Ocroner 8. 1859.] 
S UF ENGLAND AND SOUIH WALES 
LAND DRAINAGE / AND  INOLOSURE COMPANY. 
an kind of 
IGHLAND . ise “AGRICULTURAL SOCIET 
—The — 1 — will be 
d in ter wing Bye-Laws enacted by 
— t for the Board of Examiners 
e to receive for examination, e to recom- 
mend f = the Society's Agricultural Diploma, Candidates who 
attained — * 5s who shall exhibit tle 
and pass mination on the subjects hereinafter 
ouchers to be exhibited shall be 
— € d idence 
afford 
sal 
hs and been e 
tions — — a period of t 
pete 
date 
ngaged in the practical 
two years, or for two separato 
not less than one year each. — 4 o the ou 
has attended, for of t 
not less than one year c" . — 
ee some seminary recognised by P the Boal an auticlants 
Agriculture, Chemistry, Natural History, Botany, Veterinary | 18 
Medicine, and Surgery. 
“That the Candidate Hus ryt 
and of the foregoi ing Branc 
— 1 of Practical band 
hes of tudy, as well as of T 
"andidate has exhibited the vouchers 
xamination required, the Council shall issue, 
in favour of eriam — a "jr bearing the corporate 
seal ot the Society, an rtifyin, Arts 
and Sciences — ae wi 
Examina5ions a 
int 
tion ae be pr ba — ng 
Alby 1 gh. 
M '"HEIE CLUB CATTLE SHOW, 1859.— 
The AN? WUAL SHOW of FAT CATTLE, EE and 
PIGS will take place on the — 7th, aa and 9th Decem ber, 
at the Bazaar, King Street, Portman 
NM Prize List contains separate or Devons, Here 
fords, Short-horns, Sussex, Norfolk c or Suffolk polad; Long- 
horns, Scotch horned, Scotch polled, Irish, Welch, and cross or 
— breeds. Also Long-woolled Sheep, cross breeds, Short- 
and Pigs. In addition to the large amount offered in 
there are also 50 Silver and 5 Gold Medals. 
ifi Ww ready, m intend- 
uote the 
lett equire. 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
assuring as to the exceptional chai 
cumstances t of which this 3 has arisen. 
here recom me nd 
acter of the cir- | farming ? 
thi 
uce them 
that the instructions by | occupations for a new 
to effec 
How are we to con 
em, how 
lik el 
ds o anm [onem in — W 
They are belan in the last 
Journal of the English Agricultural Society, 
Vol. XIX., Part II. 
is an unquestionable fact that i 
number of the b 
| none so likely t it as that which operated 
Norfolk farmer, altho’ i a lon 
| wh hile = px ocular mew web 
eat Cox Establis 
afforde: 
y the eae ‘the length 
breadth of. the land aa simply conducted 
mple farms as shall speak at once to b the wok inds 
of pep masses, throu gh the mos t sensitive of their 
Ir 
economy = i tillage of farms, with e — 
tion of so eral no ia m Ae nds of me 
| cerns—thei 
r pockets; throw a net-work of these 
6 vii e whole land, 
ri rty, i 
to the Board—Ist, That | 2 "Candidate 
opera- | w. 
cap ital, is very d M E EM — eva sling quom 
is still as it was before the n of the Pota 
n of Providene m 
Irish agriculture. s in 
or | Oats, very often in successive crops, 
continued till the land, at least Sod Anu . d 
scratched over, is found u 
erop of three or four tim es thé p^ “ot "the 
seed, and pu IE the bye, - — er to keep down | 
the weeds compens for the want o 
e tillering, i is — a heavy, The MA is Marl 
n|manured for Potatoes, 
left 
was 
te, | syste 
very significantly called’. yn recover an racine ir 
fertilit ity. This waste is the last stubble left e 
h 
| instruetion to their neighbours, men whose capital 
ach p 
regulated by that of the 
= ne reer 
yi 
ive 
| shall not n nu that of those to whom they 
are 
their farms, p^ ise men em * the 
capitals of their masters, for then t quip 
would come in, „that money does it.“ 
t the cows of the — depend for their |a 
—— T the rent an s having to 
be Pu be out of the land i under crops, supple- 
ow 
N who, 
nin eatablis We ect se ster and 
them, bu t the great d 33 for carry- 
y little butter 
may yield. ‘When restored to a sufficient fer tility, 
oir e pn is ruere for pecu with such 
straw and coarse ha 
vided by the landed 
proprietors under the 9 and 
of their agents, agriculturists, and stewards. To 
£4 
ca ges he d as the 
ean pick up in the an — with the Z2 
ep n digo ed = straw imei: in a bye lane or 
t 
Thi n observation of the present 
; * it D "sustained by a. recent statement, of 
da 
the Professo 
ey |as augmen 
ting the wealth of the country an is 
pro ving, y. condition "i their ^ and even 
even easing the amount their own 
the farms we contemplate oe 
M ual 
0 8 . * g hat would not shock existing pre- 
A. B. ru Heifer. 66G ky 1 We vy Agricultural Review. Judio! k M E which more or less the minds of 
„ C. Ox * Extra , E. One Wether or Ewe | His are: The s of prepared, one that ot very 
Stoc Pas in Extra Stock. Potatoes followed by two or more f corn, | widel Pini from long established practices. 
