644 
THE etda EEE Gi GAZETTE. 
= condition of those for whom he 
o die.” ae although he may know as little of 
y eaten 
g's by as that the in-coming tenant ‘sip scarcely 
of greeń food for his horses, cattle, and ees 
suggestions may occur t 
hic 
iedh of fla maos he ma 
is by is th eans that returns and tabulated figures b r orses which were rer who ent edhe Em be 
come clothed wit lifes that it is he who enables the beret the Bs som inae A far w 0 alo 
porer over parliamentary reports to become a ver f Bee oe he bel 
* t <9 or of a nation’s | an S, e can a defer all farm la a 
: " Rembrindt wae ara R actual eh of tha farm He also has an oppor- 
best way to help the labourer 
Rat 
It is Sarain that the 
in pipes 
is to rE him to help ka lf. p 
ledge o tee ion of Apes poo igh- 
r par art, by no Fiabe Floop 
ith indep nr part. The one will be con- | it v “a a) 
ducive to the yri so long as we remen ber r that t the Wheat o or r Barley i in the spring, | and also Grass zit of es i 
who 
Turnip bak eT 
will be sown pei with Wheat 
of the 19th century. Messrs. Spender & Isaac oa the 
Gr: ass, | 
PE 
II 4} Q 
Labourer, in Kerke nd West of England S 
e again sown ead et s. 
igricu ourna revious to ploughing it to be ag: 
r raat — A ath. iiie datai sito es Be could com- 
mence ploughing the break whic! n, or i 
Home Correspon onde enc growing, the present year’s Oats, taht while 
Hot Hay Stacks. — It appears to me t hat the inser- | ploughing it drain part of the two-year-old et 
tion of a length of inch gas-pipe : attached to Mr. Ha IPs which will be ploughed son winter for the Oat break | an 
for 1859, ious Ki his c ncing to drain the land 
became too consolidated to remedy the evil. I send which is at present gr rowing Astute = which will be 
you a Hall's letter to me. ri sg some of our im 1889, A Labou 
plement makers will take it up. J. J. Mechi. [The} Lar, arge an nd Small Farms.—The la e a ome es st hav 
following is aes yoni le a a a tenant of Page ee ee T will take it cheap or n a 
“Ihave instrument entitled the pyroscope o = 5 knowing few ten 
fire detector, the parie cipal object of which > to in red any in. 
crease of tem rature, whether arising fro: 
‘bustion or fi Sey ot 
a beg A ‘pe “tnalds of a hay stack, a closely necked warehouse 
pyroscope consists of ametallic tube and an 
ith an cae 
one extremity of age cor Oe closed, and the other is attached to 
an indicator either a glass syphon tube contain- 
waa orether S SA a hand averting a dial plate. 
the air a er i per is expanded by the heat 
developed in n which it is placed, the mercury will 
rise in one ver i mke et and thus indicate the increase 
of temperature. This instrument wA I think, be of use to 
the farmer, as it would give him iutimation of the commence- 
ment of th on g of his stack. The tube would be placed | t 
across the stack, having the extremity to bg ich me fietst, is 
heater projecting slightly beyond the side. To save expensi 
e indicator would be sufficient for oevecal taba. Thom s 
Hal, B.A., Feet m Chemistry in in 
Mildmay y Park, Stoke e Newington. ee 
$ ga 
WoA. by skilful tenants, produce considerably more 
a. 
the City of London School, 39. 
