an | CAPENSI 
- SATE volume p. 5 C | 
t i be extended, a as the 
sae Si edipi dur 9 1507. per ne. |h 
xl not havi ng e 
bje ection he | 
ess to do so), an 
11 de 
rience in 
ew indeed that in P be usel 
appointed. 
old root 
but hi ch ond 
Thorn 
allow "nothin t wm fell 
he ke 
round was cleared. 
and 
gro bed of Rhodo Be mth 
A great. 
plants had 
nd A * l would lend i 
enied kene and 5 better 
mats and other bushes 
e master was 
ieh they 
via a little more 
N rthe 
. the ground, he 
re take 
o up cam ue 
en was already | ba kod, a 
Id do the roo 
At the same tim 
off ap € Pu be heri to Mr 
While t g on an ancient gardener Wat 
great — Knowledge chanced to pass. Aha!“ 
pen e experimentalist, ‘ What do you say to 
this, Mr. TUBER ? Le TA pied ee d 
is. 
and carried 
rts Kensington 
d. 
| Governor p "Groen GREY, a 
ro ry Mr. 2s Nos have rh 
"^i another act iy wisdom m, 
rthy they are to be Pe rast with ae F 
rg dr and 90 a region as that which now 
control of the 
Government. 
E 
uiry yesterday at the office the 
ua . Abe Er Jen were edet ne 
osed new garden 
Upon 
HORTICULTURAL SOCIET 
33 S ie propos 
ready am 
more than 23,0 
New Plants. 
220. CHAM:EBATIA FOLIOLOSA. Bentham in Plante 
H 
artwe 
South African | € 
year 
mount to Lin: in m 
and it is | then left many 
there might 725 
eartened me 
of t 
has sapplie ed t 
rep y 
I 
| with all the L world, i.e, „with 
means, leisure, ar 
are 1 
more Yt 
N 
Me 
ms pu sified by its passage across the e German 
y we ees tt order to o get rid of 
such tedious any 
surely ü there must bea sien di 
a large famil ily party, who in 
Comma, 
B 
[22 
arer air, ang 
n the 
Jthfal a Merten E. 
v s rop (eh * 
metropolis can a 
e 
sh air which comes to | wa 
pria. 
PE gian, p. 
Of this pre uw little novelty late ely introduced by |? 
M Veiteh, e find the following ai Leer by ae 
dade n his "Plante Fremontiane, where ther 
—Higher parts of the Sierra Nevada, as we ell | ™ 
the sides of the foothills; in great abundance : 
Colonel Frém ont. Mountains of the Sacramento: Mr. 
dps and Mr. Sh elto 
n. 
A shru 2t 
8 feet high, of agree 
able balsamic odour, w. very smooth bark, an nd 
| numerous Apr ht dn nches; the young twigs clothed 
with a * pubešcont epidermis, which easily 
separa’ The are br roadly ovate | in outline, 
san 
that 
the sun in this . Bay, 
ts oval ed od scarcely half a line long, 
8 pubescent, each tipped Visit minute my 
Stipu ge s minute, Em to the petiole. e cymes are 
e-flowered, and terminate the iene shoots : 
is subtended bya foliaceous bract, which is 
segmen 
S | four-fi 
each pedicel i 
and so 
delicate 
northern predio of the ke r we M 
treasures ongst 
in — = we may Judge r: po e avidity wih vi 
eiz placed — 
oc, ini 
mie 
Sot 
hidden low 
alla, tiny (ah 
e of those wen eia jl. 3 — — 
iind d ornam eir form, an 
nd devour them when 
or our — — Bent! 
ad learnt while mp nof, to tie his 
0 
ji 
Externally the calyx is glandularly panne 
de of the tu be is densely Le. The petals 
short claw 
jameter. 
and the insi 
‘bovate. 
p tir fi 
‘or imself. 
aiki to Mr. p was, Well, my 
we shall see.“ 
ground was at last made ready and 
ododendrons and 
EN es 
good f 2 
was thrownloosely over papers tillthey were m. 
Forth purpose th ,andthen anothersoaking was giv. giv 
WES 
very s 
0 or more stamens, — filaments of LAB 
several 
u ely trian, r ary is ovoid; 
with a lon 
r e on the insi i 
arpus chenium oblong, compressed, almost 
- | wholly enclosed in the persistent and mem 
calyx, be ses ate with the base of the style. 
stagnant, ot quite fragrant ditch. 
ing was eed: but over the earth, ie sed | 
for the second time, 3 or 4 inches o of ines 
peat and burnt clay were loosely red 
? ground was levelled, well watered, JE dressed 
T g of guano, and er cat 
ag turf was Vir 
en pegs. 
As soon as this work was over a new bed 
s ses and small flowering shrubs w. 
: hey may 
f 
t mygdaloid cotyledons, and a short inferior | 
erect, 
radi ve 
l series in the throat of the calyx. | 
whieh | th 
since 
g 
e — 
R than technical, 
We as yet bu 
iment. 
| discoveries, nor thro 
phe mena pr dong d „ 
t st rp 
xperi: 
ht u 
= ind; 55 but our 
as been most en! 
“The foliage of this plant is so different from that 
of most 8855 wu oe it was at T taken for a 
Mimosa or Acacia. It clearly belongs to the subtribe 
Cercocarpem, orr. d on although it sr in its 
valvate calyx. The wstivation of Mgr is difficult | 
to determine, 
, as the calyx is open ery young | 
dere and the teeth are very sg 1 how- 
ted: | The cha ribe | Crab 
imbrica‘ vem cters of the s ubt 
3 
—— must be 
altered, 
(described by Don, Endlicher, xà fucrat as Salat) and 
and | is certainly imbricate in al Dr. E 
T be 5 in his genus seme (which is | Car 
There 
1 the s 
-- ngelman 
Cowan c. 
will be nothing t therefore to distinguish the subtribes, 
5 now „ but the number of ovaries in the 
er, Meg is hein ing s a character of no great importane ce, 
surface 
selves, and may per 2 prove 
In the month of Janu an 1 
QUAE 
equally so to out 
857, a friend psf 
m in our d 
br llected at 8 ge 
con 
ft a sm 
London le 
which had "pen 
terials for 
E and m 
| the > wat er eame. t - 2 
zn ot 
to Purshia, to which it is very nearly allied in habit.” 
e mei that the 
has ju dee nted the 
towards defray- 
le FLORA 
€ in their 
to the 
were at 
ae hy ig 
having been w. 
lost purity, w. 
an t — that 
carrying arge 
plentiful pp of of w ater, a 
» 
i 
d 
y e 
e and unsight] th 
m | for 
easy w 
gee way (for . : 
speci ime 
Actinia 
th 
m all away. I bought a lit 
8 a perfect nuisance, and 
taking 
e 
a 
prosperity, w 
r| when 
OP 
col 
ns 
Pellis. po an Actinia 
rec par age of nereased stock, 
raters . a 
down our rocks 
and o! 
ken of, which —€— to teach am 
onen : simple e way of making a n Aq 
k highly 
| — and every ny | 
| but alas! th 
uarium, 
were somewhat shaken an by 
| careinallowing the wi 
the jongs 
eren ne 
pa rii 
I Stock, 
andohed s idea in despair. For instance, it 
ab 
ad 
vised pieces of roek oo, cemented together and! 
stock, a 
ing condition. Two o 
small Hermie Crab in 
