qos 9 29, 1865.] 
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
709 
are sown, the extra labour and 
giren be p а before thie UU redd by the babe дын of the 
ырды їп fruitfulness, There has been, and there 
other _ interests are all represented, and why then 
expense vil edm ey, w vis should follow this Turnip 
ү either be dri SA acd hors se plough- 
ay be p have ias 
aft 
ноб 
ways (^ the third. crop takan, 
to expect А poor thin stone brash soil to 
or profitable return, unless it receive liberal 
lands never afford good 
n from them is nii 24 a 
ways "Ein 
i atakis Such lands 
aply, in ghe i 
breaki ing 
has 
up 
n done 
ys abandoned, and more liberal 
and renovating тый. established in their pe 
The question x breaking up pasture, in its broader 
bearings, not only affects ti t а the ludin 
the tenant, and de Ja tbour т, bu o дее ply in 
indeed time when diferent interests are 
ing to make influence in the Councils of the 
nation, and with good reason, 
dide that people £a scarcely want any kind of 
| change unless re ey becom cla amorous for it. J. B. 
a le 
80 eems to be making some noise i » 
cultural ЖОШ. I am able to contribute 
mes 
It 
y | stroggli 
nial, 
sd we inp and burning. Whilst 
of labour, that i& more or 
comm unity. He who recogn 
that €T 
ess concerns the whole 
e hi 
er 
tiva 
го, appen to hasten the aT of Bin 
ces, peaty lands seem to pos 
f 16 ae of well-drained 
soil, the o 
e | ought. 
+} 
ha ihe € rofit o 
f is served by e field," * will feel t 
the Italia 
| it will retain its vigorous init е be as 
anti a 
was m 
exin experience Т jm 
be earlier than 
d it seems e 
n En 
Tta gs -Дтавѕ ; — or no 
to 
king himsel 
nationi i деа dn rof the subject. 
owever, woul а" advise th 
Cirad цу up of pasture land; there is 
round and 
much rich grazing 
whole сен in Bran D ет стас bv 
to conti nue as on 
оп], 
е indiscriminate i 
to|the dai а 
rendered. nf by climate, DUM С of soil, | 
Аа 
MES ordina в be made very pro е either e 
or ga zier, This inferior land (un 
Oats сэй pid pug the [же тол а “arge 
seed were eaten before the ey had time 
i 
ought into cultivation 
peri cours 
ould, i 
ui fair restrictions e a наб: 
crop g» be more profitable to all p 
rse of 
з 
for pasture, its ij sod being such that it лег not | iu his experi 
sis 
^ hs s much of rin energy Ze 
“old сае 
. He has cultiv 
ated this 
yes 
хаел with it, and was much ий with its vigorous 
wth. On ma aki ing inquiries about it, s found its 
due by 
This ае et iiie — act 
who hav 
LAT X 
On - other hand, there is much 
I реа to meet with an old Californian digger, who 
old i 
that would be ben: pie d and renovated if laid to Gra 
for a few years, so that on many farms for every fie " | 
broken up another of equal extent; might be devoted 2 
pasture, Our root crops would at | mau be ben 
fited „Ьу the exchange if, as seems 
t injur ed b P the severest fros ~ Ao n — 
frie V БУЙЫ sai at it was a sp f Anthi 
tiria (Уйдеп) ы recognised as б d Тегін 
Idi id not hear of it in eire or t Me vem 
т 
Ек 
Sat dec F 1QCA n um Ве 
а the 
rnips has been caused by the pbi of th 
8 
aropa. on the same land. Two fields in my own ку 
р tion 
e Ti berat t tre deyken t in manure, &c., ar 
е | begins. at the roots, the leav в droop, а 
| eutti in Hg i 
| forth. я 
e roots ha ave jeri 
a Zt read the 
rass, 
vins СЯ пех xt t yeni) "breast. 
br Turis an 
cla 
readers rrt in ^neid of "ihe er ec 
horn of Grass LN nd м Ч 
cted by some 
t of the con- 
rana 1 have гай ы 
4 ire ! It i at I have га 
Erud iir "teh cheapest, à Pese mode that can 
m 
aised a 
7 ап іп ереп вет. ative p 
ance, as Md an fuste intelli igence abont to | 
of a hen’s egg. Would not new land be a remed y for 
these and iunumerable other cases of a Apre kind ? 
