722 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
[Aveusr 4, 1860, 
Farringdon the sheet of water zing | 
the ie 
CS TEE 
was of a 
bach ge and at Crea, pecan and other cians 
exten w ses inflicted, a nd preat num pede of 
Jamilies ape pe Tha 
condition, that there have been onten 
months, sack AN. of the hay hace of Se 
away. lan: 
r3e. bien 
Much d in Epsom, Dartfo rd, 
” On the North Kent t kalay, 
mg 
aiie of our farm 
we have sc 
a R aa | it is perhaps maae becomin: g 
strip the mother country in the management and 
s, it will that 
RDR under 
k 
ool her 
so—has actually excelled the instructor.” 
rops. Part X. Blackie & Co. 
nstruction, until | proceeds, the sa 
in Saali e 
mity 
in the ordinary steeping, under a 
be it is ma but genera 
o 
pI 
Our Farm Cro & 
Pisara Wilson $ 10th rer enen an elal 
say on the cu ultivation and management of th 
its botan 
overspr 
"At Gui karane | 
ynia for separating the fi 
th 
manageme 
merely, traces of acetic acid bei eing ne D 
SA 
n Be elgium, i its s ordinary cultivation here, the varions 
bre 
Aves +} antities, In 
e seed 
‘after the oil 
wives | es been expunged. The ‘alin is a passage deserip- of « P 
ally in fennel 
neon rum,’ > might pore be colle 
g wati 
used now 
preparation 
cted in eon. 
ft 
“The foregoing is a sample of what 
pn of the country in those disastrous seas: ys from 
847 to 1854, during vie it is not too much to say 
that, of property to the amount of many O which | 
was destri oyed, a a large portion would have been save ed | 
riei into effect.” 
; n Glimpses of 
A i H. Tucker, 
&e. Albany. 
We heve lately had the pleasure and advantage | of 
ge ed, 
oc EEN in every ‘th 
ved, 
anial details— 
the 
in 
| mal’ no Meat: u 
first, 
e stem 
“ 
These ous processes—which, as has already been | 
obse: 
iffe r er Widely both i in principles and in their | 
y be Mhi clas sed under two hea ads: 
t them in | and 
e grea adva 
offered over the “Sanwa system 
the fon} 
4 
ec 
i A mhich ti 
ng the que Sh 
mprovement Society unde 
yeasty in gs Bs 
a dr and henta] in which mo 
a 
seis 
a ‘which destr 
oys, of so rely 
rt seat cementing gepen by which th several | prop: 
e stra > A es toget 
Of the first but 
ods 
x characteristics of our English agriculture as t 
ed to a well <r eo eye. Whik 
stat 
for 
n 
E er’s rei “A 
urselves, and t 
y foreigners will be 
a wn grea ead 
ith 9 ag it is perhaps diely his it Feka of 
ecial far 
© 
© 
However 
good, and the expenses in some suc 
exceed the value of the produe i it wou! * appear th: 
neficially trial 
= ch the ature mne attaches ; 
of these reports we shall aao 
ive in our 
Bias 
ther re is a diffiew culty in n steeping it properly, or where 
The condition NI the farm labourer—the statistics 
and 
f 
produce—detailed descriptions of selected 
Ib ae quir ed. 
hil “ The second, the SESS lor wet process, i 
and must be senasine 
anent i ee vement of our soils by | 
e perma 
a reference t 
very d different ways, 
ar ed | T 
mim three distinct heads, as in watts a different prin- | belief th: 
is that whe ere, me rh reasonably 
The first 
ur eat | 
Ts Tusker s 
etween English and 
Which he concludes, is 
y possesses of his own, to 
Kent, 
his capital to 
abet our climatic and other seg the same purpose 
pay Bs I ah the good fortune an a slowly or rapidly according to 
“he “does at home, | noxious =" are generated ; 
mple een kno 
the second, where it is the aare fisan “of the 
nitrogenised extractive sateen y the agency of 
on pa solvents; the third, where simply water, 
of steam, is made use of 
is effected by si 
eated or in the sh pe 
. 
+ f- tats soa 
n 
comparative ae E bet in which the flowing, iis 
stra 
h cases frequently ment, 
101 lea 
y p may be 
where the raw PESEN is ca inferior penny where | steeped 
ga 
mitte 
effected | in 
Sy — a en have drawn a —— of the ae 
Fo ae had hi 
s to the ho 
ould be weakened, 
m 3. Tt linen ate from the fibre would not bleach 
perl 
pn Senvata to the first objection, the committe 
that. the experiments* al that tl 
d the eff increasit 
oo 
S st 
fo] 
ER 
favoura is. 
ax steeped in 
6 lea yer and that by the hots 
In th 
gave 
exper 
ordin Pati a pan 
water system spun 
e sec coot experiment, the p 
60 = oat be bg 
— 
ss 
lea. The 
an extensive bl 
t- 
a rk e a 
ERES 
+I 
nero se concluded 
at one reasonable Srema had been anra Ser 
T 
Illustrated ty io 
ry Homeopathy. 
