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1800 - 1849
44 1840-1849

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Newcastle Guardian and Tyne Mercury

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Newcastle Guardian and Tyne Mercury

Horticulture

... remove all dead and decaying leaves. Give air abundantly to protected salads, should the weather prove fair and open. Pot mint and sorrel for forcing. Sow radishes and small salad in frames. Provide for a successful supply of seakale and asparagus, in ...

Beet-root Substitute for Potatoes.—Beet-root cannot be too much recommended to the notice of mankind as a cheap ..

... for the nowfailing and diseased potato. Hitherto the red kind has been only used in England as a pickle, or a garnish for salad; even the few who dress it generally boil it, which process the rich saccharine juice is in a great measure lost, and the root ...

Horticulture

... of vegetables and salads, the next fortnight will be the most important of the whole year. Endive planting must now be proceeded with in earnest, for what now planted will constitute the great bulk of the autumn and midwinter salads. Let elevated beds ...

Horticulture

... those things, examined and properly repaired. There is very little idle time for all these, where a regular supply of winter salads and vegetables is required. Every one of tbem will shortly be wanted for endives, lettuces, cauliflowers, radishes, and many ...

Horticulture

... peas and beans ; also sow cauliflowers, lettuce, Bru P , brocoli, &c. Sow also successive crops radixh, spinach, and small salad. Tranent young onions from the winter beds, if not yet attended to, as formerly directed. Cottagers' Gardens.—Continue planting ...

Horticulture

... this department there much to be performed during the coming month. Get iv suceessional crops peas, beans, radish, and small salad ; plant out cabbage, lettuce, &c. Sow crops of onions, parsnip, and carrot, and plant the main crops of potatoes for the season ...

POISONING AT AN ORDINATION DINNER

... and gravy soup, salmon and soles, peas, young potatoes, gooseberry aud plum puddings, custards, tarts, jellies and mange, salad, cheese, and butter. Before the cloth was removed several guests complained of illness, and were compelled retire. In the course ...

Horticulture

... should be made this week. A considerable share of attention should now be directed towards securing an adequate supply of salads and other small matters winter use. Chicory is one invaluable plant of which tbe'O should be no scarcity; it will do in any ...

Horticulture

... should be planted without delay - fact, one-half of the crop. High manuring is absolutely necessary to produce this valuable salad in perfection. In planting succeeding crops keep raisi ing the beds higher as the season declines. Keep the succession beds ...

Horticulture

... some staw covers or old lights on the prime parsley bed, for fear of snow; also on the Normandy cress. See well to winter salads. Flower-Garden and Siiri-bberies.—All things liable to injury from severe weather, and which are requisite for another year ...

Horticulture

... each plant. Make a succession sowing of peas, beans, French beans, turnips, lettuce, radishes, spinach, chervil, and small salading. Give good soakings of liquid manure, either from tlie melon ground, cesspool, or guano water, to new plantations of asparagus ...

Horticulture

... planting, water the drils passing the spout of the water-pot along each drib Get succession sowing of lettuces, radishes, and salading generally ; water the ground in the evening, and sow next morning, andjcover with old mats, or such like, to modify evaporation ...