574 
was 29.972 whereas is country it is 
М below E^ 000 indi, ' E d ы 
from this cireumstance that ^ ELS olumbia | thi 
BE: GARDENERS CHRONIOLE AND AGRICULTURAL SABER "s 
hourly at Leith Fort for two years, and published in 
the Edinburgh БОЕО УЕ Таан, it is shown | 
that the mean of the 9 observatio TA а raction 
st that 
the weather is not во boisterou 
ere. 
With regard to с рае it is stated that it is 
.; but we have no obser- 
of the 10 А.м. observations was a fe action pos that 
mean, "мер must eonpodunniy occur between 9 and 
сн The ob taken Fs aA e e 
New Westminster iy "io ered to represent 
exactly, or at all events [ЦУ зорь for all me 
d UP me mean temperatu ity. 
servati 
con 
T 
[JUNE 21, 1862, Ы 
tribute d. he latter 
fled Kind. of (o quality, the -—L 
чаа аа 
ailed to ascertain. То lovers xi uS 
of large elons it 
however, prove an acquisition, " 
——— 
32otíces of A 
The Amateurs Rosarium 
T е Rev. R. Wodrog 
i d minima. Mc this, however, the | of the local hotbson. Edinbu urgh : nid 
9.30 observations taken w Westminster p be hall adopt them accordingly for mparison with | Hamilton Adams & Со, ек 
compared ; for, т p^ wn up by Sir es b mean A zn wick. The Sir] Table exhibits as our national emblem se has a į 
Sex д the difference e esteem in which it ime. bue hrs. 
- Fue T whieh was né more largely Pis. 
| Јав. | Feb. |March.| April. | May. | June. | July. |August. Sept. | Oct. 4 Nov. | Dec. |freely bestowed upon it than it is at tho present das 
| | Tt is wever the Rose florist, not the ш. 
d Pe. [БШ ose in its first created form, which 
Deg. & | Deg. Deg. g eg. | Deg eg | Deg. | Deg igh admiration. It is in fact the Rose, Med a I 
INew Westminster| 33.2 | 382 49.6 481 53.6 59.2 | 048 | 610 | 599 | 488 | 391 | 342 [gent cultivati as made it, which has been prs 
: | аз the regal flower, and whic mmands the fashion. 
Chiswick MO ранае ранае зни E E ODE OES E DS T E TOME M5. npe ticis DER annual homage before it 
| his state of things sufficiently indica! that Rose | 
Difference asm | 95 |-F66 | FES | 408 ; —L2 | 419 | 421 | +31 | 13 | —93 | —49 | cultivators are numerous, and that Rose ltivation is 
A Борлы шы...) ers art which has to be learned by study P агаад 
The above differences where New Westminster is higher than Chiswk ES ck are 1 e marked +; +; lower —. ded by вос apposite and iudici 
зри ее - the whole yara at Chiswick 8 53891 49°.8 B i 4 and judicious in. 
P Nos E 8/8 са jns Де ; can supply. In the 
Be extended treatises of Rivers and Paul I hel 
0.5 ft scale, but a B bas been 
From the above it appears that the mean temperature , 
Diferenee  .. 400 
, Among Pelargoniums .Roseleaf, bright rose, with 
convenient guide. Was. wanted, а sort of of Handbook o 
of Chiswick i in Middlesex, and that of New 
sh 
e little volume Mr, 
in deos Columbia, are as nearly e ual as that of | a well know n spotted so г; Lady Canning, rose with a | Thomson has recen ev ut forth seems well 
о places ean be, for there а white eye, and окей ө E. EE. top; and Glowworm and | to supply, be eing uda, аз Ал tells 5 us, буруш 
of Знов » With regatd to the respective 1 months, | HE ne uan both high colou rod brilliant ignc of experience," except in those parts which refer A | 
s there was a great num er; ong pot есе 0%, to the rearing РУ seedlin 
in January, в ТР во in February Vm tober, | the DE were Eurydice, Queen id Whites, Cy rue has been ^ E ín Бо а 
November, and Dece ember. m. Ld Sprm A шм it | and among Fancy, sorts Princess of Prus: ssia | d Ell tl 
is warmer in the grain-ripen ing months july А ugust, | Beck. t аа s, Du but there 
