ER ee ee ee ee, a 
* 
44—1850.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 699 
sary for their sustenance. The organs of digestion re having deposited the fibrine, which is * chief ingre- 2 ant, rendering their flesh unwholesome. We 
exq y „ for when the food is — | in muscle, and its ts carbon, whi ah chief ingre- | throw y thousands in vain speculations, with the 
into the stomach it is by the action of the gas | dient in fat, it is return ed by che . undergoes hope of 1 an eh interest for money, 
juice (which is ted from the lining of — peat chemical change. which, from its nature must be fictitious, and can only 
stomach) reduced: to a pulp and removed to the liver, Fat animals cam live longer without food than those | be viewed in the light of a gambling transaction, 
where it is purified, and then conveyed through the in low. condition; a fat pig was once overwhelmed in a terminating in the ruin of those who foolishly, sup». 
i the 
> g 
lungs, where the carbon is open to the action of the slip of earth and lived 160 "days. w without food, 75 and pose that, when the legitimate securities of 
air is er 0 i : 
and being ‘ é P Trans. | country i y insure- 
into carbonie acid it -N heat, and is conveyed by | Linn. Soe. vol. xi. p. 400. In an animal kept hag * 8 by inyesting their cash. in a scheme which 
part o 
1. p 
— each inspira- | food the 2 wll apply, to the 8 for carbon to keep offers an unnatural gain. Such have been the extraor- 
the blood to every body. 
tion an animal imbibes a certain quantity of oxygen u up the heat o hhi after thatitwill goto the muscles | janapay. praga from the railroads, where extrava- 
from the 9 — (which is is composed of 79 parts of and. leave them soft an weak; kel, it will attack the gance on the part of the management was quite 2 
i A f oxygen), Theappetites of to condemn ‘tiling bes epson of. receptacles. for 
jonate quantity of carbon to maintain lite. Animal animals ma; y be incre . * acing air and exercise; housing and killing sheep, o pigs, intended for 
porti 8 
and vegetable food contain carbon in different propor- but the pes i they are kept the faster they will feed, | the London market 15 the” direction of practical 
i of fa 0 as muc 
as 80 per provided the sheds, cow-houses, or boxes, are kept at a men, who could be depended mae to 1 well their 
en we consider moderate temperature. Nature has provided the brute plans before Jaying a single stone, w ype 
imagined whi 
that candles are made from fat. After lighting the | creation with clothing ee, to support life in the popular investmen 9 for eh an 
a fair 
h oxygen, and in climate for which they w. ordained-; but, to prepare | The pel oas of the gre at Babylon ad feel how 
light and heat. If cattle for the butcher, en of suitable . much their comfort and convenience e de espan upon the 
h peat 
tlie extinguisher be placed over it the light goes out, for quietness, and warmth, are essentially necessary for s project being enc out in a judicious 
i x Assen, d an animal kept large a fi 
ing can bi 
10 minutes without air wi 
tory 
ormation of fat. Welsh sheep, hares, said manner. It is quite in vain to state fe most startling: 
1 tate 
e quantity of r that is breathed regulates nature, never carry fat. Small and erowded cow-sheds in self defence. Mere accident will probably bring 
f 
the. 2 — tes which are to supply the 
carbon su to k 
heat of the bl 
ure, 
stems with are not so well adapted for N as those 2 — a about that which every one wishes, but few will take 
nsions i | i 
ways at the same i 
ority of the best of air from without will i impede the f eeding, re. vineing evidence is lai 
ientific men, the the stalls open at the back are objectionable. I have be too often repeated, that one-half of the population 
98°, the same seen a building of this ven — the progress of the of London and all large towns are positively livi 
meat 
man in d is 
as at Calentta c — — other ps on the face of the globe. | cattle was scarcely until it was closed with | upon impure food; a description of dogs 
In England the appetite is greater 
£ r one-eighth oxyge 
fo more 
r than in the latter 
ill one of 100 cubic inches in sum 
. In summer 
m 
pai, Bi ic than in sacking to the height ie of 6 1 ra j feet from the ground; up for the oceasion and well spiced, which in, this 
inhaled in the ra woe aio ci 2 re then passed through the aseending | smoking, chewing, and dram-drinking age, a vitiated 
r the same air that warmed before it — the animals | wR cannot discover, but an impaired constitution can 
A little qui j 
— 
season; 
ils a — of 80 eubie a wih air in winter will — and l thoy fod fed twice as fast; It would here be well | and does, e quiet agitation on the subject of the 
ed in i th 
r. The heat expands to adop system as follow se cheese-rooms of sale of improper food may be of use to the present and 
. 
