“ane col THE GARDENER’S CHRONICLE. i %55 
: -seoering _ endeavoured-to cae. f in pren aren T Kayo 2o ompared to P. vilesa, o pe a and “sandy. Mr. < ay ay 
is right 
Hamilto: s system 
hada trial here, but oa eannot be said 
wine has 
O: 
d hi 
bat Sci. ni moe back by the 
Mitto 
the ats oe 
f. yr the driver servants. At Mitton he waso obliged |fe rring P, leucoc oe species, but it is fi or th t; the hands of so skilful a ner 
to sleep in his ‘britzska, as every “‘hease was full ef | leaved, eaan with ont of ‘the ‘ho: cage "of as Mr. Spencer, whom, after a very fair “trial, it would 
T the wounded ; and he was awakened in the aight by the latt tter, The Scat e petals is most deli- | take a great deal to persuade adopt this mode of 
” the cows and other animals,-of which :the i iful atic calone i is Seta fellow, Pine-growing to the exelusion of the one which seems 
‘ petro the hey which had been put over ‘his feet | over wich at the aae isdrawn a of lon ng hex- | to flourish so prosperously satisfactorily = 
i0 kee eep t them warm. He reached Ri iga o n the 30th | a; ago onal red “meshes, which f orm ehae! the howe 3 eady. Mr. Spencer was in gh os Kia making-a’new 
FSepte nce c fafi and closer | Vine-border, and it may not -be resting 
4 tepi of waggons; which had:been taken: fi fabric, till.atlast they melt -asit were his mode of p ing 2 The: subsoil, although on the 
he French. Bowen this -town -and> Bt. Duawbute, band form border to:each petal. oo prety f declivity of a hill, , thatat a foot 
hilemaking a drawin of «2 pic cturesgue 0 old fort, he Species ‘is ia perennial, with much the same" kind of | or so.under the surface it tis qu ite a pùddle. Mr. = Sn 
pasaspy; and, fare | trailing habit as the old P. nepalensis, but it is the cer was, therefore, taking all the = out ps tr the 
Phew: < as much a at hearing tl the com- },more rel a the eik pi of a 5 a full ving the woe 
ments made on ‘his note-book, which 1 y good rich , and flowe es ; pillars built of shone iit a rong! 
l nec ected memoranda, and whieh te the magistrates from J y fo Septet ber. it is easily ine inereased by tya were it at convenient dis i and a seis sw 
Eor tings j; ara young or taken off n May or | flags which were laid norm em, and on this again 
© ated into Septem mber, when 2 or 3 inches ny ‘lace in sand | was = a rubble, and then the prepared 
Ane Fandan: reached St. Eey on the'30th of under a bell-glass an and pork elose. Its was raised in the ae the latter above =~ 
e bridge, 
th thr 
sher e nths ; after which 
“he Fow to Moscow, meting te arrived on the 4th 
from the Honourable Court. of Directors sr the 
India Company, through Dr. Royle, and is said to have 
as the 
other ee which 
are Snacaally soe here abundantly proved, The 
ee in particu lar, ithe horses in 
nable to drag it through a-sn 
oolly 
of March Re Be after having 
- veulties 
hs carriage close, and the 
ter fitted by nature for yankin the horrors’ofsueh 
@night than Mr. Loudon, sat a BREN Pua 
ode ent endurance oe e often, how- 
„spoke of the situatio: arto 2 ly when 
he heard the howling of the. wolves, „and once ‘when a 
Mr. Matthews, but only ‘recently intro- 
eae Heaths and other greenhouse-plants, many of them 
Rus, ‘'Twin-fiowered pry making fine specimens ces = with foliage down 
Coena poran rub.) Solanaceæ, “Pentandria Mono-f'over the rim of the po 
gynia.—A very pretty solanaceous Reni grace- - 
ful tage two-coloured blossoms ;:a native of the Mis Tien 
rey rding t Big perez Aper d ped Lud fine, ears to Nurserymen g ae 
a indlin ng practised. b y 
duced in a living -state~b 
patei Mr. W. Lobb. 
rsery in August, 
geet ouse, and may.eas 
seni mostly nå of are 
ubis whether the postilions 
ould me New G 
A ad Botanical Magaz 
It only requires a good | |, 
a be oman Ý y an 
land one to when Torger i is added, Seat jus ust come unde er 
e pe 
our notice, gr ay ch we publish fi 
Bat ad, 
ar Topy by’ seeds, The genus preg a yery 
l grou 
1 frem So ah tana 
he vgs is this :— yeu de of re- 
vol call ed o Paul, at 
ie Caent Nurseries, hes Thar, ‘the 3 30th ult., 
mendation from Mr. Low, 
a the Clapton Nu kiy “He said that he. was in want 
veg pin beet and | stated that the ma been some time 
ddo House, and 
dies ha Rs Spd 
ig the night, and h 
the crevices in the cunta Garden Mamo randa. 
