442 
THE Noten nth Bo Sees GAZETTE, 
[June 
infected district was reached at length, and a 
residence fora considerable period i in the midst ot | 
quainted with its nature. 
As to our liability to- infection through the 
importation of live stock from the Continent, 
Professor SImoxDs in 
e as 
mporter not an 
m any Baltic 
so ere in that poem the Order i in Council forbid- 
| din n thence was e mistake— |£ 
| that, as x the pba a thence sy Lübeck 
receiyes only a hides annually from Russia, 
which e hra ied, prepared, and harmless 
| —that it receives, indeed, 8 80,000 hides a year from 
Mecklenburg, but 
in Lübeck, and se 
land tha above all, our great safeguard lies 
ga oat a 
3 aa districts, Ponti 
an sella 
eclared 
dried a 
nt a to paa butto 5 prei 
ane. PH 
e —the Rinderpest or Steppe | a 
murrain— wbi it was the object of yg mission to 
a oe th 
mine, differ 
flesh, so far from 
com 
qik g ron en that rapid de- 
osition which was declared characteristic tic of 
und and even “healthy!” 
first. poan exhibited merely 
ample opportunity of becoming ac- | tha 
to sow 200 acres se Remari ye, Nrhon Oats _ Lp and 
before he could ex any 
JE at all surprising, therefore, that Id 
rses to ay a tis ‘eubbie for the 
was desirable 
not spa are men Sand h 
prey wo year, in order that the moisture mig 
the s ‘The great art in the cultivation of ‘root crops y 
atA $ Lead 
~ | much good m 
| imparting infommabion to each other. 
and prepared 
supe iae ek | 
and individual 
eee ered horse 
the | sw 
as Mr. Boxp observ a to got the = in early. He hoped that 
Sw be ad ovens found that 
early sowing produc ced the hon vies sl EA T 
adopt that system by attending a meetin to club a 
Northampton, at which he- heard some iyaa s Sapes aka 
a Sco 
a 
T, 
ight be done among apin 
sT oaee Å Mr. 
wood, roydon 
hisa i of early sowing for the 
for the county of Surrey. 
urni and t 
fi es use of salt | ca 
in order 
e lai ands in geny z tien r thate 
cultivated without a horse ziti is foot nen it, He 
| implements to fit the land, and the si -s worked in 
rows. Sal ran om had ns doubt, a very good guon for 
Mangel Wurzel on seht lands, io he durst So uia 
ai It had the effect. of running hi 
being very retentive wes auis and nia ented 
the frost. In the case of heavy lands, Eelo. he thought the 
e quantities was very objectiona mable. To avoid 
and the result of 
oi 
had 
id 
e 
Manag his 
Ba toned, the lime in the proportion per 
acre which h 
adhered 
Mr. Wit S, of Baydo on, Wiltshire, spoke of 
te sus of steam power to the cultivation 
au 
Mr. Bonn’s declaration that he had been 
to carry: 
irds of his stubbles. gg 
-engine would, ger 
plying the eee. Autumn cultivation ought, i n in hiso opinion, 
o be comm immediately a hour's 
being of more ove at that period ani 
in the year. earlier such cultivation was “begun the morg b 
pi Ji 
the s ms of a sligh —there 
hardly an i po di 
of breathi 
The main symp 
trembling or soulders, and twitching of 
neck, sho and hind q 
i animal refused all 
exis 
ted, wad breat continued unaffecte 
During bors next ep the extremities were cold, 
the coat ick discharge — place 
from eyes a. S, came 
Calal the re wie oe: ren on the | gro 
third da the anima. 
the muscles >d 
o 
certainl pries 
pka is at 
Tiny ds wila it 
extremely fatal ch aracter of the 
bi 
ffectual would it be. The question under di n resolv: 
tself into this—had they p 
He believed all ar would 
ait 8 the ¢ 
agr hina tt ng had 
nsequence was that it was neve On 
, but no fever | w 
ultivator was doing “at piers te of 10 
acres a a day, at a cost to him: self no found the implement, of 
2s. per acre, cultivating evening es dee 
IES, of Midi: followe 
with remarks _ the relative ai i of 
aiid Mangel , as related to tha 
Mr. 
IL 
Swedes 
S 
re could be no doubt that Swedes orth or 
north-west of Eng! gland w were much more nutritious than Swedes 
ity visited | o 
oma and the means Poia 
consisted simply in | stock 
same time cal 
y 
been en 
ien discussion which followed the kog Aei ee : 
read last week i 
armers’ Club, was a 
ie difficulties of 
horse power or ae it 
season of the 
sub- Turni 
while, on the ael hand, the ag 
Wurzel of the e was iaaa or to that of the latter. The 
a greater quan 
was the enon quantity that his 
Hor cattle were got to eat so much on the east coast 
t conceive.” 
. Hammonn, of St. Mary Cray, Kent, spoke 
= the a of Turnip culture under existing 
stances :— 
seme them what it cost him to raise a crop of 
He a his land immediately after harvest, 
ed it as soon as the land was in a fit state. 
Las a in all three times and to give the 
wing as it required. Sy i 
“ete a before the en end of May. He would put cu 
J Se pamreg: A oe hich 
ee and other Sa ak aA aes 
wer hoe at 1 aere, and, 
ess than 111. acre, and 
expense he was on Mo whole rat rather a wt at that 
31 tons of Mangel per 
ence in value per 
apne ge 
= and per acre bet 
ity n kayin, 
sae in qie cultivation of our fields :— 
he autumnal cul 
Chadwick, C.B., me before th 
tion of a report made by commissioners 
seein some trial iers on the 
led X | 
committee 
recommend 
ulturists through their doing 
ry acre a be ho 
the fur- , 
nd, and of its general value during the 
ton P 
lad to hear 
out autumn cultivation already to the extent Mr. 
He 
Mt. | 
urzel, 
ep ov Coe of cattle feeding generally. He said: 
Ais and on the probabi- 
of steam | »°W 
ca 
enn maa sashes be he | the 
an extension ofautumn 
of steam-power 
iy sree a cele tee e . 
manure to agricultur: 
rr jury by the oe 
e= in need; 
TRIAL WORKS AT PAR 
ON THE Niran OF LIQUIFIED 
TO e k ae a 
absence 
roper application to the a wi 
land the fertility. and the population the and of wh 
and the extent ofthe >ne ed of theland 
20, 1857, 
ieee 
MANURE 
TOWN 
CTION, y 
partment of tho B 
me 
nive 
m tho ee of Arts to the Empe: 
e ao of an =s 
nM 
VOTES 
took hadi siperi 
brp a- 
e by ces agriculturist, The next re 
and t 
fessor Moll, 
roi 
ane a des Métiers, himself an eminent 
pular manual current in F 
the writer of a pop 
and to M. Mille, engineer in chief. The re 
translation of the first report 
The following is 
_ report of the cl mers 
loser—growing, as hedid, open 
dn of the lading spokaat: the differ- e 
wedis man 
of the * sietenay af a mast 
ation o? steam power ta 
: for in the following year, the 
they would os ye a from 15 to 40 per cent., nt, and ms ae 
it was now in th in the field a8 | oy, of 150fr. hectare, that 
e “ites was convinced that the rapal per 
| could be conferred on the | This result will appear 
gee er to field cultivation.” ea 
r. Bon having briefly replied, the followin 
Tesolution was wasadugtnd : e by 
verage 
25 per cent., 
In respect to the trials by the farmers, the 
the e quantity tothe trials by tho 6,000 cubic metres, 
a statement, with extracts, of the 
