GARDERER'S 
CHRONIOLE AND Ee GAZETTE, 
nd 
830 THE dee ine 
blesse, pale yellowish green, exc 5 sun, those of the mamm noth, 4 
glad t o have their attention directed to pe the, | where ode d vit an pud i ý Les ering firmly 
„ near St. 
bead nat of Sir Charles Lamb, Bar 
ards, 
fir 
rich, and considered nes 
e leav 
wo of them I gave to the thay cag 
1 has € 4 to 
rema 
ction of cones at his beautifully 
in other years. 
441 
— le e; d hA kerne edid et; sociated with t 
rk of very considerable extent, in | superior to "the old Cat erine; ker 
wes the more WS Ed kinds ob Pinus, Cupressus, and crenated, with "reniform gla ands, The een so of a jm oi he 
other evergreens are growing wildly in all ven 2 je $ $e 5 et npe My: h 
i 1 
pe vit pest p po he richer collec- is half melting, rich, sugary, and d elicious with prt ne some bones of a lar 
tion Of th p aroma; kernel sw An era fru > decided nE of the Minocero, or Tri 
lich al : ang no decided | ye 
1th ^ not so high as that 22 B; between as and the prece 
mansion, which, al ough t 45 fe Lum oen E difference coul observed, and as i di as | since the late Dr. Bu ickland 
in the pany of its growth, the lower branches iu id e judged hom the fruit, it was presume wi 1e ua 
ooping down with the laterals curvin e upwards | are the same Tai —Fro m Mr. G. Hood, ga , ate Mr. ibn oad 
in the Lu. Eros ful form. A Wellingtonia, 2 feet Mambend d Park, n —.— eter, * of ote: The fra in E 1 College of S 
high when planted in April 1857, is now 11 fee t, | rine, accompanied 5 the following note | with the 5 7 oF those g bo Nue 
Orbis, ae 
" ig 5 f a crop of fruits ona | there are now living i in t 2s ors 
way a fine 
situated dude, a 
plant has frequent intervals of rest, thus confirming the 
colle 
n the south of the 2 1 It seems this 
Hi 
. 
bush tree in a 13. in 
+ 
po 
out ve aid of fire-hea > tthe specimens, although no 
Ae fossils, the “ancestors ı of ‘meh ey 
as 
" ers? s the variet, usu all becomes, were ping airan [saline the mamm a 
P; uda "The 9911, fh wi : ich tl ae 8 It crite i i * Eu 7 $ Th e flav ry | tocr: vin of those da tod 
e | roc 
^ Es proach 10 ao adi f at. From this en it is evident ch fruit of | the same estate as 
caught 1 attention on passing through p ara ia yn, | the Stanwick Nectarine may be abundantly pr lanorbis, Kc. T 
near Sw a short time back, on à tour throng witht the defect of iere ^ to which it is liable. | were, the link between the pas 
Sout Wales. ‘One of a large size, pale yellow, an Allnutt, Esq., sent a well-grown fruit o 82 Stan- things. Mr. B 
orange- shaped, measured upwards of 50 inches in dt from th y = Clapham. He stated that it| dent expressed 
cumference, and weighed between 50 and 60 lbs. | was in a house witho ut fire-heat, and nei of this paper, shoving 
plant with its luxuriant growth and fine foliage ( that f the fruit e sign of cracking. xistence of man d ea 
of the leaves measuring o re than 2 feet across) \ was Oct. 11. Rer. L. V. 4 in the chair. At this ithe: us c ation 
trained over a cottage por 
he other, having the 25 ph figure of an ordinary Mr. Vin all, . Tho noyts, Esq., of Re r^ that they Waite oue 
Vegetable Marrow, was elegantly striped with dark and Seni kdo e Queening Apples, a red kind w. must disabuse their minds 
green and golden yellow. also noticed a tall specimen little or no flavour, m C. W. Strickland, Esq., Hil said or published by geologists was cali 
of Sunflower, a new variety lately introduced from | denley, near site ri kitehen Apple, called Large | any rational belief. 
