THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
[JUNE 19; 
0 say pa he was bound to make himself 
facts before he misled others i nto 
the bootles s-er 
office, 
notorious facts 
not as well that the Lobos Islauds belong 2 
. as we know that the Isle of Wight is 
indeed, admitted by the English 8 on 
the station, _as was clearly announced a short time 
ce use of Com 
* in this country. The a printed 
ish. book, called a 5 
5 ok the Western Indie es, or America 
written by ngs e DE ALCEDO, a captain 
in the anish and published 
1 d 2 1787, 4 ek recognised by all 
geographers oe t ighest authority; 
1 is expressly men- 
threat (Val. Ae p. 599) “the Lobos sland 0 0 
ñ arlo- 
eeward), lying off Aguija (or Ahuja) point ;” 
2 a) A 2 N 
g the MEL sation and 
Peru the same Lobos pegnen |a 
of Spain became those of Per 
15 took jy ag phe ov 
The question raised in 1834, beatin to which Lord 
Denby r was thie, The B tish Minister at 
Lon W 11son, diffe at with sn 
TOWNSHEND, 6 Admiral on the stat as to 
right of the Peruvian e ps to revent al 
nations from sealing a 3 e. paper 
ing to the question wor sent home, and laid 
beter a legal advise own res 
as that Lord Pat ure s decided that the Peruvian 
8 e right to deal with 
islands as it thought “ft 
eight years before the first cargo of guano arrived in 
But : title of ASS ata to a guano gt * 
such imengnttion been . iy i 3 ; 
for, pull aa. af richts of so constant! 
173), | 
net a man in any Peruvian port that does | & 
know 
ne occurred full | ag 
entlemen uninformed of the facts of the case, we 
f not to shrink from the publie du uty of 
agriculturists are labourin 
t be 
'| laws of aiin 
S OF A RECENT TOUR 
NO 
1| THROUGH ihe np 9 AND NORTH ba 
n 
—— I reached 
„ nder the Ne te of 
e “of to the Royal Agricultural 
; e. 
GENIAL e derte falling 
Lise station 
an umbre 
handsome chapel, a very noble as 
keepin; a — important desigus for whieh it. was 
grma af 
lot abora 
xr raaa — — 200 st 
— ents of oe 3 1t professors, and the 
galleries into which ai _ open (on the 
anes — in — excellence 
of arra! ment, si marea all the preconceived notions I 
had fant di Roa what I had seen ead of continental 
agricultural colle The rates ent, —— 
being mah higher at the Cirencester seminary than in 
the fore superior comfor advantag 
aor 
8 7 
Bu 
with 
upils are received also into a . in the 
2 eof a resident 
master, at the latter rate ; and pupils under 14 years of 
; and those from l 
instruction which a seminary, with its staff o f professors 
griculture, 
aeg or 8 88 22 
ann fulfilled, | B 
3 Th 
a 
the | i 
hus the 
- | accurate arrangements of a commercial concern, D 
s| have n 
2 parts 
buys artificial manures, and, as he Tas ney Soham 
* 
of corn, ount of str au 300 acreg 
Oats With Clov 
ere are nea ait 80 acres of Sainfoin 1 
s of — pasturage, — aeg 
k is aiaa ae and de 
fkept. so 
ounts 
enses 
r. Vallentine, ther co sells his corn. 
bhi market t to the highest pure 
tendent of the college 
from the cheapest ven a 
CHICORY. ee 
Curcory will turn out to be one of the most important 
agricultural as are as W eye 2277 
Nat has 
op a 
ver given us; every part F 
value—t tr bottom, anche as ia ee 
cattle, sheep, and lambs, r 
I doh — chat immediate attention will be 
mans nit this season. Ever ery seed-merchant of f 
possesses the seed of it, and ibi is eee cheap. 
