а^ зое cT 
^ witliout: the. id of. Mr. Drycbaf's 
THE GARDENERS' 
CHRONICLE 
AND AGRICULTURAL 
GAZETTE, (Jury 22, 1%, 
a people must have con-| 
f their epe 
la nd; 
to produce 
the 1 
Bénibls from | m, "ib quantity of Bee pod their 
oder; 
crops 
n Euro оргап husbandme en seem to vie | com 
ties of the salt t might have генй made, the raw | 
and t 
tity wer rin an way of seed info the land; and hence 
be m 
ach 
other 
an Ryegrams to Ro the most valuabl 
forage 
d e 
cultivat As to their respective 
n med for а seeond e eem we m ED М 
er about a у зщ 
аге now bo 
material being far of o one part of t the 
of excellence to which t e Bernd ians, hilst in another, as in 
near the "Tem aple, had беч in апе practices Engl land, th 1# 
+ th 
he immense ноте, from foreign Jande, а amount- 
fm 
nnn 007 
oney. 
that. ejns the salt pro seem 
from "the Temple for ihe. fecülintug of their lands as 
e boast of our power, because 
pis Minie rifles, Colt's 
T £k 
A E 
re volvers, ігоп-р late d ships, 
rmstron ng 
i etie in length, with this diferen 
brane 
ing habit, er has cons sequently more pues 
We may mention that we > placed a bere M 
a horse; it үт. 
the e t mout 
`2 
ka 
d 
Р F 
Sia PRESSE 
ul; it next tried the Ps ia 
did not leave off s until it had : si ча 
entire "bunch Those in the tad 
—also фо; ер 
modern iia use guano and other highly c 
trated matters? Алпа is it a too far — Е the 
has stated that the only country that has a chanco of 
shots, 
pie а was used 
were, were the result 
but He 
mmo 
x n 
agi. d agency, 
ied Seem [4 the stir Tillage then!in со 
among those - M к M^ and extraordinary people, 
апа which со зы its excellence for mauy 
centuries айтта 8. 
Ped ТТ. we may conclude, Ка 8560 уеатв 
back rire present time tillage as well or 
better т ба and practised аз re is in Grea 
Britain or any other pa ө he present 
time, and we may further come to the cono aion that 
the knowledge that ammonia, the SPIRT 
ы, as Mr. Hoskyns so properly Fee mim it to 
wn also in thos epis ы ages to be the dee 
hri that all ES oem Pulse, and others 
required to to feed 
food enough. from its own 
ople, 
of the pe 
tion of e 
ly 
the subjec 
paiher of кшш» therefore, TEN of labouring 
so incessantly, 
dominions, in шу бу iato voent by employ all their 
Q 
powers 
4 
а 
iz 
8 
and such 
"m 
an who зс hh his mind to 
of them 
of body pra mind i 
——O 
Miscellaneo 
Fertility, —Does Nd depen боз оп не consistenes 
i], we can marl light lands, w 
we сап harden а Бу the sheepfold and Afr roller, 
lig by 
YR 
ма 
scarifier and t the plot ugh, Dork 
an a os of all other nations of t 
of xut 
fore 
general European 
the necessaries of life 
not, Geo. 
Geo. 
Water 
^u 
your readers will not be led to as less ions i in the 
d 
"e 
verse s 
801 
8 from invading аде but фов will 
not обн "food for P people ; and should another 
wa 
т ai and fi 
we can by ы gro UK с MES ue viia carry 
water as it sinks, Usb its con To cireulatiog 
Doe 
im Lf into it? 
Wilkins, Wa Раде July 8. 
