900 
soils I believe even a larger expense for delivery ma y 
be incurred, whilst on — less than a quarter the 
ersons, deceived 
ion so frequent mtly as mE 
quid manure pay or ? It is well, therefore, to 
ons i": not contain more 
ie of re Ms eru 
3 side t — 
Amount of xen acid, potash, and chloride of potassium, 
[o 
In the following Table I have bone side 
ous ed in grains and ones of grains, in 1 imperial 
gallon of— 
| Potash and Chloride 
Eine as of 3 
cid. toge 
Liquid W from — ——ͤ3 ä — 
——— se 2.70 175.23 
Badm 9.51 189.64 
Quante College, 1857 2.304 21.123 
Cirencester College, 1858 4.88 19.66 
Tiptree, clear liquid . x 23 
Tiptree, with sediment . 3.72 
er will be struck 7 the 
v which are exhibited in any of the 
5 — in which is co ed for convenience of 
pariso relative amount of the more — 
fertilising substances contained in a gallon of liquid 
ure. It "fs evident that t the practical effects whi ich 
e E 
pe able of producing d 
papa of fertilising matters which enter into its com- 
position; and as the — osition of the different ki nds 
differs so very widely, we canno 
t as done marvels, and in others 
little or no good. Dr. Voeloter, in the Journal of the 
Royal ian l1 SoeL ty. 
= 
Calendar of Operations. 
NO YE E BER. 
CHESHIRE: Oct. 31.—All field operations have to a considerable 
extent been retarded by the — — M weather we have 
Wied had d 
commence 
urab! d deer being in the pia 
possible condition, and was nthe ng rapidly when the 
sudden change to frost and snow put a stop to all proceedings, 
but we still consider it soon enough to sow Wheat, — 
ndrained clay soils. And when 
has loughed upi —— “butts,” it has 
been erwise by the frost, which for 
two nights, the 23d and 24th inst., — — severe for the 
of year, and which we — — jured od th Mangai Wurzel 
most of them being he general 
was that the who Ae — 
we are of opinion that such 
roots were taken up 
the last fortnight. 
whilst the frost was still oi n them 
left in the ground for = the frost to go out gradua 
entire 25 we are induced to believe that a great por 
ided seo is due cautio: 
nem Te ‘the 
of injury, is not yet fairly OR. and that it will 
time to . Man 
— mei wn ini umo 
; but where hey e he origin. 
K — FEET: R C Lewis. Apply the 
| quently : :—Plaster of Paris, 8 ozs ; coal 2 = j ara 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE NE. AGRICULTURAL ‘AL GAZETTE, 
de -— 
oa 
ould s dem — 
then last year, and v: n pri fro 28s. up 
a wide rahge, but itis as srmerly, t ae ride sown 
out badly. Oats 3 Peas look 
CUL — — 
e give the fol wing p 
of Agriculture po Fi 
third of the cultivated, land is under cereal crops ; whilst in | Bad Farming, the Rule 
the United Kingdom, one-sixth of the whole, and one-fourth | Bean de 
f the cultivated land, is so occu prod ce of Wheat est tag — of . 63 
in France is 13} bushels per acre—that of the United King- rs’ 63 | Mem 
dom is 28 bushels. The 15, 900. we os of Wheat in the Butcher Meat, een. 7⁰ Mec pia, 
former country produce only 2 yee eps whilst the | Cabinet Mi nisters - 103 | Mixed . 
4,500, 1 Calendar re * o: weng ed. 
