THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
| we witnessing we › worki ing of the machines | improvement on M'Cormiek's cutter, nor was the form : analysis 
| г ges enjoying that hne т we | of the shears ws one эзе alt together desire | 
Judges 
alo it the 
tisfactor хул of it, r. Simpson loys three me +: " 
an dm É мы кж Y Н JAM. ab dio Teeri PU kre pson employs n on e ` — гог brook, c- the edid His Law а paradi sun, to 
dt se 
гей ‹ 4 D uisite : r i i 
pest one below that value. To c 2 Mir also|this breadth of his machine, reduce а аа bcp vk cosi, D M Фа еа н 
? the Highland and Agricultura ociety's | two are sufficient. On a machine A 3 Men width, | ^ 1 hi 
offered for the best machine at the Berwick| one man could easily bunch the corn as it is eut, | the 1 t бун "ar Ё poi "s e Pd ча hie 
but, on aecount of the state of the crops, the ihe lay down the bands and bind the bun | 
could not then be prono ounced, sheaves. 16 is not necessa Uf to Sanes а л for | all nisht-soil, 
- And'in witnessing the action of the эттерим on the | binding the eMe ; it — be the | together with the URS of cows, now so disfigurin 
different crops after the competing tri should | corn-knot is seldom loos ie лает mil and the fie 198, and соте, the Grass for 5 mow so early эй . 
that Crosskill's Bell did its work very ум оне a | the most of Pe cse irai. the patches of herbage being so rank, ani will 
p the corn low с ег ssing thri е з т, touch it whilst there is anything else to be 
wathe in à very saita egi, and where the erop ях of thick soft e d prepared with a loop at one | eaten. i cows' manure might be collected 
i! иен, 1 it seemed to lay the swathe dd in ; the bandster eet өйү апа ону - the other | third da а boy with a wheel and still enou 
bem be ie to fertilis the pasture Thesei in nta 
be place r cover as they accumulate, 
adding equal {е es, in layers, of either ashes, Ix 
di n 
so well as the one exhibited w^ аб himself. We |in i: str ля Sen iei "e die feeling in n bam — 
[е the quiet calm manner | which. M*Cormic ck’s | could be carefully kept for yea rapings, fine soil, — burnt -— charred tur 
n machine Mise and ы. dexterity in turning | corn- 2 ots would thus miss body imm nd. ss eni The compost to be turi occasional! с and well miei 
sorners and passing deep furrows is admirable. Тһе | зш rea m machine to cut three feet in width, and! | together till it is fit to гей. in in deed d 
abour endured by the man who sweeps off the grain in | the Aia: to walk two miles an — it would eut, їп in trying this plan would be small; ihe labour €! 
undles for sheaving is however too great, and we deni the course of ten hours, rather more than seven acres of | light, might be performed by women and boys How 
е didnot do his work so well this year as ve | corn ; but from the time lost ure urnings and sto oppages, true itis that small things are neglected for those of, 
een him do it in previo - SN dag probably renis the quantity eut would peii not exceed five acres in n arently, more impor ! Men will into the 
e rs, but say four ac er кеё an is 
i w best our acre n ten hours, and a 
оле among the Wheat, dfi. was нб the dile acres, especially when neither have to walk about, and а | and recommended as a panacea for T the wants 
е cw mide of a heavy bunch of grain|third stook four acres. Опе lad more is only re ciere pre плге, Т uano is usefu orcer if 
board b n with a von seems too great|to drive the horses. Give the gatherer and bandster | applied тта, that is, srra up n'h the soil in 
sral даун А» eneounter аё the speed at which | 3s. a-day each, the stooker 2s. 6d., and the lad 1s. 6d. ‚| dry bar c if sown broadenst, the operation 
the machi the breadth of 6 feet which the|and the expense of their joint labours would be just t| should b e pe Hein d in rainy w. seres er. It must be 
ts. Can "йз proportions of the work to Ъе | 2з. 6d. an acre. Опе farmer tells me that his Bell's | ge rin) known by this time that more than one half 
е not be made more. consonant with the strength of machine requires 15 persons, men and women, to|the guano sold in this country is nothing but a villanous 
as by 
Efe Сыз Бе 0 БУ ЕР к 
© 
E 
8 
et 
zS 
5 
ЭЕ 
& 
c ín 
в, 
р Б 
E 
о Зе 
"n 
=: 
ДЕ 
+ 
eo 
= 
E 
В. 
© 
E 
© 
t=] 
z 
© 
Ея 
зз 
et 
= 
5 
= 
"n 
et 
Ф 
t 
|=? 
ga 
of no e to the 
Mi de machine. ioo ; оп а former | mentions 18 as the number of men and women ге uired | dressing жү land with genuine stuff—findi 
| Scotland again in the presence of Bells ап а ve seen as many as 15 persons, nine | he has been pelos. By a system of management (in 
here it i dim off a prize in virtue of| women ен віх бс following a Bell's machine, and | having every veni en of refuse collected in the"farm- 
slow selling price alone, for no one will assert thatit|they had enough to do to keep up with it. "They | yard, to to be trodden down or introduced кй d pigsty), 
as the second- E. machine in the field. Whatever could not, indeed keep pace with it, but got up. it is astonishing s on refe hea 
sore the cause of its meriting the first prize|to it by the time it had turned. We know .not Бе formed, a fair сен of which оп 09 land w 
best reaping экы t the Lincoln meeting of| what such a wes reaping machine as we have last three years, and beat chemical mixtures out of the 
rius дената ral Society, its low selling price a e would cost in making. It could not cost field. Muck should be ploughed or dug in as soon ag 
вад у 3 i i mon i 1 
: о, 
pest a valuable hint to machinists ? The , delivery by itself would allow all the women and the ird men Cheviot ewe. My inclination was, and i frm mly re 
he grain in rear of Hussey's machine on the of a farm to be formed into а band of reapers, to cut an іп favour of the Cotswold ram and Cheviot m: ; 3 
n | whieh the horses have to walk in pu next maaa н into, and cléar the sides — nds - fields for | oceasion of my now reviving the. subject is ord 
'ound Серега objection, in our estimation, to | the reaping machine; and they could also eut all the! not only Jo» but any other readers of 208 peaa, 
mode of c "True, the grain can, and веза ying s patches of corn Sd кылы unfit r the machine ta ta | Chro; sope something ety 7 y, жой ible . the 
"T | lai 
г ewe, 
| implements. мета ture. 0. was the. lowest, he. 
