= _ were generally the fact, — d be some small 
— = — in 
more — t our ents 
Jersey the disease is worse than 5 — week os 
and i following letter from a t just 
returned from a tour on the Continent is * fa- 
vourable — bine foreign crop : 
c Ue 
=e Soe 
Cae eer? 11 F S y C eer 
d 
be said is that in some ea th pork case, 
rot so fast as was expected, and that, 4 55 the crop | fruit, vegetables, eggs, e ney, and to save an- 
| Potatoes vil apparen 
= dithering ative ot 
35—1848. | 
LOWER SEEDS, for PRESENT and AUTUMN 
ene WING, free DRO t, useful instructions. 
i bar 
488 and BRO beg to refer to a select List of 
B the above advertised in the Gardeners’ Chronicle of July 29 | al 
and Aug. 12, — amongst others, the following: 
et.—s. d. red acket.—s. d 
Auricula, Pts + dice .. 1 ) Heartsease, e Bags ice 1 
Calceolaria, from 5 ) . choice mixed 0 
— from orra os + Do. * 
0 * kets se 5 Petunia, e ite ot 
Gladiolus, from fine vars. 0 — ony extra choice 2 
Fuchsia, from best vars. 1 erbena, 2s. 6d.; smaller 1 
. choice Greenh erennials, 10s j 120 TN 
20 do. Hardy Biennials and Pere BET 
20 do. Hardy Annuals, for autumn 4 0 
Descriptive Cata for 1848 may — be h * it- 
tances are requested from unknown 2. 8 Post- 
office orders —— able to Bass and Brown. Posta 
i — for small amounts. 
p 3 eed and — Establishment, cutter, Suffolk. 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1848. 
GS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING wee 
se. September 
—— — 
Cov ** 2 and Thursday, August 30 and 31; Dur- 
= Botanical and fiortiealtaral — —Wednesday, Sept. 6: — ier. 
cate 
S — 
3 r. 
ND Sept. 7: Teddington Horticultural, Leamingto a Horti- 
iride» state of the Poraro Cror is the reverse of 87 er Flax, fr 
all 55 2 acres) 11 
roved 
. show 
daily making — progre 
since last week. On the contrary, 
without os — —— that — is 
hat e 
16 Iti is: also ale alleg 
and there „double 
THE GARDENERS’ 
FOICE FLOWER SEEDS, for PRESENT wna AUTUMN it is. We should have thought, however, that 89 m 
* 
* 
CHRON 
t, ede that so 
pg — was to pay about 5d. 
Report e was also to have the 
6 e e estate for the sum of about 2107 
— The were to enable the oecupant i 
pay ‘this, maintain ‘his family, and lay by money 
to purchase the freehold ever itually, According to 
R podi 15 tons o 
d. a stone, or 4“. a ; they et to 
of Wheat an — or 5 quart 
thoy were to keep cows, — sell the 
at 13d each cow ‘yielding 
“ pr rman em and this was to famish 1 181. 5s. per 
0, 
e loyed `i 
emo 
In erland, about 
the higher 8 5 5 the Potato 
nning to show sympto 
Sly. Be 
Thun, Chamouni, and 
crops were only be- 
ms of disease, at the end of 
a green 
th paper be 
were Ms all cleared 
off in Belgium and a4 the p pla at's oft the Rh 
and is now u “ge to feel the ‘infliction. 
ruce, of Wau n, in East Lo 
w going. Sir JoHN oN also writes 8 
Perthshire that the a tj is aden although no 
r. 
e where the disea 
havoc.” * L find,” he 
e says, tha more eee 
washing them ‘well in cold 
it question of Aber the untainted | 
: Our c ndents write that even | 
their mg 3 VERA Wert to the eye 
ho practi 
“advan ice, though w — al 
Tus House fC 
eared at i of Con 
by the lottery-office kee 
pable error error, in rent, rates, | 
re a will make — assumed anova — of al 
t 
2 — quantity f — bisat 2 and | such 
1 Mr. O' Cox al 
their chances, pe i amble 
po 
use | bee 
tly receives its answer | f 
A with bb . ‘tana of Mr. Revans (4th Rep. 
