r N . SON, having a good aiek | 
nous JACKSO . are PLANTS, respectful 
f a following low * 
ee the foll! 2 A 4 — —— bee 3” a 
| gebimenes ocella ta Ompholobium brown 
Ber bands elegans 2 ovea Mangles 
venusta iis 10 . angustifolia i 
È bulbosa lateritia 7 oiite bicolor 2 
See longistyla ane Hydrangea involucrata" 5 
* — 10 * » sp. Chi 7 
> nitida 33. Gd. 5 I | lancifolia 5 
Stanleyana, 3 Mesembryanthe ; 
taf — — California WFA 
“ 7 Pr ostantkera retusa Si 
josus * E 3 vee 
microstoma oo € 122 5 
Ca p. Ch na... 
i sp. Colombis ‘ cabal s viridissima.. 
** trifora oe Pent k > 
Fe aurantiacum... Mur 
~ egeeineum™.,. ++ Rose, Tea,“ Ju. Victoria” 
A versicolor a... € Tiree prunifolia fl, i 
S Boorardia auran 2 € ei 
Cavanallesii ( J 1 8 
e Oct. 14. 
Narseries, Kingston, 8 
— le? es 
QUEEN AND 
PRINCE ALBERT. 
o sen 
K 1 . 
2 Agents will be advertised — . 
Rosrar Josuinc, Seedsman, St. Alban 
“FIRST CLASS GERANIUM 
WHOMES can now supply s 
900 8 
ong and well - 
Iwill on 
s.. 
+h 
j Premier 5 
thi 15 of to the * one plant given wh 
à -Partie phere the set of 10, Crusader inclusive, ma 
a 8 Spots Bai 
Parties taking the above set, 9 sorts including Wind- 
an sie Cee i, may obtain them for J. 17s 
mk talogue o. above may ‘oy obtained 
i Nu: i Windsor, Oct. 14. 
er Chronicle. 
Ta OCTOBER 14, 1848. 
— 
„pretends to an acquaint- 
hn . 
subject on is n: 
in e called hot the 
during the night, and that 
arborescent Myrtle 
8 of the following . Geraniums, 
i le, Esq. te 
CRUSADER, 42s.—This famous flower pence no 
the following words, which are annexed to most of the 
„5 eee fo it w your Crusader when 
at Chiswick last year, and consider it, beyond com- 
ie Pelargonium I have ever PERT M 
4 I. i 
. Od. We s „Queen Vio- 
0 218. Od. 
35 Windsor Castle... 21 0 
g D 21 0 
Pgs reh aak 0 
0 i . Helena. 1 6 
21 0 8 4 eee 6 
0 3 7 6 
0 7 Master nivers Bul- 
15 0 kele: 8 
1 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICER. 
blooms, and Lorant 
y | gree nearer the tropic in May 
| thermometer at sunrise marked 
catia 
en exposed to a night’s 
increasing —— 
h 
was evidently the 
June, and ( November, December, and 
January); in latitude 26° S mong Tristanias, 
Phebaliums, ums, and 
the Fem uly 5, sunk —.— the night 
rom 38° to 16° and there grew Cryptandras, 
`| Acacias, Bursarias, Boronias, Stenoc es, and 
the like. C ium canaliculatum, the only 
Orchidaceous epiphyte erved, was in flower 
under a night temperature 33° B4° 
that by t exceeding 86° e facts 
throw quite a new light upon the nature of Austra 
app to have be 
usually the case. PMeverthelen it cannot have been 
always so, for althoug 
N- 
de- 
erature is need 
mp 2 fort e ad 
our limited space is j 
Ix the A of = — a Pea- pod was trans- 
mitted to us by Dr. Dre of Aberdeen, a 
rently infested by a tremelloid fungus. The wh 
an acute te with each other 
The matter appeared to us 80 interesting that we 
wrote to Dr. Dickts for a furt 
described in our Num 
as 8 3 F fa in Potatoes. 
KIE writes us—“ Mr. Bar of 
Knockleith in the pus sh of A o at Rini the} in- 
terior of Aberdee ae to Mr. 
shire, who — — 
Mac Gn LIVRAY, — whom I r 8 
the gardener ordered the kinds of N which Fhe 
calls Sarxrino’s Grotto, but thinks he got by mis- 
A 
Ks 
a 
take another kind which 3 es, and he thinks is, 
was the 
val of a month be- 
tween them 4 9 th of then em, oe ee, 
až present the same appearance at the 
he c 
case A it rom akaa re ew just re- 
ceived, as indeed was remarked by Dr. 
We 
(875 Tul y) 
the TEn 1 eight 3 1 shove | 
3 nde oe ae noon; tha 
fom ; that in the latter 
temperature up to the end of April. This will be 
more 2 from the following 
able of Noon: 
oon. da Temperatures. 
ee particular night cold is n 
Provided. Grapes ar 
8 
E 
ni it must i 
Ta s provid tually, and 
th rel of it the better the health 
be afin th in the absence of t 
. sy ee Oy the well known ente 
baue naht N on to which plants are ex- 
N hoeren, that n e has been 
0 temperature Wi night as 
s Mir L’s late Journal 
cts 
— 
ree 
E 
TE 
S 
SE 
S 
. 
ails t 
The e is Pn 
reader is 
authors pai 
p 
ns for this are well under- 
e 
because raies 
— Min. 
„Average we m Observ., 102°) "103° 629 
ty ie 10 a 73 
o> 17 »» 110 80 
20. en 105 84 
ust also 15 excessive, 
o not, 
is remar 7 4 thick and 
juicy, and to be no farther i injurious arts in the 
human The eed bodies ane at first 
white, sometimes scattered, but frequently 
togetter, and pre forming a Thelephoroid — 
a russet The 
acqui y co 
s ist ofh — exago in: tissue, smaller 5 saps but clearly 
| continuous with that of the as we believe, 
not protrudi —— the stom — most of w 
appear gorged and blocked up with a dark 
water in which they are immerse 
minute amongst. which are mixed larger 
oily ape Peas do not find in these specimens 
any o * be ies which wa have 
detected aly: han ins cellular walle w e more 
or less absorbed. 
It would have been interesting to ascertain the 
2 which took pace 5 any, from the origin of 
th atinous masses êe 
— An r rte ment of 
tion of the velop 
b fungal globules ; but this would Pst ntly require 
of so 
Teuer an, 
Justicia, berbaceous Jasmines, Tobacco, and Ama- 
ranths, aie these heats the night temperature 
seldom rem Sometimes, indeed, the 
d as much as 
at sunrise, the average noon-heat 
of “thé month being 972 J, but generally the tempe- 
rature is lower. Thus 
Nov d Dec, e 102° at 5 te 727625 
Jan. <a p eb. 973 
Feb. and March — > 1 55 
. 68 55 
Now that winter — approaching, these e facts 
no small significan They may console ites 
who fancy that their Heating i einer is defective 
29 the n 3 tempera- 
ture to 80°; rs 
and they may 
ele the possessor of a glass shed or two to his not 
: 2 7 end of A il 
£ DE * (our sa ai = acct, 
N idity of the atmosphere, as indicated by a wet 
. thermometer, does not, however, 
ness as might have been of the | Roses 
pected ted shat t some errors may have crept Armi cavers 
Journal.“ 
889 and masses 
aie ach a tobe sus. of can 
the me skilful chemist on the spot. 
The e eais pete ears to ba, stric 
to = large 
=< N us baa, 
PRACTICAL HINTS FOR n AMATER 
AN 
be mixed with the P 
paver comparativ i 
poke of flowers have visited n. 
. 
