IC AL N EEREN EEN ES a EE ET es ee E E TAER coe 
— ato 3 
bridge, Isle of Wight. 
5—150. ] 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
there i 
opinion is, that the larva is a 
leaves of trees—that it for 8 autumn in 
which it passes the winter, amà reappears in the — 
to feed ey ay of various trees. Mr.Graham 
quite to forget that the ‘ano 
doptera live throug 
would be nothing yng aon? Pa in the la 
angustiorana living in a tumbler Siting’ the whole of 
that 3 wee ele edin ing. I have kept the larva 
Boarmia in rage from Octobe 
March, during 2 ui time it had not a — of 
terpillar . — pass 
is no other tree except a Hornbeam 
f Lepi- 
many species 0 
oubleday. 
(Limon a. — Arguing from 
there can ray no „dou bt that Limonia laureola 
Conval 
mone diseolor, and Primula den- 
ticulata. I then found it at 
— feet, in 
May, and sh rtly afterwards 
present winter very well, You 
gen —4 the flowers 
ng 8 ey are 
as to rfume the 
leaves also, w a 
strongly ed; so much so, that the plant always 
bears amongst the Ang Ante f the local e name for | 
musk, as ind i 
he same speci Jacque 
6l,as e es ingen Zann 
he dise 
wa tide pee 
ucearin 
Half-hardy * 2 2 state that mois the 
t, I had in th 
well shel in the open — 
the previous 5 wi 
killed — to the ground. The —.— en ti 
destroyed, as well from New 
and rac fe 
the morning indicated 9 degrees of frost. W. V., e 
un 
the Deepden several berries, from which, how- 
ever, I failed in procuring plants, They were small in 
size, round in shape, and of a light red colour. Neither 
fruit nor the flowe much to the beauty of 
the plant, which is certainly one of the 
‘evergreen bs possess, wh ee 
wall. Whether it it hardy enough to 
border ‘om remains, I believe, 9 be proved. 
J. B. Whitin 
* aspect (i nd big of Fuchsias), —In May 
My 
eneral feeder upon ‘ibe 
of m as fr 
the winter without — and there 
d in shall have 
they immediately made good his loss. The first plants 
were much mildewed, which no foma Lr used their 
death. h have succeeded in preventing its spread by 
applying m peia 1 . is the only let against | 
mildew on I kno This Fuchsia strikes with me 
any — sort; the soil ka employ for it is 
arts 
uring their 
growing season, this delights in tmosphere, I 
— e a fine healthy plant of it struck — a eutting last 
July, which is now 14 foot high ave continued to 
re 
e I use 
omposed dung in the 3 — of — 
reated in this manner they grow as freely as any 
other Fuchsia; in fact, — the last w — m Mareh I 
e upwards of 500 plants -A er bw 
ove them — ut the middle of 
or — pit, but I shall take Spec care to keep the 
atmosphere as moist as possible. 
From the present 
t made duri 
volumes of the dee — and fully cons 
d 
end to re- | 
8 
pres na a and —— free cal 
quo and notes, resulting xtensive 
reading ling of 8 Spanish literature, of which he was a 
dmirer. In 1835 i j 
ring were publ 
n of the works of Nature 
his friends and ee — ee In 184 
was appointed assis n the ce department e 
the British — — his time was chief 
e — t of the — ical 
Sp 
— 
BS 8 
È 
enced, in 
son, the publication of a aplendid 1 pen the — 
of butterflies, of which it is greatly to d that 
carcely more th h = 
ysis 0 obseure characte 
urnal Lepidop rer 1 in ane 
= the . — He also 
synonymical ca —— — the — 
the — of the B Muse 
Edward D 
aversion to quackery, or m 
he thou ag it existed. Pre 
judgment, and regardless — — the 
caution, he occasionally placed himself in 
preter entailed upon him much ny righ 15 
as was the case when he took up the part of his f. 
Stephens against Rennie, in Loudon’s sip er op 10 of 
In addition to his other aequirements, he possessed 
an excellent ' knowledge of British plants, and was & 
Vice-President of ty. We have 
1 Seven- 
ortal career; and as it i y 
alen this short notes 
t, premising that 
it was written w — under very severe 
pain, and yet s ene dated, “7 Querci 
1.6.49. ” and — * that he h d off 
an eae which was suppos be sciatica, he 
Nota rie oh is ee a Hawthorn 7 feet 3 inches 
es ce; I had no idea of the beauty of the 
country.” We believe, in w eonclusion, that we speak 
u asserting that the death of ahs aes Ponbloday á is one 
of the most briri losses which zo ustained, 
in this country, for many years e J. O. 0. 1 
The ane Lawyer: a Popular Digent 77 75 Laws of 
land, Longmans, 12mo, 
THE — of the present work 8 a 
_ — at ac shows that it is not without 4 
Let not the publie however imagine that 
will find in this popular digest of the laws of u 
accurate statement of the law on any given point; 
eh neither is nor can be the case. The of England 
appearance of the plant I should say that it will require | volumes oF statutes at larg and about 10 tir times as many 
pps P -A lia. E. Fancour . umes of reports. To ee these into a work of 
St. John-street Nursery, Colchester. pages, is manifestly impossible. The use o 
— EET ee | — bef is to enable a com- 
Sotieties. mon person to understand what questions he should put 
to his solicitor, in cases of 
8 d T E ii A of Mr. resident i pea m to solve e i he ad or can 
G. A’ 7 to St 
the chair. After the ordinary routine terrapin r 8 
ed ee ee ever e an e ee ie int 
1 —* ee eee, abe p i RSS ot) | Of it;“ but if our readers act the knowledge to be 
h from any digest, however 2 edited, 
the President announced that, as a m 
tomologist, snatched from u 
ke a ou labours and in the prime of his 
early volumes of the 4 Entomological | an 
character, or consist of | 
last I re Veitcb’s four plants of this 
fine cored run which he. accoinpan ying woodeut is a 
tion. Two of them we n sold, t 
the remaining two I lost one, and w ortly after- 
d decease of the two I had sold. 
In justice to Messrs. Veitch, W Ea 1 Should state 
r ploy ms r 
Magazine”? are a ao 
zine’’ are of a gene 
ae £ the habits of insects, interspersed with orni- a 
acq popular 
they will = to 2 cost that they have a 
enough law to lead them astray than the 
further as 
Royle selected M 
having the best claims. 
man accustomed to 
