THE 
GARDEN 
AS“ CHRONICLE AND 
AGRIC E GAZET LN 859 
for than he — hithe orto been. 
ener ally erless } 
importa 
Let them think of the | 
8 € P 
of Eng pend asa body were doi ing a all that the e | society went a little further than a p — watch, as en of the different sr pecius — 
eammunity at large had a right to require from p it offered prizes for sheep-shea and for that — and of the in secta to —— 2 * — the = 
boking at the om in wl hich } were placed; important branch of husband tbe s lfa hoc ing of — obnox ions. The following passage racted i 
i er, in ey ultivating their farms | roots, trusted that they should be abl go still ion of the author's style :— 
as to carry m * the fols est extent all those improve- — zer in the encouragement of skilled labo ur. The | “The Chemistry of the Wheat plant, ing its 
ments which experien ae E be pract a but |f it was come when the labourer must be better cared | rtance e first of our fi — nas received 
1 ne 
came to the conclusic 
ooked af A supply of fat stock, 
that 
hat they 
2 try could | | should be — dar a m arge on their property by an | 
animal food. 
f homes of "ute ` s 
on, lof England s w — Ride where would, well as inorganic constituents have been made by 
bms woul - many of them — All ess amd |tinental, as ve as by our own chemists; all of — 
s a8 | ted. Too often were the eyes shut, as it were, | add g gn ently t store of knowledge, though ‘some of 
f € ry, but a vut |da “the back feeen ed upon them as if they did n s In 
d mportations of alli — of agricultural “produce concern us, But are not our dom arly days of agricultural yr the co mposi- 
‘from each quarter of the globe, it was v ruble | pally from the —— — of the labourer? Cou ld we n of the soil was thc ought to claim our first consi- 
for them to ascertain whether they were ta y too often are? | deration, and soil a — were ] ed u as the 
best position as agriculturists. If they referred to the | What, may be — was — — for allthis? The date stones of the new sys These failed, however, 
elimate o lucing countries, t ere eom- | removal of of the " barrier to progress, the law of paroc hial | secure the results pin 2 re that. the chemist 
pelled, from what we had imported, * i the substitution of a fair union rate, with | nable to determine the exact constitu ents of the 
that the d supply superior and better varieties ‘of | no removal of paupers. Under such a change they but ! 
n could be produced n this countr — ſor bread | m ight expect cottages do be built o on the. estates of | e — a any sample that should fairly 2 
four; but if they ! i are now th 
we Wh 
| sent 
|to hav — — to us. Every one conversant zum 
t 
t] cons: 
wner) consid — t 
Take, for inate ance, an ex: ample. When 
in the raw material (if 
r barre n beasts, they r 
m 
they | 
he De qd s0 | 4— ied 1 
. But, he would ask 
is most ab 
the rev where po 
which a ae plentifal — in tho 
7 of nir: 
— av it * 
scarce, examples 
hern — refore, from 
they | Of course improve me nts in — — can only be from the soil of t 
o surely num — ro 
undant, and | different fields on vbe 1 m 
of | of different 
8, who 
ariations f 
and frequently even 
one ie — 
— — ht be widely differen 
the other. parta. of the field, while s 
P| the 
from 
pow, was joe any reme TA 
“knew of bu bon; and c e 
number 
tw) years he tea rear a es. 
"pi 
— 
th an regard respect that 
* gw. vat — x 
ank Pe ovidenc e for the bles 
henee, and w 
go he M no 
en can hax lly 
d por than 
| better off even after a g 
chat » 
| the Jabon employed. 
rs reared 
tha hoi 
Fears sad - d were fed: ‘oft the 
hich b 
"- - practical ‘person n the detai 
2 
h teers in | Wanting—the ri 
ed off and sold at about two and a — t ae then e. expat | — o 
I 
ed | Our Fi 
PP. 
ils of | AME Wile we — don 
" Professo 
1 
e 
od togethe mt — still more mislead, and represent 
no bi postion of the sur rfacc soil whatever, Again, take 
they ddl 
in which to raise the Aly alias, 
hey 
diferent conditions: - ^ — 
in the early spring, after the dies o. of winter ha 
sing - 
80 situated n the | in 
t Whither. 
