47—1852.] 
THE ese hdl 
CHRONICLE. 
acquire that goodness of which it is ole ary without 
= ee 
when we 
assist Natare, but the moment we attempt to 
ons we have to pay d dear for it by 
the chrysalis state, being of a 
The moth 
arriving at 
pom oth belonging to the 
at the same time so efficacious 
ticable, and at and inex. 
as that. given tothe publio. by Mr, Ca 1, of 
ie fonik The foregoing r 
ted Potatoes have a better 
tubers 
traw an 
em. 
— they ought htn ee 
one wet = then 
In conelusi ope Podi to many new winter 
dishes at our tables not nowin e een as boiled Mustard, 
ows, and even those —.— 
water for ariii 7 to floa 
They make a — 
t is in the winter 
m 
Peas, s warm 
the 18 and pat: the gluten. 
lenty. 
instead of . it once or twice a wee 
taken up | f 
rotting in the 
to be P whole; insects co 
. | those. of the aoe are — 
black circle and a dark cen 
ka adjoining the base of the fringe. 
varied im the colour of nthe wings 
their 2 many 
distinet species. The 
— tlie an feath 
The latter deposits her 
eggs in onth of July and — — 
the you — a — vires. the course 
days or a ‘a fortnight. 
enjoy it every day all the bist and at n 
expense. James Cuthill, Camberwe b 
. ENTOMOLOGY. 
Tue Common Daur Mors. 
Tue periodical development of vast numbers of 
individuals of certain species of obnoxious insects is 
enomena of the science of entomology which 
attention than has een besto 
t, we s The 
extent, however, of the a sme influences upon the 
. 
r 4 4} P, 1271 1 
would ey idently lead oly enquirer to curious and unex- 
ted results. 
In certain seasons the Turni nA a are ig br 1 A 
very great extent by a large fi cies of gru 
caterpillar, which gnaws . it e bulb, 
injures or even entirely consum ag prom of it, 
leaving only a portion of the rind untouched. 
now iea fe for RCRA So numerous are they, indeed, 
occasion that we have seen a Turnip field in 
Oxfo taking in Shieh hea scarcely a single — — could 
be pulled up without . several of the cater- 
ithin their burro „or at 
x 4 5 
upon the Turn pro- 
as the subject o the 1 nei Í Society's 
prize Pan for 1839. It is not, however by eating into 
the bulb that these bs are in injurious to the plant, since 
— rA to 
Le Keux to Leading 
ounce of = — in a Orchids and their 
Vari medies have been 
vent the — of these grubs. 
that a quarter of an 
and po upon a Turnip-root in- 
m would a have the beffeet of 
them ome hs Chil might also be, advan- 
een emplo digging — out of the ground, 
as they are 2 Le Keux oe collected 
upwards of 30 in half sa hours but the kee 
for, and destroyer of t ne is the rook, — ought 
co 5 poultry and dueks may 
been 
will eauso them to quit thelr ir burrows, w when they must | 
bei immediately caught and killed. J. 0. W. 2 
Home Correspondence. 
Plants increase in Bulk in the absence of Leaves. 
Surely no one could have doubted that leaves, fally 
devel oped, mig ht b 
It is, so 
while b 
est 2 Castle 
. 
F 
1 
nfortu wight w 
during partially developed ones, during the growing 
W 
be to 
plants not —— flowering or seed. It is what 
all agrieu vists do who feed their Covers and Grassos 
beheaded thousands of 
and a moist substzatam, how indis: 
TORENS 
bus the „yield has —— been 
»? the sets is to * them 
the rest 
urths, both 
prion at a Se miles from here 
tion pe — 8 "tot. Should an any on 
— rh i of the above plan, I should pe Er advise 
nd wish them 
ence 
Cypripedium 
retiy penta ina ponies locality which 
he declines — — 
Eden Dean 
bowed * 
now than it was then, 3 net 
carried a 
of rare species of plants is is certainly « on 1 a 
excursion by rail fashionable 
© 
Chamæpitys, 
me he had seen it on an Eder 
O 
1 * f, èl 1 2 2 fal 
In my case, 
Kollar . informs us 8 Trea 
ted e Misses Loudon, | 
from its 
rn in the 
g them off it destroys the 
to be ploughed up. 
t, Te 
17 
H 
; 
s 
F 
It + will also fed all the summer 
; k 
middle of the back, and a lighter they bite so near 
i tl 
nary circum 
Tn this 
—— ———ů— N 
such irrigation 
the per aa acid and am- | when 
in a 
part 
grown after 1 — mowe 
This i 
. —v— 
heir thick — 1 their taking the very youngest 
shoots. Iam see you “snub” 2 
cultural friend Liebig; I do consider him the Sir Isaac | 
progression. J. J. 
