20-1 852. 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
to be raised early i in spring, because they 
| man, and gout to Xalapa and give its death-blow to this 
might with impunity follow such a truly distin nguished | 
not drop or leak, and hang it up with the meat in “a close 
safe, or co or 
e hs ing (requiring m 
geen in summer, forgetting tha 
a good criterion of the soil’s fertility, the other 
Lord Leicester 2 ted the — of 
as the leases expired, because a mu 
higher s uctiveness was maintai 
in the APA es one ee limiting, pani in vers eases altogether 
forbiddi wth of W nois. 
Wew Pians sare na the impression that the peeuliar cir- 
ted. the —ů of the soils i 
d we w 
which regulate 
by the dierent cultivated erops coul 
erstood until 2 notions of the con- 
ditions which 1 — ded the ammoniaeal manures to 
Turnips. stated that the 5 of Mr. Lawes 
Wheat, 
ae 
there went over 
— weather” in which 
less consequence to the 
1 
f grea 
hich, point was co 
ip, w 
* C 
And when the seeded produce of the 
tural theory. 
s in the 
Wheat w 
’ 
s was in en 
. 8 you nse tails 
hard 
oot but we are 
a * and — A wa our eee in —— 
ects -ma man 
rnips see have 
s tna — W Tad not ot thought that he 
5 
— from b being diss 
withi Two ne 
sale the . of à tea-ches 
33 com osote ; although the 
m 
might make an effort to show: that 
same as his own, he EM have ome himself 
e iscussi e pu 
hardly, when ab all, irora pti tible on eat, 
even when kept several days longer t than it would have 
remained good without this ae gr 2 aur 
Butter “ory ving some time ago 
led an American churn, o 
* 
hat 
— — 8 Double 
usually ca 
Dr. Da 
could not t find this in the bond at Rothamsted ; and who 
yet find it out? Mr. Lawes looks diligently Mead 
the. Soia and fifty pages:of his —— on Whea 
urnips re 
ing “further i inquiry. If we were right in our — 
an had derived .our in ation from Mr 
pe we arae some credit rather 
ing that r agviculturist 
(Ar. Pusey) os bie nt ae r had act nigh with 
ves misrepresented Mr. 8's Opinio In this 
view of the matter we might thae — ourselves 
that our 8 Mean ot been in vain. 
rom other soure 
any 
len. But we suspect it as yet apne the 
ene of Rothamsted.. are much safer in our 
n in Mr. Lawes's own. 
Bein aa anxious to get Ba asis the more disagree- 
sab; = of the discussion, heim e come to the sober 
re befor we must endeavour to 
1 che prai ites blame whieh 
upon us, 8 
e on ike recent lecture 8 by Dr. Daubeny. 
e 
ha spe one the greatest discrepancies ; at the prenont 
Alc tiger op — ‘prac: ice’ © of ag ric — 
cal a 3 — rop 
e; no — an 
es ieem, ade to this 
admi 
He ee so 525 r coincides. 
655 
in only suffici 
x piss sage re their rowth,’ 
with My. Lawes, and refers this y in Ad 
A den the a 
in their 4 
e the vivithin 
utter astonishme 
wess paper of 3 
than — — we 
nsequenee of our 
ro 
P 
first direct the attention of our neal to this mae | 
he others, if — — r tord a better expla’ 
j which v we k. beliosê wll a kaé be satisfactorily . 
| anc 
one cae is the e 
1 
8 primar pios 1 
the Turnip o — . N its ae 
Perceive ith ibis is the e principal ca 
Shick exist — — 
be would at once 
e of difference; for it 
1 for „Turnips grown iu the — vernal months, as it 
T tell the truth, we 8 ispo 
Dr. Daubeny or Mr. Lawes 
could dispense. with tit e 
. 
