Drerunzu 3, 150? THE 
t and grim 
—— 
birthplace, on the Hetton Railway, gaunt 
GARDENERS” CHRONICL 
ä —̃ — — nna aa 
we must store them by the middle af, Oetaber. The 
y desirable 
E AND AGRIOU LIURAL 
GAZETTE. 975 
cut down 8 or 10 acres a day 
when the weather su vits is invaluable, to the du Ta 
farmer especially. The one I used was Wood's; its 
fault i is not — close enongh to the ground; this 
that enables you to 
‘uly it would now be called, with its fore an — — 
peed on the top of the. boiler, and d the long c connect- | reform 10 mes = "-— T ael — " * » p ie 
great abbles 
o: 8 rs n’s first decided f leaving our long stu 
1 Xr en m d 7 ero of Couch for the sheep to run over in 
1 e d = or eds wonderful p blouse ai n — for game cover, must be supe eis a 
fro as they í nd perseverance, tlie esent locomo- | and 8 we it is possible to set Bentall, qu 
LE. iwa when again I remember the | Woof, o x the common plou with a a a 
— . by day | work, E ey must go, giving ve — ^ no ti e 0 
f the electric telegraph between Paddington 
e made by Burgess = "Key, 
but t have no doubt v s also, 
when it w 
reaper as well 2s rfec 
tion. I must mention the i Ifound in using 
it as forwarding autu wipes By cu Me the 
tubble close I was eng ibled t mence cultivating 
all the annual v seeds ^ —— ſolloy owing as 
rapidly as e fatter, I would recommend, burnin ng 
immediately, whereas after hand ies the — 
＋ — till we could mow the - mes and clear 
way, and v when I tried puts mo last year, 
ht 
and ^ , ju 8 and now ce "how thong! 
is transmitted like lightning to the en 
by means of this Goodies we may we — live in 
am E of i ntellectual pe on ine cern and per- 
this difficulty, I found the opera- 
And 
mende ^i Pt us . 
the satisfactory result of whic h we have seen 
ur frie ^ Mr. Burnett = . 
in 
ee e forefathers. 
season 
magni 
Mr. Coleman. of the 
Agricultural College recom- d 
hesit 
ES = wk „ ei —— ^ yam I met | ded somewhat similar system, bu t I Ó Mr. e z UL will in the end in e 
ee case pii epn 4 5 — E ad cod rn n oi your rather "than "diminish labour; i& may e the very 
K * —.— 5 — ture to the intereourse and | manure, bout it up, 60 ll f distributing the Jabour more evenly 
— of i ode is agricultu er — Lent how. malt ina — the over the — but that e is me enough left 
standing still, or is it keeping pace with the tim weeds, , re-form ihe old Pots and. sow. Fo llowin, be well i inag L - —À s m which it. would 
To say that it is, would be simply — to - a goo! — do av d 
o c to is it I eed bed. I should like to commence the — by he and the labo 
— to Aen 87 bar f adc De " i ure an Y d m xs — the land with Smith's steam whether “for i the market or st stock ‘will de ovat the spare 
th loyment o eof allour hands. We should aim at keeping the 
12 illl cats ish. e — ae at work all the year round as much as 
ment at the results 15 S bi ha slie 
One of the 
first obstacles that ys be removed is | 
ho 
the land of ou 
They must learn that as owners o: 
Ae land they p done to 2 to their nr 
e firs 
e we to manage this autumn cultivation ? 
| Under any ¢ — nces it is a busy time 
sft "introduce the second subject ] [ propos osed, viz: 
T his may 
he 
T 
the same co: 
tof prod ‘uction.—And here iner — m — —— and 
[ali-powerfal s steam ome — e as our obedient 
ES T ights, s, 
J 
ughing by steam | has 
The — — hands id tho harvest this is year 
been very remarkable, partly owing 2» aie bt to s 
uir ne des = - 
move ae 8 
tbe it laprovement of tlie soll. But I Tu be asked: d Do 
landlords 
pe 3 one . sl rapidly cause a 
ne at once, but d 
nstanees 30s. and 40 
ever really olution in agriculture. It is established beyond all|per acre w 
this is a seriou cha arge. Knowingly, or un ep | doubt that the. 1 plough can do the work vni MENT 1 e measure g to the laid condition 
* ong custom they do. Every acre of England well and a ee the eost of horse-power, and of ones í 
every can t that cannot be accomplished ya d point hich I would eall 
vache should be employed, — every encourage- means of ho! s the necs Y our using every means to economise 
ment should be given to the occu of the We cannot ; anticipate what will be the. effect of ihe that ‘arms. 
improve it to t the very utmost wit | the which su M is. heco oming year by year more interest- 
the steam plough will produce, but I know that every ing, and the —— of scientific aud practical men is 
and not al then may we expect said to flow year I have a cr " of corn in a field of stiff clay papai — so conse to it that it bids — cte to 
freely towards thei improvement o of agric cultur was drained 9 or 10 ye ago. have a m sah am e | des e the n e of a sci ence. , Farm na Mies ve been 
I believe t 1 t about 2 feet wide eal, &c. 
