ee 1} inch 
. 
RI 
40%. Now, 
Be 
= 
z5 
— 
8 2 5 
Be 
2 
8 
Ss tity 
g 
82 
f 
a 
111 
Sein 
8275 
ect 
75588 
EERE 
755 
Boe 
* 
10 ies 
DEB 
=. including glebe EA 
8 
bore. Now, I can drain 
expenses of carriage; 100 acres 
ag Se a bene ought to bea liberal ac 
5 
is not . h; for 
si 
Egret 
228 
See 
a Ja 
S 2 
E ad 
© 2 p“ 
8 2 
aS 
28 8 
* 
228 
Rang =| 
HE 
4 Oo 
eager 
a gE 
wee 4 
888 8 
8 C * 
P 
8 2 B. 
8 8 
[=] 
Fara 
2 S 
ER 
28 
acres more—call it 100 acres—the 
— at 7 per cent., is 287. I 
th m 4001, worth of additional 3 
5 per cent. Now, gentlemen, 
1 nine = me —— Mr. Huxtable then 
g 
22 
83 
as 
SEERE 
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— 
oe 
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-$ 
— 
— 
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8 
r$ 
£ d. 
. 100 o 0 
mprov ements 
ni 
capital sunk in p 
soa il s and roa’’s, 40 0l., at 5 per 
am a drai ning, 41, per acr e, the 
oden pipes, of 2-inch 
acres, 4 
E67 rds at tls. x a delivery 
en at every 
200 yards, Tika at 10 me cent., 7l. gA : 
271 
Ser S 14 
Miseellaneou s articles bought A 41 
Tradesmen’s bill . 54 1 
bought — 37 1 
corn purchased 1 — 78 
— sig corn F 63 1 
(as, ben, used for seed ove 43 1 
Labour oe ore 375 
Tea per cent. n 15001, = eis 150 
Tubes, 5s. ; fates, 2s. 6d. p acre 25 32 1 
Last by the the death of one . tee 9 ( 
£1244 311 
CREDITOR, 
| eg Meters, 2 2 a from 40 acres 1 5 at eat - 
2 
| — ee. 226 
e bes 147 
Miey 5 9 1 
Improved value of s sa 188 
— . — Rye-grass, at 7s. gee | 
Two fat heif B: 30 1 
oud del 177 1 
Keep of 100 Sheep sA z su 80 
: 1244 3 11 eee every agriculturist would profit by understandin 5 
— ecause there was not a thing we touch, see, pe uste—not 
Profit Ri p 8 8 — thing that 2 contact ir ee, ee 
ot the province of chemistry to ¢ ex lain. 
Whilst the rer. 9 teman was reading this statements some one desirable, then, must it be to heag agriculiwist ` get right e 
called out for! interest.“ ‘You shall have interest to your | respecting what taile, what plants, what t anà air, an 
content,” said Mr. Huxtable, and he then read the item | heat and moisture were composed of ; jadi Pa 5 such labours 
u on 15001.” “Don’t you think, Mr. S mer,” he | as those of Mr, Huxtable that so many of s 
i “that 107. per cent. is en gh? y, you don’t pay | explained in the familiar mann required, In reality 
— aena (Loud laughter.) Even the great N — Western | there was no r difficulty in science, and he thought 
— more than 61, Look, gentlemen, at 375“ for labour on | he might fay that. fos never heard fr r. Huxtable in 
of land 15 now a man mu e pie to face | the course ot weather explanations of ro ap e. to agri- 
—.— 3 more than 17 acre, after pay ue 10 culture—he never nerd a single word that every one might 
Í — 1 y capital.. that this i F very 3 En not understa =y Perhaps he might have — 1 8 led by his 
E- am ‘aba — endeavouri ring t Y, | “coprolites,” but that about a year ago a considerate = 
| * eg of that theory is for the pu ublic c good had 1 presented him a | specimen sent by Mr. Lawes, And he had | 
d lace es — — is that having closed this ut! 
