. The Canadian horticulturist [monthly], 1889. Gardening; Canadian periodicals. anaMan ibor^icufturieL. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $ per year, entitling the subscriber to membership of the Fruit Growers' Association of Ontario and all its privileges, including a copy of its valuable Annual Report, and a share in its annual distribution of plants and trees. REMITTANCES by Registered Letter are at our risk. Receipts will be acknowledged upon the address label. The Plant Distribution.— Owing to the ver}' rapid advance of vegetation this Spring, it was found impossible to fill the last orders re- cei


. The Canadian horticulturist [monthly], 1889. Gardening; Canadian periodicals. anaMan ibor^icufturieL. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $ per year, entitling the subscriber to membership of the Fruit Growers' Association of Ontario and all its privileges, including a copy of its valuable Annual Report, and a share in its annual distribution of plants and trees. REMITTANCES by Registered Letter are at our risk. Receipts will be acknowledged upon the address label. The Plant Distribution.— Owing to the ver}' rapid advance of vegetation this Spring, it was found impossible to fill the last orders re- ceived with any prospect of giving satisfaction. We therefore a?k those who have not received their plants this Spring to have the kindness to wait until next Fall for them. The same list will be continued for the Summer, so that subscribers sending in their names may still select from it. The Crandall Currant.—We wish it to be plainly understood by our readers that we do not endorse anything that has been said in these pages concerning this currant, and that the writers are alone responsible for the statements made. The Cran- dall is quite a new thing, and as in the case of all novelties we desire as quickly as possible to test it on our own grounds, and to receive the testi- mony of planters from all quarters. Our object is to defend the interests of the growers of fruit, and not to boom any nursery stock. Now, while Mr. Summey's experience with this currant seems to have been favorable, the experience of some horticulturists at Rochester, express- ed to us personally, is adverse, to the effect that it is a poor bearer, and that its peculiar odor is serious fault. We await further testimony with interest. The Newtown Pippin. — An English correspondent of the Garden and Forest writes in high praise of the Newton Pippin, an apple which we well know brings the highest price in the English market, some- times selling for as much as %j per barrel. He says that in point of flavo


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