for the maintenance of her national 3 that drain than on the — parts of tbe. field, m I in addition to their hay, straw, ots —.— in fattening 
‘this condition of thing vol be brought about. Con- must attribute as subo d the thorough trenching the | their stock, but the princi wes spe upon which the ad 
sider the rate at which the population of a in- soil then —— he drain that was put in tages gaine ed are depen t are far fro Po" ing u — 
ang; it has doubled in the last half century. How below. And such A steam can and will accom- stood. om a snc: system is 
is this enormous increase (and what but for pm plish. But besides doing the work more cheaply and | established, and it is “followed by many, ind so far well, 
‘wonld it have been?) and the yearly addi tion o be m than by c ordi inary means, th e epabut advan- | but the point to aim at is the best result; we want to 
maintain griculture, no doub machinery is know how to turn our straw, hay, and roots to the best 
‘the increased demands, Ame to t 
E d British yeoman, to the Vere of act e 
and food, amd to 
makers, ay, and to the kie apri en ip 
I en p — 4 AES 
Lcx 
? Th 
min desirable? ue Remember | a 
L observation that "should England 
become dependent . foreign countries for her food 
a 8 upon auto, 
thing es it js wanted to 
E ine. 
i eee Eve w. u 80 
pendant Me — Tonge in e 
-| must be a most invaluable part of the stock of Mosi 
male fe hik I believe we m MM from fully 
steam. engine 
— be made available, We know that we can have | 
a 
an poem Apure ADR shall cem eed 3 of its stable us 
f time, the baring th m of —— the 
d her wie | so 
advantage. "The s 
subject, „although it ma - 
o us, is surrou unde d 
„ Andérson. i ans 
not appear 
admitted by 
ede to 
notice the present. poston of the question sa 5 eM 
during the summer m rove a t large a about 
fields, using with Sicriminatin Ba veis 
e i very re ur management is defective, b 
ee ip vts nar ne — — hope | and d crar rd ai G that are sour and RATS 
c 3 in time of ded on a more | at ed i rw gina subsoil, drain, | During ye winter our system of feeding necessarily 
uA that. Bat itis m st e. less necessary | break up and cultivate our fields, which can take rtificial, and we wan as 
| should take 2 and raise E home in when fixed in place shall | th J lecti 
A eor resh ut our corn, d. pre e it d market ; | of food for. berg It is well known that could we consume 
" wen A — uise the —- for our horses, grind meal for our the Grass, from which we make our hay its green 
What t - "T ipa s vem aim at as cattle and chaff and —.— es -— r|state, it ould. yield a much larger return. It is al 
— Pip ach suggest, —Ist, I hope i peo di Aw; more rapidly rass grows, and the 
Dai id he TIS : antage o of every applianee | produce to —— if required 2n at t last gem ow za “its you m if is eaten the more good it does the 
of t - For a and 3d, to use waste steam among our chaff. There are very, very — * which probebly arises from its wu more easily 
ise that of our crops whieh | many fi it cannot digested | aud assimi ilat ted. 
e Men fa: arms. I shall endeavour to seize 
2 of is 3 ons proposed and the improve- 
i" 
'oductions. under this h a 
it very ait ut ene d 
ion 
e the ecoumendations in 
r manures, apply them 
i epe you 
as eir value 108 ON artificial food, an 
ty with artificial m nure besides. E 
and found to 
sheep feeds. One sub- 
tion—the complaints abil 
to he failure o 
ówth o 
Pv 250 * ES 2 
io ex " Cu 
E will 
8 VE. our 
ced under these three heads during the 
lists | of 
i — Wees 
2 
© be) sun 
portable engine, w which i is — ^ E 
tationary engine in the field working- the ploughs or 
| grubbers by means gos wire ro 
more valuable than oe made Tan 5 allowed to 
stand till the see eds are perfected, and the stems contain 
- 
T Td 31 
A representations 
he 
0 f bo Ue 
System there will always be the nans of treading 
d the. double pud ty o 82 
well as the implemen 
— 
| unwieldy borse as 
ede 3d is H 
R 5 restore it to its o 
ea 
ra large pr roportion o re. As when n Ryegrass 
than 
RUN. The qu uestion then i is, having a sad: portion is 
r winter provision in this dried Med can we by an 
W 
y experience of the bene 
ed 
» 
* 
ts * 7 4 
t a 
m e pi 
demands . upon his eows 
-| with the food he finds they require, he succeed 
were deprived. of i Is 
tisfacti 
ly deserves the titte, ot the founder 
some and then 8 od, su 
: posse Et he heat thus Mg ced, so i ely, i 
a great m answers the sam se as stea 
à | Both these systems call Spel aa — 
-Lexaet com pariso 
Mr. Horsfall, , however 
steaming his 
by no 
merely for MIA 
, and by providing t — 
s bo 
| cows improve in conditio 
butcher. To 
ing. qme dealing | 105 whi le the 
in far 
— ES truth Di is anart then that you n make at, 
reality it makes itself; pe implement 
supp ly 
of milk of superior quality, at the e that his 
3 Ts fatten for the 
o show the resu 
tions an experiment he 
— of * conjunction with 
good 
u 
One of oe fed his cow on 
rs. 
hay; the other on somewhat inferior hay, ground 
