, i ,; tr,‘. ttpartintut. • Gallen Rules for Gardeners. Never waste animal or vegetable - refuse. The Very soapsuds from the laundry ,are rich .nannure. Ilave all flower-pots washed, dried, and put - Oray as soon as they are empty. " Never Clll a pot so full of soil but that, it may bold water enough to go through it; every !pot should have half an inch of vacancy • above,the 'compost. Never grow a bad variety of anything if On help it. It tithes the same room. rind wants the same att.fintion as a good. one. Netter buy cheap seed. -It is only by get ting givd prices that, a seedstnan can supply -prtieleS toile depended on. • Cover all seeds with at- least their own thickness of soil; bat as some of it gets washed dr you must allow fur it. , Gratber fruit in dry, weather, and writh the sun sWning, and' place them as carefully in the *wt as if they were glass. The small, est bruise commences a decay. -Neti,er subject aplant to a rapid chabge of temperature. Sudden check ,or- sudden ex citement are equally injurious. , - Never gravr the same crop, 'nor _crops of the same . famh twice on the same spot with. out an !intervening crop of a, different nature. liever transplant shrubs and trees in a growing state. however carefully it may done„ the check is dangerous, it not fatal. Keep, all kinds of plants under glass,as close as possible . L 0 the tight. Never tie up lettuces ,or endives,. or earth up celery, except whenperfectly dry. They are sure to spoil if you do. Kee) your plants clean. Dust and dirt on leaves Inake the plant unhealthy, and will in tittle kill it. • Never grow a plant toe fast; it is no credit to youj because anybody, can do it, and it• spoils the plant to a certainty. liever train or support a plant unnaturally. 'Climbers will not be hanging about. Trail - .ers will not do climbing. Never 'sweep a gravel walk with an- Old broimi. It not only tears the edgeing, but it scrape& l up the walk itself. Illow l ;awns beferethe dew is - off the grass, ;unless ou have a ,taehine, which cuts it • ,best wli,en dry. Rapid ,growth makes a mild flavor, slow growth strong one.. Therefore grow vege. . tables quieVarid fruit moderately.. • - Tag Osiat ORAN3E—IIan been extensive ly regothmended by. nurserymen and agricul tural. Jobrnals, for :the last 'few years, as a i-erv .. destrable hedge-plant for the t prairies,of illeVest. It has been claimed by some as dila one thing needful in that country for fenc• -ing, And armed with a few bushels of this aeed,lhe settler might pitch his tent as well in tho treeless prairie as in the forest,ao ,tar fencmg-timiter was concerned. • .• We teomitly saw an. intelligent farmer 'from Illitn;R•and Asked him About the sumess fofthls pant in-hi; region. : • inforrned that it was indeed a good hedge-plant. I,nt. i• ..was in.the cad m‘lre expensive than r'ail.f.,nen. • It would make a fence to turn cattle in 'three' years, but required regular cutting in, .every.sciason, while a good tail-fence , required no mending or care fur several years. If left to themselves the plants would soon die out at the bottom, and the hedge would be inse• The'platit, too, he said, required a good •