■HH f;:\finKNER£_CHRO NICLE. 



[March 3, 



coum mentioned compost placing them 6 



~.U.n« in prr»*r^.. forbi ddmg « at, and ■* W>g r- • - ry> „ fim W J 



MR favourite «^» W r hares In pr^ariiig^he jjJ.SyjJ™** 1 "move the !££ 



. '/'cat Sdnp in this pan, like ooi rffrost; winter Broccoli stalks, leaves! CabbaM.V* ^^ 



Ld in a' Sine "trie dLb?d ArMgh^e 3» J™*;' | J 

 Sn« «•• eafc'Jo't into the house by wane broken window j ai 



hiHting Seedling Ftuu 



-The efforts of s 



mphshed moch in guarding the annual purcfia 

 tfrf flowers from disappointment, and these efforts 

 e furthermore made valuable by the widely spre: 

 I undone. In propounding my ■ 



M would have been the case 



. <■! nrge < 11 the funds of 

 .. Wi'hont di.-paragement 1 ; 



to perhaps a moderate product 



_:, say i'roia 2*'. 0<l. to M.. I 

 discourage the idea of char-i .. 



when awarded, as a bankrupt 



i One flower only has yet been put to a proper 



:• i 



vtriiy rather than ['enacting fr>>m its value has 



toe that I can collect, fill up my trench with tb*» 

 i chop them well with a spade. I next lay on 2 

 bot in depth of earth, and plant nearly level withj 

 rface ; I remove the plants from where they **» 

 icked out, with all the turf and manure that will hn» 



as they are planted I 

 r these means ~ 

 grow is Seyi 



ates largely to ;i 

 ve all, creates purchasers. By som( 

 -sidered too many- 



Let the experienc 



good soaking of wj 



Celery ; the kind 



dwarf solid kind. Red succeeds well under ___ 



treatment. I plantjia inches apart in the rows- tV 



weight of each head varies from 4 lbs. to 6 lbs. I fc, 



grown Celery equally well on two-year-old cow-du» 



J. Crier, Letiringt, r, lice org, Yorkshire, Feb. 13. 



Glebe Lands.— Supposing, as I do, that the "Reefr 

 of Ockham, Surrey," is right in his opinion, that* u» 



farthing towards improvements of which the outgqjgr 

 incumbent has had all the paying, the incoming all ft* 



uggest a remedy for this manifest rtm. 

 mall glebe on which I have beenkwpS 

 more than double the quantity of stock kept by n» 

 predecessor, and have now got the land into a hifi 

 -*-— -nd in the course of the last Z 

 the whole. Is it not manifestly 

 • my death my family will renin 

 nothing for unexhausted improvements? And yet 

 what else was I to have done ? The land in its form* 

 pay, and a heavy outlay was necessnj 

 to bring it into anything like good order. Wouldtta 



' is to presenting an incumbent, that the successor 

 uld pay « according to the custom of the country" 

 any unexhausted manures or other improvement!! 

 ope that we shall not bo forced, i . .: : ■ . 



„Jlies, to adopt a miserable low state of farming, to 

 the detriment of our labourers and the ruin of on- 



Primula «/ ./;.;.7._rermit me to acklowledge the 

 aminence given to my flower in the Garde*-. 

 ncle. Apart from its floral qualities, it posseaa 



■■■■■■■ 

 - 





seedlings produi 

 •ewa°rd a This 



ous or doubtful one. Bj 

 constancy it will repay the dealer fo" 

 h-dding over the stock of every varied 

 fticient to produce three, four, or sii 

 , Pansy, Picotee, or Carnations, as tb 



Ai.iaceous plant ! duced in numb 

 , SL n,0 J e . of , t, at any 





:-.,, 



i regulations of the East 



to undergo 



iron:--- 



u Bironger the test is for seedlings the 

 i >. Let me urge upon all 



- 

 each variety, and, as before 



■■■•- 

 t easily be more elaborately touched upon, 





if they have it in their choice, as we had, to select to 

 lazzaretto, they may be advised to choose Kawak. Tte 

 walk out in the envirors' every day, that portion of « 

 time which we had looked forward to beforehand mtt 

 dread, turned out in reality a most pleasant sojourn. 

 C. J. Darbishire, Riving ton, near Bolton, Feb.®. 



.1 Friewll,! Word to some Gardeners.- 1 * W gar- 

 deners, and some very respectable ones, too, aJow« 

 to suggest through your columns that when tneyw- 

 to state what their employers' intentions and wishes at*. 

 hi I not write a- if th -v "vere principals. It is pl«n? 

 themselves in a false and ridiculous position, anal w 



Hastonbury House (or whatever the name ma? n 

 kugfung in his f eve ' e ° d \y t n J^% h affie fe S^ 



engaged in supplying horticultural estab hah me ^ 



ondents, which con™*?" 1 ^ 

 g to plant so and so. la " {tke 

 . „ MW buildings. I am in wart ot 

 following goods, &c ;" and very often BigneOf ^ 

 faithfully." It completely bothers us to know ^ | 

 are addressing in reply, whether master or va > _ 

 am sure I am not acting offensively in P^ )lC f^g 

 that a gardener never loses but gains in our es ^ 

 and in that of all sensible persons, by caretui'j, 

 taining his true position, which is one of great r^r 



Cultivation of the Fuchsia.— At a late n^** „ 

 Study, Exotic Nursery, Chelsea, Mr. Maflon^ 



in 5-inch pots. The former method was P^fc 

 by it the plants were ready for shifting as soo ^ 

 were well rooted. The soil he considered »e« ^ 

 ..i of the Fuchsia was t™ ££* 

 good maiden loam in a decomposing state, one r^ 

 leaf-mould, and one of good rich manure, witn • rp 

 of silver sand, and a small quantity of bone^ a "U 

 latter was considered to be of the 

 •ts mechanical agency ranking wuhtha^ j> 



young ptajjj 





