754 THE CAEDRYERP CHRONICLE. [Nò 
wit bloom- i Beamples, showing Mer Anh E 5 
ired t d ce a fine interest., Along with E. catum, ples, showing thei licat -s 
an en of tae oat poate “order, an nd ame |i il ona block, the oidi but dh nga arini Eupho; orbia tural and "49 ricudlui ral Purposes, By ; 
specim f Diocletian, or the a of | unicea, a stove e plant Micapsa chief Panas lies in Loudon, F. L S., H.S., &e. Wi 
bright red bracts, PAROD ding, the wers, the soort Author. Longman, Brown, 
Titus ? i: when it. is pas ir it wants the volute of 
the Ton order, yn Among the labourers in the e 
dillion ; but greater blunders than thee ja variety EN identat together w 4 the | ment, one of th remarkab 
+ ered jn partig ciliar: ica = ena a | Mr. Loudo: a person who succeeded in Seiten 
ta der severe 1 di 
tai a oars r Nature. When they erect rock- | useful Aa blooming species, pe s phh rare Barkeria ing more, un _ Personal disadvantages, 
work and w: falls, such men should be sent to „the Lindley ana:a Banksian Me dal was a arte d for ‘ tag 
Highland ils glens to ae n; hey p the world. Our opi i 
d bot e a m it, 3 
rris aalit of b autifyin e garde d a be with flowers pa S like those « of Stephanotus flori- meee —- and time in no degr 
gure-grounds of their employers by imitat what is | bundus. rae rs. Henderson, view that we e kane nema He had his i, i 
beautiful in N: wages Sy childish conceits | a Coelo e, with lilac petals and a beautifully- fringed men his itings ca t be regarded as 
into tis called landscape i d 1 byan 
pow bot agr courage stake a pretence of Sane his —From Mrs. W. Phillipps, of Streatham, were which runs into extravagance ; ; and they often be, 
taal Aen They may in at P f. nipa anges i t bein ag i ip a subie 
h was littl ded to ) ut, notwithstand 
=, ne “pe ate isapa ig tenas iat lection of eut Roses, and to Messrs. Chandler and = yi these Selesai they x il } s ted for 
Jeni f Vauxh: ) res “honest eho Af 
d wofully deficient. I think it is the late | blooms ; Bas Chandler also se Loudon had È 
mle fo ia ste Eat icficient. > dscape ing is the | Merkii. oe Fruit, Mr. Toy, wes to Ha what of n all value, , un wear 
art of laying out phn to A coe the effect of | Challoner, sent a Pine- apple named a. Black Jamaica, energyaš peonsierable Sy mt i a paa owned 
natural o Fep and where hells a are taken from | weighing 4 lbs. ounces; and a certificate was | the f the peculiar class for} which 
selected ‘and mtiful Nature, success must follow ;”| awarded to Mr. Pov i pin ah to the This a Sen ulee hi having himself been o 
these simple statements appear er to have been | Thornycroft, for thr ae yy of Black Jamaicas, the class ; from his remarking the difficu! pe 
known to some, or, i wn, never to have nain acted | heaviest of which weighed 4 Ibs. 12 oz.—A F Jf d in his early career, and from ut 
gling 
eter Mack eal 
; niga A Chertse =" 
h Gra 
nches of Muscat 
e Hon 
Well c AE 
NA cara proued without the 
hea m Mr, wal ; and Mr, tary 
nt very finely coloured 
n 
+) piyi ing all the aoe of his 
ut H the of others. 
othe case work which shall inom 
Bs ay. ence how 5 
correct information ERN po ey thak he must. n 
y high value 
sarily be acquain 
the class for which it is intended : for th the great ais 
j 
í 
yous 
not rall w) se an ERR | be ntary books is t 
stock for other varieties. In the summer of 1844 I ‘Wilpon were _ Specimens T the Emperor Al full of errors to answ: er the p 
budded se Hyb Perpe urbons, le. Pah gee Esq. | pose > of self- ae The n ature of the sul 
inas, upon the Bin! ges A gages o of Pitm stated to be green-fleshed, rig 
growth, which were hi back sa bagged to the in- 2 ‘bs. 11o on, ie ye, a Cabul, ea “2 Ibs. 5.0z.— | we s shall, therefore, only say of it that we have no bo 
serted The buds have all arden las said to be made. of a compo- | in the language l adapted to the mates “9 
as three fect in len h, and have aa a succession sition of Aee d felspar, were shown by 1 Mr. es foresters, an es T ming bailiffs. It 
of flowers since pgp mmencement of the season. rom t, and not pry gist with supe fluo 
esinge te of th the “Yellow C d in the the | Garden of the ‘Society was a. fine specimen of the matter except, in 
y i bicolor, sama covering a t 
Py, = than I h ab: feet in heigh i Se before ‘a poly 
upon any ol tees nel i find it is also a good e to covered mith ‘ower down to the pot a good Aphe- | avail a ot the pa memoir by his w 
bud the Banksian upon the old China, where a 3 Musseenda frondoss, wi small yellow prefixed to the present work, of ae Re = a few 
bush is wanted ; it does not grow much, but fi chara 
very abundantly.—J. Webster, Eartham. tice For da which will pro robably prov re to be qui Whil 
Keeping Fruit.—N inquiries having, from hardy and a blue-flowered Labiate (plant, sent ty k nele e Ae re he night attend the iia : 
time to time, tive to the best methods | Mr. Fortune ; together with the useful winter- flower- the ‘pai schools. | Her: vercame his dislike 4 
of preserving Apples and P. ing winter, I will Cal progress in deawin gal 
eaa one or two par i toring Oncidium Suttonii, the se) ha He also pms ol a of botany: 
of these, and esto gia hs h best ae =| Em Caileya i Penta Po cut flowers of asians chemist, making copious trated with 
mil be mee a in dacs ee bay et | were fine ind to 1 
of canta D until. the caplet is wall ; about te his uncle, seco abe toa engraving t 
tekse decayed an 
nsof D 
Marie pem: Gans Bergamot Seckel, ‘and 
M oorfo wi Egg, the latter fi rom 
aske d his nephew to translate the tit nile; lh 
o A i 
sP 1, 
z the Belmont, 
Toom which becomes MAN ton regnated with 
oie to i ge ak off, Any animal or i ia pa se e 
is more lia ar may to ‘beeome diseased 
ich a8 
one o preg ira rE Aola toada gs; and Ur- 
poe "pl laced in an a gnat 
effluvia; but, again, o hand, it 
rore that Apples sae Pears shrivel and lose ech 
our when es S, rhe This ma in s oa free 
admissio n of e „This y bea ain uted not 
banist te, a EPEN WERE the fruit of which ‘is usually 
dard, but insipid from a wall- 
LINNZAN SOCIETY. 
