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: 
EE —“‘“‘—OC~—~— 
Sept. 25.] 
THE GARDENER®Y 
CHRONICLE. 
ee 
ing s able the spawn to run rapidly | rod, most probably will cure the evil. Send us ur ad 
over the beds, , aaatee am very ae frac comes within its ele ment, we will insert it, and you can remit the aman ee ou N E Ww 2 1) e #3 ay ee bides Ex. K. 
The pest way re y destroy it is to use bermprbacd or nitrate of soda. | office order. WwW lea fro 
Al ee ies aie ead Se Orns ce re won either fresh T. Wild.—We think the proposed rules for the Tpswich Cucum-. See om f Par 
coal t be taken that | ber Society good as far as they go; but in our opinion ae still and that an aac 
the Acorn pares za wn too thi cx ould be the additional rule that every fruit doctored, so as t o | 
3. 7.—-Cucumber growers prefer well-decayed to fresh ma- | appear to be covered with a bloom that does not belong to it, - ings has called for the 
ony Mr. Ayres recommends four parts of turfy loam from an | should be be are whatever its merit may be. oo oe vii yrecaations on “the part of the authorities. 
old pasture, two arte leaf-mould, and two parts peat with white Letitia.—You are by no méans the only person whom thi a ls of 1 
sand init. If the Russelia juncea — not flower, it may ba rig Dahlia growers a owers have disgusted. t 3 4 
posed that “‘J. 3 > _ not ; it heat and light enough, "| one ange rar piece of ground for convenient e are still necessary to maintain order in the streets of the 
and that he does not rost it proper! eS on the edge of a very steep hill would be either to make a border | disa 
A Constant Reader’s plants are,—No. 1, Pelargénium tricolor ith a walk along front, or to form it into an uneven surtace pa Se aHy gente. the pr liminary 2 meeting of the 
2, Mesemb emum aurantium; 3, Ca tananche cceriilea; 4, | with rockwork, when it may be made to look very gay during the of Pee 
Chrysécoma_Lindsy 5, Lythrum alatum. The Pentstemon | autumn, by planting any of the following plants, if you have any | who fired at the Princes, took on Tuesday, when a 
cannot be determined by such a fragment as is se rt convenience for protect: ore tender of them durin Co itt y 
Salopian’s plants are,—Solanum crispum and Berberis aristata. nter :—Fuchsias, <soomngy yerbenas, Petunias, Salvia cardi- pat tteee 5 <9 to prepare the usual report 
Vitis odoratissima is the same as riparia, The a nalis and Lsegror y as, Lobelias, Scarlet and Gera- | preparatory to the trial. In addition to the facts men- 
Lelieur — geengoed ecahed by Mr. Rivers as a very © niums, China Asters, French Marygous, aoace es mon | tioned i in ow last t Numb it tated that 
growing The Rose-grower who says the contrary ae ntianoides and varieties; shrubby Calceolarias, i geod is Stated that the prisoner 
wrong plan is and varieties ; (Enothera macrocarpa and othe late flower- o the arrest of se- 
=e —No. vata; 2 is Juncus biglumis. ing sorts; Potentilla Russelliana and others; Golden R Mi- | veral persons who participated in the atte 
R. G. yak better try a Edisiipta remieuy for clubbing-in Cauli- | chaelmas Daisies (the small and handsome si ), Statice, Rud- > . P P EEE I “4 
flowers, exactly as he directs it to be performed. He can try his | beckias, &c. These and a few dwarf evergreens, such es Laures- | Provinces, it appears that tranquillity has been again re- 
own plan also, and report to us the re esalts us, Box, Yew, Holly, Ju x, and Berberis aquifolium, inter- | stored, alth h iti d tk k hol 1 fi FY 
7T. H.—Many thanks for the paper es specimens, The | mixed with some of the more showy hardy annuals (sownata],, , ante 
former we will use. and the tadter roe 8 m with many thanks. | later season than ordinary), such as the philas, Collinsias y to prevent an open revolt. The 
Omega.—It is well known that yastecie ire cite ripe or unri Gilias, Godetias, Leptosiphons, &c., and such autemn- flowering Royal decree. horisi he Mini f Fi i 
Potatoes to a wa mosphere fo ‘ds their vegetation, and | bulbs as Amaryllis lutea, Belladonna Lily, ‘Gladiolus germ Fthe } iS a Pik A ee 
of course the earlier they are taken up the more of such heat | Autumn Cyclamen and Crocu: ns indarcedeoerge! your garden mely f ay h t le 
they ceive before the temperature of th decl: gay. We cannot direct the laying-out of grounds, = "that re- | been publish yaks 
lower t is s ent to excite them. cans ‘SO quires personal inspection. francs mae it is stated that the Mi - 
well in raising early Potatoes, by placing ripened s: = Sager irer.—There is no good work on Nursery opera‘ m _— - = alae ad endea- 
ituation, - — gradually s ram a = mone plant Nitr: "of soda, at Som rate of 2 cwt. ys acre, “applied i - the voured to prov vide for the expenses of the country with- 
, the propriety 0! ng unripe sets is render oul coe ing w sy a es are be; het ahve is = excellen i 
= ° 2 7 cx bres cenainly be affected by 20 doing, | manure; tates — g oo Siete = out recurring to the loan, but the recent insurrection 
er for the better be for the bans _ e en to ee ae Conitecene| plants, which, as * spaced sal * pen nows, are | movements had induced the Cabinet to appeal to credit 
