generally sow sow is the White te Glo 
THE AGRI GAZETTE. [Marcu 13 
be. I have tried some | circumstance 
e grown 
them to be thinned, which will be when they are about flowed by by the igali drill 
2 or 3 inches above ground, the horse hoe should be o kill a any weeds that may 
icate any weeds The drill harrow I find of the gre kiest service for 
- | shaking the vili which have been fum led u . by a 
8, I ca e produc 
the wider l Ti a feld, uu yet in high condition, 
t The seed should not be sown too deep, | nor hi oy pe manured, I o 
‘and the drill should be rolled immediately after it is 2 tons 4 e f shaws arid i e ae i Fok 
sown, so as to insure as dy a brai rd as possi sible. and 9 ict er acre in thrid of the 9 inches. 
When the plants h hed mih pe a sufficient length, the hor ikii, 
harrow, should be used, 
det a width of 8 in ches 
s 12 
be betwee 
pushed away e 3 The hand-hoe is next us 
“hand hoe. p eeds w 
sometimes by the hand, but more frequently by the beremoved byt the horse-hoe. Som 
hand-hoe ; if white Turnips, to the width of 8 or 9 inches, | Turnip fields by 3 the r p my between coal 
and yellows to the width of 10 inches. The proper | drills, for wis reason I have n 
width which Turnips, and particul 
r tha 
from the other varieties in containing | summer along with the f 1 — of the seit to he beige of 
i 
a 
Es 
m2 
S, 
® 
4 
— 
U3 
E 
a 
á 
zx 
— 
S 
F 
oO 
2 
8 
arly Swedes, | I am ‘clearly of ofopinion that suc k 
cumstances. The Swedish | a surface a any r 
ionally, the larger the the field, instead of a allowing it 
size contains about 6 per | are spread in me directio A. 
X a l p 
cent., and one of the largest size nearly 7 per cent. of for the vigour of the 8 I hay 
nut i ; whi white | found 3 delicate roots at a 0 of : 31 pti Bovey to 
r cent., and in the largest ing i most delicate ch ON in hs e ie eo 
e farme 
ver yet b 
a practice 
- should be singled, is a most important point, and | useless; the genet the sole a 5 * acts as | Wi 
ious cir 
ain 
to 
i sin soi 
size to which it attains; thns it has been found that a to min ister to the agi of the plant, whose 9 55 
v have afforded 4 pe 
roots only 3} per cent. of their whole weights. Hence su othe -A y drain tiles. Having n 
ever I saw were 
18 inches ; unfortunately the 
ison with 
an ‘fa 
the rest of the field. In oe pt posed dis- ie 6d. will be found 3 
5 t distan 
were different in 
in 
bee 
y were not 1 in com- higher in price 
foot ee in good heart, iveda was brought from 
‘this season, 
ch will be 
of 1 12 * will be readily observed by I ooking” at the ant opposite, 
da age * Aai se pola a small experiment | “driving dung to field.“ Men's wages were ls. 8d. per 
da: 10d. 
from some accidental | day, and women’s 
mS 
it is of the utmost consequence to have the Swedish of Turnips fully dévelopelf and completly 5 1 vill 
1 ible. —— e detai nt of the expense 
ure on several fields in Berwickshire, and East an 
thian, whi 
and form, the 
g — koga than i in others, which will account 
n some measure for the disparity in the value of 
4 ey were ech va Yd i 
polezi: of Labour of the Turnip Crop on five different fields in the first rotation of a Lease. 
ce of 
cwt. of bulbs 
n the drills. 
to re 
ich are so near the Anet? that they 5 52 and effects what a 
ersfinish off their 
een inform 
is worse than 
t falls in 
o ne 8 
mes 
of labour and 
nd 
ridges of some 
OPERATIONS, 
PER IMPERIAL ACRE, 
5 
. 
114 8 
Additional 
furrows. 
