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HORTICULTURAL SHOW

... The centre was composed the larger specimens,— the Cissus, Colei, Dracenas, the larger ferns, and three plants of the bread fruit tree. The most noticeable features of the whole display, many of which have been previously mentioned this year, may be given ...

Published: Saturday 21 August 1869
Newspaper: Watford Observer
County: Hertfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 323 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

CURIOUS TREES

... loud report. The shells are worked into cups and a great variety of other useful and ornamental household utensils. The bread fruit tree. Here is something useful well curious. Would that it grew somewhere besides in the Pacific. The fruit attains the size ...

CURIOUS TREES

... loud report. The shells are worked into cups and a great variety of other useful and ornamental household utensils. The bread fruit tree. Here is something useful as well as curious Would that it grew somewhere besides in the Pacific. The fruit attains the ...

Corn Exchange, Cambridge. CABINET MAKERS AND UMOLSTF.RERS STOCK-IN-TRADE, COMPRISING DRAWING-ROOM FURNITURE of ..

... but which she failed to do. The Tropical Department of the Crystal Palace now contains a fine specimen of the African bread fruit tree Encephalartos tridenta) beating its colossal fruit. There are 2399 males and 213 females engaged telegraph operators ...

Published: Saturday 17 October 1863
Newspaper: Cambridge Independent Press
County: Cambridgeshire, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 1456 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

MISCELLANEOUS

... lich was common to them all. Ihe Tropical Department of the Crystal Palace now con- tains a fine specimen of the African bread fruit tree (encepba- lartos tridents), bearing its colossal fruit, presenting a very novel appearance. ...

Published: Friday 09 October 1863
Newspaper: Essex Standard
County: Essex, England
Type: Article | Words: 1168 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

ADVERTISEMENTS

... (Artocarpus incisa' are eaten. In the islands of the South Sea, grain of every kind disappears ; its place being supplied the bread fruit tree and the pisang. In the tropical parts of New Holland there is no agriculture. Nature does all the work: the inhabitants ...

BURY HORTICULTURAL SHOW-

... vinery contains some good specimens of black and wlitte grape.s In one house is rockery, with waterfall, and a banana, bread-fruit tree. At the otherend of the mansion pinetum, where v planted a great variety of valuable firs, from different parts of the ...

Published: Saturday 08 July 1865
Newspaper: Bury Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 955 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

Anonvma,” the “lady” alieut whom »

... and whom the Timm even honoured a'r ial artwe. aalrt at present keeping large In the west-end of London. The African bread fruit-tree in the tropical department the Crystal I’alace is now in full bearing, presenting very curious and interesting appeiirance ...

Published: Saturday 17 October 1863
Newspaper: Bury Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1090 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

FUNERAL OF THE LATE DuKE OF CLEVELAND.— The funeral of the late Duke of Cleveland took place on Tuesday, at

... the emancipation in Jamaica? The negroes came from slavery entirely destitute ; their cottages were destroyed, their bread, fruit trees, their cocoa nuts, and yams were destroyed ; they had scarcely any clothing when they bade farewell to the slavery from ...

Published: Tuesday 20 September 1864
Newspaper: Bury and Norwich Post
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1312 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

Reviews

... or hardier rye, of oat, or thinner rice, or oil-ebounding maize. Freely for him the palm, the date, the banana, the bread-fruit tree, the pine, spread | out a harvest on the air; and pleasant apple, plum, or peach solicit his ready band. Beneath his ...

Published: Saturday 30 March 1861
Newspaper: Cambridge Independent Press
County: Cambridgeshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3115 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... were burning in the houses, as if the people had just fled. They pulled dowu 20 houses and cut down the cocoanut and bread-fruit trees, and all other fruit trees. Next day some of the houses were burnt down, and in a day or two all the houses were burnt ...

Published: Tuesday 26 May 1868
Newspaper: Bury and Norwich Post
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 2965 | Page: 7 | Tags: none