448 



THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



lmn.irt«nt to Agriculturists, unemists, ■■numBiuiwt,*»«»- 



^ee, Ind Other,.-SEW CHEMICAL JOUK5JAL. 

 On sI™in\ T Jnlf 19. will be published the First Number of 



rpHK : CHEMICAL RECORD AND DRUG PRICE 



X CUKKB NT, to be contioued weekly. Price bd. ; Stamped, 



§U \.«> be obtained throu*h#ny Bookseller or Newsvendor. 



Office : 17, Upper Wellington-street, Strand, London. 



'PHE EDINBURGH REVIEW, 



jL will be published on WEDNESDA 



N 



CXCI., 



Contents : ,,.._,_, 



T. THE GREEK TEXT OF THE NEW TESTAMENT, 

 TT. JOHNSTON'S NOTES ON NORTH AMERICA. 

 III. HARTLEY COLERIDGE. 



IV FATAL ACCIDENTS: HOW FAR PREVENTIBLE. 

 Y. PULSZKY'S TALES AND TRADITIONS OF HUN- 



VI. SIR EDW*. L. BULWER LYTTON'S LETTERS TO 



JOHN BULL. 

 VII. THE ROMANS IN BRITAIN. 



VIII. OROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECE: VOLS, VII, and 



VIII. 

 IX. DIXON'S LIFE OF PENN. 

 X. MODERN CHEMISTRY: ITS PROGRESS AND 



EXTENT. 

 London : Longman and Co. Edinburgh : A. and C. Black. 



Jul*. 1851. 



CHAMBERS'S EDUCATIONAL COURSE. 

 Already published, strongly bound in dark-coloured cloth : 



DIRECTORIES. 



Infant Treatment under Two Years of A$je 

 Infant Education from Two to Six Years of Age 



ENGLISH. 



First Book of Reading 



Complete in 16 volumes, half bound, morocco, price 221. 8* , 



PAXTON'S MAGAZINE OF BOTANY ; and 

 Register of the most beautiful Flowering Plants which have 

 been added to our Gardens during the last 16 years. With 

 upwards of 700 Engravings, carefully coloured from nature, 

 and numerous Engravings on Wood. 



Wm. S . Orb and Co., Amen Corner. 



Just published, 



THIRD EDITION OF MR. BABINGTON'S 



manual of British botany. i2mo, price xos.ea. 



A few copies have been printed on thin paper for the pocket ; 

 the price of these copies, in circuit binding, is 12a. 



London : John Va m Voor st, 1, P ater no ster Row, 



^E^UARTERLY REVIEW, No. CLXXVIL, 



is Published THIS DAY, 



contents: 



I. GARDENING. 

 II. SCOTLAND BEFORE THE REFORMATION. 



III. TRAVELLING IN NORTH AMERICA — ANNEX AC- 



TION— FREE TRADE— SLAVERY. 



IV. DUKES OF URBINO. 

 V, WALPOLE AND MASON. 



ORIGEN-THE EARLY PAPACY. 

 BADHAM'S EURIPIDES. 

 RUBRIC versus USAGE. 



London : John Murray, Albemarle-street, 



VI. 



VII. 

 VIII. 



A 



• * • 



111 



■ I 



■ • • 



5. d. 



1 3 



2 



. . • 



• • • 



• • • 



• • * 



» • • 



• * • 



• • ■ 



• •• 



• • • 





tii 



■ m 



. . . 



t • • 



• • • 



« • • 



• • • 



ft* 



Second Book of Reading 



Simple Lessons in Reading 



Rudiments of Knowledge 



Moral Cli«s-Book 



Introduction to Corapositi u 



Introduction to Grammar 



Grammar, Two Parts, each 



Etymology ... 



Elocution ... 



History of the English Language and Literature ... 



ARITHMETIC AND MATHEMATICS. 



• ■ • 



• • • 



• ■ • 



• i* 



o 1J 



3 

 10 



10 



1 6 



• •• 



- . . 



• • • 



• • . 



♦ * • 



- . . 



• • • 



■ f • 





■ - . 



