696 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
k we spoke three ships, all, like our own, from | mediate neighbourhood, is a very painful circumstance | where none wasmeant. If the oily at ee 
hos to tat pact, with pandori of British manu- I ie one three- sag Grass-field, which I have | Chronicle deems any of m Y expressions pei 4 
facture ; as we sailed past them, I was wane vee been “petting | in every way i my power, in hope es of | my letter of the Pence I shall b chy to subetit ere i 
our captain on the evident superiority of h others, provided either’ tie is altered, n Ute 
i ip, when he interrupted me, ugh drained, that a kan tock going rapidly over i it | motive defeated, viz. $ ahri of f the errors of r 
t 
eamanshi ‘You mis- | tho 
cus sir ; this shi = is not a very fast sailer, and I would leave a deep indentation ; conceive then what I | large e far. rm system, with small cap vas PLD gas 
en 1 hear the sound of the horn, and know the M y imagine optie n pest te 
as I do ; rather congra pet “misit may bring fifty country squires galloping | dazzled, when I per erceived fine € Charlock gad 
culate n me on my ai > a ure cin þei ing employed by a | down my hill, in the manly pursuit of running a poor | abu ndanee amongst the une t grain, and the p 
erchant who possesses practical common sense, with | animal fill it be heart-broken. I believe there is not | covered with Conch Gets Colt Thist Mi! 3 
'udgmen mt to see his interest, and liberality to act up to |a cottager in this village who ventures to plant Greens | weeds. odes is the cause of all this ? want ‘ef phe 
his judgment ; Nettie of opinion that the ships in this | for winter, knowing that what he sows he will not reap; to employ labour, or indifference about the maj pin 
rade are, in general, little more than h alf man m = and the ey a not tenants to the Lord of the Mano: and 
many of th em living in their own cottages with smal ali ~ Soap as a a —My attention has bee: 
sure he mone; b it; ; the three shi s we br ardens. The assistance m a very prolific pat 
— To Ls è passed Saai aana tenant is not “complete until you ave ss gar vee: 2 pire to an ay at her — <a ~ = 
red. He e 
from an insufficiency s hands to take in ‘sail during | made o our great men ashamed of eo yt per upon i the | this parti icular pat teh i is never man 
sudden É ents whilst and lawful enjoym of their | is entirely oap-s 
ried away ; with an insufficient crew, especia ally when ghbours. Fo ir Play. den ntally, ‘but aeaiaioe appin to > this "patch 
harassed by W cet of rough weather, it is not alate Washer. —The annexed sketch of a machine soap bey be beneficially used as 
ible to take oi advantage even of favourable ould doubtless allow such to Bét duty f free, and} 
es; before he can hoist and trim his light sails, | may be acceptable to some of your readers. It ise easily | amii a cheap article could be manufactured fro 
ar breeze he should h ave e carried with him has, gb ma aae by any village Se ame n will be found very | fish-oil, or any refuse animal fat. Can Bee or p 
ctual Iti is sim ply agehu cylinder, with epen | your readers, enlighten hereupon?—An Amat 
in a i- to car il.’ p any of the —— 
of; his igiit he cited numerous cases, each tending P ing tl gh except ers ie ors 9 Societies i 
to prove the great advantage as respecte the | p t asses through a | + ICHFIELD AND MIDL LAND cout 
_— and Een’ but ence of a ship being well trough of water. cu OAT: T NTIES AG 
f F Sept. 23.—“ Much interest was excited b the digg 
a gri with vom ro to agricultur ; the. farmer and z y T 
at ah. A rood was alloted to saeh man, and the ti 
the sail sath ae — —_— kam ‘the — or the allowed was two hou urs. _ Most o them, howevand 
the f 
much Sogo id mgolt Wi Wan any Ke. a ry = E an hour and 23 minutes ; a one BA ist 
by an insufficienc s rs ‘hands to ‘sites the lucky hour. in an hour and PaA kr prep The whole of the 
Providence dispense: nf pena See a liberal hand, ging was exceedingly w one. The judges w 
whilst man, self-willed, ignorant, or presumptuous, and Hanbury, es Wiley, ia and Mr. Darling. 
