792 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, MSIE 
his stone, and | without the neces sity for an unsi htly n 
ent, and su rely|had grave doubts as | to the value of t , à ghtly mound ы. 
Lr Sor ac и енне tha A puit ose. 1 бае could have said but little in its favour, except as to p ü i mg ЕСЕ еа t € display of graceful ија вю 
long been а resident in this city and never was I|fineness of texture and Carrara sort o eolour, e 1 e wi e veni ad itectur: Яй, Sl ories аз чан ai. 
without my plants; but I have а Mah каша to exuded a white  efflores — for several ber ec of in ту я н. pe dne berd, Sto шы 
supply my Tooms, and as I am generally away in oming taoma or ride а Фе erhaps ) of t e alkaline Comes spondet ar, be de n fe same Же 
кое I devote my attention chiefly to вто- | Пих with whi р ined ашай ДӘ Љу the | that they c t give safier Кейш, ^. des 
à М 
plants for  winte anc remark E ае Since that ceased it has tote 
they do b ter than in summer. This I|d Ё е. 
st i sensn th хі of air, impregnated as it is | grain of ra stone has ri Lm sm moke and dust, and I o e l igh Е he 15th line from ie M. 
s, which retard the | believe if a new vase of the same p of the joe 
M "pe qe E E анч RES & айа. Kohe | beside it, there would be some difficulty in Pede it reads t tit: —* For the first two ye 
i ving heat from the state of the material only any difference | con nfin е the stove compartment, but exhi 
'sa tween the new and the old. But the proper test of extraordinary growth, I made a 
or such & material i he weather, | glass partition in the angle over 
! i ificial mena T 
i ; and 5 ү i this est be main- | and having had some experience with artificia 
E tS I4 nee SPa i а в л Ta am now "e bt в о. sis makers for fountains and other | first year that a late нег : been attem 
i t d: il at on dow milar i to rtuni y 
ар cte оса ^; E E us pre to | | this over ru others to endure wear and tear and | own remarks in the last three Tr of the 
have in blossom about Christmas. Later іп the season | К topt peene th | The , been told 
i . | a jardine 
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s ed ketch. І have bad | ing t the 
am sure the little book had which you refer is ve | similar горите ons Kn бег Nudes and have noted | the cooler е compast: ment, t simply allowi 
жи кш ^s to ош both places, pag the cool one 
as | » do ithout 
ү: ry 
bath would WI Bore likely à ALIO the pts ing | none d the а TUN nce of a borea: Portland | І was s nof, "however, prepared for a diff 
La si SOT DOR water. E. А. M., Dublin. ment is' largely used in what is generally | months in the ripening of the fruit. 
і e whole a bee foliage of two Haw- | Tus own as & substitute for ton ne, and hence the|the case, ye there was no more si 
thornden Apples of 20 or 30 years growth has been | deadness of colour . Ransome’s stone | being in circulation after the shoot 
oyed in the manner ot the Seidi by red spider, hasa Mfe and sparkle about it; it is as nearly snow- | hole in the qm partition than if it 
ire appears to me now to have бер refuge in the | white, perhaps, аз any goo unpolished marble, In|to a separate „Vine, till the warm wea theri grag 
folds of the „bud, there to lie wait for est year's crop | other materials there is a large proportion of black | set it in motion. ean hardly оре а 
of leaves, in the mean time deitrorihg many of the | mixed with the white, which results in the pro roduetion Young's remarks have e азу referen nce to my eu. 