Form F. Pen of 3 Pigs. | Fo m G. One Pig in Extra Stock and the land, when ka deg to yd s more than | Th owever desirable it may be to cultivate 
The Entries 1 d on November 1. Foren about three times the amount of the seed, is laid | Potatoes in drills would not insist on it, for 
DE or B. T. BRANDRETH Gs, Hon. Sec, down to ‘rest ;’ generally * anti Grass 7 ople are not prepared to adopt - : cleanli- 
corner of Half Moon Street, Piccadilly, London, W. seeds sown with the last cr op of e Very many | nes tillage so essential to bag we 
N.B. AB anications on the Club's business should have the old bed 
the words “Smithfield Club" outside, to distinguish them 
private letters. 
The Agricultural Gazette. 
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 
— Tue recent terrible Leg ph 2 a loco- 
which 
einn 
to their man 
The — whic 
Tr Pies anal 
buta very d we do not believe. 
he verdiet of t 
W. . LU. e explosion 
n the Uands, d pe 
e non- fg uma of a 
" ptu nang 
to - oder 
e coroner’s jury declared | bec 
of the fields so ean which I end ean over, 
| Bre roduc ce in the firs year, off 
ble 
e a goat; ‘the herbage, three-fourths 
s composed of weeds, a be i£ oes pet in the second 
affording , and | i 
yeu In the third year yee dela sheep; and d aig 1 by this 
125 T zh is ae ed, vens TT the land 
for Pota uch manure 
is produced whe when sud » iar = and the | wi 
shockin 
system of digi uch i — 
to individual and — prosperity, Aa T 
to have to "—— r alm very part of | 
this e county" (Co 
not such a state rot MAE ane 8 
Ed 
hay ab simple 
abstruse publications bond; all with fede i if E 
effect ; vain have been the efforts to 
HA Giliate d farmers eyond their means. | 
ior quw and construction, and not properly 
xamined before it was used. The 
jary fa E their i dats fe 8 that every 
-engine should have an indicating 
present od ^ 
. — persons.“ 
It is plain ps the accident has arisen from a 
very badly construeted boiler, and such ill- 
The evidence of it as onud ii in excessive pressure. 
The eviden: s. is sufficiently re- 
on after , we i a to 
substitute for the greater part of them ** Borecole,” 
i 
he MUR cattle shows, 5 d no do 
give a taste, are ga 
with str t by the 
upon * 
ubt to 
ith indifference, even 
l 
[1 
edd ic 
attemp it pcne 
ople. | on the pae of their Potato ves found oi 
d to — was a good substitute for that 
wou ud continue plan. uo eor 
their ‘rest,’ | desirable an extended system af 3 sitomo 
An not seek to institute it 
consequences of it; much le: 
uce the Pergi advanced and [ 
of Lois-W. 
the most simple form 
artial green feeding i in 
OH 
ban 
way t 
sommo . M | Clove E although rar 
mall patches, is somewhat 
A e conside 
dis them 
| suitable t to he habits of the people and the existing 
ul state of the land 
e Po of 
| vau a Ai 85055 nei! m are Cabbages i in . 
S are E planted and which we do n 
propos alte: 
fiora 
Cal 
tis is asserted not 
under Pota 
closest proximity to “he 
Jabbage, and a LN the T" of the disease, 
fo ang out of sii - enirn — is a 
so 
uninfo 
eulous or suspicio a light every innovation, 
who pique themselves upon their 8 wit, 
winter feeding fll the Rye was syndy: 
toold fai e 
| who will not read, and mah have ‘little ‘res 
for the opinions 'of writers and for woke os 
ecay very — "tm 
3 soon "o t vov: e air roo them 
|selves, and poss the earth a 
notwithstanding t de. early oppression i of the Po 
the iil ceci state of the 
plan 
. — how well th 
ma; 
abbages succeed; there 
are O eed very many fine s . them. 
t The Cabbages most generally plan are the 
. but as these cannot * o 
