ü k:: ᷑ ... K a .,, ¾ . , a e a at aaa hi 
* = * ** a i a á E j i 1 
3—1850.] THE 
AGRICULTURAL SADE PTE 
43 
of —— 75 ＋ 2 . in money, and to give 2 stones 
in li f the remainder. The 
eafeulation . then be about about as u as under 
Former 3 
oa | per 28. 
Proposed to 
a | Pay in cash. 
Value of 
2 stones of 
Flour to 
Farmer, 
Total aan | 
of Wages d 
Farmer. 
Value of 
2 stones A 
Flour to 
Labourer. 
Total value | 
of Wages to 
Labourer, 
Positive 
reduction to 
Labourer 
Bion 
22 
Toga 
on 
— 
S 
> 
an 
a 
And so on reduty ld. for each — or about 84 per cent. 
should bear a . r 
money part of the pay- 
The cost of a suse 
of Wheat is 7 estimated at 58.; and a t it pro 
s. of flour, the bran pa yi ngth 
eat relief would be experienced by the 
Sia tend very much to the comfort and 
is universal in 
introduced —— zeii nerally. 
— be ayment which is diminished to the farmer 
rices Bee is the —— and others 
to follow, such as t rice of beer, and trades- 
men’s bills generally ; fen whan midea of all sorts 
are — to affen — articles which they sell, such 
as butch meat, — bread, e leese, & the ad- 
wt —— of la =f 
have 2 upon the pos on or transfer 
. thade i in — itself is the 
the em 107 
of feudal tenures have ana to impose upon ete system 
st he c 
m of those public writers, like 
yourself, who — ing benefit t the landed interest and 
the country gene 
In conelusion, 1 nd observe that if I see on one side 
of a hedge 
qualiti 
— — — ii bouret 
appeals for reduction of rent from such a quarter, 
that by his own act, * pt with the re- 
arri low 1 of them 
m 
greater impediment to proper — buildin edsk dim 
this heavy tax on their. erectio i 
Home e Correspondence. 
Landlord and Tenant. Tour remark i in the leading 
article of the Agricultural G th, th 
& the . ce of allowing land to —.— deteriorat ed 
in 
a lease, ve 
a —— 72 — s0 aAa 
illing to remain w 
ever, is but a temporary expedient, only available where 
their ” bargain, and 
both. parties are pleased wi 
each other. But tt 
the time fo 
one thing ‘only is — how to get as much as 
possible out of the l and to put nothing es it. 
Liberal peer are excellent —— because striet 
ones are ut a bad aie 
grew 
© expense 
by whic W. 
established Roost the parton items 8 cost may 
d — less than 9d. an a 
capital at 5s. 6d. an acre more than your correspondent. 
to 
z the apime at the end of the lease. Its ; tenant | 
mateur farmer, who knew very little about the 
Parisese which he had undertaken. 
i he 
a young 
business,. with plenty of cupttal 3 in fact “one in a 
thousand oa among tenants. He 
him a new dweling hous e and farm-office arg 
Soh 4 on account of its Na Ma of 
nd 0 
mirably, a 
ect order, quite 
matters dently came right, and my 
orking. a 5 N 
while the Halá landl ee is — ed to look an 
his property oe pee his very Be a wi ithout bobs ng m 
able to help him get the 
years ago—my first heavy oui atid my 20 years’ re- 
. of tg all gone for nothing. Linton 
Cost of an Acre of Roots.— 
of an acre of roots ina a late paper attracted 2 attention 
fro iously made an ae of 2 
2 
5 
= 
mn 
ep 
ž 
»o 
8 
8 
ifferent soils, localities, and practices. 
c- 
of your ex- 
perienced correspondents, who may have considered 
that aper e favour Jour readers with a view 
s matter, the ns on which i 
— 
Pes two ploughings in spring, 
which I m at 10 be unnecess r deep plo ugh- 
ing and s ing ir — on clean land; 2s. 6d. for 
Couch picking, 5 85 would not = on such land, 
generally ; ki cag 2 
estimate, w mis — the farm and there 
r | system 
began erag I gave 
a to 
editors, who are ve 
sa 
© statement of the cost 
ms des 
| sind Bs by ealtiveting land. — 
een 
present consumers of m at; a 
might indulge i in the luxury if the ticles mung rota 
0 The 
nia beyond my 4 
— — ̃ — 
consequently a person occupying 100 fear, digging 25 
in first-rate 
where I certainly am not surprised 
g 
ps b uch — 
ceedings. The ground is gehe yeer shen ye year, say 
4 or 6 ioken deep, leaving the bottom as s impervious: as 
a high road. A time is 2 whe 
give way to a be 
in its effect 
pr 5 to its management, good or z oa with 
2 hat 
to say id 
J faney its limits 
ed. Subsoiling is a bras ext sub- 
very s r piece of work when completed. 
has to be ‘addon that i is — "Old notions must give 
way to necessity, and many thin which have 
not been — We only want en pages and the old 
roying, and there is yet a TN to be 
: wh house- 
ining, with justice, of I being — 
to pay an exorbitant price — e od. 
ranm te of the market is most prejudicial # the 
well 
‘acturers hare to 
erate 
wi 
es a low —— for —— ls col 
and has not the advan 
e farmer receiv 
with what he did s some Years ago, 
—— 
fore near at yara 18s. 64 ye Aal for pulling, cortin ng, 
an I get done in the fiel 
lOe it 
whi ch costs 
interest on 
ene 
ent, tithe, an PP? >y 
—— on —— 157 per acre weed 
hing arid subsoiling in autumn è 
8. Od. 
— 
E =g 09 et rana 
Double harrowing and rolling. ww . 
20 2 manure and filling a “ae 
— 
n spreading dung i in furrows 
—— the nee ver the manure ... 
Drilling and seed ne sa 
Singling 
tne horse-hoeing (Garrett s. 
and-hoeing in 
os 
Pullin ng, toppin — tori ng in 
Four r bushels 5 — fm . 2 with 
oF 
E 
£10 3 
I am inclined to thin man labour some- 
what Se, pape dh 8 — of the are 
A Ah A ni — 101. 108. C. L. 
h your 
| of his food, by selling double the amount. ‘The reli 
| whia t of 
} mee gens when standing on its legs: and why should they 
the agriculturists must pena ki 
community, ea wo or three times a week ; 
meat t 
could do at the 
rtance, not only in a commercial 
timately connected with 5 comfort 
bw * —.— years are carried out a 
A “adie common — would 
