time of change, to the lambs being overgorged with 
while a fifth piae o to whieh we May 
bal ain for t e presence of a 
Fun 
pon the ass. im not one of these 
the increased use of art 
from another cause the oper 
— —Q and slightly | 
tion o 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND ETV 
f which i is on nly 
e 
just begining to be felt 
to t the low w prie 
of y disease, TU s any compari ison of 
Boa or attempt to show that the — 
ned 
e 5 
s evident "that there is bere x 
while for the farmer to 
produetion, and on the other to the higher price 
it of more importanee to provide 
of meat, making i 
a greater dan " cattle food. 
ce of Wheat, ‘not rendering it 
bend all 
reier 
all his e . d p 
This 
not at present calculating how 
diis at erops in six "me 
ce a succession of ro 
dis ‘thi is 
m a — ty that t 
ORE TES 9r. 
Tope. 
subject still er imp 
the i 
w they 
r earn: —7 as how 
That which 
ortant at the 
rii pE 
is re wally 7 — d if so 
r seeds, which are 
be 
s 
mes of prat ficu ies sa rey be arta 
an 
mee e gom le, as so. us plants ar 
s and 
prion. of ‘the deleterious D 
kno to be the pes 
have pape 
8 
be in vain to am upon the Tur 
ear grown 
t beginning | $ veri expect a 
to partie xc prom of snl, © I» are 
may manage 
Pt ae has 
ery- wW 
[DzcxwsER 17, 1859, 
Now this, exclus th t o 
Ko., is a serious poc indeed, 
uch, however, of fhis expense would 
arag we advocate, e esa te " 0 n um, anl 
cannot but 3 ] NE 
the ease that the seed bed of. the send Seat oat 
un — better than that of t as being in 
d 
r „ tilth,“ 
E 
be beer ae peli 
dut: 
six years ro 
A in 
ty in when it 
maintained in its Lu ox state once 
otati This s cir reumstance has doubt- 
the 
land. The 
lead to radios 
The sai 
Now we shall n 
im 75 8 
Society to offer a 
and the Remedies," to 
= rubjet i is appended the following re £ 
Turnip-growing distri 14 p id is |} 
found to be s Pt s hardy than 
liable to the attacks of various 
e expected to diseuss 
wil 
iem is ray to the 2 frequent mado of « ye this 
any | differences i in 
a prize for a "Report 
of the increased Difficu ee of Turn 
n the Causes 
heretofore, and m 
diseases, 8 
the question whether 
the mo d 
rop, or to 
n or th 
t stay here to answer 
these 
decompose sed by the action of the 
e 
ens m, an increasing 1 * A soil will 
atmo: 
n 
e have not only a complete alternation in the cg E 
of different ridges of land, but € a “cae $ 1 
= d of the rows, we shou 3 
ges of the Tu : 
I s 
má one, and probably as usual fi 
is just the happy mean in which the truth may 
we . Sdl spec MEA 
experience, let that cause be properly tested, and but will take — m t |expensi ise geen, and tents 
ous useful information is ie to pea but mere Amigos of bes declension of a most impor we may get weeds pe pe 
assertion has the tendency rather to retard than to | Crop, under ent modes of culture. Tet ud aru n, we still leave su 
promote k SOM AES. A B carefully follow. mee pn difficulty ANDERSON, the the soil to continue the pest 
nm Nri on false observations only, or obser- | agent of Lord BATHURST, at e tried the principle we have 1 to 
which some lat mixed up last r a plan of growlng alte e rows of be so 8o effectual i n wecd destru 
8 to good, because those observations are sure | Mangels and Swedes, so that the former could our 
and truth will ie elicited in t e dra and stored, and the latter use e Wheat, w — — 38 
covery of error. This is y 
other branches of science, and in none more than | Wolds 
dh 
ment, 
might vx s 
p n has been gs n false conclu- 
sions may prove real benefactors i e nee. Where | 
ed is nothing but opan, there is mel 
any room for this pro — -A for a zm gre 
e of cases the as ported 77 8 
argum s will be e id ee Bory c scientific | 
Mangels, a plan which we cannot help thinking is desirable e, and further, it is not one that m 
men. i -— of at ntion, as a season for the one | the more phe opt growth of — 
We pla xe instance given above, as|kind of pns — ps a 8 that for the | of root crop. 
that m ere e bro strum before “the meeting, other, and i rop be remov: 
but our r observations Apply to other matters which | 
rà ane der discussion. 
