28 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
[JAN. 10, 1 
required may be exhausted, aud ammonia must be sup- 
pe; It appears, how trek ` a “re at mistake to | wa 
se that every additio ammonia to aae = 
roport 
e soi 
limit beyond which they cannot oe force ven | re 
manufacturing ta ill not to be —— ee 
the strength of its eee — a high-pressu 
eighted, will ta tor more pee es will 
som ondemn the 
. — aie fe a the soil by 
ing, and on sider 8 — iE 3 — = = 
ther uch 
cul 
— farmi Har 
sses, it is evident, 5 
as bad 
The Mercan 
of life must, in 
3 rem edy as 
on e ‘si high 
s rule are the phosphate of ammonia | the peac 
— but the fo the effet propose 
waited for 
was a loss — 2. per bushel in the 
weight of the corn. The ac of thi s manure is ver 
remarkable ; the quantity of i aisr ~~ in 
the night soil which it could take up must be very 
and of the organic, carbon ‘anes seemed 
And after this 
t down, i 
Wie you 
first 
charcoal, and 
subjected by its volatility. This, 8 eing the fi 
year of se gs gr ae ey al s 
be wiser ls 
before sie en 
aie 
effica ming mere 
on it a P 
to account it; but oci 
be,it is evident that it 
it j 
S 
as | 
climate condemns us to an 
matters it to the 
n he ean 
Y, raise 
land 2. ie 
North America, if, w. 
thinks himoa well cff, shen it — 63 or 64 pa 50 
bushel; in their mates, . any application 
of ain or expense, of 68 or pm ore! th 
The will not baya 7 — or aie a 
they can get a better, or 3 oe it will only a 2 a 
t reduetion of price, w whieh increased 
orced sale of a more — . (the e 
3 it, indeed, comes i 
i+ 
E 
— 
w 
85 ipii his mcy ” 
shepherds — to sup 
in one 
bowl ee ve An the 
much smaller degree eee in 
are less rob ed 8 the soll, a à fortio 
be see eid which they are not robbed at all. L. Vernon 
e Correspondence. 
ey — Relation. — The ay ce and — 
of mankind ought to oy the pi has 
j ees is subsidia: i what —.— of helpless of 
managing property is inimical ‘to oe et. enjoyment 
rse 
cou 
10,000 os r farms 
order 4 2 their landlords that Pers 1 is 
„would 
peas security — 
It woul 
evidence wou 
we w 
sed ? 
oe 
on ped that th 
p tamil is 5 of sending $ forth gentle 
ply the place of so any farm 
seco as company of faithfal \consripts had 
d 
to be hop 
ongings of our ity Pp are st till u exha 
say that the “ mercantile relation is the only 
assumed to 
o prepared, it — stems 3 te our eee 
ok its 
„ let them 
into the e placo ‘which they h have left vacant. 
roper ch let them declar: 
Ee E e let Batis ang quit of their —— 
designation which tell us that pra 3 = them are 
| princes poe nobles, whose bus 
tho ough I should not lose — 
e great mischief ee 
definable 
d 
and j tbe British empire. In — 5 to eg charge of misgovem 
with su — “Of am- o par Sg 0vern’ 
ment you called on him to des rticulars rs, and u 
ich h 
a4 
ny recourse w decla 
the ieoa of the Brit 
the evils which will 3 us e- Nie 
eep up a ee larger th suffici 
ad of machinery, fo 
duction, in order that we ma 
n, against i 
ri that system must h f this ig 
policy, I should wiht o be informed by Me 
ow this se ae population, ate: i 
è 
m 
t ei oe peace. 
care 
e, be discar p uch a 
1 leaving t which heaven ha 
ntry, are not to, be 3 reminded of th 
aie 1846, i in * tory erotchota which by different section 
rishmen, who com Awa gerie obody understand 
ears Gi ake but themselves 
visite d the 
SP Sa a 
g 3 be we 
laid cut in g Ireland a ‘ 8 angel by the side 
well laid out if t 
s to be 
rs. af England.” It would, indee 
ed that the w rural 
usted. 
exist bet 
sonra out to 
ink no 
acne ng 
to | eO 
the 8 red Estates Act. 
no small sp to English, agriculture 
n England or Ireland, who 
capital . 11 an as 5 8 io 
and if ers p es ot other 
. do migrate. 
At 
not improve t thee “condition by borrowing 
lan rious 
e, ; ae 
all events, they 5. 
n this that money, t to A 
ter, a 
n, 
This 
by any * 
quantity, “the English culti- 
—he 
rease the 
vator wi ill be reduced to this alternative 
he esponsiblte of a servant to his 
f of the eee of his position to give impetus 
> bie own resentm T 
master „may yet avail your questions why w: 
Who can establish it a the landlords and tenan 
here is nothing in in nature 
The | i 
that ‘if anything 
were to exis 
ement to high | be levelled on 
ho do n 
pri 
9 must have som 
interest, and to whom, therefore may be useful to was 
show what can be effected by the ae . of Aae! | 
manures alone, assisted, at least, only by frequent hoeing | 
' those whic hoe canno 
the foam 
F 
and t w more abundant. 
rate of yield te is Tittle — man 25 a els 
irea used have been sulp 
the) it 
d muriate of am- by the bad 
„sulphate and phosphate r f soda and nitrate and, | | ded the fa 
ee pha Second, th 
was steeped in E — 85 amm 
with it, suffered, pr 
watered 
S littl 
knaras >, which gree grew were. di 
were not qu 
nonin and fterwards : the 
fit came up. The roots of ing s 
duced Ariton 
was quite in proportion 
Lastly, the refuse . 
air embraces the water ‘and the water em 
r the Ss 
rts of 
of the n 
among them, t the edifice wou 
the ae 
E ma 
resen when kaani so much 
what is tha which conden society in 
reland arises from bad govern, 
as been caused by the e ex 
tter ; the extravagant habi 
obably, from the strength of You contend that | a evils, bad en 
and 
ach o There is — 3 of individual 
e rasa to pa g Bu 
ge a certain 
a plant mutually susi 
oye untry, If 
ask, by the waga what bad son had to 
o with the algae, e this as it may, M oodiff 
the first wa 
t we know | pr 
fa mercantile cahili | 
ne ery soon 
servant, I ich recs me 
hen I hire 
mnt transaction. 
f 
res | these blessings ? 
each parish is suc 
require a Government gran 
port. If beyond the m 
w 
overnment, in their effo; 
ü te ge are accused 
that ing should be blamed for not having ie 
at direction. After all, however, if the 
iat N given 
PIVE penso. At the morei 
icult h a system in which 
| Potato is not to be the ais pam aah E1 
Farm Me sg giam, 
Tun Duke or BEDFORD’S Epa 
Wosvurn.—On an estate of 8 
the Duke of Bedford, N 
1 M at 
tempted an answer as that of AEN 
when necessary, with gas, and an e 
maintained by * pipes in the “ferent mot work 
. | These comprise a wood yard, with sawing sh 
cutting up into all requisite sizes either foreign or W 
timber, the refuse of which is split into faggots for 
5 