1 
. expense 
* 
calculated 
2 and 4 were light soil being used, and the fields 
and 
law “which impedes | taken 
“bwin ‘drained dunged according to the same rates as the prece —— On account 
was found in reducing of the absence of weeds, there is less women’s as we 1l 
of an expense of 9007., sprea 
alterations“ can be 
that we ‘oe perhaps, have “something 2 But as to 
our next. 
how: wate 
r — it will be all the better, as the . 1 
contact with 
Peat Charcoal. It wo ity be a sa result 
modern nde if the bogs of a d 
have been a bye-word F reproach tim 2 Which 
shew an 8 — 5 equal to the stimulus given 
It be u ur r 
= 
cet 
pE 
5 
G 
8 
Bg 
9 
8 
. 
n 
®© 
á 
> 
a 
© 
p 
2 
2 
E 
— 
E 
= 
E 
d, should com 
the e manure if it can be a esded, to roi seed contains 
within itself sufficient 0 nourishment of the best 
— — the young germ, to which strong manures, 
uch as Arr and guano, 28 ina ppropriate and even 
i injuri 
A 3 Digging Forks.—My attention has been 
called to a ig published in the Gardeners’ 
of the 28 5 — 3 te mee Winton,” and another 
t 
stated that there was no man 1 of the Ameri 
digging forks, of which he spoke so highly, in Birming- 
og gr ee! 5 nton (at that, time i ‘tid not ns 
any person of the nam 
a), “whieh stateme nt I now an 
d his esteemed friend. in wei "lire ifr 
allad ded to, rather ingeniously attempt to to contradict ys 
by saying that the said Harry. Winton has been a mam 
facturer for — last five years. They both, however, 
Th 
g, one-half guano. Whole e se, including thin 
of labour per and cropping, I.. 18e. 7d. Mr. Melas S he Hight 
of Ea tains raised Py spring poor, sa the 2 races th land Soc 2 oa e | * 
n m 
Home _ Correspondence. [arate at a total expense of 900/. in 30 years. Now 
—In your Nee of ese 28th | abolished owes however, of course 
recen or Mr. art’s system t 
ioe Stewart on the yerta of the he shew that th the ere 8 
and, and you a passage in which over 30 years, is worth a present sum of 5 
the instance 
thing), how — 
Harr 
0002. I inve 
| negle va say what A manufactures, 1 therefore supply 
he o erman sil metal spoons, 
i ; a shop at the corner of 
e e 
ae thus attempted to be pfactised upon Jou! 
public. W. A. Lyndon, Mineros Work mo 
Mare ch 2 aa simply to say that t to J oy Mr 
sa ha 
in in * 
to eleet appearance o 
N In fall of a N. W. wind (or even N pie 
into : t N.), has der my notice twi an whl 
for E wish it to be sed that I contend that no improve- ey e — Ginet in January ; in 65 
establish th ient. Take the f t can be made in the p t system ; it is far better | cases the wind below was either S. W. at few hours 
worth 500. a-year—its 8 oe nas afew years ago, and there is undoubtedly | observation, or set in from that ‘epee 
State of the law is, according to 30 years’ | to i rovements in some respects, but | after ; and in five cases out of the seven the maxim 
. Mr. Stewart's 4 judicious | cause a difference of T0 acer P made, which will | rose st the day, and attained er nis 
5 : urchase, or anythin ither 
says gy 0 years’ purchase, | a approaching to it, i flay which ought tobe pe : 
aw no mo hout the month; two, 
off = transfered ai be Con 500% odo of raising the value o of land ——— rain amounting to 4 48 inches. z ere or 
ich must of course | wonld ig s “ judicious alterations” | if not three, opposite currents in the air ; é peyot | 
do nd * rove to be. I do not desire ever, that from the N. W. predomina which nge T 
syst aici... though enclosing my | the severe gale of Wednesday, Jan. 218% our aint 
| Here and thre a sake ot | 8 95 1 en m to insert this letter as —A | over the whole of England, I observed EY thes A 
is ex i gape ef apd Solicitor. [Mr. Stewart's “judicious altera- ts a.m., viz., ‘the lower S.E.,{next bore 
veld a Prema resume me poin N. to a more ready plan for the 3 kabl 
even Mr. | transf er of land, and o 
l Now I will Let your readers a 
I | easy transfer exists, and 2 
the mei th en ae f 
pores * us have an 
go still fn per, | 50. year „ Whereas in “Bopland 
f mo 
i let us know 3 in B cgium aa onthe Khi oman Now we 
land accounted for at once, te on ——— 
made e in} i this untry, 
——̃ —äͤV 
