SEPTEMBER 3, Mi 
THE GARDENERS' 
Qv 
— AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
781 
brought into the north-west pa 
l'exford from Ballyellin ec a menfis contiguous parts of 
county o f Carlow by heavy land carriage. 
rough 
e Ac ar railway access to t 
enisi — quarries of Eallyellin, ht ed a 
— large and poor — on the western side e — 
EW exford, 
east $^ te of Ballyanne. 
of the mountain range separating — tw 
the Barro 
of ra yx we rents $ be 
shall be extended towards 
15 to 20 
uthern Setio ity 
o counties, 
the line 
this 
rom 
At the so’ 
roperties will 
Passing peren € — hilly tracts and vory is 
about Adamst 
of the county of, bein 
e of 
derivable om tlie extension | 
Borris in 
in the AE. E. T 
o grow ngel Wurzel upon a stiff 
ever to think from. what he does stain, Tanak bis - 
“Ma 
aghing "4 ciay we sometimes meet 
—that i o be done in a very short 
ing only, and in that case, whatever may <n —Ü 
in other respects it will like the rest prove a failure, so 
—and age rom which chiefly eg of clay 
not be e by the p p A 
rescue th at grea er of steam, 
"Xni "m 
that comprehensive mission which m powe 
A 
rily see steam brought into one ig the 
entum pionghing, d ony. I net i — — a ing, 
but I -— re convicti 
univ — 
e 
"d pae attent 
By | the subject of steam coltare (although not an engineer 
— ; he 
e | nor 
Ha 
hs er has to 
s well as in every renis industrial 
employment. The writer has also —— to the 
M ~ Halkett guideway ” system, which, after praising, 
ped Pag ning with fain nt praise," ] hec condemns wit 
t for that which f the 
sc a — upon which its utility entirely era da 
the = 
ion to 
in ** y whatev . ei — Mr. 
Ikett any other ee) a par- 
ticularly es myself — hly pote with 
the practical bearing | of Mr. Halk ett’s — T 
wa 2 
on of a new — ant 
| | for blowing sands. It is but one of many w we are 
| Where I find — — not grow, I * Lupin, | 
pages, 
— 
li which | 
an exceeding 
falla 
whi ade is 
made amenable to the same laws * — ani ical 
as are 
can er rop 
of 
intervening — cen —— ^r New Ross are v 
dreary, and dispiriting to the eye of a farmer, or of a 
travell rch e picturesque, I was surprised 
_ — a e in such good condition. 
Some reaped, and tbe quality of the grain 
werbe; us in a Borer bn 
suflici 
The Lapis — — nsn a crop for sheep food, 
applied in 
nothing is a better preparative for -— This is 
— valuable crop for what is almost a hopeless sort o 
oil" 
Es 
f 
us year. s 
rom Ross to Waterford a steamer leaving at 8 A.M. | sai r. Thompson that th ere on the eve of 
—— — the bea ti iful, and in = s very | great improvements. He was of opinion that clay 
deep and widel which a course of lands might be made to pay, and he 
24 miles downwards. "This boat plies set day, Sundays s| before many years had ke there would be a very 
ex , and leaves Waterford on the retu ll portion of ng lands in which Turnips might 
4 r. M. It carries to Wate terf ord large ret pr of cattle not be grown as well as M ng el Wurzel. With re- 
sheep, pigs, and poultry. he considered that 1 
of Waterford coun a gre at re that and Key's would suit the e farmers, and that 
ity but of | a: 
the counties of Wextord pe 2 d. t receives 
from Clonmel vast quantities of — and other food 
and the manufactured calicoes | c 
tablishment of the . Malcolmson 
auen eh Mr. Cuthbert, of MA the small 
a EN A T E " ome y had 
ibl lied all o 
. the dep th at which n par ? 
2 
en Ac le 
from the —— 
at 5 on n the — of M — a manuiactory t to 
which E shall in my next unicatio ti 
— — p is enough to state 
Waterford in ag 
=a during the — reading April 30, 1850, 
nr v 87,091 bales; firkins "i wie, 
233 bushels; pi gs 8 87,88 
5225 seep, 277. 
An increase will appear in the ensuing year, if we 
may judge from T ihe c cti from m lst to J 5 — 
of thea present. — Pigs, 11,698; cows, 62 
MACHINES, CROPS, AND CATTLE FOOD. 
d the late annual rrt of the — — 
tural Society, M ey ha th 
the progress t 20 Fete der ich the | ety in the habit 7€ using iti in goes when the cattle 
iety has been — — 4 sakes to the mpl and scarcely sufficient food can be found | 
of the show-yard—* Twenty years ago the tile machine | for them, even with Maize. boiled i 
was the most attractive of the implement yard;| water, and given with the leaves of the Maize. 7 
while it worked its way, and by cheapening the] are mixed up together, and given to t WS, — 
price of tiles, this machine has been the cause of drain- are kept in a tolerable state of health in the winter. 
vast extent s country which would not have| The seed had the effect of causi h 
rained. n, the e coena skill introduced | there is not a proper supply of ttle suffe 
the portable steam-e pa ET n t has that not | too eT a use of Cotton seed, Where it is grown, it 
been for the country at lar 
drained. All, ester could no rain lan exactly in| 
more pa to do it qe pope 
ing to the locality, a farmer must make u of his o 
cem eyes an vi experience. Het thought i it advisable, 
and his 
in drainage, to cut off the water from the springs 
with regard to food, he had been told by a eid! 
farmer that — made of the * — pe the | 
ton plent would fatten stock v early as 
— e. 
