ecisions of tl 
_THE AGRICULTURAL GREETS. 
d | being so, he thought the man who 
[Jone 26, 1 
had ac 
this result ought to have had the prize. 
had, 
CO! h 
The prize 
however, not yet „bee n awarded; „the ion must | 
vi fei aoe re seen thee eases 
E king e d 
wages bad g given satisfaction, but he was one of those 
independent 1 aoe mo oe not care much whether 
the: they } haa y ane 
he must 
say, were rather slow in kin Th ey. 
way Ten mon 
ra appealed to aE prese: ot at 
Ro 
his colle: eague (Mr. 
no 
yal Agrienitanl Society to 
a ats the 
and in their 
dad +} 
judgment the animals to which h they bad 
was Sal wo atk i scription, 
|b alone 
| referred tc to the i sjebani by aita 
p the bes 
had often bonne’ of t ef Tk A 
h of ited ¢ ti that day 
reed would be 
it. -In 
Town: 
of the T urnip, which he called the sheet- anchor 
of Norfolk. Hi no 
he did 
so as 
drain, and cultivate a sp of t 
me 
en ume 
the rive 
banking 
beach fe had t 
us pore 
duce Serpentis s the great cause of ite aie 
ser ex ent: ; and he (Mr. Hudson) had no 
bt thet Sf it was cultivated upon a large scale it 
dou 
would i tend to Dione foed for the increasing z popu ula- 
enever we found 
active oung man who had saved of hi 
sum sufficient to start i ina croft, w 
e they liked the best beef 
ped 
improved, for there was plenty of room 
ty from whi e cam 
good d fro 
m toothac he, their gums 
aA +h 323 7 
race. 
an They Sokatround to produce those 
animals gerne gave the most beef ‘in the 
valuabl vont Norfolk gentlemen who bred 
pre "Kod of anima’ Me uld allow him make a 
e would cig t that they ‘sod eat then 
a 
Reviclvs, 
mia 
On the Management of i jaani Lonea Property. By | co 
Es C. M‘Kay. Jere Surv oan yer In- 
s. W. Blac wood & So Second notice. 
i of Mes 
T 
so long as ‘tae oun 
pee. we would ce 
ward for his į 
sti ihe ie to oth ers, ae as "balm ng, moreover 
aenak A Mig proprietor and the an fr 
untry at 
The co kin oF Inverness, which we Tes 
with which | Mr. M'Kay i is best e sS 
provident habits, and s 
land s 80 adapted on the 
little thicker i in the va Bea ey culd 
e m about ; 3 foel _thro Pie oe of 
noble vn who 
had don uch fo: we aertiro of ae 
and England "generally, came do’ the 
to his father, r 
hi e 
2è 
S, 
esu! 
glan: ar 
wiht, therfore "perhaps | e perm 
remark, and h 
pang wie bred N folk polled beasts, whether 
ight n 
Devons, pte "b 
without deren their ek 
to work this out, but he sh 
beef-producing uate ie 
It owl y na others 
g 
“ob the decisions at which | 
arrived m might be scrutinised and critici sed by| | 
a 
Inve 
ee humbly rise ia thos, gi 
He y 
e his | fe 
of ho orses, said it 150,000 so 
oust, in its remarks vg ag on gen fe agricult ure | i 
we lately reviewed, we com w to consider his 
ccupants sof holdings rented at less erin 
counties: 
wierd over- 
est er “considerti ona hamberg 
h > pect 
three mi 
than 207. 
i | cnltivation ! ! 
on der 
ming and as 
bat of China i isd 
of Loc 
- sive and tne rocks of the 
m nsiderable proportion of the 
| purely agricultural sean nR ate nd. 
