THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



i^^iRiENAS^UP^^^most^ die- 



'■"■'■' ? ■.'-. 

 ,„,vc.i«o«, B«ii"». * c ™y b « 



^^rT^DviGETABLE SEEDS of every 

 j- W "^ * description. 



[NO OUT ; orders taken, to be de- 



*^^S2^HS^A- Deodara, 



they say, "How happe 

 tch delight in rich bro 



iiar.l. i!^ with _a few stari 



Tliai a 



than one decorated, here with a 

 >enas, there succeeded by a yard o 

 nterrupted by a couple of yards 



AfESRS. BARKER asd STEW AKT will lia^ 



iW AMERICAN SACCHARINE 



'bunAH^pKi^^th. 



!*5SR^s s 



weftrtmtcle 



^^ ^i?/Z 14, 1849. 



t^'" 



■; i ---:.- 



mble world is right, or thai 



lio speculate 1 



■ crowd somet 



ed cloak is really so I 





ured drug 

 ornament of a drawing- 

 and varied pattern. T( 



1 



probably not be denied. But such plants are preferr 

 — — — 'lin the gaudy appearance which they produ< 



'heir places and there's an end — till the frost comes 



.;■■■.,■■■ ■ ..• • - ' ' : 



r Urass for winter : Cro- 



■ 

 early Alpine pi ; a countless 



host of species ready to decorate the 



)wers of autumn have all perished, and the 



eens of rich and painted foliage. [ T pon this 

 ill - ,„„„ InM linn pceul it featuKs ail 



•ry month will brii 



onsistsm. iiio : 



depends on sr 

 ieans at the disposal of the hi-piir 





. - : ■ 



ft»i Hew trieat an error 



is this kh« [y prove, for 



■■e-. lai- 

 '- • dtirely overlooked, 



Beauty in pi nits i d< p. nd< nt r.) oi 



_ - - 



herbaceous plan i ct. Because 



•■ v 



received none, their ownei 



i live upon is not precisely what it will 



. :. 



- is. poured into the ring 



• . 



■ .. . '• - - ' • •'. i' : ;-_ 



by the aid of a second finger, and called it sowing 



seeds. The plants sprang up, crowded 69 



Ajax. Had the plants been permitted to breathe 



; I have proved themselves 

 This was 



. • - 



separate plant that would be 



thinif demanding s' 

 the contrary, the 



e the I 



land^ 



exquisite beauty and peculiar fitness for many oi 

 passable in aid of other tlu> 



' ■ no* Am *o*d to* ' ]{ - 



tide in flower-gardens by 

 reverting to tin old ward managing them. In a 

 remote place in the north of England, there existed 

 [aaJ September one of tl 



an I vet th. re was not in it one plant for which the 



l|..l]yh...-U. old-fashioned Da 



. that wo 





; : . 



!'he plan was i, 



dged beds 



rmed of the segments 



:ricate enough till its pr 



ind the fault of the place, if fault there was, con 

 isted in the insufficient number of these decorations 

 or vases, and other sculptured or quasi-sculptured 

 objects are as necessary to a flower-gardi 



:!::!; 



,v„„...l» 



r, 



they 



of B and C. If you doi 





Hemlock, put i 



from winds. a i 



to*. He 



shelter it 



give it ample room to expand ; 

 robably to his gfe I 



affair of cultivation ; and depends 



m comes for stocking your garden, you will have 

 times better information in your possession than 

 ;he advice in the world can supply you with. 



ve all things. VO u will have learned what best 



• 



, by Dr. 

 ^Thus 



