Max 7, 1859.] 
THE GARDENERS' 
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
— 
411 
Frvancrs.—Mr. Raymond Barker, chairman of the , as they do, loped treasure of ammoniacal an 
cene eet xe error Finance Committee, . the report on the phatie fe ane y Those gifts tave mot yet been availed 2 
cue TR hare more e" rid of this pest, my idea P those Subte terranean treasures at our dis —— e gone rho: 
of ploughing 5 current cash balance in the hands of the bankers was | of the weet cultivation of our stiff clays would give an 
being that I would —.— zi — E. ret" $ ee 5837. 1s. Sd. ave eret Ye * ot. sont 4 to 5 5 inches—all below this may be 
us required I wou clear it all out, but in 2 known an: be hi territory, itis is Sod 
1 n ‘o and t that ie sun Faer bate Haa | did Country MEETING 1 —— — The re of the I at after fer Hae the filtration o E ono of water and 
: ve the hole of the till (after havmg been read ‘and — mae de gradually. rod certainly aerate and improve the 
mo ‘ res ived fi 7 Crovd on, Guildford, is i the process is too slow for these quick moving ti 
hing) With di e seufller ” rubber” or M Re dub mea . that the Co ountry Mee — MÀ y to di des. ead — saturated masses by 
atmosphte: »osure. ens mass 
beer: — — * te steven umm itcr did at in 1860 should be held at Canterbury, = * that infinites — niit Se p at ted by pulverisatiom s0 
8 he Mayor of that city entered into the usual that.the millions of almost impereeptible Abres m 
a e depth an scufile immediately, then ditto | ment TE li fhe S o 5 ry of the Bois br: ihe x themselves without anay to the hitherto in. Bee ai i 
crossways, followed - a xA or eat harrow, then a pair of | Monthly Council on the 1st = Jane, — deputations | Pat fertilising ingredi eal tights, ghe 8 to eMe, and d 
harrows, — E sty a e ill 5 light t harrows. if the consisted of the following me — of ai that at passes 6 "y posed clay a 
weather and ot Presiden it its toübilgie, and in —— toes. it with ammoniacal and 
be pape. = the Twitch that has been distributed East S 1 aes — Serge m Kim, Es: cie | fertilising gases, As you follow the steam cultivator on a dry 
will be see: ai and can be — -= a Worten, Esq. ; John Sutherland, eat The Rev. E. F. dap i iantancous e — qq anke y» nostis, o 
x it is advisab Brynon; Wm. Godsmith, Esq ; Thomas Farley, Esq.; Wm, | Vince you that the earth is a great apothecary's s! "d of 
gat * can, i it one o; Can iledine, Esa, ; Mr. John W Wod -R1 Riel harda, Hon 8 chemieal compounds. The rough and lightly laid fallow 
two children follow each — and if 9 2 —.— Canterbury Deputation.—Lovd Sondes; Sir Walter James, |? E Ara — and imparts uA - 
should be persisted i or three —— — Twitch | Part.; Sir Norton Knatchbull, Bart. ; William Deedes, Esq., dn y playful » ry — coe ok the —— 
= be no m uble than any other co : n weed ; TA x Bk m Bart — n. E but e atmosphere. ‘Ths rusty looking WOR of our Ded 
negl " ver s fol " i . ^ d Canterbury; Major Munn poor ela; ls makes y claim upon the passing 
— pe = Faten — the wo will — in- PE M. Fine Esq. ; ; Robert Lake, Esq. ; Thomas Cooper, Esq. ; — — — gets —— * Se 
credi y and seriously deteriorate the so id mas Philpott. 8 "e ef ais 
add hine. Jethro prince of. 9 de 
e Scri duh Bone nia; C- Goldemit di diuo; want of artificial drainage defeated all his calculations. The 
to the aliit a of nage it. Teltch! is an pes: Fr us J. lom W. Eborall, — Rev yx Lois Weedon, is the great — p of = 
enemy, n i — nat on our s 
must — h it E —— — e Guildford Deput: tion.—Farl of Lovelace (Lord Lieutenant of oo clays culti : Itivatio wae hed re be "n a NES 
ES : h L 3 acting on f Eeonviotiom after I rained my land, I broke 
must — it how fields or it will disgrace us. a fitus M i ey a sins Cue, Det Constan, it ehe get six other horses following in the 
Twitch, Heiri "Au, and Thistles efore — Said of Deanston’s great subsoil plough. Our 
farming, but with bad farming they flourish and super- Y. ren Hos 'oskyns, labourers called it a little earthquake, and my crops have never 
sii ris Cho dido th t fe m dimer of "the | Chemical p mittee, Miser the | forgotten it; but forall that I saw how costly was horse-power 
corn; they e cos S cultivation, while the when cultivation was atte Mr p amp a à it was 
produce is diminished. J. W., Deb recommending that the E ge Te- | that we should yard deep of cultivation, 
Couch tin s rivi of analysis be 3 instead of 10 or 1 
]—viz. 3 1 
„W. H. S.“ I be = td say P he will proie nis | 5o he Intention of the Counci al Doubts about Steam.—1 confess T 
bibit directly the corn is ent to put four horses abreast rep m bota analyses E an bar r the bond fide | v very much astonished mie M Cb e friend, Mr. 
