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IT’S WORTH REMEMBERING TO VISIT

i THE GLORY BOX Where You Will Find a Unique Collection of EASTERN GOODS. VICTORIA AVENUE. Exclusive Selection of MILLINERY at | MARGARET QUIRKS Millinery Specialist. VICTORIA AVENUE <Opposite Imperial Hotel.) BERT WEBB SUIT SPECIALIST i (Opposite Bank of New Zealand.) [’FULL RANGE OF BEST SUITINGS! ‘ Cleaning and Pressing—Post Your Suit to Us. IT IS WORTH REMEMBERING THAT— The Ageratum. The soft fluffy blooms of the ageratum make it a useful bedding plant as well as an attractive border. The ageratum is quite hardy and is best treated as an annual. The seed may be sown in either autumn or spring, raising the young seedlings in seed boxes or an outdoor seed bed and, when large enough to handle, transplanting out from 10 to 12 inches apart. There are several attractive vai.c- -! ties: these range from 12 to 18 inches in height; try growing the ; blue ano white together and note I the charming effect. Daffodils. i A gardener has asked how soon • daffodil and tulip bulbs can be lifted I after flowering so that they can be transported to another garden. This I is a question that often crops up in ! the gardens, and we can say that all I bulbs can be lifted soon as the foliage begins to turn yellow and die back. The ripening process is then finished, and it will not harm either tulips or daffodils to lift them then. Let them lie on the surface of the I soil for a day or two, and then they I can he put into boxes for removal. In ( regard to daffodils, all good growers I will tell you that it is better to plant up the bulbs as soon as possible. Therefore, as soon as tne bulbs are out of the ground, make up the new bed for them and give the soil a good sterilising with a soil disinfectant before replanting. With tulijs, the bulbs can be kept out of the soil for a much longer period without any damage being done to them. Be careful to see that they are not kept in airtight containers, or they may sweat and become mouldy.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19360919.2.124.2

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 79, Issue 222, 19 September 1936, Page 13

Word Count
362

Page 13 Advertisements Column 2 Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 79, Issue 222, 19 September 1936, Page 13

Page 13 Advertisements Column 2 Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 79, Issue 222, 19 September 1936, Page 13