25—1850. | 
foreion elements of better 
3 1 0 
which are wholly | 
quality, whic They | ste 
of the situation. 
would dwindle into — an — 
appear altogether. y improvement 
be made, iS by choosing the best qualities ie 
purpose 0 
/ 
the 
eny. hese 
operating in this way, 
tion does not admit the aliment being Haiii rd 
cultivation. J. D. 
Home Correspondence. 
Potato 1 and prospects as 
upon. And what I now send you is but an instalment | 
of cai a nigh. 3 sai what I am ee 2 
Potato Planting and — — in — 2 0, of severa 
p to the present tim 
lied | general adoption 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 
necessary—at least 50/. or 60/.—and — none but — 
steadiest and most men will do for the busin 
A farmer will hire his nete and er 
he market, without making . 
about them, but he never thinks 0 
ts ag on must know 3 of him before 
hand. the merse, most pe — . are 
paid 3 in kind, the unt of me wage 
being very small, only 4/. a jar: This ble ce sheep 
gre 
3 — 
much -enq 
doing this with his or wha 
of much use, but if it is, will you or 
ents be so king as is, J 
to tell me 
— brine (which I have heard well 
—— aa lime water may not be equally —— 2 
t harmless is recommended! 
that feathered game cons 
insects, 
ants and their 
Piss ` — at a former peri 
—— was attended with ma 
grazed, b many inco 
veniences, z — muted to wg: Notwithstanding 
this, we ＋ — pens farm servants against those of any | 
district in —— on ‘respectability — — 
appeara — Of course, be found 
everywhere under ow 1 hat $ to — 4 ws is 
not between hand and mouth with them all, w 
lin our limited —— who can — 
deposit receipts from our —— banks for con- 
siderable 8. e a onvinced that more 
ch a 
over it, and mix it up till it is dry. 
12 oz. of blue vitriol in water enough to wet 4 bushels 
vak Wheat ; and 
n 
spontaneously i in half an hour. 
uano.— —The b business of preparing cheap 7 — and 
Just 
of su 
with great benefit to our farm labourers. 1 Mr. 
Edito or, you may be induced, som e day, our 
posed foe sale — — of bone dust, varying, ins in 
s will per 
m 
they so 
in M 
Irish e 8 te . of — land.“ In some places 
dee is naturally fertile . rdinary | o 
Lammer MELT 
Farmer, June 3. 
hree-course Rotation of Crops.—In one 
ers you as 
pletely innocent of bo confidence, 
that À sold. 4 far the — 2 ere of the I Spee: as 
other 
éi K. 
recen b express tarmers p 
to an ex £ cropping adopted by orth country farmers, | of these dei 
degree, you w wouid not ＋ otatoes | i. e., the taking a Wheat crop after a fallow, and fol- ash as top dressing at 4/, per ton. As it 
planted, no anything else sown or e piinad: 8 510 a | lowing that wi at crop ; but ink yo ton- | consists of b regus fire bricks — * rubbish 2 his 
a 2 — — of any sort, save an ocea-| ishment will be in when I inform you that such | alkali fu reduced to powder, we can 
r-rate colleetor, searching a course is not only permitted by or I should his profits, pae cannot suffie iently admire iar folly of 
pre irs to seize 22 rates, and in the majority of rather — bonne agents, ee most o leave the | fi rticle for 47., which could not 
such cases the only quadrupeds now to be foun the | management of their estates entirely to their agents, ere be manufactured genuine under 10“. per ton. 
and foxes, not so readily seized on in the a who, — paid a per cumini on the rental, aret T. L. C 
of ds: orses ; they, too, having gone “the way | interested g est possible rent, irre ———— — é 
of all flesh.” In other places where the! hat is speetive of — —.— that — bidder may h Sorieties 
called poor, such as the barony from which I write this, | tinue longer o farm than p m or two RA —— tha yí 
and p of some of the nies adjoining it, it further by thelr agrecme mts, the tenants tually GHLAND AND AGRicuLTURAL, — The half-yearly 
can be truly said that never in any one year since the bound to apply not less than tw eee of Was per gen of the een A w the 1 
creation has the: n so much Potatoes planted, so acre of — nature o 1 on ae e 3 an haw the Right 
— corn 8 or the land 25 or so extensively being quit ous. As this mode of cultivation has — . 
