952 
the subject of the present remarks. Men imagine 
that the Vine must like a soil which aia in no | 
place where it naturally gro see a Cab- 
bage thriving on a dunghill, and RE, they 
conclude t that a Vine must love nghill also. 
They 
and luxuriating in warm mist t, and ae 
their memorand um book the axiom that . “Vine 
must like a heated sw o of the 
g err’ 
gardening books we 
angaa as for a magical inca: 
trails th: 
Toad, he nights hast thirty-one 
Swelter’d venom sleepi. 
Boil thou first i’ the c 
ing got, 
armed pot ! 
e 
ae 
Ex 
aa 
e 
Of the raven’d salt -sea shark ; 
Root of Hemlock, digy’d ?’ the-dark ; 
Liver of blaspheming ew; 
Gall of goat, and slips of Yew,” &c., &., &e 
e beg pardon of our learned friends who 
pa Bae se Vine-border m mixtures ; we are far from 
nsiotiting that they are really th or capable of | 
bewi itching anything ; pa really the witches’ pre- | 
h lik e of theirs to be for- 
gotten. Sweepings of unea road scrapings, 
rotten Oak leaves, old tan, bricks, aaa 
g 
English 
many ingredients —_— red for a Vine 
country the summer heat of which is equal to that | 
of oe Fra: 
Itn 
m a statement in the Daily 
cent experim pro India: 
to possess’ not only all the analities necessary to 
make a good = but to b many respects 
any to ra The discovery OW 
allude is a Snn success, and may be e 
xercise the greatest irika vok the o prios | of 
u Corn, in countri 
g rat an be eåsily Gultivated k 
ja mae more than sufficient to satisfy the utmost 
paper market. ides, as rags 
are likely to fallin price, owing to the extensive 
supply resulting from this new element, the 
RS’ CHRONICLE AND “AGRICULTURAL eee 
{Ocrozrr 27, 1860, 
cultiva Kb slur upon the 
soe harsh to pS pines the Orange is n 
eee in ae no a at the pres 
rly h tur, he 
a dra 
‘own in Derbyshire i in 1813, Weighing ae 
7 | girthing 13 inches ; and thes 
but thin-skinned 
of 
trained oe he ba 
pletely with tho 
trained T ht 
lises, while eed 
Eri and in ees 0 
t the Bo 
Por 
ihe wall, they covered 
eystematio “regular of the 
e; other ined on table trel- 
com- 
pide ttn on we a e standard and dwarf 
of larger size than any in the country 
t time, rees: 
seen 
world of writers and readers noch ‘seem 
rig! future before = than the bolde Si 
im time 
ve lap: 
Talienenthy made to continue manufactu 
u- | not only the ‘most iiy bat the ts wh y inted 
I have ever even up to t time. 
P 
t| A dish of full sia "and thoroughly shaban Oranges es, 
cut with a small _ a leaf or two, and som 
few fi dished 
+}. 
were baffled by the phate of removin 
See 
But if you require 
Ages 
4 
oe th 
P 3 
E ae SS T 1 +} 
will not be found 
An bhi Eki desa 
blade. 
eet, pes is gue “to She cleverace of one 
ny 
of hides, hai trails of a shee T 
mae ioe ee sre a LIER, Monty’ Draws, æ Jewish wridog master i404 etsy mont no m E a 
all recommended in turn one ingenious Anstein = 3 ch hore wt p | Planting the Vine ee ae “ in its native Vi neyard, 
iter or another, to say nothing of other S hee gelmi made e at the Taparia? matory and then grumbling at the seasons because t is tas 
unsayoury ingredients. And yet a Vine is simple ha pe s e, near Glognitz (Lower Aus smi | do not here the same ‘mount of perfection. 
in its tastes, clean in its habits, and abhors gar- | 285 Comp els demonstrated the certainty of th What, then, are the eee pp de 
bage. It lo ir, arm Sai , andin ees Although the machinery, arrange od oer to “le attained? First t, we must have, as 
the latter part of its season a fier Give it as for the manufacture of rag-paper, could | can get it, an Italian summer, with abun t moi 
that and it has all that its consi PTET A ps of course, fally answer the req and the te inecabure varying from 45° to 70° by ni; 
err DIAMANT, resu ts of the essay were|and from 7 100° in bright sunshine during the 
- If we look around we find examples enough, x z ae 
‘some record f which i to be f a3 8% | wonderfully Ta able, The article produced | day. With this swelled ing te ture we 
of which is e e dop in our own wae oka pario Raikes ust get ; the fruits it ions; and 
I 1s ir, 
- The fine 
-JonN OnN WitMor, of Isleworth, ry ‘their bred hes 
‘clay, cinders, and har d. rubbish, Mr. 