© 
E 
ery great interest, especially 
Dein "cine and the sterility of soil as regards 
— — 5 an Rye- grass, on W. shall | eas 
ords on some future den. 
was no N ek to the success o 
* separately would have 
el 
bad crop d the Bges Wand soil of the district. 
— 
MEM — e 
vanae d ro of 12 rows 
e portio. ved 
sufficient torii m matter y ill "still n Ít in the 
7 wey r portio 
— 
y = 
which we erudi. bs — ill be less liable to dis- 
se than when special manuring | is em plo: ye ed. 
each of ds des and o 
the cleared | 
mise do for 
Potatoes 
six-course aan if they should be fo 
ET 
T aunton Ahi ieh weh 
Sae t e hy s e — "the d 
Ergo upon 
ei of 1 M prine a Grasses, 1 — 
e " pial Ge 
vemm: im e. tobe de psec piii 
fully 
Dare 
ar 
V..... 
off by oy: te mown—there is ve difference of | grown with the same crops for t » ye ears by vat ves. E apie" stent 
e asco adduce examples in | "rei 
fayour of the former practice, as do "g^ h — the — follows eddish or intjormethy a 
autho: who broached the subject in prides of 860. 1860. 0. 860. cows and pregnant ewes 
the latter, We think that too little weight — t Mangel. [ann en] October the 
is attached in the latter fallen leaves, 1801. 1861. 1861 1861. only on the Bents that the Ergot 
A good deal, however, depends upon the soil, Mangel. Swedes. Mangel. Swedes. d , little 
3 in the light they 
soil of Lincoln Heath may be quite inapplicable to 0 bip May ges. be wi ‘th *** 
arranging these 
"mE olay di or other modifications of soil, arranging 2 8 AMERICAN HORSE. Pom H, 
K 
ye a ae dae 
late rat 
se 
looked upon at least as the p 
whieh any amount of profit was to be derived ; and 
hence each farmer would if ble so arrang 
atters as to pet a recurrence of Wheat in the 
rotation as often ossible, and restrictive 
clauses in leases or other agreements between 
landlord and tenant were insisted upon to prevent | 
that exhaustion o ich such oie taking 
Í a corn erop is uce. 
Such MARO ver, have for some t 
ut proof, though 
: j text as out of place 
ural article, we may point out SCHLEIDEN'S theory 
of the embryo in plants, -———Ó 
maon on the formation of wood from fibres 
CE a 
instan. 
Ead the E ensis tillage ona for a single 
ill subserve the 
NE 
2dl y. These two fu will the better prepare a 
di seed bed for co 
And 3dly, two sett of 
growth of two crops of 
a cleaning crop will first 
" x 
3. 
E 1 
NE 
E 
T 
2 
* 
vei Fin all the germs of weeds shall be it to be at all more so than ang de 
Lt Rao yed labour. Tt is not found to distress E 
st, have previousl lona considered, not und it is undoubtedly i 
as a Bras 2 but. as sa sary p reparatio: applying a limited amount of f ha 
for corn, x ch ying bushel, | P'rposes as thres "v E 
but doubtfully so at y Vs bushel, E pese — ved, "a a ot , $ 
2 ” » 
ci log M themselv ves pay is on account of the animal is directly imparti we 
14 gearing to the axle of A m 
m ra in the ease of the Turnip fallows we rostri € to be 3 inches in s y tbe | e 5 
£s d m 8 miles an an | Li 
TT s % t TD n th t 
6 harro sat la, 4 p ri : : and the force is rivi La 
2 rollings at 1s. 8d... 026 | the animal, un 9 
The mane pen simply oe — 
tout slats resting aie 8. M 
The cost of hand Miedo 
wo horses, or for 
viia. when em in, 
work, ‘for iti is a species 
ig 
is "often way Saby. 
W and communie 
