THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
t 
= Memoranda. 
WOOLSTON, BLETORLEY.—Steam cult 
is not limited ts “ange holdings. Years Ao a 
Bere 
oat nla ov tilled in the same manner as 
na 
[January 21, 1860, 
which is ; ploughed by- horses for t 
The Wheat stubbles are e manared 
for roo 
op is Clover, 
owing Wheat. 
di 
l 
g | ridge is dibbled in ‘spr ring with tw 
a who pondered t over 
esults of deep tillage, 
ed 
and more especially 
x 
unpromising clay 
applications, was Mr. liam Smith, of Woolston. 
near , Bletchley—a Bond “ide Briti sh yeoman, farm- 
og purpose sp 
as manifested in the Marquis of | 
in the 
manurial 
ane and hand- iT 
after this c 
before. Now, according to 
ac counts, the whole outlay for jhe ne tillage from 
h | sensible” 
OTL 
DRUM MOND AND SONS, SEEDS SMEN, Stir. 
e ling, N.B., beg to intimate that their short 
DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE oF Vicor ABU = 
TOR SEEDS is now ready, and may be had pi n 
pplicatio: 
wri cels of Seeds, with. certain limitations, 
qared Uo tee to the principal Shipping Por u and 
Stations thr Sogea ut hag Nis see d Kingdom.—See 
| Stirling, N.B., and 5 Street, Du blin 
are deli. 
Railway 
u chouses, 
Forres, 
natin ae | 
A Wii Ca CO, NUR ES, 
a have for Sl soveral millions “stp 
Seedling LARCHES, l and 2-year Seedling 
lai pE otch PINE, se ARS, ‘bo 
merits of an obdurate soil with the 
same vigorous 
only 37. per acre; ; while under the _ ordinary system of 
& Co. have r the awarded 
no the Highland cot ‘Lacioultural: Boclsty of Booted for the 
gy that once eae, ash in the rw rn 
of ¢ ultur 
e gives no 
A 
ton is a orollar 
on i 
method there pursued, successfully obtains on a wider 
crop) “costs fally as OF course, this enormous 
saving of expe wes uti wo! ould not he possible if the land 
ary | were in a foul eae but, in spite of the firs — 
rable | weeds _ Which , annoyed an 
years of innu 
threatened Mr. 
en Ate of bens Fone o native Highland Scotch Fir, and their 
pre: stock i from seed collected in the celebrates | 
nativo forests of Siediaoen, PRICED pati on application: 
e Trade supplied at the wholesale | 
URSE: 
N Mics cee 
all the ers to his 
h 
tages there found to accrue from’ o opening ~ down into a his 
e 
soil wi The eae is between the Dun- 
Brickhill and Leighton 
usbandry, his x arm as i a garde n, and 
workmen have ade aie nity Ar kranas over 
the winter trenches S as Wi ell as the summer cro s from 
cultiv: 
to destr nti 
er | the land beeomes | “clean (which the experience just |E 
time to tim 
ommon, S.W., begs “to c: 
and well-selected stock of EVERGREENS. es FLOWEE: 
BS, ORN ATSE TREES. AMERICAN PLANTS, 
AND EST TREES, STAND 
2 
Be 
PAT 
Borni 1 H BOG and LOA 
AF MOULD, “the Nursery: is 10 ae 
an and Ni 
M fo: 
es walk from 
w- Wandsworth Station, Crystal Pal 
— 
rT elated Snows 
caleareous clay, a mixture Sare of lime and scree content |e ewhat greate r, owing to a few more grubbings, 
chalk nodules and veins of rm! = rtly also beso splitting the ridges, hand-picking the Couch, &., 
drift of gravelly clay. The arable portion thus consists | being seen necessary. The Ton being found 
of two sorts of soil, tg et of heavy, and abo) out 
0 istin: 
con fo - jai sewe used in 
the long run, we need not sto; to detail 
er drainage has or on an average of about 5 acres per day; 
pleted a it don. ilowing yes fourth yenn, ei tie and, seeing that by ho abour no effective til- 
f th eighbo wean = ost o be - | lage Š ave been accomplished at I it 
ti mith oda | wev wer; in re is 0 ertain whether or not the en; 
ducing a grabbing implement, which rives = breaks | could compete with a strong team in the amount of 
up the soil without under-cutting the whole breadth of | haulin _ én forth during a day. The condition 
its work, thus ope rating frre more sonop ally of of th fter seven years’ jira ment of “ culti- 
power than Etn plough (ih vation,” a te d of ploughing, and oe oat = of 
earth upon i s frictional pont rine escaping the ete an oe eo by steam | uch 
and much 1 more effectually providing for the extirpa- | y 
as mech er tillage alone 
provoking eax “to germinate for their own destruc- pe 
ver bu uryin g their se eeds and shoo ts, A of ex 
ion, and nev 
` 
in 3 wher 
he ‘ren pie 
mit ith tees no artificial peter save for p 
eriment ; purchases little oilca’ xcept to keep 
s sheep healthy; consumes corn for only a moderate 
an 
idth exposing 
of surface to the riano while = 
red at the bottom of the interven 
P up 
Jest 
We 
eam-powe' inalass wire ropes. | 
me a gent pere Tah m adopted, the tillage being as 
follows :—The Wheat stubble being little pestered with 
ys 
quantity of live sad and the three horses and pon 
which are all the team force needed, and s 
| E impor ts, far 
say, 2l. to 37. per r half 
the farin, ‘And the practical agricalburist Sin ‘readily 
| understand that this augmentation of ti eld, added 
me. Sec! 
