THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



> body being black; it 



Stt' W »>eu f„! Sh0rt hai " scattered o 



CTj bQt attack!, y feeds U P° U Willows and | in* season, now just over, I hive remained silet 



••nZ* 86 *» the tim^. / the trees > thus ,] ■ which, however, I have avoide 



SWh. M tUree y«M?beL? G , V™ es P eciall y M « ' and only now purpose to express my feelings of grab: 



I, seem now, as 

 » a« bitten to ll ' ' aoT has been th r° u g bout the '■ 



1 F^cea fastc-ii:ig th- 



t advocacy for pruning u 



ivantage ?" I beg to say that last autumn 1 partook of 

 ilack Hamburgh Grapes, from Vi , 

 owton, gardener to the Rev. T. Best, K. <• ... lu:::s, 

 a the -irth of April, 1346 ; and on the 2 Mi of April, 

 347 (that very day year), a second crop was cut from 



Mr. Sterling's Antidote to the Potato Disease,— What 