California, said to attain the height of 2 t, showing kpit, came from the same gentleman Ti^ they ha 
s 20, 
highly satisfactory t 
An Ol riber. 
y iosa.— n my garden a plant MU 
exhibiti ihe à six P flow rer x rer with. a pro 
ent fi d's Th 
9 also 440 Eve Apple, Emperor Alexan- 
ie and very fine specimens of — sums Orange. 
the pe chronology of 6000 y 
From thé ax me grower came, b 
moreover, 
bun ches of a seedling "gae from the Bla 
ripened of doo 
this ibi 
fusion of 8 on each spike. 
it is not an unusual reumstanee to ba 
es on ove ys nt. They b 
uth coast surprised 
ld. J. ^ Oct. 
erence, 
(To be continued.) 
ENTOMOLOGICAL: Sept. 5.—Dr. us 
in the chair. R. W. Fereda 
b 
disease 
| Cac since ers Mini ei EN "Webb of Readin yy 
BRITISH Assocration.— Continued from page 810 
New MODE or BREAD-MAKING.—By this process the 
carbonic acid is produced independently of and super- 
added to the flour, which con J. under 575 
modification whatever. II 
in an ordinar 
ces of steward and gardene | 
do the same, but in 
Now permit me to inform him ow within 
cane w 1 
than five ces of one man filling b both 
uation; and irem of th those m fro: m 10 to 15 years? 
standing ficient proof I think to show that the 
combin: n be successfully dd out. But your 
lty which 
others sometimes have in ge Pr a mma n to fill one or 
hae other Mes separately. secret is in getting 
an in the t place ; ;" let him pete: woes 
that and 88 his salary in proportion 
a differen 
Societies, 
HORTICULTURAL: 
n Employer? will find that there is at Fini 
of 1507. p es. Equity. fro 
process, in 
any deterioration of. the flour, so that "by t his process 
e flour which would CET alum = the 
Dr. Odling in fe. 
REMAINS is a trono. Te first 
at. 4 the 
fossil to which I tu sk of 
en "e arva of 1 prataria, feeding 
a 
i his coun 
agria concolor, Eupit 
na, &c.; he also exh 
viculare. cLachlan exhibited afi 
phe gent 
meier had recently ‘noted ee bey 
iz: Sept, 20. —Mr. Edmonds in the 
chair. On th pv Fruit Committee met at 
pucr Garden of the So Society, chiefly for the purpose of 
examining the varieties of Grape in in fruit in the large 
atory, of which a repo: appear hereafter. 
It was intimated to the Committee that C. W. Dilke, 
Esq, to place at the l for 1860 two 
lying | on its p bas 14 feet 
f the s 
um 
ivi “surface 
x otices 0 of pets 
Journal of a Voyage to estrak 
705 Magnetical rece da * 
y's 
magneti 
— * ore than 4 fee - ch the mariners’ compass i 
prese a a ur oni per rs. Veitch exhibited | whole tusk natur the soil, the the|the journal of a 
a collection of Syrian Peaches Nectarines, pit ivory Dun — * Se * the anew) a — . 
on an open south wall at “Exeter without de With | movin it to n be: alte, te ee PRA . 1 ee ote the journal 
of fruits was eigen iy 3 peng ie is eeu wh x d per io authority o of the Scoresby, with the ohjeet of observing, 
om, which take magnetic 
E ker, Mesi ir met fpei her "je s | I presented the fossil ; —: aun. I pore to sav. proceeding tate to a sou 
: ogi 9 gem m the MA ues E by Tenor notwithstanding the z latitude, and of deciding oertain 
wholly removi ed to t be | ipe bones scias found. m! 1 len c balote "d Leal pi 3 " 
No. 9; fr = eno roundish — vin very d and two m b pn th, peni, ALME Ago 8 mucha di uestions which 
mis ie E TT they were not a great way from | at „ directed during the 
o vi ne of the latter was large, weighing | subject of controversy 
cbe thi lus, though, from long use, h w Royal; and related to 
Dk bus I infer that the mammoth to which it | the rolled and ham 
onged must have been reat About | is chiefly composed, the ch 
a e same time, I obtained several bones of a large | undergoes, and the mode of co 
w e De in M mor pact nature, the compass ca 
h yed; an e tibia and one ari the | well-kn mode 
h Ts 08 in glands. | jaw were very perfect, several teet ing in The — application of of magnets ai d soft 
in en, — balf of the jaw was smashed by the . correction Dr. Scoresby, in co 
ck before I saw it; but I saved several teeth. Like others, considered to be not only & 