and September, d this is — Sepinten stands i p pei first во many tur of nad which ма 
At pac onth ut Roses fini rom "n Wm. Paul, 
Cornwall the Бай uf o 
is not below 40°, but that "of th the hottest i is p er. 45, 
ез eam 
M. ED and Р Ега 
dpptóitio n пн, ре, ах the book may | 47 safely 
instead of nearly 65? as above, 
Wheat crops Шып Lei sende yn “this is ed most 
important point for сарта QE d e 
greater cold which Po 2 tho winte топ ЕН б 
do no harm to cro me coh cold 
experienced at New ЖИС s only 10° Fahr., 
and in most winters we have 
lower than that. 7'] 
m | 
the thermometer much | Souvenir 
Baro 
8, 
ROYAL BOTANIC: June 18 (Second Great Show 
This —— was in m й respects the same as that 
held a t Sout h K Kensington on the llth inst. Orchi т 
ltivators genes, A ^ xm until 
ul's Rose 
b, "Boule 
dOr ч Triomphe 
Garden m "makes i its appea 
d'Alençon, President, Beauty о Е Waltham, Madame M 3x x ана did in the Rose fancy 
| Doll, 1, ра üc de Magenta, OR VERA Vaisse, Madam Ped үй nens to depend on _ 
do, Gloire de Santenay, Madame Au mae Van their own г judiiont nor on E des criptions ns found ir | 
Geert, a small perpetual striped kind; с Decazes, | trade lists, 1 in ma akin ng a ecti n either of varieties | 
Souvenir d'Elise, Louis XIV. ie odd M аше, апа 
nne de Wassener, the last From e hav 
Mr. Turner also came a box of nå кә pi special азов fo pr solls Bx Кз He 
Verben 3 et state were sho y Mr. Perry, | recomm hat they should follow the 
| who furnished Spark, Loveliness, Сайна of Bradford, Misa peas Ww judicious and x 
untess of Aylesford, eg Blue Beauty, all kinds with | grower, as it may be propounded ФЕ examination 
large а and fine flo owers, havi ing р rominent white eyes. de on the spot into the peculi tures of the 
Pi by ; | locality. In a genera way ns big. of Ethe k 
1 Semperv 
Ath 
large and beni Aur 
plants, among h Plero: 
of stove. and gr enhouse 
ma elega: ans, Stephanotis, | 
denias were conspicuous, Roses 
p s ed showy were greatly | 
parative loss in that r sat 
ФУ Pe 
n this ocea- 
nooks were е suitably filled 
Recesses a 
with Ferns and са foliaded аң ís, and there was a 
Би ч lbs. A 8} те p р ри was | 
"m x ге Бе: class, came from p Baileys gn At 
дий Sn ueen Pines, 
*L 6 
ыу р ood exhibition of fruit. 
Am 
f| walls with a northern or dislérd "тошо Ње Тен, 
а and vigorous ii ps, ui 
walls with a southern or 
si ond this, for dry soils Tens, js go Sede ars 
| to say баір Ду ps avy loams, all good Roses, 
: | sandy soils, 
еп an mer LP 
Roses should d» dh: set i itsel px тш 
7 right 
arnes. w the flowers in perfection manure ia төй 
folios СЫ the Royal z = çimen of Orch OF Bla k Hambur; xi arapen the most nns only i in the first t formation, but also in the 
D dcn pee : y > грее icu ОМ Ere by M. ripened three bunches came from Mr. Henders n, gr. | of the beds ; "e e used: not óuly Ja ass ia 
Мыз ot ess pem ed in He ot condition, | to Sir G. Bea ,Bart. These were black as pod curing bad soils, БН p 
— ick дү, са m and TE m bloom, Larger bunches Е тойс and vas condition ; and ít must 
Of — prep there was an A imen 5 d. Ha, oi Ec pe Pom Me. Hill ан is S ROE S E е ДЫ 
from who also contributed Sm m geni 1 n ot ON both. Hotbed unies ni bí 
Blumei ejos m three Pn pi of bloom, the | beautiful bunch üt 97 "E ian Ка монд в in its application эы 
size and bea of which wer „лары to RU xit ge 9 Ibs. From Mr. pci gr. м Doddingén 1 Hall, ra pian Р t be growth | 
| Nantwich, came some very fine West's St, Peter's d d dy p" tendenc, is to enci 
S ers. “йч pie of t ENS essrs, Jáckson, зу Beautiful" Б of Black Frontignan wer n- in t Lm ud ilis & acid боо of bigos ea Roses 
