312 
THE Bikes Sh as 
ae rs to lig Trees can | wah yaaa plants man ny a noble s 
matter br trees = re out 
io ithe of the 
ients torent tes require for their support, 
+} 
l | bear 
Ta 
Ss 
aa is lee 
a dient degrees, of | 
2 the Spruce | | 
and Horn- 
Maples, fruit trees, | 
e because public taste is ie low 
bg that is no showy. 
ndoubtedly becoming more 
+ d 
hideous muslins, carpets, 
t nhat 
g 
to be overs 
no 
| un 
S l 
rinci al 
t K 3 ary whic h fall and continually 
restore to the ai all that s had lost; and m 
s brought up by kaa 
rte roots of lang and the t 
dp ro As for 
removal of ty 
arding, for timber contains very little earthy 
mua and in an ient fores ts trees doubtless 
dropped o say, then, 
that natural forests amesa maaa would 7 a rd, 
Ty 
ave happen 
soil of Denmark w was as originally 
more, |ru 
ks; 
an nd the rag ‘skinned me a etula ver- Pape ae aera less stari 
, the We uth the common expelle a ; 
e day s 
) iná Aspen; 9, the La rch least. 
It may 
ice et pha different races of trees and light i 
the causes that operate destructiv ai 
cer sti ases, as here, in the expulsion of the 
Aa cannot bear shade, by the Beech which |o 
o mu or ee ued scarlet, than bet 
rula 
thro 
But Aona came this hostile tree ?, The Beech an cle elegance of a Fe 
| is not a native of De map N or indeed of Engla e form of the do wdy Dahlia 
if we are belie : materia cujusqu —— 
generis uti in Gallia est, , preter Sagum et abi ae 
rsa) 
sh (Be tula alba 
it bl 
Is not 
een a V; 
darin all We 
e 
the eae | 
s, and a Chinese Manda 
pit 
too wet and cold for the Bee 
Pi an therefore, 
within the nce. An interesting 
example of this operation, at the present day in 
action, is 
al is remarkably diffe: eins from habit. 
I 
thet of other wooded enmark, 
t bis Sosa 
vie i 
ale p rait Ei 
Jut- 
can 
mended by the Ger 
5 New Plants 
very , as in Gaul with | 3 == 
the 2 exception of soothe SrucciFirs), M. E 221. VANDA GIGARTEA, N 
thinks that it gradually descended from the! When the late Mr. G ee was th 
growing on the branches of Lag 
the Te enasser’ im river, near a place 
E, 
indle ay Aaka iam that it 
had seen capable of TE the 
It had, however, been long before 
ich’s he rbarium under the name of V 
y 
enough above the sea level, where 
| finds the moisture it wants, and where it po 
wit r sec utmost vigour. Such is Mont Dore 
Fra: the Thuringerwald in German In 
this oy rect hl especially on the south of Vart- 
burg, the Beech becomes as large and fine as in 
Denmark.” 
en sha e the ene of our British 
leistocene felt éxamined wit 
. VAUPELL has given to those of Denmark ? 
irregularly TO cin 
e. ae Rand the: tens cream-colonred 
when dee first a Near the Paso of the lip issome 
in Mr. Booi 
Two plants have — recen Kå og ch ri recom- | 
8 specimens but not 
n garden 
avour prep jin poaren and the inven ‘of ‘fine 
as 
igh 
EAUTIFUL FOR 
vein appreciated as fre Ueta that 
of these novelties is required at 
n 
Sai nes’s Hall, next We 
Wi 
= 
great Horticultural Meeting in St 
dnesday. 
iat aa Nt ea 
rom 
Veneaati yess it inhabits places a thousand 
plant pe the level of the sea. „The original gya mpost of h 
h 
fp 
eaves were ae een 
ee Sosa Birch only are found 
half rotten n dung, shoal be well mixed 
ready for use by the end of ‘September. 
i Violet p plants se oe ised from the 
font been 
to 
2 ones 3 feet uae, ; igus by heads of rae 
covered with little brown scales,from amids which 
came out little hard, globular, rather eae nuts 
quite s smooth and ofa bla ckish brown c olour Inj m 
a 
si TE ai: 
Epeei 
` where else Birch is mixed with Beech, which oust 
it when the soil is s Á 
0. 
its neighbour, bends al? losing 
t and 
Beech, i 
Such 
d|this we * fully 
has | a 
Should this prove hardy—which is aout 
will serve as a foil to the cape tiag Inj fas Seo 
r thre 
Professor ScHLE | toge ether'so as to ta k like a single plant. 
should. bg well drained; and if this is done with bro 
bones instead of 
roots of the Violets ay lay hold of the bones, which io 
vigour e plants and make them bloom mot 
kekin. 
SHINE potted as many as are n tooo ae 
a pha 'pply of water eg uld be ge 
e | soil well about the A su 
only und e 
But if on the i side | remain 
ther is in Nor do 
ears put an 
Squeez 
the Beech, the Bitch — to run upwards in 
of air and Bees e but 
‘the vigo pe Fenian To its vi 
poo ' Biro 5 age it is succeeded 
heavy poedings, tor they of 
Surely this is 
such fancies as ‘ £6, ‘a na! 
es mec 
When 
by no 
the Beech,” 
oar 
zed iy: the branches at be axe en in 
y cannot grow in the shadow of the | noble aag U 
The Me 
a more rational explanation than | like leaves is wall k 
su ceession of rac es.” Of | fo mis 
frames be 
» 
TAr say nothing of t 
favour 
= n Australian Reed, Arundo australis, ‘eo a ee eee 
00) 
pes ced in — a layer of old tan should | be 
s thick 3 
the silver Gynerium 
Mr. JAEGER (tne t oa tenflora) points out a 
mbelliferous plant, from Madeira, 
ing at the 
Melanos N, 
A 
Ha R 
qa 
is ahd is to De ha mbes brer #0 pass free 
} hus keep off damp, which when it 
oa 
on] beg 
on ranges yee ; destroy the ovine If, however, they are 
then the latter m 
all has. been. compete let_the iat ns 
nit When the temperatur above 50° t 
T 
_ When 
| Fren be admitted anaes in re day-time, 
pera 
mission of air $ 
strike easily, 
l or 3 a 2 plant may I3 S wide Tor ‘its Seeds, which 
tity o 
Ly sar pretty freely 
a and |- 
a 
in the { pens 
e of the Beech i is 
nts, and of gat 
enho 
raf iss a ris weather is cold and likel, tot 
ere again we > have the ex 
- | family of 
ture; and as among 
frost two m 
mae earth i in the pots must 
e if it is possible to prevent it. 
fal 
