THE GARDENERS CHHONIOLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
975 
tion at Blawith, п near Grange, Mo recombe Bay, with 
the owners of land, or whether it arose ; from the|resources of the farmer to meet the increased supply. 
st luxuriance; the Cabbages a 
h fr ря Пу equal to those seen in 
sinat 
f A. Subscriber. 
ndent gives is the best 
re from (A Voice:|Since 1840 the cmo ант of ср country had been 
Jersey. uld | “ From the owners of land, my lord He held not|so great, that might now said to c 
e be gaine ed bya large grow th of these that the landlord refused to grant leases, , but that the | 50 years. into ev "i one. Wit th the progress that 
English ретт * No,|has been made there was а greater demand for 
[The unt our Со тгез- по.) y mean to say that, аза eri the owners | what were now the necessaries of life, but which 
енк а ntes ement he of ЕЕ үе prr to grant le ases? (A Voice: “ As a | were formerly, to s роо, almost luxuries. Іа former 
extended cultivation of the plant. rule ertainly. my lord; ”). If that was the case, then ud meat was almost a luxury, and now the con- 
hi tl but і | hen о асо ity com- 
e the crop is good; for it cannot, that i in the proportion that the found the ti ; and consequently 
iul чале ru even the Dru refused leases there were more willing to uet d them. | there was а a lar "ds increased demand in that respect, 
way fo e would speak for himself, that if he could geta| Апа d was iai being met? Of course the increased 
le, Mn an *08 or any of your taint who could and would do his my to the land, en е jon nt vas t to do „ вошећї ing in the 
inform me inen it ever occurs that a cow, | he would Suh be к happy to grant а lease to him, | mat ter, t then that t in the affair, 
put repeatedly to a par- wh ie his death should not make void. (Loud | Then al Hiero as the advan dires of having crops off 
1 дай oie T That's the sort of landlord to | land which онга» was allowed to lay fallow, road 
n taken to another male at once proves fertile. | have " sce uld ind them that they were not| which took two years to produce one crop o 
ipe a physiological reason for wishing to know |talking mere ida sentiment there, but that they | Under the present system, instead of leaving E -— 
ег this be the case, and should be grateful for in- | were =” ring sentiments by which i y would, as men, | fallow, a rop aised on it, which 
| be bound out 2 - t room, eme that if | produce d for much of the additional = 
Holl an 
.—Allow me through your columns to | 
r 
Turning to the treatment of the soil, Mr. 
English te: 
asked for 
e important 
Sp 
q | useless, and had known 
f 
y Mr. T. C. Brown for his publi psi eden 
b pe At ta lans Jib ino D, adit that in | get more out of hs S bd duin n gob. ed was to try and get rid of some of the dap by burning 
experience up to the t , about | Alluding next to the progress of agri inS e heaviest portion of it. җые, they burned clay 
M since, he seemed not t o far as I land, he said they ноне there permanent steam- which p gravel under it, they would be doing 
t, that the earth used опа: 25 ей or | engines at work оп set clero extreme north, that their bost to ruin the land, because the nature of 
| Silow n oth sifting and drying are not only | had been reclaimed fi side. clay was to d" i in the shape 
шейш бе the ready use of the earth, эм E add | know any farmer in Worcestershire who had g of „manure to run thr and become lost. 
to its deodorising есас 24, M Brown | an engine. (A Voice: “I hav Then it E ron This had been proved ver satisfactorily in the course 
mites, I think, without having seen e of my closets. — butit was not the id lot of farmers in | of some experiments that made a a few years ago. 
one I think he would scarcely say that | that county. Professor Way, who side "the "epis had two 
my mechanism for throwing the eart ould be either == агре boxes made: of as filled with burnt, 
effectiv hat.which I ha and the other with unburnt clay. In these a stron 
ted. 3d, the repeated use the same clay or hern ? Clubs. solution of salt and water was poured, holes being 1 
arth is, of course, intended only where either it is M: *. Tattening Cattle: Food-pro- at the lower part of the boxes for the ок, after 
lt to p arth or to obtain a concentrated ж "Dapabititiar of England.—Mr. HENRY HUDSON | percolating through the clay, to esca apeby. Itwasfound 
ure But I а de d that to yse ag eat said, the ex xtre me fatte enin g of store animals Tn 
опүепіепсе ; first, hat one cart-load eart 1 t tasteless, whilst the burnt clay allowed the 
of sev С ons for а twelve- Aer for beer purposes. ` What he ийде деп solution to come away almost as strongly Wm 
month, and e that when I want to apply ry to | Was, 
my garden I тА з it by handfuls instead of barrow- | and fattening animals on » fattening food. Bew t b clay was, that in doing so a 2 те 
lods; and if ever this manure is to become (as surely | take опе animal, for instance, a hilt. He had se of t e ground was - iim to the action "A 
commerce, what mor some of them shown which were so fat as to be utterly tho чакыр, which was o f gre t service e, for т a large 
a 
instances where the еу 
ү, 47. ү к + 
sky and bee ma the soil, if the earth was only 
Others of excellent stock he had seen taken to the nd 
that ther ere was some value in 
every 
slaugt because|that, was see 2" e faet that every bushel of 
althou ugh such fine animals, they were quite worthless| Wheat was known to contain six pounds of ammonia. 
