THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 615 
Joe 25, 1864.] 
a minimum by the growth of green crops for summer | able. He therefore scie another plan, which turned ] ewt. of nitrate of soda; of Barle ey, 80. acres; of 
consumption. The following was the Pasce pfi out a complete success. He boug M tns arlir aA x sieh — 20 aer res ; of Bea ans, 20 acres ; of Potatos, 2 acres 
As soon as the corn was out of the field, the |i them ivi tons of ; of Ra 
urnips, 35 acres, reo. Be 
remained in | | phos phe per acre; of Swede 
un ntil severe weather set p when they | tons Law acre E Mesrine Que, ewt, 
nd 2 ¢ i. sap er popb os phate per acre 
e pastures 
451 
P |! re 
LI 
rmanent Grass 160 acres 
i ls food WF rook x if there were an ny to spare; if not g 
as ly or | of linseed cal whi ich, at 121 er ton cost Le, 6d. | oF Clo 
us it remained a exposed | | per week. If i f heifers were very dear in the| The m-yar ard 
g the an soon | spring, i occasi: inal sold a "few just before calving, | purchased cattle ns 
m consists of 100 acres of clay, 100 acres loam, 300 
acres moory soil, some on very thin white gravel subsoil, 
160 acres Grass saga plenty of lime in the soil—plant 
d lo oam, mi ixed seeds on the low or 
usual courso wa o le " the calves run wiih thei eir fees 
for sowing. | all the sum 
ar m of a: ps aM C uon st and| c P and "their points so well mon that they | Clover on the clay 
harrowed in with the seed, which was drilled on the a kedlike prize beasts in iig Mi and b 
flat at 3 feet t them y rough the winter and spring they were | up for Wheat. The dii land is farmed in the fi following 
ought by the butchers in June, when the system :—Ist, fallow and dunged ; 2d, Vetches and Tur- 
led SF winter fe cattle had been nearly all slaughtered, and | nips; 3d, Oats; ; 4th, Clover; bth, Wheat; 6th, Beans ; 
ot yet come in. The heifers were | 7tb, Wheat; Sth, early Turnips ; 9th, Wheat, witi >with Trefoil 
y ll i my 
loughed in the Prid 
and from previous ; 24, part Beans, an r nl ch Wheat ; 
ere © worth about 27. Möre EA 8d, Bare other 
t nd a-half before. Th 
mature to summers’ Grass for a young heifer 
n October for Ems at the| | tliis q "quality was rat ted k 4. ; 
homestead or on d Gras aor ewes and lambs in sr ox: 6d. — 17. 10s. ; so that "the heifer when 
spring. 2d. By ca 
in oe before ‘the Pg diy produced by the d b ted, 37. 105, wou A REI La "y o of corn 
of su r ha 4 been lost, 3d. B alf. alves received as much cake as they | feed ou tock. Good artificial manures, used 
of hore M boue n growing a fallow crop ih only on t^ Hs gn did not exceed 1 1b. per day at first, | properly, ate egredere to pay very well, 
Shingling, te the rest of the rough work to be Ped 3 Ib. at the la tter end of the time, averaging 2 Ib. 
done by the powerful though waywar nd team, fr per „day, at a cost of 1s. 6d. per week, or for t 
Ww, W. nd rain. 21. 11s. per A Taking Miscellaneous. - 
Good crops z Sras Swedes and Mangel Wurzel ner Win of two stone of roots ay fi wei 
wn = this at moderate cost ; the E on ce | calf would Sisane irie voti pesi Ti de = I caer tte ee Mela ware shostiy Mapas 
Tende ute that the Swe nl yee i These items, added to the 5 of the 15001. 13 T i stt nd desirous «e og 
en later, a that instead of 4c otal cost of 77. 2s. each. The straw and | 7 wd Posters, pnd x by ca Mont diagg. 
n 
week Tr heavy ia 
sold had | is kept, and a grea quantity of Hd argent is 
guano * superphosphate, and som w bones 
ar ands "Pt r | heiter, m 
tre, 2 ewt. A A unc i ved of KE wate attendance de considered to pe well paid for by |i5 him that the defendant had 
wn broadcast at the time of sowing. But the|the ure, 
ay hie eur £ carting : a whole root crop from the; The price he which these yearlings sold vacied of iur orkid re uS UA P mann 
vente course aay the markets; but in consequence of their 2 books 
able acreage of either ; his stat aij being to intro- | firs qua and "their light prite whìch Hik eet y. y uas, of butter h sea go bá dd ed 
eie into the management of Era exactly 5 suited p^ bu qu during dene Lee eather, ee tiantity—viz., 814 apes | th 1 - ouble na 
a characteristic feature “of light land far they were mies oF Yer worth fog per ston n the oh. 8 Bio. ls i i hat an unha alleged that 
ich consi x the great € rence between fat beef; and they ‘generally fetched An yo M Ps il E Kpd Ain vated 
in See of profit, viz, manuring the land by sheep | 17. pe r month ot their secreto from 127. to 167. per | Ultimately it bec: " M was re qiero 
instead of the ly cart, head : one y the whole lot averaged ier. oad ri | wins ra cd Rte dica dl iih Bab Pio froga 
3 e ^ em o = on this farm soon | age being 14 months. In all v T left a h andso a ir ys ls technicali SF > 
ur the topic of conve From an average | profit. ‘The peculiar advanta is system wore and: milk | ia T ids Arr aim The —- 
yie f two to three quarters per acre the r^ eat | thus described by the tenant "He or that when he (es t Irel m £ aud pork fut. he plaintiff 
"Rrop s — * E nd e Mae and ring | took his half-fat — to market, he had to r pane herr diria — nr and prt 
a large quantity of Irish butter, 
the 
H "Yet when asked what hi st 
md ^ Nothing — | sited im better to aA E that end ens a pf as becoming kant to him what the e real nature of the 
we fa on uc aubjec Prim. per day than those the sad Siuazs fensiad pro - was, he also di zo that it was not a hee ofit« 
the F applet 
ors 
ou take care diu ni Ti d, bat the bi able business, and that the rticle w 
eof deli RON x emed but - TT is iu sir thor shar the esent | market, | Accordin 
hey ran after him. 
