in eed bes 
iption of soils, which will be afterwards treated with 
garten-like management; but, on 
erior soils, a certain loss 
write at present), a common error constantly ob- 
served from this — to the end of September, is the | th 
ure 
of re- | pu 
ducing y fold- yard dung from its fresh or oy half. voted 
or ex 
in 
t intere 
resi 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
it ee cot by the . prineiple of — honesty, 
till 
a * 
i ed in — 
erence over — vincial ones, un contrary 
to fact and to led history, and even then the er 
ection and comparison of synonyms will be useful. 
a anybody o f names ; 
—— 
th 
of specimens, 
iding at a distanee from each other, will often settle 
oe nee Fgh 
id 
is prov: b. wa to pla; 
ealers all over the re gor = probably be | sible 
tal — Si 
between — i 
bantams — top- o 
. —— ——-— ͤ—ͤ..̃— !— 
by some authors. That exact degree must be arranged 
eggs. 
extent, — 
other E. never been carried out as W e 
hi be met w 
= 
— 
and rearing a few fowls for his own use and amuse- 
ment by these means, but never t out 
ell known, There are so 
obtained by means of water, gas, or a mp 
ciple, I is to make 
again 
t of 106° Fahrenheit to descend upon * In 
eggs. 
the Library of Entertaining Knowledge’ n ” referred | tos, 
to bare fall 
expects, now 
new, Iti — nevertheless 
Ag) 2 chat — — 
a practice of th 
art yet n mapy in 
be recon — . and 5 feet * ep, and 30 — apart i 
s has beon. found out to be 
se and small results. On 
as may be suitable to oa pea previous to ‘ts til 
lication From repeated 
e nes 
1 than they mas on are! Not long — 
ur . — and om land hay, being induced 
e by reading the numerous recommendations 
of te cae e, &e. I now beg si simply to state 2 such 
t may e — that I was asto 3 some 
months what it co e that — our m 
80 
what the same animals, then composing the dairy stock, 
have made since my discontinuin to salt y 
mothers for the chickens. One is of 
tion, and hasa pond init fi an 
a sort of box, with two sides lined with sheep-skins, 
long wool of which h or the chickens to set: 
their backs 22 The principle 2 invariably 
2 a descending heat, n the eggs 
= of K Tiptree for instan the stack. Undoubtedly much credit 7 or may be due T 
that system — — but on the strong, stony, — to its application in partie pg more | sam for 1 might be 
clays o of Northumberland it — not. Mr. Parkes and e — i cessary before we apt — produci — Looking at the 
Mec hi would, I dare sa; the notion of ourselves to admit it as a general ren or ‘believe | accommodation generally afforded out 
Pan. 30 inches in in depth and 18 feet guid and | all the — put forth by such sanguin: money | sgam: A for poling, a one need wonder that little 
a from — drainage the satisfac squanderers. ill mention a l ac * ie ter, ond that a it is s% 
e been obt . An examination, too, of t these | the use of salt on these premises where the animals had | dear ind scarce. 1 feel confident it would pay to build 
after it placed befi em to lick, in ord n farm | comfortable places for them, and —4 would employ some 
ge a be entirely ras upon. Let me add, that on | servan inking lad (an hired to whom of the least able-bodied about to look after the 
— isely similar where — 1 have been executed | a little more education would have been very useful, if | fowls, keep down poor - rates, and ahd many old 
at the — depths of 2} na 3 feet, no —— of the right sort), having in his hand some threw and children happy and useful, ing the stoves in 
coat whatever has been ced in it into the mouth, and pe ~~ — nostrils too, cow hen-ho and looking after the poultry. A letter 
ceeding cr If no pte miley advantage, —5 why far gone in calf; it made her cough or sneeze several can now be received from pt in 
incur adde nal expence in the rmation? An minutes, and early next morning she quitted a very egg can be hatched out to a chicken 
erroneous opinion prevails as to jaying song clay land 
ay live calf, which of course died in a few hours after 
ite flat after drainage. (“ Not a cre: says D . 
arkes.) A too close adheren is advice has cost ” Bile making.—The letter of your correspondent | r 
me of pounds, but qui nv. me Mr. Caird, on Mr. Lawes’ — on Turnip culture in 
last that the ridge, with a decided inclination to the Devonshire, induces me to sa the same side 
furrow (the best line of drain) is far preferable, These | i butter-eating the community, 
may be thought shallow notions on the subject and those 
upon, but they nev ess the subject. For I think, an unques- 
results of 3 Veri tionable fact that, wherever Turni ture flourishes 
Names oj —Every one interested in Poultry, | there it is impossible to get any bu r cream tha 
t 
either r for amusement or — and it is dar 2 the 
8 
the hile I that the 
try-deal una in calling all 
fowls with top-knots “ Polish,” or “ Polan R 
if. 
which is simple and convenient. For 
instance, the — p re by Richardson as “the 
spangled Hambur: en,” would in London be call 
e Polish hen. ade 3 in London be called 
ha 
appen es which are not leasin 
The ar ea 4 — 
Hambur The gold and Slania] 
TRELER the comb of the 
— males ti ye plump and — ten fog 
Hamburghs appear to 
of a Bok Pepine Dutch 1 B.s“ name found i 
e how to 
tunate public will soon lose all satisfaction in that most 
e good 
good farming, which at present they certainly are not; 
T. J. P., Windermere. 
Egyptian Egg Oven.—Besides the —— al vai 
the above system given by Sir Gardner Wilkinson, 
ese 
d which are 
cen | chamber: 
our Paper w the an July last, there 
is one, am explicit to be 
these ovens, however, is simply this, 
of chambers one above 
ut never more 
pears 2 
ower apartment nd the eggs one 
mee tok that would violate the law of — Tt 
p | Scourges are 
t in prayer, public as well as private, 
d can still 
F 
she eee 
two divisions hi The | cost. 
probably 
further 3 may transpire on the subject of 
n, and Chinese, and other poultry 
mercifully delayed, humble ourselves. 
before Him who- 
passions, stay the 
storm, calm the excited 
plague, and ye good out of — t Christian. 
pronounce deserving of that epithet 
both, in Turnip countries, detestable ; pia to us butter- en Down Corn be Raised Again 2— 
buyers in other counties, the De ire e When — ngenial — brought 
thought of with many regrets, n in winter, | end, it will leave much of the heavy eared Wheat beaten. 
when every pound we than its pete: down to the und, and it is a question of great interest 
cessor, Now, Turnips in their proper 8 are doubt- whether there are an aus to set it up again to the 
less good food, but it is rather ese 8 drying action of the air with the heat sun, i 
days that one should have them in one's tea and bread of 22 Å to 3 mileby, or grow mouldy, as it = 
and butter, spoiling one’s br every morning. | close o und. In repeated considerations of 
I have no faith in any of the remedies suggested for us 
taking away the taste, suc petre, chloride of 
e, &e.; they all fail, or leave another taste as bad as 
Turnips. ll modern im ments in agricul- 
ure have, or ought to have, for their object, 
crease the quantity and imp e quality of human 
food; but in the case of Turnip culture, however much 
the quantity may ase e quality of butter | t 
and cream is e pital article of food in 
positively detestable one ; and I really think the unfor- 
agreeable meal, breakfast, unless every man can afford 
— 4 x ood. I would 
pee | 
It will “hever do to plage the fre or beat i 
amsaa 
| — — c gs Cattle Food — — this neigh 
— Prin eg heat, and that of ‘i scone Cn t his cow „ 
eee eee (Symphytum oficinale) out green 3 stam o 
