ber THE 
GARDENERS’ 
E eel 
(Serr. 27, 
din affirmin ng. that we are e Tol 
awi 
utrefac- 
: ipri 
few feet of earlier sorts reduced to a mass of p 
tion. * ‘ Ambula tor’s” will, no prety also decay 
Sı it in eultur 
ether it commences in eji fi 
ete: may | be a 
t progress. 
foiea ive: ot the sea-coast been worst affected | 
usual t f digging, when they w 
sound, whilet most of his crop had ales 
There can be no doub t, we T ro 
are dug so early as the rot cam 
enerally ? 
a allotment field I mentioned as 
rst sea at dise 
of the was in many parts manured 
from the atmosphere. Their ten 
“weed, ad washed by the spray. This, 
rmi ine this 
y and insipid, parce 
nelu. 
in 
bs 
difficu’ e latter, 
prevention is apoi ble, e. But it may commence in the | 
therefore, without re to know the 
n alarming extent last year, sets the su pposed in- 
fluence of | salt at rest. The e parts a affec te d eo season 
mpto 
ar ‘of the disease, or its cause, I will assume it to 
were the fir 
oii h 4} 
commence int the tu be TS, and offer "advice according gly. | 
this yı 
J 
rabl 
+, 
g Last y ear 
ong intervals of time, 
able kingdom. Pah is not too much to ey that © some 
f these insects may b and 
hat this he d ga rise to many very i Tar ex- 
d tubers, Ag in a b 
well, Pigs now fed upon them 
seemingly ani for foi re- 
so much p Tu iber: tho- 
raw state, a and did 
boiled do well, Heem 
semblin ng w when mash 
was ado 
and | enemy t 
as com 
o 
o their favorite SARA ‘tin € old e phian, t! 
When the ey saw the crop a ne ies ie it imme. 7 
diately, and pile get se Pota n the surface of the 
gr round, takin, 
lo 
1 
[i 
t 
planations o ar that the most a 0 
the 
eart 
| a week, are sti 
till PAE ie derine. The ey were planted 
| in autumn and early sprin any 
| extent w: 
se here t 
e and thei 
mge 
was AE LE uadi a covered the pee 
ea w with clay. The result w: 2e pro y as ; 
afi ved. | 
un- 
ep 1, and 
gr 
of the la 
These 
dom. T ha ave 
go far for its first meal. 
lately 
r sets, when | they are a takoen 
nsof a 
proni, 
all 
up, a 
Eir pag Se diag a fo 
and to the eyes by 
operation bing one sa the 
eyes not havi i 
be were 
änd may be oe ae service, while it 
=. 5S. Mackenzie, Rose „Bank, Roslin, 
w “ter © 
is will 
| Cultivat 
oes 
had known it to be aforetime. ero 
r Potatoes of good qu ality. 
pt th 
pare the Beaten and storms.”—W, Bacon, | 
Mount aie June 22, 1845. From the al 
Potatoes purchased, an 
way pointed out in last we el ‘8 
uised, 
oing to dig 
ecution nd well as 4 I 
the equally great benefit of finding an an easy and profit- 
able employment fo for the in inmates ; indeed, aii 
e 
pres all up next week, and pit as mai I 
to be ‘sound, I purpose putting in narro Pint i 
ld ł mould I p 
3 
prevented by deep planting, a I do not see any " ad- 
pose taking from some old banks ee I haye ton at 
h 
so early nor is the produce so pe the 5th of | p 
Decembe: bari Epa planting, oe 4 three ives of 
Potatoes 
trouble hg a knocking down; we —_ is 
has been her 
Poor Law Commissioners at once directing “that such 
ear tatale shall be adopted in all Unions situated” 
where the Potatoes are oes injuriously effected. 
diffieu lty of a poor man is t he want of means 
rfectly dry, and I suppose 
banks for the last century. if the murrain n proves as 
d, I 
Arnott’s or some like stove byes would nied 
heat sufficient to „perfect very large quan tities. 
drills 12 inches in depth, in whic 
slightly fermented ; some 
of Ki dn 
do not know what the consequence: 
ose chief pen almost ony food i is the 
eys: a 
e here ; 
ong 
them a, ve up fei be i (spring os om 
poe in the 1 latter end of March. Ten rods of the 
On 
ly | a 
e 
Pey o 
for ear’s seed, would leave “for man’s ule vi 
hesrly ‘a2 avi Reage quantity of Potato food, even in the 
most affected dis —J. 8. 
eng 
Expediency of. Ean thing-up. Potatoes.—I have 
w I am convinced that itis 
e had doubts Poe to Sisy hing-up Potatóes 
m 1 pra and n 
ting them 
rs from 
p on Corky Sot. 20. [if decaying Da are yerr 
ill eat 
The ariety “employed i in my experiments 
is y5 Pik koe s all the sets | re plated be fe 
has pal 
hy kan 
s, and iey w. 
