TH 
E AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [JANUARY 8, 185 
—— 
notorious that in the case of illness of p penpers p be 
each farm, giving about 10 tons of 1 
from the same manufactory, which contained in a 
cas e only 4 
their 
£ ble, and neither the past; 
chari and in another nearly 40 per cent. 100 acres of ara : pasture op N 
w * Poor n ^y dedi ute No yl the — was not re more than 27., I on SA 3 e A Ce bull E. the 
ihis particular point the Irish mode contrasts favour 1 the latt r WO ould have been cheap at 107. per ton. To | land, exc id, which includes all an 10 T 
ably with that Muy ee in England; but in the it isa wealth Deren pcm Ec ote 1 n and even 24 years are pe ] 
eee d E ourishment 1 dis 17 the ie mace soa 1 2 zen 5 of his pe e — dwelling and farm buildings are generall , 
supplied the matter of course if|strength of his acic ne com : : i 
—— ; the r in lied cafe the re-| coprolites, &c., and then to — kd exact iet y [ere 8 T praem a number rae 
lieving officer, and tren things so frequently afforded | of each he must use, in or rder not to n je 3 pe ny di d an the ork ort the e 
by private charity zngland where wealth and | most of his ingredients, but s bu uwihe e hard i 
li lity I the case is reversed. : numerous | tion of his manure to an form gea ble 3 pie i A 
Irish electoral divisions hiero are no gentry or other | necessary, pope 4 uncertain = di of th e high p de (fee of the MT 
individual able or ME to give such sustenance as | composition. Again maker ought frequ ently to Fe RT. 4 tion here quartere AT 
the I poor require. If in Ireland hag medical officer | examine his Fee as the manufacture of it the liabili y Svo ie, Sem qd 1 he i 
visits eabin in ‘which s sickness exist e mu: Ea either | proceed > der that he may know wheth r he Ten years since the on ing ba ince til 1 
give — his own limited resources the means of pur- a be ii gera of soluble phosphate which co £^ puni d g s rd 1 s ( 4 
chasin 80 necessary nonrishment, or leave the and whether he bas an ufficien 18 usually sown, «E Clover, ditto for "s 1 
ick Fichout the mes of regaining health and a Ng acd to ndance of acid. From such a maker as this | fallow, Wheat aW ov 2. ss 3s ure, ? 
strength. He cannot be sure that the Board of Guar- | the manure might be depended upon, and it would fallow, winter 2d anys ^ ie ax, and % 
ians would sanetion a disbursement at his discretion, | make very little difference whether he employed i its | making nine years. urnips ue only 4 P 
and geners ly there are such impediments presented bres ira bone earth, anima 3 ee or few enterprising men, so ; 0 tse " "es i 
against any mode of giving —.— relief that few of the ny othe the ma rins 1 the market. But | successfu ye-grass is no OR Rie used, zl e 1 
medical men will encounter m. | farmer's difficulty that t. etting a cons ant | sowed last year did exceedingly w hs à x 
and considerate guardians e it must be presumed, article—does not end with t aker. Superphosphate, | the centre of the best Flax x district an and as the sola , 
out-voted in their mom kind lil ything else, is rupem after z din the|climate suit it remarkabl Yn z d sear i 
sick out-of-door paupers by others of the opposite dis- manufactory. That there are as honest agents of farm which does not ms 0 ae x mal sani , 
positions. I think that the medical office ers are, from | manures as of an ything else nobody can doubt, Sat that | 6 acres in every 100; more t m at they s ] 
education, professional knowledge, and position, the best . of them are in the habit of mi xi D e rud nsi ve ond it advisable to grow, Deme e eese. OF it o 
5 of the aqu aira nd measure of relief which the u less t things | with their r me anures i ll-known fact. | pies r : 
1 
therefore ti that ‘they— —who ose lives too are in continued 
peril while pursuing their vocation — should have more 
reese’ than E now ern mw and while | duly 
export, 34 gives 100 1 
e 
tua 1 
a matter of cl w hat they now 
a ‘th or do at their own risk. M. D. 
Corresponden 
Cotton Cab —1 shall <4 obliged by your inserting în in 
the Agricu'tural oye Age safe ng repor 
of death of a bulloc ing Cotton- oce 
present at the —— ges can vouch for be cor- 
rectness of. the report i in every particu cular, e 
or 
| customers are generally satisfied if you can show them a | prove ender nor manure. It i managed in 
| large pe — of ered pou or ande If | fashioned way ak in a hol 
it co ains. mall a tof t orme r but a large | the purpose immediately after being pulled for i 
f the latter believing that six days, until the bone or wood easily breaks t 
for t! the fingers; it is then laid out on a clear i 
nate state of things for ‘the Push bnt very con- 
eret = phosphate a E of grou und 5 in 
order to swell the per 
My advi 
on this subject is—1. eril fn 2 respectable maker 
or agent, I mean one of respectable character and abi ility. turist in in En nga 
y appa 
w shillings will pay for. It gree 
here on alls soils, the only condition being that it getsaj 
bo 
samples of 
—— boiled. and as it came from the bowel of the | 
ock 
of any strength, and ‘that, consequently, it may "a 
as at 7l. per ton. 
