408 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [June 17, 
‘ tion, a fact likewise not gene- incident P confined places, markets, and towns, I 
ciation in July. We passed 2 * pas- mally 3 . en the exercise of much in the country white poultry are free to-h elp Living 
ture intended to be broken ars abou * ee ‘od t and ingenuity on the part of those .who | selves to tho p quirements which they cannot obtain 
= +a a 1 aa. ji f th ferti- | would wish to be successful breeders. he readers | when confined, he may not have met with it, A 4 
isi l sin fac the Gert, uche aks of the ef this Journal are much indebted. to the able pen an 3 N ds. Lade gives no account of 
93 4 . b t, in practice, I find | of 2 ro e a E 81 sah kp 5 om diseases at t all, sectors, i, very little 
a 111 ire- and rearing of this use y 
that burning this turf will destroy a quantity of wire- | breed them is decided] the, t perfect, II. —This in general å is a complaint 
i 7 y the most p Paint amon 
ted Tarv of atone voy whch, eu common, inary aad ie deel eM Paap fom Lite known abont or heat 
er by be oa Benet the ploughed | peared. See No. 50, 0 “822, 1847. ‘The original e a swellings or chalkstanes on the joints, 
9 berige order, after à course of the Turkey, 3 ajid: we etymol log volved | The le e tout 1 8 remove: fi chalksto when 
Beide ere a Andee ánd scarifying, Bakis introduction as coin ncident ry Cra — — e ocala All gute 
f f of the Americas. b ortuguese * Is are subj 
er * bea 13 — Aor ue ws wih the discovery of those languages qf is called Peru, | to these ailments, and the symptoms soon on discover iiae 
— Wes ae tt whieh “the eonjanetion of strong il no doubt from the province in South Amerie, Teen Satan Sanoin w Ti of tam one in e eure, 
ri Pie isi l und it ro ’ er in the 
and hea fond a gn Se gre z 3 3 de e yr * nà history of the present | sphere or peaa the earth, or contact with cold b 
e ee tenant who had no other acres | superior breeds of Areria and S a ne f ne — ter ra e one = 
Next that they have nated in aceidental eros : ’ r bei 
draining wil tell quito < aleren erea ROIA 2 breeds with the Virginian, an A — ain 8 or" a gg Mes al i 50 2 ary. re 
farm, under ent, is th the old Englis stard, Otis Names are b Hannel in the 
carry about 1000 wrod 100 fat fat beasts, aan all the young | frequently given from some prope likeness, real | bas san 12 yore ao 2 ursed, oceasi casionally 
stock ar a considerable breeder, beside the Wheat to or imaginary, and the resemblance of te. e Gaig ton out vo TOS rink durin ing the day, often re. 
T „ guano, and other lina Turcica, to that in pictures of the Turkish soldier quiring much patience =F ‘attain before the little 
ii in, il not be under 1/. 10s. a year per acre, and is very striking, the casque o be g painted | sufferers show W sym bee oF rocovery; Ses 
Suis" double that e um for the fist twò years ; and in those pictures of a y colour, and fastened round — i A when very restless, to be see ured by 
E. N the and under the chin by red scarlet lappe uffon's "a a bin ae r, about 2 i 3 wide . 2 yards ng 
ere for it, Meleagris, taken from the ancients, is fas se oun egs to secure them in a comfort. 
within W Aa a Poet — 1 — iin 1 Tror, Ta the fable of the two sisters, e position, and wee ends then, secundum artem, 
— mas amarna ane amaaan Meliagrides, which is proved by the Turkey laying twisted r ee the body to secure the win and tied: 
. OF POULTRY. many spot OBB +88 does the Pintado or Guinea- | O ny the aL be 7 A m bath, "penefcal. hot, in water 
ued from p. 243, fowl, where: the Pare which lays but two; an vinegar, ave found very bene cial 
72. 
