THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



jjK. KYANS AZOTIC MANURES, prepared 



ROYAL LETTERS 

 PATENT. 



e?pect to -»ny others. Good 



S^SSSS *£££ She" agricultural ©ajcttc, jj2J 



i>.l V, OrToliFAl -27, 1- 





Q^HE IRISH AMELIORATION S( 



- - I. - i . Ur. I 4'. " 





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rials with which he has to deal t 



which act as the food of plants. 



Although it is of great importance to have the 

 land in a proper mechanical state for the crop in- 

 tended to be raised, that is, well drained, ploughed, 

 harrowed, Sec. — although it is of equal moment to 

 have good and proper seed, clean and free from the 

 eggs of destructive insects— yet that which is para- 

 mount, or should be the farmer's chief care, is to 

 have the best materials he can possibly obtain as 



for the plants desired to tk 

 pected that the crops will ai 



le-s he ••fruitful and multiply," as evei 



The I 





by its decomposition (heating), those 



lire what such and such a plant eats, 

 will give the best compound (com- 

 • succeeding plants (crops). It is of 



fed upon a single 



flowers, seed-. 



which each plant delight^ in. All plants ihat hel ng 

 to the same class or family (that is, those whose 

 habits and growth are nearly alike) partake of nearly 

 the like food, and the same analogy is noticed among 

 animals. T mere hare, by 



general consent, been divided into two classes, called 

 ' sting crops and fallow crops ; all 

 Tops are i'v . 

 crops with the latter. N 

 crops exhaust the land so much mor- 



:.-■■; 



in small quantity in the s il than the lat'er. 

 I • 



iti\ lv little for the second crop. 



■«■-. Why 





may be made. j the " phosphates " 



themselves, for thus 

 The Marl- Lane 



% as ed 



• : Li."'n- it with 



silence Mr. Caird if they could," i 



variance " with every thing it had \ 



i desired to enc 



11: this was a 

 e who is not likely to \>c m 



■ 



l 



that, in speaking 



