| 
> m 
LTURAL GAZETT b Ju | 
THE 3 CHRONICLE AND AGRICU [Jour 16, 185, 
——Ó fthese very valuable ploughs upon the ground —20 are gel ~ 
55 F the eir compe- masters very anxious abou p —— prone and they | w — Each has pun med its ridge, Papar br fra] 
he any of t compe roots, x = breadth he blight has assailed Minier A ved 1 of the 
are as valuable " : m ad d — by ost satisfactorily, but t A age à apparently | © s the soil moved has been . i E 
titors. They hav . achieve apasi have them earlier than it has eve eon — ene in many places | exactly what has really been cut off from the ane 
years of patient labour and ation) : ith greater virulence Y. Hark Lockerby. las beer to two or th: soil; 
- he principles are on ofensive from its effects. J. e k it 1 vo or three, and the 
ascertained conclusively what the principles à offe Thanet.—On the latter part of the last and the | work done, anc abour by which it has ben 
which a well-made plough depends forits effie 1 and besinnt of the present month we were eee coat having been thu a cerise be Ba. 905 
The prize system has made them, 1b 15 it ved thunderstorms and torrents of er AM not common in | are e declare idt - rest are x pa hn 
the ant to throw the ladder down by which jy xuriant corn Tops Wee since been favoured with a week of but the worst are as good, as rie He. p udi 5 
an ined inction. B pri es. hun uber Ahi hi n of great benefit, is concerned, as the many who fall but a iyn 
ther the | ublie verdict would have rewarded their but still on all our best high-farmed — —.— abundance of | below the best. 
that the p a. 6 ally as that of thecornis very g ——— Sefcient in quantity} We saw lying on the light land trial und a 
patient perseverance d that the latter| straw than usual, the yi —— LOW foregoing will apply to and somewhat heavy d ee med p 
selected and o — 1 ges an * ndue — and —— 5 Ones probably Oats (not Sica m m n Wo Le ceste ed shire, The hal Se 2 
has done harm by givin em cat, *- Jatt to have sustained the least, cuted ad 
who ar wn here) ; h depend 
—— 1 2 Danus tm — le from Barley 5 — — —.— a RA lateral shifting of the qi Sock, and 
often named, but, who dir vay ittle fro most injury. Peas are generally a good crop t mtm erbe lt The: o the peculiariti ‘Of the 
, ring Beans, whilst winter Beansare in most p. 1: Barle coulter. ese are raj i cu eis M 
them i in the merit of their implemen — "pe bo it ten days earlier A unl : cues prided himself; bu — im t thing 
— Lech ety sane instances autumn- h it, so far as nee. vas — ned, vast eet 
— The jut * of e d hot weather and Wi Wh — mre already. From present appearances — the ploug gh of its Mi "i 1 
has » wonderfully 1 rera - Bo vus Ma d Rs D mand — — it 2 — Ai hos A bone ficial d an | clumsy, and abrapt ML with the gefl. : 
e| ke ere rain in these oases f d polished surfaces e more “ highly was 
crops rit déem « — y then an average P c y [ 
t — the Wa rie i E vest} injurious. The holia has been mo 55 auen ie e high t 
ia 25 — uia oed along t line from London | mins have been vory heavy, t they have not been of sufficient | much su ps or to it as 1 i. ene 
as alrea ; x ici i 
to Dideot. 7 The Wheat orop "though generally this —.— do hay much injury, or ca —.— — . ascen ined, for not trie, 
var t uult to the r aping achine, eing un-] now aed ad tis . — ‘they nave ever been, not | the m of the district whioh it — giiia 
1 al Plaid romises to yield well. ris to g the year 1846, the haulm on all the early varieties edie brad upon 
this di ie given from some of M southern | looks as if it were b — - — ee MÀ À On e most pube i sections of a national 
ms a s : 
i th * wu re erop — r^ ron 1o — — public roads. Late agricultural show might be made of a representative 
Ach b d — " fl. any cases — ap y affected, whether they | stand of implementa -the ploughs and grubbem anà 
M: ctim to t i sd die illa An instru- willbedepends much o on the eather, pas a vitalne or | Barrows actually in general use in larg 2 
falling victim to the black caterpi a (that if thunder does not cause che dine ase) the virulene orn ingen sok md 
ment shown at Warwiek — a revolving A sh | itis much ine ei when the mel larger i highly — . — xa tio — An par Ai which shoul 
: - - è 
whic h would travel over 5 or 6 — a da ay—may —— y. Thon — —— an md erant t —— kin abe w me 
ague — ai ee Ww. de samo extent and ying akers would be of even gre 
aciou 1 will be severely fel y the pr - 
n grown cipe —— — vor lb p the Our Mi el Wurzel has guhorally URS well; they are strong of thes first-class . — — ndi es amie E 
dae — — j "ith bv "dl nd and healthy plants, and prom T DA 3 red have to determine the order of precedence 
vio they een be ealt wit PUE. NS inferior, every piece in the neighbourhood has sufe ho have = ed a is essentially a 
drill harro j| : much from the black Saterpillet (provenctally e T À B udi: ee hae t ! 
never own je Swedes so m prof — 
UE ‘The “annual letting of Mr. Jonas WEBR’S Maay d ntes D have been — but with 2 effect : where Messrs. ornsby, owar nd. pn. 
