28—1850. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 443 
elect the -officers and committee for the. Home Correspondence. pany particular form or existence. Judging from the 
— year, and to amend or form rules for the —The following is a curious fact: A Cochin | above natural appearances, I often think that manures 
government of the society. China h he „p m Mr. Nolan, of Dabin, laid | should be mixed with the soil in = oe ne 3 ute p 
i m e 
ion to the pri — and object 
d in the previous resolut 
se who are acquainted with the 
may 4 useful 
of the 
8 5 
Ei 
E 
3 
— 
P 
ai 
F888 8 
al imp 
eto allotments, — ts 
v an of this 
tone labo — “Your comm „„ ed much evi- 
dence about the arrangements and regulations under which the 
has been aia — 4 have come to the 
in which it may 
so be near the dw 
fsa will yield pave nia under — 
— nder 2 nh s od of tillage, 
e 
proprietor who wish de 5. 2 man, shouid. — 
exact more rent than he could posta to receive if he let it out 
to be farmed in the oninary way.” 
d other charges, should 
— the owner, and not by th 
preventing the F ee gees of arrears, ont of guarding the 
tenant ag: t frequen and sudden de 
which — might faa p 
to 
laces where the all 
ans of assisting the indus- b 
nt, and pai 
‘or the purpose of saving trouble in the collection, of : 
mands for payments 
and 
or 
ions, the com- saw her 
| chased fro 
m 
. weighed before siting, which she 
Ibs. I wou 
— s, namely 3 each hen 
buff. In three 
pann 1 one day nearly round, the 
a handsome 
obtuse at 
n . 
ral times from the pereh after retiring to - | sibl 
this twie 
Ano 
laid 11 eggs in as many —— 
is now om 
to correct i 
always in — lays 
I have not foand this to 
e ee for nter should be 
s, the former 
e days ag buff eggs were of 
next 
oval, MO 
th ends, the third 
pelt the same — end. It was a lone cottage, with 
so that there could be no mistake 
no ins 
A, 
Chey and Turnip Cutter.—On 1 a farm the 
ae riin day, 
n straw 
saw a great 
and Vetehes 
devoured with great avidity. It has 
whieh 
many s e feeding 
chaffed together, hich they 
me 
ith the solid fæces of the 
in the hollow of drills e on the 3 
any chemical action is wholly bet the materials 
the as new between bodies are 
inv: their mas as the surfaces 
they present. The land and the dung are in masses, 
is only the attraetion of adhesion. Intimate 
contact and minute — are essentially necessary 
for the affinity of com The on, and dung 
mixed in — a way, — e drills wi will be very conves 
by one furrow 
being mix 
niently form common 
moved as ns the power of to horses wil sim 
iss soil will be Tullo f moisture, 
—— 
=J. Di 
ones — e An sown Wheat oct lane: is kai 2 — 
— 
į crop, it becomes a question wheth er 
m 
ecks 
han injure me. Ishould — 
“Ther d in ther advantage me much more t 
ha Turnips, and so moisten and blend them É 
hy t, idden all Sede baun insisted upon s pate alr (something ‘like the operation of a furze-cutter and Ted sa. —— a 
have required that all causes of forfeiture—viz. . non-payment | bruiser) Id be imitating our summer feeding | of eire Partie * dry 
of rent, gross misconduet, vilful neglect of the land, should up w eattle thrive 80 much, and lso use our summer, also whether a favourable or unfav 3 2 
. in, reement signed by the tenant. (Se straw with more economy ood, Closglass. seed time, I presume much of acres laid will rise 
rotation of crops has sometimes been enjoined in the rules ; . i sean 2? again whe rain and a drying ensu 
— — — A matter . — may well be left to the discretion and Cooper's Ne- gruss. — In answer w = 2 * for Mow tof my Wheatsare 5 feet high, some more. 0 
be culti Under these arrangements, the ers Rye- th is no su t e en- “4 ; z 
has in —— den allotments. has proved ——— xed good, It quirer bose 8 Cooper Rye, ry e arly, t is quite — the richer ou d the g ter 
be er srt He wins ep a tha bled th cope kos hardy, ueti nd excellent variety of Rye, whieh the eee far thin sowing, Woe be e thase who iin 
s as enabled the labourin s rank 
raising» — Hs Ie Tor his family 2 i | is cultivated and sold by Mr 2 2 a i — _ Sees oe ede — such land of — 
pe oy aen lchester, Essex, as well as y fem other 0 
produc getables enough for six months? 7 : * J. J. Mechi, 
has 2 supplied 12 industrial trainin amy the bild ie elsewhere o such. ae 
under their parents’ £ p 1 pret nie — tata all, of ar whi denomination, There | Gazete, conveying some remarks on 23 so ap 
“sem the possession of an —— has been the means of 8 ets an — ost | pensation Bill lately — pss ee mel P re I must 
reclaiming the criminal, reforming the dissolute, and of ep che p — A fin observe that that thanks of 
changing the whole moral character and 3 It appears parts of mA "Britain, 0 er by itse a — various ence ee ae m a 
that holding of land directly fi i the tenant farmers for his e, * ie 
y from the landlord raises the | Clovers, for hay; as as its name were levali om sation fer unesbuteeted. Á ve 
