. 
30—1850. | 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
rought forward ... £5 1 0 
To keep of seven — 5 it 2 25 to Ist 2 . 
16 weeks, at 88. each a eg 
£2 5 0 with. 
„ . 
— 
After Grass as 
— —— of converting a waste mountain- 
o water meadow 0 0 |two years a 
The reason I did not plough the — after the ashes | Mechi’s 
was that I wished to ke 
h 
to t 
orig a 
erdeenshiro, 
bot 
old arable land appears ing, w compared with 
fit of thus forming cn Rt ly Which, accord- 
ing to Mr. Roales, is more than one pound interest for 
in The tw 
dispose o of 
less price t 
rs in 
verdure might 
moors of y Wales and Scotland, of sot Keane and Connemara. 
ash paid 
If the 
still I noglected, it it it will be e not to tax the owners Bris tol. 
of thes — Ss sand difficult — but we shall 
to deny that, — hold i their hands more of this or any o 
country’s surface than they. — ia mange for their 
own good or for the good of the co . P. Pusey, 
in the Journal of the English stirs m Society. person 
ABT S price e 
Home Correspondence. 
On — am Scotch 3 read and 
English 
riends any number 
3 manner as 
shape 
S, Hy am 
trict was i 
ason why s 
intestines. I find 
the best and worst sheep more or less ste 
t 5 85 fager is onesie 
or by om ing 4 me ey g 
0 ers 
— 2 rom 
ahi 
Mr. Mesh 
f them. 
I, and surrounded A zig -2 ei ghee my esteem 
not 
2 
d frig 
fin a that he has ca 
ma ow, with only the sboye- name 
Very 7 in Turnip culture, the drills too narrow — — — — 
oe ns y do dri ill, | but many ¢ of them sow on the flat). staten, hat wee T 
reat deal of their 
Fn shot, Turnip husbandry is = in its infancy with work 
p m generally; 3, but o 
d thing sina areas — most espe 
set 2 
there — pain ai all that I described, 
was to be ‘tout. The first 1 1 "had the cae “of | from well-wishers 
Earl of Essex). T under the management 
of Mr. Swanston; the appe — of all the crops was | to his recolle 
beautiful. The Tu urnips were laid down on the Scotch sucvession in = 
system ; in sh 
eco ot 
dd, also, t 
n moving towards the me 5 responsibility alone, Mr. 
fond ‘cond 
wil 
but not to pp: extent. ndeavou “ia tay 
prese manure of the farm, — * * pepe 
<a I do ee pr 1 * rop p wili * 
tell.“ Had thi given ot 
vias I would have iat its | two, or 
were all good, — 
two fields of Wheat, in extent about 50 acre: — When 
ming into ear, — average len 
he I was shown 
have seven quart 
— average 
11.fold, or 11 times more 
ne of them 8 * pure Tur Snow or Pros 
ices; ‘and w eeps up ‘th 
does not som sight of feeding for 
4 entries and 
e vegetable | fellows.” Part of "his 
ttin i 
sa em 
D hopes Mess 
May wl exhibit specimens of ‘this — cart at the an 
hills, 4 by. ‘the glowing comer 
other e * 
as to materi 
and dimensions, 
intestines, which contained nothin 
ndarat hours after death oppna nted a 
nder similar 
cially in besides 12 — aa 
ensured and weighed, T 
s of this see But 
d Mr. Mechi’s ene nari wr 
me conditions, | ever, marks mp Sia 
lose my wage hr him if by EIGHT bushels highly commended is a prime animal, bo 
But the ee ti thresh xception 
nd 
a half of seed only, or 149 ti 
cak 
a lot 15 sola, ‘hair e stalls are filled i in 
cession 5 the herd; if any are 
2 
that 
ps of 2007., so I keep 
-We perceive that your co 
admirer of — pied wa ane 
s. Ransome and 
too happy to 
of his friends — iy 4 for the —.— at any 
Pla cin 
re cautious in 
2 
4 
+ 
. 
a 
* 
TE 
8 
P 
© 
t, at th 
its nativity, being 12/., we w will build“ L.“ or ay * his 
f these car 
0. 
otch Ewe was lost under the following circum- | pig. 
perfectly healthy, she was soon | have b 
st 
appearance, a and w 
ea | Although she * hal ‘a there was but fiene fat on the 569, 
arly all my A have bn 
pem and th e | Woodhouse, 1 
prin 
a are poisoned 3 
I shall be 1 ik any of 
ai me 
23 ‘ ade referring 
My friend’s pigs were — 2 in the state I described them to 
noni e denial of my st hi 
the conditions 
om sur 
— of — does no 
o. Wilkins. 
than the seed used. 
LAND. 
462.) 
on this occasion was a 
very 
he 1 ee poth in point of numbers and quality, there | 
comprising | 
152 animals exhibited, 
W 
Remarking how 
Mr. H. replied, “ Pigs have | class i 
them. 
which has never | merit, 
| Gazette, pol also 
f these ca 
made ery 
als, bat precisely — 
111. each cart. ee 
ng else, and about six property of — — ard Bar 
ort yet ranspa t is 
a pa ait rrd the fifth time, | yet a 
whole field 
Wiens ger If, 
ve not, I more ing to 
or m 
ehallen cng 
gloves only, respecting | metry—perfect otha — tas, good! hona 
itted to wri 
Sorietes. 
ANNUAL MEETING OF THE ROYAL AGRICULTURAL 
* — TY OF ENG 
the best specimens of the several fashionable 
the Yorkshire, Cumbe 0 
horn would be cas 
Devon, in à class pr y of the 
In pigs, pe ae the Cu , Tam- 
snail, and shire compete for the 1 e breed, and 
—— „Leicester, and 
antagonists upon equal footing for ithe —— the 
w not rt breed ; and the ae that approach the nearest 
the id erf llence in the several ol 
eens goalie 2212 size, receive the honour due to 
from w r stock these excellences may have 
it 8 f — refer to vious we 
that thes 
1 t 
ishab 
ing | the skin, The form therefore 
i approach to that which a excellence, and — 
e and the most ications of 
ts local 
es the prize. 
it will be seen that s York. 
mended N N A 
ssd Prize for large breed 
ee e. WAS ee in this class, ap the animal had 
on the | rare merit in size ilking qualities, prag mas by 
he Tam Toma weet pig does not, 
r, possess proper for 2 but 
— the thin long a light — oud 8 t 
8 ee good wet nurses, - size too, and, 
| o lar 5 — of ate aper 2 
inst orkshire and 
me herb 
are muc — for vat 
sma all ll breeds, and ae not sufficient size large; 
them l animals. 
We have 
Ahat - 
fn i ciate 
ed, | looks, with th of his hind legs, — — gone 
u 
d (494), Mr. — 
7 inches, and m 
H 
extraor The second prize, i 
| more, Tho: 3 Devo on,a Leicester (517), 10 months, 
is larger th he — — *. 60 ine j 
but he is — 0 even 
is 
class are several other first-class 
1 year 3 months, Mr. Tuley's (Keighley) is 
