THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
850 
Ireland has just passed. W a nd the better ve per on Phe darm: reared better truth an dina a goo 
before us, we should fel ple ah to dema na fis as their ngs gave 
the future rather than the 
success from 8 
i i alt with in r spirit, now oa 
1b, de autin dn tos PORD elaliangh Sin Sihcal-of Law À where but I see new pis built with all desirable 
has not been better attended (in some years ri regard for the comfort and decency of the labourer: 
well even), yet the Commissioners do not pana ho inhabit th There b room yet for much more 
emselves equally justified in recommending it age buildin ng ¢ even in fortunate gre thee are 
be d di sconti nued. But tab quot te from the report ones yet, alas ! many districts. in which a a 
“ps th wir aa tudi i- | În full force, but I v ih seldom Krus ttf with a Snider 
oul oh oul ace course Ot Studies | who does not regard the question in ligh 
he e colleges of ; peal aod ayy Practical agricul- | there are few who have any means at their command 
est taught by pan P iaie which con- | who do not do something to improve the dwellings wh 
pe ‘ipa anaged farm affords. | their ; e are some bright examples Em, e 
Novae 20, 1858, 
3 that can be 
n A purely rural 
ral -a 
fair power to do | have a boys idea of the ca ete Sat 
A > give it—this js nearly all th - AS mapa tay 
hoped from 
ystem of 
it 
1 : kry obedience and 
of cons struc tion above al 
Ongue, and an aim at st: onest: ina 
ie aly you could with reason expel | a ya in 
a ed school and pretties. es rq 
T ef lad is now, so as he can 
Pi meen and he goes at once to “hi n 
er work of his a iceshi = 
oie: night schools, if vel ‘ona an dda 
uch to prevent the loss 
—— with boys of phena: intelligent (Stal 
Manager of schools must 
re res work ; as chil 
hrough 
en’s Colleges. 
eem it fe Hiat bsg 
estates; but the “cause” has its se ir and I have 
» poor 
has 
wl little fear but the next otek will see the 
of | 
+d ae <a 
w do 5o, e pleasa nt ‘elas i maa 
| s while it i 
man as a rule treated in the 
we would desire. For my pr oe cdot: it is ae 
for me to 
labourers are better hey we 
iculture, 
How is this judgment to be justified? Surely it 
would be g a: ssible for the son of a landowner | 
to get at a school farm the extended education | 
afew yea 
idk porition “among Ie kaa- 
ow 
same important light as proper homesteads for the 
| tenants. 
upboard furnished? what about the wages? Within 
be inexpetient ‘for the son of a labourer to go to 
colleg 
ve me To plough and and Semat! and reap and sow, 
be a fi pee 
To make perfect in ths 
M bread is much reduc ed i 
lën e sphere of my own observation I see here, too, a 
claim the conclusion, a —, SE 
kea a t 
growl 
ne: rs to regard wees dealings for the poor in wed 
| th 
Assuming, then, the house to be ae how is the | 
The ils are 
| sl ceny, pore vet I have jacked th om iad 
eal and a result that have 
| great gaere although wages may not have | in- | 
necessaries, the Sondre s extra ‘del; sting as wal as 
n pri ice; shoes kee , but 
| family’ diie leather, so `much labour Homey now done 
oo ar nes mee ve travel. Again, the 
la nder cultivation, aud the 
mount of land u 
| never-ceasing semi of ow inch of it, has ane 
a 
e hands, e very tim 
| emigration i ie reducing their ‘muinbers, 
the me gl it 
course, who may desire it, and can afford 
contend that a more libera 
rit Of 
f independence, at 
e drag 
_ | times Tooally inconvenient, pane a wholesom 
large and’| sı 
on Lany. downhill co: of f “low 
economy 
Shagi C set Famn: 42. 
prices. 
So far from machinery, in its present a, 
y | for manna to gp e n 
ual lab 
which a ee e auias saill be readily | f 
by any one who ttended the ordi- 
go subjec pass his 
with Same which ‘th ordinary | y 
him to 
ication to 
of lectures on the E aame tee nn sai 
n mathe- | b 
its dif- 
the i by wh ich they are 
epared. ` The waiting on the animals is also hand 
Let me T 
of good fa 
passing, that the order and |1 
he close acquaintance mi ing 
of | eor com mplested Saari "he necessarily acquired | know i 
in 
ville 
Tee 
5 
sérteni 
Lpi 
Jz 
i 
about. Th 
n the pictures on the wall ar 
Sori” in 
Ai 
ze 
EF 
riding habit ie fat die givi 
mens of cheap pai 
not 
a 
ne 
capital of a factory, has an iertabl good moral tet 
upon its “hands.” It is said footmen become butlers, 
the 
ing. still the curse 
love of dress to the young women: with ie aoe 
ir betters 
foe, and 
| butlers gentlemen, by diligent yie oa 
al | machinery of refined life; so the 
of 
most raw and stolid of 
_ Let the upper orders rule 
will find they rule vottary 8 
farm youths by degrees 
his intellect excited to understand the value of these 
hel 
are accomplished. apne is eo. a ne Bol before 
e beholds g n to those of his 
a eerie requiring those qua emer poe 
achinery ean do 
J 
li 
| the property of the poor man, 
tert = Aet b 
class psg b 
and becom men sithoagt to take aiit of parti icular 
on the surf: 
atien yetin the: field and at the b arn a gr 
sine men, women, and almost children to 
al is not the curse it a to be thot 
oard alee 
f the class, an pone 
pind ip uite up to the sna 
full benefit from the oa of in 
ec All these are dificultice a 
farm ed the 
that the ae ane on]; 
pom 
wan 
margin I love 
indulgence in 
but leading to 
on truck sy 
gin P MANGE 
HE CULTIVATION o cecal 
results of some 
e next summer, > 
the 
ew Mappa 
to ‘he effects of 
nr ode P The hod of 
A 
gial 
m 
a 
ae 
i 
ri 
is dor 
of keras a a 
A 
sr MN Mer 
ae as pen scar are somber or they are Br 
4 
returning on "ihe ote side 
and ma a oe agricultu 
sities, and we su 
friends whether ther ought 
a 
ich ngra 
wn seeing extended nai ng them- 
retain what is wlio to 
pale ver it at some fu ture tim 
6 ETE 
THE AGRI 
CULTURAL LABO 
details o to critic’, 
iver- 
ja _— occupier of fe po 
im som 
f she" patent “tet in the} 4" 
URER. h 
has made the farm and its 
shame has 
five. 
y: 
i; 
al 
I must yet say a word or two on the 
Be oy of the labourer’s education. From the 
nature of bree the time in which the children of this |b 
we so be yt is cme, al They ar 
an ahali a wher 
E "the father os trodden th the I the litte laters ot of te i 
Ontd 
Daaa y 
master 
Gro Teng other ta bal bottar core 
to write a plain hand, to re pean religion 
nailed i s0 
y 
Nat 
atta 
| carted on 
taking roa furrows at a 
