52 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CEIRI CERE 
-Ua Jan. 26, 1650. 
noter the fords of the Thames impassable by the e] by paying one dollar and gean thereafter one rel bebe 
of Cæsar. Mr. Cuantes Ksena, i in his me | dollar y Horticultu: ura ie 
u bes by of Sa seme Se i 
scribed by Bene d of the b f 5 a ra shall hee m 
remain to this day, after a a apse o; of 
n the bed of the river near O 
ġ The 
, and disburse them 
g o ae members 
the Society 
at- pi a the President or a Vice-President, poe P 
signed by the Home Sec cretary, and sha nT make a 
ow appears to be shown t that the Oak timber 
meetin ng; pe shall also distribute or preserve 
s, plants, books, &c., whic 
to this rone h anere shall be ħnual meeti 
the Soc 
n the second Monda ay o of August, 
all | doe: 
mt, be crenomitieg 
u 
own roots ; 3 at least this would seem to isi 
e case 
a dhai different origin from what has been usually 
pected ; and one so far from having any English | 
it came from Ireland, 
At a recent meeting of the Royal Institution ed ie 
Royal Architects of Ir eland, Mr. M‘Cu urpy is rep 
siall be elected aby a plurality of votes of the mem- 
rs present, 
av Ra of two-thirds of the members attending ; pd 
WE are authorised to state that the s artien 
Society has now Se d a suficie ber of 
d | annual m 
T 
in St. Michan’s Church, and verified by ‘ Taen 
in, which Lib of ay College, | t 
ruct ted with timber procured fr irom 
he vets was held in the send we 
Thursday, 20th Sept. 1855, at 7 p.m. akam] 
ea 
ibition. 
of trees w ae d during recent excavations. The 
following i is 2 copy of the record :— 
“ Stanihurst a ae este meee there cam 
Easter ings the 
adjoining to the Life, and seat 
so that of them to this 
d o ragh, King of Leynster, gave that 
ll of hat use. e faire greene or 
mmune, now wari stomontowne-greene, 
all wood, and hee -e at this day to 
a ad 
| tion i 
esire to receive them. They are lying in Regent 
| Stre P rood = =e where also some packets of 
Pampas may may be had. 
hh 
4 Mr. Pete s sials all f 
ood of prea in Monies, it it will be as well to 
consider that t pn require a Ereenhoae until some 
een the oily o bjects of exh of 
ae is reporter gives the following account :— 
“A large glass jar of Peaches preserved in mira Lad 
t by Professor A. Carnrinero: f ee 
were 8 ches in circumference milar | 
sized jar, containing ‘ ion es hy Dr. 
|  sprea ad a nals ass dis bis Mr. V 0 FF 
er ove of his Prolific ie rareripe 
phy omer w i e centre an 
on the sides of the stage, also a basket of Prolifics 
| and several plates of his delicious oman Sweets 
and Cri act: Hos. Buttock also 
Nesp 
an ie over 150 of his Tina ‘vatieties, | 
whic h showed the Amea stage of his me thod 
OHN 
Mrs. J 
New Plants. 
161. ANSELLIA Conant eee J. in Liùnæap 
vol. x 
This rare plant has just Tower in the garden of 
Wm. Wilson Saunders, Esq., t Wandsworth. It is 
ex! A. 
tremely like prey icana 
smaller and paler a roves and the middle lobe of the 
lip narrower. tertain geet dor seins janni its 
bei eing "beg i “distint from What 
gives it much interest is its t Natal 
some 33° Pacis: to 
on the other side the oniiir ‘ind 
Tt s we og hte) the only 
the sou thward. s moreover, 
mh at areia ter n iy no Tenalish 
spider welded vr breedeth to this da 
It is to this account, we suppose, that allusion 
is made i e in Nep Warp’ s London Spy, quoted by ) Mr. 
her garden, cultivated by yei while n husband | 
belief that it was built of a parti ticular kind of wood 
(Irish Oak) in whi a Latperse cannot ale ie im, this 
instance, as in so others, it w seem 
oe tradition, or as i is called ee belief, was 
is absent pre: ae the gospel. Mrs. Van ere 
erno dish of e varieties, also to vl 
man can do hile her husband i is is preaching an ind 
blishi sae el in Den Mrs. SSIONS 
donated nine Peaches, asa 
ac 
estimated to gather èt 75 bu Be s this s season. 
rs. Farnaam presented a basket of — 
it which me asured | 7 or 8 inches + cire 
us stralia 
a 
FAMILIAR BOTANY. ==HAVE FERNS SEXES? 
