aE MAICA : founded 1843. 
_—Her Majesty the QUE 
slands, &c. 
a Mac leod, 
President— 
Hon. J Mi 
—The Ho ae 
‘py His 
vanded 
ency the Governor, 
to the Author of the 
or the use ols schools 
red by the 
third przen, for the same object: 
Jam 
PREMIU UM of £100, offered 
through this Society, will be aw 
EX ay 
Society, will explain the 
re is a manual of a strict] 
mple, and ci compendious, 
of 
s of questions u upon 
iia suited to ork of this 
rs are to send their manuscripts, their motto only 
oy ae: vibed, to the Secretary of the Soci jety, Kingston, 
Jamaica, on or befofe the Ist of July, 1846, and to tra ae 
sealed note, on which their motto shall appear, containing their 
names and addresses. 
The copyright of all works gaining prizes will belong exclu- 
‘sively to the Society T. BLAND, Secretary, 
a Kingston, June 3 1945 
T The Agricultural Gasette, 
SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1845. 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS, 
Waowxspay, July 23—Agricu'tural Socie Ab: England. 
Trurspar, July 24—Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. 
Waowaspay, July 30—Agricultnral Society of England. 
Tuvrspay, July sl—Agricultur ‘al Imp. Soc. of Ire: 
FARMERS’ GLOBE. 
July 21—Darlington I uly 29—Bromsgrove 
land, 
paper for a report of the EXHIBITIONS OF Stock, 
DoyaL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF 
Vice-Patrons 
mes, Earl of Elgin and Kincardine, &c. 
Sr “yas y, Governor-in-Chief of the Leeward 
Panton, a ioe Chancellor of 
t 
tter yori ae by Colonel Bruce, s 
to the 
- | 56— 
SS that 
E refer our readers to another page of this 
furr 
eate iti 
. 3),w 
slice 4 i 
FERGUSON’S PLOUGH. 
RRow 6 x Í 
Fig. 3. 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
F | along a fur 
urrow previously Rage by itself; 
(upper line in Fig 
work turning a 
Fig. 4, 
eo 
si uld thus merely 
PAEL abn it from the fast land ad shifting its ské 
on. 
LI 
hands, ene ediatel 
dition, on the apes 
u 
ac 
* 1402. Would aot this ee jilda an adequate ret 
distri it ete to remai in K seen t—No do ubt 5 ; but the 
r the land paar uees a mo enter scar of Grass, 
have no hesitation in iyik moe a better profit is to be 
een of this ame Menyat the plough than under Grass, 
403. 
W 
ao 
i 
16 
then wi 
x mm ! u 
l 
Bl! 
ite. 
ye 
Het 
We 
i 
i i 
wH 
iil i sili ul 
EFi 
ph rA Hov h do o you Rink per T acre So 
acumen and Broken u ear, 
ents in tile-making 
n hopes that Some enn 
an estate and drain ito on the 
The last Jar n 00 
now . t year, s d year 
74 for roots, I had from 16 w 20 tonsof Swedes upon it, 
and I have now a er Wheat growing upon 2 
hich will be, I have no doubt, from 4 
5 quarte 
16 | I have Sora found it ee 5 quart -i 
i not zr Ai the possessor not being 
bleg to'ti es necessary a nea i 
hibited by ise 
the cutting i: er the plough ere one of the | 
e w 
resistance tọ its motion thr ough | the | 
Tf, instead of a in 
aie of years on the mag 
te you “think he would then avail himself of that 
power to raise bui d by that means the land 
ct | would be broken = and ence iver wth and the 
produce greatly increase ve no doubt, under 
~ pe cir rah: that the buildings would ha put up. 
