494 



General Notices. 



Place. 



Sarsden 



Sesiiicot 



Scarrisbrick 



Scrielstry 



Shardoloos 



Shplfield Place 



Sherriiigham Bower 



St. John's 



St. Leonard's Hill 



Stapleton 



Streatliam Villa 



Stoke Farm 



Stoke Park 



Stoke Pogies 



Stoneaston 



Stratton Park 



Sufton Court 



Sundridge Park 



Siiiininghill 



Buttons 



Tatton Park 



Thoresby 



Trewarthenick 



Tyrringham 



Upp-irk 



Walwood House 



"Waresley 



Welbeck 



Wembley 



Wliersted 



Widdial Hall 



Wilderness 



Wilton Park 



Wingerworth 



Woburn Abbey 



Woolerton Hall 



County. 



Oxfordshire 



Gloucestershire 



Lancashire 



Lincolnshire 



Buckinghamshire 



Sussex 



Essex 



Isle of Wight 



Gloucestershire 

 Surrey 



Ileiefordshire 



Berkshire 



Somertshire 



Hampshire 



Herefordshire 



Kent 



Berks 



Essex 



Cheshire 



Nottinghamshiro 



Cornwall 



Essex 



Sussex 



Essex 



Bucks 



Nottinghamshire 



Middlesex 



-Suffolk 



Herts 



Kent 



Wiltshire 



Derbyshire 



Bedfordshire 



Nottinghamshire 



.T. Langston, Esq., M.P. 

 S. P. Cockrell, Esq. 

 T. S. Eccleston, Esq. 

 Hon. Champion Dymock 

 William Drake, Esq., M.P. 

 Right Hon. Lord Sheffield 



Edward Simeon, Esq. 

 General Harcourt 

 Dr. Lovell, M.D. 

 Robert Brown, Esq. 

 Earl Sefton 

 Hon. E. Foley, M.P. 



John Penn, Esq. 

 Hippesley Coxe, Esq., M.P. 

 Sir F. Baring, Bart., M.P. 

 James Hereford, Esq. 

 Claude Scott, £sq., M.P. 

 James Sibbald, Esq. 

 Charles Smith, Esq., M.P. 

 Wm. Egerton, Esq., M.P. 

 C. Pierrepont, Esq., M.P. 

 F. Gregor, Esq., M.P. 

 William Praed, Esq., M.P, 

 Sir H. Featherstone, Bart 



Sir G. A.Winn, Batt., M.P 



Duke of Portland. 



Richard Page, Esq. 



Sir Robert Harland, Bart. 



J T. Ellis, Esq. 



Earl Camden 



The Earl of Wilton 



Sir Henry Hunloke, Cart. 



Duke of Bedford. 



Lord Middleton 



MISCELLANEOUS INTELLIGENCE. 



Art. 1. General Notices. 



The SUmi/ Gmb may readily be destroyed by a decoction of tobacco-water 

 thrown over the leaves by a syringe. The proportion of tobacco may be 2 oz. 

 to a gallon of water; and, after the liquor has remained a few minutes on the 

 upper surface of the leaves, it may be washed off with clear water, thus freeing 

 the leaves from every appearance, eitlier of the slimy grub, or of the tobacco 

 used to destroy it. — John Jcnmngs. Shipston on Stoiir, Aug. 21. 1838. 



Liquid Manure. — Some few years ago, Mr. Cameron, ciu-ator to the Bir- 

 mingham Botanical and Horticultural Society, made experiments on the 

 effects of liquid manure obtained from pigeons', fowls', slieep's, and deer's 

 dung mixed together. They were kej)t dry until wanted for use^ by which 

 means their virtues were better preserved than if they had been kept in a 

 moist state. 



The proportions used by him were as follows : — To forty gallons of water 

 he put half a peck of the above manure mixture, and let it stand for twenl}- 

 four hours, after which time it was fit for use. 



This mixture he found particular!)' beneficial to some sorts of plants 

 cultivated in pots, particularly those whose roots possessed strong spongioles ; 

 such as bidsams, pelargoniums, chrysanthemums, mimuluses, fuchsias, salvias, 

 and pansies. Its beneficial effects upon plants possessing such roots he 

 considered to be owing to its hot nature destroying the tender points of tlie 

 spongioles; and that the stimulus given to the soil caused fresh spongioles to 

 spring out from around those destroyed, in the short space of a day or two. 

 By these means, the feeders of the plants were increased at every successive 



