122 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Fx B. 23; 
one of the last chances of safety —the last resources your own time. You are not obliged to leave an open actly alike ; the reason for I need no 
against his present difficulties which the farmer has trench for the main drain in the of a 20 acre plain. As to — -n of ‘buildings — — — 
—and it deserves ous study and trial of all present; but ag 
trustworthy 32 a resource ample e 
create his confiden 
BRICK AND ocean gai 
Tue necessity of a briek y 
such properti ies as 
hance 
nough to ae 
ectly burnt goods (the last 
require drainage, — — Ht be — sight of in the dis- 
appllention: — last 20,000 away yesterda 
putations concerning the dozens o ple this — — neither are you 
. — of the tile, the nature of the *. — 8 d mene — E88 ried away — Deca: tone 0% 
texture, have: all in t had: a tes and | matter that you have the 2 of condueting within 
but it is seldom that the — f so the limits of your daily bus 
useful. a commodity, let it come in what guise it will, Taking therefore into peann PORT the cost of 
has- claimed. sufficient tion to raise half a dozen in he loss occasioned by the using goods not 
ments on the q The tile i on. iii 
vario 
2 leaner, Fee caused some “sensation,” and are 
e 
master s ti ay ome ve ve t 
e year, viz., at the Smithfield d Club and Royal hesitation in saying that, exclusive of the seller’s profit, 
Ser * 2 eyed with ant and | the ou . of Ula tos : hi 
i ready 
saei — 1 4 to go into the 
position as a purchaser, of 
he question T put by a stout | 100 acres pe drains, and — 1 — * minia profit 
* — machine —— + last in a the cos to thi 
ta Wek No, Sir, they — . Do d burnt | 2 Thusi in pas — sa, ay, 30 s acres 2 land t 
in a kiln, Begg the courteous: reply. “Do you sell be agra with drains 7 or 8 yards asunder, it is 
? No, Sir; * and: h — | proba able that a saving by manu Be f tiles on the 
dropped, as may be su Bless me, I thought, ae over purchase, at a reasonable 2 of 400“. 
what must this man’s land — like! Did he ever see 6501, would be effected. As dra almost 
clay before in bis life ? ay I should like: to pass ass half | i invariably induces building, it is also probabl e that an 
an hour with his e- e additional benefi N e would be gained 
do so, if * permit ked through the medium of eatin sean = he uch to ask per- 
Jour 
ur Pape: 
Brick — tile making is = a mystery, 
— company. 
a an effect of atten 
choosing a site 
ai poi ih winter and the summe reparation, are 
Be than 
the 
rning a a handle | and wer ees a ae wire. 
1 shali — these mat 
Let 
rs for other 
the agant ar 
* I promise 
wie are some of ed 
ela: The 
site for the yard, the — the clay, the to 
ill it th too p 
mission to mer = att eas with me into the diggings 
this month ? 
* (To be continued.) 
N CATTLE FEEDING, 
d, I will now procee 
rapt g reasons why catt 
feeding does n cases. The first is, 
3 in 9 “Although this is so common, 
nsequences so palpable, yet it is a point very 
00 I think it is omitted in near 
th 
— the eres aer particular 
cumstances of applic 8 ve 
Weges 3 on their v 
th 
hod is found out by experience, 
dearly fhe. people go on making the attempt roby to 
ps appoint 
1 re to as 
six people how use a certain 
be given up. I never found) ye et I could: draw 
mop Sea on es es os 
your seems pretty 
often oa ust ager te I — 
for — „Of course I do, is the answer. Re- 
necessary, but n 
t Torn 
the —— just as 
them 
to 
to | they are 
Som 
s, giving: plenty of the form 
the: d it 
hat they have got. But 
th is is on the principle of little: 4 ryen 
One — they get Tamips à in such large quantities as t 
6 doubt yak the effects | 
ed to state oe day’s 
y first eare of the 
— dof fe food for their stoek, we soa esas get as | 
ifferen need be done, 
ider a better way of ing it out, in de. 
I will give it as practised in the counties which 
I alluded to in 2 75 aper of Jan. 12. One man hag 
charge of fro 24 large fatting d thisig 
as many — d to perly. He gives them 
feed of straw in the morning as soon as it is light 
nough, as much as he thinks they will eat during the. 
time tha eani 5 ation wr which when done, he 
F 
EF 
S 
in the — ee them to th 
34 hou s and ee — ‘for them ‘ill 12 
hal n again ~ 
nips, and their right, p 
lest till To or 90 0 retook, eber they get — is called om 
d 2 
ood be — 
ver way prepared, if proper rasa be not ap- 
pointed ron api kept in supplying it, much of its 
good effect will be lo I may at some other time 
somet be — p most suitable age at whi 
d be fatted off; but I must not wespam 
further on your patience at present. G. S 
THE UNDER-DRAINING OF A DEAD.LEVEL, 
ALL soi without moisture is perfec 
=: 
~ 
p 
E > 
* 
e+ 
would prove age ~ e e . and the 
p 
of 9 and at nc time they have ln few that 
re bound up in the bowels. And after trying this | 
up and down way of it for a time, it is found out that 
the beasts hardly ee A carryi 
for them, and the whole ndemned as 
P 
acres of very wet 
to 
Before we proceed to dig * clay, let me observe . 
that the average number 
of 
a foot long used in 
draining an acre bye soil is about 2000 
the drains. being 8 yards apart. One hundred 
cres of thus drained will have used 200,000 tiles, 
pera I. inch pipes, and that 
these are 
kila is only four miles from the land to 
the roads are goo 
and 
horse carts for carrying; these wi 
at a time, and will go twice to the kiln. 
I value the 
horse; cart, boy, and share of man 
to be 
prefer a 2-inch, - 25-inch 
not 
; many people. 4 do . — 
500 or 600 makes a 
making 
possessing even 1000 
that 
will carry about 1000 | ° 
so 
0 at 
that the outlet for the water whieh sinks into the |: 
is thus 
incapable of preserving a right sabia ae * 
far too much mois 
ey 
— do not consume at the 
cattle td parse re 
ust be depri rived of SaD Gl the 
rest which they er! % pri and . onduces Sa 
their thriving more than w we of. 
4 
„ This is strictly true. 
are fed, and treated ex 
i — a aaa wove 
| bontain a vais | — a -| 
in reclaiming and ent- 
— 
