684 
THE AGRICULTURAL Oe 
— ae 
machines. You know well what the old 3 og 
or — yain 2 could acco . ish i Sa 
ut you see a tended to * 
conan. _ endowed with the h. 8 order der of me- 
in 
r 
there 
owever; let us prot 
i cee but everything in their 
favour; instead of arroes g man from em . 
they have tended to furnish him with it. st there 
my old friend, the apan engine, has just co 
work, Let us go and see the result of his day’ 
bse 
S 8 
E> 
. 
ea the lette 
phy of the Dunghill, No. 1, n ‘which t left ‘unexplained a 
culturist in 
sents the res 
0 
Now, this er yr result in threshing cannot mare 
t 
* pobacim 
the ears only from a standing crop of Wheat, and how 
to maintain that c crop in an erect position, to accom- 
plish this desired result; but I shall defer doing — or 
deseribing the construction of a orary 
mp harvesting | $ 
apparatus, until we shall e its proper position in 
the fie pas 
Let us at once proceed to the field ; for 8 is * 
pes “any oane great agricultural imp ee ent must 
2 is it we gg ave * investi- 
gate! “it re plies 300 acr — and; the raw 
material to be 8 nearly. occupies 14, 000,000 
seach i et, its thickness being o ew ine ches 
0. B., Heacham, Norfolk 
2 8 
Home sr mae eg tt 
esh and Fermented w pcs RE 
r of your corres ent, “J 
to confirm the agric 
assage is t 
as it contains 
And when 
ight of water 3 it was fermented, it con- 
ent.“ The 
its own we 
opinion ferm in 
valuable fertlizer—ammonia ia, than — manures. The 
- | fact I apprehe 
to be simply this: At the instant of 
hon e 0 the defect me iya the farmer? Let us 
t send one-ha 
required more than half th 
one half the money which te “frat method deman 
the time and 3 incur expense in matter * 
threshi hen thresbing is required by the farmer, 
the engine map on as well work a whole day as a half day 5 
: of corn would be as much as m 
1 
n of 
g an 
Eis — ee 
country ; but is said on the supposition 
certain conditions to which I shall advert vil 
wise to thresh all this 
the difficulty before to reflect 
sider, I had better briefly sketch a picture of the whol 
© proce wing, reap: 
r bagging, merna N ng, 8 peat kin Ea shockin 
——— cartin teh and catch, helter-skelter, 
forking, pitching, * ‘binding, unloading, un 
itching, stacking, thatchin 
loadin ng, unloadin ng, pitchin npitehin ng, 
— threshing, forking, — aeia and — rs * the 
w be consumed, and laboriously recarted back to 
— field i in another form 
—.— — upon himself to say m 
dealing vr straw and corn cannot 0 
will not be 8 upon, a 
> kien — lightene 
abe g, from suc a 
gende * I shall — now say I dissent, = 
pass on, with this brief observation ; viz., 3 a 
$ 
: 
ah 
od | deposit, — hars solid nor liquid 
ylang for sale daily ; consequently, t 
will be com | w ste of 
manure contains am- 
monia į 80 » however, as expos osed to the atmo- 
here, a “chan commences, which when ver 
active, as in m weather, we call “ fermentation ;” | 
3 and hydrogen ed 
volatile gas, which, if i. immediately “att hold “oh, 
tan pass into the atmosphere. Now sorbs 
pi eee co ently arrest a certain 
arly 3 
only 2 83 of the whole product in fermenting 
urine is apparent from the fact that — addition of its 
own weight of water enabled it to arrest han 
8 : 
writer’s meaning ; 
the fermenting’ substance itse. 
osed b 
— of 
g 
forking, | 
„mernis sg 2 | w 
tackin 
steam-engine e 
operations, the obtaining the heads of corn mand leaving 
tke heels behind will follow as a na nee. 
At first I = intend showing what s icigla oe conditions 
were requisite to be fulfilled, for the purpose of 
mella, 
iene vf = Christian. era, that three 
d to the d 
ca 
n the veins of an ox, will kee 
comfortable for the 3 consumed wi Ar the 
r | space of a few hours ere feed a fire to roast him by; 
so the accumulated products of the far —.—— if not 
ously aby ale ow gpg as mostly happens 
into a glorious state 
aoe an 
pended, like 
ming the soil, and the whole of the 
— ‘fertil ising 
e ammo 
et 
E 
08 
© 
2 
m 
8. 
88 f 
a 
E 
p 
© 
ether. 
een Education —It was written by Colu- 
author ural affairs who lived about the 
ecessary to 
— of doing it, the means of perform 
he will to execute the essential parts to the full and 
this observation, among man 
others, yet holds the entire strength of its force, and 
raal wil pa wholly useless. 
exertio e knowledge the means, m be 
prom pt bend vigorous, energetic | and ‘resolute or the two 
rne in mind that fresh dung does not = 
(lays 5 2 k considerable served of “this En N 
un 
ans p but t that qa quantity is | 
n which, . — with- on 
he anim 
0 
onia and | d 
The knowledge 2 any art is geet 
e mind is cast into a 
the conceptions a inst 
nin from within, and the mind become es a ' hisia. 
This la- 
3 2 
ro 
votary, till 
the curriculum has n finished of a Liberal educa- 
i o bear o 
y offer resis 
the Lepr te ba 
of ertaking, which 
calculated, aa Pi ee And the will must be 
atten m to provide the necessary action, energy, 
pat resolution lra must — 1 the purpose to 
3 755 the undertaking to in pi 
rmed. 
Tog page 638 * give an enumeration 
own land for permanent 
haps som 
; cultivate Re pem well, geta i 
good tilth, and — — it level ; sow seeds a 
bite 
ee Grase, 2 Ibs. ; ; 
P. pra Sm 8 Do edicago 
— "Yellow ‘Came 1 — 3 T: 
pere 1 al Red Clo 
"Hedge 
established the superiority of the 
for the pu of formi ae hedges as —.— j of a 
arm, Sloe is very backward in growth, and ae 
Beech wants the prickle, which forms the value of we 
orn as a warning to animals to beware of th e. 
In some peculiar soils ons the Beech thrives — 
be the Thorn, but is far from being so gen’ 
