1, 1859.] 
JANUARY 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
11 
—— — 
area of ground open to unrestricted and daring com- 
y and manures fetched and — delivered : at market 
— Y). A 
Grass m we AV -— bad enough, the fallows havi ing been 
| s ed com oxen with that | by the teams of the “common carrier.” cleared b ant manure, a good dose — the lic 
l y ercial — —— hol din nder large * As » — e — = of * being able to bear | stuff before te last rap and w pes of c « we 
i which i ugs nt i rails above — may be as | the pressure, what whole weight to be supported The harv this field of stubble i clean, : — 
pr — 2 W it u 12 or rri 11 so, then each of = would —— a leu crop again 17 it bad a i little manure, 
* re addin "the fee-sim pl e of the land may be large Boyde ell wheels would bear only 14 to 2 2 tor but I have not time to do it, busy. Well, 
and — z SM sinse for farming as — or main this is is 3 cor — with the 456 tons piri = set the pipes and man to work, and you may plough 
though "But we have no th her and ] } a dy carried well over a arable land. In and as though you had — teams the 
— tn for applying st po to c ] n 15 Ha 5 while his field (stubble) I wan So 
let us strive to perfect these, and extend thei this id lity? I. A. C. Italian Bye but i 00 * 25 wage 
as far as they will promise profit to those who can — — — again and 2 5 as dry enough What 
i .. Enterpri pris ing renee rs will spend a — a crop It nd come again. M ll, there 
P steam cultivator tha — to Home Correspond is this stubble; T weg like to a^ ? i ^ goi 
: save thei their produce; What should be — with the — PI think fi f Wurzel, but 
|. have — ion ueris that — ers will be should not be taken, as proposed, parallel with s fur ofi om the muck hill; well, set the liquid gg 
found to spend ten o r twenty gums that amount per | Thames, E as near ite MAN Ju junction with the Ah! make a pond of it, idi let it hav ve a good swill. 
acre, let the N glitter never rightly—seeing, as | as possible, n lar rge sewers open or otherwise ; but it one; the water filtered causing 
we d pitiful extent of drainage “yet executed, | should 1 in iron pipes the manure to follow it to a great depth, which 
| compared with th t I promontory, or place projecting into 2 — ue will: suit the Wurzel very well. The result a 
and the scantiness of good bu uildings, roads, and main the sea, —— here current runs strong and away from rop, no doubt or 8 
channels or rivers, compared with those demanded by the shore, i r^ it should be forced along those Then there are pu bage, Parsnips, , Rape, lenty 
ipes in the same way as the water is vnm to us | of cake 
p 
the, . — rofa an improved husbandry. 
the same we are much obliged to Mr. 
md industry in setting before us a | 
of tillage; and it may perhaps turn out 
ebted to him for other and more avail- 
Halkett’s —— E observe the 
: the 
pip 
from the waterw 
| pipes supplying London. Msi redi et together, 
me rough idea of the 
o 
used, allowing for the — it would 
The st orm or rain 
road to travel - — 
upon narrow strips of g urpose 
and not cultivated the field is s equally ace a e to the 
P 1 in a arts, no matter what state of tillage or 
n: and the land is 
™ withou machine or implemen 
ap pressure — e E dieci can the same advantages 
e secured w 
0 or * wich an 8-horse engine 
mounted upon say eight ee —.— at 
water 
may 2 "itself into the 
pon only taking t — mouth of the — into * 
water, cae — re t portion of the - — 
which in suspension a grea of 
animal her er, natter from the land that odd be 
good for manure, and might be allowed to go i 
Xd that w ould 
ha s the. so 
E c M and.other 
what may — n} d ders d be carried 
out with success. 4 Reader. 
Farmers? Clubs. 
the house sewage, the remainder into the 
d di which | 
would pena it b 
or ou 
B his At the 
into late meeting of this society, letters were written from 
many members e their 3 with the 
river. which in a condensed form 
uld have many advantages; the principal one I con- 
pidet; it would be at hand over a h portion of the 
country when its use and how to use it as a manure are | 
known and coins as it ought t to 5 - will be, E 
ave no doubt, Again, by shall n 
i 80 m a hs in any Mm yes 
"i 
rmidabl any respect, and easier ma anaged. 1 
think it should travel nt “the principal railwa ys, 
ES 
4c» end) fitted with Boydell’ « 
o traverse nd 
com- 
ys | formidable 
E] [wou greg aad workmen for construction could 
or some few yards away, diverging only hipe ha 
constructions or other things that would be 
| too costly to remove; the advantages would be n the 
€- | veyed t ot 
e spot where wanted at the least 5 — 
tane 
End kat 
es the shortest to the 
n 1 
reported as fo Dee 
constant w rts 6 bar he operation 
d decidedly s satisfactory, so iare — that I will never 
se a shearer enter eld if it is possible to use a, 
eaping sed "The d the rm was more 
wake, than other modes 2 uh 
„The 2 — eld I have a sima dx of is a field of 
Oats, 30 acres. of which w es in 30 
pee of horses 
hours, the e expense of wide was, a tee 
and tw at 12s. per day, or 18. Gd. per "EMT 
per aay 
en and women gathering, tying, ad 
“stoking -— A each, at 2s. 22 per day, 
ay . 
