$ЕРТЕМВЕЕ 21, 1861.] 
ТНЕ GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
849 
cone-formed heads of flowers. This feature cann t be | 
ispensed with i н uns Phlox, without Laer d ih 
е: Destroy it and t flor rescen ce 
other race originated ime É e aneen 
y P. yes and generally 
flowering Phloxes, are not клет “айтай а pus" ре 
the 
e rhood of ondon, | 
way, in 
though, as many of the fine Sc 
this group, we suppose the more ‚ northerly due of |» 
sa Rose seriously wounded seldom recovers. бе 
e more endangered than Manetti Roses, and are to 
ded ith more difficulty. They are vulnerable 
ood (when not ripe), at the point EM union (the 
е sin tof damage this winter 
It was ced winter suddenly following 16 months 
| xs weather, with s n - iie that 
| destro ma lost none, among 
| Briar “А а уң Rey dropped p dover. I 
b. all that I could d save my well- 
selected st ock, by А, ng the ground "plants and 
о min. enr 
, PREVIOUS | to the Christin era, and probably ар to | stuff 
eferr ned "Plar s thus ma naged are not 
effective "a thoug ix arieties may 
finest which are grown. Itis equally t > borne in мю—————= 
1 а, f hibit 
Es e Hu EM Ju ài jon, erp POMOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE AMONG THE 
profusion of bloom сап readily be secur liberal NCIENTS. 
cultivation, but in addition to these we must have 
dw; arfn ness, ап. and w we must have the panienlate | ў 
ry limited. Көке theless, on referring to | 
Columella, ‘Pliny, Y Varro, it will "v qiiem ЕЕ — 
0 kind b 
n the | point of union (the vulnerable place), the 
object сся to keep off heavy dews en im ы 
frost p E Befo re, ho owever, t this w as don 
nds of fru 
cultivators to solve, is how these results are be 
bined. — combination Le be securel does 
not appear t of reasonable dou 
adm 
Reverting then for а mou to the plants as they А 
appeared а 
t the s 
i 
t тло vlla, mele 
ve authors have mentioned 2 
n give the di: dis 
vm tende 
ugustus. 
sorts, == ма ы did not ev 
wil 
and this damaged the trees. _ The Manetti imr were 
m over the point of union by earth, and as far as 
the snow covered them they were safe. Those trees 
ne 
that ripened their wood, whether on Briars or on 
Manetti, were perfectly intact, while other trees of the 
same kind cut much for shows died by their sides. 
А! 
fter the weather broke I commenced ‘upon the rising 
I came close 
2 ЕЕ. аин. e best mode of treatment being 
ned, of [- as 
rfectly clear that 9 ich the | charac 1 be seen that asy took little 
но Li ne "allow и үз No. z i hich eir | ОГ in init of the frui of which Ar- 
natural Ким, A дебе ы this күк, not- | menia and Po =з абодва. ма fne examples. 
метка en p rd of flowers . We say | With the fall beri and the bar-| 
barism of the middle ages, it may be -— that 
groups 7 e attention | fine gardens and fru € culture we disappeared : bn 
know the zeal of Charlemagne, and at a паг date the 
especial ly to ы treatment ot the na and not lively interes ib A 
gardens near their palaces. 
fi 
appli: — 
to t the die dece p" to the old inferior о 
No. 1, as we believe, received too little aat |^ 
coho 
courtil, used їп Joinville ins stead 
t union, sealing pari ends ad both stocks 
upo 
| "^ ma ^ Z 
Ай 
the o fira 
with Robinson's glue, апа also 
bees wax, oil, soap, and 
in | essential to the hard cutting ot Manetti Roses in iiy 
e By so doing 
Nos. 2 and 8 were, in our opinion, defective from havin 
received too mucb ; they h 24 2 
stage of their growth, a E a too grea а distance from 
the root, and in this way, Ae ^w ета inflo- 
rescence was dame lost, the la i wth A 4 
rength to 
not i P or st an "effect 
way. 
to replace 
; is betw ween these extremes that „the happy histo 
ез P oam may be requisite to fix the exact d 
tw robably not be far wrong 
П produce the desired 
йу r his d Paul's Victoria, now 6 feet 4 inches high, but 
successors арреа to. have inherited bloomless. All ronnys died but on e- 
sil less of his knowledge and desire o natural budded on Manetti. In place of this Rose I would 
ry e warlike virtues. We must pass | recommend its type, and a hardier and fuller Rose, 
gf ru 6 я to йай A d" go i а viz, Lælia. aimee me — lest I forget it, adv 
o o e Valois n evi 
OM uni for. hd doti Who has not who buy B > them the first spring -as 
gardens o of t e Rue St. P. 
