928 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
{SEPTEMBER 24, 1864, E 
5s. to 30s. an acre. . The 
eee cost from P 
ere were over 800,000 Irish u not forgotten) whose lot it is, and has alway s been, to 
op 
the manafacturing districts . re wow s Scotland. Pe reath 
n fairness to ones that these Sek ho not nated air. t of aliment into 
on 
re edat a movement from this cou a whol es u y "m IL nd S for reaching | 
80' 
experiment which might pri u 
some years to come, shoulà not be treated as other than difficulty i in deciding between Food and Db pe 
an experiment. They Gout - put their hats Yrarther than of pure air to the firs ia t 
they could draw them back. wished to end as he began. d 
With respect to the em of end km thought it ought to rise | heartily wish that I SOS f ‘icy good pu ae 
here, as in England and Scotia nd. "The Irish climate, if damper r walk from the Wie [a 
was milder, the soil wi an sn “er rl u tes yox DES of to tl m labourer, such as too| will t 
scenery more frequent an " able. en the days itd 
violence an c were over, when life and property were often it is. va on Hg health, raids might be in ie | 09 
as safe in T: liddlesex,—and that time, notwith- co ttage ; but we find there, alas! the indications o $ 
standing some parting indications of angry feeling, he rejoi iced 80! 
s of the 
y any, Mes 
te ninetieth year, is ne ever their 
oil and t pa 
end ill “be nb Ae at the expense of oth, 
but, by | start ting pq a considerable hg 
aining a thick & 
101 
eede 
includes the c 
-Q 
without 
ank wai be, whose lot 
If e aske 
» 
which 
dn reoat place, tbere might 
end t 
to believe was not far distant—the natural ie for m resent, we go | sur 
district would begin to be fairl oped. H wTippeiury Leaving the Jabourer’s cottage, for the p A 
s lon; as he new where; he bad seen great ‘changes and|on to Lon g Acr e fi eld, where the plough is agoing. land kept firm by occasional rolling. 
expected see many mor E i aS carr that nm y" What there! The horses at plo ugh good start jdn is it *» 
Stant toba on har aes OSE a eater Tera *B um lks?” 1 know, fem at a glance :| may expect a luxuriant growth; 
that ol ncies as that would contribute to so great a result | AT genuine uito Ju T 
that he deed t hem to drink “ Success to the Tipperary Farming | the ne rclay & orkine? be. qually ood ; about the third year a decided 
Society.” dra : they stand 17 i e ns in the barrel, | falling off is visible ; many of 
| neat at the ; fotlock, powerful over| die; much of th Clover disappears. This deterioratio 
the ding ve as to ihe hind quarters of these| will vary much, according to t 
ori A v they are that ae a we b 1 hippo- the soil, but ap all cases it occ 
out o 
ebicws, 
xad vea Managed the T School. 
’s Wife. W. MacIn osh, 24, Patern oster Row. 
We p ve here 15 eat Lad earns a succes 
which appears to have been 
and by the ai , 80 far a 
ofa 
um of the female 
family. 
Why did none of the parishioners co-operate ? 
it because those who Nen have co-operated 
unwilling ? Or was it b 
panied as that would. pid 
matoer a shared authority ina. nbl was no 
desired ? 
on Northern Farms and Farming. By John 
.S.E., hia of Agriculture in 
b 
Professor Wilson 
out | of the di strict r refer rred to, for the picture of ener. 
1863. By a Clergy- | 
88 
ned wi im the use 
appears, |. 
members of the area's own | Fal 
dn of the 
pen conspicuous in ‘hi instance. 
ould but 
t| be co. -efficients ; ; which 
pam f them and to spare. But 
e say of the poor fellow that is SUR, "e plou 
stilts ? he st igi s and hobbles along the stitch as he 
anifestly either we e boi 
ei 
ugh 
ost 
and judicious testen is employed, 
ard dne pn wat although it may aiter 
d We ve : u ud wth than 
n be AAE RERA Ls 1 
bes so ‘good. What Pre " the sti ime o: our cropsif | 
o manure was applied ? lAn nd, t PN under tha 
rim 
armer's RA ag akes 
The farmer, "M he 
understand what so much concerns him 
ks) would see to it we the atin and t 
they are not, If in 
34 
understandin ng o 
he man shall 
1 ex xplanation 
id cultivate, - 
e the € i A atmosphere, m om 
it how, 
mix, and e 
4 ; 
of t 
less fellow drinks his week's wa ges 
iin is no help for this y^ er, 
whi ch this should be the 
and if the 
and tbe wife is careful, we disc 
| he er, that, though they do jest m ting of t 
Aed there are weeks a nd w i ey y which PO 
| il peris 
aii it be so, then 
none concerning 
they 
et es the man loses ei nce: the wi wife and the 
children, “become. pr oriduar the children show sandy 
and h bo 
r 
of both landlord and tenant which they describe. 
