| Drerunn 24, 1859. | 
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
1043 
against a seller of Rape-cake at the instance of a party jit might have been done with — in the t Swedes I have seen 
who had lost — heifers as it was alleged by "med piany after so hot and forward a d er, — — euough to draw t. fe Aun of eoa ds — y* — 
on such cake. In cons sequence of the verdict at | crops were matured a month earlier e usual, and we | root; some of them I ey no doubt have tried ri 4 
di lly admit, that could the event of such early frosts | perha they will be k ong give the readers 
supply in the autumn, they —— me that the have been foreseen, so that other f the result of their expe- 
merchant would not guarantee it for feeding om in d great | rience. Colo. 
and would only supply it on that understanding. II deal of i injury done might ha ave been pr eve oo i It = 
have always been aware of the existence of more or | would be well if all) angels were sown by the time Societies 
— pood 2 the foreign Rape seed used by tbe Mr. Mitchell recommends a at "p e 976, i. e, by — e ? 
crus u ound some years ago by mere chance in nin of Ap ril ; bu t in sensons more "shower 
that the cake after being exposed to a ee — 1 — on forward lan .. ocrerY OF ARTS: Dee. e. T The Forces used in 
212° by boiling, in order prepare a soup for — pr; e tem run for seed. In hot and — Profesor Jo After the paper read m “this subject, 
pouring over the chaff, had und some change | seasons, however, i easonable to suppose it would | Professor John — — - 
which na it more palatable to animals. I men-|be otherwise, as ex xemplitied in the present season of E thong 1 o ee are “engine, e, not ee 3 but e 
this y friend Dr. oeleker, who |1859. Moreover, past experience has proved, to our- | media A Which could communicated, 
investigated the in and who discovered selves at least, that very many clamps of Mangels in | real power existed ia ti ee upon which those — 
that ab the , tempera ture named a chemical c change former seasons have been spoiled by sto ver- | forces were fed, and in this respect he thought he could show 
Must ing them before they were matured and sufficiently — — N E well that 225 
for the — - had . and which rendered the first sw reated and ai ired in the clamp, and eith t work unless ey gave it and a certain amount of 
cake inno 
pd 
fth 
to report it, € by 
prevent. wet met the clam 
me Ts eee in in 
have used it for some mon ths 
unt di 
eding m bullocks, 
ave me n 
e | doors or u 
coverin 
y It will 2 
tw ing a 
hat we are drivi: 
oi i r propos cpr rman 
g or she * nd this tend i ssary 
a eserve Tin at all times ipid in — seasons 
safety, soa much rotting — the "v be me — 
whether they were fully m ured, froz 
attem ses lt a 
seed all proceeds from ae care in growing the seed. 
Granite ted that in degree it is so, where — is B is 
| with entire satisfaction. Indeed, 1 may add that I have 
ded ( s are more e 
and i have never exprienodd any i ill — 
it. 
inseed- ca cattle or 
sheep is unquestionable mt I consider that objection | 
obviated — — ng 
per 
m this particular $ than 3 
chief ca sowing it too e 
summer flows. 
ments March have 
red all ‘of — e others — early in 
nearl half, and — wn in — have 
— head 
were sown out of 
s late 
signs of running and ‘degen 
n ot so, a in a season like the N^ 
when seldom was there seen one prone? pi on an 
or was sown 
Present cost 
per ton. 
Moisture 
Linseed-eake, 101. 
trogenised or "flesh- 
li Rape-cake, 5l. 5s. 
* Lawrence, Cirencester, Dec. 10. 
Correspond 
at any time i 
yea rov 
or 2 3 system we ou 
never follow, and we believe. is not be cnra at home 
by an 
«Te 
i 
pi me 
w with — 
y 10 
rselves repudiate and | 5006 
ol 
water ; Bale horse could not work well unless it was 
anda could not work m was p 
to receive the 
machine did ; otherwise he met Mee pend e. ] 
thon ght it should be the yere of the —— yer to remune- 
e labourer in such a manner as w * — him to get 
cer e amount of work out of him. 
of io hard ical foree—not 1 E. 11 
y fed man * tog ex 
fed man dii: - 2 aE Saad no aaa could reasonabl 
that a laboure pable of i am: 
of work. eger pne 
f 
improvements hob hm had brought m 
a high order, and af Bug — of uen d enit to assist in 
p^ cultivation of average size and 
gw y. 
e 's farm, at Woolston, in Jnelinghates 
45 dec of arable and T acres of G: 
quality. E labour a 
a —— boys. 
