Kitley Shaddock. 



£ 265 



Encyclopaedias of Gardening and Agriculture, followed by the 

 Gardener's Magazine, will, it is hoped, incite among practical 

 men a spirit of reading and inquiry into the nature and prin- 

 ciples of matters appertaining to their profession ; and while 

 the mechanics of every rank and degree throughout the empire 

 are zealously coming forward to form institutions for their ad- 

 vancement in the arts and sciences, let it not be said that a 

 class of men so long distinguished for their intelligence and 

 respectability remain inactive. 



( To be continued.) 



Art. VI. ' Some Account of the Kitley Shaddock. By Mr. H. 

 Saunders, Gardener to E. P. Bastard, Esq. M. P. of 

 Kitley, Devonshire. 



Sir, 

 Having perused the first Number of your valuable Gar- 

 dener's Magazine, and finding such an excellent channel open 

 for noting the various daily improvements making in horticul- 

 ture, I send you two fruit, and some cuttings of a seedling 

 plant of the Shaddock family [fig. 50.) The plant which pro- 



