AUGUST 28 . 
MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YORKER: AN AGRICULTURAL AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER. 
lu reiutauon, tnat the pear * , ’ —“ mice years » r aas withnnt • ’ , “““‘ng graaB alter 
has not been and can not be grown, in this coun- 1 J7’ years from the bud > and first-class trees. , fhe very wors t tT)ossible g culture : '? d S« 1 g#? ^ il Dot 
try, successfully and nrofitnhiu f nr ___ Theae trees average from eight to eleven feet, wi, ,h„„ „ ' S' lbl< L cl ?„' ue , ? - a thousand times 
; as well ex- 
from their 
1,000 acre 
Iry, scorch- 
GOOSEBERRY MILDEW. 
WW4 » w. PEAR CULTUKE. eay from . peir , t „, M bashel eacb . from ^ , —— 
- lN a ia i tenumber of the Rural a correspondent can peaks be profitably grown for market’ 7 heaItby aud vigorous, excepting a few of the ground smooth and regular “for ftTfttarelrSS 
■fruits TW cvAonw * gave a statement of his success in arresting and - poorest callings. The setting of callings is a great cro P- He further saysfon same page, “these 8 ™! 
UITS_IN_SEASON. preventing the mildew cn gooseberries by the use Mr. Editor:— Under this head, Lewis F. Allen “ istake — 1 sha11 ev er regret it. Must yet be re- h Vv»^A Ched; this - 1 P robab] y should 
The weather for some time hasbeen very fine, the ° sa i ,bur * In ,he lasfc number of the London of Black Itock, or Grand Island Farm, appears in p ! aced Wlth healthy, vigorous tree* I would ad- Now T ZhT' " ° h 
nights cool and delightful, and the days warm. The Chronicle, we find the following inter- different articles, in rapid succession, in the Hot- Z® w 7 ° nly thrifty 4rees, let the expense hortioultnriBtB fliSSB y honttt*iiSi 0 if br ° ther 
fall fruits are beginning to ripen, (Aug. 24,) and the “ * a g Z 0 ® 0n the 8 [ ubject ’ m which the editor ticulturist, Rural New-Yorker, Country Gentle- b ° , What U W1 ’ 111S the safest and cheapest in the wheat with dwarf, or even standardiieartree^nW 
trees have about made their season’s growth. On 7,777? ***5™ “‘VST" tbat tbe free U8e aad New York Tribune, in which articles he t 9nn , ^77 , flrat year - ■"TOESSd 
many of the trees in the nurseries the wood is of sulphar "' ou!d Prevent the gooseberry mildew claims, and seems to defy refutation, that the pear 1 7 200 tree8 ’ mostly Vi rgalieus, three years wHhmT^^- rdy ? ar ’ conti . nn iDg grass after 
ripening, and from present appearances we should 18 countiy; has uot been and can not be grown, in this coun-' Z’Z 0 years from the bud , and first-class trees. , fhe very worst pwf& 3 tnM?_ 2 fl? e? J 2 R Dot 
judge trees and plants will be in fine condition for Amongst other matters connected with the his- try, successfully and profitably for market, except 7 88 trees average f rom ei ght to eleven feet high, worse than no culture at all? lie m^ff d Vi ™ 68 
removal early in the fall, L ° ry of the Grape mildew, the description of two perhaps, about Boston; and, to this end, presents , j rom seven to eleven inches around. All P ect his splendid Short-horns, taken from thef" 
Among the Pears now ripe we notice the fol- 8pecies of Erysiphe by Schweinitz, in his Synopsis his own failures in growing, both Dwarf and Stand- iealtb y, beautiful trees. They bore some last year, f ad abnndant pastures of his 1,000 acre 
lowing :-The Pulsifer, a very good, pleasant, but ° f Xorth American Fun gi has attracted the notice ard, with great pertinacity. an P have now from °ne to fifty pears on a tree. I bar^nlSf; ?“«? ! Placed °, n the dry - scorch- 