nferior Gra A is 
Į— 
we may consider that upon an 
cent. of the iabotir = Plovemne is attributable 
Pa DA 
' | great influence on me whether 
ground ; and Fig. 4 fully What I call i awe land worth less than 
The le ae t of the yo at work is l. per acre. ich J would be broken up 
stones, the rem val ot the mou Idboard di et Rag | for the benefit of the landlord, he benefit of the tenant, 
this only to Tane so that 3 stones only, or ak 
1 : Š _fla 
eee ae ‘eggs Hy vole arene i hg oa iil, se the owner of ‘an entailed estate, if/an 
Act of Parliament passed to enable you to toia 
3 sinh for the purpose of draining your estate, per 
ou do so ?—Most decidedly ; bs tit would have 
»>|the same Act to put up buildings, because 
should not get i that i ino reased v $ y 
m Birmin igham, and other stations on the railroad. | the weight of me implement, 55 per cent. to tls time afford my tenants the means cs isidi ing ta to the 
“Tar Dra mAr 1k: sana ehed operation of cutting. the aE and only 10 oe advantage the increased poar ae pestis 
part] to fhe. patio on of then mouldboard, This conclusion, | Puizir Pussy, Esq., M.P.—* 1345 you k 
Biting 3 be weight « of te implement, arly by th a if it b most of our pre-concei eived that in nthe state of f advancement Which agricu = 
ent im nid ecco 
g the furrow-slice over. In what proportion is ith opinions Fs nthe ‘sujet s tho. attempts, Wich h ‘yee TI think it 
yaq sted aevo A een the th ni been mesh Fie to s: alteration of the for is ex sy a esse entis K hav i, e` good buildin a es ee ~ 
i. arise, 
should be able to answer. For ife - so apg pith one Seer eed plough makers direct if wer were peste 0 he owners of settled estates to 
v they. would be able to direct thei and coulter, and to’diminish, within safe limits the S their lands for that loyan I think there would 
t it 6 airy te of the i mp lement in | ps ha of the implement, a nd Pits dite will, probably, b da ; 
J EE E ore successful in ngs a pe to fal upon imate " But, a the 
following fi [SE aS eA thee hand, if that danger were against, as 
Now's Swing Ploan eat the draught of Fer- | p pyy BUILDINGS A PERMANENT IMPROVE- have not the least doubt it could be, and if care’ were 
Se gh:—I1st,when its sh 10i 
Wide, the one ravine of a eater DA a NT OF LAND. taken that the farm buildings a re — se re 
Eo furrow-slice being - | bonâ have no doubt that it would ten 
th Perfectly TARA Sid 30 when the share: was ‘enn Sit to the adoption of any method of i im | extremely t page the taipcored elicitin ok Me 
hav, Rohi wide, so that a part tof the surface must | P"? Ai meee 2 the committee, I can 
buildings in in which to pori prepare, a con sum e i state one or two different classes of cases in which it 
h ERGUSON’S PLOUGH. Dra ents 5 by a greatly increased produce of | would E The first case would be with land whi 
Furrow 6 x9 | grain, sorter ay, &c., and that increased produce re- is no ths e have a very large extent of waste 
Fig. 1. Fig. 2, quires additional REDRA and yards—the land in tł Baro? 
| which to prepare the corn for market, e sae in | duced t nelose. When you “consi oh sA 
which to A the other produce. e breaking up | expense sol t bringing the land into Geghi E n ; 
of Gram- lane also, wo ch more generally car. cting fi buildings, and when you consider that a 
to f the ad- in the hands of 
| with d 
| improv: 
ender 
FE 
rainage, and those other 
ing th 
great part of th 
proprietors whose e 
e EARL oF Duciz, a member of the committee, | be a 
is RER as follows, regarding a certain district in | 
24 as goes Gloucestershire, which is the 
land 
ON What 2. $4 3, 
as 
Bey laid. i upon 
actay t by 
A Ra ba beam: given before dia select . In 
n 
g eins poor meadow 
e 
| necessar’ which the — sn th on 
that the ea of buildings should be classed alon ng | ment can be carried into effect, unless the owners 
of ai meneli rhal to charge ‘their property for the purposes ot 
BE 
i id that th is a great deal of 
r nsider that there 
ne si, et ‘gs this ert which it handys be a 
Fone X lough up ?—Decidedl. 
n case it was so rae oughed up, wi 
| tat ta out uire to have Idings upon it 
& 1363. gakoa the two thing together, 
nt improvement upon t 
6 | reason, as far as 
is, because the process 
expense, namely, an ae k ‘the porate ouse, b 
creased fa: arm e land, 6 3 to enable the farmer, pon 
with th 
aS AEP 
look sear upon. such an Pry tine gs b 
as is comected 
+h, 
at 
in- | life, t 
fe wscoomtty i arising out of the conversion ra te el 
rable 
OS and his 
se “1401, Is "that too heavy an expense for a man who 
1364. Do you think ae a great quantity of land es 
in pasture is not broken up, p, in consequence of the 
and 4s 
18 (owe i ibit the eb a af zone 
ie 8), Psi drawn ompty 
as the possessor 
peu with f a he family and no 
It is impossible for me to take he whole estate on my 
shaped estate ; a 
a very large income. 
mee o doubt of it; and itisa Pirat check to the Pes 
icultural labourers,” 
. Burret, Bart.—* 1418. Do you think it 
er ra 
uid not that 
ronid tht a T 
