78 
It is just — that it may often be a good 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
good as 
as 40 years paas But to my Cabbage, | "of every | every plant, The “best time. to sow for E Sener 
[January 28, 1860. 
that 
for I - a great de t de al o 
mber, 
not b ar the serious glance of retros) eed, 
tar bik witli w hich I as è fe more 
nag deep Raty s "bet 
the one nie ‘the oak weather a Shi. 
media ang connec 
things not so well ons anti now as they were in 
my boyhood’s days. 
At page 32 Mr. . Hewitt Davies has wisely directed 
g of 
will check ae! ravages and at the same ‘ne rim 
—— ma: . The best kind for this 
lic 
well for a ao crop; but if a 
djo 
the end of February. “Spr ring so all v very 
cal avers oo “Cabbages 
f 25 Ibs. o 50 lbs. ea ach, is requi ired, ha = ld prefer 
by th 
repere of — = 
“To t ine of Ë Cheriton- Fitz- 
pái = Lo Rae Tc CocxraM has live 
luring aa scevitaetl of 43 years, a Silver Meda 
“To Jonny CockraM, age 
the Rev. ve, and has 
always been sirietly headit; auis and | 
sober, 11. 
and JouN CKRAM 
ved | 
od ee oo has lived with | t 
Market, or Matchless neath na found equally good. 
Mr. Da vies, I perceive, says Kohl Rabi is an excelle 
milk- eens feed for cows in the spring Ih ha 
first we in August, 
ek bed dded-out in Sahai a when 
—_ ve women — stand isadi the winter, a 
plan oe 
and 
ril to 
Plants so managed on properly 
mous crop, and plants put | 
and about 18 inches 
uch heavier vite! than 
the sprin not lal 
e first week i in J May. 
Ashbo ourn, to see a p 
brick-maker in ke — clay of. his brick-yord. “ with- 
out muck,” modes “ brickey ” ha eo di iscovere ed a | 
0 subscribe os 
n as s the land can be got reai iy in | to 
of A 
— y 
pETepEE Fe 
W. P. Ayr 
i 
leigh Park, Poia 
LABOURERS AND COTTAGERS, 
M sanie and labourers hav e, in some senses of ` 
people, 
ae however, : Mr. an 
mutuali. 
3 Sones divu alsin g e 
| fine, so sos r toa! be 
w to ameliorate it ig is 
now agent selected. for discu: ussio ma befor 
The emar 
rly 60 Ths. oat end fe ess than 
were ill to sell in tiene eg and 
d, it oozed out that 
40 ibs. ; 
befo: ore the csahoaiylien list fille 
and agricultural science. 
tur ists, either employers or 
into details as io enable 
the garden yielded the liquid which produced = 
unmucked Cabbages ; muck i in those days, and I fea: 
pra tically yer with agric soit 
opinion sc are in fanlt, pe kipin : 
practices. 
ereraa 
skill—that our L abourers F riend Societies w 
sate 
t every such 
too freq uently d th 
| bodys ys “the so) olid stuff, > and not the essential ‘ “spirit” 
wh ich passeth away unobser ved. However, some of the 
eir guineas, ‘and through 
ay vi en education 
limits ; le t it encourage 5 ie pen of 
Benefit i patitis and of savings’ i and e espe 
s for 
the brickmaker many a farmer learnt the value of 
“necessary stu an 
f The obj ect however of the present article is not so |1 
things, as well as in others, 
that him ibak „hath shall be ma hi 
ground let i i 
g| la 
bage, though that i S an Reperi Ay Dies = to induce 
| agriculturists to i whether there not other 
plant likely to produce a large amo of e for 
mbs, as it will bear cutting ei, befor the od of 
April, and the thi will yie good bite for 
s war the most glaring irregular 
in rural dist 
An dt © statements oLa 
a systems of farm m 
mixed rotation of cropping on extensive arable 
d 
rility or fertilit y o 
clauses in “fa leases respe! ; 
cropping, and mere be monga and there are agoo 
lodgin: 
rent modes g and paying farm ser- 
p. This the pe a ires | natu 
ef a ry x - wise iosa d old deeply cultivated and. ri ound, but under proper 
of sk t hath O SFPE RE TONanee be evi ence | management it would yield m March and April at the 
w e zienn, i ee enn tural, all least 50 tons per acre, something worth notice with a | many differe 
all | large floc k of shee Swedes etti ver, Mangels 
attempts to „influence, by amy BA ree, a poms sop 
benev 5 asa 
or personal morality, where higher motives alone 
ht to have an influe 
there is = a gn scope for their exertions 
section of the field in which 
g marrie = farm ——— 
diggers, shepherds, hedgers. eee 
h en, hop-driers, dairy-maids, chaff- 
cutters, shoeing aa _illotment | Tenn and | m 
cottagers (for bread, for eat- 
ness, 
mestie my; 
&e.); wae carded for that. shal in penne 
operations ne ceedings which i 
Purpose to 
CABBAGEWORTS. 
