THE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
259 
butter; 
There is, i 
da 
this for seven or eight 
— 
a indifferent, 
cleanly and care ng 
pron so 
netime 
may ha thea 
onally, a no — st more iequent 
ery bad, 
how 
wev 
Poly 
ish gen — 
esirous to improve their estates and the condition ‘ 
x t 
of 
women 1 into their d 
2 vie 
aden | Bunder 
sous who wr 
Wits 
increased four or 
bourers 
numbers that there 
and, at 
* 
— 
interest (viz., 51. per 
Mr, - Mechi, thi 
. 1848) to se 
e begins: „Nothing is 
deception than figures; they loo 
teal, But Slave 
are found“ We pit 
Did you * 1 7 your 3 
80 practi of 
tof 
cannot refuse us leave to rein 
Yor 
t 
3 all systems of secdin 
bis bas of seeding 
; others irratio 
airies, that we m 
poe iid 1 — “it is not ee 
neeits 3 organs 
4 Modan ae Im rovemen 
rs alon 
ae be 29 
every square rnei apret 5441 to — ‘house i in 
the 150 a 
rror appears to h 
our acute city friend. Then comes 
t the whole matter right 
some will mischievously ing 
ins takes th 
—— ty think wit igar — 
ight t show our wives 
527857 be 
a pity it is shat r i 
agricultura ral 3 should s 
er the whole of their preteen? 
on liquid manure (Bells Messenger, Feb. 14, 
1848), it is stated that a field, which formerly fed only 
two cows, now feeds 40 cow four horses, its crops | the 
five-fold ! 
Bri 
ee at page 51 (and in 
pore aduit 
= A date 
male agricultura e are told 
884, 369, “ie the same aes j ge 50, decimal frae- 
tions y mixed up in a Table 
with whole 
7,599 inhabitants to 
ngland; 
s for each pe “tie? 
Again, Mr, Post n hedgerow timber (G 
ore Feb, by 1848), states that 
8y 
e 
ound 
32 mp 
interest, to 224 125 rt net being t — at the same | * 
rate of interes cent.), it will amount to ba 
— 584%; and though the statement was revised b 
y. 
ave been overlooked 
“ Hantoniensis ” 
and 
u, poor 
ma Han 
ures looked 240 “scientiis 
rse, did not intend t 
ption ;” still — 
dece 
« mischievous sly ” into | 86 
your “data,” u assert that a square, one side 
whereof 8 will 8 100 acres; the truth 
being that it will ouly contain 10 ac t, on ‘this 
on is build vAn your theory (abs several 
= ge that e ee row — should ‘ey 
The farmers is country 
i generally as an d e prejudiced | the 
many of us would properly 
erm 
g 
e valua ble information, 
e your corre- 
d 
bet advie 
ner? and rearin 
d?” 
states that to give the eosin — will 
up by the 
clerk of the Union, and he return them to the Govern- 
ment free of expense 
Produc 2 T rong il beg to inform you that ba 
e gh h appeared in 2 Journal at page 1 
about 2 produce of my Wheat 
The nt y 
— ** re less 1 
‘dicen April it e, very | 
vo thick in other thin— 
i 
| ferent spirit. 1 have no doubt all the 1 named 3 
tainly mak 
in — expressions towards | t 
vou 
d alla 
or la 
| which 
3 perches) | cas 
iy e time ago, of use in increasing the 
mber of eggs in winter, The advice connected with 
ihis, viz 5 — — the hens a little raw flesh when insects 
be glad if you will make use of in 
stated, in the House of Commons, 
lect information from all quarters, 
the question of the laws of settle- 
n will no t be 
+ 
y think proper. 
Sir George Grey havin. 
that it is desirable to col! 
tfo ke 
5 
nent and r 
F impertinent i m requesting y tt 
ing acer at ons, arising from his own experience in an agri- 
cultural dis riet. $ it pay ve conceded that from various 
causes, ti e laws of t 
are desirable, I suggest, Fitak 
fs p crawn upon by the 
orities, who Shall . the same within their 
= 8 1 
1 
„all casual pauperism, and 
. expenses rat tea may be the abstract 
rig 91 cannot become a national cha bec. 
local, e. ge oe su 
—— — 
by way of cncouragem t and as atest of may We A local 
rate upon Fee ee to be levied for these purposes. 
