6—1852. | ETHE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
91 
above estimate shows the entire cost of produc- 
ein favour of 
88 s, 138. 6 ee 
the land of a good ae of Swedes and Carrots as 
Produce of 1 Acre des Swedes. ;, Produce of 1 Aere of Ca 
20 tons, at 6s, per to pi 0 : 25 tons, at 7s, per ton £815 155 0 
23 tons tops, p pet 5 0 6 tons tops, at 38 0 
Balance in A 
Ss — 
ä 59§⁊vũ.K recenee 
— 
9 15 0 
0 13 6 8 6 
Balance in favour of 
£6 1 18 6 Carrots £2 14 6 
The balance in favour — 1 27. 148. 6d. per acre, 
e rag sheep on e land, I consider fair, m 
of the lea, phe being on one-si 
. — “of Carrots, i erefore not at all in unison with 
the r analysis given by Professor Johnston, 
which gives rather e than one-third in favour of 
Carr 
I 
ue by impro rovement of t 
deepening the soil, in — and 4 27 — cro — 
and also an e value left in the land 
ioh we ar 
egree of |S 
een more extensive, 
nown for many years, yet 
its cultivation has been —— to a few particular 
districts, J. Blundell. 
Home Correspondence. 
Coch Fowls. eee se a in a late Number, 
some remarks by Mr. Baily, of en — to 
Cochin China fowls, he will, I hope, perm 
correct w 
t J eonceive to be a me Ps ee | 
the white variety of that „breed, He 3 — The 
whi and I am disposed 
to consider them as such, seeing that ¢ hey prod 
none > white eo r. 
have n etter 5 — pann ago 
— cia I state 
Cochin China of M 
ma cock 
+ Ewel sapo in that 
compared 
hey y should “retain their 
ark fowls 
| 
| 
r breeds, was, that 
pure white te eolour, though: — oi 
exactly bred alike, and it would be an i —— 
to ascertain 
he progeny— 
t not having been the result in Ae. Herbert's expe- 
rience. E. F. IV. 
Agriculture. How is it to be accounted for th 
sowed in that land, and received in the same year 
fold, and the Lord blessed him onour 
barns = — with plenty, 
ee in ition — of the 
e Golden Drop is shorter in the 
ickset.“ I reply to z Alden 
ent; see at Piper s Thickset is from 6 to 12 inches 
traw than the en Drop—if by that 
Piper's Thickset. J. D. Piper. 
i 
gh for t ney, 
considerably diminished by 
in 
| eight — is ees suficien 
by | over asil 
n use to be a 
irregular distribution of seed, either — or in ing, t 
the soil d ap may very 3 —— ; and also in the state of 
- tha land 
roo 
Bailyjeould not, Í think, 
weighing 
| loads were di 
„ and we provided fresh seed, and were 
quarters of an hour, till you can no longer bear your 
finger i in — a Tih tia the vessels with — knuckles 
sou — it is then ready for 
s in the dairy to = 
immer, and kept fo 
week, without turning 
t be then = Prag — >- i 
calls Sa Praz — 10 m 
t of ane d 
sm 00 hay 
is in full milk; pe by this 1 the dairy maid, 
— ying my ‘family of 17 with abundance of milk and 
ream, can make 17 — of putter presió week. 8 
itis s an immense saving both i and labour 
butter is much —.— 2 or saska — turning 
sour than any other kind. I shall be glad — answer 
may be given in you 
ed, the better and the m 
pam, spre 
arge a surface] as 
allow, admitting of the de 
e 
the 
pth of from 8 to 4 inches, 
1 2 appeared to n 
I had he = —. variously ac- 
oted cn 
the 
me to be v 
counted fo 
mixed it with a liberal supply of turf ashes until the 
seeds were well separated, eal the 
sprinkled with water and turn 
ixi dai 
eri cond and fourt h dys: the seeds 
us aer separat . and in a state to run mors i 
and regularly through , The lend was then 
made firm — — ng, iu order that the seed should be 
and-also 
each 
reae or hot boatth will me, 
A., We 
The ‘Cultivation pe the Carrot.—The nopne and |i 
mass was freely | affec 
turning and 
eek, with a = 
som 
ooden cover = the milk-pail in- 
tead of a loch, ‘which absorbs the 
t, and have the 
In pan last week’s Gazette a 
correspondent inviten s „engges tions he best 
quickest mode of gett 
salt on Jan y 
very near the sea, I have had several pr practical — 
de that the ‘soil is 2 of retaining 
salt fro in the fact — two 
sea, pe oa impregna 
every year, when — tides 
— 
earest the surface will — receive the pag and the 
n would be assisted by the land being 
to pasture for 
—— of pl 
could readily imbibe all the ere eon may fall, 
— the necessity of E any to escape by 
ace drain 
w far an a of mem woi 
to i 
in 
present. In y. — 
oun ‘that wold will n 
nduce higher 
terest of 
deposi 
near the sur — Wale seed, was dri lled in rows 18 inches 
apart, and there followed an — and very regular 
o plant over the entire ace. After horse-hoeing, the crop 
hss hand-weeded, e the i eee of bee ving the pla — | 
inches a in the t maturi 
toa admit of the 
terest of the industrial cae of the eountry that it 
should 0. will — an old subscriber 
to en issue with 2 on these points. ep 
of the most learned geologists as to the strata in which 
sone gold — be found, aad also in 
gen scareit 
erene its 
y, have falsified by facts. 