that the produ timate! come deteriorated ; if not, why ed or greatly injured by common manure. Coniferous plants 
should aie sive cultivators import for sets the best Potatoes | will not grow well in hea uf land, and require no sealahoensss in rare Purpose of showing ak the eeniteene 
chase. Large tubers cut into sets, containing each teste a ists was not diminished.—W. ‘om the a 
asingle eye, are preferable to small Potatoes with the eyes cut about M. Desprez’ Roses was furnished by our | that the differences between Spain and Portugal on the 
I 
‘ $s 
ie sami =e caer and was merely an account of what he had * 
Here lies the difference: 1 ‘otato has a | seen when ‘ a visit to his te ta How could that be an ad- bject of the frontier tariff are expected to be satisfac- 
e or bud, whic! ns undimin the section | vertisement? The Horticultural Society has obtained a new | torily arra , and the Marquis of Saldanha 
composing the set; on the con! ,t otato has a small | double y se from Persia, but what it is worth remains to dail ted in Madri the. A: 
eye or bud, from which, in the first instance, weakly shoot | be je Yellow Races will not grow in the Society’s | C@UY ¢xpected in 4 24 dor to vag 
proceeds ; oe starts veces, Pr roducin sans bvgin —_ aes Both a cliniasinicae Pe e settlement of the question had been entrusted o 
an extensive breadth 0} iage, suppo! ona stem -— le O} ~Z.— ara Clover (Melilo! leucantha)is a 
bearing it up in the light, and hence producing better tubers than | growing plan which, in its young state, is said to mabe er part of Po rtugal. The financial Projects proposed by the 
either one weak stem, tad a multitude or such. food for Bite. r. Gorrie, i in the “ Gardener's M es Pp 
Philo~ Pentstemon.—The Ss Of OX mi 1840, says it will re e useful in alt te husbandry ; but we are 
sown pots filled with light sandy soil, about the beginning of | of opinion that, from its coarse nature, it is unfit for cultivation the attention of the Terialatare and near! ly all of the: 
March, an in a dry situation either a ‘er, greenhouse or this country, where so many better fodder plants may be gro’ e been passed. Private letters from Lisbon announce 
eras ae but not subjected to ok bo! ea eat heat W.—Lilium jum may be obtained either at M P 
they will seldom germinate un! subsided, and the atmo- diges’, at Hackney ; or Mr. Knight’s, King’s Road, Chelsea. the important as that the Pope, Russia, ra = 
sphere has become dry. The pointy mons should be | Ignoramus.—Trifolium incarnatum should be sown from the Prussia have ength appointed Ambassadors 
paces ly the autumn in p: aced ee mold my ; they will santa week in August till the 2 ae a arian when the Larscy Court of Donna Sta who are daily expect “soe 
vegetate before the spri tt sown before the spring they | will be fit ‘reed to feed down, or cut green, or be hayed the fol hi ease te Uo Ge hat 
will not vegetate till the following spring, unless stimulated by | lowing seas sent their credentials.-From German tha 
i which is very injurious to them. This applies A You: reed Gardener has certainly used bone-dust in very large | the rumour of the ae bey the Duke de Bordeaux, which 
cipally to the North Ti species ; the Mexican ones | proporti in potting his nore, a and Camellias, to have pro- we mtioned in was premature; the accounts 
inate more freely, a bear a little artificial heat, - | duced the € effects he describes. he is inclined to try it again t, r 
cularly if the seed is Alstroeme: require bottom-heat. | as a manure for such plants, he ela puta thin stratum of it | from Vienna state gree be i is fant eek and that the 
Scarlet Geraniums are best planted out in a dry season ; but in above the , and mix it with the soil in the proportion of eats red before the end 
wet one the present they would flowe’ uch better if y | one to daca sixteen. If his Orange plants have lost their 
were plunged in the pots: the great cause, however, of their not | leav they are not growing, we would we Leer to of the ensuing month. Letters from ‘Frankfort mention 
flowering wher ted out, is either too rich | re-pot as, removing at the same time a considerable quantity 
or too strong. e best way to preserve a stock of plants of | of the old soil; and then, as soon as the: y begin to rom, — 2 ny 
tstemon gentianoides, coccineum, and argutum through the | them back to the young shoots. The Cam: malliae also may be e, ¥ 
winter, is to take a sufficient number of cu and strike them | potted, and the old balls well loosened. See that they do mot a8 lth, sn out ofa agin between the Austrian gar- 
about the end of August, in a cold frame, afterwards either | suffer for want of water, and that they are kept in a entity rs x od ee hg 
them off, or let them remain in the cutting-pots, as circum- | house for a short time after the shifting. The same with the ert 
sae may = there is not plenty of room for keeping ge-trecs. ee i Se ae ee decided on impor yrtant measures relative to the organization 
em during win main in the cutting-pots un’ W. G.—For greenhouse, suc! you — roo! 
