49—1850. | 
. evidently indicates the “ why, z and the “when,” 
They th y 
cleansed, thrice weekly—in summer, d thus 
enjoy “gweet sleep, and escape being 2 “by the 
foul and impure gases, bet * — but for this pre- 
caution, 5 
we 
worth risking ame A constant 
fresh water should never be n 
9 This i 
and turn up 
raised gro tea nd which 
vi ve, 
but as many agriculturists speak o m guess, an 
N not from weighing or measuring, or even from Compa- 
i I wish to ask what your o 
Las = * 
much as Bean m eal, which can be had for less than 
request of your correspondent, of the 16th, e . 
10 questions — ‘the growth of Whea T should b 
glad to add a little oil to the e agricultural wheels, for | Va 
I rather- ut 
ng, thin sowing, clean hoeing, Wheat 
growing system, Now then for 
8 s: 
es, which form the front of the | Potato, egg, pint of milk, and pound of butter, 
— W — to time, that much of the Re i is . — z| consumed in his family, and even with a portion 
under their farm 
hin 
0, | constrain in 
p | then, are 
per lb. 
Wheat . very 1 comply with the per 
t 
the answers to the an 
time ; 
1. Some part light, some they have each an i jurious eff 
See, this 
of his 
rent, + house-rent, ane he will, then find that 3 
he thought it did. This is 
reantile 
—Be. pleased to convey my t 
spondent, “1 “W. F., Gay Bowe 
our corre- 
rs, for his opinion upon 
4 Fite mad me 5 3 of 
the subject, hei 0 an 1 worthy of a 
I shall rea 
age, ta 
mpa T. F., Birkenhead | 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 779 
They u from the. small 
Fo gag agg irg „ ET a AG 
sheets; from a readable t) middis 
a portions of your Gaz 
the farmers’, 
type which “i apprehend was invented at 2 ſor 
we have bee obliged to apply a lens of considerable. 
power cad . as tare of aga As we 
tion meritorious 
i 
the Royal Agricaltiral Society. 
3 9 
usiness so ill conducted as Farming,” No, 2. 
ha 
ite 50 5 old grocer who said so, had not known where 
nd each article, when wanted 
And y 
would only ae 1 conduct with what has fol and 
H must h 
still is, co 
b=] 
— 
E 
ri 
8. 
: 
© 
» 
i 
ened y 
ave been i in a dormant ake for some „Fears pasts 
an wh as Origi on, 
matter wales was perhaps e i ma eir attention 
when gw entered paa — state of — An in- 
tance may men recent occurrence, under 
| the title < of „Animal — in re the writer, having 
noticed that much had been published on agricultural 
that one of 
dralns and o 
m 
exhibited as a model for 
What then i is the inference ? 1 Surely w 
duty, kept o 
tra pet agricultural “ore out 
years: ago by th 3 men the author ee to: 
at the ape in a mu 0 telligi ble 
the 9 893 the grocer's bey Where 
e to : 
„ Mann 
a patie ae to your last Number. 
admit t to be quite 
intelleet 
hould b. be attached 10 it and the. pppils. 
n the field as. 
ac- 
When: mental | 
be- 
B 
Be 
* 
8 
betore harvest, and whether 3 hand. 
nd ? 
w 4. Aye, perae ie rab, p 
Between one 
j — * his crops up to last. ground is not suitable for 
harvest? ities bai are 
In ö I would say, 1 — be happy to be 
q any way, any, of a correspondents 
winke fl. Sup. Piper, Colna E | 
; Farm Accounts N read with e re the letter 
ok your corres; ty We pr a ronge aa 
ject, and as-he proposes goin tely into detail 
Í uture e apo a Aaa venture to suggest thas 
uld: strongly 32 upon farme 
of keeping their farm 8 entirely distinet from 
their house expenses, 
The farmer 
Should debit „hiz 
Nagel t his farm with every 
E very properly be carried on together, at a well con- 
* ater, ee e applied 4. Neither I think, mostly | ducted industrial village school. From this, the farmer 
seed time, or in spring, as in February who can afford it may pam his son to a higher kind of 
dressi ricultural ere taught in com- 
rO 8. How often is the Wheat: i sic p well i and — ith the dlords’ sons anà the 5 A ow 
oed, after the Wheat is up, ic over, sayin Jane; the ital indéliacinal of th 
4. Forty- 8 Seebeck mi The kno’ 
sto the | diff 
farmers may 
go to the Agricultural 3 ce there py the sons 
of ard s should be se 
pro ts at p 
age of invention, we aed require t ver. O. F. 
t contribut to 
e instruction of the publics seem im- 
pressed with = e that 
deal ney. 2 
we hear Wr ai complaints t that oh ugg 
all dramatic performance too long. Ne rie ir) 
have become an awful lak ia the time and sight of 
xt peri 3 the ig Our notion, wey that. after under- 
going the process 
of chylifieation, it passed else 
8 the sites F ers sid 2 had a cock, 
she anid about 24 2 ineubates, in fact she e 
a constant successio 
incubating an ad. sale ak 
broods. I — been mos 
early broods amongst m. 
. 2 of ie poe . 
eta. bu I ‘bare in my om 
. 1. The nature of the soil 4 ect. upon the other, flock one peliet of Le. 2 brood; 
| snd uo on on which the hollow: greed k maton quite agre your correspondent, “Falcon,” in chickens and ying. I poe Ko one of. the: 
* Soil, a Na ark ob sort thinking that, for labouring people with only e second brood ; is is laying, and I am in daily expeeta- 
of brick. earth. intellectual powers, the ed should be merely tion of having 
Q; The height abererthe: A.I noud think about 100 rudimental, consisting of reading, wri the first The fourth brood, which consists of 1 ns, are 
et tan na iles- dis- rules metic. But in all e ne healthy young birds, and as the a — here 
Q. 3. When is the corn dib. 4. usual time, or rather religious principles should be ineulcated; without these, generally very mild, I h sre will do well. 
bled in? — . e n of Ocober it will only prove a erime instead of a blessing—the | My fowls are always confined, nein 
=, S pad tow. | An Gemeraby tr dmshels ofi oq, man is likely to be more injurious, to | the building has, attached to A an tapa space f 
ng Bette cont oF aiancire Y 2 Kay i tre pounds, includin ty he woul been without his education. | in. I keep the houses an ean, feed ‘high, and 
ci and so The education of the farmers’ and labourers’ sons EN have my — in eur 3 and condition. N 
H.B 
The Deep ene, ae Clay Soils.— The money that 
has been uselessly expended in attempting to drain clay 
soils, with drains inserted only 2 or 3 feet from the 
8 iderabl information is 
valuable which shall tend to give confidence in the 
sy of dee drainage, which, experience and 
scientific reasoning show to be the more effectual and 
serviceable, even if the shallower drains, by 
rtion, equally carried off t 
tury at least osse — . ’ 
the navigators were at w ork making the eutting, the 
Vigat 
| proprietor, a skilful agriculturist, ene 
aie the loss of this to him 
ter, whenever the completion of the 
ne ata a rr ———rð)2 — ͤ EwDð— TL—— ene 
