fox-hunting it woul 
plan 
ter Beans, which 
F 74 quarters uarters to th 
are. — Mr. Rowlandson thought that in addition to the jpe * 
# 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
ag — Hon. S Tom 
e 
R. G. 
rice, Bart., — Sir John V. B. 
da 
Îl the sciences, none of 
—— can be neglected without in a certain degree inju- 
M 
I. P., Mr. Robartes P; 
N dso! 
n | Se well, M.P., Mr. Shanes, 1 F. aon Crompton Stans- 
fi 
om MP., and Mr. W 
I 
— might be be in tel, its application would lead to 
many errors, unless all stances and beari 
tation then 
admittin em to an interview, 
ish on 
ase either uniformly 
the — — ce of a grea 
r being sown in 
— —Me. adesden observ 
had sown W n the mts of — that he 
obliged the —.— after plough up, in conseque 
, the H 
with the practice also wed 
i — of Norfolk. He then gradually reduced 
to one- half that amount; afterwards to 
ra year or 
= plan, me then v introduce 7050 crops into 
ea We be e th reason for knowing that this 
omas Smith has no foundation 
tever, — 5 utterly at variance with the scheme an 
55 inten ntion of the author of the “ Word in Season.“ — 
e — 
— 
` 
t who advised Mr. Ea 
having vouched for the fact 15 
wo longer on a | 
e as land-stew ar and gardener, during w 
hou: 
_ ÅGRICULTURALĪMPROVEMENT or N follow- 
ressi ng 
the seed before planting, was 
The Secretary reported that . 
rdener to Sir T. Bath 
d heard the 
mere 
had a call from Mr, 
» of Ballintemple, 
etail 
rfectly h 2 he add 
Butler on the 7 aud 3 a repl bs ase 
in dressing an 
of good — 
row — crops 
Po — 
that “ this year, vane the 3 in the fie N a 
Ballintemple tent of one-half, 
escaped wi 
considerable injury, Ie 
rood of ground which — — planted i in the — 
not a solitary plant has been aff ot 
being one of national im 1 — —— 
barone to apply to this office, 
rfectly good and — 
otatoes wn b ton, in Sir T. Butler’ 
ardens, I considered it my Aity to make a preliminary 
reford. vi 
n the absence of the Earl of Ducie, the President of 
i The De expressed | the 
their acknowledgments of his lordship's courtesy in 
ting th and retired. mo 
out 
t on 
these were fine 
lightest and handsome bird we ards saw. 
at was in the employ- 
Belvedere for seven * 
ich time h 
obtained 17 s from the Westmeath Hortieult — 
Society, at its “meetings held in Mullingar ; some of 
rizes 8 the best early 
otatoes. 
service of the Right Hon. 
the Earl of Meath, during which timè he was awarded | 
al Dublin Society’s adhesin = for the 
n by him. He left 
82 25 
cations from ir. Spencer Stanhope on 
— manures, — from Mr. Peter Love, on facts — 
ected with the deposition of siliceous on the 
Wheat stalk, ill points discussed in a former 
lecture b, by Prof. Way, was ean referred to that co 
DEPUTATION . Guano. — following members of 
Council and Gove —4 the Society met by appoint- 
ment in the Council-roo at the house of the Society 
at half-past PaE viously to assembling at 
40 "clock at the official AÀ dos of the Prime Minister, 
attack of the Potato disease in 
Indian 
th's service in 2 1445 In 
wson, o 
to Mr. 
li January, re — = a to Sir T. 
Butler, and with 2 
r. Eaton e 
chat subsequent . — in . 
