PRODUCTIVE ECONOMY.— Rural. 
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APPLICATION OF POWER. 
!y this Table it appears, that the amount of clays’ labour, applied to the cultivation of an acre of land, varies very considerably even in the Townlands of a Parish. It is necessary, however, to deduct from the cross 
ut of acres, the quantity ot waste land m each 1 ownland, before the comparison can be correctly made, and that being done, the result will afford a clue to the effect of extreme subdivision of the land in small Farms 
amount ul labour required lor its cultivation. 1 his is shewn in the accompanying memoir, in which also an estimate is made of the amount of compound auxiliary power, as compared witli the products of cultivation re- 
surroundin/district could noth?fillTyappmtta^^ to'Mr Tchoale’^St’eam'Millt"^fi T 'T ‘. h . C ” g " Cul . ture ° f ,hc 1>ar j sh in whidl il is “Huatcd, hut over that also of an extensive 
lands are limited in the time of working by a deficiency of water : the new Steam mills alsi “ a eonsidefable pordon of'Kmc, eXpCCtati ° nS ° f itS TOS ’ Th « Wutor Mills of the Town- 
