SEPTEMBER 29, 1860.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
881 
t (weather nitting). There | m 
which lot area bast stooked. 
f 
4 
a Sgro S sm cl Be remove the cut c before the 
machine oe 
i ther fields, or tying up what was cut the day 
oer the rate of 9 for No..9 and 14 for No. 7 per a 
No. 9 only requires the gate of field p ned to commen 
work, and grain cut by i is generally in the stack in 
more feminine | appearance, answer for the cow, though 
I en add full era of udder, not fles shy, 
well 
which Mr. Wallis has successfully fought yin the 
natural obstacles of the ground. One _ large t 
t teats. good veins. 
a few mag mbers 
. itip ej alas spar he anae rules at 
sult : 
ikai A fand: 
at D 
4 
The followi ving Iti is now in a sort of t 
who has kind ndly d. D: 
he water passing slowly off; the posh was wet and 
Fy. now 
to te them is for 
Se “the pim rc of slipper It is Nero the cultivated fields to re 
ape 
ree years ago, and they a 
now what that slippery ‘ree over , Which „one ould 
t it must be 
No. 9 has at advanta, ha shows, and eg? J the res 
i dth ofcut, and idle men cannot shirk when 
ged is fal widt tifa, it stops immediately that they with difficulty make his wa b 
f le heir cut of 6 feet 6 inc The horses that yas ipe tiles have been the land 
rked No. 9 at this competition wi their usual daily | Head = ‘Moderate length, tthe. and rather | reclaimed. These st i Jeane 3 a A the total 
bt k with the machine next morning. The numbers in each dished, with clear horns, and flesh. of the ‘Atini wit Fy ef 
Mi n within parentheses denote the relative position of each * coloured nose—not black. cos ining s bs acre. t this 
' Ghina under the different columns. Expenses calcu- | Neck .. . 1 Being well sprung from shoulders, | 200 acres of the lands of Drishane have been drained 
ted at the rate of 12s. per day for two and t rses and siightly arched. ithin the last three . The aid of machinery an 
th each machine, and 2s, per day pee each eet stooker. Neck . fe Former be ra sian alla E plements, too, has bee rgely secure à s Diishane 
3 ds i 
and 
By computing, it will be seen 3 “ ” sheds in one oi 
to ti 1 ut th at top, “points” well normed er n 
$4 miles ner hour, } No. ! Ape iaa AANA tho rate rateo and. not prominent. Crops being | collectior of agricultural appliances. Hornsby ’s corn 
miles —Thurston, Dunbar, 5th Sept., 1 [It will ery full. ide, and fall, | Arill; Smith and Ashby’s hay tedding pire bt and 
¢ ed that our correspondent has onimatad the points | Breast . " Z coming well Sever, wide, and fu rake ; Young’s, of Ayr, Turnip- sowing machine ; 
siy from the usual course—the smallness ae pe Back . ° readth and levelness. E a 
numbers indicating superiority.] North British Agriculturist. | Loin .. = >.. 4 Breadth, and being well covered, not | M Pherson s, machine for making wire fences ; Wood’s 
low. 
Rap Ene: Hocks -. ir . 2 Breadth, and being at right angles Smith’s Steam Cultivator, obtained thro 
ugh ‘Mr. 
Farmers’ ( Clubs. 2 < Rumps.. ae tee pagel salt | T. M’Kenzie, local agent for the Messrs. Howard, is in 
AA NEA ~ a i h pigs - 9 Length, "levelness, aid ‘being well | practical en ty at oe fe: pparatus as i 
Chri: ai efore this Clu e following ed up. stands in the ready for wor pm. bag th 
Supplementary aper: Having dwelt uk opta Thigh Ae aiae naa danen: sb. being welt principal parts, viz., a stationary steam-engine, an iron 
e origin of the improved breed o t-horns, I| Twists .. 3 Coming w the body of 
ad comply with the wishes of the last meeting to | Hock .. 1 Being well hea anid not turned yee wf = some minor parts conlating of anchors, 
ive a continuation with a reference to a scale of the | Flank . 3 Full and coming well forward. snatch- is and porters. On 
gr tial breed, which may lead Back ribs .. 8 Well sprung from back, and round. = tl ndlass. This oft 
p fa perfect anial a S ore TS Fore ribs .. 3 Round, and opeaiog well down. a cart s ie win 
to determining their relative value, so pei Quality and bair 4 Skin not bein ing too thin, but soft and phat er horizontally on Sidlepmadent sale, ‘but 
ment of a set of rules for the guida of judges of Col 1 Pn el hair long and silky. laced close ether: one hauls in the w bi 
«cattle shore. 1 as th ee general s ttistntion of | Oden ilk vessel 3 Well $ for rmed teats and udder, large | Which the implement is drawn, and at the ie pds time 
the competitors. tre ~~ Ipi —_ the other d eldin > the strain of the rope, 
capricio us decisions of the pr ese A DEN tice, cannot be | wy, Atkinson said he igroei “with most of the points turns the ot ther way and pa When the imple- 
t Darlington in | which Mr. over which it 
March, 1797, when Charles Colling’s bull Favourite, |4 as he to go, a man attending on the win dlass t 
aa a two-year-old, m E smiet ome dee aie mini- 
m- prize of two gu “ib e posi- 
tion must have been as he 
teknowledged s 
tury a 
E 
Dris —On ogre E. 
about half a a mile to ibe eastward wie mes ae of weg | 
m | street, stands Dris the 
- | now entire 
a long head. 
in favour ‘of a very y ong biat for it indicated 
deficiency of weight. and bri oiin to gear the drum that before was paying 
out, and so reverses the action of the implement. The 
a very strong iaa 
| cultivating ‘implement consists c of a 
adya 
pair of pg with podcast eligi 
guid d ed, and about the 
ane oo are | of which the depth is regulated. 
