THE AGRICULTURAL arse. 
FB. 12, 
lested, and take his rest. 
wndeplings about, an 
the great inequ eg A weer sablo in 
bas omp 
In a yard * — cattle co saie [pel 
T s oadin 
es them vat little 
conditio sa 
hg and hend 
e 8 
t ften ex anew p b „ 18 
y gis des partons he remainder 
d perbaps 
a forwardest had = separated 99 th 
these sever be preferre 
ral eee ya 
pound, 
regul hated me — gre . 
u 
who ad 
correemess of m — upon the injury to manure by rain 
in 3 “will my st e e the same by the sun in 
summer, an be avoided by cousumin 2 
boxes, The cattle also, screened from flies, wou 
over Sii and return a sti by summer grazing now seldom, 11 
snore * erect m without an in- 
— 3 reps D the Mr. Wilkins, 
mance of T extract — — al paragraph : :—* But there 
tone d, like a * in an 
impure cell, e ting, dop — — —＋ eec sleeping o 22 
5 froni whi gases —— the 1 of 1 88) 
and s y aris his nostrils, “his 
d intestines with an efflavia which his 
Herein the rev, ty ee has wandered 
the truth, for box, unlike sta —— aps locks, wear no 
felon’s chains; and — è ne pn 
ever remain slovenly, | grasp 0 
3 mit the 
Neg 
e the vest V. 
owed to ac 8 i 
whilst 
amro — pb. age 1 
ree 
ouring 
rich mA escape the si 
the whole unity. The 
of such scenes of misery as exist in the filthy 
comfortless abodes. even close ar heir mansions 5 
but the consequences i 
e$ 
“a 
pr 
tations for the sons of toil, they ea 
Bn iafectious Abende which breed in those 
rng ‘of poverty always reacts as 
vice versa; there can, 
2 bett we) 
poor * in the 
snows. then these societies cannot beco 
ired to provide 
health tod old see da frightful N tem 
e to sa * be cravings o 3 
Rice: ill 
class. but also to —.— 
e 3 whos ose, 4 earnings answer is fount 
them to cover up their gains, will be as for 
S the value of their allotments, as the actual py 
n of the number of bushels. they obtained 
obtained 
a with m — 
s been 
n 
e 2 or saan — 
night, he will be ill. fit ted le or givin ies i- 
day’s work for a fair w * id a 
bodily to 
Who works all the da 
a 
of ption, which, if allowed da hing whate 
— alen te e gy al te 2 e ee i ‘Hee a barely | be wil 
- | support his existence now, and how is it to xpected | W 
Bina have ret ye me fos and for ae oan ai exten tbat he s w ould be a ee A a 1 for — 
or question, rapidly as ays me co ta 0 a 
eir exam 0 e case had |; 2 
ther be been th the * — be ‘oie r the rev, i de u MAD, but a cottage of the very best descrip- |r 
But ical erections | tion will itself but ease and comfort if | 
saat bedient, re a Me ilkins id eua, mers * commonest e f life be not found there. 
