Juse 18, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, : 531 
end it is necessary th t the workman should always Ber! 2 a — — booth = en — complained, yet | stage of the grow th of the plan 
his right hand i in —— with the han ndle, to Mela eady i that i isa not open to one ; it is applied * — — — a 
when it will - * it in time vini piment such an | pepper-box or small bellows (of whieh he enclosed a 
meets an obstacle. So accustomed are we in Great | occ larreucs “this year, more especially as they may con- sketch). A woman can dress an aere of Vines per da 
itai lou handles, that | fidently reckon upon from 50 to 100 per cent. more | | Scarcely any change will be observ able in the crop for 
itain to use 
at first view it — impossible that a Flemish plough visitors than even at — with — weather healthy. Should 
can do its work. It is nevertheless true that it does | I was told while complaining at me ster by a gentle- | rain fall € in five days after the "i mE of the 
i irab isi : h ~ me 
T wW — —— 
Flemis | i 
the Scoteli or English swing plough, EF the soils in| 15,000, or 20,000 ^ — of a — M in two or| Wurzel crop had been nearly * troyed. Mr. 
; A i ti ates — to be the lar vm 
cha- | t eek essed my | 
racter. The heaviest soil in Flanders bears little affinity | that t he R. A. S. lar — yet arrived at i the point of I" tim "wet the crops of Mangel Wurzel in 
to what is called heavy — in Great t Britain; it is in | *circumlocution ” indicate: yt reland and in France. The beetle is the Silpha opaca, 
fact a soil light enough fo: ips, and is 1 — removed | gone conclus ion "e “how not to do it.” X. Girdwood, 49, Fly pe — in UA Society’s Journal — viii, page 
from the sti 1m retentive clays e ing the Pall Mall, Jun late 8, figures 12 to 24). Mr. Curtis observes 
heavy soils of England. ightest soils of Flanders Corm Notes at Barnstaple.— Of th 
again are more Ii n Y po wer else; and in| Notts fair specimens were shown as oe stoe x Mr. | — the pee aes * known to recover and 
none are the stones and boulders which abound in so Merson was the winner of the priz for the Exmoor | to produce a fair air crop. 
much of the soil of Scotland met with. e soil of | sheep, l d d mour, | pr ber of an entire edition of 
ers then possesses erga features of eee Med ll | The “improvement effected in these sheep by jud | 16 reports able 3 in n the Society’s Journal, and 
calculated to ald the e v ol regular worki an|selection has been immense. They have not only tl I 
implement like the Peni ph Wich is be ho Finn good hind-quarters which belong to a mountain breed, | form by — Blackie & Son, entitled Farm 
ow e: 2 their short fore legs are far MM the ux — Insects," 
p NOE and circular, and the fleece heavy. , The thanks of the Conneil were ordered for each of 
— soils of Gre eat Britain, in ohg "i Boot — was — Aa to be not less than 3 * per niger a | icati 1 
— where the numerous obstac les to uniform In sp of the pony classes in vds last as possess- | The Council then adjourned. 
control over the plough; a control "attin, we we speci ipa va pers Dest in e yan his 5 Cux AGRICULTURAL, ULSTER : Drying Milk 
think, only by the Aa of Er ha: 5 stilts. The compact, but highly bred 2 — « Bobby," M ed Coes Tne flowing — eem € th "I — 
one-handled plough of Flanders preferred by the|to Mr. R.Smith of Exmoor, and his pur to | 5u ee ete Pe s 
EC allowing the | improve the Ex xmoor ponies, or 2 — te e hime on dt edis ri Tua Haviz 8 TRÀ 
left hand of the ploughman to be at perfect freedom to| by which they may be improved. The produce of rials E UM I TUUM the — 
handle the long tool or cee ment by means of which | “ Bobby” belo pusing v 8 to Mr. Milward sold at Tattersall’s | practice in a small way, 2 — matter 
he can free the mould- board of the manure, the earth, | a fortnight since am each. In South Down 
h ir oniar tot carried 2 before | V. 
operation of the nstant man egre is him, b za there were none of Mr. Jonas Webb’s, t 
da, hich | Du — of Richmond's, and Mr. Rigden's to du oen ay the 8 tt to 
would require the use of The roa ea wit > Horn and Somerse were , but 5 pomo 
plough then of Flanders appears w ed for the | were pm uM » "x exhibitors, ‘These |: hole o soerat But stein —— My of m ik be he 
ties of the mode e cultivation and kind of 3 hav: n we ag carefully selected | , he animal. 
