1847-] 



THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



^rRBlDGE a*d HEALY beg respectfully to in- 

 B form the Public tb **£%£ e g?^ ?^^?*£ 



WS 



Clic aflrtrulttiral ©ajm*. 



SATURD AY. AUGU ST 1, 1847. 



- . .: ' ^ : ■■.■■■■:.;■■: ^ 



be relative standing of 



Artificial akd Farm- 





nably a subject of great 



cultural importance. 









werebas 



ed on principles opposed 



jsc which justify that of the other. 





s do not supply all the 







i i'ucv. 1 arm-yarc 



dung does not restore 



nil! ill that the crops have removed from it, 







h it would otherwise si 



stain. This is the whole 



-and one easily learn 



s from it the real merits 



g«nic part ot the plant ; 

 of the soil; but so far s 



t is generally sold off the 



puic portions of the grain, and in the bones of 

 £ *tock which he has sold. How shall this defi- 

 / U 'C\ be made up ? the lost substance must be 

 ported somehow, or the soil must suffer.* 

 some farmers import food for stock— oilcake, 



n at supplementing 1 

 »re natural supplies, 

 rks, then, illustrate- 

 which Professor \ 



l-yard and artificial 



d?l,„ , nt T n S the fertility of the soil, and 

 saoDlpm "" L the sub °rdinate office of merely 



S P rth e " t! ° g dencienci <* of the former-con- 

 theirn.lt?! m re f eronce tQ the growth of a crop, and 



e^^To^roJbXwWteX 



Cl'r 1 ;f n n me ' m *? be of the'highwt value— the 

 X WeU man «factured, is all important, while 

 »y th 8 fn n,ay -i )e a J mere vehicle for r og«ery. We 



b(lt there quest / on to be decided by the analyst ; 



e «eem k .-?" , no doubt to which the greater 



^ .J» due > when_we__refer to the offices _the_y 



mp^ 1 "! tniMter Inft'e u^"' di88ol T es out of ,helan ^ 



have respectivelv to perf<rm. The economical, 

 manufacture and application of home manures, as the ! 

 cheapest method of maintaining the? fertility of our 



whole range of farm practice. And while we can- 

 have been taken as applying to this instead of the 

 other aspect of this subject, we sincerely regret 

 that they should have been regarded as conveying 

 a personal reflection, for which most certainly they 



Our object was simply to oppose the feeling in 

 favour of old practice, which Mr. Ways inadvertent 

 compliment to it had excited. His observation was 

 no doubt intended, as indeed he has himself ex- 



'ernl' Real Property, occasioned 



Repairs, Agency, and o 



and Family Settle. 

 quen'Iy stifle in it 



England is held on J 



:' property in l.n-1 fi 



I to a deeper-seated 



nd serious magnitude. 1-- • 

 iole community, and it calls aloud for remedy 

 • is it among smaller proprietors only, as many 

 uppose, ' 



applications to the Inclosi 

 Government advances under the Drainage Act have 

 opened a most surprising and unexpected evident e 

 of its widely latent extent. Indeed, a little consi- 

 deration Blight have easily led to the readiest belief 



mind how surely, if not increasingly, the responsibi- 

 lities and incumbrance of landed property arc in- 

 creased with every acre of its extent. Under what 

 may be almost called u law of Nature, property in 

 land has the faculty of making its own burthen. In 



. - - 



the outlay on permanent im- 



9 banker's or whether h 



The Tenth Annual Meeting of the Yo;;k 

 lGRICULTI-kai. Society was held on Wedn 

 L .t at Scarborough. Coming a> this meeting d 



a seeming disadvt 



>r attending, durit 



oeedings of the Society at Sc; 



:arborough, and wit- 



uild upon novelty a 



tee, although it is easy t 



