FE r Dee te. eee 
subdivide in a system 
Ao of the whole. world, 
umber of spe cies in okk 
pply to a local Flora; and it 
te sections or subgenera, 
when the limiting characters are inconstant, 
ecies cannot be so treated ; 
essentially, distin 
ch. i necessary to 
comprehending the known 
a limited n 
ed it can. be although the diff. 
* minute that they can be — on!) 
— 
tant, der 
ta a species although Wee no o difference d y . 
pro 
e 
mièr jerona à . 
works of “Graton, we 8 
bare a specific ee nly of man; but as the o 
ppear to be fo rmed on the same plan, there is 
ro- 
shaded = 
1 A at the “toot of t the eo 
THE GARDEN ER A” 
tain scenery on this sid 
the Menai Straits. Thee 
vals 
2. the, no 
gently, sudan and w 
and eas „herds 
to. present 
are AA with the 
the distance; the whole 
y by the truly enchanting, But e 
while a third party are of opinion that the eclipsed by the gardens, v 
validity. of ain be tested by cultivation, ve most cond 
late the 1 of plants to what de kro of the io 
to mankind, it WATESI ae 
there now: exists- y iversity 
d an ‘inhabitant | 
isiting 
Anglesea, — * devote all their a 
barren about here, — this as | Artishok 
knolls an i, valleys. Bas — a 
one spot adjacent, a a sh tee t rt, a 
lighiful mansion and par rhea of Owen Fal er May, 
dant our. most an 
ies and Pineries are on the, 
houses exhibit a profusion of 5 ‘he — 
kitchen-gardens are via anette uisite order, th 
CHRONICLE. 
583 
‘decry the attractions of the Island of 
ttentiou to the moun- | 
mmediate Toii « of 
untry * somewhat fla 
a most de- 
Win n 
ith an incline to the southward | on 
—.— deer 17e on the green sward, 
arvon bay: rollin, ing in 
e dees towa 
mde 
ee 
with s uccess in intermittent fevers whieh had . 
sulphate of quinine.” Comptes 
s this Codron is.J 
and some: 
what more. than $ ae Cerealia; contain. There re was 
at hw. ater the awada tha 
er obtained from 100 parts of Jerusalem Artichoke, 
high w, 9 
Carvarvonshire mountains 
e ng a coup d ii 
TITON 
in 
that is 
is 
— — and the To- 
nale 
— . is an Sa ete a muchcurigsity s 
he 5 
a turk bafo wh 
careof Mr. Ewing, who resides in — with 
and w 
e shrubberies 
pitated by spixit. he 
oe — to Neg one-twea 
and 
and of 2 
rineiple that en 
dency recede more and more, in penera p NN 
iginal type ; and it we 
to h, “= t, although 
that it can be a 
each sy 
ply. this to the |i 
py may 8 in a single eagle or two satis- si 
factorily sho 
t two supposed s e the same, 
a —. cultivation cannot prove distinct. 
The more we cultivate a plant, or the more it is en 
Particular 
- | the water not sands tro distant, and who. has —. pa 
bis 
er 
over the grounds and | 
‘he railway, | 
— 
mselves of the 
Hl 
Pi a 
e, inkas, 
BA ge the, analysis: 
in „ 
18 nose a and other saccharine substances ne Mi 
Albu and two o 9 75 e substances A D 
Gelinlose: ets y 
axe 5 
eee 
m the same 
widely dif dif. 
a rare mountainous plant may 
alpine ent state ate of some |. 
the more 
7 race or state of a southern one; and it is from 
this caife that we see in our gardens s called 
epg (on in the genus Achillea), which cannot now be 
a to: yy Das to, * x the wi, ones, although 
primar: 
nowing, thea, 
tendency ol of £ Naturo — pe permanency to a 8 of 
as origi 
or even seed-vessel, of another a cece 
ferent form. Hence 
<A — be a mere 
+. 
or a 
to. 
d patries, and in search dende, ae 
From —— a Wales Chronicle. 
