25—1848.] THE. GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. aiid 
A few days’ rain and | the extremity of the baie * exhibits some traces of | roach will eat the poison by itself, but the Cue pabana 
——— a down. ew * ference to articulation. The in the same a t traction.— M.D. P 22 h 3 
g and tying-up. All things before- neglected in manner as ne of all thn Aphidee, ‘and sat homop- mine cleared his house by mii te the rap of Cucumber, 
this way should be attended to immediately; for Holly- | terous mipterous insects. This is rtant to be | which shen aby and it acts as 5 
and si growing plants, if laid down by the eee e kor the Aphidee differ in . wer) respects eyed paper into their — or leave it about on 
three or fi 
a dozen, — is often the — dt a — — Holly- 
h k will p 
"i ta gt should n ow be in the place it is intended 
e flower * for, generally, no ing. put 
e will ae 8 show, 
less, indeed, at the ll-grown 
— i * the — of — 4 in a 
an 
— time the beds may be fid. Verbenas, | Petunias, 
— peat hooked sticks, or ps — may — stack 
m trail 
te and judgment 
ei in time, the hap- 
Look over all young standar d — 
„Prot 
or a high w 
wo years mu 
budded p en can be safely 125 — itself. H. B 
X ENTOMOLOGY. 
THE JERUSALEM AaTICHORE Arm 
Ir is surprising that no 
ons which have ate 
even than the reer comparative freedom from | 
wth of the leaves. 
damage ts to the 
roots ; in fact, oe 1 5 — 1 whieh vA hare hitherto 
ae S is. the Ap t 
woodeut 
g t es presen nted b y. the dif- 
ferent spesieaof pla piani 5 (ache which render their 
soten an igation very worthy: of 3 lover 
ene one which h but little no- 
societies, 
l individuals. 2 en 
ore slender ones (young). 
— — — communities 5 
Aera of a tuber. Of course were they . 
e backw. 
ud if e the 
iest results will fallow. Iti is lame: ntable to see how 
of the 5 
enemies. The strong and — 
stem seems to defy their attacks, a * l is nate rarely 
indeed 
from Cimex and Cicada, the types these 
0 
sub-orders of insects, that they sted even been as 
formed by some puss French autho — = 
tinet . several 
. A. Sm 1 the ere of th the e 
ee) 
as only furnished with three sefze, o which would 
represent the tongue, and the two . — the mandibles 
or maxilla, whereas t che upper — is — and pointed, 
and, by careful manipulation, four sete are found in- 
closed viene the fou 8 — thereby proving 
possess the representatives of the two 
; two of these se 
plates ; a — 
about on plates ; ; * r make a petticoat of pce paper, 
like the shade of basin placed on the 
of b h drown 
„ Glow Vermin Killer,” price 3d. per packet, 
to be bought at the druggist’s, mized g! 
stuffed into their hol kill them; it is 
poison 
not likely to attract ot em — colour being ugly.— 
W. W., Beverley. White a c, well mixed with 
the — pro 
four 2 en da at the extremity of the 2 joint of 
the pro per * cg an is 
— deren ‘nd carried downwards, 
thin liar ; 
jointed ‘Ge d), ‘but the two hind le 
at the sides of the body ay ie are * — a 
ed at jh —— 
com 
with two 
pair of legs enables the nese 2 3 
ards, and forwards, in 
roe throws its: hind legs W 
sed 32 hind legs as feelers 
the 
Wa observed 8 
men is kn 
The 
saccharine tube of the winged species 
co 
anting, raised un 
| common pora and the brah children ar their 
flour and a little refined sugar, ** we 
haunts in the evening will kill them, but of course it is 
morning.— 
E 
* 
n a botanical 
jan at 
more t be pointed out ; lid form it is less 
mmo have it however in. a crystalline state, 
secreted by the upper lip of the otra, of the Rhodo- 
dendron and in of Strelitzia. Can 
a reason be given why the saccharine matter is liquid 
e one case, erystalline in the other.— P. M. 
Pytchley Horticultural Society. Our little Hortieul - 
tural ety thrives. Our show on 3 Ist May was most 
beautiful. The n and beauty of the 
Geranium, Cineraria, Fuchs &e. 
specimens. fro ribed and did not 
come in fi The mass of new 
large and graceful 28 
great nu 
Thi t to Bi ister’ flow 
kapri m geni — 1 difficult task to adjudge the m either on the 
——ů— ͤ — tof Trama of Van Heyden; “ les, t meen Ge te 920 and think of 
as Kaltenbach latter as having | the the ew I 
— — seven-jointed, we have j. p 
je i in genus, and have named 
it specifically Rhizobius Helianthemi. (Proceed. Entomol. | Sporting mg ature of the yin Hower with me te 
~ — 1843, bee t. Hist., xiv. 453.) It “a ta “ flower this 
> gone in 
as bee t Zoology, Ray Club, parentage (Cyti ; 
Home Correspondence. 
interna Hydrangeas. 2 thi 
ortensis ant it 
the win 
8 
— a g 
grower 
entleman who is said uap 
wer of gang gia told me 
leaves not fruit: 
N 
yea — have seldom found above two or three 
Many plants cut 
might — with. little a troubles by placing them in | 
places where the frost would not reach pre 
m 
Tess 
perso! 
radicis of —— ch — 2 der avers S red flowers peculiar “eg ser 
lausen, vol. i. p. 211); but that inseet feeds on the roots | I have cee likewise a pa i Holy, witha 
of Leontodon ote hom Cnicus arvensis, — pe ole- pranc n one shot.outfear above ta graft 
raceus, sativa. and Hieracium Pilosella.—J.0.W. an sa ae ge [These phenomena are of 
ce.] I shall add also that. the wild Byacinth 
(Scilla “autem produces, in many spots, in the woods 
here, the two varieties with lilac and white flowers,— 
c Ps Yor 
We in its worst form ne its = 
. on my Vines abo 
and 
results. 
cool, Led murse fr other sorte budded upon; whieh 
