Catawbas, black, and capable, in in that igre 
hanging on the Vines till winter. Raisins 
be of good quality; have been made 
Another sort called the “ Red River,” 
like 
“Was ahite 
is much 
te, of pequally lly discoloure 
id to | whic 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
wed, pria e nts of the cells 
T is com mposed be g filled with 
e Immediately, satjaoatt cells seem 
furth 
but er down disease 
+, 
eaks moreover oft the 
„the 
very int 
LLIAM 
M: 
| was acqu aia a witl 
Grapes gr gene) did not believe 
a finer Grape he he Washit could be found in | 
th best? ‘Sintes. or in Europ 
n to this if ‘Winncans no hee of 
N kno 
r Fox gan ape: a are more or les 
where ‘‘ it | disease e tniad the pee 
A Geto 
er cure. isease 1n 
iiy. 
| case reported to us is confine 
an e 
t io juig ed likely to be fine 
q | noticed, however. 
he 
d to a emg tree be, were igh oe a 
[Novemser 10, 1860. 
Most of these trees were une excep 
se and as ay as could then 
ely set with bloom buds 
S ag 8 trees. M 
ble in point of h 
, the 
and RTE ‘had not 
h Mr. Ri 
p 
| anem jotera others of the same varie ty, a 
nf 
> 
> 
sun is the only sidé diseased, a cireumstance 
d in Apples. ee growth 
he fo paar 
g 
between the | 
of 
mye hs is checked while other ss 
ars i ti 
ize, | Bire! yaw ; ambren 
others "ahdni are free ‘from ‘disease on the 4 same | mëtt an 
e| wall. M. J. B. thes 
y ivers; but where the 
as ri he fin est quality, ann of Peai ches 
and ete es, 
the fallest avin to the a action of t and ot ther 
g influence ; then no doubt i es iten table, 
of looi ‘orm is’ _ on then judg. 
d method is necessa SAE rrying o 
e systems, and that can only be attained by ws 
rience, and s ute h a knowledge of nfen Physiology 
WE unde ion that at the late competition 
Hite: cham and Bromborough ‘Pool 
pardoni for health and a ment. At yoy ot Peac 
trees in one of the fruit e Réusiddn the gar 
e former. This shows the importane 
sw 
alw: 
wW 
sa 
t| poi 
Horticultural Society trained i in the h divia” ® form 
ne 14a} 
nt of symmetry and fruitfulness. I am yI did 
not see the fruit upon them, but it. had been gathered 
away now and then wit 
‘we'll have another but n xt year,” 
this i is s do one the spirit of the ‘competitors is ote Aa 
into weak sorts, a thir mig 
ofthe bunch. These are "iinat ttl A Med o replied 
to by amateurs, to wh om we commend th 
A CORRESPONDENT, “P. G.” has enclosed a 
sample of ‘‘ Cox’s GoLDEN Drop Pr a be show 
take "will be properly rewarded. 
ae tter to provide such PaE 9 with the 
of having every year a certainty of such 
rewabe as their industry oak skill may e entitle 
them to. To give them the cold shoulder now an 
Surely it "would | 
5 
pool a short tim 
o my A 
These trees, be. “it obs erved, are planted out 
w 
y 
of all that I 
orchard-house management, viZ., th 
of first-rate sizé and eon the crop. must 
no 
that this singular season "has not bee 
very 
igh 
D 
neonravcement 
be suppose Th e specimens sent were from tre 
growing on the north ae of a wall 4 feet high, 
E D © 
PENE Emi D ce view is Nome unced. b; 7 | mi 
eiad and Nor appear in quarterly 4s. 
so that the s an never have shone upon the 
except a eA very skó rt time early in the 
mornings, wa ring the very 
an preside under tte z the high AOO | of Drs. ČAR- 
ER, M PERCEVAL WRIGHT 
Physiology and À Histology z Mr. RAY GREENE and 
i than iie growing in n open 
eh Mr. Riv vers e trees of Pea and 
| Nectarines with the fruit ane literally like ioe s 
beta rd a a little further it 
A 
Ka r 
? 
