Max 14, 1859.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL AEN 433 
=» ius describe the crops which the land carried at the | to the West of England Land Improvement good blood,—and that the p 
t Society, established good 
by Act of — under which the advances — y it took | y; blood,—a that the purer the breed, the more 
of examination :— Five hectares = Wheat of a likely it is to 2 j itted to th 
^ — over other charges, which enabled it to dispense with y rumes ed to the offspring." 
bets remarkable, the produce bei p= — hectolitres to inquiries into title. He was sorry to have to confess that on his e bra or reco an ence to 
he hectare, and E a weight of 70 kilogrammes to the | own Pop the farm-houses and buildings are quite as bad as | blood i 
en ecurr Arabian 
order to ** infuse into our degenerate breed of 
vitalit 
two hectares of Rye equally fine. | on that of his neighbours, though he had long contemplated 
bectolitre. 2d. Thirty- wok w cds SoA wot * e [o penu and was going now to set about it in — m t. ore E rd o the ov » and more universal so 
very wet wea With reference to the projected buildings themselves, he ay t e WI inds with the e puerile theorists ‘who 
in made under bad co ouditions—the wld of | begged also to be allowed to say a few words. He had known 
Rye is about 27 hectolitres to the hectare, of a weight | instances not infrequent, of landowners proceeding to erect 
of 72 kilogrammes to the hectolitre. -$ = oo hee- 25 — and le bales sma the advice of ar — Aig and 
gn f O: f which the iR 50d uilders—the result being very pretty things, architecturally WV, 
tares of Oats, of whic’ e magnificent omis — but which. . submitted t to the criticism of prac- constitution, hardihood, enduring powers, freedom of 
an abundant rA — es yield of fis crop ge generally tical agriculturists, had been found anything but what, had | action, and india pon » 
i tolitres to t 
high-« caste Arab stallions with our native mares ! : Of their their 
is 36 hectolit es of | they been consulted in the first tenes, — would have| and their clean sin wy 1 iro; aut KORE 
| fine Buckwheat ; the yield being — of this c crop posed» eror. d Leg emer eva pE of p — 9 - and | for iie type of set fir od rar power— 
| 30 hectolitres to the hectare. 5th. Eleven v eur of | befo; called in in architect or builder, to take the advice of is known he universally “ound heathy con- 
Clover. 6th. Of 4 hectares of Potatoes; C some "PT — e agricultural friends—some of them dition of their vitals, cp tute an rrangement that 
twenty-five hectares of meadows, which giv whom t caw resent had already — their pcm d makes ‘br oken ind* n these stocrats of. the. 
kil When he should have shown them the site he had selected, 
ogrammes the hect doli which he had chosen as being centrical, but also as bein Pas desert unkn 
M. Van der Beke employs eight horses for working |to the best roads, a matter in his opinion not alw ays sufficiently — em what des is objectionable His size, says 
the farm, and feeds 36 head of pus of those e — attended to, and furnished them with the precise quantities and | som e ( of | the Sex ansive power of the 
| — cows for the use of the estion, ae tem | Pro rtions of arable and Grass land as determining the number | 5 " 
5 » 
large yield of cm ung „ which ined p the eat cup —— and Bara room, he shoul request Instances are en proving that Arab stallions, 
——— g E ben n iml fy ee gone i "prep cre — gu egi v though stalin — rather than dp the size of the 
1 serves abundantly for manuring all the ur fal produe ary mares: som pages are occu 
Ls The em rj for the transport of the arrangement of farm buildings. "The farm consisted or ich. | with y + — un. Wado not quote 
re Ke, hav eels with broad tires; these do| way from Durham to Hartlepool, which runs through the | the de apters on Bre akin, ng, H semanship, Ridi 
2 nA light — with the faciliby with which | farm. p. nm again, as he hoped they should do next | Hounds, in each of which will be found information 
narrow ones do; great ruts are thus prevented, and Progress, aud he ve entur red to — bat he should ha we esta. | interesting to the country gentleman. The fo 
the roads kept in good repair. bush hed, if not qui model farm," yet at least, that passages from the chapter on Stable Management are 
| = Hs piee on jin example and specimen of what aud wit | more likely to be useful to the majority of our readers. 
“ H 
| Sotieties. the ai of han di West of England Land Improvement Com mpany. injustice Pe liver a vigorous animal to a h age, 
| vertiser. ? great 
| ROYAL AGRICULTURAL OF EN [itis right to add that there are à F 
| bili the West of Englan eris Gen eral Land | her thraldom. is the horse in a pe state. 
