778 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
| Due. 7, 
3 but for the out-of-doors people it should be 
turn to whatever is re- | 
un — The ex- 
905 * aparer aa” 25 a 0 
Smith — to RL 
Rent; — . a py — — 30 
Interest on capital diiep emote, and stock) 8 
result is in favour of farming; sats it will, be 
as men, and not 
children; and instead of l 2 have aye * up to 158. ) from last autumn till 
— 
a paid manager ms look e the ** — ar sprin — valued, his wages would 
the rents, I gave them the power to sore: — e is put Stew work, and e n earn 
8 themselves out of their o a ` . from 12s. 10 165 weekly a draini ning, hedging, or fell. 
other, appointed by myself from among their number, tim Case No. 2. man was employed at 
ae performed their parts in every way to my satis- | hurdling, day work; th could manage to get four to 
faction, and, I — lieve, to that of all the —— me pie 1 1 er ek wages). “Pat on 
or, at 
with ° “the allotment: 
th 
much larger scale. 
readin aby for the — te 
number), giving them the power to 
tants — tie . if — think them eee . to be- 
come m of the din I shall b 
o this winter opened 
0 — wending.eoom will wor 
ts progress with * —.— and 
l you: of the —.— on a 
itie 
and the — of acres of an e quali- 
to grow 11 Sai ad 
Aeres. 
i p= Bushels of we 5 
9 2 Barley for pigs — poultry -. ii 
8 per 
1 
4 
2 
genog 
for grazi 6 
25 2 Tons of Taraip, tango, and soiling —20 ton, per a Acre i 
mber of acr 
It is not supposed that the owner 2 rest b Satie 
with such produce per acre, nee to = 
columns shay examples. will pa found of much la 
one 
by. rience 
of a garden-farm, which 2 ies most 
carefu of ground, 
with high manuring and double 9 88 with: 
feeding all kinds of stock, a mos ul collection; 
of every particle of manure, liquid * ec, from the 
lan of a is simply this this: To ate — in some 
use, for certain hou ays 
ood fire and comfortable furnituro 
—— members elect a committe 
concern. ch mem 92 a a , 
Hon orary members * 45 choose. The woman 
of the house, where they m i i 
coffee 3 who are wiling t% to pay for 
it. rs and 
whioh goes — pay or the use of roo We bis 3 
time, that s the farmers will join us as 
1 be elp us to establish a library. 
One of the ee is always expected 
ments? Those were the dwelli 
8 agricultural improvement an 
e land away from him. 
nd her man; fo 
6 tir, Ke. could § alter ri stroke nowy his t 
d 
(about. 60 S 
eleet- other inhabi. 
35. ber dozen 
ake 10 and sometimes 12 
be had, at a com : orresponi 
hould be — . ive their verdiet (aber you 
have summed’ up he to the f 1 roduced ; 
or, at least, that the advocates of. this — be 
A upon — show cause why the — of the 
in their favour) should net be reversed. 
J aasee pe Tako rule to show cause. Py 
says 
as follows“ Charcoal has also the 
perty of clarifying any liquor passed 3 * T 
pean} prens with the gas it 3 r instanee, if 
much ammonia as — ‘of! hold- 
— — was in tha t — in water, the 
ane would be pred ee If therefore liquid 
| manure was passe coal, the ammonia. 
