116 
THE GARDEN 
ERS CHRONICLE. 
[Евв. 25, 
more effectually ; disposed of by the exhibition of a 
shown in the following table, as 
far as could be 
which do not exist in their food; but пу 
tion :— 
slab of this timber, 18 feet 6 inches long, 4 feet ascertained from an imperfect опей # secti - кечби than the little n of galls, imi 
6 inches wide, and 4 inches thick, recently importe i 7 Increase in Diameter | gole y at the expense of a o; tarch л 
by the East India Company for the * xpress pur- д, аа Nos ан. ‚ шу T nS containing cells, with which they are in iE 
i» e pom ived from" India a at "the. жи А] Inches Inches. depoeited I ет fatt; М. 
such sia ave агг " 26 — po , 
the f — -— = м 294 3} фу Conk bears » appreciable propane 
rality the country has been indebted, year 60 35 5 to that of the fu æ, and may safely he 
ear during rs, fo ample and gra- 0 38] 31 neglec and the whole considered des 
tuitoos supply of the seeds of this invaluable tree. м 42 35 directly or indirectly from the nutriment supplied 
= one conversant Mes vmi att coul Е " 50 ^ H es Hey li ge anime иы MR are үзү ha con- 
ge specimen without recog a E BREES diti 
description of timber ranking among the highest of ows as fast eri to the deposit of fat i in Met. та 
its ius, that is to say acie YI or Deals. Clean аха MN, {+ Таоа со a һе trees the в of d, vi, éd ew. 
nd, massive, free from че A vil pr to fell in 30 years, t which time t abundant nutriment, and isolation from exi 
си а io top блай ry ri > an - мз | v would be 26 inches in diameter. Accordin to influences. 1618 Y dem en infants fed ор 
count its owth, and íragran ll | tables of Mr. Io ee of Arniston, Larch in Scotland, | starch will grow very fat, though at the expense of 
zw ACC фо espere dr ^ quM dai» n favourable soil and site, is -— 95 inches in тоша de pa psu inference 
: iameter, on an average at the sa in uman 
what was much : "а pre ЯА UR tin diameter, о ct pas us cannot e concluded ith- | frame, since ока j^ exi si in the starch, Тһе 
- a "repor "or - оппсїп out a word as to the distinction bet "е of | Fu of the little larve from the galls is com- 
and er gentleme Ls Lade: In p r Lebanon and Didar. А strong be lief i is ИЕ | риу confirmatory of this ny and op 
=s ve n siapte has tn ary kind Los | by meian whose opinion ама respect, that | those of BoussiNGAULT and others, who 
L z e 
estimation it ran 
d 
an oods. - "of the fastest clipper ship 
now afloat are egy of Hackmafack or 
American Larch, the Deodar timber was, 
their opinion, кеб” to Hackmatack itself, 
It has also been urged u disposed to 
t E for profit in this country that, although 
lue in India, it is not 
Jikely to b good in the North of Eu becau 
of the unfavourable == of the latter climate. 
by pointing out that |! 
no pow di erence between the 
as can Jens моь: an hypothesi 
that mo: in барп, Slinge, 
or mere A, the te "distri cts of India are 
ll 
essen the same as Great Bri em 
: Another great hypothetical argum st grow- 
гарар in this country for roit c^ n drawn 
i the supposed difference between the wood o 
Be Celit 4 
duced in England. | 
the Cedar of S" may be of great c wes 
.yet it is perishable a 
us. And hence it jen 
m 
of Lebanon 
contrary, tate Midi 
a puce. of pmi; c» 
ich the | Sweet 
a Feltr this the а 
Ф fragrance of 
of Pine vim 
whil 
ably unctuous. 
rw deme, which i 
of 
" for the different quality of the. 
