THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 
dd nig it is about to appear in some vo- 
peng ofthe N Meee cta. We hee also received from M. 
Schauer, of Breslau, his elab: ograph of th 
Prngemyrcs(C parieontandeanars ; it fe a4 
20 pages, with J seer plates $ ‘he ant! pre 
thes critically 12 genera and 62's An 
lume of 930 pages ies aieeat ed frome Rate f M. 
Au uguste de St. Hilaire on Vegeta table Mor phology, ‘hit 
de- 
vo- 
cused oe the manner of Engciman, and illustrat ie 
by 24 pla Weil work called Téra- 
Ait Péétale, by M. Moquin-Tandon, Professor of 
Botany at ag alge it per 3 be a ae iam se upon the 
same Chuck's the last, M. 
new names to old ones: it has no me and ‘ouly co 
sists of 4 ges. M. i 3 ae al revising the 
Betulaceous order, and we more success 
than has attended some of "hie pes vious aes in this 
way; he di a great number of garden varieties 
separates from the genus 
Birches under the name of Bet 
Alnaster ; f two Hi 
ich is Betula leptostachya, he form 
name of Clethropsis. 
‘one Sere 
a fed. it 
echt f act one it ait be 
it. The p alt i: = Soe one 
wers fo 
our small establishments, must havi ye indulged in a vy 
satire on that which a bong individual, and ponte Tinsel 
has so far Bsr eg ales a Hs house Ekg wey =p 
por ho examination aud taslieatons 
ceed ne it with esinuiiinge certaint ey = accounts vr the io | 
‘Sind AUN Oa tee eee 
Re at ate. gla 
| may aig six inches deep through beau 
| before you come to anid vestige of that substance. 
The climate ap; be much coder ham _— Le ig 
been anticipated from ‘the onhary of 
Speaking of the sian ee Rive 
first night I s 
crates mould, 
- — mt the nate i ‘nd ‘tit it 
thro 
wal 
th é i, mon salt or 
The is ar metho a of testing the nitrate, not ed 
quiring chemical knowledge ; wad that is, of spot asi 
quantity of the nitrate into the fire: if it ins salt, it 
will nce a Ci ng noise; if it is pare, "it will burn 
very rapidly with a sort of hissing noise, and no crackling 
at all ; and in pr pba n to the quantity of common salt, 
so will th less.—. “ay ong erald, 
me, one re has lately been prepared in 
Paris, by*M. Lass ey a kind of vend composed of arti 
ficial flour, awgatiiad fh 
deren me gg mec? of ag ea — cabay 
ands We may, perhaps, return to the subject where the barometer indicated a mean of about 
occasion. 8. yseneet 29 inches, and this too in the middle of summer, ot rather 
a in wha ht to correspond with our July a 
Rebietv. The iabthete told me that in the winter bete 
Rambles in New Zealand. +4! My C. Bidwill. London: | snow on all this part of the country ; and that on the hills 
Orr and around, which were not by any means to be ca’ x 
Tuis is a pamphlet of grea po ortance tains, it often lay for a week together. In fording a rive: 
y, when the eyes of emigrants emer with anxiety tributary to the Walt | I was rather startled to find the 
towards a fag 3 nd, among t a ‘niche inhabitants of hee 3rd of March the moun- 
which so © countrymen have pitched their | tains were covered ies Upon the whole our 
tents ponies sunk their fortunes. We happen to know th | tra veller thus sums up hi opinion bas the yonar saa 
peg a yeni i ee enterprising man; and a | ‘‘ My opinion of the editeats of New Zealand during the 
unbiassed, dis’ rested witnes s could | not be found. | tim e I was there would be su mmed u *raw;’ 
He combines wit! th i 
of Natural pe which gives to his journal | much teristic of the. air rit haya bape not beg however, 
inter er and mn, ave no doubt 
to know the capabilities of New Zealand for there will be quite sufficient heat for any pss which come 
csienial purposes. cy in ng and pees F rance; but I do 
That the New Zealand Companies acted _judiciously in nob th Th oad ae er have the 
t 
ments at the Bay of prt is ere “ te followin Upon a > weaelalie Spode 
— : this place, so wk missiona a useful information the substance of Pele oe Dealt 
statio: mn rea The Beech inlet ee 
‘“ ys 
De rot at 
use of wheel-carriages 0! Y kind (exc penrel r 
sip almost impractica og soil is cla ays poenens by 
ny of a Damson, te with & very fend peat some 
cable 
he decomposition of the rset and other 
which the whole of part of i Ww ven is “orme 
Iti is bad —tha' it is as bad soil ean be ¢ 
f New 
F ere; bon, tor Seine au sie 
very poor, and taste strongly of turpentine; the wood 
fi about the coat ge and has just the ap of 
— h ; it a musa cps Cage edi a. The 
u (Daery: a sopra m), the m autiful tree 
5 the world ae young, "de br aces 3 ver rh pena and 
e following ingredients ; viz., 
17 pe en nd reduced to powder, 75 
good vege- 
tal ables grown in the ee but as these gardens : are 
pendulous, and the leaves not erp. pasa vl then hair, 
GARDEN ME MORAND 
Mitchelstown, 
Elm in leaf, 
ste Ae The place was just at “the base of the great hil 
¥ bark; but I could never sui 
ays rh, 34 gum in d } f so that my if it 
