THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
915 
Besides the arable 
ere land i = 
rovided for 
dun 
d Rape upon the land now, |for 
of the Ко; nm toat there is 
food and г was 
der 
d get i аба "eusily, carrying. all its apparatus 
е рег furrow has not been exceeded; ‚апа 
somohinjen: iie ploughs aud even one — have 
sawing, grinding, &. Ап „8-һотзе power engine of 
drawn to and fro by the engin 
а 
ught їп 1856, another in 
| 1857, and а 10-horse power engine by the same maker 
of the 
bought in Smith's 
n windlass and uoi re was 
pu relase d in 1861, 
moving. 
ineurred on yii ^ 
| Now with the 
n moving 
wheels and v eire soif acting 
with 
f 
spring 
o other rope {һап what was 
y has been purchased, 
The original 1400 yards sent out by Howard in the 
1859, with Smith’s grubber and windlass, I 
field 
the 
—apparen rning, 
eame е tis 
pA 
diture of 1897. a 
ipei, which comes sufliciently near to the 
stimate just 
Nor, since Decemb т 1859, Messrs. — & Co. 
ccording to |i 
niies 
is Diis pina or from =ч to field re — without 
and n erri 
of 
s, Hop Mags ci steam еза өл 
&е., and. who ye же {тув had upwards of 50 years 
experience of cou лга: еге more energetic, 
en {кер ising, or enjo n Kent— declares as 
piece re and 
n laid out and the ss ан 
éravelling i to fro En 11 o'clock, having already 
fro along the zje М 
li 
nh over the rough слуш 
"eg c jerking у. eren — oe -a 
hard uneven land, I did not go down it, b 
- = ng 
-H 
wen 
nothing like yia биР 
пру 2500 ‹ s of grubbing since its purchase, 
anc 
man who shonld pur- 
chase it at su uch a sale, ће would still be a loser does not | 
his soil o чес his manngement jen expenditure 
in tear and wear of apparatus, than any 
| steam cultivator I had yet met with. The whole 
PE с 
accustomedness to it which both labourers and their 
1 1 
М, Kay considers Md ari o rope on the farm to have 
above ovi 
ше worked а 12-horse power 
р - Mani balance indi; and have 
проп their farms with 6 horses till then 
Tt was the first engine sent ob: by Messrs. 
Le eds, 
engine 
performance greater year by year. And we do not 
doubt that even with the great expenses on its head 
which it has incurred till now, and the comparatively 
aud the cost of m 
from s" to field ji. ы? to a to д жан 
ork mplished, when from опе 
t Cross 
n, of which Messrs. 
PETI bea! 
ear the brunt 
perseverance ‘in its use will . prove profitable | not - 
a 
тй all first made things in of i 
musscture, Heavy bills for repairs, new то pe, &e., 
id, and putting all that it has 
n 
what horse-power could no 
—- from the ami first start, 
Y 
n 125. ; 2 boys, 5s. 
ece E and эы and horse f for water about 908, —in all 
b d 
t а day is 
tnresnin, 
ase of the tonns eee but of its 
profitable in in the long тап tho ough retaining i its 
ла dl; while Certainly the savin M 
ir оп the whole із such as ought under fut 
herir tó make its annual Se. both бе ай 
» learned last Friday at Woodlands, was the advan 
Among the facts interesting to Hop-growers which |d 
e work thus costs 5s. an acre re 
ad wag isai I saw Howard's grubber at 
e«ploughed Bean stubble, and 
ng. * oa 
mach cheaper than horse work generally is. e of 5 ing the Но sin creosote. The 3000 | | implements equally good as tillage implements, giving 
Jt has been let for hire, and si to do я Ре à "— "a Letra for a Hop plantation | the preference rather to the latter € stead 
he hirer has been willing to give ous >: бан Eo dee ih s milicie эне: gera only five pe е уе -— and uniform removal of the whole soil to a given 
бе mere use of the а apparatus, ' Dying all coals and iata or 600 рок are needed annually per ор | depths and also for its — of being guided 
Шш, de, in addition; This was for 7 and 8-inch|them good. When creosoted, pte d the | bons m eni perfectly when the soil is at all penses d; but 
ponghing on land which ho ire not touch. In скы i anything —— than i other part of it, and giving $ " the impression both o f himself and 
"er instances 18s. has been paid over and above the | the expenditure for n les lias been almost n othing, | he at tho engine that” Б € tool 
est of fuel and of wages. The general charge for work | Another point of ев. ат agricultural interest, i$ rather өе to draw, This, is 
бле for hire has been 9s 9з. ап acre and fuel and wages. | especial y rera was the oceurrenee of the small pox | not vouched for by any атды with the. Чуаш 
The daily EN rna for — он; | on € last occasion of its visit to this country severa | Юнг. While 5 acres а day nre stated ns an average 
эш, 2s, 4d, apiece for t К ter and yem maei а 'single sheep, which was marked the performance with the 8. horse po iret gine 
"E e dac фу E a human being. There was no explanation | h ars been йопе and were done last week in a day of 
Юе for water, onc ; and v 10 
Fourteen shillings a ed 
in this neighbourhood мй Мт. 
