-~ 
10 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
[January 3, 1857, 
wagon wagon that blocks up a remote country lane is ina | mone care re to, get several thousand “pounds of our 
nuisance, but what is the da it occasions in a 
iment woul Let us i gets what truth this speech conveys. 
—The origin _ Parlia orm ld, grant was 600 
It is now 40 
Out of thi is th 
e| po 
acres to o 
very anso which the term embraces. 
joro ia of transfer is the only channel by which 
our town-collected wealth can be poured into th 
rving for will antiquate by 
metas the sickly cit suicidal folly of men ashamed 
to sell bat are not ashamed to borrow. It will render | 
more d more wise the clauses Of Entails 
and Settlements for the known and obvious advan- 
tage of the aa of the trust, as well as the good 
of hia comm 
a what will it do for the Tenant Farmer ? 
The tt and very best thing it could do would be to 
make him the owner of the land he tills! The idea 
era receive 
fees or salaries varyin 
out of the 1000 alluded to by Mr. SEYMER, 90 
work gratuitously, and we cannot permit the in- 
justice done to them by him to go forth unaccom- 
panied by this comment. 
pae Sant ECONOMY OF FOOD 
A cat M-YARD MANURE. 
THERE me ae Papers recentl ublished b 
is beginning to sound monstrous! In 1786 (only | pr, Voelcker, ae pte enor e a ch witste N the i he Agric a 
seventy years ago) says a recent visitor of this | tural College, to which I desire to call the attention of al WAS I 
country,* “the soil of England was ow 
ned hee 0,000 
in, or individual proprietors—in 1822 b 
of them. Twoo 
! Broad estates to find room in this narrow 
l 
rl a motes dhe: th and West 
and Agricu tral Jou one, * On the 
ESSE 
No. 4 was a heap of well rotted dung poarre against a 
farmers who may met have had the advantage of.a perusal | ` 
30,000 
island !— and these large domains are growing 
of Englan e 
Agricultural oe Commercial value i, Artificial Manures, 
and on y ulteratio on the other, “On t val 
b th t Chemistry o F hese have been publishe 
best stat atten) aenema A hard was c Mo se apy read The em e jón the Cothpanition: of Farm- 
e, e,” 
— that the ee of those ery farmed their |Y8"? Man appeared in the last number of the 
jabr of the Re pe Agricultural Societ, 
was greater than of those wh b farabi the ape Agricaltural an oy eee 
hand of others, and made up more than a seventh of | value of heat Mannres” KEREN, 
the whole population. constituents of such manures mae a cro a papi Pe h | have pt -e pps of oe means I have 
What has produced in so short a Ere: the extraor- | they are most beneficially applied; the real ba rigenege In with nett, of Clitheroe, F 
dinary co Hg change that we now behold? a | value of them ot the e price it may be le ago ne parch ed eight whe 
change £ t, yet so unnoticed oat nelle allenged wer our w ile gett the adulterations | polled Galloways from lot = ee were i. 
in its progress that a needs but small calculation to | which may prevail and analia for ae protection | 1" 4 m » Nine weeks alter this they 
determine h hena that iniquit PIE ve 
e current rate, we sha 
arrive reat EtA Heptare chy ! and fo 
t men will only tie themselves 
aper “ On ‘the Chemistry of Food,” a title not 
an encumbrance that 
to a hirling’ 8 toasted in it, unless like a Duke they 
can wall a county round ? 
Wsi inviting to farmers, and which I should rather have 
titled “Ùn the Kesin my of Food,” and that “ On 
arm-yard Man I venture to state, after the 
perus: aof nearly all eat a been written on agriculture 
Is it rally to come to this, that the agricultural 
status of Rugiand %4 to fia catet of Dukes enan to the ae j k y indo years, ag ng the =e art scanssarh a 
TS Do the n who rejoice in this latter tributions to agricultural awh whieh, have appeared 
name, and delight to ative in houses kepti in sia by within thas peri ese essays the | ? 