. Cattle Coo n Ox, Managemen” 
ANIMALS Mad. d DE e 
United Ki 
Sheep 0,000,000, c acres, Chemises of attie ood - 
Bullocks s, 000, Lo es to 94 acres. 8 . Leading 93 — 
Sheep . 80,000,000, or 1 to 44 m T ed 5 -—— 
Bullocks ~ 10, ,000,000, or 1 to 13 ac Condiment for Seasoning 
NIMALS SLAU Food for Live Stock . 99 
United, Kingdom. ood . T 
Sheep .. .. 10,000,000, pro oden cing 80 Ibs. of meat each, » Refuse 21, 27, 33, 39 
or 800,000,000 Cottage Poultr Yards 
Bullocks 2,000, 000, weighing 560 Ibs. each, or a total County Ocupa ions 
of 1, 120, 000,000 Ibs. Cow Houses, &c. 
nee ows, Man: ment of, in 
Sheep 8, - 0,000, Ler yred 40 Ibs. of meat each, es D 
320,600 Dairy Produce Improved . . 70| Pig, The 
Bullocks, cows, ] 4, 000, 000, dre 220 lbs. each, or a Dumpling, 165 shire. 2 
and calves . total of 880,000,000 Ibs. Extraordina 63 Fred. 
It is necessary to —- here that both oxen and milch cows Experiente, s. Cattle Food 100 Potato Culture wag 
a loyed in Franc of bu then =a in field | Fairs, Eng! land and Wales s 1 Rae, 3 
the next results will therefore be at o accounted » Sect 
„  Irela Sy z 
cu € vinim KEPT. Farm, Two Acre 5l 
Ag Farmin: ni | 
3,000,000, —— uw 250,000 gallons of milk, or 2183 =i cr: * Stoc inots.. s 
gallons 
France. 
4,000,000, producing 437,509,000 gallons of milk, or 1093 
gallons each. 
The cattle are kept either until they are from four to seven 
years old before they are slaughtered, or killed as calves at a 
month or six weeks old. This latter practice will in part 
account for the low average produce of beef ne head. d 
— the four millions slaughtered annually, the calves 
sod | i amount to 24 millions. 
C Lewis. ‘The 
appears to have been hepatitis 
mmation of the liver princi * 
or jatar th —.— is often cmd eter 3 
e ol — exposure to 
1 wet or ld, but the former rather ire the food 
wes. 
AG 1860, the most 
kind ever publie: 
3 to JosEPH THORLEY, 
St., London, E.C. Odi 
n —— * 
Linseed Cak E y 
Agricultural eres * Labourers 
Englan 240% 
Scotlan 
Ireland 
Bat 
me to make an ointment. WC 
RTHENWARE Pipes: J W. 27 feet o . will not burst 
well-made earthenware pipes of 4- moh bore, — iong they 
will remain sound at the joints under that 8 
remain in doubt for some DA used i 
Wurzel of lat become a most important Jat — vom — patti ~~ Ee n togeth 
— — — d t country, and the > mag c loss of it 
wo le more i as the Turnip cro) Quarts. 
this m is generally very deficient; we therefore . — e Mere s millions . or 20,634,000 
mend el ers to examine the roots fully at the 1848. 88 33, 358, 300 
expiration of a fortnight or three weeks from the time of 1849 90 ” » 30,263,200 
storing ; and if they are not keeping well, to separate all that 1850 88 » $ 
appear inj and make use o to prevent any r 1851 86 » * 3, 
loss. has been plentiful d the autumn, and cattle 1852 86 » » ,575,400 
have been doing well up to the time of the great change in the 1853 63 » „ 29,575,400 
weather when the cold f ht on coughs and 1854 oF » „ 21,665,700 
— — a very serious character; and it is to be 1856 4 5 » , $5,106 100 
feared = —— — has n to some 1856 . 385 t » 29° 231,500 
1 uch 1857 . .. 110 15 „ 87,899,000 
high, — Di 
cattle therelore have hodh oe ew id — prematurely, 
lUsSEX : Nov. l.— ree ud d ha 
from the mildness of summer to the EET of winter’ 
nearly 24 hours; at 
inwant 
ve it is 
the s i dan 
piece ste — visit. But 
I ot sais all: Pe tt liar 
to this "district, ing a ge of white and fine Tet which 
rage 29,3 
The = of of Wheat in 1858 was a fall average, we oe 1859 x T 
is ree to be nearl e-third below 
it LE rly o erage. Leonce 
—'' I havi = uaint 
of the T busy in he à. — — € res 
29 esterday saw a field e aet 20 — n which I 
tie pearly a hundred rudely circular patches of damaged 
i ter. 
