Arr 16, 1859.] 
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND LS OU ELE GAZETTE. 
345 
reported i n the Shrewsbury y Chronicle, we make the 
fo lov ned extincta: uh A ecturer said that 
eglected throughout 
ts and carriage horses ; nor has 
attention he deserv ves. He 
(Mr. ona) — dist more especially-point out 
— to apply the principles of breeding i horses than 
o other animals. 
eguhted aecording to the fertility already possessed 
s land. The industrial reci as Colza » Hops, 
take eate: 
it 
degree of puri ity and 
Sometimes it is used 
ter or 
ai 
an = difü 
pep quantity for a top set He 
Arrived at its destination, the plug gt the hinder 
of 5 essel is withdrawn, and T e liquid emptied into 
a barrel, which ene "boit e 
and which is 5 with a " handle at each side. 
alki 
King 
carry the barrel to the place e 
where TM manure is to red spread. ee this barr newt zd dit properly 
d receiver, 2 —.— too; they all die i 
te E returning with the ben for another supply if you breed horses of s 
cart— it js taken ou t by m ones? reste: an ill-shaj ed [e 
g Is it cheaper to 
unar 
p their bite 
me iw 
one? chea 
y pe haps say, 
e with you mas cattle and Mop you are seldom 
progeny is alw. rae what you 2 pected i 
vifi you havi o idea what 
sappoin the 
ur or shape of the 
q — "Á RT. 
t great law of nature eding i 
m 
gentle shower oui An than that ofa bini: yis at 
one point and little or none at another. This Nod 
we have previously noted, throw of the liquid : a ith noth ds th 1 f 
.the aud is not "admissible “during the hot K w F variat io 
af the plants with it. The method of application here that 4 ‘ian 
scribed takes three men to carry it out, one to spread mre c eet = ill- aai — — calf, anc 
wo to car nure from th small at he expecte you inquire 
wupations another method is employed necessitating odi Ge 3 .. ik "hl ans It is t 
oly one ets which | makes many say that hors e. eding is a lotte 
e tube ever. if you breed vm —. rhe little to fear. 
s thorough-bred a y seldom —— 
us 
m di 
wh april 
shape, and adapted for the 
to bree and the moi 
is also | the —.— iesiri is breedin; — 
and the This should make you ve 
hat not onl 
ha 
of the po pita of t th 
attender s the excretal atid of the stables 
ww-houses of Flemish far 
carefull 
the stal ow tin, ei Whie 
y agriculturist being | predom isinating —— on the proge 
tents of the solid dung the female ceil ? 
ans s and the 
other r group; or do both ive a all ? 
Mr. Eva * any very be witi ifa and inte 3 vin then. 
in support rof each theory which seemed conc sive in them- 
ue quantity of the solid — but he maintained it was not fair to look at one set of 
also vi the Tobacco | facts — and -— our eyes — others. It — be: an 
BEA T m its ordinar: rti h. Pen 
als vA that w. e get the — 
a, the Turnips, Flax, 
e latter it is-used with g; and although the 
af — straw. e^ nonce sometimes ar n goniti in one ens 
visa OW and the female uence another, ye direction is 'y no 
5 = eans constan ften teversed, and admits of no absolu: 
— to a known formula.“ 
It is a common but silly question,“ 
yl A 
other —— 
c of the —.— with tbe bomi a escapin 
tel litter there asses a arti 
Maure, For the Flax cro OP; re 
Ís op, ENS are e m 
Ondi it -applied to s 
to the M 
— 
view,” 
S 
rse- | — may say 
e | racers ; “therefore you ask how can you avoid. phe 
It is : 
wit th ca 
easily establish ha bree 
o 
As to 
disa ted; 
while in brooding | — purpos 
kin 
St to o big, To ensu 
e firs e in bre is, that like E e 34 p^ 83 (Er and livin; 
d produce like ; but it must be er ee in our — 5 — 
ond ti 
— maro "anys St Sto: tnnt e ^ the stallion 
of a differe 
into the pedigree his "Individual "shape ; prily, his health, el his temper. 
wering = sd But there ing the so be ada that 
; the 
RS both parents join hed or “the Š 
jectin the 
with which hé fully ne Which Says That! both ee are brea a 
alway in. the d male 
te dur 
t 
mares, but there are many more fa ailures. Som: 
tbat you have no pure or thoro reeds, e 
ever too late to mend.” Su 
p. "Smith, and gra at re Sa bre 
— The pre: 
— a bad one; sJ 
a e alt bred 
fail ; ae ou 
nins 
. — “exclusively from 
ad 
em B 
animals of el ame shape, a if therefore, adapted for the 
may 
same purpos 
peenlinrities essen * 
ha 
b 
and the back ribs dem the 
hand is usual: 
i ds of 
| Stonehenge observes, ‘‘ gives the whole 
a larger ds a nd is ways —— — 
whicb may easily be overtópped ; and here 
have failed as idod. ma 
2 wt been da 
fra ecessa dec 
| duis Such as aps 
gud make = 15 Na adapted —5 the E. 
