Ja? 
E exert 
o wh 
29, ona 
NUABY 2 
are those 
n 
harged with, 
system i in n Seotlan 
here you often fin ^re od 
y youth who would 
Je in Scotlar nd. 
THE AG 
as beir ng- -a sma 
—— LTU R AL 
GAZET 
TE 
19 
the fr: ame, on the 
on far ms w ell 
all block o 
near side. quus ‘there e seen, 
of the . tribes by means of pipes v m 2 or 
ear ther are circulating s ior hot water 
Thes sep ipes tobe laid at dept 
1 
aring s 
es | ga * e 
a close boiler or 
feet i 
T tov 
of 4 n » the 
a sin process to inject the gro und with g 
— as ammonia m carbon, 80 that the A ‘and 
ay AS 
cending 
d a din of We 
l 
es, 
"— or goode 
deep, in Septembers turn over 
i div - 
hall yet 
for Wheat in October; 
rm — add a penetrating 
ere, however, a consi timulus ha — 
fen 
<a ty afew men of intelligence and ind du stry—I 
a s to 
rate — e RE ter ing another E 
at ‘Chr istmas, on l for next 
In bh ae varie 
ne 
time w "hen — will be ny along the 
* will 
so a into — ents fit for 
en describes as follo ows r. Halk et t's scheme, 
majority of the 
— e 
9 at Bed 
=- or 
` Apae 
, he ld an annual ploughing 
it a as goo 
n | the —2 * — 
farm 
| — found i 
Berwickshire 
g his a proper ty in this county, who has had 
th sides — — 
hor mà convinced of the ss of such 
a system of cultivation by steam m ery combined 
with rails, I had purposed, amongst ps projeets, to 
give my r rather to com- 
n both sides er SAYS 
ald be 
he is — that no ploug without 
The 
the “tools. 
when well set, 
ane n th 
plough ; and there is no difficulty in obtaining 
I do not, under all e , use 
3 t The e occas sions in which he dispenses with 
f 
— but a good wheel plough should, also * a good mi 
bine existing practice into a whole, whenever Jeisure 
. It was, therefore, 
Jo m read by. Mr. P. A. Halkett 
last 
— stem cabling ul all 
ane a 
formed by s 
E 
th a 
" cent, 
the 
use of this M — for 
p te: m - quality of the Aar is proportioned t 
contend, that 
ploughman. Still, I do 
cent, 
— — of ability, the results are 
in favour of the wheels. 
ELSE 
se How 
gre r € i in p^ nghing 10 i 
four horses, witho ut straining or hu as the dh 
in Leva least." e latter dese iptior ‘of wo 
n experience h 
mako, is inv: valuable 
—— 
) A the tho clos of — ‘the — lease, 
mgh, and 
TO rhea i in turning at 
aghing, say 
te is another objection 
a farm, and the MD or half- any po 
e farm 
ll have 
nd om entailed. But it i - evident that all eannot | | obtain 
nin the best me 
and 
the — at ork. 
is an efficient contri oun for 
more or less di into the land, 
y. Their W 
ion, and with 
e firml 
plough—the ithe rmi 
notable repor 
e | pu me's = ploughs at the Southampton meet 
e by. * 
| ith t 
that ofa aine i sa: the furrow 
I | we see a 
ed construction land, or on vi sticky soil, oem the land wheel clogs, power’ It was not left for oe or Yor 
wa — — — the double and in whic a “foot” should be used instead of | to. do this thing, but to Peter Alexam ae 2 — 
ughing, and, at the same time, removing the wheel. ey netus zt Mr. Secs of Long — Wi 2 m Club, St. James's, in our own 
f —, — to interfere | Bennington, writes me | this ues that he finds and I u lorstand a naval officer to to boot, and ^ — 
rn furro Over some os r12 den z another great advantage in these ploughs. **W t, showing that now, as often. beípss, im- 
Mew — 333 the ploug with a eak up," says he, “ Clov: 1 for Wheat, after | provement Suing — r than 
te Farrow as laid no rectly = beautifully, ai harvest, in dry wi ther whic ich I consider the be aum 
y 9. "Not t that t ther son for strong soils—I ean plough with a wheal “To an any co mpete tent mechanic the diagrams would have 
gl lone à would scarcely face it at | sufficed without the paper, but on the follo od day I 
it, as with any y other, |2 all Ia ard's n breaking — for visited Mr. Halkett's mac —À at Kensington, and 
found i in Mr. Grafton a most intelligent and —— 
exponent of tho bes system, which in ge: neral terms 
this 
y amon! unts to 
me 
t the — $- — : ~ dane 
— y at Portland and Holyhead moving bym 
is — 
e whee 
woul 
say that for all os — 2 oye 
5 ides, -— e would be found 
minds m the t gem Teqeetin 
ing of the 
n days gone two-wheel Bien 
one-whee ‘plow ughs, and swing p were tr ried i 
4} 
à sls ot 2 land to 
o clear 
ght 
This Pat i 
m Lupa yos m 
| far 
of 
and placed on rails on ‘the 
and breadth, 
cultiv ated, ra ised to 2 a 
im — 
be 
he: the 
by engine which. also — 40 
put in Pigott ce the vaen — required for dealing 
with the land. ms ramway frame of the builder is 
ft 
r,and is farnishet with tools “aah the "a nt 
The e that c cheese 
— ngii neer. 
