* 
* 
amply sufficient to maintain fertility. 
ol arti 
the 
ne know that ther 
28—1848.] THE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
457 
— pmi ON be ogy pean capes eee 
An.! ich, 4 of Ess 
f Dover- coast, con- 
y, with a 
Far 
F 
4 
5 
in th a of 3 
2. THE e n the n risk with a good 
and ecessary Farm Buildings. To be entered 
F 
1 next Mich . 
A ta RAY. ISLAND FARM, in the parish of Ramsey, 
— tin acres of Arable and Pasture Land of excel- 
lent ele, N of it being alluvial and nae of great 
improvemen o be entered upon next pegs: 
Leases corn * gra os ps 
under ot, i conditio these T appt — to r 
i Isto — Hall, in the parish o — 
Marras, at Micha a which Le eases will be granted, pee 5 the 
terms of occupation, svete: $ o Mr. JohN Morton, Whitfield, 
Berkeley, Gloucestershire 
The phg e Gazette. 
* 
N DAT. JULY 8, 1848. 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
Toxspar July $ Meeting of the Agricultural Society of 
—— = England at York, 
uu 2 
Y —  13—Agricaltural Imp. Society of Ireland. 
Fae st — 2 ural imp, Soe or England; y 
ociety o 
Far 5 — i oor ee ma ul pp ond Seng Talckworth, 
Hadleigh, Wakedeld; rs gy Pt Tod 15: ding, East Kent.—July 17: 
Market,—Ju'y 21: Wadeb ridge. 
— have . referred to the oo of 
Srave Hoseanpry, and to an 
mending the tria re of it 
whe 
or in Mabe thos 
where it is ene! imperfect. Le 
t u nu 
far it may be applicable, to ake. ee 
tal profit... 105 0 0 
ap 3 5 to >be deducted 
Rent 447 
18 0 0 — 65 0 0 
Leaving a net profit of *. £40 0 0 
is eal cent. upon the capital (250/.), 
Which 
employed on th t 
If it its objected to this that the op was for the | farme 
ed 
most part sold—not consum m—and 
that the e 5 followed ee act, 
fore, be considered a 
n feeding about 300 
stones of beef, sold off the — 5 e year, was 
Indeed the 
growing 
mention 
gree 
ticable i in South England 
crops be so d off the 1 iy d ve, for 
ae: my a on thee 
* 
2 
8 
ag 
= 
8 
© 
— 
* 
2 
— 
3.05 
— e 
[za 
9 
— 
2 
= 
»O 
= 
= 
a) 
gS 
= 
manuring in this way 
aut to render the farmer or 
ures; an 
n e, be e 
almost N dependent ag — man 
ea where the pra 
Proved politic, ould 2 be pro ofituble. 
l is 
‘tice, if 
cou n only be adopted where 
perhaps exclusively, 2 79 to 
be f. arms. The een in of 
crops, sue such as Ryo or Rye g 
st and guano, and xell 3 
8 ‘restore to the land mo 
rom 
the farm in question. 
ant * in its _— for the year 
pian n 
crops, Carrots, 8 1 i 
-| of Ireland, and so “far 
b 
15 fault „ 
1 so many tho ao 
under cultivation, that corresponding 2 2 ns 
reasonably expected. A 
ee 
is 1 by its labour bill. cg \ Pe: ee 
e paid upon it as wages during 1 
lange a any mode F. ‘agriculture — 2 — gie 
enditure for 
are looked on in Ireland, by the farmers generally, with 
the utmost suspicion, horror, and hatred ; and hence it 
was that in 99 cases out of 
ee a 2 word of trut 
land u crops, the parece ne 
=| probable acreable produce of s 
in “yee: parts of Irelands where men — am ‘shed 
not more for want o than for inability by 
libo to procure the eini of its purchas 
o add to this short notice of 5 — 4 
rience in etails of expenditure 
e de re inquired for 
ma with the e grafting tool 14 inches deep, 
af laid i in drills 2 feet w wi and a =i gh as 
earth will lie, for tints 23d. — — — 55 
= square. may ane flat with the com- 
spade, about 6 ba deep, for 14d. per pere 
Land, ifalready once dug, ae 
riti The intervals 
cro se ar 
guide calculations of the se attending ma 
nual cultivation Take the following as an instanc 
ou 
pecking over in spring, the ma- 
which e 
Stu ee on stiff tna i 
e forked over, from ee 
. | tisties, and thus 
Irish 
the other should i be cor- 
pitied gg eee b ae government worthy the 
my s 2 is this, that these i 
— he left out where 
have induced t nd that they be also 
8 in a: correct 8 sta- 
confer a real instead of au imaginary 
benefit on the co ity. 
supposed that in commentin 
police K. >e the least idea of 1 discredit on oad 
m, who did the best he under such cir- 
Ta 
ie 
m may 
t I state, or question the value 
of eat eed which I offer thus hum mbly.—An 
oat ote . T RAILWA YS AND AGRICULTURE, 
NSHÌRE.— No. A Tré and last. 
