ps THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Max 30, 186 3, 
; ——- — = —— - — 
ede» aas neither the fresh fish nor the kelts (that is and been found to work well for very many years in заде from the second report of tbe Inspectors, dated 
M ive spawned a desirous of returning | Ireland and Seot and they are, therefore, not | March 1863, as to these “ Falls of tbe Conway," 
to the sea) will use the ladder,” and he calls it “a specu- | mere "speculative inventions.) But the perhaps| "Om the Conway proper, the greater] rtion 
lative invention, On being called to account for this | greatest beauty of all salmon ladders is that at the breeding ground lost, shut up by the Falls of 
eeping condemnation by Mr. F. Fane |“ Falls of the Conway," а 
Times, April 28), < t 
ptuously sweepi 
Times, April 23), in a second letter ( 
be brings forth his “facts and ex i ese, as 
they appear in print, аб least require a great deal waters could be as spaw ground by most у drawn and furnished ‚Р CR 
com] t f a ladder: the thing was talked of then—now | of the Board of Publio Works in Ireland, work 
inn iod t Mn Ma ын м . T. T. Whyte | it is d ). 2 ha Jc - ^ тыда, 
salmon can Xo 
y will for long, probably, be tbe most remarkable of (e — ' 
other ladders, | through and up the solid rock, of 28 or 30 feet perpen- | kind. constructed in land, and will no doubt beag — 
do ascend; and there are hundreds of | dicular height, and tho of salmon ота are great an object of ty and of interest as it promises 
other persons who have seen them in the act of ascent | doubtless deposited above, where 4} years ago no parent | to be of utility. It was com; too late for this 
wherever these or any ladders are erected. | fish could by possibility reach. floods baving delayed jt 
Salmon ladders in one form and another have existed | 1 cannot resist the temptation to insert a short pas- | progress; bot that tbe year might not be cutirely 
* 
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PERCENT И ДЕЧ 
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а fish must р 
тоа А 
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