where the rarest fruits and animals dae дода m 
са 
1 hich Charles VI. bestowed ев re, For all| 
i - ern wu W e he Hor at еа this, we still - y & they were only с fruite | 
secured f n | which had been brought at Fi дч д тош y; 
st d i й Mic Е тш, кыбал от; зүн still the same kinds, o ages ӨЛК 
vil Бе! actory e same names, li y e 
dy anra than that of topping me Сома served to distinguish t ес? А 
stems when from а foot -— E > height | t 
«а ы-ы — but Уй: latera o furn 
pecime e notice in niai E (M jreg Ж 
disposti on to tbrow up shorter blooming shoots, as а 
о speaks 
д nd Ta arentines, just 
Cato or ap bé adt ofi the gardens of аса wou 
E y if not accidental may lead to a mode of 
tment applica able to such varieties, namely to cut 
the b the 
ely be found best i 
$ nomenclature 
- nature, the "pes = of Traan bad LN we 
am агч uired п 
t least for the 
t ctio il and poo now that th 
sterling merit. Some o! 
erior kefa | 
е0 Olivier de Serres, an 
have don 
With Ta Quintinie we find what great progress fruit- 
tree culture and vegetable physiology had made, The 
pe that the em i. also 
т т any alteration, either in form ог 
ged. 
chan 
| - | boring T" will kill. 
el : If the plan 
| the chance 
regards Roses old on their own roots, nothing 1 but 
No root is so hard as a Rose’ 
ts are йн yai course you е 
r wood is not ripe. 
oses on vet etti Uer rar nd 
Gil» marso о Roses ls t him as 
root. 
i now rever to the R 
Ld Mr. Mino 
Some of thom rcu never 
here, such as MEME Eregue p at Bin 
the zg ig of P 
Do; 
notwi 
tioned in the 
Others 
viz., M уйй лу ёге, M. Phelip, 
W | Thérèse . r- vie Mons. Ravel, Du Petit "ree 
Ке аа Montijo, Y: dec ut AN Ikn 
;1,6 
the other Manetti Roses I end orse. 
purposes of po 
exist so many ant varieties of 
masses of rich dnt 
be more beautil 
nicles of 
ch is h variet: 2-75 ене |n 
» whi very showy ety with a d 
crimson eyes and A Le Gamin de pm which Hd 
e. There besides fine rose-colou 
decies 
P 
€ye, is docete feror to it. d 
La Qui пише) wW 
La Fontain 
) 
by sowing th by importat x ditt 
d countries Un арас many o 
say nearly all, нее been changed d improved wi а 
better — of — € X ану с C" are the 
same РЕ cy € 
нен of dor de 
icestors Poem the бе Ка а ре names. 
Much Mie is due to the Chartreuse, densis 
La Quinti purging the catalogues as well as in 
the he Intelligent. culture which they y эчи in their 
rchards. Hamel du Mon 
tratin 
cable chaos, the nomenclature of fruits, has been 
numerous an mmuni ication. Col- 
rved to our age to У нет ем as it is by 
d 1 ready of c 3 
respect. Dr. Berthet and Mons. Jard do well on 
M but do not v open freely. Geo 
Dupont is very good and better than ei ither. АЙ ш; 
Portemers неа on Briars, but Mr. May of pm ma em Mis 
a noble bush of o грах Fontaine is a fine 
in the apis Peronny, but a hard opener. It ier 
тух Б iE One only of my six 
plants » Manetti died, d ee Step apparently 
e ed and are ce plan: 
in dus "M 
а is rose and white str eg rw very pleasing 
its marking as well as т^ їп рыгы, while 
emite a light ; Rosea alba 
х, n 
ng from Phlox 
and blooming late in summer onward till 
nd | Review of М. 
» | By М. Pigeauz 
pru 
vigorous-habited sorts, with broad |“ established 
in France n 16 may apu ra 
that there are 1000 or 1200 гоа of rts kin in that are 
said. to be у TS vation. 
sd Liron d Airolé's per o os Piera, 
I 
AE" ROSES AND ROSES BRIAR. | one 
vE read Mr. Milne's er көр, зов = * 
Merk „ааа I can confirm i 
The Manetti wer have 
enduran vevivil, did 
е of ti the blooms. Th 
tered d 
; budd ded o А 
е А Фа. оп 
e wood 
e!that will not die will never 
ut aedes: be stated 
& | V: 
ur (stiffer and neret qnn in 
Margott 
in, bu 
"um 4 are the e Жай 
anetti 
and bad flowers, фор, weak wood and no fover, and 
Б 
lands 
petal 
not so free a санага c sepals 
d M, Bonnaire. Alexandrine de 