not high llavored fruit, a little below medium in ° f 0ne °, r tw ° out of tbe . numerous writers who I would ask Mr. Allen, with all due respect if DOt l09t 0ne from tbe number - Tb e remain- dwarf or standard pearsto Uveand^ffr / at -^ n ’- a . 8 
size. It was raised at Hennepin, Illinois. have underta he n to investigate the subject. They he does not think, on further reflection, that the der *' vere set oue and two years ago, and have fruit the treatment they received at his hands. Th Trio 
The Ott, a seedling of the Seckel, originated at WGre . ac( l aainted > however, with neither of the articles referred to are net more comprehensive on them now - the “thousand and one peddling devices of the 
Montgomery, Pa. The flesh is melting, sugary and 8pecl8s ’ The transmission of perfect individuals than he intended? I would also suggest whether . Elias Griffin > of tld 8 town, has an orchard of tZ7 res ? r ‘ ed? Do yon wonder 
rich, with some of the Seckel aroma, but not equal one <r . ora Montreal has enabled us to it would not have been better to stop with a rea- ‘ °° treeS ’ 350 set four years last 3 P rin K» and the greater wonder that thev^fved^mL 18 ? not f 
to that variety in quality. fill up a little gap in the mass of information which sonable description of his failures on his oun Is- Sam ° nnmber 6et tw o years ago; nearly all two barbarous management’ Y r et this is whanfJ BU u h 
The Rosliezer, a long, slender pear, of foreign ! aidbef °f thc P ublic ’ Unfortunately the land Home, instead of endeavoring to instruct us ^ fr0m . bud when planted - Tb ose first planted and literates, in his late tirade, good culture De! 
origin, which we were always well pleased with V ° D ° W undertakea to illu9trate on ^ of aa ccess beyond its boundaries, and fr ° m 8,gbt to thirteen feet high, and from six Jjjj “ J iH th ° mocle, > 
r,r g r^rL;k^ e .r M a‘ir ,hy 
?°sebZ° “-dfa Z,,'2^onTj “1T1T' 0f . ,h0 COmm °” e«r.ct on that, of 1,000 trees, a„,l ,,000 more ptotedto oil va- '™ t0 Bartlettr-, Seokel, P[emi 8 h «“ -Ico etepped to 
Seckel, which ripens eix weeks lahrr.” ‘ ' V ° worto of Trik^ “ reo | ord I , 0 f “ 13 ' lulte o»h°iea, all died, in eight years; and that lm is but SfSS “V"?*" N< S - In 'MfUncss and bean- - of the balanco'of thew 
One of the finest nlurns now rine ifl a • , 01 thy of a place in tuis Journal. It is extremely a fair sample of its success throughout New York f y> thls orchard cannot bo excelled. tr . ees - _ P oor remnants of his pet orchard in^ma^ 
?. . . . P . ma now ri P e > 18 the tricot, common m Pennsylvania, extending as high as and. in shm-i ___ ’ Oliver Cdai'in. of East Rloomfi«ld i,. a gmation, and thus endeth Mr. A.’« 
*-v icucivcu ixz nis hands T« fiiia 
on them now. the “thousand and ono peddling devices of 
Elias Griffin, of this town, has an orchard of s a® res ? r ‘ ed ? Do yon wonder 
U ”: 8 ,,8t «• greater wonder that thojTlived ^*10011 tmOermloh 
same number set two years ago; nearly all two barbarous management? Yet this is what he pans 
years from bud when planted. Those first planted and literates, in his late tirade, good culture De 
fll-ft frnm il.* i o . , . , . _ ll VPT 11Q fVrvwi /.nltl . 7 . . J ''°" 
wvlu. iuau y ear, ana a v;uuueninea thyself. 
« uuu. AUO vuneues A A.U • V .V tv nil lUHHUb. 
Bai-tlette, Seckel, Flemish and Jelie^lm? ffitoJZSX SttbSSSi? 
