298 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
(Maron 26, 1864, 
contrary, it had greater advantages over horse 
wer on ine land than on flat land ; and wherever 
ou th ld 
vity w sev as no 
slightest t difio ulty in pga Tene it 2 also said 
that a the weak point in V 
ee of culture was that he had | tile for his 
s to do i Gout Dog dl as E did, nearly 
all his work for pow 
| and o 
0. lata wi 
Iw another column will —€— found a report of 
experiments ua known 
various Whe hnd ihe a he 
forwarded pey our Bisa. oper were opened and laid is 
bains ndent ko res 
declared to be not in the least injurious to mea 
n the other hand, it is so prevalent, that to 
e sale of animals affected ng it 
een and thu 
measures brought before sque © has also held 
meeting, a ieh i resolved to ae 
again the bil in ite present shape. It 
solved— 
Ist 
desirable that proper precau utions should be ta aken 
side by side for n before reading 
sonuit whis ur cR m on ives o th ar 
and the following results of this Hispa p ag were 
De ‘decidedly wpe to committing to the errants 
of shipping and to railway companies, or to inspector 
few samples of Wheats oy and gra in 
others. Bef 
“That, whilst this meeting feel that it is mo tone 
———— 
A COMPARISON OF Me 
In compliance with promise you have 
with many others. ore 
: * rk : LA orfectly free 
personal motive or pom by feeling, and giy 
of pleasing or displeasing any one. RM Fidis 
are conducted w 
Bad 
uality, prod many other partien " 
practical mies and not with a Mes: to pro 
sati s by employing mea 
o | which the Wheats were grown is a good lo amn, deep 
and friable. 
e 1. Pringle's Bearded White. MB Sept, ti 
pa 
appointed by local authorities, the power to take uidi 
sorts de in me ce of the names of the several Serine oa which appears to be at present more satis- m ithy ne ip t hi be ndr d red failed in giving Me 
soria do h actorily and constitutionally exercised by her Majesty's dad y d'a an s EY of fir á pom niy well, and 
No. olaia and ong begin white Wheat, | | Council" poi: Aie ud. ze, clean wd 
of pet us and transluce — 2d. while this meeting are of opinion that|""Porm xt HR ed d eia: li and very hard; 
iforml s weigh 100 the ia should prohibit all traffic in animals suffering reri hi ir White Md un cala pA. not 
s arge and long- -berried white | under acute and — disease, they are of meme on 2] did edo stronger in “quale u a -- 
al cmm m E drying ; grs. 
0. 3. brown-red M t the oe | 
individually per ieolouréd, and the sample unev 
the grains being iiie hi irivelled ond 
horny” and others full and brown; 120 gra 
grains = 
£T 
No. 4. Large and long true-red Wheat, semi- 
translucent ; pert ains of uniform size and good 
om 132 gr ra = 100g 
Lar, and longer 
Wheat, very uniform, translucent ; 
sample ; i 124 E ins — 100 grs. 
No. 6. White Wheat, horny, somewhat ricy ; 
not 80 Niko u "Ros: 1 an ah , but otherwise like 
TS. 
berried 
s| The 
true-red | Plac 
a beautiful |; 
is of a temporary na and seldom fatal.” 
“ This ee itty ‘therefore strongly peri nth of | 
tend 
ibition to animals rae by murrain, which deeds bei 
tal. 
well adapted for sow ing late in n the season, 
thas p Lora and mm carly the sample 
aff E 
are bad or coarse, 
a Bill recently introduced into Parliament, entitled 
attle Diseases Prevention Bill, ati ‘that a 
ph etition be — to the House of Commons against | 
being passed into law in its present jor and that | 
the Chairman be Pd to sign the 
. MELVIN, of Bonnington, thou right € 
e of the Bill feras called ‘ The “Cat tle 
"T ; 148 grains — 10 
"7, Lar arge berried hid Wheat, somewhat 
shrunken, very much CDS No. 6 ; 149 grains 
5 e did n 
e how they could, under these Bills, dispose of i 
their stock at all epidemic or epizootic 
ountry. The fines were so 
and iM salts that would ow from 
fol 
creping outthe provision “4 - Bill were so serious, | 
he did not s ohid pe Wes n. to 
ay 
| E ripen 
The four following sorts, No. 2, 3, 4, and 5, were 
grown alongside each other, planted Oct. 8th, 185, 
| single seeds 9 inches apart each way. 
ned very early—firs 
No. 3. Hallett's Pedigree. Secon Besos pave 
starting with the large ears m ned to yo 
autumn o. Germinated "iow Moti phat 
€— e strongt Mie e but many of the stems 
failed the ea rs irregular in 
1 "m 
CES . Large te Wheat, horny, very fi 
and though REN of r^ valid quality, its d 
hardl x M dp from No. 
bis e grs. 
