761 
48—1852. | THE AGRICULTURAL; GAZETTE. 
i 2 20 uniform and regular descent. of rain throughout the 
ERUVIAN GU enna on! This is only a specimen of the e 
AUTION * O AGRICU 4 1 T RIS T S.— or more fields spec cified, whose cultivation is thus whole mass of soil and * N to * poe will 
ous that teen adulterations of this 
— in detail. And the valuation was made 
this autumn. The farm is, as might be expected, 
exceedingly out of 1 and the Turnip crop 
the ment described was 
— — be inclined to expect i 
not e the s — of the soil 1s 
— — uniformly friable; and we should recom- 
mend that in replacing the tiles, the ee be some- 
+ Peruvian Government and saitin from 
. a a commend Farmers and all others who valued at about 1“. aha acre. what firm] ace the trench, so as to hinder 
pide fobstge Beak parti . rom whom they purchase There are several considerations arising out o that porosity immediately over the vin to which 
of course be the best security, and, in addition to particular this doc (I.) What exceedingly different the sto bably; owing: If there were 
— to that * — Y GIBBS anD SONS think it ideas farmer and gardener must have in those parts | i ediately over the drain in this field of very stiff 
ge e ‘whol of row of Mangold Wurzel, the gran: current 
ice at which sound. Peruvian 
G has been sold.by in during the last two years is 
N 
resales made by dealers at a lower price must therefore 
Atii leave a loss to them, or the artic!e must be adulterated. 
te — A MANI URE COMPANY offers 4 
i e 
pras — — — Su 
: n 
a 
N 
upe 
Also a — of 3 alt, the 
saltpetre makers, considerably more 
valuable than the ordinary agricultural salt. 
_ Bowaap Poxses, See,, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, London. 
ANURES.—The following Manures are manu- 
factured at Mr. La he Haden DP ees <5: 
Tursip Manure, per UST 
s phat 7 0 0 
N.B, Peruvian cane, guarantee to 
rö — — more, 9. 55. 5 
&e. 
Soap at en da — 105 
Sul ate of ammonia, 
MANURE. 
pear CHARCOAL, completely saturated with 
— 8 p — —— most — ve — 
for any crop, It m m the Sewage Manur 
Works, Stanley Bride, 1 Pulham 3 Middlesex, at 603, per * 
* Cwt, and 2s, 6d. 
er age manure “abso roed h "h charcoal is a first-rate fer- 
Beans, Dahlias, Roses, and 
aboar plants ; we t halts pint 8 3 Rose and Da Wi ay 
‘sowed it in the row with tm ans, and inches to each 
Cabbage. is — — very soon bat it 
will be twice as — — Arit Th 
Garden, by Mr. 
W INTON’S PARKES'S CELEBRATED STEEL 
DIGGING ORES ANV? 0 
us agricultural meetings where 
shown, The Royal Rercditatal coenh g 41, says. 
u This form ot chura is the weir tor churnin, and 
will n ten e butter from m 
ce catalogues sent on application, 
108, 1 London, agents f 
* Reap 
ic POULTRY. EXHIBITION.—Am Ex- 
hibition of POULTRY, open to ‘alljEngland, will be held 
at Torquay on the 14th . of JANUARY, 1853. Par 
ticulars of whie ch will be 
oy Pat and — Stock, ; 
Torquay, Mov 27, „1852. ry Seeretaries. 
E BIRMINGHAM Sata ce AND POULTRY 
ing, seeding, hoeing, and singling of the in a 
4 i g x Tita l of bent this 
st i 0 
an 
© 
4 
© 
5 
G 
oO 
© 
= 
=) 
u 
= 
mploys ; 
harrowings, * alter the sa r, arid be 8 e than 
useless * vould be most injurious. The 0 
. 3 was the eee 125 
use in this case; successive harrowings, with t 
repeated dae > N of draught animals, would 
the land and unfit it for the 
more and m 
(2.) What a striking com- 
e harden 
eed, 
may rene 
belori" Whe evidence of its 
4 8 at home, but none 
of this Find jah a a E made at page 713, 
on the general backwardness of Sac nobwith- 
standing the vigorous ¿onslaught 
— . — made by many of — agricultural 
hyprovers 
If a tra 8 be be . of — 4. 
secu in any a district’ and m 
woul ike my Hampshire, and its 
Gain kaha, to justify * of 8. 
whether on those Who hold u 
arcasm, 
British bn as 
1 or on yes who, insist that it has already 
the end of its resources, and must.succumb 
~ i — — ry trial. 
