Млкси 2, 1861.] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 199 
ааваа арттату 
irregularity of plant, and tbe bulbs were much smaller, 
apparently Lar more mn "m мы size, and we could 
the difi ce 
М 
"ud nd tell— cud a pa ye ed — i if ye'd уту: to ax; who onl r| 
—if yed 'av however. "Ihey'd all? а upon the surface and never penetrat ing t o the этү 
good з unde niil wi "tbe ан: was ;— Xcept | to learn the new — -— in pu metrical L| not the two crops at less 
uitchall howeve r—bim as fell 5 py ^*im.—— | | progression which every occupier of land should know | tha IU or з tons Р acre in favour of the steam 
|n e his M ultiplic: ation- table, E Fi n owner аз p zy pe е од land : We better crop being superior to any- 
Tt was of no use to g that. Whenever І |the уйга е we are ever to L | thing we А ауе n this year. Another field on the 
up to E. poi са ч which he disclaimed | rid o f that * pest " бе н or r own sakes or our | Aylesby farm was i caltiv ated by steam, and partly 
н 1 һай got to the wall. I i Sd. neighbour: s. The sidious tiny "planting клы but alin the um тузу ‚ by horses. , The wh. ihk was sown 
р îm roll s^ inwardly, like a Hedge-hog, and you | few inches of tender ыы iir ar, an де — ying | with Turnips, tfi ai, 
| about ав a Setter-bitch does under add seemingly in autumn dike К: cunning insect that|but Mr. Sowe uin peg 15 his teh impres 
т ges in Beptemb er, stinging her nose by way o | collapses to б „еуе, їп feigned death, the ` moment it | that the steam cultivated part of the field produced one 
; Bosse - as it жеге їп the d lay's A, I аз | fourth more weight of Turnips per acre th the 
- was, а of s om, that "would м {ог | | any mole, еситсе абыс for its motto is alise {Күз ed by horses, all other things. being "equal p 
ery inch it Aad, | mu ltivation 
T ever, but: never jm a uM. temper laid ov rans nd many an ell it has taken fr ev 
. houest heart— sensitive because it was honest, and ier] before Ма biennis al phase o» ached, and it s for at 35 Пе ST ; we now anxiously await the results as it 
not face the inward misgiving that *all* was not guit egun, to those whom "the the corn crops, which another summer will 
*right'—that there was, orm might he, thing € have un with tle vele that «Thistle down donet show, gts the next harvest will дізс1оѕ 
how that was * all wrong, and That но me day som pex б ИШ ' o be ed we may have ar Act, The last autumn was not ver, егу: avourable эг working 
I vp ndi it so. Jt was по business, in fact, of p fore vidi. ек. is ош, fo or irepanning every | land, either A nem с or otherwise. But Mr. Sowerby 
all he new, he hoped the best i in all things, | skull that holds t that doctri made the it, set his E rita W o work in 
good earnest during "the harvest, and culti пера od 
02 3 
tive! e df Labours and таме АР ЖО gri m and cres three times over. 
nexperience i itself —and | eite of Debout toiled fu emblem. ү | were : all | stubble and e id for root crops this spring, 
*t d trou! mith's No.3 implement was used 
Кылт 
toil and trou 
1: 7 
tw ame and additio: " 
see a background parte. sido ont behind „this brief | haman iĝa! » featl very i 
ue that made the crabbed lor ris acuens pira іа corda !—how whic rate 
Coke n Littelton & Co. seem to ahrink | [oet me away, like boy chasing butterfly, i in ie XS nce y^ No. 4. The av 
p into netu г сотрагі ison. “S pur! off Straw—" | of giving one final pin-stab, one qu ietus, between your | | inches, and the 970 acres were done 354 days, 
—in the night’ too! ‘Times so bad'—* No Agree - | wicked wings, and assuring men the mischi ief something over 7} acres per day. It 
iiri aats к put against all this, o ia *good. un- | witeh-on- rui ыйын that you are as you fly so | being "harvest, and the ecd receiving high wages, they 
derstandin' ^ б, ly one am -— of bread to. all | КОШУ over x: summer- тоне, з and dance ав if in made long days. Тһе cost for manual labour was 
i ч d u | joke, w hou . 2d. 