Animal Benne 9 are many q s inte- 
resting to are ape or which might be e y 
a medium between the arti- 
ficial states of nere Although we! habits of sala 
become much changed in thei 
onderful in providing against 
which would sh to thwart her bea 
is specially e erga rtp 
Turkey and the Pea-fowl 
The Sag: is, that the 
im 
thicket for ~~ against the 
cock, where she once: 
other — of bird, other 
‘Precisely’ the like 
Turke eys ; but being more valued, kept 
edible qualities more than fo 
oat to Aer 
ropensities apper 
and bred for their | 
ca, gives many ve 
in connection ak their antral habits, eo 
ird or of a hen b 
ces, I am inclined to believe that there is, and that 
spotted eggs. e No. 2 22, 1845, p. 3 
pr Eggs. —— with = subject of incubation, 
there is a point. w n disputed, on which 22 
n must also “agree t 
th 
ed are not quite infallible, size and shap 
ition of the air sac, central for a on. 
ai ee No. 5 8 p. 690. After 
tios, | freque ntly marking the eggs, a en I bave been 
able to recover the shel, — after the exclu- 
sion of the a > have: pram the first to be less cer- 
i and the ive i m 
of thee eggs of the common fow. 
ms, Tntestinal.—Bird are liable 5 5 
iti 3 species of wore ieee thei intestines, paida ly 
rent, white, nee from 
are 
ass from — with the fæces, panies gly 
their p nac- 
I 
| like a species in dogs, rather tran 
paang a very 
„ when 
Turkey, in a par- 
ne but hens, 
y the cottagers, 
111 
; 
e 
most pè: 
may, 1 not unfrequen 
send ad 
lag 
S | : i 
r 
©: pal 
— — believed s — died | 
pros For this key chicks 
by acci 
are 
under 
and pheasant | 
e other parts of the 
entalist be- | perce 
body, forming a z eso 
sive cr a lg ub veers: 
the whole s stem, and is then aana DA The Ca 
3 fed upon much animal matter, 
coining money easil d 
of a 1 7 —.— without anx znam re 
8 
composed of 
ix ve grains of white vitri 
the addition of a small prepa of white win in in 
> 
of iodine, all of which have 
is- 
upra t 
existence one _ ag egg . 
0 
r Pridea 
une ee ic aiai birds. The symptom is Fecher. 
ment of on PETET, ee ee prevents a fowl 
from walkin e Cau wins o confined situa.: 
sudden aA gen loss of appetite, and 11 
take foo cases the invalids m as 
sisted, 5 5 z = b occasionally fed, a Tittle at 2 
time, with a spoon, and they must sometimes be forced 
to drink, or they will rapidly decline and die.— D. S. E, 
me Cortese ma 
in as mp Hay Grass. Damp hay, or 
ass, may be e ath layers of straw, or Të 
1 to pe heating, an du a 
Salting 
ven Gras 
ay sprinkled with s 
out ioe juice from which 
absorbed by the straw. ° Mould dy hay, put t together vid 
„from 8 Ibs. to 25 ibs. per ton, w better relished by 
the cattle, and them more sod — sound hay 
stacked without salt; of which many instances are 
re . (Johnson on Salt, p. 105, &e.) An excellent 
armer, at Landrake in Cornw. many years àg0, 
stacked damp hay with salt, whic e out almost æ 
aste when me * was opened, but ro cattle devoured 
many, re cure cut 
it greedily. 
G 
out quite a paste, an 
0 
isn g of the nd second, in re Pratt 
traw Abe eee and palatable, by the juice 
w may vary 
ran, if ower enough to preven 
Sawdust € Charring and Clay Burning. — Haring best 
for instructions for e 
8 0) into 
way, if put on sparingly, or if ape 
hoking the rai 
he clay subsoil at 
manures by lieg 
mühe but at 
the soil; us, 
ns an 
cheap. 
reach it is just the ew Bee the 1 
to build up with, and 
between ; the skill of “he b — ng, #3 
~ 
— 
— 