owever, naa the omen with Bowood, thi- Saat goe the Marquis of Lansdowne,— 
and the r ty ader the journey w This is 0 of the princely resins o Wiltshire, and 
paed without any difficu 3 ea- proprietor. "The 
4 ; was suffering so severely mansion is “Placed where it sould he, oeeapding Be 
from the pa in in his arm, he found no ease but from fing, inland “vi w, magnifice wooded ; d the 
more 
d for London 
return on the morrow. He 
“i 
ts injurious effects upon his gen 
Seas happy EPE, zaps great- extent, “gi s; as more 
oe 
artificial 
3 but with the  Enaligeoes a n> Ese which 
re than he 
especially when viewed from the house. An a 
e, formed many years ago, occupies an extremely 
or arm oi of the a, flowing 
f, 
expe ected, “and asked Mr. Paul F “esd him two £0- 
vereigns, which, however, having e agor a 
refused to do. As, however, one of their carts w 
going into London, Mr, Paul gave his man the "money, 
red himself of this dangerous eremia without 
eneing any $ 
inconvenien st 
that: his disease w: 
i 
nd he contrived to cure:himself by putting a into the: Siya ean an effort of ‘the lethesipe cmg 
3 | the ban 
T he t ee out a wine-glassful of the potion whic oe lox rer eon 
“ai the mixture became gradually ee + Sid day, |o and again 1 lose themselves ay re then massive 
ea lastit was ttle e more than wes 5 found a Fossey 
a 
undt 
SA Prove fatal, he determined, ‘if possible, to finish ” 
pria 
e in oies d with such a apem de mers and stil | ¢ 
poi font do we find the lakes and artificial attempts | o 
rming them in this 
timber a ing an effect en 
EJ pan 
4 i oso. 
Š hana, finished a ian for Baron Rothschildi; 
He first, with ithe assistance. of his 
n the or one side of the mansion isa terrace 
boxes, and the man and the swindler drove off in com- 
pany. “When they arrived at the wharf he obtained 
e man 5s. under some sible pretence, and 
leisurely walked off. a pes day it was discovered 
he had forged a in “Mr. Paul’s name, and 
adhd Selina sions 31.53 ; and byanoth 
3s. 6d. oa ane are on rng alert, and in full expee- 
aoa of ca g him. He had a full knowledge of 
‘ere 
me: 
r Mr. Ricardo, soning ‘or Mr. 
t Bath, 
Pinder, and, 
iek, for the cemete He had 
a 
oF 
though ‘his s 
ecreasing ;,and afterthe 46th of: Eanus he 
ia not ee aee house, ‘but t confined himself to'his bed 
Nothing 
re-awful, than to-wateh hi ing the few | 
mt sk of ‘his life. His \body w. 
It fase 
ns and an oeenrrs kinig perarem ee 
me 
to flower 
a} 
of thie extent Aig place | is 
Ss. The 
2: 
sre ra even describing correctly the personal 
appearance of some of the chief men, anà no — mae 
is going about the ome practising upon 
“He was res peta attired, with black era 
hat, pale, and of m te stature. He gave 
John Wilkinson, a talks with a broad Scoteh aa 
late Mr. Brown, = hes rth l—This gent leman was 
erape ‘round ie d is 
> 
1 
tained a 
benutifaliy clothed “with foliage. 
is equa igh or 80 feet ers ‘the branches, 
pon. the smooth 
ly grouped, ‘an 
o introducing. T 
Biel ba from the many pie to the 
garden and the ran pee he ‘hasbeen the ue of 
irers double Scotch 
rere firs 
are 
antl these were plan 
ator agood pone ‘for judging of 
of this classica ; the 
, Was also the result of his persevering industry. 
The agriculturist i is not a little indebted to him- asthe 
hadin 
‘melanehdly “ae 
j> 
FOUp, clearly proving $ ‘that "Be aani; is 
lated fi n S 
country, where it is | now 
Mr. 
‘sufficient to say, gs though his cya hove 
mind retained all i 
balcnlated tor 
t as Sat nothing del 
hting him ‘more 
ish Alps 
3 hath ton ot 
re than to 
sin search, s yeger treasures, 
E his well known to botanists.as tho 
Th 
Gr pes, Peach &e., are very 
th 3 es 
A iit which visited this locality i in 
z 
gr 
extensive. 
Pana 
rigin ake hi Fi 
ds. 
al diseov 
other rare natives sof the Hi 
He: 
aaa Grapes, “and 
£ 41 
on these extensive ‘hothouses. 
ergy to overcome its 
Plants. 
- Two-coloured Potentil, .(Her- 
ns which our 
t ajig other intone nor D we perceive oat 
anal, wie of 
us far from 
© | unless protected by eanvas and other 
ings ; the glazin 
3 Pa ha 
t A 
ew. Tcosandria Polygynia. |: 
ee it | an 
mporary co 
ig of the whole is,’ = Bes 
this has bee 
wever, now pik | 
te ae | 
m done a“ ly wi 
which sor . very fine appearan Mr. 
erting wor! 
successful e tois of fruits for ri. past 
‘bitions of the a Londan $ aaa 
: sae 
are| e'had lo 
i eee of those plants pee 
in order to reach th 
sonit; boy 
_, alth sail for Paea, 
to odnie Bai ct for sen ila a night th 
i M‘Na b, BOW 
American j 
rae r the he Garde rhe Hcl 
Hae tye ag gra a 
signis itself; ‘but its hairs i 
ye 
however, very dif- 
sit 
folks would ‘eall this peat soil; SOTEN af! 
ferent from what is 
en 
re commun ted to 
Society of Edinburgh. Srp 
ings. After returning to Edinb barih, and 
the "Botanica 
their Procee 
