Ap hoes. the districts in in which t 
THE GARDENERS’ 
he 
or vo a in 
t| to 
’ hs 6? 
Our ion was giv t whether ; i 
t had meia Tinted i 
per or granted b landlord, 
the interests of the latter were petty safe. 
r might consume „the straw in like | 
AA 
|, manure.’ anu 
o ae tio: 
Seal to a landlord and te 
is| with our reply, a 
| another form :—‘‘ Will a given sum of m 
n of the straw red ria ey) be bene- 
ur correspondent, horace. 'is not satisfied | 
and he repeats his questio 
ERON a AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
i tenden 
| 
no doub a 
y Ris iu 
[Noyemper 10, 1860. 
“The other | analysis ¢ given v would ; 
The green marl is not yer 
analysis of the towel er ones ‘itn 
in Berkshire. 
fata : ey: ulol. 
aan he a 
P and a 
ospheti the 
together, 80 that we T ie 
insoluble i in acids, On po 
N 
cy to run 
| anomaly of a soil with 1 
ith 19. 06 in the lower gault), resti 
subsoil of ru bble or 
de. 
ng on a pery 
rock, requ iring a certain “peri 
a 
pende d on Rape-cake bas eaten by sheep ‘toa as | 
e land as if expended on artificial | 
be are veiling to a be aee e aa le | 
matter is thrown out as a mere a Pe we 
= sanguine that in gon ood Pass ds it may lead to | 
ry important re results, J, B. 
N was addressed to us by a 
manures a applied ane p 
e answer now depends — a the | 
manure selected and the wants o oil. The 
mo 
a corres- 
manure is properly selected. If Rape-cake be 
"Ghose ee it is digs applied directly as a manure | 
nd) ev then the answer may be yea or 
i the | o! 
nay, t 
ap gie eraa oF Da y eek being pro- 
announcement of all this being in 
r dig out the Pek 2 or put in sha hor. daa i 
s | prevent injury from the water bt) 
the urface, though it will graduall pa 
rth, either on the land Ail or i ie a int shy ar 
| which it flows from 
his stratum hale f low escarpments | 
h aoa a cir falling with an 
ETS Tape p ar «gr. 
E 
& 
to ind the surface of beds which have resisted t) 
action that has swept away the v r layers with | 
which they were once covered, Thus bg ag 
£ it is left t to en: m thi 
E oi: s n 
e 
h 
cient 
shins, those at 
ith drift 
land be clayey we heer ce 
of the or cage ie e filled w 
rtainly ts being 
li ht Pay Peg’! 
Sih 34 
eee directly ; if it be 
ould prefer its being applied by sheep 
and folded on the land. No doubt it wil: not in] 
avau uuem 
ap of oth for any J be accompanied b 
y the intima- | 
e cases ab Ags 
reen sons covered 
In som 
Troe Bae Panariaa A the g 
the same Thames rift ae is sprong a widely 
with 
a f it wi 
pei = part of it will be built up in the bodies |o | 
h will be 
er in the e vale. That this 
A SfE +h 
a charge will be made y 
a Tog a-piece will 
pac fA 
n be 
wi nough. 
vantages of a payment are da t iors 
will be kept away, “that those in earnest will 
be the more determined to make use of ne 
opportunities for which they pay; and that 
teachers will feel more pare, k pnoy rH 
ance and earnest work, x ’ none are 
needed, beyond the indersanding that paymerft 
is expected on the first evenin the week, nd 
that the ort. will be closed a quarter BA an 
commencem male: 4 
e the result net of pie ‘hut of the 
rsonal joast en of w ka; 
ne kind | ¢ 
lessons phra. a boy can write 
well enough to write fon. dictation, he is master 
of an admirable me own improvement 
and instruction. ‘And Pag is no more useful | Y 
how : 
ainte sence wan Gaai 
asit ‘the work is better | the ah 
ee 
Bu. 
mainder 
efieacious, o nner of its application. | 
n, the question W. one of literal and rigid | ; 
e answer phe e that thel, 
arda een landlord and tenant pant not 
We su 
of CE of ve various ro it has s passed ie 
|or which were broken up in its course; thus when it 
s fo ch 
h ti ssary my 
notice this fact, (as agricultural “geologists "ine a 
or 
ntially exceeded, ea hw it is for the 
interest of the la win as of t 
aan the sale o. nw, 
k, 
ete d as 
disposition i in bollie “may seem capricious; sof their 
ch i 
anure, eet allow 
‘ade 
“ artificial ” 
in fact between the 
cussed in any other t 
xt | 
ost | 
foo 
be ed 
are spent on either “í artificial ” EPG 
ma 
sted oe the "pope of the caevator iarl ker 
e own agreeme 
Eak iaar strictly Ek 
benefiting himself provided 
es not agaty injure his landlord. 