o doubt that if Chicory was largely grown by the 
— and sheep farmers, that much less. disease would) 
d and 
the — meat, as ol N so w a bitter and pı 
of the blood; and w are that this root 
largely grown in "shir 
Mr. Booth says, our fau a 
a large crop we injure the flavour. II 
but have we got the climate toe elabora 
ms 
ner ds every country, I have, through 
2 
am merchant, at present residing 
brained n to que aer put by me, ar 
fra centre ef . 
si st hass 
maintains? At the Cirencester College 
gentlemen employed in chemical operations in the 
and well supplied weg which is under the 
alterna- 
tions of go eg ne f practioal e | employment in the 
chemical laboratory. ology, d surveying 
hese aro facts that admit of no question; and 
yet, in the of them, F insist ge the 
y fe 155 valuable c 
y of Pora as 
ILD- | 
za es in the adea 
z mee exa 
otany, an 
&e., in the fields, with — cal on in the routine 
of 3 fill up th of young men disposed to 
make the most of their ——— Sessional examina- 
Hom — held, — refully 
prepared paper 
Bs 
e 
and uses.” “State — edi 
= tween a plough in use o and the 
swi plough,” „This involves al the mechanical princi- 
stry.” 
pier ie: 1 
were to be found in 
uninhabited, an f° 
it, that island woul 3 to this doctrine, not | involving 
such 
125 3 Britain. 
imes ta “booty.” The Dail: Ne 
in order to esca bee e the eee ee 
a th 
ournal b rey for 
gling chapter of ‘ational “title, “i 
sufficiently shows 
8 in its column 
ms 
. r newly 
Apne wie are the two objects of 
What a wide field does not Dae 
Other „ of detail i 
science, tt 
as © What is 
— 
subsoiling p 
ringa a 55 vt 2 5 
students are privile at 402, sre to attend 
— — Th e number of 
ily inereasing, and there 
for supposing . that this will not be henceforth . 
ng institution, as it ouglit to 
with li 
aia — pee pupils, 3 
and ak excellent land 
_ Though p ing a royal charter, it Itog 
REN, of = — 12 public rime an — eee 
required. fi 
ex trinsic assista 0 
or matatenangs, =. has been entirel 
sha oe and ters.of the es tablish — 
farm con 8 
bo: 
, is 1 in the dark 
them, and 
as to eve sons | 
oO 
E 
8 
re 
© 
forthe Bri | 
eee e be 
off by 
ment pon 
üld rejoice as much as anyone at findin 
k Was =e gi in cane ; for none can kn : 
we do how great 
e evident 
ns 700 acres ineludi 
ns 700 acres, including roads and 
—.— . amounts to pre and the 
es to 1751. averages 12]. a 
he soil ie i is 1 “fertile e, and sient varie 
in 3 = arenile of treatment, 
with whom I con- 
ime oniy, obligiagly gave me a map 
8 
semi - 
map, and Ba divisions on it 
nd many d 
the 
May. 
n per it for 
u 
sites 
tand ground 
and 
er; in the Germ 
atoeh it is so 
e la hea 
„It exha yer he soil a little more 
— Decayec mp dung, any manure: 
do; but, if nance 1 for coffee, it is not desirable cert 
avour and 
Sown, 
Tana — Carrots. = 
. Trans never — 22 A 
8. N hody i is o foolish * to grow iton them 
kige aa t intermis 
the land can alw 
r very broad-leaved, is 
13. The bint value of it is, that — 
coffee of a holesome 
feeding a but it i 
purpose, as Ca trots and Turn 
good and 3 1 more ai i 
ood. 
Le ae 
K are fed in a green state, 
— I cellar or wt 2 4 6 
all of ts dryish san more 
a W. of roo ki 7 
se Ti 
cut into small oblong squares of 4 inch 
thorou shiy 7255 dried, after which they may. be. 
17, If wanted for. salads, vide Ne. 15 I 
ured by Mr. 
bon yont i 
nt we have been 
ile Wa oll e note: I page es 
went away with the im pression 
upon one part of the 1 ike Tarn wa "ero 3 in 
3 over one ha Wheat g 
tended rotation is, to sow 
55 er alt 4 — 
Clover may not be grown too togam 1 
is very different from sowing 
