THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
== | food can be re: the r quan They ag had X r; 
from the mountains, EES et San nr rt - 
à from a of | have i plano Sasiia numbers with the ed on 
6.. The. Cheviot ot Batak derive h } eof at whe mg inea it wil ant mp AKiN troa ee 
: : north of land, and thenee Fidel extension of tillage and the general improvement tint come wird ibti cnr away, althedsh à 
pos mg j tains nies of and, an ion agricult tre. Of the several varieties, the e New Leicester | ¢ F Wiis eee n Acad pay the Fal sie àt 
cease parts oi England an a aehan some- cupies the first with re e i ne xt wee ee exoUse the delay of 
what exceed in weight the thor haa Heath Breed : pr aptitude to fatten readily. The a Lincolnsh Bee ar r a Tot ‘ot calcined gypin 
they are less robust, and less su uited. to a penne of | the Romney | Maes the Spee = hi ne oe ekaia enough toda 
heaths, but are amongst the hardiest of our have eac ties et a © general approbation’ of Pieter moest ds 
Mountain Sheep. They are destitute of horns in both | their cultivation profitable a soe a ar circum pe Ba ee aa ba ve excessive, T 
and l of medium fineness, iitted for pre- stances. The Irish varieties have n ot yet generally at- PRA Ta afa aga ee: 
pay x card, and ploy 2 1 £ P holder— Supposing oF ARAIAAR vpr Be mitre tr Daa. 
of the woollen cloths, 7. The m a the etc pate the Bs a eae wakes straw is. ab a 
reared in the heathy parts of the Miscellaneous. farm is Grass-land we should are werd =e a large pare ae 
N k, Suffolk, and Cambridge. —They ee a a efer you to-authorities next wee We will 
and race of Sheep, : armed wi ith horns i in both sexes,| On the ra ipsam nile and Application of Manure Fences nquirer—A ditch should be-made on the upperside of 
beara ( Fork Couru “ 
ued for the excellence of piain mutton. ty pro- | m ments where the. aula of manure is properly : un-| for ae a Pi ae e punk eK sas Peeks can using 
Seonpiniantis soe Vie ere 7? ! - ing ere Tot pore cea a 
7 Ios ake +3. Ì roa £ è inch 
* and gat wie The ‘expense s0 a eadar COn | in the Jong handle; it does pol Tadina ta find great relief 
cause they are “The b y y se earan amply re as the spade, which is generally 4 to 5 inches z m 
pure state. 8. Breeds of the Older For arests, i dustry and Mt intelligence, ‘of sie tention Pap ds we ine reniir, to fürke an acre: 
mons, and Chases. epiorabie ing S 5 : he soi 
properties, with the localities in which they Save: been | to see the eee from which manure is wasted in att 3! be Rha ly t 
i They h often dark y faces and the e greate: f Fr rance ;* in too =r villages the told this by the farmer wha: peen 
limbs, have sor times d intended the work, and he pai ai 
tate of horns, and bear, for the most part, a short felt- | the farm Ieillings as if the object were to wash it aa A graft fast (aste igin, iot however by the fork, 
ing wool, They have been continually d 8 The greates tofi “and itcost us4 rch to digit a foot deep: as 
z trong 
the ap e successful cult tivation in French Flanders, o aa cannot do more than -ort perches in a day, Bat it 
oas 
„50 
ta mixture of the more cultivated bre 
oe West of England, h however, are still to be fou nd Fred json | 
which, is taken — 
A 
the former occupy mapying: the hi igh lands of Devonshire in | 
the forest of eee the latter, a rugged distri ict of 
would curv 
means i aes power the economy of manure. 
end prizes might be pon for those farmers who 
the most rational way. 
