786 
S ET: OAR DRNERS C 
ts eee 
CHRONICLE. 
attempt a at explanation € 
Net winter wal aid not make its a appear 
the s was forg ; but about & three 
our fine visitor Seay again at the old apot, a 
n orin SNAN most fu 
he lass a 
a has | 
very toon j 
d be liable to ome k, 
window is a 
whole length of the hapaa, which r 
blows every hour of thed lay. There isa sa corresponding | 
pure 
and if 
the leaves mu ggi 
crac Such, ae appears wor im been the pro- ing 
ars ago.—Potoos00000's. 
FOF 
+} 
beaks feat on rela arh to a De paai "at. the 
arhe in ae sg I am 
mse, pass ing by Ih 
nn onter being ‘the - largest) in size and 
t and close, a dividing the e top 
a good Tulip 
“ Lusor” an 
ti ton ti 
rs ated Patwosn the two 
this : i peyia self on the tia p about it, aa 
ahh 
wags its tail Sag: and down t tl 
dow with misik, and main unding back.to the bal- 
is ditto sl on morning till night. 
ap verybody w who has wit- 
t ebi rd’s | object, that am | 
flo rista, especial 
Don the 
pages ye skyns, Hl arewoo 
ig: saa of the Teg —In the pono a y aE at 
AENA what the maana m pe 
and that sian 2 ante — set up or laid do 
| that or the r pe 
| wer me from thane 
am the ab will be r 
sone 
> ja 
k he hase en with many 
grateful for the P on 
h they —_ ne me 
ow that flor ‘ists in 11768 
d Tulip ought t to be, 
a goo 
is 
bo! | me 
y distributed all over 
ed un 
segments 
That 
frane days, and is "E entertai aay ee the 
; but 
st every animal disease.” 
g 
nein be clear and 
ttom especially ; 
what m 
ed, torn, nor 
re 
— two or 
hi 
since e has been th 
In the ares Num 
wn by this of 
“Chambe ers Edinbur yii — nal” (to go 
at this 
time 
ganako at that per rio iod, 
ead with interest Talip all | 
f+ 
a 
writ. 
ten in 1645, where, vee vans articles ` good, <a 
are mentioned “ the haggas, o of whose goodness 
vai 
Markham 
tho: 
len Fenoes.—The fi 
io rde: 
the Tabipitolopen | W which “ W.G. 
It will be observed that the | 
St. nard’s-on-Sea there Lat aii 
ollowing wo 
to boast, which is made of oatmeal pm per 
ood”; and, further on, of puddings,” blood of baa 
oden 
PARER in 
100 different king of flowe 
e ppan ge el ay a ont summer, and 
an extract from “my "previ ious communieatio on, 
f ‘one wi is not pet in the 
oe = Prin aro: ers, Dandie iiao Ao., ne ølets, P. 
So Pals 
ly 
as 
centre of f another. 
| swine, P And 
in the first cookery oak ‘bat presents il “Donat 
Cookery,” 
five different modes of cooking blood, aba rte of 
p% oultr ry. Any | pork-shop 
es 
a ep, geese, 
no less 
Y 
in parras will afford abun. 
lack p 
‘owslips, Double A urieul: 
d 
uddi. inga W E 
a 
ani 
Blue pla Foia don, ig are made of the blood of pigs. “he aed ation, 
Wallflower, Single d m "Peas, Mig- tween the alege, me one ro g I have oa this therefore, p: d by “M.S.'B.” appears to be in 
nonette, Honeys g TEN niti e for rs, and have never had an suggesting the cooking the blood of oxen and sheep in © 
Do. Hartwes P Takapu pee e Pink, Geu ooo r instance, when :a rabbit London, on a larger scale than heretofi ‘that, 
neum, Buff to, Tropeoluin majus, Anemones, s Convol- | burrowed p oe the ee They very frequently by easier, more econo 1, and less S- 
ulus minor, en close outside the fma rea hee: ydo y of preparing it, than the ordinary one ki 
six of oils as, Acanthus spino- not one to jump over it. ne great Bx! puddings. In tland, it is well kno y 
sus, Lophospermum s: S, Beco and other Pe pee virtue to the turn outwards of art, fg 1. | ascertained, that a species of sanguettes is Di 
goniums, Celsia, Viscaria oculata, Clarkia carnea R artiele of fo In answe: “Q ii i 
grandiflora, Virginian Stock, choltzia, several va- 3 Ie a that blood tok “very little nourishment,” he wi 
Tieties of ious, Gaill goes Malope grandi- see by an article in the Ad henzum, of th inst, 
flora, prona aurea, por of aoe some per sa icles of food 
nums, Campanula, Rose etA TE Rod, Mesem- sed in coun that its nutritive property i$ 
Saver orange and purple, White Phlox, Lobelia IVY VVVVYYYYYY YY \ IVYYVY ected hae ch sensor alysis to be next to'that of pork, 
cardinalis, Œnothera rosea, Salvia, Calceolaria Apeks and pantin am that of any kind of fish, or any vege iai; 
Yellow op Salvia angusl, na Cle emat a table substance, excepting the farinaceous and i 
Erica vulgaris, Lyt roots, "Whe danger therefore would seem to be that 
Malva, Pink Cistus, Dabiias, ster nenea Cape | sanguettes alone might rather be - er nutritive p fora — 
Aster, Cotoneaster microphylla, Betonica, | certain bulk in diet is, as stated in the same Athena, 
Gilead, Stenactis speciosa, Hollyhocks, Haiatopr, “necessary to igestion, in er p i 
Arbutus, Hydrangea, Leyeesteria formosa, Hyperic But the groats ree ended by “M. 
