e THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. (Foxe 11, 1864 
apropos of a subject which has only lately been | that gentlema an has been lately givi ing a the | it was finished Mr, Josiah Parkes's able papa 
el TA — prominene, that ne Royal Agricultural Soleno the same kr 4 Zr drainage made me think I had committed ny hy 
J. BRE N writes middle class | The interest ep “publication of s such | and so, after dr ng ———— abont 75 ; Acres in this 
i r wh 10 i 
ed to 1 not, believe, rolled $ away, r by c Y odd years 
book of as many pages a ended, in whieh there | injure ihe abridged syllabus of the several year my p eis ban 
p pp J 8 d have watched x every fiel eve L 
have been collected for the readers of the volume, | lectures which we hope to lay efore our readers | v, have noted that ihe Fe As dni A TY drain, ay 
ief i i i ye|ins i | and i 1 à sed land wi 
tha 
e last issue appeared in agricultura 
terat lsewl Dr. VOELCKER and Professor} Tur Ro us A ern Beneyo a : 
Dav, Profesors THURY, of Geneva, and A, H. | may now be regarded as firmly eiie on Phe re owing than the wide drained, and every a 
Cnvncn, of Cirencester, Mes s. HARDING, C. W. | noble list of this country’s char unded | works as perfectly as it did 20 odd years snes, * 10 
w years ago b 
s more reely and friably, and 
o not for a moment let it 
at o er anties; | his unwearie 
and these have distributed among their cultivators | full majority, a E is dio by troops P this thar Mi ing an friability; 
Ww t s. pode information of the whole country, | friends in all classes of the ag Moral world, especially i in wek A ated; WR E very stiff clays, 
special nat gero aam commissioned | who lend their assistance and their qm to the drains near to each other, say 18 Dod 
from slated agricultural w iters. | its praiseworthy labours of love, Lord STANLEY, | also ^ T ample sized pipes, not mandy 
the Glouces tershire papers, that by| who presided at its annual maiar. me other day, plirpore of draining the lma, but for ventle do 
hat it LAM UAR i 1 at 
bo 
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mo 
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S6 
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ur, as been ZR to illustrate the refine us that income is 0002, per | subsoi pri 
grirsordinarr advance in the rable far rming of the annum, that its funded property is s 600 007,, and | close stone and tile drains so » elfectiy iye, and it is on 
dist fü bet n 80 and 40 ) pensioners principle that I KAYA wher e pertulit ofe b 
p or arming during ‘the past 50 years, | on its lit His Mosdship di not confine himself 
and e —9Ó Ao the past 20 years of his|to a description of the charity, but pronounced a 
acquaintance wit appears that Gloucester- | very able detence of the principle on which it is a thenry, has still a strong hold on my ging 
shire experience proves, pe increasing fer tilit ty of | established. Indiscriminate charity has been well those of 4 I i ROCHE practici ike Me say “Ah, 
the plough land under ordinary agricultural ent + ths x ak: mrem which it —À Fa Bcc H n SE pid r first drainage: se 
management of the hub" But it also proves| but all the ree eye regularly ha oho dies Abate colour, even in 
that the produce of grain and meat which has so which | it feta -A suc op lhe e brought "A "Break: Nude ay ae val it ; Moris m n 
marvellously increased under arable culture has|against the Agricultural P tied x tur t Inttation, Mns. Eddington ^ LE ng 
d 1 A E elmsford hiten 
no corresponding counterpart in the produce of} or against any of the professional charities which | working a mole „plough, at 3 feet deep and 16} fes 
the gresa lands of je county. There is no such| it resembles. As well might you ex me Kis 10 linkers No pipes - put Us bal a tunnel larger 
e ere | +1: | 
of pre, in the drain, which I once TD 
a 
BUON IAEA e fr ns e|and e ightly the 
which is maintained upon the Grass lands of the | farmer less careful of success 5n loni 1 buie of|tunnel Although I had considerable doubt about 
as there is upon its arable lands. The the institution of this Cha ari ty. To r ove, how- | $e ially in our collapsing ar clays, 
y 
i et of the o urge 
the owners of the dairy land of Gloucestershire | as A o as possible, Lord adine 102 roposes that as | °° * 
the safety and the policy of such an extension of|in the eorrespondin ng Garden x "ad Ho aki hag ape PYP 
arable culture as would not alter, pat ec et Institution, the preference sho uld be given at cu Mod ge adu ee petting i rid of ot atm 
Cairy managemen bia farms. | elections foundatio hos Nose. PORE. Ie j 
Tn order to the full and profit able deve ent of horse nd the vei e —— 2 p» hg ate eg cops Sap di "a noros can v a 
the dairy ege it nets that at least ae narar | thus pa aa a right to its advantages. ood TE [d ae p ae da Nr. e 
of pe lan pn ta m m ordi r point refered » by the Chairman is | believe out of this sies. to s P: acre itf is for thehiret 
, e ker s im th d &e. The dr 
Es; Statistics | that Banner will more especially | were afa oy dire x os afte It | one rod Qf et t Hi A TW 
the deading article of this number AL appears 1 il TM counties, ES “Middle- The p must be intense, for, on 
XX one of the most important sex, and H te furnish hundreds of sub- through thie so 
h have for man ly years been rade seribers to this peni "i ers, as Yorkshire, like a small AANS and, m doubt, this b 
pe 1 vege an» m and Cheshire, have very few. ‘This ing in addition to the cuttin E 3 
s o 90 cows on one of the best | defe | must admit water freely to t 
defe ect or spe — 7 is one n - pow Tho Messrs, Eddington let out po engi fr ia 
dar; ry "rms of the Vale, an exact record of the | Lo 
rd STANLE words hese :— 
produce of wilk, cheese, "butter, and bacon n * Whereve a i : purpose, and for ploughing, the es ui 
now for nine yea n kept; an rj the less ssons | there Si Mee ere isa a landlord or aland osa ia Leo ommend. mp rends - xf 
which me statisties teach on the policy of Medal We hope that M he Pp ao anc RaR oy in CONT aD "dni pt 
details of managem tho ‘Yalne’ of breed o ope that Mr, Suaw, the Secretary, will have thei’ Gratin near to oholi Denne poer 
Bailly detest “on E yr Vu peckts o Deering ie aa words widely published, and that means y will districts we have the advantage oft atl wide 
e taken to a tica J. J. Mechi. 