— . eee 
in Ca 
fy be 
d if 15,000,000/. of gold 
euere is found. to be equally rich in . precious 
Saxon race 
ging, w e roots were much clos 
intended, over a considerable poping 
Before the end of August the 
dense mass of dark 2 a ase 
a which Saving 1 d to the hary 
Oct eel our Carrot crop, w 
— a foir one — preceding year, at 156. = —_ we | 
offered 208. this season, seeing the crop vy 
T was soon apparent t that good men could hardly 
operate 
will ~ brought to “bear r on the several ie. — mineral 
wealth, for 5 first time in the world’s history, disclosed 
t 
the LAE e how far 
e ad 2 r otherwise 
relations in 2 — — =e shall confine 
myself to its effect between ustrial classes 
anid the publie ered 
7 
N 44 * . 
— ; and I = 
rate more than 1s. Gd. a day, the roots were so much more 
humerous than usual, from the cause I have mentioned. 
r circum of erat ify, 
the time should ever come when 
Ue TUE 
of loads set down, which were as —.— as they eould 
be made. 
ing machine, and entire of the seven 
vided by seven to get at an average weig 
of the loads, l the restilé was a otal weight-of 31 
weather, which is un- 
onsidered it must — eens 
about to sow the 
ground 8 when, on a close tion, — wc 
the earth in various places, the seed was discovered 
be in a — of vegetation. It was not ot fully up under 
ent consolidation of the soil 2 sowing. 
wever, was as abu —5 regular as 
with the exception of tw 
— 
| —— 3 5 — — 
d though the 
ve never | nev 
ecovered ; an ugh erop was . the 
1 
when led from the land. These results clearly indicate 
the advantage of of 
isha eee 
surface, which are er 
weights off the levers of the drill. 
same = of sowing our Swedes and 
season exception of the — 4 and wetting 
the 2 with similar success. C. Lawrenc 
—As s00 as the brought into the dairy 
appearance 
With de w the. apparatus, tin vesse 0 
t for necne the milk ; they form 
oire on tery to the heat of 8 
at least be continued for heap 
The land sown with Carrots bad been manured — 
13 — autumn with i. one-horse carts of fresh. . e 
and ploughed in immediately. 
The say some dreamers 
as 
' necessary t0 to 
wane seed, kept the seed so long in | tra 
to 9 
ber that the 
n and the currency restricted for his a at a time 
as scarce and year 
urnips last 
- im 
An Efectual 1 to prevent Milk 5 of apes li 
il in 
er once again; and as 
n is not now the charm, but gold, it is — 
say that the rise in the price of Wheat, if 
it n occur, may van expected to accompany a gene- 
n the various produetions of ind „and in 
raw material itself, To — i 
uarter, and 4,500,000 quarters of Wheat will 
the interest of the debt. m- 
standard of gold, 
when gold w ear increasing in 
e bargain — aad has been ob- 
nation 2 ge this, notwi ‘the 
products 
scarcity. 
— by the 
—— the 
lepreciation in the 
attendant on free — e 
gold, from intindi causes, Fee depreciated 
and fall even ith — worth of silver, ounce ah oo ounce, 
the fu ndh older content with his Other 
— 
with 
the pumping ou 
of the well, will not 
th out of the gni and, if 
ao a — which mu e 
e d d may, in a stare measure; be deter- 
