414 
"hoe, would have cost at least 12s, per acre, to have done it as 
deeply and perfectly. Therefore I consider Mant wet * | 
is a most important one for agricult It is not the we 
Able me 
me 1 do m we are a 
ve * strong opinion on the im 
li the operations going on 
ts there 
ways happy t 
y fro 
In the intervals 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
breadths, 
Beans well planted and luxuriant ; Turnip of large mea 
Y, 
| e put in in very superior style, the brairds looking 
* mie . ama there considerabl y injured with the om The | 
Pome y s being affected i in 
menti craps. 
[June 17 
| the ening 2 as those of last year. 
of it, but I am happy — — — we plants are showing in- 
most instances 
at space be 
and I 
m 5 
oat 
to * any i jiy “or all 
arm. We have 
ic inspeetion, 
happy 
are open at all ti 
public censure. Tdoit o 
r-like and — 1 4 ; and, probably, I deserve 
n, because I lay 7 — pous me — 
ricultu 
u, and 
an more 
have a 
and 
ou, perhaps, ar d by 
tre han any other neighbourhood I 
s rich 
‘on 3 it is our dut: ty to inquire into } 
that I have s hr 
bo putting forth new buds, shoots, or leave 
This they did iast — aſter a more severe struggle, ab 
or — 2 1a ter han the 1 time. 1 am sanpa; there- 
yee that the t extent. 
—J. H. 
SOMERSETSHIRE Farm, Jun ne — —This last week we hay 
been engaged in ploughing, h 
and spreading dung ; drilling Swedes 
Potatoes, whic 
n the 
know ; but 1 is lamentab! 
expense per ye pee — 
} 10 m 
— te of thousands of acres that are rendered co 
7. sterile for 
Opinio 
10 
the offer. 
‘heavy te 
Several 
most durable thin e things | 
must all, 5 ë ar dot 
what we do -a now 
tak f 500 
that is, 
of 18 hors 
50 s 
paying rent, and to keep it undrained, I would nonin’ toaccept 
between dra’ mone 
e power 
as 3 as po 
22 of a the work as two relays of 9 horses each, that is 
orking 10 rs per da: 
kin gdom, the thousands and 
mpara- 
ant ot the removal 1 te zagoak? water. And 
that that if I N offered 
wait very heavy t tenacious Sat to be farmed without 
I consider the difference 
nacious clay and — 2 — is the 
out wet mema 
e on 2 
e 
s permane sib 
“Look — the iron orien made e br ¢ * rrett. 
ench; they * good or useful 20 years | hence; rer 
ech: 
oon — gpa y 
— 
faon aes 
weather, which appears to have done 
been — practice for — —— s past, u — 
> nd where the Turnips — be fed o 
ith lent grain, and we generally obtain a —5 oan ot vaii the 
second sowing ‘cham from the first ; but they are very liable to 
saie —— are bu 
rog 
the end of that Pee 
would have spent 2000, An th 
mee by your pig 1 miso almost | 
mg not int aa magine that tl 
al off be before Chris sow Wheat. We commenced on the 
9th sowing Shirving’s Swede upon the fallow land, 3 Ibs. of 
seed per acre, drilled 2 feet apart between the rows. 0 
er 
oe 
lation 
It 
acres 
and must e 
faint a large 
consumption of coals 
essibl e, 1 al per hour, and it has the 
— for two years past, has been, per 
phosphate mixed with 20 bushels: ashes saturate 
soil, and applied by th è 2 owt. — pan 
e the se a wo broadcast and narrowed in ‘previous to drilling 
ma stat ted, s because the peculiar action of the super- 
phosphate in —— an early growth is best calculated — 
Insure a regular 2 and also by applying the gua 
f destr the — "of 
I the e ground, a 
E roots 5 of the Swedes ere to extend into the — e between | 
rows, 
late upon piesni- a F. — ngine 
an investment of 5 The price of thee engine probably > 3 
be 150),, but then you would naturally reshing 
machine, you would have a pair o mill sto = ** pee our 
own corn, iy if on the farm, whi 
I will do. will also make it pump the water, 
ent and turn the grinding-stone. And I am not sure that 
we shall d our own Wheat into flour, so that we may 
have the 1 r erasi 4 — own tne that I may 
hear an 
down amid loud applau se.—. 
