910 "E GARDENERS’ UH a 
lib 
— AGRICULTURAL LEE 
Th some o hardy as s tinent of Australia. All the the 
ecedin ng; the — is nearly of the same form and lisi MIT 
and red spider, but from pres aud ripens a month later, The fourth barg iac and curious fruit t hav ve dud 
ily kept down : 27 reati demand is the Prince Albert, on account of the | their drii a fair representation į dp 
cultivate Colea floribunda, two "ee "T F 
— —— : 
rotted manure; .on this head one can scarcely go goi 
wro ays A liber al supply, bs water is also wanted. ibo, 3 
the’ Tire lage these an casil pt 
Addison with to Earl of Shannon, Castle Martyr, Cork. te lor 
Binds a Ae rr B ud I would recommend 2 anzecium parasiticum; all 
“GE soot, and wood ashes, Crescentia, and Kigelia pinn: 
with a ditte "fresh cow- dung and clay. Mix up the statet 
of paint, ene put it on with a s given " 
brush. The e process may at first seem tedious when Hen which bandes posts, pillars, Ke, a 
there is a considerable dit y of Goose sberries grown, not only as an umbraculiferous 
but a good crop of fruit may repay all the Jabour be- tree, was stated to be held in high 
— 3 Iam ruat rep peated ‘experiments ih at y. chet uec Jas a fenit witha —. 
ure 
ne n 
birds if the adl of clay, cow-dung, xh J 
wood- ashes are eee, together 25 m It ay that 7 
DM. — 
Cotton n run n throu igh each tree is the best remedy, and if 
plante m iu beds um tree to tree. I have tried fe | 
the tre es wit ith s w, but it ipd undi the buds to swell 
1 A by frost. s Ux gp , West Ham. 
Pampas nel ren are bably constantly re- 
ceiving quoe of .& from fresh admirer P lis 
fi 
vell- 
‘mounted by i its iy plumes, like dun: LN in the 
i i 8 a n 
few montlis after its removal. I "ito a young plant 
which was transplanted in spring that has borne six 
ems 
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Oltagers Kale.—I with confidence bear. 
testimony to the great Peta e of "this vegetable — N 
Here it withstood uninjured the severe frosts of A 
October, when Broccoli, Sora. and other Devy s ere 
very much cut up. It also ft i. bears out al that has 
been said respecting its flavour; and of all Bales ^ is 
en a most, pro nete here 
gr 
fine growth of the tree, and the late ripening of its si 
vem fruit. Another sort which is 9 to 
ME great request is the Bezi ae Of this 1 ate 
ast fru 
should be itoni it. ea Bailey, J Te EAT an T believe that — ee will prove a decided 
Amen sh equisition. J. de Jon, 
am, 
` Theo vy df Spr 1gs.—The deficient rain-fall of the 
last few Mo has lately attracted much attention, aud 1 
the subject presents a remarkable instance of the way in dad 
the 
LINNE por Nov. 17. prof. Bell, President, in the | rem 
chair. ez Hogg, Esq., an W. H. Inc chee d, were 
reas d. Fallows . ire following papers w Wes 
of new 
sometimes ; jumps hastily to a conclusion, a and 7 a 
paradox oppositio on to everyday experience. Experi- 
ments ‘on t is subject have been made, whicb, are 
5 ed to Ue that the water ins ringsand w s ex-. 8 f Ut os — 
peces of Utrieu aris rom 
elyderiv 8 OP p asks deter 22d Sonth Xu with uw pen the m thor 
3 Wa x ra,” | or | 
ae = phos Y spute the liability of these experi- d P oe end anite faces dne m: ves 
ner asfar as they a apply, iat 8 uals only to the case iM 
1 8995 snes comente t 8 drr new genus h he name 
ito or ry c Ean rh NET 
hé "leaves; this. * e as cele en tree 
T — ag * ee a ony eid m paper.—2. * On the Fumaria apie a of Britain,” "by genus Sheadendron was moreovi 
mm dn dla — 5 ing o io usly i C. C. Babington, Esq. After dis scussing the differences founder to be distinct from any ki 
mysel p us, some impervions to water. can capreo- and a new order, Sha, was c 
f contradict the above theory from my own lata, the author remarked that “some is bota- | frat equ 9t Myrtaceee : 
VVT ac 
the experience of half the country would confirm m a pontiondo — — fo rege eerie that d "ue MON 
observation. y ^ constitutes a species mongst plants ? seems to me ies Combret 
my, a spec 
The Doily News went so far last. week i in to be just às i im ible to prove that the ‘aggregate c — 2 
x species,’ atson e them, are P tege distinct | by Bertoloni, : * 
deficient rain-fall, that it actually recommends the from each other, a as jb is to show that t egate called Cbiquite by the 
cer ei scheme of fo 3 reservoirs all over the The pap cludéd ip- | used by them i 
country for the purpose of irrigating the arable lands. m on of the characters of the British ad "To distin-|also carrie 
deri 2 i 0 
Co rrespondence itself, and its pedicel, and also in a fleshy mass tion is—olein 25, marjorin 75 
You. 15. —I 0 — that | which — the pedicel to the fruit, and which he E agree In 
v E 
The spec re stated to | 
_be oceur in Brit tain, and of which full diagnoses were * foun 
given. were the followin ing: gad ipsi idiflora, Jordan: | Africa, and both produce 
| ftoi pud than broad narrower than the | Mungo o Park re 
there 1 thicl and it i. s ri ightly 80, 8 
r. ith us Devon, S go Borei, Jordan: | de kin Gr Na 
ch pursued, tbe. vens fruit truneate, libe than 1 long, T merken, NUN 
ius Pete, And anno very late | perhaps always, much narrower than the enlarged =e 
Biel, w is, poo Jang in Of the pedicel f fruit stalks pat 
wey M y, Windermere, 4 
fr om. 
F. co Jordan: fruit sub 
die: ed 5 very broad, co 
‘the tip of the pedicel, fruit 
Opie ; Cornwall, 
b ja sounded a RT broad 
— iral ripens too carly as.a standard; 4h ‘mica, slightly narro CER ee ts: 
Se ^ - not a fine. habit of poses The | flower-sta stron ratte 8 Surrey, ey, 
e la Cour is more hardy and as productive ; 3 wee Sheffield. The true F. ue 
has the 
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ndsome, quite as good, and rather later | lata 
than te Mari Lois 0 F. speciosa, Bodas as 
br ih * pna wien most jn demand | fruit ohorste comprese obtuse, the base broadl 
. qualling Hs tip of He pedicel, id 
E . Thi 
pU Gy cision 
iuit, ripening in ond: Commi 
id ars ree with D e jld Goo: 
2 uctive, bearing fruit in > of — or ds e 55 1 inhabit 
form in egi c 
The fruit is of a dark green at the ue. of gathering etn > pote, d s 
Diane o m lat. numbers 
but becomes ellow on ri 
2 aiu pening, — takes They n Mada- | exh 
^ : M) MG Maui, the Schelle and 7 islands 
of Eastern A n America they are represented by | tion 
10 species. Tn Asin — ri species have yet been dis- 
covered, one of them been collected in ‘Timor | 
also in Maas aig Peet the other in | of Noct 
: No representative of the order has | was iae open th 
hitherto been met with either in Europe or the con- these are chief 
T fruit t 
ipia wn down 1 wind, its ripe af den pact 
avour very satisfactory. E" third nit 
3 also a great demand, is Agläe Gré-' 
ij 
