876 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONIELE AN 
r i [ ed with a new edition of 9" cultu d beg to thank y 
2000 Mino his aoe veri on Geognosy. It was for writing in behalf. of the working classes ; nis 1 eum ninale of ias Da Pulsa! ne Mie 
source of satisfaction to find that the Professor of|1 > You state that “Itsf Ma and ging, ere t Lr 
Botany whom 1 had left, rather a what | the Norfolk rd - ies r d, had not looked toa friend, i 
s Toe, an on, if taken so often see whether I cannot pic 
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"i » now but the of a whole, in 2 Since I € 5 a great many | bred 5d "p | da 10 
r half. Salk w ith hi " around the very 8 one-fifth of which has been 
large and wd filled botanical garden sufficed to assure | dps Turnips on the farms grow sound healthy | tion pecial individuals, 
550 y valuab i 
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that it t hi vari ntion - sacrifice the scien years, and as thes 
tific veg the soc wp P = i e town, improvemen nt Turnips at the oar day ni bay a 
and extension were - d tores. In no 8 in 
Germany have I found roo! ooms fr ei 
crowdaeaá y 
in no place are dio for y 
greater—in none is the professor more earnest in his system, Having 15 a 
desire that the student — 1 or his arts nature of a , farm — et they went a 
more indefatigable in enabling him to do s ry s ity im i a 
Few 4 me so wer fally constituted for | nine different bead e I ha " n 
the duties of teacher on botany as is bis. of observing that they are an intelligent class o of men. |s 
I have of ften seen him standing in the middle of a sT | * —.— wt o from is ome w ridic L—— s for a first class 
yho 
th f it hiefly to ea rti 8 Bre to state | detailed the; grea at, great 
ne. from a Lichen to an 0, and he. ithout th i t he i nan to act as a farm manager, unless | tions. 
t he is conversant with the principal details of farm 
as his eye fell upon them; or if the species was not dis- management. What connection has the dar: 
tinguishable without the microscope he was ready to | cropping a garden or a farm S 
point out exactly what little — was to be buying and selling of cattle, sheep, and horses, a d e| g v l 
looked after if we had the latter instrument. superintendence of Bitoma of Seikei "he | fa ^s 1 
ting of the 
Ades, and thin flanks, bu REEEENES 
anks, but whe 
long, that it bothered the err à 
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i oof that a good y hour. 
FROSTED MANGEL WURZEL. edd ee eaea vague, ideas as respecting | t the “ Herd Boo he 
_ THE frost of last —.— on so suddenly, and fo dd drainage, which is the basis of da other ben 
bat it caught my Mangels A \ garden and a home farm being necessary appen: ndeges | accept their pur chases as the of 
dica. All the upper sie has suffered, the frost- a gentleman’ s residence, I acknowledge that a gardener | but this of ped op: =e uffice 
bite — over ws an eighth part of their WS ep, or pigs 
surface. I have placed t in rows, covered d ; but t since i ideredin- | ever you can, ay de ed omit form, 
with the ferit aud se vnl furrow on eith and a mal home farm ;! I y 
side over them. Is there anything "v do to arres — acquainted with the growing of soft — hard- —— 1 
se ag reves hg m pis ants, the managem d | wa all fruit trees, 
BrO "will much obli ige G. B. Huds Wi ck, ne e forcing of fru’ it and vegetables, tl 
8 Worcestershire, Oct. m keeping of kitchen and flower gardens in — 
bow can he be rde » fee their offs spring through many general 
manager unless te has mastered the details of farm | you his kind it 
oy Ls ahaa cron to to the number. E any corres- | management under an intelligent Mrricultürist ? less, and with care a pp man 
pondent 
P 
animals imprint their own chara 
can descri experience. capable. of en. | Since I hav ve been employed in a garden, the |sorviceable for many yea sent de 
- < j mplished gardener, | forms; tal cha 
agreat t part of their winter food for stock, it will be very ah oka hy eignet bs the gh m us Pifferent 
acceptable. — — — i agni 2 idv | br aca of praetical ortionlture í in first class gardens, a ae P 
ng, a very aving always ultimately int of 10 
nee e; : placed himself under a sp intende con- 
recomme - : | nected with the executin: rmanent improvements, I" sia we cou 
m ges — einn > zw SE and attended markets aad —.— his “extention to n : 
Cro ‘ tical farming, I do not wish to be regarded as ing forms, 
ith * m: i — week ‘em 5 Ne plan p — a | rir to prejudice employers against such an intelli- facts, I think, p 
dow „ seite een nia gent class of men reer — naming details to be as to t 
show tha i a first class gardener knows no more about | whic 
| the details of farm management than dies. other class of | € 
intelligent men who hav made itself 
branch of special study. Wo * touch," and vig 
above by Mr. Hudson in which the roots 
in rendi at all, but for ‘the present lie in rows, is ts Bate 
still. — notwithstanding after a Miei or two the ey | 
— o be rotting, they must just be used as quickly 
as possi ible e.] 
