A DI: 
THE EN SRE LHRONI CHE: 
rr 
90 
as 
We learned Mr. 
at Gunnersbury, that th 
ther р 
off ; but after a time the tre 
the 
morning, SO as 
up ‘among the foliage, on which i 
under this 
of dew, and 
like drops 
d fine trees wi 
began 
ttom heat, by е afresh with m 
ith foli | 
mewhat erm 
e ded of fermenting 
wing | ma co g. Late SANTHEMUM ni mention 
little loam, and mixes them together till they acquire the | use to ut chard-house this winter. 
consisteney of mortar. ey are A — 9 which held Strawberry-plants between 
which, as soon as 
eon 
f treatment 
= trees very soon re- established —.— in health. 
г plants, a large pu of Agapanthus umbellatus, 
ga 
other 
which Mr. Forsyth st 
in the fower-garden 
on as 
spikes, and when their beauty is — rt 
again to their former quarters. — the walk 
west end o 
; laced roun 
clump — has just b 
which blooms 
The high 
we hithert 
rto eros e 
ted made one of the 
yest beds 
He — ges them in the 
ir flo 
st of the bed 
— bee; 
f the 
most things to be — em — perhaps 
‘so mu 
coming in 
are in full blossom 
wood. — are 
] 
[ 
t 
for. such things, 
{ which: — 
winter, owing to 
the 
are pushing; the: Chinese Privet and eo el are 
roman the two varieties of Pyrus atis e 
and ro: ung 
appy to 
iefly sentinel to the 
*Radishes and N 
under glasses, are 
he mildness ol the weather being 
As much, however, acf be said for 
erie ifficult to ve uis 
t 
a a ащ, pit, 2 wich the trellis da 1 
with m and frui ng to swell. Among 
common Laur 
ubtless soon 
xcellent eondition. 
sunlight. 
they 
found to b 
wished for. 
the best 
Prince Grapes 
‘covered with bloom, the foo 
fresh as in “the hé — of 
ots into the bed. 
E where · 
idence 
tstalks 
the 
ура ering 
et in length of the l the P. 
1 
"eye be worthy of 
season. А few Black 
state of . 
tate, however, that this for- 
shrubbery ; for fruit 
Th 
operations i in the kitchen- 
should spring set in favourably, a 
yyance it has саро will do: 
all the 
n be over- 
h 
yare 
mostly i in pots ; +; but 5 they begin to show —— 5 
are turn turned out of their p This 
large 
x Pines have been | 
pu ait in pits by P MW in order to give them 
best chanee of p e of this | ri 
planted with young 2. Give a 
xcellent rods, that cannot 
— ae 
e ander front of about | 
ое анана Every day of 
at the d 
0 на 
ets. — the evils yea mam 
traced to 
= under this 
| — 
— net bé oftener than 
eut into bricks, they e dried | 
5 are = into — — cach ‘of which 
former yea n is introduced, and as soon as it has 
run — the hicks they ar 
a ady for use. 
d, a 
0 
ood ae 
ront of the Pine 
stove were some excellent Vines in 2 - short- 
jointed, well-ripened wood, which was aki 
satintactorily, each new brane h 
These h 
at — yielding a plentiful 
FLORICULTURE. 
ow GaRDENING.—There аге many who have not 
e who are, neverthe- 
WIND 
arly in the purchase * pente  bestowin ng a great 
eal of pains in attending to them to be 
— too, that, after өй, thei endeavours, their ape 
look si ici, and. къа б The blame is too o 
or of the who supplied peck for not 
8 every instanee the 
it is true W 
e into the iiid } have generally y been under a hi 
state of cultivation. The eb arly wa 
is soon owning or sta 
y plants 
гч CAMELLTAS? 
elt... 4D 
altogether, is no uncommon fate. 
