THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
m her manufacturers have relied in 
past upon another source for the su upply of their 
requirements of raw for the 
ture of  pharmaceuti рел A 
a been the 
d саре: I are , Holland, 
and France. particularly strong 
upplier, n xe ry drug. farms 
are conducted on a large scale, produ: 
‘quantities of terial for the home 
телера, and th р was placed on 
ket in 
which have hitherto been im Ы 
an exte cultivation in this 
voca! munerative 
0810) 
plants of herbs which are Ey We 
as Lavende 
d other Wired 
af 
genstal geni dg Vira which pee: may ba in- 
d in my n 
7E 
p 
should expect that pathological “conditions due 
uld be dis 
b 
th 
few ew people “understand E about yound- 
sible that at a M at tance the liability to 
ped A shrubbery 
& 
„=ч 
it is a class of work which is quite 
vestigation, but when compared with the general 
consumption armaceutical u 
Si 
Leaf disease” should be т сЕ increasingly 
common, for Stereum has always been com: 
the category of medical plants any more’ than 
ustard, and the 
(To be continued.) 
ME CORRESPONCENCE. 
refore cannot be considered in 
In 
have “Frequently read of ысы апа remedies 
that е ard of in t 
(The eet rai do ркм "agere а for 
Silver Leaf Disease (sce d —Mr. Moly- 
writing on Silver in Gard. 
neux, 
Chron., Dec. 28, 1918, p. 261, are 
that “Tt is true that the = ge =: 
attack e 
wound," and asks 
* What. proof have we of ^is b ond 
tion? si Mr. Lynch ever detecte 
wounds, clean a mee watched the 
and progress 
tion 
of the spores in their gern sa 
an and seen the result in actual 
Le 
е. periment was 
am hardly at lib refer to it. May 
suggest that Mr. Mol d 
fecting, using trols of course, and see the 
result? He would t iti 
i e particula 
i direct cause. It does „> 
Le show that Stereum is not the 
a Silver Leaf disease does dignes: 
* ch 
f, and Mushroom spawn, I believe, been 