Qi mer keen, open foi held m May i, 1 the magus | Drainage, the Land Ere med Company, &c., whieh | — — is the Pill, — an artificial state? MEA d 
to take a rent charge for money ncm: — en : €— "m TE - oes sd 
| eservat .|for buildings and other permanent improvements. the close stable and fœtid effluvia; for the cooling 
Weg root dpi ni 1857, x moderate dranghts of water, as nature prompt, We 
and . with that 1858, "On the Aan RICULTURAL IMPROVEMENT —TThe | have the noxious 8 that the famished animal 
J gow deliriously swallows to quench his fiery thirst—for the 
y 
op Shams M XE Cono to pue half-yearly general meeting succulent blade of his natural dietary has been not only 
it had been bruised on the onteides = 8 B c eue Sgro Lo: Ahe Rollowing are extracts suspended, but dry hay, Oats, and Beans have been 
of Sweden and Norway, stating that he was pre s dd ne rize shoe! zx 2 iet al e show, to 
e! 
be | Substituted, in addition to the inflaming q 
The | which heaps | of warm clothing are to be borne, . 
by Professor. Holst, . of the 1 of Christiana, » 
Hn 
2 Council beg t 0 — br f cloth 
prizes for implements. never he s called u to ce 
Societ copies of the first series ol N on the pro- ‘The F armers Gazette Challenge Cup’ is still offered for com- trippe ee i 
Ae 3 al farm. z petit 2 but it is . or the implem ent — to the eating tnd ond d penetrating blast. Mors mode ith 
tater or this prize. This step bid gs consider a pru: ex | treatment 18 0 s na ure is a vera wi 
"e n — of the Council were EE for the above oie, and wil] not ue the en n the implement depart- | his instinct and Amer 
—Adjourned to May 18 titt ot Dh 
dalk. e peri . 
i i ing herbage and elastic sod, so congenial to the feet, 
onti m tho middie i is | they are in ey cates ene Haren upon hard stones, 
or buri ed n hea ting straw; water, 
Farm Buildings.—Durin ng iem m) ings were us 
alte 
st Darhem, the Council of the y Agri- alterati 1o 3 — a attend 
we wore h be ‘ta — n small quantities, 
s. r 
cu. apd oiher aah — poko 8 ments for the Socioty's show aro | to |to t suit the AR of ‘the small stomach 2 the animal, 
z the f rogressing most favourably ; and, from the energy displayed is given — twiee a-day, and i us draughts; 
e begu e committee, o: ria — un ha while, to eulminate the poor ee wrongs, some 
y | been Tiva: and some useful and — d amendments atrocious and ignoran rascal of AT E to 
made. The Society's gold medal offered by your co for give him a ‘coorse o' medicine, simi 
la 0 in for the lean, the gross feeder or delicate eater, 
the old or the $ all alike are crammed 
calomel, ial diuretics, 
heaven knows what, that nothing but the most extra- 
ordi e c Opie 1 m 
Mt. Spearman introduced the subject eounci ha Y. 
gentlemen at the other end Of the icon Md ON Id a get also off. — Jon, in each | Light in the Stable.— what principle is p. — 
ust been told by bis friend on the — Mr. — of Ireland, for thei zold metal for competition, existing dark —— are tolerated] ? PW it suffice for 
total abolition to assure the public, that from tein e uM 
i derived the — of defective eyes and total 
| blindness, so promine ta feature i in the ills that horse- 
flesh is heir to inted wit 
the fact] that in his — en perde 
b nkn he 
h Mr. Royse also cel that the receipts of the ä sima E that ma emn 
said that | Society this B nen by 307. the dc durin 
f a stronger predisposition to i it natura ally. There is a 
addressed, chen he M. | common error, that requires elucidation and correction, 
ly defective — x ar ped 25 ar e Soc riety’ s existence; and — viz. the 1 accepted idea, that a dark stable 
as read obbyn D, | makes a horse rest better, and — more health 
m it, th 
e their bibel a balance to tho credit of 5 Bosiaky. of | and 
they | 1817. 16s. 4d. à 
e 
E REL EE d 
7 freely after issuing from it, than from a well- ‘lighted 
AReviews. [ ut be undeceived as to it it s being the effects of 
one. 
The du rse and his Master; | with Hints on 3 — Á— 28 
shocks and dims his power of vision, which causes a 
rig tr we le Pegg on ae C — ROS idey aad “pap mt erect ears, and timid 
: e egeta the sori 575 — horse, 
Hec eire to breeders and keepers of horses, given 
a e 
1 
R the following ev 
eading his way ungui ide ed) — 
15 ae erent to the distressing p 
speaking wd i breeding in Irelan ere e rmm 
distressing, 
stable; the poor 
«T sé dich mal feels Need at his release vt 
gnor and custom hay e much to dete- | influence of a dark prison-house, and in the pleni 
mills towards ede onr brood of a and 8 crossing had | his happiness, he * bucks? and jum 
ctive in a s time of very undesirable by a sense of freedom ani 
st a e The i ntroduction within the last few | 
east, vit might implem , by Scotch an 2 coe turists, if 
en on calbulated t to improve rover se ave hada materially 
Y COCOS e pele aie ae e d f horses, For the increased the fi 
thens, it was co — t largor stamp of |; 
and rt ir okaro — than the native e Irish one necessary; and in gases, 
vues —.— the plenitude of er idled el ignoranes, aped clever | away 
s atleti, aie Cid 
blessings, air and light, his heritage from 
Ventilation.—“ Ventilation 
animal 
7 
regards t 
cary of they have been enabled, 
& vel 
aid, and 2 t merely important institution, r consequent upon i 
annual charge. is created u| $ 
pect of E advance upon | member —A short distance 
Ed Be and a i Pigment. towards ye towards extinguishment of never hope that you can produce them a by 
in a given tim which possess an 
A — 
PARK. 
which is thus dheis of | the tiktive Iii: Ares an infusion beyond the — —— d pleasant village of 