ple answers, but they meant wee The mp- pac made a point o ag Smali | defendant for a pd h : 
of green crops on the land in mmer ns already acres as possibl Aa af in Wy to keep t peel Severe! T which being crx this biil Hed on the 29th of : 
described ; the improvements ‘he introduced into | down, he said it condition November, 1862, On the 3d of Deceniber a an injunction 
Um eep the 
for to restrain the defe 
of Clover which sen MURS been Phage oved 
feli br reas he credit of the 
endant from pledging 
firm E MAE without the 
the making an d keeping o and as t 
E The two together evinced that care for his ‘and [me AE. for winter 
o the Sep 3 it was necessar eithe o ‘wane pus f t sent, an order w. was made 
such a bountiful return at the time of harvest, But| of the Grass, or to put up with a EZ stack k of E inte dE MES. ud. ‘1131 17. 175. was 
Ts stor e by his hoe up Ja a dry spring, | unless the land could be m 5 euius È adi d for The “anne er h -— vade in, and the stock | 
n good land, it | acre. This the X did not k a very difficult es the laintiff it v t m x at this hearing. | 
PR that the usta pm from 20 p Aed “con Se at on the ground | 
a to turn E and sickly on ‘thie strong clay, even | task, when he was 
where "ys dra and our farmer said it was all fro hay. Hesaw 
it th ed Jib ix hin eed some 
i 
- process was not what the 
was not profitable, and it Š 
na ears; and ere fore Tae t the first s ith 
oat vil co orrien sad | Dro ooh ot pem e HS "he yo d = €: for the defendant had communica! 
iderable surface he time | acre, pd d it up the Ren year by a heavy ar to: his rept feces | Dc SA. Mee advanced nio m4 
isually sets in. As soon as cla ellmade manure. He care that ig? 4 
it begins to crack, and the fissures are | the DA boula be cleared by the 1st of March, as he desir hiy oF eredulity YN DUE EIS “refuse 
eak off the small roots and | had often seen a crop of hay ruined “fro m the meadow réprütehtdlion, NAE ee - m false 
large portion of its supply April If drought sets in in May, | Presentation, the p "Wiss Cd. OMM 
ence its change of colour and loss of vigour | Irt treated pecore parched for want of its natural | 5 E S ake — 
F , Which is on ali other grounds | covering, and the Grass receives so theodos tha | re es ERE DES n cone NER © 
its healthy development, This can o yit recovers very slowly; a season continues od of equity under the dr i M MEE ME | 
or ing, not a single shallow dry, the ultimate result is nod a crop of hay, 9 pA P rait Snir ae a a pais: | 
sliding over the surface, which only | some weeks later than usua f ni Pen sn hat by the mere introducti | 
m. ST e poa di seem Clo years of the iat. py mentioned, the ate E thee ered ity Ade "i LS 
bá E d a lim | 
: ota d ae tete " Jb. A rang t complete. rdi to | that of his Honour, he did ape to believe ht diy | 
t up to harvest better than They also decken h at fa ton iore hay pe cre, jon wie "on T such a statement. | 
are e last po oint to be re lon Essa RB of pb ey the Food Adulteration cm E va | 
nd on thie f Jed kin ng aud ma naging the " fu k E iss ü ze Pane In consider- injuri to healt th, but also to sell poe i 
Worth ot ite t ation of the spirited exertions of the nant, : a 
Er, n ention E andlord consen kiet to RENDEK 2n article that w which had been adulterated by the ad 
bullock ; a ba the jous | experin -the manure 
"PLAN young Bis in fk previous am inst an Moss quantity made in the 
were doing di same. M The decidedly in favour of the 
rigole : that enia: vasa curs t declared Spiga ; 
They had (o be mid een CUT were | that ho would rather pay for (—— sions of the Aet. Bu 
ld out again in he | nbd cipal tee covering th o yard hi that was not all. tif said that until he 
: entered into A € nothing about any 
en discovered dd 
Ban be rane of the "penalt derived from it. "The same be 
of the roof was about 5s, per superficial yard of other agent th ; but het! 
; alge of was a |rt re violation of Fen law, aud he o! 
d the and value | 
de that his nr neci A i e manure was found to be 26 to 30 ped at least to have insisted on a dissolution but b | 
be Ate on this land was et argue The E bowers did, Dod i his acts he said, “I have no objection to go or if it y 
Grass; and if made up | 8 there was considera y NOt | profitable; ” he supplied the money to buy “ flare” and 
ee Lore Turnips than t carting the manure into ps, or turning it once or | i milk,” and when it turned out not to be lucrative 
s > OF if lely wrote the letter of November, 1862, im which he 
h R diffieult B. — them y iiy sas AN Keroro until wanted, and | Im z mer DE go et the yid : 
cake at f as ive 1, resen . he al er it appeare 
MÀ but some of them would aot whether ap EFE he Grass or for a fallow xd that the parties had been very nearly settling the 
for the e pu hee the Grass was not | WnrrroRD —Mr. Askell's farm | matter, and it was much to be regr akin that they had 
36, and the € cost w: was consider- li'not. Assuming that the plaintiff had a legal remedy, 
of 660 acres, Js a i of Whe Wheat, 120 acres, receiving 
