31—1852. | 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
a 
Canang at present both the bearded and the 
i my — neat but from | 
that 
mpartial in 
refiection I feel con need 
crosse 
elias the Poland pi the spangled Fi ep a e fowl; 
and in colour o e there is mu 
“ Shaven and shorn, 
And all forloin 
ugh this r I fear, is 
too long, — for the sake of oo t me observe, that. 
I ha rosse — with the 3 
some bea rd, | 
ts—as in small top-knots, 
; but in a very few eases there is 
smooth ses with a tolerably large 4 and the | produc 
full neck. F. R. Horner, M.D., Hull, July l 
` 
nn AND 3 CRITIC “ R.“ 
nued From ) 
WE have e tbus eeg shown, then 
loped in 
7 1 
trogenous 
supply is concerned, the crop is not to be — as a 
as manure — indeed, in 
such a ease, the value of the erop -far ion purposes | 
will depend upon on of the — — has 
been obtained —— ah i the ni — 
che amount of which will in 
of soil 
of 
T upon the 
crop. 
„ Now, i in giving a caution in our papers against 
excess” of nitrogen in the man res for the Turnip, it has 
The first obje 
, f; it in his T manure 
leviti > 
35 ect and most legitimate sphere of 3 
~| whilst those given ed eae 7 853 oe me ble 
hus b 
turn d 
and Kt to the — pii] pa 
some | seed. “i ave foun tho 
* yee. 
me degree devolve | 
inquiry to 4 —— — 
surely must, in the 0 
fu upon those who lodiei exercise the art, to 
and apply mr ponpa sed principle accordin — the 
and varying e which surround them 
But to PA lth to ag question ‘of the nitrogen-ollesting 
eee of the Turnip in our rotations. 
at are the opinions of“ R“ on — subject — a 
brings fo forward as d to our o 
Agricultural Gaz July 26, 1 
is a plant which gives a — example of the states in 
which it is 2 and which it is not able to appropri its 
nitrogen arbon from the atmosphere, It is ha 
nitrogen — and a nitrogen — plant ; and | by 
22 sup 
— practice the Turnip | 4 
antidote against this fatal disorder, man 
found peed on capable of cutting, binging’ “tome, and 
ood to 85 1 me for w 
68. per — ng 3 ‘for ‘the 
fat markety as a ba been 2 2 the last two years, I 
consist in the diffi- 
prs 
ty ry ie with — fed on the rich an 
— Fa herbage of England, the supply of cattle 
there during the summer and autum 
to invariably render 
— Accordingly, I mean to — 
k poa this season 
overlooking this circumstance much y 
risen,” 
ps entences which 
n quo ted from oar papers N 
draw — 4 to the fact, that the Tur oth 
i i ni 
ch it is grown, 
absolute and arbi sense 
e 1 in our rotation 
Sed ag a which 
bove q that the “ie reste n 
1 of a latter part of the sentence is direct 
nst ourse 
ee our —＋ on “ Turnip Culture,” Jour. R. A. S. E., 
Vol, 8, p. 532 :— 
The excess of nitrogenous manure, however, is seen 
ormin i eng “5 of the plant, whi 
true, may probably aid ca oe ation from the 
atmosphere, heat, “a t the * give ofitable 
app: pip aron of a bande within ag toil; ak = on foes 
to be b — clear, that there is with 
fleas, * peopor ee 
— yan 0 
* — Culture,” p. 5 
“Tf, the 
trogen Broni 
e upon the normal supplies o 
to be fully . and turned to 
economical account, it is mere especially by means of an artit. 
cial aimed of the other constituents that this object will 
be att 
„We think, then, that in these facts we have a beautiful 
istration of’ some of — — spa and ap —.— characters 
upon which 9 N „lens ast, th nomie value of 
F 
rogen in the soil produces too large a pro- 
— — — — A to form bulb, It is true 
fe land, = “+ of lent — — 
of the crop, even as far as its 
may be doubted. In fact, so far as Our 
subject enable us to judge, we believe that 
amount 
P: 
portion ofl of leaf and — 
site a crop of T 
rger — y ey manure — 14 
the soil, the ae em. 
influence is concern 
—— on this ‘ 
i 
ow, in the 3 facts * We we most 
indeed, 
8 
— 
th it, there 
accidents. As to giving — 
— ned in the stable durin ng summer, i 
and * wang to give them a 3 chance 
I have, 3 sometimes pursued this 
a single animal whi aoe been thriving badly, 
pie it to be highly 
r. Hardie, Redhall, gave in the wees report == 
| At fea quest of the secretary of the East of Berwielo- 
ire — Club, I most willis offer a few 
remarks on what has come under rvation feng 
1811, I began to farm on m 
that —— rahe ps phe the 
continued the practice, doing a little in Keeping en 
5o favourably was 
uce more 
7 ori it collected from the atmosphere is less, and a part of the pas ast 
as 
efit of the 3 would be lost.“ 
* 
crop. J. B. Lawes 
r| Redhall, 11 I redih — this 
—ha 
a little : 
trogen-collecting funetions of the Turnip is 
ured them. 
1836, the yor when I entered 
ee eee e ae the G 
ON SOILING AND PASTURING HORSES shall now 
AND CATT resulting from soiling as 
(Contin ee ables the 
Mr. COCKBURN, Harelaw reported as fi am stock on the farm. 2d. It provides 
sorry to state that the experience whieh I have had in of dung in summer I have frequently, even in this 
BER oe A a e cattle limited to such a small farm, been able to dung about 50 acres at the end 
an fined ” e, toa f harvest. is more thoroughly 
| any satisfactory evidence on the subj owever, in into —— which is more valuab le than when it is 
the rather of — instruetion on the 
pears to 
std season, I shall ov’ state the particulars o 
has been ractised, 2 — 
able to point out the many deficiencies. For the last 
ms I have bee: 
| the matter, which ap to become more important a 
command — whieh enables him to give 
f | dung to almost eve „thereby increasing a 
| dues eke applying abundance of nae ac 3 
n in the ha habit of soiling, dur 
ummer 1 seven or eight and about as 
naa ealves ; and although unable * — for 
of good grazing for eattle on my far 
| of 
tive a this is 
3 e for eutting, an 2 F 
or already — * 
pare even though eut three tines the be 
Oats 2 r much more 
weeds, The first consideration is to have i ass 
addition 2 this, the feeding 
eattle recei 
creased to 3 lbs. erm 
The are treated in the 
„ how —— of oileake or 
8 intel 
ed in sear. tas 
—— be 
staving points of farther à 
seientifie 
fe pae on * ‘sem, 
orange Shar “at ‘without t adding cak 