* which has been solo ng called for, I have to thank | for modern use. He thanked Mr. Seymer for the —— 
in the beginning you laughed at me for a { manner in which he ha * eee n of pa Mr. Petes a an 
— —— i kind opinion that has encouraged me | agriculturist, He believed that it was to the d hich 
that what only that, but you have given me a voice so 3 ct a having light soil in Herefordshire, ood feo a 
ito the back ba ge si et aa has been carried 5 en | soil ia wickshire, to deal with as they respectively required, 
l rica, am more proud in owed with 
— ihat we pport in England twice the number of uae agri culture; and he agreed with Mr. Huxtable, an it wai 
; and if we are to send out any of those poor 
$ 
E 
n 
Dn 
a 
a 
oO 
2 
+ 
11 
8 
3 
nà I hope we shall b 
— good providence, and to go 
i that se name we not hear, 
wed Eim meeting Mr. Huxtable told them he 
Fe 
eae 
8s 
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aA 
2 8 8 
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1 
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82 
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oh 
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"44m 
rit at wees Weng. ere. Hoskxxs 
f * 
0 other arta = 
an 
ped they would be able 5 
an art —. i m 
an gags o of Adam. on e gayest 
. lled ae il p been 
iim that unreasonable 
1382 12 0 
were making 
Ith o ur. Ho iins, 5 
come ue from a distant part 
THE AGRICULT URAL GAZETTE. 
a pipe-tile machine and he sell 
which might now be rais 
86 chaldron of coals 
wee ek by a ste am e engine. W hen the ey 
consumpti tion of about 
saw the ease with which | 
the ey 12 ed what bad alread ee 
they could best form an idea of 9 oe ne in — | 2 | 
the application of steam to the cultivation of the oo could | w 
be effected, it is known that about 13 ton of coals had virtue i 
it to plough near 200 acres of land 7 inches ee his wad 
a fact known t cientific of the present day, but — 
we had not yet learnt to apply steam to the 1 nd that kno e 
ledge had not made available as yet, B t he had — 
more doubt the day would come te ould b 
h 
— Pomad seemed to have been the st 
ith a gen 7 3 Not only was he opposed in his 
aoe researches, but an anonymous society 
ree he ah emn vegetation more than by nure ; 
and he (Mr. Hoskyns) only wished we would take a eat out of 
his book in reference to the mecha nical treatment of th 
c 
interesting agricu ural implements— the horse-hoe and tbe 
drill. or of both these implements, which 
he was ‘led to construct because of the N own by his 
workmen to his schemes, The main canse of bis discovery, 
however, was, that he was approximate’ — right in the direction 
which his ideas had taker. And by this was shown 
ed by the p 
» a quantity often consumed in A| aos 
pe a freezin, ‘temperature, In shallow anc 
ge, althougt Y the Surfa shallow drain 
1 Rahika beneath, . e water may be ge rena be got rid ot rid. — a poe bed of 
pastes away. Ifyou made our be chilie the 2 as it 
ma F 
a wet clay, simply 
. of mne Y Be sit Fae sion 
vented evaporation, Some of them n — * 2 that rv soil 
e dry, contracts and cracks * mall. direction be * ad 
acked s in Sade 
$33; 
= 
Seer eRe 
lied a ure oi 
conclusion that the season for Wh here was the end 
Sept. and beginning of Oct. His (ur. b Bark 8 * ex —.— 
fully bore this out. The ey would find an immense advantage in 
| Sowing Oats and Barley early, He sowed 
, | Chevalier Barley — ‘Not pone He had 2228888 
5 neighbou Brentwood, 
of | remar * wth, and m 
the practice there of early Barle Bowi 5 n 
of it, and said * had ‘ately ct doe pl. ng, he said he was aware 
we eg — frye : A change in 2 pg hi 
y a heavy fall of snow, compel] a l 
sk tiil March. a sult — ri et oompie: — 
sowing so sup to the latter that he had — . oe whey the 
2 * f carly” y ing. The most important im t 
the introduction of the drill. He valued it o much 
because of its sowing even, as because it enabled the farmer 
o keep his land clean. There is a made by Garra 
of 3 lalam — 1 out all the weeds, He 
that corn sown i t apart gave a larger crop than 
when Seaver but — if it did not, the 3 — — — 
t 
great advantage of a good education in the physical 9 
5 clean with the horse-hoe mu-t do “pad with a pone 
was one of is plans — ” — o crops of 
on in robin 2 It w 
after Wheat, but it was rane h ike o over-working a horse 
sooner or later harm wo uld be d lie was now g to 
touch on thin „ Nothing e re instructive than 
to witness the care of the 22 r not to have too many plants, 
too 
You may see them in the hothouse thinning their A vaca and 
out of doors taking care that two ge 5 do not grow together, 
nnen, them both, If hothouse’ Grapes were 
suffered to grow like those out of doors, did they suppose they 
Id e uit 
cal kno owle 
space as lar one of the plates before him, Now when they 
were overcrowded, ge eee like many plantations under the 
a ee ere starved, and rap of them perished. 
