450 
tion to in the soil and d rought, and j on 5 narter of an acre each, the seed used bei eing that | | weighing the whole produce, it [= i 
insects, w o mast: 805 eo s inherited . Re ca of White Globe Turn — The sowing of the e 2 | to draw "for ern aei gay two pe 
of the seed w Owing to bad management | was done on 19th and 20th June, E 57, and o with th earest the 
3n this * ay 2 ms with branched | $ econd series all on "ihe latter day. The hoeing and | was not ae altogether, in sng cr to an ost care it 
i erm SML nuits a the result of a tenden ey to era equent treatme sut. of every kin : were as sud as | commixture of the ures in tho > MSS. 
e ossible uniform, and the utmost care was et. 
EL x = gat, Isi sra g "e xm ts oo nene E s he following gta the results the appli- 
are given, along witli the 
Sano fo and gru vem of climate and the depre- m. 12 drills, and in tia second series six. etta oF | lied i in the manures as M eed 
Having however bees well grown seed, we 
. YELLOW ABERDEEN BULLOCK TURN IP. 
8 oa Weight of Tur-| Organic Phos- Alkaline | | è Ph 
it In eastern, “southern, and midland England nips produced| matter. | phates. | salts. m Sohne tee 
more pe iae have aot a suitable Turni Tons. owt. Foo — Con 
climate ; and Mangel Wurzel would be much more XL Warsi mance antl guano B0| 38. 841.2. 1 88 
easily and success fully gie Even here how-|| IV. Guano alone " 11 16 100 „1 75 „ 105 
it i Farm m ire alone 11 15  80| 75 : 3 
ever it is rarely that a plant well started does not | vr Somer ville: Me teas 4b E] os 
continue to increase ; and CraNDLER's water drill | | | xr. Farm anure, gua and nis xphos. 2 d 92 = 8 2 24 
which, if used with diseretion, generally | | n manure end superp osphate .. | 2 25 
. : VI. Stenh h uoc 10 40) — 88 | 1 50 
pcs the brairding of 7 seed, is a 5 valuable Xm a 8 4 80.5 5 ni nlbrophosphate E ? 16 92 - N 
ainst difficulties of climate. oil contain- | | e E ede 
ne sufficient quantity of absorbent vegetable | | II. WHITE GLOBE TURNIPS 
matter is another great security for success in this no 7 15 Ena — 
uan | .. 
mand ee Tal de — ERE CENE 
the aids at arm man 0, an superp os. 2 2 
island will n never be à ble mpete, in either | X — manure Fk superphosphate . n » 56 80 44 1 107 
quantity or d of Turnip, ‘with the northern. yr, Bienhonse & Oo. Saperphoej bale : Tec us. 0 
As to in tacks, the remedy hitherto xs | v XE: Stenhouse U8: 's nitrophosphate 11 14 60 .. 6|1 1 
een to s. k: = 2 dee a condition as manure out of covered court . II NEED T a 
e a rapid growth; a is plan is now being 
supplemented by the direct action of machi Ms 8 extract ENG ob p "api ine eee tes the churn, and the butter wal 
i e, 
meets lime and other isto up k — alone and in combination with other fertilisers, stands not feed your cow s with Turnips until they 
way t gren eoe Rd 9 : one 3 ‘hed greatly lower in the scale of the second series than it ró p previously milked, by which means the 
H does in that of the first, while the other fertilisers, con- | anima 12 hours to get rid of the flavour of the 
which had been an attr active fod ‘for them 3 a trasted among themselves, occupy precisely the same | vege etable. Good hay must also iven in sufficient 
steful poison. What m e d ulti viz., 1st, guano; 2d need not add great cleanliness not only in 
report of Mr. Row LEY’ 8 dust- blast f d, STENHOUSE & Co.'s superphosphate of lime; and 4th, oom: house — in € iry. No stale pieces of 
grub we cannot sa ut it may be 5 pales Seas egen DO. "s nitrophosphate of lime. The explana- Turnip — t be allowed to remain in 
that of all the di culties to bis the failure of tion of this curious result involves a question of great the mang wht seh. rl ald 755 clan ‘out before dig. 
the Turnip crop is owing, more hinges on a defec- interest and importance to agriculturists. In the first | If your ‘correspondent does not feed largely, hec d 
tive condition of the soil than on y other cause. uis e — the fi Jotie — ay peeling — Tur — pegs ng — the pice f ia 
| rincipa resides, 
bn and v — rm a oer X mee deis i zn — teli ap uut h Dit: 8 dh Ej salt 2 per ay purpose i 
Kad est -Xus bo sh dupl oil sad Rond y ing to the old-established practice. cond | freeing th n of the strong taste imparted by 
: serie it was taken direct from a large rt, vag . 
