OctopER 27, 1860. ] 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
963 
anyth uing besides the article. in which they grow. A Notices to Co ARAN ndents. | ow a ALE, at 7d. per ‘Gallon, fine as 
fish thrives best i AN AGRICULTURAL PROBL A Landlord says a tenant has aroma e qual to Burton Tenpenny. This 
anything, roots keep best in their native element, liberty to sell straw iad expend th the money in artificial | new Pra i "Treatis se jis ea Derbyshire man of 28 years’ 
if the expression is allowable. In Scotland we be ave | manures. He selects Rape Cake, and makes his sheep per- | }2our at the spigot and tun in the best rewery in the 
known © Carrots somal Wiehe gro agate ghou the form the duties of “a manure aibeetontor™ Question—how ea y. Rey utensils required, only those for house- 
fre sha ia far are my interests as landlord protected by this mode of ree mae oma be the best and cheapest mode 
inter and a dug up ver, in open vio application of the manure? I think my tenant looks sharp | © Produce fine Ale ever made public, oy earings ® prot of ls. 
di te respect suggest, | after his own interest, but not having myse “ bowin| whe cce Me ick ak bent iflly printed in large ty 
where a contrary a oe that the Mangels| acquaintance with science,” I shall be glad of the solution of | DP e fres to ano st appr ie for 12 Penny Post stamps. ent 
the question by a scientific and practical agriculturist. | POSt ‘ree to any address. t to Fisuer & Son, Publishers, 
pct Swe des be covered with soil ‘only. And if you [Your interests are perfectly saf He tehast might Wn Kingsland, London, N.E. etab hed 1847,—Notice.—Just 
ant to thatch at all, let. the thatching be on | the top| sume the str: he chose, in like manner as he chooses to | 2PPended to this universally priz the Publican’s Plan 
of th consume the cake; the efthands of à portion of the straw to ange eva Gin without Distillation, aes allthe methods to 
‘ads barrani cake will be beneficial to both landlord and tenont.) | fhe Go dials and Nosta, toget E wi the! Peony Preach 
ensue. $S aes aa not ta ke mild | AUSTRALAS WHEAT ve to thank Mr. Wilson for a mag- | Ices, the Delightful Jom rance verages, and all ise Wrerich 
r nificent sam f Wheat, weighiug 66 to se lbs. per bubhol, American, and ish pdt ics. 
autumn, @ ere is a freshness belongin to the} and unsurpassable for spat = ur, form, and beauty of the ba hy 
outside tubers which cannot be otherwise retained. ain. It has howeve hr aromatic masts, oy} 1V poa B SEA ee PONDS, AQUA- 
r Mangels, nine feet wide forms a convenient base ; rived from neigh! RIUMS, rp, Ten ach, Dace, Perch, Chub, 
$ : pan mag oe "| Gugon Minnows, Gold shai Silver ish Eels, &c. To be had 
nd if this is dug out 15 inches dee dy of | 
i bt T T httle addi N PLAN “I received a few seeds in a| at Neg Ba te a hin Tackle Manufactory, 376, 
oi is ke oil, dug fi or cae t Sore ful, i a”. letter ‘rom ? ia. Nalang si Boia “Barbican, ees with | Strand, W. 
ion ‘om one side, is however needful, for a e following name, ‘Serradi pew § r p poor EJN Sic RA 
nine-inch $ ‘thickness over ‘the whole of the store. Few | and sandy soils.’ This small sample I had L Mae lished, G GARTEALDT ie NOV 
ag week of June, a a 3 it made but 
safer or mical modes can be adopted. T. | itt SARDINIA, eas on bic Se. $2 steniga, Just 
$ o de gioew ps r some time, but Sterwards became ve blished, s oa USTRATED AND 
wick, October 1 ineaca and HERI TEE che er and PIVE CATALOGUE, containing the Nam MIOR 
toader, and not the least hurt by the severe frost we } D have wje: ng min eni 
snips v. Potatoes.—Dr. Lankester, of the South 
ington Museum, thus writes to your contemporary | 
«In answer to your corres- 
eet 
Ken 
Bas Weekly Messenger. 
onde nt in J Som oe who rec ammende the employment of 
the call the | 
Potato, let me 
two Simi as articles T diet, They will then be 
f the price of 
Potatoes would be e any boon to t those whose tato might 
not = them to object to those roots as food. The 
analys ja one pound of each of these substances i is as 
; to Parsnips. 
