ante 
ea 
— — 
will r 
imide ae means ae varios sa to distribute either 
17—1852. | 
THE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 
262 
and furrow form of 
of the ridge 
Among Among the ganas . assertion of which 
ch 
old Grass lands, we give one, 
rounded ridges, tS as if the land a oe: 17 — a. oo . i 
ure. ] 70 
nin arable 
IRRIGATION BY SUBTERRANEAN IRON 
PIPES, WITH HOSE AND JET. 
may N interesting to some of your readers to 
m undertaking. 
aout 80 gal- 
see them at work in 1 a fortni 85 
have seen a fire-engine in use, can * once —— 
— -i UA the Beste on of this mod iga 
oni Kala of ae eming tough * tube depending 
ima 
— po ve ar A ER Ae pa 1 is abo 
gree with it, and already it contains an imposi a 
XXX. 
ply o 
spl of bog g spring, of 30,000 gallons per diem, ra kea 
into the o the de epth of 12 feet, which is 
“Th 
for I use 20,000 gallon ay ob for 
an ‘He 
b 
„ becomes 
; besid: 
of this description 
udging from present appearances I q pn 
is needed, as it is in tio 
i It is th 
us pro- 
of to be EY 
d 
ir | roots near! 
e My engineer’s 3 pay for one hind 45 E from the ® farm) 
| Those inorganic disintegrations so essential to our 
a 
rh aig 74 The 
roperly spea ue wa an introduction of, A ed wi 
ere in salts, which, by means of rain 
ants 
ay) can be increase 
page 19, *“ The roots and other pae a. i _ {the — 
nstantly absorb water and car A 
26, — Rain and well water, bo y i 
but © contains carbonic acid.” “Plan 
nstantly possess the power of 
sorhing ey their ane moisture, * along with it air or 
aci 
from other 
t | carboni 
Im hs the ese quotations to show the reasonable e 
per we should have of He a a 2 — 
rrigati can grow 
* 
se meine to itself sufficient — 5 by still deeper | E 
eare . 
. shading the gro But how stan 
the case 1 early Turnips, our second crops of 
Grass and Clover ? The 1 — panies ground 
awaits i e much desired moisture. may 
the we d northern coasts boast of — humid 
atmosphere and luxuriant green and root er 
id these subterranean pipes I expect to ry nine more 
cer ies 28 abundant all green, root, an 
* — 
t; I expect to es a a large nu 
eat o Within my brief experience 
of seven yen the effects of drought have been costly 
and 
The, prest cost by labour, wear and tear of carts, 
oads, &c. ill also be 
i n 0 
ammonia, suming that three-horse power of my 
engine will be required, the cost of a day's application 
on 10 acres will be 
Interest on capital, at 74 per cent. 
One youth in ditto ee bes Sis ae 
Coals for engine 
(This is, in fact, 15. more than the cost, as we use 
screenings at 9s. per ton.) 
= 
13 
So that, in e tes 6d. per acre will more ere cover 
the —o ing 150 tons of manure, or water 
on l 0 acres “at daf but if even it cost iee tlar 
6007. for the 1 
soppy post for every 1 
200 yan o ae finti paa 1 (half 2-inch, half 1 ch), 
The pumps will be 
doarah 
d manur 1 m plain w. 
1 mine, the expense a 
ae small in comparison with the ordinary co 
Iwas very much interested to rom Mr. Ken- 
y that he never has any “ 
to remove ge his fe 
aae 2 
— away (but — palit) The dup 
is washed and rewashed until comp aar d 
mat agriculturist who finds water to his h 
ands from 
economy of its by pipes and pressure 
may | 
A man and stout lad a ata him Len I expect, dis- 
— of gd “geen per diem, for 10 
into the great operat Ware, much 
vater to render fluidjthe jelly like m —— of the rumi- 
imals; as th e water will be propelled by a 
from an o j is 
op and the heated 1 and 
spee 590 e The animals wi 
de A ia a a shower-bath whe 
amazingly arum AE in fact, isr 
a fire-engine. The 
inutes of Information on Sewer 
th 
1 ye action of 
9 — 
the acre (S . 
keep 
Where fern? cand f ie 
Summer feed 
ring i summe 
20 sheep to 
rp I only rept five.’ If I only double the 
I shall be satisfied, a expect goats r 
xA grw e oiy spring mir will grow 
In due ti 
rt printed a 3 a the use on sp 
allow: 
e| and other articles — * it is spe k 
In — 1 shall 
appy, as is s my custom 
= ublie erry sto 
be ha 
Fragen facilities of 2 Aan 
support the wavering, wif 
inquiring, mea — be, to contort th 
H v 
terest the 
cultur: — progress f, as 
is operation will — 
e reason 
A con 
used to 
P.S. Perhaps I ought to mention that the 
my tank is agitated or commixed by a hun 
e's suggestion. 
portion of — was te steam m alee the tan 
quired to hasten fermenta 
Kelvedon, — April 5. 
