contained more French- -built war-craft than they do > at t | tribe, oy Join guina Esq. T as of he feni bi a Tan hse et iho 
= ll bi t 
pergus qu Bn a ign: fag aa Chius A : Ia is aa oha whi h are not beh agg the loose feathers of | or two ptm ve in pereat preservati and 
i tt, Esq. a 'abool 
mme supérieur à Eo de | birds which do not fiy, as the Cassowary, Ostrich, Ap- | now flourishing m awcett, Esq., 
a i Chaves Bor ean patent g ane j teryx, &c. Inthe Gwis, not only are the ae held Yellow w Rose- setas and two boxes of ic ilgherry 
conséquence de la prévention nationale e qui together by mea es, but pes se are furni hed — ag bon bad the ee een ae 
to y ; eë Ei 7am b $ n directions and more e 
fondement, parce aré le bois de A the feathers of Fay wing. The use of these barbulets | been made in a great ma ny i espe- 
priangan paha celui de ta Mone royale, bat vient appears to be to > br reak the vibrations of the air against cially the follo win g :—20 | grafte d Mango- trees, a Phe 
imta ee i Pp rS so a A nes was ret to the ange of Ibrahim Pasha, at Cairo. ` Mane à 
avait comparé le e bois de Chên ne Anglais avec celui dano nos | read T. Edwin J. Get, Pe on | he M à D paa Ma 
Appearances of rafted Mangoes, 
de celn b distinguished from SA NEN guano HE the use of | rooted i) of ingens plants. ne indigeno 
éne fs 
gor de l’ Bue ope. Je suis convaincu que 
les ales vaisseaux de la bajos: Ties ont été 
Besides the 
ay. gather from 
à Toulon ou en Es Bg 
various, salts. 
ns ‘of muscular fibre ; 
sponges; 3, the skeletons = _snimalcues ; 3 4, crystals = 
The goo of de 
uano from Ichaboe, he had found 
ular 2, the spicule of 
the guano was no 
r had bee 
t e 
on, 
stination in a RH rRe particularly the 
goe S, the m 
ntity of crystals, Some Man, kee part of bid Bare ny 
a ‘he E Editor of the Gardeners’ Chronicle, that Oak d | ssam Tea: arnt to ’ afr Br rad. 
Me Sai np ye a ~ = am pi wk bones of binds Thes ir Watrington h had — = | ley, at Ellichpoor, a garden on às Fo ills at 
oo —Is i a ry about | contain sulphate of potassa and ammo The evation of the hills are, in re- 
st Stov Bie ace me aoe ergot, to try ra monia was probably peta rom d to t mperatur n the 3 Tea Range, 
tank system ‘for bringing forward cuttings. I had the fie sh i of the birds ; mean te nae e of about 72° in ahe 
wooden tank made 12 . of the bird b p probabi fsh, miah parse an aa 30°. winter, with a light soil and sufficient mois- 
division i in rege iddle ne et in small quantities from The mus- ture. — Several cases, ee in all 153 plants, had 
this I covered with slates, po a small L 
ye rod 
each end for steam 
On t tank I 
wie being excrementitious. The ' spicu! læ of the Gaam and 
wt port, of Bee 4 
re o 
e 
1a 
—it answered very pa À 
To 
h 
and Eu 
after 
gre 
one of Stephenson’ s Gara Boilers, asw 
of the bird as food. ie. v Toning pre- 
l Ir fu sori 
ropean s seeds. —Itis gra 
oai soled 3 
Wg WO Ne 
nigh 
ing. T afterwards got one of Deane’s ni and caniad New Poisi mic any 
pom through the top under i glass, for the pur 
of 
AGRI- BORER E AM: SOCIETY OF 
ere INDIA. 
d too 
place in “the "Society's 8 “Garden on the evening of Thur 
season fi gaa aan and Aspara; with th 
arrangement ; it is d+cidedly more certain an or 
economical than ae for small gard en purpose LF. 