Z. grains, | oz. grains. 
Flesh i t t 0 145 0 87 
Starch Bs oe ve + 2 200 0 245 
Sugar . .. si ok 0 214 0 210 
Fat .. os os .. .. 0 32 0 35 
Gum . . b. ʻi 0 27 0 52 
Woody fibre we .. 5 0 320 1 123 
aug oe . os èy 0 Sie 0 70 
1 13 53 
be ‘ian s ately: of this RE is A show how very 
inferior as an article of diet the Parsnip is as compared 
wi h the Potato.—To begin with—the flesh-forming 
matter is only about half what it is in the Potato, a 
ae ar what in rice; and one twelfth of what 
und Pota 
i v 
ips, e a pound of rice hea 
ns respectively as much nutriment as 
6 pp: 121b. of Parsnips. The n next tase we arrive 
at he starch, whic oh in plants which are no 
con sumed, as the Parsnip and Potato are, for thei 
nutritiv: 
find th t the Pot to | 
pro seg sabe AE H 
The subetita te for a rey, in i fey! is the woo ay 
fibre, which is is not employ: stem as food at all, 
ed in the 
it very indigestible 
they would prove too expensive 
pb a for the Potato at present.” M. S. 
aoa 
Calendar of Operations, 
us harvest of 
o 
F ELY, Oct, 1 f 1860 yet 
see a field of white 
weather, and 
thats we 
oF the 
o 
air dit first 
although somew! Lae PRA hi revues 
fortnight’s almost has again aves and 
prevented a completion of tions, D ring a tour 
in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire last week we saw a oe deal 
of-corn out, espec: Oats. In some hi ricts the 
some too Ca E ward teripereeaih nis agon. “A gon. White towing 
O backward to rij at all t 
has commeneed, but th s Weather is u S wg DE Aee 
seeding peek te a in 
maa l in our tour just E ae 7 D, We observ Ga ite 
Parae Raani ge lly x wretchec Some of the late 
TEMESA rather resembled Turni; beds than Turnip 
winter, Seana in the sprin ust Scarce, 
— tatoes are much ere gias abut = arorage crop The 
> rn trade for good qualities : ‘is firm, for low = ualities bad. 
ean cattle oid sheep are lower, Your Fen Reporter, 
aps 
ê bulbs were so exceeds ply small. With ppa d 
had. It is ve! 
oubt but it will come 
ar the genus Ornith 
sent to us under 
which was grow 
ry much like a Tare when gr g. 
m what I have seen, there 4 HS 
a x is plan 
, g Ma 
| H Spring | Mattress i is its being so Tas and € 
F i 
Throgen rt ton ERA pat free for six stamps.—JosE. 
Ee. 
ELASTIQUE PORT. 
He Ax "SON Mies gg a a method of making 
ttress portable. e great objection to the 
pcr ago 
no 
with the wet and eg of this pee Pome we cannot speak so | The SOMMIER ELASTIQUE PORTATI in tl 
highly ofits m a fodder corres ap a mt. separate parts, and when joined together has all the elasticity of 
Four-ACRE Piece: $ ane LioUs. By pan em doe seem very | the best Spring Mattress. Asit has no stuffing of wool or horse- 
difficult. You wish to have in piik gl are PA nted with | hair, it cannot harbour molhi to which the usual Spring 
Mangel Warsel, Balfan sere with Rape then getting mo nope is very liable ; the prices, also, are mu uch below those 
flower, to be followed by Cabbage; half an acre of aut: of the b st Sp pring Mattresses, viz. :— 
sown Vetches getting forward for ; half 8 fee l 3 £250 
sown with spring Vetches; half an acre sown with Carr ot, Sfeet6in. pCR tes A RC 
and 1 acre planted with Potatoes. Suppose eight half-acr 4 feet H ai Nisan ETTE 
pies with the following succession upon them :—1, Mangel % 4 feet 6 in. 5 s E z 800 
urzel, April till October ; ‘otatoes, February till| — pë feet » Me 3 50 
Oci tober ; 3, spring Vetches, April till August and September ; R 0 
4, Carrots, March till 
” 
6in 8 10 
ows BOUWE RLASTIQUE PORTATIF therefore combines 
— of elastici eanliness, portability, 
October ; 6, Potatoes (early sort), Febru: tember; 
7, Winter AE berg till June yoo followed by be shen nee 
pepa Aue till May; 8, Cabbage, June till November and | An Tilusirated ANET f Bodstends, Bedding, and Bed- 
ES Room are ro = y post on application, 
“cement s f oa ee grrr oth ne ae or 196, Tottenham Cont Boss, T. 
