THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
730 
ste of some of =- eap themselves or f allow ground for hoping that fatur 
possible answer—unless they be S ien qu direct, T xu rir the cake by means of a little luke- the oma s to become much lenges 
needing no calculation or researc yw warm water, vihen in a short "ime varying from a e Turnip — in totally 
be answered. But here are nearly 200 e, 
re 
f them most difficult and "pore urs, the peculiar | M iet pus. 1 
and many o S i 
Mon the same dri 
leulati Rape is a misnomer, which b, if expressed of a mechanical frien : 
o needing lengthened e a e rith a guilty dint T is simply à lie purposely | The old id wield ; a" 
i à i rau aw i 
. bath asi threes ABO pham t W e have shown that — ewes is far too distillery, and a 10 foot 1 
€ Deuba tak ‘hi — to treat them iiih much grown w with English crop w finds its way pieces of timber, w 
and it would Md im a wee into the market and is an — of commerce ji The shafts are 10 feet by 3 
any kind of jus 240 with the disho tseedsman, who finds th 3 
good for mia o less than with the equally | pair o of t ansom 
iv — S v diffioulty of the ace ulpable and men -erusher, and though 4 — p the = with idi 
if the s d dioe the attention of their eorres- | the cake resultin ey met P predict be ka tt 5 square, wi ts (ni 
pondents to one section at a tim of the large field in a separate = dy a bolsters oe same thick 
a id t 5 
i £ th ler and fewer; but if simply put aside in this sepa m m 
. Ip th wu in the N | ^: occasionally 400 its quota to the engem of the bende qid SiGe 
d CL. 
lisposed to help th 
Co ha. they ae adopted, he > can o by | T! Thames is hardly ' tenable, or why go to the trouble slips of ti 
I 101 f tł y a i 
ui Mi: But no, it can be turned to a profit. eri mers, middle to each end; ene 
good xpi men, don't examine these matters | coc 
Gre BRI Co.—This action, | critically. A cow or two may praa am die, bu en the riders, as co 
‘hich s was ia ints tried t pe ls Assizes, i is so full then , as the traditional doctor is made say if|on the top of vd d instead of 
0 
of interest that we are induced to lay emn our they die, Nature kills them. That deaths often | them, the heig he barrel i M 
readers an abstract of the proceedings with a view | take place from improper food we have little | such concentrated weight, and incony 
to a few comments upon the whole matter. doubt, and we can easily see how an isolated case — eg of dis chien fill it. By 
t would appear from the evidence that the may oceur, if we suppose that some of the cakes | P? : 
Messrs. Bnracs & Co. have sold to Mr. GRENVILLE are got off by putting a we! inequalities. 
a quantity of Rape-eake as rooD for cattle, the of them with even an otherwise genuine lot ‘The w 
, result of using won is that four cow; s partaking Rape-ca fay 
of it all die or are obliged s be killed in the short} That the mies under the name of Indian Ra = leis, 
space of 2 ours, veterinary surgeon is one in great constant demand by the seed- | dried up; t * of re-sowing (with som 
who examines the beasts N that they | crusher the e vem nce on this trial has fully esta- must be recommenced whenever we shall 
have all died of inflammation, and the chemist | blished; that th with rain. Ordinary watering, th | 
H 
(Dr. VOELCKER) who analyses the eake finds it to| not however with the avowal that it is anything frequently in my garden, has prov 
eonsist almost entirely of Mustard, and in eed | but really good Pee there can be no doubt. W. also. I — — obtained Srat eren adde 
Potato d 
is so pungent as to have blistered his assistant’s | believe this Indian Rape seed to be trash, very nips. In espect the 
arm by the application of it in the shape of a different in its species and in its effects able; I have. used it for watering 
ultice. The Professor's evidence is by|from genuine Rape seed, and therefore the ards 2m 
i EREPATH, who states that having examined | conclusion is obvious that in purchasing the im- drills in. each 
the cake under the microscope he found it to be|mense quantities of this, which farmers are — em eR piece was w. 
