49.—1845.] 
THE eens CHRONICLE. 
— 815 
ECK'S $ EEDLING PELARGONIUMS, 1844.—| would rather h iein 3 
Br informs the vee that aan sale of the. above will | diet sal dees Andove +E ee by iin fring g it the poet by ee an Fine nies 
p= a Ja nuary Ist, 1 pi $46, The sm nall portion remaining Bed over pauper, tha arge one by open soil, aad not in Bots. Paes are ae pie 
are a ponk lish in inch pots. — propos: rman. MEE ER ner tt ce wil 
the: lection after the ne f 1846, n pam ra 
Send out be ee newts e! o ‘She: ote =e “these remar arks by numberless | tage of doing so . We peels, en to reconsider the 
Ee = 5 e subject of the Pines gen at Bicton| matter. That sc is possible, the results = Thornfield 
POTATOES FROM THE SCILLY ISLAN y Eii NES, and at Thornfield b y Mr. Ha MIL- | sufficiently prov hey wish for ocular demon- 
W.E E. a << Ape a E a ortun mi A n| has Be toe say ag he o pime a Bo them look at what Mr. Iveraw is doing 
ES ich ace un is culti- m er Majesty’s „garden a t Fro ogmore, where th 
shoe fr ee fi rom the. Zo the Rev. dimai; oe ey be found mo a vating the Pine ; that both are mene Eio cutting hl 
deners Chronicle last week, Page 801. in ots, or exposing P Pines to y kind of check ; , That paron: gai in the attempt we kno w: but. we 
PI outh, Dec. of “let ce on pole tee Ay they principally differ in su bordinate The Pine- appa will not root 
ym: Fa Barnes preferring to grow his Pines in ae =ple kes to dos 
ots, Mr. w as 
The anea  Chronide, me r. HamiLtoN in the „Open hong and, that the Pine. ms abhors a If the soil 
ge, |b s ke ept, open and w arm the l hole dim 
— eee 
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1845. 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKE, 
eer S itinn is = pea 
rom 6 to 7lbs.; ae at, in 
variety 
“18 341 
2 cut, weighing in 
; and that 
us eli 
Ow. instead 3 ake } 
his pie cal plants, 
culty vanishes; f 
cultiy, ation ofthe plan 
aot better be abandoned i per- 
sons well capable of jodang e corr oe ‘that we shall 
some day have ¢ ve aye of 10 Ibs. weight. 
ee It wouldnot posi 
c cut at "Frog gmore some da 
on to the contrary, try mu 
favour of the sa ectation, 
Tn short, now that Pine- -apples are treated jike spe 
tl th So long 
| gardeners persevered ia os their roots ast s Per 
uld a horse’s tail, a 
aha 
ay. 
ch in 
ey 
onder was that the Pines 
S to imitate 
did not refuse to grow 
It appears that although ai 
erop is diseased, yet the ats Semis rather in 
july were sound, a nd that some thousand bushels 
fight be ob tained. 
orsica can also furnish a few Kindra tons; no 
n 
cue 
2 
ofsi 
| pe Oi steed is > use, says one, ofa Queen Pine 
_ Let t it not be su “pposed that such remarks as these 
okie pr r ? twoof 8 Ibs 
Ww dot 
thes 
i; Pin 
g 
Ws ? cries che forgeuimg pb h 
g so which 
rough Ea un der. aondoe. 
ı hand. The y have, in fact, a universal bearing 
upon “fortalir, as we must endeayour to show 
eek. 
Tae season has- now arrived when P PLANT 
ou 
growers i= ribe their mode 
of ened 
grammar; sneer at their u un- 
ut. eero wo 
= 
a 
o produce eet in park scenery. 
