@ True, true : a tool worked by — and dra 
a wan after it. You never spoke 
And here we are somewhe ete net Ye Tall 
icultural improve- 
e plough! 0 dear, dear ! 
Well, I Taing ge — wrai, nor never shall be neither, 
cai S Too * a little bit. How do you know you 
ever till gs o! 
F. 
re after 
Common mistry any, day. But 
should like just bt ti hear you on a bit about the plough— 
T think I could understand | that; but you must please 
ste: 
I know 
tines, rasp aw: 
I ttern 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
gging The horizontal water-wheel i * 
ruer, Greening ! and 4 limited application ; but it i 
ddle of Whe 
a goes but extravagant, 
ngular ex ception. 
—— circular action is 
e locomotive, 
the threshing, machin 
engine, a 
tion of the engin 
e, the s 
, we do it with the revolving teeth of a circular 
w3; aie not the clod into soil as fine, by the same 
rade Ai action 2 
What has the e dragging * a plough to do 
i ith team-mechan mode action lies in 
vapid iene which applied b behind 3 your 5 ve 
(which travel for as the . * 
eut a tr — a foot de mn "a Wi i 
the soil oak the land ie ＋ an 
ay 
of fineness, as easily as 
taking a, modera e bite of 
si Gently over ni 
nly waking up 
a 
opened a 
p age smooth-like, a not. too 
many of ’em! and t n they may help to ‘fill the 
bushel’ after all, beg But about the } r 
8 pardon—yo somethin 
o, no! go wn Gr teeming | ! 
66 beter Pre — i'faith! 
listener for half an 
six weg wide!“ m who was it took that, 
a happy 70 be ius — had! What 
mmon interesting, 
or! It’s for 
bite 
sir ! 
— 4 Trendy ! ! 
I'm 
Why. 
all the — like w 
|o’nights from ewhe 
the beginning i esei he talks, to > minae 80, ti 
re all thought him out of his m blest if it 
t just like Columbus, es discovered 4 — 
my ! 
Wall, "ihe t i ever ; 
d 
from your ever affectionate brother beyond the sea, or ide as a world and b as hu ity, 
a ce from your land! that he’s going to lower | our parson says—No, he died quite the wrong 
your rent, and giving all — reasons for it, - Don’t side © money-making, now ink of it.—But 
tisk x yon 2 Sap your eyes open wish you'd a’ talked now, instead o reading à 
ink I krri But I ba it’s in words for somehow the soft back of this chair o’yourn, 
of a n : that’s all I ag A for; and I'm and th hat it— e ~ „e * dear; 
your man, now. e like present tim el” what a that right wool- 
a a short steps ho wide yo 3a loa rummaging | gathering—I kne Snin 1 pe shut — eyes 
wer of papers; a great deal of settling | to think it ver a bit —and I was off Jike a shot. What 
down ma comfortably in arm. chairs; aud, I’m afraid, a is the use o’ them long words theyre just for all the 
1 
ink-pot and been playing at pom E over the p 
cleared his throat and began readin 
Each has its own peculiar 
to adopt that of either of — “others 
man, guře, an d the direction of his 
acts nat * Bool in r 
aper— | 
— 
3 
reads shall arg 3 knew 
fuses 
world like the Spanish oni —ha’n’t h 
8 a’ been am 
belt farming 2 a lot o’cockney tailors, for — 
eir long. words Now do, sir, ju yif you ca 
slice it — like, into small words, so that a plain English. 
e it—” 
it so plain that évery one as he 
= lanar Ah! that’s the 
ay to write—and talk—is’nt it, Greening! Well— 
come — yen talk it ae in plain English after 
Talpa. 
luncheon.” 
othe 
e | re 
fallen tatabler announced the e entry of price fala 
sentence of a seleeted judge, whose fiat it may be — 
. to question, more particularly when the 
mpt is made by a novice -r myself, whose pr 
— $ is on the great waters ne 
t of manure on — arms, and more 
amea a ap on those of farmers who all chele Tivea hate have 
been brought up to nothing else bu 
employment, i who follow undeviatingly 
of their father 
what ought to he manure exposed on eminence to 
the alternate heats of bogey the blustering win inds, the 
drenching rain and snow of win ce wastin 
its fragrance in * puddling horse pond, dt + well ie 
dev vious course to es this 7 
r—its e 
ž 
düs: 15 
arran, not long 8 noted as 
the most sterile spot in the n but now producing 
crops equal to any in it. 
