54. 
1186 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. T A 10, 1864. — 
— Áá— 
geri. Rea aaa WE HM quu A 
bpm though somewhat stultified by the terms | of a practical m man who has been labouring all his | busine S He spoke also of the need of agricultura R i j 
of the motion in which it ultimately issued, cannot | life at aed ue education education and of good middle-class schools. ity / 
ne 
fai to awaken the Society to one great power for| We Jad to add that ad Mr. SANDERSON, of Westminster, pronouneed aa 
good which it possesses, and which it has hitherto | Mr. Aana aing down, Mr. Moore not ely an eloquent discourse, in rather too grandiose + 
neglected. And it will MÀ r direct attention | vindicated he fewest posible words, | & style, however, for the taste of the meeting, 1 
to the position of the Roy Agricultural College, | his* own CAUTE kasii career benevo curity for capital only by a well 
and to that noe of ‘this "institution with which | and successful effort for the real educ ation | drawn ^ se.—Mr. WirsoN referred to insufficient 
the Society has bee of his neighbours of all classes, but firm y asserte d of the existing appliances at the disposal of 
The edueation m the laboufek, - no less than of| the right of in "uda member s to "ofr their the Parmar a as really at the bottom of the inade- 
o by th à | sug tions quate re ir S whioh are complained of. And if, 
r. MOORE, of Coleshill, who delivered by far the | which really appea ared to be pe di j^ ths on the o a man wish 
most practical and business-like speech of the dogmatic condemnation with which Mr. ACLAND, | pr rofit by diminish ing his expenditure, that was to 
orning, referred to the manner in which the over |@8 a member of the Council, had om sn be done by la: ing down arable land to Grass, and by 
education, or‘rather, tant se +, | followed his wise and practical suggest tio subs stitutions steam-power for that of hand labour, 
—Mr WELL suggeste that one reason. why 
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inadequate education given in our r parish doti is - We ‘need hardi that a gloo yk 
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creating a general prejudice amongst tenan t| been" cast over othe HOTS fm ai, * pee : 
^ proceedings by the h 
bird s egeo n prosent p ape en Eier of untimely death of Mr. Joun FOWLER. An accident At as they n TS duty by the sep 
ir our IY d pre Moie not ntly ae T Vieni in | in the hunting field had laid him on his bed for Sq of toris 
à : ir red L chil d M ii "paid San to t Mo ene t; but the broken limb was healing Kien ope d nly is 
: tis actorily, On Friday of last week, Los 
"Me ACLAND followed, and with what certainly Exc of tetanus appeared ed, and he on that of the ogo to take c xin ue 
to us excessive a ai Mod denounced | Sunday. He <a wer years of age. There i a at ques gene go to 
le of education (which Mr. Moore had just 4 no company of farmers in t d kingde m who hav Mr. Dat Of BEDV. di Sebel the. discussion with 
.he declared to not more or less takin i interest of late years in his Sr E telling dress- INET 
mere effort to make the child of the labourer 1 career, and his loss REA a Sonal feeling of | ore causes he failar n "E rmer Gane 
b than hi h sympathy and vA It will be seen that] remove, We "ari helplessly liable to disease, 
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the Society would never sanction so degrading an | reference was ma t at the qe meeting of | bad Ed aa ET 
idea as that. The object sts Ed ie declared, | the Royal Agricultural Society discuss these points ; Tat. tines im bof gu 
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f him. An ng| MR. ALDERMAN Mzcür's discursive paper, read | * : i 
r this was really the vox iL pex Farmers' dn and reported in|, p 
influence abridged form in another page, was fo llowe teing money in thei 
of the class —— v above the — aa by an equally discursive y mak As the end Feat's proceedings. st. Let there be goo la 
| ildi i of the 
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from degenerating into a mere ma inery for had ren deal to MEM n Ses wage and other 
ki d hed d ditch d ent ners | topic ch really had no hat to t 
y d E EM m Crue | qe uestion of farm profits whi ry was nominally under | ^2 lsr8 
And all this was addressed to the Agricultural _ — Th of mm ne Met Mies ra praises 4th. 
