430 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [May 14, 1859, 
eU EES PT ill furth lati 
under (ond here T q it Tonanti, and when vie per tepi of ant . f be tanet Tt it he EL: 
x - — — * the land in ho way I thong ate for my | were "re "along with 50 or per . NEL areuker security - tad 2 — Mas prese 
- — wire words, having, at my own ‘od phosphate | ordinary strength they had been accustomed to, ( te 
2 pn the land into a paying pe mien beturne puts on steam vong Pe fact that the application of steam to the miu Of the 
tom my landlortsadrantege T was but a fool for my 112 tub! ore the Ce X i Farmers’ Club. after Mr. | the soil would inerease the produce there could be n; 
that I ha >: the farm on a — er qas erm | Mzcnurs lectur the subject did tot add question. With regard to the prospects of the future, 
ou rent was only MEET OR . wi | materially to our "Knowledge of the ‘subject. Mr. Mr. Smith uu raa them, e the result of his own 
rents 2 1 w rhole of the estate, owing ih the i increase | W rich of Bavdon me experience, tha ere was a difference of 1 n 
value of land?—that s only | W ILLI vilam 3 to “the IND that day corn per acre between — 5 and horse culture 
a little more in proportion than the "addition made | fulness af his estimates read to the club that Believed that’ would prove to be erg, liwe. I 
to the others, on account of the 1275 ontlay on my 1 5 year d declared his belief 3 if one- | i hea impo ile rA eh Mir. "in 
premises.“ But I would ask, was not the rent i It hird the 5 horse-power 7 s a | prodr 1 808 solid 
case fixed, and the rise from 420/. to ew suficiently "s be displaced by steam , 18,000,0 wor 
r and 
fodder would be së inl ican eL 
unt im. 
8 ^ « «The food so rescu ned from tiempos E portance to all who are in any way in € 
A . o on, ac e h ld t a 
land was improved by my outlay of money ＋ usar i fed p a loss, 80,571,500 stones of meat; or 806, — gle nants pag age * a piis 
Again, did land increase in value to such an ent in| oxen, of 100 stones each; or 8,057,150 fat sheep o "ts E g eedsmen 
four years, or rather betwe E November, 1856, iiia 10 stones each,” eir bearing 
I was assur ed no rise was take plac ce, and Es ch, y of horse- Dow it seemed | ; In fo 
1858, And, as to the f looked that that with our crop seeds we are canal 
allusion to the outlay on the building, does not this the year, and that on ee bus the ch Te s consumed a greater or 5 — proportion 
appear a mere pretext for making the rent a Mitto | without yielding any r If s weeds he result 
more in proportion to the others, when the letters down for Sundays H + days, Th were virtually handling of the seeds before they reach the fares: 
above show that the plan was decided zon an nd in the 10 weeks lost, and reckoning the cost of a horse’s food We huve had further to noties che ina siting 
at on S. r week, th t 5l. an 
a month before the rent was fixed? Let the teen be | entirely lost. Multiplying the 5“. by 8, that being the 0 a i! Charloc 
De emn read, and it Sp Pea ta in pray — " ny number of horses required for a farm of 200 acres, fos 29. ON the bushel aud ates 
nclusion ean be arrived that | there od was a dod of E oy annum in favour 11 $8. ld f 2. , ib be 
propri ieto r had, at the time of the petere es of stea opposed to horse-p Steam might be|and so or is. a A v: 0 — e- 
into consideration all the items of expense, and fixed applied f BE a great variety of 7 — in 1 grown but foreign rubbish has been used for these 
his T ordingly. When he read his paper before the Pere hap s laughed nefarious i, ed ; Indian Rape, as our 
„I must not omit to state that only 38 of 160 trees, 3 ‘ icti t , hay 
which, accor rån ng to our bmp ampi Perms to 
grubbing up the hedges, should have co own, were 
actually felled ; ; although my part of the . 
