— 
* à 
l obvious, a 
pays like malformation of the un 
of fowls, like 4 Constant Reader,” 
the 
39—1850.| 
THE — Mee ote GAZETTE. 
619 
| specim mens to his custome: They 
sins of erin commission to answer ma without having: 
te. But 
into eripples aud becom e good for nothing, or die, in 
spite of the most potent remedies that Mr. Editor and 
is ai i reseribe to the unseen to bear t ame of wh 
mend 
which contain many of the elements 
and other r- 
food. For the 
re! pond — kinds o er kitehen seraps are to 
i accident is the production of a cross bill. 
No kipi so 3 has ever been hatched under Fowls, and we do not care s 
4 : b j 
of bone, with riee it 
is wanted from eee or from 
ee in the country; and, doubsless, ‘ways would do 
if requested. Bat tit would be m re agreeab 
y eon 
food, appearing to 
p grain ; ; m rib is clear good, as em 
of s dai long in a a change in pe e 
For it so not — the man- 
sa 3 be e — ief that, i 
— disease of the either of man, beast, or bird, a something, p 
i the throat, should be able 5 3 everything that is is 
troy such a miserable wrong within; whether ting from vice, indole 
istenee. over-eating; over-driakingy pete ion by hunger, cold 
The claws of a rasorial and wet, or mere feebleness of vital force; A “ Parr’s| 
Life Pill“ for 2 would ty So 
28 A artisan than to look to thei 
sufficient and equal i 7 — i. 6 
eaklings have thei well as 
he wal 
or . ing 
and delicate ; ‘il à in their very coarseness there 
orm, if much deviated from, becomes liness 
especially in wet — 3 
d not likely to cause per- truly, an d indeed w 
dy is most 
unseen 
owner of the ugly oddity can please hi AGRICULTURAL att AND 
or spare i W. EXPLA 
ULTURE is the art of phn saben the soil, are — 
the produce into food od man and f 
ps w yer 
we can artificially | 
most 
F 
F 
or 
8 
E 
a 
E 
2 
o 
2 
a. 
= 
ave often enough | if 
year 
| soil is necessary for ev 
nourishment 
er 
from their own home stock, but ere what i 
— a chapter on the Health than on — Diseases of require 
to reeur to the sub. gro 
— bulb: 
| soil enables 
ment which 
o mue! b 5 trouble w mass. 
ase na he 
perfect system of agriculture being that which produces 2 
3 do nos yearly fill up this loss, w is daily going 
on, it is evident that the pe RR a the soil will 
arly deere E ition of the 
ery plant, to it support 
„ The soil, therefore, ought oe to ten 
— the mat 
2 bring 
i the i nsensible humidity of the 
plants 
or aood = Te gr oka ex e has 
the roots of plants to =< in prn of nour 
the “soil contains, * 
s cultivation e would be loeked up . a oie 
b; 
2 ramify ins extend r, 
parn aA has no 
nich th soil, — “by the use of 
— while the land is N we complete by art what 
ure began. Land that is deeply p 3 in the 
drought 
same cireamsta nees); as to the di whieh applicable to = art of ganionibe, are deer e. eee, | 
milarly rnem (some having | a itte eee to that of farming. “ Fe 2 ‘distingu 
noise 
same — t, 
or poet scale. is, is ‘aie cere a — 
applied properly ? if it is, the eost is of no e 
= on the large se seale, provided there is capital.“ 
st 
onsequence 
(Mechi.) | * 
othe 
the there must be 
of poultry, has 3 that this “ plagu: i 
been known to be thoroughly eradicated ficou the mands 
3 mee 5 whole of the stock. of o 
t the remedy was worse w 
æ iir t of half a dozen, or | practical knowledge of the av mm . e 
of no A api consequence ; but | requi 
of 100 or 200 head, be- external influences affecting — 1 
will persist in sneezing ‘and | profitable proseeution of the art. 
crying “ seems a stroke rather too much in A knowledge of the 
style of —— Ali. e is — deeidedly off. 
cacious medicine, whie h people ep fowls.in small is nece 
by the 
8 
well as a 
cada the. — “With ns which are 
g 
57 
EL 
her operat 
operations eee her ls —— nr 
recovered, it — * — which, 3 is annual routine of p 
> are now, i semmano koan laws of Na — whieh regulate, voz se — are 
- the they pre- 
in the rich soil, 
popular notion, state of 1 Be widely different ; ; they live on 
he early stages; nearly the fi and the same ee nee 
T- 
causes the deat 2 all, and when dead (wh r may 
0 Fees been ifference of thei r — th ey all 
disease among their 33 which h proportion, as com- de t elements in the 
Saro wiii other: i e T te 
course of 9 the care and — intel grow A eca of 
each being the same. Why else — some some unehangeable as their results are certain, but the 
in cireumsta wing 
: — <r always moree 
rge their 
rded, m 
ented or — The advantages therefore are 
1 that they may be p re- n e 
nted 1 with the 
hal, 
which that farmer posses sses wht 
e 
sneeze an seasoned to their new 2 
— 6 Whether fowls 
that ha ve made a long journey are more liable to th 
attacks we would not say; but certain it is that nearly 
every stranger has to go through the ordeal, and we can chanical arrangement ch compose 
speak to the-fact, after considerable experience in the re- | the aetive soil for the production of our crops.— Matter 
i 977 year is indestructi t i 
never to lend a: valuable but eit = atom. All that we can effect 
n 
7 2 
2 
5 
nge t 
All active soil is com 
never chan nge t their nature; avec are, however, con- 
Part with: it 
ceive that the effluvium 
in apparent health, may — W a — n 
matter in the soil. 
the rows of our 
of the 3 
Nee 3 are all 
—— 
been — every repeat 
$ which supply the plants with the inorganic 
ws 
ter they 
require’; by this we extend the field in depth a the 
of plants.—When the and tem are 
| favourable for pei, the organie and i 
matter will be decomposed, an 
replenished 
animal matter, food for 
matters of a mon be in sueh 
re times in 
rops 
— v — 
ternate husbandry, 
Su 
to a depth of from | to 2 feet we mb a 
soil, aud thus double the extent of the field 
on a healthy:lot of new-comers, though they themselves 
suffer no detriment from inhaling ai "Phe fresh one ne body to an 
; | But all the eee — 1 
red universally foun ound in ri u rich and well 1 soils are in 
matters, — are 
the 
* 
deen unjustly accused of sending unhealthy! 
passi 
shee This fact should never be “a sight of; for 
this cause many a fowl-|a constant state of change, ng in original | i 
are destined to 
