25—1852. | THE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
397 
glaring laring that w ma his — may have been, we are 
utterly unable to divi 
One gen ont desires 2 guide to the eee 
a book ‘before he yields to the advice of its adver 
aser ; but in A 
— 
© 
2 
J 
. 
y- 
.0 S 
en 
baie oeg nt 
up, who desi ; 
improve it, — no 3 to number intelligent men 
ong his readers 
„ 
Intercalary Crops.— What other crops mig 
tained between — age pe Ss ones Cabbage plants (oth 
liquid manuring) might be put down between d 
early Potatoes, when nearly RR and 2 afer Sa 
Pota are removed; these Cabbages would be con- 
sumed before the season for — — A the 
same column, Ra nts sight ie be Ae shee Wr 
the; Beans ; ast 
hoeing of the ns, * Ts Aadha wou ad af a some 
food in the autumn before Wh Th 
eat-sow 
to drills 
gained without injury 
p. You have named Trifolium i incarnatum ; what i is it! ? 
it bears a beautiful crimson blossom, 
good cutting. pmi d sowing = autumn, it is fit for 
cutting in the next year in time for a crop of big a 
or for transplanted field Beet, or r Swedes, a 
Afterwards it is v rec e for filling up a mad aces 
that m inp appear — in the sthig ihin iove 
How shouid stubble epared for Ra 
Clover far nil 
J’ 
and yields one 
fi 
r 
off and burnt, 
or carried to >» 9 or pig-stye : the seed should 
be sown broadcast. remain 50 p rches to be 
i will you “dispose of them ?—I woul 
rches uuder 
f 
winter and spring Vetches 4 may re sown in u drills, form 
with a hoe, 12 inches apart, and raked in. * — gre 
ca rorida. 
dig 45 per 8 same 
45 more td leistre, in the course 
-worm do not 
101 COW 
What next at him 
are = rofitable, iso, and raised with little labour, and 
this — tom of the land will exactly suit for the pro- 
28 n of Wheat to besown 3 year acco: eae to the 
e. 1 
hh 
Tesn iey 
or ley, unless 
—Manure necessary for the ‘Beans ur 
the soil be — very 2 Short dung or ne 
shoul case s - 185 urface before 
d Beans be to the ground 1 
ted with a dibble i in rows 16 inch 
n e row hat 
advantages have winter over spr ing Beans winter 
usua 5 ri pena 
ner 
of he 3 ainda gpm: SE ei corn ; . this is over- 
und, drills m 
preparatory erop for Wheat; mele . 
spe soil ce them may be e any 4 “= after the previous 
eep digging ; tl vill then be some weeks for digging 
mpleted for cattle 
tof lime and earth, | 
suriace 33 for the 
be only necessary at the 
ay be opened an 
ce of mi 
and the spaces between them, as in the other case, dug 
i eo shyt 5 or six weeks afterwards, when 
s have clearly appeared: 
ay land with it in a day than 
7 2, spa and Ick. with less fatigue. From Groom- 
tener hism. 
555 ner ns T$ bowr.—Amongst our many 
agricaltaral discrepancies is the price of agricultural 
labour in di 
i 
aud other counties, 68. 6d. to 78. week is a com- 
mon price ; whilst in pa f Yorkshire, e 
Kent, Surrey, and elsewhere, 11 13s. is no - 
mon rate, particularly i manufacturing districts. 