Reb 
A Short med 3 the Advance. 
bandry 
pt ag deer, with the Highland Society, — r — and rain tifali, 
By Sir G. 8. Bart., F.R.S, V. P. R. 8. E., intermingled, and under — —— of which vegetation nas 
C IS 
is: — There is an rmous amount of wor 222 in the — — 
à 1 e + ot planted in the eari tof May, in th 
for an in dent j and the principle of | described in last report. Three — oat 0 ots —— — 
2 of. — * a: Saas — guide „ 17th, and 18th of May, in asunder, 
tho arrangementa which may be adopted for its por- | mad ieot rars wu duis ican mci 
0 a ce muc erior to 
formance. There can be no oubt of the truth of this those of last s. ur Bean crop does not come up to ex- 
position : ein, indy 3 — — is, whether | Pectations, being ‘dwarfish and thin, and not at all likely to 
fos may not be purchase | realise what we anticipated a few weeks ago. no season 44 
‘he of the double seach 53 | we recollect a greater abundance of Grass than the — 
— be required. And on unacquainted with the large suppl i 
yof Turnip we were inter, 
business of the — Soeiet an are now in — an condition, and ror a ve health. . 
of its eh a eek opinion, a — . — r Ah eg — — poaae 2 iot re- 
Rye-gras al t 
‘such knowledge is not Nr to form a judgment 4 Our pigs are receiving the remains ef our — —— = 
steamed with plenty of excellent winter-sown Vetches. 0 ar 
to superi tend them? And Sir G. mar ae E ana an AA aa ee 
t a , n 0 tarm- yar 4 
phiet ee ee pointing out the many im- 11 bushels of bones —— to the action of 3015 *. — 
— baada * thus P te it — * e lat aa we — in ee 9 
necessi — . 
means being devoted to the ti an Pe haan bones ER yet a considerable breadth of Turnips to sow, 
. Deren h ons in th being considerably in arrear of 
7 plan, bi mistry Society, when AES — — — arable. We understand that 
aer sems —.— come to be . will ly-sown ——.— per 5 er eg have suffered 
— off with the sheep, — 
MERSE Pan, Jane 9 last report we | crop- of hay. Our peyre — pues — — 
— pan 2 — —— ; seven the flea at . magic fe our — part 
rowing, Fl : — ae workers Whee as left for mak Rye. grass — but Clover deficient, We are 
: 1 711... e ca ear 
$ 3 th 25 1 
— June 12.—Since last C ota Pog foe's ve been acre, part with bone dust and —— acid, ous —— 
hay making, Garros, Farrage ‘snd Stang 2 el the | orate nee ee na harrowing the land for 
rey d . 3 
= Being ditbied between yada early ag hay, and horse-hoeing — 1 . 
aor tne U Peas being 134 in aes ap part, ay (ae Peas are — hedges — — — ira T angas oad —— pending 
An 
JJ TTT 
poe we bad i EST SoMERsET Farm, June 12. 
ce a and the ground is now completely | we 8 usy n — wart * sin Mars fine 
AND eee er in April 4 
fine rain: nen some s pea e eight oy Siia yee ae Thebes Twenty-four acres p — — y 
est good to all ti i wo 
White 1 10 Wheat, Oath ak — shed the country look better. | each pla ant, 13 by 7 e ree 8 wr 5 
ey are thick and forward; | first put in . 
222 the blood, erry sendin 
obtained — the application of superphospha 
mew i we shall fini ish — our cart 
Trifolium, having used it constantly 
during five weeks past for milch cows, — and pigs, and 
we have found for years past that it has afforded a greater 
weight per acre, and more nutritious food than any other green 
crop with which we are acquat inted. Our labourers have been 
marking J 5 nould be happy p 
attack or 5 on his at doy Mr. Mechi sat 
‘olk Chronicle, 
No 
of Scottish Hus- 
through the establishment of an 
sifti g guauo iš mixing “in readiness for the 
drill; they — . ies — 1 in hoeing Potatoes aud 
2 rots. The sh pherds have been feeding the sheep on Tares, 
which are cut u h 
„ by 
= in ane pastures, weeding Oats and Barley, and hoei 
—Since last report we 
Calendar of f Operations. 
rt, 
experience, having had none te aowa earkier then — 
hedge: 
id. per rood, cleaning and — Potatoes, 
; s preparing — 
e er and one woman preparing thatch for harvest, 
SEX FARM June 12.—The 
— — corn crops 
have ve improved i 
rains; and, on the meadows that prt 
are now well up and are being singled; where the 
3 
plant has misosi, we transplan 1 
putting them where the ‘manure was 3 8 ‘thelr plas 
field contai * the remainder, — un in Another 
borne 80 promising an apne earance, havi very lately, ha 
missed plant and very ir ketlar so much so Fop) Places 
about to break it up with the searifier and 80 ps We Were 
but within — — few days, from effects of t the — — 
coming up very direction, so th: i 
to sp som — Ma angoid Wurzel. . every reas 
A The following is the 
E 8. 
