—— — 
16—1833.] 
— le objection. The general use of o 
— PO — atly obviate this difficulty, nee we 
o doubt other means woul be found o E 
иле. it, At no other time could a inconvenience 
VOU 1 labour would be diminished, and 
e there would be a great accession to 
shihe err. - on the farm at no n 
ч as 115 ан i, ** 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
put their heads 
sufficiently wide to permit them to 
through, and ae re forward t 
улт puc are Lam te 
€ Drainage of an Estate| 
of the year 1848 
Mr. ——— visited the estate, ed amongst other farms 
уы over that, occu pied I ——, called the 
— Far 4450 M a view si im 
n ' the Kosik ning 
ip ci " 
— can . does the difference between to drain some bo e e. on the side of a steep hill, 
xechanie and the p oughman exist? Itis in the con- with l4 inch pipes, laid 4 feet фер, at Tonnes intervals 
$e emplo t of mind to which the former is —an operation ER eed hardly aid 
— ed. The labourer is not wanting in his powers | respect to the elementary principles. of s ves Hg рб 
ion; on the contrary, t e generally | as it is possible мы conceive, реб which it would be 
2 but of no use to him, use he is never brought a libel upon suppose | e would have 
etm upon the phenomena which are presented to тен ар The drains hay о act, and 
— — institute a single comparison only serve as a costly illustration of “the loss that may 
p. , the opportunity of developing his inventive | arise fion precipitating theo: ieh are applicable to 
Е ich would be the effect of machinery, and | one description of soil into — — ar суа unskilled 
heel not remain long beh hind his cla ehave not | occupier w vio may apply them to anoth € loss, 
to enter into кнн Pd, but we hope morever, is not confined to the drai rainage iliud to, for 
— ode ай histo: hia 1 advantag ge th iat йе it appears — {р —— —— , actin 1 th * me 
bourer | ге liberal е tion. Unde: ce, contracted with a pipe-ma. ker in ighbour- 
amo hood, to supply half a sd pipo of small pipes (e only 
steam. tial to 
it now is to the manufacture 
those m ~ ae concerns to 
bet. 4 Practical, Farm 
| Ноте puOrreapoRdenoe 
-Transplanted Wh met further 3 of inquir 
ing correspondents o our present (April) m anage- 
ment of transplanted, — th наред „ма; presuming 
this work to be now completed (she plan ts fully 
wth, we may m 
established in gro 
hoeing” between them should now ‘be persis sted in, in 
on he 
roots ; every inch of the soil teat ‚ер plant ‘should |2 
be stirred two or three inches deep “ Кы ck-hoe 
to, 
air, &c., in preference to rio pes 
о exist 
amongst 
and — RES of the Jand, А point of vast 
portan practice. The 
drill he may be desc 
im- 
уута " а sort of 
w, Say two 
would per 
o | bre 
ub- |8 н й of time h "- 
n that “ hack- | vari 
ppo 
account of the бош, ап 
ribed ack 
d six — Sige with a DT eye and | more 
in shape, and p He from 
short rem 
a 
clined to 
„roots of ee 8 
8 тее p treet, d 
linch in diameter) for use upon the 
erhaps be diffieult to find an area of sufficient 
adth i san! E ich they can be used with benefit. Mr. 
em his 3 have been stopped by the 
which e grown into them, a 
tion, we can neverthel 
—— ~ - deep, in th 
roots was vig 
тана 16 
as the уо 
n 
of the 4 feet drain. such cases 
where the water level is. not constant, pos roots o f planis, 
and we are inclined even t erennial Grasses 
e in proportion as the soil 
ut of the 
hem to Proton Lindley, he has expressed himself i 
onfirm mpression that they were Ше 
J. В. Denton, 52, Parlia 
wo feet over the edge of | VI eo 
d, 
estate, while it b 
of rasse and d 
although we are ^ able wholly to confirm the allega- aoe phe 
f 
don 
within the pipes, and the gro owt 
pipes, and submitted of 
251 
favoured by by the following, which е о ше ап im- 
nication, from Mr. mgs oseph Nolan, 
mmu 
of 33, Bachelor's e pee 88 — — only- of the 
4 vene a been " blish mi 
«T 
| o Mr. Epw aps —Srr, Seeing an article 
of yours in che dor ‘cultural Gazette, induces me to 
put you in possession of some facts. relative to Ivy. 
