196. 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
463 
ually interested with m 
ald in I; ea pabl 
bef 
ose fact: 
blic | a 
p I ho mers w 
and employ, it and our zedundant Population in in 
one 
»| Mainly indebted for th 
e theory of pre-organi 
a theory | which se ia 
nised g 
Seems to embrace every phe A em 
e pro odiistion bas boi i 
+ 
aipg ur option, b 
ig whet ihia are 
LI do ho ihe, ave haen, accustom 
e ey 
A. ‘th 
cna will disabuse their mind, and cau 
to 
the inant T g ave 
se 
cake ; as the eats Bef pantos, of Flax-see 
super 
Bess 
ive the cultivation of the plan 
m to gi ve tne beh 
My considera 
on p that the harge am e © ; t 
E 
"the 
Flax-seed, and t Brey o j am wit h the Torgi “oil. 
are now 
r to it, they will nof 
pan 
Wherever these germs are sin they rise all 
the essential organs of a seed or Aneli ; that t is, a 
plum mule and piole, and y are therefore “plant. 
under f: 
S 
om 
] 
Se Flax 
ell as oil-cak 
but. 
3 
0,000,000. 0 
add ¢ consi ider: ably 
in o eign 
d our i present ‘exertions to grow our own F 
ere: BT a 
tior ns by quoting a paragraph from the 
eaded 
—An im 
kch! co nference has be een held i in tthe Germat rt, to 
a from 
Saia of linen 
800,000 vida 
from 184 
The 
$33 to 1839, the aeat 
is over the linen i fei forts 
een 2,37 a 000s, Ran money) 
x.d 
era ga 
itish, mone ay 
y, to ops ay impor 
ote b onst 
F LN 
ise ti ill tt Bieke 2 rix-dollar: 
lover Ly by 5 silber-groschens. The 
1 
FU 
when th 
beginning of Ju 
dAd a J 
can or 12,0 00,0002. 
7 anne aie distribu ay amongst our farmers and | last, not the 
ats “to their comfort ; 
for neighbours 
r x, and | 
ur improved Tinen- trade, I shall con- 
portant at 
dient: 
eX- | nor w So 
to 1842, 
testy a her 
ally t 
na 
s on foreign linen vitae to 
wt. the first year, to double that 
rs per cwt., and 
grand | 
‘s of the Zollverein is to mke pice | 
uly, y 
li + 
weavers es: be k 
least impor tant, the sma af far 
age icultural labourers ici 
ar 
kept te: employ ae and "Rtbough | 
mers and dey 
es aes not a appear 
ms of life, bad Bichon 
the case of m 
” 
for the 
indus 
Dickson, 6, De Beauvoir-square, Tindi June 30. 
Home Gorreanaadence,. 
On, the Grow th een Whea 
ity ~—James H. on 
ng to the nba leaf-stem of Wi 
Goodiffe. Wh eat, whet! 
ira M per a orn not, is sti 
t roo 
and 
| Mr. 
ih ance of ¢ tyle on 
they tee Hove, oa the season 
the S 
a ea 
ing excitement oe or later), 
inal L 
I do ee diepate i sta teat 
70 plants of Wheat sown 
I impugn his th 
5 the. feringtion o 
20th F 
S| he ascrib 
t that 
for, | a 
nt : of the appearance ft the | pro 
uring | T 
t 
re „all tem an un 
erms or bud: 
March in the radifeatian of Wheat, 
t | sent its s down into the 
- | whom 
- | spring-sown Wheat never form 
roota Ba the plan ts t 
a double 
soil. mee e farmers to witha 1 th 
u me opa ed the ASR EIn le assured ~~ that | the gro 
hed a e5 of | deter 
in 
s the eyes 
see ves ; 
and 
have entir 
> mak! 
Ç 
e pia 4 g Az w ane a a aigle amputated Turn’ 
bulb fea! for 
pe wie f seed in the spring. In Noy ember 1843 and 
leaf, would fo eas 3 
com 
i 
plete plant 1 be Abike" by any | 
1844, I egies by the dibble a few lines 
ted M 
of the fact sta 
eck, 
lé ¢ 
or eaf-stem ; ; 
eaf, it beco: 
ful MaA it possess within itself ‘the 
e | Be germs of reproducti ea 
al Bones. kea 
re dissolved in sul- 
pl tarts acid, two plans 
: 
ne eae ieee Ppp for 
A ngl 
o the Turnip crop. In the 
p 
of the stem. It is true “hat 8 in the e Ap of 1843 
weather was excessively round so wet | 
ke 
a , the observations pro a et 
bet foreign ‘eighours ena E the ¢ 
and the rade. 
to t 
add, to what t they enumerate. 
great cause of the decline, which I 
m of o AoA 
cok to p 
e linen- ihade and Fla: 
e 
is well inova that up yA 1828 
importance | 
ultivation of | sets. 
and it is evi- | th 
e | Ho 
€, | ves 
as to ma 
culty, and hen 
bones are a 
al San in Nhe other, » the 
At = reg eaviving their food in a liquid state.’ 
