The Germantowm Telegraph thinks that the advice to cut grafts in the Fall, "before the sharp cold of winter injures their vitality," to be packed away in "boxes of fine damp moss, damp saw dust, or buried in earth or sand," all nonsense, and says: We never out our grafts before February, and if the ground is not frozen, stick them in at the foot of the tree, then the variety is known without labeling. If the ground is frozen they are tied up, the bunch labeled and buried under a shed or in a rather dry place. We have set seventy of these grafts (pears) at one time, and every one of them grew. Once on a time we employed a professed grafter, who brought his own scions (plums), and set thirty-two for us, every one of which died. The following Spring we thought to try our own hand at it, and set sixteen (plums) on a tree fifteen years planted, the grafts out as usual in February, and eleven of them grew. This we thought was doing pretty well with plums. If the grafts are carefully preserved and properly set, it makes no difference whether out in Fall or Spring.