678 THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
[Ocr. 26, 
T 
—— apparently excrementitivus, These were pro- 
ced by an active yell 
perceptible, the a 
observing the young — Em after be 
when they wer 
on being 
land w 
n pana fields were dry, and the e 
ing w — 
most of the year? Su r has been the result of a trial 
ofa piot ‘of Carrots. A farmer 
plo ughe d i 
onti- 
crop was rina o of 
The Barley would no 
— materials should not b 
Earth should wi — dug or 
complaint 
rooks, and 
red by hand. e larvee are so tenacious 
Jittle affeeted by the appli- 
otices on the subject from 
ope 
purplish granules, b — on closer exam 
white annelide observed oes up in channels 
en were the Vi 
ined only one, others 
are white, 
le to the eye, 
fore, preposes to call the species Vibrio graminis. 
by no means unfrequent amongst the short Grasses on 
sea coast, and occurs likewise inland on arid 
R read the report of the — ap- 
i. to — — Tables for the Registration of the 
of Plan — Th 
many tables 
had Bosi — one from James Hendy, Esq ot 
i the oth rom 
ortance Sev corre 
ners’ Chronicle were supplied |s 
m papers, but none of these haye 
meree 
Home Correspondence, 
e garden, a — no rre, Peas, a 
what i 
son, Main, and Loudon himself, in the“ 
agazine” p 1828, all very interesting, — t all 
arriving at the same conclusion, ae the destruction of 
the larvee A any great e ossible. 
M. Soulange Bodin, a Frene 
T a reward to any 
and 3 ogs by night 
much of the tur 
h and English Vegetable Mark 
ust been in Paris, I was surprised to gor that 
green Peas — = plentiful, and immensely large 
es abundant. Upon passing thro 
Cauliflow 
drought 2 summer "a of Paris, x far from being 
favo n — are decidedly 
ngland summer sown 
my sandy soil perish from mildew. G 
econd yee is reversed), and sepals, petals, 
— — of the flowers 1 I have never ob- 
— before— is 
T. D of 
New Grape —1 have sent, for your opinion, a bunch | m 
off the samo Vine as the bunch 
y seedling Grape 
1 e. Plums—The Reine Claude de Bavay, mentioned 7 — — 602, 1845), It is a Black Ham 
report of Mr. Rivers is a ve 
aut — S TEA 1 ape — the Gree 
ark yellow ish green 
and wanted that briskness 
which makes the Green gage so much liked; this, 
— might in some degree be ascribed to the lo ong 
and packing. Its appears to be 
the — of Oeteber, as the fruit I saw arrived we 
England about the loch. Two other Plums n 
oubt 
Stone. om 
variety — ¢ Kirke’s in the — — 
vuit — — is the best purple Plu 
fam For 2 
oe same — but all “possessing a 
— Alex andria. 1 
I have — sent — of the leres ii 
may wes — are and size. J, E. L. 
coos Berries 
Leaves very large, a 
deeply 3 — ~ smooth 
98, in manner 
of the — of a natur alist, — 
da wank oe in a most pleasing, 
the seasons, 
— and, in sho 
of America in whieh the authoress resides, To her — 
— th, Denyer's V 
t named makes an 
The 
— sa. ihe 2 
admirable © preserve equal to Apricot. re are 
ms than Denyer's Victoria, but F include it 
vi : 
For preserves and tarts late in the season, the Shro 
amson and the Winesour should be grown 
Frozen Lan . Glenny; in his = Hand- Book t 
the —— — in — ch — 4 
(first page, and bottom of first column 
. } has 
J recommends | would 
‘those in — gae it — add greatly to the — of 
book to have rs of the 
71 
. Miss 
has — — other “ute — — 
in a manner be a 
1 pry an enlarged — highly — — 
pe well read in English and foreign literature. 
—— —.— * a good pa æ 
attach country; she ean yet 
tay a aie pam ‘them out in such a . as one 
tend to —.— the A 
in —— inch depth mark on 
ee 
— — ago, that the grubs 
the perfeet | of 
Mr. | the res 
h 
and comparatively son P 
ing? The 
adverse ; at 
n Fep f 
ve 
ossoms. n one of the nounce then 
it an uncommon occurrence? bre 
l — 5 in expressing the ju 
g t eye i 
d | every thing relating to the natural history of the part w 
she would produce a a mye would be much appn 
ciated in Englan d Im — make o 
of the work. The same may be said in n 
names of the birds. If these few rema 
to you. A. M. 
est 
ers to know that an 1 of ni 
2 furnished by Baron Suarée,who therein n gave 
of h 
eren ath Travelling lately through Belgium I received 
from 
8. 
— 
E 
8 
filth as for Ne — th 
heetolitres per hectare, or 4 to 
3 pong — to th 
the 
i 
sup u ; nw 
justly estimated by a long series 
e skins unpeeled, 
oses. 
e should — be rg to let the Oxali 
t we are 
alth); bu 
are positivel noxious 
e latter (whi 
J. } innocuous, but — — . ing a very palatable 
bev the stalks are 
wholesome beverage. f, 
stems, The commissioners conclude that 
ties, as a material for mant- 
A agreable and wholesome e drink, Such 
0 
e plan ote 
answer perfectly well for pra ; diss should be 3 feet 
— r ery dire ction, to allow full growth 
to the stems and folia ae Se cor- 
Browallia Jameson ly like many of your ity that 
respondents, must complain of the great ey ty 
exists in — om plant to flower. 
The P — Amongst the 
lately Pion, i ca Wie 
the park-like seenery of the country, 80 
le Lapes farm ho has to cultivate ! 
dee = —— acae: mhie wi 2 — 
merieans | striking than 
