29—1848.] 
0 eerd —— ON LEASE, ARABLE FARMS, 
N miles of Harwich, in — prg of — = 
E POUND FARM, in the parish of Dover-coast, con- 
— e acres 23 Land of the best quality, with a 
and substantial Farm-house ich bee Ms 5 Farm 
i next 
Builain upon v 
ngs. To be en i 
* roe FARM, in the parish of Ramsey, 
— of 8 rm Land of — 4— with a eee 
Farm. house sed ails all —— Farm Buildings. To be entered 
npon next — 
—8 ISLAND FARM, in the paei ish of a 
consisting of 188 acres of Arable and Pasture Land o — 
fent quality, some of it being 233 — — yA great 
improvement. To be entered upon xt Michae z 
ant 
14, 21 t, may be 
n 
— 
Berkeley, Gloucesters 
The Agri Gazette. 
SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1848. 
WEEKS, 
og orga FOR THE iis 2 e 
daly mgs 
— 
—A f England. 
20—Agricultural —— Society « of Ireland. 
ear CLUBS. —July 17 17 
Stranrae 
Market.—July 21: Wadebridge.- July 28: 
We have ge asin ond to collect uea ee 
on the ceedings of the Gre ORK 
be stle nd confusion e 
attendant on all similar gat atherings wo allow 
e have by no means satisfic d o —— and 
Fear W we shall ore satisfy’ 2 ee t 
up thei 
shre 
especially i made r minds t 
very magnitude 
exhi- 
ost favo 
upply. 
— general eee of this, as eight with 
aad peak m 
> an 
gran all mis 
Mr. | exchanged for ee rane at the — facilities 
he T ded 4 re: odies bo 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
misgivings as to the praia we keeping ra wt fees 
rolling. Surely, we thou there must co 
— when it will, and ought, e not 8 ‘sand still, at 
— 5 be 8 lest it should be unwi ieldy 
nman We thou iy all this before 
stating for York, but ae 5 have Alas gi our 
oubts an en rew ne and nearer 
o the scene Ei action, 25 found that the only * 
ference to our personal comfort, that o 
fellow oe was oad addition, 5 almost mo 
r kno it, of carriage after carr iage 1. ou 
— — exten — poš 
o such immense th of 
e secret was at once ex- 
c 
We speak 
nand a 
success of this most im 
n boun 4 in saying char, ut for the facilities of | v 
comotion afforde y railways, probably not one 
t > abe) ie visitors could possibly attend 
the — mee 
His Royal Highness the Duke of CAMBRIDGE 
a the Show-yard on Monday, and left York 
r London on Tuesday, 
do 
Turre is an idea on which the whole rurory of 
Farmine rests, the truth of which, though as ey 
as possible self evident t, has not, we ar 
that constant residence in the mind o 
— of any farm — is — 2 the admis- 
sion o 
nts in the ae pi icul- 
4 th eee ma is Gi one 
the soil, pe the 
matter are ca as 
t 8 
be 
© 
u ng 
who sees — manure added to 
harvest taken from it, no farm e alters the | rate 
nature iving 
bea 
of the matters on which it a 
slant or animal cannot change the — 5 of the 
atoms presented to it; it flourishes or dies according 
manufacturers. 
is implements gi maintained their high charac 
ter for excellence, 
a in the fie d : and we are abl 
ate him ou an additional prize and medal for his 
Turnip drill on the flat, and horse hoe on the same 
an 
urveying the implement- yards one could not 
5 struck with the increase both in number 
and amoun a of certain machines, which but a very 
few years ago were oe $ unknown, or, at 
ake, for 
the x te e od or poiso b; it can but select those 
Proper ts growt 5 is — — an 
extraordinary secintulwdiod in the 
s which form the substance of Bar cultivated 
8 skill in agriculture is for the Bae 
1 5.80 that which enables the farmer to “pied 
ee from the cheapest 3 and collect 
Ta f r ey the living seed or plant he 
place ka oll to assimilate ikem. ; the e 
of all 8 pra nae he e in its ability to 
detach these atoms fro combinations, 
setting them free for use che the. r at the 
time it 1 them. 