. was doubly 
careful in rving, seed 
for his crops, but still they failed * a Torge extent. But 
that the of th 
it occurring to hi e virus rganisation 
either proceeded from small insects which he saw in the 
roots of the plants, or that these i re- i 
sulted from “ wee —— or mer the tuber, | an 
whi s heal thy 
D a E 7 
AI VETTE 
pa 
ce > 
ch was posed to the pl 
development ( 9 (Eaton) Dethought hime Melt fot appl ap lying g | re 
eyes, 99838 248 
unde 5 — to extract matter from any 
kin otato. 6 
f = s, particularly in 
852. 2 most N 2 the, Chinas 
were those from M. vi obtained the wrt? 
prize; 
cock bird the 
Been. 
in D g-stree part of the deputation which the a com ng of certain 
Earl of Derby the representation e Earl of | tubers — eut ponpa planting, in — ‘ascertain, nit 
Ducie, as the President of the xp possible, whether such deleterious fuid, or injurious in- 
the it d give his lordship to receive: , were the 
. the Duke of 3 Lord Berners, Hon. R. sation which precedes or follows gone the Potato disease. 
H. Clive, M.P., Baron Goldsmid, p ee John Villiers OEP hy f. 1848, he too sages Oo gc | 
Shelley,’ n ‘Sir Charles en Bart., M.P., Mr. 4. Mr. O Farrell, spe zai: „ Dublin, an 
Alcock, M. P., Mr. Raymond Barker, Captain Went- | sowed — * in a * in the a of april 
worth Buller, R.N., Captain S . Carr, Rev. Thomas The seed sprouted, an plants grew up very vigo- We have several 
Cator, Challoner, Mr. Fisher Hobbs, Mr. Hud- y till about the middle ar July, plies * were 1 cr — — ; at present we must be ed with 
son of Mr. Thompson, Prof. Way, and Mr. | blighted in a single night. ton then took up the | referring to them and to the 8 the different- 
Jonas W plants, and cut them d to about 4 or 5 inches Serica ‘contain plans of farm balding salted 9 role 
The Duke of Richmond having taken the chair, it | in length. The one-half of them he planted upon a gar- | Gaass : H EJ. will improve e the land. But the best way is 
— that the deputation should, in its inter- den-border, and the other portion re-planted in the | to stock the iad a their manure ree eae ee 
w with the Prime Minister, confine itself to the object | Melon-bed. The latter with his composition | Grou: Mawuring Wa ZETEL SSna N Se e D EET 
for which it had been specially appointed by the Co bef . These grew vigorously, and were taken intend prefs to Grass lands. 
—namely, “to represent to his lordship the importance | up in November, the tubers being the size of hen-eggs, | Grass Sexps: A R M. You must not sow the Grass seeds. 
of taking every to effect a reduction in and perf — hich had not been ma py boned kai. Fia — ze till paei Give — 
the price of guano.” At the request 3 the meeting, with the composition were taken up at the same may os Bae Barley in March, and hoe the Grass seeds in 
Sorell Buller and Mr, Mr. Hudson, of Castleacre, con- — and were Poe sy be many after the Barley is up, in 
dress the Earl of Derby on the part of the 1 ten. The next experiment he made in February, | Luceans : Con te iw rost Yon mar vow in Apri , 
A 183, ne — W te oe oe: Oder. An intelligent correspondent, at page 60, 1945, 
tain — Carr Presented to the Society an | of his ompound, then planting. At the same time says c=." Mow, i Tadd aano to plant with Oas, I would: 
on guano, last year | he plant— 
ss Lime =m entitled, “ Estudios sobre el A When t t es came to mai ey wer N rn 
celebradas, por el Gobierno all sound d of excellent qualit y. The were Half with black-budded Sp aniard 3 0 S 0 
5 avn te, de Reflexiones | vigorous and h all along, grin 3 Halt 1 — preen jeaved C 3 f ne : 
re siste cultivo y : por any symptom of blight, and only col ring from the — ’ 
»f f ati l with 3 1 
Peta tr wi which E d to | fading process parable from the ripening of the * try a rod cf two of bitter W 2 embering 
tuber, The others, which had not nd with | that the green-leaved Osler and bitter Ornard gic wee be in 
alongside of the the wettest ground. Nevertheless, it is a great erro 
The Members who attended that Meeting havi 
adjourned, at 4 o’elock, to Downin —— reet, w ware ret 
y the following additional Members of the Society, with 
j tubers were taken u 
dressed he stalks at an 
early stages getting worse and wo 
up they were iii disease In! 
r to su] 
grow 
not mind being occasionally 
may plant now, 15 just sticking the 
euttings right end downwards into the land, 