her mischief 5 seeding was that manure was ex- 
bausted — the Pa which came to no pore Mr. Davis. 
— uced —— —— of ne Rabi, which he said 
E 
y% tritiou 
al gan per ete were — after an excellent Tares in 
— and weighed 13 and 14 bs. each. He had some seed 
tle Tares 
ot “es consumed, the plants were pricked out 3 feet apart. 
OLN TURYEY, AND HARROLD. — At the annual 
hetat 2 this Society, 1 ei Hew ae Davis made the 
eae remarks On Draining and Thin Sowing: 
—.— Pi 85 bs the pehe 95 that it was pes to culti- 
vate lan dto a profitin best. f uupa ~ en hoe’ a secure 
i i ch to 
findin Weir way to others. In this county they had ia 
be ing ee proud of; thei r management of stock baa i BO 
superior. But he co uld not 8120 them the cay pcre tbo ae 
management of their arabie land, He self atl 
farmer and a land agent. As Trader he! Bor 7 1 je pee 
bility of working land to a profit, smothered up by vithan i 
overrun by game, divided into 1285 small inclosures, or, Mi 
ahi sed buildings for win utering stock and mak — manure. 
the impossibility fo atenant to live, 
| following a bad s and not availing himself o of the im- 
ecause e 
over an 
proved means oe were before him. bo whee 
on who saw them when first — 4 xs slg cae s all a, 
dat 
s | early, suid that 1 he liked sowing in October, he bad 
the same pr Ae 
not e would arth in the spring of year. The 
only land on cb he t y could 2 carly in this 
5 was wal cultivated d tithe, 
„„ he a et ce oul, do.” i 
res to the t system, eu o be 
a up, it was doubeft im ether i would be tafe 
o trust to it. He sowed from 6 to 8 peckes, but he 
found 4. the sof Lal not irae half of it, and when 
kon same ae — of — es to take e te upon the — — 
the land which Mr. Davis sowed with 3 pecks to the acre was 
3 which he * Cee Kohl oz Gas tote and in all 
lity it h be u be turned out 
of — believed if fi if — of tenure e the b the length 
eadth of the land, cultivation would on 3 at 
less a re ea: Still so long as they had ; 
ireworm ih auld snr do tó trust —7 8 acre. He —f 
‘i st afraid to use the term tenant right, teca 
rons entertained a a notion that tenants’ rights were —— de“ 
It w — > that s — that nar a 
What fe ptis to see carried whether by a ap be = 
| country or by a . right, he did not care how, kis that the 
| tenant should have fair compe nation for Per chat rare ments. 
par- 
| was well known that towards 17 years or £0, the te 
wou 
pure water; let the same experiment be * urbi 3 an 
the water would be s some ewha t stained ‘ane 
rainage 
those immense and 
£ Egypt, 700 feet in 
m 
buman Dinak 
3 ee, of the soil. If the soil is pee — 
an the 8 
nd } poe the earth pred Pg 
rer me prin i 
= — ab n m windows, that the warmth — 
om the room tho process of tthe er 
and | they pat water in pro vessels, £0 that ev. 
say to hims 1, if I do not take. a a lirle of this condition SAE 
shall be taxed for — orate one Pe hed nant 
3 Even with a “orn it would be neces- 
sary that the tenant should — a claim — — — 
3 e 1 a : 
ight a one-sided thin if 
— — sor seneg 
