THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



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:ched in igi 

 rmd by neglect. These remarks showj 

 , • ducation, and energy may , 



effect. Can a clergyman, or a dissenting minister, or 

 any well-disposed person reach the young blackguards 

 with short pipe*, whose language is made up of oaths, 

 who hate labour and daylight, and whose prospects 

 extend not beyond the unun-house and the gaol. Is 

 this class to be enlarged or diminished I That is the 

 problem. Are the middle and upper classes to be 

 awak.-n.-d to a conviction of the necessity of increasing 



the increase in the nuniher of the population ' and can 

 a scheme be devised to extend these facilities of educa- 



ampion, conveyed to tne Council the expression of his 

 satisiaction on learning that they had renewed the 



OS-teat one: but valuable as U was 



cipal point of inquiry. 





:luded him from employing it for such a purpose. 

 Spooner had correctly unserved, that a knowledge of 



lecessary to the proper application of manures ; 



Professor Way thought that mfori 



nany important data, of an approximative chart 



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heir thanks "to be conveyed to Mr. Spooner for 

 uggestions, and his communication to be referre 

 he analysis committee. 



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ion particularly 



[action hit . this country, attended the Council for tl 

 >urpose of laying before the Members various specimei 

 i that plant and its seed, as well as of the Americs 

 ndian corn, so long the subject of discussu 

 >y other parties on both sides of the Atlanti 

 -Mr. Keene stated that the peculiar kind of Maiz 

 ecommended by him for cu tivat on in England, at 

 irhich he named " For r\ -day Maize," was a h 

 irid, cultivated by himself for our climate, and 

 Ultted because it begins to show its flower in abo 

 I) days from the day of sowing. It is distinguis 



;r.-at variations'of .temj r-ture. The stalk bears b 



Seeing the coniinued failure of the I 



the North Cornwall Agrl- 

 that it had been grown 

 in the last season, by ow 

 iation, and Mr. Keene hac 

 ;d was obtained from him 

 last year. In reference 

 the mid-day heat of a 

 ful to the successful growth 



■ months^ of the south oi 



nge of heat and cold t 



mng Grapes to "si. 





open i vii ■ 

 c " !• Who, ver had been to Bagneres/in the Pyre- 



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various districts of England, more 



vn. One of the 



amply repay all expenses. 



Corn,''orthe 9 AmeHc r an d 

 tricts where this Forty-da' 

 dry plants which he show', 



a Corn flour; itu^aj 014 

 « life "is taken out of it, ^£^^2?' ^ 

 the action of yeast, and so charred, as it were h« '' 



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grown in England, orunstovedcornofariehtsort!!? * 

 but ground in England as wanted for use {for??** 

 I had been ground more than \ 3 ** 

 days), would give a very different result, and h-„ ■ 

 sought after when once known. The flour could V 

 imported in a proper state; if unstovedit sours amr** 

 solutely"[unwholesome ; if etoved. it would be rf 

 both of the sweetness and softness of the natunFS! 

 ground meal, and rendered nearly insensihi. . T 

 monT vIlue^Maizf rektTvei to f **"* *»* 

 said it ruled in the market rather higher tnankS'jt 

 that generally the crop obtained was more hwLu! 

 that of Wheat. He then described the process oft 

 ■ putting theses into the ground to * 



iken to prevent any other whatever from being wi- 

 dth it. He thus accounted for the repeated failw 

 h'cli kr-j . ;■ i !■• i ■ ■• : g instils growth in Englmi; 



mt during the growth, he affirmed to b 



lie had seen atten 

 a small scale in England, and that 



1-.- - .' i i" 1 . n e up in tufts ; they we 



r together, for in such cafe : 

 Lould stand generally at about 9 inches asnnda, 

 ve all, be sown in the right season, in the most 

 , for a few days earlier or later might prejtria 



ry interesting discussion then ensued among tls 



e evidence of its successful culture in * 

 . 

 a to place a portion of his land* 



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• I'iv.!-. ' 



.'Keene their thanks b 



e Drum-head Cabbage from seed obtained °y w 

 >m Messrs. Thomas Gibl-s and Co., the Seedsmen" 



res these Cabbages to the cows, calves, and effft J 

 (U as to the lambs of last year, and finds all w "V 



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 id. covered with heath and farz, 



subsoiling, had produced very ^e« ^ 



Turnips, Carrots, 



art of it last year w» g- 

 t that part of Sus«*, "* 

 rer before carry mg.J^ D 



| ta as lg weU a as"hoseVj 

 frames in Anglesey 



Carnarvonshire were now 



.ressing his willingness to supply the ^J 10 ^ 

 Prognostics of Weather requested by tne ^^ 

 The Rev. Thomas Cator, Bugs 



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poLsTed^n. -d S uch g MtTL! 



of Wheat, or by M n < T^f^^P^ sort, with- 



',nt only for cattle" food. 8 He hYd^d 



ivious meeting "that he had employe" -~ ^^ 

 riol to the sack " of corn to destroy s f UI ! ]*t V 

 reference to his memoranda, that tor t g^sti** 



T bushels U of d graia h "Jl^BlackhaUi on «* 