composed almost, if t 3 of Mustad, MES to im. —.— have an inferior or fictitious e the we 
Seientitic eviden ihis kind furthe hem for a a genuine one , wit ith a afte wu 
sStrencthened by the ise da of an eminent the w 
* > owed 
cal farmer who informs the ii. that four viz., an increase - poit to the vendor. It there- falling from the 
: pu e. ipn 2 x ot Mastar — = ehov es the e consum r to loo bk we ll about him evaporation, ad ina 
he — party who supplied it paid a . m pure arohases of Ra 5 for or although there Desirous of examining the state 
sation for his loss. y be a "weg y an action at law, yet we | general aspect of the interior of the 
uL me defence 4 is stated by a x m ce tha at best a tedious and unsafe, | on the west, I drove aer oss the rai 
Rape whieh ee lp Mine. minile BU UP" leosna teeta satisfaction. € — N [x it i 
$ x 8 reasons on 
Mustaid, and he considered it good as a N | above the den leve i 
On cross-examination he admits that Mustard- WEXFORD AND WATERFORD. ing 
cake is made upon the same premises, but kept Bue M the end of April to the end of Ap 1859,| Adamstown, I was sui ; 
stairs separate, He has never had any com- n has fallen, excepting some of a few hours | Potatoes were looking so well; 
plaint, although he has sold many hundred tons of e on the 20th 3 -— a light Forse — the | some rain; ww Late 
Indian rt This evidence is fully con |24 of July, in the south-east portion of the county of | land lley presented 
y other seed-crushers, all of wham ude cnet tet year = rs = — bs t e — in 3 Le. 
mi e " | oceu in the distrie which I am referring, and it 
itt d that a large amount of Indian Rape-cake mu added ihe Wand : indy the STE nc ea all . and 
From testimony of a like kind from Prof. Wax 
and mem w 8 attempted to rims that the boen the interior of th 
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of | con 
^, from which we suppose the defendant fertilisin —— — dropped at seasonable not inf ro ovis to the care 
would have it inferred that if Indian Rape did not but this x e best Barley — within a — € of the — ts of Do Carew 
act the same as other Rape the fault was none | tended pue not been so favoured by Providence. | keep wok a a corresponding 
of — in dc. His PN 2 Swedes, nor Carrots have even tion of some of these 1 it 
e ruling o e Court was that if the jury germinated on our farms. Potatoes could not t be gene- c ers have bene 
thought that the animals died of the end the 3 Planted until May, from the bad fu the den ya 
tiff had reasonable grounds for a verdict as p iling | Scotch farmers have a 
ndant had not fulfill is con’ but if 
ry W. f opinio 
i dt y the best exámpl 
. prevented their poa egeo. eia sown Barley has | of the country is extrem 
4 y fai vem and generally the straw will be sh of woodland, Ey err 
he cast may prove reasonably | homesteads, and especias 
per erro a bably of grain be on favourable soils, bly |about Lord Carew's beautiful 
ouse, and the newly er 
Fhe Tent or Winter Oats have succeeded mar. | turally tasteful ul house of F. 
p glance at the 5 b fitted: ete o soils, h the spring sorts | slope 
as to the 2 of = in * mte and d | seldom better te . The hay erog ? The Lee. ties of throne 
upon it we would remark ane sabes ere a be but is dried up. Cattle pra — renes aa 32 We in 12 married 2 
little doubt of the fact that honest Rape-cake n seem to be ruminatin iur en 
å a really wholesome feeding e and to —— of what is ey es NT —— — able distance, on wh 
» not contain the stimulating qualities of M green crops. very "AA in many | the lime on the farm 
the so-called Indian Rape; the question, there- | b 2669 and lambs are uid to have died from want of | obviates the difficulty 
fore, is—what is this Indian Rape? We have res and I know that some have frequently rushed | rain 
—— n before in this Journal as having th M m r ener to satisfy their thirst. Violent | expand i 
article— none here. May not this fact be assigned we the — By far the gren 
^ ing. in t r 
th, 1. e., 3 seed. We have pro- N e € jeunesse of our | numerous kilns of 
^ : 
eard of season stance d 
— — ea, or and within two m 
ending 
of plant such seed aene develope, b tube ugh che amo 
pe, but Nor onE| tuber. Although the amount of uce wil 1 
= ae B GERMINATE. Indian | greatly below that of last year, ub qui of — —— o Newt oe 
d cnn en is pr er 2 or = am edsman. It seems | tubers will be excellent, Potato sets planted early and «s 15 tons tern constant an Nen ROS 
* an article 0 extensive 5 ommerce with the on dry friable soil properly treated in all r will | stone from quarries Pimestone 0 
ms = its cake is ved. both be however of more than average yield ; but neither — | The average quantity od 
microscopic ver as i. as is by it its soli soil mor the spring season favoured my locality (with by them at the POT 
m facilities. Th canal from’ the m 
tivated here attains an early | is about 30,000 tons. 
ted b maturity, and t PA is about 30,000, tene 
to be that of a té pir exceptions) 2 the n 
can readily be . md le 
