490 
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
San 26, 1860. 
thr sina 
for ay ~ Men employed by the ve, ¢ or day 
occasion: 
rag constituted. By Order of the Council, H. | 
| HALL DARE, Secretary. 
Committee, from which 
assistants are paid in ordinary 2s. a day, or| The report of the Finance . ii 
a trifle over er sometimes but not mga and it was the financial conditio seve ser} Lacing Me. ap) iting Ay 
T s to hut kel di uld | Half-Yearly Account, “cxing fr ytd 1st of July to the 31st of 
have been drawn he w T3 men ae pn nir 
by the week and thoa hy he yer ie fia 8 er Balan wn Soe of the. sre? ikea £2047 18 7 
yngwn, near Narbe; embro tty Cash Balance in han y 
apes Ang told by natur: alists frequently ‘change Dividends on Stoc i : m y o 
Say residence, and move from one o, nother iit i Lie Gompos ys les 
reas and they è are correct in t vations Members’ Life-Compositions .. -> 125 8:8 
My farm ard, oa was never before troubled by these Members’ Subscriptions,.  .. + h p a's 
as take og net aay Country Meetin (Warwick) i w 4 5407 13 ê 
Sig "E battalions. It may a also be true that the Bale of fandride vc a eae 
ian prisoner when at home was able to paralyse SON 
and render them Tyne so a they might be roe ENN 
oa te Noi beg : AEE eike ovel am nally any ror Wruttaxt FISHER HOBBS, i Finance Committee. 
„have my vas pot R. MILWARD, 
a wag “and disposed ‘to play a he upon his captors, as I 
have. pe found his method of proceeding to give me 
e facilities for slaughtering the intruders. The 
bstance was eaten, but tho shovel was not 
ne brown before 
credulous servani 5 
zor — 
AL AGRICULTURAL Ne ENGLAND. 
comme nded to 
0) 
m (Signed) 
nt | 
Pristcwie: 
Establishment, gg Rent, Rates, and Leste 
ariago a ang Carriage . 
Advert: ents n .. 
Journal T Te 
Essay 
£48 4 
1 
fet tt 
Prizes a 
5 ae a Grant Goxtra wi ` «peat 
Chemical igs 
red (paid i in error) z 
Mer Warwick) . ae 
Eons 
ry ite of 'etty Cash 
Petty Cash n A oA for r by late S xy 
ce in 
= 
or 5 acres of 
he Qir Howard) 
had left crops of Wheat in his own ighbourhood,, 
raised by the an system of atiii Mera ] looked 
kird as AoT as what he saw at Lois-Weed 
believed that Mr. Smith managed h 
land in the best possible manner ; but 
e 
arrived at the same conclusion he did, which was that 
the ate oud utte er eee in this country, 
That it he gentlem: ho practised it he would 
not stihl to dispute, feo there was Bri eason 
to believe that he was a truth-lo’ ovin gm f the 
Club were to occu the "as ion of 
the subject, he did not think that they would be able 
o evolve any from it 
ey s their far 
r. F. Hobbs. — According to what that eo oo jo so 
aa described by Mr and all 
ditet of e en he shoul say fay there “cout 
be no advantage in it to the practical farmer, 
recollected visiting, some 15 or 20 years ago, a friend, 
who called = ge ion toa es Be tes which had 
een tin Se Ss for. upwards of 
50 years, but ith 2 i pekeficial t tg for it had 
m caught the attention oft a va rt no one. 
med to 
ecreta 
Balance in the hands of the Bankers, Dec. 31, 1859 133 
Petty-Cash Balance in hand, Dec. 31, 1859.. 
Examined, audited, and found correct, this 18th day 
of May, 1860. 
WILLIAM AsTB 
JORN ale, se gi 
HENR RBE 
grie Auditors on the part of 
the Society. 
Beste the ERG PETER EAE. y votes the meeting 
rated. 
— ub 
s- Weedon | y 
Pieced 
r y T. dtr ie A and certai 
System of heat Soto al tse of eta |} proposition, therefore, to raise Wh 
er n 
y 
msfo rd, considered th 
8477 13 5 | his 
m, 
gene ort ‘epptieats on re altogether ited, 
Mr. Smith was acting with the very 
e felt persuaded bee i one 
uch 
as there was an i maaohonts supply of Tabet | in the 
country, whilst if asm a regal in Mase by peg 
practice, it was that t hey: grew uch Whea 
nae no , and Wheat had no 
a 
best intentions ; 
could adopt the 
f me 
The 
a it was an exhanting one. 
a pore Ne eas Fn etal to a referen 
is made elsewhere, it was adopted. 
