THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



and his - * i family. The most respectable p 





this, in the loni 



..rnpy ; an.l this, in tin- 1.,.,- run, 



described r*f t "ther extraor- 



afag them with the accounts 



i !ie legal func- 



no means looks on " 



with disapprobation 

 suggest any remedy 



*sr*j 



caused by a superabundant crop this year ? No, we have | Swede crop by means of 

 not more than an average crop. Is it caused by very 2\ cwt. superphosphate of 



- 



large importations from abroad, or large stocks in th 

 ■ ' ' as I Nothing of the kind. Then wha 

 price I Simply rumour, which destroy 



',:::: r 



ard off the effect of Hies 

 ing the public mind with regard to the pre- 





int- purpose | 



- ■ 





■ 



crops which were invariably produced, < 

 any bad result. Good hay, Peas, and sometimes oil- 



to the land being unhealthy for sheep, perhaps from being 

 wet naturally, superadded to a wet season. W. C. S.] 



Prac ire v:ith Science. — The question of high farming 

 versus low farming has been mooted in the "New 

 Husbandry," page 38. It is there shown that whilst 

 the one impoverishes the land, and along with it both 

 landlord and tenant ; the other, if properly applied, will 

 enrich all three. The great fault in the letting of land 



ding, yet there is no question this may be greatly 

 roved by education and study. It is this which 



it whoever it may be, he shall clearly under- Briscoe, E 



md the place obtained through his influence, -' '"• «*& regard to breeding j the case 



■ farm, I may remark that I has kep 

 ver. This position of affair- ! - -uffice of them- 



■ - 



With our northern neighbours (he C 



preceded the proper cultivation of the soil. Wit 



has kept the latter in a backward state. But 







-...-ming projects, and that agri- 



Mr. Coke of Norfoll 



I y many per- i 



nand. In the present low state of farming produce, 



SMbr. injurious to the landlord, tenant, and labourer. If a 



p your perusal make-shift system is pursued on an estate, if no fore- 



■■-: - -, 



mm and Purbeek Labourers' I 

 Wareham, on the 10th of ] late, and the owner see his land retrograding in value, 



': '■ 



ru'..' N..wh,. l. :i .l cultiv^l progressively improved, an 



.„r sp n it 3 en . ■ - - which is most gratifying t< 



heart will be effected by it— he will place tuose ae- 

 >y never saw such a beautiful j pendent on him in easy and prosperous circumstances,. 



his land. To the labourer, high farming must 



tly'u creased, compared with what it would be if it 

 urins the first nUbt n ^ P'an of grazing. But if this 





put 35 sheep, ne 

 leath. V He tfaragJ 



a , ,, ril _.) • |, , r . r , , orJm-ly we see in Mr. CaL 



Skx* 



I upon them, and were all We now come to the practical part of low farming. 



be suae waj nI 



i a sort of brown pn knowledge, the skill, 



'%-z, 





Home Correspondence. 



; ^ated by a redon- 

 liaJMa oe land dry that 



'■' ",. . ■ • • .;■. ■ •■■.'.'■'■■ •' ■■ ■■• - ■•' • ■ ' -'' ; ' ; - 



::, clods get 



P*» to rule so low ? 

 Wheat in the bands of 



