7 
| sae r. Reay 
An Guardian t Society, 
names 
Hor war ER APPARATUS, dian Societ 
WIRE-WORK. EN HOUSE, &c. of ane Society for a Protection 
— R-HOUSE, —.— 
eo 
We venture to express the 1555 B that our con- 
temporaries of the e press may be induced 
to assist in 
THE „„ GAZETTE. 769 _ 
e a Secretary practice of lowering — floor 2 or 3 feet below the 
there is 
surface of the grou no necessity of 
forcing the animals ri pits thus, for after the first 
week a thickness of lair will hay e accumulated 
prise, f WIR IRE- 2 —— ee 4 making kno e existence of this | ficient to absor their urine ; and as 6 or 8 ins. 
225. 58 1 Flo oe 0 roguery, ann. at the same io, of the means which | per month is the rate at which it ordinarily rises, a 
teres cameheated anon “WATER. APPARATUS any towns exist for suppressing it. very few inches of depth will be equally efficient 
e vad on | in Town and 6 katk a Drawings and with many * in 3 9 of waste. 
k for the Trade as usual Taree meth Same time we think t unken rs 
— free. W — ei ane oP 11 n only objectionable because of the increased difficulty 
Se AL AND AGRI.| best cultivated districts of Scot and ate sh : neon th fae kom Our own bones 
Me RAL SCHOOL, 38, Kennington-lane, London.— placing the animals two na a in. ll d — deepene ond a few inches, but so far as 
. cal knowledge of Analytical and Agricultural each with a sh + fa sma. yards, | the health of the cattle is concerned we see no dif- 
Surveying, Levelling, Railway — ap of accommodating two | ference between a floor sunk 3 feet in the 
ms 1 Mensuration, Gauging, 
eter iy D Pa yee ye Kote daher by Lox : 
muy terms of the ool can 3 ad — * either 
— oe er le by letter 
The TOTER, Gazette. 
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1848. 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
TAS par, Nor. By pea posh — Society of 9 
‘Tevespa ocie reland 
* 5 : Herefor 
Fasmer?’ Civss—Nov. 212 — Nov. 2 
Set pe an 
Tuere is not a more useful or kindly connection 
ed 
between and agriculture than is exhibit 
when the e adopted ~~ = — — her 
PROTECTION ar 
seen to be readily “avilable for ‘this en of 
It is proper that the existence of societies in our 
large towns for the protection of honest men should 
be more eel aeni in order that their influence 
may be incre ya wider scope, and b 
rr means being forded them. e a 
of these associations is far from being confine = 
3 pied the ‘hiding . hes 
de communi! e farmer himself often ee 
in trade, disp produce at a distance to 
— personally 1 and titted nA a 
from m persons in who nour 
trust, The practice, for Re of ng 2550 
Wheat involves transactions at this season of the 
in we segregate are of really national 
to be sown. 
are thus generally 
er: and that, in doubtful cases, 
ieties are most u organs of 
2 seg desing: ‘the past week 
come — our: alee 
of ow 
bat hold menti 
instance the attempt of this 
are of the Wheat, notwith- 
n that as ial Aral 
our aa E r. Reay had 
acks, and had prom tly 8 8 
i ir deliy very. This gen allem n informs 
been instrumental, 
of 
gad to publish 
they will fay 
8 Society, 
avour us with the information. 
Liverpool: Secretary, i 
ther 
1 dif ? Deyoid a do 
ti 
-| con sumption of food, an 
disease. 
That 
we are satisfied, for cing pies in both: 
0 
e 1 7 7 which alone the noxious gases a 
Ta od 
There is a good deal 
„ aae e e B 
or tote 
mes a week, an ung wet stra 
—— out and 1 to accumulate i in the yards, 
STALL-FEEDING, a co 
along the side o 
of 4 or 43 1525 and where the 4 r best carried 
out, they hav ahea them, a space 
4 and a > high roof over- 
he 
d; 
in the evening, 
are shifted . the 
0 mai 
are every evening pulled into the middle. 
soiled litter 9 — n under the cattle, and their 
troughs, supported by — — either end, are raised 
as pan flooring ary fro ich 
. | ment, whic’ 
hi n and perfectly unob- 
jectionable state of things, and no — — justly 
be laid on the former, 
As regards the mode of housing cattle, whether 
im summer or winter, we greatly prefer the last 
the methods alluded to—that of boz- teding. To 
the process of — * which may be ado 
under any of these methods, we must take another 
opportunity of refering. 