—The Bisxor or 
kng Tist a dona ations to the 
+h (ee 
A 
lib brary and museum were 
a 
tree. 
fathe: 
him determine to acquire a the tee. Pee, one 
ve of independence, 
d him from applying to iis í 
d he actually Taai 
e for the editor of a peri r; 
word 
Be su caer iyo nia 
lishing in Edinbu 
temperature which sy air in spring ae attained. 
increased heat of the atmosphere th 
juices of the Apple and destroys its fla 
ephas 
Magdalena, PY, Dr. Hocker ; $ collection of s ecimens 
r to P 
f Cac Cor H. Cuming, 
Jamaica and the Honduras, containing those of Sola- 
a Pear, Martynia TEREN iN and need 
hag nob rena ly q.; a part of a frui 
he atir a, gathered on the River 
y from the 
e ia 13, 13, and id continued it 
a Journal from the ay a 
y years in Fre 
nearly 30 years ; w. riting it for man 
i to familiarise himself with the language." a sod 
“The Continent, after having | been long © 
cae visitors, n 1813 by th the general 
w the impure air to off quiet! i me rdilleras, by ing against Napoleon Bona parte, 
without creati pae PUEN a Teq., ~ B50 a species of dried plants, presented by the so ik mple feld Ls an beg, ee i mind like 
to exclude the p ang Erina. A a he 5 Ferdinandian Society of Innspruck ; 50 species of ingly, after ing 
aed winiow as much 2s posse thee down the tem- dried plants from New Zealand, by Mr. Hugh Low ; pes se gh = fro! m Har 
perature of the room, fi a oS eis Mee Britis rasses, r. Parnell.—A | March. He first landed at Got a. 
Could the: e same in| P3 per ead by the assistant secretary from the lighted with emir iy its roads, its gener an 
spring as during psig prip ne a w sarge i te William ipie mi on the structure of the | of education ; but he was too impatient to 
fruit would ker much better ee be better flavoured. mbrosin ciliata of R h. From ict struc- oe of war to stay lon, 
When Pears are just arriving at perfection, may | Sure of this visa the aber was induc give | by way of yey to Konigsberg, 
be greatly Be in flavour by being ech f in a| it the name of ae but had since ibe that | the i of A In this country he 
warm room for a few days before they are eaten. | 5° tot had given the name Cryptocarine, and | traces of war : Tii tons of horses 
The increased temperature Pine jae more rapid 
placed in this poal 
Pi y and | Sin 
perfectly ha 
rine Taewa. 
Braas U U A siat of Roxburgh was given. 
, the author was ates: 
osinia ciliata and pt pam A minute kani Of | in 
Roxb 
890 
into the town for protec 
Docieties. wasthen assing within two mi 
HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. tigation of the structure of omalo =? gh bivouac 
Nov. 4.—R. W. Bancuanp, Esq., in the chair, E, | POS in t to which the author more troops, who, in their 
R. Tunno, J. S. Barry, and G. Wood, Esqrs., were | CUatly drew attention, were the sj development of | looked more like convicts than 
eleeted fello Although the subjects of exhibition “ ed at Berlinfrom 
h i of atten. | 2% the remains of the sac of the os, the dire Ist of June, and then proceeded ‘to anual 
tion were were produced. Of gay peste, cone of the “mRost | Se radicle, which correspon ded. to to the apex of “the Oder. Here, at the er ble d'hôte, - him to be & French» 3 
le was a magnificen t specim n; of Cattleya | nucleus, the large : development of the plumule, and the i Egi ‘+ bat, oF 
labiata, with four flow f wh ich were ‘There was a full t for some see in fa sHe 
E attendance of members. The meeting was conducted | pese him speak Ae a AA 
and rendered it an object well worth ightian| z5 read the paper | must be English 7 and, when : 
‘Modal which was jesse i. This. di he Knight by a matter of ‘form, and no discussion of its valuable | from ee ws they all rose, one spr 
Mr. h Maore, gr: to R. Hanbury, Esq. From Me. Robert- | contents followed. in his haste, 
7 issing him, and 
meee Epiphyllumtruncatum; this was am ió i he was the first 
evedingly handsome plant of a pyramidal form wh viih Self-Instruction for Gardeners, Foresters,| Afterwards be Mart ¢ 
‘effected by grafting it on Cereus oom. = Lard Tioman pie Farmers ; in Arit + stopped 3 
5 longest metic ook-keeping, Geometry, three months, from 
and Pod tra ry, Mechanics, Teaia: this diffieulty 
ree ar Hydraulics, Land hav Pte de Levelling, o to Wilna, pi 
Planning, and Mappi itectural Drawing | remains of the Fren 
Pieke alga panai Isometrical Projection and Perspective, With by the road:side 