above cohen sn ier P: : Arkwright, Esq., was the President.”’—(From 
portunity, the proffered bounty ; hence the perpet ' b Mee consider this digging 
complaints of unpropitious seasons. Before I ‘opted e 0 sting circumstance; is 
e husbandry, like my neighbours, I was ofte are circumstance: mitted in the account wh 
57 eh ; the ihe gen 1 showers had pas eti aw a are of the utmos oetinporiaice to those not present ati 
de wn; dependent on — match, who wish to cultivate a few acres by the spad 
are in of information. Much has bee 
movers the favourable se sremsnarichan ae a aR piany pue ——— z mitted into your Gazette upon the subject of spade 
2 x ag 
able to sj a few rg to Tero Docks aa ‘Thistle It may be made to be easil ci a like a churn, | P2706"? an A: 36 dia y Sving the work ; 
before i Gais. siede ripe, ot o bru sh the fen Ger Gdad ao es ore permanently, a ee w me P Skotti. Wiee have never b: certain some important fat 
ne is, the depth of the digging the other, the widi 
or 
aboundin; ut ince many Pelatees are used, or w. tise it is requisite to wash 
I have em employed a number of spadesmen, whose time | them for sta reh-making, it will be found a very valuable 
Ms J _ We 
without this knowledge e the d 
of the labour, and a fim e employed, is of no use 
r Sp guide to o those person who are mo st likely to wish 
| isi 
> we other spade work, when not still more ad-| similar to that he d—differin 
vantageously called away to those various agricultural | but in one alea 5 that one, horse of tier 
operations which, to be done profitably, should be d The s here represented § as con- | 
instantly, whilst the weather is favourable, the principle | taining t ‘the — a which the 
operates as a ‘save-all;’ time is never wasted, oppor- PTER Rolv a ur machine not vertical a s ia eere Z in 
tunity > oe lost 5 $ since adopting | it my crops have straight, but ehed, A tarinki in extremities Ral F Gar n Dra 
seldom th ya, considerably b eyond the cis meeting nae “this Club lately Ona, he a how 
or unpro: er ae 3 the anxiety which farming formerly | tern to nging h they are attached ; the heme wa re- | with the attendance of Lord St tair and his b 
occasioned I feel no longer.” — M.S. volves not in „Sockets wp ered in these n Ys | North Dalrymple, Esq. +5! of Fordel, the abi ect ai 
Gold of Pleasure. s m be obliged to y —by its ue shat 
form me whether r your correspondents to Po tatoes in it have pani ‘leaned, chains from ‘the ex ex. yee 
aa of the Caineli ina sativa Gold of dat tremities f = Neg arms are hooked i l ier a rennin Dee so aari dosti 3 i 
Tt is said to have great fattening eo bom rties for sheep | and as the rotation proceeds: these, windi } 
axl 
and „cattle, and I know it to be most productive, from lift th f tł t d bring TATE affirm, that th p known cout 
to injure i i Female Subscriber. 