• ' • 



■ . • 



■ ■ • 



- - - 



• •• 



• •• 



• • • 







1 

 1 



2 

 2 

 2 



6 

 S 

 6 

 

 6 

 6 



• • « 



• • • 



• • * 



• • • 



• • • 



• • • 



* • • 



• • • 



• f * 



• •• 



• •■ 



• • 



• • ■ 



- - • 



• • • 



• ♦ * 



. • • 



- - - 



- • • 



• • • 



• •• 



• •• 



• • * 



• • < 



*>*>• 



• 1 1 



• t • 



- • • 



• • • 



- ■ ' 



• * • 



. • - 



• • i 



• •• 



■ • • 



• • * 



t * • 



• • . 



■ . • 



• « t 



■ ■ « 



* • . 



> ■ * 



■ ■ ■ 



it* 



• • t 



■ •• 



a a . 



• •• 



« *• 



• ■ • 



• ♦ • 



• •• 



• • « 



t t « 



• . . 



• • » 



• - • 



• • « 



• • • 



• • * 



- - • 



- - . 



• . t 



• •■ 



* • f 



• • • 



• • • 



• • • 



• • • 



• •• 



• i » 



• •• 



• • • 



• a a 



• •• 



* ■ • 



Introduction to Arithmetic 

 Arithmetic (Advanced Treatise) 

 Key to Arithmetic 



Book-Keeping by L.~„ ., 



Book-keepinar by Single and Double Entry 



Commercial Tables 



Algebra 



Key to Algebra 



n-'ine Geometry 



Key to Plane Geometry ... 



Solid and Spherical Geometry 



Practical Mathematics, Two Parts, each 



Key to Practical Mathematics 



Mathematical Tables 



SCIENCE. 



Introduction to the Sciences 

 Laws or Matter and Motion 



Mechanics 



Hydrostatics, Hydraulics, and Pneumatics 



Acoustics 



Optics 



Astronomy 



Electricity 



Meteorology 



Natural Philosophy, Vol. I., containing Laws of Matter 

 and Motion ; Mechanics ; Hydrostatics, &c. ; Acoustics 



Natural Philosophy, Vol. II., containing Optics, Astro- 

 nomy, Electricity, Meteorology 



Chemistry. By George Wilson, M.D., F.R.S.E., &c. 



Animal Physiology 



Zoology 



Vepetable Physioloflf 



Geology 



HISTORY. 



History of Greece 



History of Rome 



History of the British Empire 



Exemplary and Instructive Biography 



WRITING AND DRAWING. 



Wntmg— Plain, Current-Hand, and Ornamental; in 



Fifteen prepared Copy Books (post size), each . 

 First B ok of Drawing . 



Second Book of Drawing 



Drawing Books -consisting of a series of Progressive 



Lessons in Drawing and Perspective, with General 



Instructions : in Eighteen Books, each ... 



V Books I. to VI. are publiehed. 



GEOGRAPHY. 



Geographical Primer 



Text- Book of Geography for England 



SCHOOL-ROOM MAPS of England, Ireland. Scotland," 

 Europe, Asia, Palestine, North America, South America, 

 and Africa mounted (5 feet 2 inches in length, by 4 feet 

 C inches in breadth), each ... 



SCHOOL-ROOM MAP of the Hemispheres, mounted 



an m!J?r l^r? J n l enffth ' by 4 feet 6 inche8 in breadth) 21 

 emuuL ATL\S of Modern and Ancient Geoffraphv 



PRIMPR^ATi^^^ ^-^^' Ma ? 8 > coloured 11 F ..] 10 

 coloured ' con8lbtlD & of nine quarto Maps, 



t •• ... £ 



1 

 2 

 2 



1 

 2 

 3 



8 

 2 

 2 

 2 

 2 

 3 

 3 

 3 





 

 

 3 

 

 

 6 

 6 

 6 

 

 6 

 6 

 6 

 6 



1 

 10 

 10 



10 



1 



HAND-BOOK OF BRITISH FERNS; con- 

 taining scientific and full popular descriptions, with 

 Engravings of all the native Ferns, with instructions for their 

 culture. By Thomas Moore, F.L.S., Curator of the Chelsea 

 Botanic Garden. Price 5s. in neat cloth. ' 



London : Gboombridge and Sons, and W. Pamplik, 



NEW EDITION OF THE LIVES OF THE QUEENS. 

 With the Magazines, on the 30th June, was commenced the 

 publication, in Eight monthly 8vo volumes (comprising from 

 600 to 700 pa^es), price 12s. each, elegant'v bound, of the 



LIVES OF THE QUEENS OF ENGLAND. 