IS. In thriftiness and beau- — of the balance of these sickly, stunted, unsightly 
bo excelled. trees,— poor remnants of his pet orchard in ima- 
separates from the stone, and when fully ripe is that any fruit can be obtained. The mycelium 
melting, juicy and high flavored. It is an excellent as thick and felt-like as the clothv web ( 
even when it does Dot entirely kill the fruit render. mST '«d height ' . JCiemu, of Cenaodai,-,,,, h,„ an orchard of 
it uneatable. In some years it is difficult to find a aad i n this section / 111081 C ° rtain ’ Read the remarks of Mr. Allen in th« Horticul- Planted Horn ' J ° 0 f ° f which have boen 
e parasite is a member of the same section of f ailed in a crop of f fourteen vears to 1Dg ° V ° r h ‘ 8 0rcbard ’ have ^solved to cut c ?P tin S tbof, e planted last spring. The average 
Lrysijphe as the Rose mildew, and like that belongs certain know ii d „ e 1 w m ^ ,“ 7 down my 70 or 80 varieties and replace them with 12 - to , 24 inches ’ Th « greatest 
™muTh^rra t ?d w Y chK r t,sea not ,’SXTff **• -* ^ 
so much by its matted mycelium as by the perl- years old, that have not failed of a crop for the cer/am ’o theIr production. Our native pears, al- the crop. Varieties — Virgalfeu, Bartlett, sSckeL 
ecia con ainmg only a single nearly globose i as t 40 years. They have produced ve-irip fm™ most Wltb °ht exception, are hardy, strong growers, Flemish Beauty and other leading kinds.’ Never 
“ * ®, J { 11 imvureu - «excellent as thick and felt-like as the clothv web ( Erusinhe 7, rLV.’ ” uu 11VUU man 
bearer, and although many have been destroyed by pannosa) which so often attacks our roses and any ^er fruit-bearing tree I know of. With the 
the curculio, the trees are now loaded. ™ B „i, M i ( exception of the lire blight, which occasionally 
even when it does not entirely kill the fruit renders takes off an “ old settler 
it uneatable. In some years it is difficult to find a aad ia this gection - s 
single berry which is not affected. , ^ . ■ 
The parse,,e is a member of the same sectiou of STlS^rl 
f Eo “ 1 “ a llt » “>« b 3 l»” 8 » certaiu kaowMge. wS 
to Loveillb s genus Spheerotheca, characterised not trees in this countv O 
::“ n ;h . rr.«V T 0t trees in thia C0UQty > Ontario, that are 60 or 70 , f «. , 10Dg cmuvated ’ and are which he sold from $10 to $20 per bbL sav sTno for 
so much by its matted mycelium as by the perl- years old, that have not failed of a crop for the T . “ he r P roductlon - Our native pears, al- the crop. Varieties — Virgalfeu, Bartle^SeckeL 
thecia containini? onlv a noarlu c/inV>r»on i g most without fiYP.p.ntfnn nm ___ Flomifih Upnntvr onri v.. * 
I I ference of the p‘e,’,Lda haref WnMufuiu' MJerS Wi “, , ,C “ y0 “ * h8t hnn<lr '' 1 » » f of F° • "T ^* 8 P">™ » b *‘ Mr. A. ahd other euthu- 
1 I deed sometimes is the case with th^h 1 P ea rs are shipped annually from this and adjoining ° ! 1 8rt a4about 18 lnches siastic; horticulturists said or wrote years ago, 
\ / We havT lnnt t h - h ma88 - counties to the N. Y. and Canada markets ?° 0t ab ° V ° the gr0Und ‘ The pcar stocka 1 ragard '“K tbe value of the pear as a market fruit, 
\ / ' 0 bave long been in Possession of authentic p . nr a • * graft at tbc heat place for such purpose, below yiz ; :—That it would bo the most profitable market 
\ specimens of this species from the Schweinitzian “ p8 Mr ’ A * wlU re T uire tb e individual facts, where the top is to be formed Those planted last frUlt m the conntr Y — to be well founded. 