THE SMALL FARMERS AND AGRICULTURAL 
ABOURERS OF IRELAND, 
N the request that I r hould become Presi 
Society, I saw a proof of you r 
sympathy and interest ah that 
has most * the toil a 
Depen 
re identified, and it is 
— uniting for each other’s 2 
rance, to show how pte can help 
| co omplicated state had civilised society, o ought to be the 
rson ; but is more peculiarly the 
joes ose “who, under the blessing of Divine Prov 2 
tation, — h, — educatio 
to avoid ‘aay 1 ra nari nee with labour and yor 
alm o 
2 of 
Boe» i 
The trough, it m 
kata Worten on two pins at eac 
, | both ; ition i 
nd gs bottom 
upwards till the next meal, in a penile “that will 
ensure its cleanness. 
Now, as to the 33 merits of these several 
— Shall 
schemes: al uire into the subject 
theoretically and 1 what is to be e th 
fi each? or shall we determine the matter 
practically, and ascertain what 
of each? The latter, rel, is the better plan, if 
e be no W of combining the two. And, 
ubt, the bert poche of searching for 
th here, as in al er c 
the results of individual ee isted by 
j i e, it we call 
ever in them is due to the peculiar circumstances 
of each. 
The wider experience to which we allude—the 
truth in Chemistry and in Physiology of which it 
consists—indicates most l the prne of |t 
a dry bed, of pure air, o cient warmth, of | 
oderate exercise. These, together, anite. health | 
and 1 of food in the most profitable propor- 
armth and restricted exercise diminis 
comfort with moderate 
ex — ward off Now t es —— = what 
e have called individual experie 
in 
— or at all events in cattle fe geen 
t 45 . 3 1 o be a go 
of m ring m manure : and it is the 
; | alleged ‘ifficalty of Voten the wider with the 
e limited experience — the theory with the 
m jilva of the matter—that a raise is- 
cussion of this subject. 
a rightly | accom: 
read experience can aside by reasoning, 
has been experienced | 
ghtens away capital, Be avr. that freedom of 
0 utual 
are possible.“ His Royal Highness Prin nee Albert, in the C hair at 
the Fo’ Meeting of the Society for improvement of the Con- 
dition Gee Classes, grant 18, 1848, 
1 er ago n wh 
— of ‘the | people — * honour of the prince,” 
4 v. xiv., 28.) A 
p 
ship | operation of enlightened 
p — t class 
hi 
W 
ases, is to examine popes home 
ies the results 
reject what- ——— for the * 
ity 
most of the toil and least of the 8 
For if Kno be 
tual power 
jose of that wider and stron 
f kn 
— bouring elasses is he chief — 
nee and revolution in modern states; 1 
ief which even in 8 communities 
laren with — me rness all civil social re . is 
e dissociation and capital both 
mig in 3 directions, wien the chasm 
very rich and the 
very poor. 
hes wose nobles bridge that gulf with 
* — tn of Christian reg wealth and 
of classes—popu ulation 
ing w 
the rivilege chiefly as endowing life with opportunity to 
| — their hombler brethren. Happy is that kingdom 
and warmly inte- 
| whose Queen declares herself “deeply 
rested” for the happiness of the labourer. 
The Society to which the sentences at the head of 
this allude * in 1 ar cae 
, appears 
lished 
of the of the Society, and from the statements of Lord 
ccomo 
it is a thing to 3 saan e 
date itself, and to which 
3 itself ; for si it those truths are pee 
hysiology poi a 
bè alth and the eee grow 
ory mus one 01 
a perfect theory cannot | to. 
His lordship states “ that the Shey esses f 
II different parishes 117 acres, which have been let to 
553 
daily 
am er 0 
fishing crofts, and s to 2 the culture of small farms 
, and the cottages of 
b p i 
The results already manifest promise saal pee 45 
to future labours, Mr. Bond, the secretary, w me 
last June, stating that there were then 600 send me 
uce 
of baseless nenies laid 
on account of the common 
jE eree 1, 
6d. sta 7 g the 
[st madog -, 
