16—1850. | 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
251 
— 
8 of the earth, and is next applied to the 
tter implemen 4 15 every kind, dead, 
h 
re- 
ite no Sing benefit will be derived, the parts will 
not be duly ap ere and the necessary mutual sup- 
vement must begin in the en- 
mshi 3 a 3 in * rder to 
e es 
d the of cattle — etie 
the other articles. eyy 0 rene animals to the 
useful maturity, gree > mu ef dation 
eguminous crops amounts 
inty. The greater che number of 
cattle the greater will be the produce of grain. T 
want of green crops limits the pre of cattle, and 
the existing quantity is reared in an imperfect and 
profitless manner 
( To be continued.) 
Home Correspondence. 
Relations between Landlord and Tenant.—There are | 
few 3 of more _general interest at the present 
moment between tenant and landlord ; 
they are so up together that it is — pos 
sible one can — without bringing distr 
to receive more t e tenant, on the 
other hand, — — the depreciation of pro- 
duce. These are m 3 of no difficult man 
where the parties ve confidence 
other. The — of distress amongst 
co 
a couple of years s on t "a ant ‘those who pr ho 
had io to e were careless 
rh hn 8 of er ann would 
interesi 
of a very questionable nature would be 
att * 
a 
his ground 2 hg hig 
with re rE than he can manage, pen eA fund 
other is over-burthened | principle of drum and concave would he prefer? The 
s at barn Wood’ pipe 
work of Mr. the least 
to 
„ 
8. 
5 therefore re are high priest > 
they pare fe n days gone by, high prices 
smoothed the 5 path, and permitted the easy 
tenant to rest i ; guaranteeing gi 
ave 
vestment for spare cash, Fal 
rofit. pas try one will readily sured 
taken 
pia ace in agriculture 
a s is now be- 
nding im 
hose | great 
After passin, * 
0 
g their 
farms prope rly drain Fone and oiled oughout; and 
very well it is for those who paes plenty to spend. t 
is i t for those of the le c to 
embark their whole capital in a trade, unless it can be 
shown a inty of a profitable remu- 
neration, been struck lately in travelling 
waagt one e ae: southern counties the 
e 
abe rn sys tem “of farming. 
1 hrough er ral districts 
in the older st Ga of “omhoog elde, ee 
differen 
rey ting damper, 
3 rae -g of fal but as the cos 
be ill ig 
one by a very plain movemen 
ibed in the u 8 for last scrub but it —1 
uire it to be divested of the apparatus adopted for 
— 8 all persons attached to it, from the . 
to the lowest. There is nothing more destruet 
gee full cropping without efficient dressing 
exhaust the soil amounts to i 
insanity, as 
perpetrated in two years 
would not, pebi; be eet in dozen 
3 
L. 
Earki Machines,—I should 
req 
| locomotive e: engines, to enable the engineer to cut off the 
hilst the 
ee much less water to boil, and eonse 
is 
tion he shows that, in an engine — which event 
k ( 
5 i pply an engine of 2 200 hors ae as 
a cattle all box.fed, pikea okie * Ae say bun gt 1 he frequently found the heat of the air at the base of 
i n : 
n . an of bann 3 — 
. accounts, he would stare, or ably lau a 
and say “ he did not know how to write, eo theref Bh | be a better subject for a prize essay by our Royal a 
- could keep none. fone contempt of him would then | cultural * any 8 by farmers of 
ing | be at its height ; our esteem of the other would be this waste heat, an 1 0 9 wanie * 
to heightened in the same proportion when, in reply to a high pressure engines! One way ploying the heat 
similar question, he would produce half a dozen large | f the fire after leaving the boiler would be to let it go 
; volumes; tell us to a the amount of food each ox under shost iron which yer i 
had eaten—to an inch lah onthe hora | U0 a5 a Vln Soe ATORES or oiire ical tar a 
had trod, and to a shilling the money that had passed | waste steam could be r cooking e 
thropgh his banida, t bua the bankers, and or D ch, after a few hours C. 
see how much remains im the èma 's hand, tion to that heat would very easil, ith a 
and how machi in the old nese s — “ so despise, | meo; mallet ; but, i t for 
e to and we shall find that as n object the | the Steam m be A 
; latter is the best farm. Tho — tion | YOG De y ce 
are well in their way, eN: are sre very satisfying | of Man. ert 
things to live on; and we 1 A advise those ER ate 
or | farmers who have wives chil * epending upon Sotieties. b sat 
them, to think rather —— span — ere of their ROT AL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLA: 
ill | cattle and fields, and look to strict nomy in the | Proresson War, ne 
more en items of labour, — and manure. e eee 
accidental error that crept in my last 
. 1 
2 It is ye be ai ai 3 to give ae oe War. hie! 
tirahing machine shoal „ re ot hongiag D 
u m 0 ‘or 0 D 
the Di of those who do 80. or any of our rea hoy oeg oaia EA 
$ ine 66 828 . rollers JAN 
made by» fev few, th 5 is much more distress existing | or = „but 3 om 3 aa d 
in RR where there alf than one-t when it is taken into guano, On ae- 
moderate Let any 1 the length of — sheaf is u i But it id ee, of things, however 
‘through 6 who understands the differ- the rollers have, in Scotch 7 lik na oe 12 
ence between land well tilled, and that which is greatest part of the 8 a h 
pe badly cultivated, and he find a vast ere taisot one when ta g 
‘extent of acreage in a most primitive state, wasting its | discard 2 
strength in the ion of weeds. On inquiring the the drum, as “ Lusor ” ends, I am at a loss how which bis hearers coi they sought it, find equally 
reason of such the answer will probably be, that should be done without moti or better given, in books, There was, however, 
Keds then url eapnotremvert the amar alow drum and taking away the revolving rake, for my reason to believe, 
land; th t far chi the mouth of the rollers, the axis of the l, ten times more penetrative 
ing it to remain idle, having his rent to make up, I drum, and the axis of the ving rake, all in a line; he might so say) than any power of written 
never could yet understand w land under in which case, to be out of rage aa ar me — them. an 
t ean return a profit at a rent of 41. be pla iently hi; propose ; ; 
Hey the samo desertion of soil un dér the — ald drum and a new hollow concave, or would he, time to time the Dan 
Teer sad yon wee SE there will hampun e reverse pa ture, 
in and roots being sown on each, about the sine they are Present lecture. 
apparent mystery, we 
this apparent must eonelude 
. — 
To motion, „ and 
generally made ? Tes sagh dal reversed, 
2 other machinery attached will not permit it. Whose monthly lectures was, 
remarking, that a 
