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THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. (йө. a 
to set about remedying this eril 1 F. R. S., The Bowers, | American variety, and ir о original —— 
| Barkisland, near NAP. where it was raised, at Cumb i * es 
i me | Early Orufle. Pota A p Og а first-rate sort of | hence the origin of t D ; 80 > Ah 
of Pamp ni Grass I am at з loss to guess. It his been | Potato,and not gene rall y known in the south of Eng- | the Duke of Cumberland is entirely fabulous Tae 
misortune to cross ће Pampas twice, and no suc | land (at least under this name), lam anxious to bring Van Mons was the first to disseminate 
Gr found there—nothing but miserable | it under the notice of your readers, It is extensively | Pear in Belgium is not at all improbable 
uch valued ised i i | 
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at Corrientes, on the river Par , in La Plata, but | when itfirst appears in the market. І із ап abundant, de Jonghe is growin g the Cumbe Pera. that M, 
I wasn nit able to find the g proving till some months bearer, of pretty good. size, very 2 round god slightly | | super fin ; and that M, de Jonghe rene Беш 
e Pileomazo, a branch | rough, with very Ter eyes. Ин їз ап еа К superfin is aso Arie олу, je it that мия ч 
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Video, but as І sail in a few da ays | | | ahould шы e restent us given to 3 peih in T4 ° Beurré Piper, taken from observations 1 lm 
arden n the farm n En — Fi ovate, питов» ps by a Rs 
e shaded 
n at skin ines 
ME tdt a Soo Society p distribution, A fr iendinforns ja. the Mus as our early Cru He sent ds a sma аі (considera covered with t thin ag "d 0 
me that а short time back he saw at St Vulcen's, near e by post, but I am not cri sure that t ejt the side next the sun it is so "y „эин ith 
Dublin, two plants of this Grass, мб аге кен tLe b the - kind of Potato. А. Patigr еш, Mk |mon-coloured russet that none ground cologr i 
finest in Europe : one plant had 62 and the other 48 Бел, EE ble, except small spots here ча ps iique, 
flower stems, 10 feet high ; these plants are 11 gd _ барана Lenbesiana . and quaerant. ра фо, P. 789» of that side эрдим, slig tinge when {шу 
old. My friend was informed that the gardener at п С. сго- exposed to the sun's influe The eta is вому, bat 
Пову at d base, n en 7246, and i 
W codlaads, near Dublin, has pro 
suecess—a faet at whieh Iam no n | depression ; eye ery s mall, set in T iaa; 
its of sout | flesh very fine gri buttery and 
lants, having studied their ovii in — — a S. | Many Conifers have a tendency to мм in habit, e. g., jw ith-a brisk and p "t ийле resur ia sed 
Lus ct him on Mount Santa N I | Ше upright and horizontel Cypress, the upright and w with a delieate per 2 is so DEus 
have not the least doubt that he can, it lie feels тейде, | horizontal or spreading red Cedar— perbaps C. torulosa | not to offend the eer d A 
throw some light on the subject in question. А. W., а and others might be added. Let the cones and flower чайда of Oct roe ohm t Hogg. . * 
є | be compared, and the quein will be decided, 5.— mes [io s Hn d del —1 had a small quantity o 
« First Steps 10 Economie Botamg Mrs d Teas. | de not think that ыа crocarpa and Lambertiana аге Pota e givi е es a friend in March last, for the puts 
—In your Notices of Books last week your comments synonymous. C. apn is in growth and habit | pose " veces with other sorts its ity of resistin 
upon | he above little work just published by me ge less" superior to that much admired simiy, C. Goveniana ; | the disease. Although it has not so fully maintai 
favourable than I could have hoped. — * The First Steps | | its beautiful light. gree n foliage an б sompat чалса high character here as to be proof 
a 
i 
Bo it tle affecte 
* Popular Economie Botany," which you did me the valuable n C. Gov , that var: being compared with all other sorts, both early and] 
honour to approve. rather highly ; 299, however, pointed | vay pee to lose pom d -— rost, which injures | grown precisely under t › treatment, that I 
out уж errors in a kindly spirit, and І thankfully | its appearance ; a thing. which very т arely occurs with sider it worthy of recommending for more ex 
accepted the алыча well knowing your тоге | пастата, № а us C. Lambertiana мл foliage of а cultivation. Although the erops were mueh 
extensive means of information gave value to your | mu and set, as Mr. Ayres says, hori- апа by early айа 
suggestions. The errors you now mention were in that — - данай the young gr owth of the tree has | mala. ly, yet there were evident signs ot i Р 
work, which doubtless contained many more not yet | rather а  straggling appearance, it does not increase in | weaker, and of its losing much of that virulence w| ii 
point This, I think, is alnioet a matter of course | size so rapidly as C. macrocarpa, ad it attains: the had in former years, when whole fields would change 
in the present state of our information respecting raw | height А. ы "y to 10 dein when orks its way up | eolour in a week or ten days, The ot was Ân 
materials: I could point out very many in works pro- | more speedily осагра. "ота easy to вера- observed here on the 2d of July, on some early soris, 
fessing a much higher character than mine. I will not | rate ие iwo sorts fois a bed | ы which ben are M and it soon afterwar s became general in the. bot 
pt to defend the use of the term ilum, which word | mixed by two im: мерае points, viz., C. macrocarpa | во slowly did it progress, that those were 
seems to n an adhesion to. ELS E of M | seems to | tself so mu - as to Jaek strength to to | late were still green in the field 
бе еа я а з 
pir ; but it must hg co | support its elegant а. Lambertiana, on t tember, and the Flukes abovem 
» term бда beg much émploy of € : : i cent to whe t 
ir correctness, T am sure, from actual | distinct varieties we cannot dou ) astle, е. 
