ee THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
ected with all that is mischievous, 
—— n the Whea 
F LIME ( i ared ce Bone onl ja x ` 
1 Waun ‘containing a large amount of Silicates, and * re daily sight of rising membe 
1 ö ó 
sins Peers SOIL (obtained from a large public insti. | can they be expected to rise? the ladder which is 
tton) vy N GUANO (direct from import warehouse). to assist them m 1555 “se baas and i usefulness 
PEE FSIE GUANO, — ch in all — Salts of Ammonia, Phos- proved, before the ey e i 
eof What a du 
pates bl poe 1 
considerably Mireworm destroyer), Gypsum, Urate, Ni. | agricu bait labourer! Poets have praised its cat 
Soe Salt, are fash and aah other manures | fulness ; but death and the s é 
Sy € e grave, too, have 
7 ply for prices current as a praised for this. The realities of life on 10s. a — 
— il 
1 THE ONLY IMPORTERS, y those who pretend this praise, The drearest 
et i 
thal ige temporal future — an constant resent of half- 
TBBS, 
H, POY WELL, an PRYOR, LONDON, 
Scores ORTH, es against the ere consequences of | & labouring man. has ca . 
parer meme n Guano, purchasers are recom- the period of his employment is as fickle as the 
ly to Dealers of re weather—hi 3 
e — wis who will supply the article in any th j : his health ny. leave him—the workhouse 
E 
oO 
— 
. 
© 
E 
[rz 
© 
nm 
© 
8 
8 2 
Dana s 
=S 
S 
1 
oH 
5 
1 
his master might excite him to g t how often 
The cal Gazette. is not the expression ied xhibited more in me 
. DECEMBER, 9, 1848. and parchment certificate to the old man, than in 
GS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. - the friendliness which the young man needs for his 
Toxspar, Dee. ace peie y of Past. $ elp and enco urageme 
— 4 t mp. Socie 15 oF trelan 
1 ral So 5 ngiand, We are aware that this picture is not universally 
THURSDAY, — %—Agricultu mp. herent reland true: we iri 
A "Market, 8 $ ; and we are far from desiring either to ns 
er- De 15: Wadebridge the just praise of the labourer's real frien s, or to 
cast a slight on the most imperfect or mistaken efforts 
We should be sorry indeed if our Journal were to | for his benefit. But what is his condition 5 the 
as the exponent of only the material | «midland counties”? How are “B. Ba” twenty 
lations of agriculture — if the Conpition or THE | labourers? He has 1 e r for “ years ; 
l n 
to communicate thoughts and facts and arguments ‘ignorantes wa T piri habits are enough to 
ucation of the agricultural labourer—a disgust any on We venture to 2 rt that this 
matter having but little immediate connection with | writer ie nounces his o His in- 
failed to concentrate both attention and desire on is no better than this. Is human rages such that 
this —. subject. Not only have methods of | his men can be expected 25 * e spontaneously ? 
has been astrate The locality, for instance, in Is the addition of one more ts of their 
which „S. S.“ is resident has been s be i already miserable life—miserable, 150 because the 
wretchedly igno nd debased condition—cer- | are labourers, but because of their low moral stand- 
country districts—m aes orse, we are happy to tig “many of them” done any good? Threats an 
cen wit 
: &e., contained in the foreign, at a land cheerless life i is that of many an 
ERUVIAN AND BOLIVIAN GUANO ON SALF, = the food of a family have not been experienced |i 
pemg 28 ERPOOL and BRISTOL; | satisfied bodily wants, — — up the history of many | E 
m d, to| 0 
awaken his hope? The praise and satisfaction of 
ood : bu 
5 Th 
x e 
error 20la, Ope Senet —— that stimulus to effort we believe most Piven y ji F e 
— ae . N to be genuin o possess in the closer contact of their superiors, of poe for its 
m eir o in 
wk 
ition į 
rest, — are told, is taken in peA 1 
abron 
We referred, in the outset, to the heed or 
connect 
OUR Lanounrrs as bei not 
imme dia 
_ pe 
pg en the 
most alive to the inferlorit a the aa aud mental 
status of any class is the best advocate that can be 
á Sri 4 
retained on its behalf. 
objection 
amount to?— Wes are aware that the idea of a “dreary 
ought not to excite our 
3 bee 28 
reason 
é ; wn condemn 
the mere practice of farming—whic cannot have fluence cannot have bið e — the result | are 
stan 
tainly worse, we should d hope, than the average of ing ii to benchi Remi has turning awe jip rove 
distri n e thease 4 z 4 We i 8 ot desirous of os the labourer 
nt— | blank” in connection with the life of a a — : 
because 
: are ee of anything 7 and Fun Si Tighe 
notwi i 
m the less to the 
which here intervenes? 
