Jury 2, 1859.] THE 
— 
CHRONICLE AND ái ee GAZETTE. 563 
planted alongside of Keens' Seedling ripened , some | 
green interlacing arches hick i t 
"EC 
and even i after the lapse of so many years, retain 
sprung the 
m 
cames or four days before that nei kind, 
decidedly = or in flavour to it. was inclined to | ax and Guainia, about half, it was. stated, is laken dow n HR “If w spes her by her life, she is the Scottish 
impute this man earliness ss and flavour — p " " E emiramis; casting herself, before the eyes of all 
liarit: ty in and — ended In rirers o the arms o of the e assass in of he T husband, 
opinion, — n Thursday, the 23d vlt, — seme ex- pre ld g| g had tl 
ted a 
hibi nsiderable . of the M 
s Pomological Society. | 
e wich occnpy Us inhabitants. 
nod — -ma B 
— — n 
use made of the beard of the Pi: — voee — in ie. — 
The berries were like mine in —— and shape, stated ed that the pulpy envelope of the he * er y * and has been denied, and nothing in 
but in fla — even inferior in . t they were pro- | ripe fruit is M^ to yie eld the most delicious TE all "Palm effect, n — su v letters, proves that she 
nounced to be flat, acid, MS e most inferior kind in | drinks, bearing great resemblanc m both ic scinally s - vea Any ccom ae hed or Ern ihe 
the whole callection _ On tas — them I felt inclined | colour aud rie e. "i have mu un ren emarked, “had that she m attracted the victim into the 
. Nicho Ison tor eturn the ,geod fortune taste i hat she — a Boca the right and the 
n moi ney I — ason "T Midsummer, but like | hope of succeeding — ne after bis death; that 
n your e for — m Dr. Roden — fruit of most other trees is subject to seasons or she had been the 24 2 means, and the al eged prize 
— skilful amateur gardener, aa — of this periode. c of intermittance, when. little or none is of the crime; finally, that she — the murderer 
Muti Iam — to think that neither Mr. eer ured.” The fr x — nine pens by bestowing upon him her hand,—no doubt can be 
yself have received kind, or st the o ripen. Mr. Spruce gave. as follows. the. dimen- | entertained re peding these ee To provoke to 
— agmen aca Dr. Roden. as the May . — sions of one of these 22 which he cut i in the! fo: rests murder, an nd t nto absolve the perpetrator—is not 
Thos. he Guainia : thi 
Hybrid send you flowers of | including a petiole of 4 feet 8 inches; pinn æ, 63 pairs; * In fine, if oed AMAN y her death—comparable 
— m — be inte between V. speciosa and | beard, 21 inches long, on young plan wing close in its majesty, i its picty, and its courage, to the most 
p partaking h as — by it was as muc feet 9 kau Jong; spadix ft tyrs 
do of the — n ot et. other bearded Palm alo’ r and aversion with which she had bee 
the first batch of — — is — rmv with the eastern r 3 ihe Wacom Mr. —.— described | - — at last to pity, esteem, and admiration. 
me, forming - very neat — shrub, 4 feet high, to be true talea, dist tinct from A. fumi-|As lor ng as there was no ex xpiatio on she remained a 
and about 22 feet in circumference. The others are | fera. ‘he beard of this, which is. deciduous, sai criminal ; rs expiation she became victim. In her 
second crosses from decussata, and are smaller. planta persistent as in. the Pi ass: — makes excellent, bro ooms. | history bl seems rashed out by blood; the 
In the Quitinian lt of her former y w it d her 
t 
riferous habit. A. Devonian. —— 
No. 
m 
solve, we 
b 
tlo 
handsome both as respects flowers e rca the | a), but the hte onc oh req 3 3 but rather 
beau tifu 1 "arrangement and shining dark green o of the | T mns et from the fibres before they ove; i find — or her con- 
to|to this 5 e of the cultivation of tm duct in the ferocious — dissolute manners of the age ; 
excellent advantage. As a bush even without flowers | nuts in | Ceylon” e, the Rev. Thomas Foulkes, in a in tha t edu cation, de eprav — and fanatical, 
ust be - ndsome. The leaves of the diac are | letter Hooker. The writer first men the Court of the Valois; ims her 
1 va and less conspicuous; the flowers had dropped | t tioned "bas eee but all prevailing cultivation outs her beauty, her love. W. 
before the — — reached us. of this tree by the natives, remarking that i t obtains with M. Dargaud—to w * we feel deeply indebted 
2 ORD th E the researches which have guided us—* we judge 
Societies of 2000 f untain sides, A somewhat | not—we calf relate.” 
a dd d. putat : — e m nu I T Ns 
in all wot Ceylon af upwards of 20 millions for t 
ICAL: June 6.— Dr. J. E. Gray, F. R. S., TI T The systematic cultivation rden Memoranda. 
