in the minds of the "ea b; 
anxiety — y en 1 
tor inflict *. — upon their 
investi- 
to- 
rfe 2 6 aequ 
disease which e iteclf i in the 
onsequently 
bie 
to the 
attribut ak e. 
ters, to the exhaustion o 
eget ate ning of th 1 ſor the t 
EN t the same time 
à Jauffret, in those 
ured 
agi 
HG 
spec 
n the Ys should rae 1 
attacked the first — most ‘einai vely. 
The general 1 of the fields exhibited — 
spots on the edges in the inte terior of the square 
more severely attacked 
ity of the forests 
d 
diate effects of manures, the roots and tie cit ts would 
have been the first attacked, and it would necessarily 
have developed itself at the 
farther 
nae 
burst with — violence over pess port: e dis- 
trict he inhabited, and that they had been m. more e frequent 
and violent 
gas, in 
in the the oxygen of rey peters here 
electricity, an the 3 
the 2 = 
the gas places ; so that 
— — 1 with the +o Meals 
in same moment a large amo 
| sarily be ge 
sider that not 2 or | throu ch ra 
the 
e Cane —— wore marked longitudinally vih the 
THE GARDENERS’ PROS LAL. 
leading them to wuld 
e air 
in passa Juri be de- 
by a atmospheric « electricity, and that at the 
t of nitric acid must neces- 
imien at the expense of the nitrogen, | 
assed in succession 
h 
has in avariably found nitric acid com mbine 
monia and lime in the rain water; that in 60 other 
ircumstan 
difficult to 
ow —— nitric acid must then . be for 
d ev 
torms are so frequent ee 80 enn 
ring in the * the 
e gr 
Cane, and, under 
the influence of the high temperature and the light, 
scorched them, leaving — it t those yellow — 
leave ike 
aiai 
ture 
PETE place 
space 
down, 1 left the same ES s 
observed in the field of Can is 2 alten tint 
— —— yellow when dn in ballet with the 
y8. 
"Iei is many to understand — — action of such — 
so mixed w rain wa ould do but little m 
aced in e posit 
hours after, 8 the quid had i glided 
those I had | re 
ith the 
chief to the Cane itself, merely scorching portions ‘of 
ear 
Sadana 
' | glided over ney ee 
the upper part, that a * he heart of the Cane, 
whence the acid would have h escape. 
This pation of the 3 in which the ves are still 
r the e e 
destruetion, and being unable 
to = flower, Yaar was er to effect = itself 
a n be nders h 
with ihe de- 
| scending sap, and being thus impelled into the body of| P 
h its presence, disorganise the cellular 
iacal gas, 
if a grate ee of. aci * 
the and it had remained in Be ee = the 
plant. "this liquid might be bed th 
tiss 
mig 
ssue of the plant itself, 8 
e, might, by its p 
tissue, and consequently kill it. Thus I observed that 
all those Canes w * a tendeney to wither, were 
dried oe * their appar extremity. 
I am therefore of —— that this phenomenon 
buted to the formation of a notable portion 
tageous to the growth of plants, but the excess of which 
becomes hi webs: njurious. 
othe 
thelr muse ase 
Ie 3 this article without calling the 
ill 
— n vapour 00 +H,), whilst the nitogen( N 
fon’ . may combine with the ( 
use the 
cain 
| of the square in — pene gp 
whi 
mployment of sulphate of iron on a square of can 
the result of which was to 5 the leaves of the plants 
black as ink; and such mus 
a large 
amount of tannin ch, combining with 'the sulphate 
ofi 3 would at once form ink, which was a 
lant. Besides, if ferruginous salts could effect the 
G 
e chlorosis, our plantations ought | to be entire rely D xi 
pregnated vib ibh acid, after having | inj 
themselves at 
rt. 
at the same time to be able to inform you, — 4 
no injury. 
chitir hata a rep 
my 
canes, | n 
e soil | Whe 
ed upon them, Th 
frosts, which i injure 
revent them from shooting in the spring, 
Before the flowers are all f 
examined, for sometimes damp oblite. 
> | tally may be lost 
is vexatious to find on 
this 
Tt leaves the garden in 
and takes 4 room which might b — 
with spri ulbs. 
It is dói bilós t 
less dependent on the place 
than on certain conditions in which 
the case that the roots of Diba 
ace they occupy in the 
they are 
appears sound 
ina pasate rottenness before 
the tubers are quite sound ee taken from th 
r there is 
flower should be g and 
planting ot as aie as can safely be done. H. B. 
. OF THE IRISH POTATO chop. 
OMPILED FROM OFFICIA 
Cork Cainer: Skibbereen Koe 
Marshall.—No change has la 
p Cou 
i Digging ar Potato ‘crop p 
8. of ae will be fit for 
2 ine 
barete üty r to obtain 
More land wil be e 1 ensuin 
is year m the want o 
year, arising nd C ekar 
UNTY, Lismore, Oct. 28, 8, Me. pe 
Opinion 
elon 
Monin ha quality, 7 * deficient in quan 
Markets and we supplied. 
gases, 
ical agency of electricity 
the nitric acid is 
the soil of our island contains a great quantity of ferru. 
ginous substances. 
<n Samar Bel aka FOR AMATEURS 
MALL GARDEN 
e — roots should be 
DoNEGAL 1 8 
O'Neill. — Disease not ine 
digging Potatoes, 
failed ; in some districts not not even 
in, and is a full 
kurnem e fett up wel rites Well, 5 
— — unt ine time fhe! een 
lit 
ed, the names should be 
is an monan Leer 
ed to become glutted with 
2 
ö 
Oct. 28, Mr. Hee 
eet 
1 
average. Te 
