THE GARDENERS' CHRONICHE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
Bees 
Ba IBER 10, 1859, 
— 
nheritanee so perfect t that . a cannot sometimes not it the number M I oie the Nor alia md 
— that they have all come from one common | diversity. of iab ‘deviations of structur : is vs 8 fellow, — qii 
ock, in the lapse and ‘that stock the wild | both those of sl d those of considerable NA nes erp enit which he has ‘displaced, A 0. 
Cabbage that springs up hard, bitter, and un- | physiological import is endless." Probabl able 9 105 ue of Nor de U ener with an 
atable on the coast of Devonshire and Cornwall | eani he re us adds another to the instances genus 6. a e a k ind = rene dane fis 
Korean it be denied that a good deal of experience k e learned author of the Origin ME schief Bre you i know of their resin and do'mneh 
in the mutation of form is necessary to produce the | es. entrance, & Presence, he makes 
éonvietion that Savoys, Cole s, and uli- side ra Mpe t g gna 8 Ul iy si X by your 
flowers are descendants of some common „Parent. & CmrwEsE Yam is the strangest plant I tuy sayin "ram am here, get me o 2 
e has seen the wild C er seen," exclaimed an old gentlema: an the | you can.” This i is rre t English, and 11 
and form its solid heart; still less have its ma other day while looking at some fragments lying TD Protestant, as our Norway friend ndoubtelly 
flowering branches been seen to beco n the ground before him; have a capital unot quote anything in his pee A 
soft, stunted, and blended together into the rop of babe n fully fine roots, but now that they writings of those accomplished scoundrels the Greeks 
granular delicate ball called a Broce oli or Cauli- are ripe and re ady t they wo one come up. Garden = d Romans, only because they did not know him, | 
flower. But although such positi the PE withou uer des ENSE 0 s ege his favour 
not been MuR ye ecause they grow D authority more classic. My old thresher who 
ve now 
l4 
breaking them to pine, D 
vs a great pity, for 
r 
and then a piece of presumptive evidenc 
obtained, Hn is little less impor 
most direct. Of this kind an 
a 
the s di was à 
was saved. n 
e paren se 
still came Bur. For qe successive year 
ago, am of w Broc- A 
coli, believed to have been the je called Duet s | [be — up w 
ded ra at the end dot ‘the 
tant than th think them gan yn 
ya ore wholesome than. Po t 
1 
and I a 
am eia 
any o 
or they eats up p hem. anne i Lui bei but you 
2:4 
ole were 
row o of Kanea ro than | way 
t ba ck out | keeping 
em down, or they'll play the dickens with 
the Wheat.“ The keeping them down— 
—was capial fun :-trappin 
rat-catching day, ie 
shooting, 
PAFS 
mine ia root by root. S0 bibant. an idea was not 
o be neglected. ^ So the gardener did as he was 
was real sport for 
in his favour. 
us younk 
I have ze something more to s 
sex. d you ever 
capillary, vere in clay ? 
always eading on i 
= 
been done, and the ann nexed n f an * up to A » W on activity 
individ of the present se circumvent him. And then what's 
and therefore of the fourth dee capital scavenger he is; 0 
ration, engraved for Messrs. LEE English rat knew nothing about this 
Co., of the Vineyard, Ham- t of busi Mr. Waterton, you 
mersmith, from a photograph, will must cease abuse our y 
show e new race has —— e 2 ike o Hanoverian 
become. eae E iu 
Its qu uality is we kp P After all this I almost regret to 
anexceptionsble, its importance indir Scr ok for: 9 
as ero manifest, and be at all inconvenienced, but he must 
E aito that titsh habit in some places be kept down un 
is fixed.: To | eners it PRN kept out. If therefore a rat hole is 
to become a treas found in an inconvenient place you 
B But this white fprouting Broocoli have only to pour into it 1 or 2 quarts 
P 4 p q 
an of ther kind, of coal-tar and then stop it up with 
showing as it does a plain tendency mortar.: Our active friend will per 
to assume a form that connects the chance make a fresh hole—serve it 
TM i with the wild a ` - 5 8 He isa cleverly intelligent. 
e nearest approach among cul- ellow, and will soon in disgust 
tivated Cabbages to the yer oim the ill smelling sticky promenade. ^ 
e found in the Thousand- Something like this I have used to 
headed and the Colewort, with $ grize rabbit EE thein 7 
ies. is called dM Sacre is ne s 
Cottager's Kale is evidently the 2 7 7 s T 227 7755 frequent 
same thing with a more vigorous at they l- 
and productiye constitution. . Then j n br w 
Brussels Sprouts are merely Kale adjoining fi Ferrets were triel 
joining field., 
* ep carer ef SR found useless; the rabbits begat 
in ner of Cabbages. to breed and were very destractive. 
