[THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



for as Port Fai 

 of very great a? 



common Myrt 



Three EscaUon/nx are r, 

 JSscallonia macmntha h;is 1 



33S 



native country. Its hardiness is uncertain. 



Embothrium coccineum ; a greenhouse shn 

 ■with fine firm round foliage and clusters of de 

 red flowers, is a Protead, and will probably tu 



Ourisia wv?«ea,fromChiloe, is a herbaceous plai 

 with several long crimson flowers at the end of 

 " ' of a Cowslip. 



Ueaat and a new o 



spotless fl( 



be likened to a handsome, shrubby Pentsl 

 rose-coloured flowers. It will not be hardy. 



Argylia is an herbaceous genus of Bignoniads, 



of long, erect scapes, and are fine looking when drie 

 A species, new, but near^t. puberuht. said to ha 

 yellow flowers, is growing in F 



This process is onl 

 ■olific in its oil, i e., I 



i together by a powerful 

 f part required, is placed 







fumesare procured ; itso happens,however, that the finest 



cytoblust. lie found that the formation of the el)? 

 always preceded that of its cell ; on the co'Si * 



They have nothing to^wi^^formatiS'Jfti 



■ ■ 



« had to— 



3. MaceraLio,-. ducted thus : For 



A pommade, a certain quantity of purified 







without any solid body within them. ^^ 

 The author has followed the formation of the embro 

 of thelmhrt^t Orclnds h™* "^ ' *" imh *** 

 »•; the iiulh'hlual cells. He considers the notion W, 

 defended, that the embryo sac " is an intercellS 













■ " 



■ . ■ ■ 









with a membrane," as completely contradicted u tha 

 of the embryo arisinz from the th> of the nniu.^t- 



agoodplai 



hite flowe 

 i Chili." If the white is pure, it may 

 t, for the flowers are large. Crukshanks 

 m annual, with one of the lobes of tl 

 jyx enlarged into a round yellow plate, as happens 

 Mussamda. Franhcnia campestri. 

 flowers, may be compared to some sort of Thym< 

 In addition to these is Crinodendron Patagu, 

 shrub, 6 to 8 feet high, from Chiloe and Patago 

 probably requiring a greenhouse. We can har 

 form an opinion of the h 

 5 

 is a fine looking thing, with drooping bell-shaped 



almost instinctively i 

 ■ate the odoriferous pri 

 the perfume when the £ 



umery has been reared. Besides the 

 ry, the essential oils (the matters to 

 f of the plant is due) are used by 



SSLf&i 



apitukting those fact* which may be 

 "Zr+S&jS. ** old others on 



tamer of the presai 



he^Untlbetwemtw " qBeezing the odour -8 iviD g P"* 

 y made hot (thoiigK^i*^ and hencf STe 



iing processes give satisfc 

 he method of procedure adopted is by— 



s the French call it, en fleurage, tl 

 in the previously named process 

 y, if not entirely spoil them ; th 



piled one over the other, the flowers are 



main a few days. This operation is re- 



times, after which the cloths are subjeci 





m apparatus, as this is the only mode which 

 i old plan of having the fire Lmm 





circulate round the pan fc 



very useful for expe: 

 and- bye. The perft 



site sensation on the olfactory i 

 ore much prized by those whose 



de Cologne and Arquebuzade. P. 



nclusions. Phormium tenaTJ??* 

 ■and origin of the C;^^: 

 hich has had the ereatwt ■ n"* 



m:^xt:it^:^^^ 



v will consist of about eight sheets of letterprw, 

 I copper-plates, containing about 304 figmm 

 i Notice by Schlechtendal in Botanische Zeituy, 



DISEASES OF PLANTS. 

 Phia disease, of which there an 



by the want of the necessary sti 

 distribution as it ought to be ( 



■; ' -' - :; ■' • 





estigated before any step* 



G inches. Burnt meadow soil mixed with stable minmre 

 at least a year old, should be spread over and co«rw 

 brougSup'to &ev2°Jf thS wd°«n it wonW 

 kind of basin to catch any rain that may fall. But mui- 

 out waiting for such fall, it would be better in the me 



wat^ittl^S 



cted in abundance to d* 

 ; hem tosuckup«u<*» 

 diseased from repiow 



, the diseased par^J 



of Phanerogams, with the ex< 

 perms, will be published by W. H 



equally the existence 







, before the opening of the florj 



branch. The fissures mu 

 ell steeped in wat 

 are not sufficient, i 



diameter. v .. . fc imp erf<d 



Second Species. Cladodisteopht , tt« ^a),- 



nutriment of the upper branches (*7^ |rencb««? 



especially thrir'upper extremities, ^J^Jher W* 

 gradually languish, and fi" a11 ^;. Jxaipf« of ,h *J 



seen thus affected in all directions. Bat i _ • t* 

 served that the nature of this disea^cannot aj^ rf 