Mr. Alderman Blundell, as a seed crusher and manu- 
p, facturer of oilcake, wished to. ars a few observations 
was pte 
and | — — itself be’ was sooner overcome, 
ecessary to divide the indus- 
ie into two percer —— de. — of which em 
braces those in which the ra erial is brought te to 
every kind of manufacture, whether 
cotton, silk, linen, woollen, &c, or 
| turning, n mail pin, 
textile, su 
an 
in all of ^ which — fixed, and 
material Janes — under its qe ce by the working 
machine second embraces those 
ches of i industry in in ear the pow 
worked upon road, the water, v the land. It 
with this class peo that we have esent 3 
e application of steam power in the ris and second 
syste 
yo A a eere aer ore, that 1 remains to be sol 
— es prese the ation E 
virum to t 
been applied to t n oad ? e doe m 
e s De: » objecta 5 che Halkett uem 
of the dorn th 
rk 0 
ng? He will Sa — 
that i 
e projectors and 
v — the 
expense 8 and leg — pay t 
outlay. The result has proved t. 
were 5 ^ 
" 
mm 
which 
as come rapidly into use 
—the e bles. m advantage will it not 
different ER yit 
where it lies in hea those mucilaginous and 
nutrition properties wich dt it inherits i in its pure oe te. 
rm sg 
1 Ay 1A} E 
e thought that n tried it would nd that 
t rr d-cake would do far 
2 
ved in iv construction. Now th the 
tem will i voles an outlay of 207. per he laying 
down the rails ; and — the facility this will aor 
for performing all the operations of husbandry at 
ofa 
farm, I ask 8 to pre its answerin g t the 
what 
— same may - said arra respect to * m 30 or4 qo tt kaal cake, It w. — "hk a very safe | pose to carry out the dien Tj I can find no differen 
there are too many to name. There is e thing 5 x on their p for if it was left in a — between road — of the roads and th that 
t in these show-yards which would tend — — acr n it was liable to ignit e. of the land. Both ar material to which the 
improvement of agriculture in every F ike en spect to tt b is 
increase of the engineering 8 of the country had had wit eam carriages for the e common 
to the past wi ust feel | t for fe tenting purposes, E^ had used 2 seed pem ronds oe 5 — various or ploughs now before the 
gratified a: ve done Linseed -cake i in the feedin p upon a par, an in my 
promote — eee re bee e.“ 80 head of cattle, during the last namely, cows, mistakes. railroad w 
Mr. H. S. Tho: rade Kirby Hal — A puris. la Deding beasts, and store cattle, and he used a good tion that was formerly carri 
= A. er be sent at the e t t roads, at less than one-third the expense, 
socie tioned. Those cattle which had been fed with now the almost e 
Fi ai place, 55 to the best Ay 7 1 cal l those which had been kept gos whether for men an 
Lord Herries has called d s attention, I lies e, x cake in equal quantity were equally good f i 
; that we are of improvements ni the ‘butcher. e was, however, t is accomplished, 
to those which che taken place since the time wn experience when he said that rA Cotton- e tion of husbandry, an 
ens SERA M ire were introduced, and turned | Meis available f for feeding cattle, and it was only good the steam coaches o 
lig : a —— e sort of when a fine sample of it t could ed. The cake But the expense; 
— uc * ed CAMS QE dh ene = an clay should not be made fro m the wh ole Cotton seeds, the bugbear. srg ix 
in the middle wood: Fur naga as m 
oid ial Ec eastward into Holderness and north- and d. us to feed et upon; many deaths a, which does not cheapen a 
wards t s York k, are about to to be im improved. I] anim 2 soy qos Of its use. But it increases the 
believ e that un are on the ev e of as much i improving as Fa armen, i in X Cotton-seed cake for their cattle, able at times when it woul 
hen a proper description— thé Now the Hulkett system w 
most fertile sheep farms, The great drawback t but he hoped ould 1d not but it will cheapen every 
cultivation of g - is the pere of dina sufficient | purchas it in very A quantities, because he is done on 
food to k * upon i we have, b man to do the 
finding ont the right way of growing Mangel Wurzel, well as by day, and thus 
at the same time found out to larg quantity € . " " 
almost unfailingly. Ihave been pi — for some years | Home Correspondence a rail over 
past this cultivation, and Jast t winter on clay land Steam Caitination-—In — publication « of — r e ham," a loss ^ conceive. aa 
e only thr ight fi all we had | inst. th r from Mr. C. Burcham Mr. coms em see the ae ther ots 
winter—we got with onl hing, in which he men — lan of his enn, Sf is certainly at variance 
Boughing, whieh 1 hes ig Sig 2 1'T think i bae à one | pong ea VA D dd ficiently explained p Á y cn gront number f * first een 3 other s "praes 
w that this is the turning point 3 comprehensible to a stranger. gentlemen s kingdom wel as of 
