f try is planted with it; several having 
o =o E? ‘a let out for airh; farmers who all 
from o 3 bushels of 
me is supe 
hie fi 
ink 
i pi an were 
w Pri Es 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 175 
aau 
Baddeley, Thomas, Wellington, Salop pyr ep TATTA eR poy epee 
Leech, John, GIAN Carrot.—Sir CHARLES s BURRELL 
Maybery, Wal Iter, B neat ree Bart., M. P., of Knepp Castle, near Horch ham, Sussex, 
Hilder, John, Sandhurst, he attr: abated his growth o of 
t, Kent 
Redhead, John, eer Newcastle- -on-Tyn 
Trotte er, Tyn 
Ne shpo ol, Mon ntgom. 
Weston rair P Huntin ngdon 
Tancred, Sir Thomas, Bart., Belford, Northumberlan 
The names Cg SER ndidates for election at A next 
a ars. er Pusey „reported from the 
ournal 
bushels of Whit 
&c.) principally in so dry a t year, to the 
piane of previous Pearsomplough drainage, as recom- 
ended by Mr. Hod and t 
ground having been well prepared by spade husband 
pu p 
now is—‘‘ Look into the hole, and pr ae is 
in three of the "oe 5 and the sealed motto-papers of | 
red ry» 
Charles had always found the latter ponstion prefer- 
ake oa double-ploughing or soils. 5 
ad 
= dera to aerea ai never mind what it is per acre.’’ 
the foll rs ai 
W. Newbe 
si 
I 
an as given aa H 
ka follo 
26.9 
Glaten (Casein Sy ae 10.7 
Sta 52.3 
» wag and Gum 8.3 
i Fatty matter. «` 4 did 
he e föllowingis taf analysis of the sample you sent :— 
Wo 
vn fibre (husk) 
he best Report on 
I. The ened for or 
_ me rnwall, awa rded Ha Mr: W. F. om 
dition to an increase y _erop, am unting by 
eh ie ry arose, in 
his pe ab to pce at i the good effect pror 
n the land. 
= HARNOCK, of Holmefield 
House, near “Ferrybridge, sane communicated, to 
A pe into the nature of 
r Warp.—) Mr. 
by m microscope, and 
his Ces be from these investigations as:to the uea 
ed | land whi ch he conce 
the ing of on duced by that operation o 
keek, i a g ‘on, and ee y of the Cornw NATURE 0 
=| Agr icultural Assi ciation, Tru 
H. The Pri R 
the Farming of Kent, awarded to ra 
land, Ramsden , Benenden, near enna or 
II. The Prize of 20 sovereigns for an account of the of the great fertility of warp 
f eighton, ‘near Wetherby, York- 
shire, for his ashy entitled, $ ae Experimental Inquiry 
into the The eory of the Action and t e Pra 
y 
| ment of t the rere crop of Wheat obtained from | 
e Turnip ne 
a pe or LAN aa G. S. BARBER, Secre- 
tary of on Sta lham Farmers’ Club, in Norfolk, having 
at a fo: transmitted a state- 
Appli- | all 
be their remains, so well known to. exist an ethe epost 
nA all rivers 
ty 
uvial districts, and w charac ter, iene ro 
ours of Dr. hon oe or Berlin, has been. so. dis- 
tinctly traced, an » ma ite known to the oig meai ree 
Bran. AND s.—Lord OHN, 
| Melchbourne, near "Kimbolton, apes "the Council 
with the following onii doai —“ In consequence 
> the onci at their last w weekly 
asein 10.2 
Starch and Gam - 48.2 
hs nd F . 26 
ER 
amount of husk given by ee is as , but this 
5 i materially influenced by, the time of enlleoting the 
as the crease after 
r ta certain. state of E until it 
on, & rep 
Council in anions to the ‘circumstance a this par 
together, I bees to inform you that | for the last four years 
f Beans and Swede Tur- 
yield. „In his fir st letter, Dec. 28, 1844, Mr -Bar ber gives 
e E has arrived c 
is shed from the parent Be ; indeed, the. eon: ae | 
of g isinfluenced by n, manure, 
of cutting; hence the cif mG in athe pis 
y different chemists of the same sort of 
pte on the part of the Stalham Farmers’ Club:— A 
n 
field, belon nging to a gentlema not a member Fat ome 
Club, b 
n clay-land with the most complete success. The 
Turnip l nr season were. particularly se in ome in- 
g 26 inches rou nd; e Bea eans, r the 
season. 
