THE GARDENERS coton 
e: 
[Aprin 5, 
Id 
ns eat weeds, though they ipess their ties c 
not think | to assume. 
hi iefly mere annual oan sown in 
, the common Mignonette, bein 
the open air, had formed a 
maey fond of araa and, ra left alone, 
n his u und resem 
Ə Fos 
n the weeds, but 
ded that e. are ‘ey atené onj 
small of ar which are har- 
ich t they ansent 
an 
ced 
n pulling becoming bran ched ae 
of Hackney, sent a bea 
the top.—Messrs dh iges, 
eut mi of an x Odonto: 
gem ving so 
Si 
- | petheci. . | 
een in the 
was awarde 
ds fí 
a little s 
swans, ‘but 1 never saw the latter 
e or destroy one. My swans, 
educated 
which were bora and 
the Thames, are 
A sti fr Lapa chet, every 
Ave fo od 
bi 
essential to perfection in that flov 
results of an attempt to im ate “the qua 
orane varieties. Amongst them 
Mab w s stated to have stood the h eat tof a warm stove 
t | children. rie 
| pw toa om gel who lived in the same 
whenever th 
i and Jambos ; 
vol it showed the ern 
woul 
imal fo od. „It also often swallowed dried t twigs a 
d, it would sit for 
rsa wo 
tint chewing it before it swallowed it, which it 
continue to do till : fell aslèep. A specimen of 
, | draw 
and hard. 
S. cristatus had most 
of the habits of the first, €; 
wn, ri joints being ‘short, and the wood quite firm 
ld 
Achimenes ? eens similar to that exhibited at the last 
Ra oi aca about it. 
In the j 
al 
J 
wards t hank even by the i re of food. They have ment thb 
ets island in the pond he branches of tr when pursued, the 
t feath but this is only in | grown shor n pots, and in December w were | on the is es of tree np ued, they t 
the ard pruning ondion tiie dee Tuhle shifted a vie ri bv eh in which they were shown, ped ing leaps ay one = to another. If one 
of the way ii foxes and oth —Derwent. his, perhaps, the most handso of the genus, are t, they all stop to look at him, but never ai 
Morphology.—1 am not so charitable as your reviewer, | 0° wev er, in this in 7 a rked i improvem arty © off the dead bo iA ‘7 
th respect to o Dr. J. Murray's pamphlet (which I have the pase exhibited e last meeting, fl pee na 
T ep ers becoming pais’ brighter with the advance Mebiews. q 
So rokna for A, man especially for igne oby usly a he's Vith z bese ea birt moie rurale, considérée: dans ses rappori 
inant nat his su njeet, thus to denounce a nten of | pulchellnm,.1 rema: e for its handsome drooping nt iiny lå Physique, at i Matera 1 a 
hard-working, self- ted, eminent men, for mere ely hex abit, Leelia® fla as a “Braden species of recen nt intro- ssingault. Paris : Béch peite 
Hippeastrum 
eog what they believe their eyes have seen, and 
their reaso ning powers tell them are hat con- 
duct: ion, 
| called Grand “Monarch.—From_ Mr. Ww. P. Ayres, were | ya 
iti 
Aitonii s. Henderson, of Pine Apple- 
that «rapt eyes have deceived them, and their re 
ould iho: bad motives to these 
tu s of God’s 
` Culture of Cabba ages by 9 Shiai _Take ‘healthy sprouts ; | 
cut them off close to the stalk of the Cabbage ; let me 
o three days. The 
bbages, I am told, are 
po chen by haring iime.rabbish aa with the 
xX. X. 
a —Six pete Cam 
bling i. Me 
Pane, sent a white hybrid Azalea, called ‘Storyana, 
which was no Rye rovement on the old Indica alba ; 
Archeriana, Neillii, and irdens 
o 
a cross between Gesnera Douglasii an 
scarlet Brazilian kinds ; 3 it was a þe eauti tifu 1 “vaniety. 
A Banksian Medal 
ellias, in pots, were present from 
‘of King ston ; F ive of these were at the 
petals ER striped With 
ete gular bar of e . 