ughs 
s, both on heavy and light js according t 
tastes rof "tha exhibitors. “By this arrangement not 
is — — 1 = 
the face. 8 — land, to E -— — - soi in 
only 
apeg Me gna of ioe ork as execute sg 2 
soil, a the iibris : 
ee 
nsome, marked Y. L. 
ormance was 
ploug 
the manufactory — 2 
its was like 
en fitted w 
dn - land, the qs =. — A 
vertically. ! 
d c rue y 
it originally — the field. There 
why 2 ay 
d attention, 
and acquiring the — n 
be m 
in Scotland than in s Pogland, ec 
and 
usly worked 
— generally laid out in larger fields 
coming to the Modes question of draught, 
cadi I wou ould refer. it | 
and th 
sted at an = of about 45°, pec — truth rer they 
could be turned back to their or igi) horizontal 
without gaining or losing -- ccording to the 
generally received prinei a. ‘of 22 ploughing 
any Coreen de be correct and equa * uitable to all 
and modes = sours or not), it 
lough 
as gota Robert 
but epe oppór TtuniLy offered itself for aeg and — 
to 
slices were cut ja 
of c ha 
bed hec render — LI — —— with the day for 
th 
uti ee A. "publie general 
Ti * ee it — 
his at 
gre 
e . of 
e practie nelty in in —— ving post-horse 
ion. ploug e 
the dibble, broad- 
l be set in motion by 
Bd P acw the bm, = make 
= 
rows of Wheat may at last 
east an nd drill iem ose 
betwe 
liquid manure at the 
alkett 
is yet a very im- 
prin tool — — adding, a — — 
it adva will comm 
and orate the soil — rows of Plants. and 
a far bette —— — = ce hoe. 
e. platform will be — 
available for li iquid : "ante ye for the purpo: 
irrigation new method is desirable, as 
favour—so much so that the name 
or r Ball may : almost be rega rd. 
the interest "pers 
the 
pi 
(To be 3 
GUIDEWAY le arae ee 
THE — e of the 
aper by Mr. W. Bri v 
Food, i in which ia refers to the agriculture, horticul- | 
the French aon y of 
ed nthe synonym fr a Perforated pi: 
e spongy superincumbent soil, and carri 
plants ——— — the surface, ipae i 
import 
valuable than the bins. lands called. — 
et gardens, as Greenwich and 
ture, and food pro ovision of 
8 of the — € ree inhabi of the 
ea, and of the natives oi a Chilé 
ing the 
Westmimste 
vanced — ey al 
in, — ing to the Mediterra 
Tees opi ng 
pos 
PIX 
s kind would be peculiar 
The vall 
n ranges, which u 
"This river, the 
wholly 
— 
to say, 
uld, or 
t the : 
y are prett, 
ER the addition o£ a 
Review," and at the gasei mae ie MAR of Arts 
nem such Samsa — followi 
ad t artificial 
third of it itis evaporated 
W COGS, 
t the scarcity of water is so great that. perennia ly 
faction fights oceur — the pene quarrelling 
for water, which have to t down by the soldiery 
absorb 
irrigation, m, but , probably one-t! 
thir 
y the sun, 
n sober we propose 
hest. — pe aa on open land, so as to maintain 
the temperature suited to the growth and — 