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whom? а what? k ine, &с. 
below ! tap my a at tho door of the House * where e thistle- Som fond m me Eafe my first visit to the | into, as that is a matter of easy calculation to amy one. 
и ры orgotten '—* for further particulars enquire | office of Messrs. Penn. & Debbitt—some miles distant. | One 48 acre field was cultivated without the engine 
°| The бойт was of some weeks standing, and the | going into it, and it was оо, with а 
1 cnim as the Agent, all this time? you ask. Т | оссаѕіоп was well suited to hasten its execution. iong € corae or two, a hy as difticu ү to h as a well 
de entirely with that very n — question ! What conversation there befel, in an interview between | formed field of 60 acres sod have b The engine 
~ I should have "i: ^ i too, a good many times: but age and youth, etween the grey-headed experience 9 саа п ап adjoining 20 acre field, ind when the 48 
A: І knew the er Echo would xA given me. | the country practitioner and the young aspirant of a | acres were s oua it as ы pa round, and the 20 
I had learnt it, des Е: $3 from the Pasture, from | forensic path yet untrodden e а. ЕЖ mother acre field where it stood was then cultivated, makin 
the Arable, from the Woods, from the Hedgerows, and | that had commenced P. rnest— a total of 68 acres cult ivated. with n no other moving of 
had known the answer too long, to ask the question separate telling. Т. g his land 
T now. Let you ever know а | now lies as it was le ft by the cultivator, pa is being 
man of strong will and per capacity aer skill in the | fertilised by а manurial ioni pone by the air, 
selection of an Agen ni? o e, if by per-| STEAM CULTIVATION 4 NORTH LINCOLN- ne eal г penetrate to the depth of 8 inches 
d | SHIR Беарн, whilst the water as it falls upon it 
o #0 in his way? Isit not elmore < “Thank| EvERY year gives new and i ased interest а Фе fred y percolates through it. In the course o of a few 
ou, Í know how to manage my own affairs don’t | cultivation of yes “ a steam M. T a o|weeks Mr. Sowerby purposes putting the cultivator 
want any one to teach ME!" Did you ever aum the | кун Ime creased knowledge and information upon iie o | No. 4 again through it, and will then roll and harrow 
v priv (till time hath given it proof") that | far a быя results for соб элй los ulti iplies it with horses to prepare it for seed, which is the only 
m E e — ie | facte. iy" r guidance and reflection. r three | horse labour expended upon it, until it is manured and 
and | years ago s had only the few and scanty details o fthe|ridged for sowing. These facts clearly show. that 
uccessfnl ap E ication Д the principle which were | Mr. Sowerby can easily reduce hus number of horses, and 
ired i d or 
4 od ме Pigh !" com- furnished by few men of skill and enterprise e not be required to work those he retains so har 
| were far-si l, ыа who early adopted the principle, | Кее Hm so high as he did formerly. We believe 
Pu? 25 | the e| and st А à dy ; he works one-fourth less horses 
1 к er your hip’s, I must lower all | тан PN and E system, which has already — than bj did, and thesé three-fourths have much less to 
е де Жн” азе pai the —€— man of "busi- and excited almost ie attention, and | до, and conseque ntly cost less eeping, and still his 
Баре ass who *know ho 
; "DI their. Thank you? have such a new, v, ase, я $i national agriculture, gave us The wet summer preven ted Mr. Sowerby Ponto а 
e possessed as to the siio e of | some of his seed lands by Sn power-for Wheat as he 
uent | had intended, but ете уеаг, should it be more 
F a Pignan indeed, in aiet “to see the form and 
the žime.” There was a speculum, a © window Bat the case is widely altered no — pect will doubt 
1 н D p^ time to ee and|s of Smith's tackle sent ont by Messrs. How less b In y just say that the 
. judge gh-and-low-water mark outside, and all d we know not how many sets sent out ы Sa жа Ry тҮ ste cultivation at Aylesb y have been 80 
. around you till the waters had su 1 inventors and manufacturers, and whieh are constantly | thoroughly satisfactory, that several of Mr. Sowerby’s 
k young puse believe, asI саен working in different parts of the country, supply us neighbours have expre essed м hop of his prac- 
the fueoid, orthe|with an amount of information we did not before tice, апа their desire very mitate it. The 
and afford the €— publie facilities 
ets, SPUR HAMM mot only for from those | at east it requires a good Yd sum to start with; 
|vorking Kooro sets such Lelinionga th an bear, but ret farmers 
| also of witnessin "for itself the mode of appletion and|enter with caution into large outlays, however well 
| the Ary n ting ; and we have great confidence in | satisfied they T be that such mon will prove 
| these personal inspections, and believe they do much remunerative. € — Хеч -— some exten 
| more to jams Aena that any prepared statements, | account for the nit € in 
| however accurate and truthfaul, which can be put upon —- e 8 m. efus ruit à ^ p S. Ruston, 
FE va „Меп like to see and ое for themselves, and b. 6, 1861. 