o latin with its pen Ko., ‘could b — 
r the land at any time, without touching the te 
ren d n the hard strips or ways, an 
processes accomplished by ^ Halkett — be 
but that either you net t be 
1855 Which it may branch E required), to fields and 
farms, where it may be tried as manure at the smallest | ™ 
possible outlay, because so near a 2 only a few feet 
of piping being * to manure many hundred acres, 
— ould 5 but if 
a ela thine d the country in the 
extra quantities sf — corn, beef, mutton, pork, Fen 
s 
ive level of the railwa 
be f followed — daring down the pipes, i 
forcing 0 If this plan he sew- 
age woul es Y all 5 as manure, £ eda none of it go | their 
[into r and as ice makes 
2 cm nothing d should decline the gilt BR. as Pierrot beof 
ds 
or 414 for a whole d: $ 8 9 
Total, £7 8 9 
For 30 ‘ate cat 2 
Imay here state that rd: 85 mpi and horses work Bell's 
— den e eight hi iz., from 8 A.M. to 12 
from 2PM. to 6 P.M: ther permitting, Some 
people rev Why not keep the machines going all day by chang- 
ng men and eat ? My answer is that mln man and horse 
works best with the tools heis used to, and I find that I get 
more work out of c e in eight ho keeping the 
same men horses at their own machines, I used to do 
when I' kept the machines going for 12 hours and changi 
the men and horses. The way I gen iy o is to ha 
the head rigs eut by shearers and stook up to the 
fence; that enables me toh take the four the 
and e en each into its o 
mber I think 
"- rm field without 
TOME the side-working machine, if 
four gi them a asI ET aT ve of Bell's there is no he 
"un: 
achine 
he fl in sande Be on theto, aod i o if ue broad or stops 
eme onm only A" thatif amy 
^ dita] or M — for 
ork wit 
," e — that I eut ae EST this year 
148 acres in 172 hours; Barley, 117 acres 
in 145 hows; re iue 46 acres in 41 hours; alto- 
358 hours. of the fields I 
field: generally, from 
1 the other by means of a friction-box arrangement, Should this — 
all vs — should be capable of taking: : little fiot n advisable, tnt the espeneó too a they mei 
erre d om . n do if each were oe stan once, it might be — 
—— PAN e E and drop into so 
Pi ep Forma E poen having the costly | creek, canal, o the country for Pars erre the 
and shifting truck on headlands levelled for which won tie it * dite sea, and thus 
— ace of the fleld; sewer, except r habitations, —— 
ing up | cover e — ight be used on e lands a 
at | all seasons I believe, and thousands of looking 
d till the| miserable. for want manure might be made were 
next course to be culti-|*to smil and blossom he Rose." 
y; wheel being| The following plan I would ow to — the | gether 3 
to remove the parallel sewage: it? should be taken vis MM ie tlie 
the wheels together— that would and the rest, 7.e., t highest, in 
— drives all the pip with the main, from whence it should 
greatest possible amount of hold or grip p — . d to a spot in every field that would 
Ë the system be so beneficial i in promise as we hear 
ification is well worth cop» 
w 
and the rest, in _earthe enware pipes (6 inches); 
the situation of -— i, 
e to be cut up the hill, 
Ad of course, is 
vould 
os well; from thence it should run over ‘the — in 
t, fitting 
E 
41 
it — ibo light to move — emp sewage. 
| oo 
| y require, such as passin 
sta okie rem — ane sinc dir would leik too much at 
| the joints at such places. — 
connect the 
|| manuring the f 3 
out by gravitation or gentle pressure, 
nd T| calc! 
— —— n: gutta percha, or other piping 
g overa|i 
e n the e earers is decidedly, in 
favour of the machines, and the additional quantity of 
to the s for fodder for cattle is beyond 
ulation, to say of your not having a particle 
achines, and the whole of 
out. by the shearers es the present slashing 1 
Mr. J. M Hal 
* The rea ping machine T — last harvest was Me 
a mick's with Burgess and Key's — 
. nd 
r 50 feet width a once, 
to spread. it right and left. One man and on 
P —— 
Is Pe ME 
could they do! No treading of | horses or sis 
and for ed end I ent mein each 804d v very mne. 
„ manuring, ı reaping, carrying the crop, and |s 
e innumerable operations. that are not p par- 
4 or by horses, but would be 
yy productive P m 
em all, Our wire 
can only perform a few 
mi — our locomotive 
rotary digging machines 
Wer ground has been 
th the m 
achine pro- 
followed up to the Tory 
day if r required d. it ppears as if horses | gro 
c tal ton tis the farm, and coal 
preading the € as it nm out of the 
rched meadows which have — | 
cleared of hay, — he perceiv — had enough 
ahead right and left, he takes off a joint i 
stops the flow 
till h. 
in of t siat ‘tle boy has — Lees e ing, 
js 5 ime ces cutting, so the 
ysolw 
east eee . chef gad the opposite way its bouit a 
ver ear — the stubble was not so 
iked to have seen 
usually g 
trifling} 2 aeres per p and T Bod that ‘with ignem e 
— 
sped 4 s emere wi work, and the Grass begins 
he instant the manure i$ applied, and what is 
Sia wrth somotimos T wi ot Yontaze to say The 
us saving one woman or man. 
— me averaged 20s. per e ook 
which was equal t 38. 4d: to Ss- Sd.—or. 4e. Per- 
