THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
——— 
34—1848, | 
tion to “p 
RA . if it tested 
serves very prob; 
nail into the ground under 
by — — current rot | 
no charm at sil. but natural 
€ Lancet,” 27th May, has 
additional” 
previous to any such call for it comes, which would 
gre nly enbanes ita prico, the heads of families will have 
weighed what I have urged in favour of 3 
store, and most of what is now here may have found its 
me into the keeping 28 private families ; Hewitt Davis, poses 
563 
soil that the oeean by which Great Britain is. 
— — fail and from È p wodo 
matter ma 2 
be converted int 
of g 3 > ee expence, 
adding to the ad advantage o of ‘those men already 2 
t pense Having turned my attention to this — 
since, I converted 20 tons of night-soil 
of this Journal will be 
to aid in these interesting i 7 ies, and fayour 
pages with the 1 7 D. 6 Ded. an 
DEETAN 
me Gorrespanden ce 
ee - Mr. H ewitt Davis, i in his in- 
Pi 
Fondverten 
when sour; Ellen os — 
year 
5 quarts and 8 quarts 
acre are magnificent, and the 12 qarta is likewise very 
ood, but the two former are deci the 
ers of your 
also 2 chat this is — third crop of W 
f th the 
set to the bar tubers; and yet on the 5 m I have 
— — my crop by removing divectly 
ase appear ie it 1 
ſor ylides as 
rer off, er ri 
er 
but I removed t the 
in n is — grea case — dis- 
— to those until the disease h 
the root before — fin off the tops, As 
Mr. Eagle has 1 3 ae is shar to suppose 
that this operation diseased Potatoes 
w it, and here 
eorg 
Surface of H hen your corre ent “ An 
a Man, Sivan 2 17, 7, revived the old — problem 
as no one would have taken the 
plants; 
year | rea ere, 
were | which thon 
fees with Elihu the son of „Barachel the — 23 
0 
than 
Tnis . 2 were fully grown —— they can — 
2 by disense, 
trouble to show ite fal 
and I was you, — 
Editor — obinion n ought to be of weight wens 
eometrically y correct is practically wron 
“Ial will show min 
11 —— 
the soil is rend 
an 
—— — the . by a alee but the 
ere so sadn a they — 
we uished. 
rations 
on in the town, and 
1 
— 
and the most wretched 
— ang T all dad ge — vegetable 
— Curiis, Mariner, King’s 
Poult 
Sherringham in this coy — sold to — 
matter 
1 
— If your — ana who 
some 3 of what 
la will consult a few intelligent 
2 he will, 1 — to modify — 
opin <a is well kno a thet the male pheasants 
— 
il 
carpet; and as Grass, 
agricultural vegetables es extend ward * 
* 
omestie fowl were very ob 
by | origialy been a mixed v 
iles,” bearing no resem whate 
8. * sot rane rime I refer, 
w the greatest 
nd in one or two instances that I have 
noticed, the plage was strikingly similar to that in 
the cock pheasant ; W. 
, Garden Koh! Rabis—A correspondent 4. A who 
1 “the first bl bac — h 
— . t ack spot oug 5 
"i perience out that ina week ten. 
4 J will be sulively — and that in that week | t 
destroy the | b 
about five sacks of — — Shaws, 
tubers affected therewith; C. R. Bree, 
Stowmarket. 
Substitute for Potatoes. Now that a failure in the 
hich be- 
gest to the hea 
those in the * . occasion there 
themselves 
— bO te for then t also as a 
means to provide in some eben o little cost for the. 
wants of the . poor, 
* ply: of this fariancen 
a : 
cheapest food, 
of the provision ce have made for 
$ 
E 
4 
means y 
lied! At the cost ‘A 2d. may the 
of a y 
family be appeased for a 
alread 
getable in gh vy k or in mae 8 
Shona and 
Page the hill — sof sun 
33 
n's Con- ever found there 
ad Mr. Grey, o 
vide 
urface = = tt y they will hav 
— at least the — — — of a. Gazette, 
greater 
of acquiving “thet food ; 
ut that there.is dae 
liable to be * on hill-sides than on a he puma, 
with respec n crops, rnips 
Wurzel, — the like, it is clear that if the rows sbe made 
ope — there will be five rows o 2 
e plain; or rather thas he. row 
would be 
25 Esse 
otherwise d not bring their 
— me AA it would pu like plaeing —— — 
na nd all, 
in that. 
e still 
nae 
— any 
h beg to say that 
| cattle or r field ber Rabi, — is a 
ki 
avgold | soil—one of the 
| plished the con 
ul. | better 
more deli- 
the table, and a —— — a — its 
smooth — bulb e dark 
vith chick te 
s past.. 
ent, —— par —— 
poiled by Turnipy 
ation by culti- 
vising that th 
sur- are not more 
cultivated than ¢ — ase — 2 re field Ke Kohl Rabi is 
one of 
the m 
— showers of the pee has sprinkled all 
ite ample ul leaves wi 
os 
Se 
y 
access im ; a 
who have tried it say, that the Koni, like the: the Mango, 
not only keeps well in the spring, but 
butter for which the 
Or why not plan 
finer milk and butter in 
ada pted fo BB ors it 2 ‘many of the hill 
farmers’ club at — and a 
chat it was extremely fortunate for 
dually a national point of view, . they had 
the — * 83 what was deficient in ae 
tion of manures from o 
fro: 
doubt 2 its truth. Nature, vagem. is 7 
will find: re ain 
in the culture of the 
form all those persons interes 
8 
r to give any explanation of it. Uho of your 
cular account of so 
in seeding fro 
— which I have seen no attempted ex 
