21 



By Mr Manning, about seventy varieties of Pears, as follows : 



Autumn Superb, Belle Lucrative, Belle et Bonne, Beurre Diel 



and Colmar, Souverain — the last two kinds Mr M. is confident 



are identical ; the last name name we believe is not found on the 



lists of Flanders, — Easter Beurre or Pentecote, Bezi Vaet, 



Black Pear of Worcester or Iron Pear, Bleecker's Meadow, 



Williams' Bon Chretien, Buffum, Capiaumont of Pom. Mag. or 



Wurtemberg, Catillac, Bezi de Chaumontelle, Gushing, Delices 



d'Hardenpont. Doyenne Blanc or St Michael, Eschassery, Glout 



Morceau, Sucre Verte, Sylvanche Verte, Henry IV., Jalousie, 



Louise Bonne, Marie Louise, Napoleon, Verte Longue, Naum- 



keag, Newton Virgalieu, Orange d'Hiver, Passe Colmar, Pope's 



Quaker, Princesse d'Orange, Kaymond, Rousselet de Rheims, 



St Ghislain, Verte Longue Panache, Summer Thorn, Styrian, 



Washington, Wilkinson, Bowdoin, Winter Nelis or La Bonne 



Malinoise, Beurre de Bolwiller, Beurre Bosc, Fulton, Colmar 



Sabine of the French, Figue de Naples, Remsens, Green Pear 



of Yair, Thomson's (American) Beurre Von Marum, Holland 



Green, Gansel's Bergamot, Capsheaf, Coffin's Virgalieu, Saun- 



der's Beurre. Also some unnamed kinds. The above kinds of 



fruit are of the different seasons, of course but few were now in 



eating, and are therefore for re-examination at a future day. 



The apples exhibited by Mr Manning were, King of the Pippins, 



Fall Harvey, and Rambour Gros or Franc. 



By Mr Richards, Pears, Seckel, Verte Longue ; Apples, Amer- 

 ican Summer Pearmain very fine. Porter. 



By William Oliver fori) his estate in Dorchester, Pears, Broca's 

 Bergamotte, Swan's Egg, St Ghislain, Howard and Seckel. 



By J. A. Kenrick ; Pears, Seckel, Harvard, Andrews. Apples 

 Hubbardston Nonsuch, Hempstock and a large handsome fruit 

 without a name. 



By Mr Sweetser from his garden at Cambridgeport. Large 

 specimens of the Chelmsford Pear called the Mogul Summer. 



By Col. Wilder, Pears, Bartlett or Williams' Bon Chretien, and 

 fine specimens of the Roxbury Russetting of the growth of 1835. 

 By Joshua Gardner of Dorchester, Seckel Pears, Gravenstein 

 Apples, very fine, monstrous Pippin, and a native sweet apple. 



By Gardner Brewer, Roi de Wurtembarg, tree transplanted 

 from the Nursery last spring. 