—[The stov e called Deane’ s is an aana contrivance 
for a Joy r Chun 
Vesta, or “Arnott s 
Tulips. ear ery <a imale a dozen of sa in 
my bed, I allowed tha whole to remain in the ground 
until the beg inn ning f Au ugust ; Ieee OPNAR eA up, 
Ti, 
s- 
„We extract from the Bombay 
pees, heir Pere cetyl leaving 
Rebiers. 
Mills on the Cucumber. 
to them 
in alm 
J 
Second Edition. 12mo. 
Smith. í 
Tuts issa re-issue of the last eiin — called the 
second), with a a plan n for a ho t-water d some obser- 
ntry. 
Tadia, is - the om K. tbe —— vet sent out 
Upon this — sp Gar den Committe ee have 
still.to regret that, in 
A suffered ntm 
eeds, Those obtained has a AS > Good Hope have, 
tan n unp Th e Co! om- 
disanpäi 
oskar very ins 
“ Many ps pn say è 
edition of my work on the te Cultivation of Cucumbers: 
and Me elons, 4 having fou nd it inconvenient to nal we 
author, ‘‘ to ti first 
e failure of their 
ce, bee: rod luctive. 
have, in seoanianee with enap ~~ ‘had one of®my im 
o be o hea 
the pit so constructed as to be heated by hot water, a 
ted, and have the 
hen in the sun, ‘proved pits arranged as 
were igh nto ne once single laye m In- seeds as are received by the overland route, and i in the satisfaction, to Ay Nd it amamen very. expe cnn I K. 
specting them about ae kaiki naa i 
that they were all, more or less, mouldy. I s out all Unfortunately for horticulturists in India, , nurserymen p'ants that had been only rr? ad days planted, ere 
= me parts, a ‘medi ately planted them getmir was exhibited at the July Show, in Chiswiel 
r 
usly, and most of them are now up, hat exportation; and. it is “probable that aoe shall not be F 
P il lied with seeds till trad Mr. Mills has had more than 30 years’ experience im 
they ay eae cy, sud the a Wand os by | wert supplied with seeds till some ira wet steer e sed the kessiilllashan of Guguk and Melons by oe “ 
by Sclerotium tuliparum. Is thi sume Fungus? I dt loni d studies th per methods of pro- | #4 his success by th RTEA sashes — a i 
isnot described in the last volume e English Flora g1 ly-ri l ds. It is also with A its advantages an th a 
he time of planting, I d g| the g difficulty th Englist J davet his opinion of i mparatively pc a of the hote 
solution of common salt, hoping tha g+of | induced t make a proper selection of flower-seeds for valena system is Spesolans meroa ofn marks 
is materia al would destroy the Firea aiian i ish hi try “ Where manure is apan ntifu i, Cucumbers or Melon 
ing th k here, or such a 5, from t their very nature, can never suc: arerp apite a 8 good dung es stem as by 
the dipped bulbs, six weeks ago, being an inch i in re Ad the tropics nent at Ta ot water; _ re - 3 
while the others had scarcely E eai Aile stree, pondence wit “i none Lindley, on the part of the | quire ortheki kitohen GE nei it is a good inet od o! prepal 
Horticultural facia. of Lon ndon, areeni an inter- g it for that purpose, as also for the growth of Mus 
in this m rity 3 change of plants a ms. The hot-water system is by far the cleanest, an 
Mr. Toh nson bj | much less labour is required in using it than by the dung 
nack, yet. a ali revision sandal easyer it. The particularly on the culture of opted fr fruit- nla 8y. The heat can also be regulated toa greate 
which, fro 
En ngland, 
are bec 
pape horticultarist. 
m the i 
othouses in 
denton oh RACK BENE: especially when on winds, sy Wi pi 
in, pre cti 
ing objects of aSa to tbe 
Dr. Lindley stated, that in |t 
he will lead his readers into expensive errors. For 
a he says Captain Thurtell i is hen smn suc easfal | 
of Pelargoniums in the present day, If this 
tacos his flowers, when shown at the Horticultural 
Exhibitions at Chiswick, would have taken prizes, but 
they did not either in the season of 1842 or re 
the former year Horatio Nelson appeared, and i 
— na There is no raiser of this deuce: w 
with Mr. Fost be 
thinks. differently let ae try his rength i in the 
season. Small plant: 
s well 
bd rail from the any as Mr. ra 's a travel ir in the car 
t 
t his | garde ener emplo ys. I remember Mr 
more 
tw 
e correc 
Captain patki cluded by a 
ming | Mates which ae En 
endeav: 
o points of grea 
intensity of solar Tight, and "> 
d 
condition as an 
It arrived from Chelten- 
am 8 fine y re ge —_ the ta ble. 