;.if there is room pot them off. P. argutum is quite hardy, } rather flat ral as the purpose best. We aad , therefore, ad- | of the federal army, and the construction of et onal 
joes not require renewing every season ; old plants taken up | vise you to slope your roof to gle of 25 eee This angle, | fortresses in the south- western states of the confedera- 
will not make such vigorous plants as young ones in the spring; | with 13ft. wide, will of course require the back wall about 6ft. | ,; +r, Grand Duchy of 
besides, they take up much more room during winte ther than the front one. You ought to have front sashes bapers: 4 as 
'yro’s plants are Medicago lupulina, and macula um | your 5ft. of front ~. e e = ge . urg to the German Customs’ *Cnion tare pipes - 
um, lis nodosa, and Rumex pulcher. Papilio and Cypripedium insigne is any e after they have e Prussian c! —— officers 
Our very old friend’s seedling oe He cia; | finished their season’s growth, or before they begin to in | denly 7 suspended _ — ta Beas Te sail that 
but as species our editorial sagacity is at t. their | spring. Both requirea season of rest in winter when ordered to ted ie 
=. eye oe a! — has been said, but never “by their Al antalya’ A pe ont domestic ing liand k it 
,”? an ittle one. We might as well be expected to nagement be attended to s! . P s 
our fair correspondent aie eyebrows when a baby. An Amateur.—If the head of your O: tree is , we | under which this measure was to be effected 
It must be nursed in the greenhouse during winter, and hardened } would of commend you to cut it that here | Dutch Minister of Foreign Affai co! 
in the open air during the fine weather of summer. Supposi the young shoots are; if not dead, you should then off jened his office.—Accou! from the Levant mention 
be es little thing nga. aie * wel propa form a small young shoots from the stem. If the top is alive—which you may is - d hi Hin 
er.—The v: vate is called the | easily tell by trying the bark with your knife—you ought to re- | that the Pacha of Egypt has expressed his willingness 
pe tre tor ea and it it is yere place > said, as you de- the plant, to drain the pot well, and at the same time to re send home the Syrian soldiers, and that the anxiety 
Scribe. Plant open sit ion, in rows two apart; keep | move any of the old sour soil. Put he plant ina a : ia has diminished. Muc! 