other men, and to men’s es, ever hands of every e and be = pon ie 
really give a thou what is going on? or is With respect to the aid On the sy of Food,” ap 
tt goi the 
agreeable shelter of “ of“ etting under a good landlord” | ‘it is sufficient 
so fascina my i | explai 
England into a few mt Fiefs, and its cultivation | pg used rm 
d ch these are nh oms 
sus it teaches 
effectually hioin lish we special object of ice 
icultural | ro at = lea st cost; W hte seal be t 
world feeding of y 
pa fle 
The blindness = deadness ps pe agri 
world to the matter (and the of the 
-a 
oo 
how to lay out our money 
ard manure would, at first 
ts 
i mportance 
nutrition, in star i the soluble from 
bye the 
|in vegetable 
because Narorzon in trying fide? Ts one wais and the losses xposure to 
it), 
ar doi diea fell on the other 
ere no middle course for a wise nation to purs 
Bataan S da. thet ak ? et f Dr. Voelcker’s is especially 
a gt Mis aan c ops up aa pang a chess 7 pr to the farrier ewes mere perusal, but cet 
k is dually Ging land out of Commerce evidence, 
the 
ons 0 
oretical character and contai th 
e truth is that the FR etda is ae understoo thor an individual, =e he alpi 
I ld n 
PoP of, It is nobody’s busi b a bi <P 
aae else “+ ssh ed with 
sateaaie ef yses, and the pages 
Ta RAE | months’ — rsa fo 
ona See ue 
has become 
< 
res—the result of m 
iid the a is given 
nly the ioie which are 
em. resu 
è tle” | evid Mihei, the analyses an ded as the 
P hoe Š evi dences on — ra results are founded for pe use 
aid neers) — Lwe Sus- of those disposed to examine the subject 
record. 
co that all could read—* What 3 — 
the land of England regia had 
ear the Journal of our Society is — seen b 
proportion of the agricultural co 
briefly two 
— Why it is, 
- $ 
= m Al all the land is cultiyated by Tenant thos 
Pe , I trus 
j i zhi interesti 
, to ca ter study it x she aT y tly 
can be n ved 
Ir. Ker y 
able of sgl atatistics, 
Th Oe oelcker selected ea a heap ot fresh made 
ore rses, ~ „pigs, ma a oa, 
houimid Eee i three parce Is consisting a two cart-loads each. 
e 
Suesged in calleting the Scotch stalin, but they , vert] the wen at k wets ral a md as oiner 
der an open 
beei r. No. 
ws a Nae in an open about the 
in farm- 
* Emerson, “ English Traits.” 
t DAVENANT, Kixo. | same ‘hha “tn t is usually 
; in a word, the economy fas 
our of Phi sagen es numerous Nee 
man 
animal is 
fo the 
ok or supply of 
+ Th 
> 4 lbs. 
wall under the same circumstances a as N 
No, 3, being the usual nm of eri DAES 
as developed at the conclusion of the basic rim 
The ini in hinar of the dry m 
water, was 42 per cent, 
lising matters were wasted a 
| In fine, the real treneren constituents rapidly dimi- 
nished, so agi a very small proportion of fertilising 
matter remain 
Dr. Vesleker states that the drainings from dung- 
ed to rains are apami eras _valuable than 
the urine of our animals, as ing a much larger 
i. of “go ney of lim 
e hoped we stellt 
gravy jelt down d 
pools. These 
e no more of this fine 
itches or permitted to pollute our 
se experiments show much truth there 
ighbour cart- 
—“ There pe kpe: 7 
i g onveyinz 
oul has departed n 
y fro "Charles 
Lawrence, js aa a tinue 
TREATMENT OF PLEURO-PNEUMONIA. 
In the Gaze 
iculars of m m neumonia. I now 
proceed to explain the symptoms and appearances which 
used.. 
to ae or eight parties 
o NAdo at a distance ‘fro om each other, were also 
“Gack g the disease in the same an and with the 
ga resu 
respira impeded, by which some pin k 
of the Cont ron vant which slowly and impercep- 
tibly eed until the symptoms I have described a 
attract atte 
Cattle pati Treland are more subject to this come 
laint than others b n board haser 
ordinary w 
Å 4 
a 
3 
rmth, e turn 4 
—_* in tho month of yia whieh in "the present pes 
was unusually wet and changeable; the pleuro ro has 
prevailed amongst them since July. When attention is 
to this illness, the feeder states that 
e 
anes Pan and of ere 
to cause a sudden i Pel steer "of the ne 
cow's appetite is gone, and her yield as milk dim 
to one-half of what she gave 12 hours before. d 
lying the ear to the side of the animal yow 
ure 
ne he nicl of blood 
is pro mi es exert her organs of resp! a 
the necessary air, whilst the blood at z 
the same timeis in an impure state. At this stage 
eth. relief seems requisite to prevent wa i 
age from over-exertion ; with this 0 Oe ae 
e organic matters were reduce m 41 
> thei ere kes, Se matters from 25 te to = per cen 
ep a m ae ge as See ced from —_ to 51 
the n 59 per 
rotted ee) ae ‘against a n and e 
for 12 mont ‘Ibs, ofp tabi mente: matter, p! 
first, only n l remained : sn 6 from 23 Ibs. of soluble mineral thie 
only 10 r ace only of the free proceso 75 in th the 
heap hae Revi ry oe the end of the experiments, = nearly all 
ammonia in the form o Sias as lost, Dr. Voe eleker o 
that our farm-yard manu Ya epa ar the most valuable of i 
bp ree alit = elementa essential to the successful culti 
