ti 
60. i { $ 
‘Mar 5, 18 J THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ES 
dirty = it will be the more difficult to “clean in pro- the nt would be entitled to earn a yearly profit | point o a Ghee 
po ortion to the smallness of the seeds and the | for his Tivelihood at the rate of 10 fee or 2 and aay fee 2 ea imbneana kae whole paa met 
nature of the sharing APRA STC, the curvature | that the yearly expenditure of oA iente and | half the benefit of the product, that Hat er 5 iteelt 
and len: ength 0 n, and such like mechanical | the annual returns would be as follows :— being a substance which, derived from the very 
ifferences. soil to which it is d 
Ra soil _is returned, adds nothing to the 
That ne sage yak ky ee oa i, faeh ma E N with ihe Stuen crops, the £0 a, indigenous fertility of the staple, as is a by 
cattle, i i 
| A crane, E A ei. nar ise ie | Table manuring of the farm. See Ae 16 ee be badd ence, then, it may here 
certain. Our amplo 8 is a not unusual sample i Expenditure o connscted with the com crop 5. Se 19 8 a p A $ ife z É; peo I = cairn ion of 
sa a ee 9 4 etly infer from a i 
‘American seed, with all the usual ede, that we | Note.—In these sums are included the ordin nary hen under tha er that pips tele! = yr “4 
have seen accompanying its heavy crops on Re ae get ah ti a vale ohne ation of fuel ie taken place i i e rei at 
F z : 3 als and im 
alluvial banks of the Ohio, or the lake flats in seuals ati Whar aha Year $. aint me 7 2 burning, so we may conclude thai the more 
Gane anà when aah a this case, with all its | Returns f ‘from sales a. iniy stok sms 18 t Jass 13 4| abundant the remains of the vegetation of the 
weeds, it is not worth half the price of the ample fe farm exhibited in th 
] a e dung cour 
(9) of our table. At the same time we venture the | Balance yielding 10 per cent profit to the farmer must have been the absolute Cien tio of “the 
assertion that there is hardly a farmer but would} ° his ca of 3837/., over and “i the accom- hoicest rich : wn arts 
Mer: diaty ie ct ball the pri mnddatamerihe dwaling h ouseand ot other domestic choicest riches of the soil concentrated in the live 
p ie A opps. y a J e prige of Ki conveniences of the farm C e382 6 2| stock and corn yearly sent to market. From these 
to speak for themselves : the apin dict eH Thirdly, putting aside, now, t the corn part of f | observations; i aqust De anun antly obvious, that 
are a rule, not an exception A the market, a our this table, we shall next ezpound | ha details of | Dro han restora ages diast aee ie“ 
ee ne ney ee Toi RETEA A A cus the cattle crop portion of it a rather than restorative are the rinciples involved 
A entirely within the power of the agricul- | TABLE IL SHOWING THE AGGREGATE YEARLY EXPENSES OF ey get mr en hither roe of 
o rem “THE MANURE DEPARTMENTS OF THE FARM ; THE Par | °° BE yata menuro, ©, More. perep tible is, the 
turist t edy, and we still hope that the time 5 i nb i tion 
il] come whe h il k TICULARS OF EACH HEAD BEING GIVEN UNDER CORRES- importan nee of the point embodied in the ques ior 
wi n he wi rh what is and what is FONDERE, Nr i aes SCHEDULE or DETAILS at THE | which now naturall ts itself ; vheth 
not dirt, and not content himself with merely pay- a stat a decreased 8 asi: Luga eT S Ia in of this 
ing accordingly, but ae the dirty at any price. | No. of the Sane fertiliver ts oe er ae nas be 
Sch AEE 4 oa 
cheful, ___| less diminution of the area of the teed Soutiionly 
THE fi 1-|~ 1 | Expenses of tilling and sowing the root | £ 8 devoted to cattle crops, and an increased use of 
tural interest is , given in fall, thowgle occupying so ape bye: ar ee ‘operations extraneous fertilisers, ought not to be adopted? 
b : ; : : : A 
Jorgo 8 portiop ‘of our impression, as a specimen of ee on ea cation ee i de p With no intention of entering on this subject at 
pe Get aided. PAAPA which saab a mibien needs 2 A moiety. oh eae eet in large, it may be well, however, to illustrate its 
I eceived. It isin Op sho canion in i 
its further discussion, ane not as € ey ae ration ek T OE Ss: 10218 4 puiset of this mala patin the follo wine. fie 
H e conclusi k writer, that. we give 3 ad ERAO of tilling and ary tief Tables ; 
is pro inen over crop 67 0 0 
SURS to his es y. The main seat ne 4 Expense of Ronverting the green crops | TABLE HI. 
