1 а 
me) 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
155 
rtance ; but, unfortunately „having had some 
im e that this was 
phere eme giv ^i zu ideas of her prineiples upon 
more or less exhaus 
wat appeared i 8 me that the 
attempt to conn 
Let it once be recognised in 
I science, that there 
T Con- 
de throu, the as having anything 
roots, connected with the fixa- ie Hs pares UR of Е 
and elaboration of certain — nsider: — 
of plants, and that den; — in 
This is greater or less according a ier — — ch 
to е sources of the exact com- as a [mere production of starch, 
ta aboratio i оеш vegetable 
- —— in Pinos was not the 
cause of their requiring more 
or less of ammonia or сагв їп 
the m mp 
demonstrate that what the phy- 
— — rodu 1 ке чачар ters of plam 
abits of growth.“ Mr. Lawes, w what si milar, the 
of th agri Г oF pii MES. ed in | 
t 
n of the prin- 
25 involved in "the alterna- 
of eropping of 
manures — in — 
Lawes to point out the exceptions, as I do not know 
- | That plant has also been classed as one o 
and the inconstant з weather | of April, with the exhausting 
| moestrale of thé 
er 
E 
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ч 
rp 
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4 
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8 
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— 
e exception to the Rothams 
I shall. contend for the rule, and leave. Mr. 
of 
Josophy ? 
The Rice, too, has been placed ртов the proscribed. 
f the carnivora 
of the — 
go, in W 
produce ces à туч 7 
quantity of food than the most fertile co 
animal manures. 
Lawes 
ge 32. 
wn that when the fo the i and 
i 1 чуз in the atmosphere * 
the time the primary organs. of 
richer ана а and during а bees s were being ms ed." 
"owe uen od of the ise wages PP a в, 96у; Gaz 
of the plant, a much May 15, e Bean — 
peris arerequire d quires eee tome: i 
* hen the b еге, гра when the 
In these cireumstances the 
—— nures then 
nd less carbon. 
Ur, Lawes, ча ад 
April 3, 1852, 
i Grasses, , Ag. Gas., 
24, 1852. 
Now I will first take the ease of Maize, w 
has excluded from the fallow crops. 
ition, | 
On this | 
| ault does not 
c exhausting qualities of Maize and I might |a 
а passage in his“ E mge which has 
ormed by Mr.- 
wes that so has 
given his — on r otations. If he 
done so, wil say oF im what Arthur Yos ung said 
his —— t 
"enge. 
tood by the enlightened 
e peasants themselves," Mr. 
re that Wheat— Maize. 
luctive rotation in the south of — 
theory does not do here 
тор 
countryman, men 
From Calais to — in Quercij you never once 
get of fallows ; but no sooner you en 
t 
It also “requires a hi her | i 
he as one cause of the exhausting. 2 а Turnip when 
that 
lower from the Ist of he = —— middle of. teta 
e | the than 
t | June to the end 
eountry- 
yields mm 
But next ecme the oil plants, and to them Mr, 
acres — — 
m 30 to 60 реа ches are said 
n Lo 
v called **Spade and Fork Husbandry," by a person 
pect that n undham 
he pabulum — 
— dd — He Saxm in Suffolk, who 
d has 
w. 
person writes a go 
published another book 
ama, 1) over his farm, I said, “ Let 
That the Cane should require — richer in nitro- man’s cottage was lawye woe — full of letters 
n — Frasi i n n it yields the non- — all parts of the kingdom, asking advice, Ke. Now 
trogenous substa: ems to me altogether | I am writing, I would just inform y ers that I 
doubtful: "but I will — — on this question know a person who grew roots on Mr. Smith's plan 
hen I lay bare t r mieten into which I think | with great — last year. H Potatoes in 
. Lawes has fallen, and en our to substitute а | rows —— aep —— т е; 
few simple — iples that — — the rationale between Sn Pota ; they are not all 
of some of our agricultural practice. In the meantime | sold p мы 1 expect he will si v or 121. per aere 
it may t —— that sugar cannot be increased. by of them, in all at 1 - 261. per acre. Suppose we take 
g manures in Bee e are adverse to the | out 8l. f rent and e ses, then there will remain а 
secretion of this substance and are avoided. Ihe tolerable r pect per acre, I ear men 
Pota ds a somewhat parallel instance, as it his name, fearing his agricultural neighbours might 
becomes waxy and less starchy on being dressed with | him a bla ick shee ‚ога | bird, or something of 
h spec 
that sort. J. D. P, Colne s Engine 
Predatory y Birds—On same sort of 
ing incontestable 
ory of rotations. Here 
The O 
has triumphantly арр as affordin 
evidence of the truth of his the 
ences and resemb - 
ace in the — gd produets which 
| they yi have nothing to do wi 
of the year, in the north of Trae 
an 8 
patiently g 
e Cole has even — — the hasty Wheat; 
oe wholly opposed to my pri that | 
j the 
i З wow ust bee 
indiented above applies. — " - — — plants. 
Mr. Lawes l blunder in aseribin 
grown for seed, it requires “a mu igher- tem- 
ange during a considerable — of its growth 
than when bulb is produced.“ But the 
seeds than for bul tempera 
from the middle of 
of ere when the bulb is gro 
E. Russell, Kilwhiss, Fife. 
(To be continued.) 
Home Correspondence. 
Tullian Husbandry.— see 
ist" enter the x" 
autumn— п № 
and there qr lies ó 
P 
h | tendencies. 
la bourer with 
e pound of the 
common as that used in dressing seed- Wheat is 
"n — — vits two gallons of ter; when not 
“oe -warm, put 2 са mixture half a 
from yo same bu e 
ante 
. W.,“ so far as birds 
— 5 тетт do not find yourself alone in лө геге glory, 
‘am, you will be pleased to 
— so m trying the DEN — — me 
Forking Land.— I w sfied with this 
operation — season that 1 — forked 18 acres this 
ember, December, and January— 
n the ridge, exposing to view and to 
atmospherie infapgess as vile and various 
elay as could be 
t an 
t nd быва. 11 shall soon saturate 
n — fields with torrents = liquid manure; am > forking, 
do into ing 
shade of and yellow 
these 
birdlime-like yellow plastic clays mich exhibit every 
e А with m —— 
How — afford 
the mean 
tence with a | 
one's-self. We must all: feel 5 h obliged to 
Mts Smith, of Lois- Weedon. The 
el 
hum 
icles ет mendo: ow for m. 
the summer, the IR Ls 
AVOY TS being | in 
ean the Maize’ approncheg téa 
coun 0; 
have grown (Wheat) рег aere. . 
often alluded to ; re the farmers want 
n Wheat, an 
ee its flowering and seed-forming 
— ammonia to yield an equal 
B 
; еауев 
8 е heat of June — — J ly m at e “ Bechel- 
October." M 
836 the Maize which w. 
2 
10 
Ж 
Ев 
a 
5 
s 
th 
E 
er e 
ei wit Mr. Smith's book, I will mention 
| stances. 
he a limit, the 
deeper more 
but I think that runs 4 feet deep are 
in, even 
effective at the wider intervals, “A. T 
ittle savi the 
an incline of about 1 їп 55, ть "а. 
