g—1848. | 
THE PARP ED EBS’ 
FARO NACHE 
W 
e having put it to this severe test 
Bal l have nong to fear Nan as Verein which 
of more by way of- speculation than fro 
ss i s} 70 2 * 8 7 ri 
4 sh Y P 
pas 7 n iin — stove, so as mot t 
f eae temperat <i of the h ouse ee. ati 20° 
external air, which i in ihia case-was between 60° and 
hew Burgess, Hackney-road. 
HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 
ae R GOWEN, Bea j n in thé chair. 
40 ese, 
; Esq. 
P o e of exhibition; Mr. zk am, 
orth, sent a collec- 
cies which, un 
fet Fra e we sone 8 of its genus, the Hier He Jan 
olo sized, roundish Pear, of rehi favour, ripening in October | 
and thinly scattered 
y comp 
5 just all ed: T 0 3 
fhe orange-blossomed Saccolabium miniatum, a plant 
Sse aaa ents the best variety of 
consisting of four of the 
* re . Skin inneri; an 
oft anes eee Brassavola e a aver 
found near Ver: by Mr. Har 
E bee it among his earliest consignments to ‘ad 
al be menti 
maA sent two _ 
elargoniums, of the 
which in —— every — ner 
ray were Flowe 
ci Journal” that this: re did not 
succeed with other plants. — From the Garden of the 
Society. were, aoe other things, Burchellia capensis, 
finel n; A dodoneeifolia ; Kapon la lactea, 
a nseful Fine gde ee plant; ner ja retusa ; th 
Lk stove plant ub pulcherrima, whose 
gay crimson flowers keep up a br illi ant 1 for 
months, and w remain in beauty for a con- 
derable time after pane eut; Corr Goodei ; 
ario hs, d other plants. — 
ids, an p 
rs of SEBER d fragrans 5 grandiflorus, 
together 9 cuttings pi Pear iks were distributed 5 
such as wished to receive them. The Pea 
consisted of “Knight's Moran a hardy ‘and excelent 
beare ese fruit —meltin ag and rie . ripens 
uary ; Eye wood, also a hardy, middle. 
an $ mitidle. sized roundish 
e 
i. which ripensin — and January, partaking p 
se th 
the flavours -of e Melon and Pine- apple; and, 
name, it having originated at Amanlis, a parish: abo 
18 miles pas om Rennes. It is an excellent Pear, large 
m, pale green dotted with brown 
ripen rthy of 
ove-mentione avoured from 
standards or dwarfs.— ess ee that the usual 
| seeds were Bag for 3 to Fellows 
THE GLOWING BEJ ATIA 
ejaria æstuans; Mutis, 
n Octo It ; 
mam oi eat the fruit = this, s, together j chat of all a 
a the a 
essrs, Vei teh, of Exeter, 
have rais aised it it. 
ches are covered with coarse hairs, The 
— — are shaggy wi hairs, and 
y juice which —— out from the surfac 
lant will require a greenhouse, of which it 
will be a decoration as valuable as the Chinese Azalea, 
if the species gms prove to be as — 
e 
sence of knowledge acce 
Such is bma the case with the present ‘attempt 
m of Alge, whieh sur 
ich have bee 
long before 308 L ee of the treatise and the 
— 2 spores an earlier 
eed was 
| chrome consisting partly of feeula W of chromule. 
if ta s generation. 
No sponta Propagation Without sexes 
| ps Barga i mme. 
: Endoehr hrome, consisting partly of 2 — 
m o spontaneous generation. 
gation sexual; male organs with seminal — 
ich are not inclosed in a cellular sack; ale organs 
without any calyptra, with mother cells in h are 
four mother cells of the second order, each containing 
spore; iner es) by means of ge . 
It i our intention, nor have we room to point out 
the consequences of these mon met E but we shall 
ith a few remarks ca cale 
using the word in its generally ree latitude, as in 
fungi. The observations of Kiitzing were carefully 
conducted, and his conclusions ar quite as well es- 
sia 
opa hich had been then between Alg Fungi the ground at 
e esb hich more once. The r i nilt is, 
paid, It was not-in bloom, but its trusses to say the least of it, in the highest de uncertain, 
ed; while the Then as to the propagation im the one division being 
ficial appliances. sexual an e other xual, without taking the fuei 
proved quite at in consi ion, which exhibit a far more evident 
plants i sexual apparatus n any Floridez, in very few of 
ing their buds, which antheridia have been discovered, the well known 
chsias, Roses, a phenomena of. ta which are now extended to 
in question was built last spring, Diatomacęæ ENEEK E m like sexual agency. Here 
stoves, It : | again then the between the two grand 
9 feet iat Mel x divisions fails. 
beast And sot west, and, of course, a ` But to turn to one or two of the minor diyisions,— 
of last menth,, what could be more absurd ] make the whole 
experi in main-| Tus genus is little known in Europe. Mutis named order of Li a mere division of the same value with 
5 it after his friend Professor Bejar, of Cadiz: but Lin- Palmellaces, Uly. „Ke. It may be very that 
‘Dymond, of Bo n-p hen mnianending j jar for f, published it under A erro- | the Lichens may form a portion of Alge, 1 — in the 
well formed, aching | neous name of Bet It sh be written, as above, ean ie the, opinion of Fries, 
been cut from a plant, | and saunded — = “It is — related to the Rho- | quite another, question 
planted. out in a pit heated by it, diff s petals being al rte again, “4 ree a division of still iis: ae 
re tioned to have distinct, overlapping each other, and pila ea? a | Face M of Zonar 
f scale some years 8 but having tube. The species inhabit the Alps of P. d Mexico, very uncertain. ground that a a very pars villas g 
that time with a composition resembling | where their beauty. 88 fully: 1 dand rivals growth the eutiele is inverted, and nn the fertile 
NEW GARDEN PLANTS, PUBLISHED IN BOOKS. 
i Whien „first 
cher nate sone pi Piers * Natural Order, | of Tori of Tia erte Flowered. ee 
„ Bot. Mag., 4353 Swan River | G. h Leguminous Plants Yellow Spring 1847 Kew. 
Bot. Mag., 4354 Sierra Leone S. r Verbenes White December 1847 Lucombe & Co. 
„ Bot. Mag., 4355 Sierra Le eone 8. h Verbenes White — — 1847 Lucombe & Co. 
..| Ann, Gand., t. 166 N. Holland | G. h Daphnads White sä 1846  |Verschaffelt, 
EERS Ann. Gand., t. 10 Gardens G. h Theads Crimson Spring 1847 Saegher, of Ghent. 
Bot. Reg., 1847, t. 67 East Indies Orehids White . 1847 * 
(epiphyte) 8 
N. B.— = 
Very handsome. 
4 = Second rate, $ = Third rate. 17 = Telmpertant. 