Present pres the chair. Mr. Stevens exhibited A. a" Doxar’s, Esq. 8 am TH.—At few 
number of beautiful butterflies recei devoted to it, however, dates from about the year place Sue, aed im — Chry ums grown in 
Mr. Wallace, — whom they * been collected in 1842, when it was undertaken. with. v — san- n perfection as ag are aig by — DE * 
Ternate, n ew Guinea, He also read an extract! guine hopes of apes and large mene "n the | Do xats ga arden Some account of his mode 
— — by the same po inves — it. In very time 5 
anew and most gorg —— of Papilio, 
is well asanew kind of | Bird of Paradise. — ns had 
Mr. Stev 'ens : also n mentioned | o 
| 
4 ; m 
the case of Qm they are cut down afte 
and set in à cold frame or pit (under a north a wali 
abl 8 
thousands of a of unprofitabl 
" different perte. ‘of the island, and 
half fa} million . maen has been 
le jungle were ib e 
probably. upwards ing 
expended on the is pee efer: 
as they 
n 
he capture 
1ave 
yh 
RE FE lo: Es cian tail “i be divided, es offsets are removed and. put 
and Hetgrius sesquicornis. po Janson exhibited a the remaining provinces, which occupy. an area of into 3. inch in a light sandy soil and 
— British genus of ants' nest beetles, belonging t tothe | 18,509 sapate ni ee Ae ms cie extending | ke ES ather "ms for few. da; — 
of Formica.. over 22,40 Taking ge o of 80 trees te to * g and shading, “ke, When 
es 
that this — wo robably —— 
of the que Symetha € ano in Dr. H — 
the Javanese Lepidoptera. Mr. MacLac 
of two species of Micro-Lepidoptera 
gene Ornis and Tortrix, He also read so 
given we 
suffer from want 
roots they are on, 
size of the mo When 
into growth they are pinched ud. 
them break stron seamen the rae “After the y have 
the latter are pegged Eo 80 
a fair plant, r o ener as may, be 
ben mg By ond [stad — the size is increased, 
and it * the 2 of aes into bloom. Those 
who have stock by th , OF who wish to obtain fresh 
y us genus Trinodes. Mr. Baly read —— of 
me new exotic species of Chrysomelidze. 
LINNEAN: June li — f. Bell, President, in the 
chair. E. Bradford, yir e Ven. Archdeacon Hale, | 
H. ersteen, M. D., J. . Disi d Dr. G. 
Rolleston, and talc Willi re be ected Fellows. | 
following ae . zx 2 
Synopsis of the Distom ida," by T. S. Cobbo! d, M. D— 
2. A memoir * On ap — ag the — e 
th deseripti w species m Born — J. D. 
from 
ae 225 ‘Synopsis of 
ised | t 
H 
600000 nnual 
yield of the » Jaffera estates — 
„000,000 of nuts, on 9000 a mal 
only of the trees being in full = bearing. The q 
"s Cocoa-nut oil exported fro PEE in —.— Wale 
was 70754 13 gallons. per gave an 
(interesting account of the manageme — pi the planta- | well turne 
ions, and the author concluded with the following recur ae o open 
end 
| nurse 
ry, so as to obtain nice 
which will 
enc fine specimens for. kr purpo 
4-inch pot u a 10- Ap h one if required. 
Mr. c ae qd uses is loam and stable dung, 
bulk for v E 25 E together 12 months previously, and 
mes), with sand, the latter to 
d diii They oug 
ses se 
The soil 
le 
meres 
for 
but t it is no t the eagle: 
high ; Cin . 5 
Re water; but it is not - raio pinag; MEM. cn x des 
— ion of a 
description wf ^W 
Dr. J. D. Hoo en 
Wallace,” by R. 
iassaba of the 
— 
AES has lien US — want of safiicient 
S be identical wi er fumifera of 
— which rhe ba of B 
It 
It is white ; but it’ is X the silve: 
It has th nine eee t is not t Siva.” iu 
. A memoir “ : f by | of soft wat 
arke wm Lot “On the structure red ad | 7s 0 tissoly 
nities of Batideæ p Callitr ichacem; on the structure | 
and 3 of Vochysiacee ; and on Cassythe,“ yi 
| 1 th 
| B. Clarke, Esq. 
On 
e the 
e plants. od -eful 
It will not os perde “but prevent “fly from 
its appearan Shee. uld mildew 2 Mud 
phur, puttin: "s it one day ai h 
Well sprinkle the : 
Notices of Books. 
Stuart, by Alphonse da. La martine, Svo. Black. un 
With portrait, autograph, and vignette. 
manure 
A ren of translation of one of the most beautiful f 
besto: 
T 
D "thin y J 5 1. 5 5557 Tx APE 
e, long ke Sade ts e them ccm nes 1 
ascertained distribution of. the Piassaba Palm, —— s P bl. AR ak ab range ys cepting, 815 th 
ont. in lo Marr y wi a | translations of the poetry of the Queen an 
epe depth s. from the —— We may homer er- extract een 
pee 15 5 DT s; "the "Rio Negro, on the | Lamartine, in wii. ha eloquently condenses 
, an inions as to t e character o gnata tini h 
Pa acimon sine east. NA: : EM vill oed PE en, M 2 in the light of h surface of the soil. hese. get sco or 
the south. — of eal te siara veio thor re- | charms, her talents, h agical Ln over all men | pum plants are almost, sure Ee [5 icing 
marked, “where I pen deep into the forest, I| who approached he AR — ed. the. Sa this is however easily avoided by the mule rod 
came. on grovi . . and . that the 1605 century. All that Pa not, love in mentioned and freqnent waterit » x í qn me 
I eee in Amazonian when dwells e str poetry; her verses, like those of. Tl a pom he pa to cd oe ipe: 
and —— tly on memory than d teacher, possess a at ers them ornaments de gari N i: E; * 
thes range bearded solimo; ge. walk among de en simplicity ; $ they are written with lof bloom. Pompones Mr. Shrimpton keeps in shady 
