29—1850. | 
understand by “ re a village pond. 
cattle have access to 
as Suggs you ndent. | 
re tg of quickline a and diay would effectual plug the 
a 
ter fro either where s have been 
THE GARDENERS’ 
5 It appears that name of the bard to his own most — — 1 eared 
5, — 5 the poet's 1 land pecu 
wha 
arly his e Pioult Chênedollé was a very 
of France—he w 
tin 
Normandy, in 
Hand, and return 
d to his untry when 
| Buonaparte removed the interdict from the N 
d Genie de l' Hom 
CHRONICLE. 
hed poe at Vire of 
176 He left Prunes: on the outbreak | 
. | of 3 resided for several ak in Belgium | w 
d 
453 
yet hill, Belper, offered to to give a penn 
y for ev 
ht be caught — or about his groun ol, 
u at Coisel, near 
Caen, Dee. 1833. You: may refer to the 
“ Biogra phie t Universelle j bor! farther ee ta That 
work is the y P.S. I shall be 
meaning of the n 
rieus, “ Armosa, “ Vitellina,” “ 3 
y grew close to a 
. — wall, without tiles; but if “they had had the 
an 1 under the 
ekod of the pumps wd en 85 adriak o t of. Thus, 
veti ge omplished 
lence £ HC, D.” mi 97 —— riend to 
1 
1 
lication, Mr. Cuthill 
t 
8 
trawberrv 
Pure 
raw verry 
imeric, 
k. July aire s 
Wate 
The Potato genie made its ta appearance in n this 
t was first 
tice the inst. 
then it has progressed up — stalk from the — The |i 
tubers co with small white po 
ts, d 
apparently some fungus, more particularly that portion 
to which the haulm is attached. Gon Summers, eee 
Wake, near — . Dorsel. he disease has 
began to show its 
frewshire, N. B.) ca about the same time 
same manner as i t year, namely, 
stems nearest the old sets begin to 
and in 
et dis- 
oe 
— wh" D 
of Potatoes (which are 
the cow country tl EF? W * aL a 
e 
of th the country (Rene | i 
the Pee of | he who 
: ing the Vine.—Am I to infer from Mr. 
Love's. article “that he condemns “summer pruning” 
much propriety, con- w 
hat the leaf of a — 
other leaves is very 
es 
to e 
ines in eee perfection without “ stopping,” 
art., 0 rren’s-court, to be exceedingly tame, and 
was a most beautiful singing bird; ; the eldest son of the 
family eame to see his a iag mg mother fr eon Macroom. 
where he kee cloth s and was 
attracted 275 the be beat pot the little pot that 
with tog culty, prevailed on the young children to 
0 
will, I fear, tell — = 
beautiful Potato fields, dA. Bs Paisley, J 16. 
Pu. which if ‘elle with every 
letter erroneously or 9 the — re offers 
to view its true name. n English. 
If unanswered in — next pran ban a “definition will 
appear within a m A. 
Loudon’s — Eritannious—In ur review of 
f 
arrangement of the Supplement as ee ys ayo 
troduced by me. This was no 
adopted in the — Supplement pr — 
ished in 1832, and the owed 
in the 1 of 1839, od in the —.— 
on an 
supp. 
generall. 
„ July 16. 
Sime of you 
8. 
Lu 
5 
hat he can of and 2 5 oe 
who, 2 Bb ate em, — ye so much a 
. The na of the 
e 
him sa 
yo 
ention the alpha- | is n 
nts, parti- 
y liked by | this is 
wit He accordingly took 
vening, the e cage being covered with a cloth, an 
fely to peep the where tes: se te every atten- 
n, but all ain ; no 
anions, 
e little bird ev betat day gettin zae, when, fortunately 
— all, o — — was left open, an 
time — e young family n 
were made happy ra their little raona s r 
perched on the dinner tabl very tes- 
timony — his n the Ae ess mee alight T he expe- 
rienced o old friends. It was m He 
ow in "perfec ct health Nor, W. as before, at “certainly | 
h 
require comment. W. Toogood, South. 
r 
t of Birds.—A goldfinch had been 8 by | handso: 
: the youre family of the groom mi Sir Augustus W 
Warr 
it — late in the 
carried | W 
rred the 
oo 
will receive ane mpa and cannot thrive with- 
out them. 4. L. M., Spin feld. 
Sorteties, 
HORTICULTURAL, July 1 GARDEN Exuisiti 
any one portion of this in all respects excelent a Jol 
exhibition can be said ei —— attracted m 
e 
rapes; for ge 
the schedule, that. “all fruit 
or market, and well coloured, n — nearly the w 
the este were far from being ripe. 
unripe bain some exhibitions of this 
d be taken of them by the judg 
* su rage ripe 
hole of 
a 
were one or two eriendid —— 
Peaches and Nectarines 
J a 8 flavour is concerned. 
2 H has gained the first prize 
r. ones, gr. to Sir J 
D. 
sq., of Pontypool-park, a 
Ripley uati 5 Ibs. 14 oz. 5 ; Mr. Higgs, gr. to J. H. 
er not be part Warren’s-court (a bird’s 
ght) is six — from Macroom, the cage was covered 
— it was night when he was ets ae Bey 3 and was 
not his coming home wonderful! Warren 
Warrenstown. 
ko0.—I beg to inform “ W. H. B.,“ 
Burchard, Eeg, of Putney oe a Moscow Queen, 
4 lbs. 12} oz and Mr. Wilmot, of Isleworth, an old 
Queen, 3 Ibs. 5 oz. These tiful frui 
The Cue 
have —— the peculiar note of the 
tioned by “ seasons 
May ; and this season more than usual. 
much too — for the young cuckoo to cheer us 
with his song. J. L. M., Tonbridge Wells. 
The Building for the Exhibition of 1851.—Would it 
i rt this into a “ wi 
E 
et 
— 
g 
i=") 
pt 
— 
„and 
enough ; 
rps Tonbri 
my garden, 
d 
watering I kept == alive. I however lost sight of it for the 
season, but it came up again in 1848. The plant has 
gained s strength erer since. Its close herbage sopo 
so fleeting. The 
lt, 1 was most probab 
n y ivator of Normandy, a — 
the richest varieties of 
py ated in the 
of the great poet same dis- 
general admiration of f the sam 
trict, and was willing to testify ecrganiect by giving the 
heads of bloom, on stems at least 
* been gathered. 
eee with 
Towers, Croydon 
3 best 
k furnished by Mr. Spencer, gr. to 
uch a mee would be an W to the « lungs” of | do 
ells. n 
— ae 
t as many inches . i 
e also on were 
Duppa'e-ill a N 3 of W John 
stove 13 oZ., from À 
to the 
t Bowood ; it weighed 9 lbs. E oz. The 
t from Mr. 
wne, 
and » gr. oR 
rompton, had a large oreo fruit, 
9 8 Ibs. 8 
denen . 3 the best 1 
y Mr. Holmes, gr. to 
S — Esq o of] Putney heath; . second best 
ywood, o G. R. G. Goodman, Esg- of 
were furnished by Mr. Taylor, gr. to 
Wasps.—On the 4th of June last, J. Strutt, Esq., of 
Esq, of Streatham; Mr. Gorrie, gr. to Sir # 
