546 Notices of some Gardens and Country Seats 



Comte de Lamy Henri Quatre 



Calebasse Jargonelle 



Crown Josephine 



Doyenne Gris Knivett's Seedling 



Blanc Louise Bonne 

 Duchesse d'Angouleme of Jersey 



Due de Berri Marie Louise 



Double de Guerre Monarch 



Dunmore Napoleon 



Delices d'Hiver ; Nelis d'Hiver 



Eastnor Castle Ne plus Meuris 



Elton Orange d'Hiver 



E'pine d'E'te Rouse Lench 



Excellent d'Espagne Royale d'Hiver 



Figue de Naples Rousselet de Rheims 



Flemish Beauty Saint Germain 



Forelle Sucre Vert 



Franc-Real d'Hiver Swan's Egg, Old 



d'E'te New 



Grande Bretagne doree Thompson's 



Glout Morceau Urbaniste 



Green Pear of Yair Vallee Franche 



Gracioli Van Mons Leon le Clerc 



Hacon's Incomparable Whitfield 



Hessel Williams's Melting. 



To the above will be added, next year, the undermentioned 

 sorts, now growing in the other quarters of the nursery on pear 

 stocks, with a great variety of others not mentioned here : — 



Bergamot, Searle's Ormskirk Bergamot 



Downton Poirre Niel 



Beaudelet Gendeseim 



Bergamot, March Poire Anglaise 



Echasserie Chaptal 



Ramilies Bon Chretien de Vernoi. 



Rendle's Nursery. This also contains a very long straight 

 walk with many fine specimens ranged on each side, together 

 with rockwork, basins of water, aquatics, and a number of houses 

 filled with greenhouse plants, Cacti, heaths, Orchidaceae, bulbs, 

 new tropaeolums, rare pelargoniums, and various other articles ; 

 the whole in excellent order. 



Plymouth Bone-Manure Manufactory ; Messrs. Pontey, Rowe, 

 and Co. The machinery, which is impelled by water, is very 

 powerful, and the quantity of bone-dust produced in an hour 

 is so great, that we cannot venture to put it down. The greater 

 part of the bones are imported, and among them are human 

 bones. Before the bones are put in the machine, they are each 

 separately examined by women ; for, the price being high, the 

 foreigners find it worth their while to adulterate them, by insert- 

 ing nails and other pieces of old iron in the hollows and cre- 

 vices, and when bones having these scraps of iron in them 

 get into the mill, the injury they do to the cylinders is very 



