* - ` ARF , * * * 6 1 
Ocronrr 8, 1859. | THE GARDENERS’ sett he AND — — ULTURAL GAZE ITE. 819 
as would tl e table; for — Mr. Walter, M.P., , Mr. t } uh | very important fe ature i the relation between a land 
the dictum of “A. N. > d his admire to | great feeling upon the p great « of the | lord the — of their cottages, 
these animals having no merits as ae of | tion. With r respect to one of — * must venture to He had very strong feeli ings upon this matter, but 
— I venture to hint, “tastes differ,” and | differ 1 him. Associations of this kind were not that was a ing v huh associ ations of this kind could 
a rabbit “smothered in Onions," dressed my eminently useful in bringing men arr but as not under do. "There was one thing he had 
— stuffed like a hare, is not — Fae ; at a mea rewarding public trials of agricultural skill. | th Werke nd that w he her, for the encourage- 
wit d instance, he might mention the ariii of rewards | ment of labourers, they could not gi »em a small 
that the tenants might be uel; game prese ers| to the best ploughmen, for the best skill in any agri- | holding of land. ^ — ed to be within the more 
instead of the inferior game keepers. By all m — as cultural operations, for the best specimens of erops, and, legitimate le arding serv: — It was a 
“Judex” says is the custom on an estate in - — 2 he might add, such proofs of. agricultural skill as were matt er tha srry wig — between a master and his servant, 
bourhood, the winged game be pr implied in the f any description 1 y this association 
landlord and rabbits and go — the tenants, and very x 2 for any public society to encourage. SE Pe: y madea very brief r. reply. He sym ised 
(I would add) their labourers. n them o hen, | They wards for merit of skill. They | in many of "the views — — been ex — jate nd it 
but do not hunt t out o ray —— nor by ferred . no ‘obligation which ny way could|so happened that he — ) take those e views 
ilessly destroying the whole species take away au humble a man or diminish -r before the committee, rere "ir oted. 
Charlock seed, which e is of 
grow a "yt long since I so 
second 
seasons old, SH quite would, "nd it grew bare well. 
observe 
disait fu function of the rel: 
| his hon. friend been. an active » member of the 
tion 
appeared to him it was doing that which no society | 
could do. To his mind it was interfe ering with the 
i E 
social fabric, any interference with which he was ex 
tremely 1— of. been i 0 
u great r of men, and he had never 
that by bo it ould procure a nice inous 
mixture, but my surprise the seed was not at all 
affected the hot water, nor was the water soiled; 
afterwa: e between blotting paper and 
found ticle of oil. A friend of mine n si 
n — Charlook for 5s. a bushel! For what use? As it 
coat, it would ly do M ‘or mustard for the 
table; did my friend re-purchase it for“ 
numbe 
found ‘that there was any necessity for the. encourage- 
what 
2 
1;| The Journal of Ag trorum 
, they 
a probably have produced a very different bill of 
what they had had. However, he hoped some 
would come out of the discussion of the topics 
which had been brought under their notice. 
Notices of Books. 
he 
Tra — ^ oe 
hig 
a Society. Octo 1859. Blac d & Sons. 
one districts 
necessary, 
n r thot or "that an 
artisan was tl eing intrusted 
with the good offices of "is AE. But rt A- 
pen ned that about 25 * ei was 
this ea untry th cultural L'une 
This is an. unusually tine resting num og The Report 
of Mel. Lagan on the Sho ow at Edinburgh, and of 
more — the =y which has att — kd official 
wn a cie - ann rt, a 
poesien 3 
en t 
a el 
Halkett's guideway m em 
e paper by Mr. 
and instruc tive V ee d on the Absorption 
me | whichthe Feier um War Liebig, aedes and W. 8. 
Johnson are diseu 
ssed and —" w — 
give me 2s. a bushel, I did not trouble to soing e bad, that — — d to be the| 
send it to Jaz Sainfoin seed will not clon — Dae b d of the day, that the land was to be illed, 
second season. The growth of broad Clover is un- *» eia. ouses to be filled, and the N b | 
— the * year, unless, it is m it been | h It was though, ie ver, by some that giving | 
— — Wa pone it from the Sainfoin — lie ion such sops by associations of this kind, and 
1 Wurzel are both — “the fiel eld, as no rewarding him for bringi his family out | 
Aa — ijah either, but I find — are very fond ‘of parochial relief, and for moral conduct, would in a great 
t „and will eat out the u k the apprehend lt 
= It 
of your 
send a more pion list of the Mes d of seeds, as T d 
ything of £ the kind * « 
not remember having seen an; 
very —.— 
Whe en the Mangel is in bloo n 
or nt ‘ould be 
iat 
Mm 
or. es most probable nation of this 
phenomeno n, to which Mr. “gas si Kirby - — 
attention, is that the soils to 
upon 
simply that ES beat aa 0 
e in that opini which is more a mechanical t — mical pheno- 
him, and whose opinion he had a great t for, menon. A so soil possessi ng organic” i matte esent in any 
never 2 — ar Sane — d not reg hjg of absorbin 
specia ial e eh as necessa th f 1 | retaining sows. ammonia. And t has 
t ] f di ime, E — deoom- 
Bean 4e.— y, being wet, 
folks are cutting ‘up by steam a large supply of 
Straw, as stiff as small walking sticks, chaff mo 
to be my bullocks; when moistened with 
hot it mes soft and mucilaginous, | © 
ir 
— 
bare 
a general rul 
sacrificing three-fourths ofi its v value. J. J. Mechi. 