Jam of its green crop culture- — st inad Ze oe iy me me wee ee cent E A i 
eh by the pe woer from E he $ "ike dn eye Ts E ; Totala, 1 Fiat RGP: 
E iie gaitle ero grai ata chang > the g pplying it to the ster S 1, Estimated produce of 100} £ s. d| € s d| £ “8. a 
corn crops of his pears | mens shag es agai b tthe APP | four-course Potation i 
obvious AME ET of wh returns ton the! live i | 40 oo sa Pinbat po aero = 
stock which he feeds. 3 this, however, and to ; 1196 18 10 prea? a g 665 0 0} 613 0 
thar ner points w 2 must ee er he crea alter, 7, 8,9 BEES SENT 2, Estimated produce of, 100 
emar rkable | p. ct, on 13341. 16s., ee et Aes lld. bushels per acre = £ = eae 
toryof Fat English arable husbandry, miat peni M A ihe | pa eaea | o pital ee 
text books norjournals of the profession, nor even sac sh sind «gn a 
in the treatises ag to those points of agricul- fer r rl? Val he Ce ne 15 
tuzal policy which lead to the valuing of tenant- 10 mua ER ey from sales os ler a padi 
rights, h as mi i alam er nee raise ha or deter- ae ibe ee bia 
mined CONVERTING A somal t,he, spit he Dance 
EXTER? i i, wi aa MANU une? nurial benefits upao to be e sche AIK 
athe {i rm. o of the i Ril wha mate “A them = — poet 
1, 
693.14 s: reaping, dressing, and 
market: the Barl zle 
Po clusive o; S 
ad the annual ou ded Fro t 
giyen quantity af farm dung ? For jer acouret) i em 2 Enisa: fhe e fallow wing 
ga i 
this there at's d the apology, that not only pop yes PAN ne age rotati 
are the mnnt | involved. in the inquiry intr’ arly opbopiaated “to a 
cate and the matters of fact. difficult of ascertain. | branch of industry wh which “ae only yields no ron 
er s op ih moiety an ganap loss | 2. ere 
e point was compara es unimpo preni meh nting to 7007. res. And if the Sire 
Ar gey pitte _ Fefleotion, however, sitions 0 for this sli-infitod, heater rt sought for, itis L 
i Ww, u as extraneou patie ound to resolve itself into a mere blind belief an 
ety h äh in the LRN mar- : tore of ke system, that by no other), 
at, it thenceforward was a very plain duty|means can the s il in arable farmi 
W. : i gala owed to themselyes, to/efliciently kept in heart. But of this very in cleansing the farm 
ascertain by some method or other whether they costly article itself, it may be remarked, that ON iia Sel 
. conld not promote the yield of their farms at less while the use of a given quantity of any extraneous pie: 
cost and more plentifully, from extern Laney manure represents the positive addition cer l p 
an from the internal supply of their cattle tain amount of fertile matter to the soil, it is true PE AAA Me 
arson It is very true that were the oa a of farm dung that every atom of its mineral pital invested therein| 919 8 4 
o terminate in a verdict against t thes economy of| elements (and these according to the best kpiod ba eA ee D 
growing prepn pope for conversion into dung , the | ties cpnsnte its most vali tituents) Manure departments, 
prevailing device nene farming would A already be nomena’ from re identical source to ere es ba es ge 
shaken to its base, aad that or less difficulty | which thoy are applied, and thus are no more chatge for profit on ths 
pigri ensue in adjusting. eon. landlord a d | be regarded as ai re fal acquisitio on to Oe fertility of Gagttel Jaren: Spey: 
tenant fresh rules of management; hut how w greatly | the staple, than the ashes which the careful hous (pe Table IL) -o -428 5 Cpe Me 
fobeslamnecsted oot katy i be athe > up from the hear id ERTE es peels At rare 
P agricultural community in the |t ate, form any actual augmentation of th EIEN 
world should shirk the pAseencian at lb a art t ion k fo ege ‘uel. Nor ts it less Sette that from the | thf, ee 
at we have here raised. | very large pro ortion of the choicest riches of lek gs pr aa.) 
marea Saa kimo the ungracions office of the soil, peasy abeneted in ae condition of melon WEN 
that we have mooted this unseemly and, | corn and butcher's meat, as- well as from |® The proportion of capital 
ry very rejudicial ignorance on a matter the unthrifty waste vinaidental tà ‘the cattle sant shecees ipy by. the eet 1192.19 7| 518 & 
B englis dry npecnliarly, is of great | each years dunging, instea oi ing en ire, iş| 7. The ig Proportion of capital ; 
4 a ustrate a mode of|at best a very par n to the fiel of whats | ee ie 
of S F iye the point raised |i K a z year, had bee a = 
i "aay ler to. Gea a starting point or or | trodden down remains $ the 
what Mey ty to sonent, | industrial success in the husbandry of cs 
Henctionl 2 matt Fpothetical and| Nay, more; of this merely sidan comm 
ra oase of a thoro this purpose we will mi farther reduced remainder on 
iy rea 
els n crops, since the Roots and 
on so cons 
ethe 
Eaa sad oultiycted erprise rot 
an ths br k anki ay as probably to leave no more bag a mere moie 
cour 
an now less relied on, system of vee available j the cereal mem MEEA A TABLE IV. 
Secondly e assu ge the yearly aaoo: of dung 5 5 0 meg geet aos DF ase 
would pa Cia pap torres mity with 1 these premises, w sina a farm cres to be T peds Oats at 6l 58 
r say preli , that this fom follows that Sealy 937 of these sae apse rn | vals perso. E by ae Pee ea. S. 
ze pital of 38377. see No. 7 and 9 of | crops (being at the rate of no more t ns, 
ase to be given next week), o Loge a ae 31, 10s. per acre) ; so that while in Total produce `.. 
