362 
south as there is beyond the Tweed. 
in the s The; b 
blications of we: Scottish SONT, a, hi vd 
ther efor e [apartments again: 
e ther 
well as 
s our readers ja 
pu 
it available we ri 
and w 
call the atten th 
e di rectors, to 
ciation 
various parts 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
s had been ENA n lieu of lath a 
eu had been code 
d plaster, 
mp. 
ith the most pooner success, and 
seems 
[May 24, 1856. 
France points to & more permanen 
ing 
of the most sees = improvements made b, 
Mr. Fow 
bre = in the proportion of 9 
nage chitect ( 
country on the invitation of Jand- 
f leh e r 
1 ‘id out in meat, butter, nu rere while that of th 
class is exactly re 
le rds, 
n on 
The second of these reports 
A sald 
flto9. Thei siaii veal 
as “sho 
pte apie’ have ascertained from many sources 
that the general issue of their First, Annual Report | last 
wI 
for “their copunenatt Lord Kinnaird had rece os 
orn a pha in this way, and they were pola t to 
find satisfied D = dship’s expecta- 
her had built 
tive of a Taya ponañisial effect on cottage improvement. | o 
Kemadan rmed that several ot the _plans 
or E improve iether of co ottages 
Th 
Lord Kinvaird had impro 
} 
thus constantly enlarging 
dair iry pro oduce. 
within the last 80 years, , while 
little or no advance. 
the 
of c as 
= as T “ined a in 1851, is 
sy chief cause of the gre: whic! 
gland to pie rearing and pa 
gem of 
bash nt anc 
SONAE iy 
parts of the pedin g 
according to advice given bef their 
architec t, and are giving satisfaction i in every w 
: that 
executi ion, an serving the various a iiia in 
of esi of meat ‘is not equal the the demand. An 
the 
same process sats now st eve begun in France. 
Le: 
dol 
wh eae Pe detail it was ee, Be Depa in 
might remark that the Ass 
aia éii } 
i å 
e supply, s en 
ich of hus 
served nan chief deign of their publication, 
to stimulate subseri 
firmly ressed was 
} 
iry beco 
‘ho owever minute, that cape the 
ou, es 
notice. The comforts | of social lie, ne they believed, 
nahia the sabi > by providing more “ample 
plans fer rifles here a to, t 
On the 
— = a to eo aa tage eiea 
ing or livin ng — 
modai 
hkata misery, and a little well- Il adjusted Dar o would | 
7 
t adaa ation 
produce of aas 
will kepip a steady advance in the average 
rn land. — 12 or 13 bushels an 
e the will soon aoeget ud, small 
Mr. Carrn’s letter, to which we last week referred, 
b, eee : ry 1 f+ Ati 
v 
a proper div 
urer’s fami amily, a bea ee absolutely necessary wo ‘be 
provided for in promoting any 
g the peasantry 
(= 
h , the differences between it and 
of Eng fi 
improvements snggested, it is said, cannot be 
carried out at such a s to r ender the invest- 
mode in which that admits 
bea ‘prodigious additio 
France. It would amount Ma nearly 10,000,000 quarters 
of Wheat. the 
foreign Wheat 
‘16 or 18, a 
a ven that i increase ; would 
the agricultural wealth of 
equ: ae to annual importation of 
Asse 
& The firs 
, as neg d of live 
that 
4 capable S the of 
st economical tg plishment, as prove ved by 
ora 
stock, gy endo to M. LAvERGN NE, ee is in Siena 
se under wut = re 
tie history of the lat 
We unable to find room for the whole of the 
than under Wheat. Let a part of this, 
r Wh a 
i imate REDS age to a 
ea 
ith a root such as 
with rach quotations as Fes J give the views ex- 
p . CAIRD 
Says ; 
“ The main distinction beeen sy hgh oo of is 
s in 
Se ahi 
ial de y re 
centage on the outlay of their erection ; and the pa 
confident that, where such i is insisted on, _ these h 
} 
a 
= ero 
munerating per 
cent. 
directors do profess to afford directions for bui 
cottages where a plain yet is adopted, which sal 
et yield 
22 h the proportions under corn 
untries 
eters of land under corn, and ‘the numbers of the 
í 
embrace all these, an 
s, 
popu lat atio 
he 
Ae Ae E 
a referen neces to 
Bs spel Ae i wen methods of 
lathing Ra e ‘een rafters in atti 31 
fr : hearths; and ng n attic rooms 
so grenti Y» 
$ does not end ka for while the En; 
may net “the same, as is ren by ihe aoe ing 
ae 
Bushels 
on 
Acr 
Total pro |Bushels 
"ton te in duce = to each 
Quarters, | pe: 
ifferent propor =p 
d is priiviilated ed id ening wo 
e has 53 
ing kept til} they ar 
T frm the case in Englan 
Fra 
reste provis sio 
i and cr ped w 
Man abe Warzel, which i is aE Aaa to the soil 
and climate of France a with Tes crops, would 
cattle 
and case in 
, the y. would = fattened in the first or second 
f 
P to sen 
sheep oea Eini of one-fifth. 
