58 
ee A GRICULTU RAL GAZETTE. 
[Jan 24 1 
more than — 
while by reaso 
consequent ee of gm 
apprentices as they been wont, many cities, 
ealthy and well inhabited as u heretofore, were 
pieni — 
he p 
of our own soil, but extended — merchandise 
from peenei — of — — detai 
ri ese cost more,” ay 
than they did a few years before ; 
as deer or deerer again, an 
part thereof, as far as 1 can » for In 
saw more sg ia of corne, raana — cattel of. ‘all common. Turnips, h 
this and have had 
resent 
as ye — all ‘inns 20 years passed contin — could oft ost beneficially employe n 
ed be our Lord God“ The extension of this England, Mangold supplies the pus of the Sweds visits to L fer age of t 
dearth to imported articles rather staggers his faith in regard to early culture; but it must also have a Regent’s-park and Zoological ere which mo 
in the assigned for it by popular opinion, rg 2 3 nitrogen it re Nerat there is | effected by tile drains of 4 feet and u upwards dena 
namely, the sheepe; and he very prudently con- r-dosing it, for it wi ae produce | intervals of 243 feet (the Zoological Gardens at 164 eet), 
cludes, that were the cause - — * bulbs he "tiie situations where the richest | AS ps a Un subsoil poikin alag, n ee oy ables. me $ 
thing else, it were pity but they might be removed. gang, bill have just — removed. Green crops — — * * — ne Arnins im such Bells 
The lando i the d thus require nitrogenous manures to be added in 1 p Jedini in die sail 
man — classes had it in their power to 2 excess to produce satisfactory results. When already been practically answered by their failure to lay 
ere pine of their — as the he dan E the crop is drawn from the ground, they no doubt | this ground inage has several times been 
ries — 
; which th 
£ 
ma 
e of dis- 
tress arising from high prices — that- ——— by 
al es in our pans ? Ani the — complaints 
e pitiless pelting of the 
4 shower, ot * is certain, namely, — 
W. return tothe Left om the 
slp eo our 
apr 
e mys: “Tt might: require a certain 
in the plant fo extract the requi amount 
ho and alkali 1 bs soil. By the 
of: ee en increased 
j owing to the | 
growth which are | 
y through the atmospheric con- 
May in eee eae and Irelan 
o doubt the increase of a crop by t e application 
of Sette when the soil is not \ eficien n these 
8 tt s pre-eminently seen in the 
e seeds of cereals contain a 
of phosphates in proportion to the absolute quantity 
they require than Turnips, and they are e thus more 
independent of an artificial supply than * oe 
in their incipient stages a —— th. 
same way the increase of crop’ is ‘mac 
s wn panir wag arly in 
w | Scotland “thi er to be liberally areas 
with manures yielding ammonia, and there was no 
t| danger of applying too munen of this element if the 
crop was sown in time; it may be confidently 
stated that phosphates alone are seldom or never 
«| Crops, 
withdraw a great quantity of nitrogen, but they 
which in 
h their turn yield food for the cereals, — extract 
; | the juices of their roots in the seeding process. It is 
ase of leaf, at the very moment 
they may s ripening their feathery seeds ; and dat 
a See unt of substance nsformed i 
e to that of the cereals. The suc- 
—— roots of Grasses remain = ene land and 
come the rich pabulum for grain 
In the case of the Bean and some so plants, a 
different set of principles come oo play. There is 
cro our rotatio re de- 
aceous manures, during t 
very T T 
manure to — its foliage, — 
becomes more genial, it can then 
v 
rely more upon 
a — its and a a ne | CAannan 
aries | processes in the case s pos- 
sible that it may t — from the: 4 at 
— 
absorb. There i Soga stone in the ai 
their roots in this process, as is the case with the 
cereals, Turnips, &c., which are most e 
maintains continuous growt 
Britain, where they are — ed 
heaven, they possess pi quality natavally, “Tht 
5 
a Ci ise, this s seems, t Q 9 Anse 
to As amount of vapour of water in the atmos 
g is to th 
within the British N to w 
look for a solution of some af the proposal stated d 
bove: N. 
DRAINAGE OF CLAY SOILS. 
attempted, with wood and tile drains, at depths 
from 18 eae to 30 inches deep ; and itis int 
by them and in all der 
it still e d, a source ‘of fog to 
the ne eighhouthood, the Sse noes of its subsoil: lyi 
ithin a foot or two 
n their | ; 
of nitrogenous, and probably to have 
the firs aig wy of its}; 
Bean. I 
rently requires the | form to 
rhen 
mes 
the * . for its — — and its vegetative |i 
‘damp soil o 
fog fens wet spots T 
remi ed me of the e $ in the Arabian Nig 
the issuing forth of the 
fr mere: 
risen like 
fevers it —— “ accompany t : 
at h = po wer of: misehief, y 
kave 88 som mach to d 
j ake- 
one stage ofits — and add at —.—— in the 
the a ay Ae roots which it leaves 
p 
5 N more manure 
i 
ge 
the clear skies 2 —— yet 
and a fertile so 
thei — 
n 
a railway cutting a ; 
If — roots of ‘his plant 
the 
| that. the: 
ant did not penetrate deeper | 
„it would very probably be ruled | 
bye —— same atmospheric itio es 
trees in Paris, where bans 
oa 
©- limited area, require to cea richly aay Tat 
where their roots are allowed to range the so 
pleasure, as in the groves Seville—wateri is — 
food they mae ee, Saai 5 little doubt 
plants 
obtain 
—_ — The 
itions. — 2 
have in the scl: — them: — — to 
more manure, but to economise what they 
actually 