РЁ 
du 
| 
| 
#2 
ni 
Е 
going. good way 16 is of 
Hi 
і 
EB 
hole performance depends, and their | 
e to depend on the avoidance of 
ІН 
y 
E 
я 
Э 
aes and October, 1860, only 
89076 » done, some Je м: Зн: hire. 
s83 
sag: 
| | 
hr iu 
+ 
340 acres were 
n were нышу obtained 
"in E се then 500 
хри m = 
ceptin io 
P yards Em - 
doing 850 acres 
nditure on rope is аах 
Е 
little service to вау that so many 
d a& such and su ch an expendi: | 
TV | 
g | made very 
ег | in the flock or neighbour 
\ very 
It is on them that the speed | 
9 | property by the 
m oliered, hat it may have been dnk vea 
ngs from an infected flock elsewhere. But that 
mained solitar; 
power engine is 
t 1 d y of 
em 
nine working hours. 
The land m for the most part in large fields, vary+ 
at once, а nt nursing, being 
ing in size 10 to 40 a acres, , Abo ut 80 ас тев of 
hg 
fed several times a day with gruel for some days, and 
at Jas ast, no other happeni 
LOWER BEEDING, NEAR Н ORSHAM. 
Two аа acres in this neighbourhood, 
the pro e: of ta orn DU were some years 
ago purcha 
has been for nearly 30 к» ime the > management 
+} 
Mr ee 
Hubbard. абу 
f t 
The und is 
on ё 
eroppin tch crops bein "E — 
onally. "lbs. а field which last 3 
ыз n sown to Rye, eat off by е 
hen been ploughed up fo orla te. sown 
Johu Ka the death 
of Mr Beauclerk, —: the administration. x the 
f Chancery, and pe e 
sale by the trustees to its рене owner. He has 
during superintendence of - M dk pe altorations 
iri sd i 
nces—a роот 
E 
dibus its 
uh ot Slngham inclu includes abott 400 acres, of w. 
300 are arable. Uii Firm at Lower Bording 
inc clud es 600 acres, Tot whic h 320 are arable and 90 
repairs, &e., 
reeeivin ms 
s jet enough to replace the ng lesso 
чы peria Б 
ТЧ 7 teres daily 
аа ое enr 10 aan Ато be 
да ve been accom | 
rus "шше? 5 йау; and in very difficult’ be 
Е 
| sold, and 
|16 runs together and fo 
е пей 
Under average citata d ‹ i 
Sin p past 15 years no less жүзүн, 
d have been bbed. The wood E. been 
the grubbing к t about 
‚ an aere. Drainage when need а 
e There is a tilery on the estato t turning ouf 
places 
on the 
"Тыш wer 
pez three moveable steam engines are Kom m 
almost eds ly engage in 
and in the bands ў 
its turn, and it will be then p 
which -— b 
Twenty horses eps on 
these [4 i» ur engines used 
\ as well as for cultivation, and d is 
nm dnd commodo 
barns and food houses—cart 
пое оао іп. large o п flde ап both them snp- 
Kris rc lies eg ear TE 
hus soil, there ought to be no 
8 
granaries. Bentall's pulper. наба Amies and Ваг 
aratus are in u 
P$ todo al x of 450 Southdown ewes is kept. of 
Jonas Webb's, Rigden's, Lindsay’s, and the сэн of 
рет" Ў been used for many years, amd good 
obtained for Јат А herd of Short- | 
ies in — 
шагып, йай supplied Ње анте materials of the. 
herd, and one of his bulls is still used. Both ; 
ROUGH, NEAR GUILDFORD. 
ТнЕЕЕ stretches westward from Guildford, t 
Farnham, a cha ]k ridge s0 metrical and peri Бы 
fl standing independently in the midst of the surro ound- 