roving eet pede man in is own estimation, and ve z introdused inte — * — a Cornwall, with many 4 e e difficulty of i the 
stake in Gen country, and places him in the class whic e | other es, tools, and practices, from the 4 Tu. — ject, it is something that publie attention has been 
a pare baw — W which he may call of 8 to these —— F — it is call K RENE: | nied — portant aa — the same time 
ep upon his own exertions, it | and i W. von it is ver, Ever, or 
pee, — — m tothe exercise of self. control, and lea 2 him to Iver, and pping t initial I and v is called be valueless u he h a aie N 
prosent . Se: future. It furnishes bim 3 n the te t of E ith a rider or clause that will stu — and make i gal 
with an inte erest in life, imulate his faculties, to — his | Ray, and Ray-grass, through reater part of Eng- all special cov ts and conditions as between landlord 
mind, i to — to inspiro hima wit i h hope; — it hoe en a 10 bic land. a misnomer to at se — —— and tenant in the taking and letti * 
stain from many r no! nity to Rye. It is ieved that : 
Hara sate icad 1" a at 1 300 heads of families holding allotments : do ot profess to sell any variety of voned questi bye — toe a 5 tlio all pish 
ted for any offence d i Aa Loli p arliness or excellence th hore a 2 estio bs the se ent 
* 1841 and 1842, that ia in = parish of Hadlow — . r Paper of June — there nants and : 
ze in 1800, and ia e 1835 ving year, gn t sys ee was introduced Pos re se mee al F. Me, — drill — 1 — — an 8 now is soiled by 
reduced to one? Since that we 8 had. Sra eine 8 aystem secs of $e sbandry, a — on the l, einen — “which —— a “ tenant ri that would do justice to both 
2 — — those a apate — — pr — n in 1835, it is d in the a very general landlord and tenant, giving the latter such com a- 
an com å 
we have had the Sin ince ce the Year 1837, there h has been but ja r ane: 7 e e (Eas Lothian, t re seen ta tion only as the merits of his claim deman while 
d . 
one commitment from among t f all 
It does not appear to your committee 
benefits are purchased at the expense of any other interest. 
All the ee were unanimous as to the — p a 
—.— — — eat allotments which are under proper 
agem 
u. in 1 these than any other rents; frequently 
— there i is less. N umerous instances have been mentioned 
pe applyi ing for parochial relief ; and it may be safel y 
3 whioh diminishes the poverty of the 
pae — pnd 1 s their good conduct, cannot but 
be benefici aed at large. It has likewise hada 
that these important | sown | 
pec 
rer a 
and his ants; increas ing his acquaintance and 
—— tenan is = 
interest in their circumstances, and exciting in them more 
than’ and respect.” he 
kfulness an 
2 GULATIONS FOR Fretp GARDEN e She a 
ommittee 3 r 
d — è arges), to 
dee bh preceding pl aed and Micha 
the e 
2. No, er: — under. let his allotmen 
3. Te Semen to be cultivated 1 solely "by the 2 spade, to be 
suffici 
4 
as, at 7 o’clock 
ny clear from seats. 
t No. u 
damage done yt an children to the crops of so to Aag 285 
ow 
pod 7 the p 
any — . be s nkard, or in the practice of — 
quentin public houses uarrelsome, or use profa: 
j and shall persist. in such habits . having — 
reprove nt his allot- 
any in favour 
Cae TYE S ~ 
parochial 
d by Balk. yea 3 on and was 
lowlands, 
o hav 
5 
weeds abound 
er small pieces in fields w 
and that he never 
hands and few 
Applica 
o Messrs. Ga 
— i complication, 
try are in g 
are + alpen opem y 
nly res 
— ails a grt deal, 
, told me lately peh 
sa 
y adjuðging it, “the 
W on account of i 
ae Man 
simplo (and cheap) ho 
he 
ich were no 
3 tha 
. Edinmek in 
prize t was 
Hunter, Samuelston, Hadd 
its extreme simplicity, 
an 
can wrought with fewer 
rses. There is, however, a want of 
orse hoe, and Mess 
bly come into use for want of a 
idge by For 
its of no dispute that 
and of 
the fey of alluvial eine, better unds, all 
the 
e been 
grow: 
u — —— yes p the path j 
st Mbari ta selianeiss his 3 
278 — yaa e — his crops shall be valued to, 
by . s Arrage 
— — Tecided by the landlord (o 
respecting —— to be deci y {or 
Committee), and his (or their) decision to be final and binding. 0 
and 
ferti? of all 1 
of the elements 
ved f 
quantity of materials that 
igher 1} i 
0 out, 
cultivation of the 
. J. — Rowley, Rowthorne, 
h 
s ee at hom 
h 
the —.— pna have the benefit of all proved dilapi- 
7 4 plan, if properly 
Believing 
the means 
Sotieties. 
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL * ENGLAND, 
ystery. R. Pusey, Journa 462. 
Sir Join Jounstone i inquire of Pro fessor Sewell what 
results on the subject of water 2 cattle had become 
nk as much as they 
blood. -heat 3 > 
k, to dri 
ased of the New River a Ese at a 
ich, the a po 
oxen prefer 
ngs. 
red water in tr 
arest spri e Duk 
te 
ake Z 
. of water n in the 
s water for mek and inquired wh 
i. —— * 2 * 
e e by the carbo- 
ces, ral 
oamy soils arises from the aiii — 
rather than the 
quantity or quality in 
* ee p of Ret val shat = — Prof. Way 