ses Errors in 
planting are aniey Ra wors b 
epg 
indifference hov 
n describes his pate vin it i is intel 
and ith those who, 
abuse 
le 
eing Ahon 
"i r Ce 
The o y be altered page to the means or 
capric owner ; 10 o the noble Oak or the 
Wr rt 
when their magnifice t pr oportiqna are developed, 
or the 
= the same fault, 
Ther hee: us of the drunken |; 
fall 
a much higher a = on 
the 
Amone the poina of the mere cultivators of 
E wil ‘hat 
Class 
men so 
what ts, i 
‘asc! He = ante, iced pueri!” r 
changes his damp, dirty, smoky 
arai and ven- 
o the flail 
Ai 
‘‘quamyis lapis omnia nudus 
amosoque PE obducat Sma junco,” 
is by no means, of n 
a 
; gardener 1 
le 
a great many wooden — A um 
: led * ge gathod aai gether under a 
is right. z 
> Thin 
ves | in Tele ht, as weighed 
ber 
f mai of the Thornfield Pines :— — 
2 184 
fellow ith his 
into the gutter He him: 
The fact that the Bieton and Thornfield noaa are 
of ce is sufficiently 
mon 
ourselves some time since oon eee from Mr. Pur- 
LIPS, of Thornfield, the employe 
Montserrat Pine, sent as a fai 
duce of his Pine-honses, concerning which we can 
nly say that a more beautifully ¢ gromo Joib or one 
as more excellence, we never saw. e also |; 
eceived, by the kind mee sion of aly aes 
apecimen.o of Mr. Mid s’s Queens, of hick the fol- 
lo wee isa are 
aches in socomiorengr? inches | 
ie 60 The num- 
of pips in height cag as a noble fruit 
ee gtd rly fr om ei bace to ie top, w whick 
was terminated b l fort 
size of the j uit. The pips were Jar rge and w 
swelled, possessing in a high dake that rich ely 
which is pier omens cof ut gor! cul- 
had lost its t sio 
mrade for tumbling ‘hand of 
to the 
za | matured je reflection and experience, defines the 
we too often to our morithenan fed them blemishes 
rather th ts of the landscape. In build- 
; they are 
| unavailable to ue xi embellishes ks and 
n | Clothes with a zf orp the naked surfaces 
itted to hi rule or line is s epe 
one, 
No 
| to suppose, | -an individual 
has ae yn sino in some profession or other, 
tha pes 
y sg i i 
erect out drives 
important and dificult ecomabeted with the residence 
E a country gentleman, cannot be so treated with 
uccess, Itis s scarcely — ma the untrained eye 
Fo uld discover the — ch planting is 
| capable p S y” dit tisi 
pA oti res Sidi t Cheadle Heath, near | Stock- 
t 
| has 
JAMES Newron, | 
ne 
d per- |; 
oan a report that the Hassitonian system | 
pro 
zeal, cy Mrak — points most susceptible o 
aracter ; bat it is BT Ti- true in many 
2 i artially o, far more extensively than 
mit. Let 
or a industrious and talented 
own experience, that the 
fruit, I reg mg» 
which skill aoe 
embellishment; or 
easily rpe rh 
ing ie S t us take, for e e eio at of a tr os gre set the on, pit here was of many gl aring instances of this in all 
cussions that have been going on for excellent flay and as far as a lly cloudy drosti ate “thal we F ot page tes for drawing 
ars past as to the cultivation of the Pinz-| and wet summer would permit, of good size and colour. attention just now to ich we do in the 
E. It is undeniable that a large number of gar- | The pit was built in August, 1844, and ia the fo rasa hope that, with the c cane season, gentlemen will 
are to befound who pertinaciously insist upon | 208th 50 planted in it, 45 of ause Tee hee comm al to imprudent hands the 
ods beii infinitel taner strong and healthy maiden plants, 35 of these of embellishing their domains, or allow their 
enter g meyi ge tae within 12 months, rong oats = Ibs. 5 | ia dyisers to disfigure what a a honu uni by sioleiben of 
p of heavy Pines, because some- i ga e pianie ate whos gh g = first se a of taste. It should be — 
now and then grown a single cut within 12 a Hori Be scree 29 a 10 oz. z. avoir- that tre i ~ = objects oe sta 
er days; who sneer at the so- | dupois,and I haye no doubt by pursuin cat Hamiin pone t r ap a -n me eg 
int g an a tools th : 
, Š sia el e aad vail county lik like E ia oy iti is, therefore, of the most 
the res oy pa inted Le either deny jipe Aas produced t this 5 evidence af there being Eige pa arad that we should study well their 
aliogether « or coolly = emand that the e pr roofs | no ex out the Bicton 
egies em for Pines, - shall, for = future, cr sac re rs rati a is only by oe ee with 
Such men to ther to nt. kill i in rt | ne at favourite trees are 
Toots, would be as profit Pino w without Tg Ano diy t 1 the pl of the oodman’ , and re- 
: we one kind of advice aia ea 
Teceive attention as the other. They 
* See the new edition of his excellent “Treatise on the Pine- | 
apple,” lately published, 
as object 
ek dia upon those w hom these 
mai 