I had two ll h m n goats, of 
lected Ivy off the wall and T fed « on n3:  voraciously 
we had on the f llowing morning five immature ki ip: 
[The p 
y ^g fres use of Ivy, as recommended in oe: — to 
mno Mr. Nolan alludes. e wi mitted, 
n mature 3 n, “a portion of d letter whieh I 
am sure will merit the approval of m 
rea ld rs of an 
ll should or might safel 
E feel 3 to say that since my = арреагей їп 
best 
arranged 
uy Me in = * the model Yu ty ef DEM 
at Houtown Ho the residence o ff, Esq., 
whose ing operations are d te Pes. of the 
d | most intelligent, industrious, and trustworthy men 
met in this country, or * the sister i 
nev с 
lection of healthy dives and p 
sa mber of dams, са witho ingle 
His intelligent сасе M Nicki, told me, on 
the occasion to which I allude, that for ears he 
had been in the habit of using “the spare e Ivy” for such 
Mangolds, Turnips, and i other, green food, in winter ; 
and never found an t. the ait results 2и such 
i the pros. and cons, 
my information goes. If ve 
e wrong (which I da not myself believe) I regret it, 
ward 
t, London. 
distanc: credit ; leaving the 
of the plants, for the present, to th will d | P: 206, you say, nitrate of soda, if pure, will gi p — 
nent of our contemporaries, who differ in opinion eipitate with nitrate of silver, The 
on this point, till further ex ade and | of soda, according to o Hoffstetter, see Ps "345 of “Карр 
tS athe ae we ees it our belief, that from 6 inches Chemical ENT is given as follows 428 
e the r distances. 1 itrate of soda . Я PEN 5: 
ч ? will be found to be li ad нано amongst „ potash. :. hran — 
all kinds at this season of the y and to * pee trace 
3 e. of it well will cost a 56. p acre, Chloride of sodium — 
in return, Айтат "Пену. ff.. ̃ĩ7˙ ар 139 
Осе upying т абз in the Insoluble matter ... 0.20 
— Bogan with ab about 3 ae vs of meadow land, 100.00 
wa. fü Xi mowed regularly every 22 2 As nitrate of soda is often Ap agu an easy, зи 0 855 
unted the cost o I by eh a and having | of analysis would be valuable to farmers who 
y the animale 4 diei food, and the | using a deal of this salt. J. R. Persia, Chilwell. 
d | [The addition of nitrate of silver is brar t co — 
Perfeetly pure ee 0 will exhibit no 
te ulk of the 3 when 
here is one, will indicate x quantity of common salt 
been added. 
destro 
as quiekly as ble. 1 cannot help T T 
seldom praetical farmers, and I am sur 
natural histo 
wiul. 
ast | be i 
ata time when all the strength of 
leq mor Turnip sowing. Leisurely. [Sheep may 
ла of rin, Grass so as to eat the whole of it 
e | had been 
taught in m. as Latin and Greek are — 
instilled into unwilling lads, who E little and soo: 
forget. I have known a boy cured of shooting rooks “a 
seeing ip contents of its bill, after heir shot one кета 
1 the hope of killing one 
ce in any neighbour- 
earson, Chilwe 
Tey said to Produce sr Since 
the a 
of m rori in ee tural Gazette, on the subject 
slof I for cattle, sheep, and deer feeding, I have been 
with Tarn 
‘ate of Soda. In your Notices to Pai ENS do piel they would leave 
the Ivy. Е. C. 
t 
pant an 
appearance | gr 
quen 
and Mangold Wurze 
nr hog, and Man ng e caretaker coming wi 
— — — 
Sokieties. : 
— + 
і AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND, 
Hob 
неад um from Canada) th Mr. кее Mr. Risler ч» — * 
r. landson, „Mr. Slaney, Mr. Smi 
i Albans), Dr. inst ШЕ 2 encer 8 Mr. 
Crompton MU =k ga Ы ^ 
Professor. Јонн Wi 4 (late eom of the Royal 
Agricultural Colli e, Cirencester) delivered a lecture on 
tf 
into cloth T^ saered and profane 
citing the оўва 
n sta 
Pes 1172 to the middle of the last century, for com 
lling farmers to eultivate Flax, and publie rewards since 
shel out — inducing attention to the perfection of its 
nufactur 
— the mas eral conditions of the rotations connected with 
Flax eultivation, and especially to dwell on aen necessity 
urface, and ready 
rops. 
full statement of the ошена of the Flax-straw, and 
its treatment by the dry mechanical, 
