THE site CHRONICLE. 
x to draw t 
P . which he 
jhad atle. êd. each, 
two sorts a 
f sie ist = 
ctrl 
His trees this 
well worthy the attention of pe 
number of winter « specimen fruit that he can 
osipe oy post-office order for 25s, 
Wii 844 autum 
urséry, Saint 
he attention of the public t 80 
youches will correspond wit 
3 in the latter ga $ 
fruit | 
be ha at 15 oe 
Irin sal will ka till May. | 
- also me gs an 5 ay. she 
rice 7s. 6d 
oe * ~ 
from un- 
199 5 are or superior 
Ee 
AU 
Medical 
| aner Chronicle. 
AY, NOVEMBER 25, 
THE TWO ‘HE TWO FOLLOWIN G a 
— t 
w Geo: 2 ae 
— — gery Chirurgi cal. Brae 
a 28 | onori 9 P.M. 
i “potanical (Anniversary) ........ 8 r. u. 
i omms — 29 Society of Arts 8. F. u. 
= G 1 3 j 1. een. Sr. xm. 
e RO nniversary) )))) 4 r. x. 
opa, = = Antiquarian 8 P.M. 
Fann i „„ cb eens B P.M. 
run, Dec. Entomological 7 8 P.M, 
R 1 Pathologic. P.M. 
N — 4 
Nowy, re cp EE vestvie sews 8 P.M. 
n jae A eg „„ 8 P.M. 
a: ae he á a ETP T . P.M, 
We ‘Tamir, ah -54 Linnean | PM 
mn A Astronomical M, 
F ai e ae 
LLIA is paos a greenhouse plant, a 
plant, and that 
are two sides to 
t 
Felon posta of 5. e 
& pr 
aus is en 
i 4 a X 
l tot for the b 
i SC 1 
ugust is 883⸗ 
arded, would appear 
to it which we last 
oof that it 
HEIT’s the m 
be inferred that the Camellia is not a green- 
paring te 
Camelia feels, and is Cased a 
wh 
At Pekin it is said ana the summer is 
* oe tate of Bengal, and the winter 
N 
ing to Tuunsere, the heat 
often 100°, and would be blen s 
in —.— place es 
ence e oniy consisting in 
cti 
the practice of gardeners pe 
this to most}. 
exa el 0 of 
is not determined 
ai which culti- 
own country 
nd hardened 
ere vegetation 
; at Chusan, 813° 
# ti 
temperature, such as is 
„is therefore provided by 
e Ii 
mellia to bear 
„ 2 
= 
— 
„it a remains 
ti 
po — of resisting 
under whic 
> that it shall not begin to 
ruin, and w 
ich pro ur damp 
zs fingering ae 
ol rt 
ers till the — has * * 
way. In 
ght that úli 
but in a diffused instead 
situ itio n they rec 
itdtépetiible to their wants, 
of a MES condition. 
r the 
Camellia becomes 
or a smooth- 
n BY aie e Camellia | 
pla 
e fa ets to the consideration of cul- 
ach them a gre 
mitted in gi 
that they are to be inter jan as Fg that the 
Camellia is best grown like a Laure ate will db. 
is deed th 
facts which h 
more appropriately transferred to another — 
this Paper. mitre have a far 3 7 ; 
for what is true of the Camellia is true of hundreds 
health, not by a dexterous application of high tem- 
perature, but by enabling them to bear a low one. 
rapt 
ee growth must! of 
on 
ese circumstances it is known that the 
a e 
N of Governmes 
planters e ca for growing the Cotton 
e 2 47 À 47 ri machines for — it, and 
ackin 
a repetitio of the fe „ 
manufacture of 
r, and — ke the preparation 
ection of o 7 d 
di erent parts 
n be diffi- 
sugar 
of silk, and the coll 
ur observati 
C made, b individuals, by the Agri- 
cultura Society ‘of India, 13 — by two of the A 
an planters, within its limits, of its 
din ate may arte interesting to hort is pb on as 
the Botanic Garden of 8 from which so man 
plants are received in this e 
the dense 
erous ag ead called the Sunderbu 
— frontier, which runs westward from Assam, 
is formed by a belt of from 10 to 20 — in breadth 
and tree 
of other plants; and dey furnis sh conclusivo evidence | of a tall grass ‘le, w spama Be 
of this great truth, that a low (even a very low) foot of the lower Himalayas. On he tak it is 
winter temperature is wiht is tei to vegetation, rit ts by the Cossya hills and other 1 es 
and wha ood gardener will tea n Tipperah and Chittagong, while the west is con- 
sustain. In time we shall find that the test of skilful fin ed by the low ree which “aig: from Rajm: 
N | gardening will be the ability t n towards Birbhoo le Mehals, 
This 
a 
numerous other navi ou pre . which, . 
han 
wide expanse of plain i is intersect by t 
Ganges, the wide spreading Bu 
et eir co 
In F, 
some pines as splat k to the —.— . 
ture of Am N Corr The chemical consti- 
“| tuents of the ‘soil did ae, upon the wil, appear a i 
A 
be of greater ad than its hen dager state. 
essen. 
Otten U 
high degree of summer temperat 
D 
ame ilre, considerable though n not 
ICAL TALC, 
jot ten f. e., 
m 
manular 
not extraordinary that 
33 a variety of 
sources, n looked to as the 
country most likely to supply a a ‘really increased 
quantity in a short s space of time ; chiefly because it 
shall 
eve i tends to in- 
ate. But the effects 
sun are occ 
when cs is — and * sk 
The s are 
India, 100 “litte thet 3 is, the hot, the rain 
meas produces lar ledy not only £9 for the const 
cold. The hot weather begins with aap aad eh md 1 
e consump: 
ion of its millions of oo cae but se for export 
o China, But the arg! 
ed o 
dily increases until the rains come on, 
ox But occasional 4 with rain, occur, — 
Indian Cotton not belha gener f the tal of Bengal, in lat. 22° wee 
and it does not always follow that b “a ‘spinners, it has been thought that careful iae. oe 28 Epa 10 e eee 
them to certain conditions culture might improve its nature, and also that level of the ti about 78°. 
are exposed to them} where cies 80 5 — — 
animals, hav some ther might be successfully introduced, especia Jan, | Feb. 50 85 aie | 
we themselves to ousie “in 4 ai which is s ep yd scribed as 66.2 | 69.8 | 80.0 85.4 85.7 | 83.7 
ce do not perish | including every variety of soil and climate a Pe 
conti t London, den ee veit be r dinary if no L 215 82.0 | Se 82.8 92 142 66. 
inue me wear their thin linen de to attain so desirable an object as ‘about 45° to to 75° i in the 
8 i l; they are dutta al of an article pan in demand in * = geen rend N. E. 1 
her do the Camellias of and which would appear to be of benefit to — 8 season, 
9, beueath the infliction of an untry producing it as fet e of 5 
a en although they may not have enquiry, indeed, we find that a vast number . Pom 
sun ; cont we | periments have — made by the East “ae 
nd even flourish. It is pro- Company for al ries of years, inde ger! 1 
y ill tne ipen their wood | the — 1788 to the —.— eileen and; ee e : 
nelish winter, provided enough to have i 
vita onditious $ meen er ts from persevering in what appeared à a the 
necessary to enable | habla undertaking. . 3 Flow 2 2 pane 
ate: firstly, 
lie saan a ‘of seeds to cultivators, and 