"Biss ow 
iS the case in siden csae We „long ago 
jas Ae K r Ma aula oe ioari deka hy but 
planted on the 2d of June, in the 
pages fela, iii m hanim i is vigorous, are tainted. 
out boilin -y 
The Pointo _ furrain in North America. — 
this ri learned ‘hs t-a patoja spighe 
2s A y 
in some Victo oria 
me early sorts, ei] 
his spring from acu t fs “Fs on the 27th of 
the first 
destroyed the greatest part of it, ee the eai 
in the row: s, and tak taken up pH 
(Sept. 2) pear weighed. The average “of all my e 
riments gives exactly an increase of one-fourth in favo 
of 1 not remy | up; but some of the f lots gave stiik 
more, viz., as 42 Ibs. is ted Ae ere _ The experiment 3 
en EE s on the si of good deep 
loam, with a cool, ‘acted poe of “My ; experiments cone 
ra 
pee 
= 
flay, are infected ; the haulm g rorously, th 
howe perfect, but some few of psd pets ves s black § 
given to me I think it must be of the same nature as | firm also the opinion, that the Potato murrain 
ure j many D parts of „England, and oe am sorry to add f | th d-up 
| Canada also agan. th 
ame may be said of some Hundred-fold MEEGA grow- 
ig ly vigorously. I have not bee: 
any defect in the ge? of the Potato, with m p- 
es becoming 
dying : at the perei be hos is eae split down ‘te pA 
g juicy to the v: On those wher 
, appears àr 
is apparently dead, fe oplting. à ogee 
haulm duan which 
A Yoh, not ef from the borders of sands } the 
may in Jean Sor ge le, Sept ci 
n the 
and hollow, like a 
show the discoloration og a: to 
5 for 
od pecs ase inch 
apna gr a e 
[ purpose packing paN ees ss mould, which I have 
a appn ge pati e all the best, 
Ser the hoe ean 
pa 
come more tenacious of its correctness. It w. 
this : ee from some cause which we did not th 
not now, define to ee om a er Potato 
vine was soa tacked with a 
quently see on the straw rot Rie 
whic tinued 
finding it next to 
ag I 
1 Whea 
the case of the Potato it ft showed itself in a nae 
of t h e cont 
tall 
ses 
up were nearest the surface, 
ores soniad to pe at thev very to) 
up rows died off nig Esg Ha 
and t rey di leav 
exposure to th x lig! igas w 
up.— George W. J 
Hoare’s SER, fi Vine Culture.— 
my P; sii 
Pea A 12 rows un 
Id 
4 young plan 
withheld from mage roots o yon 
am sorr, H. supposed me 
feet them without so 
ing 
t 
h 
at the farita aein of disease, be- 
pag, detect very many infected w n 
mould, showing itself in spots.. When taken up we w 
not aware of the nee of 
ss woe 
‘rompton, Middlesex, Sept. 1 am 
ndu 1ced to ‘couble you again upon this eject rom 
dry and d hard as though it had : reache d its ma- 
vw 
y Mr. 
surdity ; for the fact nat 
supplies « of water, then 
Aa but Ae lower part remains green for a while. 
The conjecture (it was mere ee we threw out, 
was this : whether the sap, which v w stopped by 
the dryness of the stalk, in its usual c inel of circula- 
tion, and, of course, ens from ma mee into the 
leaf, n to return to 
Tact 
+h 
of th 
por Preparing 4 the eres facts 
e last season both here 
, its 
ment, did not 
en? 
aR are s indispatable, and deman 
ion in any ge can rainy boyy Soe pra |i 
progressive 
EERS 
under all circumstances ; and repeat the | 
| were too r "gone to ipee much u Eege 
i eki y 
n 4 Le 
claim to its origin—a fact that 
en we 
Hig seo "x us, as 
how the Bent atl aaa mage g, that 
ously 
by splitting one open, 
flat A ning, in Mark-lane w 
without suspicion. 
this sort of hg for another variety growin 
fi hissort grows from 
I cannot hear of an; 
the disease, i t has no 
renders the fature ge of the root a matter of grea 
Ino 
to confirm the opinion pai | m 
previously epret en a certain degree 
or maturity is to feed the — 
‘cin from all re e first v Those 
upon dry, rich, well-drained so q llow 5 prepad sorts, 
on cold wet “soils, on a ai or with north 
that tend to retard growth, seem or a tg geo, 
flatter the possessor rea “hav e escaped; _ but 
of ripeness | 
Early {i 
maturity w which the circumstance of ey tase could pos- 
of the field suffered 
literally be said to wither in an hour. p5 a 
: Ambulator,” in last Number, 
as much from the rot as any pape atra are 
then, is one instance in brot Y our 
experiments were tried, of w we shall cite ee one 
or two. oe ioe ae few hills 
when the vines Arat sowed symptoms of d Pages go c 
in 
carefully buried them 
a og the dis- | e 
the Potatoes gave al my öviletiés of 
MUCE edinous threads e 
which was speca yesterday : 
uninjured for some time, but af peak 
possi 
ll tissue, W 
sa as me dierent tin tnt 
ular passages are 
