GARDE NERI 
CHRONICLE. 
[Jury 24, 
rieties which do not readily run to seed; 
N kind, easil 
and oo Auvergne Pea, a prolific 
guished by the curve d form of its pods. 
s h a 
was stated that the seeds been received fr have been expected, and the same remark applied to 
hills of Bok i try, | the Malacca-eane, The specimens of * wood an 
from a brother offic o made a tour to that coun ag one of Tabasheer gave no evidence of the presence of | pro 
sent it home be n the ga Me me a fluorine. . So far, however, as p 55 named in the 
exhibited the following donatio preceding table are concerned, the author not 
* of 1 esd at the Bota Sat 40. he infewneddee e negative results which 
bean el ns of Rye, 
“ stolen ree 
ri 
quisetaceze, er plants, with some observat 
on the sourees from which 8 derive this phat 
M.D.” uthor commence 
orted 
this. element, throu 
were not very- numerous very e RN 
of th 
On 
— stems na he — fou 
w 
cee 
oranrcaL or EDINBURGH, July iy 8.—The Sis Her in (Grasses), especia lly “a eomm 
kno 
i yielded — elem 
aci 
the renee See of fluorine 
is table the author remarked that the siliceous 
nd to abound m n flu uorine, 
ere . thos 
i deep etching 
r i 
horse- ta ils), and 
Equise 0 
on Bamboo. last 
Th 
contain silica in such abundance that it 
? | collected pe the joints in white 3 nearly pure, 
an „under the name of Tabasheer, been an 
or 
— 
ongly s lieeous 
cane, however, 
x's pone ‘conclusions were 
occurs in a large number of 
in mar eked quami i in eae siliceous 
inet and Equise . That 
yield, with oil of 
95 7 Sed 
e:p 
which contain it most abundantly t pro- 
doe 
iy am mount to more e than a fraction per cent, of their 
eight, be variable, 
o for a0 fferent specimens of the same plant 1 “ie yield 
concordant results. In this, however, there is nothing 
anomal r some pe ae se th: Tabasheer Jargely, 
whilst others are fou 
ts; sean and Nader y as serious a 
cult 
ded in devising a process 
to plants, and could be carri 
as possible, 
eold with oil of wee so as, to sec 
sition of the salts T 
5 to a retort or ast provided with 
a bent tube dipping i into water, and the liquid d to 
3 ng when fluorine, 
Ti 
S 
, if present, was evolved 
ilica 
h 
om- | mineral kingdom 
animal ki 
to e It see 
3 that K fluorides yore ah pea siliceous 
a plant, on their way to the seeds or frui 
mich ‘hey finally accumulate, may — ‘arrested m the 
finorides 
ab. 
nd 
* 
„than the 
sneer maliciously behind th 
| greetings w. 
f 
sa silicon and of metal), and a Bamboo, for fet tr 
sec where one 
slow 
eer may effect this chang 
ine it 
thr 
rried into the of plants ; 2 (2) 
— of ri with other salts, of which the 
osphate 
of lime with fluoride of calci cium. This oc 
m in apatite and phospho * and in the 
hood of the Cly dea as well as the grani 
abis, Aa and the ashes of coal, contain ore, so that 
9 
urs in the thou knowes 
d co rals, as well as 
cover 
imagan 
trap rocks near Edinburgh, — in pee 8 j 
of Aberdeen- 
0 
— — ä as ever journey 
y man handia 
many pu 
depend upon male 
are no the s t night, the town j 
would lady, that under a silk — Ne — 
— Whore the old folks work at home, while the 
oung gentlemen on a week da: leasure- parties 
Vith — burghers' — — mayst pid 
ecause the many churches and 
unte 
— in a plac, o not expect much, or very remark- 
le piety ther ary consequence ; nor 
the — naue of — fois — — 
them r fr 
ments . thee, to the honour’ of this person — 
do not believe that they are to com 
4 tell rather of the vanity y of t — 
the If thou 1 not find the peasant at 
— * in his "fields by sunrise, be assured that many sit 
the evening, over their beer and 
H the pis A folks 
in tall 
brand 
eous, the ox 
evil spirit in the place some t; 
t will on rye Siting 
walls of a town, no up 
large it is is is certainly — if the folks 
n th and their hat rims are wom. 
