Jone 25, 1859.] 
ws some nourishing food, in 
than milk, to 
p eti of e| 
bsta: 
e co 
addition to the estu, at 
season. Draff and Bean mealare the two su 
more general n such circums 
If the production of butter is t pe the main object 
of tem gen a dairy, there are two 
should pay particular —— the 
2 tbe fe 1 When we ers of 
merely 2n io am 1 aah what 
is gro: m his 
v — — 
the feeding, w not m 
— c farmer purchases, but of w 
THE GARDENERS’ 
ces | Ferae for 1893, A lb. of Beans i is 
and other meal ; and 
ing qualities of Linseed-cak 
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
by Lord Berners, “ That Mr. Hudson be dismissed from 
de 
in the epsit of the — National 
said to be e equal i 
rnip, and nearly 3 Ibs. 
f Secretary. 
The Special 8 (with the addition of the 
names of Mr. Fisher Hobbs and Mr. Brandr reth) was 
in reappointed to carry ou it cer rtain reco mmendat tions 
fatt 30 of Turn 
| of oatmeal. I tri he Bean-meal one season, at — 
rate of 3 lbs. a ae e "boiled for each milk cow, wi 
Mangel, Turnip, and hay. By February one of them 
by the Council relativ re there 5 
| Pic the — of Mr. — seconded by Col. 
was fat, but : may say dry ; and the others with about 
tity : 
half the ipe 
I tried for e quantity in 
the 
h cow pem: doma — the quan- 
—.— of milk than those own on pod We 
f milk — iren and turned out full better the 
following summer, It ried the same quantity í of F yellow | W 
halloner, as resolved, That a Committee be ap- 
poi ae co eror of the Pr esident, Vi — presidents, 
Trustees, and € crt hg members of the Council : 
iH dec . Col. d, Mr. Barnett, Mr. Jonas Webb, Mr, 
oskyns, Mr. Torr, Mr. Fisher m € Mil- 
Bra andr Mr. Mr. 
have known cattle fed on T 
farms made mals fed 
on Turnips with the addition — 2 or <7 of Linse — 
cake each per day, the treatment and housing of t 
animals being alike in both cases. Certain fields “in 
^v m vincam milk than 
be ded. ho not Y the locality, "put by th 
determining what 4 EET. of the dairy he should | seen 
Peri o — While he may find it Pott 
able to sell all his sweet. TG even at a consi erable 
Ebé 
baa 
734): 
ro butter. I tried] bran for three winters, at the rate of 
ate Mr. eth Gibbs, 
Brandr eth, t 
wet th 
bs. ever gl 
10 il what iu their opinion Should be 
— while usi y As — ut better th 
Sdlowing summer Fiir eeding. The 
bran not only y thems — Heny e — them a 
greater reli ish | ir foo ud there me combina- 
tion — * what inis riter I have 
ributes — i 
* hich the food is n has also a great 
effect in the production of both mil kes M" yield of » We! 
jd of utter 
vert it into butter, iae 1 used a great don] of extra 
food for his cows, the profit from which, unless judi- 
ciously used, is not pen certain. We are aware that 
often dra ze used where th ie production of pM er is vibe 
à parti f the Secretary and 
the mode of his appoin tment.’ * 
JUDGES FOR THE Warwick SHOW. — Col. Challoner, 
| 88 z mrs Implement Committee, enm the 
| re ending the judges of implem 
*. Mil — chairman of the 
r 
Committee, presented the 
judges of live stock, — and wool. These reports 
pec 
were received 8 confi 
—On the motion 
and milk is never so at when 
Turnips, with Beans boiled quite soft amongst them, as 
when =y get the —— Turnips — =. same — 0g 
of Beans made in eal ar nd m xed with the 
Again 
STEWARD OF 
of e": Brandreth Gi ved Ar. Nas was elected to this 
Prien Essay. Mr. T son, chairman of 
main objec a lar; 
milk f butter, but e nom 
We are convinced that 
and not be satisfied with the 
l increase of butter as a proof of the value of the 
dnf, they ' would come to the conclusion that it wo ould 
s 
the ies ratio. 
it, — the Turnips are 5 — mixed with eut 
ved or — — 
f Turnips a ole — ** Journal 
q A di Siria " i neice on 
this eu — Ags M. Lejeune, a director of * — 
n Belgi 
milk is to be sold 
t Thourout, 
rmented, — if the same dee e | 
ae = 
H. S. Thomp: 
reported the recommendation 
that the - of 25 Sovereign for the best R 
the Agr — of the Islands of — Guernsey, 
Aiderne: — d Sark, be arded to the ai 
fall the eet, 
— the quit; that can be obtained, —— 
watery aX inferior i ad br i — d — tet the 
return, In this ot the „ is 
— 
Without referring at all at present to the — — 
cow most fitable for a butter dairy, we pas 
er — be 
profitably for the production of but 
e great authority on this — on is Mr. Horsfall, who 
— laid the publie under great obliga ations to himself 
to test any idein but are pi extracted from his 
accounts, and show the importance of 3 to the 
le in wi il In 
anner :—Each co 
Beetroot, and a 
mE com His method of feeding is the 
— — ayi his feme are turned out on rich 
pasture near sire — — — end are 
uM, — mw upplied w 
— mixture, to 
— è me hay * morning to evening. 
