THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
I give each | POWs a are drilled on the flat 24 inches apart ; i Taron property; the best proof of such a 
| to set the plants 16 inches in the row. After the to be found in a recent number of th io ár. 
_horse- hoeing h Magazine” i in which — w orp declares that if such a 
e-half of the country 
pond lawyers might shut up 5 tele: iota: B. M. F. 
ApriL 25, 1857.j 
297 
later months 
‘the nec necessity y of 1 
of the winter 
t 
he sag: tio the depth, of 6 Taches, 
soon as 
et This shoul fy 
lest it ool break the purtace 300 
_ establish 
ui 
Home Correspondence. 
Soluble Phoophat es —These phosphates seem not easy 
weather, ery 3 
en gan the Beet being ready for harv 
second w eek of October, it may generall 
e la I A diihi 
un r “sen oh le ess 80 I think than the ammoniacal 
them an 
gad of to 
we are 
y give 
my ee of m ould you favour 
third h r acre, Coupee Polk 
- | which leave Ca field ‘sufficiently pe r dou sak on the peie $ 
If there a are ing a solu 
a sufficient quantity of acid 
i Motel y as pap ies as 
? an wads would it ot llow asa 
that re sample Mass e ined fi o A 
rey Hao emaren est Piste Fe aati of 
Be ts phosphates in a phir form? If this be true, what 
he p mera under which makers labour 
the “ cost and trouble of nevarni the 
ong oro oe a soluble overs ape ath y Is the acid in 
ubl superp osph to kilika “litmus? 
re nd 
are valueless ?—that their noone ition is ee z the 
w pieces of chemistry that the e spongiole is unable to 
On 
eag o sh ia A of poo field a hich it grew 
r to drain another part. me = ton T 
I hav 
bu 
tenanious clays if they are ad drained | piled 
its roots to a — rr itm in 
hate with ammo w am 
gelatinous precipitate is not alumina? Would not it be 
pa easy for a m.: erener to riein sy — pw from’ 
a quantity of clay dry 
phosphates, the fraud” téip in net hus haast detectible | ~ red- 
ness of ash? On the contrary, if I find a 
ki coring a rom a ferruiginous earth, on Srian i is it not 
he ammoniacal precipitate from such a 
creased by alumina? 5. V is the 
irchase as a guide and Beatet in 
sort? — and what the best place to 
ey cannot quit 
to an agricultural or 
ie these troublesome 
subject shall be dis- 
S 
only whose attacks upòn the young plant are to 
tes drew is the slug. It feeds upon t the ela, leaves at 
early age, ride: if pore to go on unmolested, will 
fie serious inr is easily detected by the 
appearance of thes ao one se les ing fi 
taken and “the other left. The slug is at once destroyed peg 
and the crop benefited si sowing ate ear’ ey dawn, after a 
ure 
ill dewy night of 1 cwt. of guano and 
of salt to t 
Cabbages or Potatoes near the drain—sa: 
each side of it. e greater part of ko arable hand 
onl he excess 
y requires carry off 
nor in Big = weather, ae was effectually drained, | 
s from 24 to 30 inches 
doa. On this this a I never see ay a mischief from the 
roots of the Beet, which penetrate far below the drains 
into Fa ig subsoil. | ee of t 
land i 
er crop A a obtained from 
m, the! ws te ~ a 
chemical tae Be Pag 
=, ions. Lect z 
cussed at len “aks very a0 on 
redy uch has pa said on 
e hardly 
in; but sti ill mah more’ 
Such appearance 
im © hint to tke up the ape at 
greater dept th. The best soil for Beet somewhat | 
tenacious, its Fhe ges requires _ to! 
roper seed-bed. 
calling my brother 
wt situ 8 a k their diiio and their soil, i T. 
G ea rede in its ee Mr. Paget, in the r Eai jee re Prii sedis 
ae [Agricul S Ar And why should eo crops be so m 
by rains and win 
tio 
im of s why should 
as Ties remains plants for est P 
uch blighted i laid 
s? The ‘writer of the above a "m 
INVESTMENTS IN LAND 
last zareag" of the Journ al of the Royal Fee 
cultural Soci jet 
calis hi: 
co 
a3 
are) 
a 
sobs 
Q 
— 
over 
strong mself a very thick seeder, ‘ed the kii gar uiii 
o the ag of at least | 
thickly covered with plants that ay soil in 
after seeding canno the 
ecome too “ winter proud,” 
and never “ “ido r | 
E e seen betw 
. Adderley, Esq., M.P. 
ba: 1 reference to Scot tland, “The sums invested never “blight 
he | 
which he acre direct rate 
fold -p As pa earliest opportunity after Wheat sowi 
Some 
e-pract 
On refi E 3 in my little ` Sity “the above, we refer 
T learn that in the nail of Scotland the usual ed by 
of entry to a farm is May : ees is" is Piccadill 
-c0 
bein idea t by flourishing even Fwhies 
eG ed by has been Ree: iby 
farm of expect on 
cro a 
P in the fo c A 
cba piese, or ttc, in a Behl oF Wheat, 
| with the drill in the full 
17/. or is, yer acre. 
| ener 
i 
cart-wheel which 
ton of 
cwt. 
owt. at the first 
Easain and bai t lant in the field on 
d | Estates 
Pret aidit. My. about to ee ina bill to 
201. per acre , 20i. for been m 
| manure, 1e te p and er a igh "ior “for other | P and br buried at 
capital, &e. 60/7, Poad the tw 
acre ; with these fiets before me T may be pardo ned 
ll | expressing a wish oat goes on with my 
farmers, to learn the of these representative their 
i Friar on the other side of of ae Tweed, one t 
alone upwards 
yan i A that Gass 
For 
simplify the transfer of la 
