24—1 
848. 
THE AE EEU RAN E LARREEN 
mist to the institution) for analysis was one o 
2 — 
of the Socie! 
man of high 
a small fee, to be fix 
sent 
requiring so mue 
ledge of the 
rofi 
and maintained the laboratory, 
the ex 
uano, 
have far mor 
to the Society. (Hear, hear.) The scree 
was to engage some eminent che 
attainments and authority, who should, for | 
ed, make analyses of all samples 
7 
— meee that the 
was not th 
bseription 
e 
— was 
—.— ne aa ewt. of bones. 
of t — ses. Again, in 
by Professor Way the 
a ton was cha: 
e- | now 
a few tons, the sugg gested to ar that there 
red the annual | ing refuse fro 
ry wor — oe As. 
hich had elapsed since the Associa- |i 
tion had opene a its laboratory—but 
himself in this 
was, 
rom 
tained 
122 
which a cheap supply of ammonia, 
rather of te might be had— it was the e of 
eal skins, of bier many hundred 
nually thrown away. ob 
of this 3 and iial it to 
ho had drawn out an analysis ; 
efuse was put on the rail- 
a Yor 105 a ton, he obtained 380 from 
next thing | 
ver, they re 
peat that he Tia. con 
nnected with the analysis of soils ; 8 
sent — instead 4 51 se e be the 
e. . | this was 
er that the quantity considered how 
-| were annually thro 
int 
he uestion 
ar osing 
al 
for sprin 
raight be 
Pro- | easily me free by the application of warm ‘alkalies and 
With rm alkali would be A | 
-ski 
farmers the wa 
* ‘ime, and ifthey took “half a ton of this 
in wise country for 
want of knowing how to use it. He told by a gen- 
„ | tleman lately, that only the other ay there had been 
8 was no * 
were wo a out 71. to 81. sti 
enqu iry, he fo 
oe them. He enquired what 
the carcases, 
for the. oil pan from 
with 
was, pe were towed 1 _by 
there sunk. But obtaining 
such substances were generally known, 
ses, now worse than useless, would 
substance, with quick. time i in 2 
*. 1 — 4 ita sa 
a 
+ 
— | ferent, for thes 
e | proportion of nitrogen 
Wurzel leav 
uch 
to decay so rapidly, that enh they eo containe 85 a larger 
d phosphates than the "ts i 
it had 1 4 ais found i asus ble to preserve 
He had b 
since, in sinking a ta easion to 
cut into this p se ie fo 4 > his astonishment, that 
a 
sco 
loss of the nitrogen in these 
value of any peu for cattle w 
tion o n i 8 
standing the quantity of . in Mangold Wurzel 
n 
tops, it was well kno 
ves and vg 
ene ral rule purged cattle, and de 
ocak r Tittle value. Mr. Lawes, in his papers, 
had exp ason ‘of this to be that t they were 
sap was N ripened; 
find a 
of 
nning of November, aay spread them 
on the field, a he left them for som 
experi 
indicated certainly a loss of nitrogen, but 
added that, weight for weight, these pickled Teaves con- 
ain 
This w 
FORO 
was in conseque nee of the 
weight by the loss of — in the process of fermen 
hey ne th 
covering of rags 
fix the 5 a Cea of a 1 which Rasa 
than 4/. or 5/., by t MA 
the Agricultural Society,” | 
tion of so valuable a nature that Ti 
of 
uced 
impossible du their value 
Mr. Lawe 
For — they could not expect 1 same startling fn 
t 
airaa 7 eould 2 made ga was ur “the 
g 
—— 
—ů— of Wheat— 
question of a vast number of | 
E i 
le in pa ato that 
ta more Heep aa the bulbs. Gentlemen 
who were practically aequai with agriculture would 
ty gant A ise of October when al —— 
ps t in a was 
. a Ficheros th . dia y know hat to to en 
rought Plants eame wp in the dries 
and 
p urie with 
and allowed * my — á ding the salt. 
it should | be -poured 
another practical use for this, e i were mated 
