THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
91 
in our power, to aid i 
‘creasing population n of pe r sage with bread an 
Peter Love, Manor-house, Nas y, Welford, Rusiy 
The Tour in Scotlan xi —We sha of sigh gee an 
paper compared toa e coach, and no mean com- 
ison, f e enough a public the So, one ee st 
on, as a coac 
2 5 = s; and é 8 ind 
in the latter a ee — one r: mmunity 
ec 
ie periodical we 3 the 
of 
h De 1 nR 
e has traver dt no 
3 its in- 
and cor- 
pigre ot by any means sires th 
SGeoeotch farming is ye piatky 15 he ne plus ultra of 
‘good. husban dry; w re however pac D 
though we have sty meth to learn ; 
ae statements it appears we 
m goe rene. is, but onl 
at I am on 
sed by 
t “the soil 
ction to thi Our 
Use weaze told, is “ almost universally on bad prin- 
most part the drains are Bee ade with 
bene shoe tiles without soles,” and I agree with your 
eee at’s Merrion. ae ‘that being 1 —.— “ they 
are sure to fail.” Still h spon any m a og this 
‘is aniversal ; a tnt 8 eee f the far 
ae of horse- 8 tiles with. ae and 
andrei afterwards informed that “ the 
Sas eee — have done well ;” 
in these two statements and the test 
of mathemati 18 ss by 
pk eae 
extreme 1 I do 
f the = in Scotland a are 
irty, oe st han — no eee 
t the ex „ he 
als 9 ee 
Ino 
a 7 — f this — 
a a j 2 in fron 
i Ploughs never in u 
se ex to 
if — — only employed when ee 
hig on. The We of ploughing 
. * h co 
so far ; 
2 sufficient a for an old — . 
e | what 
failed i in his a 
h 
and Decembe 
t © 
drains | Toot 
_ | storin 
20 e Mangold Wurzel; 
* bushel, 
ny the fact that 2 
am aware of several in the parish receiving 3s. 6d. P r 
week, and others 2s. 6d. and a stone of Oat 
In his pe assertion, sone co AN appears as n 
he cee ant to give to all the rest of his censure 
rtis t5 terme “the effect,” bu the enari 
2 0 
never to farm on their own 
ee although they will eh fe oug farm as 
bailiffs with the money of thei alter” 0 
e reason 
s that ony. English ploughboy is equally quali 
eee 
xtreme Cr wo you desire to hear of instances 
of abundant cro os f Wheat, I will give you one. My 
late respected friend George Webb Hall, Esq., a Lier 
tical farmer, in the year my ory does not 
deceive me, purchased at an auction of the goods of a 
clergy Wroxhall, near standing crop 
f gla 
eina on pr ee and non-existence of glands: 
ils of b write, especially as 
hose 
in the s, I am induced to 
no copes eme be 
who den 
— 
— 
y hair and 
of small eee te follicles, e 
Besides these se are the 
o | fe 
use is = ane ate To fe athers. 
SW pa 
a microscope * ik so n 
yield an nai precable amount of oily matter sufficient 
maintain the shorter feathers envelo 2 ‘gh the body ina 
athers being 
Py alg minut glands by 
0 becom 
rods less tha acre of land. vested it when | Soiled, va 4 5 r the larger ca one on each 
ripe, and threshed out, as ty e mie, g bushels side o audal vertebra. Tha glands. 
of grain from it. I w cone Wheat, coarse wy 1 e 11 fully believe, on the authority of the 
sample, but the partioular p 0 ari Know, | present * of comparative anatomy of London 
5 with the enormous produce, I purchased some and Edinburgh; and any one may satisfy himself, 
noh pad and s wer it in hire, in a soil as by pla @ — tail spirits of wine for a few 
than ‘bal alt which * was aised as my days, and then carefully 3 the am But how 
does the maa i 
did not o 
ien 
The Turnip Cro se 
is so 5 t that ae aan doubt 
stock to e 
aye 
The longer I e more convinced I am of the pro- 
priety of 3 dd, during the months of Novemb 
but if possible befo 
0 
od 
ill they attain their full grow th, or vif “drilled with large | G 
guano or super phosphate, = which the 
are forced t 4 size and e e, ee op 
first to show signs of deeay, and w red are 
not to keep long, and pra "AT eile mene re plainly in 
on 0 
d 
smaller — ould produc: 
in pe es to ee is the best for food as well as for 
H. S. 
5 and Produce of 9 acres 20 Put good |® 
s plan :—Ist 
Kidney Potatoes—(these e 
years); 1 
s—half the rer 
ar year, Dutch 
and the second 
angold moat 
ed o mown 
crop fed with sheep ; the land, where Ma 
folded. 41 
dibbling ; ; ; dib bled T kieren altogether of ‘Spalding’ 8, ad 
a small T of — Taunton Dean 2 er acre ; 
rows apart : commenced , finis hed 
on 
tA very regular plant —— over Pap field ; 
i 
Man 
about te bushels of soot per acre early in 
, was also rolled in the 
. é zo bushels, — 85 
oe il, good, 
55 . oe 
395 bushels. 
The tail Wheat I sold to my m 
less The head Wheat ogi 613 lbs. per 
eep), as an ex perimen 
sites Piper, Colne Engin 
quantity of land, 1 acre 
913 bushels, — 2 
e hav n e I think ill be found 
most productive Wheat grown, but will not bea: 
; the ts being so closely set, holds 
The straw 
my average ut 5 qrs. per 
me 3 a suitable for Turnips, but. in the he opinion 
or — 
some, too sharp or Whe 
X. [We shall be much obliged for further ee 1 
sis 
the Turnip erp 
if t t 
> | these yolk 
.|ing cock, whicb, regulating 
e Spring | — afterwards 
m — ig light harrows 5 br eak the crust. To 
Produc 
as 
ls. per bushel 
wi 
had 1 
: that ca 
r | known i 
‘recommended = corr * 
do w 
eri 
The Oil. gland in Birds — Having read with attention 
the several letters that have lately appeared in the 
5 i the bil el the bir rd. 
continues till the feat e of the 
those over the thighs are well erabi —5 if we ma 
judge by their sleek, hah shining r ance after 
.| the operation. So important is the necessity for this 
oiling, that it is a well known fact a ri anatomi 
* the * of all birds are made of sufficient length 
r the of the bill t ach th in the 
wa rit th necks of r ts ar 
e in popore to: 
855 length of the legs, so as to om the anim 5 eat 
e r low growi ng pla —0. 0. ` 
On the Fecundation of th gs o 7 for an 
entire season n fies the 7 — a the cock, I would wish 
to say a few words. any of your readers 5 
5 hen in ri oy ot posite they * ht hay 
hat the m pose sed of a mass uf yolk bags, 
rese Ber e a es hs of . but with this difference, 
that the yolk bags ö in size from an inch in diame- 
n to a pin’s hea 
bags, bar N vis 
e een of having owe con 
o reason, and has not been a 
ata ee 
his your corresponden 
t no a could in the normal state ay 100 or 150 
eggs —. which chiekens mig red after the 
death of the een, or cocks, as thos ioe which do not. 
n before his death ora do so after. 
basa e ve 
8s 
by the u 
known hours of the master s — of his hens, 
“fre 
me 
nothing ; ; d the 
e less oe another. 
. 44), to say, A 
angerous experiment ; 
ison’s 
sa 
enemy is Fatto to flight. 
emy thod of Preparing ight soil as a Drill Manure 
for 2 — Co., W. Sippet.—Some time ago 
