Арап, 25, 1863.]. THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL САЛЕТТЕ, 395 
fullest vigour, in a stiff soil n dr stiffer gault,|of the animals which obtained the hi ighest honours at | farmer, if he 
wis 
of 225, 84, 
thoug p advantages of | the Battersea Show last year were fedon malt. I һауе |subject to a tax per quarter, These are 
this treatment, do, a but eak the ваше | һай some experience in the feeding of sheep оп malt, | facts of which every E agrieulturist can appre- 
guage spoken under ler Mec as by the more | and І can state that at the Yorkshire Show last year | ciate the importance, without diving very deeply in 
lowly | the ie eye: sters were animals whi E Lad been fed the subject. Mr. Fisher Hobbs will tell you that some 
In one of the i и deep cultivation under | for the rt оп malt. T" n get Barley for | of the b i animals he has ever produced were fed on 
notice, ы form ation a & fox covert was the original | malting a at "7, per ton, апа {һе melting will ч the | malt. was the case as жен his entire рать 
intention. And for that purpose some bala dosin | - to 8 ^ra am now paying 10/. n for А ie. Pa item 
p won Y^ first prize "ast yea 
-drained arable land, of average condition, pw cake, of course obliged to ni У "with | | А gentleman who comes fro ond 
us calcareous clay, similar to the farm | the manufactured p which is offered me; and I че а you that his best stallions ave ани "ted i in the 
here, had -tre | should m prefer u using m malt, if the law permitted |s: - manner. Iask, is it an Eng! system of treat- 
li | me 
about 2 feet in depth to produce а thicket—tbhe Ta n tt , to compel persons to pay 2 yo r. on what 
planting of which was, however, subsequently aban-| Mr. Tuomas Ашка. eaid : the feeding of | is ed sole rt Lg c their animale, Жы. that, too, 
, and, ently, the land ши dug turned | stock, the malt t foreigners are exempte "id fro e burden of the 
over again to the Wheat was the crop pre-| injuriously tha c: -— classes of the community. Of | duty ? I hope you will now reduce “с duty with the 
viously taken. The work of digging rr done by | course, as ыш ч е аге affected by it чя Ше ваше уар of A els it а: ау, in order that 
contraet in the winter кен s а tough job for the шеп, | way as ; but it affects us of bein oilcake, linseed, and 
the peculiarly, ier Y prevent us from using б second ted 
same е ее which we have to buy 
if | of sheep, we be 
considerable, namel s pe 
18+. 4d. рег бе см 
order to qe а thoroug 
or at the rate of 107. | 
dug in 
No manure was 
all winter when 
ђе of the chay brought е 
applied tho first ог ве и Ju and the crops taken | far better results, Pigs t Barley in a 
in successive Yr = were ut not во cattle or scele ; gh ys hile ә Mati: 2 ice 
lst. iq а of Jong ушей» ciet nonu of pork is 5d. per lb., m of mutton and beef is "n 
which without the aid of a ticle of manure | being a difference of 40 p cent. д! ier of pork. 
of stock. 1 
mm: were o melted ur — purposes, superior 
it would | enabled to ich pa 
me, and m Loren фе the purpose to any artic t that can ^ purchased, 
ST € riri s aun AND x 'HE PICTURESQUE. 
‚Окк unday 
Red, w 
applied, ARD full 30 tons per joo give sheep Barley, жазса: "of them in re k ^ esutifal part of the county of Ken 
2d. One steam grubbing was given, and Globe | kill pigs. Pi njoyin enery as th ) have few 
Mangels—both red апа orange tubers— yielded a good | any injurio jus eilects; but ruminating ani E which | opportunities of getting away from a city's smoke, 
even crop of upwards of 20 tons an acre. yield the — quality of meat, cannot assimilate ы: Isuddenly emerged from a little , through 
9.7 А mode article. I had made my way w 
ird ur for = next crop and two | in мА та 
ven for spring Beans drilled, | stomach, 
"quarters per acre. — for th 
а p M ML "et ud ploughed in after once 
у ing" over the Bean stubble before winter with | 
the steam cultivator ; the result was a good average crop 
of the former, and a fair crop of the latter, which, how- 
with difficulty, into a large 
held which lay kapag the aau of the wood, It 
the e of that field a irent 
locomotive engins with its praeh deeply embedded in 
and with a considerable lurch over {о one ^ 
I 
e re 
a reason 
Qu 28. 
Barley acts orm we m their 
som yet 
and 
Ами m 
oelcker, the eminent. 
grubbin 
which yielded fali 7 am ol 
| agricultural ural chemist; roteto Dr. 
views on ба point coincided with my own. 
meds ere could e doub t 
n 
the field, ndeed, а 
Ey I Е. engine, Ба but s. "d 
pu. = оү етеп їп {һе conte were & couple 
lower qualities of Barley repel Pe more digestible both | [кде piman which, "t was “Ж business 
ы food a nd as condiment, if ^ re allowed to 
iven asa vegetable it would | |by means of twisted metal ropes. ki perte a В 
t before, 
They had savagely torn up a 
ied it, and the еу в seemed to 
For $e present season, a heavy was laid on, | 
and one steam ploughing СА by €^ new furrow | 
or! turnover implement, э, which ail the 
on has arisen recen 
vhen it 
Gi Brie ey in 
bei more алан 
рг орегі e readily, we тош enjoy the advantage | | arrested i in mid-career. 
th, an nd worri 
there е be more beef and mutton for the |be loo 
community. | ness, om “Чайка bull- oer ad E. for their master to 
a WILLIAMS referred "v to other injurious| give the signal for г begin mE, 
f the malt tax. Не said:—I consider that the field iron—t 
most injured broken with ferocious blows—were dug deep into the 
| by өк d m: much as the po may and does suffer | earth. The wire-twisted ropes were passed round them, 
отш dera burning sus so that be 
зб фазі all parts of the enclosure without the 
i E manter iebes t gire 
Howard's. steam dm 
ot a efficacious tool for the purpose | 
made an excellent. АСЯ before the Sussex | drill fi 
prios Beans, k well. 