This point 
——— 
Би 
ear 
too, from Mr. ACWORTH, that the old trees Көз saw о 
like our own old fo 
Lebanon were uoi arle 
while the forests of Deoda 
India ded] him 
In these remarks we 
hitherto produced of its Р 
cultivation. The general use of it in ancient sys! 
in constructing oriental p and temples, 
it really was as gentrally as is 
mis only serve to show that 
rior of buildings, in a very агу. 
has little te ғ, Cedar of Lebano 
eue Е Minero bris y employed. But the name Cedar 
r authorities to have Sen 
; 2-4-4 us ancients Sont as loosely as it is 
asit "dl тад when At is given to such . different 
ext place. 
‚ was demonstrated at the meeting in ind Street 
iat there is no appreciable mee between the 
this ^v lied by 
were suppli 
c» of the uei near Баи, 
Lebanon e years and who 
— ge ipo dicm must have 
cien сара е of St. Jerome. This 
gentleman had psa ts 
rality forwarded eR = 
тешеп, in order tat t might ZA Mere as 
few vi 
i variations К 
ULUG CHU 
rest trees, 
r which he had visited in 
of a paa of gigantic Larches 
wished to avoid ali 
| speculative questions, confining и to what i 
ut has 
а 
anter for mere pro 
; discovered. Аз a 
a practica 
only conclusion which w 
Vif: ^t will БЫН" ere | 
g entirely supersede the Larch. 
For 
n draw 
— 
any Coniferous 
Ew queries are more frequently made by our 
correspondents than such as relate 
the inte- carts which occur on the leaves, twigs, or even 
wood on the roots of Oak trees, as will be 
- Ajen additional la 
ted | 
n of 
ree 
| examination wi в r ne have come to a 
chemical labor: 
and satisfactory pom M. J.B 
о рет, 
М-ти PATHOLOGY. mo ҮШ, > | 
p any cases it is requisi à | 
cells should Бе their M gere f ma 
e, and the 
neighbourin éd a 
м oig carie le ading to to 
1] жез, in беши 
П the pi rays т some other instances, - 
the two contiguous Fi в, з, еге 1 
which in some si con 
is only = 84 the cells are 
22. As it in contact that. 
the layers are perforated, it герц ise that 
two sides of a cell present a ve 
is pe ET 
23. As all plants, even the largest, consist m пег 
very еа 1 
cells, as enomi- 
nations, are iode id of one form the 
ase, though itis necessary for the purposes of 
td o classify the different cells, it is du that up. 
fication cannot йу ei s be very definite, and that 
arise as nature of 
te to the several 
have -— illustrated with figures. Some 
markable 
үнү 
su 
on o r pi f 
„па! the kinds of gall examined by this naturalist; | 25. "lle paimehym of whiclisome plants e 
чья аи succeed each т with а composed is in all a most important element. Тев 
y intermixed, and with slight | vary extremely in size and t their 
e 
his researches 
es Sciences 
M жез амра not to the complete eium of 
lants. 
ry cell, 
a ness, and in such cases th 
modification 
or el m e ds 
sation of their walls. me p 
subgl ti me 
elongated cells. Іп some moulds and 
the otn plant before Hoctifeaton consists 
y branched ngated, 
sometimes extremely thin, ere 
as in the'albumen of certain seeds, 
eir АГАЙ 
by tubular canals, but not оаа тс 
gum, starch, с ого 
em here. 
26. The тооду tissue consists of 
generally ending acutely and 
the walls for the most part 
E canals communicatin, 
not 
vet | 
i ti s take ccasion to ан 
сопс] албайн, жы ы Origin of fat in 
affected. ves S, whether this de formed in the animals them- 
One of with the food grk thè мсн from matter taken 
to in the Deoder t s the yen Nery The is manifestly necessary to tu ык дач, it 
үзе slab meis наа е vi оноро of the Mes piu "ur is Siro 
? 1 m Р 
old, licike que der more than 19 100 years been ied with this 
of growth had hy as | the Mh tirvi, iind clearly tit 
p are formed in ihe anima] | in 
m 
VAN. 
E 
