10 THE 
AGRICULTURAL wit 
a 
JAN. 3; i 
speaking of a doubtful fact, a matter of argument or 
opinion: we believe that there is scarcely one in a 
hun of our readers who does not Kaze mane 
truth of the 5 Ne. after poi 
above 8 conclu y Repor ts “of 92 
Times What 
ne it that amidst the 
rival ae therefore proximately etal progress in u 
other me, keeps gric ype we ought 
rather to the La as of the country in this 
piebald state? Is it the fault ‘of the Laborers ? 
or the Tenants ? or the Landlords ? 
To the generality of those who take an interest 
in the subject, it commonly occurs in every da 
ter 
down 
which makes him dierent to pert of English 
id? Is he d by 
0 
mention of this 
Possible alternative suggests a subject which sooner 
or 3 must occupy the attention of the 
n the vain hope of retracing this 
step, already nearly extinct, shall have absolutely 
sae out, sone given place to c mr scrutinies ; when ® 
in corn hall ha e at least 
behind 
trade in the produce of land, 
e land itself free that is to 
Is it free to buy, 
seller - 
Can the Buyer buy or the 
reasonable expense, lays. or r impediment and ol 
= eee large o Can the lesso 
9 ers Z the occupier to occupy 
advantage both in duration of . 
and security for outlaid ‘cop Sa a se 
very 
ee 2 and re 
thed with ample means “for 
ay ay and the ae of 
2 for the cultiva of the e 
f the leg 
in fee-simple 
, contin 
in com- 
ship, &c. 
gent re ancy, tenancy 
mon, coparceny, % ee trustee 
most ai 
rect 
n expressly de 
small part of the legal 
laying out additional capital,’ 2 the 
=s and Pie wp 
he 
better security, or returns it in the 
But who is t 
tenant for life in tail, who, 
gula pecuniæ, = more liberal 
is 
s 
younger children 8 
d vide for, or to his inherited and ‘s 
which he is restricted from se ellin 
rat 
slature | 
e Legislature th 
r 
l comers in 
th 
leases for ine 
t an it; “all these things are as real, and s 
im 
gre pro 
of the spinning-jenny o 
public lidan com 
th 
gent rt of the subject. 
ided i of 
ee 
— party from 
been 
and decreed respecting its valeabloy andes ns 
sell with 
T | standing and a tongue. C. 
“iter a 
ins 
sita li 
oe of the produce obtained in 
0— n 
Aree k, to aid him 
egal wie 0° al 
n of farm m: 
to present to you the Following details. 
s 
8 pn of 
put 
The way in whic 
man o 0 0 
you must do the sa 
nt : there is nothing — it more, offers 
rely,’ 
respective posi- 
to each the greedy soil appeals in 
outl 
the answer 
127 recen 
se 
turn, 
ea 
me 
his spare capital must pro- Th 
ettled’ mortgages 
“No improvements, ” observes Mr. Mix * “ ope- 
directly upon the presa of 
of farms, and in 
r else promotes 
nd, e e af m; to 
ich can a little of it into 
can make more; sd substitution: of long 
at will; abov , the acquisition 
a fixed interest in the soil — pe cultivation of 
hem. 
vements in production, h pi invention 
m-engine,”’ 
There i om 2 dim and oe sense of the truth of 
tinct or 
— iaia on — import- 
st evil that ca t a question of 
plexit he 
ose most interested, from 
Q 
43 
e minds of t 
she 
divi wh is peculiar] 
creature, ‘separate and splits off the attention of each 
giv 
will, we trust, 
. H. 
a 
ecome a subject of valuation against e oad ae 
affles and diverts | 
| —.— t 
e it an ae 
ground is dispos “panes” of half an ago 
served by — ebe feeders, a plan whieh, 
what e expensive at the 
sireferatled in gen ho 
da 
* a of — 
nly this 
the — — 
ost lux arance. a 
from present — — was estimated at from 
40 tons the 
ing applied 
he land for a = ‘of Tumis, » 3 
. in an to irrigati 
eith a Mane urgh, were laid d 
a cost i — 5 — ; 7 the. i con 
1 almost abso! 
naka Sy - Ti 1 now 5 
tion extending close do 
ht in — produe 
oved system o —— in 2 ; 
city and a more 8 use of water. Besides these 
igentinney meadows there are others pr 1 and on 
the west side of which we not visit, 
I believe 3 “stil larger 
rofits, from their 1 proximity to the town and their 
° ping within the toll 
The 
next farm visited was-in the immediate ie 
of reren where the supply of liquid manure is de | 
from another source, and distributed in a differen 
HE MANURES OF TOWNS. 
THE General 8 of — ar has 5 3 
examination re be made (for in- 
ormation 92 the local Boars of Health), of the jeading | 4 
application of sewer manure and. of 
Sacre production. The fallow 
| from the Hon. D dley F. 
an and w. a e a 
investigation, gives an account of 3 
My Lords 8 
of deck members of our pers my friend Mr. 
d. Gentlemen, — Having been requested laid alon 
arms 
quid which the bat ie is convey 
taining 
30,000 or 40, ate gallons, bce it is pumped up imme 
diately by a 12-horse power engine, and forced t 
4-inch iron pipes laid aaa 18 inches under grou 
into large vats or cisterns place e highest p 
and to ga irrigated. Pred t Tee it descen 
anothe 
lying at some distance apart, t 
ed bei miles, a 
being about two mi 
the highest ele vation 80 feet above the site of the tank 
ure in the liquid form. — 
The 
ituated a ou 
ran eee system 
weragi under 
. is at Present derived from half the 
nis Was e E 
t that they are fully idei and that the cows rusi 
"wih avidity to those ere that have = last i 
eat them down ¿ e case in 
oe however, by far the most 7 — 
been found to . to Italian Rye-grass, of ih 
tt ie » wit 
supplied by Mr. Die Dickinson, whose -eulti- 
ration of it padi. similar means near Tondon has, 
The first t cutting — * had ; 
41 
À 
About — to 
acres laid out in the course of 
sfe 
t impracticable 
| have been 
rest are irri 
* Political Economy, B. 1, c. xii, On the law Sr atao 
der irrigation at various times, the most recent 
addition being nearly 50 
last year and the year previous, which: lying above — 
ted 
fter the crop of Oa 
9 5 pri Erg to sowing, and two more at. di 
ente gentleman 
stages of The — 
carried out 
„ Land. 
t One-fourth 
more than the English acre, 
works at his own 
spite of the arising 