aiso a good example of that s WEN plant, ^md те i eid rewitt, gr. at Тһе Denbies, near | must have ‚л soi wl ih is light and Рт. od 
nu o the MARINES. T ODE eer cid Дыра; a Standish of Bagshot showed good | being fatal ШЙ, ЫР p bad 
o! de Жатчы Mr. William i bad d & БОЙ Goff cr p d of "Polis Must t. Of White Grapes, some planted as we ud a i Roses Шош 
in which were Lobbii, Lo termedi sg ne good were exhibited + but ‚Шау ы deferred till spr ing. "ри DE pm 
fine varieti Н show e edm edius, and other | were E Lf unripe. The earliest among Roses ате so constant in their activity t! i and 
нне ies, p y 8 s ket etin e Moss, them is the Archerfield variety. Ah pruning iñ autumn they are sure to start ы 
а E si Ter Eus ric бу: тед дете ^ " я much up on the 14th Dec., was stated to be eatable in May, sitios REC and | the same e rule ap ;pplies to all of n 
ш ied suriaced w. sand wa one of ordina: Миса shut up on the 156 of 2 brid C y fa ii ;: let 
OUS ober, a erwi ated in a similar way has ru is erally, * the m rti | 
s P р ое у а peren peta соу ps fruit only fit Pe Of Buckland md the тн "t your prin Муз» SP тб 
od wd ami Rr. е beg d T Mi: | water fine Ъз but imripe were shown by Mr. Hill, | to the freed в growth, Ino ү 
i — Catherine Hay. T в were Little| and we п specimens of Майне, wh ose o roma vum Deli prune it little; v too 
m. р, e: an к = Campbell— anb of i P mg called Bailey's variety. sely. Prunea ы 
li б j d Майа С, vw earl of A gland | Frontignan, М; r. M. Henderson had some E jod fruit. b meagrely and 4 P hi shabby blooms; рле 
with а white corolla. Aneth Tneissen, a pretty kind | — Peaches, consisting о yal George and Bellegarde — rame — and the ens is that it 
Айчы — ч е llection of much taller | were furnished by Taylor, Gr. to C. A. Hanbury. ; culture 
Lag peur dam Mr eni E SU, PE nd їй 18-inch | Esq. of Belmont, Mr. ewitt, Mr. Durrant, УИ. | SEN NU быша RT in the as Ше 
р Aido РА Wii a Bd d p dd ustone, Mr. Heri d Mr. Hill, all of whom | of Roses is the Prec of Ў t is known ен 
Й попе br to Pd БЕТ mas lection from | showed large and good früit for the season. xin centre. In general this Sons occupying 
Obeiism Bie d Ovid x 8, consisting Of| were also well ripened dishes of Violette Hátive and | the form of three ог fo r gri etimes % 
ч ; d Dickso ЕЕ сар он, Alsophila | Elruge Nectarines from. Mr. Allan, gr. to J. B. the place of the central petals, but 80m? form of 
е * py antarctica Ped s т Mr. , Mr. M. Hend ш, Mr. Dunn, and Mr. Hor becomes so much developed as to take Do орфо 
Gleichenia; xd ws abo коша "veg qr iranat of| Strawberries w numerous. Among the s sorts | little green shoots. The tendency is genera Уу of 
varieties of Ferns fr essrs s. Veitch and Mr Bull. йор бош Nr. - Mando, er eri 2а, indic зан эч to particular varieties, but pot Hn dose lo р 
А А 8. . . » Turner, t, of whose merit ‚ and Mr. Thomson agrees with : us 
Ti t кч е varieties T Ivy was shown | te judges expressed a favou c онбой: It sum t as etn the result of excessive nutrition, 
rdg e x ‚ Henderson ; among thi re one or | bles Trollope’s енг, baut is earlier than that saor | às the excessive ing of a naturally olim rigo T 
bwo sorts, and others ith small | The sample че stated t ges been gathered | produces a tende pet rigo its in vidna -over 
fraing са of ees bias be u das from the o р diminish its rono ia that ошай, 
for other purposes w еи were ro chief Мау D i edi green 
сон y Мау Duke and Elton. runing resultin in C ee centre 
growing varieties es might be unsuitable, Of Figs and Melons several exhibitions were coh- | and ne ЕА feeding pi Ti - 
