51—1 — 
drink of chicory (for oy might 
— a — — ger very cheap, an d. chiefly into 
in's, we m 
greens, * 
Extending to the 
e 
will pe as y 2 0. 0 
of preparati 
m 
our home products, — 
d 
is produeti 
r ũ;»è%˙ð0 ͤ²¹mm KͥrnL¹ʃ—r]f —⁰ ⁰ ee eS 
of gee are very: worthless, d fi 
r barrenness. It —— 
ture wich rer earth to form 
iveness. wet weather 
peres dre 
it ‘forms into 
t weather 
wiles 
i 
often a total fail 
ure, 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
ans [postauoe-of guano: ——-—-V—T —ê⅛ 
a land are tolerable 
ned | 
es, — laf ‘the corn.and hay 
t passes: into a crumbly: —.— of dried: incoherent’ of W 
_ 
0 1 
. of a 
by reason of the land being “exposed to drought with: ki 
811 
u his own hands, consis! poor lan 
for roa most part errr reclaimed fro — beat — 
at 6s. per acre, For six years past the 
ther, with about 80 tons pease 
tatoes had been 
the seed furrow. 
from the extended — blade. 
© 
n 
P 
ring, a 
t y the Gaii of — vegetable foliage. 
ing rops an be 1 number, about one to 
1 = 225 l. 
13. Wine T Tares, consume ed on the 
ia — 
= 
DA 
5. Rape 6. Barley; 
thus 1 the bene ‘derived from two crops consumed on 
our own labourers, an 
economical — of animal food. J. Prideaua, 
Home Correspondence. 
ure 
is m — — with and: suppo 
the bg the grand support of life, before 
bein rovided; it would appe ar that no ani 
t . has certainly very great 
which 
animal abo 
1 Tarn r Outs; 
b feedin — ; 2. Bar 
. Tares; h winter 
. Clover 
y. 
ropped a these pas 
in good conditi ion. The present value o * 
gers action of artificial of 
winter moisture | the whole of these s. six 
Seed- | have been 
ing four years, 
good ae may — sync with bona acres 0 
| that he applied guano 
of about 5 
sidered 
ear 140 — * of Mangold Wurzel and C 
ce to — supply of 
seovery 
supplies of guano could no obtained foun other 
© doubled uy 
—Your correspondent, “ 2 
guano is limi ted to those regions of the globe i in which 
* pe 
reason comp ain. That 
80 er osterous a sum, for 3 as 
edue 
olific: The nextsandstone is the new | e, xpe 
h nny 
nses upon the 2 2 will turn 8 * — 
for and if the 
rth their while 
yor 
uppe: 
oy the: =. clay, or on De- eous 
The up 
any seams passin, 
e * surfaces. A stratu 
yb: 
by seams- that are. parallel throughout 
? rofessor Playfair, in 
— 
can 
is — . of applicants for ad 
: commissio: — Sa of 
into — matters, 
be 
said in justification 
chal 
assistant-co } ich we know 
least one instance; confidence would the publie 
h the faithful conducing of such a publie grant 
for a speeial —— pau the right“ application of 
4 — money the mmissioner is 
sible party, it — 3 is to be en 
— either to the stewards of applicants or to 
r eee, applicants may proper to 
Would such a mode of mass ace publie busin 
meni n soy other department? If — chargo of 
curred 
— 2 
e formation of a 
erally lamin- 
he chird sand- 
ion. Beingip immedia | 
is pumy = enii and a e 
aggregat ted: mass, it becom 
1, 4 
he 
itself. The u green 3 oft holly: lost im: 
the ehalk-marl tia 5 the — on which it lies, as 
in ducing si s. chalky,s' * ie 
posit i 
De evon, Surrey, Oxford, and 
and it r the whole. of the 
é ochre 
The dep depth in MaA Airi ii is seated at 100 feet, 
iltshire at 30. sands at Woburn, in ord- 
shire, exhibit the best pep in Britain of the upper 
he whole. formation, with the inter- 
ro 
ment to the — ee e| 
much — 
ped into trough and J chimney z] 
j ken Mr. Biddu „ Mr. Bosanquet Mr. 
