508 THE HOT-HOUSE. [Sept. 
Collect your Geraniums, at the same time, and all other plants 
that tend to succulency, and arrange them in front of the Green- 
house, there to remain till it is found necessary to take them in. Sec 
next month. 
THE HOT-HOUSE. 
Repairing the Lights and cleaning the House. 
If the roof-lights had in the course of the summer been taken 
oflf any of the Hot-house departments, they should be replaced 
early in the month, and all the glass-work of the entire house or 
houses put in the best possible repair. Examine the wood-work 
and see that all is tight and in good condition. If new painting of 
the timbers, sashes or any other parts is necessary, and that it had 
not been done in the preceding months, it should be no longer ne- 
glected. 
Indeed it would be of considerable advantage at this time, pre- 
vious to the taking in of the plants, to give a complete and tho- 
rough cleaning, painting, and white washing to the entire house; 
and if infested with insects, to fumigate it effectually; and also to 
wash the entire of the inside with a very strong solution of corrosive 
sublimate, and if thought necessary, to clean away every morsel 
of old bark out of the pits, carry it off to a considerable distance 
and replace it with fresh tan. Any plants remaining in this de- 
partment, may be removed into the Green-hoHse while this work is 
going on, and these should be effectually washed and cleaned, if 
infested with insects, before their being replaced. 
This cleansing, fumigating, 8cc. will destroy most, if not all, of 
the lurking insects, which have taken shelter in the various parts 
of the house, and which, by and by, if not destroyed would sally 
forth and make a formidable and, perhaps, destructive attack upon 
your plants; every timely precaution ought to be taken to keep the 
house clean and sweet, and the plants free from vermin. 
Taking in the Plants. 
The more tender kinds of Hot-house exotics which a,re arranged 
out of doors, should, in (he middle states, be taken into the Green- 
house about the tenth of this month, and the others successively, 
according to their respective degrees of tenderness, so that the 
■whole collection may be in by the eighteenth or twentieth thereof, 
or a few days earlier should the weather happen to be cold. Here 
they are to remain, closing the windows at night and giving them all 
the air possible on warm and mild days, till towards the end of the 
month, or sooner if you have the bark-pit renewed, and the Hot- 
house ready for their reception. 
