1084 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL бАЛЕТТЕ, 
[Моүнмвкв 15, 1862, 
аз som Ў sa mi E re of аһ | capital, and he believed with Mr. Pusey on that subject that the wee тт We inerenao the cropa: Таш erem 
e described Mr. Blizard; ; Е wherel from 6l. to SI. pts e would enable them to do 80, and at the d f дв down we increase th 
onam I shall be obiged i mne 1 tell m сап | same time do justice to themselves and to their landlords. | 200 arming is a thing that pays y if: 
procure a really true of Chevalier Barley. I| When they knew t gapital they possessed, they m might were toi invest their money liberal? i all fa Dd 
айт ibute the mixtur e of o g | readily $ calculate pde acreage they оч наб: There t of farmi y E the land they 
another point on entering upon a far ic s not фас m Three 
nd if v We would | keep ig seed corn considered—the се 2, whether dive стун е roads and H as is pe and. happen ed to sit next to аза! 
е о sort, we easy accoss to market, во that they might readily ta ke their | He said he had been to Liverpool, and Lo merican, 
Ош ur Wheat Mo im n this loeality are хс к than|produee, and bring М ok manure. That. Was а point which | Rome; and he said, * When I c; udon, and 
timated them at harvest time. I have threshed out should be remembered in "considering the grew а setia of | wanted to see one thing—I came to England | 
ES OMUR s: rent. He also thought the tenant farmer who h le : : 1ng—1 wanted 
a couple of fields, and have 6 quarters per acre of | capital had as much right to oonsider who was ай ve p putting his money into another man’s lan „а тщ 
Fenton White Wheat, the кы of which I have direct | landlord as the latter had to inquire as to the character and ou've hit on the right man „Таў 
А g to show yo 
m Mr. Hope, ud п Barns. Drem Swedes are a E T. ar erue se кшш ай such a also har ga. vi ы what Lincoln, and there is no district where that 1 live near 
wou is position under suc 18 carried 
ood crop. a оше! fa ilure from the ntered upon a farm, and gave up his tim E and m ins tt A "s e extent? ‚ he came to seg m 
M oodd: or тл ° Pota dices at the same time, to [od the Ten conatalidor which ook him to our principal seller of oileak rid 
them diseased, the Flukes eter of all the urinis attached to him as the father of a family. cultural manures, and asked him to let us look чь 
We are just about үти sowing Wheat, and nihe elt. The next point was—How should he hold his land ? books, y turned over the ledger to one D. 
gone. moe . Charles Doncaster, Southwell. | Sh ould ek > by lease, by written agreement, or by ссора 10 was 500. and odd; another, TOL 
[ vill pro bably obtain for латна another, 10007, and во on. “ Well, he вай], «5. 
the information he des es.] 2 ‚рге VERI % hold it by lease. If a man had a lease for | ĉe landlords Who pay all this."—« No," mid the 
Statistics 0 Tint in Sheep.—l am anxious to gm ould lay out his capital freely and look | merchant, “I don't get much out of the landl 
collect reliable statistics as to losses Kurse sustained for a yield hereafter to reproduce his capital and pay interest. they are tenant-farmers who pay me this ords; 
l kinds. "Тһе diseases He was = at all sind at talking on this subject, though | « But." said the реп еш: “still money, 
by he had been told that L- came once a year to preach 'sedition » ge an, “ still you haven't shown 
f sh cep ust be more огей Studied i in future, and | to the Cannock farm The subject had, however, been | Me One man putting his money into another даз; 
Itrust many of your readers will aid me with the a alluded to r3 recent она by the Earl of Shrewsbury and | land." So І оок him home with me, and on the ы 
mation I seek "a ose to learn | the кч of Lichfield; and he would assert that in what he | we saw the d lgoing; aud I said “ть 
f х f the followi ti was advancing, so far from wishing to create an ill-feeling, he | coo $t going into th : d^ H , ere, now you 
rom a number of sources the following particuars :— | was taking m р course which would cement a good feeling Дз з. HEP е was astonished ; and Į 
Number of sheep kept, number of lambs born, total | between the tenant and landlord. Но believed if the subject asked him, “ How do you manage in America} 
number of. animals lost, ie of losses a mongst bt viel. diced 2 Meg, gon ye Suid fes весте that ec pe "ne “if a man'saves 5001. he buys land with 
Н Li 
his property would be improved, and would arrive at the ip A. Бе чуо it TAN the other half” “Bug” 
