— = 
THE 
SES ERAL GAZETTE. 
519 
IE Tar 
fe 
neing, and 
Apart from this, there | 
aan e o “of any permanent improvement 
for for the ‘rotation ; 
Ifa tenant is allo 
wed to remain I 
ng roads and fe ences, and im- 
proving the er Hie m the land. 
t of ma 
nkind, Property and station ran! pr Fet 
well as ‘their rights.” It aoh = 
past three or four years, preserved, or 
seed Potatoes in the following yetsa 
| early crop, an nd ww rhen 
prepared, his 
ol plants his 
fit, removes t hem, setting i in their 
rents now-a- rag on any nu of far 
counties besides 
under a wise and 
The farm which I 
a cons sider rably larger profi thar 
1 Na ere this might take place 
pide system of “management. 
ow yes me 
years ago, 
And this simply in consequence o 
landlord sabeletiog a good practical, scie 
for ste ward instead of a London lawye Sev 
ing t 
mb bog gen be cro 
ror 25 to 50 per cent., and that with advantage to the 
s | ten: 
C: 
otne farmer 
ral ir 
t 
p of the last season. When 
d a good ity. 
Tt is "Po common, and the a gestae ‘accurate om. 
h 
distriċts, Iti is not so much the mere 
tatoes not d ripened, are the better, as seed, 
ra 
after h 
complain, o oug ht to 
is complete: 
gay he wou 
i g that could be don 
oere Sios stone draining p 
n tiles, provided 
Th, 
T better than 
and th 
hey ar 
ich ney bse think ol best engi Bs ae 
at the 
As T 
repitt gisant en cy, 
Tishould ‘say, especially in steep land, that stones are 
t e properly executed 
care to execute 
erefore there is always a risk that 
d 
n apa 
is the want of freedom and security in 
atio lna ee a a Seisan i 
Societies. 
without whieh farming prosper, order to 
objec 
the fn a ‘of estates 
ROYAL pee JILTURAL SOCIETY: OF ENGLAND. 
ETING AT mah 
We must add to our last w 
„a dese’ 
Ls ed 
pace ‘with the advance st the age, and unite with 
those scien 
draining with 
tifie principles upon whieh alone that Sima valuable 
can be safely ba sed.—A Tenant ‘Far 
< Warping.—The c: 
w 
hy y Mr. “E. H. oer of Heybridge, near ldon.. 
chang by Mr. Vinco, 
action consisted in 
Penzance, the prineiple of who: 
the panera intermittent coincidence of apertures 
ference ; it is the 
that 
F a 
In o: 
rder 
Tecommend that ne stones sho 
uld bere aby. material . dif- 
“falling i in of silt amongst the stones 
3 not the form oft 
o prevent that silt-getting in, I 
uld be cov ered at first 
is said to eeth more than precept, the i inquirer my Ae 
to hear of some pae instance of the improvement 
mid g r di ficulties, now ren dy for in- 
yare is so well’done, and tiles are to be preferre: eases of the sacecuiell practice o res in 
om that account. T should say where the t m rping, for the A pa, orgie r = ard lands, other fixed, which 
fall tiles sop be preferable to stones. obligingly communicated by your corres pondents, f the seed chest. Wewere not.aware 
ya n tiles or the tube-tiles 2—I think it makes | ae ffer the exact ag for siita Hon ~ which tne | Ein mak same, prineipl been adop by any other 
è? pitiorence. inquiry was made. The outfall of the Tre and. ‘Ous maker ; but something similar is observable in. con- 
sie lete you say that stones Pate. pe care, incélnshire. this instrument, a Han d-depositor,. 
4 r do you aw and their respective estuaries so remote from the (pric e 6d.), manufactured by tall, This 
d itely tumble ee into the drain ?=-The i and thei r ` sloping borders 50 favourable for | seed- pita sens, is for use by children greta. man 
| tobe cu ‘ow Bar = covered to the te tom. th who dibbles the :holes, Hol ment over 
_ stones saat ery equal size, about | co mparatively easy. bold vith aj each hole in suecession, and first pullieg its handle out. 
the size of road bae they shout then be putin care- |'stronger and more r ‘inline tide, it bee gosta and then pushing it in, three grains at each. 
| fully, and be well straighte he surface after there | whether other sen of procedure rete i ose now in | movement into the hole over which ‘itis held. It con- 
isasofficient quanti wa i a and Poa ùk that from 6 ee practice on the banks of the Humber and the | sists of a metallic vessel of the form of. the s me 
to'8 inches of stone is quite-su ash, would not be more Abie The principles | tween two concentric pod od k inch-apart, ! 
Will'not stones with gi nae? points Bane ae d oF all th e the same, but ba means | is kept filled with Wheat fro REY o the neck of of 
one mass, Ming crue stones would not do ?— and as example | the person using the in strument, of this 
essel is piereed with kolas it miga 
g in which there is one take, witha tube} sts it. 
