651 
41—1852. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
5 itroge ed from natural soure d | assistance since the union was formed. In other ap nen pe some recently, and though the recipient of 
lessen the e feeding vale ft ecrop. It remains, then, the column for 3 relieved out-of-doors dur oe this r in every respect deserving 5 i 5 A 
for the kanar ope practical farmer, | last year i pee k; and the respective s pro ably | on general principle to some of the items o Ba ure ; 
bearing in ind the pt points to which we aed consider that this ci cir 8 affords to the —.— e | for instance a mother should not be paid fo attendance 
pac Bore to call his g so ote y adapt! his system | strong testimony of the generally good prre ipe the | on her own — and the Irish 8 1 ly 
of — cn Be n and othe: umsta | labouring ree in heer localities. il ind — | w dn e it; nor would Irish mothers say — 
around him secure himself i in regan to them ount of real pauperism is to be e ted “by. th is a hard e oor mothers to have to work for 
the full benefits of the crop. Nor can it fail, that the | number of individuals in the — car of els unions, | | our reli igion.”* Reversing the cireumstances just stated, 
further experience gained, will of itself open up — would be cause for c pee but when it it was consid erseers under the former 
new points for scientific anu and thus it is, that | is considered that few adults except those on the ve te | me — 8 5 ce spo s be dutiful to their 
the true relations of science and apse ee rv „ utterly un nfriended and pared of the old ance, and Pele se 
in advantages to each — — from means of subsistence, will enter them, we ar that ae, s aid 5 ſor sitting up with their si 
We — now completed the — called forth by | there remains unrelie e of 2 — t | aie “te 
tions m e writer “R?” of our may be fairly termed pauperism, if the want o | Though a sick person should have every reasonable 
views on the | subject of the growth of the Turnip in our | necessaries and decencies of life deemed e e comfort, ra | egy p — — burger of the 
rotations ; ; but there 2 remains one ivision of | even in the lowe ngland a just claim eins se dut ord a atin 
ti ur views | to relief from poor-rates. If a de above the starva- | affecti ree: At 1 — is 
as to — ee umstances of growth of the coins? and tion point, at which of necessity the 3 is driven depre Fi 
this we hope to take an early opportunity of entering into the workhouse, be considered a satisfac tory state of (To be continued.) 
upon. J. B. Lawes. the poor, we must e at a more elevate 
rege 
PAUPERISM, 
Continued A yr 
i 
634, 
— heavy — — 
idea 
emigrants, especially girls 
household and domestic duties 
transmittance to som 
ear at least. By this amamma we have 
e of the ee e — from the 
time persons able 
spot; an e have at 
ENGLanp., TRELAND. 
N ewbury. Wexford 
Union. | Union, 
SCOTLAND. 
Easter 
1851, 
Electoral 
Divisions, 
e ma 
_ aster Rog Ross en. Parishes :—Meal, with milk 
variably for breakfast or supper, 
oatcake, lerne, apne denk, potatoes, rice, and 
of 2e Carnarvon mn dietary. ia nearly identical with th 
br mat, 8 but shows a somewhat larger 1 of 
eee ee 
— p Unites variations i in food i se — different countries 
as in i 
— ‘the neue a inte " aon. in the different 
oy wr — ares not 3 
ere degree be 
were he food in the locality of te . — 
Neuber 
returns from the Wexford Union' present 
— case of e —— out of the work- 
Gis ac © solitary : ‘cipient of such relief Paral 
“ro the only individual | who has recei —— 
‘nd of petty amount e 
5 of Y eke errs 
made in 
g for 
to work, — apparently having no — of wee: ve 
the sam 
th 
w 
Ross Com- 
binatio 
ope that 
hat level of aa he which 57 sone ng 
legislative protectio 
(vith epee atio ons) for tie E 
eo are ssary act of justice ca — 
— nity fo or the poor of Ireland — In such un 
a~ nope Aor of the house, or no relief n 
mer permitted pia hoot either the law 
Eng lish poo 
8 
— 
usa . e land. 
The rr to ere this severe e has been 
England, and it has failed. English humanity 
phere from the cruelty of ae compelling the 
old and infirm poor who, with 
ng repugnance on F part of 
; and this 9 fp 
pri f 
Gi miserable of them dislike to go into 
And it is * e to disc 
wi 
lasses of poor, if they 1 prefer their 
t is neither politic nor humane to app 
tes all 
HAG 
other 
sugar, and u little i Th 
exford . —Porridge of oatmeal and Indi 
and brown bread, sweet milk, buttermilk, 
occasionally to 
the aged and da 
ee 
daughter labouring during many months under a wastin ag 
sta d the oara ela of her illness, h 
hed 
* 
Pint of Port ‘wine 
rw ad for 
tot ane 
on 
Rg 5 
Nurse (th (ihe sick E giri H's mother) A we 
extra n — * a ion 
Bread for extra nurse nie 
Groceries for nurses ., 
Extra allowance during the last week 
oo one pee 
‘ 
* SSS 
— 
=" 
Funeral expenses: 
Elm ootia 
a Sen Sagesssgeeeg 
: RFF 
1S] ewin 
— — paper, also, a mistake whi 
the — oa — the 3 merits of the two 
stated ce the rakings after Hussey’s mac 
4 bushels, "m 
to 
ound meas 
of a a bushel to M‘Cormick’ sand | 1} bushel to Hussey’s per 
pe — mistake occurred in filling in the 
e Quedgelen — 
Rotha 
6 — of the 
to | capabilities, 
oroughly 
— this land si since 1849 
38. 
and always elean, could not be overlooked. — om 
that had been richly ‘tilled i 5 
Home Correspondence. 
As you have noticed the 
Reaping Machines 
Rigs oot — — a be upon the oe of ee gi machines at the 
in 
rhaps you ‘il allow me 
portance to the 
— — of th ork perform aie these machines. It is 
hin 
explained in a letter to the Times by 
— tine, the College inne manager, but it is 
urther those 
4 desirable that it should be f 
may not 
have seen it. J. Curtis Hazard, 
ire. 
msted and the Writer “ R. Excuse one word 
of in terruption. Mr. Lawe: 
25th inst., has th 
gentleman —.— to develope all its 
for fn — n crops for cows, . was 
and deeply Free with the 
however, to a 
th 
years since, and 
Every crop of the 
has 
those one of Cow Cabbage, at 
ee 
kovri . 1 
lergyma at the Swan an. 
“aw we me eh ag TORTES HOLT, and 
