—.— 4 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
267 
e ipes two inches diameter without collars, In 
peaty clays the pr drains would be of the sme den pth, but м 
more distant intervals; pipes and dollars being used, & sta agnan 
= released by clearing and apo the existing ‘tees n 
¢he depth of the main опаа — peats ther a still 
l 
di and t 
depthot the outfall d drains 
and со 
and — of all 
casiona al under dra 
ing, y depen ing, 
cutting of new ditches, where. re È 
. Oce Vier т 
aoaia; ааа with aa е мед a: in sei 
ere grown.” Ammon 
witha in manure, but: to be economic 
must striv asses i s Liebig, “to give | 
ubstanoes in such а — s 
| о be dis spensed 
^ Intelligent farmers 
u 
7 
where ae “= 
— оп en 
as the he ontfalls Eu allow. In all cases and in every 
. il, springs rising within and under water held in 
ersand veins must be т oem чын, boring а — ae 
with run 
e. surface, th 
A present facilities 
us chain 2 conduit by means of 
r by ott — a length of smaller size pipes 
withina similar — voe T lar s, the practicability of under- 
peaty soi ils, sufficiently consolidated to bear stock, — 
bted ; nor will the Possibility of preventing the chok 
of the drains in B dier meadows, zen d it is reme embered: th hati in 
case 
dq 
er prings. In |i 
— to open Bitches, cut 
ер 
still would deny that a Е паза: open 
the manure is — y to produce 
& bushel of Wheat, in i conseque ce of a © definite con- 
[sumpt of a Ri — — does this prineipally 
se from our — — f application, &e. 
have already stated my — n for ee g that this is 
ssary er has yet been 
vd to my 
But then, wh at ів 
pa аі 
: To persons who. 
subsoil is essential to. perfect Ёге ld d 
e 
drains may ith a self-aeting trap and fixed 
bolt, or with a plug, a i" "арнар of па all water may be 
stayed in a — unti ned. An ethod of summer 
the soil has presented itself to our "minds during the 
оппа applicab 
e.th ure more carbo 
ceous, while the өм, whieh is ре nate a ower, should 
have the manure less carbon Therefore a slowly 
growing plant re tardina a dar 7 ieri 
opposite oca of. course hold true also. 
not t divide t 1s Sim 
0 
s idea t 
ple Si 
this innocent mra and not even ^ — pea 
as many as ould ; but all ve little ‚ for 
though the heer was a — al r, the de ата 
always up before him, and eontin — his depredations in 
spite oe all that could be done to prevent him; and 
oe of — — erop of 
,00 
laced inte ermediate 
from the river, or from any other pram source. The 
mater моба 7 down thos se inlet pipes might b e stopped at the 
t manurı 
would 
et them and the outlet drains, whereby vegetation would 
be e e in the — un 8 
t to 
t 
t this system, which we кеген with 
"dence as a novelty, may be Maece here surface 
rule dis sen and explain the whole peor “of 
7 * uctions from it are "Simple and consistent. 
The field aren is 2 grow ni pe is e the nitro- 
genous ma ‚ Peruvi d ore largely and 
successfully. applied for “this crop than 555 any other ? 
And is this sa ful manu 
ve, 
while th 
i with the Marci te,’ or ха, -and- 
w surface system of ec * dows, and i in the Test Valley 
there would never be any deficiency of water 
KILWHISS v. ROTHAMSTED.—No, V. 
RBON IN ÁGRICULTURE ? 
