500 



NOTES AND QUERIES. 



[No. 160. 



TO ALL WHO HAVE FARMS OR 

 GARDENS. 



THE GARDENERS' CHRO- 

 NICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GA- 

 ZETTE, 



(The Horticultural Part edited by PROF. 



LINDLEY) 



Of Saturday, November 13, contains Articles on 



Orange, Tangerine, by 



Mr. Wallace 

 Orchids, sale of 

 Pigs, food of 

 Plants, origin of woody 



tissue in 

 , disleaflng to in- 

 crease their bulk, by 

 Mr. Ayres 



, tenacity of life 



in 

 Potatoes, to plant 

 Preserve, Rhubarb, by 



Mr. Cuthill 

 Roads old and new, 



rev. 

 Sheep, foot-halt in 

 Skimmia japonica 

 Snails, to kill 

 Societies, proceedings 

 of the Entomologi- 

 cal, and Wexford 

 Agricultural 

 Tenant-right, differ- 

 ent forms of, by Mr. 

 Kinners 

 Tomatoes, fried 

 Vegetables, origin of 



woody tissue in 

 Vegetable life, tena- 

 city of 

 Veronica Andersonii, 



by Mr. Dickson 

 Vine mildew 

 Weather.impossibility 



of predicting the 

 Window gardening, by 

 Mr. Church (with 

 engraving) 

 Wine, Mai vasiaGrape, 

 by Mr. Hopkins 



Agriculture, Ameri- 

 can, by Mr. Sibbald 



Asphalte 



Beet root, to dress 



Brugmansias 



Calendar, horticul- 

 tural 



Cattle, to feed,by Capt. 

 Grey 



Chrysanthemums, 



S>mpone, by Mr. 

 ickson 

 Cineraria, the 

 Cucumber, large 

 Farm buildings 

 Floods, their causes 



and effects, by Mr. 



Hewitt Davis 

 Fruit trees for dwarf 



standards 

 Garden, kitchen 

 Grapes, Malvasia, by 



Mr. Hopldns 



,late 



Gynerium argenteum 

 Heating, cheap 

 Horticultural Society's 



meetings 

 Irrifjation, by Mr. Me- 



chi 

 Kitchen garden 

 Lambs, food of 

 Larch, rot in 

 Manures, deodorising, 



by Mr. Blyth 



, straw as 



Melampyrum arvense 

 Mildew, Vine 

 Myosotis Azorica 

 Nectarine, Stanwick, 



by Mr. Rivers 



THE GARDENERS' CHRO- 

 NICLE and AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 

 contains, in addition to the above, the Covent 

 Garden, Mark Lane, Smithfield, and Liverpool 

 prices, with returns from the Potato, Hop, Hay, 

 Coal, Timber, Bark, Wool, and Seed Markets, 

 and a complete Newspaper, with a condensed 

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ORDER of any Newsvender. OFFICE for 

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In a few days, 



AN ENGLISHMAN'S LET- 

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HENRY G. BOHN, 4, 5, & 6. York Street, 

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CANON TREVOR ON CONVOCATION. 



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THE CONVOCATIONS OF 

 THE TWO PROVINCES, their original 

 Constitution, and Forms of Proceeding, with 

 a Chapter on their Revival. By GEORGE 

 TREVOR, M.A., Canon of York, and Proctor 

 for the Clergy of the Archdeaconry of York. 



«»* In this work all the questions now 

 mooted are carefully considered, and the au- 

 thorities produced from authentic records. 



London: J. & C. MOZLEY, 6. Paternoster 

 Row. Oxford : J. H. PARKER. 



D 



,E PORQUET'S HISTOIRE 



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/CLASSICAL EDUCATION IN 



\J FRANCE. — A married gentleman, of 

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jLHi RecensuitF. A.PALEY. Editio Auc- 

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FOLIORUM SILVULA : a 



Selection of Passages for Translation into Greek 

 and Latin Verse, mainly from the University 

 and College Examination Papers. Edited by 

 H. A. HOLDEN, M. A., Fellow ard Assistant 

 Tutor of Trinity College, Cambridge. 



Post 8vo. 7s. 



FOLIORUM CENTURI^. 



Selections for Translation into Greek and Latin 

 Prose, chiefly from the University and College^ 

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 HOLDEN, M. A. Post 8vo. 7». 



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 papers, which supply a wantoften experienced; 

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TWO INTRODUCTORY 



LECTURES upon ARCHEOLOGY, deli- 

 vered in the University of Cambridge. By the 

 Rev. JOHN HOWARD MARSDEN, B.D., 

 Disney Professor of Archaeology. 8vo. 2s. 6d. 



Cambridge: J. DEIGHTON. 

 London : GEORGE BELL, 186. Fleet Street. 



8vo., price 21». 



QOME ACCOUNT of DOMES- 



O TIC ARCHITECTURE in ENGLAND, 

 from the Conquest to the end of the i hirteenth 

 Century, with numerous Hlustrations of Ex- 

 isting Remains from Original Drawings. By 

 T. HUDSON TURNER. 



" What Horace Walpole attempted, and what 

 Sir Charles Lock Eastlake has done for oil- 

 painting — elucidated its history and traced its 

 progress in England by mtans of the records 

 of expenses and mandates of the successive 

 Sovereigns of the realm — Mr. Hudson Turner 

 has now acliieved for Domestic Architecture ia 

 this country during tlie twelfth and thirteenth 

 centuries." — Architect. 



" The writer of the present volume ranks 

 among the most intelligent of the craft, and 

 a careful perusal of its contents will convince 

 the reader of the enormous amount of labour 

 bestowed on its minutest details, as well as the 

 discriminating judgment presiding over the 

 general arrangement." — Morning Chronicle. 



" The book of which the title is given above 

 is one of the very few attempts that have been 

 made in this country to treat this interesting 

 subject in anything more than a superficial 

 manner. 



"Mr. Turner exhibits much learning and 

 research, and he has consequently laid before 

 the reader much interesting information. It 

 is a bools that was wanted, and that affords us 

 some relief from the mass of works on Eccle- 

 siastical Architecture with which of late years 

 we have been deluged. 



" The work is well illustrated throughout 

 witli wood-engravings of the more interesting 

 remains, and will prove a valuable addition to 

 the antiquary's library." — Literary Oazctte. 



" It is as a text-book on the social comforts 

 and condition of the Squires and Gentry of 

 England during the twelfth and thirteenth cen- 

 turies, that the leading value of Mr. Turner's 

 present publication will be found to consist. 



" Turner's handsomely-printed volume is 

 profusely illustrated with careful woodcuts of 

 all important existing remains, made from 

 drawings by Mr. Blore and Mr. Twopeny." — 

 AVienxKum. 



JOHN HENRY PARKER, Oxford ; and 

 377. Strand, London. 



Printed by Thomas Clark Shaw, of No. 8. New Street Square, at No. 5. New Street Square, in the Parish of St. Bride, in the City of London ; and 

 published by George Bell, of No. 186. Fleet Street, in the Parish ol St. Dunstan in the West, in the City ot Loudon, Pubbsher, at No. 18b. 

 Fleet Street ftforesaid— Saturday, November 20. 18S2. 



