50 Mildew. 
BUSHBERG CATALOGUE. 
Rot. 
Riparia crosses with Labr.: Amber (Rommel’s), 
Marion, Uhland. 
Hybr., Labr. and Vinifera, Labr. and Hybr., and 
Vinif. with Rip.: Black Eagle, Brighton, 
Brandt, Herbert, Lindley, Triumph, Wilder. 
TV. — suffering — even in normal 
ptin some few 
fav savin dicalitkies, which her from mildew. 
stivalis, Elsinbur: umelan 
Labrusca, South. Division : Adon 
= Real 
dac 
Creveling, Isabella, Iona, Mottled, Ri 
ney, Union Village, Rebecca, Walter. 
Undetermined Class - DELAWARE. 
Hybr. of Vinif. and Labr,- Agawam, Allen’s 
hybr. Amenia, Barry, Black Deflation. goa 
Irving, Massasoit, Merrimack, Salem Sen- 
asqua. 
Hybr. of Vinf. and Rip. Autuchon, Canada. 
Cornucopia, Othello. 
eo = sufficiently tried, and especially new 
would not presume t 0 classify ; 
- may piky aera f their resistan 
parentage. The 
Delaware. or the Isabella, and all 
‘brids (of te ) give but faint hopes for their succe: ss in 
docalities usuall 
S. growers resor 
and generally prefer to select Varie- 
te ih are los oct mile 
a Sow tr de ner akesits 
proses ) 
pearance of this 
be ta damp places, with a cold, 
wrote in his last 
- rather interrupted in its jacirdei and re-appears 
with 
these PASE We may look and wonder, power- 
less, yet knowing 
“*That the bright hopes of to-day 
ed by next morn!” 
The disease is generally preceded by the appear- 
ance of numerous spots of brown color on the surface 
i these spots turn to a deeper 
of the grape leaves ; 
brown, and fin nally hol S appear in their places. In 
of the same pales healthy, fully coloring 
seems not to the 
vigor of the vine nor its,foliage in the least. Of ‘ate, 
however, it attacks not rarel m one to three- 
infests the most vigorous 
vines as much, if not more than weak wers, The 
Concord has of late proved as unresisting to stg bsg 
Rot as the Catawba. The theory that 
as to Rot; nor has the 
> gbiptesiae ate Re aol any influence upon aaa eee. 
— is ff m rich soil 
en growing on poor land The a oe 
Hot 4 is induced by Phylloxera (root he) is entirely 
founded. - 
Atmospheric electricity, humid ty and dryness, may 
materially influence reading or stopping of the 
i : The nature of the soil and he re) 
f 
to do with the ap- 
this malady, which especially rages on 
so it Sometimes found in 
post with a ? dry soil. Asa rule, 
however, dry seasons and localities, blessed with a 
purer atmosphere and sw i , are more 
exempt from 
The late M. B. Batenam (died ieee 3. ier a 
report to the 4 
