—— GARI ENERS CHRON icu E AND AG RICU. LTURAL GAZETTE. 
nnual sa 
ving 
— — Ae ers 
The death-rate, Vn; on he 
185 
previous 
average 
to 3, was 291. has been gates p abe 
of the last five yea s to 22 1000; l 
2 
about 
the last 
reduced 
Hom 
Irish Mr 2 . 
points a 
e ent boundaries included 
n di 
btained a reduction of the death. rate 
1 by the ex 
Bout rs on 
^ [Clover ae would 
give as as thick 2 
broad-e a — 
,, Mr. m Hungerford, said Red 
r. crop; White Clover, ho sp 
valuabl 
lea. He woul 
egrast 
S, in h 
of 
"Iw un happy to say ier he i Ae 
— 
ible quantity of He 
e lar gest pose that Pe 58 : recollected a single 
eeds, 
Rye 
| the Wheat er op; - a fiend of m 
seeds, h 
to mix it 
arpon ated of it ever a 
m 
3 
| instance in which he I nad lost his ls. sght that, | 
bed R 
11 dm 
from 27 to 24 
esponden 
In drawing pr. 
i is sh ag riultur al statisties one or 5 0 
Ty bo borne i —1. The 
is un- 
ble 
e for corn. e ‘anes at a rain map o of Europe 
ar but he th 
zi 
whenever the farmer ¥ was bound by hi 
f the neut kan 1 Tet 
the fo it was N 
cal fou 
rejecti 
} 
ekt 
will s ho SY 
no equal, 
h 
nas 
except a small part of ‘Cornwall, ns, 
Cu 3 i the west of Scotland. Add to this a 
ts 
winds in s 
G 
rass in five 
sole of Gra 
winter temperature 
2 temperature of Cork i 
1 
gels in 
that (my grove a the > year round, except 
rent apes 
aid t 
of gr 
o be 
e British Isles, EX this solely í rom 5. 
ness. The a bel 
the 
e ground xe ior 
t in thee 
lition to 
d with a rich thick close | 
rass, ao ae hardly be got in 10 time 
many years in the sige) climate of the east of England. 
far 
All this 
into gra 
them, whether they ‘Tike it or no 
8. 
acres in i 1855. to 
zin 
crease of corn crops 
of course influences fi e ers, rather it forces 
| pite 
o discover 
est method of obtaining, sa — a que every 
rth year. 2 — — able . by 
ng Rye. g toge " 
cate: he fonnd that no 
bin atten Barley, and Ae dl but the. 
early | T 
upon Red Clover as a lea for the Wher 
t 
A 
seei E 
Th uld not, therefore, as a 
. adopted was to mix 12 
Ibs. of 2 
n 
of 
und Tr foil sey next fo years. 
the Trefoil seldom rose a seco 
em I Clove 
| 
as HE 
eec thu us he got a [ue ticle to place his iub 
pon for weaning than die that could be sped 
a tillage farm. By placing lambs spo on Whit 
— which had been e in off by sheep in 
the autumn, ongs t the hints 
= omes inevitable; and he be lie eae that a large 
of the losses of lambs in Linoniushire and else- 
where, during the last two years referred to by Mr. 
hall t 
OW 
he so owed es acre 
Trefoil, nata pe of 
On land which he could 
Clover; bu 
"T 
Ere 
depen: 
a pr eparation a: lei 
if 
eat he 
pie came in Whi te Clover, Ryegrass Ho W 
sowed White re ee i * 
— nee 16 lbs. to a peck of R. 
course, the White Clover was sowed distin 
Red. 
Mr. Coussmaker, om Fg 1 
neighbourhood was to m 
th er 
ected with Belle 
Marshall, must have arisen from putting them on White 
Clover leas pr ta fed off by s heep. The same 
nore wou nida pply also to Red FR which had been 
o fi 
I think this fully accounts for the de- 
mentioned lately in yo 
Ny 
1,436, 680 a cres in 3 here is no 
t like him 
7 order rg - 
alternate 2 he had just described. Tho 
med hot or 
Wt 
who, 
it was we 
korp the lad, shaded, by not allowing it to gro 
show a st 
In fact both Jar 
aud small find it to their Bes as Aat 85 sed land gets 
. in condition to put it in Grass and leave it so. 
x ally 
y This T believe 8 
ill larger inerease. arge farmers 
The 
point shown in the 8 the dim inu- 
and M gel and increase: + "Potatoes. 
