Blush, ex 
Briar makes 
as for the Austrian Sweetbriars, 
H. Coppin, Mr. Clarkes an Streatham 
Brizton-hill, Surrey. experience is 
neilable with Mr. Saul’s statements resp 
the different kinds 
cept that it strikes much more freely. 
the best stock for most Mòss 
et been d 
Roses, as well | 
and their hybrids. | 
- mer meeng 
* 
it, 8 
ow 
— 
y years ol the 
been Wien in in England), ona the 
fe mth he >= Be 7 8 for these 
THE GARDENERS’ 
have 
main — — tong after the white-lead 
has perished issolved, e 
ground. In 
ound that the black letters re- 
exeept ing where it bas 
— hs 
The manner with black — on a white- lead 
instances I 
ground | i 
hand, 
or 
ignitio 
cha 
formed b 
its ag — — iow fin 
I have instance 
in 2 the black letters stand out i clear — 
roji n, in conseque: hing of the 
of the 
ace of the wood, — 5 well as — solution of ‘the white- 
ly cove 
n, it neither acts nor i 
al i Next in 
bie. ge 
beco strong bushy plane 
a 4. weakly first 25 ‘ie Se tee N which it 
grew after the heading bac 
was asto- 
8 Romrsanl 
would 
Alea 
Feeding Bees. — Y” 
rank owe groun nd 8 
chat a 
8 
nishing. Other 1 on bot hi the 
have thriven yw 
Elise Sauvag 
* 
anger 
Add to these 3 efore my eyes, 
Galdand D 2 circumstances of the finest Cloth of 
2 | 
to be generally appre- 
n Boursault stocks, and must we not have 
1 doubts of the correctness of Mr. Saul’s tas. 
this point of Rose-growing? I think it most 
Amateur, Bristol. 
Rotting of vie age 22 the Double White Brug- 
mansia expand. a double sae 
— i wer properly under my 
management, . the $ griwa from which it was 
flowered —_ freely an 
ear my plan Vinery, when it 
ppeared — but each over, as it appeared, began 
to rot off in the centre before the double part 1 
flow 
it 
the plant, | 
would re: aa yitt We grow | 
rich, loamy. soil, and p appears most luxu- 
and advances as 
aps bounds, From its summit descend | 
several fibres ; when those which happen to be 
our correspondents i in- | 
| circa 
side loose their hold, — co 
the tuft of Cresses turning on its pivot moves the whole | m 
no 
| (if in 
length of its bed. In vain 
morrow in the 
current of the river, | 
families, new 
* aquat ie 
has 
edly 
on the south who know g effec! 
closing 
whet 
toa little feeding . the — bees sun them 
fig. by their hum, which 
z after plunder, 
n not mention it in his ok on bees ? 
rences, it has been my p 
carry a drain along the 
one side or in the m iddle is i 
tions, as to ear 
mulates into such a body as to 
Size of following are the 
8 of a og 2 Mah — to be the largest 
— mpal ver asured it as it lay 
n the — Tee Loans was 20 feet, width 
1 teot depth 3 fot 4 inches. J. W. H. 
the iy 
eared 
the rü wile er of — Tweed as well a 
the 
en 
ok the hives 
d 
r by night or by day. 
ns who appro 
sounds as if they w 
If „ Y.” thinks his the best asd why |e 
[What k on 
ver wrote a darias on the 
d m 
Our friend “Y? n 
d many—the value of 
ho 
ey: preter. 
su employ the same material, n EAS 
al 
— a As the pores to ree 
the: healthiest — y Certainly h 
g 
2 
ia Ais 
i 
EEPE 
Bek, 
ress 
hia 
2485 
F 
2 
1 E 
to do n the porous us ot 
the roots strong — ane clinging to th 
nware, while unn bern 
= 
A 
42288 
12 
from oat the Doe 
i 
8 
E 
coat the | exteri or with a dens se glaze, and ae 
8 26. = that he would Ake: to have porous i ms ha pots, 
ni 
and the inside papily, why not 
— the pot all over? Does he suppose that uld be 
and — * outside s in the m 
$ traced, so that the 7 14. has vad been iden tified. The 
spee: old 
e ee With “G., but they must be —— with some! 
that will not N ee with iha t ea of the material, F. 
Sotieties. 
