THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
703 
; R pierces 
. 3 3 ROS 
ST NEW agran RARIAS OF THE SE 
amt pest xew & Co., NURSERYMEN, eg. io ‘refer 
rdeners’ Chronicle to 
t of the 
fleshy tissue of the ‘Hyacinth ; 
tin 
forces of the dying emg exercising their plastic 
rps cales out of th 
to see those scale: 
orm of miniature bulbs, At the Cosford Unio 
| invalid y wife, who uses: a good deal of it; but he 
san article equal to one he is accustomed to buy. 
House about 40 sacks 
EOLA 
E C a> reaso' enable prices, basket : and package ee 
Ge ARIAS; first. set of five 
9 second ditto a= 
The Sote Collection, ten distinet yatictios = 
CALCEOLARIAS, first set of six — ste 
Pitto, second ditto 
The whole Colleetion, twelve distinct’v varie 
W.J. = Co, will be a! to keep the Plants until sprig 
those who may request, and early orders are solicited to pre- 
disappointment: — Oct. 13. 
> Hardeners? Chronicle, 
os Sos 
r 428. 
~ 30s. 
DE 
1 to goon the = 
> gl 
Nh 
still it aa 
ecomes i Steel i 
r if i that is prev vented 
sprouting ou bosom a r other, but f of Potatoes; grown on vitenswth pooti too bad 
still nestling Close within it ; and a to behold | for use; these are going the process, and a 
new bro od o tiny Hyac inths ieia the spac e| large quantity of flour has already been procured. 
-f| whichso late a bishel of d Potatoes, in the y 
- was a ee Poe of the fable of the drag rt of the season, may be made to produce from 
eth Tl to 12 lbs: of this flour, ofa most su superi ior — 
nother thing that warmth will do is l 
the unwilling Hy acinth tò form roots. How often | oot, &e. from Is. 6d. to 2s. 6d. the Ib. 5 mies 
does it happen that the bulb, of Potatoes may y be esti- 
f. 
at 6d. to Ts., it should: seem, that whilst the Po- 
tato flour may comman da mark etuble value which 
of pro ce eding is s this 
+ +h 
sba idly. 
| dition alwvasinth dbal bėéapplied.. A convenientway 
Whe ena Hyacinth bulb shows 
facture, it may oft 
“ee prepared: by the 
maa 
r lb: 
s, for mente use, at @ prime cost 
growers 
of $d. or 
CT OBER 18, 1845. 
of the HYACINTH has been 
e 
: neighbouroo od of the water, let it be luke-| 
whenever fresh water is added, whenever 
3 Bad begins to val fill the cree en milk-warm | 
ots, 
should be pressed, and a 
i 
water to within an inch of the b; I moved, exeept the want of al ma- 
whole in warm faniél, and iry the glass thus | chi inery, rina we' suppose that sonte ra the machine 
prepared, in a warm closet. This operation will'| makers will have something to: propose on that 
| not need repetition, as in general roots will come | subject: What would answer the purpose best 
| out in three or four days afterwards. As soon as seems to .be a flat pierced iron grater, forming the 
the roots are a q r sia inch long, add as much | bottom of a trough, and having a rapid horizontal 
warm — as will just touch the tips of the r motion. Upon this trough the washed Potat 
vessel placed below it 
— who have not st t of this till the ote are half an g. When that is| Wee we the pulp. 
A d of management will hardly’ believe “how great | the case = over ; nore annel may be 
jé Hyacinth moved bulb light th 
appears that the drying the flour is a very 
_ Mr . Lroyo, of Whittington, near 
enched from time pA time with a en 
es m t whi 
of pares sell 
is doubtless “nue that Hyacinths in the open 
wer 
shal 
Hyacinth 1 bulb, abovè the man 
ad warmth, the great iola of 
0- buds a are formed 
str: 
is oe than that of still guarding against cold | O 
nthishead : 
_ poses a number of Snin oer oe washed 
clean, and anit free from li be about 
Z feet long, and one foot wide aed woos Put 
the wet flour into the bags, and having tied them 
up at the top, hang them up to the ceiling ina 
kitchen è there’is a fire, until dry lan 
has been practised in my house for several years, 
when m a rr Potato starch. The Potato flour 
form ms in lumps, which are easily ken. The 
the fire. 
