1 
prospect of 
"m erp our own observations would lead to the con- 
wn experience convinces him that one — on of 
ifje 
cultivation 
the cultivator in these two s does, on clay 
da, produce as good an effect as two plongbings. | C 
He as his clay ve ap e lds— | 
roots, Barley, Beans, t, Clover, Wheat, | 
Beans, — nd Whe at, 2 which ‘he Deut. 
nates, as in the followi wing diagram, by the 
p a WW e D 
| Roots. Barley. | Beans. Wheat. 
si — per ous 
| 
E F 
Clover. Wheat. Beans. Wheat. 
expenses, and pay interest and prin 
loss to the 
remar! the ys be cultivated ab all. has judiciously sige se for perman tps 
indeed “they pi be sal r eni ye tais at im menee 
wear out during the lease, besides what he is ens 
| has succeeded the e Turnip okop pan ie ud to for his superint nee risk, M 
t that they cap 0 as who cannot, with good management, reali 
kom weeds ; but should ‘be remembered ‘that pay too high rents for their farms, P. ning he 
Barle not peers and few farmers have no ecome such a fashionable pursuit that a goog Tow 
retty good weed admixture to separate from the people of independent means, who preter at Sadar 
P bid 1 threshing. hani b a nust be country, rent a farm in a "Wwe lity congenial to thet 
A embered that before the Barley is ripe, and | tastes, more for ‘the sake of healthful recreation than 
| N its cutting, enou 3 are usually sown pecuniary g rather than purchase a small a 
to ensure their continuance, upposing, € Hence to sou 
the seeds to have escaped this, som source of ¢ g: n s it 
nation we are able to assert, ir ete bis nm P ME 
£z 30 samp eds, consisting of le gru: * 1 r ers m E 
THE n of the year is fast Seer and | * 
indeed iae: rh when the important — distin- 
tinguished by the farmer as “ seeds’ well 
forward with its spri 
n be predi 
pring growth, a aad its simmer |3 ar E 
usually occurs, but whic + is not sufficiently 
ttended to, viz., that Clover Grass are very 
mee up 
more or less 
As io EE the present year's 
n th have the injuries which early | 
ted been more thoroughly repaired tha an| 
8 
. 
A 
more than in any previous s — 
recollect has been caper pi ten mu 
H ey a ter 5 and if we see w 
seed crop, we are as anxious to tin them | oug 
—“ ddr out Tues Te up ne miens 
«LA 1s. per acre." 
ipe that little — Docks or Thistles are 
ooked after; in indeed, many "Pon ds are 
considered as a good part of the crop. Who 
troubles a 
Plantago media—Broad-lea: 
x lanceo: 
” 
Ranunculus repens 
Geranium molle—Soft C 
erardia arvensis— Field der. 
tellaria ~media—Chick 
et 
os 
AR 
A 
worth dultirating at all iti ia — 
ap 
as from 
beh therefrom h 
Fut à any other erop; 
om it may concern that, df need be, from 2s. 6d. 
that have led to to ie pert for thisis not thrown “ied — if s 
than 
—— i QM Menit 
l nt 5 s year 
shall Son a find th — the good 8 of corn cal or even more, will result from an effici nt "ve 
intended for hay, from 1 ewt. 
an 
from this it 1 be safely 
ud 
c experienee we ean assure heed | 
| requisite je 
erest for 
| whieh will w. 
ITF. L.“ 
rented 200 
P 
that porti 
pon. expen "m. a wor 
| esirablo ob ed "E woul cine 
ea coun untry. ae instance, it 
eight ` letters rs of the al alpha habet t; ‘and the follo owing eight hundred or ni AIME * * Ar "s mers on ght 5 3 
chara eristie instructions at once become in- are often sown with e bushe EE each acre of id 7 to enable them to fum pn. 
telligible:—“ The harvest in, bring out the steam | seed! A sum so — large that ti p not | fitably. Too many have not m E Sl oe 
h up c, 6, H; if you wish for further ai ig the crop shoul ally so h à cre to purchase stock ve rad ge and for working 
expedition, cross-cultivate H 5 steam, t ve p> The follo owing Ea Table s es 8 brio 0 Pin expenses, F — nte Lr Bars evans m. 