this h 
Fra 
ieni bde a enais pid its success on an amp! 
n of wi inter and sumi r food. But that i is pre- 
‘| 34,000,000 15,000,000} 12 4-5 | 24,000,000) 53 
18.000,000\ 8,500,000 263 ee 5 1-9 
obtain necessary food for the people, EDN 
ulture diin employa twice ine extent of "Whea 
ich would be needed in 
Frani 
p ia 
“To 
change propos 
cisely fete 
rms bee nae 
by 
sa concntion 9 of this winter food fo: 
urce of manure for improving the Wh i cro 
"The “encouragemen nt which, as Mr 
$ 
vement o: 
means ain the similari rity of 
nglish import 
Ann Onn 
ety ‘the report 
oe motion of 
who said :— 
. | each 
their own ‘growth j pires i ve els 
individual of the 
Wheat eee which, added to - 
mp ult 
n that which English farmers find, 
just in seer ot as the oe oe of produce is 
moze easily gained than any subsequent increase. 
“There is more profit to be had by a good farmer in 
d entering ef a ger soil which has been Lene farmed 
5 
fo; 
of rench people. So ately do 
the results pin ater with the necessities of the 
though the otally different.” 
the land to its haha pitch of pr roduetiveness. 
seems precisely the present mais of France as com- 
>| pared with England, rat sak eee m prospect of 
agricultural pont: saf eiria 
of 
That 
r me onto part of the letter to English 
Rog 
rt read was of a Pol apes TAA the 
iffi t} Tal 
inact and parei 
iere, 
d that it w 
J 
rs 
t 
tne 
r in in Enpi vt must use to get a gern by i 
The plans given in that 
port he bellowed had been found! phe. generally sai itae 
tory, and the — sears that were given by the ae 
had assisted th o were wishing to build to deci 
on the plan they y should adopt. w propose 
The 
the soil or in ie pie te of si ce, ak rang 
superior, acordin ng to the best authorities, for the |° 
wth of corn to those of England. It ‘exists in 
elhe. greater cone of manure which the English 
rds :: 
a a practise in agricultural art which his predecessor ot 
ted.” 
pee ce 
“The es ue increase in France is so much 
sips x te n aem oe a rise of 20 bushels an 
It was no atl. system affo ined, 
“ Every a of corn land in England 2 and, when at 
to ERE immediately in the hands o orkmen, Reiter. esas ae ak men sie ‘still. fall esil hrt of the present average 
e ai communication with this ofice er any (such are the relative proportions of the land in Grass |! England. Yet this average is by the yy amount 
other party. t was proposed lithograph a few | 5nd corn), while in France th ure from each a a the sretna produce of France (12 to 13 bushels an 
pmi three or four of the Se of: Crasssynant = ove p| acre) belo e regular crops of the bet ae 
designe ished i in the report. pene f the English rasa While the average of Fra erage of 
the plans he ie required, with any aiditiooal information Erea systems, while ‘tat of f England affords fen | Sores ee eet etek 2 Dl te average 
its Gras rass lands the 
they 
tabular measurements the ey could put the plans into the mosotiiai 
hands of E a country tradesman, and have 
They al so propose to issue with this 
alent of nine loads of manure 
rn, that of France yields little 
load jat phan ere.” 
medy then the ba roa: cag oft 
Neots as regards 
mia with lett —— observa! tions, 
end of last year’s report. These 
eral additional ne a had been 
presen healed tion. was the 
oliow brick instead of ` lathing, which had been sug 
for 
its a of corn ust seg 
which shall increase its supply of m anu 
The soil of that joyki inay "i te of 12 or 
a bushels an acre, and it is a ial gee of the 
by w 
eapest source of manure which t t 
ottages that had been built, They had found by calcu- 
atious that this brick rear - ta as cheaply as 
ath and plaster, and seen ess lial e to b 
“In England that i increase has fr requently been acco 
Ae by the a Asem ion of guano or nitrate of soda, 
great degree the resource is also open 
the immediate adoption of France. But over an 
of course impract cable, 
accom- 
ki 
26} to 
Mr. ca s letter will no p Sa id vty circu- 
ted ne ee = w call her. 
an will 
xc few wee ng 
ACK 
penance from Ain 
DIVISION 2.— AUSTRIA, HOLLAND BELGI 
Wraith is evident from Mr. Denison’s has to iho 
apaa hpa bens al nå aes 
(By Mr. H. rade.) 
ik ako sete Ai: E 
roperty of becoming of the same 
hat of par ansa 
that ¢ 
ns eps 
requiring repair, over., In some 
e ith | 
supply of these manures would fail were it even 
steal oie or sdvienble (which it is not) to excite such an 
| immediate demand. 
“ The increasi 
on the rea are not far behind those ot 
homers 
this country in the of good implements an psd =~ 
chines, = we geuite uite Gaas that as 
increasing demand for and price of meat in | 
