— IHE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 915 
— m- to bear upon -— us camel vm J. J. Mechi, Tip- «all a secondary resou: the first importance being 
. No { attached to the concomitant ot fattening stock with as 
2 
Novxunxn 12, 
e of conv met — tre Hall, Kel n, Ess 
panem and the slight know- aron Liebig on Mam Ag ricaltare (page 222) says 
: n i s he year 1855-1856 about 10. million cwt. of guano were | and fodder. Thenasto the profit fi feedin 
we vet of the meaning of its presence or "Int 3 s i ep t arising ‘at g 
ledge : : imported of whic A the gres ater portic n rema Deu an E — nd, . | byw it all de apends upon ! the e judgment of the bayer; 
he 2 
* 
intance e decomposition and | manure is not worth > mentioning when on en n | ir — o buy t 
e ini ritain, and 1s asac e “and the advice is ood if the price i ; 
fermentation is great tly desired. The microscope is ompared n the a of human excrements carried by the riv id b leer : e E nO: prion:3 
revealing regions as astounding =~ a interesting as re T e. jo easts must have a pad — pasture, and a good 
any that the only i is — useful * same author, 2 1 — . 7 — Mr — | market to make the Younger beasts well 
in tracing the hidden ate to em it is ghas rom 8 and wasted thei reme with ght and wall. sali selected often bring a larger r return. 
with less ri n 
winning its way to the uc 2 Every purchase ^ AI these rn rules had, FS histo tells us, only a. temporary p 
of eatables that may in pon rated—and. into what effect: — hastened t se Le agriculture, and the | | kno owledge sd deme of the e pureb aser, Some men 
he p 
i 1 : hal 
— of the air. A deeper have been imported into thay ‘country, 
processes of 
e deca 
2 3i iare cation — deed. “that he bad all his ex- | can h — mistakes, others hardly ever lay out 
»edients to keep his fields fru M Y pit and, as the history of the | their = ing pcdes the latter class yearly 
iner 
ilii 
nd some means o 2 adulteration ?—ought ve Ü ef out èrs ms us, there ensued a con- o € 
n reach some analysts to whom he —— refer fon d x re of the population the m — nit us and i ree into | diminish in number in rtion — the 
0 e genu >} while n a nation can — ~ is — that mai 3 — * rated | va nt 8 1 glit and the im proved treat- 
0 Y was 1e ex- | ment of them when 
ffered for sale, I don't care — . n producing this result, but assuredly one of these | 
penalties if only fraudulent admixtures could — istion of the soil by the spoliation system of agricullure then | must be fatte ned i JA increasing Xa mbers to meet’ the 
exposed. Let the mete pa from authority ce the who | the th app; add 
Cayenne p is turo prape. Mm 
iae Red. má Uu d green pickles with copper ; tbat without the 2 — Loa ence ha YAT D oe 33 era or | made to pay y by the inereasin E^ requirements of con- 
the loaf, which to the naked e e seems made - the ‘best point out to them a land ny fertility of which has for 3000 years Sumers. J. W., Peterborou oug: 
and purest Wheat fl never decreased, but on the contrary, hs apr bl e 2 Errem. gel Wu — rel. — On passing ome the Eynsham 
i , re. increase, and where more men are crowd oge all estate, t rt t 
* hich g gives a fine appearance to damage d and eee | "1 — mile than are to be found on the same spac in Holland fiel 1, jus " i gel "nin of the Conntess of — 
tritious — and that the beer E | or e it is quite impossible for us in Europ eld, lust week, my attention was drawn to an extrao 
has been dilut ed yith hin: then strengthened w vith | form M n adequate conception of the grea 8 lr — dinary c o of Mange] W fae a the Red Tankard. 1 
o increase the thirst — | bestowed in China upon the collection of qe excremen — inquired of Mr. Williams, the n. the weight per 
seems to uench and the ublic may safe el be left to | In the eyes of the Chinese these constitute the true sustenance | acre; he could not tell; so I measur ius off — A 
i. » P “4 ely a the soil (so Davis, Andorra! Hedde, — others tell us), hd iae 
it Wh bird, ~ 1 ^ pil "inti ded agent that they poles. The men pulled up the pr produc and t 
— will have but an empty bag; and, if the pur- AL be the cita P, “ert of : yd VETE 
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haser could Cote ennbled to see ere; the eyes ot Phe ore one which it held is N. that every- | or at the rate of 67 tons 13 ewt. per acre. Tre grew 
A" ever, i necessary would be accomplished — BOSIN. th v amount of Ou. — d M lp. on a small farm set apart for her r ladyship's use Mr. 
