AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
| Aue. 3, 
492 THE 
14 years, with ee exception of one single case, the 
“ landlords have not been asked by me for one single w 
farthing fo my expenses, nor with that exception 
(and which was aa th pose of pro — a valuable 
a the estate), have I pa been Lapes ing. I 
do not, however, judge fro my o ; I know 
members o h classes, —1 I know tak on on the whole, 
the rove’ of efficiently entesa 
by the one p as the other; and not only the land- it i 
lord’s interest, but that hich i — importance, 
e t's also. So far from a country solicitor not 
knowing anything of the value of land, it is the very 
in-spring existence, ject that is 
brought daily under his most serious and anxious con- 
sideration, in the negotiation of s, and more 
especially the loans of money on landed securiti 
agree M t and honest tenant 
lighted by the periodical visits of his landlord; but I 
have kn y deli too, not from a prai 
t with the view of obtaining, or, at 
on. I can assure Te 
that the profit attending them, if honestly conducted, is, 
cases, m pen Wa es. On the other 
re are two sides to a eee ust not 
o fi in 
4 Crops in Tried, pif pr 1 
deav to give your 
+ a land plant 
te this ( 
Ox 
lette r I en- 
readers some ion of the extent 
wee 
xiste what extent 
it would or may hereafter prove ry mye neither I 
nor any one else can tell. I would hay 
the subject then, but feared I should be i down as an 
reports. I am no alarmist, and i 
5 
E 
ges 
8 8 
» S 
y 
1 
above al, lest hey F aia — an in- 
jurious effect ou the sales of propert now under the 
pen ong termination, in order to cull a few of those } 
flowers which constitute the travellers 
— made in so 
road fo r the use of thos 
foot, wire the r 
walls or hedge 
the Hawthorn is frequently ats, es for some time 
e who have to travel 
o 
Q5 
o may be supposed interested in &e. 
but a i dime frequently comes freis ths hedge i is allowed | a 
to make im roper inroads gone the a e so that the 
li 
walk i 
ally there is muc 
— they should sing 
“Gentle Hawthorn thrive, 
And, for ever alive, 
May’ * t thou blossom as now in thy prime, 
By the wind unbroke, 
a the thunder stroke, 
ee by the axe or time.“ 
eight, a 
som he co 
n thing to have a footpath on one side | sume 
0 
of Fam: law Board.—People roa grumble . 
but what | 
confined and having no other provision :—one cock, 
three bres „ three March — six April, and six 
May „ during eight clear days, and one feed left.“ 
ys. 
ubject myself. One year I ke account of the fowls 
killed — the . and foeni their number to 
a eir Barley came to three guineas, 
nothing else, but were at liberty, an 
n rural eco 
in providing 
whom are able-bodied. 
t 5,792, 9631“. 
of England and 
collected from the working E> i the community. Can | u 
e hands, and reduce 
TEL 
z+ 
1 tax ? Falco 
High ming. — The m high farming is to 
often ond” to denote e extravagant. and experimental 
ae and this 1 —.— those who are anxious to 
. their land, but stand in fear of capacious ard e 
for manure, are phar for cattle ; in addition 
all sorts of ploughs 
o carr. 
Mechian style requires 
assume 
e to the 
8 aay be made to disguise 
all Irelan 5 1 
shape, at i stage of the plant’s growth. In 
some cases it is viable B the = Er land, 
attacking the ames ron * near the 
or: 
y — in some of the 
e Ss on canker appears in the main stems or 
side sh ma in others in the footstalks « of the leaves, 
usiness 
pay and is paying wherever the pro 
— between landlord and tenant is fully understood 
d exercised dlords 
1 
Noa efo 
pence path in which the argument for road — 
might aili be brought to a most convenient and 
Sens erec 
tho fact, my belie ik a ace fe aot k Potato field in 
t tuber, subject o 
ungus and fin ally | 
Tn luxuriant-looking | 
is a reflection on our coun 
on e pigs, cows, and horses luxuriating in ~~, whilst 
ur labourers are, in many instances, vegetatin e 
stion, omar together i in confusion, to which we do n 
it i 
rtar more 
biped the prefere 
— 
is 
e — Edward ee. Friar's- hill, 
fee 
nomy, combined with industry and common sense, will 
35 more to keep the plough going than anything else. 
alcon. 
A Prolific Sow.—We have in our possessi 
— — — in six successive farrows, the 
us progeny :— Ist, 18; 2d, 18; 
20; th, 173 6th, 19; making a total of 11 
— and six months, George Summers, Stoke Was 
orset. 
Pou oultry. —I hope that Mr. Dixon will allow — 855 
call his attention to a deficiency in a work other 
very interesting an He has 
notice of the best and most economical mode o 
lieve none on t 
oubray 
(bl 1 in Ju ie 1806, a measured peck of g good Barley 
kept in a high style of condition the following stock, 
or : tie action of 
* no apparatus, and no 
y be done by almost any farmer 
wate of ammonia is prevented, will 
taken yey little 
g | th 
experiments now 
and Ireland likewise ; 
us with such reports from — i om 
Blighted Wheat.—There —— ghbour 
several fields of Wheat affected with düst, m * 
the baby which had, up 00 
markably vigorous — — tured ail n once = 
and yellowis 3 
sown, 
flowering, and that the operation of fertilisation had 
thus been — — 
The Cro this e 
d i 
1 = order. Wheat 
hood, and fs — all — in g 
m 
mend, and if nothing hapaa 155 
Now — 3 debto ae 
sorry to — ing rapidly ' $ in 1845, — 
dark stalks I first noticed 
y eariy 
rE maae 
ted—the * 
Tile hnllecks'3 feet each way ; no manure, 155 
