eae 
Mar 16, 1857.] 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
347 
reading their record in the bowels of the earth, 
me in m their strange characters that such 
ages “ae were, and what they p roduced, we are the 
tter enabled to ap repeta s impressive 
Garde 
SRS. VEITCH 
eontr 
i he image of God, an 
next, in meet sequence, G the form „of man, have 
been equally from all agad pre-determined actors 
sch a profound pi 
I approac 
see how in the e-Adamic 
we 
at every justiciary court kgr out for them- 
course punishment which 
prim subjected.” 
Description des Muriers ; by N. C. Seringe (Paris, 
Masson, 8vo., pp. 336), is aey complete treatise 
White M Mulberry, its varieti 
the and the yasat a 
kel 
now dying out, ‘the ce is 
m the same celebrated writer, so 
aM Végétales, a thin 4to 
e latter we can only 
decrees Ju fill 
‘in whom moral evil can have no place? The subject is 
e which it seems not man thoroughly to | ot 
Permit 1 he © a to merki in reply, 
ivocall 
18e upon | is a neat scro 
mists, | of 
odd numbers of his parat des Familles Naturelles, aaa à 
F 
CuUurance. 
a r aquarium a u 
rar yaari in the eso es are nat in flower and a 
y a "r 
fresh wat 
yaje re 
g| Doren in this division h has been 
n Memoranda. 
H’S ‘omer, KIN CHE 
innar noikh other improvements lately effected here, 
rys 
ments, one on cach wo m the prin 
In are her 
plants oraa for fin foliage, Phe on > with a salt 
to be stoc 
@’s Roan 
with its proper 
d against the men 
trained, 80 
T- | an 
among which we noticed | ‘some extremely 
pi 
phylia was 
an wardias are 
ate as oE they nf 
with nye foliaged po 
l of fine specim 
the | e Chilian 1 
it must 
t 
j with a crete OEE ae 
ane grentir rere on either side, formed in 
houses ani 
=e r pa a 
meiri 
sanr tegar sal Archives du Museum con- 
2 continuation of M rie gT 's careful, | 
The plates are 
examples bie hr an the —— itself 
example of systematical scien 
isan hononrable e 
jaa finale 1: 12mo. volume of 748 pes adorably | a 
saga illustrated, Messrs. Black, of Edinb 
eondensed the whole poetical rg! 
‘The eet its smallness, is 
legible en, aged. eyes, 20 that the volume may 
m 2 5" delightful ode companion to pete 
Whether old or or young. y 
laa oe thus situated ¢ 
|a capital collection ted 
Among these we observed the now eo | 
re igs handsome ed s 
e 
geria rosea, In Seepran of ‘this 
Veitch re oo been most 
=the doubtless they will not be less 
order to flower this plant in perfection it is found 
es. rg 
grow 
rarely met aira class of 
kinds are also 
a Arr 
here. 
that no 
eter, 
In 
is now, as indeed it Phin is, ful 
w deservedl emed 
ng 
escantia discolor vittata, a variety or 4 rllow atriped 
foliage. Among flowering plants on Daan 5 pit of ne 
men 
bloom Paor 
open so Eitte i mi plenty of water, of 
which while eM jan it can hardly have too mu 
also n plant of the new fruit-bearing rey 
For the accommodation of young stoc 
lants, a small roofed house 
to the 
pd 0 wide, ay Ai 
Rhododen 
a, | aud Sars 
er | effect. To 
e ornamental appearan: this house, 
e nei well-grown specimens of fine foliaged 
been introd here and there with pond 
persons fond of water plants this aquarium 
are about to be 
winter they have been 
at a g young Conifers and 
sort from the severity of the weather. 
eata, Wellin, 
Bikem S eines Si length and 14 feet 
was hie! Re its atin Soar 
the a 
po Eo eae E 
an 
oropani pro- | 
with a luxuriance 
of plants. 
nothing n 
out” to the 7 
the merits of this new sort . 
Ser ta pat gach lle chor 
Among novelties may be mentioned the large white- 
blassomed Rhododendron from the Burmese 
exhibited the ears a to the tere Society ; 
A prapa y far W. Hooker 
me tee 
oe in colour they are a rich scarlet doped with 
eo eA 41 h" AL 
and put in order fee th the summer, and the nursery à ie: 
gether begins to re on a trim and neat appear 
Mi scellancous. ne 
Sale of Orchids.— portion of Messrs. Lod- 
diges’ Orchids, Soe “well-known = 
Cra under bel! t 
to the hammer Ea 
the Cyclamen Europæum, 
nis Seeger 
rgative, and externally ; 