The see d stored up in the. instrument can thus. escape: 
ta nf th 
+} hiat 
the” Seuss or Orwell, or on =A other p 
14 rY 
which it rests, 
1 A 
y $ 
ore 
lappe 
il | that ase 
above into the open of the 
3 apache. Ns 
H 
i over, so as to poten: any 
nin ng into the drain; t 
n be an be ob if clay cannot be i 
yy erence be placed 
turf, and eaten or tramped down so 
as to preven nt the possibility be any direct opening from 
va 
then I 
recommend as 
oe ahs po 
—Ano 
Pe huric Acid. T.B.” is certainly charged far | 
ao high a ‘piles os Ta’ his acid ; for his vin deraku: and | 
h T have pur 
in a manner ely fis and ingenious, The inne 
„Whati is ie pv 
è A 
r 
cylinder, which constitutes one side. of, the seed-box, s 
mi of Are the ays — at ot av 
pe the 
ane of the now being 
lea lott 
manu ers is 3d. per lb,, with 
cid s 
5 per EOT, for a “t. 1,700, “and ld. per r lb., 
5 per weit Sf "tor s sp. g. 1l o Tia 
to use that at'1,700, which not having p aen the 
expensi ve process | of boilir ing down, Contains m real | c 
pressing hpi- i ne edge FF a ie band 
course turns the ies in th 
LO Ee: hae è 
eep the fre Cool.—The 
me ti boxes cool, would 
nside of the slate 
n. ete 
hole one for th in “on 
| Pep 
Aree an aro gu 2 a a "handie tho 
nie in 
eets with th 
0 
highest part of the roof insert a 
be ing per’ rforated with s small holes. 
1 
Previous. to adopt- 
oe) “ns upon its axis to (is left, and ie 
very 
to enter inte the 
it with all th. 
Bui 
> 
by its peru 
t etetit o on the noble a h 
great question « of agricultural 
2 
posited ‘The alternate u up-and-down motion ‘thus, ps 
Pe 
not prepeny s ventilated i in the cold aier D, 
Instru n the Cultivation of Fiax.—In answer | 
I 
roses a, in short, so far asa cheap and oiciont 
to your Bristol aibed riber, I beg to say, that 
some hopes thata society may | be i formed ‘by ee 
and Flax spinners, Impro 
ment sth — has been so p Per aS for the 
+ of Wie 
s| of fing 
je rao hit 
rA thumb, which has been the gre 
to to the process of hand dibblng, a 
k nothing to be d a raea 
also atoe i 
mor tas ie : 
an machine, a Til 
by Me. pie A was 
tige mach 
I shall attend’ to communications from gentlemen wish- 
not in \ the par irs pod oe thers entry. The peeu- 
ing the clay-through 
the plant ; eg if I find the landlor 
Tae A 
not inclined to meet the wish es of the Flax 
= 
y Struck me, 
the hla ing bot 
thoee est i R: portance to a agricultu: 
Just o ma dhepa Fhih relate to the 
high rank to aean he ae Wh at, 
D 
however, 
ers, 
Ths is effected by a:pair ‘of cleo oe 
de- 
en a or'tile i 
adh 
o overcome. he 
such arrangements as 5 will allow of my time b eing d 
oppo: rtune and of 
ral interest, are 
2. Proper 
r edu- 
mode of Flax cultivation, and will secure the assi 
of 
e which it necessari ly offers at the operation. 
The e produton or emission of the tube from the die 
istance 
rom Belgium and Trelan d 
ation of a % P rq 
oe of farm J. H. Dickso 6. Be Lond 1, when the tube is ent. 
atl time ti the s | 22, 1845. [To this i Be Bea as nose by “tater into lengths; vh piama wy a seston is ee 
: atten’ jian uiae rong oe on ps correspondent, that pe ecg $ by This s efe cte d by giving sufficient i ination -to 
: i ton « of al sar feel in e ad- | subscription to the so he tube, thus. 
oben E oeperity of Bi titish e agiaitiare re. “the those at grieg = Tpew ich, obtain ‘every mona R | paata ai the onward motion -of the. with 
Ben of tions, quoted pd Fy lords tha from the} -Bitter Y. With respect to bitter yea st I thi onward motion combined with an upward ome: , 
“Paring nee t of the former. If there. be 
the ing of Kent” e author of the y on | the followi ag to` of any. | on the:par 
zf t n i :| To remove the Sait tterness from mj one in having. a! 
thi ink that a 
io 
lump o | 
eng in say a pint of bitter ‘Yeast, and after 
iy more rent, with an equal a 
sd 
fantl Peir 
: and observat 
state s 
vit aeri), but 
these g 
ation, 
should 
» with the daily. ane 
acre on G: 
ra 
y palatable: 
a H. 2a A if. eae i 
eee wo years a t 21 ewt. of guano to an 
et ie fs at was eae 
aT 
and strengthe 
‘errata a and inculcate 
ong th 
man, of a candid tian her 
the 
great objects 
en a spirit of 
years never remembered 
tis of | may be attributed perhaps 
tl be- | year I 
Neither last year or this did these epena RETEN 
by the guno, but rather F inpo Sae es in This 
have been try 
e 
ar £ "alti 
$ asec o g 
ves the baek- 
lotting il fail ba 
and aeia, do 
report tat the C 
were 
not. 
sone = 
the dies ee mashi 
isis tobe 
\ of our: last week's 
; refi n colec, page-500, 
ed by Mr. s, of Salford, Man- 