E 922 
0 
R 
d 
2% 
~ 
hile t 
keep up so great a ex to g sun will — hot, that it may be spirita ust ar consi red = some se day. Let 
— Lassist in e mise 
n peti i a 
n him; on the other Dee another moving painful to hold a hand upon exposing the 
densed a osphere will —— so: large a quantity your Gaselte a detailed account 3 — — 
d 
come voracious, as the savings may be effected, and, — Jong, I hope to see in Fa system of 1 and selling unsound food. 
e of heat. rive m a moderately warm a sdi -house, 0 iy Hiob Farm I am induced to say a. few 
or any other hot bleak and cold one. J. C. H., Croft Farm, Bridgnorth, words upon this pen ot t from, the observations made at 
TSO: t Indie 
climates, exist upon fruits or — a contai mare = a recent agricultural meeting by a reverend gentleman, 
than 12 t 
n the Arctic region rrespondence. cabinet occasionally to the Gazette, and a, most 
per cent, of car Home Corr 
will eat at one meal 5 Ibs. o È blubber, or any fat tas Fresh Air and Cleanliness are most ane to the excellent man and: clergyman, He mentions a field of 
and drink train oil or 3 in proportion. Under health of mankind, and there is no difficulty in distin- his that has been hi h farmed, and this I know to be 
will ea d i 
the equator anim bi u wate 
aung time, but in a cold climate hunger will soon cause | the agricultural labourers The former has all the ap- oo b en yielded more than 14 quarter per acre of 
iti eat. this y 
eath.. According to. Liebig, an adult in taking mode- 
— exereise 
— dins — 
pearan 
d the 3 of 13 oz. of ware into reer. The artisan who lives in an ill ventilated house, situs Nom I will n a few remarks on what I con 
134% oz. of carbon; | countenance of the latter speaks. of inhaling purer air. | true from the app ce erop before reaped. 
use, ; : 
and that nimals | ated in a badly drained and narrow street, may have high com: ot this blight. This land, good land and in 
ut seas disgu 
e warmer than | plied to the publie, are enough to bring down upon us all Thanet, the best land I knows The farmers there avoid 
es ar 8 ; : 
although.they are | the pagnes of Egypt, and of every other e county under | applying any active manure directly to the 8 crops 
not without air; the thes No animal, te enje 5 ntti Be ould be but put it upon the 
the 
4 
® 
3 
— 
oO 
< 
* 
2 
Pi 
a 
i 
bladder containing — to enter throu 2 | give it to the roots, be they Mangold Wurzel £ a 
of the vessel that polis. It is folly to talk of 1 5 oie of carrying | or anything else; it Pee RAS to give them an over 
contains. it ise to the surface or oak to the |meat from the suburbs, when such i * sk 5 dose, I thi may challenge any ME 999 to say that 
ing th ani particular 
„ they r 
doubt the aai quantity of air contains a tained by g 2 
1 
bottom; no 
sufficient. quantity of oxygen, which 
bon found in 
Q 
2 of u ood pr f 
the weight and pen- to do with ee fevers, typhus, and cholera. Al- 1 by immersing bags = of peat. charcoal, would: 
poor animals 
A uniting with the of cruelty and abomin —— naket, a | Mangold Wurzel. E. A., near Braintree, Essex. 