Mr. Jac 
other was 5 white with the 
ink. Of the red sorts, one 
p petal.— 
into the so ped ‘which ave been asked re- 
to th 
e oar goog of oe Institution, it will, per- 
the n 
r. Mou nntjo SA 
ling "Rhododendron, that-w tated 
ere! of campanulatum ; 
andsome, an Twil no doub 
| ture of plants, 
i. he (Third Not 
Veceráste: physiology, if ei 
nected with it are separated, is s veny y si e 
upon by M: heparan It o 
aero of his first chapter. “shall, 5 
s it very brie 
Boussingault ‘frst touches upon the general str 
and connects their growth \ with the 
cal condit ions He isof 
| nion that the pith of plants i is os of great impo 
and adds, t te mu ge be oved from young É 
or even Aarra in fo 
uch 
pte 
there! fore 
M 
itis, tep s, true 
logoa its vitality, and may be di 
explain 
the pension list of thi 
reason w hy 
m. 
ait ih 
y. In consequence of o: 
Ə 
the 
| sarded for 
usefi 
e of the Committee diries 
's 
i 
an’s (Wm. Edwards) sub- 
un 
olling pape 
rs. | Were 
and 
| sake at Me Gaines; of Batters, sent a ne 
d m 
d flowere 
d 
Š old statement that the sa ofa ae 
ith o 
hoots invariably di 
. coccinea, —From Messrs. Ro of Tooting, 
the old Oncidium Baue eri; Dendvobiom sulcatum, 
zn irs "yellow w flowers ; M 
“th 
believe, by no means the 
of i motion eof the fluid, 
are still in ips dar 
cause of the rise o Sof the sap, and. its conte 
most remote points 0 of the vegetable of vie B 2 Eib 
oe i 
aculata nova 
thei imaginary action of the silver er to the 
ave known 
k this matte 
In Gaman I may 
ma Ahere the EAR EEn court th 
ation into their affairs being convinced the mo: 
losest investi- 
re their | 8° 
th 
Kew, 
with the 
act |P T 
theory of Endosmose, we are afrai d that, unless J 
interest, we have no satisfactory explanation of 
‘oblem. 
e latter end of the little physiol 
notices that state as preface to the bees, we 
q | Observation that a ı plant only grows when it pel 
Gy’ saf, 
plant pa 
wers | under the action of sunlight; it ait not, then, to 
ikel atnight. Nevertheless, in some experimi imen! eee ieg 
ihat 
avour in the gardening world. 
So 
ne grew 2°34 oye serra 7 P.M 
it without being ari with the ah but 
in future if any penan will Poe me with a line, I 
a copy of the rules and | 
FI Uvedale’s St. fide Pears pit were eect at the 
1844 3 Rack t4 
while $t vaniy gained mA ahs es in length in the 
pee of time, betwee: nak noon. © And in 
me oh It proves to I 
be a very 
g, but by no means a good table- fruit—An ex- | or 
va 
nera Hop-plant rere Ao: 02inches in the nights 
only 40°12 inches in the forenoons of the same nui 
shall be Rot A 
R awe} ap Ay 
ou 
ct, ex 
it | was exited from the garden of the D uke 
considering the se season, 
of Marl- 
E? 
Th 
he cite we pea of the work is of far 
rier 
Don enes. 
HORTICULTURAL S 
j + ean Ww. 
5, Esq., was ele On this 
sion cond fine things were brought together. 
F. G. Cox, Esq., of Stockwell, were specimens 0 
Biom 
| 
oa 
of the 
ee 
in circumference and 93 in height „the numb er 
was 
imen of good culti- 
f pips por 
rtance, and w noticed next week in the 4 
remarks we received &'l 
vation 
book we were © 
Ms 
issim 
| scented... white flow the 
Illicium ria an. evergreen shrub jy Florida, 
rown „blossoms and swee 
pression, and even bene 
says Mr. L., * of the full co 
to my surprise w the peer ae 
@ species ; found on lofty t trees in hot ; damp 
Guatemala ; 
> 
PS She 1 fae +h q 
Indian kind 1, with large lilac blosso: 
DA 
Isa HA 
— I was not fal ir till too late, 
tables and calculations 
phe: 
pedium 
Oncidium bifolium. A Banksian 
the 
m barbatum ; and the somewhat slender roving 
Medal w 
b from Dr, Cantor, on two 
of Chi e 
rey to | sp 
pera 
Ri 
t shapes our commo: asia | 
circumstances, be made 
2 the A s Pears, p ni acy Monarch, Tomp. 
son’s, Ds fil Lisi: Bro m. Par! riw ero distributed 
ch Fellow: ished Mere 
LINNEAN OPIRE, 
April 1. 
—E. Forster, e Chair. 
Hassall, Esq., was elected a Fe low, A 
species of 
Aee 2 
Re: The 
able man whether, after this adm: 
called unduly sevete. We have nothing t tod er 
ba ions between Mr. Law apase T — her, 
annot enter further into 
ith the! 
E 
NTS. 
With 
Reu FH 
pant nalealy untied & at p. p: 1 
addressed a lette: 
| prone 1 "ean 1 Mexico in aay ples 
, Who were e ngage ectors for P e 
n | Governm ent. The po survived Wa" 
sented to His Majesty "Es nel ae 
rie" be at Lacken, in fay, 
y Professor’ ‘Scheidweiler, 
Ir iik ? 
h. Me de Tiat 
