716 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
s getting scanty from ary 
[ Aveusy 27, 2 
general char acteristics a are 2 invas 
ather. 
TAA hay a large crop, pas T ; 
from NC E urs communicated to it from rÉÍ2 - Se Wu well, Peterborough: i at TA nab dà 10 lably P 
The ained its greatest heat in ros dn Oxronp.—Wheat, fair average; Phe gion Pe as Mood: a ipd ary. In faet that the ae that 
PEA: - ; erage ; ; Peas, 8 ac 3 
Blesk aa 45 its greatest cold i in Mare h t thus a € im uu Quis — e ped d; Potatoes, shall and Show either in w whole or in part, the ost bg wi 
ing that 15 was pro $ toms of disease; pasture. very mu at up. D f their ancestors 501 %% $t Titi 
periods of greatest “heat : and cing in Lepage It was Syme N Anot OP Al kinds of corn wasted on i the p parent, and — a taking pore a 
A that the sea was mer inter on the west owing to the shortnes 8 labourers. Samuel Druce, j 2 tet oF both, aat N atter the of the 
t § 
theory 0 
w 
non the east of Scotland, ay still warmer on the 
thus " f 
rth of Ireland— bearing. out the 
Abbey Farm, Eynshaw. 
Notices o ot nee 
our west coast. 
I d in th je ten 
pe 
contributed i inan important s 
e to 
mperature; and he need m refer to the fact = it 
es 
been found on their n airman ^s estate 
ei ight 
e E^ hey 
had an “important 
that in 
ality increased. 
many ailments for wid an equable 
required, and invalids were frequently sent 
y, Hastings, and the Isl of Wight for the 
IF physicians 
" 1 
The mean range at m inland station ns 
The Form of the Hor. it Inspec 
A the 1 e s Jam mes C. L. Ca 
W. 
ctio 
rson, 
Robertson, 23, Upper Sackville Street, 
Da biin 
| The substance of this small octavo volume appear 
originally in a series of letters to the Londonderry 
Standard 10 ago. With p exe soul ofa 
pages at the pea on Breeding, y 
described by its title; each duc eue etis a 
etailed examination of the right shape, aitoi; ad 
erii 
— of the different parts of the animal in n0 
duo sio 
mdr aba hiat 
e may be, 
50 nbi 
urabilit 
s down fone 
are ether 
mper, softness, strength x. 
any age thing—they p 
generati 
EU 
but, a 
be 
high s 
this plan ‘tha 
p 
so a by all gis: keep 
ame time, must b 
st specimens of th n 
suc 
to the 
wit 
1 55 ro 
The fact of its hi 
the task is estemos. 
“The C Let it be partieularly observed, more- 
be best enjoy eii in eotland, vus nde to consult the 
tables of Mr. Everett. He had x mentioned Sandwick as 
temperature, and 
r, that pet in the draught-horse the chest should 
es deep as well as ro e in order to afford suffic E mi 
ace for lungs of the roper magnitude. Depth 
lbe in the 
e 
mperature of winter was slight tly higher 
than at Hastings or En rupes d and 5 he range of tempe- 
s, being only 1 But the most 
peo on which this nhs bearing was 
A theory was started some years since b 
rs, that it necessar 
oa certain extent prove ed b by the « cir cum- 
+h 
| cart- horse; and hence it is no unusua al thing 
people ich are very faulty in 
this particular. A horse with a 50 chest is not 
any purpose. 
“The reason E all this i is very obvi ious, for, as Mr. 
Ber d 
uld be 
p 
a diminutio 
tains mo we than any other of equal girth and admea- 
sureme 
| 
60? during the four summer 8 Wheat ripened 
in i about 120 day s. In Yorkshire, where the tempera- | a 
ture was lower, ook a longer time, and in Scotland 
still Bere owing to the ame or bests but, by 
multiply: ing the days. and degrees of heat, they were 
E E dd 3 
ee 
ARD 
es boy ‘had the pleas “oF EU -— 
e 
expand, | u 
NIE n of them 
ecause tthe pois is a figure whites con- 
Boot h is now r sufüciónt to create emand 
animal.” 55 i 
Farm 
INGLISMALDIZ, Kr We 
a farm- ates 24 in Kineardin 
by reyes arb of F 
We should think i is one of t 
neshire, 
bolls of Potatoes ha d been used for 1 
the season. steading covers 
bein 
* The for 
the pastera, ar N the leg. It is com 
entirely of bone, skin, sinew, and 2 There 
no muscles E as he d to it, and, consequently, it acts 
mer ely 53 lever for the support and propulsion of the 
uL hay 
be possible to 9 new cereals with advan 
g 
posed | w 
e are 
ve already alluded to the erroneous | į 
There Were seve ral anomalies in this ma — which 
rett 
EFEM. 
It was said by the writer of an English e 
Journal! that i in the > south of England, Wheat wo ould not | 
es nder the knee. 
5 ition, sie 8 modera 
— — shank-bone is the best, ende its extremities 
are. _ sufficien mtly expanded for the attachment 
I 
muscles and moderate-sized bones are a sure | 
at that height, = 5, ee too low; but i — 
er tem 
a poets 
indieation 
The pone of the A bone is jene and firm, whereas | 
of | slong by 
‘Lothian the average s perature f an active tem mperament, and vice versa. are al 
CR Wheat detur pn SEC they — 3 In all, there are 600 yards of double 
t n " T an i 
which did not ripen it in he's of England, was poner ever think of — the id — * L 1 
that in East Lothian the day was e dn Midsumme IE regarding the roper size and proportion of| the steading, the roof ese all sup 
by 2 hour and twenty mentee than it was in the| the leg in the man and the horse ? dun „large bones | and iron illam. Te ** 
south of England; and that in Inverness, whero Wheat sya immediately abov ve th wrist-j taken 3 ai ma 2 by th 
er astill lower e l f the strength and mettle of the man? | — peor’ Ayn s fer of the doors 
wo hours longer, and the pla mit t They are "generally found — — : in | and court c. — witho s np. 
