586 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
** The | they are —— for carrying heavy weights. 
отвезу” * | When 507 00/. ean be- realise 
e breeder's purpose to 
h sums as 25/, the 
scences show im t 
, the "Water are 
apology 
the attention ^e our rea 
ing out the rarity of € "saddl 
, as Per in the display made at the various Амон 
and the effect of this on the cavalry, observing | at 
ry 20 stone 
fe then w 
purposes she is kept 
unately lame 
to the stud ; and 
as his choice between tw 
um almost alone the icio distriets supply— 
ed h a cart 
es, on t 
— ‘attention — 
hat are run, 
at w orses are brought 
em which young to the evil arising qus: allowing the 
tances to be curtailed f en's Plates, he 
bestow Som 
15 110 the ity early 19904 * of a tall, leg eggy Clevelan d AA ; 2. as for 
t to the post. |а 
1 м һан nter and he sew as a hack, the ve per 
eo 
but he can 
nately агама and sold for good on? whilst ‘the 
females are also doing their parts 
instead of being devoted to the 57 
roughebred and the cart stallion which а 
frequently ann in n fact, they often travel доша 
the e gens гы 
nagerie 
It is э С 
S 
e+ 
al bounties: would bring such horses for- 
d as would be capable of contending in “such 
orses throughout the country. In order to obtain 
horses, the writer advises that we sħould Len 
ho o whose merits he de- 
rer lie ary pig, the one to attract = cei on 
and the other to take care of the pen The 
8 
аск Ki xri that it would im cart horse, hi own proper Laren P often 
sible to produce horses with agre action and | called upon to exercise his powers where his better- 
igh breeding, yet capable of carrying such weights bred companion has sweated himself in vain. Some- 
as 20 stone; but th done, he says, es, however, the cart we is put to light mares, 
the aid of a c with a lower but stronger breed | to 1mpro size 0 ffspring ; and the blood 
of horses, thus producing the finest сам: r 0 ms e фета? for the purpose of imparting 
in th ld. Our author, however, fall vity, the result being (very 
rt at | m 
переко іп p latter instance) that we BRUN; nr 
d ith blood horse's legs ; 
s 
о m 
e 
does 
English cart or the heavy Flanders 
not say — he энти ek for mares ог for ow. 
gst. — he leave 
ers "ens althou 
d union, 
in thes 
— he devote 
were серу but not m 
analogy n 
reeding of we animals, such as sheep 
n and o п almost m care is pr d in the 
selection of both sex The best of each are 
eserved for breeding танбы: іп tiis horse this is 
e! atit entirely neglected. The too Nasen custom 
of yug sr amie every half-bred horse indiscri- 
r either his merits or demerits can 
useful m 
e princi 
зей йн, бик. d those 
in bree iion; an 
И 8 4 7 Rai of keeping every u 
active work so long as her limbs are clean and 
sound, and her constitution in a vigorous condition, 
are, in our opinion, M pn. — of the dete- 
the result. great evi complained of rioration of our rse; a reversal of this 
is the Rarer of procuring good saddle horses system must be "m атса n. in vincla 5 
r- abre nimals w these views, we 
, Such a n | plan proposed as Wit 
T grown ought not to be less ‘than n) to 16 hands reserve for a fut e mt iele some practical sugges- |ì 
high, and furnis FLY proporti | tion 
to this height. Now, sure ely ui bain e à breed 
we sh 0 rab horses—we 
anded: as they are M conj is than 
‘would fall. «найр Short, and fail i in producing 
A 
Wl 
rnished in e ons by way of remedy for the growing evil to which 
this writer has so properly called attention. А OLS: 
Taere is but - забур which is generally 
owed to regulate t 
prepared, perhaps and —the 
under shatter are P ed Mba Hütéred = their manure is 
eames ou " to dusk it, fov may be pr 
T of even 
w pounds ing 
ard servitude, e 
n | selves 
e 
ording the best 7 proof that the en 
tehed. 
mare in 
? 
kare for hs foots sii 
Fiche 
ent has n 
тағ: himself of the vi isl of his s su 
n by going in amongst them from bu ra 
laing; ; jm hence it yong a that tee 
spection principle might often be dopted y 
rm buildings no lus 
i 
superintendent in a 
ral situation, 
operations to be 
— cireularly ar 
the 
estead, thus sparing | the loss of Г 
colsequent on = need of pae. to enter ech gat- | 
tieilar buildi 
4 farm du on the Ve gare pelea 
е supposed to be the half o circle of, say 400 
i the exterior mc line чы 
halicircle being partly enclos ed by the ends of fir 
m 40 feet in Tor of a greater 
bed spaces, thongh no mor 
would of course . 
radiating from en central poi 
or less open, or gl 
m 
з these ` 3 and possess ] 
ualifications required for a hack, 
uch as gad, iod, deep, bli ee Moa di: flat legs with the t on pm 
rank’ AH ith the proper t is econo 
a t oblig quity. The evil to which. attention is pareria —— buildings € ial] 
carrie several 
principle which has hitherto regulated the arrange- 
remedy ;. but, before stating our views on АН bind of them 
—— cb tie oh the sake of elucidation, glance t there are two essential principles which ou 
зган to be ra i in mi One undoubtedly is the need 
еб of | of economising labour—the other is the need of 
m ing it. In a plan put forth some years 
by nt TORRINGTON jiis latter principle 
» Published by T. Hatchard. — TN on; еы 
lar sequ and |! 
t сре ons, bingeing the o one upo ex 1 other, s "the 
ich they are severally carried on are | V 
ought ti ns carryi g on at a di 
i cra du 
isolation of farm yard 
8 eden) aner 
According to Sir S 
not а limited to the sa os d; 
0 atory is ed a 
2 from which views 5 0 
in istan pesi 