tended s bette reed from 
à. whether aix or female, 
re the mare being stinted 
as much a: 
corn, but 32 
ed animals often 
mals ofa hei 
mall.” 
a state of ore x Mna wit! 
ooling diet, unles she Fatten 
me when s 0 
also, like her, 1st wi u his blood ; ondly, 
this diffieu enm 
lty in selectin, 
itabls, but prs ero 
ion's suitabilit, 
ences more or less 
In expla- 
st, Professor 
e potent, influe 
female by oe males. 
n that ent physiologi: 
ntal ons left by the first male pon 
female ; “but den are mA Which — i dei it 1806 
likely that the blood of the mbibed from that of 
oute 80 
m its male parent; 
e may communicate these, with those 
propos 15 herself, E the subsequent oftspring of a different 
nale parentage." 
n incisa ad allow m say that agricultural 
d are to be blamed very much for the little 
attention they pay to ho as compared with. other 
3 especially poultry, “They ong to pe liberal 
pri d the bes ood m and 8 of all 
pay as much —— ntio 
more—as to ca 
should have to travel within the district of the 
uring next. session, 
Kies 
i stall 
animals is the best for the. ner Ye 
areka others advocate the long-ho 
pes particular kind is germ — — 
mstances — the Aena, of all others. Such 
Some dens 
all cir- 
persons 
the surplus 
taith 
olid m: 
n large acer iti is s tramsport ed to 
That p^r of 
r adapted for that 
out lyi ing particular toca 
Before ex ti wland ; vee 4 r grassin better housed. 
i» hol e are E ecu «pa it also . upon the demand of vM neighbouring mark ets. 
i 185 - - y . |Insome parts cheese-makin ng pay est; in other parts milk 
epositei ‘matter with t iquid ; in| in ee meat, &c. In s istricts it pays better to 
N ts. it is pumped up into the Mend manure | breed dra vc horses, — others 2 = ey rg in 
ich tra i w m i es, in 8 ponies, &c. "Wha 1 to im 
s its own 
Press sooty upon your mind i is this : 
Over | peculiar conformation, and that c 
m ns sie l upon close inves tigation to be 
“engrais flamand.” | particular. purpose ; h 
the usual 
g itis by s of an — 
for babe, the reets. 
d very m 
ande 
same 
tana 
horses into two p y classes 
and go fast; ee to dre Weights afiar them. 
that they are destined for Mei Le —— — 
differe: erely draw 
set to work in a very m 
— utn — tho fact that here's pe a peculiar shape apd 
1 
kets. Thi rdiy, having decided upon t! 
—— study the’ best Shape and 
attain in a most 
y 
breed horses, scaly the qm 
duties. Fo — don't — 
vv ale, ose shape is well 
it is intended for: let thun ba of the most perfect sha 
can get of their ipee ra being 1 with 
of reru d — u wil not be satisfied unless their an. 
thor 
ere read. 
of from Miss — 1 on pn the Festuca 
me Present state of growth of which sh seers alo 
Council then adj 
[journed over Passion and Easter 
Dod: Monthly Council on the 4th of May. pony, "or carriago-horse, 
——— — 
ot eee 
na wrong 
a 
g | The Chai irman : Have 
ug 
of their tenants at a nominal 24 F. them- 
selves also wet ris their own en by 
dr oft 
being * penny wise and pound foolish; # au Ys more 
at the fee of the horie: when they pa] him, than at 
his shape. 
Mr. H. Smith said : I can truly sympathise eon Mr. 
i h for the 
US in 
z 
E. 
* 
another bloo 
you such a distinct br 
Mr. Samuel Meire: There is not a doubt of it. If I 
fock up ensure my life for 100 years, I could keep my 
ock u i 
bt at the Shropshire 
epi is a cross-bred sheep, and w hat breed is not? I 
should lik who boast of the purity of the 
Southdown as if that was the sheep that came od of 
the ark. i 
MES 
On the History, Cultivation, 2 
Italian Rye-grass. lt W. 
Albert National Agri nsi 
the 
: "wt „ &c., of the min to be l 
g at the Albert Institu- 