n 
obtained answers 
from Warwie 
ficial ne where it had been trodden upon by feeding cattle ave ickshire, 
me d it d i 9 | throug! e previous winter, sheltered entirely from Che Soeren and Devonshire. Some of 
ioa ressing of farm dung applied, but i in ‘spite | rain, and little exposed to the atmosphere. In botl f the nuisance to 
everything the seed so br airded, and the plant cases ity by easure was the sins ; but it o the growth of some ill-tasted weed at thit 
Ub that 29 t will be seen that the weight of — —— manure time; def appear to have bad mo experience of 
uffücient to e ensure, edes the ensuing lied instane n that of common | — lained of; the only one who speaks 
iof crops, the maintenance of the fertility farm -yard dung in the „ viz., “The cause of the unpleasant in your cor- 
of the newly broken land- hile in ordinary years as 12 to 15. This is to be 9d perhaps; but it respondent „Res bu tte er is he Garlic, or what in 
the a Snc the district does not exceed 1 y the eel 
10 aie : the Swedish Turni was the == —— en to that t of sr ordinarily ndr is often found bei in ridi he leat is 
uan of decayin vegeta empl oye ot be worked into t nd it was much like i Lily of the Valle a whi 
3 » TE NNUS matter i T tho t turiy | ught i podle to “diminish es ot affi Sn e butter alter 
soil, and of soluble mineral matter in the ashes | * 
h 
e proper 
d Ag 
reason of 2 
ue 
d 
which this kind 
ofmanureisusually me eastred —wasthe same. The the ae 
the middle 
the cows will not eat 1 he best w. 
ty 
80 much urged by 
of June is, that it is then in flower, when 
t it. T 
early in ae or now, if not d 
oone Joa IAEA 
ayin to dipika 
si Gss T 
is Ner | 
eultur bt B. of to parts 
^ of management, rei. manure is i ete, appears | althou u T . z^ ard of instane * 
xm mber w 0 p to publish stories ex- | to receive no support from these e due ERA sa Nor th m where the butter is not 1 
hi d in the applicatio. ^ Art sis stands certain seasons of the year, and the caue W 
8 other TOps. f Mr. GRANT relates third in | degree of productiveness, the less dec e ed | | attributed to ill- d plants pe 
to the following subst re » at those times, more especially tlie wild Onion, dm 
“Tt was resolv p n f th t all events, ‘it would | The herbage, certainly, tos a great deal to that x 
viz. :— seem iat — manure, de only slightly fer-| flavour of butter and cheese, I ta 
J.B 80 
1. With the usual quantit y Wt fuuyud n mented, requires the addition of some special een Clover even affects it; in this county there is 
ordinary way, without any othe [to act as a stimulant, or in some other way to render it | to a a old pastures for the . 
eet R er Rope available for the nutrition of the * ers in Warwiekshire would examine 
2. Half the quantity of perphosphate carefully ‘they — be able às er 
s iall 3 Gs ass Uum 
Imperial aere. x Sueno at p Ta of 3 evt. pet. combination ‘of {kenge d manure eg ph — zs tier had tho arid ad 
ELM | quantity of farmyard m anure, with | e productive than either of them employed = We had about a dessert-s oi So 
Lois ot guano at the mite of 1} ew, and alon ved in water, and put into every gallon 
same weight of superphosphate of lime, sup- In the co comparison of the farm manure from the before it was churned, and a small bit of eam 
plied pr Messrs. STENHOUSE & CO, of Newcastle- 1 court Paar at the bottom of the second was P luto 2 — due. when th 
A Panai pne. With Eee y rdi arily rotted in fro the c he cream 45 
à; eruvian erario alone, at the rate of 4 cwt, per} sy a epared howevi „0 ö ed that bola water for pe an hour, rn 
* the available igit applied in the former | “tile the water cooled before » 
Half — quantity of farmyard manure, case. e less re than : mately we h butter, but ce 
— ition of superphosphate of lim. me at ti ct that this season of the y r had passed i 
rate of 8 ewt, ies imperial acre. EUM they were in a a less available state in — ms inani; bat e — es pen 
- STENHOUS e — e It is the cups at this season ay 
ir ee, 5 Co, Co., of See yng cr in an immediately ava orsi con ition which i » = x e Sl ek pioa 2 ihe diny ; 
7. . hos des wa rth 8), pour into it, in 
p XT ae pos supplied F by M Messrs. | diate effect of any fertiliser; and fiis 7 — of T^ (ran a from t T — to a gallo Fer 
— ie per i peii in this A ticular need not shake our | it over with a cloth, four times doable, s a 
8. Sowers N 5 by Mr. man 8 as m im 1 of that mode — ; then strain and pour — into is resi ; 
Ree ES S. M. SOMERVILL aiat Ma: arm whieh exposes cream. .Ihaveneverk 11 
e Works, , Montrose, at the die d int e Ar least a atmospherie wast : . or the sut it less the i dairy-maid put a wood en cover o 
imperial acr that found upon e — of these Tables „ even when 
9. No manure or den ilis f t those manures which contain am removes any unpleasani > 
10. Bone-ast ate of 13 EON es superphosphate stana hg Rain ammonia in well fed n. yellow. urnips and A 06 
ae ash at the per acre, wi effects upon the Turni — est at Craigo in their — ther: no colouring Carrot, 
tbe m additi 10n of double that pi of am appearance of summ b er Big $ 
NES: = ork.” 5. There is a vp pote 
p 1 conducted in duplicate, or in TASTE Sere — whic o 
two — es. m 2 recs series half an im] TRR follow? — e se of Turpe x 4 5 pre - 
measured off for each experiment and | from previ 1 taste, aud €. nit - 
ul : > previous volumes of the od to en 
— Tem d T es 11 E 
m 
“Aberdeen Bullock ;” while for the "second series 3 all the | bad flavour. A drach rd M iy any other and never ver had the a abiti: s ot . disent 
f butter put into the water of the via | m. cem. uoti, hot water dry away? 
