4 
4 
' E> Cope 
Jory 7, 1860.} 
THE GARDENER'S 
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
633 
A in a town that citizens take in enjoying a 
cee a secluded retreat with those whose tastes 
n 
ag Deeg an employer of labour instead of an 
s ald prefer ate aa a Mrs to 
rthe it will 
'y a a SRR ` itself for 
e as the abolishing of hiring 
er” 
ch a radica 
pe The term hi “laboure 
markets would be at prese ent. r 
isapplied ind who 
are employed regularly by farmers at Hoik which 
nires horse-power, and also to those Rib es work 
connected with the executing of per r 
me Ploughmen who are engage Aave 
m 8 service are ‘ rvant „° and are as firmly 
te soldi Watching with a jealous 
ia anything which is connected with the labouring 
classes, I see no substitute in the shap a holiday 
suggested for the hiring markets, which are regarded 
by so man: a curse and the source of immorality. 
present state of things must of cessity remai 
unchangeable until the majority of the landowners, 
tenant farmers, 
duties pon the 
that if the majority of the three classes were to per- 
form their duties, majority of the labourers 
‘Ther no RRA ı that farm, no Sabbath pra 
alc the control oe any office-bearer in the church, 
ANES es suog pine of the parish. The plough- 
men ce k for devo! otional exercises, and it 
THE VALE OF STRATHMORE. 
(Cont 
z known as “the 
bothy s system,” those on this farm 
ayed i Fai inconspicuous pert. Every one who 
were p. 4 0.) ere p 
POLLED GUS CATTLE. at the aee bothies here. Their bein 
remarkable 
We now turn to siotier, isa, if anything, more | for badn: ess cannot be attr ibuted tothe landlord, R he 
interesting branch of Str a ore husbandry. The} could nei 
Scotch niet ee s are well known throughout the igre 
foie pri way, when killed, eas” the modat i on, to keep fewer inmates in the bothies, nor 
table of roys valty to that of the humblest of her Majesty’s with - occupier. Suffice it to 1 say, the thing was not 
subjects. may not carry so jaunty don and, at the pereos matters wear something of a 
As to the policy of herding colonies 
an air as their “aristocratic rate | Highland brethren 
ark o! 
- | for producing goo! 
i ` dijes 
= mk ew years ago t o hear a man, who i 
and esteemed by rich ae poor, speaking of 
the calle nealgenc of the Presbyterian ministers. 
I heard that man state that the minister of whose 
brother 
Ë my early t 
2A ya as 2 apes eve 
lo age once 
consecutive years, and althou: 
several of es Dili eons! s children, 
the ploughm when passin: ng i 
Gas with se ee reo we 
of a a — —s of the Presby Ta 
re you a plo 
p your d 
pe rer y a class wee fees incom 
t | of beasts 
ee ing | tryst or fair, and you 
saparia 
ed | show. 
them 
nor may they be so a: a. after for park orna- 
the e grac 
f eè 
3 the ‘province of the writer to enter. 
ither men or women together in boran, ker is notin 
_ Wh he r it adds 
ms 5 
sating meat on ay right pla 
and plenty of i AA “with coming ea pil to 
butcher—we question if many breeds ant em. 
course reference is here made to well-bred specimens of 
and not to mon beas 
apani ; Or whether there may not be a 
of the 
msi relati ate 
preyaienk illegitimacy n ae the humbler classes in the 
| north, he s for 
judgm ent „of the reader to 
uke well h p 
of ye 
lt eh an re a 
z | proves of which not even the Short-horns need be 
= z3 ve done a for t 
breed, may 
the present Parl of Soutbesk ; Mr. Wate.’ 
| Mr. Bowie, M‘Combi 
and 
; temporarily "iohibited. by a part of the 10 female out- 
creatures !” aid. “If I was to put m rse 
in til’t, poor beat the very hoofs w ee rot off himi in 
less tham a wee ek,” How wever, “man wants but little 
here Toking into the hut 
Mains of Kelly ; Mr. mbie, "Tilly four: 
Ik 
ashi ire; 
ircumstances be very 
er, Portletien, both of Aberdee’ 
pare! either. A mae Uai of one apartment r 
M 
i Fu iarton, Reston, and many o 
J been ain. 
the fireplace facing the door, er 
heir la Take the 
ave | wall little over a man? s height, and the sole window 
s 
à} 
5 
red in the district, at th 
ad the 
wha t most of our 
a 
: koiiyr ae sleeping apartmen 
f 3 
tal 
2 Highl nd women were camels ses Er hor 
the late tenant’s time, this domi 
-In 
cile formed the ae s 
nt being over 
the stable. 
praat 
t they must 
rder to make that | money to | 
gentlemen and tenant fi ers’ 
*t that 
the butcher; for their size would | 
ia nd! 
m | by climbing a Tad ‘laced oaia risian the 
wall. A loose rope tied in knots, for the sake of givi 
sia better hold, offers its aid to the feabiesieionded wo ie. 
