THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



2:?5 



Ql ftdi •f d jr room where a gas lamp is used, 

 ^afcfty ■ * gymp toms of the first stage appear, 

 i**-**V be superseded by a few doses of ^the 



- > ■ 

 rff5l«ndatheejv, S a-i-..s ! ,ti..-t..i ll .i., ; 



Aunce of earthy phosphates on the develop- 

 the weds of cereals has been established by 

 i otaemtions, and, according to Liebig, in 



rf maturity. Earthy phosphates in fact are 

 Meyer cereals grow. The object of using 



phate and carbonate of li 

 borne acid would have on 



vest of 1846, were sown it 

 of each being 200 cubic < 



water charged with car- 1 

 Ffine'whtat, OS 110 "" 



: ; >|'h 



2 acid. Each vessel h 



lme of carbonic acid, t 

 olding in solution soi 



n partly decompc 



(composed &y being buried in tile 



r essels were placed in a porcelain 



covered by a bell-glass of the capacity 



from any S dus t that might be floatfngTntfm^anT This 



low and exposed to the direct rays of the 

 ire. The air in which it was placed was 

 kept as nearly as possible at a temperature of 10° to 12 p 

 centigrade. All the seeds in these two vessels germi- 

 nated in less than two days ; the plumule gradually de- 

 veloped as if it had been in the open air, and sent out 

 two leaves of a beautiful green colour, which grew to a 



tolerable size in the abov, 



:: ■ • .-..:-. ■■!;.•: A- -A 



the stems of the seeds water- 



«•!,, _T 



>-':'■ 





completely dried, 

 ic is by no means I weighed only 0.153 gr. ; 

 ■i ir weight, when c 



ffer, the experiment was stopped, and 

 from the glass vessels, their roots were 

 p to cleanse them of the sand which 



placed ; the diff'er- 



wno tne roiiowing day met each other half, 

 shake hands and settle by a little mutual 

 ■n, some troubled subject that had long kept 

 le apart. The remark was that « Selfishnesse 

 " "s blynded, lookynge on 

 the light fall upon the 



seeketh his own happinesse consider well 

 the posture of his neighbour, and plae 



the tryal is at first of diffi- 

 cult empryse), he shall find the whole matter between 



the lignt ; but wisdome, 

 back to the suune, an 





mpued by the 



■.v admirably 



ule laid down by the good 



he seems to say (though indeedjhis language 

 aid look back upon yourself 

 om mat point : the thing is difficult and there is little 

 mger of your getting too perfect in the art of looking 



e time imaginary, the Mutuality real. So will you see 

 ur own best interest and happiness in 



r neighbour's judgment into 



sqnent practice is to do the exact reverse : 



antagonism, and make the mutuality a 



fiction and a humbug. What the effect is— first upon the 



, ;he laborer, and 3dly on the public wealth, 



is mistaken system has been long in 



>eration, let him say who has seen a country, a dis- 



ict, or even a single acre which has been the arena of 



ire unmitigated selfishness, on the part of its Owners 



id Occupiers, and all who come between the two. The 



gns are not easily mistakeable ;— beggared land, beg- 



ired labourers, beggared parish-funds, and beggared 



begins to understand that this corruption is the work 



gently and agreeably around - 

 offends them by long neglect, and the selfish notion 

 D be starved and outraged, harmlessly 

 Then they come in force : and evince their preseni 

 --Regret 



» water charged v 



1 partly d 



^». b S«t;x{FEt 



m, instead of plea 

 roblems of Society begin to work 

 n'gh pressure. 



In the earlystages of theworld theyare simple enough, 

 Vhenev.r. '■ e duties of Land- 



in water charged i lord and Tenant needed small definition. But advance- 



"complicatesrelations: presently the 



Degin to see one man cultivating the 



Sous ! for* W ^nd "^ ' ' 



prudence, self denial, far- 



CHRONICLES OF A CLAY FARM.— No. III. 

 To people of that happily constituted mind in which 

 he hope and the faith, in the moral progress of their 

 wn race, and the sanguine watching of its slow- 

 reeping evidences, furnish a continual, albeit a slender, 

 anquet,— whose patient and far-reaching charity may 

 e truly said to "feed upon air, promise- crammed ;" 

 ; must furnish an occasional, and not infio.iuent pang 

 f something Jike despondency to witness how 

 remotely the best remarks of the best 

 DortZ^ X*.. their ^organic philosophers, the most practical advice of the most 

 nr bo l! he,r carb °»ate an,! }<*, touch, affect, 



on of IT- \. were e ; lu,u 8 ht8 aI ? d ac ; 



n in the working-day routine of < business 



By further . 

 ate of r Pr01 " * 



---•^wUr vedw£ 



I declared, and siucerel 



'»g to the analyses of | true happiness in every ( 



s and oppose 

 ed, to be c 



, ti -. . 



"" We wei"' fed by the 



vith the good feelings or good resolutions < 

 of Sunday's sermon. 



■ - 



of the most complicate and pecuUar^ reiat »jns^that has 

 rest, upon the same ground, 

 ... ; upon each of the parties for one of the 



self- interest. It is easy to say that Land 



It may. So may 



a leaf or a flower be manufactured, or a horse carved 



said to attain it, 

 an art when the watch is heard 



partitions, oak floors, and marble chimney pieces, are 

 dead things, the fitting subjects of a dead M 



bounding vitality for good or ill 

 -., inly work of a higher manu- 

 i will not brook the dull sloth of sleeping 



I and his brother man. She speaks, witl 

 ous organ ; and tells you the character o 