PE 
PER" 
ground idle, as hey were “ripe mabe porto I sowed 
Pret Flee 
ver 
J 6 
d, and 
alt f Col eed and white Turnips w pice ae me 
e truth, but it is possible hi ES R iai 
, Te d s possible his analysis was made before | of its produce, which at harvest was cut and mer in a | Beans had bee 
1, aeri mode of estimating the amount of oil was | barn by itself. This amount, when threshed, was ascer- pee I should. have succeeded in this experiment ae: 
Bar ’ seed used by him ave been arti- | tained to be a fraction over 22 combs, or 11 quarters per | for when it di dc e the plan nts grew fam usly. Tam 
y dried, hence his proportions will be somewhat acre, of ; wi in order that this might be placed fied of t i > 
than mine. The following is the analysis of beyond a doubt, the field has bee n twice measured since that T intend "alti it again this yea pe oom ow 
mens of oil-cake. The cakes were sent to me under hatvest: in close double r Seen A St a senor 
es they afterwards praag to lj eee i No. 1 at least | Tieta han rows for the Turnips. . The fie Id 
e pri e, Eng 
7, 10s, (when Replied for ‘would 
vse mg od 20 c cool mbs per a The 
ame 
>| years sinens 7 palra per acre of Wheat, and another 
in cre. 
|12 
Pe 
sell u hide 97.) 5 Belgian, 87. 10s. 
m Farmers 
re U eh 4 +} 
ntend ti 
|.Ne R Le.) No. 2. | No. 3.* 
of so large a = P, —_ prove of national ‘a 
poses to ma h examination, and to cate the 
13 15. 
69:5 | 71. 
7: 6. 
10.5 | 
[100.0 | 106.0 | 100.0 
Nos. 2 and 3 evidently mixed sae: Vela after the first 
hing,’ ee bulk, 
Chu urning. =n page 91 
4mproved Churn ; i, abn 
amon a urns j 
ga 
Royal Agricultural Society with the result. It eilo ro- 
ost, a portion of the 
own co se pro 
to 
| Council ha 
tion, directed inquiry A 
ve vies of weight a 
The alana a seat aia piat however äran: 
we nae the propose angem might prove, the 
s | peculiar value of Lord Laaa 8 oilen pete Bact pi ia 
gro bub Pela oh f Lx pe d a fa armer, to have of „a winter 
Cia 
gr P 
4 A 4 + 
a rein wae 
ae 12 in 
be 
see pi the Club.” 
pe recommended 
is of 12 in 
analysi she 
subsoil of the field in question. sh cat made by Dr. Siis 
| Playfair t i 
res 
air at Ahe expense of the Society; a 
PF 
anddown in aiferent parts for abe ved at four 
3 and then take of the churn, and 
chu 15 or 20 tninutie 
wil mpleted. And itis a if this 
was not sre o ‘the churn, as here des ribe d, i 
arber 
an naa of the amount of th ered, under abe 
different heads of clean corn, ae 
BENENDEN er a ars 
Tarn ips. . 