| ano 
ants to hire pie | 
500 
ain, a -acre farm made into two of 
and stock ; I shall be asked how? In answer I 
corn a 
say the lar who his farm chea 
for a long lease knows that by ordinary manage- 
When | but th y for those wo e repaid i 
there is a general oem d = ee ur, Ag lig labourers | by the small tenant. I am 
consider 2d. per foot in depth per 18 lineal feet, hs 6d. | of froin: 200 to 300 or vat acres will produce more cor 
— 18 a! fect, fair prices for cutting 3 6 and | | and stock, employ more labour, and open a field for 
porosity, 
e) Hier 
| half-yearly 
en $ Peps oni cms that depth a proportion: nal addi- | income, and improvements assisted by uy Hanara ing heard t 
tional price imes requisite, owing to the greater | would tn follow. Thesm: aller farm a bene t | xpress their pene ores wos as they 
width that sudt een be cut; Bub the will | necessary with betaine to the whole. r 
of and the demand for labour aio tape of | admit ther a few exceptions case, with an expression of the hope that sudi 
low prices. I have, on two different gentlemen’s es-| having ohietied in ae county the ‘argo j will be made as will retain the serv o 
tates, received 10d. per 18 lineal feet for rates 42- | on good soils, I ag gag that eee iao fs r Nig aia enter aa 
Da aoe, which too m any men, for some t. E back, | a great loss to the cage I shall hav y against ONDO : Aug. The annual e 
e been glad a hte m fos inches d deep for | me, but I will net f my ainen a discuss | of the Ro tate ple Fe ‘sr of Tren j 
Wap a 18 Tinent feet. — Various opinions are en- | the matter before a jury of landlords Lore a half | Opened at Londonderry does a 
tertained b tl and leave th pubiish | advancement of the Emeral 
application of lime as a Tortiliaing eal Some farmers | the verdict. F. L., Land Steward, d, Norfolk international meeti 
Enlargement of Agricultural Pro duce, l to di 
two oe emi t it is it is laid on t} 
some’ 
The in- 
Te 4 
lg 
LAND AND pe 
J, 
to practi 
t subject 
| fewer than 
A 
now in c 
Poultry 
Implements 
Price of G —Mr. Harvey, Whitting hi 
were aware “that a short time since ME. Be 
meeting w was then Ki: is admini 
of the cu 
wa 
> 
tect it from wet 
s | soil are known to be very considerable. p in New 
EE E ET E, Re eee +] 
not less th 
ae ee 4 PO ay: 
tas election a ver mem 
i 
rish agricultu 
a | ewido by the cient ‘unig of hers 
The _ Trish costae compete with e 
The 
weiner. or 28-inch dls "o ag , if not most of th 
a good m oai the inna then the staple od of various countri yield a lar; ro- 
i down oa lime — in “sail io previous portio n of f food in a given area or ateit of ad tha an 
spreading it regularly ov Bio Bats thou; en the corn plants, upon i Ak we de Hg almost wholly 
is well known that lime hee at c beyo: md for the supply of our populati i sar n tree and 
S recent work 
lime on as Seerp d a surface as the yet of the the latter is said to yield fully one hundred times as 
and the 
lower part of a field, which „has been 1 recently drained, 
Banyan yields still more abundantly. The Wheat har- 
ard. In 
is up t expectant 
eke Som nts of resem 
~ ara ed with Hine, i is sufficient pr oof that the 
it in good “condition a matter of a very precarious 
peculiar 
close affinity. 
f the 
Irish R geet. Bet 
e poi esemblance. 
old fortified walls, 
But historic comparisons ai 
speak, is taxed to meet Irish wants. The 
too, come out in Bi their 
not only a 
Douglas, who! 
lists a ` coma 
resent teat 
Prisons and 
Bs 
Ta 
ame Ma 
>» | Very deeply indebted to Mr. Caird, who had taken 
, &e.;” | interest ie bringing this matter under the notice 
be built, orn 
the agriculi 
ter th 
Insh g 
be above the recently cut drains should be allowed | nature. 
time to solidify, previous to the line being applied. | upon ote the corn seed fructifies. ws pense ond give a very gene’ eral notice of the "Son m 
raining. landowners defray half th nses of| has been greatly developed of late years, but it is| our next issue rape Scant at present 
~ cit per a or wh hich the te nant pays capable of still grea eater re sults. The following su gges OF the St ock not ust being 
in aces Ree pit Posey tases KA beter: stalls ls, which are pratt well erin: 
20 feet ap E apart Q8 lin “lineal ee 1 10a: gis a lent be immensely increased, ie the ants of | iene large collection of Ayrshires 
tenant „must l egy ho is 
often endangered by bein ng laid by sto his rae 
ally larg 
fine 'short-horns, including ae 
he our reports 
at 8d. or sntiraly pera by the on on meas ifers (see 
for pipes, ges sted, and also a large sa ane: iety 
pipe 14 inches $ in length; ary to use so much sod in sowing epee ae the Pri 
also ca 6d. eent ; few farmers | buil of = 
per ll, in | Ae ee pectatic ion of having a return for such | but could spare an acre o! f ground for the purpose, id the coun 
arend equivalent to the market value of the money | probably that small space would be sufficient to demon- | We 
: the land, besides w at is required for pur- | strate its practicabi Corn plants produce usually | sti 
—_— = m: inery, n re s A stems arising from each seed, a 
ime e t 
He wom hho out of place DOMAMI to hero i arino 6 ut he ae sre ele ep e To 
that an out-going | from this one stem to relarg in “ihe ‘flowin yen rae 
uccessor’s way, $ and the same process of cutting away all but one stein 
to mix an ine ing tenant’s rain resorted. to. When the e flowering takes place, , if and Powe 
ving ig have | to th 
the ee of a barn. Those pn bulk of Ts seed in Pee to the first- cai i sugges- 
tion ; in ti ime by adopting these methods 4 believe not 
rough d durin ng imie ooking 
n the out-going tenant 
be attained, but the e laying of crops, now so fe aes a 
of apprehension, on hencefo' =i be on rely 
overcome, as the strength of the plant would sate it| 
to encounter violent storms without yielding. Other 
Ulster Tatai 
| the merits of the mac 
kees 
e Ch 
hra 
aor 
