1184 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
oe 22, 1860. 
the effect that the condition of disgraceful tene- | Society is ‘Society is doing its work well, and that the doom of these, be almost og gee ent he influence of medical — 
” fairs, at any rate as hiring fairs, is fast hastening to a Ay Tal | 
ments should be publicly ‘‘ presented” by pari pa this light, aaa this this year was. afailura; Ht. John's 70D skill. more atikun the case with 
vestries, first tot their owners a and Kc to Boards o near Worcester was a failure; and at Solihull not a single | herr that are ee for the most par rti ina a state of 
dians on ka servant or employer attended, and at sid ime were there pre- ure; in tdo 
K — m han 20 Lapa ted Equally disgraceful and ocean | 
account of that neighbourhood ar 
part eonfrmatry of of his statistics, not mere ge a 
n proportion as they 
det Tapoan fedima, ma T and thus those 
of er e far more under influence than those 
With ¢ the medical peaabibonet, and still more 
veterinary the remunera- 
a few years foe oa a ee 
Soci eties have so ably co: 
s|, (2) next pona ey is oo a paper 
gis pier? pe 
Our ead 
„| before the Inverness-shire Farmers’ Club, in which | 
ste 
Pi z po aah ad ae 
coun try € distr ict. 
we certainly cannot acquiesce in this. 
ip age te al known to u 
some detail, not one presents, unless they be in 
Instances 
| ducted by one of the old school. 
| cases handed was. one of seven years” 
urati which (the Lenar „being wealthy) 
d em 
he called BONY valle 
S | unde ane Ai their “unmarried labourers a are boarded | 
together in an t-house with very little 
of on kind which a TUCKER dait = is 
ee 
yantry. il the lat 
ought h er to be ‘more baal soiw than 
Fi S upon a 
Esn exvision— fessional" inona: 
case T 
pa 
aa y unsatisfactory state of things Diro 
s asocial and ? 
eager pursuit. is s etil more imas d i i ha treat 
e time or Sais Nes ne to our | di 
iyi i osa s ekige: mforts n lace = 
d their reach by the avaricious hand of yin: spin; 
ord dlyism. Is it not Ss often the case that farmers wale 
ee ee yee 
after wale: 
Hara Sisar ae. 
yon 
animals and o 
fon 
conscien: ces = ate 
and the shame, may tend 
The remedy pes aga enough, 
a good cottage can t be 
r rent which "tha Tabonrer i er 
case indeed tha 
rgs 
whie pay for both. ys de 
with ‘half an acre of good la anc d asa geroan close 
ill easily or Ti-a wears 7 
Such land will command—it generally does ¢ 
us, hope that he publicity given F 
ana e 
FO |. 
caress ising 
vet 
3: net si to each other. 
h 
er grudge from 10/. to 501. in giving additional accommoda- 
e makes any suggestion 
he know: _have a sanatory effe ct, he 
y. 
of hi 
r mia unable to perform his i Tt is PETE true gph in spite of this there are a 
work 
A slight pe eh rmata nu umber of ¢ onscientious men both i in the medical 
d ocket, and plenty of | 
af, 
n that. 
| may occur to them penn es „prevent rb 
s was the prelude to.so severe a condemnatio 
th | but ena pr the ia pa which 
thos 
rather want of relation 
nd servantin the district, as 
the 
© 
Et 
Oia between “master a 
ady 
t only the nai erof the complaint. 
excitin e; 
janowing of the younger men employed as yaly but, also the a eee ent 
rvants on the farm, it has a mos st mischievo 
tond n 
o 
: Ne handed down by trad: 3 
revealings of science. Why therefore should 
the former be rewarded as well as the latter 
w. the opinion, of an employer of | 
labourers, whore he must forgive us er jü vsapnigge 
extravagant., The followi 
The Royal Agricultural Society of England make 
a liberal annua! pecuniary grant | to ‘the _ Roy yal 
y eterinary 
the. need of som 
the. argin off which the landlord who borrow 
awe of the Land Improvement Society for | 
the erection of cottages, can write the extra |s 
a. mere house room) Piok is to repay the |! 
