* 
629 
his land Properly, either owner or 
Now, there is but one way to the in the mode of cony 
Proceed in : 
eland especially, and i by which the 
whi improvement o land, and eying real p ropert: 
led tw Sland, and Ir industrio Y» 
7 5 e or ac para tively ‘ne laz re appoint agricultural inspectors to look over in th ep : — hay bene a ty 
bee eding er rops. e a and see that 0 pis cultivated, and, as dw ling, fn Exiglishinain'’s E ee build him a 
your correspondents says, n does not fi vented by the present Eee nes yes he is DAR 
s 
es 
e fu hese experi- Canter e : lh a ce 
awe arg ie 4 the most pa enen withe , compel him more must be don ut 
o that Sain E growing Wheat, tan the N 3 eee up to those who will. Were | you will say I should take up too r = m or 
dm r spite tak ge 5 © ire this matter, and a | touched upon many subjects in this 15 x hag 
À =p . 3 rä 3 g got upon, there is no doubt which requires a separate essay f a hand ka Ed 
E and this no doubt i is very prejudicial to the success | ciency of ou manufacture both a suffi- | thaa mine. I hope they will receive the atte tið oa 
1 1 ments 1 have b tailing. | pend cf WP a 4 and praga of all kings, to be t this time especial] rit. I know oq n 
‘A Tr has been objecte d to these experiments, that, | but kine tabs hag : but if we go till 1858 with- yar aid in furtherance of 3 you consider tha : 
Sowing all to Ave been done which is here detai led, I may add, t] Ire e shall DUDE ever lost. g 3 eyed 5 855 fy mn e mai; Gyor 5 
i leads to n0 . e . although it may toes (alter 2 3 e bserve in a late Gaz 5 
| 1 icable to grow Wheat every y in a small manure) with am at last year with farm-yard sandra signed “ = George Jomtings® and headed ú Th 
‘gj like the one 1 on, it is not so on a them about two. thir 8 ates N eligi 5 5 erid Li e 
large scale. Bu os . remember that | diseased Potato in the whole! See Sal ER d one * dee s for drying corn artifi ially. Now, I 
ben is ad therfore TA ne . e À 8 1 the best in the neighbourhood. I intend selling aboni Sainai. 1 1 * N 
me; an eres this and 5 ng > : wg Apparatus. This is in fi 
oeing the crop in te spring, it will entirely with Rive jew t 1 3 , e not only 
er little Aa 8 at I answer 1 Will inform y 775 f a wear dois ea w they | for th ose, but for a vast variety o other drying 
Alke better able to — nis thie per 4 ae harvest, a g . opori progress; conomist. | Operations, most useful and val cas 1 agricul 3 
ing sow neat on an Oat stubble with one lation, 1 6 1 hea 0 ver popu-| W. Bullock Webster, 48, Charing ng Sir rare 
„II is said there are no weeds i Chinese | ery has b is Me each ened vith poor ; the erwickshire Agriculture, — to thank « 
if they can eradicate them completely i 485 raised and spread by those who have never | Berwickshire Edueated Agricultariet ” * "for his p" l ‘s 
4 we, if we adopt the same methods, and follow ; S hot bur sh wiih the 1 subject. The land | my inquiries respecting the reason of not sowing Wheat 
en up as perseveringly. sateen ere 4 orking classes, but, on the on lea there, as practised in the south. I do not 
admitting that it is not e n to grow my exper : Te aes OF the country, : As fa however, perceive that your correspondent has deduced 
a4 bad eve ry yea wat mate p 8 7 the result o y inquiries go, the | any satisfactory reason for its t being ado ted with 
| — etn doublo the crop in ho se genie in whieh | w ithstav ding 5 lets and sells for, not- the same sueces the south, and, Í belies . 
