aoe ae 
13.—1845.] 
THE 
CSEOEV ERS CHRONI 
CLE. 211 
d sometimes even 36°. | 
form 
been kept ver y dry 
spats Sn no oa jsture ineeie excepting occa | 
i | damping over head.—J. L. Snow ž 
Erratos.—Io No. 11, p. 170, col. c, in Camellias, for “ Well- 
Sonstrians,”"read # Weltbankiana.” 
cay Apri 
Whati is Dr, John — 
is? W w iay 
opin ion, but 
ray? s' answer ring thi 
a o 
1 l 
y cases comparatively slbreahapte is not aaah 
intl *-(p. H). -Is this what he calls his im 
in the garden of the H itural Society in December, 
1844.— Botanical Register, 
Miscellaneou 
Rose Gardens of Ches seepoor. Ghats epoor 
brated throughout India for the 
nd 
is cele- 
wholesomeness of its 
its t- 
Societies. But if Dr. apes Murray, in his eagerness to bec r, and he beauty and extent of its Rose-gardeus. 
OSCOPICAL SOCIETY. a martyr to the impious, atheistical, hideous, Saia Perhaps these in a good degree arise from the same 
Toe ea ose Berni M Ea e and so forth ee of Mo rphology, has rummaged | Cause, —the elevated level on which it stands, and th 
on c ie Sa Spicer, C. Brind, | his poe plat a e-bo ok in n for quotations or argu- ryne its soil, which never retains the moisture, 
By ini Es al TE Paes A a sore ' oat paper 4 nd after the heaviest showers is, ina very few hours, fi 
; m Mi Smee „on the Min mie e Anatomy r y faete. Sica} 2 $ = x ae fond of he vere re ide ‘A a Sani hadar eg Saiak Pease 
ls;:which jd gsis 7 si hir th ea, that it must be favour the grow 
seal ppacnesdea i ini njecting by means of carmine and Apple-tree at Burlington, RA ERIRE ] r flowery It is al “8 another stirs aya rania a 
ammonia, which ran parallel with the sides of the rf : Monee of the city.and cantonment, that it has a 
lis, and formed a perfectly regular network around the tal h asi eac ch « of th | i 
fthe cells in which the fat was contained. Mr, f petals + the consequence ther rA Hi Gesiegalty Blows ciin thatch ai 
bo o that thd ese | wells TA ripens like ae apples dice fes apples are|| duarter,t nerally Be this as it mays 
t € fee [etare o y | AE edless.’? » Sur ainia ppy.as the English regiments remoy red Tither from the other 
ructure f tha a ‘ignorance ; so i. foes tea. wisfortan en hopp we | stations, have always found their number, of deaths di- 
the ungraci sk di stu urbing this good,| Minish from the Indian to the European ratio; and th 
b nity. He | 2Pparent health of the inhabitants, both English and na- 
a isni pens ot | tives, really struck me as doing justice to the favourable 
know that the latter | reports of the air. The Gt gi ound is t as India 
of lets, | generally is, and the Ros s.were not +: oom, There 
Is, | Was, however I wers s and flo ower 
) and pistils, or flower of 
nts; and the Nir ejes of the hymenium 
he pileu: 
o» he 
tain) h 4 
certainly bear seeds 5 
aA th f, iph 
The Toki fields, which | occupy many hundred acres, in 
are described as 
just show him what 
a 
‘| sort of fruit an Apple without petals does bear—a, in 
the accompanying cut, being the flower, and b = fruit. 
of: pe oy to that which occurs in the conversion of 
arts of the flower in the highe 
-| Let us then i inquire who he is, 
- | known pao 
e 
Dr. John -Marra mphlet. 
and wheth er his yes 
ah s migenog PB oh es his opinions au 
wei ight fe mber: 
We have said that we can. find nothing rga) Í the | Wel 
spe 
pxtromely beautiful. They are puen for distillation, 
and for making. Ara tiky; ch gge -water is both good and 
cheap her or ae ht of two pounds 
| . large aber of ‘the ae jaie eight anas, or a shil- 
ater is made, 
sun-rise in the 
The a ttar is obtained after the | FOSe- 
= till 
morning in large open vessels = to the air, and 
then oy se off the essential oil which floats at the 
AaB t d 
to The rose-water which is thus skimmed bears a 
lower price than that which is warranted with its cream 
entire ; but Mr. Bayley said there is very little percepti- 
ble difference. weight of attar, 
If our senses do not deceive us, there are seeds enou gh d. thousand well-grown oses are required. 
The price, even on the spot, is extr ravagant, a rupee’s 
ght pont s the bazaar ( dul 
an al- -wood) f for 80s. Bis and * e pipah 
100s 
Mr. “opha: ke who repa ome oy himself. on 
id he calculated that the rent uf the land, and 
Au 
i DRA horticul 
pric e of utens ils, really cost him at the r of a gor r tee, 
one > pure botany, oh 
servants, &e. —Bis shop Heber’s Indian Journ ae 
urg 
| ture, but still which none 
In case ofo Sepira botanists are capable of saa ng We must t declar re, then. 
vob pusher as had rena figured | that although we know, either personally or id _ 
explanation as that for | writings, every ving? gat t having any k 
hich a second- flower-bud was | scientific reputation, we ap not know such a.pe 
e of the first. After | Dr. John Murray; we never ieee d of him as a botanist | 
bjects. were exhibited in | and we cannot: fiad EAE who ever did. We 
the soap sul en of the then 
But sate Dr. John Murray i is the mougiee of 
does not like to msel 
p 
TEPS > 
“so, we any br ask 
bim to a betray his ret but we invite him to name any | 
of Dr. Gr aham’ s health being tufortubately such as to 
ws of sree hives 
Seep 
poak Newshbws non tae Be 
The “end of 
ropee 
| nearly agree with those `o Mr, ‘Behar tt. 
