THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



e an'early i* 



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infenial heat for a long time, and can have the 

 2rJ; nnewed when it becomes.- 

 j.nfn'reDiring this rather unpoeti 



rieh common things may be adorned by genius. 1 > 

 a, principal operations in building the hotbed 



»de, that all parts may sink equally. Tiw_dung 



"Jili, and it has soon sunk to one. A good plants to 



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fabiet 6 WMOn ' ^ ut if a .g°' ,u bed for general pur- 

 * e "e»»Uso n f W ' t ^ ere Wil1 be sufficiem li ' u « i t 1 1 i 1 



,''. '.."." - ! 

 hh * H0me Corres Pondence. 



^car^gTsf 1 abou d t sowin s °" ions 



^i^^^ftlnT'a^dS^ 

 j^SS'^^^ilguiste? 



^l^rTlO. PPear ' note »ough for acrop.- 



^R^WoSpjr Iventure t0 send th * ac 

 ^.iS^ications for n T e "PP"**™, m 1 have 



* ^tition. I wlw Wn la the P^n meeting on 

 ^ 2 tty paS8 »ge. T "i P ° 1 r80n who 8ti » doubts 



^"* *W-toom 1 a S 6 q " ,te ^cceeded in 

 U P stairs, 50 feet by 20, with 





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drainage and gives a neat appearance to the pots. The 

 compost which suits the Carnation the Pansy wil 

 thrive in. The advantages in using pots consists in the 



Magnesia nn-r. /' >.«> ,, ■,.-..,, -I ] ia ve heard of 



i.enticated cases in this oeif 



where the use of rough sulphate of magnesia has pre- 



working garden { town-a'per- 



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I try a similarly prepared comport, inul thr.t by so doing 

 " -bytheprw 



pared or 



era;-! 



...tl' this brown en 



er coating before I 





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w::K^. s f,Xj 



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ode "©'"proceeding is as follow.:— poi 



If of tho mould is sifted through a tolerably fine j Lightfoot in his Flora Scotiea, h 



Normandy," says 



