634 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 00r. 2 
h floor The famine of — which ave sudden rise ta a 
tly the least—so very inferior is the horses, I ogre it 8 in favour of the eart 5 Save sudden rise 
— ane te Jast lene that a Persistence i in the for althou table with a good paved floor, the an oe a which, ¢ of pauperism and — 
ti * be absurd, pe it is on iy as he sae chief portion of, me urine is drained away into a tank, | Irela w. combined witk the e agency of a 
— n am tue thata comparison ne rawn, Vet i ot done without some 8 zat Me gr at jem igration that p rincipally resulted from it, 
1 Ose! 
Each stall- fed animal uses about 1 8 bet nt for objeeti aol an e air in the es when ¢ , 
litter during the six months of 8 while = 
box-fed animal requires nearly 3 In a dry 
climate, with a soil suited to seep — where | 3. 
two-thirds of the Turnips may be consumed on the 
ground one-third drawn der for cattle, a 
feeding will probably be found in every respect dor 
0 
either the climate or the soil is e to pei on 
a and if whole gre pihs 
med by cattle, box-feedi 151 a y 
talls rop of the 
ml Ie 
s 
the plan ever since the — of an 
followed 
experiment, and that I intend to gma e it, until so 
more advantageous mode can be dey 
conclusion I beg to observe, that fac . of 
impur 
esse also — — rem 8 of the a whereas in the | 1851, 
cas a 
he pe 7 — from 8 „175, 
ng 
y stalking 8 ng b 
the land, before any approach to adequate d 
perism was afford m any quarter, The ne 
of poor accommodated in workhouses before = 
reli 
an l uch ef 3 any Mben 
ee „ tha ot h te to n to ee from the Imperial treasury w ri 
your notice with the e confidence, believing that siderable ; and ba he i to June 1848, the + 
most effectua of that starved fro ne i nimi 
1 moved, an incon 
e| of pauperism rushed’ in, as the accomp 
exhibits— 
In e 
mparting to my brother farmers sults of a 
supply of litter would’ be pagers. and stall- |; experiment from which I have derived bene rm 
. N 1 nsable where straw | induced me to offer this short essay u a present 
ued as icle of food, ‘the 85 tons saved occasion. Joseph Blundell, Bursledon, Sept. 2 
a yer 85 ro the system of stall- imina gives 
ita ge aa over the Coca phys 
LL's experie Sadie over Wait ren 
250 ‘cattle fattened Anal, ad its recut on the (Conti be Aine ge 587.) 
whole is the very satisfactory one that 6s. or 7s. a ton now advert to Trish — — 8 o easy 
can b e of Swedish Turnips by converting matter for any Government to obtain a po vor lav for 
them into Of course it must be remembered Treland, though it was so imperatively called for by the 
the cattle are well housed and regularly and circumstan vee — eee, ee se p e 
Stall fed; and it is to these points, as he well „ould so materially affect A og Thiet dten dad 
are, that a 2 1 BAe 8 woul make green crops the introduction, which they looked on as an in nstrument 
te substitution, > sip 5 of the cooked midday for ee from thei 2 
ote for 1 5 th oa a 
cattle. by pony 5 bre 2 
tionately larger return per s con- 
sumed, and a greater ae ‘of labile! manure. 
equal weight of cut 
Straw, given as the midday feed 
eee 
STABLE MANAGEMENT. 
_ [We have received ot Mr. Blundell, of Bursledon, 
op a 
illingness to 
ons that may arise out of its publication. i. 
— attention 2 riculturists been much 
excited of late thei 
e foreign corn grower, one of 
the means of ailh rr cost of production must as 
mpi aaee whereby the caged sey be imereased 
and the quality i ved and re „ E th 
- | opponents a compulsory p 
tives 
D 
D 
8. 
