Ai 
23—1848. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 371 
e Grass, and sell | sowir 2 4 * ays e If the soil be well drained 1] a careful observation of the e actions sof fowls 
peor ep vee oe Lee Ae purchase the have S that in the south of En ngland arg is no | do Ben their feathers ox) ie Teire 
pe Beas d autumn, winter e yard, then graze and d * get m so 8 2 or i sn a aha advan- gland ; and that they are arado vith i manaa or in- 
ll; they are supp n better, a d there is tage, for it seeds better and is a finer is telligence that pone ee to ecessity of the 
So ih je of the yard; but even with this the | less likely to fall. The re th be said of | dig cic qperation? It is not urged that Ne e e for the ex- 
in autumn will generally be found in ing ing pulsion of ligida i is i “its sole purpose; may it not assi 
balance in cas 
22 r of letting ® th 
e interest on outlayed money, 
cid 
F. 1 place, oud 3 ‘London J 
Salt. In yo i mi on 
a cate F 
— Hewitt Davis, 3 "i 
ay 3 Co; 
* instin 
s 
1 4 to great — amy not les 
8 5 
he considerate manner in which it is wri a et 
rch. than from the high 3 character of its author's! 
n 
rse of 
hemieal 
l It up can only 
—.— a BAA ‘quantity of manure, ro, indifferently » el 
bedd ing, wher reas 
r 
Ae 
1 Zo be continued.) 
m orrespondence. 
nant Right. — As a lawyer and a landowner, I came 
to the conclusion more than 23 
being Ín t 2 2 
* 
Forester. 
aud. the ee of leasing of landowners ; ; the 
the various terms en interests granted to tenants 
to the local customs, and the various de- 
ble, nd respon compen 
mprov ements, for which the tenant shali 
mpensa 
not have b ee co in their use. 
8 8 
>o 
t 
uch pecuniary compensation for pe ype eh 
in in banking an ed facia within 5 years, a and good u under 
ithin 
r fal sali of g wil Pay for go little addition to 
hates. Chem 
bou 
Parsad contents of salt, after g 
le. showing how 2 
g in the cou 
8 
© 
nelusio apprehending thea 
in the soil 2 be with salt (as with lime) 
and the w. 
ary, © 
nen of 2 as ml will generally a Neef but 
e costly, an he deduction, for 
ur phos s livin are 
ia aving reasons ‘for Wee examina 
uring streams, may have noticed their ‘regularly 
fi es from 
n a 
2. D 
t fro if 
Pay erer, neutralised Bcd in Na 
Buta 
oe chief — aris 
N 
their feathers en 
aani soluble 
modified by the al mper; yi 
proportions — ” — arg: as * * is brongbt up 5 
evaporation own by rain; tending to retai 
moisture by pion 2 dews, sik resisting vapors 
tion; helping the action, of ot ther 
f amm 
— 
rom whom it was tak 
S e. 
on 
* O 
ts ‘the A 
: Wa 
Nature 2 425 ns it in birds, and not given 
754 
the tendency o 
of green juicy vegetation, or scat sas ye stall, where seed 
ted. Ne 
draining wi 
shall award, which arbitrators shall abate accordin ng to 
the benefit derived 4 the tenant from such improve- 
ments and additions, take into — how 
far at the expiration mol t the tenancy th 
ey may be bene- Bo 
r the sea, the land is t enough and 
its ‘effects often x suficientiy mer but far inland I 
ess guano, a or the n trates, s 
arely | be used, , without 3 5 pean their own weight of salt 
ficial 4 this estate.’ e mode of appointi 
arbitr rss there sot forth. I have never yet eit 
changed o or lost by any m ars 
the co of 22 years, but v were that to happen, though 
no — 
I should conce 
10 made for 
ede compe e according to the s spirit 
The much gr reater cause to 
now 
had to many 
d Ag 
3, July 1 321 (a ete | lor 
1 scientifie “investigation, m young 
shows a much pro 
diminishing a - ar ott. Me 0 m: vee 
n Profess 
of t 
d by him, cannot protect 
like it appear 
8 in 
ye 
oun an 8 bad drains, or concealed def 
piei r foundations.— R. 
8 58 and the Advantage of Earl 4 ee TE 
Ihave long attached great importan 
to ge etting 
7 ring se seedin 
extent 
anda uent 
t consequent 
re 
farmin “abs 
to be forward. eal ates m 
alogous sense, bu 
| ceived a, before they de i its validity, are bound, 
1| T thin adva e satisfactory so 
this ‘iff gelt enigma, and to ee out a more BE | 
to | accept o 
r| advan 
| attempted $ to 7 us 
mystery 
ge aca pei papa panas 
y be attributed 
7 9 on bo 
of the question.— J. Prideauæ, May 1. 
Rump Gland i ns tes —The more we aig ay the 
laws shat regulate physiological functio 
th naturalist 
8 
8. 
hole eee ay: at . apparent. 
‘he rded ma 
rae among 88 of all rey 
= indeed — end a present ti 
he spleen may be s 
vet ree 
Ph in 
opponents of the generally re- 
solution o 
conclusion than the one in general use; indeed u 
they offer a better hypothesis I shall be ‘nee alg 0 
of 2 bas a vanced upon 
A i ongoing failed sa 
y sup sitions of their own, nor hay 
subject. 
fac 
e they | + 
EE to the o unravelling of 2 ad 
the 
‘they pre 
receive —— any day by 
ismanage r 
1 shoud ave hardly thought itr req 
eG 
arling bulls at 
from 14/. to 202. — * two- ‘ioral heifers at 110. 
t an 12¹. his 
erally considered that the 
and the treatment of youn g stock 
intended for. Tos pr Pog these objects not only must the 
early rearing 
o years mu 
may never lose the flesh they have — put on. That 
seems to me a very irrational practice which allows 
e to Lee me fat in $ and lean in the 
ard, ompared to the ingenuity of 
the Irishman who fed his Pig only on alternate days, in 
order to have a streak of lean and as 3 
The objeet 10 b od 
g W 
rom the ing, 
ood health to the end. It is in the first two or 
s th g a 
greater expense than can be or of 1 
the gm, 2 animal’s T by sa 
are all weil aware that a calf is a healthier 
$ 
the dah Tor the Bist few days of its life. 
