36.—1845.] 
THE ee ee Lissette 
EEE a eee eee ee ena eee 
615 
ped suggestion | inal the collars is due to me 
Clayton, the patentee of the excellent pipe and tile 
unction, and you render displacement im- ard å f the ground, manured by di 
ag * should be peat in laying so fs o pack the | Bie two g pipes | ould be— £ s. d.| into it a few green iB table tat See but the ant 
ipes that suey do not lie hollo if you re surface Cer Dirches es eating laying vile Teo t Rn is 213 4 say was thus varied—seeds of the red Chevalier 
= | ircums ances araliel to ose e- 7 
ning t de ib) thet -a (argo enough gh o; fore mention med of 1800 ave collars, weight W andeo), < ci stee ope ed 48 hours. in Mr. Campbells (of 
beyond n cA zi diant I believe the merit rg a ns Si 
Cost of the 1800 feet of pipes 
‘and collars at 8s. 6a. ‘per 
009, add for capital, wear. 
seeds of white S Sufi lk Whea 
and tear, &c. 5s. per 100 1 4 
w ho rs; teeped 
oe aud others of the same ging se any pre~ 
£4 0 AY 
7 | paratio ne row of each was sown in nine een 
ote Pilea Aeka pe one i neh deep, some two, some three seeds in a 
I was conversing at Shrewsbury the other day with „From the foregoing calculation it will be seen that we. } tìll 1 Mareh, set Pr e intense 
Mr. Beart, the patentee of amore most drainage is executed with the drai rains, say at | severity of 5 winter, to o: the 21st of March, retarded 
machine, on. thi subiit He a ted the merit of | eight yes apart a -_ oe ree feet 6 inches deep, more prageee $ and when the: weather became - mild, upon re- 
Mr. Clayton's « Coney e b ti o sery ved, and j justly. than. 4 ed by ns the pijes instead of | mov yin ngs 
that th ni g of soles, and 844, the 
IOON of th ded l by ex: Pipes instead of vite tiles and soles | Dante beng almost destitute of the fe aca and the 
the making of 1000 pipes, m am ae would add con- | of the jesar j sizes y et adopted. 
siderably to the cost of the grainage. At that time I| Ofthe efficacy oa the e pipes there is not the least room Whe. “It would admit of ques- 
Genght so too 5 but, I bel elieve P have since tbat co on- for aaah: some y; of tion w viet er fv variation was Prag to the difference 
Mr. Chy on 5 process of producing these collars i is, as | 
Lundersta : 
ersation devised a nt, Susse athe med and Suffolk , have demonstrated | of depth in the two sowings, o , retardation and 
ll and that the cost ki them may I n the course of last winter I drained torpor: occasio on ed by y the protrasted aeres of the season, 
aid, sa; 2 n diamet tth lands he occupation s. Russell; at the D n May ar lent that the two 
oti ik small sum of Is. 10d, per 1000, or about 2d. | Straits, = evi ridge, abou l Himley, | steeped rows had in every reek ee pre- anne 
per 109. would | and I e drains (3 ft. deep) yond ole with l-inch | over that i in tappes the unprepared Wheat por 
not we above 2s. 6d. or 3s. per acre to the cost of the pipes, 2-inch pipes, an with tile es an ds The main sited. The e culms 
draina, 
were a like ea a the ver- 
d the ears very long, a 
As the season ad- 
Et ih cen: rsa cel of the spikelets showed 
might observe, if they thought: pro] per, 
different drains. The l-inch z ens have pra aes 
and when nt to put them over the 1 inch to be burnt 
heavy rains as free ly ; as the o' bigira leaving abortive, and this “Sear termed here 
"tle 
Now, when you u have to a ‘with 1000 } of ae cals | È 
seems. to have been rather prevalent; 
few. seeds promised 
thing 
GS tlieir in: the | iln 
yield of the rows from. so 
mo: 
th 
D 
Beloa: * 
tilemakers, s, who have any p judice against pipes, 
those 
a 4h 
E the side of the aan on various aaa must 
F I obviate-it thus :— 
rim of the pipe, when ibe comesthrough the die, is, 
4 my tho -eighths v an inch Kp gk pipe en al say 
, es long. have a board like that now before us 
with knives laid ie ng it at t distan ances rather Aa than 
2 inches 2 apart. Those knives stand u 
pi 
about three- 
us, the average peaos from 6 to 20 tillers 
The Season n. however was greatly pro- 
acted, tth fi li 
ir paga ook p ong before there was an approach to to 
maturity, peer hance that sree could be no chance 
was appre o the Couneil, 
TL at }. 
1, 
| fall of rain. P was my self at first rather dis 
dou 
ka a in. 