 By Agnes Strickland. A new, revised, and greatly 

 augmented edition. Embellished with Portraits of every 

 Queen, beautifully engraved, from authentic sources. 



N.B.— The first volume contains the Lives and Portraits of 

 Thirteen Queens, and a fine Portrait of tho Author. 



From m The Times."— 41 These volumes have the fascination 

 of romance united to the integrity of history. The work is a 

 lucid arrangement of facts, derived from authentic sources, 

 exhibiting: a combination of industry, learning, judgment, and 

 impartiality,not often met with in biographers of crowned heads." 



Colbdrn and Co., Publishers, 13, Great Marlborough- street. 

 To be had of all Booksellers. -• 



THE FOLLOWING WORKS ARE CONSTANTLY 

 ON SALE AT THE OFFICE OF THIS PAPER. 



Second Edition, Revised and Enlarged, 



Price 5s. 6d., cloth, 



ORNAMENTAL AND DOMESTIC POULTRY ; 

 their History and Management. By the Rev. Edmund 

 Saul Dixon, M.A., Rector of Intwood with Keswick. 



The Birds treated of are 



1 

 1 

 1 

 1 





 

 

 



3 





• • - 



- - . 



• ■ • 



■ ■ » 



• • * 



• • « 



• ■ • 



• • • 



• • » 



• • ■ 



- . i 



•• 



• •• 



• • i 



• • • 



• a ■ 



• • • 



• • * 



• i » 



• * * 



€ t . 



3 

 3 

 1 



1 

 2 





 

 6 

 

 6 

 6 



Domestic Fowl in 



general 

 The Guinea Fowl 

 The Spanish Fowl 

 The Speckled Dork- 

 ings 



The Cochin-China 



Fowl 

 The Malay Fowl 

 The Pheasant Malay 



Fowl 

 The Game Fowl 

 The Mute Swan 

 The Canada Goose 

 The Egyptian, or 



Cape Goose 



The Musk Duck 

 The Grey China 



Goose 

 The White Fronted 



or Laughing Goose 

 The Wigeon 

 The Teal and its 



congeners 

 The White China 



Goose 

 The Tame Duck 

 The Domestic Goose 

 The Bernicie Goose 

 The Breut Goose 

 The Turkey 



The Golden and Sil- 

 ver Hamburgh 

 Fowls 

 The Cuckoo Fowl 

 The Blue Dun Fowl 

 The Lark-crested 



Fowl 

 The Poland Fowl 

 Bantam Fowls 

 The Rumpless Fowl 

 The Silky and Negro 



Fowls 

 The Frizzled or 

 Friesland Fowls 



{The Pea Fowl 



fl This book is the best and most modern authority that can 

 be consulted on the general management of Poultry." — Stir- 



ling Observer, 



H 



• • * 



• •• 



• « • 



• •• 



• • t 



• • • 



t * * 





• *• 



• • • 



• •« 



• • 



• •• 



• 1 1 



• t * 



2 

 2 

 2 

 2 



6 

 6 

 6 

 6 



• t 9 



• ■ • 



t ■ ft 



• 1 • 



• • • 



ft * ft 







1 



1 



6 

 6 

 6 



t • • 



• •• 



1 6 



• f * 



* •• 



8 

 10 



14 







Price 3d., or 5s. for 25 copies for distribution amongst Cottage 

 Tenantry, delivered anywhere in London, on a Post-office 

 order being sent to the Publisher, James Matthews, at the 

 Office of the Gardeners 9 Chronicle. 



THE COTTAGERS' CALENDAR OF GARDEN 

 OPERATIONS. 



By Joseph Paxton. 



Reprinted from the Gardeners' Chronicle ; above 63,000 

 have already been sold. 



Just Published, price Is. 6d., free by post 1*. 10a*. 



LABELS FOR THE HERBARIUM, 

 CONSISTING OF THE NAMES OP THE 



Classes, Alliances, Orders, and Sub-Orders 



OF 



PROFESSOR LINDLEY'S " VEGETABLE KINGDOM." 

 So printed, in large type, that they can be cut out and pasted 



into The H erbarium. 



Price 3s. 6d. (post free.) 



HPHE TREE ROSE.— Practical Instructions for its 



-L Formation and Culture. Illustrated by 24 Woodcuts. 



