THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



'' b **°i ^'ZriVe escaped the ravages of the fly, are 



" . - '.--■: ...;..: V -...:::■. .:,-■. ■■ v •: 



,, ,WL AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. - The 



N T DIA RUBBER 



jSJ^S 



Z\)t ^QrtcttUucai «£amte. 



SATURDAY, AUGUSTS, 1847. 



The influence of Legislation upon Agricui 



wneral scrutiny and observation. Rays of light 

 from many surrounding quarters, and from som 

 where it was least to be expected, have of late falle 

 ■rir and combinedly upon the subject, openin; 

 up different points to different observers, and exhi 

 biting to those who are in a position for the join 

 perception, at once the greatness of the object itsel 

 ud the variety of individual fields of view fror 



annot fairly divest the p 

 be up the hands of the 



»d fettered Tenancy might stand awhile hand in 

 tod, but they cannot stand separately : and this 

 ^oe round to apply no t to occupiers only, but to 



Ze ill t P0 - nt ' conc entrically as it were, to the 

 J* cone usion. We remember no similar instance 



^°of t 2 1 When L ° rd ^ EORGE Bentinck aTthe 



^icUon'or !?^ th<J 5 osition of an advocate of 

 «**o 1 abol,t, on of excise-duties as a sort of 

 5 sam^n — '? that of Tariff-reform ; as though 



^nfrootth - r8ary ' s chain,-a shaft, not only 

 *** ^crion. qU1V6r ° f Free " trade » but riot in the 

 ^oUTvan tt f l mpted COnfusion of confix has 



* « ft ieST gh0ut ^ ,ate e,ections : and 



^»rrfS CoSi D » ^ u eU " igh 0Ver ' the Same 

 f 6 " and the letS™ J observ able in the public 

 dacti on8 and \ f correspondents. The de- 



** »aie idl 1 " fer 1 e " ces begotten of Free trade, are 

 "«* Vce ^ T 1 Dish - though served up with the 

 B « amnn » i, C0B and the roa S h hantl s of Esau. 



eral Tenant *° CCUpier ' haV ° eac ' h M 

 •policy of that remnant of feuda 



>ader application of an equal Tru 



e to the fault or I 



referable to < 

 vidual has no < 

 of phenomena 



ng augmented pressui 



little sympathy with anv exigencies but tl 

 War,— the one grand exigency of feudal 



the true development of national wealth, I 

 as dead and blind as the mind ot Prejudice 



his Fief— am 

 not for the c 

 could produt 



precious system of Land 

 By a self-reproducing s; 



produce ' men capable of t 

 our real-property Lawyei 

 the shell whatever may 



and its successive owner 

 subsisted between Frank 

 ton. It can neither b< 



preternaturally inseparable 





expanse of acres which it is again not ms iiiierusi 

 to improve, nor in his power to part from. 



And thus upon millions of improvable English 

 acres is Labour defrauded, Tenantry degraded, and 



Railroads and Repudiative Stock, whose highest 

 supposable or visionary dividends will not pay one- 



What a tale is told by t 

 act, which coolly requires 

 centage to the Estate, as til 



BsSr" ] 



The progress of Trade hi 

 establishment of a regular C 



dited by the State ; so thi 

 wants and progress, each 6( 

 may be duly appreciated a 

 capable of the task? Is i 



Drainage Cor 



Tenant Right, Agricultural Statis 



lated subject of Town Sewerage. 



t"47« a ce°nt 



lappy to perceive how successfully the 



meeting at Londonderry. The report 

 her page indicates a very satisfactory 

 amongst exhibitors of stock and imple- 



i! have benefited by wit- 

 •esults of the skill which during the past 

 ie n concentrated from all parts of the 

 rdom in their neighbourhood, and which 



ts of lrol Hid will have benefited by 

 I sojourn in the better cultivated di~ 

 > north, the practice of Irish agriculture 





r.;-,,i 









wh.r 





ed fertile land. Before dr; 







ally extremely wet 



the «.-,ter oftentimes 





nst-r 





e surface, for M it waa 





t I. v, : 





rou n*the"lSi r '"iScf* 



h '■ 





YadJSaduuiidNt. 











■ 



. 



JftKlfttS 



yeai^sSse" 



by digging a deep 







s we then thought) all 







•'•' ' 







....l v., 















■ I!ip! V, 1 SU 



cessfuliy in irrigati 





distan 



ce. Fin 









o afterwards, we opened a 



drain nearly parallel 



«ith 



t, about 80 yards below. 



This drain waa dug 







at the bottom. This was a still further 











and carried off an 









at enough. We then occasionally in the 







. put in other 



drains 3 feet deep, 



f r i 







Sw^TSiJ^S 









•ZSZ12B- 



l put in 4 feet deep, the mains being 

 ing to circuit:.: 



ield now range from 30 to 60 feet. There i 



• ■•-... 



tie VmTdepth alongside, at the bottom of 



together, forming an aperture of G by 3 

 which was placed a!- 



3 of receiving tin- <' n- * 

 lV ,, rc cur through. The old main 



.hree-quarters of the aperture, although it 

 a steep declivity; th" "■" 





S'.SIj^'S 