Surely, this is powerful evidence of the necessity for | 
setting labou by a national rating, in lieu of the 
cal trammels of or union relie 
Labour be 
as free as air, — 
he great principle of commercial —— ; not that 1 
tink cheaply-paid labour is by any means — — 
desirable. The physical condition of a man, as of a | 
8 is the limit of his ee minus his intelligence; 
but with extreme low wages, we see miserable ragged- | 
ness an conditioned =. peydah disgraceful alike to the 
locality and to nity, and evidencing a low scale of | 
rent for para with "inferior farming. But there is no 
end to a ultu In Norfolk I can find | 
ences neatly trimmed, free fro 
ole of, 
s la 3 
t 
es we should 
stubble 
us, and the 
(February), 8 very paar pean 
eld labour, whereas the planting of winter Beans 
h Wheat 
into reece cropping, according to the pla 
y land, inasmu fhe! the la rte of digging 
would be les "He rches of 
: e land id a man rough! y dig, 14 3 N 
day ?—A man, without overworking him 
roughly but very deeply dig. fro wy oa 10 
sday, on for man 
— — 1's 8 
time for the spring digging 
und for 
of C 
be —— 
a whica e have rooted de eeply, it be oe 
fo tarn pie the upper sod more lightly, and to 
second spit over it in order to other the Grasses effect 1 
a 
have been as dependent on foreigners for 
clothing as we have been for food. Mr. Mechi's Second 
Paper 
Notices to Correspondent 
Beans: F C. It is a and the w 1 ter Beans 
are as peculiarly — to this black mildewy blight as the 
y wi ury by insects. W r 
foli 
Wet weather and set foliage" favour — evil.— 
ourselves had 20 
oyed fib pes 8 i luxuriant green 
‘o pao N pi a week, before 1 blossoming was 
pc pe rg present wet weather is favourable ms such 
rapid bligh 
COLOURED Tur 125 “As it 
fays: 
t 
could inform me pply to piain 
ülés in eT n — — that when burat their flaring 
redness may be perm ently subdued.” 
oe ape = Yi ur Aussen was too late 
eek, vod Alderney cow wil 
daily, aad 10 lbs. 2 butrer Tea dn 
A cow may cost 71. 8s, a-year. 
co correspondents may be abie to give you . defiuite 2 
mation on—lst, t f — 3 good Jers 
cow wil jea oe ere 2d, how many may be placed tein 
the man wade e dairy maid; 3d, the cost of keep of 
one cow mae iua 
Guano : Agricola, Apply about 4 cwt. per acre in a compost 
to appear last 
2 20 ) quarts of milk 
Dorh e 
son y soil as to four cart-loads 
per acre of the minare, Tc wiil 2 the land sufficiently 
to as crop, by the cousumption of which on the land 
of red-hot fuel at bottom, Thes 
ale Ay 
damp — or * — ugs. 
when it is judged, by 
clearness of the smo! 
to carry on the operation, As contents $ e 
stuff is added, care being taken to maintain e 
full, to close all interstices in the walls, and to fill up holes at 
top as they occur from shrinkage produced by combustion. 
Flame must never be allowed to appear on the surface. The 
clamp is known to be sufficiently filled wi arcoa en 
he added stuff settles but little, e operation sbould be 
3 — 
in 
Abu t the best vies an te to 
extinguish bend water, N also prevents the fuer = 
pir am blown away when the clamp is emptied.” 
arkes, i 8 Gazette, 1844, 
pots 10 L QUESTIONS : s W. Irtis our 1 55 to steer as clear as 
possible of — Rad re pt 10 — — nd w 
e cultiv ten of ie 7 ise Wever, our groat 
. and from that we are not Hy all likely to depart. 
Sreamine: F R. You had better apply to some of the manu- 
facturers ; epea eps mond, of Salford, — noted for their 
acres, with only four fields ed 250 —— = 
steaming appara 
Sussex Fars 708 . powns: Horsham, July 18. Wether 
lambs, from the bill flocks of We y — "n ir a a — wether 
shee * i ambs, cub 
ewe — 8, ra and wether — yh got — — Lewes, 
Sept. 21. Firat “arent fair for draft ewes, wether lambs, cub 
bs, 
ewe lambs, and wether sh not sold 
or let. At the —— sale of the principal — some of 
the crack flocks, dis of before 
the fair, f the best stock in the neighbour- 
hood of 3888 where his Grace the Duke of Ri d 
has an annual sale — 5 — and letting of rams, 
early in September. e stated that the 5th of 
August is is 
nebtield — te and the 2d of October 
Lewes second fair for sheep and lambs, 
ERRATUM —Inciosur E E ACT: aria came to an article on the 
“ Transfer ot Land, Bantry 0 „ 
Ir t is stated to be 8 & 9 ictoria, c. 18 it. 
should be 118. 7. S. : 
Markets. 
. 
