i 
: 
OCTOBER 2, va 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
739 
— 
jat ordinary temperatures. W il not water in its thar 
- existence of the wild type of) before ncaa to s suggest measures for the improve- | 
the prese he ae is scented fort by supposing | ment of grain, some attempts will be made to 
the type either perished ed at the ar of the flood, or | the views which agriculturists common ly entertain on 
thst irpated b se oe ie having extended tol the subject of misset corn. Patrick Sheriff, Haddington. 
~ frst station of the plant. g in, Wh been 
Di Masa movar cy iota ina wid state; butho SYMONDSBURY HARVEST HOME. 
e same time with man, a 
jave been fro ace to place new c her Men of sinew! hale hea 
Re diag o mita Sa ile dholana: Brave at scythe and sickle, me ! 
a te years a plant named ng re mann — ante rere swell pisai aow ra px 44 ! 
pentifully he ta De abs ae the M of wo rare ‘Rae Time for all er poe for Sek 
a ments have been instituted, with the view Time for his fo mits” soy 
trae Wheat from Aegilops, by means of pè 
d s 
gee a Mot meek ! home troubles leaving, 
the experiments, an sns r curious in 
Val dow the matter feet ear 
f cultivated Wheat remains a p PA: ng, 
iai in the, rel ks From the honest-hearted, come! 
poblem Nought unmeet for n’s bearin 
eng doubts exis Seen ee in er type, t Pr arth, sam en N ght un man’s Nearing? 
be adopted i variety B 
different from wild type a and et | ran Arrn Harvest apa 
iswhat is called a sport, which has bee! tua Maidens modest! fear no roughness; 
means of care and cultivation This th Fathers Lein are we; com me! 
pport, and is in perfect harmony with bluffness 
efacts and the practice of the farm at the p t en then, come! 
time. amie chiefly consists in nd vo tiie payee of lightness 
pray. 
with your own unsullied vijiti, 
alt} 
not then dissolved in it, from hav 
fo ved must ed hs des: m 
they are called 
Mice there 
vidence than 
rth to retain ye the nutritive 
essity of preven ting we 
those 
d the facult; "ot 
fact is ascertained that the e aih w ies he old ther pe till by 
alt nighn iey le 
. M. 
Cultivation vind ” Autumn Culiure.—When at the 
Ches ter Royal Agricultural reyes was much struck 
, Cha 
les Clay, of Walton, 
ft aware whether it ob- 
es then or not; but 
near Wakefield.” 
tained any notice feo om 
ecording] 
ae ppn seeds. Accordin 
val ikam are issued for the best seed of varion 
y, | soils, 
Ys 
sS 
4 
es. The St Whisk are requir 
OM ee Boer a at erer F are fea 
judga of e show are left to 
mot e Aare me before s them. 
e seldom “Esved to si poe m ges in 
Be he, but the tests of seed co: ba i 
cleanness, eioan colour, aey: “aia in the 
_ Sent of an equality in these four, weight would become 
G 
in which the seeds of weeds are found to be 
can on considered fit for ee an The 
en appli rn, embraces 
ons other ies te rai from t! 
ited, Barley’ ell Bc ing 
weeds when mixed with seed Wh 
also Uibe the exclusion from the 
varie = 
Py 
a 
z 
HE 
i 
ur 
not always empow- 
pie and the dieulty |i 
A grain is prese ented, 
& 
iB 
fy 
= 
8 
understood | pla 
e 
from the one 
much abile] one t 
E n r ot Maidens ! bless our Harvest-Home, = tan cane urchased rom Mr, Clay, an 
, occasionally ona small scale itso excellent an instrament that rward this 
eter n ith as much nicety as man does = folks ! our — glory, notice of it, in hopes that others may profit by the use 
wi without his aid ~~ is also ionally manu ames and grandsires !—all must come ; of it as I have done. Its great m erit get pa erence 
§ a sport or variety of Wheat fitted for human Come and tell again the ag from ca ther cultiva ators oe that. by a t simple 
sea de we sheng er a sim oe re aa em trength n og om of time, 
Èe instrumenta! of. ani imal ls befor reated,| “ Ye who with life’ sill} have sions irra tly relieved nei the bble, Ke. 