these clear the ; allow the runners to occupy the | house, where it will soon begin to out young shoots ich prevailed respecting casita *% 
Spaces the fn r, then dig down the old ro over, —<- any gen eee eats acs aga Pat Ghee nee excitement has been occasioned in Constantinople by 
autumn. Make a fresh or fourth year. may be shortene d thinne al L Cex- i 
An Admirer of Cle eae voor bea “ are overran 4 quantity of lime to hold in solution, and that quantity is | the ffectis f the troops, which are said to have 
wont ar fungus called Cladosporium herbarum. We | very small, only about 13 Ls Lp ot samcaay thee Ings | made some hostile ——,. on account of the non- 
all the infected leaves and burn them ; or if favourable circumstances. e sim r ie . d an in- 
were ious we would cut off the branches and expose them | water therefore is to put into a tub a much larger quantity of lime | paym: nae ste their arrears, to hase — pain 
to thi ie fate. We should take up the plants and change the the water will take up at once, and when is ee 
Soil — = ot October, and next year if th y appears we = fill up solved. b again and again until the ee 
iM V1; lime-water '-Of- or, eis vi 
ting the — igorual nates — = ate we |  Hibernia.—You may cut down pga or ron aah the House of Commo ns has been ae 
¥ di ur arma cestusgue, that is, our drugs and our oop top as "cuttings. It a not le the of the estimates, 
Syringe, not as conquerors, but as piscine Seriously, what- | seeds of Fuchsia fulgens have not ripened before ee mata bat datos the ‘week with a e- biz Fes discussion om the 
proras cure the mildew of Peaches will probably cure the Cla- | the plant cannot be healthy. The seed- are q with seve: noppose! il ° 
m also. when ripe, ak ie see noone te oe oe yours in ae aarti don the Gardens Bill 
Mr. Reid's ink made a slight mistake in fancying | this state? e ly remed: byslenatheccaclgr some 0} 
that he raked fi the two = tere Graben which have been sent *e us; they | picking and destroying it. lagna will see some a ——. — umed on day ; both basen sas chindeiteoe site 
Ste both ola well-known varieties. One is the white Cornichon; subject in a late num e Ci position, but were read last night for 
Other isthe red Cornichon. The white is well ripened and | anything about Fuchsia Wormald ieht rich kt Gee oh - for the Continuation of the Poor Law 
" ig to Noisette, ‘‘ Jardin Fruitier,”’ it sara 2g at|  G. T.—The soil for oe should be @ ight ooh Bip aie P - s jroduéed, aad is te neg 
Paris much better than the violet. On the principle of like pro- | dry open bottom ; if m so naturally it mast rn yet as n ini 
Hae like, i it is just x mene that the Grapes sent may be ae and lime rubbish, ‘30 ins sposed as may best carry © se aieee alias tee med next pet y after the financial statement of the 
lings from the abore- varieties; but as they are stated to | moisture. Whilst, however, this is kept in view. ¢ mat sc Were and Momus has 
have s dpentanencnty it is natural to suppose the | understood that the ples ants must. be age — wit! is best. | C Chance! Lior of the Exe bequer aer on ¢! 
Ween must have been growing mewhere ni = neers Lr a apt to : —_ Peverraier fruit. Aso’ ae ene hes uieanee 
of thi being the case ith regar pruning, ke as bi oat 
One thing pie tar born di be desirable to Ie icarn fig makes a shoot in the early part of rs area er 
from him, and that i is, rite mode of to lengthen for a time about midsummer, map dapat ovr Bom ome eis. 
A, produce fruit in three events extremely slow. Fruit is beine formes, ‘tt ‘ay attain a Lap ce Albert, and the Princes 
A Rocke. Your Dabtie ters 43, has one great de: t of | on the young shoot; but such fruit, reg B cate outor |. COURE--—_Hex La pened me Wind TheQ ad 
being neither a white nor a lilac, but partaking ofboth, fom the considerable size, rarely acq Sanaa it as it forms. | Royal are well, e at Windsor. The Queen an 
Faals opening white and changing to lilac after it has beena doors. It therefore becomes to pon Prince have a mars ‘ones! exercise during the 
4 Sey neanees the general form of the foweraregood. consent part of op a act Bicoa tk Gack GP tbe Castle. " me er 
~ S., Cambri ie! i i i ruits are general 3 these : . 
bright rosy eri idge — Your -_ tipped dope grown, they live through the winter under proper protect, S| Sussex arrived Castle on Thursday, on a visit to 
the petal not being of aocenmeen , and turning back flat too | ripen in the ensuing i egeargries = a Her Majesty. Hi: Highness was received by 
Soon, disqualifies it from bein a show.fiower: if it is of a dwarf | shoots last produced must be rcrowded, or | Viscount Sydney, Lge in Waiting ; Vice-A Sir Robert 
habit it will be “pe f bright consist in thinning out the branches where ove st WE e 
lively colour siaceter seal ce er gee eicrm rege 4 occasionally ge where pongo eee Se mg 5 Groom i aiting; and C emyss, Equerry 
very highly of; tex the phere ge of the “the petal, and in the Your trees, aiting. — si er ae ajesty has been pleased to ap- 
General form of flower, we consider it first rate; it did not t the Cow of Dunmo he Hon. = 
vein water so well as specimen, and we are anxious a ‘cz Cis ciuemiaiakel Sinaia of ——. grow- Georgians } sm utd to be two of the Ladies Lx 7 
3 ing species of Lilies, the Amaryllis belladonns,, one soil most suit- c t. the How. 
is loam, b 
; the best time for potting them 
of growing. 
ora al. 
: Se ot es OLS Greece moult an ste el 
‘As usual, many letters have arrived much too late for answer 
‘this week. 
Bedebi bamber in Ordinary ; and Cap 
in Wai 
‘when they show | Her Majesty. 
The New yogi 
three in Ireland, no 
the exception of two oF 
ioe meena 