6, the cale 
was made from the milk of "lo cows, ＋ of 
ich. were those with which the observations were 
The nutritive value of the 
£ + "p alculated 
June mown Grass 
they — * — 
are food. 
e — libitum three times 
are given, from 
Rabi till cach of th — 
supply of each of 
H n 
H 
Bm 
ri a warm state. "The a — 
b. to 14 Ibs of .Bean-meal per cow, accord- 
c There 
portion 
equivalent to 
lbs. of ssi meadow hay per er head. NET 
consisted of Oat 
—— of 30 
given in 1856 
was 
of — 
butter for 20 quarts 
e exception of t the food, — in the same 
h years, and there were more newly-calved 
an in 1856. The Farmers’ Note-book in 
the Journal of Agricu 8 
Hom e Correspo ndence 
The Wheat TM in the North o se relists Jooks 2 
promising ; $ it i is I think about a id: later than last 
Bier ion to t 
he yield of milk, those in fall | 3 
etting 2 Ibs. each per day, others but little; ; it is — — 
3 
" "n H 
arately." This is certainly high feedi 
repaid by the results; for while cow 
ï de dl — — milk Which yields 
ing, but 
s fed in in 
TITIO mds It is also an im- 
part of his system never to diow his cows to 
off in condition. He considers the Larger d - 
Th 
tha 
It is a 
earlier nen among eee in the nor th, as 
the Em essential to a large yield of milk. 
can be no doubt of the soundness of this opi 
have all tend 
orn 
arkets ed downwards bu 1 appre- 
ben however, ok a halt will be made now that it has 
n o 48s. per quart not 
r, as there is any probability 
of . foreign Wheat coming profitably to our market P 
from he eon prope 
below that rate, h 
uantity of still in farmers’ will no 
1 | dane to o m sale, it 
dee 
milk co — that 
supply of en it be Attended with ] 
and a consequent diminution in the 
quality of th 
e seen from 
nt 
e the ‘follow! b 
believe fium the upon — — maet, 
Farmers 
cause a fall in price as 
for as the rise which took place a 
H. J. Turner, Richmond, Yorkshire. 
xad 
Aiii: 
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL 
At a Sp 
1859, his 
in the chair— 
i of milk 8:—* In | 
g& over the experime: eeding in ens, a 
ce of opinion comparative fatten- 
" The report of the Special Committee appointed to]: 
examine the past accounts of the Society was read, re- 
tut and confirmed. 
t was moved by the Hon. Col. Hood, and seconded 
lon 
ity | ber 
1 w. 
corn rent, and 
was e si E 
blooming very | 
e once 
Mr. Dunn's paper any 
War the 
ia MEN ti — A te 
make e arrangements relative to 
ded several cases as to 
The ned t eekly ing 
Wedn verge Ue 29th . pedes Prof. Voelcker' 8 piae 
on the analysis of a Mangel root kept two years will 
ead. 
Farmer rs? — ubs. 
NEWOA! Leases.—The following dis- 
cussion 2 d on grec eg of the paper published 
the week before last :— 
Mr. Chrisp, Hawk Hill, did not oppose leases; they were 
— EV ir: * ally with a — of capital an 
lord, so that a "n 
power aba 
nto 
the landlord. ‘An obligation of this kind ou t to be reciprocal, 
or there was no use in it. — -w 
than formerly. MA ood and n 
|m 
pen: Their wo tioned 
clauses the t t, but y 
| stances t] been over ch rded, he great 
| detriment of e landlord. This was the reason why 
| landlords equently obje to nting long leases. 
| He did not say Don't grant leases," but let every man do 
| what he thought right, according to the s Sud the z and 
other circumstances. To urge a lease — casio less. 
est a 
| Cuird — it y — eon — . 
r benefited landlo rd nor tenant. 
number 
getting 8 it, the one never could 
to receive, nor the other what Pose 3 
) always operates y b ves 
[terere E A 
landlord an: 
recomm! endatio on as to how the farm is 