e | arrangement of the nae and the sizes, depths, and rele 
t productiveness, | pan: 
ses add: 
r. Se ORTIGULTERAL N VALUER 
MES ALFRED « CHANDLER, (of tho Inte rnd 
Desi fo. yi ing, 
menting the Land which they haye purchased as a C 
= the Borough. D ace i— 
the te 
and the su H 
and ee goang positions of the Chapels, ee rng ta a 
requisite structures, and the land to be set apart. for Orm 
mental Planting. 
tions showing the earthworks required for the re 
ne of the ji 
ea of howl 
boso Cemete 
mium o! - 
is within 20 acres, 
aS = the BU 
enty Guineas will be 
of the Corporatio 
become the absolute prope! 
— —_ - ma 
istinguis 
ied by a aad e 
. eae ae 
ICULTURAL AGENT AND VALUER. 
DLER & Sı 
H À sps 
Di Priory Road, Wandswo; 
TURAL GLASS 
AB SIZES, 16 oz. 
Couch, aud so requiring no nn ing, receives | th 
a eov u of T tons of d permease mane! e ri of root and bett live | stock create d by the new These prices only a apply to the sizes stated. 
ely after e ure havin m long val 
before arte from ‘th homestead ky Sed Sai ue of he fee simple at least t 152. per acre, s0 that the Uae g P 
e e steam trench-plough then throws theland into | no ~e than a tanani boon, The Wo li by 9, 12by 9, 13b by 9 
yard-wide ridges, covering in the manure in certainly an exampl * he Be M im ie? il. 
ple of the change in Sid 18,, i Mig: Thy 165 1B E 
a. Sa a ridges, ge origi TA subsoil at a depth of| physi i a = which intercommunion with the | 14 5, i 15,12, 16, 2 irs i2 i. 
inches from After be ae pe induce in strong ; the land | 38, 12, 19,, 12, 20,, NS what 
weeks to mellow, a double mouldboard pea ar nbn pact a dense is tibly elastic =" a: peig ie a is ey ACE 
by four horses, deepens the trenches: depth | benenth the feet, lighter pg more ame, and drying |16;, 14, 17, 14, 185. = m 
= oS a Tom be creas of ee sooner after rains and this because the husbandman |19 » 14, 20» 14, 21 
ies i is form until ý e | det = e absorpt ition, being are i ‘or i “English Glass, w) 
sere ee crop, ly n fa sinter wether a t of the = ger ent of a inal stage ouass FC FOR me pei 
y lyi r win erin, i 
with ridges yi i asp ¢ ing, corru- | of the weather as a hydropathic in bento Rira 
“a costo ga eal down the with ai ll; d 
"sloping: sides, with a torn and crumbled bottom of 4 to | atmosphere may freely enter, imparting craante p ne | 
6 inches tae et equal to at least a preparing the = 1 nos ~ which lie 
ae pr mensions of the field y allow | dormant; and whatever manurial ri tives may be 
weer a . tos a in eines a with the ee | demanded on on light lands, oi "English cys wil mot need |- 
Tis freest possible 
= nid doers pariar tl ag of Baron Liebig and Mr. hi. Times, 
psig 
oy ae with th 
uisite to force its erms past the reach of 
the fly, addled toa depth wl which secures the saai 
its 
of a weighty Such is the difference between 
fine mould wrought down by slow natural thering 
and a sai obtained by = mechanical a’ 
di m of clod- orushing, U that while 
rain and ia me ‘aoe the 
former Gf s che consolidating pressure of spri 
cultivation) continues for a long in its: beautiful 
a state. relieved his land of e 
ier horse- r. Smith is not: a 
enabled to. grow the crops 0 E roots on his fa 
but also to. feed off the Turnips with sheep carefally 
folded (with ing the land; 
king u pelea rith steam tence log, 
‘sna across 
sig eda? Gaeta dig 
t year’s 
Notices to en 
GricutturaL SHow. X.: It will 
_ from the Novurunay, Sow, X: It will be hel 
products from all 
divided in 
D 
a n 
be by kh ver, 
RABB a It is impossible 
to estimate accurate! 
pete SR Take the case of Ser Ts v: Hiderton, 7 
reported in the Berwick Wari Forster, f 
stubble in autumn ; an ee 
acres Ve pe. hes in end of 
sree you can 
ve Ahes 
A stubble i in thre 
nted with Potatoes 
oc Swedes to be 
me time give it lungs, by making it es and ‘spongy ri 
in, cS 
to the Barley cro 
ounties Rail 
87 Bishopssate Btroot Without, 
