604 
THE AGRICULTURAL SE 
|Serr. 21, 
hand, compression of any kind will assist in excluding 
air, and in checking the descent of water, and must 
constantly going o 
but of the farmer himself, 
his 
implements, should be —— toward e which jurio 
is likely to attain in all Ee. ~ at 
The expe 
IF 
e co 
men and horses 
number of horses 
— the 
e grea 
pepe: prope rly directing the labour of es 
usually employe oe By e ee 
generally a ppr s sufficient, 
a cart, o 
plou 
The work kof a well managed farm cannot in any case b 
wkward boys o aught men with 
such as ploughing, sh dae * 5 as this of i ise 
ec e 
Ys 
ith much grea‘ rtainty, 
than at present, before high farmin the 
application of much lal the p much 
manure, t f the finest kin crops can 
‘The breaking up of heavy G 
would be a t Wer aca © p 
seeing that searoely f ap s acre thereof has ev 
tted to deriv the 75 benefit 
—— or produce p o 
but if the iad on be broken 
same i as much of that already und 
cultivation, it ogee be eee Wi 
and yet no crops of any great value sa be 
from it, so long asit continued under such 
up certain portions of the pasture of their mgt a 
pr had been d upon plans that would +e 
; that draining tiles would be verte them 
all l thoir land, but the draining was to 
e laid down 5 
hat their yas 
corn; b 
voll orbid, thee exis ting practice of taking tw 
ssion ; and they would be obliged to 
8 of their arable land every year, and — 
ad bee 
might be made to adopt a 
husbandry, and that ped resi might be put into 2 
conditio made more productive, so as to beco! 
cheaper to them at the T rents, than they had 
been under the oes I must pass over the difficulties of 
next three made 
the sta 
the 605 thrown in the way, the with- 
they ever have bee 
uicker than ever after the A toerbe days, and oo a 
the rents were colle cet 
ception, admit ter 
r than they 
| the proprietor, seeking to ief 
o reduction could cod Ean the same relief, 
—— | 
be done at phe, | 
f| it). The plan 
inst these | th 
sources from which a our winter fogs an 
may ne prove intresting to so 
e Mr. Piper selected an 
r eavy an 
n | ment, the surface soil being about : — deep, resting 
on clay and undrained (Mr. Piper tends draining 
of the cultivation Sen for the last 
ys guara 
del this b the cet 
grow on their own old- fashioned plan of — * the 
n the 5 ond e Nature. F 
— but would have been mischie e by machine for 3s. ; for reaping, 17. per acre, 
James The want of | better Draining *. the Nabe Parks. — which might be done r 
ae My residence in the neig ping of the Regent’s- | from 6s. to 8s. whic — a done for 1s, 
Home Corresponden park has made me acquaint T Teri state in The Five years of * t after Wheat without Ploughing, 
Lesson to Tankar. At the nse tis Gordian which this land lies for fi nths in the ee 42 bushels Wheat, at 
e known the intention to repe: e Corn. laws, | year, from oe want of better Salite; ate Jam a — Es * r 5s 2 75 * shel £11 1 0 
1 years since, the owner o an ess to n 0 uch this interferes with its Rates — o 3 0 | Straw s 3 00 
estate of about 4000 acres, situate e centre of public 5 but also to what is of far more conse- H . after harvest 012 0| Chaff . 0 
at 8 > prospect which free trade pre- | quence, name. wegen o the 1 effect the vapours daily | Dibbling od s 3 £15 0 0 
sented, of reduced rent and diminished inco me, had his m its surface have upon the phere Howiog 2 ‘i, 6 65. Expenses 5 818 9 
attention ere the ef confined to the incon- eerie ee | 
for the lower prices they would have to take for the | venien 2 I should — think of Reaping .. 1 0 0| Profitperacre . 86 6 3 
rong har ee t, in the improvement abis 8 ‘siento to it, ‘bat when I consider how | 7+ artin a stack ae 7 ` : 
his estate, for means to to ue its | m 8 of the neighbourhood is en by — aes 3. P. Ar. 1 1 0 
eben cultivation. The suecess which has atte ae r re from i , and how | 60 bu hels of 1005 at 
i 80 le an example to others, desirable it is that the effect which face per bus 3 0 0 
shall be excused for giving some account upon climate should be better considered, I think Searing Birds ca 
ed the estate divided | the ill state of so lar, urface in a populous district e 
to 300 acres, which, tithe free and is well worth drawing attention To the want of £313 9! 
ip: were let at i more on raining, and to the high 755 of several ae pana S £17 0 
to 30s. an The try, althou ny sae: ancient, | pieces of w. Ee thio Regent nt?3-park, do I as ioe much Dibbling „„ 1 
had held only y by the the 4 11 3 the land, which is lly | of the o damp 2 of the houses r a it, Harvesting -~ 100 
Th had had scarcely anythin done to penen it, on Be consequent depreciated estimation a which Carting, Stacking, &. = Se 
farmers had little idea of any capability in the | ow held in this otherwise attractive toon Tas 1 o 
soil i their inferi h p ——— 1 believe I may go still farther, and Sowing Soot ~ 0 20 
The quantity of pasture upon each farm allowed of a | attribute much of the fog and raw cold of London in Boeri Puts 2 
considerable of but as the t oud i Trussing 8 + 
cattle were il the i the tesdows, and — UGA MMAR Hoa Sarker When 2 11 0 
no provision of winter food, except ha: 
P no except 
them, the' arable land had no benefit foen the Taeg 
and its cultivation n a course withou root 
we consider the effect on the neighbourhood of the al- 
| ternate daily rise and fall upon 7 
temperature 
8 of the exhalations by day and deposit of de 
ight, th 
crops, and but little * by man 
re 
London as dry as possible I think becomes 
rent. I believe it is about 
ournal, an 
water by 8 and the eold e iy 
oy the action on of th the sun upon a wet surface, is only 
becoming u so as to ey out the perdini for 
leep drains in rely lind bo the surface. 
ime the s-park — ty n 
ourse was 3 . shallow drains, ma 3 
that 3 be admitted „ 
and that such soils ious to 
= api that experience 
13755 
rt p 9 the importance of making the distriet f 
l taken 
more, or all of Fe 
years ago 
Assur 
S. Newington, M. P., Hastings 
Reaping v. Mowing.—As “his matter has already 
pretty fully discussed, I should h thought it 
unnecessary to have said more on the ably but for 
the reason that We has a accuse 1 
my various ealeulations Shear ma shown one, or 
to have been wrong, he might pee 
e of jus 
. 
* E; 
— 
such s w draining, and 
e that this groun 
