540 
THE AGRICULTURAL —ꝛ 
8 24, 
rimental Wheat fields corroborate this view ; so also 
my own in a minor degree. Had I time tospare ( (whieh 1 
have a., I could describe some — aai Arey 
of young Hops, which minutely confi k Wa * "si 
ferences on oc relative power = revel, 3 
marl, clay to absorb ammo conclusi 
ion, 
when we ag — weak spots of corn in ae field, e mend 
them with np. in ee gos P. S. Have any of your 
correspondents hat rmed the 
“finger and * blight *in n their Swedes this season! 
of clean bedding, in consequence of 
straw 
bones rn 
n 
n. 
cows and — live in boxes or stalls, success aon te 
the 
My upon the ch soil is one of the best I upon the care of aster an 
ever had, but that upon the lower green sand (our best keeping them anaes 
Turnip land), is quite s k ere is not one sound | When 5 statements of 
Swede in 50. When I first noticed the disease I thought amongst in part 
my artificial manuring was at fault, t until 11 examined interesti 
other dun and apa ing, &c. 
equally as my own. I understand that this disease | when food is scarce, what 
is very pre t through all the lowe nd | is observable 1 the eps — on a farm—ev 
formation in this neighbourhood, ding over several | rib ted, the 
miles of count 9 16 "Half fami hd 45 
p 
ual 33 | capability i is ill cultivated, 
Why is 
and dry. 
ity, was formerly e “unworthy 
ve ch, by swperi 
8 
pil 
© 8 
without hair. 
disease w 
in this instance the plan did not answer, and the 
operly * er 
very 
PF 
are not in a better cas 
— cya g 
8 
SS Aly 
de of 1 5 —The season sk the 
Ia 
18 49, p. 474, July 28 
suggested a 
y idea 
condition, quite incapable of M "cultivation, but 
properly 
rarely 
p intervening. Much moor land is d d 
which would pay for — ver by y judicious 4 
ced by a few isolated proofs, ex 
weer oar’ 
it is not quite concluded, although some of the corn is 
or cutting, an some little is alread cut. It 
would apparently be desirable to cultivate a consider- 
able portion of the bes inferior old 
fi 
tisfaction. — 4 3 T ea | managed | 
where 
farms in this weg di riously injured by unneces 
sary hedges, trees, e, and by waste of liquid 
and Era manure, — the benefits of irrigation seem 
be quite overlooked. Many of the landlords and 
fro 
s Ainiai, 
large e very s 
wards by a horse, which travelled through the fields | 
ey grew, thre 
I think rubbed out ve corn at 
In this 
s0 
hit 2 now the middle 975 — | 
a 
mY 
and co: n w 
and, baat i ae bat little hoed. bo 4 
Exeter meeting for takin 
clean, and * with — 2. 
any e ee of neglect 
alcon., 
e on harv 
raw from whic 
entle 
chat in par 
of. corn, plucked off be ears as t 
into a receptacle, an 
f| once as it travelled Suh 
being wanted for dung was left G and I phar 
I think, to 
set fire es ghed in where i 
the Rom 
tion of gentleme 
e advancement fod 
en 
rs to make their q 
weight, so that the labouring man 
to for his is money. 
and as such it is to be Leper they will not be offended 
by these notices, but that they may be beneficially at- 
tended to, co 
ma et Yorkshire 
ont read man “agers rate: ne 
. of box- feeding, which appears to bry 
of the cular sy — If a 
abuse 
is poe in a shed 12 or 14 feet — der venti Inted, 
1 t below the surface of the 1 
liquid man off into a com clean 
bedding supplied frequently, I 3 he iat fer in a 
ver a co omfortable position, 
ivi 
have certainly seen animals in 
meng d as they do from An Observant Farmer, | i 
es not well at sarya and suffering from the want 
d i — ine 
mployment, either as foo 
an engineer in Devon- 
shire, that he proposed 5 exhibit a machine at the late 
off the ears as the corn 
e dise 
Sac Wat 
ow 
e, e year, 
a lam Ar pri of leanness 
ery | on 
movable and almost 
m fed up for the Samar than — ‘would be 
if — little flesh had been kept on their bone: 
n change from starvation to plenty kiap with it t 
trial of harvesting ony the ears of the 
ce 
aping ma siki * ‘the same prin- 
m 
8 knowledge to the m 
4 n astonishin 
loaf of one sop m * that 
of 4 . — both pro of oe to se 
seri 3 of bread. Notices 
sho 
at men are ae 7 tri e deal 
-| with individuals who heat them 
the he necessity of submitting tò a fa im 
ny rs sell beer as well as bre 
their “unfortana 
tock of te 
the expense of 
stalls. | 
into 
arm serv: 
ases prevalent 
it would be 
re liable to 
2 
= 
"0 
rs had been cut tof 
most convenient 
d or litter. 
w them 
w not 
» too, 
han 
ee 
the ground —— and in e tity as the e 
d e. 
To | w 
ur 
would 1 
0 wil valuable i improvement 
ae been lately — in 3 erection of farm build. 
ings, t be roofed 
minus of a railwa 
will, no doubt, have 
p 
proper, te 
width, and it does not require any supporting prep 
The a spha lted felts are com. 
ire an ine 7086 on which they are 
, and on both these points they are inferior to the 
— iron. e three wings of the farmery will 
e roofed over with the thin iron, the common ele- 
rin 
on cast-iron pillars, which are placed in the subdivision 
walls of the f can extend 
ery and railways, it would quickly perceive 
that many useful modifications of their utility might 
introduced into the practical operations of its own de- 
ere they are 
> cut the Po into V slices and the hay into —— 
when 
of cutting all s aws that are used — 1 itis is 
vident that all the articles in the ¢ ust be 
necessary The 
is laid 1 apéi a light fereau which 
. The power 
The hay may be ¢ 
On the — ‘ide of the e 
s byan 
cut t food ma 
manufactur 
The 
. b 
d b 
ing idea k ay h 
ricks of grain stand singly on fous ata ¢ latforms 
arn 
receives the ne without th 
rer avy a cross 
* 
Aa panai 
rick of th 
neighbour who can 
a few — i to lay ont in a stoc 
d| toes, bacon It 
a, sugar, Pota- 
onderful that the spirit ‘of the 
I mean 
“hen 
ows well enough how 
toils on with itl hope 3 pros- 
condition, w 
sage 
the 1 ing 
ces 
e idle 
es idea of pag one ick of 3 
r| 
and — are covered b 
roof of the farmery e over 
. of having a second floor over the 
arm buildings, 
in 
he im agination, and with it will 
ing them en 
may * od to be threshed, 
sideration, ins ppe 
in the feasibility of its adoption, 1 1 
application and pets ion of the 
the „ . nly an sype of the principle 
that has oe or AN en used on a minor scale 
smaller purposes. J. 
Mangold — thle td 
the Swedish, Tus sia i Su f 
the Swedish Turnip is 
ung one of the most 
ing to be 
is now g that 
less 1 7 
valuable to the farmer; 
beginnin 
South Hants; not 
ss esteemed, for 
