l 
wri ’ 
. coincide with my own, and with those of f. 
38—1850. | 605 
= his crops meagre or that his m be partly attributed to the low price of malt, and; been ground fine and elubriated, the same = 
W. 7s 5 pa ine about er — 'Iength, pare — to a dal ‘node of employing the — mee the porcelain manufactory being again made 
and bulk. of stubble left between the methods of cutting which has caused the experiment to fail in many in- of. In this case, one plant attained a height of 20 
high and low, oa mg B = e. for stances, and given rise to the idea that beer made from | inches, and produced four perfect grains. The plahts 
the erops in e parts with. | sugar will not 3 The me re error fallen into by in this * mass were * onger 
1 tes the weight of a "ong length ot E stubble, the brewers has bee of boiling the sug n those in felspar, but their first evolu- 
t B ipa an equal length o ith wort. This i yaa istake ; the su ti 2 longer time than in latter. 
the ear, and found that 1˙15 rae me p stubbl x should never iled in any stage of the operation. | The two latter experiments sho t influence of 
— in . 24 feet of oye measuring from the I have ost excellent bitter beer, made rding | the mec cal struct of the soil upon vegetation. 
ear. Therefore if a length of the stem before being | to the ayer receipt, having perha; ore both the same felspar w. ; both were 
cut measures 3 fee , and 7 inches of stubble = fl r than beer mad the pag manner ; and | at the same time, and carried out under exactly 
is left behind, is nearly e and o chief usag of which, as I was informed, con- | circumstances ; but the pro of vegetation in the 
quite 50 per cent, of the entire weight of ee ibe left on ed in the len N of non for which it would keep | two was totally different. In the ly-powdered 
the gr cent., as “ n | without — k I have since heard of a fels all sprung up at the end of five 
some case seen 18 inches of stubble left after mimg a sa Surrey, where, in consequence of the use of | days ; whilst in the fine they had aver ht days. 
cart loads | sugar, the spoi rned by the various e r the latter had 50 
pae. high 5 when there were abou 
0 W, an . per 
ranged rom 33 0 
8 
4 5 
lad 
®© 
my i 1 
ing this matter, I bend the insertion of the following 
T 
g 
letter from the Bucks Advertiser of last week 
— > 
armers gene- 
rally. “ Short Shearing in Pi i ie general use of 
threshin 
. Australia and 1 where 
ng straw, give g i 
this part of the process in favour of — “high-sheared 
a which more t 
the 
reaped 
important. But it is the economy in threshing which 
is decisive. When the i 
g 
5 
L. 
8 
g 
a 
p 
m 
— 
gg 
re 
© 
* 
Be 
0 
“2 
— 
ons of water i 
cool to 
thre 
bowl 8 wo 
eee, 
100 parts 
Carbonate of Tinke 
Pro 
Sulphate of lime 
fe of lim 
oride of sodium 
used in a pure 
| the ae —— were 3 and of these to 
pe 
5 
< 
EY 
or 
in a copper 
90° Fahr. 
agne: 
mate of manganese 
me oor 
Silicate of potas — 
Spathic iron ore 
10. 
spathie iron, from its insolubility in aqueous | 
The 
ee of carbo 
experiments upon v 
nie acid, ap 
egetation 
pe 
than pe 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
so much reduced as to be 
ep 
soli 
moistened with water, that a hole could ‘hardly be 
r brewing, is about 30s. per 
12 lbs., and it is „ that 50 lbs. of sugar are 
— about equal to 2 bushe 5 
as 
mixing 
Do not 
Bley 55.3 
S 
Ser 
SS NDS 
+ 
sss 
—— 
ared poeta 1 for 
e of iron 
which has been heated to redness, for r this i is 3 
e fro 
insoluble. 
L 
ntaine 
Protoxide of iron 
That used in these experiments 
tein, and according to an analysis by . 
— 
an of manganese pe 
Magnesia 3 
Carbonic acid 
mowing Wheat at 5s. per acre, and — at 
amshire, 
— 9d., nee beer. The prices for . Sene 
cekin have this h p 
Bedfordshire and Bu 
any . at — gli 
accounts fro parts o ng 
in — pease Gare Corn Pag down, tied up, shocked, 
e u per acro ! Why 
2 
ost certainly * 3 
ing to mowing by a solution of that 
ate k. F., Sept. 9. 