Juha} 
EEG 
a box or barrow which 
2 farmer near — sowed 34 Ibs. = $ and his Paced ee the Sl The trap-door bing open, Eataly established by our RS ; and pi pris 
m tells me that the roduce was 600 c age a tow — fall into this barrow and are easily re When we beg to aram 
wards. Iti is said t may £ drain nly cut about from So to 24 inches di 
be sown on poor e ae Rous, pac Bake a Tmportan ce of Employing Sufficient Capital in| a nd in maaan insianees — were only 18 inches 
ington. Farming. —I m xe diselaim the sl keg intention of | $ our experience increased, we very soon 
hole a st ree 
egan 
t farmers, mis- | serve that such a trifling and su superficial mode de of ; 
Seed W pe Be 
as 
Peria paba of are ine Tam Sy to anny asserte rted by aid My remarks | in 
give you my method of treating mat ‘Wheat, and : contained in the Gazette of the Tih of September, can In no instance, therefore, | according = his expen 
cet agh the sead only by po seg © have reference to those who either hee x ae 
have used has som a ane hold f. o large for their available capital, or | he was to give an opinion upon the ma tes ee 
quantity of smut a Tro o tne days Lae sow- eok w ‘take  advantago of a propitious season, which | stance e our drains, in ores r kind ra a 
ing I mix in a large tu tity o; of st rong liquid | t this has a — —— throughout = in depth than from 30 to mi ches. Of inal 
manure (the drainings f. 3% par sae Sd fi if we are to beli ocal accounts. My co i pah as many of our Mossy kinds, the 
tank), with as — common salt as it il hog in so-| munication of the th wi was peri to support ipi be: ons. oases deeper ‘than pa ne veide 
kim z the immerse the o ren ments Heri “large farms with small capitals”; on 30 i fter such an exe 
s ours (the „light corn is skimmed of off and r e- | this po! t Mr. James — agrees with me—eui bono | was ite le “clear that this ek eed of A 
and spread thinly on a ae) a quantity of sear statement, viz., that vast merri of grai r 
rip 
n, 
slaked lime is kled over it, and the K “se the sickle were standing on the meeting or ane ene trae jasan. 
whole turned several times. A fine sieve is used to s betw 1 n Gloucester sat Lon he growl he by seo — and allo wea much deeper 
get ee sof the superfluous lime ; it is then fit for dril- of gre aid be after; and also oe there were | the other nical means of improving the 
po very many acres uncut in the counties between Glou- | opens up s ar spear extensive field for = te 
oat ‘or a steep, soapers’ ley, the corn being after-| cester and Leeds, on the 11th of September, which | of th sof the various plants we cultiva! E 
earls dried vg moet se he has assured me that he | ought to have been stacked. The apparent neglect of t ideration, and one that will, a 
never grew an mutty co —A. Notman. the farmers was the common topic of conversation with d ayeta of draining, soon substanta 
Eggs will ken longer sae better in salt than in any | st i he mi and intelligerr 
other wa; way.— muds age gis fone I attributed it to the « large farm and small ees rist, and that will always ca ase such a pa: 
Fnjuri t hat | sy others entertained diferent opinions ; I g nfinitely to the credit fBryde 
iep itary thst the i both. Perh ape Mr r Before concluding, msi erh evai 
Par ment, and in piar ene- | being left so long standing after it was ; p ri ‘o a ae ry em 3 
an as a matter of interest only to landlords mela | so prevalent this z ? He must —— Bros: a aag z the improving classes . ly c 
nants, and not the sligh E consideration seems to bé | ston, St. Peters, Thanet, is not all England, and if he | communi ity, a and one with — ga a ares e 
raan to the pains and penalties endured by the small | was Iate in getting in his seed, I cannot help it. Should | that the inereasing ulture, 
proprieter cultivating his o or her little allotment. I have | I be alive, and T I shall probably next year look in | by a rapidly improving sys om of arin any ro 
> which I employ for my conve- | upon Mr. James ’s farm, an — oe ubtless, | as entirely to preclude us from . as in exp 
nience and amusement. I have ils a great price for paa it a pattern of 'enitivation: ” n farmers wish to | means in the drainage of the soil ; ined the fu 
ps and = ‘ot es a aree draining an eep foreign grain out of the t, they sr regu- | he observed, when our lands are drei ish ed, witho 
_ Las ri had 15 Apple- lta the supply according to the ¢ oan and not trust | of its effects cannot be properly er costly andt 
to the tender mercies of the capitalist | having recourse to — ae and the nu 
My Rye, 100) a Iin- | and monopolist. I hope I have neither the power nor operation, from ee at tone efficiently © 
calves, w: much | the wish to injure any man, my object is to prevent | horses that must be employed, llent mod 
lence eee oie -| them doing themselves Man pih - | and to follo sach varehase : 
he x ar L | ment relative to last year ion, | ment, nig, such as Pughs, and 
dread of fox-hunters. The authority, but le alii = lements, su soils i 
n a | ay a an ty, qr oe “itip an soils in 