winter, for the horses you mus a contained in el o > * 
2r e rest; they e ugh k, eross-cultivate | of the erops — hich is pened e — € ere; Kane "mus. armen kep 
o and a, drill £, c, and d, better and cheaper average in round numbers of the six samples o — — „ zie. ere with their 
ane steam can. This done Jet the hors bout or | each set :— ces of the je ds | keep their car sie a 
A ar , manure it, split - 3 “fe px TABLE OF Warp Beens IN A BCSHEL. — — | first-class, saddle-hors 1 " 
mil. be n themt this wi eee eee eed antes = A Amount per bushel Average, asecond-hand gig faie Cas or à shi ; 
winter, — ue, for drilling in, s spring f 8 which is groomed by the cattle man, ne pay 
roots, When they have done x, if the manure is Parennial Bye grass. 15040 "ML former giv ies 
ready they may draw it on to r, and plough F and Duis * | 184,390 242840 education; some of the latter just give their familia 
B for Beans i the ordinary way. g thus itto 204,800 " an elementary edueation at th a school, A 
sketched out the work, both for horses and Ditto | Ao ae acre farm 3 which sia zente by * enant of sud 
steam, I may s that the former will not Dio oe > positive loss te t . 
with this arran e full employ during | Italian Rye-grass 20,480 and his wife do not in eneral c «€ 
H i team Ditto 61,440 q y amon: st thos: e 
7 ing uer z ed 92,160... 411,760 rodue on Qn ria coun 
F etn ^s ept e inis ; eee ad grocers, md, per 
in idleness at the cost of your steam tackle, for D Ditto 261,120 , ; : > 
i i „ f people th de whom such 
will have sown with Clover, and A will not Ditto 2 0 0 
require much of their assistance until the spring, | Red Clover 6,56 ‘ ind w y enterprising ; farmers E 
and chen if the land is at all adhesive and h Ditto 140,880 abate iy € ee sail Ao Ae 
: 1 t vill Ditto 245,760 128,293 employment, but they also suppor! 
n fed off by sheep, the st implement w Ditto 307/200 , and higher walks of life. 
produce a much better tilth for the Barley than if Ditto 1,085,440 Since a farm "which will emp 
ploughed in the ordinary way. you hape an M —— hat Mr. Grey of Dilston haie 
manure the horses may 1 — it to D, it will Gow 40,960 e to the industrious lal 
P 4 good, and the Wheat crop after it. | Ditto : 102,400 | society,” small farms 
way your may be kept as ge Ditto 409,600 401,086 || qualifications of suc 
and with at least one-third fewer horses Ditto 768,000 | many tenants of 100-a d of 
necessary steam is not adopted; itto . : 8,24 | farms who ae possess more than 4l. 
- , if you are keeping and working 15 purchasing stock an eme 
horses, or two E Seea working that number p yia 1, 24.000 tj — wauld be m » mu i j 
en them, five may be sold, and wit th m ae 1,209,840 2,768,106 | occupying the posi E 
reali d the saving in the on st of k ^ ivan sui suitable to their experienc abili " E 
e an 8 Ditto 4,505,000 the apparentl elevated ams — position 1 
an engine and a apparatus may be purchased ; E e TREE Er ae DUE a 
cost of coal, and wear and tear of eres being | This is indeed a fearful array of figu 1 (eir | farm. 
a small item compared with horse keep." — em we may expect the res dr Pide y more corn than a co farm al 
positior : 
y 
t 
ieren = dee profit for bis 
rking expenses 
ear of ho 
—.— 
— 
ieultura: 
It being the root crop that 
last season, a e circumstance th. hoe ork in pie 
a Clover | value of arable farms, any : 
Barley were ripened almost together, had caused | field; and the Poe we may thereby do is not alto- | the canter of labour ELT 
much gr to shed in hurry of gether ed to casion, but if set about at must now dias ng ot 
getting it together, and the subsequent mild the proper time, namely in early inet d of Tabourers-and 5 tel win the sowing 9o 
weather has augmented a gro which a spring, all chance of vented, and | divisions of labour connecte 4. 200 ae i ja 
harder winter than the one we have experienced future itta thus become Bu uierous nips than a farmer of 1 Mr. Grey's: gei 
would ya prevented. This question is and expens employs. Your extracts from ME un m 
, wi ow small farmers get the labour 
interesting as showing how one er be ding anion pont 
ioi LARGE A ALI The comparative condition 0° 
ps id b mee, a een - — b ) eene m9 ferent parts of the United Kina te nd tho? 
care should be exercised in esting the previous |, HAVING een employed on farms varyi 10 : t pu ing a 
ee so hat eie hed eds shouldbe ot as pde o 20 ͤ ᷑̃ eredi im | ie mali ore pret reel 
possible. Tt is doge perhaps very e oint ifyi 12 iscussion between some experience otchmen, parently cannot giva, octire de 
edy for A this = dere in necessity ee h * *. — Fed, a pred Norful” re- | description of the labourers in ; 
m much may b pue Jn nents i an old impression of the emite s ions hi bn 
vot ted oce d 88 Ff à te 
rge or small farm all the me, c 
let us offer a few] age as epic his farm as will defray his wi EM to | at Zr root oot ofa T iprietor, furmet, 
