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Farmer's Gazette and Journal of Practical Horticulture

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Farmer's Gazette and Journal of Practical Horticulture

CLASS P.—SWINE

... s select and rare, there are very fine plants of Antiaris toxicaria, the Upas tree, and Arclocarpus incisa, the true bread fruit tree. April, Among th« plants that ara riobly flowering, in ths first greenhouse we were in, we noted Erica Wilmoreana vernix ...

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... packed peas. 2. The only novelty lately introduced for cattle feeding is the pods and beans of the Locust or St. John’s bread fruit tree (Cercis Siliquastrnm), now being largely imported for that purpose, and exhibited at the late show of toe Kuyal Agricultural ...

These fruits were very large and of the most approved varieties. Mr. L. T. Davis, OpleVgrove, Hillsborough, ..

... ginger plant, in a healthy growth; a Chinese rice paper plant, supposed to the finest specimen in the United Kingdom ; the bread fruit tree, indigenous to the South Pacific Islands; the cow tree, also a native of the southern latitudes, and justly prized for ...

to four weeks, and quite clean then and in good condition, irettiD’ full of yellow scurf on the back and

... fear, in our country only fit for a hothouse.” The locust bean is the Ceratonia siliqua; it is also called St. John's bread fruit tree; it has been long time an inhabitant of our greenhouses, and we don’t know that it has ever been tried whether hardy ...

FAIRS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK

... specimen ? Heligoland. Are the locust and lick bean the same?— The locust b«an is the carol* bean, or seed St. John’s bread fruit tree; quite distinct from the tick. The latter is an annual plant; the former tree, requiring the protection of greenhouse ...