,^>4r 



THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETT] 



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* DURABLE ROOFING. 







• A<\:.>, X,:, 



. Is 



auumlffiaKtte. 



.rnrl o„ " f « 



... 



Z^^i their 8 !i r ° m ' Xed and made t0 act on 

 £* Mch Po«m. Ws recon,! ' 



. ro II V ,{ul «l»'*l'tii"- lice 

 J? ,too '*e brinl PP u° ach t0 accur ^ v : »'«■"■ i» 



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C^OtD i. - 4 ?. Iu 1 l erehange of elements ; 



2^>^m wha 3 d u° use t,,e P~d«wt»oi 



green crops. 



BMA. I,.„ U- 



cc. — so, in the other, the lime, magnesia, potash, 

 hosphorus, chlorine, &c— are often buried 



hem, (iiid diminishes their influence. 



There are many lines of resemblance here 

 ble : is not a « case ' made out sufficient to justify 

 mher inquiry into the relative standing of these 

 rts ? Is not the likeness between them sufficiently 



ill things have ex, 



Since 1783 the prodi 

 increased two humlm 

 wool, hnen, and silk, have vastly increased— and 

 that of cotton, which now outstrips 

 been created. Since then our chemical 







n anothei cniumn a letter written on the 23d o 

 May, in 1783, which— knowing the district to whici 

 t refers — we assert to convey a very accurate ide 

 >f its cultivation in 1847 1 There is a fact ti 

 upon ! Within the past 60 years the woollei 



l its machines and its 

 processes having been adopted as soon as kuowi 

 During that period " 



n tn .! t are ut : 



factory, at coal-pit, and on railway. In fact the 

 is not an art connected with the district which h 

 not greatly improved, excepting, as Mr. Smith i 



These are the two fad 

 cal or general, of thi: 

 slow progress hitherto c 



progress which 



; as compai 



ig itself, directs ua to the neglect of the sciences 

 » their obvious relations to cultivation : and for the 

 auses of the second we are persuaded we must 

 >ok to those local differences which exist in the 



-'latiunship between landlord and tenant. Both of 

 io*o subjects deserve extended consideration, and 



It is reported that much of the Turnip and other 

 seed which has been sold this year is largely mixed 

 with killed seed. We should not be much sur- 



ve advise everybody who has any doubt on the 

 ubject to try his samples before sowing them, 

 as the seedsmen do. The manner of doing so 

 to count off 100 seeds, to sow them care- 

 Hy in a garden-pot, and to place it in a 

 arm Cucumber frame. In a few days such seeds 



'young plants the proportion of living seed will 

 ! determined. In this kind of investigation it is 

 stter to obtain an average by trying at least four 

 »ts of each sa mple. 



which I have already 

 them. It is ' 

 , beneficial to such schools, ai 



their being properly pre 



•ly prepared for the c 



ind the higher charge at the 

 ,-truction only, 



plan would enable 



them to effect th log the cost of 



founding expensive colleges, but at the rate 



ahead for each \M» of availing 



lulls ritted for 8uch higher in- 



,r the land to have them all gone by old Lady-day 

 April 6] or soon after, otherwise the Bailey crop may 

 s endangered by the laud getting stubborn. However, 



•■■■■•■■ ■■-■ ■ ' \ x ..:■■-. . .-:<■. : 



■ .-tiug and making use of its 



are often totally lost and wasted. To the Ag 

 College, on the other hand, s ' 



Ufa tSs fort of mana^ement^pon poor arable lands 



I sheep to market as good 



,„ ™^\ e up 011 lands of treble the value. The 



Clover shoi 



of^g^es.im^nce^ i understand the diffi- ■ 



°ared to^ai 1 '^ the higS « ™ uc h bet '« f or the V ieAt ^^ ^famfTb 



1 jr:u "' j ^jj i n July, «a soon m the Turnips are all sown, to 