M.R.C.V.S., &e. 
packer: 7 a a 
77, Fleet Street, 
We have here a naii of the kind to which M 
fi 
‘list 
ican 
the temperat 
at here ated of | 
pes this KUANG | 
which a 
a Pis 
she’ ee e E as ne 
et he would 
region ia doubt that ‘the. ria she 
with oyery 
nnually prepare so carefully would show, 
costly, and never altogether efficient in their poets 
while 7 the third tha Separ ation may be effected with- 
oes ete > i 
5 profesion 
the use í 
Ai 
t 
some degree of authority onn 
rits and advantages of the two courses 0 
Moves number of cases of pleuro ‘pieumoniga 
il fever, among other diseases are described. 
ith the follow gen 
Low 
eon! 
bly greai any of our moderately Paes 
a districts, tam it ay can, higher prices a md, mi 
e rent has bee aA ducted f 
nglish. an be uit the. taxes for the ‘a nish , crown 
1 ond for ey oy Hia Legh se for anybody t that 
to have inheri right of levying 
ould be r 
PEDERE 
Pe 
f pla ant, and all its several parts be left in an 
of the 
available conditio on. 
“Of thes 
| advantages of homeopathy : — 
eure means to heal. ure 
disease and not the patients constitution., The 
AON 
e fir h 
teeping,’ is oe stat, or still m may be 
universal method hay whi h Flax fibre is prepare ed in 
ever s grown, Lag only improye- 
ace kps records 
having been of quite recent dat 
and suffi which emi es exist. i! 
sonal a ng Itc more cases t 
Such is my own experience oe ae ig ees 
t ese — 
m 
aii 
given; it appears to me be warrante on general “The y advance | tried bo . E D 
View of the agriculture of the two countries, while, at modan puna have made is H the bor Pora A of an | one know orribil ruel all aioe c measures K 
the time, not pretend a kesy it with | increased and regular temperature for tÀ the lo ower an and | ate. es string ana A over-drng a DOAR e 
istics—the definite record SoTa ed facts—for paas bn apa ture of the ay deh which | 28 sensitive to eady at 
there are none of our own a; ad fe ew that are the steeping is commonly carried “This s system, acutely, ar ments a of tort torture a which the mm 
ailable here of thei ade. read in : — — g that bono a 
to come is the improved English agri- pask the old, as we are now able to a the o a the hi ar a and acere ed system, and that some 
culture of onr aa -with that measure of f perfe ct = the e year, „in al- Seth part0 asap d allopathy, with what i indignation on. wool 
cess it has hg aba and that m ESE of certainty that | the h far more eer a v very man receive wir ip ey ~ 
now attends its successes—has been merely a gradual | to the isk cy say cases, | with inc eraat on his horse, dog! stom, howeret 
and natural some of the causes and features | returns from the aor operated upon.” makes CERPNY d familiar, pase Taunfianty "heads i : 
of which I have been attempting to indicate, out of a| The description of the mod es by steeping and dew- ence. 4, the single remedy. ‘ 
confusion far greater than that as pathy drug is given at a time; its i cn 
our ans efforts not interfered with by teins mixed with different 
vancemen en throw- | met 
ane Akm emacan we sey hoe dev. | merated mgruous substa: s, however, is no 
he tage the mechanical skill of our| “The T of r iriti employing heated water | consistent with the account of Mr. Moore's owi 
ere our farming is ote for nt r iin to. Behand, who teok eyin a practice min some he cases he has rae 
> x a a a Iaa, iving o0; 
very ee ONENE, aae ng | pathy gives monstrous A abstancesto | 
has possessed for hi sat Si n $ : 7 ‘re cite poisonous such as “purging, s weating, Åe | 
not in a degree Hao in * * * 6, it economises os strength. Whatever lowes f i 
which she now possesses, in her far greater wealth, her | 30 at work in in di wie cm hanes ferent ts of Trel: Silah iro robs the body of its power to resist the weak- | È 
Apanocsstic  proiectins f for country life, and hoes com- | in this country, aayat oo upon from ol ot Tiaoa 2 
act population merican | tons of straw an ally. _ in 1 thi th Te f fer- Lisbur : ; 
ricalture |m mentation is tl a sid vs pay is noe eS vot Pax lx sta, Ater boing ste ped and diie. : 
Id b independent of external temper mre being g RON same straw steeped by the leaped atray garo Ces ( 
score or two of years behind the farmers of Great 
by 
tally 
placed under the control of the aren who c n easily | 5 
Britain, = ds ype in 
our backward whatever it may be, is la 
owing to the Hatna circumstances of our country, in- 
cluding, as I have before said, that lack of capital from 
the verdict 
argely tity o 
ity of Flax oper upon, 
article he wishes A p3 uce. AT impo. 
time is effected, from aie hours for the finer P qualities tó 
96 igre ba the coarsi o 
from 
nly 1 
o three vea aa The work, be 
pearl on > all the year round, instead o of only à during the 
witch o we have suffered in all pursuits, the distance of 
our markets and the low prices they have eye s 
populated territory, and a 
za get away from the farm, and live by 
ind 
is room to derive en- 
tev for upon the comparison, | 
oie ae the same purpose are afterwards enu- |! 
| mni 
f steed in th the 
— gig a lbs. of Flax straw 
e hot-water steep, and 
ordi v BA 
dressed 
H at the 
SPa n at Belfast Let open gave a rae 1 Is 
the pie: returns i the p saai wiar (Schenck’s 
changes which tons undergo w. 
deye- | 90°, and prora ig at will by the operai 
out- jev the same destructive 
| Pee ‘steep’ is kept up between a ca 
itor. 
ever, we have fi 
opii ed. The d g ks | rpc -a dea PTR 
e regu iiid iB OF 100 tons on the average 
the * a and oy again are tre deta rmined W By: seeing, SARS ee and husk, leaving 
y the | — ca, of supply and The “2. By steeping, the 67 Sori ET 
