THE GARDE 
; Sdly, pré rays nea |f 
whi 
Ocroser 8, 1859.] 
mp but never by graft: » 
6. Farmer, 
NERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETIR. 
Esq.,  Nonsuch Park, Surrey. 
off the former, the latter will be 
in 
" p ep às by ‘the assistan ch th if growth. In fact, nothing can be tra han this— 
1 | Loddiges, when it wa fig ured in Paxton's Flower | w en a tree is making wood rapidly it į aking roots 
ferent "s Iti- | Garde But it was far inferior to Mr. Farmer's — rapidly also. Some years ago i splanting a tree 
; pled by rh ag Dicotyledons are the: — the only | men, only one flower havin e" "E D and that I had i injured most of its rootlets; the next year it was 
| plants that can be mu! Itiplied ^ that manner. If by not more than 3 in hile th bloom, but had scarcely any foliage. The 
1 management, or expense that | measured 5 inches. It is N Bir waiting for.] ce di ed. A friend of mine, ex imenting Pear 
5 may b abore bere I maintain he Gis met ees pe — 1 should not have Ten- tree with thumb. 2 nb one summer, carried it t so — 
though l be in ing in a scien- | tured to have d 1 we any further Á- Sy vnd ee teas Soe, : — 
ve no value, of this Compoun m no een reading only las e tree di ese aro extreme cases, bu RIAM 
I TIER "i practically 2 * night in y "pos Pape r some queries on the subject of | Such I take to be the true — of the various systems 
| I finish with a LA as it indicates the prin- | mildew, and this of whi — the of pruning—each serves the contemplated, and i 
l to will render following is a copy, referring more ally this|so far to be adopted Principles in re are thus 
iym infer 8 which I w M tom an is be — — be ere de George directed by the ＋ to his benefit, and the better 
4 draw 2, Oct. t. 4. .H did not immediately y answer your in- | such principles are t m mo bosco will 
Are incapable of most opera as been 
ps — roots from the onion because I had not then given it a sufficient | the forerunner of theory = ne eee, | thongh late 
Cellular .. . Er und posed to the trial. T now beg to.say that I - found it extremely | | in the field, has ever been uable 
m gro multiplied by | useful i ia 2 in check an estroying vario use of real vogren. Ed N Burlent, Holly Wood 
A — ki nsects injurious to garden | plants ; such as the | Cottage, Swillington, near Leeds. 
k id irhoë digi — My attention — Mon = 
pen ^ — Lo e considerable care is neces- | directed to prs — advertisemen: new 
pan Have no exposed to the air and | sary in mixing the E" I prefer the mixture | annuals in r ht i iss pe e with 
— may be multiplied — — dissolving 2 ozs. 1 f hot water, | reference bi "the 80- called "Cal irhoë digitata that if it 
by — but not by f I have 4 — ry ys pe. wie as in some be, as I have reason to believe, e, the same pla that 
Or Vascular ipe ont hav stronger dose affect the foliage offered by the leading lsmen in this country last 
Are capable of producing "nn applied ; "this à is more jtm necessary when | spring, under the name of Callirhos pedata, Messrs, 
f roots from the parts o foliage is young a eod s tender—with older leaves | Carter hardly likely to be in possession of the whole 
r: — mag te. msi 3 0 ae On the whole I con- stock of seed. Their statement contains indeed its own 
both by and 4 at have ve valuable composition for| refu tion, seeing th e notice in a conte ^ 
assistin — in n keeping his etm &c., free | from which the quote an extract, related to Messrs. E 
n 
the garden 
— translated pa a paper 4 r in the from those aula hom e 9 S, W 
Horticole. kept 
which, unless G. Henderson’s y. I have myself the 
dow interfere with cultivation, | under cultivation in my garden for two years, and as 
—— John s Spencer, were freely sold in spring it must have been pretty 
runing Fruit Trees.—In soliciting insertion of the | gene lly grown. to inclose a specimen, which, 
| Home Correspondence. following remarks, perhaps I ought to m A » : am —— hu inferior, and consi ed by the 
ER * Palace. In um th Mero ii ue —— of its 
Ain ground I remarked an im school, — — n adopting any new r practice, but | cultivation, It ob 1 am: the pub- 
- Pdidly grown. plants in pots, num ing I sl | e ready to find jr with —— MÀ the appearance | lished figures of atalia pr er T will E 
; — of 1000, and v well trained. ue of | of novelty or innovation. nstant pruning of fruit | for yon to d 2 eher it The 
l easure from Across, some 4 feet, and | trees is a | meno: of too 1 ateur | colour of its f 2 but what 
t 1 “foot | t high; they h and n with a Serap of the e pen. I is generally termed ros oša iin purple, as you 
well furnished with shoots, there bei ing scarcely a | n “such wish, — “that mr pruning is|can judge from specimen. It seems to be 
)lant among them. They promise well, both large attended “with results m most gardeners wish | — of D duration and rai a —.— as a 
mall varieties, to make a fine show in Novem to enco ra the time ngly hardy annual, I presume that it enerically dis- 
are trained in all arda s, pyram. — 5 of ópislon that Nature, ye in the animal or|tinct from Mal thou se there is * 
fs; in fact when collected together they will ee 4 kingdom, furnishes | few superfluous parts, — in the habit. Jota. [The specimen sent w. 