d. Moo „Mr. Mai 
M. P., * Shaw 2 Mr, "Shelley, 
tolera 
34d, for the ins “or question; cou 
tall by fái uld have been 
tion of the work k ding progress (a 
part of the busi the surveyor, 
to oer 
e inspee- 
ge n 
ho is required 
writer, where 
ae surveyor-coming to works after z completion, 
was indueed to have d pened, to 
— when, to his: amazoment; h he fou nd 
in them. We say, 
— ah 
iF 
to the — execution of the 4 inage. ＋ | 
1s 
that. sterili 
i 
j 
. a 
| crew 
little or no rain falls. regions are only 
d for two or three either side of the 
tropics, und ars — “distinguished by deserts or 
rain. Thus 
8 5 
had filled two boats 8 
rainless region, there w. 
ing that tar in considerable e quanti 
ay of f re: so, it beyer tr be so much 
more valle in in * 1 of being wi so short 
bec 
— o 
rehaut in London had been 
duced by a en — t of these facts ney the 5 
various old voyages, to send three ships for 
. sagen of ex 3 — if posible 1 ond ng with 
the arrival of the first ship, 
a boat having = —— sent on — the crew- 
d been ra e whole either 
ful. y 
Admiralty had — a vessel of war to Arquin to 
endeavour, — es to rescue some of the -boats 
and it was possible they might. have: made some 
inquiries, and 
then, the 
ires to have 
ad 
its the pa — upon it. 42 Assistant Commissioner, 
h: — 
ic 
Sotieties. 
— AGRICULTURAL —ů OF ENGLAND. 
x: Couxci was held — si ee 
uare, on — — 
Grace e Duke ke of — 
Brown, 
M. P., Mr. Bra „Mr. T 
We 
mpson Cios t Haid, Me 
ws J. R. Smythies, Mr. 
Ham r; Mr. 
Re 
G. D. Trotter, Mr. C 
y, York 
* 1 
t, Streatham, Surrey 
Leac u, Joho, Pembro 
redwell. Thomas, 9 Joba's Lodge, Upper Norwood, Surre 
William Mills Langley Broom, Colnbrooik, Backs 
rrey 
Gua epee * Wale orntH Burer, R. 
verted to: ihe communication lately made by Lord Pal. 
merston the Cour eil: rela . guano 
In proof of the vast im. 
and are 
pieces. The soils that 
p belong to 
There ther places, a as parts of 
ited S Sea, and the > Gulf of. Persia, which. were. none 
Captain 
, | favoured t 
ediad with = supply xs — to this conn 
ran 5 adso 
; and he thought it. a very easyſaudſrerꝝ 
desirable for im Admi ve general instructions 
of all chips 8 near shaver: 
— a makoi ings, and re to th 
as lies of The. n 
ae — sca birds. 3 penguin) in a. 
less region were indications which could scarcely 
en. 
The thanks of the Couneil were voted to Captain 
Moorsom and. Kobert Smith then. 
Co uneil with P ans information con- 
B 
Buller for 
„of Cas 3 
an rofess0 
hina fo for et had — . "of tie loon vlani in deter- 
manure, and the price at whieh, 
pli 
Mr. Turner, Colonel 
Maedouall,§. Mr. pa Mr. Acland, and Mr. Paine, 
detailed to the Council their experience in the purchase 
of guano 
ae IPAL Bauer, n C. R. 8 Ber a 
C the Harbour Department in the A 
the Council a emali 1 
REOSOT su Man 
Parliament. ees. transinitieasto the sa the fol- 
lowing statement “of the empyreuiatie 
manure on the growth» 2 