Mr. "Tavo wes’ 
mmon nia," o 
ammonia as a 
8 
WI 
the асе 
| indiscriminating 
olds. The wr now near: 
in ostility of game is 
1 furtive in ite habits, that the presse boys soon 
know where i 
veying mi 
ent. 
ing, acid whom, I believe, 
ground E pu ent, Contrast wit 
orbit 
manures dy ld t p 
minently carbon aceous for the гадаа than for the 
e 
id grower. ammonia i 
ng th he manure. jd TRA ‘Peruvian о may 
considered "fect, manure later — — 
ure rre " 
be brought 10 E judgment. T 
cially Supplied is not essential if — 
Carbonaceous substances. 
ia i t a 
ee ibis 
ayes long as corn is cultivated ;" he 
experiments * show distinctly the production of of 
supply of c: 
ce of the Turnip ip 
consists ы — "the other- 
Tefuse of our cor ps (straw) into-a 
чен and 1 nourishing ee Ad ettet: (Journal of 
oci l viii, p. 560 
кып that his experiments prove e н 25 ) 
they have $e 
al 
rid it is AM". a passi 
economy manures. - — fo following | 
Mr. fr. Lawes the italics are his 
'Wn successfull 
Tposes,t the Turnip, ав compared with ‘Wheat, requires a 
€ — carbonaceo UA nitrogenous.” (Agri- 
vitor — is abroad that не ч е 
е зары for Wheat. 
ery... per for 
Turnips, Pm r^ ile Norfolk Whites s: iv tt 
1 dr 
But in dry climates or o где 
wede, consist, not in encouraging eee growth. of 
pie, sparrow, hawk, or e 
d 
Caithness. 
defects for the greater « « e: of the 7 or the ver 
us birds and agen nem —— хоя 
у hand 
у common ыннан и S raise 
85 di Lem; ; and ты п the 
i While how'r 
omparatively to find the is of the stote, van › 
ес most detested of all, is 
or a прага ion; with many, 
anit would ear the oniy, ү: ей was tothe me] 
апи it Wou alm 
* but in not maintaining 32 at the end of tl 
Ui ме 
{һе to t 
AN we to add nitrogenous man 
he 
the supply of. i active prineiple. ugar-cane 
req to co! — 
uires 14 months. lete its“ oni and were 
es to increase 
ity " of the plant, the deposition s 
lari 
undonbtedly be arrested ^ e y" 
e 
accelerated .developme ew 
n | be 
П | nitrog 
ns 
d te neighbourhood, mei gave promise 
>» S 
ne 
y in our nd más i feeding and 
аады 
being confounded 
ou C bat period E the | 
the Wheat plat i is us ng on à 
a few extra 
over luxuriance. No d 
year when 
"y economically anne z the 
nous manures ; but surely our theo ory of manured 
зде over {һе ae gt bread 
ada cannot be fully explained And elucidate 
rse the dicta that Turnips, as com 
Wheat, require a manure cone great carbona- 
ceous than n nitrogenous.” R. Russell, Kilwhiss 
pms ae aa A тирии. NN к анн 
‘Home Correspondence 
One Word for the Spa arrow.—In your Chronicle of the 
2d inst. * Inquirer" mentions th Iness 
the sparrow. Will he have the kindness to point out 
8, ‹ 
Uppos 
—W hat is the object of (огош 1 ge? 
саайа meant by impro oved eu 
A dee 
with that de epth. — Then 2 fee 
with such a depth of cultivated soil ? 
away the water MD fant mone 
еши tivation ; for, with 
my compensation under the following 
| Some years ago I had. given to.me a beautiful — I 
tralian Wheat, This ain 
Aus! 
roper нео am > 
pl grata nig 
а piece о no 
good ties for и of Wheat ; it | 
was just ordinary soil, posts: er rich nor poor—if ei 
hes latter ; however, n plants сате. up well an 
appearance all other Wheat i in 
of a valuab 
Lo e to protect it from bares 
А2 et its; winter N well, and 
kept the: E of all ume Wheat thr spring, 
ze 
i 
n the 
aped. this to » their great surprise. e Wheat ЕЕ on 
1 
til one d on going t to it Et found afew white fakes 
trn 
ould be 
— coil a 
e | hi 
- 
more 
-—d see 4 & good there is in п deep еш 
TIS i 
t an 
are qe c enough.” 
drain t be w 
e clay deen oe a р! 
other hand, where there is 
Fs. 
a pan to bre 