5 
nd, where accustom nds t 
abundant leisure s ee and sufficient 
tal, dist wher? labourers are 
m 
and per ce 
farms jie horse husbandry a 
THE IRISH AGRICULTURAL 1 INSTRUCTION 
Some time ago an — wa 
ractical instructors for the 
United. Sanas resl. The ide 
acted upon by the Earl of 8 Lord- 8 
influence could 
8 con ceived and set 2 } 
Irish 
sider how drills—an G > to al the drills again, or — uded from p 
exclusion of horse-power, on such small farms as 1 the seed may then be sown—a hand-hoeing ust not be inf erred from the account I have given 
may be placed in suitable circumstances. to single the plants—a ya between the rows | of the ee tenan nanti e they are exceptions in 
ving some years occupied a spade hus- | while the plants are still young—and a digging with pone i me 1 in oia ae In e 
bandry farm of about 20 acres, in a neighbourhood | the fork between the rows before the intervals are (ife all ee 3 ange 1 Duke fe 1 ° 
where labourers are noon e us, we can | covered by the overhanging leaves. Thus the cost dhe 2 * gs d ‘he Dai tot 
speak from experience on this point. The follow- | of this ne in cultivation alone, and leaving out throughout N z ` A chee ee stamp 
ingis a preg in roun od —— ok the results n operations of sowing and ripe would | of men flourishing on of wise and liberal land- 
on this farm for 1 mount nearly to es per perch, or 44. acr ords. The customs and traditions of nty are in 
Diets od the thc os 0 0 ut we need not multiply instances to show the the right direction, and cus r law. 
Profit on the green crops including 3 large amount of labour which spade husbandry in- Good Jandlords ma and it is not any 
of Potatoes (sold), 2 aeres of Carrots volves, nor thus enlarge upon what is no doubt the | peculiarity in the soil that renders this district flourish- 
(sold), and 3 acres of Mangold Wurzel ighest merit of the system, provided its 8 ing, but the due relationship which exists between the 
(part sold) ih ees de wes 0 "4 shall p sod in the long 2 e to exceed 8 sg oar 3 the tenant, and the labourer rtan 
to gui 
ount of capital ; the landlords arx pre- 
pared to provide iio farm buildi e 
in due 
a improvemen ents, 
* of capital and direction of intellect 28 Lin- 
T discussion 
arming. 
lat the subject of tenant farmers’ a 
subject on which discussion cannot fail to do . 
I saw in Lincolnshire compared with what I 
n rule, 
a de families—in = Rutlands, 
the Yarboroughs, the Chaplins, e Det es—eff 
Lincolnshire what leases do he ns. 
re 
heir 
rvices could be ornare ee 
the d nee is much less to get 
t than essen to ety it out; nor is this 
who attempt farming for show aad than profit, and 
thus ee tlie evils which 
assure you, and to phew . blie 
agm pages, 1 the labours of the pra 
hroughou land will be entirely . tive if has 
a er now on the supposition that those who have 
been by their teachings intluen ee 
out of 
eee * ＋ * = the preachings of tbe practical 
structors, t will be much more difficult to get 
such, pore to attempt such cropping next phen: than it 
is—for such is the ease this year with om 
3 cu 
their 3 eee for ya feeding. 
e no gore Ly ese _ 
papi 
s brings me toan 
t—the statistics of 1847, iin which thi ing — — 
rfect, s goo to the machinery em- 
2 * in 2 pro 
be less perfec 
a bask oe oimai me —— 
The 
willing to ee 
e It is not a sabt s place to build or effect 3 
i ordinary circumstances 
improvements ; 
ital on th 2 and in the 9 —— more 
i the unexhausted i e- 
paid the Ee: 
, | perfect in repair on commencemen' 
soj by by landlord, — kept in repair by — wil a few 
arrangements of the sam uld be better 
e kind—wo 
ree points which interfere with im- 
than any lease, 
are th 
cultivation—want of 
game reservations, 
ae the other hand landlords suffer from ten 
without sufficient capi A 
tenant eyi mee "AE learn the character of a great land- 
lord, an t, whieh is of more rae, but it 
tenant. To 
