THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
[Ave. 2, 
SSS Sait ie cone wo wach was considered to delinte form, by applying them toa partionlar case, | Paaie oo rtaeibany of iad hada 
r d the quality of the lime applic ied, the de- | and a ar tke e actual extent in £. s. d., of the in-| Df dryers. after which the paint will be bite? toe and plenty 
seription of soil, the course of crop) pping puraaed > | finence both on po’ a Jo n wie Sete a edeatively:; but we eve note thet for out-deor week ae 
big * on of ascertaining | coating of tar, slaked lime, and san 
b t it was consi tty ere pure ure lim irai ecis w aae subject bearing = conomical and effective.” Wilbo fomn 
Beier ta PEA Pa full dressing perhap: tt r Oars—The specimen is- attacked by smut, a kind 
in nine se wp rom the Durham Chronicle Sm on. parties “whose interests in t atter are | which is very destructive to. the grain of corn. Wh fangas, 
oe Maal ome — Report of Agriculturist. PE a quantitative analysis is the only | possibly be so absurd as to fancy it a male Oat > coua 
Ane Tma per oan the fllon | ones i sach scat Wish can afford any real insire. | Pi fear TeL Eons t Anaa aa 
ing aya of the active a aera ist was re “ My | ti hope e soon to refer to this ar ee gee Tips Ss Ban ey ie Fates i 30 fowls, 
Tha ve the honour to lay before | fetal, pa fig discussing t the | subject of which it treats. dug out of a trench pe Gaa on the surface for 13d, tote 
A A Q naa per r cubic yard, according to its texture a £ F 
the third of yo Society. | oe of the trench, which, ofeo OW! er pr bat the ae 3 
Bn was rr year gp os Bk! 150/. worth o eeds, Miscellaneous. workman ; and at this price a good workman will care ah Ai . 
this year we have increased the quantity to 505%., h th teenth Century.—One plo ough will a day, A dr drain in soil of good easy texture without stones, 
which, f 15s. per acre expense of | not serve in all se sesame it isnecessary to have ie mete le è a ubic ‘yard of apd 14 inches at 
seeding, would sow I hope you will | } div rtes. re a rsetshire, Dorsetshire, and | wili amount to about 2 2hd.t r pe Pb} yard 
consider is increasing usefuln f the Society. | Glostenshire the mea that in many places is | Rassrrs—A Retired Cit asks for information onthe management 
There has also been 700 be, of Turnip seed Fl m bY le led w low- Prr is four or five foote long, made ahi y epee) Se pores, me th the of hutches 
he small farmers this season. The Hon Mr. > | very broad and thinne and that is because t the land is mania rop SEO FE TE aai q 
rd tongond Me: Mr. Eigewort and STON pul i [ory n oi and 4 e earth, "or the bag which beadok iri mat enter the phan A : 
: I hin tack by absorption atthe SRE, ‘and sin nee the: b d 
seed tis Sin d t . y are buried 
Teport, Lord Longford’ tt t h n Kent they l fashion, for there | ‘hey ripe |. PO AE tic grent care casa P 
T of drains on the D m . Me gl apos whee clean seed, or in purifying such a: accid 
’s tenants, on the Hill estate lone, have made ema. a oani. eu some counties they wi cted.” — Professor Henin, in the English À orindi 
5880 perches, and about tha ‘h more around Edge- | 4 andsend, sa plough a de sada Fi Steep. your new Oats in brine, and dry 
wn, both those gentlemen allow the tenants Jd. way. a Buckinghamshire are ploughs of another | rye Gucrist—It should be sown about the middle or 
Qui towards 
pay draining, and Mr. Ed en as obliged f fashion, Bh ayini ing shape, both which sÈ end of August. oi yy 
“to call on the tenants to P raining, as they were, ın more 'eorrespondent i ~" ED WHEAT—Querist—Old Wheat if newly threshed, is, perhaps, 
f 7 e * he best asseed. New Wheat, if dr , is as d, yi 
y instances, swampin y sae He will sllaw and a ytte in gonen for most places, espe scially if “ithe best ARNE ie grime with whei ie Tn ay be infe ae 
, in future, 10 per cent. e beame were four inches| old Wheat does not need. 
