726 THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
ultifiorum, — Will no fire-h 
essful in the cultivation of | ee the last fortnight, a 
me with a ry few of thei r lea aves, 
eras reflerum . mu 
and the Vines have as e 4 
searcely any. In the 
B, 
hem a 
f you s 
numbers ad a 238 oak deception of a e last — there 
curious montrosity in a Geranium, soon | still a Lee bs A tho Vines here getting into 
followed * a ay on the su es 55 ve my "friend c the and yellow leaf, a ‘while those in the second 
Mr. ton. Such freal eee e ery 8 Sie: comparative ng. 
because the house has bee 
ll 
among Geraniums 5 “ab sent business is not with 
them. Nevertheless s subject d me of another |? 
1 the f which I should be glad to w 
ady to drop? My own e 
ae = is thoroughly ripe and cut 
om 
SRS 
cu 
Vi in exposed the r then, ilp 
Poe i re An their — for rest is considerably shortened. 
Inquirer, Nov. 2. 
Elm. Rivers? Donbl-beaving Raspberry. 
N dere since, a dozen of 
8289 6 
o 
"s 
gt 249 arge and fine fi 
continues, p should ee e frui 
early the of this 
th; i 
s far mo 
man, 
3 ers. — I have wre — 1 with some 
West Tadina seeds by a = . — 8 a — — 
2 of them J have r — 
and 3 1 w Clitoria — a (called 
The flowers, h the blu 
white dare i are quite as fine as th 
toes, greater part * Clitoria ternate 
which weighed from 1 Ib. to 2 Ibs. each, — — . — —.— whe 
14 Ibs. Ai eos Sane Paan land, w 
lent for table Michael — y pim — — in all warm 
G as Blue Convolvulus), I have no 
g Early Peas. cane being the tifal blossom; and wh is not more Cultivated, 1 
very best time — potting in the fi nnot i magine, for it is one of 1 
would mmend t b ale ultramarine flowers of 34 inches 
de eter. Seven or — of these open each day, and, 
contrasted with I a Horsfallice, and I. ficifolia, 
make a charming . 1. Cen you tell me what the —.— 
es of | palmate serrated foliage, and very rough fruit; an: yet 
ow, — are in an unripe sta 
ces to one that those on the * side w 
e those on — — 
snow, will be destroyed b 
wpe sa them i in cone to wand off. slugs, 
Ke. Sink a pot r pitch with lard a 
half filled m vater, into > the japar 2 to the brim 8 
soon as the wu; thi p all m 
a cats skin, ‘neatly stuffed, will frighten the 2 
J. Hardy, Nov 
- Lymewylon 
e saasaa and m 
which, perhaps, you may know by their 
well as their mn —— ome eeds 
with the purple eephalies,” 
* striped cephalies, Po yellow cephalic.” 
— are species -of —— 
any infor mation as to the true names o 
have mentioned I — be much obliged. 
Hythe, Nov iy 
formation tae 
Win 
. important fact pees in 
* rance of thi 
u - m; 
inter, and found it most successful 
many goo 23 of Fuchsias, Pelargoni 
| &e., which I did not like to 
outside — * * or 3 inches o of — 
the bottom, sh 
i thi —— — — — during 
ter without e 
no dou . indi 
economy, whi i 
re aed W. 8 is, probab efforts. Bey near Braintree, Essen. 
Plant. 
almost .without 
that attended m: my e 
The Smoke —One 
. is © — —— plant!“ and he sends you a speci- 
ees ised up that —— aei: not- zreeog. 
— 
n of i 
— it was a piece o ‘ume a 
1 th 
a the former may be attache — — A = . — 
be discovered * 
— (Hylecætus Derme. „ wit near the 
stoides y curious roots have 
Wat Fn figured and pe ay by * Gari in “thos — oke“ to the nam 
found in 
fhe branch se 
3 this insect attacks old Birch much — adds to the probability chat 
as the Fumitories 
f ite name, but the haut-gout of 
Terre {fren — ee — Terre, the Smoke of 
ih has beenthoughts | 
In the first house there were Pines till , pressure ; and this is chief curio 
| 
h 
—Ha aving recei ived, to 
n of Mr. Rivers’ new late- bearing à 
n 
fi 
than — old — 2 — and che fruit is is — 
s 
had find eee faultless 
Green Ging 
I — —— way bot po rid of the 
b 
e are unable to furnish the in. 
am: 
unag Half Hardy Plants.—I tried the — i 
anded — aes 
gup — us with ie ‘beantiful — curious — 
ht 3 —— ber brought 
1 then the oven probability would 
from British O wever, rank” is a w 
un 
leave no doubt why the name is given. 
ment of smelling them may 
wn and plentiful weed ever 
we received was not tory. 
The Smoke Plant: Open Fire-places. — In reply 
a o your inquiry, at page 696, I beg to state that 
a point in Vine-growing on A Smoke Plant does emit what idole like smoke 
ion of your corre- 
* Iti to the general , the north si 
a gus Vines to to be kept! scene ben Ba hand bund Wt eee A 
** a g a north (and th 
commenced — in January; the let got Ec 
mere 
——— convinced 
sidered 
frame, a ti preserve the mood = : | 
nrg Pie tried, as Barge: 
Shakspeare's time. go Rath bien; Cork. $ [What man 
di 
on | mere 
| The Sugar Planter’s Manua 
obtaining Si 
osity. 
are 3 minute, and had, ee 
n ereeper, but very peig 
broad, keeps 
it Ar . 
the house by a 7 ge, and 
. chiefly appropriated to constant in 
the air coming down for 
We have necordingly — of late o obliged 
; but this is neither 
reise, in which we are 
3 — for improvement. 
famine we grew quantities of Jeru- 
hey are not yai — liked 
bould we sell them i exchange for 
Potatoes! oe Subsorier. ae 8 ae ical — 
very bes n grates e seen 
— — manufactured by Mr. es, of J — 
vise you to apply. We use them ourselves, 
ess. 
er.—I am surprised 
y grown 
ove. Hadjee Allee, — Bost be — 
the ‘celebrated — of Indian —— amented, 
when serv dinner consisting of 2 v of curries 
given — Colo onel Ludlow — t thie Oriental ‘Ciub, fha — 4 
could not do his employer justice or 
em in addition to the o; eana 
Manure o for Potatoes: I see in your Paper (qutea 
from “ee aes of October 19), ged. 
pari or Po 3 ccording to bch the 
dung Seen and vegetable compost) was mixed 
e-fourth or one-fifth of — lime. Is not that 
to the bleaching system, by 
rain? 
monia is undoubted} injurious to the Potato crop 
as object of — writer is, we presume, to do exactly 
be.] 
at you des 
vr — puleher.— We have a plant here in 
our stove of this Aschynanthu s, growing in a'10-inch 
ot, and covering a cylindrical wire eee peg 
— 5 — in er i K with no 60 ex- 
wers on is is t it has 
this 
1 
ou re 
he water is re uired for 
al, Jana a Tre 
ugar from the Sugar-cane. 55 W. 
London, 1847. 
mer n Sefer Patent for Refining Sugar, 
a 14th August, 1850. 
no part of i the miiido of sugar which ich 
in need of chemical aid than the purifie 