Y Meli ай p oce taris сы ret 235, 6d. ар: дне, " 
ойда tb f Home Correspondence average of the wether latubs, Ed this 
mosphere prognosticates a gale of 
: t while the crop would| Spade Hao 7y.—The fol онш est ilia е T. Nan à ien. $ Др it is all weigh "W^ 
n the ground in swathe| made after t he experience of а few years in 5 lbs ДУР, лее m. quite 
tacked 
6 us 
heep 
: husbandry, with a view of inducin (Ж meson and ie | opinion as to the s 
d. to have esta- | taining 1 meet ida; not of laying down the law or pre- | alluded vgl m this sentiment we shall nn m : 
ority of the cutting edge over е | tending to any particular wisdom in agrieult ural matters. "5 duty as every Áo - jo de Mov renturte 
he shears have this year been| England possesses the great advantage of having many ittle pott q 
i cutting ейде | wealthy and energetie landlords and farmers, who are реи хо xy engag D E pursui Ne 
an earlier|ever ready to carry out experiments at апу cost ; under the influence of these fee Saig ow me же" 
hes y ir that if you can remove me from 
od, and assum the eutting edge. The prin-|not $a for their own benefit, but also for that of their A y А of the. 
T "ple of eutüng, first exhibited by M'Cormick in this | neighbours, The difficulty is to decide upon the. value "то I ask you, ^ "Cab," to “фе “рз. Y 
| 
| 
| 
f shears, w orking closely on e other, occa- | advisable to recommend it for gen use, Draining, 4 the | 
ое Ад, much Hd S friction and the i inc ботенесе without whieh it is impossible to bring stiff clay land sive Mte deri м Lx a pep Dart. 
Эу х Deed in the w working of Bell's machines, Ву abandoning | into profitable tilth, is still ап open qu EG Es emt s à 8 
je shear principle of cutting im Bell's machine, it has | success. of the operation depends very much. upon "edu d Rumning to Seed.—1 have noticed for 
oss en simplified in construetion, and | manner in which the land is m: «ее s seti Ld past нет йы. ар 
Lin draught. We have admired M*Cormick's | бод ; the deeper AE ropes, a pasture жа ig in your Journal, respeeting red. — as 
i g 
j. i , un ; ved at 
ed-edged cutter and Hussey’ ight be spared if the wants of the land and its capa- |S t З 
поо cir cutter afe modifie ations, and mot "miae bilities eth thought of before а too] entered the СКС m ма ied any li kely mens o 
боик s кна, but perhaps these oH | The object is mot. to get rid of We THAI M сет Е seed-growe ftl. Ap a for iol 
were adop to avoid t ance Ї 
\ e 
i tion, and not "odd Heg. were better. We still|fór the purposes ot S and at the samo |40 yea, and lave tried а ану Ok. акрет pares 
ler M*Cormicl's  arrangemen t for its simplicity and | time реков, M в *. ч. ero E and Becoming: yit ed 
аі the roots ot рар rd resent unse ion, Л 
1 number face is most essential to the health of all to the p — ока id seed- 
à Pn pec tend i roca Б үк рари, tiis may 1 be obtained on ipic: deanad apd | а nr rap bya жайбы of 
Tag machine is P MEAE, Ud pug MÁS Roe tn by frequeny stirring the s e n ns k "mre Йе | the crop, howeyer mach ihe land may be p or 
Z8 eiie dh iae a пада etia sperm tu ine ur elites rei P rr G 
s | by : My reasons for tbat I 
аме By, impson, of |i 95% D^ | be highly essential in growing the seeds of umbe ! 
object is not ox in Sus Pa nh ut | becomes both above and below as firm аз а соры к | by m m ed ыхы a4 those above тшеп опей 
Tt 
їй ара bind it into sheaves ready for stooking. | roa 'ithonttherequisite nourishment, tribe, that 
eU ng and binding into o re effected by Карам he меу, ав aspect of E: Б ар а пое жт, м. э. ИР К, eco ind perdi 
| en do eorn ia хазар, рн рам пер, what they may. Iu hot,scorching weatner 1 p ts, it is as soon as the umbels, and headsof . 
, in 
А osening е soil a st | roots, it is necessary as 5000 
j ing to observe the effect, of. loosening пар NDS d the. blossoms. begin to ex 
> size of ette SEE. jt PU two ibd ibm sd Cauliflowers,—not. deep enough to injure | bloom аге formed and the eate g vies wi 
bud .the bu ndles alte ately into. sheaves, the roots, n sufficiently у ee to admit o ху gen : and heat go óver ye pa cut pe fiekaia 
und, 
raining- über wi 
un le. 21 ч "The bands. аге pre-|to bring up the. moisture trom below. g-pipes hes е or seanina m 
S aad placed on the machine for use, 15| hon sever valen Шал d inche in diemen d уй woul 
| SS at bat e dedo i using artificial manures (artificial, indeed, if | nourishment which. 
