withont i njuring the taiant: To pa publie it is a very | 
evident the se re great. ee the foo n 
man is ag aa e nd that t only w ae 
injury to any Nndividaal apt but to the benefit t of 
degrees on 
viz., the landlord, the tenant, =" l the 
ip eo Ee 
ua a ia 
AUMALUCOU: sa Q wean te 
ae ae korre 
hey receive it being placed on the under side tho 
leaves.” ut, as to the diffused gases in_ the o- 
sphere—I have found that when Turnips 
gar together as to cause their leaves to noc 
oth a deposit was visible on the 
except at feeding times. -= Now do you think the cattle 
could assimilate a greater portion of nourishment ? 
for I have no wish to ve nae food — — gh 
them un 
appropriated by the s 
can 
r | judge the constituents of my food t are the foli nwibi per 
day each bea: 
Jo agrieniture; sarae certainly), and if rain id not come and wash 1 meald Hitrogshons, St taroh; &e., and 
S. S. S. F 
Leaf Feeding.—With reference to my former remarks | off, the s become =n er am = “op ene toe Ae z h & tise Fat, 
on this subject, I beg to state that in consequence of Whether these deposits are ig © called e Wiest Mee a wes ; Aa 6% 
me o aving adde if any” a pendant to my | not, I will ! i so one mo at Rape-cake ee RIN 2 tite a ig 1 
sentence, “ the better the culture the Jess this evolve- | matters than myself to pear ine, but certain it ct at E gocer + i A 
epre caused the chasm to r per than plants suffer more gen these depositions when crowded, a Me ot AE es Pegg : 
it rob y is between Mr. Goodiff’s opinion and my than from want of a I e that it is mainly iis is not far from the prop r 3 n nitro» 
on on this absorbing Jeaf-feeding business. There owing to this that cattle refuso “0! afte “yank ? Grass. NES non a ele s = ow v strikes 
no difference betwe n us as he propriety of It is patent to most p that these patches are left | me these are erials sufficien 5 l m er the 
hoeing, nor of i tary effects on plan t, whether | almost untouched. These excretio ombined with | favourable circumstances 0 gamo, cleanliness, and 
= co diation being arrested by the veil of Grass, renders it he h will yield su i carbon fo 
ra n 
solid one we and thirdly, what are mes “rt 
im e inorganic ? e first 
a doubt but cathe fond, 
d the atmosphere 
of the case alone, 
the  evaporations from the earth as 
50, 00 feet 
ry seek at these os inorganic food which 
by ats act wi 
has been rendered soluble nt ith the atmo- 
sphere?” Yes, I think they ¢ n find it as deep as 
; | they ever os, for supposing air eter not get there, 
water west en Giles 
com opted ns analysis of this 
The bulb contains 
i 
distilling Onions with water. This volatile oil i is dis- 
caential 
g 
3s 
5 
9 
Š 
o 
dieagreeablo aki and bya largo proportion of sulphur 
ich enters osi 
essential oils 
pam in its 
f portion ‘of the Paper, sho: 
s.| The small Chesnu 
recat for of respiration. lata 
truth in ee p a The expenses of the 
pose n thus 
56 Ibs, peg age at 10s. per ton 
Steaming padaan utting straw, root- } on per day per head. 
2 Ibs, of Rape-cake, a at 71. per ton... iid. 
Ba. 
The manure considered worth the attendance and 
straw ; one man steams the food, feeds, and cleans all 
the cattle, The Turnips ond straw are prepar ared for him 
d two women, taking them pai jigri S 
th 
e of beef they a 
ag e jacea the 
are 
cent. of ni ae rogenised constituents, for if so it must be 
uable food? Would you recommend me 
will fatten off without it ? the 
half fat. B. [We 
which 
death, soon be very sick hy !—because the sun ’s rays | when dried at 212° Fahr. 