ammonia whic! heme 
20-Ibs. to 40 Ibs. of ammonia. You will fi oe oe A 'BINGL EY, NEW 
very fall pea of it by Professor. Way, in Blackie’s PATTERN TOOTH BRUSHES, Pon etrat ity oa 
Cyclopedia of Ay ture, art. Waste. ‘air Brushes, genuine Smyrna Sponges, and every ts 
Grass LAND: Rusticus. Your land probably needs drainage. Brush and Comb and Perfumery for the toile’ 
Yo onsen = am outfall a drains 7 feet deep. pt place celebra lkaline Tooth Powder, 2s. per box. 
them land 6 yards apart. There is nothi pi RY BOUQUET.—This delicious per- 
under our control ‘than, the v tion on our pa e was originally discovered by one o ortun “ys 
To a = ne ae Te d ner en mt iy aata It is made from wild flowers, cul on os 
will grow Clovers pasture. manured exclusively , ee 
with ammoniacal manures it will grow the ge owe ri Mey of t be A gears me md wl hte grows a ‘the 
sively. In AER erg good management and drainage will | of ertainty ay is the existence of Titania herself, is 
get rid of the Ne repared solely by METCALFE, Heese i & Co., Per- 
NGEL LEA ng w C. The following is the process for | fumers, &c., 130 B and ope ce rd Street, London, W.—In 
Br the Mee hehe: as recommended by “an oe Se a nA bottles, 2s., bs, 6d., and 5s. 
the selene aaas, —In taking stom Din | nsn ie A an d OR- SILVER =| 
to the bulb nd carefull; Cat The REAL NICKEL SILVER, in q r 
ches as sisia Sa 0 S Maa at! ale E ET 25 years ago by WILLIAM 8. BURTON, 
naii ini and of s ess vä — — on z — eee s Co., is all 
of the soil will allow. wever, tho land is nbiest to to sterling’ silver 
wet inthe winter, A wil be better to make enches mploy chat bach, DA A oA O ; oy 
shallow, and raise t ridge of the tops above tine poner no possib e test can = be s ed from real silver. 
than to have them Was the ws Same Sai speed l useful set, gua quality for finish and 
bein m m the e a y, p! go e in th layer | durability, as foll ene: 
of tops abou ches a tion py ad & ae ee 
The 1s kait over thent ante | portion of 1b, to aed : uE xE FE í 
every 4 cubic feet of tops: then put in another eg and ee 23 Fg “be: 
more salt, and so on layer after Foye bri g O 8 Soh BER 3 ase 
ridge at the top above the ground. When the Genabs i is thus Bom ja ™ Pa 
filled, the sides of the angle must be carefully cover reg See ~ -| — n 
mould beaten hard and smoot! ith the spade, an £84.)8 s d.| £s dj £8. d 
wards when cracks a a O EA oie pru 12 Table Forks “£5 --|1180/2 40/210 0215 0 
will the case as the fol T shea cs sere 12TableSpoons .. ..|1130/2 40/210 0) 215 0 
of the natural moisture, toni ey yee g filled he | 12 Dessert Forks .. -.| 1 40/1120/115 0117 0 
bank kept smooth and hard to shoot off the Yain ged: plo 12 Dessert Spoons --|1 40)1120/115 0117 0. 