THE AGRICULTURE OF BERKSHIRE. 
THE REY. J. C, OLUTTERBUCK, OF LONG WITTENHAM, 
984.) 
(Co; ‘ontinued in n De 
nV, 
Poe: 
the » agrienlturist they hav: 
miy Aon 
de epres sand at and al 
its A a the alk, not a ne she pee: ion, a 
gan. w ne wae pair al Posy -i 
harg are BORRA aie 
ich the ope 
as undulations 
eceive 
Gault 
a EES E ‘of the lower chalk, we pass into the 
vale— —the Vale of White » Hors se, with 
e exact pet A 
Agus. than that which h 
e Bro 3 5. attending the school should be olf 
that a certain degree 
chalk overlying the upper a i 
city distinguished. ksk: unpractised e 
to confound the 
A epee particles give a green tint to the soil. _ The 
sary ; tha y 
write oug. 
dilute muriatic acid, “will show 
en 
keep an nent t — i lanour ay an 
at the same. tim 
$ 
labour whieh ia em thus eens tee is + en 
double wes ordinary wages of an agricultur 
We have been able within the 
kan 
ali ae, eB. of eee acquired | 
poe! otha id e evening 
should be m 
E E an Py ool, so as to 
me 
he nha PE was proposed the 
other day, and the ptio which we offered has 
not En satisfacto A landlord permits ae 
teat o o his sarbe bjo lan to sell straw and expend 
ar H 
ee 
On 
says:—* I think my mira "looks 
sharp.after his own. interest ; but not haying even 
acquaintance” with seience I must ask 
_ others to say how far my interests as landlord are 
| Protected by. this. made of application of the 
pad snsplnbia 3 in acids in the 
pa of green i sand, rubble o or roc ck, a compar req wit th 
the chalk. There can b b 
all its historic | drift o 
ee 
**Glory of the County;” the 
payor 4 Young called the red land of ge 
inhabitants of Te p 
s chalk or upper gravel drift, 
doitvration is that t of a lighter soil. "This s giv 
tion to the farming where these smi and pom sheer 
green sands form one or various occu upay i mi: On ie 
re is no rigid adherence ade rotation of 
identity between these 
beds in Berkshire oe pie € oF 
which ¢ sete Agri 
ety’s 
l analysis i is given in the Boy 
s Journ al, vol. a A 
A Ae imen sabmitted to th 
y him to be EE with 
e soft — rock above gault, the 
PAA BER er E SARN eas an extract :— “fiat 
bined with a lit tter Be 
Se seman 
8 
| the breadth is es devs to s 
Mangels, & 
id 
is followed b 
3 Ad 
Wheat 
es. 45 E 
season by Turnips, Mustar. 
fed by sheep prepare the way for wpe 
Bea cn heavier Yan 
sor and a thir matter of ju j 
ent or convenience. Meas pote these ioe 
the encloanres, ‘now happily with few sppentions 
few comparatively speaking w e kent d kosa 
ame 
ee 
or 
ow 
rs oe 
Car arb ag ¢ 
Sulphuric wad. ze 
lorine if 
she ot elem 
ae 
twos 
eO 
fin A 
Magnesia” 
Potash .. 
sheep 
at theoe times the fallow and y avd dang was al 
character of the soil vites a liberty of “toe 
which too often degenerates into ne 
t. There ich H 
Paope 
TER 
Soda 
Protóxide a and Peroxide of Iron 
aie rot in acids, 42.81 
ad 
S2eorn8 
Lime 
esia 
Pea” 
Soda 
Alumina, ; with a little oxide ofi iron 
Silicic acid and sand .. 
id 
ornowo 
g 
It is spoken of as one of the richest maa of the 
whole chalk series, a a cee adapted tor “the 
Apa Whe t, Beans, &e. 
spas 
ida farmer 
baie sh 
— of H 
cular mentione cepa to this b 
with bed o 
pes en sand, whieh § is enat applicable to the same jha Pa | 
e | by a simple chemical experiment and it ‘will be 
consist of abont one-half lime and and the T ander the 
