THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
869 
m the failur 
ht cause. Law. 
N on * rig 
m, Presto 
1 ‘be the groundwork of all 
n the absence of an institution 
masters for village | n 
D 
tmsequence is, they care nothing a gs 
ing to prenian 2 but in their course of aes 
entirely neglect If a well trained master w 
ad in e oer backed by those of a uka 
f pan 
: e; an that masters are to 55 who 
Vill undertake such schools I am ube satisfied, 
— Among the reports in the Cem of the 
à ult, y your correspondent from East Lincolnshire 
— as part of his weekly 3 “ plough- 
Wheat.” In common with ma 
umunica 
m 7 
oughing, s 
e thereof | is 
If, he wou e numerous 
all farm 
Scotland pay per 
e 
eed 
g farmer 2 Fu 
some simple models | a 
the Gazette, 
ay a s 
of your journal a most important advantage. 
co 
æ Small Farms. Ma of those gee. strenuo Gee to 
popeta jie page 806), and the same arenan nts 
| might almost equal justice be based the 
English eee pes his 
— * A de the 
and mie e tenant over his labou 
oa And it is 
s | iia t it is equally unfair. to — p many do, 
English or rish farming with Scotch, as jak ore and 
general taxation of ng —. is 
either of the latter countries. 
inhabitants as a panas: of 
haps ne 
one-fifth that of these Bip 
England pays nearly five times as much as either iar 
land or Ireland. Wi i 
Mangold Wurzel, By wa priya ag BA rela- 
tive 4 y W of the Keren Red hal Valo G 
he 
seed of each in alternate . 2 1 apart, 
ced De positor.—1 ha 
and Scotland had till lately a complete monopoly of ‘the 
d cattle market of England, a is the 
f h 
Fo 
prosperity of t 
land, Increased population may lead t 
wastes, but it will bring with it all the ary that have 
a climate tha Sary 
as to tempt the sou 0 emigrat e to it; with 
a great extent hac land, a) a se anty population, s SO as 
to give room enough a e no 
of poor — to rew eae idlen A the 
A population, It Si ay, 80 industrious 
frugal 
that poe scanty numbers do not cause as it cherie 
would any gre at advance in wages (as in Am 
example), with a very intelligent class b both o 
ing in of | see 
a for j thi 
f te enants | I can wo: 
and la ndlords, possessing sufficient capital, 1 think it is 
extreme 
sible to vermin, and obtains 
This is of eminent advan- 
„tage to all grain, but especially to autumn-sown Whea eat, 
which is so liable to be thrown out by the winter’s 
The dibble I ei i ns, as 
well as grain, by putting in different sizes A = 
There are depo ee ‘pec "T fg or NA 
8 1 8 no ry e holes eee 
up o selv put in with the 
ales for e pog la ad will want a brush over with 
a bunch of thorns, or a few wound into a gate, or some- 
rost. 
and ¢ easy communication with a large country, greatly 
over burdened both with population and ta and 
raised to a great he hei St 
ith oatmeal as the gen 
little might do, with h „ease, the 
10 hours achine with six depositors, which, i it 
must be rem ed, is oy fe 2 one. There 
some on wheels which have 2 i 
person ma a little 
rably straight withou 
marks of the ama itse 
ease (8, pnd 2 ins. 
and eo ently prices 
of Trish into Scotlan d, 21 the natural in 
in petii 
h d, and suffered very gre 
mine penne gA though the 55 fortunately does not 
nly food of any class, yet is more or less eaten 
dee. es. d yet England had no subscription 
rself, for the capital of the large farm 
those losses which ger 857 
ands 
in. is caused partly by the premises, 
oe b of which render land divided into, sm mall 
ia chiefly. by the great competitions is for sma 1 
the cultiv. pos differs in no respect from that 15 large 
farms, except in being worse, n. all iy sagen often 
cultivate EEN own land, 1 t the co 
rg "Whe 1 ays a Melee of 
small farms and small proprietors in a parish, 3 
wo 
when 
all to be 
r op ge doing ee work for th 
al 
sa 
. three large farms, 2 as each sh small farmer with his amiy Fan 
the ey pa yy these 
ger farm 
uch avs time on Sis hands 
crpnose 
e | don 
be thought ese: pretty correctly by th 
tised w 722 beginning at a straight s N of the feld or or 
piece of land to be done 
desired 
deposition being a row, eep the machine 
reg or e7 right angles with the piers or field to be 
Having gone down the straight side, turn again, 
ight angles ` with its end oppo- 
mer 
oy 
[4,5 
m one t to 
nearer, it will of course require proporti more 
ed; and bot the season is advanced, as at 
the present hee perha 
r 9 inches I 
l 
think it na to m in a little more 
mber, and also in the 
ut mere 
into each hole, but would rather ser have 
What I have said 3 
Beans, &e., rg e 
to ps en 
succes: things specially 
land—well draining, ter at well 
destructi 
y 
and pays 50. 
8 
in the he neighhourhood 8d. a day, and th 
in n | judged from what was actually kept on one of 25 ne 
e. m the farmer pays 25s.; suppose t 
ame of the la 
tools, & 
C); ginea a e 
; is it not evident that he pa: 
fami 
ments and stock kept 
2 cart Reig a or Rie" colt, mileh cow, 
heifer, , 
12 sto 10 ad tumbri 4 
2 7 
„ 
of himself, wife, and children (with win 
an 
paid | 
the produce is 
one 
oe | protons aat Jioni the 
„the pey yment of labour, and not 
payment f that mai 
thrown into the ground 
E for the Ae 
also, pays him, in the only true 
that of food, most be on 
| oe Everything, also, 
—— unt of animal 
labour, and 
uantity 
Dec. 4. | the support 
such animals, 1 ea Tomoye : 
