TV V ot 
ArnL 30, 1859.] 
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE rat AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
393 
it would do o if there were ‘no outlets; but, as there , allowance of roadwork, and o haulages, With than half an acre per day during the harvest. Partof 
always us outlets, in ——— of the undu- | respect to * x the ie K is better to have a bu , and nd wa 
28 ng surface of the earth, the r fin zd a vent at|s separate l ock. uf lio rur team, which imparts a | non 60 to 65 lbs. per us and — of the Potato- 
some point nt, and flows bes in L " the ole body lity to the carter than can be | Oat — sp t un 72 b bushels per and weighed 
v er , of course, "rel to the | the case ned the feeding | to one man, or even | 45} lbs. bushel. The circular corn 3 are gene- 
2 or such like . driven there by the irre- where a horse-feeder is appointed, and the carters have | rally teat 15 feet in ameter at “ve base, 15 feet 
Sistible fore e of hydrosta tie pressure. As the particles | only to groom and work their e erben horses. The high from Ho ae ihe eav | the slope 
of r rub à latter system | is peo Ge on the ue T5 the . of the roo ? 
gainst t 
t 
is retarde 
e sides of the fissures, the 
f the exi ied 
na nyo an inclination, 
t t beantifally p regulated 57 the jos opposing forces 
42 iu and friction ; the angle of incli- 
nation ues th e mean oa 
— the water aecumulates and the nearest vent 
utfall. 
$2349 " Lay 
4 
STABLE MANAGEMENT. 
LET us 
the lighter, well as 
county, three or four . ften be seen slow 
draggi z. a plough, at less than 2i miles per hou 
probably n 
in 31 ewt. on the ters lh pe di the same 
bem of furrow slice, and parter of m the like "hows rd 
fi 
and another of Beans 
ple. This brought the ! 
bir. 7 cwt. for each animal, exclusive of the Jaton 
e waggons Som 
the highest 7 M adv: 
On some of} . 
my s —— soils s tus 
not showing in 
he 
—— a 
oof more tha y farmers 
ous eaa ing machines w m thresh a ee of. em — 
| hou 8. 
s in three A Rede many farmers’ laboure 
mu he pé of 1855 the writer ado op 
mw system of rations, 
antage. Iti ven below. 
ted a 
bat, without practical | 
machine, wheel the corn barn with wheel- 
s. 9d. 
7 lbs, (boiled) . om 
^ nang "d ewt. (ut to chat ai and moistened 
a with the Linseed) : 
3 
3 
1 
3 
t or Peas straw, ad tib. 0 
9 
0 
0 
3 
2 
0 
uo 
the 
; others carry thee corn uibus the barn on their 
backs. Where two carts are required for carting the 
| corn from the stackya ard to 
the two 
| men or stout lads are requ nd carting the sheaves 
to the barn. A man feeds the se vu and two women, 
„ A rd, 
| 
over nig ht 
and keep the doorway 
an vom inire of aie meia — — pan 
it was T Midsummer ere in show 
county, w 
a 
en it makes the course of à 
table, compels to lie still when you w 
actively engaged, has any desire for a return of the 
complai nt? Its ultimate effects, too, especially on 
combined . 
they aga ed a3 
nd bloom. Looking at the condition e 
n young 
a 
clear ; one or two w 
the corn from the spout and riddles it in 
t 
e t 
rn or carry i 
;| experienced p RR Dd. will, 
natur the soil uantity 
who ho may 
me mery men, am an essa: ermed. plough 
r hinds in E 2 in the sout 
of the 
fifteen rummer's horse 
of a rece f 
y wo ear 
be adja railway station And up till lately h 
the old aay ii nobly falâlled — N ne Flay 
ts aed over wn behi: m a load of|! 
fiet 
ions, and grew i rength as is 
be wonder * uy then, that . 
of which hé 
ine ne ent, the . of feed is 
worth. 
that the starve-all | 
ri ght way to attain such a desirable 
ram c ir 
1 feedin 
money’s- 
hol the: doctrine t| 
We ha — Ww. 