“it fe son Mr. ired depth 
857 filled 
randa. 
p the river Finnow and 
me Castle, ientenan 
He ioe a all D.L. The Dri a 
by the Colonel’s 
John UR. $. Wallis, t the praca to in 
f High-Sheriff of i os 
inches. In front 
which it is Sadie 
r, by means 
Colonel 
p 
the Tees, pe all oth 
of form, * aptitude to fatten, as well as fitness sg ‘the 
Antal 
eat deal | in 
n 
of this land i is let in far rms rying i zA size from torn from its position, and more or 
Ffi 
acres. 
Onte 
as ae to the- grazier. As “the sit quick 
The houses of the tenants are remarkably pi, ak 
41 
rie ih 
4 P 
Mr. Miaa is now engaged 
cattle et was no ‘one to to obian 
iugo b bone and 
wiry Sore conseanenthi Gs f mp 
had 
f people, 
in fitting o =p Eee? -room for iaoe 
n his ploy- 
onl k for delica fat in ad each ill have the privilege 
the e: Py h sii fe a AES Those now engaged with him him 
weigh the most et broaght the nigh ps aime: 7 the are a very intelligent class of men well able to oe land 
shambles. Nor has the mild and docile te emper f the his efforts for their amelioration, | Mr. Wallis now y and only 
breed rendered eT De ha: ed, and is read e reception 
whose well filled pail renders them grateful for Boan: land are worked by him on a five-course- shift. The | of the seed, it being considered that the value of the 
Se returns of good feeding and good treatment. J saa ue yie is the Norfolk four-course, that | work when d dry is superior to two 
ust not pass by their eee for the dair, y; no 
a | or one dragging or scarifying. The 
po selves to aAa pr ie - Pion dor tA 
of 1 gi 
0 
milk, and 
ants from the improved S Short-horns ; Seg the 
bre often loses sight of thi is merit i in ‘selecting his 
e plan 
taking the Norfolk four-course asa basis, to alter it 
uare 
into a five- -course, and thereby get three, corn cropa in | sı a 
ees, through h hollows and over 
a 
that this object ought to be kept in view, -as I hold | c 
with many authorities that a tendency to lay on fat is 
eep.. A great advantage crete with the 
ustom. Mr. a Dipy up his lea a ae a en ea is that if placed in a central position it will 
put i in the Seb 3 This is Paar ang oy Turn 
et he eat in the third 
omptibie 
is given to her food ‘and other treatment. 
be h ilkin; 
vith a good dairy 
Many 
being removed. Thea Drishane was w. Lod 
laid down “with Grass seeds, oe -dressed with oe soe aie bs by 
the 
instances could given of a heavy mi 
becoming fat in a short time when 
ao: noe bu holt like a 
az 
is di 
ungainly animals, diffi tten. On 
little dwarfed stunted oo, are equally | i 
i eeding. The Shart-' i 
; hair Bis u 
we 
tribe have more or 
e characters will, with allowances for the 
ich hens farmers who came 
an 8-horse power dothlv qplababtagiosmes manufactured by 
the Messrs wae ayton ani Tuesday last 
Every crop gets ired | th 
ther direct tly or indirectly, that is ie tiem peal dung or | 
ERE manure. Of the Phospho-Peruvian, as supplied 
rdon of ep i — is much purpose. 
fitt “qt ah 
of snipe. | 
f requi 
ear had 
Pee 
Such a fis was it that t the former tenant, 
Sis 
pee and pull the animals out with a 
| was eter last = by Mr. Wallis, gyi br 
Ser On Tuesday the 
as kept going on that oa “ie ‘following 
m Thursday, at nes 
die their results, 
etic acres we a% mp twice over, st sal 
ie of foots IEA sae borne it 
thn, i a sto one, amounted fr | is a dep to use a five tined i e » but i ne 
2 as prevent instance only three tines were n 
‘seeding considered — too rei Soe land. 
hours was 
eld of 15 ac 
rte o of fe 
fhe 15 a 
rill work of r 862. in in 
sA, 
i 
ced in his pocket, an 
the drill ea the ayn " ai against tnis ting the 
tlay ~— engage ce ere im ple ent. 
“ots i to th very 
aree of the PA dona sec n astonished | During Tuesday, Wednesday, and ls A std of Phraday 
to look at what a considered that the apparatus was work, th 
d tl “yi 
oer en 
the folly going on at E e at Is. a cwt., cost 5s. eared abont i apparatus 
Sapio 
ngly 
m 
| pri aeien ons he there would be no crop a at all he apparatus 
Lt att], 
nts , 