C. Belcher, Little Coxwell, Faringdon, in the 
и. have reaped a tolerable 
for 
harvest of Ай» id I поб thought 1 it more prudent 
of the Royal Agricultural Socie iety. 
Home Piper mein 
. Read for East хо d a 
р 
e pa is We 
on acco т. Read's political creed 
agricultu m Шын 
repr of great impor! 
dawn upon a „large, i intelligent, and, we think, almost 
unt o r that w d 
will not wi itd "sr about, e the d that the | : 
at ] ye p^ d in securing E 
t- 
constituencies return frentladion interested i in lard, some- 
hers, too, 
| no; River 
add that in New Sou 
The 
th Wales it seems to give 
mentioned 
ass," the flower-stems of which T 
he effect on the forage if thus 
trái; have thrown s ears of Bar десе ъа 
s, Sawbri 
n Ess t firstrate on the strong 
Ci d Fl 
| cracking de which suffer. aiti in wet weather, Not 
rodue 
ер it must jót > gotten that у 
DAN 
по bad farmers, but these EE tei after all aee 
arly well filled, owi 
Eris "etel л 
represent their own class, and no ot the tenant far 
£411 
e is gained, and a 
th 
ced to early не and 
x a simi d au шуы "to ше m as 
t of valuable ma than 
mechanicall ssipated D 2 Hem re nw also 
оре y, an ong clay soils cause ап 
anything at all of 
he called upon even in to regulate 
affairs connected with landed pr не of which 5 
knows nothing, or to decide asa magistrate проп poin 
of la w oa n which he knows less. „п both T P 
his o 
farming. Тоо келу, пейт Аче 
ie isa d marke 
ML n. Sete. "of the СЯ е а and 
& Y t 34 
wn crops of all sorts bra were weg еа е 
е sug est to с == -land farmers an inexpensive 
Фрай бы, у in breaking up pasture on a strong 
еу should Ee = opportunity of clod 
sed i wW 
Р 
Secure the спеве of TAN 
отету slight incr 
The dried rf would, eve, | 21 
of a — quantity of coal, provide 
large нс of clay |® 
у dose of burned erc 
Р іп intelligence, and it is a proof of 
like, ti in га 
жы сун 8 the 
17%, and will soon be g д 
m to t 
ma ашнен clerk de ане the — н this i i or no 
n which agricultural and rural 
of 
they will be even fit ter repre 
he eavy and warm rains. l be 
оа and must influence the value M Tm live 
ock. J. J, Mechi, Ju 
nt "Dieser Í in 1863, 
h К nien vel 
he 
Food for stock now 
— Through your columns I 
e to furnish Mr. Denton with the dip of a well 
1864, and 1865. "There is a bed 
about 10 feet man the vem ^ the ж 
and w constant] 
nib mer / 
wh hich Ciren cester stan 
nd as they do so 
sentatives of their class than they are at present 
of the town. 
ea! 
The d bed rests p me fuller's 
under- 
rth, a more or less mr -bearing Mere an 
P 
ich. 
risi 
1а ш! h; 
will yield m 
erefore to plant the dn 
crops ae firs t would jec! 
DM 
i 
Y for nn 
Ё 
i 
hink I may a 
many rus ants also, the exhaustive 
ingia Piu гоме € - fr reqnently 
render it n for to give any 
tha li "to or cropping 
as I consider likely to raise 
soils ins 
ИП 
ЭК EE PE 
z PE jd: 
hu 
$ 
EH. 
period. id ча any class 
be. period, urely the fraing of England 
Tight, unless year by year English land i 
{ 
first tenant fenior who has ventured to offer welt 
atas 
in 12 3 ailes to the vale of the Thames. In рне 
et а county. say 
aet й represented, and it 
€— small рио 
return m 
called 
int 
that ме „most earnestly h 
tatives 
represen- | 
of their own class—! е are pow y of tóm. | 
il 
КЕТТ 
EFESE 
Е ККЕ 
plantatio: 
m April ot this poin 
is Sheng "evaporation in igh d dry soils by means ot 
, ав much as encourag ging i re Aas clay 
listriets, p clea! way timber and by dee 
The Church, the Bar, the Railway, the Landed, and | я 
v. 
ion? In Биске to Vocis the Noii 
