a ee T ee mT 
— 
101852. THE GARDENERS: CHRONICLE. 149 
sion never could be enjoyed without trespass the | it is removed from the parent plant. Hence such cann eye, or the glow-worm, to the semi-metaliic brilliancy of 
nd aee a rae —2— 2 — si igi quoted with ss be called ordinary N nor . Llike boracite. u beautiful phenomenon, to whatever ak. 
instr 2 * 2 
is 11 d, wherein it was set forth, that it was inexpedient to depend o 1 hem for the production of perfect fruit; stance i t may be attac at ee. any quantity of 
divide entire * into heer = — such | but, Giolitti that a Pine requires five months from the moist earth of the cave, that may be gathered up in 
portion s in fractional parts, even though the integral occu-! the time of “showing” before it ripens,—in that case, the hand; br rought to the light of day it disappears, 
longed to different landlords, nie — the several 5 and 
farts an belonged so to enhance the value of the whole.” Mr. those at Chatsworth only had one month for growth, | the collector is left w ith a lump of worthless dirt, in 
which is certainly a little for an ordinary Providence | place of the seeming . Nor will its beauty, though 
occupation ; ; — . — — “vexata Seog E P whether — Pine sucker. I had always considered that Providences, it return for hile, prove of long duration, even when 
uses, as stock in trade, cou e brought in ie . ioe b fi 2 l t 
ment, — if assessable, not being separate but combined Cayennes, and Montserrata pigie longer time in re arkness n 
—— 1 a to confer vns upon land? Can they be 
sed otherwise than as land improved thereby ? A which 
latter case, those deductions 1 by 6 and 7 
cap, 96, fi value, being the cost of eee 
repair s, and reinstalment —— to be performed to com- 
mand * gery 8 1 pie consume the sum of the 
— Bp from and leave the rate — 
: m d 
ipening han Queens; an am sure 8 if Sir J. pelled, the charm is broken, and, its 1 once 
Paxton — kindly give your readers some account betrayed, the false light of the moul dering earth seems 
of his management and _ = the size -i his perseg he | incapable of keeping up the delusion. The mysteries 
would N favour on many. Š gal, Ireland. | of mines and metals hav e, in Germany, been from 
[The above has been — to Sir — Paxton, old times associated with Are tales of the su- 
E the following is r reply. At eee the | pernatural A cated of gnomes and kobolds, who are 
sucke on the parent We until supposed to guard them, and to punish in vari 
spring, when they are T a A nd planted out at ways the trespasses of avaricious man into their subter- 
once into the fru ruiting beds. The ‘hires anes alluded | ranean empire. What more mischie ous, and at the 
breaking of glass, throug’ Sa therwise, i e i T, than to e a 
from the constant operation we ae — clo which ripened and was cut at the end of August. | laborious search after gold which, with an irony worthy 
on of a ature required t to be sustained, glasa = being Cayennes grow as quickly as any other sort, and produce | of Mephistopheles, they cause to turn to dust in the very 
frost in winter, “tod abi tH lity rt at parai arii 3 better fruit, superior in weight to any other kind of the hands that have gathered it? Applied to avarice, the 
through hail storms in Besides which, there are | Same age ; they have ~ nae with us 9} cpl and are | lesson is the same as that taught by the story of the 
many repairs, paioting, Co., included in the charges of main- certainly the best winter es which can be grown. | Dead Sea Apple as applied to pleasure, but the romantic 
* 1 F produce * that season cai weighing | humour of the German legend gives an additional zest 
Ib: he 
such an amount as would absorb and swallow up any reason- è 
able interest on 4 — cost, suis might be — in the from 4 7 lbs.; but some persons have grown to the truth of its moral. Luc rg, t 
light of yearly rental, so that the respondent parish, even if the | Havannahs under the name of Cayenne, and the dif- | tain, has an evident relation to the e phenomena of phos- 