y 
at for 5 
— — be employed in grubbing up a odpa erow. Now, . ig wit th ees 
e had since applied steam successfully for such pur- tis however ponte ng to o know that our inves- 
Lie as that. With a five-horse engine he — — tibus into these matters are gradually working 
C Tp dint era el cuir a Eig ME 1 5 t 
nse, and wit t any a yt i ing with respectable men, 
Mr. PHIPPS does well to p “Mah a d aibi which vig, ive e happened that iens "half the roots were re the followh aee P prey 
rs vh 
* 
abl 
t apr has been awakened :— 
im 11 
tifully the work was di n his own He had| “We take this ELE. of — that the 
mr + — cuperem also polled down Lacie. of trees i 8 of the mioty of the readers of the Gardeners 
UI ‘have felt warranted in thus far trespassing | on | Same agency.” and Agricultural Gazette are customers me 
Mr. FOWLER — 5 8 to the great advan- minds of —.— e 7 
A personni grievance, affects not me only but tenant st Fortra now gives to the cultivator of meia farmers ur Del E NN d 
a — i OW. "me dus } 1a nat } | when the impositions of the low class of seedsmen were 
add, and this I am prepared to show, f: y t ks to 
— four years of my — qud Lex. | — — nin account ; — he t t 7 t exposed, they niy, ee Gt he remar! peti 
ise in i 0 » semen memi a so that we were 
in improving the farm, | power land was worth doxbis what it was s without 5 and samples, &c. before they 
f. 10007. beyond what I should rea done had | | that AER owing to the simple fact that six times 
n the footing been which I really „|as much power might be applied as could be ——. 
1 n a 10-h engine woul 
mnt Pel 3 + 
render it impossible to give up the farm at lis e end T 
the fourth year without ineurring ruinous rag 
endured the "700. increase for one year, but te th t 
8 
E 
5 
& 
e 
zh 
E 
J 
& 
S 
hour, and 
horses; and unlik e the h rses, it would dò its work 
witho ut at the ie m TREE ng the land. s | 
dios: 
at T E een only m- 
— of that got should terminate my con nection.” yen where 12 us "id t B Dé v mployed, and 10 horses | 
he following analyses by Mr. NESBIT of u e 14 horses and 12 oxen ‘hal been used. If an 
late e le of Kooria Mooria guano have atonal number of horses was required in the 
moniy. pe ens ed: it would be easy to PEN them, an nd if mine ey 
L L, 1859 be at 
eee, GUAE Th; mate h 
E à Mr. (ote referred. in ee to his own | 
$2 |s8.| 38 T of applying steam to cultivation, by whic 
2 8 #23 | gg the softest bed an ed, 
26 a D" along with the hardest 5 for carri v We 
R * have already deseri KETT s guideway 
Scheme, but shall re x Thereafter ia own „state- 
an 9.00 124 | ment of the cost at w ch the s 
22.45 | 14:80 | 22.80 | agriculture can by 
— — The most — adress — thee evening = me 
Pra BN ias | that of Mr. mc 
8.82 4.34 ver | Romford. He sai d that all f fear for the yoe n the 
| 501} 350| 352 | labourer might be dismissed. hora so badly grown? 
„He (Mr. Hart) had applied st be 
100.00 pplied steam more extensively, ust 
TON perhaps, than y of his neighbours, and yet hee sk defect in c 2 pn (har it ma it; 
ployed more labourers than his neighbours, with tho less ; question is what eme wii ohh 
| further advantage that he had a hi ighe T cultivation and | following copy: of a circular le — 
| produced a greater amount of food, 
JJC 
| ms Mad as wi smind. He Grass, le which 
"d believed | the time Mia dias Vh the farmers might | in Liv — ue orders for which wil tie 
T advisable to do that un ct eal bt sy pang acm . 1 
ne : 
: state o of cultivation than it was EAS Tee ME We need not — that the p 
i 12 | keep both engines and horses until i in a better The 16s. per quarter (2s. per 
Oxide of iron and alumina x 5 state tivation. With re, to the use of high MIX with Ttali — ie 
Phosphoric acid. aa 49.35 | pr » many years ago he that there was a diffi. 7s. per bushel 
We sulphate of liie Se tha uen — introducing steam into agriculture, as ld 
salts, Ec. 2 ed ren " as farmers est; the cost of their horses per acre), would at 
a alf'a-crown a day, wherea In commerce a horse cost | at any pri 
100. a day; and an an re daa labourer was con- = E 
Total phosphoric acid equal to — a day, a k - 
Cr eura ot Hate m } 91.76 | chester 8 de wor 55. a day. msequently, if 1 pst 
Mire n éq 5 | burned me proportion of hel that was y, if he bot Pet resin ve ars ya a 
= 7 z 0.26 0.26 — chester he E cent. t. It SRM 
so-call "rust osphates are extraor- unt profitable. He eame to tlie : 
h i dr pen P cid as Mr. | fore that in order to make os Rum dem business (for E NS M 
Nessir re as econo; machinery as he co he ought received) should DA to 
poss gi 
he commenced an engine of 200 Ibs. pressu re, and state boldly for what 
Ibs. pressure, without any accident, | cable, t som = 
he stren was Drs e pro- | tr 
took care, if he went much rejoice to w that 
‘which engineers had previously |join with us i denouncing 
