28 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZ ET TE. 
[JAN. 12, 
vear, for the best essay and Ee on the arrangement | 
and construction = labourers’ cottages. A deta gr] 
essay, containing the cos 
kind and amount. 
art of Mr. 
Goddardꝰs ce, practical e 
acknowledge e aay material i improvem 
effected by the doings s a society, in the ground 
he 
y his ideas improve nothing 
Boson the — nfl of 10 square feet, 
huddlin get — within = ve 
No * ver can be elean 
has only “ one door for ev wey N se of ingress and 
he v name = pie ery pos 
shares the filth of its occupation. 
essential to every living acc 
ms on = 2 ‘oor are 
arrangem 2 the open 
awkward jutting manner on the: haat of t the ial The 
cost of each cottage, 90/., might give a better accommo- 
dation. J. D. 
Cumberland o ne-horse Caris.—A eee 
L. V. R,“ who hed dis orar what he considers 
with as much asperit 
side boards or name plate, for the cost of 87. 1 
ub back 
this expense. 
3 shoe . Paper of Dec. 29 asks for the 
in 
and belly-band are 00 gak 
— 
posed of gravel or broken stones, so as to continue 
smooth, and not p with wheels. A cask mus 
placed to receive the liq: 
a keg or small barrel cut in two 
implement 
the cask into the man 
w-houses. 
be never is 3 me 1 Re, fine fanged, which 
to the exclusion of water; because, 
e houses, an 
l being close to 
I 
regu 
Phe: rye but it is without a roof: 
is generally equally good 
preted a layer of fire-fanged dung init. This 
last dunghill, however, contains o 
The 
of apart, but i in a late a of your J 
wa 
experience ce will 1 not 
ent has 
Wheat are 
| reason to gta 
ot m 
ry | of then. are o 
back- | ra 
ints, the plans of Mr. Goddard | s 
t be | there 
Take Wheat for 
rows is 12 inches 
scape which the rr. is capable of. 
instan 1 distance in ee 
rna 
of grain at 12 inches was 5 eee that at 6 
eting at 5 * other day, as 
sed, ba would favs been able to show to the 
the present pric 
cases n e than 20 bushels are 
shows that it is not so 
mischief, as es farming. 
there appears to be mor 
still re bes 3 m any _— with them 
they ar We now ened 
me encement zA the b of th 
o doubt much fres bag abroad v 
fate cultivation, solely w 
produce into the En nen market. 
gro 
may be — that of 
an pled ntifa l. In former times, increased prices m 
sae amends for es der 3 produce. In this case, 
most — and less 
red in . Journal the 5 week, that 
famous for being the wo t farmed 
nty fro 30 Edinburgh. To any on 
appear to be the case, as 
which has not a vestige of d 
there are other pa 
e 
ass — a 8 
nvenient 
when fixed on a long handle for bmg a | that seem to 
manure. The shed o th 
in quality, | farm 
ing movements 
but 
ent prices, Law. Rawstorne. 
4 read 85 
` 
85 
easu p Paper of fi 
ber e as to the 5 N of North and a cok | i n 
re 
untry farming. ubject tbat will tend to the 
8 ot aik farming by bringing into notice 
the most ec cal methods of cultivation, 
and ae that the success of the 
ore Spon we ag directing and 
applying” > the shades! force of the han the aid 
by the moroi o the chemist 
logist. But epee as the farmin 
whic Pa ge 
high rents uik do a 
the future |t 
8. ich a rried hom 
ac acknowledge "thal — labour bill for manual labour is 
e 
London 
travelling — railway, it must 5 allowed that such . t 
maintain 
b 
| gentleman asserted last aie he was in err 
rro e bee 
—— —„—-— 
the hay harvest. Th 
dressings of soil to the pasture, 
will of 
ation of hase 
e occasional ee ot 
and ot di 
farm 
Folk, Ia fe of 
d Wurzel and — erops ea — removed 
to the farm- yard), =. not requife some 
it is but fair, now 
tch 
horses. My ob; 
impart information, and I am ready to gran 
o far as regards the use of one-horse carts, and the 
ent — — barn —— that you are far 
before us, but e you not yet to wn vail yourselves of 
the use of the es which the Scotch farmers will ere 
jong adopt more ə generally, though it may occasion them 
o employ a horse or t Hugh ka 
— e da 0 acres 
far greater than on mmon Scotch farm. The 
pa of our sr is l by the rent, which, with 
tithe a , amounts to = e e n aere.) 