s Corréipindkné Societies. pedigree ; 
Bailiff iad "Ga rdener.—A. good deal hav isig been qual 
beg vagi the necessity for . bo Bowe T DERBYSHIRE: Cat tile Br eeding.—At the late | snare. 
es of stew: d head gardener, owing t out recess of the — a Dr. Hitehman spoke on | any kind, i 
diei a bad feeling prevailing bet ween so many bailiffs this subject. He said:—We are living in an age of | whether i 
and gardeners, I have no hesitation in statin "s it — ee, and "dy ll the aid we can afford | No after treat 
is the result of a eee spirit too often on the ba to =~ Other nations are emulating our management i 
and in some instances is caused by ladies or serii | indus kerari r brother J onathan, on m Aes other side of | If at any tim e f 
men causing bailiffs and gardeners to interfere with | the Atha i : » M em ahea es ha appen 
ue € duties ; consequently à the bailiff a it in in | matters m not in discretion, “His agri- | is withheld, or if warm 
r to annoy the garden But firs ti "io p 1 
garden iios e very vague ideas pecting ee end charac and his zeal is shov the v that h hick 
or pe 8 Joseph Paxton W in his fe | does ia di itató to give a thoad — ſor a very — proper 
before a meeting held in behalf of the Gardeners’ | first class 3 bull. This ee "um za “fancy | Exclude a young 10 ani 
7 er aten that, ies horticulture i is 100 ped rice," and one which fe ew even ard by the 
f agricultu Beari n mind the | afford, yet, lieder which he — "own sim 
ng 1 
tive . —— of the higher branches | tion. hoe consumption of meat in this mtry i 1 gases p“ 
of agriculture and horticulture, in es respects can | becom — London ana un uires tw wo thiltvons | and you will plant tthe n 
horticulture be said to be in advance f agriculture at of rem Qu b adu of five hundred thousand beasts | and those eum 5 3 fei 
the present day ? Gardeners int ced s deep ie for its annual supply. And, "psv is n re gen calves suddenl ts, or COD 
ok culture e sowing of — — in rows instead of upon the r labours that oin ur | scrofula Dr evi sil) ridet 2 
but the seed and trenching ding i A 
sto a ing 
2 mini e gueiee w xion we learn that Desain, "with animal, 
a comparas some aid from its sister county, Nottingham, ra earl 
CELA A of dealers | four 9 coals mally we cannot teo — See how 
gv [^am t farmers of 1 ho perform — rs — às d 
eur e eres ee , 
or 2 "^ 
Staves. You have enkro red fully in e relative | rich lands of Kentu is ae meet ee ee to nel eluded fron, ie Tigh y pe 
value of a great many que L3 which are in- 2 with us in u ment stuffs," as she already does in life. You ma retard, an 
tended for sale amongst fi You have sho bread-stuffs,” and as a nation we must r Dok to our orl higher anaes which ce 
i d — 
78 
$95. 
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for the 
key à ) my mo urels r. Russel 
ion for feeding cattle, incur by so much food being | that re saw at Springfield, in America, a very large m fro peat 
pues in supporting respiration and keeping up the | show of Short-horn cattle, and he does not pia that for ger ae 
eat of the animal system. e statements | at the 4 7 €— hee at Windsor, — velo 1 — 3 — th 
the dif- the general stock and the 
f 
ferent component parts of artificial food and rican, ty de rtin uei b “the “ | nd ill 
the fertilising properties of artificial manures are York,” 2 veh ps vh bil doge spring, ini a d at fall 
now regarded as final by the majority of the most in- | places himself at once in the same position for success | which under [en 
ers. But for & adva need | as En ngland was in 1810—when Charles Collins’s — — If required for th 
t ood deprived b: 
S nO Comet bl ing me 
golden harvests artificial food and manure manufac-| whence have s f 
prung the hundreds of fine —— sphere of m 
e e as to ave an ‘the mos MET appear to which now graze T — ee and uplands of this te cause the eal to fal oer 2 let in 
monopolise the mos -|b i : v 
A M s 3 ucrative appoint- | eantiful country. rica "Du ^ : Botan Mos in selec ting | destined f for. = a useful us the the Pr 
gina “garden ers to ot, imas ther are, a to race, for they possess intense vital force, A impress | Bring man rof the do, em 
10 ies? bond Ade fa their s. apio ens npon their offsprin ; as a | some warmth; ve him 
er I rejoice to sn soc an itae taken in — proof of this, I may mention, that three years ago, ind then, oh! then, in 