soll in which it depict ii Tm P DET oe the fest Bur days to a keep down 
sole (sep) to which the working parts of Ms the prize a and Mr. Bond the ài The «eru e rbd and Cx salis ation On the fourth day, four r quar or, if 
f of blood 
Pi o- 
furrow (versoir) are attached, is generally made of portion o the vast and ond extent of country -— 
wood ; i is a meia d sledge, wine slides along the | these sheep now oeempy: Next year at Dorchester we should be taken from a Py ie . ee 
d the left side of w hich works may expec see them in greater force. Mr. Brown V cedes 
the part of the 1 land not operated n by the | had — of the p prizes, —— — with Mr. Moore, will 17 — e but dor 
to softe dg 
D 9 Soc ned eid whic priota 1 * n = 
tesi : d * GS EL almost have disappeared without any bad consequence 
a of the i Thel h af the (sep) sole Societies. resulting. I have known some — where after such 
Obviously regulates that of the working parts of the 
plough ; some advocate a long sole, some a short one; eras AGRICUL TURAL OF ENGLA 
KLY Counc held June 15 present 
for friction. The action of the sole in adding to the Mr. 2 Barker, Vice-President, in the chair — 
pe of the plough, and also in forming a hard| The Earl of Malmesbury, Secretary of State for Foreign 
urface in the bottom of the fur no less the | Affairs, transmitted the report of Mr. Morgan, her 
after milking only, and not again touched until 
sad in for slaughter = the end ot the season, 
The above is the is "RU t o 
being sent to Grass; but on eee the bathing =! 
with—the Grass being 
bath—the friction of sistem 
br id pr de Ml of. €: 
appliance. This le in i tio vhi 
which are placed behind the sole; these be 
t be 
plough, and serve as they re ker s hp e result of an ag cniin be made 
of the uis on pU soil These may act very well in the view to ascertaining the 2 — Ru substance. hang out, 80 s — 
einer ly on agen soils ie ky with in Mug. ts but i re al soils Mor, gan's report states that favourable e te have point of a small knife applied to the band where it 
not ve judicially s dua little ronda y- d .TI the f — a red tes degree ee — ile 
To the fore ot he 1 soc) is con g T said that we eris eatedl i ' ly 
ME Say! fe on the Ei most available rise its are 8 on — road to p^ diseases of the ors hae in cows by the emplo 
Ape the 3 not only the diamond districts. The chief mentre e I ment of the MA thie 9 ii tinet Pus 57 
to jend » x seprilin or ett ay d the e ON Ai good roads, but 8 r railroad is bryonia. In in which 1 — - the 
sad this ay up to th Meer pam Ther — ac e " 
furrow e sedi n REM E the River . b. e ye . AMT Ih e 
LL requires to be made so well that it will San Frances co, — — of X — — — altogether hof; "ari oe, 
a ee ae nop and wi e of — — a Eo giving one — the —— 
ti bstac passag much softer, In twelve hours he commen 
se of oth doe! the mould-board. In many of the leagues The. regant proceeds to to ‘detail the process of to milk her and gave no more medicine. After calving, 
— Pepe da p he udder again became very much inflamed, and her 
— Pe of wood, me es the face ve with a ay Mares — — to acad PEN = body exceedingly swollen as far forward as the fore 
integrity 2 eger neg y oen i m 1 — ied oF ie i ibis m X legs. She remained in that state for four days. He 
of iron. The upper part of the turn- deposits lying i in the intended line I believe, with th ~ B Beye — M yo "A. E E ight 2 Nee 
— e yore is so curved t ee it lays — in England ut 7. (o Gl. per ton. Should the trade in (eam » quite soft. To another three- vais heifer 
erc the Flemish plough generally lara carved this article inerease,. either from competition or =y A epi 5 sou ene ae "ü 
outline nearly equal to that of the — line of mo abundance, it is but natural to suppose it would be brisa: ee 
board ; ii is rarely placed Lesern n the — at placed at a lower figure for the purposes of our com- 
least n early vertical — as * hane or English merce, inasmuch as the manure in question contains 
R, S. B. highly organised matter with a large — of real 
ammoni Ls nitrogen, ies, magnesi: 
| and car of lime.” 
nce. On the iii Mr. Wren Hoskyns, these commu- 
: 4m Show.—lwas|nications were referred to the Chemical Comites 
ot 6 Aa ented attending the last half-yearly | with a view to Ge canine analysed by Dr. 
— Royal Society, where I cker, consulting — and the 
inten to T brought ary, the 8 ol thanks of the Council were ordered to be conveyed to 
shall only be echoing the remark o brand. wen 1 | ese cn = F 
the want of catalogues in 3 A letter from Mr. Bullock Webster (dated from 
* demand at the Shows 15 in whi 
e : M wd year after year is Athens) was read, in which he states that he has been 
Md e to the managers. To persons who devoting attenti the Vine disease, and that the 
e spare time to exp ery stand in application of sulphur most in 
the implement yard but who wish to see anything n ce, and that the same has uced 
or likely to be useful, tof aca zl» | blighte H speak vd rna 
eq 8 y blighted green erops. m as 
i me one to an inhabitant of this | to Potatoes, Peas, fruit trees, Roses, trees, &c., 
— with no other ad oe » that he has no doubt of its e as ds both | consisted. 
py P and although I must bear witness to the courtesy I|Turnips and Hops. He also states that S ue d , The sand extracted 
ways experienced in being d with a Gad e he applied in a very fine powder in the early | from the sample ting 
