TUB AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



[Jan. 20, 



sdi'- visi-.nary chimera, they might t 





Jtion, and viewing with compla- 



;!,,. struck- join? on, as described by Lord 



ell The Lucei » Qnm, to be cut 



in with th«- flrass fur the roots in .-, ring. Other crops 



: ■ ■ -' ! ' ■ 

 ■ 





:mla continual struggle going on 



r.i i :!>■:!■■!=, 



d this great change. The principal of these are,the 



GF and other things, and h 

 k done, might be pursued 





Jr., Dec. 4. [The Turbir 





hundreds of " Charitable Institutions " 

 their origin to the feeling of a necessity foi 



people are held up by the best informed travellei 

 writers of Europe to universal execration— and 



many acre-, of cultivable land in that country perfectly 

 he thought that out of 130 farms, of which he h 



>: divide his farms, ani 



two words! They bj 



it will fail of any rea 

 have judged aright, that cry will gradually change into 

 e for a repeal of the entail system, and tl 



The cry of ££. 

 f "Tenant Right "ia to mt 

 any really useful end. If J 



best form of tiles. For clays, I think an oval flattened 



cular, as requiring no wider room, carrying more water, 



and standing firmer. The drain is made so that the 



y, and has to be pressed down to the 



cannot be forced out of its place by the earth thrown 



in. Tapering pipes, so that one end fits i. 



are good for sandy soils, only the passage inside the 



soles obviate this, the only difficulty is, 



machine cannot be made tapering, though 

 i y a machine made somewh | 



dune cut in them, turning 



tLu C ght aC the an an- m J^r e 



sir rrCj r — n . 



mon tile and sole cSSafc F- L ■ l==3 



would obviate many objections, and prevent all move- 

 ments. To be made so as to slip the tile over the sole 



in the drains and thereby obstructing the free 



nuity of the pipe. The coning the ends I think might 

 e cheaply effected either by an inner and outer concave 

 >ol, revolving on its axis, to which the end of the pipes 



jitable for forming the cone by cutting away the clay, 







Farmers' Clubs. 



Newcastle, Dec. 2, 1848.— Mr. T. L. Colbeck, of 

 East Denton, read a paper on the question, What has 







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