258 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
[APRIL 15, 
on both rey to bring the . to = discussion 
much nearer to one anothe We st confess, 
however, aj ‘ts ‘having Fuge di mainished our ex- 
ctation of useful tenaut right legislation. The |$ 
nd so nume- 
personal.and voluntary engagement. 
i i ich, by the way, those wh 
its 2 eful care. 
ìe plea is, he does not understand his 
ar 1 
. of liste interference in 
ween tw are both perfectly at liberty, 
d the dem for farms at 
„ by in the 
tating the term e it is to be let. If, howev 
I am disappointed, 1 shall immediately insert a clau 
in every = ting binding the * not to take 7 
act. If such an evasion should be 
c urity will be my protection,. — 
but should t the l larger N bi do the same thing, it 
at the Act had failed. Snae 
zealous member ‘of Parliament, justly, incensed at th 
8 N of the measure, w no doubt sive 
of a gs ill, 
Base ak ald mh rinciple 
it ought to r hiraet M * N e — Who 
would stop at the first step in the right direction? This 
ev, bill would be be succeeded 
neh 
allowing 
t, or is too obstinate to follow 3 sity : 
r than 
smallest degree pr “4 
what I Aer never asked for— 
m the state.” 
ON THIN SEEDING. 
Dark Ages versus Rational Seeders.— The 
evidence 
115 8 . a fairly go for a new tri 
* barbarians ” might ve 7 5 
à tolerab ood chance of ob a 
as 
use 
is, Mechi, and Wilkin, and all f th — 
i, an “ 
— — hia, sonal — 
Title don. but all who have succeeded have figured in 
in the course of his “ np surveys), see p. 346, 
upon 
1847, if they, 
were to sow th 
urprised 
is probably 
this aggre appears to 
N man 
shale, upon Clover leys, 
ree —— sae Why *. A* not e 
if they ‘reaped three sacks only ; 
are that half the — of "Wheat 
The settling of 
4 Even thus :— 
medium, six with a sliding | o 
Say pecks o 
— * to be regulated by c TN “speci al regard 
being had ing: take 
e. | three peck 
sow three pints in 
barbarians 
like ; os me party be guided 
and n 
to the time of so a minimum 
s for the rationals, and let the ul rational 
the garden at Wix if he likes; let the 
take as a — nk three bushels 1 
any — “refl-etions gon 
n the = known. preee- 
ke of New 
o do as he likes soe his own. 
Miles’s “* Butt 
Thiek a 
agriculture to the public through the medium 
but 
Gazette, 
| these pre remis 
he has 
incontrovertible; that 
miie e who is 
cause 
3 I Qik. it 
results = 
not iiit 
terms it for thick sowin B 5 
seeded corn ee my the 
what is mildew 
— fourths of Be 
8 2 
B 
6, 7, 8, or 
the 
made 
82 
a 
N to ride roughshod over all distinctions 
tude, climate, geolozieal sl ik on, vegetable 
eposit state of cultivation, &e. ; and 4 these se poia 
must know that these v ies do 
greet E 
Spring ‘Tiptree, or 
pose that quantity to be s 
under all z 
cat Su ar 
DAN 
es 
equally adapted on al wil and : t. We all 
be tend kaeran 100; and tnne : one 
such 
i „ is the variation in sea- 
n 
from 
when they 
dewed or 
| the 
to wate Mork 
cur ive fan „er 
in prope drain y 
can get a ficient 20 full 5 — — 
and rationally 
for ever; it wi 
be good | Thi 
n. 
w I freely admit, ey thiat 
nar certainly is not og 4 
remed 
e Correspondence 
Hom 0 
nd Thin Sowing.—The Rev. Geo orge Wilki = 
c 
as lately contributed many of his opinions 0 
of your 
aver starts with 
s: that what he be true be- 
. it to be so, . that it 5 33 
he is one of the enlightened i 
to negative all the exper — og those 
D ppears to me that 1 
of the animal was black, 
chamelion e 
ries, 
(When ü irst the — — tound a tongue), 
ta 
ers see as we 
vaheuld alwa 
agric ray páa necessari 
nthe sie 
as jou.” 
our e aeg 
er = 
refore,” he says, 
all hedgerow trees, grub up 
a ae er 
u can destroy 
4 hedges an 
gsi pet may dry your crops as 
fast as 
damp or wet, and you will bid defiance to pisand 
not, cannot, appear on your co 
— e reverend l amana 8 Opinion, and i he 
that “a m rrect ac 
etory as it mi 
uch pwy will produce — 
ness is the re- 
ect. Ther reverend comes? ‘8 
eir food in a state of solution; 
may be right 
be 
7 that 2 become mil- 
‘kin . 
1 ted. The p iable to 
w that 200 
ot land that would feed 200 in 
8 
white, green, th 
th 
s be borne in syed tha t the 
ay | horse hoe 
| strictly adhered to, a 
er 
the slightest 
e | Crookham, 
learning and experience 
he will Say that the definition | 
isease ; it, in induce cream 
z, its twin’ brother, blight. Plants, 
rely eupport 100 —— 
„ that the quantity of * sorn their land 
duce is dependent o 
would almost tell 4 r 
are to plant per acre, et o 0 
seasons, —- neces of so 
; in fact, ip all na 
— 
N co sa 
terins, the 
him self. —G. 
partially under 
ate very 
0 t * 
M arch 21. nos concur ith 
tig having as 
better quality ; as after ¢ it was 
sown with Grass seeds, principally White e aa 1 
am well aware that this called inogulati 
but that system, as . . done,» viz, 2 l 
the turfs, is ineffectual, as Ih ns 75 * 
my eye—a 
under n na oe ‘ofa 
field, and not taking the ee e ona to 5 1 ae it 
e was knocki e summer, and w 
e mon 2 2 1 it will have the appearance of ntl 
pas 
Thick a i Thin Seeding. 7 one who has weighed 
e g ee on either side must admit that thin 
rves th T 8 attention and has in 
n 8 t leas uce 
ly — thoroughly under 
2d. The subsoil eto to a depth ot at least 14 inches, 
y. 
rms, by man 
— hears tried (qy-) his system— 
bis foundation is s forgotten * 2 — — — je in 
isappointm 
attempt to ca 
ned when 
be received * — general adoption, there ought nat 
oubt in an unprej d mind ; 
uced to ‘fe, 
making 
3 n a 
success, and also, if possible, D 
wide conclusions ‘of the contending parties. —C. P. Dy 
the erie churn. 
| saientifie a anap of making butter kd 
hip accomp the si 
‘of forcing a full current of sot 
by means of an exceeding 
heat cream to 
pump is worked by 
laborious as th 
pra orn ee a winch, i 
usual churns, 
| napa 8 application of science to 
Me. 
8 
ur tes, and — Kk Á isa 
26 Ibs. of butter.” — £. Hulme. [The 2 
Weston, of 1 the 1 * 
Improrement in Churn 
having rect 
daughters, 5 nec 
and reprobate j Tg 
in 