fulfil 
2 the shareholders,” or, as 3 8 
o 
Sale we may leave that questioh where 
oe 
n pigs were to be fattened, and sold at 
wr * e les were to realise 
Ad... an is was 
e done u 
s to live in Ss 
Ne bread, ducks, 
144. . 4d. an acre, or 291. 16s. 8d. on the 
2 acres ; —— to ain this, only 157 pe were to be 
n Jabour—all which is support 
res and —— duly set forth in the place | 
above 
Mr, eden 8 are 2 2 upon a 
sans allotment hall reduce it to a 2-acre 
holding. He nd ts . oe thus 4 
5 s. 0 
Best hay for e ar Dee. to 5 6 8 
Clothing for ‘aaa; ‘wife, and — 15 0 0 
uel, soap, and ca ndles 0 0 
Repairing implements .. 8 
igs in May sha 40 0 
‘£42 
But he did not appear himself to know ial the 
charge upon the ‘tenants for rent, rates, and taxes 
was likely to be ; for we find that the 
beat least 10. 0%. 98. 4d. Wem t. ti 
2-acre hold 
How far the ders are likely to pay — at 
E and lay by their redemption ‘money, w 
leave our readers to jud 
ace, an acre of land is to yield 15 
and as lottee: 
ever to produce . te ieee —— for 
= land and any cultivators to produce as an ave- 
. Yet this i is the foundation of the whole course 
- ese 15 tons are to be 
: for cows 2, for 3 mily 1}, for 
5 ce it will be 
supposition | ¥ 
hat a fair óp of Potatoes wil be had ; but what 
if they ‘have done for the last three 
that the 
with gambling from the a 
ottees are taught to gamb! 
for their * sel — to 
— crops, just as Mr. O’Con 
against law and —— for the 
— of a tacky throw whieh would relieve — 
from the e — — 1 5 
the 1 keeping is word to the ear o 
the poor men whose money as wasted. 
Then’ the cows, ew of which are to be kept upon 
and two roods and half of ground, which 
= 
e for 
Potat 
are to yield 8 quarts of milk each per diem all the fai 
ipad 2 and Mets milk is to be sold for 13d. 
s point we content ourselves | 
llent pasture to k 
This sum may be taken as the rental, ‘although, from the 
confused account of Mr. M'GBATH and others, it has appeared 
to be higher, 
ICLE. 
throughout th ane ais 
sed t out erer . quarts « 
does give milk j ae mus 
t 
granity, — aver 
A holder of a — and 2 acres of land, under | pss 
ab 4s. 8d. cre 
mee — ar Mr. — (Sth | milk, 
eh 2 
rehas 
Till t this was 4 — — of 102. 9s. 4d. was red is to 
r. Q’Connor, 9 7 is easier; his tenants were | i 
rent ves vill her 
K all as 
for e much notice that it requires to be 
on 
2 gallons a 
she 
i 
largest town d 
which th pinnae A nitions, 
— are collected and 
expected, vi i. 58. fl h : vithout 
rom each cow, w 
including the . ‘ot the calf, or allowing an j for 
value of th 
But w we should i like to know who is to buy the 
rocured in the quantity 
r. O'Connor? Where is the 
yawi raged 3 for instance, in which it 
t ? 
H 
iryw omen can testify, 
labourer at e says Mr. Revays, a A 
me that the butter made by — o be ears on the 
ee e was 2 * uneatable,” 
eld on an average about 
oven p acre, if the bushel is taken at 56 lbs. ; 
and this o 
oduce with spade husbandry 
more than 42 — or 6 Ta less than Mr. 
O Cox xon's aver 
As for the —— matters in Mr. O'Coxxon's 
scheme, they ma passed by, since the whole 
Foundation o of his speculations has been thus shown 
e 
et over, 
argument is th 
Potatoes, and 48 bus 
yield 8 quarts of milk 5 diy ; if you sell it for 
Hd art ; 79 55 hives of houey weigh 52 Ibs. 
ach; if you et 122, 10s, for a quarter of an 
acre of Flax ; sinid if, in addition to these profits, 
you 
an réalize 4 few ot 2 t 
or newspaper paragraphs, but canno 
the basis of sound financial calculations,” and 
i ay be 
elude i os people ty holdin ng ep 
rule is to practise 
ece] tion. For ours wer hit hey 
o was sa that “no — cag: 
off such land 8 h he adi as to 
en pa rent,” than all the cs (era who ever set up 
The. aitotnrétit system has now, however, attracted 
considered 
n its own grounds, without. teference to land 
eee or to Messrs. A. B. and C. It is essentially 
a purar question, and one which we should be 
glad to have discussed by men o who 
ave no personal interests to serve, — We b by no 
means insist that our own opinion diffi- 
cult 8 0 should be taken to 
wan in tha er mian \ 
a very 
worth more 
ear ‘columns open t 
A can, on a 
fainily upon two English acres of land or thereabouts 
(meaning tent ee 
lüd 
too — to render it a safe clement in any caleu- 
lation 
EERE 
must now be allowed . cai Temai 
in ‘ie south of England, as 
of 
he general p —.— 
the Potato Diskasr, ene we believe 1 fully 