The ed plot here alluded to was but an 
1 
322 | ай 
selected | 
| lah 
tle £ 
ena the fo foe nan oral ua гче 
I will now advert to one other instan 
ce of what may 
= са. and, w 
readth had ч 
e 30 of tillage. d id down a 7 necessity of of shifting the locomotive. Some of езе i iron 
ttn тае with an Oat crop. This b [the 1 rage, bec 
but receptly been acquired, and it being desirabl is com у, round the trunks of the trees, in order to get a firmer 
nclude it, rather Базу, in the park pm furnish gue. with it only to а very limited extent. | purchase, зере? thing р ruinous, disconsolate, 
it was underdrained with land adjacent to it in | Адап, the malt-tax is —— p. porai grounds. | truculent, an d wic cked. An id n ot only was M per 
1861, fallowed m emi immi and ulti |I believe that the r part rendered hideo 
mately seeded d Unfortunately the | which occurs in this s arises y the duty on Бу it, m even the country which I bad just before өг 
team сон ЫЙ i eld. md only be conducted pak оте production and use of beer at tl d , seemed contaminated too. аз 
over Mr of it in time for layin A (юч then | dw d 
—the ainder сач nau | Esos e but now they have no ми ot| But а day ог two before that, as the winter 
was 
certain rising prat. 
sting I watched, upon a 
It was the old 
- к machine n work. 
horses, wholly free from the infec- 
tius азу ot. the age, and an old labourer, to whose 
he vell adapted of those wortby animals- was 
E 
, were еп working this 
the hillside! ! t Hos "p each turrow was 
— Үт: Уа orse power. the A & ези 
ае aliko, crop bg ime: ene and M. down to 
obtaining it at i: What is the consequence ? а 
higher class of soci «although they have full com 
A Адаш А е middie 
ally fi эмеге: opportunities оЁ | mo 
drinking t to с, еу уг ам dan of р at am 
command; but they do not, as a rule, E Lf within 
in the habi £ drinking >a 
now 
караа half as M with th 
w slowly it made its way along 
of the niece is most strik inthem 
as | as the turn was made !" The slow und тя ng movement 
of - plough had рз гуво i A in it. 
п | earth was lifted gently and graciously and as if it 
nd roads in vid peque iy friends—not torn id етмай by the 
cation. Wh hy is ther e this difference? It | teet th of en here. It was ah 
CS ony with the he ighty 
plenty E pos nt home, and am ан а man Aa flight of crow т, in harmony with the bare trees, with 
othing to drink at home, and is therefore driv | the little bro oods, with the e golden clouds—with 
was that most of the Grass n "newly "y the сама | 
have perished. In' half |^ 
х Ње 
of the field, the drainage of course would act imme- е Moreover, when the еа тап ре м | the mind of (t ман wayfarer who err to look 
diately, a new tilth being made by ш for|those places he does not obtain a pure article for his | | and listen tas could scarcely be better Жез eie than 
the v is most likely relish it; sound money, but one pick bre hean, adulterated. Let the and so listening, for the DM its 
both Grass and Qo 
t of the different 
opted Si whos ен part of - 
perience thus us gained teaches be ignored, on to the wey ae « Stock, 
E as unworthy Ж ное CN of V itis now the | overlooked 
fashion to describe as deep drainage failures, when not | residi 
аиша Ьу а deeper cultivation of our unwrought | Year 
daty on malt be 
ure essence o s 
not 
MALT FOOD FOR CATTLE. Having, under these с 
Тнк following are б оп this subject ER the | it t 
addresses of "T Booth, of Warlaby ; Mr. Аг f| 22s. 8d. per qr 
kell, o 
Swindon; and Mr. J. Williams, of Baydon, at ihe ry 
icri living j cultur 
Det А oft the deputation with ihe Chancellor of th nt senes d late à oth tnam ind. pictu- 
ти (Warlaby) said: АУ, poes тт gcns E up with almost e um 
have, I ieve, prepared more -farming is to go prosper, it 
4 d : Royal Ж, кашан d мы l Aere js er. And m it will go pg and 
EN o: Aa aea PR зе an 
ieties than almost any one else in England, and 1 sheep upon er, perhaps ов will p ME b Mx iai f 
can declare from experience that malt is superior to any | the v s Эзер suppose e righi, n у ерат рттар rre 
other article for feeding cattle up to the very "tur | sut “у. йе бхр жыз am afraid i "б акр — - - i MY m 
па „т x E. b on't complain. 
TA ei eiu с pen re Mee ave the Treninge St feedin paying any ER | We have RNC it long, and it will take а long time 