we grow it by the application of chemical manures (and lal ou Ria? a a e a Ah rie tho application of | generally throughout England. The period ghee 
the same manures are applicable to all cereal crops i Me a armar in a | ATS Shif eee aud food of ‘work peopl i 4 
| wiles tat be a conclusion worth arriving at. — ieee nopol 0 para Tt : “oe kit as e the feetly understood by me previo 10 9 ian. — 
s possible to do so is, I think, sufficiently show by popali p aris 1 5 „ B a themi appears t bë eer 
the results which I have obtained. What then ma lab t 1 know it ; mo of | satisfactory reason why the tenant should t A 
= es a er Ae et = 8 re 4 have more than two miles added to each his land with any particular crop at the period lke 
plied and varied under the superintendence of skilful wrong 5 x allog 255 Pati T told my landlord he was | is most capable of doifig so ; and if Wheat is a heavy 
1 will devote ir le time would not bay E own b e cottages; but he said he Scourging crop, as some consider it to b „the best time 
"and attention to the subject? Will raising the ave aged | ths 1 Se te >s in his pa to burden | to sow it is when the land has had the longest period 
q prods from 25 to 50 bushels per acre be the ad 2 p~ ex-M. P. (thanks to Providence | of rest, and best able to carry it, viz., after two seasons 
| da g otes he 1s not so now, but he was when of hay, an our 
| improvement can be carri ed? II the present sett! oi „ having four 
— not. 000 em i w was passed), wh as clear seasons without the same crop—the intermediate 
nnen aise Fola urge on all owners and oceu. Bim 15 bo 8 hs is a cottage. I recommended | ones having only extracted from the soil certain fluids 
| sof land the importance of devoting at least 1 1 ied, „as long as n get and gases according to their own tie require- 
{to agricattur al experiments ; as Í think there ean 30, 2720 x he ning parishes Š Pains ee to do ments, and each leaving behind other gases not suited 
dnn babt that if these are carefu . vee rates are next t k ng. I won’t to their development, with these views. I am 
2 le an d 10 1 | by agriculiurists generally, | 19th S Pd im oi y ele ‘that i in a ha 2 tapane ba she the = of sowing Wheat upon 
el be so from 1 : arliament has e most advantageous t’s 
bags years, th at nt nasa surplus Fe pipea 1 to foster these barbarous and injurious also enables him to 80 5 t in the of ora ws 
gas for our neighbours. T. G., Clitheroe N 1 f ge 33 t e principle of our old settlement law giving it the efit of being brought to early ait it 
| „Oot. 12,1 etter ; it was that of voluntary admission to a com- under the influen a midsummer sun—a — 
Home e Corresponde dei Sk for a consideration; an individual agreed to | sideration in the tain changes of a British climate, 
Fon C c . ee ea ee ; 1 Aisi Period as apprentice or servant, and | and ata ky in the 9 05 of Scotland, which i tibia 
Paper fe 0 years, ard ng je Ra 17 a gaine is settlement. Now in these days of loco- | three our weeks later than the south of England 
1 g 1e | motio the Serf is nailed to the soil on which he is born. Your correspondent as not sh that Wheat will not 
i on e a opinion parochial settlement is bad altogether, | Succeed u 2 n lea in these counties, which I was told it 
ibo 7 55 her y wa 23 to me he his eee would no en in Scotland—the verity of which I did 
e ers. would not t put faith in. I shoul 
s se the other would not, and the poor-rates would your correspondent has e — — Ae 
e 1580 a igh t wa be ate I said, | d je 78 period of his education; Amicus. 
any as you can yourself, you ha oultry.—I ha 1 in some of your umbers. 
amg a work | that bene doing ; there is the drain- 8 giving and requiring sg intaran mart erning 
A agree nd tiles, set to work | the feeding of fowls; if the knowledge of the following 
with that ; you will get them put in on advantageous | method, which I adopted in _ iso 4 Sted use to your 
terms, and can pick the However, I went readers, it is much at your service. I ised it there 
over somé time _after, and the draining and many years, and so su ee that it ee es me very 
e 1 5 2 oe 3 „Oh = d the tenant, nt oe HE that I have no facility for keeping fowls. 
ould not employ the men because the other | here, for if I had should ver n be able to send. 
hee: sage and all that ~~ orth having went to th ou a couple which I should t be i mpare 
railway, the work must be done when they come back.“ with any that Leadenhall Market can fi even 
The men came back, but still the work was not done ; though they ere such as I few times in my 
one „ rs ‘oe e 2 oe the 8 5 sn rss paid 9s. or spe, a couple for to that ve pectable 
. ‘wise law that fosters these p es. esman avis. d best adapted for the ; 
y change the law, but you cannot hum ure. w ed the Chittagong,” the same, as far 
assert that there is not one able-bodied man Erand as I c as the y, which on in, 
in the country ; AEs e h of the country will increase England, “The fa e e or rather ing- for 
| . eee inere eir numbers, and proper tiie for | only fattening fowls were permitted to be in it, was 
e ee of | their Ja bour. Every man should be | kept cool as possible (in e e Sug almost 
th th have 9 eà sama at encouraged to ta he market ; the disabled dark Each fowl owen a separate pen; they were fed. 
dane orking ‘for a and infirm should be entitled to relief, from a fand col- | once; and only on with rice, boiled as rice o 
hey are in the | lected on as broad a principle ible ; inducement tö ke boiled for Chilstibie; not to a mash ; but £o that 
ould be given to increase the population of rural dis. | grain from should separate. The guy to, 
tricts (at least the opposite should be tak y) ; it is | each fowl r the 
d not i lanes and alleys, that heroes and men | first three bee. to east: was are about a ional 
E pmt, 3 3 sa eae red. = whl of  Ghoo: —1} teaspoonful of treada ; 
sure if I was tọ bui alf a dozen comfortable 3 
e 
t 
! our 
ne 
| — 1 prae 3 — = Tan of m 
c enemy. I 
lation;“ you may pein to the mass of craton in 
th mbe 
W. 
e misery; no earthly powe e 
be done to better, the low ‘on aici of such e ces, 
d I wish the a ple _— not so driven to the towns, | th 
You may point to so parishes. - Whe 
* will find one SN I will find 10 underpeopled 
may again object, We have done something for 
| hes working classes ; and wise n h 
y neighbours ; 
r poor rates!? and 
assert 2 there is not over-popu- 
a 
ere are 
is 1 ibere will be 
t it, though much 
akis there 
r can preve 
wded rural here | i 
legislation 
emancipation 
us through recent troubles.” I answer, “It is to the 
patient persev eran ce and pee loyalty of ney that | will go 
you b The ething rem o be 
done; you ma ee is t 
work, and pass a 10 hours act; the next, th 
little, and talk of an emigration bill; but this is not t 
ung. There for ing, be 
one a 
tion of labour ; for another, be a a great change | 