— ai I ha 
of su sh questions. fo 
munication, which appeared in your Nene of the 31st. 
of last Mar 
e pu 
as sin n dem 
r one is a mixture of stable and cow-house manure, | and geo ng may be in | dwarf an early th this 
which may make the er more inclined to heat. I the best aTe eS ts of Scotland, as a south England, 1 "hive, in order to obtain the best proof, is 
often ter a rainy night, the countryman, . t that we are to look only year grown all his t varieti he same ae fo 
ul of not been spread, but | to the north for th e example to be followed in every | (borders of Lancashire and Cheshire), with the 1 N 
lie in heaps, are in a violent state of fermentation ; but | instan 0 e peculiarity of sort, called 8 corn. 32 is, tliat old 
the body of the man > egg being pressed | management whi ay that particular | Keene’s hybrid show to ller than we i 
close together, as it is in ca where it never | place, or that may be adopted with some advantage | kind, by about ene- iN, it ai more back a 
heats. H. W. Myddleton. sewh Nor w y readers allow that in ripening, approaching to perfection 
Present Rents with Present Prices.—My o eas | the amount of labour employed upon a farm in Suffolk, | filling the ear wi . Mr. Keene’s is both a dwal 
of the capacity of land so great; we have s so little | as compared witħ a farm in Scotland, can be taken as a | and a very earl rai as 8 with many the 
arrived at a just 3 the mea proof of the superior management of the latter unless but it is manifes arger and later plant than t 1 
we have uch to „ generally, ~ 1 — bigher further eo de as to soil, the kind of old Quarantain, 4.4). or Cobbett corn, taller, oat es 
ge ta . that, at, speaking of poe country at large, | management os the kind z and value of the pro- i uttin nA 
landlords and tenants will co-operate in ing out | duce, and the cos uction. And as an induce- ey 
1an i re | ment for you to entit Paya into the subject, I beg to | the B 
aes a few words wth he ean extracts from the r 
. artiele in questi q notorious what |t | 
e fallacious guides ‘farsi cabin te been in this hood — 
respeet, a if the total expenditure in any department e 
is taken out the year, and made matter of com- who o Š 
parison, — ere is less risk of being deceived. Let us speeime a 10th of 
ich | take one nore a which will readily show the economy | Society in London. In Foe: umber. of Po — 
of the Seoteh system in portant item, that of November, you observe, tha specimens 0 Sa g 
and of Cobbett’s aa were exhibited on 
Maize, 
to the Horticultural er b 
ven 
in would only be required for 340 acres ariety the name “ 40-day 
land of the same description, farm the four-course | apply, peg me to sa. . Charl 
n shift, alth the grain was all threshed by Cobbett's corn” to exhibit. : 
power. This is not easily for where the what he ad at his own shop. That w 
anual labour is also much greater. How far the „ Cobbett’s corn,” is 
employment of the gigantic and the cumbrous ae of its its kind, but it is the real mais d 
tumbril, oe with small enclosures, may have an icken corn; a sed some of it 
t an influence i in g th ntrasts, it is not for us| order to send it with other specimens of chic 
termine.” I believe the stati the | to the the , to show 
240 acre farm is given at page 143, of the “ Agriculture | Keene, the & corn, as 
~ Suffolk.“ Now instead of its being a farm of |15 feet high, had been equally wrong when he pek 
240 acres, it is one of 300; there being 60 acres of | th the chicken-corn, the most dee 
which requires in Suffolk some expenditure | the tribe. Very near to the shop in which Mr. 
of pro- of horse labour, to keep it in condition, as well as during 
