201848. 
THE ARE — CHRONICLE. 
of our hands 
commen 
af the 
—.— and enjoy the past 
nal and dable. 
It was on Sunday we ad under the above 
ed Crab-tree, and became afresh convinced how 
ent are the resources adie 
N 
=] 
8 8 
* 
5 
— 
2 
Se 
p 
5 8 
* 
erry ue 
compelled us to open our eyes, an dispelled our 2 
It being our allotted task to dwell — es 
the more laborious tions of garden 
—— of this e a ot 
lture never e ts proper 
is linked with intellectual. operations, and has 
on 
A ae poti igible sentence was printed last week ef some 
he 8 is requested to correct the last sentence 
ot . paragraph ae) 
reat enemies of rome pza — 3 to 
Ing. 
tinations without the previous process of pot 
puan NTS, FOR BEDDING, — — THE 
ARDEN. 0 Continued from p. 
ee y do 
nho 
— 4 . — ing a plant of 
— 
2 
PE gages 
g fd 
é 
5 
— 
2 
tra care and attention than wis; — 
ea: with = eee À under reasonable condition, 
Plane the 1 shoul be ene ged until a suffi- 
pi inching Mer re- 
mae Aower-bade w unt the latter end = Sun > 
mon 
gema and its varieties — "Ta 
to indies t the te = 
eto greater f. tility. 
Phea pubigera (syn. 
wths, which will | p 
t holiday of Christendom ; while to walk out | guinea).—This 
bours 
E 
Being qui 
| planted obliquely, 
0 
em — — 
SELECT SPRING AND SUMMER FLOWERING | fe 
FLOWER plan 
a far more 
ous Mana 
Senate it is 
ing — re From its prolifie . — to form 
— wth is 
continued —— throughout the summer and autumn 
Ageralum celestinum x. 
great improvement u 
„ * a 
mess 1 a 
habit, pro 
ong succe 
m a low front bois el a ta 
pliable growth Sinit its 
to 1 2 the entire e surfaco of the bed, 
He 
n permitte 
tted late in autumn, an 
contrasts well 
eutenn flowers.— William Wood, 
rk. 
Fishergate Ni 5. Fo 
Home Sei cena 
aring Silkworms, — In the — 
Godalming I have a friend who i — e endeavour- 
ing to make the rearing of oo — a souree of profit. 
re tick haar 
bed. 
succulent 3 it ieee: — be 080 like plants of 
e, deli have bee 
a 
March as e as February, PAm be 4 Abr = drought 
s e had 
ry li 2 
t expect to be told that young Scotch h Firs a 
Larches, and ey an shrubs, planted in the — * 
ather ich continued uninterrupted] 
L 
peny piae than its pro- | I once pian a first prize 
retty luxuriant grow essential to its | answer 
hin ing 
light rae clusters of Foals fr rom | i 
se Sul until the 5 of fi This den 
wi 
them 
either 23 3 g 
of those e 
ted to bloom bad 
of |i 
N amip past of 
many | o 
| shut 
t while so many eee Ho si 
A which ren- 
dough | bav 
n for 
lake district, 8 Bs Mr. r. Miler, o of 
Bri 
for Cucumbers in 
ning of April, and in a homie a i a the 
ants are, and planted out elons, which gained a 
at Ci ado 
stalks of a 
ing just about 9 
ey I saw in the Gar- 
s 
ad had halt an ick 
25th the stopping 
I already —— that the dwarf s 
are much thicker, and the leaves ver 
2 
E 
then appeared from roken one, and it was said that 
a rude plan ingrensed the volghi ot the crop.—B. B., 
land of Valencia, Come of Kerr 
* e eee L ae my dwelling-house 
ove is N in a cellar, the fire box 
— as top, a 
nearly the whole ti 
by the ash-pit ha and only so akoes iag the fire — 
pa hole. The admission of as 
2 air by t 
ole would at any t heat, 
and m wrs the fel — the damper was close 
W. L. 
Tabaco cco Paper. At p. 2 ra is — that 
had at from 8d. per 
rom 
1 gan et it at either of those places ; it is true yee 
neg 
gat in go-to a month 
1 did g get it 
to, I can 
p 
commen 
ould immediately 
am 
ing dea 
more are waiting to know 
Whitehaven for the sociatio 
most singu r differences | tans — t oly & few Cor antag they too may give their 
miles, I l — up too much space detail 15 
them, interesting though they are, but 1 will mention Erodium 1 Tee 3 33 
three situations which I actually see from my windows: specimens of British p wing * a 
Inches. is considered their 2 eee pom rare 
At this haem last year 36.815 plant, presuming it has propriate n has 
oe eae eee miles cr ++ 98-004 | wandered far away from its ee jy being ing foun so far 
55 . 2 
ol 5 head, about the same de. i. in a dif- inland ily N “pot ere fondes foe 
= cumber 
far 
it at Macefeld, eth on ing hedge-banks, in 
ee here it ae rather plentifully.— John 
Ove the wood fo orest, w 
The greatest quantity measured is at es. | Battersby, Man eld, May 
por owdale, being, * ieee me ae y an pple Blossoms.—* Este” would be glad to know if 
do do., 1845 : . 131.87 amy one has remarked tes unusual of the 
ple blossom this The Ke 
Wet ae at Seathwaite, in — ve és . ++ 202| Ross’s Nonpareils, 
2 „ d this district. It was the case last year, 
ing | erop . full and — 
é The whole of — Miller s * is very interesting | crop was "The Wisiaria si e blossom is 
i very pale, th 
eed.— T. S. P., 10. 
ae tt Ca af i of the fricii Hero Cu- ne i 
—Fro 
ds, and on ue we 
cot gan. in order = dung ; I then soiled 
and pl mall two-li ight ot 
havis lo hae. On ‘the 19th of April I cut three 
| — ucumbers ; one h a 
e 13. 
O 
c 
rous I cut r ruit 12 inches long, a 
and o es. 
were turned out of 5-inch pots; 2. — — 
at the length of 3 or 4 
weaken 
ering. 
tg above the close 
3 I put about 15 inches 
5 oll a 
Cutting Fiver — ag 
ndents asks a ques 
off the flowers of — whi 
In Hollanc 
inths, 
N t th likna io, most 
te leaves a on all; aras allow 
— —— —— 
a dulbs. 
3 loved the above plan in England, and found it answer 