10 NUS noted this fact in. the case of a tively — 
Vertu f can 
ate ailment. If * prevention is better 
pare let us strongly Mary mend the free use of boiled 
Linseed for mois istening th food, and lubricatin ing dry |, 
gs 
© 
at a convenien e farm steading, 
and agree to a specified fors m of payment in cash or in 
mM and jobbing orn Pus vo resi — in provincial 
d c n farms whi 
This ay applies particularly to the time when the change 
is made fro n food; and 1 lb. or 14 lb. per day 
will not be praedas too opening in its nature with the 
15 3 of horses. 
the preparation of the food. The 
je — decides that Beans oug! eni to be split, — well 
wns, 4 7 E an ch are not 
reip for the plona iatayar, The p 0 ughman receives 
} 
of the stat J of the weather, or his having been unable 
to w a few weeks ee — ig but the 
4 | jobbing at not only is not paid for the — or 
weeks he does not work during a storm of 
showery weather, but sometimes he has difficulty to trix 
m your Outs 
arm hors 
occasionally | 
to bolt his feod, in in which case 
p 
y 
which 1850 we 
of goes 
twenty | 
so keep 
split, too. But we have not found, except i in the case : 
of aged animals, that there is d i Bae, “ae il — e. 71 * 
. able to give an affirmative answer to the oft- times either to we ii pass pats 
repeated inquiry of Mary Wedlake & Co., “Do you his w E morning ed evening, or take lodgings, 
tw a 
yet 0 
which is ks payin S, A 
of tools in working order. 
8 k 
ra mbined w may 
hard work at pw daily Atia eral is the most | 
profitable plan. With such D aoe ^y will ask 
for fev 8 whe ther the weather be wet or dry; 
they 
or a p pull when 
Rita; and there is m less likelihood of the eg i- 
Uh 
work, both fast and slow, as any horse in 2 PtH 
ee 2 a qu py * Jack? d masti 
pril ege; an 
en with — or rn in t the 
whetlibe eyióm eat” or mixed with cut chaff. Under 
any circumstances, ‘there are few fot horse > feeders that 
m-—- 
| all of which is calculate 
all the above it 
ucro since wha 
ofteu needed. 
her board and „wages. 
x was till ll late. years Pici and prem therefore, € the 
38 ty! 
explain yment in kind 
ecomplis 
with seven 2 rs of ho ke under this syste 
17 or 18 rnm pee a system well-known in the mid- 
what is the present mode of 
management? the pe enter the stable at 5 in the 
, feed, water, and groo m the. horses; get their 
own breakfas ts, aint turn out at 7 to the minute; work 
aue then one sand in the stable; and return 
eed, litter them down, and leave 
a half-hour earlier in the 
which Wet recive s midday, when they are 
ll rubbed down. If work- 
‘th a mil 
Ea 
at ulen Bran, how 
| other food, thong w we enden paying 5 the 
ice Thea 
d It probably is so 
still, and, as compared with southern practices, iens 
| nón undoubted! 
as well. We are not partial to giving horses Bisher 
Uwe ——! with Wheat, or consuming large quan- | 
i. n—varieties of "feeding — — there to be 
teams are favoured with large quantities of |* 
commodity, and am sleek coats and full- 
kno 
px 
still the pr nea Ea pe. of payment in Northumber- 
Jang and how far south from the Tweed d 
nat form of payment now 
the meni. P eyailing mode 
i D Northumbrian Plough who 
xj a tele coal 
tn. 
E 
| ergies 
strength, te will 
lios with me that. "e per 
flesh — — is well No doubt there are 
hin: And t 
price per ton that is ov rer fox good W 
rei anf Corn E 
. Loocenyton Co 
Home Correspondence 
Labour on Tweed-side.—The greater 
7 | and vs being the general ra 
s vel h 
like * buying go oa r? A piece of d 55 for 
eee horse lick at, “a a condiment, m not 
f jer. 
and washing, which amount 5 
to 1 
rate of bo 
| 2s. must be deducted from what the farmer pa 
| bind for the bondager's work. i 
| mer to py the hind 39/. 2s. 6d. for his own 
15/. as about the maximum that the 
— — ax lis won s ipd kat 16s. for ep ; 
during harvest at 1s. day, 211 
at ls. per da 
& 
Scoteh and 
system 
* 
N * hom 
never could arrive 
A own practice that the chief profit from 
earlier in the afternoo Farm part of wi 
wee, ce feeding. The weekly allowance for each ing A 5 me . 
wid m. manure into the carts w 
C — N s —— to bebe pens, the turning the manure * 
Al et. Clo Over (fF cha t Pr and net). anure in the aip — — hoe 
Taki age gh ted and mixed with c pulling, rooti: the Tins i is ee are 
eg above at fair local value, we are not sur- b women in t| he Eu SEP gears the 
| em by MC that it is more costly than the series | Tweed. The la 14, 14}, and 
Ol Haws. Bor J C. Morton, in his article on “The Cost | 15 feet ridges ras 
the instanes c in the last issue of the “Journal.” But | generally upon one 
in him refe ms sets up the corn whieh four reapers cut. 
refor to Operations; whereas t| we | cuts half an acre 
ave always lying ahead of them an . reaper of an e en 