on to one of Coleman's scarifiers, an A 
mith, 
progres, should dese 
L consider 
na! of far 
investigation by the Society's Consulting Chemist were 
recommended :— 
— e changes that t 
oxi a 
ake place in liquid manure in passing 
ugh different soils. 
for Wheat 
fot; 3 mure p 8 rn 
and Barley. ttained. 
"shines. C 
k it off. itl, yo ant time your land | 
if it 
acter Soe teins 
= is impossible to deny with truthfulness tha 
5 experimen nts on the nature and Fowler’: d Mr. Smith's plans are ctically proven 
stables; th s to be allow dos n on it, no matter i — of cultivated — ps. 3 saled win — of — — nd — both in 
how full en laid a winter in the ame | F — 2 effect, b award and of the Royal Agricul- 
bottom of the yard there will be plenty of time for ali] o Ar. Ra „ hair. | these plane, 1 um sure i Sin pay Y — 
kinds of seeds to swell, and after it has up ea wdc f ime * i i 
" h 3 : of sa Tie re itt enge t fixed steam-engine I shou once e prac 
man of the - ommi ee, presen: e repor as artt 
into a hill in the field requiring it, such a | a eply disturbed, 
ion 1 or seeds of any kind can | | to the repairs required in the drainage of the house. but I suppose I must hire a portable n a pity-af-the 
possibly grow. I advise, if you have nothing | Wa ARWICK MEETING. —Lor aig vice- chairman of! a at a v olo MM S mentio —— 
> the G W. | fa in Ju r. 
to t your dung on the land; the E General loug! — — c attach ; cultivated wo stetches of 
will run on nicely now the land is fir Yo f the Committe fa —— — — field on which Wheat was to be sown 
can then h the dung in at your ares leisure, That Mr. Bishop, of the Regent Hotel Leamington, ci. in October. Alt — ren feld had been formerly subsoiled, 
time bef. . d supply the first- class refreshments for the — in the and forked by manual labour, Fowler's subsoil brought up = 
y ore Christmas. In the spri ngs when the show yard ; and that Mr. Cole, of the Horse and Hounds | ex to view some tindisturbed nasty ochrey rusty sul 
land is dry and will bear the horses well, give it — | Inn, Warwick, short supply the sound — ee x gricultural friends woul — 
— — e — and th ments, subject to arrangements with the honora cue uld d say notning would on it, but mark the 
tch will not as fast in the mad Direc! f the Show. esult. October or November the Wheat was duly drilled 
mI. e spring ntumn, so | 2. That th eed of entry cheese, wool, ai oer the whole field; as soon as it came up, and in every stage 
Sur, — ren ae om es if you will 
the Gazett 
oa 9 serait ts that | 1859) in Wheat again, and in this early stage of growth, two 
erre — — and good, pad been made for — My men — — ME. 
say S lbs. Wurzel hee to the acre. = es rjr ami TE commencement of the show yard by | Bat ho can seriously doubt the benefits of ; on 
You are sure of a yc as the — will be full of moie. f . ne clays after — —— * 
TwPLEMENTS.— On the motion of Mr. ubi dexina, a 
ture. No a how d r, but don’t ARD or € and dry, the intermediate spaces were dark and damp. 