I ae also submit the parag 
3 an 
a daily journal to be raat oig ‘the 
could not fail to be _imp 
mpiete 
ours to frui 
cal cli 
ngla ad are press defcient i in | cation, where it is not. 
interest to horticulture, viz., the Mil 
a 
d that 
a year, the results | 
forcing apparatu us, is ‘that aoe which he dan, “have at: 
m-h f 
All that th 
hee ereby. ires of 
amend 
Mr. Mills has, in fa proved inane i sisino by : 
roducing in his ened pit Cue s 24. inch 
old a 
as ‘Captain Thurtell. informs s us,” &e., e the e judgment 
and on the temperature of the s 
oil at certain rere 
in length. These were i pt ; asi 
ay raed the case with many tbat are exhibitedy 
t young and tender. nexes a plan of th 
it the 
p 
Burbidge a: 
ey were grown in, Mills’ “Improved, heated by” 
This, be states,” 
s and ask ħim if he should l be conducted, ìt was stated. that facilities existed hs be. fonn to wer every expectation that can be 
would knowingly purchase a rootlet. y for wiries med of it, on roe being regularly disc and neither | 
reat plan of progagation condemn a 4 ry nor the zonen The apparatus, mb observes, is 
ms, as being only productive = wah pire plants, ment to have these researches seats at that esta- very easy of m nagement in con ane of the very” 
The xt paragraph is a aae e advertisement at the | blishment. f the furnace- Sates damper, &¢ 
end, Ir zoncany recom aay Johnson to read should be samen in order to render available the fa- The best fuel, at Teast, that which answers — 
Macaulay’s Essay on * “Mr. "Ro be . Montgomery, ” Sub- well, is elsh coal; 
stitute flowers for | Y: ] m 
Chinese Quinces.—In the very interesting translation 
avin of rai 
5 si qual 
ized, the 
fire will not require “looking to more ‘nan 
Sag 
g tions from if properly managed, viz., the: com- 
'ather Ripa’s account of China a by Mr. Pran earth’s surfi gtt gp hich bustion allowed {0 o on slo wily. he boiler should E 
pabliohed ae veg he ob th ty had and the quantity of tanks should be : 
than ours, and o quisite Revoir: the reed es ikë ing :— ns mJ. S. Law, Esq., on tag plantsof Saccolabium oe as not to pa the water to boil.’’ E 
oneness are so wholesome that they are given uncooked Wightianum, Ledebouria hyacotbina, Anthericum Nim 
to sic persons. 
so that when 
rely of juice, 
moi, Remusatia \ vivipara, Habe 
aria longicornis, Platano 
Ma dar 
on in Europe, |t 
G 
nohis Sp.; 3 also | 
Garden randa. ; 
3 Bicton Gardens, Jan. 2, 1845. .—There i is at this time 
Memo 
seed. fihe Ch 1 . oO 
ies 0 aa 
at Mandana and Nando s from when kanita to Sura rat, | Mr. Barnes ha of Cycas oLuTA, and ~ 
s favoured us with the fol t cating 
_— it is consi ara a great delicacy: the fruit is Carus oe it :— I te following baten : 
oe aa in pri 3 resembles in taste both the | which the fruit sent h s been taken, in the year 1842, — 
um and the Melon. From the Botanie Garden | an t ‘aoe eo its beaut fi iod of 12 5 
tsa -O tno re an, c aa lus | months. Many persons, and among em 2S pracy 
, $ o ie z nts 
ad ona! mosa, Sorindeia Madagascariensis, Clerode bidr wg Rog — poser ee: ead Chnt plant would eh er 
e Owl- nense, Dombeya Opulifiora, Plumbago Jenecea, Ruellia | a sucker from it 
» Which bas now attained as aan a size a8 i 