: be said to be — 
found that their — — exp hey are 
those whos — 
anted to see was, that | the 
modi 
ity— 
marke! is not 
3 ien ar parish.. "s a word, 
h the 
acted upon the — er a d its — soluble 
way 
has passed off by 
tho aol 
— behind in the surface-soil the so- 
| soi; while of 
| autumn would very h igh in 1 scale 
I of. the 2 
place the sa Saudi d 
of fer tility. — — the analyses — soils had furnished 
reliable data we expected, we should 
have fll ry apply them pr ota, until. we were 
to be— 
— .. 
Vevielos. 
— 
Farm Cro, Part 
John Wilson, ERSE P Pr 
University of Edinburgh, &c. 
LE 
Dole su lie 
I. The Wheat Crop. 
ofessor of €— in the | 
jackie 
Son, 
‘pya 
with in the 
soil in which it was to be p The i importance to 
— - a chemical investigation into the 
nts once r 
— the —— was taken up with great meri — 
Ex ity by the Royal Agricultural Society. 
promptly made known to the ve iae 
. — as W. "ii as - 2^ the 22 
Q 
e E 
hatever Q W Q 
p tar J} us hey n ip — ce — 2 Jc e 
: 2 0½fl thie would Ube mplete i rst noo | Qur cops are c u 
great. nd btai comes perfectly ta the of the prospectus ; at will be 
"ani col Det unitis E one 55 So om 
e wi with regard the | 48 he 
market. He all stock | Varieties most grown, the details of thelr ca cultivation, 
fnr SPS A om, Pat bon | VER ee —————— 
x rich eod as good | in this iven, as is the ease with all 
—.— 
nent of th at sale was one of the reasons wh 
hibited 
us ig ed, and the show. that day bad 
of : 
the Royal 
ch Do wpo aa Bes Mbit pA 
y this year; and if they 
th 
J 
v 
- mie md dut me shé 
bability nre m more advan 
prosa to = 
In twenty specimens of Wheat 
examined (sixteen 
the > experienco of even Grecian 
inkled the en of the let, but these, | 
tg hi Ae the "aste of those ferry 
eu "Up 
the object of t 
still assiduous 
1 prosperity of cs they wonld 
1e of the best in the = 
author. 
course of the eveni the labourers who 
in ir Ne gabe t matches, 7 and 
; y 
in connection with “with the use of machinery, 
would find that it would be "speedily applied 
with 
— this T ere er H pre- uy 
T E aia’ —. — the — 
attack the! 
s ium detail ; 
» 
208 | farther issues of the 
corrected, that 
be co 
nat | of 
land 
3 the à deficiencios in the home grow wh of Wheat 
appro- i 
pages, e preparat 
Mist | by cultivation, the selection of the seed, its preparat 
befi i of its germination, d quani- 
the The experience 25871. the 
sd oce of s of their contem- | 
all the latter need or can 
e one grown on 
ter 
"of lime ine — 
07 and 9.06 pe 
8011 F gig. + 
land * m th af 
ts 
— all £k 
all s 
re dis 
—— concludes w. 
A pages on E thé m. of aa, Bu et 
We may add as indicating a 
mo: 3 
— information on the statistics of 
the extent of 
the erop, the 
of hary ing, he operation of 
the pni of Peers E and of the 
whieh in of its 
fect which In the 
ts growth 
iseussed in 
with nine | 
val 
percentage of phosp acid po eing 
evidently better suited 2 “cultivation i in poor - than 
the otbers, which r fo D larger proportions of those 
salts for their growth. 
— aa aa 
more valuable every day. He M 
— 2 ut most — tai 
petere gregem — 
"m 
good 
mselves in ev. ery "irs ocu of skilled. 
Counties’ Hi 
1 per acre of good | cultivation, Fuller i 
5 
ton of general skilled labour. 
ion on the effect rich are 
T given—tl 
wt Nicronas: Labourers Cottages. med d then e been given he — 
annual meeting of thi eI. . Aplin of the crop in the rotation might have full 
— fle said — Their object was discnsseg— natin wit ere nc er ally 
For that 
might have been given. The reader has the advantage 
