GARDEN ERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
7 
28, 
718 THE 
had an opportu nit 8 * was sitting under an Orange | 
tree, and op heard a humming bird singing rn pt yards 
of me. I fancied that I eoul its bill move as it 
warbled. had not the smallest doubt of — fact. 
ming. b. —- 
mall k 
humming “bird and the real songst 
whilst m ination, far too vivi 
de ser in 
— cA — Afriea 
„ he had seen th 
m what sonree would 
or nem ?” J thenexplained | w 
— carry a supply a food in their bag 
t, in esding their young ones, they 
d that they — their bag into 
8 
the. gaping mouths of their * ones 
around. I added that no doubt, blood from the fish 
might occasionally trickle down = throat and breast 
of parent bird. “ Ah e gentleman, I s 
now clearly my informan n ived. 
have read with great 8 the oe on vegetable 
made the following experiment, Although I 
had plenty of game and fish a mand, I reso- 
lutely resisted my inclination to fe erp and for 
11 whole months, $ never once — either fish or 
not what it was to 
fatigued; Charles Water 
The Nen a —— “you Paper of Sept. 2 
n the tropical | i 
y | the old brane’ pee 
of a medical journal were to give currency to bernie — 
She — firs 
complain ? Gentlemen who pertinaci iously maintain — 
—— doctrines should find private — 3 of giving 
ork ] 
ries, —Enquiry has been made concerning the 
best way of treating the white Mulberry, a fruit no 
much cultivated, I believe, i in t Bosin ; and sagan 
I have seen k- 7525 . 
erry, your corre 
ondent must be — 
ne 
the — — fen 
branches Ai in E healthy eee 1 id prodigious 
but that those on the south side, 
— — with rs trunk, had yearns decayed ; the 
le trunk, indeed, being quite hollow, and the slight 
portion of it which remained being reduced to touch- 
d to grow with s ns 
tly new head is . 
Thes 
fusion; but until last mas no een thrown out 
by thos ose newly ar and the few fruit set on fe 
this pen was of very 78 N ae ality. 
me 10?years before I bec 
d Gim from i 
Senen 
b of 
m 
able situation uuder a south wall, and havi ing taken root 
there appeared a y Mr. Bircham, in which he 
expressed a desire that. a ys d should be raised by sub- 
scription, out of whic 
August for double H 
e the best place to exhibit the I shal glad to 
contribute tow: such a do Os. for 
spikes and 20s. for stands of eut blooms. J. Clarke, 
offi 
regards the properties an 
flow wer, is great. 
e pas the plan, and I 
I am gla ——— rote a ee — 
bald Re ba apy 
contributing 
oppor- 
W. 
have to-day pas a printed 
ted to — Lindley, seeking information upon 
ral 
ired, still the i —— that . both as new one 
very speedily, threw one lateral ‘shoots, w which now ex 
tend some 15 feet -n 
ca — A heaton mka 
yt The ese facts gps tend to 
that if the porches Mulberry i is be the s 
eto Apri 
2 
A 
ent may interest some of you 
e the are of its success. 
ee years since I observed = me aks had swollen 
n examin und 
n ont “roots 
2 
— 
iameter 
* itself, forein 
and form 
— to the grou 
head. I have take 
But as I am equall 
e ito find out the sar cause of the 
columns against such speculati 
Insects are not 2 cause « of the “Potato disease, . het 
nds of Curran ee and Cherries ? 
arden, which is — surrounded b 
and hedges, giving shelter 
the number 
other. ki 
I 
t kinds I scarcely rescue 
cient fruit my cook for her 
preserves ; whilst the — of black is mo — * 
sary, a 
dyi 
1 * — it has been proved that an insect can de. | instan * fell off k ile ched. I never pean have 
rs a ulm of the Po otato— [everybody knows | imagined that s an effect could have taken place 
11— pe your readers not excuse you f rom the — rans of though it is pretty 
— — all communications whi si may | certain that an atmosphe carburetted hydrogen is 
discovery of the true cause ; and Ia — | destructive to vegetable life. ie ent future os 
upon refi will see the necessity of s0 doing, if varnished iene ws over with strong 
n reflection, you 
you wish to work with your 2 open, — a 
the community at large; J 
oes 
— 3 a aie 
imagine it to be the duty of an editor to insert wo ab- stated 
surdi him itor must e 
aue potass ; W. S. [Have our readers any — i 
Beet Root,—In a new work just ee I find it 
In storing Carrots the first thing is to trim off 
ty that is sent to ercise | all the small fibrous roots ; the to f 
p 2 ; — Carrots t 
— a — — io bi 8 ee for doing 8 and not only t the lea yai of the Ca be 3 
wisely 1 sliee of the root, or i n 
opinion that cholera was caused by bugs, and and the editor | thick 40 remove the whole af the cine oy cone hon in 
Conifer 2 
s before — 
to | to some 8 S 
may a 
e proprietor of E no 
whence the leaves would spring 
a 
Parsn and Beets + 
arira began ty 
© 
jp spoil Bee 
— on a moor a Methven re Perthshire the : 
aupor 
Culling . the — Early a Remed; 
tato Disease.—My experience leads me < — 
Hardy and Son's statement, that when í the —— is eu 
the tubers 
nee ee — aa — 
the 
broken n by co the tops of 
ood, the bark alone on — side exhibiting any signs of | them. On digging — ine erop, I found that that 
— Being anxious to preserve e as long the tops of w ad been eaten, was almost. 
as possible, — to fill in the entire decayed | free from — whilst the remainder was very 
body with well kneaded clay, mg aeiy up after the manner | derably affee The sound tube bute 
which elay is —— for building houses common — oars quality. These facts go far to prove what 
o the district, and having thus filled it, I caused the a much disputed point with s viz., 10 U 
aian to be bound up w with iron hoops, as keep it 15 — rey disease commences, and w “of the 
gether. After the first sg new vio as apparent | plant is —— affected, whether the tubers or the 
in the = from unk, imm ediately above the haulm. I have examined the plants with the 
and have found that the — xtends along 
through the sound parenchy — structure. I think 
chat the proximate e — oi e disease must be 
dition of the plan 
s Planting mane ble ew practical 
8 to subseribe to ‘al ‘that the writers to whem 
ou allude in your Leader of Oct. 7 have said, but Id 
think it is premature to brand what they have said 
to be derived — well-m 
— W. Tott, Bromley, Kent, 
men will 
parts of the meer to communica 
trees : for 
, | knowledge of Gui business prevails to 
amount receiv 
at the sam 
acre now wit! 
nig g an 
s of trees, aorta 
the same, the age of the pinntatiod when cut, and the 
n 
levation d 
m of an acre w » prr imm ran 
covered by the young tim 
rations. The above ae 
additional consideration i 
once planted — Pe n permanently on thè 
und branch 
Orad 
acti 
bracing t for the ma 
ees, suita e s k for avy 
e that 
estirring themse that 
a 
A 
the cloudless days whic 
last, and Camellias need la 
in s 2 The Gra 
were 
is easier to r The la 
ll close eetly air-ti 
a d perfi 22 of howe 
The ve. — This. 
