It will never answer to keep an idle team to pl ay wi bh] 
a steam plough. Each has its proper province, tnd it 
is ae judicious use of eac ^ which end the differ- 
etween success and the want arm is | 
_ by 
the te 
t had tosay if he paid proper attenti 
| the cese of a farm. 
arose was, that at 
pon ^ by 
wher 
ran he 
hand, at "the increased wages of the day, 
Va Tulloghe er he was 
THE eres CHRONICLE AND im snis GAZETTE. 
5 
[OCTOBER 22, 1864, 
n to 
The way that difference 
was obliged to eut the 
lig 
3 
able to gt it dote by 
| injurious 
subsoiled 
toit. Now as to the application of 
ght land. Beier have completed my work 
strong land I , have 
pe [1 
was tn 
c; I hay 
of it. My 
chiefly | nan va uisi implements either 
" a plo h bei eing rarely u sed; and 
be 
ote td 
js probably found cast into some dit 
Br 1 ner far and a diminished _la 
eigion 
ne 
Far ccounts he admitted were a "very gront 
1 | help, but its was Uum ** bosh 
unts, 
or could keep a 
and think among egere about t 
achin 
er sys sion r p^" 
conviction that 
round, of ci 
my t 
the tám kultivita i oa all vay or profit than they - E present. 
proper « ci ircumstane ces innt i 
ante lands, under in good | g 
and I 
ex pe ases, but 
tal 
all, as s tenant. farmers, Imi 
] 
5 
arefully staked out iov portions of the field tha 
to say every farmer should 
a 
as from experience - — o 
lave e oth 
of the field having been worked by the h orse plong 
a book-keeper 
Bet he : 
the 
their farms when the ey e t 
&c., and 
ere re 
a heavy item in t 
3 the 
out of it a 
uh st heartily that all 
in in its quera aay Py ihe Pars? they richly 
as nu 
they did not, it was all er a fault. 
if 
ch 
ess 
. F. W. Bignell, Loughton 
Societis. 
that 
a 
themselves a the means by wh 
ved and put to the AME of the tenant, sé 
w with horses; Iwilladmit that during the last t dry summer ^ 
dee 
have i inv variably found that the root crop is very muc 
he contrast between 
cultivation and shallo 
wetter 
sba 
was Bond pets in < dt autumn, aid the pel i 
ie winter. On that field I g 
Barley I ever saw grown in Holkham 
at this time I have got the ver 
hey ; had no one to blam e but themselves. All these j got t best 
Re se exceptin inquefoin, t have 
his mind in the par lam so satisfied with the Pure of d 
alshow was Obviously. much 
GowaAN.—The 
better, sire i in m quantity ré qualit 
oon la un 
m 
at 
icious 
nder 
NN were 49 entr 
bt ing inem 
pra 
m edges = 
an > 
be for n pr toa 
were other Meth in i the way of tillage which he had 
acticableness of a large saving by 
thought it bu 2 Piet to 
he 
cultivation. on renee ti ia of lan 
t I intend to patios ait thet Lem 
oposing 
with steam, € r^ here trees or other incumbranes 
exist, to do | so with horse- "power. 
park, t 
Now the conclusion T 
also o given so ome little consideration to. Ít str uck him as 
Üranght eo » 
p^ t year there had bee of lime in m nuring their lands. It was a useful|400 acres or upw wards steam cultivation might be 
about 30 entries fot horses, and it was then considered manure, to "m piae: but, above all —— in use, ge^ profitably employed ; the great we n horseflesh, 
that de Th was none so — as lime if abused by a tlie more effeetual working of dee being to a 
_ 
e show i 
ios» ds 5 e 
Yen iter, 32 two-year-old heifers, - yearlings, 
eifer calves, &e. In the shee = department there 
id al 
Th re pigs numbered 68, 
— - -— it age 
f peop! 
land and "took ‘all L vegetable matter out of it by 
ir quantities for mechanical paren 
ime 
Lime was inte ned for 
“Mecha "it 
[- 
En 
the 
certain extent independent ; of the essct the eno 
to do everything at the right time, and t 
he certain 
cally t 
nts. There 
e who piens ed their 
make the purchase of steam machinery on stich a 
farm a most — investment. 
this ean be e eeted by 
On light land, on 
f deep a is consider pape 
The pre eer 
€ C 
t 
light land is not invio to it. 
g eie various young animals. On’ the whol 
show comprised of 49 horses, 146 head of 
orned cattle, 255 ay dont and 68 pigs, s ome of the 
p all. 
5 
en by Sir John Power, Bar 
ng “ The Royal Agri 
ilkenny 
instituti 
1 the 
feed med fro 
hands. 
oe ers’ 
The ane proceeding from- the d 
manure were that in many places the vegetalo p 
land was so ho 
expected ab would grow without the land ae irat crop 
its impoverished state by competent 
to the TI or ue ik as “lod 
the 
sl 
that 
estroyed that it could not be 
Oct. 7.— of Lite 
8 —— — 
Tight 
pris wi ey 
get S f 
out the è parents help the ey con ald n not on. Someo 
reclaimed from 
con: sis ts of a 
vould d bee 
M 
of sarees wil annually b 
1 experien 
may be of s ce "pom 
cultivators for or rie) pup of working the land I "n 
e sea. 