Eseallonia ed us, P. pienille Tiopwoodiama, the sanguettes, will no doubt answer the p 
themumsin varieties, Tussilago fragrans, as well as tion. I merely add 
purpureus, Pink Sedum, harg varieties of ea the south s n “9h all the — q 
and J8 varieties of Rose.—C. My St. jae saa -on~ used in wine, is san 
Sea, Ni m ER Fig. 2. | black nate rey that those ‘si male i 
: Tulips be tween 50 and 100 years aga—If the follow. od, are remarkably strong 
ing pe aking relative to the properties of a Tulip 50 i a a op FE pig Bi he Pees of the | _ 
years ago, taken from the “ Florists’ mae ry,” by | The intervals een the wire t d entik 
James Maddock, Florist EE tome n, TR Tomi imagine that any rabbit ọr here would attempt to 
publi i p 1792, b ew es p- 704), | force. thomas through that space. The uprights 4 are al out £3. 
it is * his yay ie int The stem should be strong, pis nize Of may Hee © E on tne WINS a Or t LINNEAN SOCIETY. 
elastic I i te balk. I don’t know how ‘ov. 18.—The Lorp Bisnor of Norwic#,. 
of the | - “The flower should be large | and lh | may act ag = ae as I have no ae aaar yasa in the chair. Specimens of preparations ns of 
of six petals f them rude. The uprights are alpi dmna used by the Japanese, were presen 
into the cont about 4 or 6 inches, The as pad exhibited. Dr. 
cup, with a ot bottom = widest at top. The | 8d. per foot vith ý i e 
three exterior petals should be rather larger than the | the uprights and labour.—Q. L os to oh ore Moss.” is pr abe m re pe 
three interior ones, and the base ; all the | that 1 have seen a wire fence, similar to the one pro- | at Swan sg Se is recommend 
petals should have perfectly entire edges, free from | posed at p. 753, for the purp eeping bits. n Moss, Iceland ae — a Moss, 
notch or serrature ; the top o bond be broad | At first it d to answer very well, but after a | forms of F 
and well rounded ; the ground . colo the flower at | time the rabbits to jump completely over it, its strueture it rese the Fueus arian 
the bottom of the. Pe should be clear whit h the fence ponpa inclined ards at | to which it was par oa aie Ww. J. Hooke 
and the various -colonred stripes, peeks are the | the top. There is an error, I might say, invaria specimens in the Linnean m, 
pee neipal ornament of a fine ,Tolip, should be regu ular, committed by the manufacturers - such thought it more near 
à and distinct ton rabbit-proof ;” they set the wires | of Linngeus. A 
broken points, cgay i feathered or pencilled, The | too far apart, forgetting that rabbits = gp young, the natural history, 
centre of each lea ill sanem through a mall space, and such | British species of Meloe 
rmixed with small portions will do as ie mischief as wn — common insects, 
of ig Acta or these o tiga slg he hag into 
irre, Some fi e of | m 
inion that the 
tribute to the beaut; 
confined to a narr ow stripe exactly do wn the centre, 
ore than Li 
that mention was made 
rabbi fall gro 
To E perfectly secure, the wires ought never to be 
siene apart: I speak from long experience. 
of the original or breeder colour. s certain that | i 
bit aa wy beautiful and iia. ain, especially 
they bei ar narrow feathering at the 
giai in this, flower 
interesting to know 
Fa.» „ Situated on the w 
is at present a pena 
hetght ‘and ll fe et in 
usly agree 
the car abounds with rieh plari distributed in a 
before 
— 
Thus 
that in Arg pomis of W 
measur 
1 diameter, each way, having 840 |} 
D. Comeron. th 
oto en is easy > me — $ 
them, we e proof 
us says pa fod of th the Gar- 
Y Chaoniele à in his “arahan. in regard 
The remark i applicable to the 
He asserts, | six tru 
e | proper and 
been but fair, pag cen it on thi 
e | have state d on what igi s this assertion is founded. | more 
į may be 
. Robertson, 
of Inverness-shire, | prose: 
ing 10 feet in 
markable meng 
The Scotch “Thistle-—In a recent Number I observed | whi 
of a Scotch Thistle 8 feet in | 
metam 
pean ee 
ich the au pobet ‘ished tp drar atie 
th 
E 
year 17 te ip w when n perfec t forms an elegant little nourishment,” some of th 
standing pon aw ell- proporton i round stem whom ? and by what expe eriments can this be prov: ` rn and hym encpler TP The author referred Se 
enp is composed of six lea 3 the weet} His nee + objection, ' “it is exeeedingly subject to | themselves upon the la h ea ee 
shoul fat ith Po rea the stem, putrescence,” may be admitted, as compared to animal | to severa in whie ie 5 ith jarvee having ho 
atly round upwards ; the diameter of fibre, but certainly not to the degree asserted, for | had Daai: speci ‘bodies. poste 
e nearly equal erent st of cas Sie tha 
ing at right angles, z height of the | if means be not taken to prevent. it, yet by the e simple | object of ee 
o-thirds of the di ameen Pat Fa ust | ee “M. S. B.?? it may be kept for erare 
-the petals must be nearly | days without putrescence., “It isthe seat andjorgan of 
