25—1848. 
. —— GAZETTE. 
41] 
H.’s 
or Mr. H. thought to e taken it 
he brow tout with him — his were — 
oe — fm 7 * took the second priz 
of mine, b 
— 4 prizes. About t two.thirde of the 8 prize 
the Plains. Ihad 
they were drilled 4 
after Mr. Cobbett’s — it was the 
Lever saw in y country, and many others said the 
Permit me to nn a pama, 
nstead | 
Speckled 
peared in ges as 
that bas ately ap 5 — the — — 
with the Dorking fowl. Hav 
fresh well -selected cock | 
3 your corres 
m from overlooking this 
D n Cu — land. 
mestic Pou ey" ~~ “they the — “were first 
an opted by the Cumberland 
race, and are perhaps their descen h respect 
to the pheasant mesa, low: e. a thought by the 
country people to come from the pheasant blood, 
“mule” pheasan the beau of the race lies with th 
“mule” pheasant, ty 
ride 
sapiy — food of the kind most required, „hide 
ture . would many more 
be 
ing farm 
—Richardson in “ Do- Muriates 
would all lead one to believe that the “ : pheasant breed“ | th 
the pheasant b 
blood. This, 
seeki 
respecting uence of sulphuric acid rn salt tupon 
iron — bad — — . specification of the soil.] 
it was not th f those substances m 
s bamad the most mesg ar 
st respecting lime? The whole of our 
may — said to be salt rE oe but where — ‘abject ect 
has attention at all among 
near the sea, the most 3 nt opinions — At 
Newcastle, 
subject, and very dif- 
held. In the 
ixed | POU 
toes | PY the evidence of — correspondents. I hope that 
learned in these s ts, upon the m 
i yet the class of duties represen 
if | are — iic to th 
a attention 
— — — 
for example, 2 very little precise abe 
could be 
the 
| —— given — to be attributed to the salt alone, 
new com substances, usually 
lime and ammonia, previously existing i in thesoil. Thus,at 
last year’s Gazette, * 
sea, draining and | 
ime —— improved 
se 
sprung after: the first — — of a fine kind, an 
23 1 elose to the —_ by the cattle. 
of ealcium formed an a set free wou 
f these 
be especially — Agai 
en kind, even weeds 
t has found that farm- 
ard m 
tion ant 4 Is i 
have had little o 
the fertility was owing to — nee of the 
dressings? A ppliod 2 alone to the light soil, the most 
valuable portions of th 
or wash hi 
re had been applied to 
t mot probate sarah om ite alone would 
or wes is soil, an 
. 
it 
* @® 
th 
with v te and ‘has pre the ete 
effects of arid winds and scorching — on a soil so u 
38 mstance which oceurr 
y chan 
n and scanty, pbn — 1 
dark 
rich green, and grew up again and frre — | ree 
; all the rest, salted and unsalted, remaining 
during the e dry weather . 2 The food, 
over the f i 
of your correspondents, in which the 
med probable eure oe a fertility was owing | w 
rem marks se 
— Heath, Rushes, and Bent 
t 
the 
aporation (I sup- | i 
the central |t 
it all oot into = = bought pigs and fatted them 
with i thing new in that. 
and cattle. 
your d with the 
å | subjecti wo ould state — value to t re community of the 
nine or ten million 8 of Barley now worse 
; How much more and richer 
e of it? How 
in any 0 
rganie constituents very mu 
ł Were these returned +s — soil 
for the more pree 
ture and its "pati effects the better. In the one from 
inton, ne sonal we is e aome — 2 from 
iron- water, “ con well kno 
do with low level 12 M 
several bogs, 
anan ce, — 
r defects 
the pea 
very valuable pasture a 
Would you oblige us by a more detailed 
re of liberty has alwa; 
as they 
| — — el for ‘the liberty of doing good only. 
The own passions soon 
— upon — licence of the 
pher fell short of the object of his 
3 yet as 
oe — 
ptam 
9 —.— 
. 
of salt eat, 
as Gian | 
far the | ato 
e time 
present day for men to def 
lie in nature. this idek of e 
right 
— bas no bur 
duties which the — fealty represents have no 
ind of the man who agitates — tenant right; 
e 
3 & 
= 
that acco 
it as — obligatio 
do you 5 g ele y^] 
ternal 
discussion in in your — mre 
ormation being elicited. Such of your 
good practical information on 
iti 
subject, and the 
fnd anria — 
— insin aine bout 60 
referring to the same vol 
liove the benefit was the result of some specific f 
4% s Property i in the salt itself. Perhaps it is not too late 
— this want, and thus to make = 
they at 2 ver — more valuable than as 
— of them, doubtless, could 
dus conditions 
— 
yaur eo ann. j 
ig that whe whenever i it was Apoi with me or with am 
Gin ai ` its ial results were 
good med to agree in the practical 
arising from 1 manure heaps, and in some of 
reports of e 
in their vari repo 
— would furnish some N 
he gre 
which answ w but still, — was to be 
done with die Barley ?” He sent it to the mill, and had 
few | landlord 
- oe 3 “into ¢ the 3 uestions, 
equality 3 ‘veri ur eyes pre- 
minds the . of a great one — over 
— or streams tri 
ing his 
tenants as fee a perpetually 
wealth of laudlord. That there are 
modern mind in harmony with these traths, is a proof 
that — is little i in the modern mind in harmony with 
the minds — med these laws. The en of 
| changing the laws relating to the of land reso 
whether or — we 
— or not men 
— constitution of 
an pas ＋ py — or of one 
He who ente 
r than our 
are re likely —.— . most 
series of years. If, therefore, I possesse 
number of tenant rights attached to it, I 
I would hope to 