_^ sXTi.htr b,daata,e,h ' t ” eco “ ,ad ° ^"sasa^^asaatsss 
afhicot rum. V^Tl’ k Wh! °? on ,1,e 1,e " ie8 »f stead oMhekW JittoVowm ° n f r °“ ,'* 0m0 ' Mr ' A ™ “' C0S t,il<i ‘ ! ' “ »• Cha- Bo. “ttftecn yeare W preyLm P ”.°taw“n f o ,n '’■'« <, 
P ,r^r- oMo, r^ otft,8dM,of c 
i few In W . npening ’ aad wl11 be m perfection in who are engaged on the illustration of the mycol- m °i h ‘ ,S not failed of a crop for tb e last 40 years, the ground have succeeded well arow and bear bearS abunda ntly, and its fruit is of t h' e /J J r ° W ^’ 
ew days. Lawrence s Favonte, which looks like ogy of the United States, thongh their collections aud whic!l haa averaged, at least, 20 bushels a year finely Had this anvthine to do with their failnm? ~ swe ?’ mellin g> Juicy, delicious; a dcA vdfow 
deserved TZ l£Z ^ T* *“» “ V— ‘"l f“™ ~ - «0 BaeUett f'Z SXZS& 
all collection*_ ^ 
CULTUBE OF STRAWBERRIES.—LARGE CBOP, ^OmAwMkm frteadl atoaM tak« AlassiMi ISam •« ** - ^ 
buyers will tell you that hundreds of barrels of ^t ? 0 En ^ pean vaiieties are put on the 
APRICOT PLUM. 
James CnTmrr « i a , —ueuau 01 ineir Gooseberries. ,- v " irom very uniform. 
andfniitSn e celebrated market gardener As the disease in its first stage, like the Grape 30 to 85 buahels yearly, worth $200. There are a a. W. Wiifeiock has a near 
spring of 
West Bloomfield, N. Y.,l™ 6 N 8 , n - 
you nearly my last dish of Prince of Wales for"this attacks GooseberriTs'"“u ^ 100 ^ ^ Co ” informs me of a tree o/this'^Ti'etylhe fruit iTh'h T ° f niC ° P0ar8 ' Th ° fonrth 
year; many are yet green. Fifty-five days have a™teria/^Hiurv and nevlr ™ of which broagb t §70 the single crop f®" ^ Cf ° P ° f wbeat in tho orchard which 
ZZt BiaCG y firet ® am ® int ° acti7 ® - SSSS J hT CoZZ th ° den9e There « - in this State and Massachusetts ZZni to K 17 ^1*™* 7"* 
the open ground. Surely that is good work, more h Wrottxeca. 01wr two hundred years old. Mr. A. states in the Zif! 7 , y ® &r th ' 8 0rchard P ro ' 
Has i (I ^ . Horticulturist of 186!, P. 65, that there are a good York $140 IZ lll 
gathered one barrel of nice pears. The fourth 
the open ground. Surely that is good work, more V * W/ '^ 
especially after such a season as the present Has (1 
anybody else been more successful? Truss after V J jf 
truss has followed in close succession, and if the J 
ground is in good heart, each succeeding bunch // \\ 1 /s (l 
will ripen just as well as the first Early mulching // \ / / // // 
has much to do with my crops; the proper time to \ 
apply it is February, or early in March, just before —-AN 
plants begin to grow; the dung used should be ( 
spread all over the plants, which push through it \ '/ \ 
and derive nourishment from it when they most W 7 )) 
want it Mulching has also the advantage of keep- t jK J) 
1Q g a11 weeds down, and the manure gets gradually 
darker m color, and thereby better absorbs the heat 7 // /ill 
w the sun, while at the same time it keeps all right ^ J 4 , \\ /ZZav 
about the root When I am obliged to water, this 7 \ /j [ 
half decayed matter impedes rapid evaporation V // Vc *V.T 
from the soil, and by the time the fruit is ripe, the (?0 JJ 
dung whose appearance might be objectionable in ^ 
-■ebruary has become sweet and keeps all heavy ^ J r 
storms from spoiling the fruit with grit My 
■rotato Pamphlet contains more than I can say on 4 2 3 
Iff ? 6r !' Stra wberries like the very best ° Qr figure ^presents ( 1 ) a perithecium with 
APPLE DUMPLINGS. 
