234 MY FARM. 



as if he edited a morning paper. And I really 

 do not know how I could put the matter more 

 strongly. 



With respect to gypsum, and in close of this 

 special topic, I may say that I have found it some- 

 times of service upon young clover, and sometimes 

 of no service at all. Upon old pasture land, it has, 

 with me, uniformly counted for nothing ; and again, 

 I have never failed to find an appreciable increase of 

 the crop of potatoes, where I have sown gypsum in 

 the trenches at planting. It is certain that we have 

 no right to condemn the salt, simply because we 

 cannot detect the precise mode of its operation. That 

 mode, I am inclined to believe very complex, and 

 that no uniform law will ever meet the requirements 

 of the case ; nor have I a doubt but that in process 

 of time, and under the tests of a future and finer 

 chemistry, and of a fuller experience, every one of 

 the dilute theories named, will throw down its little 

 flocculent precipitate of truth. 



Science and Practice. 



I REMEMBER once, in company with a crowd 

 of interested auditors, listening to a justly 

 distinguished pomologist, who, in the course of his 

 peroration in praise of scientific study, suggested the 



