826 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. a 13, 1856. 
by him, the comparative virtues of our aa RY stem, so that everybody has now prog i not only, cially the former, as it the largest town in Upper 
14} g ha ve en me fowls for la aying g eggs, aisa xg for | Ca Ap it is very Aap riei as shes farms may fetch 
and registered for the guidance of agricult Į g] tyo i, ardv Cochins | from 100 to 15 0 dollars an er ne included, 
the ad of the community. But from aps 7 y and e, but where clas of brick), a dollar being 4 aioe Heringa an vy eve’ 
eai yatan kod experiments aas made | lo Bardo: the sorts that ‘will pa tin most eggs, | MOT? should they be so situated as to be near o the 
site of a future town or vi kis a posdillity. contem- 
no such rigid conclusions can be drawn; and/ rear most chic ary s, or average the heaviest weight. 
our only course is still to bring all the rival | Another word add es e on the iaaa of reno > miy 7,0 to 100 dollars the aere, or pias pi z 
varieties of cattle and systems of man sas ca sag shows and ia eating : if the public will t roads 
into Sepelio; a allowin ng each by mparison n | liv o freely upon -> and veal and other young __ West of ae stretches a huge tract to Lake “St. 
of cost of time weight = satin its posi | cH tha the ey must no longer inquire for delici d 
tion as better or worse than another. e prize | flavoured four- kwea A mutton; and the fewer | : is a dead level ye whole way, it might be too subjec 
animals e domesticated menagerie in Baker | animals they spare to develope into maturity, the | to the ague to be pleasant. Asa rule, flat rich [andis is 
Street may be neither dire: o the | sca rcer and denti must they expect to find full t 
eeders, nor, when but: tehered, palatable to consumers grown beef and mutton. Z. A. ©. 
but they are valuable as bein ng the greatest achieve- 
Amherstburg, but as 
cleared poe dr: ained ; it is a gently ro olling tract, with 
ni eee good gps <rainage, that is the most hea althy. Tt is 
o > ont- We are unable to give this week a vd gi of the|of very great importance to : 
vie each other ; and it is precisely that breed and very in rare discussion on cror rotations that | Toushly well ‘watered, both with springs po Tuning 
that management yielding the most extraordinary took place on Monday last before > ti n on | brooks, if possible: and ss care and od judgment wil aba 
specimens under extraordinary cir ireumstan hich | Farmer r9’ Clu b. Mr. . THomas, of Bedfordshire, who eai calamity can happen in rior hot 
is found to be most profitable for ordina a u f Be ee a weather. The spring ir Dantis get lower and lower 
—the pattern tenant of a pattern landlord— all the summer, till the September and November rai 
The Smithfield Club does not lavish its sa ended most anansweably for greater Bbeir ol the fet of which refresh, the second fill them, tiong 
tions upon the most corpulent bullo ore a pinguid | action than the bonds of agreements, or still worse, | the end of October is generally the driest time. 
swine, simply as such, but with a more pra ractical | those of custom opia upon the cultivator, by ond i in Upper Canada is, as a rule, divided into lots 
issue confers them upon those Cern se most | insisting on his following an order of cropping—|of 200 acres, each cng so id again into half and 
onomised their rati y as pro i thi d aen sesak 
| 
f 
| 
| 
| 
1 
UN pen kidati 
;? the next year a giv e a z ii of 
between beasts fed on “ Grass, hay, Turnips, Cab- in losses arising from the incompatibility of the oe 
bage; or other vegetables,” and those fattened by | rules laid down re the very nature of the plants | py Brantford and a Pas t to the head ‘a n = ae, 
“oilcake, corn, or any other food in addition,” and ey cultivate. 
the rul that the j faults of the four course system on t li visitor there fi 
the selected animals had | boaze aiaaglinoied; ‘anè the, Pand and the of Nowravasentax's agree- | ment ; besides, the land, o pot A rather too ies an and 
difference between their living and dea ights n the eee er. He show ow over | piace rather too exclusively with Wheat, and FEA 
and even the ions of fore and 9 guinness ovary pr ears was in the very nature of things | lightly stocked with cat Thit habe its pow 
tehi i i impossi The co , of whi 
b am 
+t] 
an tal wil, 18 
tate th dition of flesh of thei mals when | devised, by which Beans or mixed seeds were made | °} emigrant will fin 
put up to feed: and the time of fatting a as ‘well as the a alternate es other fourth year vee Beas: an r: valu 
age and ana a, aoe the sort of food, has always been Clover were insi sted on as necessary. e showed ct : 
se pk ad a e adadan how teeny erops of Tarnips grown as guano and nenas ying atm Lates Han, ie, and Onr 
Und hibitions have tended s FON: kwe aiaa tario, an i 
fi i t ll ieties by. sheep, cake ey now were | mists that pass over the lower country lying round ; at 
of live stock, n “ee f agri rd fe d- rendered = land Uy nit for "producing geod malt- | the same time the rise is so gentle that the fact is only 
ture, but cher: reer im the Pes eee: ii oF ing Barley. crop was su o fall, and. in Hera discovered by the superior greenness o thi Grass, 
cattle-food relatively the nt of meat pro- measure haces spoil, ad. when statistics of railway levels, and the. flow of the rivers 
duced. a pply of a paaie the way to meet this i From all I have heard and seen 
better quality of sa pork, and mutton for our COP an not it field, or to give ne of ok aher “parts, would unhesitatingly recommend it as 
tables, Think of the d ee t jerge fevbenieh ing food along with it, he replied | a place of residence. 