_ Pre mary ti sas A Aa Ir. M'Kay s remarks on 
the animals. He on) one reason 
‘ospe ects of ‘this class—one 
Hebrides—al eh in the bounds of Iny 
th th 
e labours of 
MK 
y po 
ask and 
touched by plough, h 
pose,” * he writes, ‘ ‘are of improve. 
difference fre requently a 
judges, a GE pilom Sof ba bystan 
looked t ugh a telescope for good 
aid of | a „microscope sought to fin 
Bystanders 
= mi out 
lain wh i 
ain a bsg e of Xhe 
he nursery of that class of our harba 
nrivalled—we give the following as m 
opinion of a writer i in whose o opportunities of obse: 
shi ch for 
seee o valour in the field and discipline in the | 
ony while the | ca mp stands 
d 
acres 
lie Peg abt: 
a| they are aat i incapable emun 
Teisi 
tion, and no doubt there are ances of soi 
position, Seana or climate, wii Brice an assé 
ho! lds g But e deny its general applicabil 
were sometimes greatly a agers 
of 
her to 
“The question of depopulation i in the Highland dis- 
lity now lying waste, which w know to be pm 
put from 
in the daily and weekly political prints. 
la ad AE re ghland Sie 
sary to cond 
ice b i 
aking oi 
ghily respec tahle ie The jud es 
e of examining many te nimals. 
icular class | of horses t which a 
allowed agricultur 
writer on 
tota. al population 
not been 
Senan that t 
counties, districts, or ev Aa 
diminished by the chan 
The people dis owns, 
more vig — 
the ae of trotting a 
— he certainly som. 
were any of that pe Vial ney Sote tting breed 
some of = distant 
lid „He 
t J 
here 
existing in 
nooks w = 
nana the wo 
«sad dormant ” ad 
o 
e county, let them not 
mene aiT prove 
g es of cultivated crops, I 
t of adrari. climate? Are the 
not sell "their lands to others who 
The 
| impr ve eal c oi p law Pod 
a inng- 
“The Royal r enonltural 
and observed that he had been 
o 
ps ito 
» | them—by dailyi: kowi in erenching saat aie 
"teks roofs of their bei 
stentless an dependent upon assi 
them: 
ing ‘periodieally reduce 
Wet ink 
2 class valuab 
ves ha 
oral energy. “We saw them in 184 
shough the ordeal o 
we must 
he power oft 
e to sand 
e emigrant’s ambition—the goal to 
and whi ch i is the most agar ae 
Rae 
ng stone ved? and 
e| bee that such a SHOR cy stomatal flowed ont 
the land o = lan 
of t 
= the breeds of cattle rie ‘he 
| wo uld thi te alike to 
s otla; nd. 
ths is to the ai intelli- 
id E 
ene viz. 
of hig which he might Ta 
his e ith the pire aii of leaving 
patrimony p his family — this, we sa; 
attainable t hom as 
mplements that could be p 
nt10us 
Ls 
implements he thought the agriculturi 
w ‘be in a very poor p 
he country were on ~ fns ht its 
chanical aid had 
he was sure that they 
sing of „Pro videne ce, 
Ti 
their 
“would be able my te ‘dee: 
pace the arvest ; 
“itera t down OAA aH 
the assistance of t 
failing, S unanswerable r iiny 
ese wi what 
E Scottis ae agriculture is to be ascribed ; 
“ty F we dey wp, the sources of their supply we shall 
surely ret: 
r. M‘Kay pata nts out that the Pate 
dige ‘bar to the advancement of this cla: 
i ky Re of the crofters rs in the Highlands have yet got 
of leases is a 
, as it wo 
any lied country.” 
We may ab A add, without est the facts whid 
c adduces rsonal Pok and observation 
that M 
r MK Kay m wade that “it ae 
bring wate land ints cultivation, ió than it 
Canada ;” rks t should 
ved at a time 
aie scheme of the how i in these 
e proprietor. 
ae x 
And 
could they i pe cted to 
monstrated with fo; 
they might and ai 
says—“ When croi modera 
me ie and looked after, 
nted and ae more independent 
than the crofte The i denice for 
> he 
rented a2 and dicious! 
is no class more con 
free from car 
and 
er | established markets, $ mild clim: 
an Brvileees all of which we sl 
re than now do if we once felt t 
an roug 
country as in Cards á 
a mac ine had been 
toate we 
to bear, and he h q 
of | t 
al va Sd in; 
there is now, and ise we ne hag far 
o give every man a croft, wea 
ble -bodi 
tiedre bee re a 
ro ae, and al 
by itthanhe! Reina he had seen ares better plo This 
truggling for he existence 
eagerly apa “4 init their pow. 
from 1 advising ain 
cu 
ied young Highlendes ‘thee 
ould more than 
We have met with hundreds of Poft the ear: hes | 
to: 
i Roa to the nicht oes followed 