from the Potato ge onde 
bad 
He wished he could E his 
t ha 
ifferent in enn ‘counties with which he w 
sandy lands, na: chat, Imi 
ll to 
—— un 
It 
Q: 
m which he e bad suffered fr the = last rE 
e regretted to "m i pe 
He remembered s 
Dodder pue roe there $ in ds — 
pate tch 5 0 iameter, 
e Medii aia that 16 years’ practice had 2 5 | 
Po 
rnips. as been so far a relapse 
in nto ¢ old habits, On the ma T believe the increased 
with 
they almost E sow 
In Essex ol K 
in eight year taking especial care 
once 
Clover. 
oe 
I: 
late in April or early in “Ma 3 Rob out any weeds 
appeared in 5 so that E Clover Eus have all the 
ground to i self. It its rights, and 
oracle 
ral progress in Irel land, and no one denies that 
_ the return in this respect is sa 3 a shop 
M‘Ha ^ again 
s 
enk proud, that Rs catchy 
mw i it eg aera le 
nd heu n riots d RN e increase 
oist clim 
he bright green of the Emerald Meo ead which 
i ides S did ii fit- 
w Gra m 
rass in r^ LE We po received |t eed. With regard to Italian Rye- Ms. ships de a ailer aren 
oe hat the failure 
. S ge nuine reed, [aed from Couch or Twitch Grass. He had rely from the w 
ín Wurrel.—The following € of trans- reason to know that a large quantity of Couch. -grass Rye rus did not t ctn Ttalian be 
pan gel Wurzel may possess some interest for | seeds was ed from this country, and r most productive and valuable food for 
. your agricultural readers; more es ally a co correspon- | sent hom Italian Rye-grass, with which it was} but it h ud t kept down and not sus 
3 * 8 ago i he had been told by a friend viii was in i heen b a ime result would em? 
Dem te we r acre. Lai satisfied myself | the trade, and consequently in its secrets. It was, there- E pa^ * Rye- grass. He knew ins 
M si jh Be: Esa aig waa io my garden t that | fore, of importance that they should buy of a respect- | which last sed six qu of riv 
lanting i 3 PE; - | able person, who was careful in the selection of his seed. | grown after Italian $ e- and dis 
piar gina Mor a as this ear that He purchased his from Mr. Dickinson, an that | Clov: ub and this year ar — 2 | 
i : 9 acres might Les for it was really Italian Rye. grass, and nothing else. It midland counties the result bad been - 
The ri ste prev s a plant, He Hg which was very greedy in its — pa pers Ttali Bye oa : 
7 : uem he gesede xcd preparation farm, which was situated in the dun thee 
; TE he 3 : ate ee the county of Surrey, J ECL 
ound and 3 puti à settle gre d tigated it thoroughly, and he invariably grew it both with he P 
: 80 inches ap irn sath the he pet Bet at » I Li Tae nothing war N i “wen. be * t; Clover, two pecks 4 aay He vz 
: s di ell, pro- — pe — LES SE 
bx ie is m were desis filled up nd 2e eee ai Ween ee of acd Which aged i 1 E erp Er 
n e as lows :—3 irrigation, putiing } sho eed o. st 
Nae » = r eni up on the 5th o Lay an hour. By the fallowing PR coining, t it White Clo er, p which, : her P up 
t. K 
no 5 9 should i intrude. 
practice was, to mow the Clover, hoe once, let it g 
ell a second time, and then when high feed it off, the 
edin ng prevented 
the dertopmen of the root, 5 was — food of the 
On . land he dopted the plan 
su prom by M omas, nam bay ave a crop o 
— say mt E 2 if the land were very saucy, he some- 
it ed regar 
r 6 fi 
suiting wold bes E to 12 or P. 
kil 
matter ie clean 
t 
made its appearance in t 
—— suffered from its ravages in 
8 8 
eB 
nees secure a full ero 
wi 
1 in se the urious; and it 
He Fir in * ER house; a board covered E: 4 pet i L N rein 2 d Rape he out wht might ope i "it for 
inches of mo x an ewt. of salt; t | , 
da pant jn ie ei. he bite were thousands of wir worms, not a single stem of the E ud x 
from injury, ar than’ ndun d p enden TOUN BAa heat plant would be lost. This he had proved b See 
This mode of flling a the di vin $e the seed € Would fiuc ne thing was certain, the s did might b y 
z 8 d s d or dibbled, will I am inclined to gorged ber ile giak a 1 ipe Mer «i 
*: valuable p of this thou ght the A Ste EN nce of having 
root. Wm. Gu rdon, Brantham, Suffo 
lk, crus Vai cur rtainly 
y would € quite safe in drilling Clover. It 
the more economical plan; for 8 Ibs. of 
ad 
conseque i ne seard 
vailed on be other side o! the 
which were most successful in 