Horticulturist of 1851, P. 05, that there are a good York $140 This vear u, , ’ W ® fth in New Deab r ™al:-As I have received many valu- 
many trees above Detroit 150 years old, CO feet in worth $280 Mr W ha loHn t‘ S estimate, able hints and directions through your paper, I 
r, ; *** thc of my 
there are pMUMMiSo™”'” P. 0 ™” " aja ^'lils for Some “'"time [re™ F f "“ °T Dl ™ ,ios ' 11>re ! m ' e th » 0 ™«* 
p8 over 400 years old - are large enough to produce a barrel of fruit— Z, 8 °f a bl8Cult ’ Wlth a ama11 piece °f butter 
these facts might be greatly extended to prove The cause of the unthrifty trees is want of care rubbed into the ,lour ; 1 teaspoon salt; lj do. soda; 
thfi rtfyp IiPnlfV, arnl _ „ J 1,00 WUUI, 01 Care. sn , lr mill. o„<Kr,iov,t ai_, .’ 
tZ*2Z7tZ i tT'Z! m ” “» 8 bai, for a great crop 4,7. ^ these w foi*Ooop Apple Dvm ., nos , , prepare the 
Z ' P “ °' er 400 years old - are large enough to produce a barrel of fruit— Z, 8 °f a b 1801114, Wlth a sma11 piece °f butter 
these facts might bo greatly extended to prove The cause of the unthrifty trees is want of carp rubbed lnto the flour; 1 teaspoon salt; l.j do. soda; 
the age, .health, and productiveness of the pear Kinds mostly Virgalieus,—some Bartletts and 80ar Imi ‘ k sufficient that the paste be not too stiff; 
tree throughout the States and the World, omitting Seckels. Mr. W. has also 500 dwarfs planted in the 1° , ° Ut f \° A D ® arly aQ inch thicknes »; la Y in the 
Mr. A. a Island Home, where they live but eight spring of 1854. Average height 5 / feet circum f P Z Md ° V ® r th ° CrU8t ’ wrap carefull y in a 
S r lliV er V D ! 0rtnnate l0Cati0n foraIovei> of ference near the ground six inches! Has lostol JS V ^ ce ' m ^ tcamGr ’ b °il one hour. It 
this del con, fruit. tbc ,„ „ bout J b “i" plant I “ ^ ^ * < “ !Mde<1 »n the old 
Mr. A. may object to theso statistics, because ed whore a barn previously stood, a lew by (h[ W 1,1 
7 lar f® ° rcbard8 ’ thickly planted * mice, none by blight. The trees are thrifty, though AN 0 Tn Km-Fill a tin dish one-third full of 
to t.fZAw « 8 Can b ® P Foduced > °r facts shown, not growing so rapidly as tho standards. These quartered apples, cover with warm water; take 
d L w , bal b ® pear . iS Sh ® rter hved or leaa P r0 ‘ commenced fruiting last year, and produced three br ® ad d °' ,gh ’ rai6ed with yeast ’ and ro11 in butter 
b *™:« of -ioe Virgalieus. The crop ™ ™ h orl "' i »•« tb. apple, about one 
b * m ”° f wpgrurCcfeprwo^,,. . —- 00 ,... 
bear af U and are no, [hi a^g'wC ££, TtVsT ** T T ^ I “ 'ZftSiXL'VL' ^-T'“ d “ “ ,he 
Morms trom spoiling the fruit with grit. Mv nlanted in .7. 'J° aa iUUg waen 8ta ndard trees for an orchard, as they require so f- t0 J® and boil half an hour ' and y° n wil1 have a 
WoPo^cout.insmorck.n'fcaTLyS „ . 3 » 3 ^ Much iess care to produce tb^saru, iSHfE I'rtt pudding. _ _ “BatStap,.„ 
0 f “ 5 ? r f , e ; Strawberriea like the very best ° Qr figure ^presents ( 1 ) a perithecium with its the life of the tree, or diminished tie I f” b f r 88 rauch or more > for the first eight years, and „ p „ _ 
Bknt d ’f l i! a ? my three 60rta do -) I give them P roces «es magnified; (2) the tip of one of these chard planting, until intimated bv Mr A P ’ q* 7' ^ tb&t time > twice 38 many. Ho thinks perhaps S , I t ! E8, ~ Fia T «^™ep.-As I like to see 
Iknty of both liquid and solid manure, and at the “ ore hlgh ly magnified and minutely granulated aa my observation extends pear tnL f ’ y dwarffl might not faiI if they had 1he ve, 7 hest of column well filled, I will contribute 
