THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



ow ^,l! r v 



„ drought, the d 



Societies. 



HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY _ 



ia H if W. BaRCHard, Esq., in the chair.- 

 }». W*- 1 f (Vjombe wood House. Kingston, an«l 

 ^S^di of Hackney, were elected Fellows. 



ST^^on^Tuted To be^bXee^threrand 



UiL first that has ripened iu Europe, was opened 

 ilporpo* of exhibiting the arrangement of the 



jtai, were also flowers and ripe fri 



25»Papaw tree(Carica papaya), whose fruit is 



.... . . - •-•, ..::■,■: : > 



JJJJJ J, .pJ^rB to have little to recommend it. The 



teinrthe toughest animal substances tender I y causing 

 iteration ot the muscular fibre ; its vapour even does 



it he hade r eate 11 1 



>ia. The flesh is crisp and juicy, and doubtlei 

 o those who prefer sweet to sharp-tiavoure 

 Itisinperfectionnow and wnl j,,-, ; . ,.v .,,.; t 





well swelled; the 



Col. Chal- 

 St. Peter's 

 Clapham-road, 



• it.-Mr. Tov, l'p. to 

 *•*«•' niaek Hamburgh and Black g 

 napes; aud J. Moorman, Esq., of Clapham- 

 - 

 -«u.-From Mr. Hamp, gr. to J. 

 *f» tabeixm (Glycine Api os ), which were sent with 

 jMr nuher m aid of the Potato. This hardy trailing 

 S^?1 Paat La8 hithert0 on] y bee * grown for 



srwLm"^ but ***' Hamp is ° f ° p timt 



^fadtf" y ^'eateVof d the roots 8 , 



^^edbCgchlbs ^/Zr " the J aberS 

 4e» letuwh »~a s ™ u f' > ear a'ter year adding to 

 ■• S' t *«l«»™g apparently more than 

 **»* » quiion r0 whe e ther ly ^ ing '** * "° P ' !t 

 ^.hoiSTl 4 !? !u **. culture - The experiment 

 *^ Se JJ^" 1 ? on a small scale by those 



ff* dh " n » nie»urin*at & 1 "^ ^^ -° f ^ranthemum 



^^ngourwiuUfl • * blo86oni »» a colour so 

 !*^ awarded? orn D l-S laUtS - A Banksian 



?**«■. MVH,ail£ "''I™*" 1 "— >' f M^-,,11,,. 



•*«faaJr? • at P- 19. 

 ^^plante P J?l n ? the 



^^nto£ e t "r o T 



Mfc^E L S^c7ETY. 



^^^Triculf' W . ard > Ascribing »^2ci 

 ** *!*» «.i. : l. u ! fr °nd mate«/i «# »v_ .._ 



memoir on " The Natural History, Anatomy, 

 eyelopmeut of Meloe." The chief object of the 



ce the general anatomy of Meiiie, and the insects 



i the anatomy and habits of the Strepsiptera 



orrespoii'l': 



instinct. That where one portion of 



i class of organs is predominant, the 



e versa. He announced this 



that of their organisation, 



natural history be studied 



proper position asan impi 

 The history of Meloe, an 



Siebold, wi 



their earlier states. The 



Strepsiptera, as recently described by 



m examined, and its earlier periods and 



)mpared with that of Meloe, showing 



parasitic in their young state on the 



Hymenoptera, and that they resemble each other in some 



I in the remarkable fact, that 



legs of the larva become atn 



nost entirely disappear before the change to the state 



nymph, thus proving not only giv.it similarity in 



ompletely apodal in the bodies of the bees where they 

 if young, while the males fly al : 



e author found many hundreds produced from a single 



lined off a 

 a supper for a csi 



■ Tea ; while others elevate it I 

 of Spanish Nectar. 

 " In Andalucia it was no less easy for the Moor to 

 : ; 

 ' - 



ist destroy health when taken I 



. iv found out at Gibraltar. 



XXXIX. 



e * Colonial Library," ai 

 iferior to the best of the 

 1 it, while it is, perhaps, i 

 feel that we are called i 

 j an encomium. Let 



I, graphic as Borrow, 

 that are peculiarly his own. So en- 



plicity of dishes, the rock c 

 rule of Bacon ; many are 

 body, and spoon were absc 





, and of those which l 



This dish is always well 



g that they are apt to put in bad oil, and 

 too much garlic, pepper, and saffron. Sap. 



. urself, and take hare, partridge, rabbit, 

 n»j have foraged on the road ; 



pieces, but dry them i 



The : 



grape from whence it is produced grows 

 sandy soil. The vintage is very eariy, as 

 fathered before it is quite ripe. "The wine 

 is of a delicate pale straw colour, and is extremely 

 : strengthens the stoma< 



- ■■ . 

 may be compared to the ancient Lesbian, which 

 quaffed so plentifully in the cool shade, and t 

 scribed as never doing harm. The men empl 

 the sherry \ 



zanilla. Among their betters, clubs are formed solely 



::.:,;:: 



tymology is to be found in its striking 

 bitter flavour of the flowers of Chamo- 

 zanilia), which are used by our doctors to 



tea in hygseian J . who drink it 



are ever troubled with gravel, stone, or gout. Certainly, 

 it is eminently free from acidity. The very best Man- 

 No. 16, Mark Lane. Since • 



was enjoined last year in the ' Handbook,' the importa- 

 ne to England, which previously did not 



well • but the irods grant no excellence to mortals with- 

 it much lal, the goddess 

 of grace, was allied to hard-working Vulcan 



lately directed attention, has been i 

 L Reeves in a 4 to form, so that those i 