| of 
which 
the milk, &e., for the use of the er tom Stace I 
is their Tor 
an 
cr 
mo pe eet of Cabbage which produced a 1 
s, Tares, or Grass, At present the seed fro poo in feck the bondage sys' rth-e 
the Ta of demand is dear, 8d. to 1s. per ounce, but of En ne and the border “counties = a 
only create a demand for it, andit would b y f Scotland—eaeh ha 
price of Turni ed in a very short time, as it is faul aged to itself, whi, > Poss no hesitati 
equally g, and Id yield as as grea ab a stating 3 nothi mf bu t the co being so thi 
ight per acre. Fora spring crop. it should b g working classëš- 
the first week in April, and put out not later th d 
end of July. p ut in rows 18 a of unim pea schabls Bates as much as a l 
| apart, | i foot apart in the row; re on the Aprilja first-class sa ane horse and pointer, bee: ver 
following a plot so planted will present a solid mass of | dog, w will effect a cure or rem edy for or the ea ae 
vegetation “This Hate is e Tardy, no oe in | diti i 
g injured it; and as 
for Peara use meai to nothing i in cultivation 
We nae 2 hear of the failure of late of stubble | i 
urnips, a 
vegetable 
Greens ‘without i forming a hard Cabbage “which i in 
like that of ee last would be destroyed. 
Now these Colewo: e sown early in Yanks Wasa 
oe time of planti jac out are sE strong plants, 
would be found excellent feed for sheep poner | 
sse sa ir ba rd coon 
, and a inken, ‘othe or shed, — 
he cere in the following season 
ij qa va ‘manured and in 
left the midland counties, now more than 20 yea: ally di 
I think I that i in all my ‘petambulations | for that urpose, 
except in vigs I have not in = —_— le small = compact Cal hago} which may be planted 
time seen 10 of Drumh attle to 15 inches apart all ways with advan antage. 
Cabbage. I senitiaes pom gs: our dair iry a But most persons, gardeners as well as farmers an 
a herd bs choice short-hor used to do on this 
good hay, aad ‘that the bost Highland | 
stots or bullock used to 
feeds of Ca 
| cottagers, fall into sad blunders in plantin 
use, 
ba proto by the A aser and 
iA eme 
age ing them much m 
y.. Iplant out at 1 We Loe lass 
out Pe! alternate row for during 
winter and sprin 
lot of Cabbage 1] leit Of course this 
y 
locality sins the ine inherent p 
> | yet praetically Arid little has been 
e 
and T tate. the, R Splendid 
A gre eat many men who are pepe 
and acute observers take a one-sided view of mates 0 ; 
rtance wh: ff 
tives choose 
marriages 
locality ise gil are the maregbiey pn Sor 
ee legitimate results of an over¢ 
on? 
ts of men moving in the different ¥ 
nge 
ti 
of life present a pini 
with each oth 
—— 
Those whose i 
of agriculture’ | 
best ade 3 of housing 
insure Pe once their health and their comfort, b 
-| an increased quantity of — but seed ieheap i f pur 
-| Wew 
e expense of plan nting not 
opin ent crop ata = 
gel if not done is Pak n 
over a e game is nota 
crop which may be planted even agri- 
y | culturally with erent profit, but where rabbits abound 
jit is useless to attempt it, as they will eat the heart out 