drain what wi e m so much, at a Aaa perci. a sa betw she ssa and the ploughe: tail. ape Wyke pecan ergo ques tion, “ Haw man y shet np Ss 
el Palliser has made a great quantity o Ne ihor coy T Sie too strictly on their fashion a a cows, can I keep on 9 acres of Grass lan 
Sig adjoining Mr. sl orth’s, under the super. hei o county but E en r, experience hath in which iyd depends fori = othing. cd Yo aha bette iit ind e a 
Emran of his active estate e-manager, M Mr. Rose. } o 8 sheep per acre, for as remain ott 
i ces e expense is de spe lh ee the andhe ti 3) ke vhich are left for Spp er r deducting such an 
Colonel, wi miht the exception of drawing the s losime of hisnesbb d howsoever any sp a will keep the 2 icone til he Ist of August, wl 
bas rfaag “the serpa in he d fashioned, zó it tbe. well pea es ed, it ke of H the ul manure. Tts value d 
e = style. e better be suffer A. Fitzherbert’s Boke us- 
s doh, a large quantity in his demesne, In, Pet. in H amaai as" 1532 ; “quite | i c W. Johnson, Fsq., in the 
almost eve iy tang 
has been done within ‘the Jast ‘twelve monte I am 
g 
“On Stacking S Stainfoir 
happy 4. dives +h 
the last week in June, last summer, I cut 9a 
¢ 
£ thi i 
the season, averaging B ra 
2 
a 
Wheat looks r 
„and in ‘full flower. On Weda nesday it wi 
d 
| 
and all The 
eee» pon’ ic 2 there is Aged breath 
this year 
and SEFT, The weather was dry and hot, so ta 
Our Starch 
ars 5 jeep eat 
ye 
than ever there was before, fro the ha ied, but still so aa that o Ween RN Sern se 
so well last year, and having seed- | mem it between the finger and thum wai for hor: 
._ The Oats have that peculiar colour and breadth | of moist ture ex uded. In stacking it, $ pat ae nate vad chat, ‘after 
‘leaf that denotes a yield of es = me - ands prog- 
toes are certainly th tin T ey have that | nosticated 1 Mikin ing and pane 3 and io ie iliff s ome 
healthy, luxuriant, broad leaf “et shiek of stalk, gested that I should put a 
that will insure on no failure, and f rough timber, communicating 
"itis admitted on ere ta y such a quan | at the bottom with a horizontal on semaine to the 
‘tity of them planted in this county before. ‘The only _ No heating \ whatever took place ; 
the pia api bot adi sx booted. e The pand Bething n the former as they Siphona ar 
+ Pe ve are a eg to | can be finer than e hay. taine: its green on fhe ete Sain lyed in half their 
refer to report, and also to one in yon | colour; and z lower, especialy near the chimney, is| ofa poa 
where I call Pag attention of the p aati right an purple as Hin first cut. The „straw 7D in at it is impossible 
€amlin to the sinking of if th ee mac hi Mat In the first ao > 
mer, 20 miles it could be done Poy 10, 0007. t We las aino ae specs aye Sad the whole toge. | a s ne a gest poe sy eee ent it Anba ae 
longer it is delayed the mo wes will cost ; when the ther euts up into irable chaff. This year I| neither we, ae perhaps any one bisa” AN pe 
rail „commence to , l abou, it is to be | should certainly wish to Ao one the at th Sy my | ee of the agricultural machine manufacturers i i 
h from one-fourth t y, but fear there will be a great deficiency of straw.— | iago, 
-x is at P present, consequently the sinking of the river | The Earl of Eu, in the Journal of the “En. glish Tiea Sub Dipping Erken geri in, p 
will pense proportionably. I am happy to Agricultural Society The former must be weakened by mixing with it tw: sw ee 
to th 
pplied for.—James k elly, A, 
1 The best Mode of Harvesting Grain 
Cı Ti en which was a useful and animated 
one, embraced the whole subject of cutt 
stacking grain crops, 
ing, carrying, 
as well as some im- 
su ti 
the comparative me 
re particularly 
king and of the Kentish and other breeds of sheep 
An Essay on Corn R: Practical Farmer. 