Beer with Sugar. —When the act E em 
use of sugar in breweries, it was sup- 
A hod of manufacture would be very 
ted, this has not been t 
2 seven 
rod duced e ears, 
, the plants in all the three m i 
an average a height of 11 inches, N 3 ae 
ers seven leaves, 
ns of 
They ee he 
perfect 
do 
—. | 
arei 
of ‘a 
par also Were 
result was yielded 
case | felspar was used, a 
treng 
pwer e bares had perfectly withered, shoots i 
sent out from at least two of them, A ere similar I 
by an an in which the same 
third part o 
p 
ne pi them ake forth two 
ins; whilst in all the other ex- 
came 
th th puy 
When 
e porcelain 
Besides 
arley were pla 
height of 15 inches, — 
then 
that eo after th 
which however had 
thre 
and er grains of reir 
ixtures | 
leaf-bud which was formed could scarcely ot its way 
2 it. But when the plants had attained a height 
4|of 5 inches, those in the fine mee appeared ae 
surpassed the former in thei 
ee 
A acid and ammonia — > sphere in . quan 
ti also ha 
six wee e harvest, the 
f | turned out but Nude mon more tba 
Inner 
Car vonie 
ities. -o it might paeo the felspar 
ly pose 
e presence of 
kademie der Wis- 
sensch., zu „ Feb. 1850, pp. 60-71. Chemical 
Gazette, (To be continued. ) 
W — e eee 
Segrar — ~The i —.— msl some time 
— sparati is going on for 
re lately been — in 
and in plo g and 
pr 
e5 3 here hav 
rt by 
ligt 
ones the Wheat stubbles for Pem nd Tares. ap 
108 | filled read meg 3d. per two-hi 
bou lay 
A ri eaking clay pit, much more 
s requir ed to certain number of loads ese N 
a pit of e —— depth is obtained. It is therefore 
necessary “consideration, v ee 2 rope a be 
clay, according to Our 
at W — T ibe TA rat “of 3 3d, — * filling from a. 
pit about deep, and 2 20 feet wide. Claying land is 
ee expensive, but an indispensable and permanent improve- 
— 
pods for filling 
nearly 28. pee 
test sands, he crops of las 
rin point of 2 — to those of last year. In a 
geld of ours — which procie bon 40 bushels 
ks 
in question a pore the 
— it Mice — 
acre à pars w 
p nore — as dibble t the rate of 5 pecks per 
acre; and — aa adibbled with Br. a “yee patent im- 
lement, aci the rate of 4 pecks pe The drilled part. 
&c. This was filled up pe March by tra 
it l superior to any other part nin 
F. We » have et mag transplanting fal wae 
iy pertormed ata pte bing that is, e plants 
fixed in the soil w land 
ing. rived 0 rs cam him 
ment at a when he required no hands 
He —— 1 — that the men appeared to have unusually, 
great feet, aud thought et would just do to meas the wire. 
wormy eat, which he proposed to them, terne en at first 
did not like the job, and said it looked like m 
them, However, after a little encouragement, they set to Work, 
ved several aeres of Witeas in 8 eld where 
and failed completely, Hea 
n usurp ya planting. The us 
m 3 to 4 bushels per acre, 
the 782 of 
her , is 
T Trifu lium 
for ligh About 20 Ibs. per acre is ` „5004 
pe ing — e 8 er ap once prev. vailed, a crop of 
winter Tares is now gen 
— a good crop is obtained ; if the land is foul, it requires 
plo 2 — 5 as the weather will permit after the 
ae farms, songs ar 4 1 turned 
roots, 
sown, 
suns 
mm — ing young pigs, 
keep breeding all the year through. ase digging 18 
7 — many hands. In a circle of 10 
from sen Sharer g 1 to be 0 s 
of 500 — of 
ontributions to 
section 
enough ia — to send 
one post earlier. ] 
measureme! . ee wath Va” be hing 
he calendarial. 
Myf Mes A pca meena 
