THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL SEE 
[ Mang v 
226 
“get | theory. h not perhaps visible to o | 
wish, some dirt being always buried too dee p to get | theory, at least, thoug GROWTH 
era — the annual seeds th epe, m! intermixed » it the. exe, that every. gom, eed „diminished the | d win PLYMOU U oes SER "e 
What, I will now ask, are the advantages or disad- crop, d rel e 1 COME ULT 
— . attending tis dm The advantages on well as every weed o e land gane the a» tity | | D Did fr or stocky MARTE oor all kinda qf E 
supposed advanta i e, J believe, usually considered of eorn. goo. and 1 — every shovelful of muck in- They respectfully invite the a. 4 ade 
he he stubble and part of the we eds creases it no ot des irable and of the. greatest | their FARM PUN sag for 1859, which wit 
ot, b = 1 +} e hs 1 ＋ O the Gre De sea. 
of ripa kedr the land to work free and 1 the and enlarge the latter? In olden times the corn er | " Ihe mend ae soris of SWEDES wn 
ng, by admitting the frost and air pe Ply into it | cut. so high, a THE A 
rani. ul s — 1 of enabling you to d the | there was Xa eft in be fields tient to keep the — — — —— Swipp ED RS 1 
nickin e in the spring, the "m ‘ot aving | pigs, geese, and youn tle for ral days, if not | GRANT’S PINE-APPLE B Dub DT. 
b en et arated into small pieces by shallow er | we eeks. "pui now her are mown so — — and . so T a following extract taken from t Leading! Dr 
i s ha pri ds. left for a mouse to urmers Gazette of October 16, 1858 will Ae 
n ase x 
good sto 1 Those jl 
0 
the Fr apii e "They appear to consist s burying 
weeds and seed. S deer 1 Lr they 1 need to b 6, e, thereby | 
live ADR for.a co 3 th 
and cattle A as 15 
hem. out the | 
necessar v. en to get d 
perfectly, 
in 
following ing a without — € to do so 
spare the m 
It is true that the pr resent expense and cul 
this, task are. glar ingly —— * me 
and of cansing — — qe — 
year when are done of one AN 
or another that the farmer "hardly M how to geb it 
done fast enough, l. Having said thus much |o 
w- describe — — 1 
lt 
of going, tg work to. produce the 
mean cleaning, or taking the face off the * FM 
ba 
farmer's ehe, and the. prospective adva antage 
— lear 
t 
both their —— and prob: P 
f the 
e the, “fin eat ka Mess 
wore new to us, but cer 
view left a dies "favourable 
tainly the a 
1 21 on our mind, 
pa 
Pov do 
emote ; by 
land. The ordinary manu re that is annually bre 
ak sed on a farm takes so 
and return its profits, 
with aay and advantage 
- fallowsin the antumn. To refer back t 
A tes more expense and longer 
ing fit fr use, win also as certainly 
cleaning, the a off the stubbles: mnis is 
by, ging a ‘cultivator, or any — 
imploment — the purpose, along "the sar fn of M 
fie! ld, ata de pth of not more than nches. 
and most 
ie with etes and p 
— only a question o 
enture to state that Ro m do attempt to adopt this 
the 
ofi the other . r that, to barrow it well with a 
* rte ne the chai ain “arrows, ‘and 
whole and not as to a 
iar only—that i is to — “that the enlargement of jas | 
manure heaps: sho uld be particularly ati nded to, 
then to gather and lead off the field 
into 
in. some convenien the purpose of | ej 
mi with lime, at a future period, for dressing Grass | 
land. By this process, all the annual seeds get sS vid N 
with soil; and are kept within such a distance of the 
surface as: on a * P prid 4 cause — ia | 
— 
Los the sam next 
en y an to ve vm aiani 
yourable season n: the 
"* 
expen 
dim ished, Whether this ai 
relly adopted. in, this county 
T 
i 
— folds, iir [om 
having the 
ken off the — and the weeds and = 
her burned or couped in to somo quarr y hole. 
in of them; — that you should have them carefully 
— the field 3 into real good dung 
— — and: attent 
iia dis e of Operations, 
A — 
M A 
Ls SLE OF Buy, March 10.— 
ought with it its many w 
its clonds of.dust. The first fow days r 
than March, — = were almost indu 
cold weather 
glories was fall come. 
ceived us, an 
Cold wind: 
and first, as to the 
oa probably be- that . e 
sin, iia this 8. wor 
ff as wo 4. 
eiae not 2 wd 
ubb 
tog ive "the land a deep 79 
aer, 
quam ib would not. work, o 
— zn 
on some d je — 0 — font in winter i 
worked in 
- the 
pr [envase of it 
ar mo 
ores - 
spri — 
is Ted 
a S iq ved dy iat ‘aldo 
-— aor as ba —.— d deen 
ee 
en the fie in the va 8 described first and ae it 
a goad dep pion So 
—— ie lan does a with t the —. 
of eae se ets ings in nc 
use o the i esa: only to work the land. with and, 
the di ut afterwards, however reverse this 
or grubbe 
is now 
» — — "s sheep, 
ring, trusting to. the 
condition 
er | Reporter, 
Noti 
- Foyt Laxp: 0€ J. T 
no * — 
usual e egetation 
ug! Werben with severely cold LAE would be be sena 
injured; but — € — of seasonable weather we m 
had 
. — to “chin 
d. be S winter * * — ** 
an e 
resent al the verdure aa pe we usually witness i in Ma Ay. 