es ong allu 
alled ae 6 stiff eus re it possesses a 
ge ma nd is 
e mo} 
and y this 
tts sed my steam 
ost 
£d for tiie m par 
etly Jit 
1; not exa 
This 
vial so 
of Lady Desart, apparently consisting only of 
E 
of paper, bu but the 3'5 
the Royal Agrieultural Society, whieh 
esed Mer them to compete with each other, It was for 
them tos show what they were ableto do, and he oe 
PUE 
it fane 
+} T 
Lis uow they bl tol 
be advantages to Desa. from such societies, 
“a 
they were ie lob bear with him, while on his legs, he 
dr 
very gi 
3 an 
+} 
e same Ge 
e 
By 
o break up from. 300 
inches deep, during X months of August. a 
nd If 
worked  effectualiy when it is 
€ T "d steam I am enabled 
acres, from 10 to 18 
"SéjtemÓnP, 
ee 5 a land is broken up 
ked before the 
farmers, ‘namely, the 
mes “ey Ma "qu en P dae old to 
giv 
They ought ie d pe no doubt, 
Fs s together: and requires no 
light- land farm of 1000 
would not be sufficient > oj the vera ol 8 
ae vA advantage 
Sm 
KAROR” hv "mri > Tar, T am still e 
i did 
purchase sea” mae meli 
light-land. 
inta use, y which tie number o! 
light land fi 
should this 
lessened in price, the case might be a 
r horses enm be 1 
no 
ep 
the thing 2 
e intere st pa wb 
oU 
gens 1 
of. 
acres of strong 
vei 
s at strong land, I should not . 
ery to farm ar wh acres ofi 
ays come 
am of the 
achin tat 
wer on the 400 
pose expensive machinery 
€ Itered altogether, 
————— 
Reviews. 
The Ox and his Diseases. By J. R. Dobson, VS 
Lon; X 
well illustrated book o 
ularly explicit -— em itus 
ordinary and extraordin 
, but tru and eli 
A very explicit and 
nary treatment—particu 
in i ion x m 
rturi stworth “oo 
every wher 
The following are extracts relating to 
—The 
r 
tillage a Grass. fatter perro pof the je. r harrow before the : rm, 
but then. are — — AM do oe tg By this means I obtai ain, a what Im may call | a | inch long. The treatme hoose 
pat t " tillag fi th getting rid of rasites. This, from t 
ne iun whieh is as beneficial to it | situation and tenacity of life, is no easy 
pare d sitet all that had ion said as sT believe i it to bei injurious bE " d. To plough | effect e icine must be given which 
against it, ae gag p ge, he same depth, | i ately upon the parasite, and yet not 
and tillage only. of farming was toal me time, would be Ae er impossible, the life of the c itself. One of the best 
UEM at on as much as ible, and Bren E prre force could be obtained, the cost per | the only internal medicine to be be depended upon 
decrease the jense of growing them, if possible; and | acre would be very considerable, and the w ork ior oil of moran a medicine peculiarly dest: 
he could say without boasting or — hat he|n ne 80 effectually gei To my m great | worms of all kinds, when it cau t into 
had iner the and equi pond expenses at "ne has been p! he oparai Se rd arse with = entine, when given int 
Tullog er; in doing so ther ne point which | steam and lorte power. Ec if ees a the most— | is absorbed fro e stomach into the circulati 
struck hi: üsly this ome, "This year be had i which E! peer di flere ence betw n the produco tben nee, by the RUN of the lungs, oneri 
D an bnt two o farms, one at ; Tullogher, and th 
the et 
th 
the other has no 
rr pene under the ty alps ions that I hav 
, to 
Strong land, thoroughly drained, 
reat extent, in veka en- 
-" 1 himso much was how the iid could 
save in their expenses. He would not t ow 
t could increase the mh as they all knew how to 
, but there was one point he had 
i trouble of working and pini ag » the cost of 
cutting the. bin It had 
acres of eor 
quickly 
53. 
at acost of 4s. Sd. am nere. That struck him at - Y t rate orming 
as being a very. serious te pg and he there-| thereby a smooth and hardened furrow. By the 
t prese itself js application steam, horses would be reduced. to 
2o sr pita va to vihon as 
Domine. dal 
he had to deal with a great 
dent of the seasons. Deep pito not one srt gor cad 
M temperaturi of the M but also pre 
excess of moisture or 
mak, ei state that the aerae will wor 
md effec 
a minimum, Effectually to work strong land with 
njury 
XC088 Wy ue è aha 
f. 
the air — bringing its vapour into d 
with t 
toh vias . l]2ounce 
Oil of e er EE 4 
i ME espe twice a ‘day, i ina little warm -— 
* On Pleuro-pneumonia.— xs summing up the 
s^arches made by modern seien: p we are 
n land | that has been 1 worked 
tant 
Ap em ae are teens, and tha: 
weeks t| 
VS a 
| the work when the weather 
he Bonum. A 
m stron: 
in order to force on 
will permit ; and for many 
m gemein idle, as I find that | on 
compel! ed to confess how very futile all mps 
lof. prevention and cure, have hither to proved p 
he disease, In fict, 
upon est ee 
of this most distressing malad e "x 
re i 
arresting the progress of the disease. P 
tically & ing, it vi dud regarded as completely 
incurable, and the farmer will best It buder 
interest consigns his a fected I stock to the 
upon the very first appearance of the complai lamt, 
prop 
jin ser with the p give Da 
when there | 
ergo earn 
what |either man or 
“in p weather is more or less 
diseased ani ? 
isolation, homer: it must be C DL 
* The filarize bronebiales. 