impinge upon it and stream into i hen the sun| According to Dr. Thomas Richard a e 
goes down, leaving sky, t his heated solid clay | stalk and bulb of Onions id a in 100 par 
streams off its heat with the same facility as it received 3 
it. Why !— se there was nothing to break the Bulb. Stalk, 
streams of heat from going off. Now let this path be ; seine 
knocked to atoms before the sun rises, and a wonderful As 32.35 13.98 
change will tec i in its pairean powers ; it will peria ahaa ER ARAA S tad Pe sd 
neither cooled so quickly, | Lime a ia Balia Mel 
Why t— ce want is coon iced of parts innumer- | Phosphoric acid . 15.09 e et 
able; and nage are in bckweels "Ube; Rib Soa ee soa, | 1017 
with air, which is a non-conductor ere is a | Phosphate ofiron. ... = ke das RRR: fitoi 
worked out that “the better the culture of the | Chloride of sodium... +. __-.. 449 Trace 
carte i the less the evolv .? These what I shall Oily ‘eats as fer Cilisere: They have been found 
call mechanical chambers in the soil, filled wi al w and then useful, and we have to look for some 
work wonders in the winter with respect to foreign ae occasionally accompanying refuse 
When a well pulve sree hd agen Be rain, the of the observed manuring effect 
fine panen of earth lve (and the more The oil of blabber, which in parti been found 
> mpe e nea for this aO, ay the'surface |t o benefit the ¢ crop to which i it was ae n for instance, 
as it were. water 
gem ly 5 Sprat vm ge ts it; it casta it off ise ised substance th tili 
rticular places, so saa sata there sinks | in effects f vavan - 
or Sie ot to te furrows : i p p rost from n. v re due toits yepe Anin Tied 
i 
entering so deeply as it otherwise wou ould, by the same 
law oe poem pa gr cake bag those 
evolve organic I wer that, | more 
though T have dabbled in in tary nae Liebig T eo only tha 
e have proof 
j ran hen the contents 
so long as 
ae containing both organic and inorganic gts 
s statement is eran. A in on of Mr. s pro- 
je aon but I beg to add in illustratio of the state- 
ment I e respecting ta rooting delay in search 
what they could find neare; 
ung 
luxuriant to all outward appearance, but if it does reach 
an advanced state so as to rend u 
up its centre stalk, it | 
ammonia, and it is on this substance, occurri 
tly in the watery liqui 
on the oily or resinous su 
ammoniacal liquid of rasie man we Sion no hesitation to 
pronounce ten times superior in gas-tar, which 
when perfectly washed with water, so as to deprive it of 
store 
] 
Biais food gee it to build its structure Äi e 
it cannot find material to to lay upon i its sides in an inci- 
into a e m ems coating, which would have been 
to the 
demand made 
its ripening ear. e plant at Weedon is 
pomi ye y situated ; te i is fortunate for it if it had a good 
steamed, an th 
seen gpro . , ey A apes a decia fav I 
prays H pe aen : c food is A stout 20 x Turnips are pulped and mixed with | call acre to my ma Stans apo a trust 1 you will 
tel are with the i gh scarce it is soja $ s. of £ ant, Wheat straw, and on which the allow to appear in t ow come journal which Rega the report 
> = a bt ar oe e inorganic portions and evening ; the X of last evening’s proc gs. By so doing you uch oblige 
deep et p sap that when the robust prs ples mpyaaa | gany of pulped Turnip illiam Higgs, 24, ll Okarte Street, Fi mit ton 
a: us — roots (ten thousand for one of | and about 8 lbs. of cut straw. I should mention SS 
P tah on raa nenill, it finds enough to support its | that until ight a cart- of Turni : 
SR a See ae Danie Meet ae ee a ee ee a sumei| AS Farm Memoranda. ____— 
g e ea antez ie -|wi > relish—they greatly aided the consump- HOLMESCALE, nmpk: KENDAL.—A new destin 
tuent eleme eggs publi pr : on — no asnar LAA since their — e consump- water-wheel, known the “vortex,” has jus 
he t. PYM : ead, say | erected b M Will il 
pes yey S ae. aaea — from 20 ky to get The pysia are m $6 nd Mites for ions ‘i ppt Boie, ee re this 
. earth > e ght, an were sold fat bout | farm 
pra fede ae var cal condoning > ae fornight back about 43 stones weight ; the present | from the meee po een y my tena re 
A sieve 
by the stomata or mouths by which ' are enn ful a f “their he 1.4 P arenaer bone ar oe ha examining. #8 og 
upon it by | 
is very | 
with advantage as a manure, always contains carbonate p 
of h | prolific, “a when a 
- Dati of its thickly clustering acorn: 
à | have published a report of the Paper read before 4 
Society of Arts by Mr. W. Fothergill Cooke on the Loia 4 
ecem 
Coo 
ir isg 
sing and precipitating 
saving h 
insertion. 
30 inches in height, and ought i pint 
assed over here ea notice ; however, it is very 
nts for ne ce this dwarf Oak ma; 
The ac 
quill is 
f Know- 
‘p. Wy 
ante Process of Deodorising Scwage.—As ye 
from a book by t 
wad ore 
e Society tor the Diffusion 0 
ny | ledge on ntal 
and Useful Planting. 
mber last, will oe do sapin the favour to insert 
following letter sent by m the Secretary 
Society of soe wad published in in their po al 
terday it was asserted ‘ 
as ts the inventor of of the Tin e process for ser i 
wage.’ As long since as 1847 a court 
of inquiry, oa of t the chairman of the meeting, Dr. b 
= oes enry de la Beche a nd one or tW 
inv 
“Th ME: 
Mr. Wick 
and appeared greatly 
shall refer to nar subject in another — 
light upor 
srs i ier 
of the 
| 
A 