— EET — — upon the value of stock, 
hich are advancing in price every 
ib c ^w active ES ILIM nd. er d 
prices 
i| mie Fork 1 p been very s slightly 1 5 
k- 
ably. — ^ lighter | P. 
black soils it is toch weake 
x of more m. 
and 
ngs 
hands | gir Infoexnels on c Cr Sage ew ed 
ins Wi 
rendering some ie fails houseless and homeless. 5 
ing is favourably, and most of our farme 
m on. their M soils, dh 
* very during the. last — 
May, not Mast eis ete TO| dry 
fen fen danda, Bon the opinion. — Te to ae to for soning on 
ME 
rain. The corn trade if sible has 
ly given w: The 
y improved, which h may 
d. inquiry ere e long. Your. Fen, 
iym cr the. 
seeding is over, but t the 
possi bes 
ight 
possibly lead to a more extend 
—_— 
ipaa to Correspondents: 
There has honn no better season than the 
ring d. 
ma 
past few weeks for clea It 
ribbed: with the ä 
sere 
— NE 5 The B Bath 
at Barnstaple, Ist, 2d, an. 
S. It is ^ very good dressin 
3 g for Potatoes, 
into.the land a broadcast of 
E lime with which 2.0r 3 c wt. of — sitse | 
en, dying mixed for a month or two, before planting 
a Nanton Treacle is selling whol 
N ds — eb — — — 
answers for feeding cattle 
Woop js. men. Can auy of our readers give 
— hon 
the following case? A milk 2 
theveare reat: se is * 
yard. The poor toad on 
alonging eye, F [sw 
« < e- quarters of 
s on, showing ti rat every quanti 
rom E m — g qu W 
until we come to show, in 
al t 
ar ; 
times, and h tsand frames of ves | many 
W. — a upina best in the milk-nouse. 
Misc 
red lead with 
mice— mou with Beane f. 1. the 
z — years never found it fi fail; the ud 
and 
and 
e| the Turn 
ics from 
i — statio in. 5 tho chist per 
_ e tasting a a poem delivery ot paid | 
n | except and BULBS. 
F 
KEN EDY ann fria 
ting compleja hei Sook of incom — 
prepared to execute orders for 
w) y aj 
Interesting notices of the leadin varieti 
ing these. 1 m be fou A in their Pica 
FARM SEEDS ri T EN d which will be 
ion mare 
The followin — UR RNIP —- —- 
fully selected out are — at the pi — — "d 
SWEDES, the leading varieties 
YELLOWS, the jan varieties. 
WHITES, the d varieties 
Seeds delivered F, m ure to the 
in. — nd Scoti tland, and to the 
5 ii pa 
En 
pal Steam Pag 
in Irelan 
EDS FOR THE 
N°: EW OVAL-SHAPED YELLOW X 
troduced by us 
ested and is now recomme: mere 3 a etr. E 
cm produced om 5 to 10 d Bone ee i On 
variety (see. Gardeners’. ili of Jan. 
8 ur — 
d Chasing” — 
cription 
bad. — — ba e — ‘the, 5 of xus 7 
rnip, and from its great. liability to 1 
l lance to 
worthy of confidence, 
on past been * a 
p up or improve the shape, size, P 
various kinds; 8 we bui] D what perce te oe 
t perfect sa 
rowth, mise 
i 
r^y s selec / 
e and Yellows. j 
inereases 
te: 
Wo guaran ou Seeds to ms o profs ts 1 e 
mes strong healthy Een 
RENN L BYE-GRASS,— — 
Hiis do. do. 810 t Ne 
Home grown 
— pte 
Prod an in m 
n poet — to 
E ur imported 
— — 
the aires t produce ‘ : 
spia ur 
s 
o the ane — 
cultivated under the Ex “avourable e 
——— ordinary pains 
d 
— vane 
FI d othe s S 
ALSIKE i and other varie! 
LARGE BROAD- LEAVED SCOTCH TARES. 
ith every other Ch em of Seed n 
ED LISTS which may 
G is . Wen placed in 
being rect 8 
ae 
= ‘ain 
4 — ee rward 
AN E S MA pen 
UTTON S YELLOW GLOBE nt 
VE rhe ng from fully developed m 
which have been prov repe saveral Years 4 
From the Right E em m. Lori 
** Let me have e same 
gs best crop 
loa r acre or more." 
The First Pri sat Birmin ghe 
the kingdom have boon E s n 
both for Mange and for the 
of Surron’s Lar, Tali w Globe Mangel 
or ches b; xin Mangal, 87 
Prig — of prt ds of a 
Grasses, &c., will be,sent ari omi saa i t roni 
Carriage free-to all parts Establihmen 
Svrrox & Sosa, Royal Bonis 
e 