wsumaY’s Vines grew ina cathe walk. eN 
Mr. GLENDINNING, .at Turnham Green, had 
eed upon except a pathway of 
y_and common black garden mould. 
ex 
‘then 
ape but not Aos piore a 
ou want a thick skinned, 
The orate tor on the inyention is Coun t CARL 
Ocravio Zu LIPPE WEISSENFELD, = several 
peters ae the follo owing results : 
- It y possible e every variety of 
pa jal from A bde of Indien A but the wi Fe 
is equal, and in et respects even superior, to the 
age, and about as g 
Modia, noy an prevailing fashio 
from June to 
“the 
vou a ono 
has pot 
the sii tiny of m. 
you! r obj ect will | be attai ned to the 
skin 
Ses te 
| ar ae seca from rags. 
e paper requires but very little size to render it 
y lit 
fit “or Saa purposes, as the dee beni contains 
gred die » Which 
arge | proport ion of | that nenea 
wholly unsupported ey evidence 
wows example of the error in suppos 
Vine requ — tos amase mixtures 
TA ded by- the 
plants now growing rt ae 
the Horticultu ral Society at ofisi Weve su 
that no one w thei 
ing that the 
first | 
manure, to give 
of which are 
start ; ae note in a bani of are jhe ie 
held to, soapy loa 
lesirable. 
3. eaching is effeci 
rapid i r cile process, g indeed, fi 
d by a an n extraordinarily w 
; but 
tle thie tian 
d treat i 
light coloured anang paper the proc ess becomes 
tirely unnecessary. 
E The Tndiat possesses greater ‘strength |t 
or the 
mG n paper 
and tenacity than rag paper, without the 
the comm 
hla El h } 
of ae so conspicuous in 
products, 
i "No machinery being required in the pore st 
of this paper for the purpose of tearing up a 
peer and reducing we to pulp, the expense, b oth i in 
wer and time, is far less than is necessary 
uction of viet g pap er, 
t LIPPE having pi eet = communication’ 
with ‘the Austrian Govern Imperial — ufac- 
= 
z 
e 
inventor urse of construction. at 
S Vine = 
and into it the ots have hdi 
penetrated for 10 fect. Ss Swan is that a 
nat good soil affords a V the fo ed it 
wants, provided the cther conditions of vigorous 
growt wth arefully ensured and skilfully 
e ex a 
husks of I Indian Corn, mish, ae not articles | 
oe tory for Indian Corn 
| delighted to see 
calls it) is 
Eat the weer 
untry in Euro 
full operation i in n Switz erland ; preparatio 
the Medi terranean for the 
t| produc tion and exportation on a large scale of the pulp 
= new material. 
h a re the statements 
| Profitable use 
ORANGE TREES AND ron ee 
ALLING a short tae back at Sawbridgew was 
the large provision which Me “tasers 
has made and is making for the introduotion of t 
Covent Garden 
` While oem anges can Be re Fought in fhe ari of good 
ae at“ "vee a are three a eet — pect: te it 
may be Foe a step to atte to grow them 
a mi lation in antry. Mr. 
Riv vers ebinks ‘it woaid Pay, “ond H have it ttle doubt tot | 
oak m nme ri Tight, the principle pera 
te ite chante vet 
give T per Ib, for hothouse se Grapes 
in preference to Taba G3 As. to 1s. 6d., 50 of 
they a remunerative price for the finer kinds 
Oranges, w really superior A 
are; while th 
cultivatio 
the horticultural world more 
enting Dares wel jon of OE 
trees and their als sty among Ù? 
h eo 
whole, pecia! 
eailtivation in this omir and trees, too, scone 7e 
most hens a ted in horticaltural matters may $0 
learn es 
pegs u 
Gas houses, bap enough ; hs Mes det 
colina 
g 25 fet ‘wide, 5 feet high a of the sides, dos and 12 al 
roof, whicli par had put up foot 
just 26s. per all 
one 
of English agricultur roducible in every 
Tangier and other sweet Oranges rchard-house | 