when we had no peken Aa praa NEA ri ia ad reat bay that the proper object of agricul. |, The best ar oie to ai «Morton’s Cyclopedia,” 
i i en cba! imbar i — S s not to find methods by which the fertility | as it contai full information on every point, 
so many English counties and infusing into ‘the nates : “arenes | though «Stephen's Bank of the Far” in also an admir- 
ntries the blood : e 3 able work ; and should he add to that the Garde mers? 
py ae indicating propen nito ighest degree of fertility which could be conferred f the day, he 
fatten, fatten, Beauty grained meat, and s soundiees “of — be ager bly utilised. His expedient was to | will find himself thoroughly provided. Of course, allow- 
The famous beasts of our fathers? day ia the bt ve years’ course, by taking | ances must: be made for the difference of climate and 
bred with a our 
eee S coarse ungain! msy now that artificial d: imported fertilisers | or any root as the espe ou; ea eed by Sep- 
like ' i feather mel could chased and agit. Mr.. THomas’s | tem d dae sti Ea of 
stretched over sharp hip an AmE wi andif some. Titicisms of the Northumberland agreements ome : October. His neighbours, however will give him all 
pe pag =re ey es on ra owt received i. tip ayal pl pace lee ak aa = for the time for going, the ear ae se Psi 
they furnished for the spit! Aga rig rman, fea pee age ge Mer: ires p kopaa eye he viner 
BakEWELL made a ‘ Vein cantar? a un- simply impossible. The tion of all the y 
shapely slow-feeding docks were. scattered thinly COPS would not produce the manure which, ac- peo tr arse A fat nagar at to the 
upon our meads; and what lean lank hogs pre- e- cording to this agreement, was needed for their | butcher, &e,, it is the time rag by all for giving 
ge, that no abund- growth, And gaa aani Lenten cae of course | up possession, though the summer is, of course. y: the best 
Jo; a 4 ke z\iin e in e lan 
of J 1, 7. 
the coarseness of their bacon t ome. impossi and its crops, There are, however, rate some farms 
like bristles: Now, thanks to “The only criticism of any moment which Mr.|in the Tae kek that 4 ta yar ntered on almost at any 
leading agriculturists not only to cultivate the best Tuomas’s argument received was from Mr. kite etr — vn — ete J.C. BY ceca 
breeds themselves, but to instruct the public by com- Bette who pointed out that the arrangemen offer to buy his land, though some 
sey : Tare becoming 12 the case of He. Tuomas gs in ikat of his ee The | fixat clase peor would reqnit a good Png act 
are g 
rare, and the wonder is how our swine can grow so p: 0f. Bantoapezp ent ae lived cen EE ot Cor 
Duk 
patie atisuch am earl! how the improved: pa ig ght aa be generally a Ba ag inasmuc yy difficult to find & 
varieties of sheep on ac a Spey tired as either characte conduct. were universally pi. ii goo aan it tew s clearing 
land can accum so quickly thei eir delicately- trustworthy, wi r among landlords or among | extent at first. A fresh ferris would not like quite ® 
flavoured va sts our aesa cattle thrive tenants ; that i ecessity of rules arose out of| new lot, nor would he find it easy to get one in & g 
with s such in pastur e, t and stall. It tis the ge of that intelligence and ability which, | situation, and such a farm as he could buy would have 
however, whenever they did exist, ought to have | from 50 to 100 acres cleared’ (speaking of a y wt 
all | wi barn an 
soe 
a faet hate aaa fi five formerly, The the, freest scope given to their pe yes We shall | with i ie or frame house on it, and a. = 
of meat, too, in an ox of a given weight is  284in refer to the other addresses that were given, | buildings; so there would be time tis property. He 
now y greater than early: i ooo | for himself the best way of laying out pro) A 
ht, i ake srianan EMIGRATION TO CANADA. should be sancti teat: faat: ber his intended pur- 
gei NG a request fo for information from an intendin g chase, to see there is a sufficient. qu ae jee 
f ger beg to offer him my idetbhaines! least a q 7 picked 
much as from T tahoe one-third of ed having resided sev veral years in that sn I: should over, as he may find when too riate i ‘hat ‘a sd mae 
thought as from the graces of their Jaws and system of boari town, and nothing but Be ct otty Y ised w ay ; 
As an illustratiomof the benefit ( and | left, which is very difficult to convert into frema hor 
su tske the me ot Fy - The“ mania ” of want of ambiti and energy in n-the French Canadians, pace re only in the towns eaten, 
thelast few yarara aa t pa ibitionshave | he will not find h himself very comfortable there. Upper | altogether even there. in the winter 
not only wonderfully extended the taste tor poultry: Canada, west of aan ae is the trinkets I should recom- | Should it Be necessary to to arrive 
} in ps to maintaining | mend, There is a vi und Cobourg, at | with snow on the ground, it is always pestle by the 
dogs or cats, but has doubled the weight of | ‘he back of T arai aer ped wood land, 
s 4 here he may purchase with advanta. This see toons Gee the woods. 
: reeding |” y p vantage, This seems at grow in of Beech 
é ae é giving a very wide range to select from , but good land | as as ts termed, marked by a pent or ; 
Me RoR the quantity of a costly is found in all those parts 3 in fact, the w akali ot hi hi d | and Maple, with la rgo straight clear runka i e peor 
th little mir Upper Canada, as a rule, is of excellent quality, n and of a very par 1 quality, from 
| Oak an 
them 
prefe light ian, land, though Ture brick 
fe diferent condi- price of land of cour raves mech i pure brick 
arandia å P anana sea 
„Round large wre bee $ ein, 
