874 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
" 
were for skilful ploughing. І havetried my hand at the Е and а well- -kept leet and tidy garden are as good | variety of Жы o hos 
plough myself, c^: — I am afraid I made but of home cis cua where g o m land eri ^ 
ЖЕТ лаи Соот 36 si sii h “л Ер ds y= а wel are who Бате орь t "Жи | set set px [ with аду vantag 
tute rewards 
kd -— it requires es to dri rive a straight furrow d У Lee А RI c d lion ор m (breeding. Cattle and akao 
i Т 1 iati t lar e on the same pasture 
which form the main and os «к ble vai for conduct, of which an association a ] , 
feature of this association, There are other prizes, also, | can o judge, and in eds in the care of my eu gr "A clo T Nn distribute 
of a similar t dinate charact Particular | farm pru ers I koi not a е association tó | cattle, an e cropped Grass 
courties, you kn now, have credit for superior skill in one | interfere. With respect to the. zes for Tu mue H I| mo T m 
= other of the brane hes of agricultu re. This cou nty, loo n быр them merely as expedients, as valuable as is om dis e slopes 
ext to Middlesex which they are intended. | the x of the ве 
m mr pu ЕЙГЕ well shaped ricks. A rick js | It does not follow because t hey succeed. once or twice ound the si 
alone, sandsto; 
judge of, ld ш зец a to compet rick- -making I| upon success. in c priz as a decisive Г rap a ne 
Ai er reason why Су Ape not v m ust | man Pid gain this prize, and | limestone о pa i ox ү 
as x rifle shooting racing, о port. Tine bea farmer whom I or any other landlord wo uei | Suc Т ions are " 
you have also prizes for eee бага, us There appears in the presen t mized, th à 56 потлар wet we o tham ; 
pretty ı much under the same cat egor, . Yo ou have also [d day to bea tendency to gus. Ue: for pimp st every- | | mare e ui and the \ 
prizes for to run prize mad, i I had an invitation | he plains, towns à 
and conscientious character, which is not 
meritorious thing in its lf, but is a fair subject fi 
only a most 
the other „дау from a а gront en pue dis: rict to | 
а) of rivers whi rye 
est 
e 
of fact w which can be ma 
b 
grea — H list 
going t through | 
e | all tho. prizes ^ the icem] kind p up v with a| 
both t travelled mate 
аны clay. The farmin 
demand 
then 
a totally different ede 
servants for "o of service and 
gr patote. mam mber. of sheep at the fair. I am 
rant of these matters, but this i is the first 
|in pun life that I 
| buy ying t Ee which he wants to bu пу for his own pur- 
very 
time | 
t 
id the soil 
d of E M. ud. 
1 4 
p well mi кын brewer the i 
should 
and long se 
valuable 
ualities 
however much the 
pable o 
vae gor to шеге servants ris "diclis | c 
There are qua which, however 
ey 
ien d us, I find ges а great п number 
he 
сћуш 
[of pila and black агац ughts. 
which I | 
aung, е 
quo purpose of 
A 
рма are froward 
s 
er,—and m 
e masters, as tho Bible 
inn 
| P тиф: 
y of thinking, Hg I hope befo any land “стз supply of 
s | years are id that some means may be bvised. which Carse farmin only be 
will remove the sequis to which I have referre d. | Turnip. 
ith t o far 
avor no троа | SR inconsistent Y the Но oly Word, 80 
the 
oT will now 
0 
satisfaction to me to 
might be lei s that 1, m 
tId 
*Success to 
во far as it tends to enl are wanted, d. 
ent with the rules of common 
rinking * 
уыпн, Association,” 
agriculture, and i is consist 
о d ex I Ts. jm that 
Indeed еей, La 
who have de [^ mean 
i eus m 
vt 
45 
Pk 
£n 
$ 
3 
un 
that such a | Ze 
be aron a^ pe рашай 
сЕ tirely beyond 
Poticeg of Bookg, 
Ti of Farm аз T Ёсе apa and ds 
кае 
ecture generally, 
m за whatev "Tt is rchit and i "aot des esigns for | drainage, on pes classes. 