_ Being a paan apd cating Gh AAE ite Poe: 
a Shes m se a windiag ec ae Bey Sony 
-e himself | 
. of rent Taaie Sa iie the 
he has give m his ideas a 
Notices to Ceao 
Ronat Cuemistay—By E. Solly, Esq., F.R.S., Experimental 
Chemist to the Horticultural Society of London, ingi pin 
Member of the Royal Agricultural Society, and Lecturer of 
Chemistry at the Royal Institution, may be had of ali book- 
publish names and addresses 
when we can get ices: 2 it pend give a value to their com- 
jens rir ihina which the ey do not at wens possess were = 
respondents to permit us, more frequently than they do, t 
append to them their en 
— Yeast—M B—Will the recipe in our last Number assist 
you 
Booxs— Yorkshire Farmer—Read Reid's‘ Chemistry of Nai n 
in the first place; then, some Sumas work, such as 
Turner’s, On Chemistry as a Science. It is sony by making 
KA ?s-self acquainted with the science of chemistry that one can 
hly appreciate and understand its applicabili ty to the 
ng others, to that of The works 
less milk than when in 
the field. they will generally give 
more in proportion.to the food consume. 
FELT-200) Po a ara —We presume you haye failed in c 
sequence of not observing the following : 
pee the felt must =e a good coating of g: 
coal-tar ; or, if age" convenient 8 ogg = tar, 
Hae dry iy chalic, latter 
being well slaked by exposure Fg phe stein ae pean of 
23 buckets of tar to one of yoann tk, whiting, or lime, well boiled 
oe 36 —— col sangrai stirred while boiling, and put on 
be ¥ r brush; at ag 
eee arp, | shouid i sifted over it 
care not t po va | over the wor] poe! than i is nece: 
sary, yet to bape it Enis ae the workman finishing as 
goes yoke , and to otful scattering with a brush dry sharp 
a re commencing — iy The smell from the 
tar goes o days. is absolute! CSS: tthe 
day pee be <4 and the felt perfectly so, gy 3 gh ape coat- 
ing is put Lo felt be painted “it requires a first pre- 
eithe e a slight coat of lime whitening, 
or a coat. of ing his a mixture of sig 
and whiting; a slight coat “8 necessary—the form: 
inf ‘All Roots covered Calf readil 
d into the m The pops 
communicatio; ns have arrived too late. 
prem age 
ooo 
HMPrackets. 
HFIELD, Mopar, July 28. reed stone of E 
aate gto ae Ar Best end acon s ame § : } 
y Beasts - 3 4 a Ader 
ae 
5 sori Pigs ‘a 
Ha If-brads 
rs, 2687 5 e ii a Lamba, 2.9005, 
ü o 
SE aanst a G meediat readily 
coset PE ae 
ns gà., and S$ 
he time 
Erie of Sheep emarkably smail for ti 
A ae a ge P teat jeeps is not quite, 0 ed m 
rather over Gts —Veal trace 
meets 5 Pork: Jitie 
FRID. 
3 , Aug. 
EosT for hemes sone oe quire in t ‘bine 
EEST ee s Y mre 
raed Hg oper BE pat oo e EE mie 
Ie 
several 
apene sali 
wade 
p and Li 
T: 
HAY.—Per Load of 36 
Smirngienp, July a i“ 
Prime TETN „Hay ‘casa to ag phe Hay soto 128 
Inferior Hay 
Orumennanp MARKE 
Superior Mend.’ Hay! ieee pera 
gay 3 
nie lee 
ane 5 
tor ere 
Tater Mey 
ge ie re ug: ag. 1. 
Fine Old Hag ~ 100at0 11% TE Cover 
ne Hay - clover 
ree AY, Aug- 
bs pon one. ea ee 
The Bine continnes 
which is ponent to bee 
is generally overrated. 
ahes 
fe her 
“en 