Tams t me ung n at : ince When | person can turn duc ee — they moro effectually bably made the best work upon the light-land gromid, 
«d acquainted with. | MEX of dust and 
clear off the nigger . 7 9 à ible that by dub : 
four dozen sh ; 4 rs sheep, From what I have tried myself, end seen others, I M and it is barely possibl M» : 
two doze thread sheep, . — few older that if as soon as the nigger first appears ducks at the rate piration, and labo r and anxiet h the distin 
rams were offered. The e prices reached did not| about four per acre are — on the field, — — soon eat tions on which the relative position of their tools depend 
equal those of — Od. ton vious years, although the = horde —Ü EM and ic — pa | may have been correctly made out; and all the 
a Od, for 54 d 2 ble n d — ter. Willian — — Ramsgate and labour on the part of the ers was 
: 
„25“. 
4l, 10s, iter thes a 
— en 
Societies. 
SOCIETY AT WARWICK. 
th| GREAT MEETING OF m ROYAL AGRICULTURAL meter the land i is ploughed during those thr 
country i an 
"s ploughs or Ransome's ? 
during the next three year ». 
y 
r culture will not i i 
Society this year r a large uid of trial alee P es — — ve merite of the 
PEARANCE 3 CRO „ ground. Excepting t that, of of the s steam there and it is probable that the t the long run aper: 
Connw. nearly an aver were at Chester no field trials whatever ; the judges were — —.— implements vom allowed his own 
not € al to ret ‘the jm two years, Barley ai an "hate Ghorm enni od on barn = and implement fc r to the spectator if each ma er wora eter " 
suffering much from the drought, and both these crops will | “ere eng: E * y p f exhibiting them, even t h na 
light 4 ? low an average. Hay, a very | preparing This ey are employed in Way ot exhibiting them, che ietys avari vert 
go JE. 2 me ed in —.— AT " — Saperintending hon fide, " harrowing, 5 0 rating, wea of the competition for e | 
very partial, the fly in x à 
edingly. Some fields wn Swedes ae hoed and | 10 in 
rm the Black ——— land, eu many fields are dh for the 
= ex- pose." 
t 1 42 kale ¥ p 
MONDAY: July 11. 
day, . Jy 9 and to- a 
Y y y those 
Fa 4 ut 121 
a personal la —.— The — to be solved is not so 
capable of — independently of — jndgment or 
the prejudice of chaff- 
ce | would 
Great — ae T at the 
Se ieaie emp oa ie ray 
withou — 
| single hoof x the soit — Doi Lies 
- | vable surfa 
ream Provera. — On Satar 
the judges have eur 
the work 
of ploughs, steam mima p 
bbers, paring ploughs, and harrows. On . Y 
ind, a peas ie dA — — — — — ; 
' ry severe 
ed to a ve 
work in the field. 
team of horses co 
ly 20 horses if they could 
might have — — machine along, 
have dis figared th — — 
ling; and here 
| exceeding the ordin 
Y Sex] 
k 
much "T: 
loosened, 
haye | cultivating or — was an eq 
— ty by binis sub- | perfect —left of ad 
is. und rem processes an 
n ue ge a | before fit e seed, s more completely v 
hich | disturbed at least 8 inches e 
and ought to be all d and in st be p f o, steam ena 
vas iib ist - only ed different in diffe i 1 ‘omer e than that of avin e 
ni Woolston's , 
of 7 th M less pots 
; essrs. Howard, was also in our opinion was per- 
are ploughed up; ti » ped hi X will go swimmingly through dry and the wh whole. The plot worked by ‘by this on khan tha which 
P. "Ho og Peas a fal wi : End clog and choke in foul land or ha aps less favourable to its operation Fowler; 0 X 
good. rage. Ling harrow like that of Mr. Ellis, | fell to to the lot of the cultivator v worked by PD ege 
usuall ici qum Monday afternoon i certainly the old m part of B à 
ing very scarce, „but the h hay has been thing to shake the had to go — me a any dawn bad dem 
ps of -— Govern md Grass, however, ed scarifi r eee nt. When the work up and to the i 
- Hole - 3 Wi jaar s July 9. ee sandy soil, but it | cross by his — as it is in much reduced : 
— Pie on eros wetter land. pletion of his process, the land was Y pii the weather 
power or by steam, wh ether dri by horse-|and more A for the influence of | which it 
extremely dey and * ose Ww ork may vary much on than under the rough. bat t Pose ma e — n 
— hard and IT may, — received at the hands of s i 
mstance aro 
differ very little in their — “| will pive ake Son creuit that E i Lor aped 3 
wd with mints of implements of y de 
hee Soe ay ot singula " thus more difficult and laborious pc. y mes ü um ` e epis sepa A € „ 
many | carwig and wire- | less likely than any others t to be complete! tory. | gine Fowler’s horizontal erneath it; 
oc, altogether rende:ing fock- Look at the effect of them—you orem have T attach ed » a 508 bendi engine und p 