— — 
hire, con- 
3 
ppeared to be „ seven men 
many. 
id Aet 
— horse, and steam-power, he (Mr. Sidney) murs rie 2 
say that the Woolston farm, being never in naked 
6 — to — r but say 5 quarters on 
- quarters of Barley, and. 
st besides f 
of the farmer himself. These calculations, 
De se | — H would show, not only that full. 
agricultural 
pi gs, 
bs. 
the pe 
poe ch zd 
t to arise from bei 
her, - 
is par 
draw a atenton. 
Your re —- ce ps — e 
pth of soil open 
to the r 
wild plant “originally.” ian ee to 
to the 
the I may say tha! 
ments < carried on for three generations, I got scarcely 
t wild Carrot, 
extent. With. the Parsnip, howev 
of p 
of a T. p we convey iu et [2s - = a 
e, e, of co it 7 ive m : an nd in 
case 
from the p it Eshowe d 
of it. 
as 
| aptitado for EDS 
P dur Me nud Wa 
d sa 
my aia — gar 
2 
c 
ME 
5e. g 
use of Smith's steam Sexo 22 ‘the 
for 
I hav en, 
at the Royal Agric Cale a crop growing ae 
lot ing. This las' 
and with only | § 
di rightly 
rne in i 
amd on 
loughing, an 
CU 1 
must be bo: 
prize at * 
load 
p ot kde the | a 
eed w: m cum that the whole cro 
4 this 5 esculent "3 the den fable was planted 
wie 
ner production s 
ding. 
|] a in 
mpetition m growths by all other me 
ie rich m in each case the 
his — Aw soi ME 
din: ps m this its use and | 
heir — 5 — re partienlarly to 8 an 
e for 
r 
Jg. 42288 
m than mer t 
any of you St 
[ects and ct have con 
a 
ns 
much so as to v jeti the rl Ae of the 
— handed — n to the 
eed merchan: eadin 
— Sutton, the emin 
ae of breaking the 
Thi 
mplement 
in the | la: 
as the 3 variet 
more = compat and sym 
vu y taf mira 
em ha eda gen (the la: 
ahi Babi. were sarin ving prov g — t cm 
s, and as Mangels wil 
r » 
was undeniable. By m 
will short Se 
their and d 
pn * 
d but xm "n i3 
T o uud y it gave 2 frost, is s it t not "high t 
ne lool t the Tu 
nderstand 
. not ve o ee oh Rabi? Iw 
c and with despatch, and so be e lie it has ha beon grown pret —— — se = given yonr 
i our 
€ work usnally left — T you and y A T E Mat de has 
lower. 
In the given by Mr. Morton of the rise of 
(— at one large and ge pred fact was 
madd and dighated i in the r aa se an re b 
stated the progress of wages in different 
joned 
eof 
latter got — work 
eed could be done at T 
A by mi E aivenee ot wages. 
E would tal 
t tim: day for 
work whilst the amount of work i 
er d: 
ay. That was aying at the rate of 2 france 
80) 
* 
if hig 
kyns said, if he had wanted evidence 
rl advances ar peo var ia in this 
able e to effect, it could not be more 
B and pago ub to a depth hitherto | — y experien S of e — aa Kohl sin is 
unattainads and in this way poor land may gain a | Rabi is ae 1 nough to and f ai ne ene LEE 
iru — — hitherto pes m aie oe Mead | mending others for “field 3m ture E CE UMEN He could not submit to the idea that they had as yet at- 
ope and friable. Hewitt Davis, 3, Fred s Place, | and cattle, nt te — erc a a snail tede yag scene’ io hi davelapmant o of the Matte ogee CR the caie 
Jewry, leads me m — of the so’ 
kom sondon, Ds 1 . s tek Itapp ears toime to bb, perfectly. Indy, au. bed es Bet > ee 8 ence 
at page 977, writes very reasonabl ph the injuriou: little4 app tion not in any department where human 
| effects of the srt W on Mri Wurzel; pera he f crop, which is growing tan i —— 2 ege ingenuity bad bom i d poem but tor spe fe 
ix 4 e here is the difficulty of er. Wurzel bing f the bulbs are fully larger than the general average of | the use of the stam engine in agrena, en et specifie 
as in Novem — 