their 
aa And will any ce lee the pit 
absurd because t 
o be sensual and a almost 
tative life it deplores eee sand deals 
tion? Sensibility might be 
ight be urge ed onwards in 
that reign in tural districts—at least I can safely say it knowledge of his men than the neighbouring magis- 
applies to the neighbourhood in one of the midland trate or the lists of their depredations can furnish ; 
imties, where I have east anchor, Scarcely a night if he look on în the dis isgust which all this will natu- 
een Pha petty robberies, poaching cases, or rally inspire, and do no more than threaten to dis- 
len mischief to people's property. Another evil is charge the next offender, his men will pilfer 
et 
e A ignorance still, Let a master 
u w, and = you get mee polluted by the still, and live in im aes at” wall 
the g 
ar ; à : 
Sage for some years of abou (00: mek ol of ia acquainted with him; let them see him in other 
class, and . their ignorance and pilfering | lights than merely as the director and strict pay 
enough to popao any one. ave turned | master of their services: and his efforts for their 
| away ; And yet I ean put trust in very few | improvement—in the grant of the allotment field— 
for themselves and 
t in its perfurmanee, The p n the their children—in his t of wages by “th 
8 I live, and the parsons in the oth > in his assistance of the more trustworthy 
eh of 8 » have just had a meeting to form a aspiring among them—in his ultimate establish- 
T 5 d as 
ay usstonary society for raising subserip- er eading room—in his advocacy 
to send bibles 3 ee aa ment of the * = 7. bank; thè friendly 
and i 
usand other ways in which a 3 man 
E verting Jews, Ho tients te ee ee ss befriend his servants—will soon put a eee 
y 
GoD except t blas heme,” lo 
a a Ga glen w Wer ai now the present condition of the 
$ f 
ading en comparisons of town ee e 
Sale dn 5 rden. in this eee provement follow the continued resi in 
in town and country w * 
eee to be eier : ‘the Wider The oe pe if his efforts for the good of the labouring class, de 
a . 
il 
| a 5 there it is 
denser, has better 
| = he “ore its inherent ‘tendency to any one be able, with a g or 
Ang mixtures of the | the miserable moral „ of the pe 
r particles is whom he has for 8 
And we h l 
have been detached— | difference with “ B. B.” We kave ye N 
* ay a lower moral status than the | 
is deeper ; few will de — 
than our own — but s not unex, e disgust are not powerless in the work of moral im- beyond his position in life; 
bus a een rites rovement ; they are mischievous; they retard its that were n any 22 
418. S? does not exaggerate 5 ignorance and erime progress. And if a master fear to acquire any further | schooling of the “ N. 
peoples ore our r great cities E Tes iii face upon ‘the class among whom he lives an m i 
25 zal country. i in the neighbourhood of] tio 
Ps Populations. The purity of a country | Kynaston, near Ross, in Herefordshire, Spat if no ity 5 
locality of such men as Mr. Batson, of that place 
intellec taal. 
2 cnfred vpn a i 
t no one can su 
** this in the ordinary 
ational” r the ‘ iti 
e 
1s A Snow or Fat CATTLE ABLE 5 TEACH? 
in 
as a of this kind h 
hold the sam 
relation to agriculture as exhibitions of 3 
hold in relation to other arts. An “exposition” of | 
posi 
yo or an ee vil 
is equally 8 a show of mere r 
doubt each, 
ults—calculated no 
and the latter especialy, to — the 
si emotions at which 
initia! 
, but, to t the un- 
the artist 
ed man who shall vis visit 1 it with the sors 
learning t 
ong as ‘the methods 
it are unknown to hia, it is 
tion. Education is founde 
xcite only wonder and ri 
can draw inferences 
instruction o of readers—ou t 
to w 
comparison: its 
ssons arise out = th e successivo steps which lead 
jew 4 
h Su be ee, and emulation ion may te 
m m o i 
i : —an the | aroused, in the “rego an 
in their own pari = aa To use the words Society, and the temperance clu the . 
which produced 
"n for his instruc- 
ele m toc and nów 
i a have taught hi H compare, 
1| he l 
ich the animals belong ; and, for the 2 2 
tery o of self love—on the i 
year’s strictures | ue 
influence of his | 
hag oe ee that the zamik 5 
» results i as t! 