ASHES or PLA ee P. TAUNTON, of Ash- 
| ley, apr Stoc kbri eg Hampshire, suggested the 
e gaes a in the proposed analysisof the +e of 
s, thos 
e of the different Grasses a 
fe 
Conse t. Messe. Thomee, 
Co. 
supply him 
of t as they might 
proper to, select ane import for. gpi for the pur- 
tended to 
vu libs x and 
ertaken t to 
peis swi seed 
think p 
a GES 
-formed the Cou athe publication of. his 
t | Paper in the Society s pap ‘al , the death of Mr. John 
Hate her » the ingeni ous int entor of the cheap earthen 
ki 
a aa rai from minutes to churn the same 
i ity cream in thas same churns. The price of 
in Se tubes is ls. 6d; ; they may be made by a 
hve he of so simple a retest | iiiting wily 
andle ving lid, the other 
4 
S" 
$E 
ha oF aken place—a circumstance which deprived the 
agricultural community of oa aliipa progress it mes 
his inténtion to have made this year through many o 
the counties of E land, land, for ai 
| purpose 
explaining-in detail: to parties inte terested i in W 
ma! pir in pagent to 
ell a 
ure time 
o the C 
ae ome pa Ms N; , of 
E near Bristol, Enae y to the 
spade-fork, whi 
— a carat al ae he à 
led t 
Wh y 
-been little touched u upon: 
T should like | 
n the rows. 
toot i ponte of 
awa wh a less quantity of seed per acre is 
1 rain Ass, perk distance cae peer ab kiss is the | 
r most approved ?—Banks of the 
eties. 
Horak: well as of giving information the 
ning-tile manufacture on that spinel Mr. 
any other implement of the kind: he 
for the di ats ng 0 of pe as well as of cultivated land ; 
both from its judicious form’ pt 
could now onl 
b 
nenden Brick 
Mi ale ne ar aber the son and successor 
the earthen kila = the tile-making 
d where 
rk fr rom the middle of April 
machine w would be in = wor 
de-cutting edge inserted nate = 
ortion of hers ork say onr 
y to 
brogi under his noti ice 
ieved 
until November 
hed oma. 
as toamna 
frees n the Dover rai aa ay.—Mr. 
to mention mek as pA understood, Diese earth- an inh 
suited only fo of and that coals, ac- 
cording to Mr. 
m Wednesday ie ‘the 12 
charge of 25l. 
Parkes , however, a ~~ ared to form em 
exclusive of timber, but Kia 
Baer > Esq., M.P 
nage ge Aa Mr. Pusey had gone into the esasi 
mates with Mr... Pa rkes for draining a large 
K pirhe below hard p ai. 
DESTRUCTION OF i Rear 
letter he had received from Mr. esanai Hook 
Norton, Ostordshiro,: the inve! entor of ipi dibbling 
hi Per SER D the sub- 
BERT wth of Moss in thee by 
ect of coe ing the grow 
‘ibbtng Vetches eas means of his machine, and after- 
feedi ager "LANGSTON 
—The 
perty, 
tem ‘of en stones, at an oi ere including meat 
he 
6l. an acre ing seers done on the 
f Esse: southern counti 
oe ol 
og, Farnham, $ 
} Pee einen 
| thousand, exclusive of the cost of the nra neh 
hat 
witha tee wait asin oe wedge, or turf- 
|| draining Mn. E Pusey ha had found that-a mi Sep could 
e thus dr ntly by placing in the bottom of 
me Si pe, rea bh Mr. Parkes real ‘sy 
| from the proprietor’s yard at a prime - per 
| (as 8 peaked to to him by Mr. 
{ Meas of the doferner Me, 
Moss: he 
scarifying, fo 
| case of n perfect success fe 
| the operation in a cross direction, an 
fail. 
it 
Bariey.—Mr. B. Grass aro the 
bre he thee was then ve when ould be 
Pa REN Newtons, a. 
irasome 
Herefordshire 
| manently at the very low ang of 30s., ag guineas, or 
fey, Wellington Senne 
| 40s. per acre, according to the variation of soils. 
necessary to place the Barley selected for trial at. the 
Southampton 
ike s dete of uch parties as 
