m 8 ö r 
S eee r v . ee , ea a o III Se ee 3 
bars or s — lace d befo 
43—1850.] THE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
685 
“ haws” or natural seed of th plant. 
laid in the e ground with the thickest end downw: 
straight line N placed in the direction of the — 
fence, the Grass urf o the pote a ct — 
ust be — eupplid 
or by pulling acro 
n | that cannot be afforde 
peona Ags shelter sheds e 
ts, | and by stan 
work better — 17 laid on the s 
f | sm 
oots from | ti 
For Bathing.— e-glass 
om | soft soap, 1 s — “al, for 20 sheep. Make | moor; 
To co 
is to eac! 
der | well — 
- | 60 shee 
coger thes oat observe that one of your corres- 
rd 
| Snow in such countries, and injure 4 their shade the 
crops on the adjoining lands. The shelte r to animals 
d by = e of 6 fee t must be 
the s 
r. 
—Ten Scotch ‘ints Archangel ta 
5 ar for 
28 ‘tbe b. butter, far 0 She eep. Melt the butter, and — 
it well wich the tar, adding a — of milk to make it 
A d 
r 33d. Being the best 
ul spirit of tar, 1 Ib. 
a decoction 
much water — rd 4 9 
over a of the spirit being * put a ee 
art as requ 
running it on the shee 
day, with the assistance of 
hie 2 water 
y as the la I believe that butter and t 
e 
d. per lb. It kills 
, | inventions, 
ti 
torms of W. 
, | the materials vary very peo but the cost per sheep | out 
is generally estimated at 3d 
t | were nece: e author 
— — E 
see cons wonderful improvements and innovations in other 
| concerns, we may Hen 1 that agrieulture is also 
capable of being advan 
rob t. 
We must not proceed with Ae take land, as we 
used to do, but we must either make it dry, or 
we 
water, whether th be clear or ched, to waste, as 
i it is an . clement, aii 
must be applied es only to 
th 
m erti 0 
every other available purpo 
fitably applied, as it may be in most 
must also enlist all the other elements of nature 
| the investigations of ro 2 — with the aren sg 
ills è 
ised on | at reduced wages, may be advanced to the require- 
ments of the times, and the speed of modern rogress. 
If these remarks be d . oli aad ia fio 
| Agricultural madia og 8 2 — | probably be lre 
Price | by others on the 
— head generally about 214 It is applied in che same 
ntine 
N e 
sede From 9-8 p. i) In addition’ to these 8 
state of the 
( 
Con 
the advan 
ments, which in 
ily i 
voured to ascertain hae 
table and animal refuse 
r 6 
gro — A N 
same dune: the bank of f earth must n broken by 
spade or hoe to admit seas aN to the 78880 rat the plants, 
1 third y edge may need no mending 
uirements, no cutting must be doris 
* 
for whenever an ineision is made, a multitude of buds i er 
besom of shoots and | free fi 
very great rmity in an upward 
t deformi 
vegetation, and e the efforts of Nature in an | carted 
tion. The above method must be O 
i ; the gaidit of 
h and retain the . w tains 
to vegetation, 
df 
m | Bein 
in Turnips. Though “unasked, I I have taken the 
liberty of a very your notice to a fact t connected with 
this disease. 
tained have completely re 
meres, t this w uld be a proof that e latter exert no 
t ai upon voe getation. For the f deter- 
the 
as I do not remember to have seen it noticed in any a 
cul „ I mention it. Wherever the soil 
purpose o ter. 
is Ay case, a quantity of spt which 
ri | according to to the statement of as adapted 
to the cultivation 55 Barley without further 3 
in the “aoe crop. My 
to this by a friend ; 
appears to me a cle: 
retained in this state for an 1 
de ition of 
dee a pean o 
5 Mer 
un cro 
aih — by it this N, indeed it appears to be 
reading and more every year. 4 Lammermuir 
. 
and the means likely to to ect 
afford some relief. — Ido 
hopes S., or learned „ ma 
the di dark subject, and throw the light of — upon it. 
g only an illiterate blunderer, I will leave it to 
others to ier a lucid explana of 
h 
nseꝗ want of energy, 
rather than a priors 5 So without | 
eee it in a 
„ of 
ther 1 
re agreeable duty of ofering 
been nd 
some hints for im aprovemment. One of the chief e 
nature ae the | fi 
After a period of growth 3 = 10 wae 
dutition: my attained a height of som 
15 inches, re furnished w 
ever; didn 256 ly-developed 
grains. from this uniform development, 
remains 
of organic existing in 
soil, not recent! „ exert 
scarcely any perceptible influence upon ere For 
the sake of comparison, some of the sam e Barley w 
A 
without ene 
this has been the case, t 
manure the soil without bringing t 
tact with ts a * a manner nan this could ng 
istan 
exert a. purpose, a 
quantity of th ‘the common 19 which had been heated in 
current of oxygen, was in troduced into 
8 krety in a zine vessel, 3 3 
closed by a tall pray eight graas of arley having 
n previously placed i n ih Beneath the bell- 
d practice of our sires, and grandsires, instead of trying | 
Now: when we look around and 
glass, but separated ‘oom il 8 a quantity of 
freshly-manured garden soil. To be certain that the 
i present 
to imporve upon them. 
| . requisite for vegetation was in sufficient 