Gardeners' Chronicle, with additions. 

 CONTENTS. 



Reprinted from the 



• t ■ 



* • • 



6 



• ■ ■ 



• • • 



• t • 



• • • 



• •• 



• •• 



»• ■ 



* •• 



• • • 



• •• 



• • « 



• • • 



• •« 



• •* 



• • * 



• • • 



• * ■ 



• •• 



- . . 



3 

 2 

 2 

 3 



4 

 3 

 4 

 9 

 5 

 4 

 3 



6 



r> 







6 



6 



6 















6 



6 



». *i^. LATIN. 



Edited by Dr. Schmitz, Rector of the Hirii 



T .«« r UrK ; aDd Dr ' ZDMPT > of «*» Eniversitj 

 Latin Grammar •»■**/ 



C. Julii Caesaris Commeutarii de EeUo Galileo 



C. Sallustu Crispi Catilina et Ju*urtha 



Q. Curtius Rufus, de Gestis Alexandri Magni 



P. \ irgihj Maronis Carmina .. 



y^T u . , :" tI 9 ice ««w Orationes Select* XII."" 



— Latin -English Part 



— English-Latin Part 

 Fxcerpta ex Ovidu* Carminibua 



Eclogae ex floratii Poematibus. f n the Press". 



GERMAN. 



Edited by Dr. A**, Ge^ast. in * e High SchooI> 



First German Reading Book ... 



Second Reading Book " 2 



" *** 3 



FRENCH. 



Edited by Professor Du Gue. 

 Elementary Grammar. In the Press. 



Other Works in preparation. 

 Published by W. and R. Chambers 339 Hi»h ft*-^* ^j- 

 burgh ; W. S Omm and Co., Ameft^'ftS^ I* 1 * \ 

 Chambers, 55, West Nile-street, Glasgow- Jwat'£\*'' 

 50, Upper SackviJIe-street, Dublin; and 3d ij ^ £Sh5J"» 





 



Annual pruning 

 time, principle of 

 execution, &c. 



Binding up 



Budding knife 



Budding, time of 

 year, day, time of 

 day, state of the 

 plan t,care of buds 



Budding upon body 



Bud, insertion of, 

 into stock 



Bud, preparation of, 

 for use 



Buds, dormant and 



pushing 

 Buds, failing 

 Buds, securing a 



supply of 

 aterpil lars, slugs, 



and snails, to 



destroy 



Causes of success 

 Dormant buds, 

 theory of replant- 

 ing with expl ain e d 

 Guards against 

 Labelling [wind 

 Loosing ligatures 

 March pruning 

 Mixture for healing 



wounds 

 Pruning for trans- 

 plantation 





Planting out, ar- 

 rangement of 

 trees, &c. 



Pushing eye, spring 

 treatment of dwarf 

 shoots from 



Roses, difFerentsorts 

 on the same stock 



Roses, short list of 



desirable sorts for 



budding with a 



pushing eye 



Sap-bud, treatment 

 of 



Shape of trees 



Shoots and buds, 

 choice of 



Shoots for budding 

 upon, and their 

 arrangement 



Shoots, keeping 

 even, and remov- 

 ing thorns 



Shortening wild 

 shoots 



Stocks, planting out 

 for budding upon ; 

 the means of pro- 

 curing ; colour, 

 age, height; sorts 

 for different spe- 

 cies of Rose ; tak- 

 ing up, trimming 

 r>»c*, sending 



re- 



up 



distance, shorten- 

 ing heads, dec. 

 saw proper for 

 the purpose 

 GRAFTING. 

 Aphides, to keep 

 down 



Free-growers, 



marks on 

 Graft, binding 



and finishing 



Grafting, advantage 

 of 



Grafting, disadvan- 

 tage of 



Operation In differ- 

 ent months 



Preliminary obser- 

 vations 



Roses, catalogue 

 and brief descrip- 

 tion of a fe w sorts 



Scion, preparation 

 and insertion of 



Scion, choice and 

 arrangement of 



Stock, preparation 

 of 



APPENDIX. 

