636 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Oct._5, 
tio —— Now that is a field extensive obtained accidentally, : and an _account of which I 2 1 favourable to the latter. It is certainly notorious 
enoug try so something superior t — our present plo 7 — g h i and t: „ 40 Hare that the ho rrible erime of assassination has been even 
or cee 1 4 it a good time again to urge the WE your rs Į pa Them, pr — their en also have of in later times occasionally committed in Ireland. But 
. 3 1 have met with, hen | its production and quality confirm all I have thought or prid look at the causes which hare produced these stains on 
ional character o 
with farmers, came*crowdin 
ive — nery, and intelligent 
too—impossi 0 
the time printing w 
of — printer, stood one of thos d heretofore 
gained much éclat, by writing well ana —— My 
ription cannot port e look of con 
e eyed the printer whit delivering 
of the ne following 5 Here's a T 4 
re rome 
powers of desc: 
tempt, with wh ich h 
himself 
7 it is like * 
will take a piece of paper) r, and with a pen only, 
— to y our 
But observe,” remarked the printer.“ I can — — 
about it. Indeed it is a most valuable kind of Wheat 3 t, and Thay 
no doubt whatever 
quite general in this co * 
12 three wet kinds of W 
and own 
field of T also reed on m 
an acre only, an ge of. th 
good.” Thi not an u 
But this year I grew in 
heat as well as the Egyptian, and 
I challen —* — bbs — We better kinds of his ge stock 
ibi as 
and me e ask, will * go there 1 ese by. 
gone causes At al events ihe bare, 
— now subsided, and are — longer a bar to 
ment o e A redundant 
ountry 
ving from various causes 
0 being likely to remain m from contin 
Poor-rates being fo pe the same F A the ' ‘spare 
k | ing state of the, countr 3 
and m 
and d aboye, all, pol ola amd An. 
ments, j greatly ab ey 
tion, as it has via bai sup — seig — — Bre Pik nd gi ms ; ilst land ean, 
which ‘ows in t actually ars when perfect thisnum 
10 ik. . The mis solid, or: at least fall of pith, now be purchased of the mbered estates. coms ; 
in order to yield great | missioners, with ect security of title, and er, 
1 * ight as the ears 1 whereas the Fi or o at 0 ib | impo t advantages calcu 1 gy 
mere hollow straw.”—Calmet on the 41st chapter o; e f $ TROD 
T — that this is an exact description of the Wheat I — grow. ments, at prices too which, according to the 0. N 4 
ing; I have found in my field 16 ears on ones 4 competent judges, are, if not extremely low, a 
grains from single roots of one grain or 4000-fold ; folly alone | decidedly derate.. Let therefore hope tha 7 1 
therefore can condemn it. George tins. ore enter ising men will b nd amonga 7 
The hr N 22 9505 ugh I am only an old prag. bidders for the forthcoming estates, with ref 
tical far a have been leebe that the old | which I ma urther assert, that whilst it “cannot T 
no more bim „P sent times | doubt 
i 48 00 9 2 farmin 
may oe spinning wheel will 189 
— — him. ‘Nevertheless printing gral 
made its way, horace bigotry co —— it. 
The analogy of the cases strue — rid a e 
difficult to traders established opinions, and — 
or if a pun may wi 
for their under- standings to 
a 
steam-power, and 2 lled on a portable 
I then —— — m no mechanic, — can 2 
be o 
beings of the prese ept 
The evening —— red — and — 
ust tend to raise such a class of 
— 1 
might i 
mpre 
behind. Sand in e 
is easy to see what i is vlog, iti is chu "difficult 
it seems to me 
open.) it 
say what would be right. 
hole system, of agriculture re 
soil is 1 
At seemed to 
i 
va ne 
amongst thm 
industrious class o 
us, 
to fetch water, instead of usin 
have this great advantage 
— 2 ` whether wich hands or head, ‘they can 
ale a pro 
dition: 
p are ny therefore study, properly guided, would 
in their case case pro 
tion, N the se 
i 
t present their employ- | m 
ri ous, that weariness destroys the 
spirit of improvement. But let them be once rid of | 
rmness which has 
them to soar aloft, when the weight 
ben flight I heartily wish them God — Anon. 
