Sha Me pis admirabl ith the var n^ 
* tbl opting — Pied a rod acier aving | this — EA we pecie Ed funy ba tak p a — ‘a Kind “of neutral tint u 
unless indeed a severe frost in € he beginning e — about 4%, a ton; but a sample sack "hat we | Prince kress dustrial Sod is cmm 
br Er proved fatal to his later er £ of Br Aes received from Messrs, HAYTER & Co., fH pia — su =e 
Gut’s long experience ld him to the | Stercug,” 3 
an Qat tia. the mildew E the 8 ia other sie an pe as 1355 
lowing MS 
as the it will robabl t 
dnd ht p y act in freie me way as aa ab en 
mig be ‘prevented by | rags, so largely and advantageously — in [ses mer Clarke (a butcher, at 
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