1648. THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE, 
Swale gies an i — indication of what is to be. 
ve a with the Azalea, whose — 
buds ne es in t 
wi 1 of this tribe 
TT 
gar 
d 
robably — — 
varieties. At resent Mt is by g use 
the Azalea displays Padt bana and 
apply to that alone. Those who have 
— 1 in arden know vey 
ust do more yi ne than they 
right kind of soil, 
pond procure 
Ed hardiest 3 and have besides 
warmest spo island ; 
ant 
. 
* 
& 
uty 
e 
ted by seed 
is for —— the finer sorts upon; 
when the tender kinds may be 
vital ju 1 5 noe nee 
s. When struck, the you 
eee 
0 
when th 
ul comparatively motionles 
have 
n —4 seasons 0 
8 ig how- 
the plan 
ng growth i te zalea, as is indicated by its 
res great heat, and will obtain a 
n 
attained its extent, e air e given 
— 8 a prepare the plan for 
ing, the deci- 
uiring less moisture igh those which 
February the bloom will become 
and more air and water should then 
ABLES, 
3 * n respecting the 
be, Cabbages, Broccoli, yore 
e following may be 
aS 
P È 
ay 
many of the other kinds 
a 
* 
pi TI 5 who vs an opportun ay m 
aly ea this is 
probably . +H 
seed saving fr 3 from the 
of England: ood 
the Early Ch bastion: 
early Cabbage, n 
„ none co. the 
Variety is known to e the ribs 
1 8 
s must have every advantage of light and air, acd land 
ee shiftings, to secure a vigorous development, 
into bloo — — 
4 you will go; 
the nature of the | an 
K a a seyt 
; Ben of F succeeds ie eitig. Fair- 
à len tha 
stron sticks, 
8 ev 
the dwarf cooks more tend 
8 — d Cabbage is best 
olt,— Grange’s 
Fine White Cape, Knight’s Pro 
now’s Superb 
supply the whole season. 
Letiuces.—As a Cos Lettuce for 
o not soon run t 
a ne 
speckled 
Wilm 
8 Bie Bel 
g’s New Fr rench ee, 
ods 
excee din 
the silver-skinned 
er than theother. The Small | 
for picklin 
arly Cauliflower, Hammond's | 
teeting Wal 
c 
White, may be considered sufficient 
In fact, — alch 
may he made to do this by timely sow 
rsmith Hardy 
saved Lettuce is a very | 
leaves are long, e erect, and * 
et they blanch 3 the plants 
se 
s True Forcing, Cream- 
“ ny 
The is a very sm 
1 y wal adapted for pickling. It is white, like 
„ heren, and 
W aak Use, none is 
are hardy 
or the Negro, 
The latter is a 
mall early variety, 
e Correspondence 
Hom 
ation, or a ie ¢ Yo 
able letters of recommen 
* 
tlemen residing there; but generally the olden is made 
the di 3 ee soil 
state of a ee et to which the 
has n directed from priests 
from what is lear: ned of 
tion 
e | zending. Therefor, i 8 —.— all the information 
0 purp 
n the 
u shou 
d you to associate your 
e them 
r own. you a 
‘ad u will have 
eads i better 
Lh — to 
recomm 
even two it you ne 
chimes in with y 
well acquainted, 
given by t 
ticularly on you al, w en 
prudent conduct 8 80 anch depe 
rth to 
aly . 3 1 to entering on Seat engage- 
was a young fel 
to receive — — — for the 
2 
buffaloes at Quebec, to gkir and cu 
yellow selvages — by but t 
tion to Am 
everything be 
shovel long- — with trea 
a. 
steel. polled and fit for rough wo 
well steeled for a we eeen 
ga 
bret how use . 
AA 
ge ‘iti 
20 feet by 12, with a 5 tition. 
mi 
nd 
830). —The d 
oiled. may e 
be aker thoroughly in fres! 
, sieve „ and was 
> As larger and lat 
e but little rand later 3 
A 5 type of the Battersea, 
Tate Cai Pomeranian f is a very dis- 
hie „conical, with a sharp 
ud a gee 3 
$p the preceding 
sorts of it, a dwarf warf and a tall ; 
s on em re 
ee exceedingly usefu 
ively single 
whose inclination to emigrate 
t you be so silly; ; they found n0 
Pi- found ry empty pocket 
and of th 
r three ‘files to set it with; Le axe 
an 
Work, 
1 edge. Yor ou may 
f 
eaping-hook, kni 
and other trifles that ‘will r 
à things sent - ted Post 
erefore | į 
d Rea 
irty clo ve 
asily be remedied. 
y 
n obtain service- 
r other gen- 
age 
really friends and 
2 the advantage 
than one; and you 
each other in pre- 
r 
low, and be- 
. ing ino 
oe: we'll chas 
t is in England, 
it is 
eee te 
containin 
Bat remem that 
and tear 
Seakale 
he Seakale 
eren —— 80 
Cos though palais mat 
| thre 
Profits o 
| perience of “ L 
shoes made 
gutta percha aean in 
fhin *. betwee 
“Winter 1 Temperature of Stove Plants.— I go sent 
cut flowers house here, which, 
nts, is never as duri 
bi her ** 
„ 
_ | fro 
inside the house, but without having any 
oa bem nd what the house a an 
d winter, 
the pant is every season covered w 
year. rig gr splendens t — equal 
well in the summer, and I fi am 
higher colour than those from * ants pct in a w. 
house; in the winter becomes (which, in fact, it 
is) a perfectly rT mr tree. These 
confirm 
era, 
* such as 
no coddling acti ever knew ce 
Mildness * the Season. — This day, (Dee. 1 9,) we have 
seve it grounds in full bloom, 
The sorts ao but one row in particular of 3 
trees, which Hale iy a good crop of Easter 
covered with white blos 
Chronicle of the 2d inst. and whose advice 1 aa 
more value for this very reason, that he states in 
letter that “he has no wonders to relate 
re I 
the 
his 
of some — 
ecord a the subject of pro- 
nig other, no ple 
fi 
ee the plan of f plentiful feeding in autumn, a 
ring, if the weather be very mild, before ‘tous fa 
from which the bees 
or whether (suppos that a 
is sto tored and — ge ene. at the 
between 
L. C. K.“ s . se that all this is consumed at the time, 
and that the supply should be kept up continually, as 
long as they will take it? The other point r — I 
t ad is, how to keep rom deposit 
om 8 the b es an ses. I have two = of N 
2 th all the a tus fox ven 
one on Nutt’s = he e er 
the oth 
8 apparatus; and 1 find very little difference 
between t rds the exclusion of 
very rarel 
£ TE bes fab plan, with very 
ars ‘kept a tag wit = 
re E king, in a fair average season, from 
60 Ibs. from my two sets of boxes; a 
e ee 
ble 
Ibs. 
= 
I nt, in with w 
foe Che grant 1595 fro 