 A selection of vari- 

 eties 



Comparison be- 

 tween budding 



Published by J. Mattbews, ^'V^W^JSSS 



Covent-garden, London, 



NEW EDITION OF 



PROF. LINDLEY'S INTRODUCTION t* 

 Recently published, in 2 vols. 8vo, with Si n B ° T **T 



numerous Wood Engravings ni^ftT^-rtAtl 



NTRODUCTION g Vo ?\*E^ m 



By Professor Lindlet, Ph.D. F.R. S p J* ° T A X ¥ 

 in University College, London, &c. Fourth P^ « t*L 

 rections and numerous Additions. ^QUioa, wiJU 



London : Longman, Brown Gnrvir ... 



pOR PORT 



SSS&S 



TERBCRY 



AND WELLINGTON," Nfw"V.' 0t O1 

 The First C1m« p M i.. ZBal uC 

 GEORGE POLLOCK SJ*SL Shi * € 

 ■ l?in* in the East Indi.^ >5 

 and provisioned by the CantwhL 1 * 1 ^ 



of passage :-Chief Cabin (a whole Cabin CJi* J > ** 

 Second Cabin, 224. ; Steerage. 1«. F " fe° ***^ 

 further inform stion. apply to* Paw and Co m" ^ • 

 street ; J Statmek, HO, F*nchurch. 8 tree^ ' .« L >*■*• 

 Young, Manager of Shipping, Office of the r.Jf [ ltt| »»t 

 elation, 74. CornhiU. London. Caattrbar, i£ 



POR PORT LYTTELToTr^- 



-L TERBURY SETTLEMENT W,F 



NEW PLYMOUTH, ahd NEW zffi* 



~\^-The First Class Passenger il^ 



■*>■ ■■ India Docks, Chartered and PtwiJiiT 



, the Canterbury Association to sidh??^ 



DAT the V 2th of August. Rate, of & 



(a whole Cabin between deckp), 111 . c?: 



steerage, Ul For freight, passage or bSi. 



apply to J. Statner, 110, Fenchurch-SSr 



*%?■ -^r*; 



*-^,^r-; 



Chief Cabin 



Cabin, 221 ; 



information, 



Filbt and Co., 157, Feuchurch-street; or 



to 



Manager of Shipping, Office of the Canterbury AMurfS* 

 74, CornhiU, London. «■'«■* 



THE LADIES' FRIEND. 



OWLAND'S AQUA D'0R(U 



This is the most fragrant and refreshing Perfunn m 

 yielded by the " Souls of Flowers.'* It retain* iti fmhty 

 delightful odorou?ness tor days. It is ioTigorating, mk 

 stimulating, yet sedative ; and is an unrivalled quiateMiiZ 

 spirituous product. For fainting fits, fatigue* of datciv. 

 oppressions from over-crowded rooms, or inteme wmii 

 heat, its uses cannot be over-estimated. Price 3i.6d. per bitth. 

 N.B.— A Golden Fountain of the Aqua d'Oio is exhibue4 tf 

 the Crystal Palace. 



ROWLANDS' MACASSAR OIL, 



for creating and sustaining 



A LUXURIANT HEAD OF Hill, 



ROWLANDS' KALYDOR, 



FOR RENDERING THE SKIN 80FT, FAIR, AND BL0OKII5, 



and 



ROWLANDS' ODONTO, 



OR PEARL DENTRIFICE, 



FOR IMPARTING A PEARL-LIKE WHITENESS TO TEE TirfX 



The Patronage of Royalty throughout Kurope. *ad tU Ufk 



appreciation by rank and fashion, with the well kiwn 



infallible efficacy of these articles, give them & celaUtj 



unparallelled. 



BEWARE OF SPURIOUS IMITATIONS. 



The only genuine of each bears the name of "ROWUW 

 preceding that of the Article on the Wrapper or LabeL 



Sold by A. Rowland and Sons, 20, Hatton-girden, tote, 

 aud by respectabl e Chemistg and Perfumers. 



THE BLOOD.— Our bodies have been entirely formri> 

 are now forming, and will continue tobebuittupdv*!^ 

 from the blood. Wliat the sap is to Hie tree thebwdis totomm 

 frame : and inasmuch as the strength and verdure ofatmm *• 



pendant on the moisture derived from the root, the tea&**£? 

 of the body are indispensably connected with a pure awifrtt*** 

 tion of this important fluid. It is this that must /e*J mfmif 



VIBRATOR, an extraordinary, P ^!^^* 



ted instrument, for deafness, entirely d*«£u 



». to surpass anything of the kind that ,ha« been, ij 



existence ; and unless its replenishments are freely ^JJT^Jj! 

 municated, Vie vital fire becomes clouded, burns diyfy , •** »» 

 mately extinguished. The grand object is to keep j^y**g 

 (the blood) in a pure and healthy state, for without m?****- 

 wiU show itself in some wav or other. 



