THE AGRICU LTURAL GAZETTE 



,. -j 1 n £j AUni^ULlUHAL V* A £ U 1 1 .&. 689 



AW possible, taught, at all events he is told, that j cesa of r r 



i'fiSS'S'T 1 ; 5' - «ive respeTtTack™ wledge - •*». •** ""J*™" 7 » S*«JS 



.:•■ 



S^ 10 F ^f n ?tao^to «nd outllKew Vari 



;1LL on Co.! -' t" • i or take his go 



« at No. 40 as before. a |i otmcnt tenantry- as to all your other occupy in: 



: 



ZwHEA^SO WING.-The 



TuANO, AFRICAN GUANO, 



pRUWA?AN L iJ BOLIVIAN GUANO ON SALE, 





■j-'.lSIXG, &c.- Practical information can be 



) HEALY beg respectfully to in 



rfntltttrat QBritzttte 



DAY, OCTOBER 16, IS47. 





i In M •. 15 (km > 



fSffi 



from their use. They hav< 

 disappeared. The 



milord, the other is described as the first chemist in 

 They both discard the use of dung and other 1 



It is very easy to let your allotment tenants feel yen 

 iplicit statement of what should be their condue 



: fully developed in a very few condition- expresse 



by depute, assumed this relationship in reference i 

 a body of 28 occupying tenants. The conditioi 



ipation of the land i- based, are— on the side < 

 _ . tenant— punctual hall-yearly payment of th 

 stipulated rent, a bond not to sublet his lam 

 cultivation on the system of alternate croppin; 

 exclusively by spade husbandry, and the uncoi 

 ditional surrender of the land at the end of the yeai 

 and on the part of the landlord— peaceable "occ; 

 pation for the period, and a bond to pay (01 B< 

 paid) the outgoing tenant the true value of all h 



-en. The agreement of course w: 



both of the parties to it desire it. The tenant 

 '-.nows very well our views on the sub 

 ninkenuess, thieving, &c, though we nevi 

 lim: and, what is more i;. 



- 

 u the' mutter: if wc are not satisfied 

 lis conduct in any respect we need not ren 

 grei'iiieut with him. T.d* i- the <■ .1\ b_ 



But the relationship of "neighbour" of 



descant ir.; n th : 

 but everybody knows how by friendly euuvei.. ..... 



nionsr It may. And we have no : 



e West Suffolk Agrieulu 

 g Turnips which the gru 



:-■■:.■■ : 





• been consulted, and hind. 

 iders and correspondents might use- hone 



V be said is undeserving of exami- Sunday, \.- . wo should -ee it the magistrate 



not interfere to prevent him. But, it is ■"■*»""' d 

 - not the intluence of absurd to suppose the uecess 



•"« ol us management after it he- «**» a 

 at weT f ° r the S uidance of all ° 



mi condemned ir 



™<»asm«j,butastl.,)s«. whom 



**J to restrain on all sides, bul 



'hicnT"*" ° n aU sidos to ,)0 ' m1 



"}s his ,-ont ir 



■oocii? 0nt f ne0u " ; 



P ,er ot 40 perches ofland is, ii 



person would I 1 



a good day's wo 

 raj should this appear mor 



• that ho o'.uld 



[ittle use to the man without the food as the preparation 

 which produce good crops without manure, others 



m abundant supply of all the constituents required by 

 plants, and are formed during the revolutions to which 

 aur earth has been subjected by currents of water 

 washing away the most valuable parts of other soils 

 md concentrating them in one place. Ihese fcrtde 

 soils are, however, much rarer than is generally 

 supposed; and I believe that there is no > sod 

 in the world rich enough to produce successive 

 agricultural crops of Turnips or Mangold \V urzel 

 Again, the effect produced by small quantities ot 

 guano and other concentrated manures compared 

 with dung, gives rise to the idea that the food «J«^ 



• - • ' 

 r their own sen« - i 1 hugw qaaatitk l an d woaM 



Zlt orVrVaved man, we should call for that re- ing th , . 



watuponMin, » ttoS? H mil 



lifficulty,ascertamt 



■; 



• 





r , _-'. ! • in encouragement to rig 



stronger over tie 'fe* *"^* Winds 



"f- ' * . M n ot the ground that h 



of all kinds, ll 



ON THE STEEPING OF SEEDS ^ 



i by a certain patent f 



Potato. Without affecting 