MU oer t umen 
Hom 
Economy of Grest Bri 
ask them to Dok at Chiba à and Cow nations whose 
ject 
5 à 
tho Armst 
д 
guns, Minie EA Colt's ferrem, i iron-clad ships, and 
600-lb. steel shots, that we have for the wholesale 
re 
and surface 
rura к 
destruction of their fellow —those countries, 
savage as we considerthem to be, have for very many 
centuries been farther advanced in the theory an 
practice of agriculture th En d are in the | extrem 
e highly enlightened age. For example, | t 
coming, as 
will 
неге. тм his timely su 
aid t inqui ту, а ses E "wi on nly opone p t my 
member that, а 
‚бо w 
E 
Seld у dde crops over the i 
T 
the 
e the em 
of si ubterranean 
o relax their 
observations, because we have recently had the ines- 
Every one 
although a supply of rain will 
pde to overcome the evils of drought by filling ponds | ® 
itches. hich the poorer residents în 
ly— 
£ think 
S M 
e before it wiil yield good crop 
it depend on the natural [79 
tents of the land being fitted Hu с fuod. of be 
can lime, and bur and t b int тойа чее the 
agency of air and rain gency 
and ihin ie E thus stimulate t that chemi 
o 
uw 
Ж | 
е 
„= 
shallow dn Midas ordinary cha 
e effected in the сое M Wien of the had 
s, than it is is in the fens of 
hope 
jf crops, and herds an 
„| Rush, Аш Бор 
nd flocks of cattle and of sh еер, where 
the natural rd A rage forit but Sedge and 
Аа ud s plants, with only wild fowl 
for the live s 
Thin Seeding, — That was a quaint bit “ч 
юз wisdom MS ^ad 3 Ve thbert Johnson 
them is near Ht Ba i whilst that of ор which 
we are taught р о extrao 
ече i d of Mr. 5 ил not 
uny and miserable increas 
Ват Те в із ке, - that both duin 
have fo or many hundr 
what constitutes the real pabula of p 
а 
known | 
ave|a 
d 
that. we may 4 able to show "Hio: 
pon 
secutive dry su 
o winters 
g hearse, as | 
journals regarding a 
» On tha (*, n t l4 
die of t 
n the каби о ng s 
have the 
even 
—— 
much- va 
соп He 
upply of |d 
rainfalls, i 
піз other corne, they will growe doubtless much the 
better, for that eoio. will a bin, how myag 
And if a young husband, 
Piy: $o о it may в 80 fortune, a man that 
by possibility ш 
ted “Ne 
аса РЕ 
сгеакіп 
terms the dung cart, supplied al that 
T: ose pabula 
Mr. 
Grass of the past season, ау in 
of. s nei ы, ram av ve, pe his n elio sd 
| unkind if m will ш ы this young husband part f 
were requ prop 
to the nature of them, to every one of their never- 
ав we аге as ntlemen 
J ger deal has been written. in the prais 
e. of contention with 
e of this | 
their seede, for this s of discretion hathe a wondrous 
ME the more wi is eyther taken otai йы 
more ES i discretion is that par of good 
sured by ge 
them, uc annually a 
D 
duced it into this гу, 
soon 
enough 
to have 
he diñ- 
; of the way than d de a ojo 
conduct whi ch t 
Thus th. M — 
who have ong 
плз ог за fiom x their ow own ач 
popu lation а 
debi t | settlem men nt of this matter when the Grass 
paring E cm t the astani of | In our letter we Mid that this Grass was L a ати, 
йт (аны К ылы ср a — having been b resa nto Sco tland many years a 
the same as our own. But, if UN of thei 1 tl he Grass really 
agriculture be "go ect, value 
or ds of the j з and 16 is, we think, а 
rewards of the journey; and 16 is. earliest 
Specimens ot “ book farming " 1n our Janguage, ње 
H that hand " 
| h a А +1 he. your hasband do mingle 
and I s ae d ibt which it гуйи s, it was. not a a rs 
n that it окса! that. Ape Li country i in ras uid th Н Nia properties MD only no 
12 п 
it with his * seed co 
them, it is certa w have| Steam Power in pm vation.—Steam. power, ge 
our ‘parts of the earth, and it appea n disc gat ions in our opinion, its тана as a | all, was s no very expeusive in "the lug Fu Lg 
that neither in Japan nor China are rone оле PE plant had im established. As we inti-|now in cons еа use one engine, which ће bough 