urage b 
e 
Mha } ey ie 
stiffish soil. You thus see that there is a reat variety, 
xt rhich can be iketered” ° sate 
Horse eR oar DA not = 
pues 2 bushels of Carrots a week r äs Be gic hay as they will 
n Not knowing the size we cannot guess 
of y q 
but it will Probably he from 1D Am 20 Ibs, e a > ba we 
of -Cats a-week, about 3 ewt of 7 
Se eat about 2} bus 
Dairpobi; _ straw ad a 
La R 100 AcrEs—Inguiver—Five men 
They are both very wild and hardy races 
differ. from ~ other forest breeds 
ore fitted | 
The main object is to secure the 
I. That the od shorld not | 
Tha the | whi 
as possible. 
following me ra 
for frets Tey the ewn b than the eard. 9. ‘The run off from the premises. 2. be» ch | 
woolled varieties of the Proven ama ——Thesé Sheep | voir u apee so that in dry sidan may be 
hornless of small size, and of good forms, patient | thrown back on the heap. 3. To preveñt aty epr daa | 
of "scanty food, and produetive of a fine short felting | except that which falls immediately upon itfrom r 
wool, which was long the most esteemed for the making | ning int ard. 4, That the beiviifficiently 
of cloth of any in This breed, from the sub- | large to prevent the necessity of piling up the manure 
stitution of the larger varieties; and the effects of cross- | too high: -Tt is convenient ‘to: make the dene slightly 
ing, has been long diminishin ers: Choy S uT concave, 
nearly extinct. 10." The Soi D, Breed,: derived | soil uld ‘be: elayey and imperyi A Sipe fe 
from the chalky hills of pone ae "Brit vee if acres is not this ady mae paturally, nė must be ob- 
—It is to be classed amongst the es d forest | tained artificially. » The w rs of the ghill, ae 
breeds, but it has been 1 tank, are =P and re 
effects of breeding aig wef t For 
Bria gers over all the south-eastern counties ia hwertz recomm: s moveable spouts 
art of the 
yard. : 
firm wooden grating, ô 
of 
near to prevent any alid substance 
4 aie haan 
entering. A most important point is to „take care 
preparation by the card. 
cality, and the taste and opinions of the _breeder: 
f th me e 
from the stables and stalls shall run natur 
the older Sheep of | the Sussex Downs. _ They are pone 
The litter, however abundant d ‘pes iin 
absorb the whole of the urine, especially’ when the 
food : 
and Cheviot Breeds, and are better fitted for a se re 
maperate climate than for a Ka and moist ce 
coarse haye unive Y0- 
Fae of the more highly cultivated Southdo: 12. 
The osed Somerset B ) natural- 
‘calcareous district of the hm texans coun- 
qt 
1. — m be thrown carelessly upo: 
“a whieh oul may be 
es, bear a a clothing ‘ho 
to nalet t his arrangement 
The materials of the eo ia 
n the mass. 
fa ed 
is quite unpardonable. 
read and bata d so 
n per I 
urzel., You can give your 
eigen 1 ay ee hoaia jat 
atly pr refer Smith 
HE Leasp—Will a “Loo. Pains kind ee eae 
unavoidable delay of his Satoi lé paper? 
To Cune Bacon—Curly Tait p i " be: am. ab 
of 
been penta elk am see swine 
the 1 
hic! 
ane DOES 
WHAT Paisi oF THE 
latitude, 
*,* As usual, many communications have mretvpd thee 
————— 
GARDEN, 
> produeed. They ias 
ee eventos, “which å is 
is too | At 
wool 
wie for the fatty ot the females to. reste is male 
<4, of small i 
eaused | decomposition would aa 
heavy eaa oae. rns barra shown that the depth of 
hould be erie denese ts pekweet s and 7 feet. 
