THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



pens during the night. The herds of swine commen 



roots are ripe, and the Muts have fallen. Their fo 

 is, Cinstnuts, Acorns, Beech-mast, and innnmeral 



/n buth^sweeluels) 8 ' wlTrl 



hardly waddle aloDg, so loaded are they with fat. 

 D. S. E. 



, 1846; the seed did i 



> up till May, 1847, and tl 



Keep of Sheep : Relative Value of Dry and Grec, 

 Fodder.— The question I intended to ask, and whici 



p. 710J, wtt, mparison of th 



I ueek of June t 



ti.ii.: (lir-r week ■ t .June), seven weeks, is to be con 

 sidereda just one— i,:,- • : . 



they pay more), it would only a 



mples^t the «me 

 md I cannot think 



• ' : • ' 









land, where the important business of taking up t 

 Potato crop, and the sti" ; —* J • 



important duty of i 





; ■ • . , ■ ■; . •■ . 



stand for 10 or 12 hours, 1 



- ■ - ■■ '■ :■!-. . : 



% 2\, or 6 inches, according to its richness. In the tSew^ln^W 



December to the first day of Mai 



allotments, and gratitude of the occupiers Hantoni- 



The Lactometer, or Milk-guage.— Having occasionally 



-■■-: - ■ 



ner, by having six tubes, U 



, the comparative value o! • 



ows may be easily ascertained, and their m 



• dairy ] 





d, that the cream line should be 

 would give respectively one-fifth, 



dilk. Hence, by measuring 



^ 



kind, were it only for the j 

 ability and good managemeni 



. he without «, methii 



M>atittizs. 



EAST ESSEX AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY. 



Oct. 9.— Annual Meeting Mr. Barkeb, one of tl 



judges, made the following remarks in the course 



^He^ald-lherewereinthe resent da certoin 













H3E'"H: 







K^v^riiijr 



