THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
[January I, 1859. | 
10 
Census, would feel * half-ruined wer ; 
tifully less has been enclosed ; the , e md ] 
and wonders that Time brings, w s does; beau y h ent umber mul- fall to ren plaee r Cents. a: 
n ten, the rate at which our 3 Wow 
not cast a th ud bias ps sometimes at that e: and the Board of Trade, once sión; Sock us un follow any me S au rendering 
— : AT. ^ s but the poe how m food we impo i; ut " OW v mh we we ck as in rans epis = at dd what 
yd ! ) Ives, or ever grew, We Y ou 
w ; 6 res E — eee Took - but Mayo it to the curious i in such = ters à be as ye ee as the 1 Stock 
has gon g t, | ning robiem heir a : nothi 
quickly ornp tats, to in ki its poole ri asc m — that . = Ap: ren o ien ip ee the acre e-0wn 
- ba nd : lik an exeou nd say what a little and be fed ; leaving it to Mr. M. Corroon a ht. ys i d 
cast its balances like an hat after. and Mr. Porrsr’s tables to decide the knotty the same hgh ney wi E stir in ‘the m 
it has bequeathed to o those tha cme a universal | problem w whether seven bushels, or a quarter of the me ma ^ 1 0 , bring i Pills, 
Is Agriculture am exception : thi wheat per annum icq the average consump- | Commissions may si S Benin to Seien 
des * Doe x En Te 8 d os » MER tion per igi and Mr. Carrp to draw n — Ama ie se who have the power to; 
f it indee will not he emselves, 
Pusey said at the 2 of sey — labour w — e eee e ri-| There has Nen nd there still is, 
the Royal Agricultural So iety's rising. s, Land Statistics. Are t the ntry, too much narrowness of view j 
* Farming is written out,’ and enn ih : 3 eda Am igi pc rs Fuck p rece do e deen T ok. for i pr 
furni : essay S : A catalogue of nothing more for worn-out country pens to write | agriculture; and 1 8 de itself not less 
— e say ens x piis clem dit about 5 An ha supposing for an instant that they causes to which psi re we x: Prizes for 
subjects the new- à dta 1 * s scarcely were, doe more remain behind? W and a : si 27 n ha 
awaits A matter, and with coming | about x "Tran tales of Land? Have we probed to eeting of influential gentlemen to promote? 
? . 
gle for improving our resources upon t 
acre: me that we have. The question is not, as simp 
acreage’ by the Irish Dean, how to grow two oped 
n where ew befo 
re 
the bott 
article whi 
ich 555 
3 under t 
its right and title to be sold, what w 
m the effect which the beg 4 penalties of 
milli 
y e 80 
he hammer pea n pre iden to 
ould 
s of acres | 1 
thei 
bea buyer, 
ana w 
ora 2 ue rie Y insu the gist 
bare blem of increased produ 
- atively with ice eost. 
is the pressing problem 
ths prede tale h 
And is not 
run out has left 
EE 
bargain is, not | f 
OSS V = ous "d the article ite "hut that 
end of it, little i 
s| a death-I 
nd than 
mpany the 
that — i acco 
d e paralysis idis the so 
ioned 
eountry has 
these, 
24. 
snocess ai a convin 
ao 
telligenee, 
2 in ques den growing — — m 
once required 
power that e it? A famous 
Bass horse newer | 
rent 
was cal 
nei Rey for 500 500 years, d 
a i horse power how 
be considered how 
in million 
quarters of corn from — alf of it -— 
I and doubles its number of m 
[ sy for France, with its stand -still 
E of "pete te 
wood, to ask of England ho ow free trade 
: iioii 
z 
AE 
fog cee 
once a year, 
rather. how little land,—« “al by: 
The | but 
xe sounded (ege s Hen 
ow large a 
—like the women’s shoes in China,— 
minds of Englishmen were 
nd fairly 
ds 'umbered 
from | ters off before ioe e and showed thai 
| could set land free in spite of lawyers at least 
in 
" 
Paeiumeat a 
to this 
w ‘of Trent As well might the occu- 
d do 
Epen E 
live, like other 
is ma scarce ; and the 7 nai: catches faster 
an 
t 
and practicably saleable. 
— 
all ins qi is 
num 
improvement 
y anything we have ips ee, 
Se propia of the la en yea 
un 
how much, or Md m thro 
degrees, and | recoils upon Gates. 
‘to. the manner born,’ 
V bes = Sed the zm of the 
> which b me tte 
me cobweb- 2 8 
Chambers sit 
and ee TS. 
Ja 4: 
mainspring of * 
x sight r 
set it worl 
prse and heneeforward tb 
eare 0 pu and need no pushing: 
learnt this manly 4 
ul for 
B 
ey come; but che b breed is compara- 
consists is 
2 to the Em | 
, and se um ers. re ae 
-bottles are a noble of 
uyers, 
is not besieged by tor lien 
measure nd land really 
is cher bass ; but |” 
clr advanced by the 
3 les but fi Mu, ge of sal 
‘think as we may of 
rs. ieee * 2 
a = - 
1 
The holders of ed 
e| r giving an 
th at pq or 3 may be “ — best shape of 
etitions ro be 
extrinsic aids 
freest — in deve 
| soil, an 
in the psi that lies ‘within Ca 
HALKETT'S GUIDEWAY ign UR 
“ WHAT pipe 122 
a question often asked a few 
be inquiry would rather he, " Which ag age 
rail for a r la 
comes common-place we shall haye era 
as to “ 
tary a 
the many poi ts. propounded! by Mr. Halk 
paesi bel is HH m d for ae it, exc 
onal n the pages í * i 
sin See "dimly tae Tong ‘shadows of * 
are distantly yet clearly “coming.” Wes 
ju 
ers are 
o to ier 5 axes soe a SN TN while 
careless, wit 
are 
vei to invest psa c on their 
