— 
unite in forming that vanguard of orers whose 
and inclination lead them to — wr 
pr Mag 
4 1 warning they convey. 
„ however, that the establishment of 
much 
san of evidence — to give them currency 
progressive improvem | 
e of 3 — Knowledge 
l gr 
ths | ta tained in the field from the oe NCES 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
weeks’ semi-starvation o doubt Turnips, as well 
as other roots, lose w tbr y being stored a con- 
siderable e ey it is — opinion both of Professor 
wa 
Anpe i itself, 
or from the j juice exuding from where the 
—— and tails are cut off. But — en admin ont 
ere is a Poa able 
sequence 4 p~ bulbs, and bleeding fn from ae cut 
eater 
compositio 
prson that ry loss yt om e will 
ppearan da 
matter, nr could cally happen — ea 152 fi 
bstan 
loss oc n-|t 
since me 
— be sus- —— 
re 
thing 
servants, and every 
we = not know about. — 3 ! Butit is the 
are not co 
animals, both wi nged and | four. ted ; Erh Page 
t, to bring conviction, be fi 
> eaka ould be — 5 or considered necessary in 
any other department of experimental inquiry. 
And this remark is true, not merely in regard to 
those great improvements whic 
their extreme novelty, but also in 
w 
may instan kyni 
are apt to startle 
fact, 
—— 
whole cro a Turms in the feld, only to be ca 
home when required, the risk o f 
Tu 
any noticeable loss of nutritive ma erial, w 
at will be cons nai dared more satisfactory 
8 
= 
oO 
8 
z 
necessary 
free of frost and as dry as possible, wh poh cover t 
with 
improve 
vouring 
— er of my erg Many of these details 
— “that, if onkel, bo 
nant- 
can scarcely look for 
assistance or even expect commiseration from those | 12 
—— — 2 — in Gras 
important 
improvements which call for co-operation on the 
rer — the landlord. 
ese semanks 2 ee 8 partly 
seus hs which ven orae ate — Sady 
ing of the Hi hland + unin asd of Scot- 
in win 
from fron 
ground, have been receiving daily for some — 
back a a poe of cart-loads of froz ips, 
knocked out of the snow by — at no — 
trouble — end. comfort to the w T 
sequences to the 3 at — ‘ime — de 
‘that by leaving th the |; 
nter. The 
— | 
straw of any kind to protect them r 
says I, “if one to manage it. 
Mr. Leader of a field . let or four or six years of 
P 
4 Norfolk man, says, I would rather starve» 
as not see my fat bullocks get forward.” N. B. 
FARM ESTIMATES, 
Tue following is the cost and return of 
farming 
present prices, as furnished by Mr. Watson, of Kelas 
It is un to give his estimate under fi 
p ting that the returns nena 
rices, for, excep! are m out 
at 20 to 30 per cent. less than those, the elende 
— same. 
Returns of Produce from a Farm of 500 acres, on a — 
Eil ota ; otherwise than disastrous ; for Turnips, at all times rotation, on an average of past years. 
on modes.of storing dangerous — unwholesome food for ewes carrying — 2800 0 0 
and partly by nal ac — — ean the faci young, are particularly so when given to them Inert ene Si ati 10 
that very many farmers donot lay up as na frozen state. Another ins bite a fene nie i004. f per 800 0 0 
at all een and thus by their practice pm — tioned of a flock of wether sheep folded on Turnips, — — capi s per 100 0 0 
“navy: paaa ity. A fou — 5 5 50 uanee of which, when we saw them, seemed to have given up | Expenses of £ management, wages s, in- 
frost probably — ta slight as con bulbs beneath surance, tradesma > — 
viction that ry — have been 5 to 3 from sheer fatigue. Now, i in either case, how can any annual isd ai ee ja ee 
ency 80 mon > 
rs b In the former case, deaths among the ewes at the | P". Re hardens i + 
nt to lambi ai Went du de the result; e — y 
ka )e the latter, the fat must be rapidly withdrawn . Doai. cm 
cor the body to supply the waste of the lungs—a Onta £ from 100 acres, at 48 bushels an 
as the and snow dis- which i ua inereased by t 7 condensed Be č — T 
appear with returning good weather. The speakers | state of — ea zing po servants, orses, seed, Ge. a 
* r ce 
— EA 
ost or snow, to cart 
sumed 
The greai i 
it is to be feared, have not iepa so comfortab 
i ed. We have ve had occasion lately to see 
many flocks of shee 
—— fields, ae striving, but unsuccess 
fully, to scrape the crust from their food ; and 
in what state is it — reached ? 
bulb as hard Ailsa 
requiring 
Ever y Tt 
A 
proper supply of Turnips be- 
eep dotting the dreary surface of | wi 
sets ity m in. fn. Teng who contend for | ©°*S 
String and jui icy 
People found it probable to 
that aden market. 1 ai 
each day ? 
Economy, as well as — calls 2 for a 
general adoption of the system urnips 
ore 
ake - that “ John Prost, in his ann 
not merely eat up our profits, but also a — dige ar 
of what should go to pay the expense of growing 
coomb are very near 
pray what do you t 
g. > 
wheel out.on the surface as many as could be con- 
- per Ib., we ogh to| 
our 
Turnip crop. 
NOTES OF FARM 3 IN 1776. in 
Scorcu Eneuish Farminc—Bewley, Norfolk.— | 
apt 3 . „ W they were 
ry ; the Ba up as ha. — in 
Wheat in stacks. 1 see ee 
‘Signed, 
_ The comparative loss of 412“. at p 
cent., and the returns from the live stock 20 per cent, 
iw trade But ifccxedit ho taken far so ee 5 
of — 
in the value 
We an 
ra next went to the 1 field ae — dad — 
feeding 
Bushels, at 38 re 2400 0 0 — 360 0 0 
, 40 acres, at 32 bushels 
per acre . é im , 1280 0 0 
eee, . „ ao 0 9 
Bushels, at 78. 1120 0 0692 0 0 
Barley, — Ny ai — 2520 0 0 
| Less seed, h. 0 0 
Bushels, at 46. IE agi 2020 0 9 2020 0 0 —404 09 
Profits for live stotk fed upon200 acres 
Grass, 100 acres greens — 800 D 9 
— — 
21956 0 9 
— 
Huen WATSON, — spa 
— —ñ—E — — 
