Jory 9, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 5 
587 
to by the chairman. A vote of thanks to the — people, and a judge’s seat near it. The horses in are enormous plains of country, covered, at this time, by 
of Arts for the use of their room was also passed, a brown Grass, in which are the seed vessels end 
which the proceedings terminated. horse, ealled Ethan Allen, performing about 24 miles I ov of innumerable flowers, which are said to as 
eee an hour ; Ht Edward 2 nto ve t nearer EX this | was di lovely i in their form and colour in the spring. It 
£ 2 * by calen atin at the rat of two minutes and 
Notices of Books. en y yi which it > Se omg what 
circle. The owner of this horse has refus viet 5,000 da ls. | our Serer — Reilly of Te — ria had see 
The 2 —— ted Seaweeds: a History, 1 or 30007. for it. It is said to de the fastest cete in anro Palace gardens at Sydenham, in full 
by Figur and Dissections, of the A T the | am but most of the ho said that they reminded hi airi n 
* | were — spring. The ground is so level, that the woods on the 
S meta Pi lps at Albany.—* The hotel is very large | horizon had the effect that the first sight of the dark 
vol. I, royal 8vo, With s. d good; — t, alas! — of our dear darkies at line of land has at sea. In many places near the road 
The old art of e fcire that i say, of Newport, e had som — aget — damsels to on each side, small farms were established, and good- 
obtaining impressions of plants by using dried or An wait — "able, all dr v^" Ak e in pink cot tons, their sized fields of Indian Corn ever 
fresh ee 3 of copper; plates, res as it was, | bare s much displayed in — with was a railway station, a town, or even a * city 
always great advantage alls kowi — — little een. to form the short * eeves, large, | with one or two churches, and an hotel, besides grocery 
senting "the n ‘intended Like s tography, it — e, clean, white arms, and short white rae not hares and wooden buildings —— various kinds, were in 
could no hat Heger art in its eachin ng to the — They had no caps, and Sue veu La verd in this immense wilder t i 
t the of o y showing a 11 ! i laughter-houses at Chic cago. = W * 
— ch tod zu pee and most careless, — looking, and i S Ty 8 i 
ly. mpressions of wes thus obtained | ; i oon at 3 
fey E " much more distinct — ed and even papa could not de fend any one of t or = — . out ot "the carriage m the 2 
and up oy urall badl waited upon; saili i stoc | pa — 
l bester, en modem dil Pas wo a won- | mepestien very y po y Dg ildiug- 
ut li 
every In a y. 
drous change in Nature-printing ; for rough * what we — as the niggers at Newport. did. Men. — number pnis 2 oxen, and the nt tes. 
— surfaces we now p et delica acy servants a red the » be d-room „ bells, g to on these _ brought into the 
ine, ile every surface- . is elabora day | y as waiters.” side of the ui ; s 
e Jen and it is im mpossible not t to feel that when Mr. 3 Ms Vi — pm ocv which drew it along by imd attached to its 
flat thin bodi beds at Cincinnati.—Mr. Longworth, among other horns and mmi through a P eiie on the floor. The 
of plants, the human band | is wholly superseded. Those things remarkable about him, is the proprietor of the ,beast, b of men  belabouring it from 
who have seen the beautiful impressions of leaves Vineyards from which the sparkling Champagne is behind, and tdi. ragging it i de b 
executed in Germany by Dr. v. et and in | produced, known, from the name of the Grape, as the | in and its = drawn down towards the when a 
H n Brad ury * HS 
tement. defi 
ing, w 
. sparkling Catawba; but he seems no less t 8 felled ^ instantaneously to 
that this is no over statement. The defect of the art | from immense extent of his t im beds, the ees “and Tit eight ort t was turned over 
consists in its being unable to represent very convex | which prr im J think he said, 60 a 
i as 
d i 
midribs of whose leaves are merely que lines, | dare not set it down from memory. He showed papa — to be suhjected. The first of these was to 
although the leaves themselves are adir exact. a book he had written about his . — and Straw- rip up and remove e the intestines of the e poor beast, and 
It is thus clear that while the new art is perfectly | berries, and i inenednlede an im i m ; 
ted to the representation of — — of ing Beer oe be This led to a i p } t} till i g b dy was s hung “up to cools The 
plants or qe of their structure, t fails when — the relative size of trees and p the two sid itl 
to other classes and other But to nothing is it the Atlantic; and in speaking of the Indian — e| of — huge an nial “thus skinned and cleft in two. 