March, or early i in Pa wri jes: ne the p: 
cognise the truths of Morphology. We know no such 
then ave’ ‘commenced aie hose 29 
R 
eMiclures'on Morphology ; its Cravarvanta le 
~ Hon and Atheaical Tenden y John Murry, 
oe werk Hamil ton. 
asas of 25 pages, the purpose of whi 
aE ay indeed by itf title. er author states it t 
nviction (reasoning from inductive pii 
nlf a hae © tendency of „Mor rpholog iaa 
> 
ATER 
o gesn station, paaie 
ch i to Teter him“ to the w 
was one of the fathers of the wicked 
bar 
rell known * “ Prolepais I Blantarom.” 
| “hees ı PER re» his yi y until ae 
Dr. John Murra 
red gentleman’ ia exact name, from fear that there 
olog ists that 
s du uty ; me we would ous hat 
of duty whieh “people who | 
e | au aia bank 
ue e might have spared himself the trouble, 
may assured that ti R what they 
bration sehen “better than hed iron wot 
eyan Api t ridiculous. . 
r Fight 
emin video, mirror m magis,” as 
We, too, have no avy Yor tk 
in T he has placed himself ; we have mie 
des e to become a lau ughing. -stock 5 and we leave 
Dr. John nieri we ofr youa piece of 
self with J Mo 
should ‘be any other Dr. yang epoch? posere | 
e Mor ph aT l — 
our learned | 
ety | 
. however, may be full a moths shou a a 
woollen r oi hee mgs on chs agr ate 
and the large tomtit is not to ae wis way vay by 
coloured strings. ie is only severo Fiket that u 
him , through the force of hunger, to kidnap bees, 
rapping slily k pitoi doors, euk iiA g them up when 
they appear outside, But as Ay as been aie OM ob- 
served, that may ba preve TAA ke the door 
‘shut. The curren opinion “that ate am are 
diminished in si ie by the © the larvee, is 
open to objection ; but Mr. f the comb is at 
ap is: “ 
Hb ve constructed of the proper: dimensions, acon 
ecrease from that size proves! the ne mimi p: occa- 
man ally—say once in four or 
or three bro od combs; which are soon y 
now, 
The next time you occupy y 
of to be unoccupied by eggs and larvee.” 
i indeed, 
not Tan out by bis ae Tat must soom ee 
en before they are four 
Wolff, Goethe, orn? „Ro rt oe Agee: Sup me they ste oceupied only thrice 
de St. Hilaire, Engelman, Nees v. Esenbeck, Dunal, | during the season, the cells in a hive four years old 
Martius, Moquin Tandon, Turia a Schleiden, would, of course, contain 12 coatings—a of 
d a hundred others. Inve: stiga ate „the ir facts, a | | considerable thickness, At this rate, the cells must.be 
when you have done that, show y üs hive, nine years old, which 
be unquestionable facts; and in | you can. Such i s the. kind oa ae which is ex: | is in m possession : and what must they have beem in 
mente it should: be. sl that 3 t Inv e is the unerring i in- | a hive A, has stood 40 or 50 years, as some haye been 
é Pe ti Sa chal ‘record ave cep Ly ch, however, are of rare 
» Murray does no > occurrence. Still, I may safely say that, in A 
leat ges $, indeed, that it ‘aan his comprehension how NE ANTS. | the ica last = the a But, according to Mi Ss 
: ig- an eyer become its fruit, which RIA A Ris. ( oon Epiohe), z the: mbs m moved in 7 in: winters an ae m 
that it does; and we can ayh believe that a Gyn Monandria. per 
are beyond his com ut | related ind “he beet Maxi we teal, and Jike i i haps: even tab pi is rey in weak hives that the ey are 
y they should ea yerd isa discovery of Mr. But, surely, he ean in winter ; for he acti 
me a ured by the power of | village of i Queralt ange’ in KGa a “ite leaves are that “ the combo: peu a bo restored. oie one 
intelle > i i r Is a very r time 
a obj A iS ci rt bria ASSA EER were than i = car a s% fi bané” their lost comb before April ; 
yen of what the ‘learned as oni 
man calls reasonin 
a ists et nts that i in the rany the Aro! rt whieh 
is identical wit rhb the e parts whicl 
leaves, which precede the appearance. of the per erfect 
leaves and _terminal pseudo-bulbs of such plants; meg 
ihe 
"teen a portion 
of a 
as The pen which spread ridely apart, are folded 
a triangular form. -It flowere 
ould n 
Sia the colony me of be weak spin the summer, 
by loss of early b nee ve, I mentioned that 
about midsummer w of. season for the operation. 
By that.time the Pare mol eda be Saved, and „the 
fresh combs would contain a g 