SRE ORT. 
cogent at one io particular period of the year. ‘Still, he 
t was 
all read of it in Jethro Tull. 
er kE 
thoug En that it ight. be oivana on teenie sly 
upon : a oes all scale. » 
no | 58 acr The 
t the rate of 10s. 113d. in thelr 
hi een "pda into the Society 5 cope 
e funded capital, which ROR at I 10,0007, has bee: 
fu 8 investment t 
ee per Cen 
The to tag in Octobe 
We ought to fin ish sowing in 
DA £ 
, using the fork. The cost 
er Kae is pd under 4l. ; the 
e lahour together make a 
of the manual boar 
manual labour and h 
J, 15s. 
2 | soil i is = on 
rtion of 
senate! 
eae a grea 
-= teati efly of a loam: 
Bat 
er 
oward dG Biddentian) “en that he he” went |t 
igging the in- | France, 
Abou 
The depth of forking is about ie inches. The | j 
One wr pba pro- |s 
su 
oamy | toh 
ols but even bert sires | were doi oing as effectively 
ve tine means, pth good Renan a aie 
secured good roo cco pe few 
oat 800 acras 
Tto point Sit gop e the. fal yin td nets ‘mt 
it ‘struck him that one ri a of W 
was mec — 
lanted. Thi 
$ 
which thi 
him as if it would be all down 
apart, ‘with one-half the 
down tooi Weed 
the (I b, ean 
cinds ath ull Mr. Smith unlike 
any landlo: rds, sueidiubabty ‘ner ted it In 
nnd he ( ee , Howard) Pani he a abo borne out 
y the it was as 
Whea 
any pi a could pony desire; ones 
th 
Seg aa They 
would be his remark; 
t ¥ 
Ebai: SOAR Toht “7 1 To h 
noteik 
rest Mr. 
, | had been 
ken up for 14 years, it must b Se 
ita poems As to the portion which was c 
| Smith's house, mi which he stated was new rand that 
bro 
ence ie tane imi tare will succeed in con. 
agers a palio with efficien 
ency an and 
he arrangements for the Canterbury Meeting, 
d during agian agar oth of 
satisfactorily. Implemen 
tunity should not 
agriculture peculiar to 
induced to accept the 
= or pie: 
een 
of a eame Sini, to a 
hing on the Kentish o 
ps, Wool, and pret 
have decided, sub- 
offer 
distribated in pie fr for piip 
turnrise system, as 
of Live 
a mi Ara Kent, have th they 
could not do ¢ than defer to tl de poms 
expressed wishes of the aie that ver pedal oppor- 
ae to the | s 
- | to m. Therefore, 
upon new land, al only seven crops, they could 
hardly expect i ex considering the 
ormed 
t | 4 or 5 acres were 
of | He 
ques 
those crops, hitin going a 
so far as the last few years wi 
means paid the em so wel ell. 
r another, which, 
ere concerned, had 
most farmers begja say that | 
ty of the soil. The whole oe orth same ea 
perfo: coathman, &e. bet 
y uced their one 
ether they would be doing right i in Testu month’s di 
a rath fi 
to 
„TF the > Lois-Weedon ea 
they 
| were | 
Tn it shou ag’ no 
utting i in operation 
After na 
Smith, 0 
e state that be nex 
abs 
ig ty the at visited Mr. 
reat | the ee Wheat soils. 
aunty | upon the 
cation of steam rok in and that too upon 
He felt quite nsec that 
acious clay soi ils with which many present | m 
te of.| Weedon sy 
e Woolston par 
tem of alteratious—thetwo de Bon he 
peas to gettin an amount as 
as required by th the e Tois Weald 
Wes 
to work wall; 
anual „labo! 
—no farmer would consider ‘hi compensa 
mote mself sated i 
(growing ‘the quantity of which Mr. Smith boasted. 
was, he considered, att erl 
question. If they could 
were now contained in farm leases m very m 
altered and Easy se ies ey all Ese that a iron 
prejudice exi sted i against the vine 
l taking two white strar ‘crops $ in succession, and i ap- 
$ 
Woolston “thea 1 
right. In his opinion the Lois was only _ 
pete Ok tet 
|as i A è concur: t ion 
Mr. Hobbs that peca no use + tine goats h 
[to the Leis-Weedon system upon many estates. "He 
Mr. Corbet was poa that, as the discussicn had 
1 eee Oe an a ee a ra i i 
———— A 