g to state that this view of | the 
_ When the bones are 
Now, T 
reland ; and, as tne English « kata 
that, the: 
an 
refore the r 
leat In prosf of the be maple 
pia 
roots ;” whereas, in fact, er, plumule i is tle st | over the liguid 5 
d ot grow Kayan 
the ‘one "method as KA other. x 
not tot 
The Turn rnip ‘drills are formed 
ny on the land, and the Turnip seed 
is then ge if u = lags attend to this 
simple operation, he will e p 
ees nips, b 
r im ile: Flax), the Irish far prt 3 had 
gement to grow the pla ante and, a 
Bat. almost ceased t 
- | Turnip 
cut across, and “the upper half planted, 
short time a crowd of young roots will | 
Ina 
watery p 
mene it is spread upon ; it; 
and. the covering in of th 
n farther absorbs 
T <4} 
ver. 
p Turni ip 
f, 
extens 
d 
Mr. Goodifte | 
any moisture it may cori „itis just 
r 
d enterprising A aaa have 
Mee En los osing 
done faces to save 
its linen-trade, ie had 
for iysiolagieal study 3 ‘but he hae made rather more 
the liquid with rye er in mis ask and dried si 
ound for about a week, fore the - 
| rng A pao vegetae and fora agen "The 
bee id decline, up t 
SEDETI to the 
nt Society, coupled: on those from other | 
oa | lan dlords, do Tas cribe the pr osperous 
tate o 
E To their. liberal ¢ aiat ons a 
veme 
inners an 
n K the 
he plumules of all plants are deve eloped before their 
net men nd th ves are the parents of ro alh 
is, aa physiologically true, that in every ins 
| the movements of both a EUDAN though i in Pde | 
e the of the  Turnips reach 
R 
e es in a dry, shak -in a liquid state, is, that in ae one 
case, the dissolved bones are mixed w with earth before 
| as are applied to 
remi 1 H 
it go a ‘to be known that Plax-spinning w 
a O. 
4) e } 1 1 
t an enormous profit, t 
|3 P W hatsoever 
A 
ach greater than the supply, 
ion a annually increased ; t 
ate a th f 
op YY. 
Leeds, th 
the spinning and 
his fact is COTTO- 
e extraord 
the late and 
p 
, 
e- 
emi + 
“The 
rson “La 
soil 
Y 
most 
en 
rnips reach them ; and 
cases sqünily eflicaci- 
appeare 
Be of which he as the head, together with the v 
Messrs, Hines and Atkinson, 
S 
instructive series, of experiments E~ ce, in practice, both 
search can ra ssa A is that of propagation by dass ous. It ap par, 'therefore, to be uni a waste of time 
- | tings in water. By it mber ofb autifu l phen omena | to apply disso lve wh a water-cart. The error in 
are shes. engl at once to ‘Tight, water E process _ superior te the 
y dis- other, a ears to me to have arisen from overlooking 
uld be obs cured or \ett to Aaka ep oten, IA Seas tesa ia atic ast at ap plied 
lor propagation; but, having in the first instance, | learned | to the soil wat = urni the 
kda Co., ee Leeds, supplied for many 
I was in the ] habit, during a aeauhan 9 o% TAS of trying 
ot to growing ps. 
re app to the growing Tūrnips, it 
would ap ppear extremely "pebable Er it erpa ae 
m 
lied in 
rs with almost an lant that came in my and thus eee effe ecto n them than if they w e app ry 
mand for. frih linen goods a in xp then, it is to-the land PS 
pug g facts, 1 heye always found that a phial | of white las aes the „Jid is applied. Before oe Tarnips sen 
price from 11s, a to 4s. 9d. or 5s. | it 1 d dail tion, but ted the | it is all absorbed by the soil, ir nothing but the e dry 
s, the f 21b. |i tion n y means of result of the pce is found in ‘the groun 
e addition of 30 Flax-mills | a great ict de: of ats botiles, filled i to the neck afterwards made “solu n Bs wih es 
ed the Irish farmers in of b so also is 
0 | specte 
| clear soft water, the proc 
d at all times; oer we 
e Mr. exp 
ment with the divided Turnip hi eg in a broad 
Hya acint th-glass, there would be 
mel raik manure i just to depend. for ca 
a 
That 
t 
conse —_ efficacy, on the ra 
> | it will be som, 
he moisture whic! ht contains,— 
one m 
all: round the divided bulb, pio need be no oo $ but 
A Turn ip 
sample, 
nhat diffi Bical to prore are those roots 
y existi ; Ab ex 
Cardif pyes Club. —In Beie A over pa Tai 
f£] 
` own nek can have 
ngk ae to antes | 
market, that we 
alth 
tes in 
to pore at such 
egre 
length on | a 
<a and 
the aan and Gloxinia ee yir assisted 
Anha what a 
cae ” means : that i the og I would 
iy alittle heat, not so 
} mo the decline of 
bas n 
i obli ied to go | an 
i oe {T gee! 
hope a. as we aie 
the linen | | 
of Flax in |i 
ca ai my | thrown 
of extension ; 
red pied, term of | co 
er Du Hamel, we are 
There 
plants, prespelr adapted to 
the plant ee geen el ed t 
of the 2ist ult., 
es 
hi 5 
m all provincial idioms : 
as 
are in 3 similar predicament to h un- 
with the Welch language.—Wo 2 
; tandard weights and 
tan we 
ero he What is the gare 
to abstain 
doub 
rping.—In answer to a correspondent’s i ace 
are now in | gg sie warpin 
ard in 
parishes 
country is 
eee has by we 
Healey, Esg., of Asiy, near ms gonent 
E 