duce heat, making positive San to a. civilised country. Scanty garen Manure.—The plan suggested in your lea 
i ndensin 
ht a : 
he other. G though et eee see pa is attributed to imperfect I am sure be ineffectual. Charcoal possesses. tuo pro- 
reat — . ni wa uch : perties, the paige ee bag > PONE ha conde. 
exertion will.cause quick breathing and a palpitation of | drainage, an dou! mischief. acerues from 1 peng ret 
88 imagined tha 
of the blood; but such i 
science and — will, show that 
tected against e 
—— heat. I 
i i thi tthe ar oiher things to be com complained:| quantities 
a aei 4 9 yt ther r o mankind, and not 3 tact with 111 4 18 Aue en 8 s its deodorising 
remedy. Filth Nise e the N of houses, and power. Chareoal has also the property of 5 
sewers bourhood ts. of any liquor passed through it. It readily par 2 the 
iy 
t4 
he 
is not the case, for of 
animals are pro 
n a steam-engine ; A. f 
2 oF power by its furnace, and as the —— on the part of the Mrandlorde and tenants ; and gas it absorbs,—for instan 
of th 0 
18 reg 
mes more ss the 
when it 
wer, the pressu pasna — ithin opens a safety- valve induce them to act right. The workin 
re borates the ats quantity of — animals thei 
a quick and quie 
athing may pro more s 
heat, iy g keep a circulation — — at the same 1 e _, = W 
temperature, our s are provided with oon which uld be to 5 r 
open like safety 3 to inlet off the heat by means of lighten the hardships they endure by passing their | by the removal of the colouring matter S 
iration. i tp a ase : 
p iv „ To und 
It is here necessary to observe that. dogs and some measures as a sanatory precaution, is like e 
a a garme 
ce if it con ng as 
by law, where a ammonia as it was py of holding, ge was in that 
has not. sufficient weight on individuals to | state immersed. in water; the ammonia would be dis- 
ing classes, from solved out. If pes aak 2 aan was pass 
n an i d sele ough th ar mmonia it could condense 
duce houses in loealities free from ae 1 Je i would only be. the portion “that was disso olved in the 
1 small 22 water retained in its pores. The 
arrives at a certain sense of du 
= 
A 
B 
4 
a 
g 
[z] 
& 
rg 
3 
o 
+ 
A 
g 
2 
2 
& 
= 
[zi 
= 
5 
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B 
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E 
iece ga a 
ed, and porapiration is secreted from that it on to the top, by way of increasing 1 
and mucous membrane of the mouth. it * and breadth, To do one thing and leave the 
Sees the 
supposed that i în 23 hunt 
255 apie is —— per rs 
se. 
oxygen, and sulphur, are the i 
gluten, and casein, w which. constitute re and being be accomm modated ‘and Aal without 
conveyed by the arteries to every part of the body, and now pract gling unfortunate 
an on 
its length the liquid retained in its porat, o difference wo 
made in what was 
&e,, the decrease | 2 undone is a mocker To construct splendid ‘due ation.—I quite Se with the opinion ex 
ers, pee 
3 but it appears to sewers to carry of the liquid refuse from the haunts of | bylyour correspondents, on the policy gi promoting — 
ing of a — at the same time to allow the sale of unwhole- education of the people generally. ; 
: at some meat and vegetables is an ano maly so able as admit, that in the march of improvement, the school- 
the co the | to excite the astonishment of all classes, Rag asa master poste lead the way; so that we gain the end we 
a there isa remedy at hand, whic far from are ing, it matters little how it is: done; but we 
uced to cinders, being an additional burthen to salesmen —— e rasi id be ng who. we take as rm ages = 
red inders 
is reduced by the would be a positive s al, Let four great ma e W ve land agents writing; class po 
I — from the — of — agricultural students, in whieh, we told 
metropolis, —— he railroads, where animals can . 2 8 Ibs. of aner . 1 Ib. of h 
and „if I mistake no 
H os feail &e 
2 
85 
R 
Dn 
£, 
Pe. 
pis 
RS 
