CAMPANULA PYRAMIBALIS. 
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flower. As in rooms there is not the same conven¬ 
ience for potting or shifting them as in a Conservatory, 
they maybe kept in such rooms till the season arrives 
for placing them out for Summer, when they can be 
fresh potted if they require it, and they will perfect 
their flower buds by Autumn. 
Camellias are increased by grafting them on stocks 
of the single red, the cuttings of which may be taken 
off the mother Plant, any season after the wood of 
the previous growth is ripe, and planted in pots of 
white sand, which should be well drained, and two or 
three leaves left on each cutting. Place them in a 
shady part of the Greenhouse, for five or six weeks, 
and then plunge them up to their rims in a hot bed, 
and when rooted, they should be separated into small 
pots, and keep them shaded when first potted, then 
nursed along till of fit size to graft. 
CAMPANULA PYRAMIDALIS. 
This is a well known plant with its tall pyramid of 
blue flowers, and is considered one of the greatest 
ornaments in a conservatory and one that will amply 
repay for its attendance by the brilliancy of its colors, 
and the length of time it continues in flower; in the 
spring, the seed should be sown early, and placed on a 
shelf in a conservatory or room window, and kept a 
little moist, and when the plants are large enough to 
