180 
THE a EMA 8 let GAZETTE. 
= 
[Maren |) 
eres De my register for December, The black line shows thet 
pe A altitude 
wes, or SO 
some dhani ment, "of 
inter * * nee 5 of | r 
I have found Sieg reget ` practically 
similar changes on Harvey, 
ulham, Aas. [The re oe of oponi 
the form with which Mr has br 
pos us the only norte ty of e oe ibe 
It consists of a series o see one for every day 
of the month crossed by a number of rules: one of | 
them giving robin for a daily memorandum of the rain, 
another ſor the wind, a third for a 
he 
to 29 1 
{S hours à K Suk Ske on 
served the condition of animals in boxes 
and have never detected any un- 
m 
h and the 
The eee trifling cost 
ee rey the ey may be — “> places them wishin the 
"e: of every tenant- 
e experiments aseran by Mr. 8 in the last 
oyal Agricultural Soc s Journal, 
imp 
tation of 
tion of aep in the soil, is 
mical m of m praised Sen ee the 
application ot artificia! an aditional 
remar ew 
climate, on the * poveri BS 
absolute necessity of a ain 3 
pia soil, dependent sub ~efficie 
und instruction. If the ese N causes ha 
n, and been 
valuable 
ee 3 ot ‘thi 
new appear to be “x . ved . 
solution as when first brought before the public 
| somew peas apenas denne ay Mr e at 
Stu n thin sh 
rved 
commencing at 41 on the one side, 2 . to 
and fro 
wing, as bug No. 1 and the 
and ending at 36° on the o 
daily mean 
represent 
re for Dee. last, which was ue 
manth 
upon ro č rational 
system of r apana me by the n Mr. 
to excite an irritable controversial 
ather 
56° on the last day. Pr oscillating line crossing the 
by th 
day; ts position in the column, 
bene 
paw e $ ‘the third abe of the rules, marks the 
Particular “ watch” to which the characteristic ad- 
jectives stormy,“ “fair,” &. refer. If any one fails 
to 3 the matter from Ree: anes 15 shall be 
happy to lend him on.] 
THICK AND THIN SOWING, AND BOX AND 
STALL FEED 
on. An 
ties can never be ne berge, 
must 1 form an obstacle to the develop- 
ment of the truth of i i 
patient and dis 
metric N of the are 
e 
ulgence | i 
ra calcula 
e spirit than to pro 
fess that, bos er geste) 3 for five 
ee age n 30 acres of Whe 
which 1 . tried a e eee 
6 pecks p 
that (taking | into 8 the very great variation 
of soils, the . seasons, and the undeniable 
influence of eli ate hg ong fairly be 2 = lie be- 
n my limited practice I have 
which 8. hard! A Wenge e on 
In ad a 
Spaldin 
exceeds 5 
oam on ae, 
4 pecks 05 
usual average 
a chalk subsoil 
e i (aitea a at 12,9 
n this soil—a thin 
ry rors 0 é rop I 
rown; ji iy from wh M 7 have already dicated, 
it is not likely to yield more than 
In w ate ver district I m 
e no moral doubt, but it is is equally 
certain Bee the Pas ee in all its bearings is 
ost careful, 
—. 
prevent 
Cornes 
its work satisfactorily, "n I pig fed a 
Barley-m ut straw. Th 
ae remarkably re erry their conditi 
Ratton A pri 
8 
i it 2 ba ib * pe 
e spirit.— ubscriber, dad Memb t 
R. A. Society ; Feb. ; Co ¢ z 
Hom e corem aii 
Fossil Phosphates — lf yo 
Clutte pines 
=p 
where the protien junetion of the gait 
n n be recognise 
ate t th I sl f Wi 5 
o the 
localities . E hes there s are. many 
e fou 
j Se 
the same thing 
igh though a a simple 
am 
ae 
Be 
me position as at Farnham 
8 to the . 
(interest that I read in 
nt 
ford; v and i in . the Sa 
J. Man aring P 
I, eg Fossi il Phos 
liinn plan of ad xes, as bein 
leu ái $ d, 
far as I ereng Judge, to 8 7 gb len este tetas al, 
s 
and — — sup. * N 
discovered of T hare] 
-yard manure, aye ! 
al, | siti 
1e account by 
of fossil manure, 
ton to agriculture 
Science or art mu ance from either 
=. 
farmer, who has so $ DE wih boaters Dr the 
which may re 
r | years 
is ae at 71 oi ke 
oes really i mi 
satisfactory 
T 
Ih 
of 8 ing Wheat from 6 pecks | p 
at , inches, a 40 — shels per acre; o 
ve 
e yet 
necessari ly | m 
u 
per iron-pyrites ; and aa that 
e 
rieh beds may | to 
í 
and tuis discovery may be expected to aid hin gg 
ral ways: not mere 5 by the . uus and him i sep, 
3 to light, bats 
ar 
. per cent, 
y contains nearly 50 ine o 40 of 
nd as I can Wan the cla 
land for ls. 6d. sae ui the application ef 8 
—— a will cost 375 4d. Sure rely this 
ery high price for it, while superphos ed 
with an additional 
for carriage.— 1323 
Native Phosphate of “Lime, a r nes discov 
of phosphatic nodules in the up Pe. reen sand, j 
8 rey, is not 
3d July, 1845; haps it may encourage 
researches, it i were now to be reprinted in 
ri a In additio 
to fi 
the 
2 
on to what is there 
it was state A es a ee raising 
nodules at Felixstow at ae us weekly, and 
that he hoped to 
inerease thi ‘is 7 So as to be able 0 
tl 
no 
journa 
pin 
. — 8 gist th 
closer attention to oak nodules, an 
si derable number of them, 1 at 
pre: 185 g 0 
of a 
t year, I read a ie ay of: ‘the 
nodules befo re e the Geologien al Society, and 
abiy of t opnan origin, by 
or less . 
er- centage of hae sphate of lime. } 
1 e nodules alluded to were of copti 
might be collected at 
on be 2 . wi Hirs very il 
e 
vaid 
Pst 3 be: 
ws 
— 
— 
bly wrought, N 
nodules collected b 5 way of trial, 
of them analysed by Mr. 
ulties to contend with ; 34 
found as much as 59 per po of 
