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Show HE Hi mov’dto the Borders, where if they are much expos’d, or the Soil moitt, they fhould not be t ntedtill / r to fhoot out te f nerally produc e great Quantities of Seeds every Year, fo there will feldom be Occafion for propagating them any other way, becaufe the Seedling Plants are generally better than thofe obtain’d from Cuttings, and it being more ae r to * veae jon ofFthefe their Seeds fhould be fown 5 1 ; and when they are feldom fo ftrong j eafon of flowerin Trouble to propagate them by Cuttings; few lio Samp/fuchi, Dwarf Ciftus, hairy Heads, People praétife that Method. The 13th, 14th, and 15th Sorts are annual Plants, and muft be fown every Year, or the Seeds fuffer’d to fall; which, if the Ground be clear from Weeds, will come up, and abide the Winter, and flower early in the fucceeding re perrfectec Gardens not hearfo a ‘VO00000 Clam ¢ The Flowers of this laft Sort are amongft Myrtles, Fafmines, &c. where they may remain until O¢fober ; at which time they fhould be remoy’d into the Green-houfe, where they fhould be plac’d fo as to have as much [‘Haclesmov, of tiar@ Turnfole. The great Turnfole of Diofcorides, LIoTROP£UM > Americauum, American Turnfole, Hoary ‘Diwearf Mouintain Sy B. WIhite-floy ; ney may remain un 5 Ciftus, with narrower Clary Leaves. » He LiotRopium ; arborefcens, folio, flore albo in capitula denfi congefta. Tree-like Turnfole, with a Germander Leaf and white Flowers growing in thick, fhort Heads. ik ee LIOTROPTUA rienfe, arbore/7 ort. Amt. Canary TreeThe firft, fecond, and third Kinds are annual Plants: ‘Thefirft is very hzardy, and is better preferv'd inaG rden, by fuf ering the Seeds to oe when ripe, which will come up in muchbetter than when with Care, for it rarely 1s rah thofe which are fown “They mayalfo be propa Cuttings of ee of th of fhad alfo may remain in when they fhould be ted for the Seedli in the do grow; fo that ifit be intended to ina different Place from where the ew the preceding Year, the Seeds be fown foon after they are ripe; " HELLEBORE ; vide Helleborus. uld be in tae Place where they are 5 for thefe Plants feldom thrive well an{planted, efj tm dwhile the Plants The Char. Ith VE ke Turn trefolele, with a Wood-fage Leaf. they fhould be remov’d to ms I é to continue for good, 0 > them up v a good Ball of Fs Oots, otherwife they eay’d Dw: arf Cittus with €-Hlower’dDia with na Irrow hai Ty I 4eaves, % cf be tranfpl about fourIn mer ; but I have never yet feen any on the Saath Sort, although it is by much the |larger Plant. caeru- leum, foltis Hormini. Acad. Reg. Sc. Blue American Turnfole, with Clary Leaves 3. Hertorropium ; Americanum, caruleum, foliis Ho guftioribus. H. L. Blue le Waterinzs. HELLEBORINE; Baftard Hellebore. 1. Herrotroprum; majus, Difcoridi. C. B. of free Air as poffible, and will require frequent The fifth Sort produces Flowers every Sum- The Spacies are ; je tranfplanted into Pots fil’d- with light frefh Earth, whichfhould beplac’d ina thadySSitua- isa Plant which requires but very little Care, it is well worth keeping in a Garden. gibbofe Si ’ ing to fhade and water them until they have taken Root; and in Auguft they fhould be tion until the Plants are rooted in the Pots; when they maybe removdinto the epen Air one Flowers are Gollett hefe are all pror p Plants annual are propa very beautiful, each Petal or Leaf having a folded, andits Brim cut into ten Segments, Dwarf Thefe deep purple Spot at the Bottom ; and fince it The Charaéfers are; The Flower confifts of one Lea, like a Funnel, having its Center HAtarSeuoy, The fourth and fifth Sorts grow,to be la fhrubby Plan HELIOTROPIUM ; OPI. 5, Plants, nor are they often cultivated but in Botanick Gardens for V ariety fake. planting Cuttings of them in any of the Summer Months, in a Bed of light Earth, obferv- the Sui, and zeéra, Gr. to turn.] AM al i ward in the Spring, they feldom perfeét their Seeds: ‘There is no great Beauty in thefe two large Plants, efpecially of the 15th Sort, of which, if the Seeds are fownin the Spring, the Plants are apt to be very fmall, and produce but few Flowers, and many times the Seeds will not come up at all, fo that if you fow them, it fhould be done foon after they remain the which tin upon a Hot-bed in the Spring, and manag’d as was directed for the Cyanns Turcicus (to which the Reader is defir’d to turn, to fave Repetition) ; for if they are not brought Summer; whichis the fureft Method to obtain are ripe: thickin t This Plant produces its Flowers in Fane, and the Seeds ripen in Augu/t. The fecond and third Sorts muft be fown y if it be not peryoung. T“he Species are, HerriesoriIne CommonBaftard Helle HELLEBORINE ; aif C.B.P. Baftard Hellebo Flower. 3. HELLEBORINE flower’d Baftard He// 4. HELLEBORINE ; ceolus: C. BP. Lad De HeELLEBORINE Banifier. witha yellow Flower HELLEBORINE nadenfis, five C Maria. Icon. t. Canada La ‘There arefeveral Orlin Species of this Plant, e of which areof J /b Growth , bur as of no great Beauty, and are ficulty cultivated in a Garejen, fo I fhall pais them ove 2 without naming, thefe here mention’d being the moft valuable Kinds which we areat prefent acquainted with. Thefe are all Natives of Woods and fhady Places: The four fi mention’d are found in the Woods of York/hire, Le Mh and Bere other |