THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
— a bushel of the 4 in. for every bushel of 
so as 1 
80 scantily that the food wholly give 
he life, without adding weight to t * > car- 
22 e ultimate ig gl of keeping st 
which i 
a 
88 good; let 45 be r toatl 
n 2 ae he 
British army, and served through the Peninsular war 
re 1 than most subalterns, 
ay in 1817, and, havi 
has, to 
. — en 
ee the 
to be led 
a N 
Br tire, 
appears a possibility of thei E being” extended 
„| years’ more gaan Monan th ie length and breath 
By 2 
of the land ; 
oth 
subject 2 “observe that in 1052 he proposed, through the 
publie p 
ing married 
as since been generally residing in that i 
nt, 155 } 
which case I should derive oo a year income 
ur res e and 
e not . the ‘=. 
uch mischievous nonsense ; an 
ay unread book is 
and i [We 
Huxtable o omist 
tion is, How 
arity annual in inom 
m? 55 
ce, and you have every 
9 market gardening 
ol e for the unemployed poor 
1 ued to u 
r, and 
very grat 
even modifications of his ae plan iin y enerali TE 
177% after so many years of uns n effor 
ust 1 have now satished $ “B. A” e 8 or 
sired ness of Mr. Goodiff to pee out the . ex- b 
n periment, and of this I do 
e him, that with r 
t to all money arrangements, ‘Ve will be happy they 
2601 Bi 
id te 
. G. Grossmith, Romsey, Hants, | 
Home Go 
With respect to the P 
crossing the promi for 
week, I did not see a single ayse do 
Potato erop 2 re k and the — almost gone, -e 
laces th tubers are rotting away, but i 
which is rat her exposed, with ia naturally | 
not rotting, and very little of the disease 
$o be ie i in the nti not more than one in 20 on 
iis farm i earl and in the late planted sorts 
have not seen any — ones, but the tops are gone; 
ie Potatoes scarce reely half grown, and of course can only 
8 . a * F 
8 
Sag — plentiful 
sma 
prin; 
as they could _by any means procure 
92 They risked their all, in fact I might say that 
urnips or — else as a su 
eat deal of —— 
ssh 5 2 
, to be plentiful i in most places ov 
. part of the 
ow pro- 
ha 
3 James Alexander, 
— 3 5 bet at p. 612, 1848, 
u! 
e e nden thi 
tato Crop, in * part of 
of | the 2 capital, as propound 
Econo 
* ce 
odiff oie that after f. fairly remunerati 
in 0 
ised; as the m b 
subscribed with a view to pro ort 2: on the exten- 
empl 
e rating er 
Proposed Terms between Landlord and Tenant.— 
Cultivation: The mode of e to be adopted 
bia ee system of mp ke that i =m not the take 
fro of the arable tapes than 
Wheat Barley, Oats 
Cab- 
ome other green, ameliorating 
pats ; but it shall, nevertheless, be lawful to take- 
a cro h of Beans or Peas on one- te a of the re et ay 
n as an wires À spi 2. Consu 
sale of stra 
amel 
op, by feeding or r foddering 8 or sheep, or 
men * N therewith; the purchase of 
sion of the p on it may become cial e 
of capital, it may be deemed eee to appropriate 
per cent. to the industrial Sng ming of the chil- 
e eee employe he farm, and to form 
S, 
ile endowments fo couples ; for with 
spade farms we fear no excess of population, We 
might tius supersede, our poor- laws. In the same pub- 
lication “ Hibernicus ’ de rings before ee readers 8 the 
Agricultural Gazette e pious labours in this of 
75 sect of p nc Tien called “The Socket) of 
n mmittee has now advertise l 
for a farm 250 to 400 Irish De in one of the midlan 
counties of Ireland, for the purpose of establishing 
et their 
se 5 
repar 
withdrawing their little cai from it, before all are 
sw ed up in the suppor 7 un ‘he, progres whose 
Fc pe in the shied ase of manure. 
at least ra thirds e 4 of all the straw 
roots, or other aden ng e 
rere taken off the Ait nage this ilea 
, to be consumed by st ock o n 40 Lagere ey the 
aes produced therefrom, mat manure which 
may be purchased, to be applied > the land the saver’ 
year in which th 1 n been sold. 3. Ten 
rights : At ihi. a of the e the tenant to be aid 
the read of the une bet 3 ure, 
with the value of the hay and straw, of the 
las at year's crop, which may be left altor rua 6 un- 
and the value of all the 
eal 
oilcake, 
t for the three P sagen ng years (as taken 
the acral n ished by Government in the London 
azette in the month of Jan nuary, pursuant to the 4 
8 ‘Act et) Thus, suppose the rent to be 100 
of Wheat, at 50s. per qr. for tne lasttwo yens (230 T ‘Man. 
e average of Wh a 50, and 51, 
are m 
— 
he tenants’ * to pay their r 
Granard, Irelar 
The Potato Di isease.—As it is very are that 
me portion of diseased ee should be preserved, 
the following methods are recommended to the e public. 
1. To make Potato Flour, which will keep good for 
r years — Was 
®© 
5 
until the water g 
8 oes 
t o 
trewing salt at 3 same time, until qui 
serve the Potatoes l 
joint and in with lin lime Lio pte rosin, or grease. 
Place the n a dry, on. Pota 
keep snd i in this way . me 132 All Potato 
ied should be pen ned, exam sorted ; but Pota- 
cannot 
esi ae them 
also hid grating Potatoes iC. A. A. Lloyd. 
Ca — Like 4 Economist, 4 I ka. read 
" with grea 1 5 your Paper for some years ; but, 
meditating to give my farming hobby full Haag: Soho 
ded by y corre- 
mist” in your last week’s edhe, has 
on Mr. H 
uietly, at even 4 per 
Ne 8 
rs n in 
eaking down of the farm and th f | of 
te small belting by the tandlords, as ey le all li hope 
of 
Pi Seed. Gar, following system 
M pirt e l as Carrots :—Let the he pron at 
and well 
top 
toes will | roo 
ined, a 
oe ctually sorted without previously | 
are machines for washing and 
hould be 54s. per qr. ore 
his i 
the third year would be 2600. ; 
of Wheat for the three years should be 46s uarter, 
that is 48. pete S., then the moiety of thi or 2s. per 
quarter, amoun 0 102. 0 uarters, 
is to be Tegel trom the swe i sot 
rent for that year will b 
Lease : r 21 ben me 
whi 
erect any buildings which may 
ase for ars, the landlord Piya to pay for all 
in drain in any buildin, 
nip seed as 
tended for ng “he roots be of a 
d coat 
S, 
18 inches deep, 
st the side, at ot toad 24 inches 9 
6 inches 
of circulati 
moe en Carrot seed is. 
end mee or Doge 
seed; e 
ed 
H 
