96, 1859.] 
— —uͤ— 
THE AG SRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
177 
T | VARY 
— 
Kinds No. d ^j ig Vaca tape Deto have turned out a failing crop, from their almost ine 
€ | acres |; - eei] Dis of variably being unhealthy, and in — of a large round, 
of Turnips. | Scot. gom ar e bones Vau iii rts EN grow E this year of a — tankard shape. ic 
Farms. | l Wurzel a abba c Each year extends 
Dei — 
— | : " à | the i impression. that other root crops should be intro- 
i Yellow Bullock (resown) 1 * T E | 1 d urnip crop— oli Wurzel 
shaw (continued) do : p 2 | 3 Fane Sand o | and Cabbage seem the most sc to be tried. The 
0. { " 
" f 27 1 i4 24 "a Si |June 16 latter in our moist climate seems rving of a z 
pd inis 2⁰ 1 : H 4 . Hanes e nded trial than has hitherto, been given. 
d. : ; 2 - noH ee of this year show double weight edis 
e AE (mom, 1 25 n 2 1 Ichaboe e 31 to qune | W. with Swedes 5 
Kirkhill ""lYellow Salar 48.14 |..35: Ng S 2 1 
= | 8 ar] % 4 1 une 8, Reviews, 
[Imperial Purple-top Yellow nos |. 20. pec: 4 fs et. do. mu 
meranian White a} l 20 ie = E pend Vet. Medi 2 
do. 1 20 pi l} |14 ewt. do. June 24 and 25 e erinary edicines : their Actions and Uses, with a 
, n 13 20 " lj s ewt. do. Mee e 12 cated din Appenin on 1 inl Diseases g ~ Domesti- 
. |Skirvi ^s Pu: le-top Swede 11 2 ^ 2 25 cate als. ay Dun, V. S. Simpkin 
Killbrook ‘Starving s Purple: dh Yellow $1 i c e : May 3l Marshall, 0. " €— 
17 " 2 r as June 4 
Oriney Y ; OW s 1 4 We dohabée gno une — d second edition of this admirable gir has - 
irvine’ 27 ; 3 ws une 7 peare 
Wamphraygate skirving’s Purple-top Swede d ib e pent pud June 20 to 25 the larger portion of the volume, is a descri Me Ti ^ 
Yellow Es erg! top Yell 1 " 25 June 27 heir pre aration, use, i effec 
irving's Purple-top Yellow b E s 4 n, use, 
merani. D d ; 1 n : ddr ben là ES MY N veterinary 3 and the second contains short 
me Manse .. 9 : "a e-top Swede i 10 i do. do. [Le no descriptions i animal disenses, their causes, symptoms, 
Mireng ha Furnls top Yellow " 18 |, 18 |i do. and treatm It is a work as useful to the farmer as 
1 Sw ee B 24 : Most. Tehaboe direy Deme Bode to — e veterinary practitioner, We two extracts 
eee Maine. nancy Ye is | i iem. roid ilu apy ide a 
Sirm ings Purple top Yellow 18 : une 10 $i illustrative respectively o e two sections of the 
brick 18 oe July 1 an olume. 
Pomeranian White 1 18 : i u r3 rt Drau or Drenches.—Drenches usually 
Anpanbank +- n je Purple- top Swede 1 23 2 0 27 mns reparations They are occasional Lae 
ellow 2n to I hen a B. 
1 18 ne 25 rses, especially when is 
2 18 d June 20 desired, as in colic; are frequen dy —— 
D Purpletop Yellow 1 is 1 Tune T do; 15 a oy eae t only = in which 
ranian Whi n to cattle or sheep. In th 
18 e 28 p 
— i 15 i (Juls July 7 10 to 12 — ef in the solid state p very tardily 
8 . top Yellow 11| 36 let. & 0 &ljct. M man. le T and imperfect y, A they get mix with the 
do. Green- atop do. ; * 4 T bs rm 45 immense bulk of lways found in the vines and 
Yellow Bullock à 47 5 da. 80 Tune 18 thus remain — — ften for a long time. Some 
Dale's Hybrid. 1 36 do. do June 21 medicines, too, from prolonged contact with this mass 
Pomeranian White 36 do. i June 22 f vegetable matt bl h i 
ve mno Mene ¿|15 11| 36 A ARS v d mne ly interfere ‘vith: the wo. Meme ho 
rialy interfere wi eir action edicine in a 
e do. n 36 do. . n an 2d 
n 18 i ec * &2ct. n man. June 10 to 14 liqui form, however, comes i tely into intimate 
Stiddrig 1 Pun c fci 16 | 18 i m d contact with a large absorbing surface of mucous mem- 
— llow eo ae Var THp ig 1 | ne, and more speedily towards the second 
9 rp 3 op Ye j yi WELT ac 5 E to 27 and fourth st In preparing drenches, care must 
omes A: i xa 1 l ext. blood —— e be taken that the different ingredients are not incom- 
Tindwalk Parks 3 Purple top Swede | 3 12 55 — ba * sh. hsb — 5 10 to15 patible, posing or inj ly reacting on each 
Purple-top Swede u 405 de Ws other; and further, that their quantity not 
Yellow Bu es UM 1 $5 do. d» June 7 great, as the trouble of administration is thereby much 
Dale’s Hybrid 1 ke v ga E" gune u c For dogs, 2 to 6 oz., accordin the size of 
Lincolns animal, is an average amou for horses, 1 to 
» - Y id; white sorts can 5 safely 980 till after the | for shee p, 4 to 6 ounces ; but for cattle it is not 
Average Weight ve = of E Min ikke 1905 middie of Jun sary limit the proportion id. In giving 
v. Eat. T Cut. T Cet. T. Cwt. F. Ort th of ei: —Though the number of Turnips the medicine the bead should be slightly raised, which 
uw. 21 16 D IT 16.2798 -T- 9t 19... | ny Raz 10y seems fewer than usual, this appeared | in horses ma conveniently done with the aid of a 
. z Y 19 as hu 7 — ay = a to have arisen more from blanks than regular thin | t tch, the n of which is placed over the animal’s 
1854. 1855 1856.. 1857 1858 hoeing; and Mr. Halliday stated he 9 ord upper jaw within the incisor teeth, and the stick held 
T.Cwt T. Cwt. T.Cwt. T.Cwt. T. Cwt. this year rper A y the thicker hoe x 8 | by an assistant, standing on the left side of the patient. 