€ breading purposes. Therefore, he said, pm That was one of the advantages of deep tillage and 
would never of burning the on v eavy land. In 
der d ispensed with corn feeding, they 
culis 
tenant was entitled to er see than 
mere yearly holding. Уау lad zd let а large and 
excellen t farm to a tenani mik and on going over it | 
tenant had started in 
a way which gave him the grentest tost satisfaction. 
а А Mr. Hudso 
меф. 
| used for 
t . Mr.E 
was at first contemplated when these “societies were | infi ugh, they were able to 
n then alluded to a. restriction s with so much ањ that іп the aa 
to be given by the Duc | еу would be able to make the whole of the clay lands 
baec for I т bin result of Aabye улен 
e lan. id ha d bee as shown in the fac 
— on the premium 
d for Man 
lo io mpete 
ngel W 
unless t 
hey were forbidden to grow 1 
o thought they ought not to allow 
аон the feeding of Кыа; when p we to $506 im 
cm ecran TEE 
e mac rd 
was clear to him that. his new tenant was & 
nes man ri bens ind that he possessed, an 
d. —— ha 
upon the lan 
inquirdd of de om чн. the new tenant not 
asked for a lease. The 1 was that. the t enant was 
expens 
i of hoe who ordi cene clay lard. 
ll very "а if ым bred pone for e farmed 
t|Gl oucestershire t the farmers had been. given the advan- 
ould be 
мАн oF pond osi them 
they did not do Longe regente gre 
| thems elvi ул RSS for Ее His. experience was 
e kind of animal was to which the 
was formed, and he was s happy to say that so much was 
ves 
whatev it appreciated, that in „the first year the expense 
uu Qui A 
to 
feed. At as well as they c could. As farmers they had to 
the t 
they ought to 
Е оп, fo уеаг of the compar 
would be difficult; ty first o of all wit 
ot 
of additional food t 
and gro 
Hte 
d толи Ther this 
ШЫЙ, that their fields would be too sma! 
t was Tequired for an additional for cultivation кле ДА 8o that they would тыт. -- b 
а population. ngland was but a 
y increasing number of inhabitants 
this the landlord mus со-оре erate with ап 
nd take 
the f: anne It would be to the benefit c 
t Уз ехіта "Space. eu ed for their 
e land England |i the landlord, because t the acreage wo 
СЕ € "eme 
b-M A07 I Ww 4. 
had shared болои might 
—which ind 1 followed, the о тере "E the corn 
ly expressed тоц à to have 
Mr. Holland spoke of 
to all — men e md perg: hat эу their faflibenes 
vati n brought together, fresh ideas had 
nated, among and they had been 
‚ Man rs ago 
it was a зге "that СЯ СЯ for the increased 
- Wer. occupied | been 
ag oï ine b etween Birming- merde 
ham and London alone covering upwards of 6000 € agilis, in eonsequence of Perm with а 
acres in its course. Now, all — x vor from the food- | xà d acreage, provided food for an increased popu- 
t them, 
of | lat 
pthe amp ciency. rim of | 
under cultivat 
z 
with that space 
as this, 
that i in со m e of the increase in - the - population | General and. Descriptive ы 
gli mprove order 
by science and skill, н жал 
ere was Tome бы она б 
LC 
hardly а нёс 
үлене твы 
the 
tal upon | 
area for growing it. Th 
d for sik ce, and the e ыт г 
ment, їп that it might be rus cm 
might be made equal to 
and, That t had to be hae and he 
- t of this and | v 
$ 
the dem: kind has long been 
| terinary КСЫ and at 
i8 business; secondly, 
| по таап an Боа v undertake a farm that was larger | Ro 
Ede: the existen: 
other socie eties, and npa the —9 arded by the | sı обоо Professor 
creased ini 
mgee and his colleague resolved 
EE is and from the gence of the that. before po енг er 
guide should be 
he year 1840, w „Те йыб nce ME аер кшш 
first emi ез уз а p, proud of the еен and activity which competition 
if his (the chairman в) u called forth. at Edin bu: aril The латон volume їз 
mgee 
solution of the problem. In t 
"rm ч s t yal Agricultural Society pers 
16; an r. Pus 
бшу: when he tl his skill an à capital into | recollectio dq cs Ton кар under "s pen which 
e UM n A mih he s ahonld iko care to stay | cultivation, of some kind. н г other, in this country, was Бч been published during ihe pi past "e onths. The 
there as long as in that year 48,000,000 ac the value of "4 Wheat | two Colleges in vigorous erous operation there, 
The Eade рат on the subject of farm vibra Dam 000,0007. pe f Beans, sending forth and sedens and profieients in 
i3 ей. had 1 him mooted by Sir J. Pakington, | 17,000,0007. and of Grass 000/0001. He дөгү үшүрү Pes numbers, stand in үг eo соп state of 
asked whether the refusal of leases had come from | these facts to show the immense demand upon the|things at Dublin, where no veterinary college at all 
