1666 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
p contrary such 
erived wih an shee | are ees of » od, but that on bie Sues la 
als is more |i 
ste 
older ones is, that the Jaona syste 
t. vely the 
Y Men | oo of ee maj it ra n aeareely be done in any 
other way than by taking the average price of 
n Hort and O nd as we find that the former 
er value than the latter, 
this time I have never been able to accord 
betes oval to this m gays It was 
pearance and hed i 
8 
a 
to steam-drawn implements 
liked Colonel FANE 
of starch or sugar, whilst ound of flesh steadily Ee e Ind placing E ahs 
contains only the elements of a qua wid o eni dn bis ES EM 
i. tere Allo apt etu a edi 9d. - ch Sa and JE contain more than double | accustomed to it 
per 1b. Again, the wool which has sold £o well of | as much as Oats. W. C. S. 
late is a bi hl; nitrogenised product; its : à adis 
abounds wit el, and, experto shows th that n] Mr. Scort, the Drainage Engineer, bu rd 
an : 
fol | conduces cider pp igi Sd published in the daily pp by othe r writers, 
e rest He considers urge LU — crop, or say 
much of it 
o the question or 
s dispute, for it can be 
respect’ 1 
Barley or Wheat consumed by sins 
we enter our protest agains 
iven, s supplement |t 
b 
Sae re mae of this may 
Mri an aere of arable land 
well cleaned ‘and pus 2s. 6d. laid out 
a E 
is 
l, we [T hirds o 
rally sound tubers; Sw 
ree wit m of a erop on the land here s plant 
gen 
a the more so when we Per such e ag 
‘oun À 1 
appears from Mr. Lawes' ortel experinets w 
g|m anuring Grass lands that : it requites 400 Ibs of 
ficial manure, or g " 
roduce an norense l to 
evidently not pay unless where 
a high pr We must also bear in 
a 
aeration equal to a good s ot pé but ete ve 
can neither weed nor subsoil to 
the D ek 
the The use of Pulse and | allowe A it 9H9 
cake to accord well with young lan nd s 
eas ut e eonduee both to their health and | | ploughed up, and the s zop 
h A small md 
on the food of pigs. Can we possibly do better | from the: first cutting, as no second, u 
than to aseertain the relative garai or propor- |priated for seed, has been obtaine Vidas a y- 
t carbo: e nts| Where. Rye-grass seed will be nearly a fuil erop." | 
tiv iy most His estimates of the green erop x with our 
ta rtt mis anim: EEA and Aen ; those of grain are muoh gh. It 
ue ipe nts in similar. s E tac sa y de die nord fie ma; TI nearly | 
the but is riptions 
are €— are Ang destlonatly excessive, 
o bus Wheat 
- best procured. If this is im it win be found 
it m Thirty - els o 
that however desirable e em 
mare 80 to com 
[3 
B 
average 
are outrageously 
and 3 
beyond the truth ; 28, 34, 
otively would be mue 
“4 
eal m espe = 
the best bileake ty basilar in its effects s, weight real ave rage experience of the country, 
for weight, to that made from Linseed itself; o 
in other words that the albuminous and mucila-| Tun current autumn is showing in - -— 
ginous materials are more productive of increase b | lasse the admirable T ics ap of Mr. 8 
than the oil pressed out, of which the ey cecupy | (Woolston mie pe — cultivator rur drill 
the PP ses e — nfidently of the merits oi 
ars since chemists were z doubt in t tool; a weiter no doubt that his 
ch he p 
caper acre of three crops respectively, o 
in 
manure over the have 
present machinery permits, Therefore small doses, fre 
quently applied, ik 
as they descend into th T 
* | Clovers, which it is our interest to foster, 
surface. When a 
reason not t teal of yal in our philo: 
| bears "m first place in all pe pas 
me,‘or in the form of gypsy 
habit of assigning too 
value to 
at may be sown at on 
Bean stabble, Barley on a sheep-fold, without » 
preparation, and a most effective seed-bed thus 
receives its seed at any rate that may be desirod, 
Havi 
the 
At the present d they 
E „ai; isposed o run into the opposite extr reme, and 
oett than er d carbonaceous is retained by 
a | cured, t 
qox Vite pit adju 
heap. Whos these are E proeul all mee 
refuse of the farm—Couch, Nettles, seeds _ 
&c.—shoul r and burnt or c 
ina ditches 
seen the implement at work last s ` 
the animal in its i increase, they are almost aoine we a ARo abie-to to spe cmm personal e ot mss ak potash lost he noy ud "m 
vie as a secondary its merits, and the following testimony by Mr. i 
E n atting ye , forgetful of the fact that the! Bre : ho farms a sti nie and tic dun. ha leigh A Lee A pe 
enou ent is in eonstant requisition in | near ton, i lusive. Says : lately applied to the artificial G 
[ yi 2 lr other| “I ed from a visit to Woolston, Clovers seem to requi 
Genk Jae ELS : sou e ba ccc l for the pose of se it was prol the 
the muscular or fleshy parts are ; ject to Ualortnuatst hs en I got there WA 2 Clover ove 
r xx 12 o'clock) | whether the 
constant wear and tear and continual T ce of y acres is the ligh j ad ju : their —À 
and that the animal temperature may be sustained | been completed. I mention th fine io artiou- hese ashes and any other refuse, ea 
| p 
by the decomposition f these oeae con- | larly, as I was told that the work was nly eom- | ped thst cnn be procure ed should be turned 
ni te Cane by that 35. ced at 9:40 the day before, so that nearly an | 8° Dx intima tely, and in the wid 
ch sip 8, ne urine of d ntains twice|acre an hour had en accomplished, and this Ms T E rp eau 
d e Jo of nitrogenous ee eme iis as the|ineluded the headlands and about three acres of |. son s : sim, fr t 
oe ani da del. also the largest portion of the | co ork to finis ae A ect La of the 
erements and we any rat l 
Hao id Be y rate correctly | piece of steam work I ha ver yet seen, the 
land having been by one pies 
has |s A e d € ano de 
If 
them at work on the heavy or 
r 
on converted into 
sited. be — 
Ee os engine rand t havicg i in the moan- penetra ates to the roots while my: ci 
time been removed two miles, and at 12 o'clock |at once assimilate it, as will 
about 6 acres, including the headlands, had been | ™ laid leer t "d 
» if dons, and done in a mann most fas- | hec T tae tate a? 
4 rough a tel must have a It is true they ‘have time to reap the benefit 
may equa zit e land was in capit: ndition for | stronger-rooted 
Mite » perfectly clean, and, from previous deep | tno expense of the finer. 1 
culture, the draught was comparatively light; bat | referring any reader anxious to to improve his 
mitrogenous | it is steam to which that condition is due. Ùp to! economically to an able article in the F 