8 of sola As he Tni — their men of à soft flabby 6 cpm: Let any take | the whole 
noble de regen had been aten to grow Wheat at f the pugilistie c champions that one man n dată easily sid 107 
above. the level of the seu ed rai ised the 
tempe 
| a look àt the likeness of some o 
of En ngl and, and he will certainly admire the smalln ness 
sta ble for 2 work horses is 
— Fear AM. S. 
Harvest Prospects. 
—The followin | 
received too late to p mis des e dere 
ublish with the other 
> ee legs an s. Has itno ot always been thought a | 
nt of 8 ee that the bone above the ankle- 
joint should be small, and the ball of the leg large? 
most 
et wide, a great height, with no lott 
tains 20 stalls fully 6 feet wide cach, 1 
centre; and a harness-r 
the whole length behind the ae 
RDSHIRE.—Wheat, under average; Barley, _| of tight, wiry, active, and indomitable constitutions ? from | 
— Tor ea aE ; piazer, enar : gum What reason is Sapen then, for wishing to see a hed The x nt did. ot 1 is moved along o 
tem Sod. William Lavender, Bülden m, Muni rit ~ — n the man, and a thick one in he horse? | lines behind the cattle to the dung-pit. te 
Brew , average; Barley, average ; Oats, part pond ut what principle * e for the difference? | 130 y 16 of Turnip houses; and à 
= 8 iar Beans, poor crop; Turuips late | I confess I never. could see the vantage of having the | 120 feet in extent. en there des 
a plant was vbi di ange oes eee fed oe few [s E Casas win . of t this bone larg A — - there are not house, artificial manure que ho ed 
pasture generall à fi Mg d Ts imagine, who would admire the human " " house. a ve 
Chirnside, Beriickshir cient. Jola Wilson, Edington Mains with ei thick end of it next the ground.” tos — “opiates by Suit Smith & Co, 
Down. ms aes E barely an average in quantity, quality | . ude with a p ge o ing :—* There | do its work in 20 minu re 20 
of an average. a oes pa more than two- is not the slightest foundation for tl strong pre- lofts, 20 feet wide. On 
av : 1 ng 
* grow n here. T ed teron have 8 acl N. we the public mind against in- dee ‘sheds, Dt neatly E as We renee of 
can è a fine crop. oM. as nificent stea a nr 
good ond all e | clusive “of ca 
xi Clay — & Sintomi med sem an 
dress xed machin 
r it | piste. and finished. — $ voi nship Oe 
y | upwards of J. steading 
wehr Tormer : i the — — tena Dese 1 5 
pees P e pas N DE mel kirk, and does great c 2 to a „ 
quarter less than av — pu ; hay, one- any pa rticular strain E that of tbe perte. intelligence. We bad likewise Lord 
E T rig ci ney arises f quently po the same boo returning fre- | another. steading, also erected by ted by Mr. 
ro > spri ng and summer. Jam vi Knee, ralem. “We must be c W r, to observe that t! a —.— — when uy dicor T r 
a 1 "5 | individual at the | Aucheairnie, It is 
Essex, t will be a full average crop; th tion . : uals B — e breed fion are as near perfec- | former, but is built on "he same princi] ciem 
Ed pe ve very variable, most of it is 3 Solemn ond We Mil -tius eo both V cpi and their ancestors d 4 — bout 0001. Ec 
z is a heavy crop, but tl s secure the transmission of their good deep. 
quality is sprouted and very thin. Os 2 ut th — qualities. On illac at n o heir also covered, 4 — which i i 
S g ms The Winter Beans defective aed e defect, it will be ; s 0 b — i de. „any special divided into parts by a broad "ns tn 
419p. . Goer A pises that were left producing a verage in- -and-in, €: will hardl pas „when it is thr own! Turnip shed; it forms two dee - 
cr ans are good. Grey an n Peas a good | it i he be got rid of. I think for! ttle: the feeding cattle are t; 
— a Mum UNE 3 plant well and are healthy, this ral ng, i a great measure, to want of attention to bt yontem p es "idee of the dung - pit; 
at caterpillars. The Mangel Wurzel is this rule, that there i tum ` up aroun e 
generally very good, and a larger breadth than usual Po. | broedi reer de pénis against close | in front of the cattle for feeding © 
all diseased more or less, but forthe — a Po-| breeding. It will succeed only when the good passage rf nothing t 
i d ightly, i 8 ualities | clea t the cattlema n 
absence of aln to increase. Pastures ve ny, bare o from — immense preponderance ins the bed ones, — prons the manure over 4 : 
nj second math of Clover slight. Robt. Baker, reli S Reg iq breeders. very properl place great | feet high Mr. S. told us that, after Sur 
Norr eme at, bulky ehance on blood. In short, this just amounts t „ by having 1 
+ ut | fact, 9 the | he was convinced that, by 
quality, av average; Barley, pened prematurely, 255 xu ch 1 “Lik e good and bad ere, are hereditary, dove br theos cattle; with alt the 
; Beans: winter Beni 4 e | fout : "und ! 9 person ever saw a Clydesdale | and freed from rain, Snow, addi à 
7 ood-ho À onal 
-plant Potatoes ol ; Tumi 8 Jet lant; Mangels, go iir call M d Cis re, or ashort- | sphere, it was wort BOL d t en 
Ru ek ery promising; pasture, | cow. Such a out of along-horned | not a hint here to the ff shir 
d. If, then, these! farmers of Free hee and Ban 