„1. It is 
never be a i ni must have some sort of 
monopoly or "preference agence for shte o * 88 
will be to weaken the which exists betw . n A 
classes ina their employers =, 3 charities, hts 
common, turf, &c., will be disorganised, - litigation will 
ensue. f it be proposed to substit 
tlement, we find already that unions are go 
pinconveniently a 5 e have 
rge tracts of under Gilbert a 
But as the — of ——— 
would propone to re-arrange it 5 in this manner 
1, Let every man have his settlement in the parish in which — 
bas resided, say (3) years, unless he now belongs to a parish 
which he is resident ; ce yet “9 
a 
papoan 38 where men live in one — N. 
n the next) until the age of (65 ?) when be shall cease to ‘belong 
any paris 
national fund, — 2. wt — removing from a Seay in 
irre 
so much so that he was * d by mauy to e. the 
erop, Potat dio, Ë a, some ol by way of ex- 
nt, . the thick 
at 
the officers 
moved and sp ánted, sv as 5 60 
regular. p, from that ti 
grew to the height vor 7 feet. It — been threshed „and 
from these 147 perches of very middling land, he de- | 
livered to per stig miller, 67 bushels of best 
Wh 
eee. | 
» thrived well, and 
a m y ment to, being iot in 
e becomes a aupe: on 
(by gat * amount AS relief fornished shall ‘be 
e pa his being 
ee Nee sito gs, — — aon 
. t an hou er neglecting this yy atter 
oar any M noved ao me ; a uted parish 
ton, and 
Mr. 
eat, wa one peck to r, of 
o Mr. Periect, ai Mendip, for seed, and r 
il together near | 
d de- 
allow when there 
a 2 quantity of plants sprung up from 
h dropped at the late harvest. Mr. Nicholls ane 
ot bey . of these plants, and replanted them, so 
pie 28 cover 42 lug of 
"Chicken Hatching i in Egypt.—As the hydro-incubator 
ting was finished, the | 
ually ere 
The stabble oras | 
3 
that | 
look in good | be a 
rom a very agreeably minn work on the 
amuse of your readers. 
be treated as casual 
they may be found, aud 
dient. I do not venture upon the vari 
tthis plan, but I believe it will 1 be found very 
least, and —ͤ— — —— 
be intinitely less 
leave their hones and 
s will afford relief ree 
chickens come ou oven mou 
well closed. The chickens that we saw had been 
the same morning, 40 all. It was curious to see 
their in waving motion as they were crammed 
together two sq ts ou the floor. 
There is an immense number of t establishments in 
t. Mr. Lane in 1831, | 
T Lower Egypt. | Upper Egypt. 
vay forthe a 
hatching of fowls’ eggs was oe 
s used . 19,325,600 | 6,878,900 
Amarr pe . 6.255.867 | 2,529,660 
N hati ee ot oe 13,0 „783 0 4,349,240 
Vir. Lane also states that i 
(2 or 
third of which n 
' A Wayfarer’s Notes,” oy Cue G. Young, B.A. 
paragraph e 
of the “ rooster, we presume the cock is |” 
is of nest eggs, is, as stated in a) f 
meant, and TER a 2 
otietieg. 
= ROYAL AGRICULTURAL merge ENGLAND. 
A WEEKLY COUNCIL was 
in H ver-sq last, the 12th of 
April. Present:—Mr. „ ID ; 
S John M. Burgoyne, Bart. ; Sir John V. B. John- 
2 Ret. EB, Banyoa — 
Mr. S. B y ; Mr. 
Mr. Cherry, Col. Challoner, Mr. K Clutterbuck Mr. 
Mr. Kin 5 
8 Shaw London), Mr Robert Smith, 
b ie et tome R. Tweed, Prot, 
Nin. 