my dut; e ше SL "If fhor | farmeries and , cottages, lI s нн Mee ead be reared. 
are тч, ud mete they are | of the plans are those |a vonimodation i or al the 
rp» to leave me, an 41 1 to part with them.|of farmeries already bu built, as ach instance Plates. XI. to distr icts in every suce 
rvant i is nob entitled. o: шу particular credit gi XVL, including those of S ir W, G. Hayter, Dart, near | could effecte i 
staying wi Mus ED Bracknell зар ir s at Drumkilbo, Forfar- | be by purchasing 
e saw ay an €|shire ; Barron Graham, m Morphie, Kincardine- | and such а change 
7 тае who A Served 30 years viai; rr gua we|shire; Lord ecu A at Coleshill, Berkshire; and ANE д 
all know and esteem. "There was no credit to him for | others. The remaining specim. are we presume, he Authors then sid 
staying. He would have been the greatest b l in the reri by the authors for the circumstances of Чоп ОЁ the farmstead and f Ta 
world if he could ever have been induced to leave so pastoral, carse, dairy, * Suburbial" common, and * Having thus 
good a mi - The same i i^ of | mixed husbandry f. respectively. This is the < 
2 It is admitted that this system could not | cation adopted. distin between th n the gene 
be applied to an of nts, and I do not|two last lies in the MS on the latter of|guide the construction ; 
any reason tural labourers should Ъе | ћеш bred upon a p The “ ” | arable husbandry, 
ered as in capacity to domestic | farming, on th Phase to rich xen * Straw being the most buli 
m It h urged as Ан excuse—for I never | lands. «16 implies a а fn са › rich soil апа i t апа dail у! 
eard RENE: Ба а г r the practice—that | | raising all sorts of g and is therefore pd ci tA and si aisant 
e farmers аг poor to el their labourers as|suited to arable чту y for the same reason | у b xal ba 
they deserve, My 2 Rege m meeting that difficulty is | unsui pasture and live stock." 'l'he|be pad opi Mor y 
very simple. It a farmer poor, who is the right | other kinds of farming, including the suburban here 
person to step in in that et The landlord. I have ial are iently in mma i - E доош d 
upo. 
ры, — : 
u as r t— “ The which. lo 9 iversi 
testimonial E li the apena of farming те genii wo try, Hu es М 
е they soldier. Ew there = no analog * gy bety ard the following MM eep und the veo i range "ys x 
" 1e Oes поб rece ive 118 Tovar 
fi ~ an „енн association of private p li high ge ts еек ia cde 
no true so ier would r such a prize; he receiv and there, in consequence, рае Боер, 
his prize from aster, his mistress—the Queen— sheep only are ч һе к-С, гт ma э ted 
that is the fountain from which his honour i drawn. | much subjected and and 45 it ot 
When people who ought to know better draw an analogy | that the tops of mountains face different directions 
between the soldi т who gets his riband and the fa e face affording comparative shelter jpeg 
labourer who reeeives his prize, it falls to the ground | whilst the opposite is confrontin the беген A of 
altogeth I e these remarks with the sincere the elements—su ould be unfi n for 
desire we may be enable ether, | the most hardy breeds of sh venes between it and 
she 
the в 
should be paiet € th 
e second; lls to tł D a 
eum it follows that both sheep аа cattle can be E "Y А. 8 "follows йош 
reared on the ва m This constitutes | s dA 
Jour second description of pastoral farms, Few store еше, X comit fo to the pute 
masters, however, trouble rei, with breedin koe Season. ME facing f 
киын» and sheep, where accommodation in stead- prer owed b sun to enter, go 
Мадан 15 very limited, and where | о to the g 