in wet; if you do the Pee, e — t you have it d — by Mr. John Hudson (of Castleacre), | It was deep cultivation that did this, producing facile aération, 
— the plant has its rough leaves ing. Rainy | Mr. Edwa was elected one of of | jme capillarity, and rapid ion. It proves that a 
soon makes them fit for the hoe. Now let us| Implement à in — place of Lieut.-Colonel Towneley, | yard when H m crt ond ny fond 1 — -—— — car Wi ; — 
have a a look at the ex xpense, follow wing is an esti- ed to the Council his regret that he | Pars sida "ne a whose — — — 13 den 6 inches — * 
th | and e t no present 
aclean one. There will be no xs say on des Tur- — i. idea as depth of eultivation and e shall 
nips or Wurzel, but nevertheless, as soon as the crop is|, STEWARD CF Live Srock.—On the motion of Mr. — imately amive at with ith steam power. -W hy did that Parsnip 
visible, the horse-hoe to work, — dont let | it stand Brandreth c seconded b Mr. Geo eorge Turner, | of 14 feet. Tt had — 4 a brick-earth pit, filled up with soil 
still the crop is too big to get cut, and then Mr. Fisher from the adjoining land, when it w cessary to open a new 
will be sure to have one. Comm Mx mirma or 1861.— On the motion of Mr. due isn —ͤ—ͤ— —— — — — — — 
i —.— . 258, Gd. | Brandreth Gibbs, a —— from the Se ecretary | m tende us, The shilling flail is superseded ed by one that 
H vy harrowings .. i x of the Crystal Palace, i — relative to the Society's | costs 3001, — —- and profit. Who is to say that 
1 3 proposed MÀ MÀ ing in the year — was wo shall mot have = — . wil 
Clearing and carting stubble into yards - x 8 0 refe aad o the “ Met an Sites — dm t — 1 — — 3 LB result?" Toit. 
a three — 9.0 List. — popa with. the Scion the | were astouted ien Vo wies mans irte -plou gh. dra: as 
1 heavy ele rane ^ tio — 5 Es MER m m A un DOCE 
llightditto .. . 0 6 M — b. adoption at the ensuing E m indeed did CH — i my admi- 
parey . TI Tg. x ri "n 3X1. Yd or | Fonoi a — m ps 
N Carting manure tl as heretofore, the 1ith inst — * Lx realisation of what agriculture once considered a romantic and 
ow attention ^ sy Me any chance you cu a — of | d chimerical id: If my anticipati are to be realised, let 
the in the land after this; — mme mark : Cia id ow drain — van -— their “ 
as this is yonr game ; send your bane er: nS Oj EM 
vibe fet to tal take it up, and fog cook it! Charles LOND May 2.—The Advantages of Steam in Position, as an agriculturist, brings to 
— le. Hope, Essex. (Mr. Bates’s figu A pe e flowing is the greater portion of the | anxious and intelligent inventor, whose sl 
is w. 
Fe 
per read by Mr. Alderman Mechi :— 
pà and absorbel by 2 one — and who 
2 While the agricultural e is congratulating Efe —— 
for this neigh- 
anguishes for — ‘wherewithal è 
ical bearing t houghte- 
3 EE Monsieur de la "Tréhonnais is holding | us up to his 
Upon. The man we have is y sober, and | your humble servant is lamenting our 
gnorant, and from. the conversation I have | backwardness and imperfection. his ae of 
e and large farmers, I feel confident | sentiment may be readily accounted for. They compare | 
— men would ‘he toe the Apaan with, the — With them the extensive po my Ant 
district, — i por of progress. With them the — —ö— 
C D de — 2 — J. pail 3 ve rule. With me they do but con- — 
ou should apply to — demn it, and point to its - ndment. We paf — do A 
— ee, at the London, eet oid and the New = much 1 of our e f. 
eterinary colleges respectively.] 3 7 districts suy tis aa 
feed. | but that — 
Societies | cold, stiff, tenacious clay, 15 or which ae 
i soa | drained, is to my certain kr: in a most M MÀ 
* . ͤ iplescaieof tenant, and the country at large. the pobli — ms 
Dae : sday, Moy 4.—His Grace | Now, it opinion e dn su w s the 
ol Marlborough, improved, dd most „ 
