ee 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
recesses often found at the present day in monastic 
were ori 8 bee-hives. ) 
The Husbandry of Bees is thus contained in Chapter 
of the “ ‘Housewife’ s Garden,” paze ve 17 by the 75 
There remaineth on 
ere apparently 155 lightnes 
no external motions of daubi 
bees, in casting time, ei 
.to lie out and ves bated to east before they be nee 4 
and strong, so and untimel 
whereas if they have room sufficient wer. ripen timely ; 
and casting seasonabl for labour 
a mare’s foal. If Land want 
be in disse of flying away. Any tim 
to . 
th hon no purpose, for the other 251 will 
eat it up. 15 your swarm knit in the top of a tree, i 
‘the wind beat aes z he fall a let the stool or 
ladder (describe & Orchard 
ay use no hole i in the sii 
a en of wood “ heeled,” to save 
ein pr or the be of them, for 
2 ot get; the re will 
e a nettles, &c., which 1 T ‘utterly 
to be molested. Ringing 
other creatures, love 
, therefore handle earn leisurely 
hey kno 
Being Wfa 
em to their seat. Set your hives, all of 
be strong: 1. They will 
drones ; 2. They will sweat 
ect ‘They will f l Bee, Oy reasén 
wo o ecially | 
the rest, ery Up, up, 5 or tear 15 tout, 
the alarm to battle. „ Much 
or garden, which is 
y persons suppose that 
come 
e | bees want meat, you shall see the la meg 
e 
anda | heat of the ‘ley, 8 
it run fed them— —always when they | but 
housewife be persua 
their de; 
oq Bey ee 
Ilean not on RD ns ee pe love to set down 
ot I know to be true, and leave these 
e hive B. 
warehouses.) Two men, * 
the hive, will easily furn 
Bees gather not till A: “od then they be dis- 
charged of their r young, ore 
to labour; and now the sap. 
also, in 
Rape 
is 22 cand n boonuse Bis gir nia can neither 
abide cold or wet; ands whieh th ey well fore- 
interrupt their warn 8 they fall in the 
pone var Gh by 
king their honey, ‘which, I know, is 
m of r that there are 
gs, and so, being deficient, 
g 8 _ 0 
Nate tura nihil fecit fru era: SF 
in.“ They heat the 
nd cause them to cast the sooner. They never 
on them, two, ropes 5 four at 3 
oe a 7 be led to the gallows; an 
and draw the m far from home, as hateful 
5 
Some use, towards night, in a 
mouth of the hive a thin r with Tile holes, in at 
which the — Koti e spe An enter, but 80 
tha . em at your pleasu 
Snails spoil bees by night, like — they com 
are so fast, that the bees beesiifear them es. 
e a . Break your e 
com 
as Beans, Fennel, 
seasonable weather for fun | 
1 
and killing them, oat | 
sos 
day, to set before p 
wning in a tub of clean water, 
and Son water ‘well bi brewed will will be good botchet. Draw 
a pair of pincers, 
strong, | out your sp with a lest 
the wood grow soft and swell, and so will not be drawn, 
the our hive. 
e worse 
are 1 cays b but after 
ing, I use because it will no 
„if you have 
. | but 40 stocks, shall "yield you more commodity clearly 
us much may 
PRACTICAL HI L HINTS FO FOR: AMATEURS 
MALL GA 
ov Guiles After allowing Hope to tell a 
weeks, respecti 0 the safety ne safety of 
Í Kidne 
nd | size, and only showed their want of maturity by the 
= — enderness rom forme 
r experience 
yr al I believe that r 
only way to P decaying; for one 
year when I left them in the until 
there was ; posi tively nothing to dig. 1 have 
These Pink- -eyes were y much spotted, 2 
many of 2 will e. unfit for u 
y susceptible 
w this variety was “pect 
of the * of the distem temper, I — that other kinds 
these. 
ved was 
partially infected.’ The 
— was large, and the finest Potatoes were the 
fferers. The foliage of this kind had exhibited no 
3 of infection, having turned yellow in the ordinary 
This renders the spotted character of the roots 
— found that 
the were 
sound. The soi soil in — the above cases very rich, 
although no manure had been used in planting 5 ; but the 
preceding crop was Broccoli, on which much dung had 
poe age 
ed, 
etations 
rather ve Beto of straw; and t 
erefo 
w . They w will get in either at the mouth, 
or an » eer a hole. The remedy is, good 
ts ban wa e 
say, are enemies ees; 
I see it n 
Mo ore kes perili by winter’s cold than by all other 
hurts ; for the bee is tender and ni nice, and only lives in 
warm "weather, and dies in cold; andt ene — my 
IEEE 
use 
described : a chiefest help she can res her eg 
against t many more Man 
again nst cold i in n winter to stop 
some set them in hou ea, persuading themselves that 
| thereby „they relieve their bees. Fi a Nes 
in houses, 
7 u 
up their ih close, ana 
8 of — deve- 
ve to amateurs is to take up their 
Potatoes as soon as the foliage exhibits 8 of 
sickness, and even al this is not the case, to err 
the side of being too too late. Should 45 
removal be productive EF decay, even then there will be 
the compensation of a crop of Turnips, which will do 
wel if sown now; H. B 
Home Ferre 
Potato Disease.—As e 1 sr a 
hat ohi 
is of and about the master bee. 