= 
5 
— 
e 
|- 
8 
wW 
glance at eee eee in the one case how 
oil du 
the s uring winter becomes broken up, — 
difficulty sched ed, a nd dee omposed, 5 the influence of 
ces- frost a . And it is one d from the farm-yard 
in spring, and t toms thus prepared in it 
esi-| and add to E are 
ed abs 
atoms from the air, and, ee 
the plant the > produce aimed at by the farmer. 
an mon 
— —— 
‘foes tay mal. At ev stage of the 
lo 3 scene my may — er ap- 
sa ap or waste suffered, and thus pe etn ea ere 
is room 28 miss application of skill and — — 
The atomic theory, s speak, rin practice 
will teed us, ios, to see Sow fertility ma sel 
sustaine e will a n and over the surface 
from t a soil, it 
will thus appear, na * 3 ent, 
al g 
a few 
many years, il the literei “details of 
Hik Jë have been favoured. we must post- 
pone further remarks to ebe opportunity. 
UNPRODUCTIVE I n AT UNION 
WORKHOUSES. 
I wisn, through the seater of yos 8 3 
Paper, to draw public attention 
feeling occasioned by the — eT e i of 
the inmates of union workhouses. On accou 
orality, as l as nomy, all compulsory 
should be productive, for nothing is so destructive of 
good feeling m com 
The e and hd tory ¢ nature of 
m 
either an onwards or a retrospective 
a red so per 
fect as to be relied on for perfect eomectness in the 
d respecting them. ne described in the 
Besh, for instance ; consider whence the atoms which 
— — — been taken—the various ibe nor) com- 
ina 
Vib avg IUC 
th wh 
pont Gazette i short ime ago (the inven 
0 EWING rtainly among the 
if not the very best, of the hand-dibbling 1 755 
or the present, quit the 
subject, contenting . with a few e ro 
eetin ar 
remarks on the m 
The fineness of the weather, and m expected 
Highne nce 
e 
which shall Wee 3 ‘their place in 
no 
ER 2 ark 
how each 2 maintained ved individuality Be = 
character ig at mberless companion 
r| from which it arted—the e wit 2 h it 
as uni iied, un neil all. t in the 
animal n 4 which they ultimately form a part. 
uch an nation, ked n detail, 
ide ea a of the nature of that 
ing. And 
r 
t= J 
of manuring, soe insta 
e balk 
tice. 
1 
better iene, for 
e 
investigation in this way 2 that which the English i 
is highly calculated to produce the feelings of ha 
and malice ; as a test of poverty it acts more severel 
on the well disposed unfo par poor than it does on 
the ouse f 
lat eo 
relief. 
The well known ee to making the union 
houses workshops is valid, inasmuch as it would aa a 
dency to in 5 inmates by the 
of competition on fr r, but to the employ- 
nt of paupers in the * of Jan pade 
erk s nk there can be no valid objection, for in 
ith horses not with 
la 
t thata man may be more 3 employed in 
digging | than i in the usual occupation available in 
From wr statements which have frequently been 
ade of the advantages of spade cultivation over that 
of the plough (and my experience wou me to 
lieve ct on many soi would be 
air to su that an able labourer judiciously em- 
Lede in digging would earn 12s, per week, which would 
pay for the consumed by mseif 
other inmates; land would afford em Wer not only to 
the able labourer, but the aged; the women and ch 
might also be productively employed in its cultivation. 
The labour which is now performed in or 
penal if 
productively employed in the eultiv of the 
rate-payer would be relieved a of his burden, 
and the pauper would igorated and refreshed b 
is more healthful e able 
ared to 
me a cruel absurdity, namely, aad — of employing 
men on unproductive and painful labour because they 
Stabe, R near 
LAND DRAINAGE REPORTS. 
No. XIII.—Ratno, N.B.—Seeing that 
of 4 feet deep 3 * are most „ 
munications to 
believing tha 
x | 
2 fi pi to some 10 or os dis- Agricultural pei has eee for one of their universal application, perhaps you may find 
pric returning to in t With Essays for 1849 ow to increase the produce of | of the subjoined experience, which I have had, of use 
‘pect to the 1 and still i enir, size A full diac ssion of it vill involve every | to you in the ing out of the general drains 
meetings, we must own we have had our! ene! process, from the preparation of the soil | turns, and I exhibited in your 
