Serreser 15, 1860.| THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,  _ 843 
i feat 4 feet in mR and supposed to contain | ab least t | to these papers are extremely ath Bs and a | greater sheep were. b abaeatel weighed, The shee ep in Lot L, 
30 ton: dinary hay | ab sae was never seen than the with pulp, weighed— 
at 16 stone as Ibs. each, I suppose) | ‘per cubic ya ard, or size of a capital letter, Which is p ge 88 Bhp Nod cc ly silt co} boanie. dah ibs, 
224 he said, was pheri of a shovel curd Caka » IERE SE aE E a T 
‘compact’ in the stack, so clos osely errs indeed th tha ie Dr. Vo ele ker next Tia on = value of Mangel ” 4 anas eget ee ir ” 
pad repeatedly found -it ae trial W The conclusions to which Md Biao O ae Si 
tes per cubic yard, or 3 Ihe. Thi is remarkably | he is led by “ analy ses. 
heavy. He finds-great a s antage, he thinks, in early ces fies weight for ‘weight, pole similar to that “ The semen in ot iA psi i upon pa Mangels aor a 
cutting, never letting the Grass get into ful 1 flower. ve the same feeding 3.lbs, 
best..pasture is a deep alluvial loam, but the rae fh eek Mangel Wurzels. ý Kant ey ae 
vol ony. in is irr igated, is’ naturally a thin soil and . That such „pu lp, ho owever, is „a refuse material : eendi 165-8 ~ id % 
z seiis the sewage of the Veee of Burley flows, and “To | prove that the pulp examined by me is not equa im tal weight .. a eos. 
, is simply Jasia Aah by being admitted at the highest | in nu utritive value to the ` good Man ngels, I need only “The experiment began on: the 22d of. Marchyand 
point, a gentle knoll, whence fa urrows having a very i ee re terminated es nthe 10th of: May, when no more pulp 
olh nt c: wa it over the whole, the water then cent. more a matter than the pulp. In materials could..:be ned, the distillery having stopped. its 
tar uch ida as exists in tito ss or pulp, | opera atio ovis: 
di sufficien “The first lot received per day 11. of, Linseed. cake, 
io, aan as f at oe mentioned, the cba taal ve a ton of por ae, is as eae itious asa ton of Fs elok “hay chaff, o r 41b.of cake, and.1 1b. of hay 
is grazed until May, and then another e ensues | Mangels. - _The average- peren ntage: moet dry matter si r sheep, andas hate as) the sheep felt inclined 
angels examined by me is 12.05. th F i 
towing: takes place. cate poet therefore o 270 ad of ary Canes i a io. se be second a 
l On 
Teg 
i wos o 
í ‘ 91.31, which leaves 8.69 of solid matter in 100 parts of 7.07 
K eviews, ig 
pulp. 
moms Sadi : 
3 : k z 
Journal of the Tailh, p eigai Society. 76} lbs. more DE eading-at matter, more than 
ray. one- third » more "Tooting. matter, than in 1 ton of pulp. z 
_ Pare. Lavon sai repo of a or tira papers Unless therefore the dry matters ee veo the again fediat:5 ay a] ee in the evening; Lot I. with 
well jus | Pt greatly sup Mangels | 21bs, < Clover-hay mixed up with pulp; Lot Il/with 
Sin, ve h decided advantage over the pulp which I 2 Ibs. o fo -hay -mixed with sliced M 
Mr. ae a most ame PTEN farmer, the -chaff with pulp, sliced root 
the number with an account of the agricultur eof | ee “iti is not dificult to proye that this e ease, sales =e —_— edit ity ofp Ud rots wero used, 4 
his county , describing its ‘climate, its geology, its soils fI Mangels Ea times lordor toi insure the entire consumption of the hay 
its till and soluble pestinous o ‘compo ounds, make A care, however r, was taken to Keep the feeding: 
firm buildings—its stock, cepa and labourers. p In ree per fectly 4 nee root we have 38 per cent. more of troughs ¢ constant ly suppli ed with. ‘pulp ‘an sliced roo 
this last point he i is especially fitted to give an opin. these substances than i the au “The | latter indeed peet 
for no man — “Bates volent interest in the | e | hard : ny : rahe h pulp and roots as they Hikoi. The 
er nes of thos “who om: e-em, Bebe wehbe eo RI Nie er p have | pulp aad Mangel whith were given to the sheep were of 
ae is AOU DY valis ALU ed. 
uotes : — soluble: non- “nitrogenised s bs tances in the root itself, “The fo gh of food -w, ere consumed 
“From all the prog which T have felt it my duty However, leaving the question as to © comparative durin ng tbe toe experimental 7 periód of 7 weeks :— 
to give, many may infer that the general condition of | value of t the soluble non-nitrogenised matters tot a p fed upon pulp consumed ae lbs. of 
er is > may | pulp a su ed, we’ have at alle Cl $ Badd ai : 
look for per poe results, I.should be sorry to | 38 per cent, of fattening a ane very readily- digestible |21 = Sat dg i ret asker ait ok que 
teate such an erroneous impression, and distinctly state | materials i a favour of the ro ai 4 sheep fed upon ‘Mangels, consuméd 
Anticipate nothing of the kind until the moral | be placed he 7 per cent. ae nous ¢ compounds, And | i lbs E Gather, chaff, “9 Ibs. of Linsced-cake, 
in - i i se tay. E in has te the 30 per ons of tarado fibre, which the meee contains | 33 tate = qr. 19 Ibs of Man: 
higher standar ere Sympathy and | more t the he question, therefore, would 
fendship which ss hy q > “Tt will He o “301 rved that the 
ana alaei. 
