THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



' • '•". "-•.-: ■■■-■■■■■ -■■'•■ : ""' '. 



Sfessa: 



ijwrahow-yards, as encouraging a wa 

 imwis, and a waut of the food of man. 

 And if that premature and over- feed 



■,■..'...■ -'.. ••■;:. 



- 



*£r imt Jud ^ eS are selected > in the contempt 



JjMnj, frame aud quali'ty'a™ t enough, S 

 *Meshy condition of the animal presented to you 





; 



■ -au.h 



IJfc^the X th b o ted an!l 



S^ I ^*^ no te a u u ? h ; ll ^ i f TO ° 1 * ^Sy 



^^ *moSj Uc t ° r ^ )selfCt0 suspect "tha^you 



- 

 rSion^r t of the i 



tirely at variance with the Theories on Agriculture 

 which j on di.sH minate ; I veiling, instead of increasing, 

 as it does, the production of the animal, and increasing, 

 it the same time, instead of lessening, the cost of its 



system which debars the professional farmer, who has 

 too much good sense, and too htd< Miptrlluou- ct-di for 

 the indulgence of extravagance aud absurdity, from any 



-•-■• >ce '! piv'akh, <; «>i t!i, p prizes which ^ u wv.fess 



remedy of the evil I complain of, than 



you, to belo 



ig to the 



exception! and not to 



he rule ;— 













the presence of an un 





purely arti 

















fr m : 



power of competition 



• 



would go further,— 









*uch a 













»r%, I am 

















preferable 





should be excluded 







r .vi ,,:- 











feetion of the animal fo 





. 





ful purposes, should b 





on the farm 



r i iuio. 





■ 



r resolves to effect it 



of your show-yards becoming subservient instead of, as 

 they now are, obstructive to the objects you profess a 

 wish to promote by them, and so rule it, that your 



Fau-kes, Farnley, Mar 



] rcr::.:vtr;;:\ 



inder a misplaced confidence i; 

 it, "a Landlord 

 :eded all through . 



idenceiaeii 



u-mer judge for himself as to ■ ■ ■.: . . !., . 

 f his family, and if the landlord will not 



Lease*.— I think a "Tenant and Landowner's?' 

 letter on this subject is one of the best that ever ap- 

 peared in your Paper ; but with your pc-rmL-j-ion I will 

 add a few lines. Leases on farms ave generally u ?cless. 



heaUhy^and dry it i 

 if the times coi 



\X.::i 



the gentleman who granted a lease to put 

 order for a new tenant, m i 



long and great aite useless to 



to am a tenant and a small 



landed proprietor, and I strongly advise farmers alwaya 



a lease. Agents of gentlemen are generally men of 



- 



e present high pri 



would, I think, be usefu 



perienee of some 





that valuable root. My farm 





. 



subsoil, on the four cou 



■ 





■rots, and choose 



the lightest and worst 1 













Carrots ; the latter co 



VL 13*. per acre. 



I get the land as clean 









per acre, cr 30 bushels 











- 



careful to bury the seed v 









j 20*., add ] ■ - - ' 



n I have grown more than 





iay or other roots. They 



The Carrot thrives 



of leases— (Jour. Ag. See., voLj 

 to 'purchase and pay for 4,000 acres of land, withot 

 taking some title deeds for security I and it not, "o- 

 f^me C rs tn to°lay e out theiTcapital on their farms of 40 



-.; / ; 

 . ■ . . : ■<■■ '^ 



• : 