The reports sho uld extend o e year commencing viction that if a tenant laid out his capital lavishly, he ОЧЕН Sad, " ets the land he desires, does he еш 
1st July, 1861, ач ending M july 1862. Апу опе Б алт that һе эма in the а be ү remunerated if Hog ARUM ; well as our tenantfarmers! " "NO le 
поё repaid. Supposing the agreement to be an annual one— | said, “ће land із n 
зне їп гана 0 ату кт Peri ‚те pos - for he had been told by landlords that tenants were averse to a5 vou do, and he 0А меѓ а, Y де, cultivate i$ 
haips personally, as you will by introducing this note | Jeases іп Staffordshire—he would pies up. n them to have the y 9, А So you see our 
our columns. John Gam, New Veterinary | terms in writing. „Не knew it could be done very readily, avd | tenant-farmers do il "de ney into та 
‚дее, ry А x men's 
College, Edinburgh, November 11. that the conditions could be put їп a single sheet of foolscap. | land, and that is the secret EA Ae fine farming. It is 
Without entering. "into the question of ths prize offered that which begets fid 
ч аб whic! egets confidence on the part of the land- 
UA prie d would t a th vie D tend lords. If he sees the land well managed 
ini compete—he w tell them one clause : k an 
жип should have in all their agreements. Whatever clauses they | farmed, he has naturally a kindly feeling for his 
5201г eties might have in regard to рога! cultivation, selling off ted tenant; and so it is that we seldom h f 
. BrnxrrrY Js THORNBURY : Chee е maki ng,- Th e | Se» they pv have a general — ye in the a bib leaving "his farm d. Lincolnshire and туле any one 
2 eig year o! ceupation a valuer shou! e appoin who , 
ho uld ейде the questions of unexhausted improvements f rmer breaking down. Let me 
held on Monday a at Berkeley, when Dr. Voelcker, ES ri c e PI — any 8 сои а вау а word a ers =. straw, can't look along 
ance between them. ey such a clause in their 
M Cireneester Agricultural College, кыч t pem re ents they might do their duty by the land, to them- LR roads without pim а of straw going 
on Che making. The Professor explained the com- теа and their landlords. Не wouid not attempt to offer any | UP tO Hondon. W, o not say this is all 
milk, gave some Smh able hints as to the|remarksas to how they should farm, for there was so much | wrong; for I say, get the best and M most 
» " 
i i anipulative details of | difference in t| al the land and climate, that a man | valuable mark ou can for your produce, I 
must consider and judge for himself. He, however, VES ay, 
i 
e ро а М оп Чап д 
adopted for ripening and storing the cheese. e аг он Мт е arm - and Sh энд a good | belongs to the land ; you cannot deny that; and if it 
lecture was listened to with much interest by a large «ањ with eir sympathy from such a шап, | is taken off the land, you have a right to put an equiva- 
number of members, several of whom [шд their шош oF шов wore алй s af Vh обра ven lent ; into the land рғ зоо e other ape. Now, we com 
wives and erac rs wi ith them. An inte esting dis- | The туш which the tenant farmers hold ought to "be to manure, and we use it 
cussion followed, in which it tl li rein gthened. They ought to feel not only in а secure position | largely. The fa rmers bills that T shown to the 
portant рий! in the prat ЫЛ of pod a siy LA У posenion of a temptatio 300; iod to support sac oto American eene an were shown wes’ agent, 
be carried out by landlords going to the expense of re- | only when they did that which was their duty, not only to them- And let say t Бан the more sut vs put into the 
constructing the old d airies, in which it is Патен to | selves and D ir families, but to their landlorda and their | land, iex s e jus Ус do to the land, eee 
make first class cheese. The lecture will be published | "try, in making the earth yield forth its fruits. and to geo enit ind t-farmer does what 
y the Association. ules: [b m do justice to all three. I hear 
The э was, that hat if | od сор к would "x pay, e еве something about Now, 1 d 
ever гін 
Cannock : Agricultural Education.—At the late eyer тоша ара, ты: in which the farmed, pio rod сне. 5 E Чы жашык TT 
annual papa of this itin: the Chairman, Mr. до with the farming of other countries with which they were in | Standing oen апер would de 
said—He fou wn career that he p en Беу 3 Ань competition with he whole: уоп. remain longer on 5 i me than 
` what were — 
d not sufficiently consider, wind ре entera on the | In this country they edd noL enr 2 bulk-of eoru ?| under a system of lenses—longe 
