426 
THE 
aante — GAZETTE, 
yusiness; it 75 — — 2 the rank of a science: 
business; I 1 
and how 
other seien 
basen maintains their strength unfatigued a 
And it is most reasonable that agriculture should 
steps, 
but 
ove not in concert to accomplish t 
n to 
. 
body 
but — capriciously, or in opposition 
each 
m there i is nothi ing mutual i int their 
ast of the. 
ces, while proktor ‘the very cea | 
y when the various members of its} withs 
[JULY 3, 
or loss 3 which, at all 
Mey Se never to he 
e analysation of accounts, as s set forth in my | . must show m source 5 gai 
sgt mode of po ie ya can be tested, and, events, is some 85 5 
d, and the best adopted; . W. F. 
ot within human control ary, an 
all our (considered adicións) J efforts; harg À systems, appa 
rently correctly carr ied out, will often fai fail. But, n 
di 
ou rebookt: 
tanding all this, accounts.faithfully, kept, t, fail Se, 
the Cash-book 
we shall give — — — and in the fourth 
th Leger 
ASH. 34 
0, 0 
p 
£ 
PER CONTRA. 
1850. 
1000, Oct. 
Dr, 
Rees Tocash. ... 0 70 = ~ sonm Jones, for valua! 
Ere 
8 g 
pre 
Ea ahaoe h that of . — 
r, because of the: 
want of 8 as to the — r e | 
in what they: diffe: 5 in what harmonise. The pr 
— 0 
aw 
kind ‘of soil. 
pare 
VELYN’S 
fthe 18th 
“Those tie have written, aioe arte combinatorié, reckon up no 
one: hundred: and as one» thousand: 
and sinty differen: sorts of earths; but of all thle-¢ enormous. 
number, as of N rod things, ie — they do not 
acquaint minen n a useful to our 
221 Bid ti naturally ey usually (o 10 he pita the pit, Is shall ‘here | 
you (the the Royal Society), in their 
order The Thin, toas: — —— earth, a ug 
surface, is the natura]! under-turf earth; but for a 
description eei ie rest whic suc — 1 in -strata — layers 
till we arrive at the barren and im trable rock, I shall 
critical reader to the old * 
“My Bacon directs to the observation 
where its extremity seems to rest as pointin 
and fertile mould); but this, I conceive, may be very fallacious, 
it having two horns or bases arg ever opposite,” 
7 heard anything of. 
in 8 er “ forma-. 
in geology, a ge m amile at th 8 
and facts enunciated. b. 
of a. scientific. 
3 va.” . 
£ the rainbow, 
toa more roc 
in every place. Wich no ‘peter da 
ns. 
now. bein 
ould be 
47 5 Areca 
geo agricultura improvem would 
en sh fe ae ge andom ; the mar 
= e een a attaited. We hope to sh future 
t use is ually made of geological. 
Eerie for the benefit of pee Rare ture, vais 
FARM: ACCOUNTS.—No.. I. 
teresting detail, for vi 
= the carryin 
f 
id Nov. 1, To balance brought from last month 
us 
es gas, re 
from whose decompos 
oxygen a atah or inet b been d a 
beam i 
p ition, e. 
ta Thon thare. 
8 
8 — 
some salt of silver which i is, eas 
À darker 
bour account, see paren A 1 5 
$ Wat iam Mason, for 50 Ewes ‘ 
13, Labour account 
oF 
William Simmonds, for need ‘Wheat 
Labour accoun 
Housekeepiog, 
Balance carried to next month 
PETO 
S S 
51. 
31. 
~ 
SS See 
1 
£1000 0 0 
CASH: a PER CONTRA: 
Noy. 3. By labour account; see labour hook , 
10. ditto Atltto Pe 
17. 
4. 
30. 
Dr. 
1850 
ditto ditto, 
ditto ditto 
Balance carried to next month, 
— 
£454. 9 6 
CASH. 
Dr, PER CONTRA. 
1850. 
Dec. 1. To balance brought from last month 
1850. 
445 15 r Dec, — i * — see — wae 
— 
on 
rf 
. 
a a 
Housekeeping ii 
Tutour ats account, see labour book | 
Balance — „ 
£446.13. 6. 
Dre CASH. 
1851. 11. 
Jan. I. To balance brought from last montn .. 429. 0. 6. 
* If the party farming keeps an account with a bank er, it may be better to head the account with the se of aREE, 
as in fact it will be debited for all monies deposited with it. 
PER CON TRA. 
E 
= 
RELATIONS OF amar eo THE LAND. 
Ir is neeessary to add but a very few 2 i — 
remarks on this beet which havo alre: e e a 
in the article “Leaf.” The m fact aa there 
stated, that, under the influe Be, “of sunshine, ad, in 
less degree, of Plight, the leaves of plants e 
ini ning, at the 
natural. tendencies, of thi 
o wor 
t all events it cannot be his interest to remain in 
— rance of them. J. C. M., in Blaehie's Cyclopedia f 
Agriculture. ais 
earbonic-a 
He 
DIGGINGS BY A FEN-FARMERi—No. IV. 
Tue southern half of the Great ree of the Fens 
maida es the nor — 0: 
k, Suffolk, Huntingdon, 
consists. of 310,000 paspa 
this tract; and: i ‘vided. ima tlie North, Middle, and 
Seuth odin the: irst draining: by the river Nene, the 
Ous 
two latter 
The Non n Levat ‘of aban 48,000 — 
3 — — te previous to the impro 
eat 
ca the: 
p water. 1 5 
oc act 8 floodings; 2 in 1799, 
neal ma ruinous devastations. ; 10 
ing the . — wanes se tr, 
apparent, as these 
te of precaution and assiduous f 
ge of this tract by; 30W 
e sun 
* the 
| ponents of the sunbeam are really 
o to speak, and not m 
common agent, a 
able: th 
passin ng 
of the sun, th n, 
exhibits in se places not only the differently. i 
oured anin of whieh light ee but the heat ra 
ip: 
propariy+. an 
Sa 1 with 
a upon b Wed 
such eet, i 
1 be seen s lie 
oureg 
en; as a 
„ produced u 
of ray, will 
and and burning” in tlie Bedfo: 
a little way into it. The in this dis trict’ about the mió 
“whi — owe to Mr. 
Level seems to have 
iddle of the rahe Ik 
— of > + Subject, much of 
1 Hunt, whose experiments 
Siren a copy 
many, and all 8 
hat I ssri allow an 
ra Say 
turi 
of a. li 
being 3 to 
y whi 
5 Tikel rench families had been den 
into —.— d, and ig ae came to this, their ‘i 
a — t brought. most likely, by the ie report of 
—— * is * fe doubt butt bs 
tice of 
as we re thal ; 
n bring. oe 
To the fi 
t, that, other things 
e quantity of light t which his 
r the i beam 
— 
er these eer raved Power the prac 
ijai to e na their en 
e main point burning in this part of the 
was i 
poi is importan 
N : belig equal, it is cies th i 
ur- 
nalised'monthly, as I have shown; iili — — — 
a “Ledger” has to to be prepared an 
plants recei 
y aie : 
of the year, make a valuation of 
e yo lant, 
e d under the dats of f the pame Wen nging 
e precise 
interest to take on all these 
a sea The swt 