Wikins’s —For many years the attacks made 
soon me were founded on the notion that I could not pmo 
the plained and always successfully 
to 57 long cherished 5 or 
the farmers of this co ar after year 7 —.— 
always more ian i — eed never failed ; all 
— . had more or less adopted * 1 è 
— as it was found from yearly experience that the closer they 
followed my system the larger were their crops with propor- 
tionately less exhaustion of their soil; the attacks upon the t 
had dually and would soon have been 
died 
— But now the attack is — from — 
See ne to — kind of Wheat I grew. —— 
— roa — 
away, a 
ice-Chair- 
Mechi's 
se om best and most agreeable relaxa- | 
di 
Jer rou 
rly wit 
bean 77 it which: of all othe ha has, 
eae ssed, viz., the 
sa ig of 
the dannen 
would, 
papel monre for thus address 
n Irish 
ga ring, pr 
ty an no better than Rye,” and this as 
received with 2 reporters would term of 
2 aad ea 4— since been industriously . 
ughéut the 
—— 
a des 
Tea n 
m i fr 
yields, were very ige kinds, whereas the — lay 
3 believe I changed and changed until I 
early wn in my neighbour 
abont half an acre of Egyptian Wheat from a little seed 
wn all kinds 
mode of cultivation only, and notin the kinds of T Wheat, bps bei 
grown 
hood. But last year I 221 Erne 
prising men o class hav 
estates in Ireland, oy: thus rete 
emai... whilst _provo oking 
g the 
on into that apaa of the soem aa ae 
| remunet rated capital, s ai, and industry o 
of the kin 5380 om, 
e through ‘her be 
confirm 
and ' 
by the farmer, 1 g K se 
al | dom and 
e ed t 
lowered the actual om and consequently the present 
ly table value of land, no one acquainted with 
pre me who. can 1 1 any conception of the 
prospective 1 of 12 we resources, can doubt 
that that whatever may hay e rates of pur base 
hitherto (whether high or hen the presen Rpudia 
state of the country, whi e most unpractised eye may 
see at a glance must, ere iong 2 state the spare 
Y.|,capital of land, and o a considerable rise. 
0 To rg tag therefore, 3 pe pure W. 
whilst can, at 
ow, 
blie 
imony, a 
assured 
oe 
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in 
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© 
E 
E 
8 
= + 
BO a 
— 
B 
— 
4 
E 
4 
E 
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5 
oe 
a 
of t 
lfare 
we all kom be greatly Köha 
ing ha 
tr 
life 
a eal 
any, w 
long bee ted lan which, 
198 falling in in 15 ultimate objeet of its establishment 
> arms 
from causes having the slightest identity with the upon which industrious young men 
con- that 
e 
bee, then, is 3 to 22 855 page of the ca 
able sue 
0 their confidenes i in 
Id beg t 
you will hay regret , 
our position rand cure P Jish Mandlords- Aud 
ad to the farmers d 
are 
light taxa pa 
e | England ; 9 5 exa ee too 
lenge 2 of farming would be sal" e to 
is P 
the: 
materially help to roper 
Ba 
whole 
ral-1 rs—English as well as Tri ciha 
who would gla adly ae with e parties eiter 
15 ae i r 
ite 
safe as 
nter- | of course also regar 
upon you 
rhending the — and grazie 
r in their minds, and 7 4 want to se ei 
and if, thus ve thie oe 
| st le prod etions, : do not imbil ‘some 
ral feelin 3 ‘for its W they are made 
po — 
been greatly ‘hinne’, aig 
. 
