May bd 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
worked on the Dog Rose. 
of rec de Rosoméne were 2esag 
gustine Teliem, Latifolia, Madame 
Madame Nerard, 
other varieties of equally robust habits, suffered 
seve: 
b . *¢ killed 
a 
| pen subernon will 
Of the al 
be the best for the Beara Peal of | | 
a group, as the most luxuriant. erpetuelle 
y, on ite an “se is also an admirable Rose rm 
uping, as its its habit i compact, an and | its flowe rs large, | 
and when the house was shut up with a syringe; 
vines pia th were esha prey at this time. 
the bad sel f the Cannon-hall M 
_ the pollen is defects “es Sala 
t to be able to perform their neces: 
ad 
or the anthers 
necessary 0 
te > badded, as its flowers i in many soils seldom open well. 
I beli 
por, Norton, Stockton-on- Tees. 
t 
__ Cockroaches. pee lays bey fads: nye 
of the four above-m 
sequently be always anne eed plant 
— as their uniformity will be assed a severe 
Still, ge a of these families pani 
be ap sig ey plantations, yet ne merit | 
lace i nom where re they can a 
en 5 
Seer eleaeen on ingly in p 
} 7 Pers 
par as Sagem: eine nce of seed and hares 
ptera, ani d were known 
the e ancionts deg the appropriate name of Lucifuge. 
€ com: species B 
which ae imported fro into Europe through 
the commerce in the hae ‘ag brought over in ship- 
cargoes. Your destructi 
i.) 
th Nothin Sani wile 
eealtare wich is seal to “Tift” them in the begin- 
correspondent —— fully tl 
but in addition to 
ere is no doubt that, 
like their foreign congeners, they make use of their win wings 
alate al or fence, and let their heads rest 
At the com! mencement of aii a@ mat, 
remain all 
Same, if coe ‘ollowing ath is mild it may be re- 
at the ‘wall. 
dom seen to do so. 
are selected by a parasite-fiy 
air, and placed over 
t the end of March, or be- 
April, they may be planted out for the summer, 
moved to giv e the bran ches 
Abou! 
ginning of 
having their shoots cut back in the usual way. 
much finer than if suffered to stand 
to a neighbouring drain or dead well. 
Besie the saving of labour and “be superiority of so 
over spring, there is the ae rae of having a sup- 
ply opt ut th Conperature’o€ Santé axsaie 
nig 
the an same manner as the Ichneumon 
fly deposits its pi in larva and aa insects. —(Grif- 
fith’s Cuvie er—Rennie’s taboo by The! — to catch 
+ They will 
in the open 
it no! 
¢ 
ueniiins 36 ina-eidlaeoader 4a cps s exposed to 
the process of evaporation, the value of which is well 
known to every practical cultivator. Tank yon igenieer® 
and cement, os gee sla’ is 
Mpa dig rig gy sagen pile 
that at the bottom. A little flour or meal must 
must be a side-door to the box; ; when mo 
eee 
the box, and holding i overa . 
in that time, and never found the ecco nti 
arise from it. I recommend their being made rags 
wide, not very deep, and with a well of sufficient 
pot into. 
peat cn and exhausted. The improvement 
62 h tL . 2 2. © th, a 
Reverie prost, that we shall in future have no occasion 
ur rows 
a lt aoek by some _ +6 rac infernal 
These are of the — luxurian' as hardy as 
sl pele 
be fixed at any desir- 
oa naar eet 
oo trent ig Ne materials for tanks. 
The 
scuncaneen are a sketch and cae 
he will soon find that the 
tained.—B. 
basin of boiling water, open the door and shake it, when 
desired object has been at- 
ellow Rose.—Miller, quoting old Par- 
llow Rose, “The sept is so thick 
one side or 
unto the great 
Provence or Holland Rose.” Now, r conceive that G. ‘B., 
We are of opinion that no hi atop bo oa be | 
doing himself j ustice that pass into the 
l- ) 
hem, and thus increased that disposition to 
brid China Roses, w ch by 
spoiled by the soluble salts it steamaaet mpregn: with. 
ak noi of which Parkinson and all others complain : 
indeed, I lat 
ated 
an where —s attention is paid to soil we se 
of wa 
2 
to th +, PO cd eee 
re- 
uality and ealiiecenl are 
several of first-rate « quality a and peculiary Toru; 
pom mea f 
ay Recap amon jeer a 
a chia aan Sep sores ey eek to whom he 
named the Rose. This is a first-rate Rose, very hardy and 
vigorous in its habit ; Mr. Lalla hubs tbiine teal-gisen us 
Marshal Soult, ae es and Edward Jesse, all 
Ne 
cottages in in Suffolk, 
where y wild, and that he 
sic pay Fong a are very pene Ber t of the knife. 
gt Exotic Pi ed ont into the_ 
fe 
were planted in a southern 
and are all thriving well. ger quretenteetg winter, 
I put some leafy mould, moss, or decayed bark, over the 
SS 
Cedar o Hwy ts 
| They flower every year 
In 1835, one plant set ore 
page 
rich earth, 
subsoil, at about 170 fet abore the level of the Praga 
duced 12 stems, which bore is eri- 
ni a native of Sf 
good roses, but and habit too closely bling in 1825, and 
the Princesse. followed by Madame y continues well; it flowers in May and June, and some - 
and Comte de e varieties, rent in their | years produces a few seeds. At the aj approach of winter, 
from the four first mentioned, and approaching _ | some old mould is put over the root. Itis 
more a en Roses, A Gen a dwarf tough little plant, only 8 or 9 inches high, and I 
the mR ae SA 8 opr abundance of ; took off a slip with some root on it, and planted it ina 
flowers in the autumn. sandy loam, and it struck well a énsis ripen 
with fragrant flo and are aie passed by the l Nitrate of Soda, and its Effects on the Dahlia.—In the | seeds in the open border, © 1839, and 
new variety from a a ge ne I observe Pe re ae P ind with / several self-sown plants late in spring of 
You have noticed it in p. 262 as being like Comte de Paris; | ¥ the soil of which was very poor and light; in | 1840, whi d freely fc 1 , and produced 
but the flowers then ex were forced from buds | August they freely, but small, and open in the | seeds: a few survived last winter. C idpica, in 
formed in the i Gu Sigh cube toe tk foe tk phe. of nod _I then dissolved ib. nitrate of pots, produces ripe seeds here, some of which were sown 
in its natural state, when I sawit in Paris in 1839, its colo da, in 12 galls. he open ground, on biter te of aging 
was dark as that of George the and I believe Mr. They protect an broken frame, and in 
‘Laffay will be borne out in his assertion thatit is the watering was Aap gl AE WRC ETD about 6 or 7 weeks fifteen seedlings appeared. Inthe au- 
perpetual known. M. new per= effects were eraggenns i Sigil became a fine tumn they taken up with.eemne cones Sepes tes Pe 
Pp, 1 £ PD. rs Ithy green—t pt r ina 1: i1 th é ti 3 
i: ; some of hibited in 3 f them fi d at about 13 months old. Inthe 
teur obtained a second ah Se at spring of 1823, a seedling was planted out under a high 
show, ith were 24 competitors.—A | wall, on a western aspect, where th sh 
humble Amateur. until mid-day, in an argillaceous soil, on a decayed 
; + ne 
—t 
. 
‘J of 
Ta xt. 
ene he bunch, notwithstanding that there is 
these | number of oe poe pdb way ater eet, 
temperature time of fioweri 
from 70° to 75° by Revie y the sun from 80° to to 
85°, and the floor 
lee 
| forbinda was planted in the open 