to that most —— Sani the state of the 
erp we hav @ been all a pe upon what we 
kne t ar from taking 
to believe cant affairs are wors a repre- 
sented them ; for we have always believed ‘les the 
Scotch and Irish crop was pre although 
| our Northumberlandiintelli aray adani produced 
| some misgiving even asto that. We knew that the 
murrain had appeared in Ireland, in a ye cided 
form, and we said so: but we trusted that it might 
be local, and we had no bad news from Scotland. 
| the rip m are reported to 
about Aberdeen, yet saw it Scotch news is u 
the whole most alar We 
the south of Fife, : the ara. iage karo 
me day to the case of the | “much the appearance of bruised Apples,” 
T rre si mted, for the sake of is vont our murrain ; ; that “at Alloa 
-e in “Pero bulbs or } th mostly rotten ;” that one grower of 1400 
by plant inde a ge part of his in a state of 
decay, and that alge s g that -e " the co "ey 
the Potatoes a “wherever the 
riali, ity, ji T e Seema tender as 
ould hay e been e etigi. = soon 
to * sh tie 
; but we defer tongs s0 ‘at a Title Ñe aditional 
any real servi ice, 
—— in complaints as 
st f the communications on Pora-jto the state of p are heard at Hawick, 
that i a Hyacint nae nen kakan, us since our last, and are Roxburghshire. — The worst th it too is TR 
ot printed elsewhere, is as follows :— o-growers, many o 
wed - cnc : rban of chloride of lime continues to re- whom do not a ww the disease when it, 
xed cut | comme’ as a means of preventing at rot unless it has arrived at an adv: anced stage i t 
i the sw sep A og: we find no| their 
i n this Ti f anat. of ts aaecess, and t k we can answer Mr. ARTHUR, the wane - p yeta 88 a 
Hyaci Niel for its pea r columns, as- 
röcess about ti 
oy Sig y oy N t believe that ting away all | Angus, Pe a: me - vicinity of Dunbar, the 
none We nd H oe : will b 4 eof | disease i is more or less’ a apparent in every field, and 
‘A z 
grein 
as mois ened with we idently tlie only n Treland matters seem t Although 
von Agere e Papap? Tos a E S Pye lai ts tat ts which we found $ it our “our daty to make 
ib ith its edges sed aage course, except that of ` feeding ze sod s ' aiy deda s => es y jons, am se 
O “aoe 4! istence of the murrain in Ire was ei 
a many places th great suce g ties ex ; raj 
stove : oo io ae +f ie of ey ple “are ar have been prapaied at Chalten pras altogether, or asserted = ran ting ace 
Was given | and | and the js being adopted even in Middlesex, | local, yet it now appears from the pee 
‘eee ‘oe aoe decaying fom have been for the Fos mee P raging in | country, and 
asack. From w issue by the bine. 2 that the cay Eg lable consequences are antici- 
Cib "i oe memorandum we publis ed a few w ed. 1 & Examiner is even of opio = 
ulatio de their appear-| since, earn that Bre J. Raxo, the Viee-|the Irish Potato ti eeyo 8 a0. Genel oes ae Go- 
the deca; + Blane and ina few| President o £ the Club, has employed w thors without doia ipe morina ar epen 
of as uwa routed forth-on | grate about 30 rae of bad Poe {prama ma on his frig com, Ay. r is aiie 
ote tenes aai | cortained inden Asdan ihe obtained I7 “of confine ourselves to the 
seo whi h : A = G Layham, has ex- pona ich hav have eel announced since wA 
owing to the ein stin cet eo cam | 30 Ibs, of flour from -abont 5 bushels of First, e meie KER, lege Pe 
mo vitalit ire tak mt not the | Potatoes, ane of elmar of his allotment, and | the Consti sae a: Be Cork awing picture o 
prá e bulb. sipe could | has refused 6d. t he which was plait aa op eee the county kei Sait aair 
i , sm jolar eae the habit proouring a and grieve to say T found D in Ë 3 pn of the 
than e a ng: cae tay, og ogee Arrow Root fro een rab at an 4d. per lb., for an | country labouring 