——* the 1-inch pees 
sufficiency to carr 
ordinary frequent or furrow draining 
_ nsive of dis; sagem tat the end 
He 
but 
A IL 
ends. 
in 
spite 
I as faras 
be effect of eu ee, corn in different. eon 
q 
be taken in laying ‘the inch | be, the 
it mmaturity, and the bes sults I now notice, 
of 
dition 
Those 
however, 
Por m ake e 
i the pipe is po Tis aie knives and put paek on 
ac to dry. By ee as s the collars re- 
to little more an inches in len gE 
eej d } 
att 
bottom. of 
seeds as Sven ge ken ; per Tans a 
roots with 16 to 20, ‘nd 2 24 perfect tillers, and.ree : xr 
against a ea prst fama at a aie es p emd P ara 
ana shall continue the sees of laying the end of the 
e 2-inch. Pipe, fo poe: of | 
aging the pipes end to jarn with a 
in pie 
za 
It adheres nat ani of being 
ced in the gi fic 
£ being dra m the kil 
This i is enormous, and i 
„(Tti is hardly possible to over-estimate the i tane: 
ingi 8i, 10l. and 
g 
; and these pipes being propery teed i in 
D 
D 
per acre to 
121 or 4Z It will be ebeud: that it is 
tcl by ine side > of the 
t one ~~ of i wa 100 with fewer th 
had fallen sien ankai 
in the cost. of one, and in carriage, tillers, but if 10 or 20 se eds 
f- 
t 
q 
ws break oi, a piece o of 
ake, : 
wond ea ach. have 
of labour remains Ses á: before, or eae s0; ‘ena in 
i Bet ha nipon be 
d 
sent up two tillers £ or. aaia 
ot five ed in 
entirely 
_ The S desideratum in pasua marked i is a 
will 1 roll and replace 
P 
er oe Farmers’ Club, fos that Mr. 
roe 
prose of directing re Fe to the | patches in their work of manana 
ne w. 
ct Sen 
was 
plon p nee ate Mien, of Blackdub, near 10 men by Fe get np I suppose tl 
q 3 iatt 
by breedin 
5 
e 
5 J > 
+} Š 
eed, Mr, S: 
all pec 
ag 4 
neasy 
I have B. 
men distrustful 
e | economy. 
A 
36- yards, or exactiv id 
ove 
1 1 Til 
th for 
È feel, however, thata 
ing such a power as a or 16 ar will parae 
ado opted. The machine is too unwieldy ; 
ges and in s ti at -must be of doubtful | 
(To be continued.) 
do 
squeaks. Tiko pas a ie pig. 
m most cecasions. 
Mr. Pennant has a notion 
Home Correspondence. that infests garde: À 
Dibbling Wheat pis been an object with me to | cats. will not eat ih I ean thee = say the; 
“ofthe small pipe Speen ee Siete” 5 
Fabal pause here for „a moment to d 
th 
al 
f sowing Wheat by the dibble, so far | m n more ee anr. 
garde | devour her. Ags H., 
What is 
east as 
inao. 
tain— 
ese districts ee or six years | 
of Pa ee lime, clay sani 
ya 
simple, 
eral in use in th 
ae are pariis Il 
th e pipes Suppose an acre to be drained at e 
feet deep in soils such as 
cluding i 
ae ci 
d, magnesia, 
tack, soda, and ue oxides ot eae re manganese. 
nitrogen, hyd n, chlorine, and 
t iz., phosphorus, ear- 
5 Airs—viz., oxygen: 
tiuorine. 
2 Solid 
bon, and aca 
—was du ug e: in Teun 1843, afte: ring 
over it a very "ie ‘er compost, and a few hand handsful 
of haa bones fi e house. egm sae all kapi 
bs pea faye sth baci 
n dibble became elodded at om 
ath ma 
‘ail ie substances should exist in small portions 
soil, except carbonate of lime, elay sand, Ro at oxy- 
et six when they ocenr o t of the |in yo fo aie gen, and hydrogen, 
tiles. carefully laid and the drai ee Sg nd vegetated 3 Proportions of each for good soil. 
t and a half feet pe ee piety put the phy ‘though pon retained ty ME OP ù 
the w; of labour are about 14s. week, | hea! y throughout the winter 184 34. Tn March I} siumina.. 
an a sa yard? I apprehend no Carbonate of r e 
rge sized tiles uppose the kiln | ri entioned and figured some weeks nimal or vegetable which 
yrd aig np miles from t e drainage — =x above the ‘Gat series of seed roots, with an in- | D&¢aved -------- a (es area 
640 yards) of drains, £34 lof slender stem at least an in At this pai: 
R ley iep , Tefilling the drains, ry . re thinned out to one in a hole, and Total «+++ +++ en aD 
soles andl igs igi naa nan fa 
and suppose poe 
winter weather, 
wet heavy fields 
n yen 
7 hid se 
Bad. 
213 4 
ese. 
Racecar ecg IE 0| than 40 seeds 
and 8, for capi 21 0 as man 
capital, be. te. 
Ss, set i Nov. 3, eens 
| Containing subs 
f exist in small proportions. 
“oman 
esia 
began nr aay mga omitted; as 
f it commonly exists in sand and pag 
6. 
rom the. oe row were- Anaga entire before the 
it ‘be from mixing the 
Council of the Royal A, sal See haa the oe sinere huk A exist in it in a greater proportion than 
prior to the Sou eesis eT | 3 per cent., few plan grow init. The nitrates and 
i e i of ammonia are the most powerful manures among 
i larger ai nm T pig t that can be made 
Tea | the emen 
to soils is to carry sand upon SN oes, and c 
three upon sandy or gravelly ries —C. Lloyd. j 
