J ee ee ee a a ae * 
15—1848. ] 
THE GARDENERS: 
Grit 
LE. 239 
. 
of Arts and 
Chair. Numerous donations of Ae including the that I have not been idle, this 
of the Natur. oie A 
we s 
Pamplin’s neat Reprint of e Botanical Works 
of Johnson, one ur earliest investigators o 
plants (and which were originally published 
from 1629 to 1641), well it of Hugh 
Es om s lants have been 
Fisher exhibited a 
re 
totic a part o excellence which deserves 
e The book of matter not extracted 
: in floriculture, a 
. Storey, and N 3 names often a 
2 your own pages.” We 
— Well, since 
d upon your advi en (stamens 
= you recommended me to do; and 
of Got. But, first, I may tell you that I have found a mapag 
will testify. 
of the-little | 
a0 
seeds on sand, or a peat, it 
ance diminutive e like that 1 nted 
its little cross- 
„if allow shade amo 
e bushes, « or in such a place as the Musk plant (Mimulus 
om | moschatus) prefers 
here is now gay 
ree 
not a blossom 
the 
striking than Chick 
curious observer, that the Winter Violet Grass 
its value. 1 been eee r its 
will produce in abun 
above. 
aped, pale, but eah violet 
ion as to almost hi 
re 
es a Ce e 
ed to sow itself in the shad among 
m Port rtugal to the ee 
by the Due de Palmella a few years since 
Garden Memorand 
Messrs. NN 8, Lea-bri 
way 5 before. Under these circum- | ste 
m 
it is 82 novelty and little else. 
t is in midwinter, when snow is on the ground, and 
essy 
ts A portion of th 
materia medica e dru orassan, and of this house was profusely ee wit —— 
had made some extensive observations on t gum of d, as ght-yellow flowered Acacia pu e of the 
a species of Balsamodendron. then reviewed the So, again, with the leaf very best of the genus for planting out in the border of 
ding to their natura’ and stated that hi a consery; he ellia-house, which joins the 
8 =e 3 at least one-seventh part of ceus, or King of the show-house till rich in blossom, and promised 
whole; whilst pical natural orders were n to continue 50 for some time to come. In we 
either wanting or at a Wee in Seinde. The Sal- observed a nice collection rimroses, consisting of 
sole were marked hee in the flora of the country. ce ami ilac, red, and yellow—all sees perfectly hardy, 
4 the hills of Seinde were very similar to z 7 and well-known sorts, but not so much grown as they 
ia in parts like tliose of e ee to bas gis whether cnltivated in po 
latter eviewed the synonyme of the plants described by anged on the greenhouse shelf, en. out in the 
Capt. Vickery in the “Calcutta Journal of 1846. open border, we know of nothing more pleasing at this 
Thomas alg Barlow, Esq., was elected a Season of the year. To these might be the 
Fellow of the Society. e Himalayan P. dentie others from the same 
mountain region, which rating, as they do, 
Reb ews, — ae cee 8 floweri 
4 Systematic Catalogu 5 a eee 
os gue of the Fags KA British ferim peers, On ie front a Pelargonium 
by 273 ne à (8vo, Van Voorst), is an octavo eggs? what — or friend to the fiorist will they be capri nicely-blossomed Mirbelia a 
British olame eda, oat fia’ containing Pie es i. eeni reveal? Ah, there, you are asking for more t nii golden yellow and brown flowers “ey 
be mie “Teasers Sp a 2 which memoranda,| we bar, argained to tell. We are -5 not ento- opted for the difficul lty sometim es ex 
5 elie: nae us intended to render marks on mologists; but no doubt that, in umber of our —— it successfully. Associated with it 9 
War of ana Superiuous, and to facilitate the preserva- | read, rs, there is one of that it, ered will, at a future| specimen in flower of Eriostemo: scabrum, a some- 
0 1 The idea is a good one, and time help us to the information we both require, and what new and neat s grafted o 9 a 
Mr. rin D * ve 1 shall be thankful for.—What do you pay for your stock on which it takes freely, but whose habit of 
nid 0 E cai Nat turalis?’s Note Book, issued glass ? 12s. W. will last you a life, with common | gro does not appear ether to suit it; it was 
ers * a very neat, thin pocket. book, care; and I re you will now agree with me, that thought it might possibly be found to do better on its 
cord in a method id f those ee y a me mige amateur or professional, ought to be st — the same house was a 3 
i rvatio ey may | without one.—Goo Bs e. young p handsome genus Kalosan 
peu 17 that present themselves in their ram- The eggs, No. 2, seem from the cut to belong to a which we have ing half so gay at the season in 
> wy Ses advan tage of drawing attention to the snail, rather than to an * s to the price of the which they | bloom. They succeed here under treat- 
"The Leon: it 4 desirable to observe glass, we hope such a sum wil be understood | ment not difi em that of Pelargoniums, growing 
4 pal col u The et is before us, with to be absolutely pane : less than half he aie give | luxuriantly in the same kind of soil. 
Cone oured ar of th lia called the |g man’s eyesight t help enough for or most purpos T Heath-house was filled with small plants of that 
tess of Orkney, 3 e reminds us that — —ͤ—ͤ— interesting tribe em was av of 
on =e 3 Mn e work we omitted to do justice THE MINTER 3 GRASS, inosa, called nana, which, though little known at 
urable ued b ; i 
giring the publie original ia and graceful 
oo Scene 0 
ighway ʻo that of literature, that a young jo 
fa to join the band of ex epti t so 3 a s i i 
entirely The Florist may be mentioned as a w. * in cuttings in autumn, from which nice little 
may free from all ishonesty of the kind = we Tuts little eee annual is beginn ie ts find its adra are obtained, which bloom in the i 
i. day think it while to point out some | way — our gardens, but as yet a attracted attention | spring. We now come to the specimen houses which 
dere ally t of linguents to which we from v ons. e is not known. contain the magnificent plants that shown 
th de; in the Meanwhile, they may be left to seen in the summer in flower se’ or a sunny border, it | successfully at our great tan exhibitions last 
“ath ity in which their safety consis forms a tu green round leaves, 5 or 6 inches high, year, and which will again ery soon excite the 
Subject of insects; and t importance of of of studying a . of fugitive, pallid violet 3 d in a few of „Cultiva d ima 
: us in the ae. again adverted to in the Number before * Sa i rwards, however, | could hardly be carried mpli 
; owing at n comes, it aed springs up, to by some of ch ont webe nt ree 
8 this 5 fact 
NEW GARDEN TRANT hepsi eo IN BOOKS. 
hird rate. Y = Unimportant. 1 
N. B. = Very bandsome. . 
Where Published. | f Country. Quality. | Natural Order. op Menge “ „ Where, 
Bot. Mag., t. 4363 | E. Indies | S. i |  Acanthads Violet nel i | Kew. 
Bot. Mag., t. 4364 |Sierra Leone} S.p | Passion-flowers | White | February | 1948 | Kew. 
Bot. Mag., t. 4365 New Grenada S. b Mallowworts | Rose bee, r, 1847 | Kew. : 
tMi A Bot. Mag., t. 4366 | E. Indies S. p Acanthads | Pale lilae Des, Feb. 1847 | Low and Cos 
jn b. a e Bot. Mag., t. 4367 South Brazil! G. % Aselepiads Purple Jane, July 1847 *. coat 
3 Lee 8 —— Bot. Mag., t 4305 | Ceylon. | S.% Bindweeds Purple | December 1845 | Mrs, Sherbourne. 
——— a es 