The 
dimensions of the bedroom were 18 ae _long by 
| 12 feet wide, and 5 feet 9 inches high. At height 
a well- sa ste man con nid not stand by 
have good grounds | for interferon; _ but are wich men 
My late father’s master was not responsible a Tis oo 
‘proprietor was and still is. The minister of the paris sh 
in whi i I emerged from boyhood to manhood was 
eh: rgeabl e with a culpable neglect of duty in not 
ve i t 207 upon a moderate well- 
beds looke 
puppies. d to tl h fro erai ho 
ha 
bred Short-horn of equal hts ag bulk. The north 
untry beasts are heavier make, but slower 
feeders and decidedly ie symmetrical: possessing more 
e horse s’-collar style, “narrow at top, an ond = ide 
A These working oxen, an 
aan os the a bok ta o m years old ster roy be 
rhe yx 
| would not be vere To the credit 
ow s bedroom was at once disused on his obtain- 
the land in his own hand; the other bothies, too, 
the 
tions cast for ; 
homestead, Tne farm tin na good sate of f cultivation, 
imple- 
orth fr m 502, to 602. the pair. 
to follow up the education th ey had r 
parish school; and I want to know who ought to be at 
the expense of purchasing a few educational nT other 
works for the young men in each parish. Ea ch individual 
f every 
of „labour without attempting to throw his own work 
airg. 
Sir John Pakington and Lord Kinnaird have devot 
quite competent to manage their own affi oh 
‘their attention to the subject; but it would be much 
nge 
such ages, =: a moderate share o: = work, on if tied 
up and stall fed, but we must pass on to M 
KINNAIR 
F R 4} 
cuca 
di range , of hills valley 
pon ates the basin of Lunnan Water from the va 
ee 
f the Southesk, on the oe of the Scottish North | 5 
Eastern Railw: way, the towers and tur rets of the sees 
. | ments, i 
hey are = orted to fatten better at | ¢,, 
ever, 
A 
pps bier Poul in action by M r. Peter, and a 
held ros aeres, drilled r ~ Aap ntl aus in a 
See the sae the Feira ge Gazett 
my acquaintance with Mr. Wilson, of Edington A 
eft. A fine tract of rich „alluvial lend stretches a ober 
e Esk, which 
I venture to state that Mr. Wilson 
uses which 
of men in 
iscussing anything connec 
of ulture. 
or instance, Mr. Wilson states 
aan (see ene ees ignore E 
“He thought when it for instance that these 
markets were loo upon quarters as the cause of 
“the drunkenness and aotar that they complained of, that 
this was a mistaken view, and that these markets were e rather 
the the cause o ee 
T get quit of Bese 
. Wilson poaa 
peculiarities 
were the cause of ad evils complained 
hh things 
Scotland, as he 
with the SAn sete or with the higher branches sloping 1 hill side, 
agrien 
r lan 
ri ing hiring |. wil x a 
p. a s” Sore 
highest 
uch eyil, but aia 
self in the Basin of Monts rose—a large 
tidal Nake sage is tw wice filled = _ emptied in the 
24 hours. if 
in a fine state of a shields 
in some a e fro m the wintr 
distance of 8 o; 
of 
Ba osa being 3465 feet atove the level 
Bridge-of-Dun forms the mos st convenient SIR “for 
pen ths Kinnaird, mile and 
ath byt the south 
weenie pvt 
plantation. 
the courtesy 
a 
3 — to ane 
Before e adi ourni cows, | an 
E ing the farm 
much | manager, an opportunity of 
cont 
erare Haas $ 
the controversy on w: 
it is a species 
Scotland than Paan it once was. 
nd|ago, w 
seal be gion 
ws 
style cig would pass m hire. 
must now cox ‘to the a ae oe doddies.” 
“But 
T. Bowiek. 
(To be continued.) 
a Br -e r ttle, from the Province of 
Bretagne in France.— oth reference to a paragraph 
the | i 30, under pap 
ia yonr aat ra Paper, dated June 
may bo int “Bre Cows,” the following particu 
ars 
n & Enquire 
cattle. The first time of e r being bro 
s to others who have noticed this breed of 
paalis pobo in this country oc F ir aala years 
under 
the Ilustrated Tie News published 
t of the importation of a herd of Brctonne 