so * muk rimary eration is to furnish a man with 
vo 0 * ‘ 
— . —.— coat ri e in But means for wae such a home ; and the means for 
te him from su ve and needless animadversions, | preserving heal ras — made of secondary moment 
If proofs were “amed of * high es tion in which | to those for sus g 
the cattle boxes could quote largely from et more — ee be i 3 let epi = is therefore no gr a ; 
the and — f from Sir Charles Burrell, | fit societies of all e ished and sup- ho ates his allotment well is a very likely 
Bart., as well as ivate communications; also | ported; for 5 a rit a are at the pre- man to be able to bear the burden and heat of the da 
from the writings of we Herun, papd 2 a lecture |s time ing happy advantage from them, for he can afford himself an — . of bacon vi 
232 gricultural and many more might do the same; take 8 ses in which a 
„wherein he — that vine he poe seen at into consideration the still greater numbers w an has continual oami aep no wife to çulti 
Trimingham n ap to an|meedy. and s circumstances d them ithe plot for him. The usual * ia gd the wh 
extract from the past year’s re ; of the Farm ers’ from joining in such societie arene be. saen f work at their la: y are (a8 
Club of whieh the Rev. Mr. Wilkins “was once a that t most important beneficial scheme | very frequently the case) out * —— Arbe man 
zaon haan pang ir * ive is one which will supply those men with necessaries ‘obliged to lose half a day or a day two or three tit 
3 — oe ae 4X — g 8 enough to enabl to become members of clubs,| during the year to sow or reap is little farm, 
head m Jamy epokan Ps [> — retain — — aality of the an nd enjoy the comforts of a neat and e dious ere are always ar of idlers who have tim 
mich and above all, for sec uring the it degree o 2 dwelling. A plan which can effect this must also be and, and — si wonderfully era 
28 Segre e = 7 — N omy capable of adding to the prosperity of those who a y culture “of a mot of 
psn A the 1. of mo sa — was much gratified to -asi — of the above pri es; thus 3 — 4 Tight work during the dy, 0 ad a thei t erefore abl to 
the 11 pivana. 2 ed at Trimingham, and w condition too —_ of | . hard dship, Sn the ire a considers ble portio strength to the , 
this — } gaining maak ia the | © Š ger oppor anagement of thei yei groun ers 
* — og improves a man's so 
ocial and physical — 
him m with more leisure for mental 
cultur nelined) more extended 
aecomplis is; an extremely importa 
therefore, is it that its usefulness 8 * = 
A 
E 
N 
ws 
rnes, 
PS. diodele of the boxes may be seen 
ewe establishment of “Mr, 
108, „street, Lo ndon 
t the agri- 
THE ALLOTMENT SYSTEM, 
* CONSIDERATION of t 
distress, 
i rtan 
3 e mer can better the — 
anp deare a qo — of 3 3 
the health of human bei ‘be hudd 
ndemn “ em to fro 
—.— 
ps the « “returns” obtained b a the a aby 
Jabez Hare, | are 
m 
o | feeling and the 2 moral oul eet 
d | application, attention, 
known that ho — real 
WhO 3 at the present 3 ees | 
— land and — it again in 8 to 
conceal from the 
tments, fearing that 
0 en en r 1 
an 
ae finds pon 
gains from his — ( not abstrac 
odueed by —. 
Arbe B h th — 
f the — 4 rom — 9 be hi : ahs 
ngs tban 
together iu a wet, dark 1 — 2 fe om to be huddled 
hut; no outlet bei 
p Maing here to 
thfal bees of the 
publie admiration, one thi 
the fact s clearly Ranney to ‘ight, 
8 
admit ‘of a profitable, 7 — 
„ if h ow a 
«| Application of of the “allotment system” is gte Js 
ade Aa tha 
=- | mental im 
„a man leisure Tos Pg 
ork on ly a particular seasons, are Sable to work W 
pe apd * on their allotment. It is e 
evil to let a man have 
gross the — of his spare tim — 
The weni — failure, in many instances, 
„large Py ones states, is aes 8388 of more 
enant has capital to ma 
useless to 
leigure K he had no t 
ultin ng — 8 
it is 
1 
. 
ug- finigh his day 
reuit ; and, on the e ontrary, a ma 
2 of the farmer 
‘som info. aed, ed. If there are 
nat their ser 
s themselv 8 who 
well 
well educated a 
> an 
it is easy to see 
way in which this benefit may had toi se Wi 
. —— s—“ s 
— = mee 
ant of full employments has. very 
with only half a meal. You never § 
ent payment, — i loss, 
— with an empty stomach sitting still.“ The 
ry advantages resulting from the culture of an 
fact, then, that such was the motive which indes n in 
duced 
aE 
s, &. 
ght A case of this kind has are in the ne 
2 frok which I write; but I ha 1 
which, uni personal k Parti, 
which inevitably result from the of a allottoes | 2 oii sete kahin will forma 
they cannot statement of w h 
coke one or two for — at 
si a 
he shen | Is no time to * N ae oe the e cultivation 
of his m 
Now, with arene to the first objection, I 3 
ay for 
ab, 
y to be deprive 
f 8 
ished, 
— H—— 
ertainly u 
ment 80 oa as to en-: 
both of 
more land 
yo not 14 
themselves Hoary always stand t as li hts shi 
the midst of dar ho ‘i — i 
es. The 
allot- 