— while — -nga 
0 
be considered s 
whieh have been "split 
in one or two — 
= has 
oun 
thor's friends, who had opportunities 
the living plant, than from any conviction of idee: the 
necessity or utility of so doing.” ~ justice of — 
are we concur who is to apply them ? an 
The reader will rosy edition the authors’ | 
Linnean 
igen to oeeupy t 
aoa wine the counsel ah have Trà È 2 a cen- 
e now thrown 
pa peh briefs in despair. 
en — — 
VIN.— 
8 which is a new genus to Sg British eo 
tions, b esid nt for its loeality, viz., pi 
4 Thiet tironin at an elevation of 12,000 feet, The 
ing is and will become a 
with 
the very, Sgn leaves, 2 a fi rance. The 
an 
in my 3 
such as 
for September. 
arts —— 
The mass 
with so mee cold ley tha 
nd runs off the spoon 
tracting. Before 
for several days 
| should be 
be repeated, Arch 
the use of the see 
ing 0 
qaras : of the “Cordillera, and called * ha natives “ 
Botanic Gar Gua Ther icated b M. Herran, cha 3 d'affaires for | be 
flower in ‘this ee ‘the rare Allard 1 tomentosa the — “of Costa ta Riom, i in a la etter ae J 
= 
Carhagena some seeds 
value, gate animals, - well as — a to ad causes them 
— ig — by th 
those who look after plants suitabl n b the gero 
r — e la Montague, og 15 ‘the rapidity x ajin which = 
alis 
corail 
pane of the poiso 
pir Ae * . ie 
par 
bk. Ta par t pearlash, = 24 to 
arely | parts of sia ion of caustic potash. stearine and 
into sli — mixed with the cold . W and 
v der 
mee for Dasar pp ey ‘owing ‘aecoun 
r will soon 
Abridged | 
f 
CA RE AE R 
Pectine e 
Salts : Vie See 
5 4085 
of the FN e e the 
i analyses, of some that 
were grow soil manured with am a a a, 
* of 8 en II. of purchased ta tahe 
— 1 ime . 
Carbonate of magn nesia „ h 
2 pe lime and agin ia ae s 50% 
Chioride of potassium t ; 
wing Cucumbers in, | 
lias and 
er | &c. Alpha, i in hares * — and Garden Miscellany 
ee Method of 3 mee in Plaster af To and | 
i ditions | rendering them Take 2 parts o 
ere Sari was found = the 2 
f stearine, 
en- 
old ley is is ad 
ew m . 
ntil cold, when it is mixed 
t it becomes perfectly "o 
vitho ut coagt 
N it taa bo 
ee covere 
ke It may be pre- 
served for years. age pplying ic to the sat pen they 
— the stains 
* 17 — 
h the 
Ft 
Fe 
coating is then dusted with e or a soft brush. If 
jen gs, me 
Fimo, i Da 
0 
land 
Cedron,” 
a tlia talk ble 
„or r bout 10 ine s long, trailir var mae a: doubloon (3k Ba i 6s. 64 ) ne pail = . singlo 
on gey —— of the 3 In — iecunthe |*? ing my stay in tra rica, 
Same situation, are N specimens of the "Potent lla myself! been -onliged to ae use of the — er on 
ida, of Wallich, a fine species, allied to P. fruticosa. t It is d as follows 
It is Very, pretty, growing about a foot high, with large | of the see 2 fs in — of 
bright yellow flowers. 8 ites whieh both plants | brandy, is swallowed by the patient ; next a piece of linen 
were 5 or Madden. soaked in brandy, and pow ore of the i 
is placed upon the wound; the patient is A left to 
DORGAN Hatt, ANG Tun szat oF. O. F, himself, and seldom requires another he cure 
—— Esq.—It has been — custom for strangers | being perfect. I have employed the Paon substance 
ter tity o 
cellular aon e beneath 
The J Jerasalem Artichoke ecm contains. a small uat- 
of iolet 3 de * osited in the 
the nase 
is inves Aub therefore, 100 parts of — zi wean 
r co 23.9 of nutritive subs mips 
and they are ce ec well adapted for the fattening o 
big 1 cattle, Chemical Gazette. 
or Fruit Tree s.—I am, at this season of the 
h for fruit 
have tried, and I have u 
bie m use & 
will ‘hold aeons 70 gallons ; in this 
w load of yellow clay, and an * 
temperature of from 53° to 59° F., in dry air, The 
wound soon heals, and the roots can be preserved with- 
i to ascertai ent the 
the juice of whi arked 7°, mon 
November, 1848, the roots of one lot be ta 
low the collar, and the roots of the other lut being in 
he state in which they are usually sto The 
lots wer placed in a dry spot, out of the reach of fr 
nd in which the air was ; at the end 
February a a. jies, was rom Th 
roots which ha 
ir collars had nearly all ler 
* ga ve a wad peat os 3° ; those, om the o ther hand, 
