. The Gardeners' chronicle : a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects. , AND INDIGESTION. and as the safest Aperient for Delicate Constitutions, Ladies,Children, and Infants. DINNEFORDS MAGNESIA. HOLLOWAYS OINTMENTandPILLS.—Much watchfulness must be exercised at the presenttime, and the earliest evidences of ill-health must be immediately .checked, or a slight illness may result in a serious and sore throat, influenza, quinsey, coughs, chroniccough, bronchitis, and most other pulmonary afTections will berelieved by rubbing this cooling Ointment into the s
. The Gardeners' chronicle : a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects. , AND INDIGESTION. and as the safest Aperient for Delicate Constitutions, Ladies,Children, and Infants. DINNEFORDS MAGNESIA. HOLLOWAYS OINTMENTandPILLS.—Much watchfulness must be exercised at the presenttime, and the earliest evidences of ill-health must be immediately .checked, or a slight illness may result in a serious and sore throat, influenza, quinsey, coughs, chroniccough, bronchitis, and most other pulmonary afTections will berelieved by rubbing this cooling Ointment into the skin as nearas practicable to the seat of mischief. 1 his treatment, so simpleand yet so eflective, is admirably adapted for the removal ofthese diseases during infancy and youth. Old asthmatic invalidswill derive marvellousrelief from the use of Holloways remedies,which have brought round manysuch sufferers, and re-establishedhealth, after every other means had signally failed. 740 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. [December 3, 1881. Charles Sharpe & Co., Sleaford. CUCUMBER-SHARPES This, the perfection of frame Cucumbers, is a cross between Telegraph and Tender and True ; in form it has aresemblance to Telegraph, but is of a darker green and much longer—fruit 31 inches in length having been cutfrom it. In flavour it is superior to Tender and True, but its chief recommendation is its marvellous productiveness,n which it excells everything that has come under our notice, as many as 300 and 400 fruit having been cut at onetime from twelve plants, in a three-light pit, three-quarter span. For succession it is unequalled, bearing as abundantly at Christmas as Midsummer—and in addition to itshandsome form and lovely colour, it is a variety that seldom produces seeds, not one in a hundred containing a peculiarity has delayed sending out the stock for a year or two, and at one time it was so nearly lost that onlyby striking cuttings could it be preserved. Retail pri
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Keywords: ., bo, bookdecade1870, booksubjectgardening, booksubjecthorticulture