~~ rakes may in a great An i hs aam RENES is given, which it has collected, I have always Tand, the” want 
a i Withon ying m e e as vod Ea Home! of n power a coe k eS wh i other ¢ - tors, as 
TORR cultivated from the; certian feet epg cnc! lend your pantie ane Ae apra a oa ko. Thav ‘thine ', ing 
+ staan bom is on deservi a of eoa 's care and taste a Benta Jl pl h over the stubbles and then followed 
Good to hear i 15 ae nr — it with Some cultivator, leaving the ground, which 
3 2- iis = es of ee in >on done pa _ Chi ren! merry ¢ n, com efore ery foul, Mga a age ogee 
prod > utumn, 
starr iretock ana animal protctions Benea s| Gleaning proud beside your mothers The cultivator has done its work beau ful ‘and by 
inrelation to these obj rm a striking © t to | Ye must share our Harvest- arat patting U the: teeth tic Ao one bar, it m a per- 
ea he have bee! en ae ee High and low! with one another, satis tch oe sod “ae a Beth ee or before e brought 
y eties over the Cereals ithou Young and old! oka eta us, come! a cultivator. „In writin ais do not p 
mtice; and; gaging both from the nature of the Each to each, in God, a brother, | h farming, but in hope I may probably be of ı 
ich h: b ursued, on the effects To chee Da Romane ( | some amateurs who have been puzzled like myself how 
hich have resul m the m , there is no “Well it is that har ligt t lal a, 5 to accomplish clearing th nd in September and 
reason to believe that the proceedings of any association | Richly crowird, sH A bind alt neighbours leaving it ready for spring crops, instead of having it 
a: aia aan ve the grains ‘of ‘the farm. But the Tn a thankfal isibu pandy a T Ska i PrP il a cath shai 
conclusions will be best shown by buries all root weeds, and leayes them and : 
mo Aia y taken place Home Correspondence eady to th vigor in § ring when the corn is 
ts are held und under the auspices} _ On the Nutrition of Plants.—The mete and oan By this] this plan all: rodte ios to the sur- 
sieeve sustained: by those of Liebig on | faco to be burnt or carted off, find 
and all annnal seeds 
ions of | themselves in such a beautiful bed: that ges om at 
once, and are all buried by the plough som 
aon W: D. 
agent we 
in ai and let loose again the nutrime 
Way and ing 
and Liebig, still retain 
gay matters 
soluble; Way, age ie ea by 
itél; sah ‘wile Liebig, passing 
pode ‘that TE = oa themselves 
pro} e 
gt ight = the ears + deen ving certain 
ch by itself it is in hio of diuin disso 
bability has been before 
ical for 
| ducive T= pea: of their banin; were t 
the cottages 
counte: erection of git 
i 
F 
=f that. the Sees effect of 
expel e seeds of weeds without 
$ 
di 
4 
IF 
re 
ity are sometimes 
i 
i 
Ee 
gh 
into | h li 
frequently ‘ound, the surface of which 
berge siiman furrow correspon 
or 
T ie ou into the ares Pa Tidig ination 
submi mitted a variety of 
is covered over | the 
T 
the ordi inch work “ ons, 
to ache the tol body of the val a inch b ehar and at 
windows and corners Bg ttresses 
ramet naat the wall, and 
ing ae ah are E The 
i 
f 
and tha at the so 
ye 
Me 
ore of tae Thus it must re inferred that it 
LE 
i 
“ee none of the mentioned tes 
ect the 
as takenthe omer gg these solutions ‘become 
J. M. 
can affect the purity or ae pasty | available to plants, or aes res 
> ain Chaka feiwoverent roots on them, they again come soluble. | To this non aie 
may eht to Sahat For by some other mans an last sz lty arikan ana be am rae: Son p tirn EIGHIEY.—At the late annual meeting of this 
= samples bright, clean, dry, and fin e soluble, senor apin earth al imbibe them Society, Mr. W. of Bingley, Yorkshire, who 
= a z saturated with them, or un mri mendara not ided, gave a fi of the results of his experience of 
ly shows have ii betat fh E a t i ns ing operations. He said tens of thousands of pounds 
peeta. Mher aa And have proved some | be again absorbed by oara ina soluble had during the last half century been spent in agri- 
T weeds, ni es tended to exti kinds | oceurs on these salts an of Way nor Liebig have | cultural experiments. e of this expenditur 
ted create a taste for clean and highly | state; neither the a gipa ra were growing. | was that ect of deep drainage had already 
tention of and they have also attracted the| been on earths on whi gei sugges been u eau im Hiis som Having himself 
the or hos woh other districts Ti distinction | But it be, an fi has i befo a form, mF spent a — he would tell 
m weed corn, ants into | that plants receive their oie se sef an them what he 4h ts we ih th abject, advising them, 
: | gh. But during this lo thispartielar have Poenhighly that a more subtile “ang ei which overcomes pin the ir fith u anything which he, 
E | SPs have been long period of ti ime ee the labora o plant eil. Ticbig has observed that | or te y other man, mig! vag or say, but to s study 
having brought forward ith- | the retention 0! ne of drain: o se their 
undergone any ee ak in i ur h uence over the m rA ere g 
; “ity whatever can anasa a X; in no! water in a - ion € 
ie t be pointed out. But| most fixed to cause their vo! 
b por m 
we SE 