from 2- Mee r-old and 3- -year-old } heifers respectively of any who ma y be disposed to call the attention of ; isa AND Trres.—Although ee cH) 
4h ted gb en t qona " 
f a lar arge gus ea of ploug h propriety of Pene musti nem an Rode A. placed at vi 
ind on the dairy f dU ay SA the very hi tighest upon their beneyo len d S | intervals, so as to afford climatic shelter, and a 
mportance. e foll owing are ong ren e for the feathered tribe. Il upon om 
the conclusions to whi i 4 
cer tre on Eq P XE kt Gio er a 
bin OE 5 INT be teat pepe 7 His n, pie AD: pest bility of ee a weather during haryest | m my v i juin hope m S TY ladies s vil Es 
using superior balls, that the calves he has to sell ee ruction of 
may be of more value for rearing. E TT "si usual anxieis amoog’ tho agraar |l ced upon s peret vage in missha 
2d. Thatit is to his advantage to n his heifer about dry or rainy weather, may I ask i to Ie ie 8o large | p ore miserable old ugly Pollard anq hapen d 
calves early, and, by his liberal treatmen a w onöouraga | d, SMS of De somiti? thot by koopiag d very briar ut cue Tm Md s aas round tue. pu eres b tho me 
i ol e barom t 
— i and bring them them into the dairy at a little pit. in smal squares (say KA tenth of ae tach jo yet dud tt FEP ATA of "p i arged views, 
í ay—a! bs. 5 y 7 
Bd. That winter-dairying thay he successfully carried | ist ite coming change or continuance of weather may be | 2 the distance a noble farm jantatio 
on, and that by ber) feeding the cows will give than nent seul paeta À e S Aie on um iti [deni id thi yeregstet pat fo 
D 0, as its ang 
aln l ilk asin the summer, without mate- aan oF paimopheto more unifor iy kiy evidently. 4 Air ike ne of me LE the 
ng, the summers yield, surface of water, is not moved, depressed, or raised suddenly, 4 den 5 hed: s0 1 
acertain portion of arable. H arable land attached | prim, DE Send Edere qu b vy data L i dr i w DX ina carriage, ette M 
_ to ever ee A ird—would greatly | witi- nin m D (or. thin AE; d over the gate 
the fa m 1 feedin n my repor year, | occasional glimpse of a four-acre field ov 
P hcc asa e = rid the imd t of For the wt ota Pg Men the pa uw» r entitled Tm mcus i pe Pai mi gei n ingol Maa gus 
od purchased ned due of etch ty ; mine in y may do 4 
who uses much i nde ) be obeervrd that there are may | winter season or seed time, they ce 
improving the staple of the In of fod mets for saying Ghai the ound rg of wind i, rorya Ps more than compensating amount Hs 
hat itis to the Sa en ofthe landlord to | wai “handel ador weld ray, Toretelis drier or E visting the Fretch departnoat of by: the inse 
aia o liber ral foiling, ni Lending bo this vet er, and that its “backing against the sun," or ''left- PUT: Iwas very much struck by 
d of his e | of handed, ndisse viin d ind oF both, together be — Be fa pepee Je volume p pontang Ec M. of tie 
7th. That for “this purpose he should erect suitable | ?dvance of Midland En glish. Countiós and “eastern consta from of a great variety of birds during each 7 näete! 
buildings for comfortable ipei of dioses | 1 half a day to two days eful for year; and saw at once x oe ae — 
and e e the breaki ing up o ofa porti on of the Tishaa cant divis iiid to these E mar ni T “a 
poorer Gr i i en T the enemies to his 
The F. y aid t tisti edi URAL NOTES. Each bird was ‘ere T as well as 
» rocester Court statistics will be qnoiad i R. ALDERMAN e^ tion of its food. During the hatching 
Ma ure iay A on dai airy husbandry as the fi Ap TWENTY-TWO d orent EXER IN DRAINING. lE of grubs, tre fies | 
ich E; ulture hss Ia. n 1842 I drained most o 2) hne 5 ae the st stiff clay larks only to their y are | 
a at the substitution of exact side (plastic yellow clay, ‘ike bii, in in winter and| game do not eat insects, therefore 1 : 
: y in summer, too strong to make bricks, free | them, except that a boiled rabbit or TO 
Ning but abundantly supplied with A, I| nice now and then. J. J. i, 
32 inches deep and 12 feet between the drains|  UrILIZATION OP TOWN SEWAGE—À ^ 
un lower. t of the drain filled with small stones to | mittee of the House of Commons z nom dene? 
at | stones a 2inch which bindi erede or pe tice d oe 
a to.bave | the pipe, inding the sides of| given to the publie, enabling , 
lectures which ren Lic mete aoe page Fon de prepa Sy ixi yo caren ern 2i 