Made up with water, yeast, and a de hy were composed of “ Chenille” amet A the ae much 
eat i to have scastatiled rye-bread, and t sg gn e | ing ig and for ciate p i, would be al like that el the Yew, to rays . ‘ie es Rimn is s allied ; 
food of an _ a ; it is even expected, — a manner + nai from their small size. There are but two spots | it is swee' and eaten by the e wo! = resembles 
preparing it shall be improved, to become fit for the about the Bay where Id be b the site | in colour ns of the Apple- sree rand is “pe ; it is one 
of man, f the village of Kornarika, notorious at presen sie con- | of the lar; trees in the forest; as it be ecomes ney it 
Fungi in the Human Head.—tIf we ave to credit some | taining, I should think, a greater number of rogues than loses its extraordinary tonite. "the leaves shortening till 
modern microscopical observers, not only are all kinds of | any other 7 scales. Next in abundance is “Miro 
fermentation the mere phenomena of growth in minute | on the opposi site side of Bay, near the missionary | es ferrugineus), a tree 
fungi, but such plants are the cause of appearances in | establishment, Paihia (Pyhea , but bearin gy Save berries about the size of Horse- 
which they would be least expected. A M. Gruby has bests helter for s shipping. ® be is ra cut val frou: the | beans, | pata inte eet hades aun rand om 
atel supply of the count situat grained, rather : ea 
Age nounced | ais discovery, Bese ea, ee 2) fe peas ry, bei Soak” Its Miieat dled a oben tae fet diameter “4 
by a parasitical pala » com osed of cylindrical. branch- out half a mile distant pad nd. It is 80. con- | its a beauty, it would well deser to be grown #9 
ing threads, made nme of oblong j oin nts, arrang ed like ‘the | a that the part available for building p id England high up the 
beads in a necklace. i pula lave doubt it the Pa 
longs, beyond all d bt, Tt Wo nk Of the cannibalism of the New Zealand: h hor, Bs was sl ~ es oe —— —_ 
Mycoderms, He ngi t he has found, who was educated as a medical m countr ¥ (or ote v “stom ron) is very 
another disease o tthe a ca tet . andi money He says, “ About six wecks before Tarrved at Taw. these woods t is not peculiar to them, although in 
ite distinct fi rang! 
* arene near "Tawrange, seized a number of people (about 20, J, be- | Kavrie. Jt ine nol hie Bont, and Me alrags —. 
C- 
I 
A 
county of Cork, the seat of the Hit Hon. Earl of 
Sdn —A plain gateway leads to one ‘oy is angheshor abe and 
th nsive mansions in this ger e pure Goth 
iad parks ate aares and well ' y 
e+ wall seven miles in ci ” About 100 yards south 
¢ Mansion is the Stable-yarg, iy Paihich yon enter the gar- 
hed hou: Fed Collection of Heaths, Pelar- 
Saw the Erica ventricosa su- 
; ©pposite oS is a Vi 
h rich co 
reels had And entire Gant cove: 
communica itside the wall of 
‘ge Tange "ied and Pine pits, 
lese you enter the long range of forcing- 
and Neéctarines well grown, and in 
is a beaut: 
F 
et 
covered with its beautife 
about 40 oo length, the pit of 
Planted with 
‘With fruit, the roots having noco 
ear this is y 
on Lage ing, 
‘atical teacher always resident in the garden, to 
the Pt subjects which may be of benefit to the 
a1. 
Bevo Charles Hugel’s coun try seat 
Wesel * of the 2ist August, pees a de: 
ea the country seat of Baron Hugel. eminent 
& visited England, and our readers will feared feel 
whatever cormects him with the peculiar branches 
ich we devote our 
‘pt of i 
. We carmot now afford 
I a — of (Manganorie); and when I visited it, 1 
saw ¢ native ovens (coppe r mowries, according to 
Toelish p “Promucis tion) in wh h the cooking had been 
perfo Tr 
eed in proc a specimen either in flower or seed. 
meas 37 feet in circumference ; such 
common, would be $s, 
1 hi 
on 
4 
ee a 
+ 
n hal Poa t, ae ieee I had 
that day, and did not follow hi im, This I i d d 
s0 that when I visited the place afterwards, y 
of the a a ring had 
8 observes, ‘* The country abou! 
contains a ‘soot proportion | of un- 
which 
s stirred. He saw vi cee and Grass growing 
ta pisses is agg cannot indeed be called 
as the estruction of the Fern by a is 
sufficient to impoverish any land ; but in the —— 
be preferable I. 
ture to the clayey forest-lands where the Kawrie grows, 
which a ee cee t have hither arto 
been t ts of purchase by 
places — desnbes eo ag . equal, ot the narrow tr 
if not sw ie : forest-lands of New South 
Wales 
waly * 
a: are ever any young Ratas ; 
ete tk 
they pao d, bat 4 th 
ever grow seme at to it, —that is, ey 
strike root in the branches of another tree, and afters: ards 
a as it decays 5 it would be a esas ornamental 
think, 
3 it would be ok unlike any rio oa 
in Europe : the fo oliage being very den 
of sm: Box, 
| or out of mtic ston. Sf 
well watered,” pega 
a rey 
the gi 
my | Phatoade Pica 
he steep 
‘soi as being pumice hax Yo 