V 3. Obtain, | showers of rain. The troublesome = aig ie of wee 
if you can, an analysis of the kind you think of buying, 
14 
A which we have been so often t wes K be absol i 
whether other 3 have met with espe] cases, 
John Fryer, Jun eee House, Chatte: 
C . Cooper, V.S., ORAE 
si E 
iP " 
h. Iregrettha ess pre me — t- 
larg, Lex I found a + most — substitute i 
[4 po 
the 
"This 
e qu 
but a few e ene conducted on 
d petes is to be valued. partly. aecording 
er cent. and upwards of soluble 
ost 
cessary, is bs totally dispensed wit 
h an article should not co la 
be nd is remp with an in vis ent y 
believe peculiar — this pat 
It acts something like a pair o 
| sight Baier with the e Tot timine weed 
„held at an angle o 
|are fixed 
it is a good manure. 
dern 
gh 
* e 
condi tio on of the soil to whi ch it is appli ed. Fr om 
that onl 
antity necessary to 5 use 
the is land, 
and during the same season, with differ quan- 
tities of superp pee will determine this matter 
von sufficient accuracy. Moses Pullen, Painswick, 
8 re. [The statement ist a yop 
o the 
will end iM ext in in another comi 
ed ; | catio on, together with pones of expenses and n 
if —.— m ect be considered sufficiently interesting 
insertion. W. Grossmith, Bauske, Courland, Russ 
n be given as to the 
Farmers? Clubs. 
n „ BOTLEY: The Cross Breeding of Sleep. Mr 
2 of Winchester, in a 
JH 
one-fourth, | 
ater at 98°, and th inst out in 
hours each. to 
eight 
rye vind of 
up the 
urar, the 
with the writer of that 
t contains may d T —. Stank eat of tl lub, aid th 
ph hate of Ti il sacle Ne tain nitr FFC is club, s 
A eee t refi ers not t * = rience of late years | had p — d that the 
is nevi ertheles is true, beca o super- i gi 
system. The peer lude ration which] 
sented itself w v the best 55 sur Mead th m. 
m an : 
an in the hse by this 
Mem 
reign I Correspondence 
refer 
CouURLAND. Now. that ‘free trade | | this ki ingdom, the sheep s stood for 
d t find their wa y to 
e reason being probably dea dre i 1204 
nown in England, I will endeavour 
sketch o; x 
then entered into the itor of the: Sonthdow 
Leicester, the Cotsw e Hamps 
| Amongst the wr “tals, the ‘Southdows 
| foremost r. xe 
my intenti 
article, but — to offer some opinions and Observa- 
tions of wn, in the hope that they m — — 
T ber osphate, as you are 
wee and does not, deri 
to your 
entirely 
ee d 
I cannot [erem 
. from w) 
| law, &c. 
Nis 
sinder Pi and the Nithoogh are employed for | 
paying the State expenses, 
ceded to Russi ia, y 
. thi 
sed 
is seldom heard. 
and i t may| 
- | therefore "be said to be a German State under th 
e pro- 
itro-phosphate 
ate onght, as the 
fe te That se is 
e amount p 
is d ound 
How is 
soluble e phosphate, 
to th 
which 
€ b piis N 
It is not di to determin alysis, 
W p 
bi-phomphate e phosphate 
fficulty. | 
kno e of the 
Mica any given sample contains? 
that by anal 
The 
or lean Hee with f. 
mu tton 
fearon without havi ing h any deteri 
E 
RE 
treatment seems N nA 
5 cannot do it for 
is not t suficient that an fr s has 
of a 
ing thee iay to. hav 
s the mannfact 
^ qe 
erstands the pri inciples on | 
— re a tithe of them 
to 
ery great varia- | 
e have no quality. The Cotswolds, in former days, w 
all large yet rather coarse- e-grained ‘carcass, wit 
a 
qu like Mr. 
done by game, for sett. enc of wool, 
ua atiy of har 
sessin 
hardy than the 3 by judicious í 
réel y have been e 
much earlier Sa sien 
hoe ere 3 
whic 
no rabbits, an mall 
an pate ridges, in ah la of the | with 
game laws Ht being severe. Instead of the a rable 
m of A P farms or estates j 8 ei ees 
„ we have around eac! 
Gatte of falas land and wood whieh affords fuel; 
tion in point of quality. 
have known superphosphate, 
| there is also a portion 
Hn 00 quas e with the 
of water meadow belonging to | of Seating with the cross their 