KlVrr* 1 have bad hundreds here with (this Character, however, is not constLf) (3 two «nd productive,^^ treatment, and proper soil; but says he knows the a mite thereto in the form of a recipe for sugar 
om 12 to 15 trusses upon every plant, and each of the asci wj th their contained snoridia hL i gle trees scattered about tbo ^ trees ’ 88 ln 8m ’ majority of our farmers could not be induced to p1 ® 8 ' Take 0ne Cnp BUgar; one water; one table ’ 
° f fr0m I 2 t0 13 ffa it. Itwm “ agnided; spores of the plant lithe this will be the opinion offrowc^gMif'f givc them attention requisite for vigor, fruitful- 8 P°° n fl ° nr; 7 . taasi,00nfn f I I extract ° F eBBenc ® ° f 
has be seen how my crops last so long upon so 0ldl oid state. 1 be it not so about Boston fn 618 ganeiall y- Is ness and life. I would ask if Mr. A. might not nos one -haif teaspoonful soda; one cream- 
Cn than a tuQ weight of fruit has ttt'pZtt -^-~ they have large, old orchards’ H so^th ^7 8ibly C ° m ® UQd ® r thiB claa8 of fa ™ersf It is well 77' ^ thoroughly End boi, > Btirri «g mean- 
een gathered this year off my three-quarters of THE Sb ^MER QUEEN APPLE. foregoing fact! are unanswerable known to all successful horticulturists that in order whlle t0 prevCnt the flour from eettliDg ’ Ba ^ 
n ac^ 1 have another plan in practice by which Ed9 p nwiT T ~- Mr Editor l have a few ntW f, i t • . t0 grow trees rapidly, healthily and handsomely to with two crusts. 
: SHSf r “ - ■* 
form m’a ff B ‘T Wlll - yon ’ or any of y° ur reader 8, in- cultivation from fbtLo U of treatment or I will here admit that I have taken a oreii- • bept constantly well pulverized. No well informed Another Mode to Remove Mildew.— Having 
&S Sfeo,5pp.o' a onT S S;E > ? r 11° H r »b»o I «mo“mo r “ 0r lcre8t in '»«-*«»- ° Z “f“ Irte, »f >»wing » crop of grai „ noticed so i»„uiry, in a .«,c .ember of the Re,,.. 8 
noZV;z:i^r:L , M .........«»- -«* ^ i-j® i h ^ e -« i r* * 
it not so about Boston and all other places wkcre “If " 1 woald aak if Mr. A. might not pos- ®“° n ’ ^spoonful soda; one cream- 
they have large, old orchards’ If 80 Sen 8lbly carae “ der cla « 8 of farmers’ It is well Mix thoroughly and boil, stirring mean¬ 
foregoing facts are unanswerable known to all successful horticulturists that in niYW while to prevent the flour from settling. Babe 
all successful horticulturists that in order 
Ena Rural*—I wi7T~ * „ Mr- Editor, I have a few otto fact. I wish ? gro Y ,ree ’ “““J “1 handsomely, to crM ''' , 
oted and wide . . 7 ‘ninire, through your present for Mr. A.'s beneli, as wen a, n. t .1 th ™ lMg ,iTCd an,i Prodoctive, that they C,n J0n * or “V »' J°” r rea,Ier '' Slvo any infer. 
nn(l Widely spread Danp.r In raftomi 4 . AL. . 1 well as to satisfy the mnst. hft VtifrVilTf I , * matinn rftBnpp.t.infr as.. 
or grass in an orchard—at least till the trees had f« r taking out mildew, I send a simple remedy 
hppn Tilanfp^ cnirnml ,1 t _ ,, . . _LJ.L T in.._•» 1 i a .. ** 
, , —- 21 of p.7re',=; allowed to grew, end ,he grennd-m^ —— 
form yon ’ or any of your readers, in- cultivation from . 0 6 of tieatment or I will here admit that I have taken a mvmf • e P* constantly well pulverized. No well informed Another Mode to Remove Mildew.— Having 
-boulft” at ° r tereatiQ tbe cultivation o would think of sowing a crop of grain noticed an inquiry, in a late number of the Rural" 
Your opinion If S? Is it iari to Whati8 I have non“ of tT PS ° t y 1# v the last seven years, and have endeavor^ to t 7 7" “ “ orchard - at lea '^ till the trees had for taking out mildew, I send a simple remedy! 