ir | to be concentrated 
ors. e proprietors were divide 
pore — excep into two aes both 
consent, 
different m > e one objested fro fro 
heavy reductions ee. their rentals, sendy crippled : 
the other (a much smaller bod posed o f landlords 
with little — pressing on tlieir estates, exclaimed 
ee eee for the oa of their neighbours’ | a 
ore act of o themselves, an 
paupers ; 
oad our bac q 
and onis, — re y tenants f other la 5 who 
5 to be: without compelling 
‘Rial 
t the ua titi as — and though in the 
nothing can be 2 
decidadi tol — of e it must be deemed an 
of justice of good for that country. “And 
For 
t the pes seen 
want of 5 c support, to 
— and other British ports, 
in pauperism there, or be diffused 
1 the interior 
e sales which have taken place under the Eneum 
2 Estates Act, show the impoverished state * a 
t 
influx of 
rush into Liverpool, 
; orses in stable, by ee ee e will x 
= oN nena 3 be taken up pound o. rated ren e was therefore t red 
8 rat dee, which would a the. share | pay | 12007, out of his 20 20000. a rade while the ies 
1 bare hitherto eigast only with a stable the strongly sho eee 
van 2 N es gly Showed a necessity for assessing on means and 
2 
proportion of the ed proprietary, and how 
impossible | it would have been for them to allow — ot 
rentals for the support 
the of pa pauperism i n Ireland. Previous! 
to all — on the subjeet, Mr. Guinness, then 
Kinsa anar mrtg sage rege 
as the 
30002 hes which e 6000. was — in jointures and interest 
to mortgagees. 
oe 000 
t was | One of the most melancholy features e aft 
, | Purpo be drawn from the pocket of one | 
person out of mais recipients of hye 
beeause ; 
Maximam wur Maximum a 
in workhous — 
At February 27, 1847 116,321 No out- door taig 
syd wee 24, 1848 140,227 a 
July 1, 1848 oe 833 
„ June 16, 1849 227,329 na 
„ July 7, 184 — 784,567 
„ February 23, 1850 264,048 ie 
yy July 22, 1850 — 148,909 
15 April 5 ASSL. 63, 252,615 — 
i 123.1851 — 10,935 
Of the enormous crowds reported as recipients ofo 
of-door ie Tonic o doubt fraudulently represents 
themselves, o e 80 r en as eas. shonest dist 
d food supplie 
— inadequacy of employment fi 
or the 
— stood i — in the marketplace had W a 
influe on the soc and 
system 
he poor-law, that the original rale rome i reising 
— able-bodied — departed from;it 
— sed 1 11 
. to the jetter of the law, 
r a ver w nee the 
ir 
ne la 
etive working of the riene in 
5 very low figure 
— necessity in fut 
— rkhouses, — 
to accommodate about 400,000 G 
wee zdi mortality in them 
from 4260 6 nmates in 1847 to 56 in 185). 
rish — even to a recent 
ouse paupe bens i a few 
unions, where the poor-rates long pressed token 
but where it does not appesi 
ilanthropy on the . w 
| 
i 
L 
88 of the 
which were not so fortunate 
en hene 
of the — d to be 
| 
poor of 
as to 
stamps 
Count de Strzelicki, who dispensed the bounty of the 
ion in of the most. 
of Ireland with the im of 
ence of poor- law and other new enac 
press of 9 who have a real 
preservation of their property, will be forced to look 
as never did before, to the impro LES OF * 
„ Those who are insolvent must part with the N THE PHOSPHATIC NODU 
—— 4 nominal tenure of land, and leave their SENSAND ON THE NORTH OF 
hollow form at a depth of 14 inches * ey, i wi mo, daty of been |- Pior, Honors the 
r diminishing the dept until | abandoned to themse Ives and to their — —— 1 
level ſront s, and the e vatio encefort * * ; 
Eien, hn ron E | ran feted a 
t g » In as dry a state as [ ede e ent, and, in extreme cases, a | rn under 5 
ne littered with straw, as Many of a landlords laboured p egal Sepp called ean Se ee 
aid he 12 Ma at’ tee Y as g oaraid cake ae 2 = tain the poor on their own estates. For neighbourh of Moire to the Giants 
. N n 95 0 
anaes Shera stn wi wn oma! aul hase see coan a |g ia soe Has oe 
ra eee ammoniacal vap vapour, sacrifices by the labour wages which he afforded, and kept | from yellow green to a rich dark 
1 ging about once ree them all out of the workhouse, And itis tobe lamented, | nodules whi ch h Tag zed were 9 
‘the horses ent green, food) it requires te be a 3 nd, ard pa 
ore so Sight weeks, ood, it requires to 83 to maintain their own poor, we ere rendered li liable by law 
