9—1852. | 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 
direct the | bullocks, their comical dress and long 
r would vn very likely to imagine him- | at the summit of the 
f m the 
e male flower 
see 
about two feet phere — — r four at a time. 
The drills a are draw. n as straight as s poste, the plough leaves, their base 
returning as I have before dese * aran in th a 
asitis sown ; — whieh the —— 
1 
hysiologist. 
en describing the various 
his is "tothe with the — parts of this 
e 1 25 mentioned; the sower 
being supplied with a bag, full of seed oes 
i — ape len has — ts ſertili 
h the leaves 
xen, and do 
any count | 
| may add, the whole plant is peculiarly i 
paper and particularly worthy of the attention of mresa fear. of 8 — oot 
7 
m 
g lance 7 feet high, a aa a spike or panicle of male flowers 
stem, whilst the female flowers 
75 
S R 
24 
wo in number, a 
cman t a the middle of the . the 
he 
stalk. 
As the — moment offers a good 8 of | 
useful purposes to w they 
valuable plant are apika 1 will obliged to sow ten times 
D J — — with — a at a later period), a van |da —— 
sing duties 
broken off, pres 
nkeys ; of the 
É N there are about 15,00 000. on the Island of St. ; Michael, Da friend 
dried, and used as 
uel by ras poor ——. 
t 1 I will finish this brief sketch of Azorean 
P. Wallace. 
nen of | 
orse 
en first offered to them, and | 2 
e corn is ripe, | 
Hom e Correspondence mended is 
On the le Manufacture — Ofal into — ©. 745). — nutritious 4 all K 
and let the 
up t o fall a 
Smithfield eld question at 
fori the Art aie 
rt of ee not 2 
ore than was — by the o 
Aka it should : be borne 
have a margin o 
is 
ntity of Beans 
Michael's Sear 180,080 
ng (analqueire is about a peck English measure), 
e tinig mer 260 reis per alqueire, nearly | sa 
IId. 7, mo 
Iso the. e for sowing French Beans, 
— er pont vale o for home consumption, likewise | 
for exportation. Tho t e the — will of 
— and retail prices, though in e 
would not all reach his 
a | erg, afford a quick 
er mean 
urchaser s 
ge 
market, the chanees are much in favour of — 
slaugh iter | 
— 
— — that the farmer will given them in 
from . per stone o l 
work upon, that being the deren between the whole- thick. Ia 
1 
s po — . al a my it 
to could n 
It kind that are sold for 5s. per cwt. ; there is — 
llow melted here. oblige 
s. to 
out the details 
tting m 
h the 
profit of their Pare sow French Bea 
the rows of Minn yrn: after it has received its first t parties wou 
hoeing, in fac ater are grown in that then could remain 
— i but land “5 poor to produce ‘hy other crop, 
bit gab rench Beans ; the Orange gardens also are 
used for this cro pa 
ane June tong the: = dian nd | 
and third time ; se 
. 
The 1755 of growth of Indian Corn is truly sur- 
secon 
among the Beans rarel 
eats more — once, as the dry hot weather 
ails s” everywhere suitable in thi 
is valuable cereal, a short descrip- 
aid those who. have 
-> 
ze 2 
more 
truly deplo rapie éni of famine 
3 peo Sto i p 8 time, a question of 
sideration, and not a mere question 
of seed to 
ead an — form the my la as good heart as it was 
articles eae ‘food of the robust and healthy Azorean but pact I have done so, had I tl 
middle class e even found at the such thing; but the first year of thie 
xhausted the soil too oy for a 
— . — 
lower 
ba sm 
people more strength to 
0 
Alder this rather wide e es my ! e 
‘briefly to describe the Corn a 
Zen Mays of botanist, of which — 
* 
ehe inthe 
dueing th great 
‘wh By sean yellow, must not exhanst the he patience — your 
the to arks on 
of t 
of owt “The tall 5 kinds 
zores, usually growing from 6 
6 to misunderstan 
Mr. a has sai 
respectin A — 4000. fold of Wheat. To prevent 
` ‘Aa I yi cedo other 
a change ; — as it would not injure the consumer, al 
ld be benefited the manure and 6431 
Thorold, 
part of t in seeding only. ti 
Then, why do not my . „zur. Goodiff and o th 
not keep eter- 
thin 
rom nore like to hear 
er again, 
Mr. “Piper and o your 
that after allowing for my trae tithes, m — he 
akes annual . 
ir 
| of Wheat as well as — © Egyptian ; ; but particulari 
I single out Morton? strawed White Wh 
w rooi 
producing 2000-fold increase, 
— kind of Wheat; 
Red-stra 
— 
Fas 
n 
n that the general 
benefit: of the system by w which it is nee and 
‘Ragland dora nt ld; and I further add, T 
every 20 — 
s not exceed l 
heat sown in England 
fruit to — ecti N 
1 
re 1 [ andoni RhA th 
by irds 
of which the Egyptian 
that the result will prove the 
8 and if * will make 
y 
one, let me inform hi 
— be the We tat 
im 
sis proves it to possess m uten 
Aj — kind of Wheat ; ; hence 2 conclude, without fear 
of a „ that the heat I 
N 
or — all other kinds have spru 
——— 
small quanti 
each pig, 1 in — * 
had some steeped in water, and when soft, 
put on — —— in — feeding en but I found 
wr ch an ae inable stench, that I — it 
be n that way. — — 
„X would stating 
as well as , 
30 Ibs. per day ‘of Indian Indian 
mange. 8. 
all would lard grea ves answer 
I find that a 7 — 
stirabout, as thick as blanc 
M — Perhaps 
anticipate some of your 
frien ae wall aire ive me a few useful hints 3 
the results 
dents 
to the quantity 
used. I myself in four ratte grew 
sea 2 “ayer of Wheat per acre, and — — — left 
mmenced ; | 
it? 
subsequent . 
kinds 
erefore, i 
my friend, Mr. Goodiff, let me . — for the hundredth 
eral profit de the farmer’s con 
i the in 
practice here to put the elay upon pipes, 
Lender to exclude. the soil; — — — where — 
are 
. P., Nov, 2 
land in the solid form at 
pense o and filte 
ee, — Drains 
distance each o 
3 orga and loosened t 