Bose ety! M 2 aa a aon ^ ced the |w d of security for! Tieni capital (^ o man, either tne à Har and una po 5th, said 
Nee ohavation of the ogantey; would p will obtain the use of capital Urol beue expendnage TOME 
babl ni fe Mi ion ia the He ret kaaa mut ae for forming or any o other purpose unless he offers leat e eod bone o rp E 
diu Di bere witli those of the body in whi gh for pot onr los (“* never it arty to any but a es me hon : the ae which this bit of good 
certain cial p i they Ir united, m [eco m iae good y to any sense and ood humour produced I had subsided, the 
Lei fon also, fo -— wk ota i ~ | are the worthy Alderman's recomm: endation s if | the | © di 
t iseussion by a reference to splenic apoplexy am and 
other diseases which have lately been — 
or ramen g eie profits of graziers and far 
in his own neighbourhood. 
EN 
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noteqpttslnd vin clequtessonmnd ion P) 
x alisation of rates and taxes— 
Wh ot] det rà reduce the number of hares and 
aig hr Mes dire pe " LM AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION. — 
Epmonps, of Rugby, declared that many of the I HAVE lately seen a Pamphlet ou the "edi o 
life at hom “each one within the | 5: 9m LE hA A which the attention of the Council iba e Royal a- 
duo cas iR ia is | difficulties in the way of the farmer to which Mr. culturel Society has been calle - y, theg 
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in in fact, as ves excited = was nawittin gly he pie bl rt a the eincation of youth intending to | become peac aud W 
condemnin n Mr. Moore. But, indeed, the f di - ‘The which, y ves ordingly, y written and 
fitness Mr c i of tho | 49 90 m PN en LISOUSSION, e | printed for the enlightenment of the Council on that $1. 
main point for the farmer’s consideration is that | subject. There is, however, a very small portion of a 
. kes or far fi 
mE Aa hich h d, b Mee ur 
nature of the d ieh he Lore “ dar partnership E ith another, A retains the rfo of the duty imposed on = Society by < 
f $ of stocking it with an indefinite astitit of t their ‘Charter, the main scope of it, on the contrary, 
Ee ve he OE it were the | wn lives q y could soeur to.lave ‘been i press on the Council 
tec er : y OE ELCKER referred to ee question of town 
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wildness of the vie e ex SpA gro 
it, may be explained in this way pasen succulent plant, the worse is its quality as 003. Y persi mg say that the agricultural whippers-in will 
ser ai all, a man's conduct of affairs and his ex He believ Ven Ren iom sands are the Bi ac jands do wisely in keeping the Council to their text in their 
: i rogardin to i rieh pastu s ang Charter, and not allow es. to EUR off into the | | 
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pim ETE 1, as they have abundantly 
my my: subjects ieri m cl a sali a good manu Tor Math hat | years. ivory moving about amon ose classes, 
conduct €— 3 them. does _ — bear Ware - cla: qt His experience, and that |è at this time of day; t be — aware that the 
We may t s the issue ot | of aud y a ‘coll Ph vs 'C LEMAN, | 20° essity of any public agitation n reference to their — 
| p tir oy t e pir i essor n >| educa tion is a mere delusion, insane as they con- — 
to which rwr inire RA mie to listen on Thu i | has ben utir rely of Ba irem ri » the meeting into stitute the class par excellence that has made, hus 
latc Shateven Nr. s 1 AME ee = y be Ss voi discussion of the currency qi question, and of the asosni E sach hr grater e. A Dlicable t to us 
nro g the Agrieultu their | vay in which excessive Tabor tetiodh of : their sevi 3 eral mit than any 
comparative eut humble Bos of making labourers during low prices damage the British Tisia other class. 
better han armers better agricul- | He quoted the case of a merchant who, during the| Schools abound suited to every — : vex he 
rists, karing. the director pert cise of “the | troublous times of the Danish war, had ordered kind, of. 
the 
| upon 
el Kel a pores arceri what remedy he pr rediere 
reverting to : 
nario etpuisi. sewage question, spoke o e way they adopt in general ma a may be defective may be assumed. 
the zed tia the groat Milan ot utilising the col contents of cesspools. | There are to be found incompetent instructors in 
—Mr. JA AMES Howakrp, | d, brought ! back | | every department et the service c the public; the 
the be lett to the discrimination 
- that M. Hr, pit on d oer a generan am the ds | of parents. 
the experi l every other| It is only after leaving such schools that the future 