home, put into pans or saucers, 3 with 
m and the water left in the they are set 
place, a lett о their fate. In the 
first case, the leaves turn ye drop, the flowers 
fall, and in — short — all ‘that can 15 seen 
naked stems, with little tufts of green on 
shoots, which a 
ints 0 — 
—— erfectio 
die "with all the leaves € bloo 
— own in windows 
uses. I will «айызын Attempt 
5 lay — a ae ee 1 rules, which, if pro 
attended to, = do away with 3 н the complaints |! 
ter but ts 
That i 8 easily 3 Ty feeling e 
actually wan t it. 
ith the he бири, ог de 
uckles. МЫ 
soil w. 
with 
d; irem it feels dry, then ача нег 
three times a week in 
winter, and e ae Ре іп арак" and s E 
з | giving à it — ev and al r 
у from the pe so that a pen eg never 
used should be per rain or 
water. 
a day o 
e 
under a bright sun, the уже will have to 
sun upon 
lant ; and F 
sun, the flowers 
pen and drop. = =, the rooms where the 
* — are of as uniform a temperature as possible, and 
the plants eae bt as near the is con- 
venient, except in 
near the middle of 9 9 during the night. 
E ee ee een Py if the pots are fall 
interesting in every stage of growth, from the first 
mention | formation of the leaves to the o perfection of the flower. 
development bas its charm ; 
те 
s Li 
f the r of trees in summer, 
ryan being + the 
d and g abundanee of light and fresh air. 
I still have, 
(many of them 
at this 
appearances I 
» Osbaldwich, near 
G B. A Stang article on their treatment will be 
found in another column of to-day's paper. 
Cars ue" GUE received from Messrs, Bass and Brown, of Sudbury, 
m 
жые: P P. We cannot recommend dealers. 
Horrnvnocks: Mrs. W. The — practice is to plant them 
out in March. Those you inten sz ing in from your nursery- 
man will, doubtless, be in pots; if necessary, you may give 
them a shift, but by no means Vira them out now; keep them. 
in your frame, as hardy as possible, until the time we have 
mentione 
Roses: L K. To prune now, when the plants are growing— 
— blooming, for we last week gathered Géant de Batailles 
om the open ground in very good — would be 
induce the eyes left to start, - € can scarcely expect that 
had therefore best let them 
od for the present. 
Miscellaneous. 
eventura Truffles. — L have found real Truffles at 
Handia, at Mexorata, and indeed eet i — 5 - 
бутту white Truffles! I ha who kets of 
them Poan and exchanged i p i 
reros against an equal quantity of Potatoes. 
Truffles EN but little below the surface of the soil in 
dry plac s, and almost always at the foot of the * Tur- 
mero," or He lianthemum ＋ nariense; their presence is 
d b 2 15 yar s ground above them. 
ebmann, in Hooker's J 
ry cans е employ yed for да: Destruction АА, — ed Grub. 
M. Mar a co catio to the 
Hordedtiinl Society ‹ of Puri, кей СЯ in pre to 
destroy the mselves into the 
— 
„ a8 
servation is important 
would us of tedious and 
but he believed 
men and children, 
were 
upon. 
prove injurious to the 510 
young — "A would grati i — thi 
e and 
window as 
ere weather, when they are better | 
the materity of the fruit, as 
ed — Bei T but he feared that this substan 
ears to rot: M. Guérin- — "believed 
in 1 5 p of the oil ; he ealled to 
en closing u wound: 
| 477 shite taken = М. тана thotght that — — 
deserved tri that some experiments should be 
made, in pei that it — be either confirmed o ' 
condemned. Flore des Serres. " 
GENERA EMAR KS 
. Tur diffeulty of obtaining a erop of — has. == 
but |! to counte 
act the — of our ns months, foot aff 
trees while in bloom Whatever means are 
ore partieularly prove the Apricot and 
fatal to 
си — on the other, — a later bloom чнч 
з 
R 
Camellias will now ee шие ып — T" 
there- | Land willbe base benefited by occasional = 