aid 
tot je, n only of the Sli atid; if more like Nut- 
magsikap b Peaches or i e. regnen y, 
sabe, stated that a ge is capable of brin e a 
and of Wey pad quality, although | yy i Dae a PO te perlsoe ging à 
ain ua P rui per ec ram „an 1a 
of course not equal an ie peanon ki & ae peere of Animals ; Mr. Bus K, Mr. Luss and oe is on it ret be ned at 
0) Ma ji N Nir F ye tre i rofi HUXLE r Human “and Geumwation the "ibe sè of ‘hi size an ty which under 
b i ree, forgotten, allowed to grow | Anatomy and Embryology; Prof. OLIVER for | proper treatment it ought to ps "Bat j if on the 
wild, smothered with suckers, overshadowed b erogamic Botany ; Mr. FRE “Se Rsk contrary, the ero op is over-thinned, and less are Jett, on 
Jont on the north side of a great pile of| for Cryptogamic Botany; and pog 
wood, neverth extremely §00¢/ and WYvILLE THOMSON ‘san Paise ntology. ‘The | You get fruit of larger size and sometimes ee 
Plums—such indeed as would ah been pro- proposed Review wil therefore embrace every portions. The late I r, Clement bape at his ‘treatise on on 
e ia excellent had they come from any other 
seems to deserve being generally 
herr nts 
staple ace of sail generally 
EEk clima 
pa ae S 
TA to Hatt inland 
e Pat that o that the Horticultural |g 
som 
faraion cann ft eia 
ological Science. 
Its content s will w A seed into—I, Reviews; |4 
IL. Original Articles 
pprap notices aÀ toii 
tion will embrace criticism: 
bli 
it is well k 
may sufficient 
serve pov, thongh they may not be 
e to dem and a we e in ad ipang r si a 
ar of a Vine Sate mia ted Ason n 
marie eA a Hetey crop ee seeing’ of one; but still I 
think it may be Jaid dow asa rule that such Vines 
me Pago 
ouncil 
n found History 
r two Pe crops, b 
soon checked, nie 
w Sr TT. 
may 
other common forms of Sou 
but to confine himself tola 
d 
I 
dt Horticultural distributions and Ballots ü | 
season ought to possess great inter 
Ever 
form of se in Ape y 
of t heir flosh, od cated by little 
it 
fruit grower is too ages with. that 
consists in ~ 
8 w discoloured pits i the outer surface, 
is that form of disease to which we had occasion to 
allude e 870. of this year’s Gardeners’ 
pu ications 
This I nae noticed in m: 
wo or thr oa ars becomes celebrated 
Lar 
| for its magnificent Grapes 
ful crops, but this rarely leata long, and Ie wes 
ait epee 
atural History that have a red 
irita F ppea 
record of the | o 
us | mi uch trouble en numerate a number of places hrs this 
the plants are 
to beco) on a SE eee sand ha have the power 
fata à ed before they carry one, 
| ites — a bat little "bias tue poa will attain a ripe 
old ag e tl here ke Spe: fruit 
D 
Y vigorous th Ke i pi hr weal 
judiciously as as to the yos Mow 
awil bé rewarded with “tet of tbe wanes eo 
es of all be ds must be 
it is to be expected that the proposed periodi = 
will take a very high place in Scientific Literature. 
ORCHARD HOUSES. 
RecuRRING to my Moa to Sawbridgeworth i it is 
exten! 
eke d, ext it extreme 
inxuriiee— etree root rig g, and fikawise extreme 
anuring, endeavour get our trees into # 
healthy Fett state and heap ‘ies so by avoiding 
NW kind: 
which Cage described under the In Mr. Rivers’s pr nurseries the soinben, of fruit 
Caries in No, 98 of our series ye. articles | to which Mr. Rivers bas | trees preparing orchard house ani eae 
ox Vesa bi va Byer as ae as our} ca: rried the p preparation oF a stor - nin T is 7 almost incredible. pe 
s, this di as been onfin ed to va ion, he having at the present time fruit trees of all è quarters may be sten of one variety, e while all 
ve oo ag s foe kinds, I think In may say by the thousand. House after the Teng pg are pe ted by on pene if not 
is tifi thousa season in 
ps an al wid ane a in Pear ats sip, ee: dition ; the sam may be said of the Peach, Nectarine, | fine H i neral next year 
now peal: sage ope Oiga icot, and Figs, whi sald have been elgg 2 Still I am not am 
report. kin is | of Apples, Pears, and Plums, and also a’ large quantity aaedeuke for this extre dwarfing, though for 