BoranicaL OF 3 April 11, 52 
FLxuls in * Several do 2 
developed or ar form of so 
Himantia, Fibril Acrotham 
Ko., are considered b Fries ás 
us fungi, in a More or less 
e full development has e 
s from eelbarrow are probably the 
same S Having been more favourably piaced, 
there is evidently an approach to a higher develop- 
ment.” Mr. M'Nab show wed a specin en of 
ficaria, raised Eve roots w 1255 been gathered in 
Silesia by wit: ise Wade These roots 
had bee af meng 
of country in 
Austria k 7 275 ai and i * i peopleg 1 
them and used cag bas fi 
row the 
t too often 
— rains, 
durin 
vel w. pay 2 up and carried | th 
gk 
onjec ctures 
nature and origin, igs in te 2 N re 
were spoken of as if they had fallen from the sky. 
i Peas by the inhabi 
© 
8 
ge 
. E 
8 
5 
— 
1755 
Esq. 
ces could be detected. 
bese, | borders of the 
fas in report read at last m 
tin uation 
ractice, o 0 
line of the ae hernen” on 
material), and to place 
at the edges at such dista tances, or in such poai i- 
carry the water into the drain before it ac 
of 
These things attended to, it is 
f what material the bottoming of the 
ided i e and dry, with suffi- 
Quercus. 
y Trees Tho 
Pots (see p. 228). — G. m — “ Most as- 
h 
so close — 
4. By ene [One part of this communi- 
cation is quite as much in need of confirmation as 
eilt Black is, u the very best material to 
that the 
as asl 
ing is a porous 
e perfect 4 of plants. Has 
moist 2 pore of a dar 
et plant Aal 
ome may infer —.4 ‘this statement 
that i 
p » 
non-porous pot * — to one 
ba 
9 m y 
d th in a healthy hing 
have do 
| 
condition? If h 
unacquainted an what a non-porous pot is, and shail have to 
enjoy the satisfaction of 
the manner 
f . —— to watering. Nen 
usual but 
and flouris 
e has not N. mte these things, then he is 
-= 
2 
ne. 
— „„ eee ee 
Su 
Beg. 
S5 K 
DATE, 2 8 Names of Plants in Flower. 
55 
Foo 
38 
March 15| 40° Saxifraga oppositifolia, Adonis vernalis, 
» 16 T  |Corydaiis solida, C. cava. 
„ 18 ari botryoides, Orobus vernus. 
19} 35 {Geum altaicum, Lamiu aculatum, Tri- 
tonia media, Anemone nemorosa. 
EE R: y i pilarin bapa $ perialis, Gagea lutea, Saxifraga 
crassifolia. 
„ 21) 39 Primula auricula, P, marginata, Alopecurus 
ricans, Corydalis capuoides, Aubrietia 
„ 22 29 [Saxifraga virginica, Geum pyrenaicum, Eri- 
ea villosum, Primula villosa. * 
„ 24 23 a HO ora, Orobus venosus, Nar- 
ssus pseudo-Narcissus, H. moschatus. 
» 7 2 Not 5 n is flower. 
2 2 22 lomphatodes wae 
„ 2 25 N. — e e flower. 
* 2 35 
OR 37 balibarda geoides 
ate 3 — pat plants observe a Vota - ‘pulmonensis 
P 42 oe rabidifolia, Viola 
25 44 3 — * omparabilis, Pul- 
— augus 
45 Ke seum sa. Bpan A. montanum. A. appe 
25 n — flaccidus, Puimonaria 
4) 44 bal i Euphorbia pilosa, 
8 bellidifolia, Draba rupestris, 
ierochive borealis. 
„ 5| 88 |Asphodelus taurieus, Carex stenophylla, c. 
pilosa, Euphorbia epithymoides, Orobus 
canescens, 
„ 6 39 Anemone N Nareissus stellaris, Do- 
ronicu m Pardalianches, Prunus Cerasus- 
„ 8 45 illa — Lunaria vesicaria, Hyacinthus 
„ 9 42 — eee, Narcissus pallidus, Care 
„ 10, 43 . poeticus, Fritillaria meleagti#y 
Carex pilosa, Helonias bullata. 
ICAL or Lonpon, eget 5.—G. Coorer, Les 
in the chair, collection 
native within $ 
tna 
would endeavour to keep them in a 
bas! 
Norfllyeosbracing an cx 
seeds, and 
