4— 18J9-] 



THE GARDENER 



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^wSlAa-Fine flowering plants of the besl 



conclusively that no just ideas i 

 thing, B another, C a third ; and 



itable ; bunches when thinning them, to cold border; 

 i one being set, hot niehts, wet, dv 

 usion sulphur ; in short, every p« 



i of a phe- 



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at length be made to lay the foundation of vegetable 

 pathology as a distinct bi " 



l\^"& be cV. 



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^* 2>A $*PSn *, 1849. 



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immediately under their < 



tns as they advance ; to em 

 scover the cause by a careful compai 

 - under the sa; 



rdener at the Deepdene, sent 

 apes, of a porti, 

 representation. Son: 





ilthy plants unaer the same cir- [ that gradi 

 then having done this to report in order t 



ecu. accompanying their report sistance to extension by gro\i 

 the disease in its va compelled to force t 



•■ ._.; 



i great advantage wil 

 ; observations ; in fad 

 3 are generally vak 



£--£?£ 





rmn 



.. !l., purp..,, 



mdantly show 



ents to be fc 



and agricultural periodic 



disease, even although il 

 perfect. In order to contribute son 



'' 's desiral 

 eekly port' 



Much of this 



ouldbeveryim- 

 hing towards ob- 



: ot Plants, publ 

 rat Philip Re. 



:-v:. 



i' r,i. and 



n. Had thev onlv expended upon Count 

 Re's book one-hundredth part of the time 

 has been sacrificed to objects having no direct 



g upon the public s< 



long since C09 mmatanne some 



f troriu mi Goon on 



: axlern discoveries 



ired them 



o room exists for doubt. Then what 



injured them ? Could fingering the berries do it ? 



produce no evidence that 



" " made the subject of experiment, 



being produced in such a manner : but u 

 disbelieve altogether that Grapes are generally made 

 rusty by any such inadequate means. If it were so. 

 happen that they become rusty on open 



■ 



I air, ot very dry air. | 

 Grapes when they are yoong and tender, destroying 



; all power of expansion, which, as we 

 have shown, is the true cause of the evil conse- 



seen to be worthy ot a great country, and not an 

 inapt representation of the genius of Kn. 



: ired to bril- 

 not to be re- 

 garded as examples of an it 



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ilSS 



nmunity,forinthea 







^rtiorT was v ^ ed ' 



i justified in p«U 

 j which, to be ju>- 

 whole, and not with reference to some of its parts. I ception of Her Ma. 



l and the Prince, and bounded 