ng the ing corn, and that farmers suffer | mated that it ын r intention to sow a quantity of | Messrs. Clayton & Shuttleworth in 1855, m 
to on their lands but what they sow the | the seed on our experimental grounds this season, | expense of eid it in горе: had been quite per 
seeds for. They return also to the land in the shape|alongside of what we have hitherto considered our penny halfpenny m always brought that it was 
manure the same substances they took from them in | most valunble forage pieng the Lolium italicum, and ut after de result of employing ^^ 
the shape of corn, always in sufficient quantities | our samples are now of sufficient growth, ог rather, |t hat he had but lite to do all the rest ot the yeri 
to produce their never-failing fine crops. 16 is also fully {ше Me UNE S we send you herewith - plenty of time to go to the Central - 
stated, апа on e то над at the prod of each for your inspection. The тее тъ . Mr. DNA of by. all ont 
of their crops was near 200-fold, and I think Mr. Layard seeds of the ! two Gr asses were sown- in rows on mio e Couc і d that this 
has written that he observed the same in the course | 8th A April, and the tł 0 “laboriously conducted—for 
of his travels i parts of Asia; if these state- | ment, came up well ; ted p » that } ultivators, oes, and plot 
be facts, see no reason to doubt them, it is | seed) was beautifully rowed by ied h, as and so expensively at work? pers 
a proof that so far also the of tillage and | was later in germinating, and wa did се rer for натру imagine it. Certainly there is no more Tue 
seeding and fertilizing producing lts, must | fully six days after the Italian. The Italian main-|companion or attendant on our management. tirpate 
К опе. gis ve, also, the highest|tained the lead until the last few weels,— they | pr acessos, profassedly for its хере а | 
evidence cluding that in the Holy Land are now much about equal. The fente y, tbey are annual, Bee : 
produce was 30, 60, and even 2 100. ud: But Mr. Caird, | are about equal in lengtb, the Ttalian the most num оку » iet е harvest; and n 
а; relied-on аніон has sí — at in Great B aing from the root than TW hes, Dic ie with per onient declare ed not BF 
EIE DESCR lms or stems are about equal as regards |1 106 intended, ог at least t emis This, 
it, d an g tt Ns The contrat of tribute: te and continue 1 » the 
is seals pes w, "s p неч I L much below the | the Ps poe their appearin. round was very | course, Pe Page, is denied ; and сен, all the 
uantity ed 88-fold of Wheat | striking. The Italian has hea to the last the | plant, perhaps that is the explanation; Aning у 
d whi years out of 17, | rich green with which it started. The Bromus, | fallow hoeing, Couch picking, inevitable 
f Barley 126-fold, | which in growth and appearance is similar to Oats, is | annual aud continual, simply because th у ar rhe m, 
ks an acre, and naturally of a dark green colour, but for some weeks | It is half work whicb breeds the plant. the 
els an acre; and of the past its bottom leaves have assumed a withered and | scraping of the land with hoes will only erento ses уд 
t years, 44 ees sickly appearance; this we cannot account for, the two | for its endless repetition. Even Mo y o 
seed was neither 1 peck ng received frequent wat during the past transplant the living weed and increase 9^ ip орта 
weather. The leaves of the Bromus, even when|its growth. Repeated fallow 0| — work of. 
ng my readers by i) in their fresh ndition, are comparatively dry and | reduce it—an ot sun withers it; but it, and * 
г that it is aot tat all improbable | tast eless when mpared with the Italian * latter| this or any other pes ys «чу а Sainfoi - 
tries ar's rest in Grass, о w years aj ы). »- 
their 200-fold, ч especially аз we 
the sweeter and juicier of the tw 
Unless yen 
l bri ring all the "evidences of its vI 
in reality produce 
чеш da ts энне the til] fth 
EE do at 
nat «till 
Tar ph 
