572 
THE AGRICULTURAL- GAZETTE, 
wening School a meal sates oe afforded me 
a Leader in a 
ie pen = at pre e 
inary kind 
— — soning, 
nd the 
he argu 
which they had been 
1 poverty or or fre sail the second 
ish t ded with i their delicate 
as 
ig an evil- 
producin I felt it my duty, though i in a secluded 
and outta way village in t 
shire. 
ery i abate 5 
afford the 3 vik of, or o 
unt; som 
e I saw they were m 
5 
eient time to read t 
be then collected and divided 
ould b 
who wishes well to — . pre Willian | — he wished 
7 Fin Vale, Sheffield. 
Societies, 
soil, both as 
use 
cluded his 
without the aid of manure, for the 3 of luxu- 
riant vegetation; but to 
other available for t 
that, in order to render the one 
inuti 
which “his view was sust 
s of the 
wh 
tern upon which Pht spr nd 
fibres e in Tull's language, the 
tl 
animals i in this ve respec 
ase 
n be more true, 
at for all practical pes pora the soil is 
; and tha roots of plants 
= ity occupy every 7 — — which ier su 
s tantamo = to the production of a new e aoe 
. | as, and a fresh s source of food. 
consta 
e influe 
r the 
riches, and 
air 2 beneficial 
r. Wa d 
roceeded, and ¢ 
Colonel essor 
Way, oe — —— ist to the — delivered | wi 
Siringhe iiris —ͤ—ͤ— 
18 y the agricultural ciples of the | of 
celebrated J Jethro Tull on 55 h 
bly 
——— by mae the 
J views andthe ar = Way wished it el ý 
that he was not advocati 
s yie eld from 9 to 15 — acre. He 
u 
we Fe of all those who had not yet become proteins) d 
Mr. S 
and found 
E 
this end, it was necessary | s si 
that the soil should = opened de by abundant pulverisa- | 
tion and commin of i 
T ments with 
were most fo 5 and convincing. The e to illus. 
o | trate his meanin 
ined | E 
ntal W 
, | sted, about the Tast day of June. 
ay whi ay 1 was likewise v 9 . ar 
d aid realise from 7 to 74 qu . 5 ysis 
| pariso 
n the sueceeding season, in their 3 turn _ 
c 
ay read a | 0 
assages from the author’s er ype 
upon and explaining them as he pr re 5 in 
ing which led at 
arrangements p the lectures re 25 a eliy 
ime be kor 5 of the 
uired es 1e condition ofp 
er of the 
e t . 
was destroyed ne 
those silie 
an — account of | hie 
he Rev. S. 
arp 
personal Visit to 
8 
un nuas po sag aha E boo Essex had 50 : 
acres on — e 
The 
em was immediately after u. 3 
8˙8 — 
e 
in sh eye some 
i aan he was bound to s sat that. vere 
exceeded either of them in luxur 
of crop. When he first pebeld i kein, be cod 
as n lavishly 
À 
t help exclaiming, “ This land 
iacal manure.” 
whole cro his opinion, sten 
l to be g faramo — ] 
pe aee ae e largeness and 
2 size of nt ears of the corm an wih d 
a 
pam] 
3 stirrings of the 
angold o 
pos. T had him 
on of facts, be — 
Juated and obsolete ccordane 
= theories of the the older cl 
but utterly i he 
been thought, 
Way, 
appropriated by the Soci 
son had n 
and proved t 
convertible a. 
under the old d syste 
perior, 
a 
of farm- 
e | contrary, 
from its 
- | would lead u 
manu- | attributable ra — 
ti be Whea 
on Tull’s punpa and we a great im 
racti Mr ith’s in 
Tull’s ` — 
th digs À 
deeply into the subsoil, which Tull was e 8 
Mr. Paine con nsidered d Mr. Smith's practice to 
l illustration of th 
rops agai s se ey W 
their —— as last year, pr eee ee 
no sign of exhaustion in ‘the £ Wheat 
its seventh successive growth of 
there teisa some danger to 
exuberan re Page Y 
mulation — ae ] an 
the soil, Paine Seal 
the geol esmi structure o 
Fa 01 to infer that 3 
when well 7 oun 
tees 
— — 
land did not produce large crops. 