more suitable than to the isit letal; | race of tells us he has seen it standing, in Ohio, 18 feet hi Ac rocess, from ime the animal leaves the yard 
seaweeds, which are capable of so completely giving up | and he — it has been known, in Kentucky, ‘to pee alive wlth the time ‘ti is split and sd up in two pieces, 
their forms to paper, in all the most minute ramifien- as high as 25 feet, and the ear 18 inches long. The less than a quarter At the end of 
tions, that it requires good eye to distinguish | old gent! is a imi e-looking person, — ut mta salted, ‘packed i in casks, 
the original impression. Of this property Mr. with a coat so shabby that one would be tempted best parts o: be shipped to England, and the 
H i offer him a sixpence if we met ipi Ls the streets ; inferior perts to be eaten by the free and enlightened 
which is quite a wonder in typography; for even | indeed a story is told of a stranger, w is great continent. e greater number 
the letterpress has the — — and blackness of € and being shown round it b y Mr. Longworth, of these beasts come from Texas, and have splen- 
la —— is the practical him a doll horns, 3 feet long. The next 
has been a pplied to its to his pocket, and it was not till he was asked to go thing they sa TE the somewhat similar treat- 
One — which this E of printing cannot do is vos the house ‘that the stranger 28 him to be ment of the € pigs; but these are animals, of 
to represent those magnified dissections of the minute the ow. H — a elightfully vivacious, | which for size t is nothing similar to te seen in 
parts of planta, which oe indispensable to scientific | and full of date hobbies. His wife is a very England, excepting, piia X ed 2 At 
natural his — In the volume iatea ye that de Es t | pleasing, primitive-looking — Wo tasted at their | least, one which UPS w hang hed. 00 lbs 
addition of o the — — his city, called by the and looked E 
t pE ag — ae 
the structur ses, classification, | ag the 
the British Alge, w — also will Pd — — little great- gra S 2 T A, 2E chil ~ mt 
for the aes vation, preservation in the herbarium, and | eighteen mantha, The rr 
diong into a 
microscopic objects of these inter — i enough to accommodate us the ER Was | they lie side by side in a quiescent state, very different 
— one they were in a few minutes before, when 
panied by fall scientific description, — of synonyms, 33 gworth pouring out tea nena coffee for they were quarrelling in a most unmannerly manner 
nd such — observations as the subject calls for. the wi ss party as vigorously as if she were 18 years|in the yard below. m this trough the one first 
— of ire this volume for | old, "C" © being 72. She is "- y, a Pretty, pet in is, dra a — in nious machine, taken up from 
its singu feel | with mplexion, and into an empty trough, 
that it is indispenabl to the library of all who TE and eg poc and face. Fa 9 Aut w a minate he is — denuded of 
themselves with the study of the v cou and Cincinnati hams, also oysters served ^ — bristles, and pa r to be cleft and hung up. 
mighty Ko "e three different ways — be tet "fried in butter, The trough my — eight or ten ‘thus lying e 
The first volume is enti and in care ut taken out of their shells side, and the moment — is taken out at one 
perms or — Sonnerie; the next volume m en masse in a argo dish. Our friends were | ano ther is put i in n at t he — and tliey thus all font 
Complete their history; a thi will contain ione E we m m e tl 
the Melanosperms, and the fourth will spem of d the | theirs y form, w ud — Brar Ang being very order; bub so rapid is the process, that no one pig is 
5 unge and 8 said, too long in; in — the whole business deen only a 
eee eee t uke maki I hey pitied very few m nutes per pig very part i ned to 
re New World on two Travellers our want of taste, and mented ove our ERE — t, th a — 
— e Autumn of 1858. Longmans. | small ones in England. brushes, &c. In the e age ire, in ud stor 
Lach ro. i uq 454 4,| Weed and autumnal tra. [vod Gflly dried — above the oxen, ther 
1 out 1500 unhappy =$ 
preserved by Mrs. Flagg, and we also looked over an | hung ap to cool, before Was cut up, salted, 1985 
illustrated poem on the subject of Mr. and Mrs. Long- | apd se off, Ther 
in m travelli ing 12 on States and Cana — * a 
Series of letters written as she went on her way she 
records what she saw and thought of the novel scenes 
of other ladies who thinks of following her route. 
A fastidious critic would per 
nothing newin three hundred | pages of feminine gossip. | 
But that would be reasonable. There is little me ; à. 
the sun; a such novelty as is t deal more e, end that : 
— > be found consists tive of the feelin: of i nga ices — —— good — 1 and it was a T was y 
an, who wishes h ehcp s all over America; even in very small Me escape." 
hat they may expect. in the western wo | "Those who are curious abou abont Arete MÀ 
How fur the tales —— E told her are or fruit ices are rare; ci Bun are almost id sl s — e win get fram npon those import- 
true or the con not for usto say. We add a |. Vanilla cream. In sum a stewed Peach is ant subjects also. 
few. — bu: pos * es added. 
American. ringfield.—“ We drove next to b Bein November 4t. ` eous. 
the Horse Fair, which was very well arranged. «De Prairies 22 instant, and soon P E leaving Miscellan 
was a cteni a mile, forming a wide carriage | Vincennes Fie ourselves in a Prairie, but it was not| Gutta Percha of Srinam.— Professor Bleckrod, of 
road, on which horses were ridden or driven, to show off | till after 60 miles that we got to the Grand gs |the Delft i has recently 28 a notice of the 
their meri quickest ated at the rate of | wh Ped we- traversed for abon t 60 more. Gutta Perc! men Althou a. bog P RN 
— miles an hour h dri ess, however, of this prairie consists in its pee — — in Europe f vente S 
the driver delà a rein i each band. There | fi orth to south, in whi ch it stretches through | come into geni use, y ek M remains w be 
was a platform. at one end filled with well conducted | — iole hog of the State 3 "s ese prairies! done regarding it, bwy as respects its uses and its 