In the exam ple b before ls we have I directed my man - — F * 
a oo. m 2 ere all the bundle of young White ushes; 
i he laterals these were chopped up! iat a 
— 2 SEM M teaches Ee 
us that the wild Cabbage — mouths of all t urrows with à 
natural tendency to for — id 3 he Ae poured er 
hear tar on to t us; 
1 er es, And ed, p. | M ed ; the 9 8 — 7 out of the ground without | to thoroughly saturate them; they were t ei 
resistance, an e er on was vais nde ed a The rabbits — came out, . 
feu of f a moie of, or eo known are the | very clever sort of gentleman. Hought mis only recently, ‘coming fro —— v 
more or less complex nest iin of | of his two friends we have not hear mpted to form some weak — by P by the — 
rae e All sum D. gest etos s foll -— :— NE ETEN thoes stopped last spring. I shall no ow serve them 
. buds active an ow E 
vu 1 wild Cabbage, Kale do. | GOOSEBERRY BUSHES, RATS, AND RABBITS. e 
All the buds. active and closed. Flowers I mave been interested in ing the various o US. i 
is TTT AUSTRALIAN CYCADEE. ge 
ne end perfect z eren and closed. M to think that/ no i 6 dt m biras, A nd I vain Tun Palms, those, noble piane. which Bin 055 ine 
TIU IM mnd pi Pas | bud: veh e &oc. simple as mine — no, is ita ied for Ib bib "and not -i ay called “the 
8 oboe | wai t "Modi." 3 cred neighbour, a : a farmer Aor of gardening, pev vd brines oF ie emp * et 5 Pre but a e^ 
nd Cauliflower „ Sot. bated ihan tale Deae rn (ee natrala. Indeed none have beet eg 
ti : : i" ; 
Pan U the bu N ve and ope Flowers | edm shake it up p Wall wi witha a fork, m. soak it with refuse | 05 ‘Anstralia Felix west of 1 rediit 
Hence it fall oe ee See vse ved it ours, and while it is moist towards "Central ius " na ilt rou 
È it follows that Brussels Sprouts are I. C over all the bus shies, whether Gooseberries. or : "€ seemingly no 
with the peculiarity of, urrants, so that it ese : arpentaria and Arnheim d seeming. 
before u h r ; and that in the onse | coats This is best don gs to them and forms a thin | Palms occur than the steels Livistona inermis. 
d 8 et a race with the tendencies o x 13 x: vie — ds mill to is Mes Seaforthia elegans; with asf ch, in Eastern A 
originally Jed to the appearance of thes moda Mer. e - TL tl "e: à or tw ed 415 x eod een monostach® d 
li ti | eaves are ha A port. | visto} 0 K 
i e are "profo dly ignorant. hing, | be taken off, and the remainder suf tion of im x "d “then Calamus ost consociated. A sont % 
er, more n an this Broccoli supports the trees by tl i — from a nut bore 
Mr. Danwix'st vi e inheritance of ps | tection fro nO ds but from — : p* oniy P pa Captain B Blackwood ee to 
ities. ‘‘ The law ws governing inheritance,’ In default of hay I have early spring frosts. | of North-e ——— : — Tor eo reape 
this able naturalist it , Abra a y ave used stable litter or Barley | on thé A fT t anst 
m a. s fro 1 f 14. a d 2 Dee > i Thesis any verme — of straw, so that it is | paucity of Palins N Sip yet 
in different n cling to the bushes, | of d 
af di Spinal o oie i species an and ae fei | 2 — Fecommended by. * ce venerable’ and in resting o e esence do six T the whale 
; inherite r. are M 
take off the.t F : sa probarem of. fio t 
5 55 <u rees iu spring, as Filey y are apt to , is à 5 
e observe that Messrs. LEE advertise the seed at 25. 6d. a E 22 m the) gung opening buds. z [ go ens — dissimilar 4 E ee — e. ie [n bh. 
the Origin of Species. Small 8vo, Murray. [s stoats, weasels; Mieten about the destruction of ‘hawks, | the — € ibed in Be us 
. ri j yeas, Led briefly descri E. 
t T cannot ies w with him in | * Prodromus," are strictly tropic cal, extending adie. 