water of winter. This is absolutely necessa the success | 12 Tea $S 2. -| 0160/1 20}1 5 01.1 7 0 
of the plan. When the trench is filled and completed, a| 6 Deoa TDO. 0100/0136015 0| 015 0 
drain must be dug all round it, to catch the water from the | 2 Sauce Ladles .. -.|0 60/0 80/0 9 00 9 6 
sides, and t ust be conveyed to the nearest ditch bya| 1 Gravy Spoon . --| 09 66}/0100/011 0| 012 @ 
aS r5 drain. The ner layers of a os os 2 Salt Spoons, gilt bowls.. 0 34/0 46/0 5 010 5 0 
e thicker than the up} Beh erwis ey wi the | 1 Mustard § t 
draining of the moisture, an undue pro} on of the bowl gi s 0 18/0 23j0 2 6926 
salt. The evaporation ofthe vegetable moisture m the mass | 1 Pair of Sugar Tongs -10 2610 86/0 4004 6 
and its perfect conservation will take six weeks, when it may Boon tog te geet E 40/1 76/110 O} 112 0 
at once be given to the cattle. The us quantity given to | 1 Butter Knife --|0 26/0 56/0 6 007 0 
cows is about one bushel per ‘day, and those who know their | 1 Soup Ladle --|0100/0170)017 0100 
value will not be more lavish of them. Every kind of} 1Sugar Sifter .. --/0 33)0 46)0 5 010 6 6 
nimal are fond of them, and bea e i other piel ae SRE REN 
them. But they are -particul ae pted to milch ci Total 9 19 9 |13 10 3 |14 19 6116 4 
both increasing the quantity ani mproving g the ‘quality í of Any article to be had singly at the same prices. An Oak 
‘They keep them in health, Se ha contain the F 
salt, and it is found that calves rear 
P iier pagel and n fast, 
the milk, es _ butter. 
g to ed | &e. 
apri spi 
uld be aj rot the lea 
rtance ol atom a 
na when coe certain to be 
need not be insisted on. I may say that Turn 
rks rendered equally available by subaiteng them 
same pi immense mass of food 
saved which is now completely wasted, the n 
ieee of having so large a quantity to be dis, 
Peas e Pop’ : Norwich. Tie1 quart of Peas loosely ina clo 
pat them: tt ali water and let 
quite tender, then beat ioe fine with a wooden 
0: an 
di 
meat you ini ve il 8 
i tie it, and turn it out. -Peas should 
ppt eta x me ~ er pare ae aa ooked. Nick 
rwich. An excellent soup 
1 pint of E Pian, 5 Banas of "Wash and ane he wer pik o 
pia y them in any kitel ae E ye tie 
spoousful of owa ene: ; then wait he whole into 
with the P 
e i soup is di ng ora! 
igs foot ‘is an food merch a) Boll i the whole five hours | Mews, 
15s. 
‘When Dishes, Cruet and Li 
ee prices. 
te U 
ua | dozen 
me f 
Ranges, Lamps, Gase) rays, rns, 
tables in 4 Eds Clocks, Table Cutlery, Baths, Toilet, are, Turnery, 
at 39, 
dall the bones cored for the pare, aoa | Show oor, at 2 a ney 
number of Knives, 
Covers and Corner 
t 
d a relative 
Tea re Cottee, aee Dish 
r Frames, &c., al irge 
All kinds of tei dime D by the patent 
LERY, NAER RANTED.—The i 
m 
assortment of TABLE ven ERY in the world, all war- 
ema 15. 
oe oE Plated Dessert rags 
them boil two hours to be ise, and of the new: 
h Carvers. He 
ILLIAM S&S. BURTON'S GENERAL 
NISHING IRONMONGERY CATALOGUE may be had 
tons orh of his il Aree OY Pot of Sterling Silvo prends of 0 itr 
and Britanni 
ia Metal 
ar Te apie 
Brass Bedst 
Jeon. Aoa, with Liste of Prices, and Plans of the 
jó, Oxford, Streety W; l, la, 2 
Perry’s s Place, 
1820. 
, London, s 
