340 
in England with that dan in ! 
should infer . ee r is 
3 where wa ary betw eet: 8 
in those parts of E _England ee 
e estim 
ng last year’ 
some cases, beyond measure on sterous. 
to France, we h nt proof that ibi r 0 
i as ‘well as a hig aid 
States, labour will conseque: e 
and thus, to a e considerable extent, maere for 
mer’s poc cke t, in old esta- 
Allo w me — 
farm Sori in badly ee neighbourh a 
e shall be ve ad to find your bee ae 
dop 
he Green-sand.—P. P.—Your 
1 — overlooked Mr. Paine s quota 
-| value, and as 
suited towns orig — United 
ductive of the best results.— Cuthbert P. Johnson 
in 
Mr. Ful 
=- 5 Brandreth Gibis; ; Mr. Baskerville 7 $ Mr. 
C. Keene ; Kind 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 
meads, on thes =e ng sandy Kentish 
the ane of = Bast met both for a own 
s for similar improvements in the 
Kingdom, would te" pro- 
Sorirties, 
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL tg it or ENGLAND. 
EEKLY COUNCIL was heat e s Feet, 
oooh — the 
M 
Cure; Mr. Eggar; Ue. 
Mr. 
Mr. 
er; Colonel 
ae ; Prof. 
eed ; Prof. 
Ine ard; £ 
MacD ouall; : ` Mr. 
— 
s 
aaa on the 
the ci 
res and e onceived were 
such a e 3 upon their 
offspring were at the same 
e Rev . Gleg in 
the high-bred foals at the 
ier’s analysis of the green-sand nodules, in 
er ; all the subsequent analyses only no to 
more than 26 years 
compositi 
e this green 
nt. of — in the green grains 
John Herschell 
p = 
r their Barle eye aa is perhaps as 
f alkali (and — of an 
e occurrence of the aap sage There 
entlemen in se counties fully aware ot 
Boh 
dressing for 
vale 
down hill, to the upper green-san 
‘om 
and n 
Mr. Sotheron has extensively —— ‘the eee 
s 
He 
© 
4 
doubtful, according to Mr. 
this proceeding m must be eminent 
ho wer of claying ‘their 
poA fields — sent examples of different elays to the 
mical iation, and adopted that 
which was determined by Mr. gr to contain mos 
d phosphoric acid. —S. . Woodward, 40, 
Upper Park-street, rete 
Salt as a Man — Tho article on salt in a late 
num umber cont — opinion that salt is not generally 
0 ap poppe oe he small quantity of 
covered by analysis of vegetable or a 
am satisfied is 5 during storms 
in 
ru 
gales, the glass under my verandah h 
Hire 
covered by the proper tests, as w <a poe by evaporation 
which leaves the crystais of 5 by 
salt behind. ee 
satisfied we need not apply salt as a manure, p 
still should be glad to know whether in — soils far 
a y not be be ally used both i- 
cally and also mechanically, by a ing moi 
from . [There is abundant experience 
— : the importance of ex- 
tending improvement a li 
they pe be induced to extend 3 ato rge pip? to 
considerably below Woolwich, (keeping as good an 
sasa n the | ha 
have seen the — Q) ma denen | 
Eowd 
at four months 
the first m arrots, when it 
found that not one e-fiftieth of the number of fo * thit 
na, ? 
the old system were lost pas the new one. 
Without endeavouring E asce what cause the 
the 
the 9 — ; 5 he coal state fro 
— 
ry, 
—.— after their birth.—Sir Matthew 3 did not 
think it advisable e to mna 
that case, — in — 
urse-cows would of course be 
that 
: structed of iron; a 
in fro 0 
Hungarian mares had probably 
- co 
pria withdrawn, and a vacancy being thus left in the 
be found to occasion mùch difference 1 
fi of those events; statements conne 
nd appearance 
of . with 
green food south of t 
ined — applying to districts n = 
the y. sth of division 
the 
of th that 
owER.—Mr. Fur xn, M. P., 
poet rig ot of the © Cosme a ay of ‘he 
ts (alluded to by him a 
— 
that of a threshing- 
poses. The whee 
ber was cu 
as npe ih purposes and i 
others, employm 
but in a 
were require ab — 
try the eutting of Gorse to some prise by means of 
his machinery. 
Sawpvust CHARCOAL. — Mr. Woo a e 
k 
on his 
t with 
hea — a om the bottom to the top, where 
+ 
—.— 
= 
S 
aster who neea lost one-tenth 
ing the lam m 
— 
pastures, * might safely be deer, from the 
— that, on n the other hand, w 
in condition 
allowing the lam 
. Milw 
ewes ; 
ee were low 
ust n —.— e 
bs to remain too | 
Dyer’s friend arose 
— 
ra condition, and n 
lambs being allo 
that case the udde 
with | co 
ned 
bs, as in to putrescence ; and he beli 
| it ought to i 
between a — and a mechanical agent ; 
5 ammo: 
of “bones, the prese 
mbibing properties 
that volatile element — e 
naa 
its escapes salnslle 
2 
ers, 
by hand, would become sore 
thought 
that no general r rule could be laid down on igs J t, 
take place 
ce; and thought that if inquiry 
and breeders 
origin of 
urity, eg s in . 
hich he con nsidered to becom 
f the time of lambing 
a statement of the dates at which, 
localities — „ 
green crops are 8 ready Pets ewes and lamba, would 
a practical benefit, as it was very 
n w 
ear ing of lam 
from distention, unless milked | found 
and diseased. 
arded the subject | 1 
enerally fro 
—— ate 
Turnip fields — set 
and would drill in e 
— — 
st apart Ior eit 
hitmore exp 
to the Society all the 
subject 
Fichi 
Council 
he had grown with great 
88 cows, and pi 
h 
ran Duane, 
Conrnkr. on the 
| The reading of this 
known to botanists by the 