an lies ond the 
of agricultural wages. arden 
ord the higher rent, and would, 
ese! to pay it, tho the land 
oe: aged 
im the c sere and a 
pack “relief to athe Pika 
_ In this, as helping forward cottage building, and i 
may be mat erially improved, lie the two great 
remedies for aoe one pw ch Mr. Tucker has 
powerfully den 
lo n 
g| Temartios measures for the i improvement 
whom he e eons ys. sem of “the diseases of cattle and asp, Swe 
hav a word to mya against i grant or wy 
taal. ör ability of thos benetit by it, but a 
if the sa same time, either ‘fro hin no ot going tax enou 
o farming, it is little cared for around here: 
| inoreased rents on every ph iat iake a E 
ants, labour, trade, and necessar 
farmer’ i produce is silka up, and hes 
e loses only his livi ng. 
ice 
th l as in the centre, the dis- 
ases of sort aud ry of sheep, are 
| greatly neglected a nd most imperfectly studied. 
SE to und i 
only ee ki 
pri may say t 
worse ai | 
on good ma: ee the, 
not work, either | 
year, rovinces, not i in i me 
ma n lying Tanas AR 
upies more than et the aid is mane sought 
AEN assistanc ce rarely invoked—o f those ve 
ete 
SEE, 
wki |rinary eai ge as scientific er compe etent 
aS 
grant, at least equal to the repent 0 one, 
not have it Mir į ae fatten an; hon it 
who rA Sp ta is lip: one it be one 5 with di ited in Tai Ki. ha ra aiil “eee 
ing of stock does not pay. Our rs kee es, donkeys, | co tate of 
contribution to the discussion on the cndi- | cows, pigs, rabbits, fowis—and who keeps mice? Oa ant aye whid cattle and ae mi te ete time to ptt 
tion of the a opened by Mr. Scorr Bury on | 2 it costs our aan weeks) for tebacno-they: amiga ip 2 i 
yw ’ uce. some of the |*2224 from wor and at posi the ms en 1s a week | the, e eae any e yaa the post-mortem 
-opinions w us. here reprod on snui e are our servants, and our labourers. i 
kuao i ee where expressed on | Our four horses, one man, and on cost us 2001, b souks “andthe kp Mire of peeti 
Mot 
Birmingham, appeared 
and or Herald ,— 
irs oft 
ey ia re 
abolition of statutes will be gratified on | 
ecently been soundly rated by the 
ubli vias ae crag as inter- 
ople. The 
walls of the ania of Evesham han a "ii rofusely 
covered with a tole: ote. oe aaa in ben § the then na eo 
coming mop was announ lefended ; and the efforts 
the © County I LRE Societe: were renorsicnttany decried 
The disinterested p: es putting forth the 
tio! 
ih 
, farmer, or 
trade ; ; and it it 5 pists = ually 
: Woe a ieir 
much co! di lid 20, 30, end 4 40 years ago, TTE 
double the peg It is education which will roti all Ot 
| lower classes. What made so many Pauls, enpaki 
Robsons? Why, education; it whe 
it pervert 
aie ut for all their The ex 
and | Aed aE he e much, provided the pik. pEi of 
sn | the cattle and sh 
ets a man’s appetite, eep be limited to a supply of 
pt gd pate "The time is cetyl ged nen i wilt medi sate gone ea saprintondene and pact, 
be a difficulty to trust any one.’ a par ar attendan individual case. 
We altogether differ from our Nagy, Sores The objec eot would be atta mod of ser it the 
ot | We believe oa in the long run, an nd o interest of the me dical man as well as. the, owner 
average, a man is ser — as wi jiin a he d rves to 
be; we b a vena a good master makes 9 = We have been led w AEU these observations 
servants; that. agriculture and all clas -|by considering the nai Sea diseasa. whieh is 
nected with it ask improved during pe te connec Teer weather, and which 
referred to, and that education Kak us along aay, la m Jardy te Breen a and whose 
the road still farther towards p fatal termination indeed is often: intima- 
‘tio : its eriavoniii We refer to that fini 
oe which so frequently carries off young cattle, and is 
We have yet to speak of several of the dis-| known under the fate ination of quarter-ill. 
eases to which a wet season exposes our ve. stock.| Yearly wifes are most frequently affected, and 
a| Lt cannot be denied that a large dis- | more so om hey are left aan ae 
eases which affect both sheep and cattle aoe to |in the Whether it is 