rh 
e'shesp in the first lot 
n han 
‘shoul unite the employer and em- | a pear to Fanci Steelt simply to this: Is 7 cent. of | consumed 1 0 Ibs. m ore pulp than the quautity of 
ppe: per 
does not exist, or only in a. very small degree, | albuminous compoun 30 per cent. of Sone Pat: yootéienten As Each pA 
c ser wren as valuable as 38. ah cent. of sugar? But was weighed o on the 12th of ‘April,’ 26th “of “April, and 
i n do fnot really quite so simple; for, in comparing the Pat May 10th. ‘The wei te if a? sheep at these periods, 
their ‘final: incr: is given inst jí 
the fibre of the root with that oft the ies we e hare assu ned Pei 
hai e > eae includ E padanie 
“wih ander e action-of sul- 
nent for a pe: a staff rod BE tt and, a a 'jadicions |D Fot sed, TA Beet foot cise, are 
Sutin s of a achineiy; so to readily ioa sugar, and thus ‘ed 
he farm t to require- extr a hands in-the summer soluble. “The "Gbro of the; he. pulps after deduct ing thet in- 
which remain attached 
~ $2 upon a3 mere machines, whoiare ans valued for | to me nee almost sy ‘of f woody fibre. Weight 
ount of work they ea aia d t that they | for weight, th 
netrusted, treated kindly, helped and zes ected, pte e than the crude fibre of the pulp. But e 
il then as they help and respect them supposing the crude fibte of the pulp to be waite 
ee that our “interest will be theire; an asa) nutritious with the crade fibre of the root, I am not 
ties affo them for improvement, | the less convinced that this 38 per céht. of soluble 
eee and the formation of industri ious. habits, | non-nitrogenous matters (consisting chiefly of sugar) 
tained in the latter will go ag in fainas 
2 butcher’s-meat than the 7 per cent. album 
course Of this” i 
mctice which prevails of- “sowing - aes Beans | the ‘former ; ; and for this reaso n— acer we “oie 
gether, on whieh the editor remarks,“ I consider this fain wind n that the » Os ace in its natural ‘state con- 
‘ery'slovenly ae ‘He might as well have con. 
vo the growth f Peas altogether, for ihi is cer- | alb t tl f the 
1 
e cleanest s } $ 
paso we presume, has arisen from bis supposin, 
There the Beang Peas vare n-togeth petane Seirak es pulp. -We ahali bit see how a 
drilled together the P Peas are supported, and the these speculations: are borne out by actua al experien | 
Meroe can work between the rows 
n. 
opi nion, which à appea o be pretty generally enter: 11602 | soy 
A full and instructive t by'M 
prize report is given by’ Mr. | tained’ b oer writers, ‘that little or no feeding vilis “ rs thus: thai a 
iater, on the condition: in= which. the soil should be | is to Seca bed to. sugar, and that, chiefly on this | gained = Trappes tas tiat a than: the" A sheep fed 
the seed is CINA. to it. We extract. a | account, the p y be con sidered to be as nu tritious | upon pulp, although the nsumed 2 ewts 
ie relating tothe t he growth of winter Beans, t 1’ Wei of roots. ‘In’ my opinion the pes re of pulp. of i í tho“ firs imil 
A in hae be at- once directed :— is by’ ifar“ the ws important t. constituet Heien t = som lost. 3 Ibs. in w “This 
>» Ynter. Beans-the sam t 3 an) ‘armers who judg panan 
ok s ed at The ploughing Pend land steal their Swedes or Mangels b the more or less sweet t 
Por tilo ground, tale The ced NG Co Eh Shay rot any cela iaatindtivaly 
5 9 . F a 
as near the middle of October as possible, after sens ee T further the account which he gives 
or te been taken to get. the ground. firm. ~-Tt “is |actunl-trinle of this food iu sheep. feeding, b Meh peg 
rnness in the soil, and tate sowing of Winter boratory results are fully out :— respects; E confirm s i 
have e minds'of mañy'dgainst “ Lehall now Sewage y arn Be Whieb T)insti- opinion to which T haveb led byt alys 
_morevextended: growth. > Afim seed-bedis as | tuted witha» testing: ‘practically the relative | pip and of Mangel Warza? = : 
‘for the stability of thee pean as'we have seen ein reket of "Mangel and of pulp, the latter being |" We shall return on another occasion to" the: Other 
or the Wheat erop, but this point is frequently | the of a distillery in whieh Leplay’s system was | | papers inthis Part ofthe Journal. i 
-In 'sowi: this variety of Bean, thetwider-+a (net beers 
oe necessary for the purpose of |. « Eight 
0 capital essays follow on m vip mt Sokoli | ae are. The are periment beg ZAR and dei Lim; Lin- | Zhe i fel 
all p ji — angel fed fi d | weakest ‘class in t oe pecan res 
venents E e ahiry practice, inlet tie es of | pon: a cpel pulp, Clover-hay, aga $ ! ite "tee Eam Of bie ae ice OF correct 
cheesemaker, rais cheese-turner, t! aceto- | cake, Pane ipeltitldary tri or fog bone ils. -Ho woll romeine 
Er cheese apparat us, &e, The illustrations | the sheep gradually to ‘heir diet. pre 10 aes ‘the principles too frequently preva 
Le 
TR 
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