` 
OCTOBER 22, 1864.1 
THE GARDENERS' CHRONIOLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
1021 
upon it; or, to ure his own language, so to act upon | stirred, takes abo 
2 agrad “for it t die would be impossible.” Not 
to be e ndowed gen cud miraculous pre- | 
if: hm d 
e hour before it boils, “and is | “qs | death of such shares, filli ing up vacancies, 5 &e ] Upon 
- ENT — dor dou half an hour more, - = the members subscribing their rules, I agreed to let 
e gravy, i. e. the water f 
farm for 
the 
vus e Wheat, is poured over the chaff i p nes A ca rs dur pe | 
his lecture to have such a epe Aiit of it, 
my life. der 
taps ri ived o all Parochial Pince 
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tof.) f£ 
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haa upon gs in return pee cordial vote of 
p I will specify the a0 given to the h ase rae | we ee 
institution, at a mecting called together on pupose.: 
man's powers eri bave m led in uston by 
the Parson of Dl and put to so inta annoyan 
- 66. 
practical men may bave a special m misgiving a s to its E The aforesaid ot pie » odiis à by 
| fitness for young sheep. This lot, 246 head, nciples, and owing i^ the energy and 
1 bushel of boiled Wheat and 64 J5 of meal, half | imi attenti ion of the local clergy, who act as 
this, even in the e ba npe is time upwards of 25,0007. in 
H cwt. | hand, Afte a fel s this society paid me off all 
| the capita 1 bad let them which Bae me to let 
other members. This 
besides running for one or r 
wW th will have a 
It is tru my readers probably mdi that bas 
vedi lite serving power has bee said to 
n pos in ancient p d Egy 
mummy-makers, whose ar like re 
salting and 
of bacon, EM. were apes poor and 
tise imported into 
Ts, 
farming about 350 ng 
| on mm this pore near! mgt h and the ad con- as their own property a! Lo tock and ihe m 
a 
ne nd; and as each share bas 
siders th e d in better tha an when hey bed | s been 
meia am diga an cd Wheat upon hee Be labourers the sum ¢ of 
loss 
have bat 
i ho p 
is country, th uld be at home in their business, 
2 make the vm iUt rot the lportsi: of them. 
ossible that t Egypti an mummy-ma ake: erg, who were 
possessod the a ( preserving life Mi the time 
limited to it by t. DA “Cre ator ? rasa p^ Fan any proof 
ihat they ever pa to p art? They 
The Whea pst r its equivalent in — at 4s. 6d. 
M ur bushel o» pev week .£&$ 8 0 
e Cotton d 1 1 0 | that they ha d the use of these men as before, - 
£4 4 0 | only a certain number 
Linseed-cake. 
instead of =~ for his ewes. The cost is pem tban m 2700 only the 
Linseed-cal a p -— ds nt first were — 
my project; but when they found I was not 
taking their 1 Wc out ot their former » tion ; 
"n" how to salt and dry tie] a 7 “fellow beings, 
knew T nothing a 2 neige by which their ety 
Pus rved, -— than doe 
about 4d, per head ed | of these two farms; and that they, moreover, had men 
Aa 
Me Parley chaff, I c choy pie ard's chaff 
cutter at del 8 ions Led dy; ; allowing 28s. for the | 
cut n, (the ae price), | 
would deprive them of their share in the farms, and, 
| also, that these labourers were eir from any parish 
es 
the clown "ina in othe 
hee € ho rd whan all the scientific t Mine 
of them are endowed also with what 
3 
andas m 
allowance, they altered their nd were willing to 
abilities, have been unable to preserve vitality in 
farinaceous — seeds for a quarter of a century 
ly, can any ra 
tional man believe that those ancient | ea 
» 
ç, 5, 4} 
were not of th e 
low and common ejos iom n ‘what all m. n4 
science know is impossible to be done? But ther 
m 
bye — of a mummy at Mas but if any ever was ih i 
riain that it was put in by some eee 
t called Mum 
found in mummies! an ey were a 
delicious kind, 80 mild and PS -" the taste "that 
he them, - said, 
and so wel 
nt every meal, h did he li 
did “they | ^ ree zs him more Pn any anmmon 
Onions ! re and 
Nec from the le JEN ‘Wheat imposture arose 
the Mum - Peas, and then the Onions, and the next, 
I presum Mummy Potatos, msg sd an 
| ec any dra 
c 2 stone 
ost 
e results so far obtained. 
vis is wy "e and water, the | raga un 
Dx 6s. $e ton, or about 3}d. per cwt. For confess that the p bad every advantage without one 
my own part, I much doubt whether the manurial | drawback. I should here mention these two 
i dig abe in straw is much affected by being societies have ta lishe store shop with a brewery, 
passed through the animal. The few roots given | which I am now building for them, after the Rochdale 
ch farmer may fo: elf. When the ewes and | principle ; and I bear they expec to heir rents 
er hoggets are par the lat Te TT money and getting 
increase of corn. Aq rim are expected. to be every article ri cag i v p will at 
no o for the butcher, Pert m weigh 10 stone, as soon as € asta oe 
they are shorn 
much o oppositi 
quern dd not like ‘the tho iulio of first 
ad | | setti ing the society at wor xt — fr rom the kombenio 
letters I b ita yo dens 
e | only in England, but in Sy parts of the eo nn 
I feel a 
These boggets were all in good condition, and h 
wback per "n e p he Barley on on aet 
é wron ze: vid of iD A cvm 
to it, which, ift ^t heit cannot discern for himself, 
he can ha ly taught. 