— Да ун ФЬ $ 
mias es the party broke up, cried * Don't | possessing канте of witnessin me Correspond 
» g d operations poncaence 
m" alse Mr. fr. ва Shieh coupled MICI n» | themse Wei Ж of ану noticing cin ubse-| Roots in Drains.—I perceive. that yon allude to the 
extended am чү warm saluter cramped back ту |quent effects, will do right to embrace 2 m s vii | probabilit of a avmg been 
EL ч a galvanic recoil, ve fowble-locked | doubtless t4 -— prosit for vt t tolinjured by the roo ot^ the Mangel Wurzel. Having 
E —— zi Кб , caught gaping, closesagainst | such as have not at sent such fi маш, Es to | suffered to some очай this year from а similar cause, 
sertim an ie md Жы»! some one as he passed | others who may s an Pura in knowing the mode I can corrobo rate youre pah rks : the fact that] Ik have 
xn , : casual * ,* “ You had) better have | of oper eration, and the results obtained other dep 
УД : p aft. rur { than their own, some observa Жы upon 
: y advice: but I recie v point of it he vurting of one of Switl's iic in No - d feet, ма дв: зараду pus ар. by the fibres 
E pim лее us that * qe the signs. of ideas." | Lincins nshir may not be al naonta m the of th l-Wurzel. I have measured 
; s k tion, as fa а E etter проп the subjec LO EI а- а p roots dea sung el Wurzel 
. Bmt,like much of the information of "books, ' it sm tion, we referred to the fact tha t " Francis os 218 this year which: bave mi plante o Ex Wi iom 
ЕС gathered, andthe*idens" themselves | had purchased a set of Smith's tackle — гесе гово Бойтра 
^ Lr» Nur in alonger and wider schoolroom than Howe Bedford, and was then working it upon n ME —[The ing 
t cians. For instance, to the mind of с у farm. During а recent visit іо Aylesby we had | referre. to in rne кеде "et e]: к Hering 
Two-or-three-and-twenty ? MA idea? thus worded bserved in the — Counties Н, (Birming- 
extent of dra n put ina Fors y 
| having Mr. Squitehall “loo after" in his then | hearing fro т. $8 
E d pu owerby how far the experiments the ast a tabular mmm of 
conn brongt principali $ into оред the time- made last t year E prov X suecessful. Отг yn. visit NU S 5 ча in which myn m 
d where we saw the cultivator No. 3 I r. Wight, one of the pro п 
eed versified for practical use— ue b a depth РСА about 8 К D, publish h it, was 
Eco sadly they took him to bed, autumn, i.e, in 1859. is field is now Swede Turn rnips, | pos. He informed me you petes rd 
To ү Е wife aud daughter, and the sheep are just зе folded upon ет. А few . My object in aldrene yon is tostate that 
m. [ poe i a couple of Red- days later we visited another field upon his Gunnerby | ® manner in whieh my name appe with a sale of 
вш as Life "- m, which was also Swedes, but which had not been | only five late young bulls in a arii Gt wi in (to avoid 
on эчт" уапсез, See IT give enis ——— е steam. "The contrast € acis was ucl wintering of them), at the end of a deceased friend's 
түлөн (eleu! fugaces) by fio, men's ‘ideas? he former instance the unifi r. W. Moore's) sale, at а мор. of te year when 
ав the Thistles do, in а Sendia e tegali plant, and the bulbs чан x in en pe bulis are but little wanted, old at so low a 
рсы. out of sight; and woe to him. E in weight, whilst in the latter there was some [average, is not a fair entes Pre of my die is likely 
