a ca ee eee 
gree se. e case, 
‘Favoured kinds may be cultivated, but it would be 
tiseless attempting the growth of these, unless a con- 
‘siderable amount of artificial heat is applied. Where 
the latter can be secured, the following kinds may be 
ac ar 
Muscadine, and — water. * — to — 
sio 
tivate too many varieties in one ‘hous has few 
i a 
way 7 
4 — to select three four well-known free- Have 
ood kinds, suitable to the situation and tem- 
bearing, goo 
perature in which they are to be an to seek 
varie typ w which is followed } ty questionable success. — 
latter is, however, an error into w he amateur 
d; 
3 sintaintiously led; for, under stih conditions, hè 
cts than 
uch, even far more the nature of his 
her 
—— can produce, and consequently he fails 
in his efforts. 
The kind of plants which should be * — and 
which enl most suitable, are those which have bee 
from ey e previous season. it may be mike why 
Suth at to be 5 — to older Vines, or stronger 
e bes lanti 
ning of April. The per is gene yt but 
imperfectly understood. Instead of turning the 
‘over the whole, and upon this, place a few — of 
half. decayed manure, as a covering and Sg ection to 
d, | Thi 
in drying weather ; Bee this is complete 
e only | Gor 
remaining an in the operation is to fasten each 
Whe hen Vines are first planted, it is a bad plan to süb- | 8 
ject them immediately to a sm tem no seman $ — 
allow them to start with the 
temporary refuge for their young, receiving them 
into n and therefore, without feeling com- 
transeribe 
na voyage to South America 
the year 1593, expressly says that he ‘has “frequently 
Seen the young sharks go into, and out > the mouth 
the stomach; 
L is fish devo = 85 
ours its own young. John Hunter de- sour e is by far the best and — 
on 
of the . of Ahes, — it undetermined whether 
the same pees is capable o of 9 a 
a r in thi 
reptile òu of the Zoologia? Society, by 
sie R s NICLE. i — 5, 
f d istir 
whole w el. — wrap the bowl up in — 
> m 
too rapidly, and when it is cold and appears to 
thickened, take off the cloth, and cover the top an 
surface of the curds, to draw off the whey capillary 
attraction. After the] liquid has remained — 
for 12, 18, or more hours, it will be ready for use. If 
ich h 
tna the se nt only. itself bites, ox ocea- 
p 
sighted folks ‘should pram se wae — Re 
‘pai 
—— — — wed and wa ad his fortune learn; 
ged, to pk: school 75 Merlin or — Stot 
to P 
Hr 
— meet dhrick, the — of Delphos leaving. 
t 
r 
t for It is stated i in the 4. Theoty e of lee that the, 
dol 
fire, 0 
is whieh the yoghoort is to be served u 
has — ——j— just to allow of your finger bearing 
are 
wl shoul he 8 of the spoo: 8 
thus obtained oort, you have only to dessert 
spoonful of it instead of 'so ugh, to curdle the milk; 
for the yoghoort made with leaven is not ‘the 
eaven, indeed, being only used whe 
I yoghoort cannot 
be procured, and serving, as it were, to lay a founda. 
tion ; it is therefore well = put by a small — — ‘of 
hoort i 
yog — time, fo: day's u 
is a most — refreshing thing, — 
warm — It ple — t with sugar or 
honey, and is an — add e 
table. A small quantity dissolved’ ina a —— a Sm 
n loud in the — = — iti is — ae de ~ 
hat 
5 
—— for eating — $ but t after — or three — it 
will be relished more each time. Yoghoort is 80 
common in this part of Turkey, that one is never at a 
loss to ‘procure any, to curdle milk; en natives are 
therefore actuall orant how the first was ‘made, 
rthly. probably imagining | that at the beginning of — world, 
eated. who I 
pana * H. H. Ci, — — Turkey y Asia. 
s of Animals. — Those of which 1 ke 
ans — a handful of erumbly earth at ‘the — aad 
— freely — — middle — more than 
only took notice of them tember an and 
1 in the compass 6 a year; which, without 
my aid, I do not think they w. would have done. A. H. 
Advice to Masters and — —— — 
m odman” sa 
owever, convince him that a radical reform as — 
fi (n 
matter Where), I was hastened to a greenhouse, next to 
a Fig-ho then ‘a Peac — Ke. In (passin: 
e often 
heed RAE as been left.“ I made no reply; but in- 
deed I —— 8 — — a glass house into a pot 
he kitchen - 
. — same dirt 
radical reform was put in 
== ‘well: — mended, and — in their amama 4 
hen gave th foreman irections to see that every too 
was in its glace; and that any man who left a tool 2 
or put one away dirty, should be ned 
ule i 
re 
uickly. The plants were lifted out, some ‘down, 
others repotted, the pit was filled up, new po ts of course 
ol were wanted, and ai good supply of of broken Bes from the 
- tory was the next place I entered; 
Moss, | here 1 found ‘a collection of ‘stove — 
Hea 
plants, such as Camellias, Azaleas, 
Ges — — ä 
me co outside 
silver stood at 29° Fahr, while * — was 65° 5 
not fi 
— — — had many ‘bloom-buds on them; 
and no wonder, the heat alone would have caused ‘the 
in 
buds'to fall off. But the — — evil here was that the 
plants had been potted in soil — from the bottom of 
a pond, — out any drainage, or at least only a single 
— r the hole in the pot. The Camellias had be. 
— the leaves had curled up, some 
ava | off, ae  Dodman ” will, therefore, surely agree agree with 
7 ˙ R 
—.— is unknown in this country) might make a good sub- 