Ou 
s} 
rot 
Tinned S thal vs id everybody else till a 
| qui ickeye = Polish gontioandh,’ Count Leszezye-Sumineki, 
I will not ask you to.pr 
2 
found out the mis as 
cm yr 3 he ja 
the present of Westminster Hall is that con- gaii ta sees d of Me Tee D. Wann ~ 
structed in the reign of Rurus, bacanas the walle amalga t amg over 4 enna AT ban ng 
were raised in ime. of RICHAR r 74 inches in circumferen oR. 3 
their conjecture is well founded abe Tish org ae Warmer sent a sample of her ‘Kirtland Exile’ i 
the timber would be still apocryphal. But it is Peach, very large and delicious.” We are told that 
pay e that such a magnifi roof, const kied “ The whole appearance of the stand was sufficient 
with the care and skill which characterised the |to excite the epicurean taste a S most refin a 
ta rks of the spp architects, have been as a feast never before n thes 
‘ound so decay years, the e which t ter Ereet tothe pheseerriM: 
psed — ween the origin nal construction about Vili for ado option, Elder Wooprurr, the pine nounce both + noble anarti' DAMOR, for letters- 
Lane t dent, exhorted all present to Sansa, eir time in arranged like these are unfa to our English 
no | 2 ee te is rather to bar conjectured that what | planti g seeds, for all that was presented this aiak ET a "thst fo |, Brest iS 
alled the “new roof, ee saponine to | evening were but seedlings, oe on fruit, and | Le n ib such immortality as 
the design of Maste a isy ZENELY,” was some |they would bear comparis with seedlings in the + satigi ae le an, onfer, hana g gront 
Philadelphia, New York, Liv ct o; Fahy other daca a ie ire Ei i tg me rl Fre ork 
Be that as it may this important question bs least | Portion of country. This he thought was proved by | William IV, ueniat 
: Why did Ruros send to| What he had himself done in the way of raising "he reason, or at least one of the reasons, why nobody 
Duite for the timber for his Hall RENE Aon Soutd fruit trees, Elder “gn Pratr stated that the| saw before wh K Coun Saas nski saw in. 1848 was that 
easily have felled timber in the neighbouring knowledge of raising “fra was one of the first | nobody began ie e beginuing when they studied the 
forests. only explanation that occurs to us is articles of the eology to our father gn Sy waited bow orig of indeed to be doubted whether 
ie ought eople. i age, know what 
no Oak Eine enough for the. pee e a pe | befound on the earth. “The spell,” he exe ahi ‘ig | the "beginning g is Let me AS make this 
span; and tha t he ged ie broken ; 31 years I have tting out fruit trees, | clearer. 
fetch ch the sessile-fraite d Oak f but nevertasted the fruit of my labour until thisseason. a you look upon the damp gro Fer 
* | Itis better to live partially on fruits than wholly upon | [greon a oe hte a ae te covered with a 
| ca a 
byrsu ht ld prot aya 1 Sic — a & a tow ped a pack of cards, only with a fe ag airs, for roots, 
Pir A were we in possession of p aoe: h Ply h z SS ec n wi oe The sprouting from near the panes ay! (see Fig. 1). Ti 
examples of ancient Oak from Leinster. a cage Bes ce ae d re rface of a g 
Honourable Gro. A. Surra was rejoiced to see the pot or of an old w 3 TT a 
fruit of the labo ours of "H brethren. He had | ‘There the ey lie | fat u spat a the Eo, looking or infant 
Tae Mormons have founded a HORTICULTURAL ileit fruit trees in New York, hio, Missouri, | Liverworts. _— f Ferns, as you: 
Society, We have ioe us the Deseret News| Ilinois and Io da in this city, and Parowan, | will presently se 
of Oct. 3, 1855, which shows that the love of|and Pro ut had not yet tasted the fruits of his Litt pein fe one iat Sivas bodies and place it under æ 
gardening is implanted in the nature of even the | labours. op that gardeners ld- give and Beck’s educationals will 
most eccentric ilised men. It appears that a|them instructions howto plant fruit trees Another do) the underside apne 3 you will find that it is æ 
meeting was held at the Seon Lake City on the | Honourabl ENSON—“ =e — was little convex, and on the convexity stand a few ver 
14th of last September, a constitution and eee for had ted g like blisters, but of two s 
bye-laws for istin W.. Wooprurr | Woodruff’s. This meeting woul amerin an ene: nel One sort Fan, a hol à Se (fig. 2), the other is 
( J) W. STAINES (V. President), T into ious communities to-go ahead to raise perem =u a he net Cig E w: Cee! Oe oie 
Butrock (Secretary), Geo. D. Watt (Corresponding | fruits, and then you will see a healthy people yi e first a pistilli 
Secretary), Sam. W. Ricnarps (Treasurer), and | rosy cheeks.” More Honourables followed in the ae we tow what are now styled the of 
publ UNTER, Jno. Negeren, Caas. H. Oxirwanr, | same strain, Ferns. The sees is cw lady, oe antheria i is 5 the 
Jesse Litrie and Sawer Spracus were present The Honourable E. Hunter desired t tl and gentlemen it must be 
te occasion, Weg ve the names of these gentlemen worker. Whe e Mormons first came ak it ee es ihh ont i 
y oubtful whether they aise fruit or stillid is only 7 nest, with a little egg hidden 
of the Sader ronicle. The following is a|cereals. Dr. Darzincton and many other botanists | 2t the bottom. Mr. Antherid is a sort of * pimple 
condensed report of ‘what ook le declared = ust have rain to sustain the trunk | YOU may see the eg king into the nest ; 
after which i itatio Ey the President, |and stem. We presume he intended to add, Mise nals i priait peA a w you will r 
ais, ce Senet ution was ted, in which’ | is not pact, that at the Great Salt Lake plan 3 | squeeze it it y out aka ia 7 baga, in mba 
at (D ' 
Any citizen of this territory can become a member| The fruit was then distributed by the committee | es gied up spirally a sort o his big ndal 
