692 
THE “AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
cows, and never bad the taste of Turnips in the butter, 
and water ge 8 ines there are many in all parts of 
o be bought by the sack Sirs the | 
il erate | 
of the Turnip. We generally made from 1d. to 2d. per | return of profit, a upe 
Ib. of our butter more than market price. Should any | to that tu ut Lo a small portable mill ; and few of 
rocess was, I should this "nl gin 
details of the process.] 
Koh! Rabi.—I suspect the cause of the small size of 
the plants complained of by some of your e 3 — 
see 
the table. anting a 
week sale AE “till “he aa of July, but, like ae 
id not find m do well after 
e seed- 
fit-for being 
while the purple and green cattle kind had scarcely pre- 
= ee nee of bulb, Now Vinja close of 
tember), man; both sorts are 4 lbs. 
), the failures of the large sizes being © 
purple and the green kind a a gal 
it w ver 
11 
e skin; for if perfect in 
nang a, — Kehl Rabi 
n by th 
put ehk z 
gland mii bat i is certainly w well wor thy of general 15 
“Deg only a | the 
stibus,’ &e. ne call it 
lac 
3 vegetable ; 3 FV. i Constant Header. 
oot-halt. our correspondent “ B. H.“ i 
wane kirpa to — the best manner of ene 
calls it) foot-halt in sheep. 
admitting having used tar ives Pi fm 
the percent must baye been ex- | 
hausted, or it was not ape pfies often E to effect a mai 
„ I think ee well eleansed 
from 
dirt, and an any ca — — quantit, 
of- T well worked in, 24 hours would esse — — — 
more firmly, and i in a week, if t 
rs. 
vinegar; James 
without a sep on of y thousand miles from the | ; 
land of our birth. On the subject of of his mill, I mu — 
however, still differ with him, for although in no way 
e trifling com- 
I must Se: baud enough to 
on sp as 
aside la. a 8 a 
the corn, but here lies the difference, and the n Pay 
aa a sack of flour of — quality woe a as to from 
s from 
ve the fair return of loav ack, and that the 
Sdit should not be 
all that life and ligh 
instead o 
elow the vel: in saying ] |1 
a bushel of 
pew 2 
e 
dairy, such a 
8 
— 
knowledge of 3 i have 1 N. 80 N ale srs 
intended to intrude upon your e reer that T hesitate 
tI cannot refra in 
Mr. Pigott's account 
farm returns wd 
de- 
sirable, for the table, to preserve the fine globular 1 any 80 fo 
smooth delicat 
a very | is 
the skim milk, without any of the cl ge as of f selling 
From 
in regular | w 
-the-b ye, a mostly 
— . T is little, doubt of his obtaining an in- 
per head spd The allusion 
io gall cow can be no guide, as such an animal as 
reais . since, ina dairy produce 
hen far hi ighe r ra n my returns of this 
| oe I felt 1 was obtaining 30 to 35 per Shark . 
and a net profit of 
d 
rage return of a good A 
of ears per week through wd prine $ of her 
milking. I bave had one that gave 14 lb 
Calves.— have found 1 3 method ~ rear 
Calves the surest and ealf run with 
the cow for a week, then es an it up, giving it about ] 
cow from the be 
€- | calf or filling the alle for the Aer the followi 
to observe er 4 
Ings. | neg ect 
other. 
minutes’ — night and morning, having rage small 
8 arrots scraped backwards ; let the dairy- 
ce the Carrot into the calf’s mouth, it wi 
-e tbis easy process stow a few days, 
en cut in Sept ces the boiled Carrots and put them 
at them 
rtnight ; gradually r 
in finally wean it at the end ofa m month ; 
bu $; e succee this simple 
thethod, and at 18 months the heifers — generally had 
eee Id the 
| eee. the day, the year, without 8 that we 
are erious duties to | ma 
nsible beings having most 
shah r 
the commands of re _Maker—to assist t ench | 
own | t 
in | emigration (a 
their projects for geen ing Fresh markets pais 
create new 
r own flesh and blo 
n Be 8 
è great effort is made to 
mo 
ce the time of Po e 
n 
5 be charity v 
marks may be deemed more fit fo 
al Tate 
e wanes 
e 250 
ful labour in his E neighbourhood, ere 1 se 
d į sideratio 
r he is to ben 
as se 4 he will in more ways th n 
of domestic peace 
newspaper, yet feeling convinced that our Pulpit than a 
entirely d upon our actions, P ai w 
istian principles (apart from twadd] g: 8 
and an tieism on the ther), that I could ode 
. | sist expressing my sentiments on t e subj ie 
ind į buting the number fof w of empl ttri. 
=e 
efit directly AA ne 
one. 
mpossib le this . can continue in ie 4280 
ings will terminate, prov 
foresight are not ma 
pressure. Tt i is ridiculous to s 
trac st of land can r 
too hard upon him, bourin 
field in allotments of two acre 
out them 
e rent kare 
wear & 
weeds oe eading land 
Skilful m ent, 40 bushel 
r 8 scarcely half that quantity t toth 
who a fair 8 iors Jan 
pase tel of grain; therefore it is 
na field is seen in a dirt ty state, i it 
45 
fevenue. 
Ae a 3 yield, under 
Wheat, and n 
d can afford 
Pru 
Hes requisition to Aaa a 
rmer rents 
land at 21. per 1 and i that Ai 8 
Lab 
pay K 
i and 25 2 u tl the frond pa 5 
ade. Hij 
the 1 of 
e Fart 
fair to con 
ssential poi 
nt), 
ome manufactures 5 ad me 
in our colonies, 8 ed w 
whose interest it will be to boy, tell, an 
e mo 
not some nat 
n 
ai conver 
all land w 
induce monied men to e 
be the safe speculation, of turning a heathery 
a corn field, to the annoyance 
the extreme satisfacti ion of t 
e cheering, and the eir condition n 
both bod 
1, Bringing all waste | lands under the pl 
time to o mature 
nd e 
nnot any longer depend 
waste into 
of the year ! an 
exists during 
shillings and sixpences to sturdy wan 
ibe to a fu r 
trious habits, a 
the W 29259 5 
pti er 
mbul em the country. 
— of flour, and two of whitening or eh are too many for t 
Charity. — If England cannot support its population | volence pining in seeret; it is only 
in 1848 is to bi eof th ry 58 ? is | public against street begging, and to 
a questi such vast importance as to req he at- | toward roper channel ; Falcon. 
tention not only of our rulers, but of every individual Th sh Cha S ev 
who eg able of thinkin too stom | generally estimated according to 
of those in power (indeed it is 1 fault that may be laid whom h ciates, 80 
to the = pes of all classes) to look a very short dis paper is valued according to t 
beyond the present time; legi — or working for | intrinsic value of those who 
those who are to come after us is "e far into | It sometimes happens, however, that 
futurity. We consider how we are to get over the | cha , unconsciously, 
231 
| promised in ease of obedience to Pee ordinances. No 
care of 
m | to 
man is to live for for himself alone ; ke esired to take 
belonging to him ; — A aes 
be kind and liberal to others. ‘The: 
from the charac 
Now, in your Paper 
ent addresses you on the canject of * 
e singularity that 
arming.“ 
tho dollowing “remarks ; but 
| subject of 
shou ale 
nish the aie 1 mg! characters 
not 
where it is 3 ſor, 
1 g 