experience, that you are іп error. Iy daily | cultural Soc — ш records of their introduction вле | Grape o (see p. 774).— 
occupations bring me in contact with the  vast|examinesit w oubtless find that I both со kind as to fur 
Tea imports of the Port of Liverpool, and m any from c m € ета different parts of dat which he iem 2 " 
thousands ar boxes ef, "um Teas dave been ex- | vast tract of country. не s some опе who has been | he alludes to the Syrian or White Nice 1 
amined yea ange Pekoes and scented in » California, and seen them = ing еге, тау be ^x very much of it; i OWS . 
Capers I believe are wholly períomed "ih the flowers | to throw some light on the subject. Aspasia Devoniana, | Muscats, &c., to that weight, mu 
of Diea TR, Orange Pekoe is Ше most common | Ezmouth. е is leaving some of us in the rearss 
Luis de ea, and if you examine a package you will find |- Qrange Trecs.—Having alot of these favourite trees growing. A Grape Grower, Dec, 125 
ery leaf so beautifully twisted that the most perfee der my саге not doing so well as I should like, I| Pear Growing.— That publie 
[3 t u . 
бейи exists throughout the vane of пи бега am induced to ask some of your eorrespondents who | subject is — to elieit во 
аге no fragments of any kind, and certainly not of manage Orange trees successful] what can be the по doubt, provided the subject i 
Chloran flowers ves; but in the bottom of the | eause of my failure, which consists in their foliage ad аме dun either to facts 
ура ш арарет аан О mine bo yelow meet энн тд иш dne F 
реа the minnt pe ani of Olea fragrans are off. They are kept in a large metallic house | find myself opposed to persons ‹ 
ejm visible; the perfume of the Tea ү м 18 ia pen that red vi 2i асыр енг Sheet ine эскен и» built two | ranged е and I somewhat 
of the fragrant Olive. Scented Caper from its peeuliar | years pee: Lad e Orange trees, an d partly for my pen in — of the Lois cen by whom 
manufacture do does not admit of such easy ia but the a or inery. iat is furnished with pipes con- | is in а great measure suppli 
odour is exactly iiir In the scented Ары, called | neeted with the à of another use e t is, 
© Flowery Pekoe,” and in those green Teas which are | paupau never turned on except on frosty nights, when 
netimes perfumed, you may detect the fragepis of | |it is required for other plants, which are kept in the 
v in great abundance, but the odour of these Teas same house. Тһе О ge trees are from 5 to 8 f 
is not so much like Cowslips as the higher scented ones | high, and are planted in red deal boxes, 2 feet square, 
before menti whi ey have all been planted wiibin the last four 
8, the bo the which were 
deeay boxes are filled up with a compost of ve 
rotten turf, taken from a shee , with some leaf 
mould mixed with it, and each box has 2 or 3 inches of 
t | broken tiles in the bottom for анњо. Тһе trees are | ye 
7 : MES. $ DAYO. any arranged al the 1 walk in the kitchen |; 
rad. your Тым. ЖИГ, ; M geni g rng: rep walk in the kitehen 
Satisfaction sny AR e upon. this s interesting subject, Ооќсђев i 
реа С. Archer, Арык Tranmere, Cheshire, Dec. M. they begin to ; taken ont, 
f Syren be the last от ciate the merits of and after being out about а month they begin, as І have 
ime we know to be а zealous and expe- | stated, to бе ор their foliage ; and soon after they are 
pr « imported теде. taken indoors they begin to break-out all over afresh, much artificial 
eir use require to be bear 
minds the fruitful parents o f miseonce ption and. i ps. 
.ofideas. If it itis wand teaching you : men - 
young the subject "d much oblige. А. M. D. 
y true as үзе: it eue Beurré ыле анына, and the Cumberland Pear are 
superfin origi 
ated at 