culiar hs in 
occupation of land, what the qualifications and what | as other countries. The English c gia WaS aont i imate, vere thoy hay герр — ; let meadd that 
he be 
nd was he ул tten 
ever coming on the land, and thou; hes ИА sx qood DF P ore ind better you will do r farms, and the 
the ааа аа These qualifications had for root s erope it was not good for Corn, That fact адеп to | your HRR E heet ТЕ a йа of ш eu One wo 
i he began farming, some 82 years ago, | point o tta i omi заре agn to be their foundation of farming. |» our ih o live pen pari 
I ek far e foundation of m gem onmi 2 be about cottages. sppe i ik 
a sound тойы education aA man would like to | 209107. "It they "looked а thei imports of co where a good ды! y imd belongs to ene 
find that in this respect he "was i nferior to his own kem ал» Sr КЫ aras чы ү ri n ciy, зараа w vu They And P D e E 
other countries in the uction of corn, no other countr A 
1 abourers ; but yet he ici possibly do во, unless he 2 uld nnen with Eng dens d in the production of what th x agricultural labourers, v he ual rent js y p 
siliarty called buteliere" meat ; sind. whak they added see — NI the А x po E 
hai ү th 1 foundati Ж. ithi lf. ban 3l. "for г an inferior o a 
fus шше. When he sail commercial eduontion, ines taat cora mist Rion M ары i 17 for thoee abo x i» 
He ponia on with gratitude ос benefits farmers z a man has to walk four or five miles балое if liti 
had derived from chemi geol did: oth HERTFORD.—AÀt the annual meeting here the other | to do a dap work; and I can't baee Fi 
egi sciences ; but he would этеке any шап day, the Hon. A. L. MELVILLE said he was glad to|people can afford to build cottages m йы s ny" 
who exa » got his bread by the dalti f tho attend an agricultural meeting here, because he had | why Bino cannot build cottages ani ai ГЫ ag 
soil to beco ere dabbler in science. There or 30 years been settled in what usually con- | also, adding a rood of land, which wo 
de who had c ны thair time -to thó шува! sidered the leading agricultural county, Lincolnshire, | thing for eve 
and tof those separate sciences, and who were He remarked that Franklin once made, аа ———— 
pae to give th ult Г ж lab is own lan 
those y^ E d for i "it t i z would | 22 and farmed it t baly. He said he had no excuse, for aToN.—At the agricultural moeting red 
were anxious to | 16, bad only to look over;the hedge and see what his a] Мт. Brisco, the Chairman, said :—1f m үрүл 
fih en | eighbour was doing, еа he Molville), you do MM. Now, rise from the grave of 30 years E mà "AL Wigton, 
to a үөү фе vho really th | Melvi was in 
Е ча дл у give ret lover =. w - | the hedge, although some of your Бодров. are thicker | From what was that change derived! had 
I Бес м higher than welike to see them in Lincolnshire. | great progress they were making in Eng f wood and 
as hb hai абс tio fou ou 1 have an opportunity of seeing what is going on, | now raised up from the а а o position; 
1 as plac 
$EÉEDETYRÉYPÉR 
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Erde баг) x3 к oec ES TET tened to by those present, and read hereafter by those | y man ет Ed o. He was no longe) 
акр кий асаа) , and these mee tend to | drudge. C Н 
one of thé ds харат е subject, Mr. Pusey, a | ОЁ agriculture and the benefit of farmers. If I take a es upon piene d wers ed Erat giae 
Eos erii a xd ved Eu. а *, Gentleman, who comprehensive view of the county, and compare what | introduced the Siem engine а tead of thelittle оа ое 
Mom iege — he к ар. get e iba ens yi of гне. вее пон таи wha Y E i see b a да EE im- impleme do the agricu йк, or implemen те 
j зе land, and consider e question fi hi E had bert 
own point of view as a tenant farmer, he th hongut GL or at most extent] I ade 2а hoped t to E and t i pe 
Ms e t Ae -— for an eti farm. He, DOT е | farm w beg ome of their corn into | It Vappened that the practic pes d im agi 
greai uld 
employed by the landlord ánd the tenamt. . 1f they were. is vaca, E ES ва barks for all the corn they бот теу а CN. za nd, wi » ^ e e = 
to take a a farm and build upon it, drain it, grub up the posed e in incoloshire are not fond of barns. - Y i 
make a different arrangement of the whole form, then ho | Tarnips are better than any I have ever seen here ; sever pare ie "that riin 
Butif|it is a атоо year for Turnips; but yn are | had peor er th test tl 
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