Tun following remarkable instance of drains 
Det by the en within them of annual roots 
deserves attention 
"| Reigate, says 
Being a decided ail wd voeste of the 25 e of an 
A in all soils, I have carried ou 
atn 1 a iim 5 this 25 0h 
ON of CATTUB, SHEEP, PIGS, and th nds gla some s pure clay; and as Ta 
of DOMESTIC POULTRY will be held in BINGLEY HALL, | GY 12715 of the high F school, I have, p 
HAM, on TUESDAY, e pest THURSDAY, | addition.to a thorough deep draining, from 4 to 5 fee 
“and FRIDAY; the Lith, 15th, 16th, and 17th days of ber. oe aining, 
2 The PRIVATE VIEW and th @ ANNUAL DIN? DIN? NER on TUES. deep and 20 to,27 f 5 55 sees subsoiled hog 12 te 
SDAY, and on | 14 inches, manured and subsequent] a portion 
W. Thursday, and Friday, 1s. i PO 
— Á s crops—Swede. and 
P CATTLE SHOW OF THE SMITHFIELD 
T 
70 fad cloves ses FRIDAY 1 Sth, — pert 
i . Baker-street. 
z ‘fom Dash all Nine ia e Evening; Admittance, is, mA 
TION 
mences TUESDAY 
| SATURDAY, NOVEM, NOVEMBER 27, ', 1853, 
DU E WEDNESDAY; Dee. rope r complete etely į 
oe l society ee, —.— up —— epr causing all ena — 
separ, ee Fag. Wel- ol ireland. ° mes 1 Now t anxious to know, 
soit Wirpreient to — as ——— anty » Whe e 2 ore k oe known 
Ja ig attention, the following stait Fam ait“ Thven- eet wi h l ae roe de vill the 
nue ‘and . r a 25 L. ate ots, ep tig Wurzel has ary Pen off, or must I 
3 are A 52 * Bye Valuer, in a the pull up all the drains? This would cost more tien 
eq 8 r County o the 9 5 * — and wo in my opinion, 
AR Lr . pe RADA and e prevent many people from draini t all, or at least 
e A A a a mg r arrowed—twice rolled. pow — ms a — red Man ngold a 
“Si e crop itse mai ently suffered ye eriall 
Ploughed once—six times harrowed—twice rolled. se the — e land, as it pro e tn in the 
Letter piei early s oe magnificent field; but turns out 
— 1 onee-—-eight times harrowed—three times about 24 PA only to the acre, as near a8 I 
Me TFA 9} acres, weigh the There are two fields of 5 and 4 acres, 
Plougi e peaga times, aud both are equally bad. One field has been Balled 
these 10 days, but still land is as wet as eve 
harrowed — twite 
eT acres ; 
re 
2 
ultural Gazette. tiem 
— — — colour, smelling strongly of the NM Mangold f 
wh 
goo neo har- 
Fer 
of my land for root er es, ages, an 
d Wurzel —and to my great mortification T 
now find 3 fields where the Mangold Wurzel is 
most as wet msi they were before they were | 
fore the 
gro 3 
ang benen perfect Mangold 
urzel was sown. I . 
coming out of toot pipes in a 
ne 
the other is still coded Can the cause be the 
we hav — since May last? | 
unceasi 
The drain M ptper- will, i 
pulled up and replaced; ay over the whole field, but 
2 e 8 TA 12} 
l ov ve — 
1 
g soil a 
of 
w pe stfectly instances | your Pape: 
The writer, Mr. Sugunanb, of 
ol sowing ; but so 
destroyed, and ‘be ol other „quite sound 
| more i m ir phot 
0 
water setting down through the 
of the a would induce bag “unnatural gro p 
of the root fibres towards’ a the pipes, so 
ult t to stop the conduit, Tt the drains had 
been filled firmly, so inder any ym a 
in 
t 
Wold Hite had * such 
th. We do not 
4 think it probable that 5 20 roots 
will rot in the course of a few nae 
FINGERS AND TOES IN TURNIPS. 
expensive one to put in, 
profitable fatting of stoek materially depends; if it fail, 
ea 2 have to be sent to market before they are ‘ready yY. 
p the want; 
1 pr think that the variety of Turnip: has 
2 to do with it, except that ray most rapid sf 
og seem rather most affected. I have 
es hurt with R a any extent, — in 
and that prea did affect 8. 
2. ature of the soi which it most prevails 
is stiff, rather black, adhesive 2 deep; but the * 1 
s. The course 
wing in wet 2 
ful effect in developing its evils; and wet we: 
after, before the laud N 
way. 
The kind of 
ewt, of superphosphate of 1 2 or g be 
of hon not dine lyed. The whole made up by earth or 
tena ea Laren ele Deere 
Tam unable to atizibuzo the chuse to 
6, The. disease has always been ; 
always aperiat same part of the ea e Crag 
drills, in eases, being very much affected or quite 
and a good crop, 
Ar OAL 
„ of sowing, nor manure, has anything directly to do to do 
with it. 
7. IJ have. not observed insects u the 
atier it showed si piepe aigi alae i Bie pel 
effee 
8. Turnips ae been cultivated: on, the nev M 
> intervals I have stated 
— — but shaik has at 
— 
land 