buds, аз you will see has occurred in this sho of. Is of а very bad | grey —the colour of 1 linen badly 
there any remedy? Is it possible to was n dst of I The last two | stopping the shoots, whereas beginning of ts 
of the shoots in the win ps n di preparation fatal winters have been very trying tò materials of this kind. | pap per us rred to above I hav pee (йв 
s? By. ongen d fH m top) “апа this ni on чет ut but on m 
ng Ww 
to. succeed d, but. how is it to deg predi For sev sm 
yen rs I have obs erved the buds of the trees cankering 
Sly falling off. Two or r three years 869. indeed, І 
had а good егор, but scarcely опе free from maggot u a 
which Т imagine could only be got rid of by destroying 
the larvæ in the beneath the tree during forced erop was deficient s 
winter, Your advice on both points will oblige Rus in colour, from. which cirom 
Tbe. [Аз воо; the leaves have fallen wash your а very good lesa 
trees with sulph whitewas e same time may be learnt ss to tle 
sweep up all the fallen leaves and burn them. Кереа т 
sulphur in April, before the buds open le 
As to the maggot, we s should pare away 3 or 4 inches of 
3 Ee" soil rede the trees, and burn with the leaves. ] 
ifer. eiu) you 
'or givet the more common name am the plant, if it has | 
one t As regards manure for Conifers, you say, * don 
9 them on any дош, Met ide 
us s I have with good effect put the grass, | Јен. the lens tamie 
ers EM ofi trees, &c., in cleming Plantations, over the about, lest the excitement 
roots of Conifers. By this s the roots are protected going on at the late end 
from severe frost, the yo y of the b E me should cause Ше eariy 
ently assists the growth of the pl 3 ripen ned wood to break 
f ез; but “these substances" are not manure in i tbe | before winter, in which ese 
proper meaning of the word. You will find Ча npn 
oa Manetti im in our volume for 1857, p. ssa fa 
other name. ave weathered all storms well for seven years, Fi А 
'ocoa ibre,— ve had no experience of this as | till the last winter, when the frost catching hen Ps eredi d iis 
anetting, but I think do fep superior to any other sort, | When soaking wet shivered them into chips. The wick Hall, 
asit is almost indestruetible, and does not shrink or mus takes place with the stone goods got a VM of Henry Milvai ain, Esq. Tu 
expand when the weather changes as og m ee $ НЫ try masons, which consist ge erally of common a partition and extendin, 
а l | 
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t to pei this Thare = ы 
жїйзїйөг from ш 
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have used 16 this year for supporting Peas instead of plaster i ortla the beight i 
sticks, and I find it to answer very. e : have employ е equable, and the two materials part for ever; Minerva | construction of the Vine bor 
itasa diet sce clothes lin e, be eing constantly and Apollo shed their skins without acr eme by | from the ordinary method. Ins 
all we w ut five or six yea ral t ierwands the dis play. of symmetrical skeletons n though | 4 or 5 feet from the front li 
beproved|high runs from end to end 
e it would now 8 dee a strain that по new by кешш its specific gravity under various circum- within this space, kii i 
Tt TA ud ЖОЙ; it is Le same size as an ordinary | ѕ the level of the area; the border 
сше зб jardinet hás about it а sufficient amount of small chiefly of rotted turves 
S L. A. G." (see p. 774), I would =s in „е four de to be powdered to du st by а | rubbish, is also raised abov 
^ say КТ the Fami внат M heat ; (вау 3 feet next the house 
eep ear ill b t t every scroll is as perfect Tow as Wet | towards the south. There wa 
D : i gradually mide: and when i ardent pn mes and e ын affair can be made as bright | excavating, or conereting 
, 80, take off ve purs cree a чог, Р. |and sn gnon an er iier Ты: n half КЕРНЕ Ан removed, a drain 
à 268, — s e pps пі in wn. The soutervoids which for t 
: ed Wo v Ae „take as. 
ПЕЕ di hile th Š = 
мев V ose I did not operate o о | ii Кол 
than half rotten. тте еу were planted in a stif Yan on | with à stron brin пе, first а наб, 
а ау Бо ш). yith no manure, early in Apri 1 | tł К xs stiff fp Ue iore € reru, Й 
taken up Aug. 23. The crop was good, with very few | used to wash it with Portland, abont h i 
bear hs M many were of large size, some weighing | | land to a a pail of water, and 1 be lie Т india d Port uus еш Hd eec 
e this sisa common 
thre е quarters of а pound, The variety is | practice. 16 is ; brin th Bed ды ы pilare боз 
called E "Foreign Shaws.” SS. G. est regenerator. As to the artistic тл е жеш Мн 
S oye "pé ere ent Ston e. — Inquiries are frequently | | the works Ишт in. this material. there bit e ree the Vide va Ced th y tpe 
made as perishabilit, 
6 feet) and half way do 
of ihe Patent Siliceons Stone manufactured by Messrs. | | of ep апуб rof the kind hitherto s i j 
some of Ipswich. On the subject of its alle ed | a n imagine P uo ask feature on rese др ze ее of е ешм NUES 
< парегиђа bility » Y can dig no opinion, nor perhaps | o stone flower boxes and a Кеййн jardinet, to be kept In 1860 the were 
will any mortal man venture to do z я к е 8 to its furnished allthe year round with the very best stoc h weighing 41 lbs., were ob 
sui ri for garden eem п їс һе testi- ks gardener can command for them. T farnish my | 1861, there have been 350 bunches, 9 
f five e years’ ex pestes! in its лаве ud as the p tone bed e A а dozen times in the course а the eee а. m e E 3 e : 
re and gro cessions for the purpose As 
a а few н may be useful. One of the most prized of | ЗЕ md represente, iti is dre ith. коша Co Conifers 
; thos emo for Hyacinths and 
E Tuli rdi Moa and Aubrieti 
wind ows е the ride room; p irrespective A its | Fuchsias, Pompone Chrysanthemums to follow, &c. 
nd кыс outlines, it has нн best effec$ I have had this season was a bed ofla table. M. P. 7. 
ect of кшн zd hs 'rsons of taste for the ч eris Kermesina ; E when that was over a selection | Judges at жене? pe dires ba р. вове" 
= ч. o P e еы id in of а nts w. Экез}. these to give wa y soon to | remark on the а of dr ans HF d 
e n ап object 
cryst: 