PARR'S LIFE PILLS. 



It is universally admitted that this median* i «8T P*W 

 blood better Vuin any other, and wiU conquer ;».»«J*S prL r 3 . 



None are genuine unless the words l4 FARKb .7^ pprll0 esl 

 are in white Letters on a Red Ground, on the W^eij-j- 



stamp, pasted round each box ; also the ^mM v w^ 



natur P e P of the Proprietors, " T. BOBBBW «^* 

 court, Fleet-street, London," on the ™recaoD3.-^. ^ 

 at Is. lid., 2s.9d. t and family packets at iul « »• 

 respec table medicine vendors throughout jh ewgr^ 



DEAFNESS.— New Discovery.-THE Oft^MC 

 VI nn.TAD *— „^l~*«i nnwerful s ^ Dew 5 



inrented hwm wwij «^» -^ -— » - »v«» ha« beeo, w 



others, to .urpa.. aoything of the kind tta W £ < ^ 

 bably ever can be produced. It io modelled Ito tM «^ ^ 

 it reel 8 within, without projecting. Being ( *}™ tot * 



as the skin, it is not perceptible. ?"» b ^£?fiiia»# r 

 general conversation, to hear distinctly »*«f i X^ - iil» 

 assemblies. The unpleasant sensation of s> W °J & 



ears is entirely removed, and it affords all the un ^ 

 possibly could be desired. Invaluable ne#J f^ m 

 tacles, Powerful Telescopes. Opera and « 8 « " GUll> « 

 curious, very small, powerful, Wauttoat -^ <* 

 the size of a Walnut, to .iiscern objecti at ;to ^ ^* 

 or five miles.-S. and B. Solomons, Aunsts 

 93, Albemarle-street, Piccadil ly. London. ^ 



VI ETCALFE AN o Co'b NEW /J™™Z<+ 



M BRUSH and SMYRNA **°*°**ZSwto "£ 

 has the important advantage of searchiijgtnorb^^ 



divisions of the teeth, and cleaning them m^ ^ &m 

 ordinary manner, and is fsmoui) 6jr l " hat c iesn» i» * *7 

 loose.-ls. An Improved Clomes-Brusb tba &wt ^ 



part of the usual time, aud inc «W *" e ""J^ "Jbh^ \% 

 Penetrating Hair-Brushes, with ^e durable ^ £ 



sian bri-tlea, which do not soften **»£*% friction. J*} 

 Brushes of improved, graduated, and power' ,^— 



Brushes, which act in the most J^Pf w f th it. P«< 

 manner. The genuine Smyrna Sponge, w dor ,^ 

 valuable properties of absorption, vitali ty, &*£L 



mean, of direct impor-ations dispensing w m£ 



parties' profits and destructive bleacning^ ^ ^^ 

 L„™ «f . .rennine Smyrna Sponge. " > oif"^"^ 



luxury of a genuine 8m J rn * .^"lat. 13» »• ° 

 Bimout, and Go's, Sole Establishment, 



one door fr-.m HolUs-street. _„ p0 WDEE, J*\ r^ft* 



M ETCALFE'S ALKALINE TOOTH PW ^ticun- 



Cairriow.— Beware of the words 



adopted by some houses. 



Printed by Willi*" 

 the parish ol St. Psncra^ 



Chuich row ~ 



at tbeir Olfi 



Mhg£&Ssjg& 



ol St. hancrw, » DU h *, h T n ' ue County w ZZ i itWi*£& 

 , Stoke NewwRton^both A* i» p ^^ «i WWg k 0£ 



ce in LoBbirf.itwt.JiV.t the Off'*^*" 



City of London; *nd pob »»^ n( , b / SJSh^^ JTbi >>»"" 

 street, in the n»ri»h ol St. /"^J^^di ** w " ^ 



trtii»eaient« and Commuof 



turn EBitoa.-8AfBBPAf. J»" 13 » 1Wl 



street, 



where all Ad re 