— 1 net heir favour, would, at the best, have 9 ference in the plants is not very perceptible until they phores ce; the name of the animal itself bein 
£ , frui re a wi m i 00 
Mr. Paine’s report concluded with the following ot ti suckers of any kind than from old plants, provided the |i eye, and so man ron etymologies are discoverable 
— e 8 such a suckers show fruit whilst the roots are in an active — the lan . of northern Europe, that this need 
define je its E . See ize d i ly 0 t i 
Z i cy eal signification, of es acess e the rate- roots at the time of showing. The fruit cut at Chats- nosity 2 Is it phosphorescent Moss or minute fungi, or 
foe * r a worth during the summer of 1851 Be concert ws. e s the rotten wood itself beco 0 
and 5o am guous, vague purport ; while commenced in 3 and ended in September: decayed animal Wer, without the intervention of a 
lbs. oz Ibs. igh 
f 
© 
© 
3 
pE 
JE 
5 
5 
it 7 be Er more difficult to state pe — next the im 
nt p 
that the premises gry be — to the two surveyors, Mr. a 
Paine on beh r. Lane, who was appointed to meet — ai 
parochial — — 0 dete ermine the future value of Mr. Lane se tility, 
oecupation exclusive of *tenant’s rights PR 1 srt 5 s - : 1 i 
such survey were to be born by the parish, p 5 Cayenne „ e 5 in the hope of discovering the means of produeing a suf- 
„ 9 Z . . Cayenne „ 36 . u e 3 bit light for useful purposes without fire. S. 
$ oe eS pe | M r.—I suspect that there are peculiarities 
3 Cayenne oiidid: with the habit of this tree, which have not 
) Do, hi 
3 os ” 
vee FE] 
1 
Home Correspondence. 1 
Vines in Pots.— The practice of page hore in api ss 
has become pretty common of late years 2 
; eas i 
R ne as cayenne 25 . 
the same plants may be grown for a series of years in ” 
the same pots, or have the means of accomplishing such | , 
feats as the Messrs. eg OG who, in the course of | » 
the same season, from single eyes, can produce good) * 26 5 8 Cayenne 
crops, and also ripen them. That, indeed eclipses the , 91 sent you a lea Pia zen from a Horse Chestnut which is 
tetas : eee ’ who, some years ago, under-| The See 4 Tr ade. Waite v. Swain growing in Huntsmore Park. The tree anara roduced 
omg 5 Ky Tee planted in a prepared border | the Court of Common Pleas, 3 at p. 71 of the it is about = feet high, — about the same in diameter. 
nt Dearing fi e loci ee g Daile noes part o! your paper Tds oE A poo many yenne past it aa mover edt being 
plan of prepari K in One 7 ka Oe amare fin his decision has established a bad precedent, and one | forth da leaves about the Ist of March, and this year 
sie — paring Pot Vines, is to strike them in small | whic may give much trouble. According to the evi- |I observ e buds open in February. The frosty 
wer 5 in spring. Shift them once or twice | dence of the defendant, it appeared “that the seeds winds of * 1 afeti blacken and destroy a portion of 
i The fol? and endeavour to get the wood well | s supplied, particularly the Potato seeds, were of a different the foliage, but in some seasons it aopa unhurt; it 
— — So see spring I place them in their | sort to those ordered, and of — inferior quality.“ In | blossoms late, and has small flower spikes. 
soil Toc en y shaking away all or most of the | his ju 3 re rd Chief Justice said, “In respect to | very little growth, and hardly ever ripens fruit, and it 
eir Toots, and sometimes coiling a portion of | some of the i n the e unt, the seeds een retains its leaves in autumn after other trees of the 
plunge th inch or two beneath the mould. I then Altogether failed, the plant e kind are quite bare. The soil of the park is a 
Eve em in a gentle hotbed, and when the shoots are regards t 5 ough = canal | bl black alluvial deposit o nl loose gravel, and is very 
fae eet in length, I remove them to a Vinery, placing pr to that ik red, the defendant aks ber and Bucks, Ma rch 2. 