sat ae health Te of manners he de rturo * from hid house of a guest ian no ag a the whole piece will contain am 
—— ma arily: exercises are ne ul for the health | W o neg! ects to et m ave that a antage to whic! ch deems equal w: t dator. 5 
men who are employed in nous | . - . 7 ee e — in Young Stock. Two of my cows and 
occupations. Gyamastic grounds have been established is note pedore — 2 icles or od gene of imam several of my it stock have this summer 7 been 
mew Primrose Hill, in London, and also in Liverpool e ents, Every system of farming based on the spoliat: — with a eough which yielded to none of the 
bythe munificence of an individual. The -pastimes of oft the ani inde to poverty e dei was neverthel ich in | usu emedies, and which hog they fed as usual re- 
an ing | poore: ne duced an to mere skeletons. The wife of a retired 
imilar gatherings, sh i armer in the paris 
o of S and for handa of the nation, 1 cie Spaniards had do tten, | their wir 4 but as nobody is I consulted in t 
games wanting even to this grave | pr, po longer practise "uev had Put inte" cens | neighbourhood had heard of such a thing, I — — 
generation; and the s success. ae has pr rer A the — 1d P Rie POL ** b. bern bey the. idea until one died, when the various Peek a s of 
Ẹ revival of old En glish sports at Wenlock, under the did not know how tgs A wp "— 2 T the lungs were found full of small worms: an inch long, 
i a Every iid: b oia nati who were in pos of f their K lite iake than a coarse one d, and white. I see- 
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It cannot be expected tha: y towns will receive Ving 5 fon ow 
: = of land w ich * ` 
à os noble as that which was conferred on Halifax by | yielde en many years by MEE Sm — oe € of ume correspondents kindly give their ex- 
Crossley, on Derby by Mr. Strutt, - on Birming- | no fling omi in the weight = aay of the crops — minded per ience on the subject ? How do the worms get there 
ry town ma 4 
by Mr, Adderley ; but eve y secure a the former of the necessity restoring to the land the con- | and iv? I have tried turpentine 
: : tit 
park for itself by the imposition of a —— te rate to | y 5 ‘ofthe mal rie as ^ jm rime Saus e but I am not sure in what quantity I may give it, and, 
Tepay the loan by — yet Imi id s purchased. tho ginally so teeming with fertility, they were turned TUIS one or two strong doses or repeated small os ones 
hough original many districte brought 8 such | would be best, C. J. [ disease is “ hoose, v 
wre absolute exhat that even now, several ti in this ! 
THE SEWAGE n — — ] idi 
Ar. Mechi once — J" tion to this subject in the Home Correspondence. i of 11 3 ye y vum * 
1 : rm Manure. —The communication of ^ W. G.” in Treatment Mangel frost from 
danger ccr ce itud g vm X ig | your magpie d October 22, p.995. furnishes conside- | October 21 to October Ware be v remembered 
pem = má — Du ens I TIUS5 | rable matter for reflection, and I thought it vod have iade its — upon Mangel Wurzel and Coleseed. The 
gradual but sure —— " the eal of Great | P wen’ eed $^ p mo "ws, des ly, ot a his theo and |1 — À grown very rapidly during the — $ 
Britain b a practice of “rotting straw” the most oung and tender, 
pea. 83 N Bin of v that x 1 generally mepe His —— cei 3 of 20° Fab. The 
rind cin uly |e he on a rs |e rere ls yng tor ont 
must ultimately fein grok a anne oe ced | sheds," po h be states “the yard o f the homestead | of the ed quite pprotected ; Cicas are rendered 
Science lias sho Pa a un nanon | may be redu o half their present size and made useless for storing. But w ere the tops am are growing 
ia his wn us that scons but 1 depth ae mei au eating store cattle 3 chin 3 — folds," | th 
M measurable quantity of the s 21 TIR: " with * Yi n Po thrown down just as they are drawn | days undisturbed, we do not apprehend much m M 
th from the field.” TI to reco nally from the effects 
karn poit pe tendi exbamniedy and m the use of cake or offered as more —— than the ers CA are pron itn having t e and 
i lum s Nec Más now waste fattening bea: nearly all far opped, and stored in the — x — e 
Me of d, seplh en lb Tila : A E "s 1100 acr » of straw or stubble, —— 
es ires | > — 
L i ld and once fertile È States 2 KA American 3 " e ed respect ies ay z earth in avech or a fortnight” s Eme, aa 
kee 3 by 7 E do A Trip 
weave pure linn Mee = — bu in hey may c for trea ing. A Straw for Veniam T Clubs, 
dat grent tying to mig the edi we are warned T PRES og decode, e : iri, TS Toxpom: Mob. 2. De grow 
7 * teen tint c (the Sir Isaac Newton of eee, e WC Rae th iii. NN Es adm e iata a fei or "ue 
| Compared wi — these attempts are but as a winds, for such young and growing stock as — Grass. A pa this subject was read 
Mn -a false we waste, . Where such buildings or or Marshall of Ri wig Lincolnshire He said: The 1 
delicacy a — know! es we have properly fenced yards do not exist we commonly se that 
eati med to te the very the liget ne soils of England, and the intervening 
in lien of seeds not altogether 
clean cultivation, 
P". 
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E 
» arem ts of i that some farmers make a point of not using | growth of a P. 
popa ation i imis e. atl: an their straw in this way; indeed where a demand ponolar introduetio 
ecce — exists for straw near a large town — scareely by no means DEDI 
„but retain — to bed down their horses and Pad E 2 ie rer n y 
ing toe it Ced means of pigs if at liberty to sell it; but presuming that all the | four ; 
been ical ag Re. s traw is kept on the farm and turned into manure, 80 e 
human exe excrement has = ar eere. ban riso gia iac vi shall 
ealth very properly con- | e used or consumed, and that the value of that 
is to cleanse our. towns and cities, ena 7 fed with Linseed-cake far, very far, sur- 
associat ' 
and sgriculturists to e | passes a mal bulk drawn D 
the land those pre- | by any other scheme that can be W. G.” | account of 
exhaust our soil, contaminate manure so made in no ease be henped;" a 
our agriculturiste, those | but if he allows his to run in a yamd at to|seeds, has long since 
It may be said w. their stable, he will find it advantageous to mix the y 
E MAD —ů bey nure 80 made with that from cattle: im own exper 
nees, clean ers so as to induce tion, ; | ‘ : qu 
., but by these very means by heav terials spread over the top, and | growth of Trefoil at y seasons of the year, and 
stimulating su gs then have the luxury of “ spit dung,” (prit s j certain circumstances, may be attributed the 
on of our wea keep up the vigour of his n 
tion 8 under P stock makes mfor- | the of 1857 and 1858, when 
that and with a porti sot admit di ey may 3 Ira dad, en] um ced, from 
you will bring yas poveri — thas — it is after | feeding on Trefoil 