ves make a very comple: sto exhibition. * Broome and no tendency in either nimal or plant i is more pN 
i ves.—Enclosed a ful ot 1 eavour —Can you tell me how I can distinguish 
two plants raised from the same Australia SE reach a healthy vitality, Numbers of instances true Mushrooms from. others? Mx fields | abound with 
pecimen with the pinnate appen: p re a ver 
ant in a conservatory; the other is from a t n the animal kingdom plants, | large v tis d. D. F. C. [Cap brownish, thick, with many 
out, and now about 20 feet high. What is the which i in the rege er their n s appear ar uei ci to | little bits Agi | off; gills reddish viole t, very fragrant. 
? The older tree quite lost the pinnate | run after suitable eir leaves " make their| New Self-acti ng Ventilator.— n invention capable 
lage; what is its natur f this inherent|of being naien h been 
The tree fk tow ency. 
e, and Suh i are the true | way to the light, iow MM signs o 
abes that the 
Do plants 
N. 
A. Sophora. 
early condition of those * the o 
seful in Wee tb ouses has 
p Ny uow exhibited Pal 
oe & Oria, 
the t 
*e old condition, and are merel stalks, minns Lo condition ? 
tf pi flattened laterally. Bes Lans are called | Why th 
les, and such Acacias phyll , The ca eae 5 would now make? “The 
41 is H 
4, or of their dimorphism, is Solis re rian itable soil and du uly 
iering of Melons.—I have eee i e| n ire, will c its d 
ty Ad and occasional] th good su than - it. 
Bw years past I have gro vi thes in two-light seed i n. pedir abunda 
Ph Mese heat, supplied by 3 without ing 
ah due surface heat which enables i 
o vital erly ber — guess irs 
m 
y not and T this ic oboe | 
leaves „wither away, and the in ioe winter pruning is wi 
Try : 
has ectly ripened. | bush growing ad libitum wm rec pe of up the temperature o agriculturists it 
id dod di (rens bush growing «d lbi ning its quota of seed none| will also be in ricks of any 
me so such as suits the market gardener. The roots ire ed | kind it will indicate the tem mn ature, i d employ- 
t they may remain perfect till nothing from moderate winter n afford to suc’ 1 
Essex Man. [We|fruit buds as remain a 2 as valuable cattle require ni anagement as to heat or 
vit. increases the pulpy matter. ua veoh - The ori pe principi is is aleo . to — — 
cg ts qM to other fruit trees. hou or other places. is is pointed out 
root b) aai by 
and summer (i 
i ly bad irit, huis say 
to be c 
merely Vidas ‘the hands hos the cylinder, which 
sets the machinery i in operation directly. At the e same 
and * of the te alone to sider f tempe- 
9 or lifting the trees tend go or bell or fi and thus become 
e|threatens to destroy their vitality ; s pl 43 0 It detects any increase or decrease of heat 
instinctively attempt to fulfil their 3 this prac- at all times and in all pos es, whether in the deepest 
tice, as the phr: th , but they f a ship or on the 
ing | become stunted trees. walking a short | deck.” 4 eee y Mr. men one of the. 
time ago through a gentleman's 8 that had boas Patentees : 
about 10 y The poi 
one kind of e trees that were ill-thriven, 
stunted objects; ” gai bear every year, 
but make no wood; they will be old trees" In 
my o this spring a cat undertoo| ASSOCIATION 
Scratch up one or ides : reme Pangad Kin Tex vmm or Ma a 
yet them when they ha out of the ground two or 
from 40 to 50 | three hours herd lanted them; they grew; that is, antiquity of the han human race 
43 they kept alive, flowered, and ed before any | sufficient evidence 
of the , hec ever after- | man . 
wards, Such is the e! root-pruning. so superficia di 1 
Spotted or|are made e, but are diminutive and s the last eain a century, 8 mone af 
hare ye small, short-lived ; e vie these of little mue bong az vU 
what I hay. will percei 9 -pruning is virtually roo ing. d cud in 3 
uncommonly fine thing although a ve a very |a way the leaf in summer . the roote Will su; yf food aud #talactites ced a with the Bente e A 
When induced to 5 it well les ential When the lungs of an i extinct hyæna, bear, elephant, or Thi —— 
le patience of the ee ppearance tbe alimentary viscera ^J little; ind em On 
in the extreme, T ny add t we have | trine 2 = S ped Of this any one soon her back than we 1 E 
the lawn a superb specimen of Gynerium | sa Acorn in a es vessel ; TOR idit o d 
Pampas Grass, with 60 flower spikes, | h DM pea tee and AA develop d IET reasoners to admit vali wr 
12 feet high. S. M. Carson, Gardener he and will find after he has pinched|such hat so many caves 