When I first commenced r N oak middens I had 
to 8 with the Bie in of my n 
deep r prejudices of my own 
an absent failure “atid wai 
what say they now 
ià pae sage j gas ofon 
cultural shows a f 
vindication, in order : rat m 
foun 
pe aps may not have given a personal p 
to experiments, —— — nevertheless undertake 
spine, a e 8 e works TOT SENEE TO — a ely to wn. James Robertson 
at a winch, eates : ting the handle ON SHELTER FOR DUNGHEAP PS. Walker, Gilgarran, Cons isl August 20. 
8 point ia the circle, to ee, half gH vide within thi t the Journal 2 — ee as 
ba. sh pa 3 barge, of the Royal Agricultural Society. ag although time THE PUED. ay TEE AIR. 
1 figure so as to adjust it as much 11 ossible | has not permitted me to peruse it carefully, 1 have, 
— fes the soil th kag a digging, | much to m gřet, observed a på in Mr. — ‘ine . 
i the sagt gr und h til N anden Thompson's report to Mr. Pusey on the “ Essays T me furnish o ther proofs of the fact that mo 5 è 
An : nly hy by oe oe sti we us 500 Farm Buildings” wherein he disapproves of covered pe bulky part of our plants is d from the 
sng Manua l| depéts for manure, I have not the pleasure of knowing — already pro it b showing that the 
a = — act most power in perpendicular 23 who M pson is, but f address Mr. 1 pera seca 4 from which a plant can 
th fail 1 de mploys. bi 1 Š Boe arar Pusey, I suppose him to have been conjointly a judge get its combustible part, cal there are two other 
fi 2 alae a tion orso b the merits of several essays for a prize on “ Fa arm in which I ean prove it— show you that the 
The back- of 5 four- c 3 cee, il B. 3 8 3” b ioe 2 heavy enough to render it very likely t A 7 contains 
perpendi , to the ground: the adaptation s ae 5 hig en Se based Je fail to i Boing f pores publ | enough e of i etal to e r pae 5 an — 
. must be b 4 ag se "e at least of that part o E the e agri community 3 drila plan J 
S it fortunately | ho h t to furnish the 
3 80 the spa frets. — the hoe ar are tering into son foie trial t s * —— ee TELUR 8 Eide: hy ast en n is eno’ = 
traction, an — soil, raising i d Mr. Thompson been present this spring when | it- hea that you might suppose able o 
with the pe like setion 2 of the plough, very ies ure was carting out, and had he further wit- build up — — pa and trees? Why the 
—— Sad oe but the w tress nessed the effects of it on my Turnips, some of them air surrounding t the « ae t is at least 20 times as heavy 
pared wi 7 8 a ie hee oe ere 200 feet sane the level of the sea, and none under as all the surface soi an, 
compared sA would in e a perverse | posing it to be on the aveniae 12 inches deep? T — 
doing little towards its culation ing, 
n of animal power, in sae i 
‘al: aad Fortionial traction is the only form 
oS e ee 
Mei, d of 15 soil; * 3 
Again, in 
s power must still be hori- 
1 his work be done by lateral 
ltivation, nor is it 
The ok, the “harrow, the seuffler, | 
only 
it is so easily moved through, the air 
can u. There are 15 lbs. wei 
inch nd. T 
i e: 
ime I will venture to submit my own humble opinion 
antagonistic to his, ious yb 
the little weight it will necessarily have, in 
to that of a chosen by the Council of the — 
Agricul Society to be an umpire ina i 
vitally important not only to agriculturists but to pg be 
nation at large that of the best mode of 
farm b buildi 
It certai 
forth opinions, which 
a 
3 ft. | 
y concern the Council of the Society 
to be cautious how they give ji may | the 
‘mislead both landlords and tenants; and that the i 
A g 3 I can N 
s of years most amply testify ; sur 
whe Weighty authoritative why it is 
