268 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
[APRIL 97; 
“To complete the contrast of this oven with all 
thers kn to W ha the 
offe on the y pted 
; an educatio: ided such as the parents think 
likely to benefit their chil 
the father rE g 
that out of his week’s wages the school fee shoul 
the privations which must be endured, w 
a 
— yielding 
po 
with these let him ran two fresh gilts as before, ym 
| that year and each succeeding one he will obtain tw 
— I think he — fairly count on five at a litte — 
as 
a gen rage, though — (I speak from ex- 
B is nearer the mark. This is the plan adop 
e in my neighbourhood, and * which 
158. from eac en. 
y earnings of the family are diminished by 
ae 6d. which that child might have 
That explanation which it is easiest to give of pth un- 
the Kin 
l 
8 
s Somborne s 
master, or to re- 
r | 
readiness, or simplicity, or aptitude in 
his way of dealing with children. He ta takes no pains to 
alts, I have 
à this 1 on 
of the s 
= —— to the 
The probabilities of the case are all, in 
opposed t 
am bridge, “ote W. any yea 
University as 2 and tutor of his college ; and a 
unaccustome place, whe | 
in| tively speaking, mone 
cres 
e 
American Natives. I usu obtain from this 
about 100 sacks, 18 oe ( 14 bem per Gane) to the 
sack ; though my father, a more e d 
myself, has 8 vida 160 sacks of this kind pet 
ing year alf an acre of groun o be 
— drei i (I mean 4 to 5 270 4 a — dept, excep 
some circumstances, e fou compar 
thro 
8 
pe ay. 
some of it „tenacious clay 
w 
w 
drained 
first time to keep the top soil at the top, unless 
extends to that depth, when 2 dv 
to be buried 5 ** = 5 it is full 
of the seeds of v. remember right, 
riou 
“A Country Curate” sated that’ it had been allowed to 
run wild for som d 
super- 
the largest. crops being 
phosphate of lime per acre, 
always obtained from the use of farm-yard and artificial 
mbi 
nd than | ™ 
The following new members were elected: > 
Field, Charles. „Tru 
arm, Alton, H 
Talbot on. Wellington Patrick, Rane 
e i Grounds, 
Har Thomas, Silkmore House, Stafford 
Tal, tal Exeter 
The names of in “a for election at the next 
r — then ' 
YAL HIGHNESS P 
hed to give no 
age into the pri below the false “bottom, when, 
according inciple of w regaining its o 
vel, the sewag Mauid would se through the filtering 
d to its original level in the tank, and, provid 
water. 
the ta 
e marie mht 3 12 was also clearly 
shown, by es sections, how the 2 e could 
be let into the tank, or shut off, when n Sy 
what facility such a filtering tank pat be ‘applied to 
ee existing arrangement of sewers, ran requiring 
alteration i m re 1 eture. The filte ee 
m an 
a sm years one opened that of King’s Som karit abstrac age all ex A. 
When I eg it —— r 3 ye g s d. ter; would, in ail proba ability, become the richest manure, 
otsi wie ee T ES iam itil? 158 poles Ki gee Betton ee, , de cond at any tm, bp stopping the ranei . 
e (0) i tche e 
mot to be . — g eee Aa ate, ka Di ges old n carted o — any place thought most desirable. 
de placed in every » do not dispute the premises, 3 seis pigs a ay 15 3 osoh, wa 12 10 ọ | Tbe solid matter, too, held in suspensio the se 
but I see nothing to justify. the conclusion. The | 2 fat so 3, 20 f ply at be They should weigh, it weii would ably form a very rich deposit at the bo to 
example of t ing’s Somborne school would be of kept, nearer 30 stone (14 Ibs. per stone) 10 of the of as e approaching in i ties 
little value if it did not embody a principle; and there to guano, ould be extracted by removing the false 
‘is no reason why, if that principle were y appre- £27 10 0| bottom, which 1 ia 8 pepe 
our trai not supply masters Dr. ver t W. low it in the tank, and e 
— es 3 or og L 5 such —.— were 9 Ber . — ay 110 * made to lift up or take ant ine the 0 fe waite 
provided, one mind such should oes tT eew ĩðZVj «w i t easil onstrue 
“control many such —_— not Gri rinding ditto, at 2s. Sd. per qr, u... 016 0 8 2 that one mi . A pet while the 
the. | 2 quarters Beans, at 30s, pe a RE sd 25 3 0 0 > : 8 T iment might be 
highly y educated, Tike Ma De ven to the e tp a 8 . seed Potatoes ait : : 10 0 arser : veng emptied, 8 „ ps 
— e Mr, zawes raises it aboy on ” 10 0 a y ain co j 
on of the people about him Bin tank his Royal Highness had himself tried the operation on & 
considering what has been the previous training of Tiie mye small nt uccess ; > ani he 172 
our present onal oolmas this is not to be 1 th Zap I * J have estimated higher, 227 —.— suggested an important an n Of the 
WO! dered at; but I speak of other state of their ower, an oug t to have Brea. but I would rather be er 9G priceiple involved i in the . roposed, he 
tion, and y men, duly y within the mark. The Mangold Wurzel, Probably | wished to lay no claim to origin mek in the adoption of 
educated for the rg should not er where h — allowance of nearly 2 € per diem that well-known law of fluid bodies by which they 
2 cbr confidence, and accomplish the same or yet 2 wm pig dl had ries » 3 rler aay an effort, proportionate to their displacement, foun — 
z -m i 
Education, ts. Report to the Committee of Council on should be given when warm to the sows during the time their original equilibrium, On that principle was f 
undergoing the process a a trough | p the Thames water com s. His Royal Highs 
z clean water for y panie 
ome Correspondence. 
Home 
In answer to a Country Curate, the best 
Gard 
admirable work on the Potato (wh (whieh 
“should be t h 
Mr. be without) which may be 
* For twenty years tutor of Downing College, 
| field, LP. 
J. C. Wharton, Mr 
drinking bein 
use pigs. In summer I 
+ 4 . * 33 24 
„ and the corn b 
The Sa 72 a 
„Een, Rector, Lincolnshire. 
ieties, 
eirgis ke pril 24; present, 
~ chair ; Earl of Ducie, „Lord Port- 
man, Hon. R, H. Clive, M.P., er J: Carnegie, Sir 
Mr. , Mr. x ee Mr. È 
Huxtable, Mr. „Langston, M. P. 
a L 
impson, Mr. 
Shaws Taylor, Mr. G. Vernon 
s Gap S „Rev. 
J. T. Wharton, and Prof. Way. 
Seih s * 1 i wealth, 
is 
at the dee ome, 
It 0 
f Ricumonp, K. G., Trustee. in | 
Lord W. 
„Sir 17 tion Bart, M. P., | that account, tha 
5 1. Charcoal: 
substance for 
by the ja 3 —— for the dhai of a deadly 
nuisance, e conversion of decomposing 
highly fe a to animal life, into the most p 
before the 
— be 
ve 7 
| 8 saturated to . it 2 as a mant 
Ro 
His Royal Highn ess had used filtering 
the following s 
admitted — be the most — arak aly 