No. 9. Remarkably fine 
eat, uniform, t transient; 
Sn m tires 
137 grain T 
; 135 grai 
coarse aid: exocodingly | 
a true-red Wheat, shrunken; 111 grai 
to 
À | be greater than the penalties to which the diia | 
z l 
ka 12. A brown-red Wheat, M e ve 
some dn = grain shrunken in drying 124 grain 
m^ 3. A ee of 9E short, round-berried true 
white When 
te Whe Sei 
inary ed ad t " 
Try, and Hallow Fair ir ee a vede as 
this Bill would introduce, | 
Mr. MoLàcaw, of Vis eie recommended | 
red | that they should not ne eee em | 
the Bill in toto; th many thin 
a 
tethert he believed t 
(a fa fault common to all tender-strawed Wheats 
sown ‘thie on rich Shand); ; chaff large, aiT 
eamy whi t brown; straw long, thick, and 
soft, very subject ts Silden ; grain large, pale yellowish 
f| red, coarse an i ality, 
inferior 
No. ed.— Germina ted ove i QN plants 
very healthy, t Sa sol and produced ears regular 
in size, lon what thin; straw ve yag ead 
| would render them 
eui since 1842 the| 
d doubled, tripled, | , 
that 50 per cent. of that |s 
contagious ante, 
n this positio: 
slender ; guid xr iie s bright red, rather large and of very 
bise gui; S good beg ei No. 3. The 
mple of this variety is threshed, and 
dent Yor comparing with 3 2 
No. 5. Shirreff's Bear 
inated ov 
of this 
hum man food is to ,be RUE untarnished, wes hall 
An 
pr ces are prot on this | subject may c | 
to the ** Compaen of Wheats” in another colum 
and re — names whieh a 
numbers : ey may also compare our inde 
pendent deseription of the MÀ samples | 
our ent's original descriptions of the 
rres 
9 e on MÀ ae — to -—À Pom we retain 
em should 
oun. ? | the effect 
It is also proper to the i ofa ~~ - he en ee E 
— set rie bee it does materially on its cul- wu db Per pee uin X "ein i 
— ea 
value x Ngee ars sort; Bem rd the ~~ ~ th mace refuse conveyance of live stock, though ontitély 
given of the ess of these sorts must be he, oo Sees : S = Mert: ne Ut theirs udin an o 
ong wi deus AM of the 
samples that have It CER to petition against the Bill in its | 
sent state. 
: TuE Cattle — Prevention Bill now before 
: Mans epee e of re ouse of Commons is 
a proper t 
iud i no in quiry, no “prevention, of | 
| disease, no Iain t the Society will be placing 
goi. sarai 
injury 
| murrain, and s Loughe it E) Mes a ee: 
m 
d were the Highland and A 
forward and pe 
if very much "Dem on 
Rongh Chaff.—Germ 
| strong batty plants, tillered aenn CAN ; 
dr len 
ed.—Germ: 
; plante. vel heathy ie bere 
ring the winter appear 
variety 
eak, but in the 
w and er P ost am 
dur 
sha red, 
in eai, uti ^ tty «d red Wheat trie 
; cee red variety : this is s ungues. 
of i 
ighty-six Tarot past d 2, 8, 4, and 
gro BEL nd ons 9, 10, 1 and 12; aeris 
were planted November L 1862 ; single e seeds 
6 in ^ apa 
Tru mp Wheat (?).— —Germinated bir 
very “healthy, tillered well ; straw long gent thic! tdi 
tou ngh s sos rather thin, not long, but un 4 
grain — size, white and good q wal ity; y; potus 
fair icine ted well Lr 
No. 7. E; 
h, stout, hard and i 
rs short and d th thick, chaff woolly ; grain medium si% 
reddish white and rather rough; good in in quality; 
d average. ted belor 
8. Purghfteld Early White.—Germina! this 
average, - —Á : 
and tender; ears ra ong and t 
flat, Mud. uneven, reddish white; 
roduce average. of this 
pu to Kessingland, but with h whiter 
tionably the b 
mior 
not earlier 
YN, who 
sided, submi th 
following resolution on i k 
tted 
subj eot of the Cattle | i 
q | Importatio 
t tle into the 
= » unnecessary, and should be 
n, the iR aie nie 11 and 12 At c. 105, 
purpose ; petition 
“No.9. Nursery Red(t (true).— = Gonminatedorer pes z 
e eo j tuy, illere modera 
and hard pe ca ery rw 
‘No. Hallett's P edd 9 : 
by Me Hallett in inna th the s lneripion ape 
No. 3 is padon turlag appl icable here; after pert Eyi 
belg kaipi "pes for 
against the Bill 
and that th rds , 
thnntend £ 24 
d »1irL 
“54 ine same, 4 nar 
detect 
f, we aro bound to admit ring ili © 
* 
x 
oin 
OO EO RE 