25... 9018 $4 194 21 6 17 6 E 9 In cattle, the head should al . ee steadied by an 
Y e 18 i 20 19 15 16 14 15 1 ihe er Septeml who holds either the ears; and in 
3 and O bang by the moist wa ; the | dogs, the jaws -— be kept acer apart by getting 
ES Halliday, who had weig and + othe bulb was ene deprived of = r and ssn an some one to put a loop of epu string over each jaw, 
the club n — eei its enlargement prevented ; an ly r emarked and gently — g th hen edicine may 
, 
cases he weighed the whole emn on e 
up. His in 
d ended on the 20th Nov 
ection 
began 
From 
9n the 8th 
Mr. iiio tem 
Hilliday's s Mies See to the deb meeting, the 
observat 
he inspection of the present | mm 
n 
loose, or 
only shghtly — on by the operit le ft thumb. 
e The flui d should always be carefully and piel given; 
— of hoeing t them hes 
ost beneficially exhibited by, 2 Klliots ee Hard- 
and the animal set free xs a few minutes." 
year were e: 
e great crops, and ought not to be de d from The following are passages from the decipi of 
8 of the Season and its Effect on This, ae the reei the width of t dill never | Foot-ro 57 
— weather of the early d of May being under 27 inches, is, as is proved, e indispensable| Foo in Sheep, enin probably e$ nhe 
id th e for , a few farmers | with our mild and moist autumn ee least, with suffi- | the — — brine: has ev erg > more prevalen nt d 
15th of that lves of it, by sowing Bwedes before the | ome nung) than in the drier eastern side of | t 2 last fifty years, chief ) 
n month d ture being | the all varieties of ‘sheep, an and to their ir occupying km 
braird able 1 there was a strong and regular Dis isease, Me Halliday remarked that although moist lowland pastures previously unreclaimed, or 
. abont the 95th. a he fly, which became a greater or less extent er ned | grazed only by cattle. The horn mes o 
tere ue bi s3 although damaged and retarded general, he "thought — the 8 by it soft, and di or tear; it turns inwards 
Pils cate or ‘th anks in the early sowings, which, as greater than usual. He og Mex an the sole, or the outer insensible covering of the 
deecided Mt , and others show a very |tion 1 ar his 5558 hat appli of lime | down. Sai and dirt insinuate them y 
Between As sone, Ta the later sowings of Swedes. | lessened, if not mem it, but ‘that it should always t t 
bind ra m ^ May and the middle of June t le in the preceding autumn. Mr the sensitive laminæ are thus produced, causing swel 
than has m estroyed by the ravages of the fly nlespie of Autunbesk had for several years remarked precum che bot, Sige the ham and 
ei 
ecollected in n this district. s appear- 
that where Turnips with the least degree of disease 
of thi in, badly sm ling p 
l 
y in „July 3 regia, and for- 
d th 
nd i indeed the 
-— the previous year, the crop of Turnip f vo 
h diseased. Decided facts wer 
lesshire 
DEus diem and growing weather after the 
revs — une a considerable portion, . e hd 
— of the whole extent (of co 
and the Galloways which ied wake 
a invariably Auc 
d, fully confirmato 
tions, and this seemed to elu 
reason of the beneficial action. of lime. 
, Indeed in- 
e | Although all epi ee amy be ie 
u those 
stances where 
cing 
discharge, and nha an — — 
or ot to en coronary verae ep d irregular 
of faulty horn or sinuses, similar to those of quittor. 
ted, the disease is 
9 con or both of the fore feet, € 
onally to fad digit only. It alw ways — 
lid on land even two or three years 1 had 
y injured) 
ve never stained their fall Bones and th 
and the irr y Cand 
Climate and Benefit of Fresh Land.—The | * nem 
on Shaw, above 500 te 55 Sddrigs more 
feet above sea level, s 
manure. 
Manure. —It will be n 
, either dissolved or en in 
ed from the table that the 
addi tii on to 
y 
uffered less from fig are 
| mitted to th 
parts 
during bard frost r dry hot wea ere The L uh 
or digit frequently iiy at short intervals ; whilst the 
— of those subject to the malady beco me ise and 
ft, and 5 altered an trans- 
e observa- 
c 
e progeny. Indeed it i isa 
n, that a eee 5 appearance 
isposes to 
Causes. Toot- ro es ced in 
different ways, and by the most mid iei causes, lt 
oftenresultsfrom heovergronth kerle the a 1 
A 
guano, is more E than form 
+ 
e 
f Jun 
than Hose earlier or later. 
however 
3 a. "facility given 1 the 
on ep d 
fo Loved E M mediately after the 10th of May, 
y yellow whenever a fine tilth can be 
to be 
la 
new ene mal at Nethestoteh in the centre of the 
distr: 
— ht from T cest Oa UD i 
prong Hence the notorious epu the 
amongst black faced Cheviot and South ven sheep, 
Seed. — The only additional observation under this! 
* — from their native walks into rich arable districts. 