The ewes (300) have boiled Wheat and straw chaff, Ir 
without the addition of meal. The bullocks get 
of boiled Wheat, 2 stones of M um - Barley | 
meal, and 2 bey ton per head per week, 
costing togeth milch seed in ao doom 
have 5 stones of boiled Wi and m truc 
f Cotton-cake. The your H stock c ith their bus i m shrewd remarks; while 
e of food. . The pigs a'so have boiled Wheat their better m ins of ving gives them power to fi 
an — odas ba gy ith s energy. 
In hide mark: Ist, After a month's | © dto me in a letter it 
trial a con tol 
ure 
| and then his — à 
i D 
FE 
er 
he 
ell pleased b bat igs that. had for the agri- 
aT eban Pe glad to domum | eulturalJabourer. Of this I feel assured after thirty- 
five years! experience. I should add that no land is 
will be 
&e., abd the » foundation of one impostur 
of the ae “Ri 
better a or rents more punctually paid than by 
tude eie gaping after sometbing "they do not 
hour to Mr. . Bennett, Dun Gate, near Cambridge, and | tins libe 
understand, and always ready to be deceived by any 
2d. There are ‘many devices which may occur to (To be Continued). 
quack im postor , who with a 
before them, The Wheat called | Mummy Wheat i is, as 
"n 
too general adoption; but e is not one of them. 
analysis shows it to be the best, fullest of gluten 
po most nutri itious, of course; and as Calmet aleo 
»nd continued to be wn there till Calmet's time ; 
ind upw: 200 years sin also grown in 
England, aps longer; an ll grew it, an 
Frere n Gate, 
n 
If 
Ny followed, Wheat may possibly be | me Corres ri 
rene 1s. a bushel, ond L seed: n. proportionate ly| The Mi eem tan Farina Com —As thi 
lowered in price; but our Monk of y stra ur|tions in our eee article KA y^ week ete « te 
wate supply is more likely to run se ar dur the considered to apply to this Company, which has lately 
Wheat market to be seriously affected by the cou een bringing more prominently before the principal 
which I suggest. on agridalituriate the analysis of their biscuit meal by Dr. 
An American grist mill, costing 25/., would be a Voelcker, ich shi the very high per centage 
irected to state 
useful D to ne other machinery required. P. H. of its feeding properties, I have been di 
ambridge to y i 
t 
earliest iod to ot by preservation i e of the Metropolitan Farina Com 
* 1 * Pes 
ummies, but by su ve cultivations of it. — i ilar to mple analysed by De. 
: In conclusion, I will inform my readers that jn con- SOCIAL SCIENCE CONGRESS AT YORK. | Votleker, efie sligbtly "2. im rms some batches 
jut 1 y s fo [In the Agricultural Section, presided over by Mr. Holland, M. P.» being a little more brown It is not a 
r preserving vitality papers were read by the President, Mr. Strickland, Mr. compound, but is entirely the ibd ee Wheat flour. 
dei Ss d by ag” hods Gordon, and others, of which the — are abstracts.| | G, Co wley, for Metropoli olitan Farina Company. [We 
hires by men who iated the impor eet. (Continued from i t 
the subject, but. I never "could g j* Wheat to © germinate | CO-OPERATIVE poem AT petal Scrrorx.— will ‘guarantee the Torei they sell to ^" A the quality 
1 I feel A communication was read from Mr. Jonny ee DON, indicated by tbe sis: and thus all that our 
gem “that it never has been kept much beyond which he said l for a plan Corsiea to pr Mr. "Oria esires. | 
onan time, and most certainly not for 20 years; I to idit the labourer in his “elass without taking him m Cultivation. — The vay rer à going on 
peat, therefore, that if my Essex friend can, as ‘he 
sts, keep life 
out of it 
d thus ied the remarks of Colonel Fane on the subject 
rr its advantages should record 
n Wheat for ine of years, he rendering him a serviceable man not only to his God | of steam cultivation bas interest: as ote 
and for this achievement | put to his neighbours. All connected with se cultivators by steam, in I 
sigher Power yi ares BI must ackno: that no labourer can exist upon 9s, that tbat gentleman mera det M 
Power. A Wiz, September 30 30. v E vea 
fi of m udieiously or unfairly used, or fro oe 
a more or my i ici or y |, or from some cause or 
WHEAT AS FOOD FOR STOCK. parish, offering ! to t5 lead Sete ail withont interest to ano m nother he may have been unsuccessful, but we all know 
THE partial iile of our root crops giv usual | cultivate the same, subject to rules and regulations— that not only as ghs but in many 
i , How shall we keep our Med namely, that each member sho uld advance 27. as other things different work with very different 
this tog "The course I am adopting is the | % ee; that a manager, accountant, and stock- results, At all eventsit has answered my pu , and 
followin eeper should selected for po the | “that being the case I aa = cone p to en system, 
I boil dally d ari copper full of Wheat, mix it with | farm; that the ses be paid as the when cold water is invention by 
cut Bar rley straw ; let the mixture stard a few hours, profits arose; that quarterly meetings yo eld for |o! ee who has no Vendesi oiii of i it, "that those 
transacting business, kis that all necessary art ticles be w ave experien 
ce mmi ittee w my -— A A ee mmi $ their opinions. e seven years I have worked 
y other | a steam cultivator, ‘ann year has brought an increne 
,|of produce. The worki h year ha 
o form a e | been less, as 
tary r rules w vas breakage 
yir ies arisin: 
a the therefrom a 
nnd for contingencies. Ot ther 
S Aboat 10 allons of water each 
um A onem are required to 
The mixture, which must, be 
for the hea rk of breaking up, —— all the minor 
sed tos loans upon their coe the disposal at! operations du lighter labour to E 