Home. Corr 
Liquid Manure and Peat Charcoal. Ling one of your 
recent 1 I read your very judicious suggestio 
as to the l liq manure, 
than which ‘te thi could be more desirable. But, 
my surprise, I subsequently find etter from 
* ays he “is sure it would be inef- 
te ual,” and 
11 
order, and look alter oof books and paper Bed he dense soils only i. the-portion that was 
s the above may be useful to some of your dissolved? in the small quanti eiA of water retained in its 
readers. R. Thorp, Benton à Leicester. | pores. e se d would be em extent 
hy do you stop? short at the beggarly allot- | of its colour by th . ring matte 
ment system! W not go ith | pended, but not a timation of — realy valuable soluble 
the same quantity of land 1 — ae let in allot- 
ings of the rural labour 
pean . y removed. By im 
only benefit woul 
— 8 retained i in its pores, 
portion of 
5 would be 
; ý | made left. elt. much to be 
house and offices, as well as the making of composts poking the “ allotment) system,” . ame, E chat s prineiples” should be g ene. to be 
and a sort of shed laboratory for the preparation of the others do not possess. Na ould. go attacked by: t give real. names in 
manures. A kiln for burning all rubbish, a S- | beyond bene. — oe the cottage e Ne support of > views—the more particularly when 
sible some: piece of land for irrigation, at any ra with ens a lar scale for those oceasiona se views are o Aaa OA, laid laid down, whilst: the 
liberal use of the liquid manure by « or horse to the — mer ‘the Divino now employs in est and 5 ee, babe and contrary to the proved pro- 
Grass crops. The thorough — of ‘the soil and Turnip hoeing, and t s adrift on the parish. I perties t charcoal, If intimate omens of 
would have a of employment for 3 take place wi m with Stine 
the . and in such a à Tented space, that portion them when not wanted by the farmer; Dui don, 1 Bay; niaeal and is pia gases, the ay is so strong, t 
or green be regularly gone over with the . allotm It perpetuates the within a certain time (depending upon “ng so and 
in the Flemish style, — it into e — — evil 7 by finding a instead a remedy. | nature and pr tion of the 20 the gases will 
taking out with the val j intermediate spaces, th In — Number for Saturday, Nov. 16, take possession, and expel the water. So fa the: 
on the surfaces of the adjoining: piece, pind yon havo m made e copious. observations here quantity of bastion d being“ only that 
and then picking and forking the hollow space, which om the « 1 syste” With. much you, contained in the water occupying the po the 
in its turn is filled up, and the Kon written therein we: fully a ; but the thought will draw i ni rive out water and 
ere ccm — a deep soil is — —— that at one swoop the statements of your correspon & immersing © : ity of charcoal in 
a ld has — — isture = * A Practical Farmer, e subject are to be | liquid Marte the away, 3 3 
in the first instan A different return might reason 
— be looked fea after sach se pe of the land, and 
ould give mere sa on in doors 
among the n 
S; 
$ 
“be — a rent 
converts to his opinion ‘of its being “an Irish system 
and we hive as obtrude our remarks o 
tements: 
therefore appeal to you, 
perm 
er der 
and w tisfae 
while it enabled the out-door work to be carried on 
without 5 
re on hand, bu 
and rar ts of the veterinary w 
ation — a syst 
| worth tha 
of giving ita ann . as well as a 
few roots ially the 
Sp my ee, on the: i —e 
3 verdikt. 5 
ich is having: encouraget 
eldom 
tolerably apies 2 of ene 
tabli cost about 
ere are some 
with 
again wa ey “ — 5 
rary 
which may yot t hasprodced We do this more eig, 
ny | wages 
conscientious, and for m 
| to” —— ty nor wrong his — 4 ph - * was 
frequently known to rise “forward k his 
e ground of another; fies at 6 o'elock 
go to his regulae place of work; but frequently so jaded | 
as to be unfit for it; co uent}. „ With 
| it 
made peat 
| vie to — 
ut prese 
7 farmer the hens giving unmistakeable indications 
4 speedily becoming ean of 
aif e water, passing, a 
Allowed to filter r upwards through E TENEO divested 
its gaseous contents, until, the charcoal Í 
charged with gases. hat such is the axe — be rea- 
dily proved. Take a n of 8 water, place 
in a n of properly 
od propor- 
In a short time the water will 
ecome pur T i may say, perfectly pure, if the quan- 
0 bier of Charcoal be in Proper ‘proportions, 
when 
| are of course filled with water till the sd te e 
takes 
z 
en time, the impurities, 
ce; tye within a 
are seized he charcoal, and taken 
efore “ Celt?’ assumes 
ars since, there 
Poultry Diseases o 
cases: appeared in the Gardeners’ Chronic —— of: 3 
3 TE 
1 
liable, at e. aslo seasons 
I was at that time a lear sangre 
d in nos BER degree 
I have 
treatmen S 
— eggs nearly all the year round; and am 2 
in the receipt of some: 3 
‘the la) ity.“ T have 
had but one death z and 
that nails i g the “fall of the 
s atrophy. My poultry-yard exhibits ple 
the most robust r rigoros 
such vailing amongst al ir 
— — the more choice vari 
We | i old sponge Role n- < ounces: 
——— 