Profit aw? + What varieties are the best’and most why I make these inquiries ^“because'Th ^ 6 accurate observer during that period. I must also SS/“n*? KCVeral aDd b ® C ° m ® Wel1 estab ' whi ° h 1 Hk ® much better than those PoWished this 
fain thA ® ^ ra k 8e for market ’ and where can I ob- so many complaints^aii ft’ 7u ^® 1 have heard acknowledge that I am indebted to Mr \ him«Air 1 h d ’ Bat never, under any circumstances, among week. Take a piece of chloride of lime, about tbe 
SS m by - the f quantity - aad a t what price?- all ” d ell™ 77 7 g th&t they had loat for a portion of the zeal I have for 7 ’ ’ They ma8t be tilled like 8 favorite cauli size of an egg, dissolve it in cold water and soak 
teases b » 2^z^,r,, ,ta 8 rzr d rtr *■ss. z*z s z'?£ “tlzzx : b ° ~ b «• '■»» ^ 
Ben arks—T hose wh[ grow Zt eg. b^ for ,'T 'T “ ZfoL f ZluZu X TS ^ ^ 
a« parpee of sappiying the mart .,, n i d Km “ £ Uhem decay, „bi!c itar.S TZ tteS °,Z » T“", *° ol ' ’- 
sioa. vJ. C l r j,,nd !‘ te ' 'Ohstoteepupasncce.. lea , on which ,'.hinkTh al tte unu *“« ll J' wet those remarks, I commenced the Dlantine 0 ,^ a*J« il^tion here apises, what kind of tillage Creaji Pies.-I will send yon a recipe for mat 
e know nothing of any sorts called the flttpnH ’ .. “ k 8 bard ^^ Probable, for my orchard which now contphia a „ P -A n . Dg ° f 8 P ® ar dld Mr » Allbn givc his pet orchard of dwarf and in 8 cream pies. One cup cream; one suizar- two 
n B ,„, ro . Dl ^Z»s ram «™. 
^srs-Cien.Bat. 
garden vegetable foVmA f ® baBmefi9 of rai8iDg Augusta Station, iud., 1858. oral Reader. letts, and Winter Nelia, 120 in numhe" planted six i?n 70a recorded in tb e//or- drink it immediately. Repeat this three times a 
Remares-—W e have before received similar day till cured. A. T. N., Olego, JV. K, 
Bk.ARW-We S i Pm, T Lal '’ MkK 1S58 - WeTerTLde“,r^ e e rS" StlT r?"r ^ *" 4 ei *"‘ «• ««<^ inehefa™„nd‘ ^^ *““»»» WunZwm .ome'ot your unmer- 
" Bhow of no each work. their experience and otaemtiln the benellt of Commenced hearing when three years old, have feef apart I J,.J j, [a TT\ ‘ 0,6 r “ w ® beta * 12 ous correspondente commnhicato thro> the Rural, 
__ a f ™ lted O’ory year since, and are now well loaded I „„„ C L° 'l r t J f?t‘’ “ d h,d * *• a reol >' e " hi ' b . If followed, will make L 
-- --- ’ P ‘ 1 nCXt year 1 8eeded 14 t0 oats and grass, good Elderberry Wine?-N. H, Holley, N. Y, 1858. 
Chmt, Victoria and Linnccus 
sorts. 
-sovu™, U i. a no ofthe 
are good, large, market Cnd it j 
befolT SEED8 - Can y0Q ^11 me if there is to 
a “TrAf ,*- 111 8 1 th .® W ° rId 0f print> 8uch a thing as 
I am ° n Raising and Saving Garden Reeds?” 
gardAn 1 y ® ar ’ g ° ing int0 the hnsiness of raising 
oo«c,; e s“ 1 r for marketa " d ”" id “o.o 
seeds-tt u* t0asma11 ex t e nt, that of raising 
• «• Jacobs, Prospect Lake, Mick, 1858. 
EiiAp.Ks._We know of no such work. 
their experience and observation. 