e, thus | ever, 
the merits of 
Tt appeared 4, hint that. ve idea 72 giving prizes yr 
ral conduct muet ki nd of moral superiority, or | 
stor on the 
set fi a, this 
dodo ana Ce comes into A wem for the 
| retention of the ammonia, w whi ch i 
f lime — pr 
wh: 
ht to 1 be very ip established before it was as- 
— reed. 
t 
natever 
tt 1 
2 it exercises none over solutions of its 
14, 
t 
utility. 
i Certainly i in "ome. of t the objects of this y agreed; but he as 
ut 
- child, ofa * — and her army 
n the affording some sort of eet" c 
elect themselves as 
—.— 
zm 
e losing extract gea “the Feel Note 
ufo 
made by 1 trom 
ina — e 
ve dipped 4 as man 
In warm weather, however, and especially if the sheep 
f unquestionable 
of than half that ) ha 
which he pa 
-|as not being — 
interfere wit z i 
w that a proportion of e prizes, more 
A pemde fell viti that class 
gerous ; so much, that in ome instance, on using, during 
the summer, a solntion Xm ee 2 drachms of 
7 to the 10 per cent v the sheep 
at wethers) died. I have always had a few dea 
dipping in an arsenical — raro warm 
weather, although not to the extent just men ti ioned, as 
with—prizes having referente n 
lah 
rey Sue In the ease of s —— 
individuals, I have known tances where d 
said he looked upon this 
association as established for 
The — way in which he could — his 
ee 
as by asking what would be ied ed Mg of a 
ins 
| seas to a dreadful extent dirae — ineau 
ations in warm wi an niente + 
J r 
y May soutien - za me ighbom, i in 1 December of last 
to character sho 
parish 
rewards to yardsmen, 
‘the mee upon Y d 
imi 
uld be 
- 
purpos e poan — on each other's cooks, | 
| ewes and lambs s in an arsenical solutio on, the stre ength of 
of c 
locimen, housekeepers cre gers or gamekeepers. 
want ted some shov wh at was the difference 
had lived in his house 30 or 
hard his master; | he was sent Tini, and i was: it nota 
dship 
d the —— w 
ho worked i in hi s fa voe nds 
I do not know, and the result was that 
ed.” 
| 1300, being anii one-half of them, di 
remarks to the e 
“The pcre of these 
sI think, suffi cient obvious. Thet paint 
of whi ieh 850 
v. - Elliot 
+h 
or other work | pr 
a great | wo 
It was said ‘hat pe 
urer. 
rson | in 
E 
In the e 
itr iret — n — 
srt wai 
book 
certain es rather shrewd i in his way, and 
‘of Genesis, cay i found ‘that a 
whose 
of la te years 
farmyards, stables, and other buildings 
systems o of draining and ventilation had b carried | a 
—— ——— N e vocem that 
e r, hard-worki 
labourer had to live were not to — with d. 
excellerit condition of many fa 
far tin Conny d “alluding to 22 
^ in remedying the e 
isha - gentleman, in construct 
m 
cottages 
be compared with the 
rmyards, 
he Me 
asd Mr. W; 
vils 2 nted out b — 
ing for hi 
2 
vant, not in bandry, but ne who had led a 
— — life. Thy ey would find that his 75 15 had 
po iy his dang ters ped Siig and the best part of om 
e for He, of aa 
it’s, no ensued, I am 
surprised at this either ; 33 rs am agen arsured "hat. 11 
the witnesses alluded to will aps the trouble of 
repeating their experiments during the hot senson, they 
will arrive at _ very different. conclusions from those 
men n» side the articles just named, 
E, arable. me 2 "Pro essor James, of — 
on Manures, and a full waer of * 3 Address 
Cattle Feeding, of which a is given else- 
m 
servants, Mr. Morres b called their attention toa 
on ag 