The hea he beap u sual fopa from the centre, a = conve- 
papa upon it. raetice 
derived from the m 
ing the 
in yeaa nr ‘load oy tie heap i nee ‘to ic 
a 
poe emg eines 
inl an peep 4 ‘but it is seldom tisian i 
establishm 
convenient to ra 50 iene! a mass for a long peed. dant, 2 
so rapid as = omen aj /are plent deat Carr 
iphy 
is cer- | rias, Pelargoniums, Bs gp 
New £4 
ell Be vih eg 
ufficient for the dem: 
Bechelbronn the manure St iade so firm that a | quote 
h w: j ig he depar” can pass over it 
without nares S eami so which the ma- 
nure is laid is a matte ; besides the 
mand, 
and suf ufficient for the 
venture, Epi 
themums, Violets, 
eomp: vehinat, “Ss e pure New - Leicester | 
Breed ; and, secondly, thes visas pore or less inter- 
mond with Pad in blood, of which the pri ie Tene 
of Lincolnshire Shee 
sas Sd; the Cohen Toci; At the the s Devoe 
she Nora iih, the eg woolled Irish v 
size, 
ade of = 
Zanmi y 
here artificial 
“FRUIT 
a. large are ent, a in ar localities, hid Fine Apple, perib., arto 644. | Be aie forte oi 
iste neighbourhood of a large mass of materials | tares Hothouse, ver IY m | Almonde, per peck, oe 
4 — Spanish; wieder lo usi 
in a state mposition may be giir if not Poron p Toe wood | Sweet yo Jontte 2 
z : Melons, nith, each, 4e to 10s iani ii g 
unwho A le plan is sometimes adopted in | 4 fc’ Dese., per bush-» 400 100 «| Nutey 
the t du Nord, viz., planting a row of E — Hitchen, 2% LO eRe i aes Bac ba 
to shade the yard. This is far preferable to a roof, | °°" ;2 is, d to 11 } r peck, 4s to a 
which has sometimes Pr , the expense being pf = Se krp arei kak | Pensa, por Bfrev-, 8a t0 10r 
far too; the rain VEGETABLES, i " 
Cetery, per bunch, 6d w 
| con nce, and the timber of the roof being liable to | Gobbapes, per Some. 90 10 8 Cardnonny esch 64 to wi pad 
| speedy destruction from the steam of the fermenting | Brussels Fp, p. bist 18 to 28 ee ae ars 
i Savoy: ng GR 10- to alsify, d0., 1s to 
he faria ds not DARAI the eoastraction of a tank and | OTEN IE MFE bi et | Onn Serna 
3 > a — i dos. 
the subjacent soil is easily permeable A moisture, the | Greens, per dcz. inches, 210 8s n siilo per Iy 234, al 
French Beans, per I0, pes mores ae 
essence of the manure will, to a great extent, be lo — sorrel, vhtaieve 2 a ptt, pat ROOFS a 0 15. 
$ = 3 
| with a layer of soil, sand or turf, marl, or, in a an Sunes 276d to gs eter. Bee 
substance capable of absorbing the m oisture. ‘This is 4 acy ee a, 2 = ee Slade BP adios - 
frequent practice with farmers in Alsatia.—M. J. B. | het) signin ned tole ne over Egan ee Si | 
è krones per dor, babs Nasco b EE 
Horee Hadish, per bundle, } seed coe 
* This is, unfortunately, quite as much the case in England, snaie er pannen leto Parsley, pee ae 
pepe sae oon xs, who are im ent rn peered ance bundle, } Por — pe y 
nae ors essence of the farm-yard to be washed away | Asra ype, ee res Tame per baneh H, ag 
of proper tanks, and even where the ae is | Spinach, per sieve, 92 to 1368.. Marjoram, Pe gaat 3d wit 
such Se pes the Se em absolutely running off) no | Leeks. per arr buzi aea rs Chervil, vet 
‘Pains are taken to prevent ing absorbed by the earth. Garlic, per lb O# 
t them—itis not economical yi 
n to their “bushel of Osis 
port) | 
00 acres of gs 
a, and 14 per 100 — of pasture, exclusive sca i 
be about the thing. ` ne 