ed as at the t time; an add, been practised for 40 years to my knowledge, you s 
nts were ne er paid, though in in- —— put — to nich the a — *.— That tenant —— — — of ony local 
stead of being diminished in ount, This will make and now that such tenants are ruined, the landlords | agri tur ation, shall pay ra 
t this and your own side of blame free e for n inattention and igno- | wards annually, in advance, the s of 10s., with the option 
3 perhaps Did the landlords or their agents bestow as ere fe parce of a Ke, —— y — 2 
sta 
r the 8 no 
correct 
which I have just allad 
ad 
P, ioe 
om ls, 6d. to 36. 6d. per cwt. of 
Huts Kil- Po 
e been all 
less quantity than 1 
Ireland, co 
ention — 
7 Transactions, the first t efforts of 
w wn, w 
analyses of Wheat soils takem from various parts of 
ortan 
renerally it | is thought doub 2 the — — . 
oem the e years the o 
aid subscription. Chemi 
aid, must certainly acknowledge, wh 
— — scientific investi; 
ve been carried on with 
cep 
might m 
quantity and the fine quality 
being celebrated for the large ‘ 
Wheat grown Another in 5 an 
In a this locality, which is prin . — 
4 nad perc there are not more than one-fifth planted. 
e conacre scarcel — at mt, nor is i 
The] 
alluded 
m 
ther, 
r it, on which to — w Pott The prese 
Bilanchfield. 
heaps.—I quite agree with Mr. Mechi in the 
esse 
Dung- 
oor persons | 
land | the 
nt price of | not taken 
Pots tatoes for seed, per cwt., Dan 5s. to 6s. Patrick | i 
meeting of the Farmers’ Club | 
b 
> thle 
grown and high situations? He h: 
euject —— last = with some degree eon — Arg = 
amely, the small amount of the funds co buted to — 
emical branch of the — „ 
i to state th 
additio: 
population “ 
to grow weeds, having no them. which the anim, to rere since 
Notwithstanding that, it is by good tillage they should — cannot be kept clean comfortable without | January last; and, during the same 2 — sarees — 
and can hope to keep r ruin; for good litter, I recommend my old plan of all straws 2 2 oi 4 t ene ad year’s 3 
pay and middli l pay PPP lengths b the | threshin Ys which the privileges T enjoy from being a aubseriber to the chemical 
paid and is paying all sensible men who hold land on will admit the intimate m W, fæces, an „ I am free to state, without of contradic- 
fair terms.” Edward Carroll, Friar’s-hill, Ballagha-| urine. And I have ever suggested that all I Turnip soils | tion, that I have re beon enabled to miako my selections of — e 
derreen, co. Mayo prepared a deep w  Plonghings : — secur on —— 2 those who have — 
88 Sheplerd- s fh printing our by Finlayson’ , and th z dung be Evailed themselves of the aid of our r chemist; and Lam more 
note of the w of a Lammerm a ar? ou ask | mixed with the land by the two last nh, — of the | and more satisfied, 
if we give no one at all 2 er, Y Thore grubber. I will moisture, by properties of — — a cali iP — 
are considerable differences in n — Hm moving ng the ak i i — — = „ „ 
other things g we gave the list referred to up to ex „in the common way, converts | mere chance, and thus ma 
48 being something like an average; but in no instance | lands of any tenaci into a mass B J. D. of the, — * (liebe 
that we are aware of, is any money paid. To many, Steeps for W heat.—It has become the practice before | themselves about a ; but T would ask s m 
Such æ practi y ngly of the | so sowing Whea ley, oe steep them in a prepar || —whether, when 
truck system, but we can refer haracter and of arsenic, m A for or feeding su — it it would not be mors 
statas o our Herds generally, as being — ̃ bunt or rust This has proved | Eto w3 Shep toy So 
of our To the number of sheep detrimental to the feathered game, killing — — — 
8 highly * nty 
required to up his pack, a considerable capital is by wholesale. I do not fee that any steep ould be — at at a few al 