the grass grows in — street go 2 m It will de 
et work from or trade is- 
Efe 
difficult to ge 
Lawyers and police m 9. looking. 
all corners. If iy comest as 
every little town has 0 
common 
pomir y good fat fields where the road-sides are not 
beset with beggars, but t planted mia 
= ers, 2 and publicans, com: hard n 
—ther Katt mp: hor, takes thy rest; the people bare 
their ie and their hearts inthe right place: if 
splendid palaces. thou — houses eee 
the windows broken or blocked up, and many 
3 ee anijs eng few the disintegration tion of those rocks | par 55 m 
te when the whole of the silicon es also. All plants, accord: in ia 
5 ices oP Gebla. ‘sank 3 ingly, may 82 p petad to exhibit 1 . — of their of 
solved the fluoride of ammonium, genen, in the: following; portions. of $ 
l the 1 ahs process aioe fic Anidar li: Ia the secending. aim, i den Memoranda, . 
s of plants, The followin 2. In the descending sap, in association wi the — E, HolLOowar.— The pro 
g were l : N 
E ; sipe 3 and in i the seeds or in | Pinks, Picotees, and Carnations, by e 
or baste — for Fluoriné, The nunibers 21 9? vale „ fluorides: along with | being vigorously prose vivings z Wer 
of ashes, except in the ease of Tabasheer In the stems, iall: li ä b soei aea 64 pipings f, 
Opal. The blanks imply that the weight was | and hardened, edie ra, The | w g 
- — investigation is still in progress. which are 6 — f — 
: enclosed by a 4. inch skirting o 
Neue at Plant, , awning of white calico ; m. 
— Review. a forward state, though they 
* |Horsetait quisetum limosum) .. Distinct etehing, 4 days. The s 
Bamboo (Bambusa arun- nP „iane ands on Golden Feet. Groombridge. 18mo, | 8 layer, is 
e chiefly” from : Sa . 162,—This is a good translation of one of Zschokke’s ose ; of the 
Oik Fei 4 smaller eeii best t tales, It is the history of the rise from poverty to | learned -in 
peat * = ” vy general in 
i — „ inapplicable to English social relations, never- | neatly arra: — ed ad — eps hed 
tay N ee 2 E is pregnant with truths which are truths e ery- | it at — ne 
e ee ; Paint etching, 3 . grown hr oth nae of oiig 
; » — b zampe ivr ER 2 " k of 3 —— — w 
T 1 D 5 on golden feet, vie * 
= —— si sa) n but not ps one knows how to pan the, a Do thou Taylor’ sy e = quality of plant had ere | 
— ' ofici yes Many of our handieraftsm studied; it seems a sacrifice of time un 24 U 
3 Arie run. ” — b» yee cr . nor * taste ie ind j i of over one hundred 4 
T nh feats an Teak vb eben e Therefore we must go abroad to p. * in ia.d d 4 — — gro — 
et 3 Aneeierind 5 learn. To travel with advantage, thou must see 3 — which is — destined to prodane 8 dee 
e ; ... oe ore ” une i Am ; ka i 
repe Keune Baraboo {Bambusa Nepa- of i. Ta who travels otherwise, has gone through tl the seh fe ype fair growth, we — die be 
imou ees _Polypodtain yul. * world as if in sleep; has seen n green painte of esmere, W ripe une E a 
j 1 8, and two-legged” — that are to be seen at home! light varieties, ong ; promi 
” have known journ n handicraftsmen who knew | the Amazon (Low), ance (Hen 
” nothing more about 2. gens on njai their — wane 3 Was 
trasburg, and the long- ton 
S & ane 
aie ti f | 
wt poston may fee | 
E akea town and penny oo sae 
ties pe cathedral 
figure As 
rson), bo 
White Uniques $ 
features | ( 
been 
tainly one of the best of — a 
— 
— Ua—UÜAͤm — 
