formed o qx ornamental woods of the ancients, 
should learn t 
ood and M paik 
be answered b 
ne h. 
f 
from which w 
introduction of ae 
THE GARDENERS’ 
hat long before ka | 
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
qualities of the he North African Callitri rs. It i 
m rte d thatn oup of the 5 vp produce 
are inclined to think that 
losing the habit of th 
the ‘bu ds not 
- e 
follow from what E ke. 
Lung M 
—— , 
race Wa 
6 : 
quite a dime 
pie 
requirements 0 Í 
of European or Mediter: n growt This is 
more lik ely to be admitted M w than ‘| have 
previ modern fashion for 
Inut-woo od, which was Mw old- onus stan- 
er peu woo a y the Romans, as we lea 
fro L, Sat 117 :— 
E 3 m im resp at "us e those times beheld 
Of our own wood : old Walnut that was fell'd 
By some I tempest, when ind lay east. 
No h gourmands 9 1 a feast 
Unless the Theat be served on Citrus board 
Whose ample width rests on some r nt e 
In ancient times much mo ntion seems 
to have been paid to the duslitins "Possessed 1 b 
certain parts of a tree than to the species of t 
M EM we learn that the burrs je- 
duced n trees, on account of the variety 
of 5 whieh dor displayed, were chiefly sought 
after for ornamen el purpose s. It is only recently 
i has been turned to any 
Waln 
exce pt a 
i! gia from the Fau 
y eurious vers beautiful xo E are to 
en Lin "ihe warehouses of the dealer: 
M 
any of ou 
handsome burr woods, such as the Elm, cplar, 
hich bu | 
modern M br is somewhat (— Mew 
les of it ver, ery insign 
ubourg St. Antoine in Faris | 
in 
r Dira trees faroa extremely | 
1 Bv Ape 1 2 ‘Oak L ler sliced into t ee 
and i certainly be ses showing the |p 
capabilities of other Bri ^ sh tim 
ll 
the scion, 
mel ciall 
appens that the use o 
arranged Y Museum p en 
e cattle 
e ga 
spines in iy sie as 
d 
stunte 
Nobo y 
ndian 
Cruciferous 
d 
o such on exists, lant would not ha 
forme effect of thi 
But how is heen object to be accomplished? That) whole fore 
Qi 
Sir ra 
der, which, when 
ry aud more than full ; 80 is the old m 
o do ubt, | but W 
d ill- contrived structure is full 
-— To 
can be 
presen Be: mean an 
of foreign ntle 
if af pins of the raduisite oret m could | 4 
often produce, from their own estates, orna- 
mental materials for furniture that would far alwa 
in beauty the wood usually furnished 
r upholsterers. A collection etm to 
te the ornamental woods of Proxy would 
D 
t lea 
Pestana, liberal ae its grants for Kew hav 
s been n, would at present look with fa seen 
upon i atol to expend any considerable sum 
upon another Museum, however desirable it may be, 
Ir one principle in gardening is fixed upon a 
of its offshoots. 
grown 
Bu 
ER would gla idly carry i it out Dm 
and st 
and |a 
as mueh more space, and we doubt whether i 
pi 55 ues E 
stocks would probably zu E 
ee . young vigorous po 
nserted them on youn 
. LEROY'S 
No change of make was there 
om 
a pes. Sinne helt 
shoot up under thi 
state they make v 
almost an amplification of 
et alnus tuber sectile, ist citrus, acerque. 
$ which itis 88 With all its peculiarities of whats 
tly distinguished | 
r graft will always reproduce the variety fro 
a jus 
owever of a somewhat | W 
1 122 n which he takes 
the 
ormida ble “tens, a 
s (o 
co 
pearance. abs ate mu ducis n Pour 
Some o en ornamental w oods, 
of more breui growth, ich are now rarely or 
never met with in this oguntey, would, no doubt, 
likewise ‘prove worth i TE ancient reputatio n. 
m, and Terebinth— 
Pistacia terebinthus. E E e —€— "s 
in the sha ample Ae 
Sequebatur puer cum pM terebinthina et 
erystallinis tesseris, — a boy followed krg with a 
W ight-board of Terebinth wood, d crystal | y 
on to po 5 out 2 Pied Stead of the 
ues d by Ca dures 
no 
nt are 
specimens of the wood of ' Cali robusta, ‘hich 
exhibit, so far as plain wood can, ma: my of the fine 
opportunity of correcting an 
orion that a table of the famous Citrus wood was to hich form very exten: vo rie tural taken it show Mr. B 
; our ory misled — rmer, only durin e ld last in Engla: — 2 in a 1857 7 to ‘gent tl 
y nia LE > me WFüy: of fpe ha Ba Ui co] e aen thy N ng evill, who had specim — 
Ade e thas VR B > in og fore.” p 
it the ra f the’ Bude um 1 B We co our suspic 
Sof t to Sinapis edil he pl distur 
v-— € 72 9 apis require | the plant re! : 
however, be 5 5. 5 ly 5 e 4 [teu be te especies whichis walled ra raee, IS Mustard, ani ‘ane e een ore ini 
ihat instead o aeu “utterly wrong" we P dtm wil nd as à condi 3 8. glauca a be the t AE xomh | that it was on turally 
The Gitrus fria A g ere y Pe eso, and 8. een the oria, IM is the 
ancient writer on troes, “What 3 according to that bun, Pores e strongl 8 
s ite un- l Besamum 
t. éov was is quite un edi for the oil which is -$ z ext ten Indeed the vari 
— uite — 
as to have!signified Thus, or Frankin- 
er indeed any fragrant wood not Cedar of Lebano on. 
gr pm i. om 
of our | we ihe look for the route by which the Cabba 
it meant Citrus wood; but | t 
hedge is obvious, a: nd 
re Would c Aw n - e this sort of Whitethorn 
n England. RE havin 
pagating a E peoien with had bee 
the p prised to find that his budded 
plants Jost the e TS of — tase Out of 
ame of Crategus | la 
food. 
will be seen in our a 
oudly poc by 
i he 
| Palace has sustained a serious loss, 
4 | tory to feel — Ed ps "ila de 
fited by the 
MUS 
lants. i 
Foner (e 
ee 
* U | 
o Bal favoured by Mr. Spinner : 
viele aithor this plan . 
in the a dener. 
^ 
s? Chronicle of 27th inst. the P 
in which you 
fa 
tion 
t ont 
* 
is no by 
Whitethe rn, wit thout a trace — the . com- | 
plex spines of their parent. was that ? 
Tt appears 
were was this: obtaini 
buds fi any part except the end of. the you 
t. € [od where the spines were very little 
that the man — im wuk "the m. | from G 
Was E | form, 
aps ee 
tief on that it 
to sati Le J 
of San 
£ | Oncidium i jonosmu 5 
| the enclosed rang 6 of three 
hs d 1t was mor sary to cut away 
n 
es them selves, in order to get the b d 
Mex a Ew Ahi sk of Oe stock. M. CARRI g Bi More 
conjectures that the cause of his worked plants 
: subject of m seed resemb! n 
the 
1 mes 
lant Lepidium sativa, or Gatien 
it 
introduced into India from or P. Pers ^ Vm also 
Turnip aed f 
and cul tivat into India, 
ou A. their way 
d the g 
duced —— d 
Cashmere, and gro noses 
The Tu grown 
— in Kunawar, are described 
"Besides these, which are id confined as 
urhood of vi are other 
Es 
for 
as 
eultivat 
he ANM of the 
má or oil f. x br burning lamps, 
n, and yr ention 
greater part of India depend 
cf Indja depend von them eei sketches furnish am 
