TH 
E GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 863 
he 
Ir. | curious bone, which had its pv — over every 
p sag jac plate occupied the centre of the space tively they will be found to be no 
t takes place in pollen 
dene Crypto ogamic plants, between. 1 seme ars ss . fro * = — did man ded by the ve if it. is to 1 
and various A! From not always indicate lin e, but they are certain] yond the apprehension of 
of these bodies, take con- seemed pu "E znamenal 5 za tho reptile — of ‘the school est capacity, and are 
the man hie 3 the of specimens sy et more likely to be valued and remembered by 
arated from the cuticle, the | the poi b had teen! shyewdly antici — by cag „ than the tin reek and Latin by which 
f a glandular nature indicated the true Dendrodic paaa is disgusted with all learning ct i 
m au 
died et poe n taught, it mes 
i shoulder, greatly resembled the dorsal spine of one of | m and can only ea ith exhibition AAE 
i een and suggested that the bodies a e hug 2 Plae s oids of e i Carboniferous ef ae ark — 4 of taking its — among the highest 
de of th e nature. | Gyracanthus—it was ilarly wed by diagonal | branches of useful knowledge. 2 
— urchison might be o ied | groovings ; but, N resemblance, — rs 4 econ 
—— between these extremes. 
— raa 20. —The Bishop of Nonwick in the 
tated as a fact, probably inte 
db 
to — that, * ee e of many 
was no fear that they would d 
a 
in 
© 
8 B 
28 
o 8 
Lcd 
3 
85 
8 
and w 
as exhibited “sever 
rs, five n 
J Chehra tercbrans, a — cie phi phan 
| — Mr. White exhibited oa of S 
Mam Ano, a new genus of Ar insects ; ws 
Aw species of Petalocheirus aa, in Ceylon and 
s = caste 
en tite of the spider — q 
Wil on the — a ed with no . 
n 3 Dec. 13. — The 
of this Society assembled in th 
their opot 
t 
2 sitti 
80. | to the fact, as he had 
ld Red 
t | of size 
Chairman sta ; 4 
e Society, that a species of aut had attacked 
’ um Club house, and a commi d 1 
me 
estroy the 
e the D range of these plants, 
evidently 1 not a an iethyodovulite, but lay flat on the body subject, and have no previous knowledge of it. 
of the creature in the character of a plate. As shown 
by numerous coprolites fo fo 23 in the — bed with the Mr. Cuthbert Johnson’s Reader Coes not appear to 
remains of Asterolepis, and which, from their great us likely to answer the purpose for which it is intended. 
size, cou uld ee i t e of its contempo- are he 22 ai er eves il re- 
raries, the anim pr rae f like existing sharks | quire much notorious, and if are 
and rays, and some t xtinet enalos urians n ithe — — hy facto’ in early themes,” as the 
s|—the s — dispositi ion 01 intestine, and, the broke 
n | author says, they are worthless. But rt seve o 
in the plainest language, and demand u 
The w words should 
fragments „ 
deed be 
vorous babits. 
D 
km At 
u ‘Miller 1 that the bulk of some 
bu 
was the more desirous, he said, to draw attenti ion 
mentioned in his little work on the will avoid the society of those er speak ill of our 
Sandstone, 1 on a large amount of 8 of e ither of the Houses of eee 
negative oe that the fish a crowded 
sandston e characterised generally by a al 
‘Sin — way tae 1 s, found by Mr. Dick 
the neighbour urhood of Thurso, ’ meas asure ed 1 16} in dec be 
and a e Srl in the collection of Professor 
a 
side.“ “ An + 
ihe surface 
smus, at Dorpat, 2 feet across; whereas, in the very | pe 9 sips to the flo $ of our 
assive e i of Holpert, found by the Rev. | rooms, still grea oraint always arise in still 
r. Noble, of St. Madoes, at Clashbennie, Ad- uo in rapidly promoting these pl ially if, in the 
ceilings of our rooms, c the ong to add to ita 
ortion of lime whitening for by this mean 
| t | general ToT r per: 
tar as oled, 5 still mere — banished, 
2 eness thus im 
more ‘ight i is given to our dwellings 
| tence for children mang a reading-book. 
— 
FR 
ar iets n of 00 a whose peoi 
n the Book . Historical Flowers we are told that 
r 1 — Lily, with all its varieties, bel one 
irableness of those engaged in the of the genera or family ; the er ey 
i m in | include Onion, Garli 
the third.” p be found to trash like this, 
‘even in Ireland, whence the book comes ? 
t 
those of the recent era, when som 
ing fa 
were stated by several members, which, it is hoped will Mi 7 . 
2 
ce 
= 
— 
Among the former were fine s ecimens of Bryum ro- 
1 a large a aA ‘aut species, with mature fruit, | — 
nd} al. Beauv, sc aN ale 
which i is Ne 
B. A The 
p ; t 
and ihe. other agent arty iosrated the modificatione | arepa dung ol the vacancies, and several inter 
i made 
brought home by 
er, i. nee. Me 18 ie ‘the allied to 
| Harrington 
n ani | — iain of ——— and suffi 
coast of Cockburn's Island, beyond which all clim of Ireland ; th Berberis 
i k concluded — 
presented by various — b 
defatigable and very valuable 
Mad 
on the e 9 in 
re 
with ans 
d| and was calculate Pe ai s a a useful = to the 
Rebiews. ° 
Decandolle s . Vol. * bas lately reached 
tains the little order ain; 
by Bentham Stibids an 
niastrum for S. monopetala, The volume 
ass addition to its invaluable: predecessors. 
w being renewed, 
lish ma 5 — written on them. 
s 
Mrs. eee s er yieal Geography g ie vols. . 
is well eo laces beautifully written 
Si epar 
botanical and Eng 
thin 
the * — 
ees Mas t seemed to be 
e | would 
ss Mors Pa a . 
se l ae ar bl ul formation, 9 
accurate ane valuable op ar in 
the formal a scientific 
When 
ident. But we regret to be obliged to add that it is e filled up, I trust t 
ishe misprints ioe of bo 
the use 0 
0 
errors. 
able to appreciate d to separate e 
a it were crcl corrected by ee. perso * 
ms. to 
the valuable of all introductio 5 
oe 12mo) | bas 
full of 
in 
Dr. . e s School School Chemistry y ( 
in a very differe 
* 