EMIGRATION TO CANADA. 
fri to emigration as a means o 
i oor, containing 3 on the pip- 
, and iin hip 
© 
ance of prov e extra —— 
ble for emigrants to 
gr 
li ttle reliance which 
are 
to their due, in 3 quality, an 
eee e persons to whom . 
sum, the. erop m 
Aae ubser ber: 
us | home various sums 
rope. n fac r of 
hive sock eet te purchased food, and still grow | 
Wh 
2 nce apply at the 2 p eee from ari United 
ingdom, and oe Am 
second edition, to be gratuitously circulated as 
5 ans as possible, 
fit} Ia 
. So endenvourin ng to N funds m net 
in aid of m ed means, as you by the 
accompanying ee ie for the — ‘of ing 
the condition of destitu 
ch family, in most cases a woman, selected 
ood character and in 2 i 
e natural expectation that she will 
3 3 in — extend that 
— 
d shall be very thankful et 
White — London—or to my 
utts—any contributions, large or 
ose. I intend to apply this fund to 
es of actual ene, chiefly in the 
west of Ireland, — my own persona — 
vation. I have collected ar to ‘this ate 1007. from 
Coun tess 
“4 ee, Hon. Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Herbert, 
and Countess of Earl Granville, Marquis 
of J Bristol, &c. idan will be app to the emi- 
tion of about 20 persons, members of 20 different 
families. One of the men whom I sent to America in 
1850 has sent, some months ago, for two of his daugh- 
rs, who were ps “eg workhouse of Tulla, in county 
Clare ; another, d me, for his 
and rs have sent 
mother and one of tis brothers, 
and 
of money, 
shall very soon be able to send for some members 
their — 
emigration is 
s | were only 30 
ak that there are m 
hear f 
remanet” or 8 8680 el tter |` 
our 2 — ng | i ; 
the kitchen to — — must admire the secant ay 5. 
men 
apply a — to the transmission — Bau ‘ 
larity, or disturb the spleen — Wee been in agri- 
1 1 : 
i 
root crops, our cannie friends over g. 
ets of 
water foreed through a . or 3 of pipes placed in oe 
Mr. 
when re 
on. J.J. Mechi, Tiptree Hall, 
issue, | 
assisting female em 
because — “nae — 1 _ — last ato 
of the Irish Poor-law commission 61,000 able- 
bodied women in the Irish — there 
1 1 + 99.000 aha hana d men, so that it is evi- 
2 
out of employment 
— of women in employment 
e of men, women are least able to 
men; while the w: 
. s than thos 
are —— to emigrate. 
rds the notorious abuses connected with the 
the United 
most important imp ts are,— 
required issue of a d daily—the pow 
the 3 ports of 
‘oceed to sea with 
len AY the emigrat 
refusing to allow passenger ships to 
— —and the separation of single 
passengers. 
* 
of 2 
cold, and often contracting diseases 
by Government and by legislature to the estab- 
lishment of emigrants’ ey private oe 
paires op) incipally, and at le the staff 
‘ole 2. ofc : at Liverpool will be increased, for- 
that Captain P and his two assistants 
duty 
eile reliable information 
ect of pee Laks to the British Colonies and 
nited States. 
rely an enlightened Parliament would sanction the 
| appropriation o e a few hun 1 or even a few 
a purpos y would be 
po whi 
inh 5 oa than — milkon ns now — xpended 
: n the Ka 
fir war, on jobbin ng inefficient dockyards, a 
of our colonies as have passed their infancy. Vere Foster. 
Home fen ndence. 
se 8 Sketch : No. 1.—Feb., 1852. To J. J. Mechi, 
— 
laugh, m 
have Try o that awful ——— 
y you any 
in the agricultural channel, and trust 
It is to be hoped also that every facility Pim given 
d b š 
2 
that you will a continue to do so, wi ithout sinking * 
`A 