DE 
this « 
Lawes h 
tho 
believe that either 
a 
for 3 
L any s such thing as that, Turni egiari 
try it.” R. ‘Ba, 
e d from Mr. 
he tere to them in 1 stage of 
We hope H was not Mr. Lawes who had: 
a ariy op y said that he so 
wes, an Tela pe an ed 
bet gk > — 
said 
„ like, ourselves, bad legally“ read from | coriand 
cc rea m 
e Rothamsted" that Wheat eee ad ould under no i 
ces absorb its nitrog en from = atmosphere; 
Egypt to : validity of 
tbe of ct aes) 2 
and Turnips to — that it w. 
tes passage 
r 
mark — nese | 
es as se vei aon 3 — matter. 
I 8 cer ae wou rege ave been a piece of “apt” scholar. 
ship on our part to extraet truth out of such materials, 
_ gratitude c 9 to have been shown to us instead of 
ing else 
: 
. Lawes’ writings really 5 of so free a 
with frins if other r people's do not act in 
state. S. B. 
Acting P tent gs 
dir — Sie given fi 
— produce the 
old box divin 
and having pay ede | the 
Jn -i fin it does 
and sta dó a minute 
mien 
80, it end 
ik covered —— thick 
churn, a 
— becomes like a pan 
am. any of your 
churn 
Over 
h 
have used this sort rn, — Wet oF 3 
me if they — anything of — a J have deseri 
or what cha s churn | is amongst 
ose wh tae — it; there e thi 
way | 
2 J observe there 
in the Agri. Gazette on the 
of ve — ion for years 
unde — oe inte telli ligen 
the Gazette if we thought they had not 
already —. the woof of error de alivately wrought 
up in the lengthened web b whieh he has woven. all 
afterwards take up, one by one, the extracts which 
Mr. Lawes h 
d us, as we — mip have — 8 of 
—— that Mr. n a great misunder 
s the principles apes b a — of erop 
is found ed. After ave use sages 
H 
d those pas 0 
fulorum o overthrow. the es of *. Rotham. 
H 
2 
[=] 
sted; 
cracked and broken in the “attempt wht 
made to bend them 
e which almost ev 
been merely o —— 2 
revelations of the eru 3 
gazing too intently on 
racti ical 1 a Te ms at-the 
ing. To distinguish be- 
tween its passive and a active per A as, to d, 
been a paan difficult em than mee of the: conditione { 
ances e wi 
No one will be mo s of y 
— oft 
are a number of questions 
riage up | 
re ready to adopt the — 
the p 
sue 
last —— in = ne 
ry generally circulated 
— nan the — had — ee ee 
bo 
P, 
as made, and to which he so confidently | the Sa 
gon 
wes in regard to ate pagan: of 
— 
0 nden 
reeding trout; and I noticed a 
— "d 
th trout and s ing streams of the 
eof — a 
middle of 
re spawning: 
trout, so that the ee e of the eee Angling 
ociety were then dismissed for the season. know 
ova of tr —— those of the other species of the 
oni e from’ 100 to 110 days to be — 
s rivers swarm with 
ly in eate aa 
— of ‘the — drought. The 
the beds of = in 01 
ung and id 
pest source of repairing the fertility 
of oor a while the feeding of cattle with large a 
of ca eurs to be so in others; the 
— no ee discussi ing 
these interesting eria at present, b will end 
fien path hint, t direetly leads to their 
3 5 se question 
“by the —— — t let hi — 
[We m ust add — that 
we have re 
ya 
1 
nch secures 
this year, 
While there has been no river fishing: 5 ae 
where this there have been some days of excellent 
s year, 
eee in -~ lakes of Crammork, Buttermere, 
thw d Derwentwater; and as as W. ng, 
or ee daye’ rain our streams will be oa with the 
fish which have been secure in the depth 
during ht. There can 1 5 — that 
of this dry 
inegar, or crude eth cage acid, ca 
of smoke; but ether of these mmunicateg its taste 
to the surface eat, often to an unpleasant degree. 
To atone: this, the pian of Wee, has been: ite 
with uccess. 
£ costly, mà:not oftenint hand, ol of tar; i 
it out, so i 
and this leads me to remark that e couse 
—＋ Sri 
for those who reside near “late” to be in communica- 
aoe of “early” rivers like those of 
esent. 
