from withou 
21—1850. ] 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
331 
je to be establish hed is this—viz., a 
— BB sone ng rinciple in practice, which cannot 
be followed without pot and which cannot be departed 
t . 
ry Nay, that cannot be, 
emistry will neither insert the seed in the 
it therefro nother will say cattle- 
me 
iculture, for, some use oxe 
over, and others horses, 
advocate the one 
drainage, &e. 
must be secondary; and if you, sae the perfect- 
proceed to 
rfecti which 
they depend. In another letter I wish to offer moony 
re o erroneous ideas entertained by 
to put 
e, Cross- 
d, to . 
is * What eat 25 the pr agrion 
ee g a alon their produc 
Home Correspondence. 
Flax oe. in 1758—(from a letter 
Londonderry 
— man concer — 
8 
our own Flax seed, the immense annual e 
at 2 importing it from America or the ie, and 
some 
ts aa e are in 
ure o i 
— anai my — 
tha 
604. 
mak 
7 * 
ANS D — 
UD 
o 
D 
2 
BS 
33 
359 
oughman 
That austin, nthe Near of this letter which I wish i 
„Mr. Mechi, ai an 
m 
affeet 
th | ever, yap 5 got pate si Se cider. 
came t guz 
rse 
| Londonderry, mrt pee: 3 Seotch peated Boned is vey 
little more than a res plantation m I sow 
Apel, and most arcu ae to 
rection in the whole culture and manage- | 
Societies, 
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND, 
W En bein ge Be 0 ch 
1 8 sel 
M 
100 — by the accident of horses breaking into the 
eld. Notwithstanding these losses I have Mr. 
Flax-seed, Pro AY commenced lecture by giving a short 
pr comes to 91/. sterling, out of | statement of the circumstances which had led 11 into 
which, 3 311. for the rent, seed, e, and the that 
expense of saving the seed and 
1 2 an exact aceount of 
e a large allowance. 
first attempt, encourages me to pre 
with -seed in the same mann 
n 
tion of the members. About 
ago, the Rev. A. Hux inhia hed. oieta to aim 
ts filtering sub- 
stances, might be so „* deprived ai its colouring 
to matter an risti ur, as to be rendered in 
ope this success will encourage | every — sete as tasteless, inodorous, and 
armers to pursue it, as they will thereby not | less as spring water. About the same 
| only save Rants viens — ty for the use of the kingdom, | Thompson, o mgpa Hall, aoaia to him th the singular 
ut also will s rom experience, be convinced of | effect of soil volatile alkali, ammonia, 
is —— brought i in ma with oes Prof. Way was not 
terested in | these statemen statements, but totally un- 
ipe (as i 
It will have a much only 
manufa d will | abl 
e er e 
of considerable advantage in every branch of the 2 produced ; and of so igh a e f im 
eat | did he consider as fertile in a series of new fa 
e market in September an 
if this method of Mr. Melvils i 
immense saving, re eg 
kingdom in general. 4 
op ata uir „ Shepherd, 1850.— CERAM, 
House * garden, with peats cut by servant, and 
carted by m „ £2 
1000 2 Potatoes, in à 80-inch äriiis, at t 6a. per 
immediate 8 in practica 
plants, and to 1 
— ee to the agrieulture; that he lost no time in verifying thege 
* 
si 12 
perial s of — p” <A 3d. per stone 5 
13 aa — Barley, at 178. 9d 1 
Half. quarter of Peas or Bean 
n Money £27 8 75 7 an 
d 3 7 — [Do you give Bo 8 g 
at all 7] 
Labourers. — There is one point on 
because there 
that ; whereas, here, it is all bother and 
Nay, even the failure of the cider crop is no | 
eg 4 
porter, pu 
and to explain the probable 
it | decom the ammonia, arresti 
and replacing itoy Hawes rece tm . 
wth apa of Nature the su 
retained in the soil, . 
Poor fellow! ach —— were allowed to 
the temperan pt ahon ee sph al gh 
had attention of 
only perfection. —— 
e ens ol P lm he wa T 
en in which bis Royal Highees [cage 
9 esale, as it were. N. 7 a, of eis et 
bui 2 they . married men), “without incumbrance.“ | bute. 
er friend of mine, then a resident in Lan 
in 
bricks. 
They å 2 a fact; and the dis- 
d e that of the two evils, the old one 
the least: a sort was the 
5, David | consequence, the 
ith certain wholesome restrictions as to amount of fens Way fo i den 
— — — Bonlta, Glavaedss | the motion of the Hon. J. J. 