in the ground an 
THE METROPOLIT 
autumn ot 1858 the best beef DEM hos 
lb. ; and veal from 54d. to 7d. The ant 
. rices were 
Dec. 13, the it Christ ke 
ws white straw. The only name it goes by here is **old-| the spring of 1859 beef of th ged feu T 
fashioned White and whi strawed Wheat ;” and it is said that Ti. ; and mutton was towards Mi — high a 84, i 
— x best — for = i - — m bear : eavy md uide as 10d. per lb. At — the prices are 
odging, u good; i ferred f, 
eie by the — » any other wet. fu pe, — no’ 7d. to 74d. ; Bors, to “o D item 5 
commo nthey lately were. Gold. is the WEIGHT or 
most com: of the T sorts o ^ th — uem by KE “the xui 
many samples of Chidham, and of 3 Morton's red straw, also of| be taken where TE a te ody, 
spring or nursery. sudden we have ave| immediatel Debit 6 
blackened t the Mangel tops, but we do not think that the roots front of thé. shoulder die, shoulder“ th length, to M 
are e hurt; we have found that they do not suffer much from the square of the girth in feet and inches with the | ulin 
—— not pulled, the tops partl ct them, and so it| feet and ine nd the product by 2, 20. 28, 30. ac 
scene ae ^ whe ey hold of the ground; cording to the fatness of the aut 1; the result will be the 
I EIL (4 may be running a risk, I think it weight of the carcass in — — — ht ; 
* to let them stand a short time longer, and then we carcass is to the live wi "vm asl NECS “title 
: — see i da is done. In ours at least there more than 1 to E in cattle Bb oe =e 
2 min gh aig s — m — ip —.— — t T ; as 2 to 3 in the case T "d It fattened pi ni - 
However, there oe Ms = yy e mgt, animal, vary sobbed ng to the condition — tice 
kinds of tock are very dear. usual, many communi 
ie a ze: 3 
dear. M plentiful, but very dear and in good | ents the insertion of w 2 Be Sotto i f =i 
AA seeds of the species 0 of rine, 
v 
the 
per Ib.; the best mutton from 63d. to 73d. per 
— ! 
HORLEYS. FA 
Compreh. ensive and 
Bree AT ponti post tore 
— 
Rap e Cake gi ” 
Yor 
Smiths feld Club.. 
Arts and Manufactures , - 
Dai 
Farms, "Axherican Sew 
Led Memoranda( Monthly) Sh 
x Cultu: v« ee 
Forcing — of Feeding Shep! 
Stoc 86, 90 | Singular 
Peeing Live Stock— Engine, 
rig l 
Steam 
Sheep 
ign end reser » 
ran og » 
French Poultry 33 
Fu ture ofthe Steamiinging E 
Grass Land Monet 
Harvest, Hay P 5 
„ Corn se ee 
Homeste 77 
Horses, 8 of, in 
Town .. s 
» Management (M 
3 the 1 Food ob. flit sa 
A Vitality of E. Taxes, 
xperimentsin 
" OW qd 
” . eg 
» Young oe cani 
per Sea we oe 
Hotinds, Fox i e 
use Fe eding 5 
i gem 
Mou 8 zt bend Informational 
ecum of evi g use! 
y be serviceable to the Agriculturist. — Fra, 
S FOOD for T 
s Stal 
HORLEY' a ron vin 
Windsor ; in 
> Ree ween; 
ch Stree 
Fiole. Consignes for a oest oie 
26, n next door Paid to any 
ess 
