576 ope fo CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTUR ap GAZETTE. [June 23, 1860. 
aimed. And. ei (ap. TI i, esp of the more noble | and timber measuring.’ nis I t 
ae Scr in many ros ith in ar yh ya oi ‘Sei ato ere lac 1 
Sa ie aaie anala Tona ene |e aati” rr nah Sian win ten So 
be advantages os ee Seagate tter ought to be forthcoming. Oth on 
t Paty 
is perpendicular the walls lie like tiles one upon the 
Dedalea 
alea quercina sometimes out 
sights taca 2 a ga oe spreading for poten inc 
He and 
ye ay 
does to Po olyporus, are found “occasionally | 
oe it is very figs to RREN generig 
oce with whe 
consis isting of nothing more than 
sources were tried with the same result, and dete I 
was obliged to fall ae upon a young man who had 
| served i befi 
RA 
pac 
Being, as I have been T more ‘than 20 5 a 
em mployed on new ground-w ork, i 
anga ır 
r | object, and when 
re walk, as we have seen it in Wales 
earance, 
of carrying out work of that kind | in a proper 
capable 
ann r, and I can safely say that in my 20 years’ ex- 
re 
Dedalea quercina is, we believe, applicable to r 
e| especial use; the substance is too thi 
available for tinder. It is, however, a very 
ooctrsling on the side of a shrubbery 
in to make it 
pretty 
ould be considered good 
workmen. “This arises ina "great measure from their com- 
, it is real 
| ornament. 
morning’s mowing, or a mang at a walk trees, tin 
t h ili B d by oth Occasionally the spawn of this species increase to an | Wor their way until. they get sent out as foremen or 
Tig. e erp w. e supported by others in notions extent without producing pile ei, snd, is then under: gardeners. Now many of these men are clever 
the course o tion they may in that. case find it ot distinguishable from the e pr roduetion kno n under | ab gro wing a big Fu posia aBakyam, and expert in 
r Åz alea on c rut ches. But 
fected wit ot. This par ce i the Vth ‘op 
„ | however entitled to : a geuerl name. PER nothing or lay wa are comple ely at 
mC E have ae from op = & more than mere spawn. We have one ` wit Sa s True, many have no of seeing ground- 
voc another specimen 0. e MPRESS —— in w ‘na was dev 
UCU. 
ill perfectly fit for Tapie it weigh hed 
Although sti 
et 2 feet 3 inches long, 8 inches ro und 
hou 
very. rapi idly, but this is neommon occurrence. 
ich D. querci yA: 
to such an extent as ii dest wey the Sala umbea 
very 
ork carried out, ne pops funk “hah wor E Baath. 
| their notice, but it may be lai d down as a rule that a 
| man who is not a ae in ground-work, and 
eye 
+ 
as we know 
prove that, though so pam snore with the Oak 
“When adak it was found to be 4 racah e it has anything to do with marine dry rot, the 
so nearly solid that scarcely any space wos Pare = Cig n that case producing a totally different 
for seed as very much like the m — nt | Fungus f. J. B. 
Cucumbers exhibited b SHAY 
before the Horticultural Society in 1858, 4 though er on OF GARDENERS. 
neither so heavy nor so long: y remarkab] Bent attona ae 
at all ich we haye education of ae 
e large pate ies of w. 
authentic ‘cobras were white-spined. 
| eniti iy iedod. to ‘the 
e har sh lines do not gr rate, as much as 
F 
will never 
make a clever and artistic gardener. _ 
mener the world as hundreds h 
but he will never, as poor Loudon cod to say, s 
things “ with the aye a aS anges ” Nor is this in all 
| cases to be regretted, an circum: rei will 
the more easily bend to Geaa ARREA ies, and 
He may plod 
ze gar of ice 
for if my experience of the last few years is ress 
relied upon I fear there is ample room for more spirit 
nd fan 
d pe rh aps applause, rire better 
ae 
=} 
gee 
sa 
oe very justly eles the growth of 
specimen par has been the all- ir eet 
rs ba ck; the 
— MYCOLOGY.—No. 
SDALEA P aaka: neral notion 
of | occas 
for 
strictly practical has be en 
Within the ee four years I have on r 
io sato on a 
XI. 
e gen 
is that am ae soft evanescent adver 
which spring up i night and vanish alm 
Sur. This may be. “true ae of many, but 
hardness and last i 
vith wood 
some years. A few of these TAR a very large s 
One, for example, la 
porus A ich 
grows at the foot of old 
Ash | , sometimes 
reaches roy, in diameter, 
and w ust see 
jus n 
attached 
ato the base of a 
h fell a sa e 
have 
two aaoi 
faethe 
convex, and fag 
tiff rigid waved and si 
ous pores, the walls | "of 
Le 
or broken, and ar re nearly 
Dx 
(Copied by permission from 
ns had to send into the London ma 
foreman, and on each occasion have experienced con- 
iderable sig in getting a suitab an. ee 
spring of last year my foreman having igi 
ng left m 
+ Sree. to one of the largest London firms to sind me | 
n his place, and I fixed my standard of qaii, 
ÆDALEA SR EN . 
ag 
T fear aot pine and scientific deductions tee 
been unnoticed 
J 
tain thing he 1 you, u, “ Because I = So-and-so 
treated his plants in n that nine and not because 
reason, Mey iene and cng induction had ‘tea him to 
conclude the method he as the right 
pea te io Ta s of hor- 
ticult: e not 
the scien Sot cultivation is 
now reduced to a code of 
eg ou the 
edited penalties hr 
out a 
track for aieh, must 
not expec ct to kee ep pace 
s has been the 
still a 
several patches of 
Clover aes and sbeing 
walls of the cells as they | cation high in order that I might get a man worth 
k developed and elongated, the apertures | being pushed forward in the won: es 
span ee their. roun ded form and beco ome waved, | requi ired that t the man should n 
of js 
I therefore | 
pate Sat have a good 
“ance of regular gills radia iating from a common centre, f lar, but th oe 
the relation therefore is clearly rather to tl ure soli fici 
; Polyporia than to the Mushroom tribe. eed | of the ff of y fi 
. differs from rather in the more | a correct ah: 
: LOTE l | y pay s en 
i constant development of ur age pores connect: h | ment, but strange as it ee eem the head of. the firm 
i nga “sit bape Ae essential character, replic ed, “I could send you pavers! i piod gi pe a 
© pores quite as aa sinuous, and the walls as decidedly te ot aera ahi cet ft gardeners on our 
decidedly broken | books there is not one that will venture da Ehe land 
Ciovo field. I See the 
of the loss he v uld 
ata b ee 
ro: £ 
} 1 z 
q a eee | 
y “thick pay. ul don pes heya and it was not LI 
ana him of the “action ” that he would cde 
mself to if he sold the seed, and the resulting crop 
= destroyed by Dodder, that he induced io 
estroy the weed - ing, which by the way is the 
most effectual way of getting rid of it in the Clover 
d. First mow an aid of 
z 
of the ib of the field ai 
Not long ago I saw rane farmer with a gang of 