COVENT GARDEN, Jons 19, 
Vegetables and — are pes 2 = The sale . Eng — 
Pine-apples is still dull. — saa 
prove both in supply. — eng: A few a esser prae tg — 
still be obtained. Oranges are plentifaliy supplied, and — 
good, Nuts are nearly the same as last 
borist, ow ing to the Galavourabionens of 
a pe 
consist of Heaths, Epacrises, Cinerarias, Mignonette, * 
| Azaleas, Primulas, Lily “ 75 e. and other bulbs 
Pine-apples, per Ib., 6s to io, 8 per doz., 1s to 2s 
i a hothou par ibs 4s to 8s oa on is 8 ls 6d 
s, per doz. 0 248 s 6d to 10s 
Neg. on N agents — Te 24s | arog — Is to 3s 
Melons, each, 28 to 65 Nuts, 8 per bush, 20s 
Cherries, per Ib., 2s to 8s 
rries, p. Ib., 4s to 12s — Brasil 5 Ha bsh., 125 tolis 
Almonds, per peck, 58 Cobs, per 100 ibs., 100s 
— . per Ib., 28 to 3s 
bages, doz., 6d ee 2 bunch, 4d 
Cab per to s, per f 
ire Le a Garlic, per Ib., Sd to lis 
8 Cab., per score 4d to 15 
‘ — Cos, p. score, 3d to 18 
Apara 8 Is to 1s | Radishes, per doz., 8d to 1s 
reens, per doz., 1s to 1s 6d — Turnip, 9d to ls 6d 
Rhubarb, ve rmen 3d to 4d Small Salads, p. 24 to 3d 
Pota! to 80s Radisb, p. Isto4e 
— pg ag rooms, p. pott., 8d to 9d 
— pet ot Is ed to 2s 6d — per net, 9d 
Prien, e, per Ib., 1s to 2s | Sorrel, hf. sieve, 6d to 18 
Artichokes, Jerus., do., 9d to 18 
unel, per bunch, 2d to 3d 
Three per bunch, 2d to =. 
lery, per bundle, 1s to 28 Thyme, per 
rrots, p. bun., 7d to ls Parsley, pa doz. mE, ve to i 
Spinach, per sieve, 9d to 18 3d 13 nch, 2d to 4d 
Onions, per bunch, 2d to asil, p. bunch, 6d 
— Spanish, p. doz. 183d to 3s — 1 do., 3d to 
Beet, per doz., Is to 28 atercresses,p,12 bun., 9d to 16 
8, per d to 6d 
HAT.— Per Load of 36 Trusses, 
SMITRFIELD, June 17. 
Prime Meadow Pag vg to 84s Clover „85s to 95s 
Inferior do. 72 2d e do i oai TO 84 
owen 55 83 — | Straw * 2 ae 30 
New Hay .. 
ee which I con- 
abous 2 yards 
Siili a re yard high, T 
g 
were rapidly and padi ne it of massive sods cut fro 
the superteial bog-earth, which been recently Capek 
over by a peculiar plough, in slices 18 iuches — sd 9 4 
deep. The joints ot he wa 
wich soft stuff obtained from adjacent declan. ey esa or 
four small holes, say 4 inches 5 mia 1 55 0 in ‘gan walls at 
bottom to give air for kindling the first made 
tty strong with dried peats, iu wists 838388 
rates thus 
Roc. pte which can be re 
‘bulk of the new wool being 
The supply short and trade brisk, 
CUMBERLAND MARKET, June 17. psi 
Prime er vona nae g to -4 . yee . 758 to 84 
Inferior do. aie wo — 
ow Hay s 4a — | Straw woo vee SO! * 
U!d Clover š 88 - 
_ — WBITECHAPEL, June 17. 
Fine old Hay specs os . am 
New Hay b do. 
Inferior do —- 55 
Straw one . 24 
is well on sa 
on Sussex 
8s, per San oe — a, 
—— ae been done one on the duty. cy: 
— pore oar 120s to re | Yar * 1225 to 
w+» 1268 to 1478 — * 205 to 50s 
| Baglish 825 market on 
‘ied suppi — at — wool tate tone ees ied by te nd 
F n 8 e e, A! 
prices thust be considered as decidedly in favour of the seller. 
far asked ew wool are mi 
is, that staplers — ents 
disposed of to a fe 
w consumers, 