against the back ut 4 fi 
1 noo 41 
Cayenne „, 49 Trinidad one complete ä in three years, and so ascends 
35 o like a screw ? aps some of eer r readers will obli- 
gingly answer these questions. Eben 
Early Leafing in the case of a Horse Chestnut.—I have 
He You 
ab the 125 : ha opting my 
plump’as th end of the season, the lower buds are as| thus it appears, that, let a seedsman supply whatever | culation may be found to be deficient ; but I can assure 
those at the upper ends of the shoots, — are | rubbish he ory he can recover its value in a court of him, that if the heating apparatus be kept low and 
when they are 7 or 3 feet in length, an d are justice. No tig es my pemg. this is rae Supposing | well under the house, with a free ingress of external 
ey recei 5 ase ai 
air passing un n 
t eee ee ae 3 were - sufficient seed a 1 Kidney Potatoes to plant ascend into the house and esca 
2 . — . 2 d — 
plants ; = bei in that respect. 
and 1 then t they had been a catefll attended t es directly they are ready for market, and plant the With regard to the iron plate and clay covering, the 
trained wes om 3 here they were ground for = sna crop with Celery. But instead of first has stood the fiery ordeal for several years 
I am, aaea the g the grand secret of 9 the Tün haog cleared KA 5 middle of July, as hc Aaaa, ; as for the latter it might answer 
which har 2 puzzled to know what to do with plants would be the with Ash-leaves, they prove to be better than brick arch, though not so durable. 
Tam „ e I generally throw them away ; but Chapman's or Cambrid eshire Kidioys, and are not fit fidoi a pit w ranni might be Polmaised without 
in pots places his that a very successful grower to dig until October. en the crop, instead of being | either, by a common flue, provided oh was kept well 
strong heat th plants, which have borne fruit, in a | worth, say 10s. per bushel, only realises one-fourth of under the house in a hot chamber, communicating with 
ped e following season, and when n they ispa ibat sum, and I lose my crop of Celery also. Now in the external air, W. Fitzsimon, C l. Havin; 
the leaves, cuts them down, shakes (even this case, instead of paying Dodge and Co. the value of read the articles in your late numbers relative to this 
from y show an a abundance of of fait 9 "o the soil | their seed, I contend T ought to recover from them the system of heating plant-houses, I think it due to the 
3 eri i e la * t A 2 
E 
= 
for another season. Now, Po lery (less | Meek’s place, and s i 
It is like 1888 to be wasting tlie energies of the plants. the expenses of cultivation) which I should have had, | stove, I employed his builder to put 7 one for me in a 
he begins w ing a labourer walk a long journey before | if the 8 supplied had been true to name. What | co mservatory, and subsequently had two others built by 
Would it not no be If they are worth keeping at all, say you? W. P. A., Blackheath. [We say that you are our village workmen, one in a Vinery, and the other for 
them, in better to cut them down before oe right in Eea whatever you may be in Jaw.] a hot stove house. All these stoves have been in use 
might be r that the — stored opis n their roots Zumi —Among the primitive range of the ever since, that is, three or four entire sosu aes rae 
he turned te usefu 3 unt? J. M Fichtelgebiree, so named from its Pine forests, in the complete success. There was lately a slight — 
ta Sir J at C ms observe at page 64, centre of Germany, is a mountain called the Luchsberg. | gas in the stove house, proceeding from a minute crack in 
oseph sree ei has produ ceda Providende Pine- It appears as if composed of huge rounded fragments of | the iron plates. cof fat s defect was easily re acA 
. j A lacin, i 
jad viz., | great nibe d profound nee owing not less to prevent any of gas between the 
, viz. extent an ‘oun ae ee - 
sa can be the overhanging rocks, a to tall Pines that spring brick — and the hot plate. This liability of the re 
ri from their erevices. In the r of these | plate „„ 8 
just quoted | recesses, there lim: iow tipo the damp soil, —— ~ s . 
n Brovjtenes; sometimes in ee tal quantity, a number of lumi- hothouse, which has been in a heated state with few in- 
aid th the greeni termissions for some y s, is the only one that has 
gold. Its 
Hae 
SS 
75 
5 
E 
F 
af 
m 
i 
S 
ll it acquires a somewhat between 
tls ig rm the mao 