crn of trite 
Colleg 
explicit Manual 
Chemistry. 
be m 
cri of apes in the Royal peepee 
of Iostractions, which is | į 
ollows over the collar bones. Then 
fields is procu d 
Hire 
"nana 
If we | If 
, &c., 
and phosphates are present ; er hand, 
these are absent, and the "us NÉ, Cock! a t, &c, 
are strong, we dud safely say SN ni itrogen is present - 
excess of the mineral matte EL stly, if the 
are weak, and th e 
vet om m 
nou d whether they xmi or not, he 
r stint my cattle in 
gr udging | them 
ponens pes plenty. of soil, to which mine my be 
t me three : 
the r 
hat are not persos 
"ei them up again.” 
constituents of a agricultural material or produc: 
are cone Ae this way the processes of anal 
ns 
^ “In pct tg "Quantitative methods, examples have | 
been selected from the most important substances 
likely to engage the attention of the agricultural 
analy By a reference to the Table oy Contents, it 
will be seen. that the examination, not on ly of v arious 
(e he eg má the cou ies 
a mission from Oxford to tea eh them 
been 
Oats, for | added, or withheld oman a ould F 
y afford a capital di , and i ore our 
: | . p e —-— i: son of Adr fi roii 
; 4 cwt. of partia aly dissolved heo or an 
q — O ah Hone. dusk + d owt, of 
P ni her E ; A 
2 ew 
dx ES 
pta at) i sprend mty ed 
Ganna ced, m — eem effect on 
feed, a dr 
deese mow or fe 
mires sort, the itat; ww. can give, should be put 
eid ird year. The winter feeding of. bh 
ree aid: e mdi is istot D d prepared for th 
soils, is included. 
“The j‘M anual of Qualitative Analysis; by Mr. 
. Northcote sid myself, has furnished some Vogziitióds 
for the Ro a of the "present ies T: me 
| should do it have re just se 
when the er carried, the men m 
fallen 
hey ive ab 
| fibre, lost bulk i in the Tin 
| fu ull day’ 8 wo: ork for wages. 
lost the power to render a 
A mistake ! a mistake! | pay th 
€ - err ia ertain that 
m better. -— conclusion, cde 
Ace ne Spay 
1 
t The instance of tos ‘farm-labourer might seem to con- 
— le 
still true tha t12,1 
(94. gris out of doors. 
eos m to - ie law of health, _ it 
it 16 | ma 
tanec in ; the 
“The isi for 
pnp uia i a help in m carrying ou 
system of practical i Hitrocdón Y in ampie as applied 
to neis there purs 3 Ás n — 
d the 
in. fi 
ric acid, Se in n coprlen ; "his aid 
important in 
rrin 
— Le the m 
the effica ven of this simple method is shown 
ei He as e. 
ak anal 3 is the v of the labouret ind his family 
often Mme eem d ba the bread t 
distributed over a Voci 
— id often very bad; the 
by the rural shops are of inferior quay wd 
and special organisation 
might not onl ly prove of interest, but also 
wider meds 
in a 
pe ki Bava 
wes : —— the PM QN of part of its aitei 
render a | enffice 
| Th 
| eottag nly a two or a 
| three days work were afforded, this time „would „also 
unfavi einen are by this | loss of an 
But alas! 
sol: 
T out | 
| would be 
tre cv dear at half their ' price. The en the roof " the labore rer’s 
this | 
rotten ¢ y: 
. Artificial to be 
Mies ess as stints, bi high iral to suppl 
yard manure ; and, by calling p a" energies 
enabling it "to abiat an 
of 
man and his family. do live, it is true, notwith- 
home—whethe ritbea SEN 
an inheritan 15-0! 
i any way. | merely a of 
lodge, or in the | 10 or 12 different kinds of Grasses, 
(exceptions ' of the leguminous 
out-of- deor I jak no ea in Good Words. 
On. —Climate and present prices render 
l to perirent t should be made 
—first, | our croppin rn and more stock food. The 
-of-door question Lem i T it not practicable y down some 
ially of | of the nee soils that yield a poor ret oe arable 
that in many Grass ot last 
and I am not eds to p -— 
has 
ee years, 
nt; but I would ask Mec a fair 
the land h properly prg and 
E 
plant 
plant, 
food fr cc the soil. 5. The importan 
the yrs mt ingredients of 
buyin d upon a guarantee analysis 
upon, and nrbe of fraud pointed 
in | las tly. The mobos of a more liberal man 
eerie she led. Professor J-C 
| Wigton. 
| Cochineal. —Our cochineal was found to be al 
lin in its native Mexico — early in, 
16th century, the Spaniards arrived there; ae 
100 y were not sure whether it was an 
"The , Cactus on which it isu rea 
tatio 
ora seed. 
a 
merce is produced from s 
Indians P) tinm are very ma 
their Nopal plantations on 
mountain slopes, two or rhe gré 
