THE AGRICULTURAL. GAZETTE. 
of having Wheat in t , vigorous growth, a crop of winter deep ans. 
fallow interval of 3 feet eac ch Fine row. So | | part of the field there was 
that there is this startling | iari which yielded last 
grain were ua 
9—1852. | 141 
Ty ak present diffic ulties, and of enabling this count? 
o go on for the future with greater prosperity than 
ever to al classes,” 
The 
In another 
re of winter Beans, 
aut 
nd, in ee 
pa 
=] 
4 
oO 
8 
E 
er 
8 
— 
-y 
© 
2 
= 
' 
s of unnecessary 
rop. I value m 
with such a as . 1 2 = hesitate to charge will nisada ki so long as deeds are 
ever known a it in my b ee a at 27. One word more, not in skill or am 
ee and I have done. the ope — of my letter I have 
5 the Sond hae balance- erz of the operation of my tit 
four acre 
manured quan 
land, from the first | th 
acco 
may 
pai 
4 ee t “th a result, perhaps, o onsideration 
and thought) than for one unital long, and ver- 
ll. | bose, are little skill, 7 — . i labour, 
the first tillage | An Act of Parliament 
i 8 and 9 Vic 
reby pro 
: * N 
I | fo de 
for my Wheat I spoke, incorrectly. I m 
inorganic manure for a — 2 
e same four 
ange, expenses ma 
further the cause of truth if we wai 
— ed, ee — produce sold.—I am, Sir, be 
botter f 
© 
2 
0 title 
rainage an ves on. When it rains very | contract "entered into 
d ex-/| tenant should not, even 5 
er- courses. We had heavy | be much more short an —.— e 
e 14th inst. On the 13th, | our own part, without proti ing to ted with 
a and 15th, drains discharged abundantly 85 all the legal difficulties which — the — we do not 
n similar soils, ridged up by d 3 ot be as easil Basar rred 
was in the straw and the dung to do this? Let rains fro 
go to some cunning’ men, able and willing to teach, 
ontai 
an 
p. Difficulties, im sebiliies, an and objections of 
ask further, elev an of cultivated, | dee poss 
common sense swill tell — that ‘de we or loamy sub- 
soil of his Wheat land contains the very same mine eral 
cota a | reformer, — any other person aim 
must expect and 8 E 
opposition ; but | in the <= he will, if judicious, pre 
ry ed 
The ot ther subjects to 
* 
of fertility, with that manure whi ch h es from his astic e 
yard, or buys in the market. Here, then, i is Woe 3 drew from the apparent discrepancy was, that ve Mr. Stewart are 
j he subsoil A the | its an s evaporation even the mode of professional remuneration, the Court of 
t r | Chancery, the Fe Wi of copyholds, which we 
before the end of 
w 
el 
se, — ea clay bottom, an 
e than valueless. But, lay bare 
To do more than that at the 
iz 
m 
© 
— 
id 
So 
to our heavy lands. Tares do ere could | brated speech 
be little evaporation Hys the finely harrowed young 
speak, | Wheats, or ould not i discharged so 
sol itself, confirmed deep 
8 
on law refor 
and cons are nourished and made fraitfal by the activity of 
— of fertility in Mr. Stewart. 
ite su ka 
provided we knew how we might iea avail our- 
—the ee of paca 
he kno 
acre required for trenching. Having 
mineral supply of food, gr — open the 8 for a 
and summer fa low, 
in comet stagnant water into 
market 
iptree Hall, Jan. 27. 
Reblen tes, 
uy 
ers, havin 
| conveckently ho 
ir position 2 be 
have remained s 
fr 
51 E the, sack of 157 k 
hased a 
over, have 
* 
sellers. 
* 
| Wednesday 
« that the late decline in the price of flour in the Paris 
42 occasioned by i 
2 qu 
mredi from 50 f. to 
greater stock than they could 
been compelled to Lineage 
Prices, bags hs 
Flour 
nality 
Mr. Nesbit, ‘is, in fact, "ae gen as to Reform in at Br 1 of the Law. s the 
_ air, And when the Wheat plant — ge fallow, ths By James Stewart, Esq. 2d Edi Stevens and | agric 1 districts — that the — ‘of bee has 
additional materials accumulated from the air i — Norton. 8 ae 131 fallen 1 f. per 100 kilog i In the 
-the crop, perhaps, by two or three quarters per a Tus work is issue of some suggestions upon the | Vosges the fall has been 2 f. the 100 kil mes, At 
Carbon and nitrogen are wanted, and the atmosphere same subject, — by the author 10 years ago, Dijon an Grey likewise the complete cessation of all 
~ Contains them both, in the forms of ammonia and with * matter, sho what has been done in demand for Alsace ioned a backward mo 
: i ; ith every of rain, ry th y — since that time, and what still heat has risen in the 17 f. 50 e. to 18 f. the 
descent of the dew, and every fall of snow, they are | remains to kilogrammes, in consequence of a b: demand for 
| h ro there retained,| With res pe w facilitating the transfer of real |the north of France and Belgi our 
either for future 
property, which is the subject of the second chapter, 
up by d anit 
growing plant. All that is ted is, to give to each | and that in which our alot are most interested, the the inister 
w im A plant fair play, by letting in upon it sun | author says : pe for the delivery of Wheat at Metz, Thionville, 
and air; to afford i ots width m depth to pasture | Within the last ten years great progress has bee Longwy, but the prices demanded varying from. 
in, and to keep the surface of il open and free made, not, I am afraid, in facilitating the transfer of 28 f. to 30 f. the quintal, exceeding the maximum fixed: 
Do this, and, will do land in this country, but in bringing home to the by the inister, no adjudication took place. — 
the rest. But, if I use no what mes ieee 1 the importance of this subject. This, in ra tey cattle markets continue to be „ sps 
of the straw? Ido not sell it. No armer, I con- exaggerated. I do not hesitate to and sales are Pores Bis effected at . 
ceive, wood do so, though he could get “ee it al a ton, | my “conviction, | — er e result of more than 25 years’ 2 to the graziers 
f because 3 . its — 7 8 experie veyancer, and after great conside- — — — — 
I have yeas d and ration of F the — that the present law, which i 
| never: could get it 2 40s. "Wet shen t is tur e free transfer of land, its expense = aly; à „m to aro, they {08 to be de ‘con 
r crops that require forcing, but which deprive the a ner of the value of his the gricultor. vthing bayoni —— 
Wheat wil not mt Fee | to my | E and 2 of 1 he aly — any unless 
earry 0 years’ purchase, and that the pretences 
its richn and b it deep in 5 of frechold iad should bring in the market, 3 ] s 
ira clay” With what rosule 2- My | average, 40 TT.! painon ia enting ot ots performed br banging them n 
and all my principal root crops, are planted —— believe, „ that a few judicious alterations in the | rooms, not as in ordinary cas heated with sloves — but ia 
wee law n en t ! 
—— 
oth — — them before ven meh wer the ape, in 
; 3 
5 
1 x realise this 
smoke rooms where sawdu-t . ac mg — 
t out the vast of our readers will give you 
the landowner, mee ti y 3 : WGR. The p „ but 
, when many a worthy e neral terms emplcy 
on the difference between the rent due da; 