6 —— — om 5 is 2 1 
8 . at 4d. . i = 0 : 
1 horse at 3s, 2 
Performing 24 acres a da 
For Drilling, 7 r 
2 men and sacd with drill he 9 
m man with harrow 1 
6 
1 
moco 
4 
Ti Sowo - Sasok 
E 
4 men with er for manure 
7 horses at 3s, 4 
— 
Performing 5 acres, £1 
We commenced Turnip a on the 3d, the 
for it, and some of those firs 
e month, rather injured by the „ Dh 
e | ploughing for and sowing Rape, also sheep — 
Notices to — 
— 4 — Epoucation—C—It wo 
but we doubt if it be possible— a Tepes 
Farmer” * would be dispo osed m — wen 
ould give hart ope or 
Miller—A work b Messrs, . Blacki lasgow, 
on Practical — ‘id — We do 
not know its title, but pi bookseller ean obtain it it for you, 
He cin Beans—J C M—Your Beans are with Dredo 
Fabe, P., of which a agers will be found in Grev, — 
Orypt. Fl. tab. 95. It is a , but is seldom 
seriously injurious. It is r remarkable to what an extent Ure. 
dines sometimes (exist without — much — 4 
he a 288 — in the 
spring certain to be the victim N 0, AY 
w pushing vigorously, — —— to . 2 
9 75 
u io 
, though the whole po pege 
wW N— 
comparable to the ‘swan as an — * e d 
weedsin Tn 
ere 
s. It does not, however, eat all 
it —— scarcely to touch the Water Lili ies, white and 
xeept perhaps ina hier ee x * reii it no doubt 
y h 
may be uprooted by means of a long pole pen with an iron 
claw, and used either te = shore or from a boat; once 
detached from their ings they may be floated ’ — 
Swans seem to 1 e 72 we all the lower forms u 
t 
fateyg — 
lately published will show has been 
n kept ae an in a much m 
In ar instan nce within own knowledge, wi 
But if all communicatio 
me, V Ne" ‘the nearest main stream, 
the swans will disappear wg 3 as surely as 
wigeon and the piutails. It is cheaper in gine end to y 
fair price ior a p wellness 
with than und 
1 
to 
the disappointment of nursing 
of three long years’ pp 
z 
indicates riy he om 
service might be reudered hd , A 
— es hooper, of whose tameability Linnens 
highly ; — z iess graceful e. ver, bearing more 
in its and carriage to sob Mogae 
also — Polish swan, that prod ee 
—— oe if to be procured alive, averag! 
les cygnus olor, might originate 
— for limited pieces of water. 
be less domestic than bad mute swali 
sé erred * 
His 
ue 
— 
— to us; but, b 
ts ga “ss gam 
carries off matters * y 
f the 
no hand, ani and, 
h, as 
frequently comer — abundantly, un under ¢i s 
must be dered unfavourab eee 
lities bal vad ne S ie 
they 
diet, and, Ten the. gaudy iy shell xk 
shrimps, with 
hich, to cut 
ee, imelala Pe might ren render th 
vice, bu a work of 
t even if procured 
chance of kee — S at home work fe ba 
tical, D, 
sen-wi 
Markets. 
POTATOES, — asx, WATERSIDE, 
ell 
n e ia be nes oa 
ans Reotch Cups 
teh do., 
BAY.—Per Load of 
8 
New H 
Clover 
f 36 Trusses. 
Mead. H 
Prime 
trio ea a 658 to 758 
uu 
Prime M Na 5 0 . 
. BA 
ay 
w 
Pine Old — ea ot Old Chavet 
Inferior Hay 60 . 
New Hay.. ons w Clover » 
Ay, 
— 1 report tuat, „ 
1 
"Tr re ng — Siar Kents p, 
ing 3 — 
oid i Hops 
ne 16. | 
Mes Fa Hop market 
Par 
ina sour y dull — 
* & ep an peat, * 
eald of 19 
Viini i 84 68 
F 80 — 120 
anes 
. 
