— id THE 
AGRICULTURAL — NEI 
Part is and litter. The heap kept by j t 
itself is r of ho — cattle, "heey, dp vig ‘ang | 
the droppings fed in 1 the sheds. 
personal observation, speak volumes as to the care with 
which Mr. Huxtable collects and prepares every ýa 
lants. This, as regards m 
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ramework on whic 
ks or ** one- flooring 
inclined to the drain com- 
The ee 0 the floors 
a gardener's hoe, used 
ap Ne that * ‘through nipple 
below, the under part being in 
municating with the tanks. 
admits of room ae 
in go ou 
— interstice of 
4 wide, aia” 13 } thiek, ‘Still cattle cannot well 
a little straw spread on the boards; much 
g 
cattle in-doors are supplied with 
straw, mixed with green food, such as Turnips 
and Mangold W zeh, onte ate Bean-meal, during 
8, mixed wi 
W. 
latter pilot in absorbing the juices sof the succulent | ex 
renders it bulky ; while its astringent 
qualities correet the ‘Marthe 
h retards fattening in tied-up animals, 
wn 
moving in a eirele, the bestial 
i 
livides Sooke as well as er: 
size, thus promoting am 
stances. The preparation of cat 
with threshing grain ) 
steam engine ; that grinds corn into 
furns the machine that slices 
ploys is made by Moody of s. 8 5 
al 
house interested me 
novel spectacle to see a hundred d tied u 
d in two onting 
manger co: their food, and in munching thi 
on a boarded floor, 3 feet wide, furnish a Sk 
alr de 
too 
purpose requisite. irsel thus gere seemed 
5 th; — 1 of foot rot obse 
when they stand on a brick pe r 
with Tares or Grasses—cut by 
Mechi 
ae ont r relish, Bs pty on ew diet, Pag id and also 
vane straw, t Sutton W. 
e 
| not merge 97 in the ge 
the old-fashioned open-air heaps ; and the matu . 
of all fortilising — under circumstances se ting | 
like access to rain 
pra poe 
Home Correspond ennie, 
co: 
9 
m of the 
to the 
d | of each, pee it had been found by experience th at | poss 
neither can bear forcing rin oe | 
f aa 9 
as rvable also _ t 3 
estimate of the return . 
pig mars — 2 if Ps Wen di eyer n he put 
t, m u Spie d be wasted; and 
— Chat on — which appeared to give) 
re (speaking from memory) than 1 per ee 
P. Mechi, „ hasn 
farm, both buildings and land, into or 
his apprenticeship ; 3 is 
start afresh ; and it is 
every water, — the till 
$ possiblity of eee evaporation —now a sine qua 
covenants in high farming, James f. 
ave a 
: Tura 
grown a clearer 
is given for working the soil, 17 which it is not 
rendered more friable for the spread of the 
wth 
they will do under fa 
The high authority already quoted 
grow successi ee er manure, 
— ons will deny tat by judicious management and 
th ication of suita 
eal 
o this 
than it used to be — “he farm-yard and 
ings are better constructed. Mush of the old system of 
constantly turning out * cattle i 2 
„out, and more dung and of a bette 
; | The Turnip cu 
n that of a — n the erop, be it green or 
1 som and increased — 
t | of rich fe rtilisers as to . — or four times 
There are also a number 
. H. A 
Practice with $ 
g may 
be best brought to a successful issue. The principles | 
hich good farming is N are few, plain, and 
e whole ghean igs fi 
ern operations viz. : ma E oa dry, clean, fing, 
rich, All thy the works rage aur most eminent agricul 
turists, all 
pj 
together, and 
the 
working 0 5 t water, under 
any cire silani must at be i injurious but A ne removal 
of it — advantages 
. laid dry the work F the lough Rey be going. on at 
ost seasons of the is brought i 
tages, 7 the expense 7 often be repaid in a si 
year. Land being Ka adas is one of the f 
needless tc 
tl 
the e —— pigs; and as often as number 
is reduced by sales, recruits of the named 
d to supply their place. Of eropping 
t e precision. 
as possible, 
as the Seasons revolve, — — and profitable I 
v — Z for effecting the purpose 
their | that the corn sme peewee may be left to itself, but | stances. 
this may be a great There can be 
are made enabling tenant farmers to 
n the land | beaten tr, 
reason ga a crop of corn should not be kept just as 
n i , | clean as a crop of Turnips, and x ions ha 
ortant 80 ted this matter, that there be no e3 
ane for bad farming in this parti e corn crop 
the great f grown in drills (and ee see can be no r 
nmodation in | by thew of Mas Garrats 5 
vinter than are dat present ; bat to got mid of | De . Newington’s hand-hoe cultivator, the land may, | 
and ad introduction of the green erop system qu 
Mn arh facilitated 1 The old fallows being 
I lands, d 
vantage; th 3 
o 2 on almost al a well worke 
Beans 
e of Turni will e serve the pur- 
pose of 2 le the soil by frequent turnia 
perhaps it clearer by the overshadowing they 
create than its being baked even by a 
| no corn is allowed to bem 
