I SIEEEEOGSS'SISS = 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 421 
RSI SAS SON DO RS PES ERT Fie 
: n i ] 
‘ De i ce of came matter and water which they con-] exhausted re wate or cag a fresh Casus belli, 
Se eir only useful ingredient. Yet he does | that sober j 
ES Cer? SOTROURBE ee Wia he applies 12 bush i pepp 
a rA ; R Adi applies ushels of bones per acre, in ing to aes be t fant 
TALLIC BESS Zs WORKS. a ape an ng alone are required to U on these grounds annot expect to m 
supply a e phosphates that are necessary. with ES ‘of sentime 
J sat on the subject which 
55, LIONE ELSTREET, BIRMINGHAM. ven in the poo: peeks of soul, wei is it not | have a now pea over. On the contra s it is now 
Proprietor, Mr. THOMA K, n advantage to give re- | undergoing the proba ationary contest to which we 
uperintendent of the eg ta r. Sj pros JON ES. = pa me and thus ot alae and we are not surprised that the jarda 
R.i CLAR RK begs to state, fe er the Lend wae of |t am ofthe cent ely slid So eik- which supports the theory is doubted by some of 
d the Public at , that he is no 
his Frien Tokers he zion diass io iv he FE DAE E mA ie se am h la arger § upply of a nimal | our correspondents, or that the advantages =n 
oe. of HOTHOUSE LIGHTS or SASHES a pages tale d by others 
arly Forty per Ome ‘ieee cas babies dane of bones would aio rd? n Tumi ip soil EAR 
e e 
$ + shes a Eroen P Ain shi mae vee are already rich in cig substances, ad ON THE SEMINAL LEAF-STEM OF WHEAT. 
ay Nir yg eon , with British Sheet Glass of superior | Where the earthy part of nes alone is eeded, In the e Agricultural Gazette of the 3d Ma an ad- 
quality and thickness, the ao eni Da a pep ni the saving vhp feu aur cate is dibbli oe 
s dome n e sitive mon 
Baks 3 reiii lazed in ri ordina Sra paarir mein: gain. In such p 4 bu akok of the solubl e bones, ing of it, tip fres arat ng the seed at a more regular depth, 
For a sample of h He Mosel ie He Ho thouses, promod complete, properly ae “vill afford all that is required, a nd which T ea mires conceive to exist, if it is carefully 
Be and Oe ASP VARY Wr’ da [eet all that the most liberal dressing of ordinary | done ; but the weiter also ascribes to the depositing the 
at his Seeaicataat es Birmin — i a aby come bon rH gen a bly accomplis ppt he calls oe sy piani hete I think might be 
a ence of Mr. JONES, and are admitte r Fiai e gain inthe amount of produce, from a pro er ut which un mig! t 
at judges to be the most perfect of the kindin the world. f use of soluble bones, is gpr a ih Ho eo pE E [appropriately termed the seminal leaf-s stem, which in 
many cases, more or less deve eloped, proceeds from the 
ee Seem sore dence oe collated ; and it is not difficult te to 
l t account for. When w the Turnip plant a 
je gricett a ZELTE, £, ready supply of its enna t AE its orth from portance eS aa ancving ihe gett em roma 
— t organs of nutrition | seed, While singular enou gh, on the 14th of May, Mr, 
SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1845. are sooner deve toca a werful in their pn te a tale mted Editor of the Jrish Firmie 
n his 
ad m e po 
o e AAEE PIER E KER a E operation ; and B ‘road leaf, {hough whi ich rit in- Jo ournal, i ging of that date, pager ys not only 
Weonespay, June 25—Agricultural Society of England, spires the whol a lar the ve ry existence oop: neck or 
Taurspay, June HoA Saclar] Imp. pene z reland. - Í st detri “ 
Wapsesoay, July 2—Agricultnral Baolety nf ngland. its structure, is sae h. The grow th | 4 Per sË, rins. 
eee Eaa haat sultaral, Levy Soci of irala, of the plant is thus acting ae it su suffers less fr mals ding f At the sah ine, each is i 
RS’ CLUBS, the attacks of its insect enemies, and gba ai beret 
Vr = {Dla | 3 sane op aid earlier and more pro olifi miturit i “The shoe e Da is brought forward with this view. (As to 
June rove oh y: gee act depth at which seed should be deposited, aid 
x 4 a OTT : ich the pt arog gives us over the See man y fe grem voklo 
E are appy to hear that TuE Ro Aaritcr obvious and ag i th t t 
TURAL CoLLEG CIRENCESTER 4 recei this the increase an | aib presen ponn much 
pport it so richly deserves. His Royal Highnes ess} Thea fF è rop, however, may often be in- o t more or pu wet state of the ground.) “Again ps 
ace Albert h nig become Patron and $ esearch by: +e Ramy re me Bigot cape afford. iter in od pa asnan hre wee of the 10th May, 
overnor of th I Fos we Aiei that it | of being used in mai aters, ascribes t ing her aan ved 
behoves every fr iend ‘of a mproved education for | suita ble to me present a and anticipated Pani 0 rather its very "ekion o the 
Agricultural p round this attempt t oil. It may also be mixed with any “ slow- ae VEN says that spring Whe i (aie sping iii, 
an such an Tosti a as s will be adequate to the ling if insane, and thus a fe rile iser may be com- ae , wae gical So a tan Be 
feds s at once.” And they all appear to believe that the 
ounded, calculated both. to act speedily, and to : “ ” 
E d dth saiak h k tillering process takes place at the surface. “H. W, 
e understand that the AA ings and pr epar: a- | maintain fertility for a length of a tie <i i i 
> 5 ays : “If sown or drilled stubbles be examined 
are so advanced, that the College is epeei Setting aside, however, the efficacy of dissolved | carefully, there will be found necks of every length, 
pai for the reception of students in the c iea a Ce would mak on when the state of | from 3 to 4 inches long to almost nothing at all, and it 
e soil or the Pinan would ma ill appear that, their different lengths will be owing, 
worthless, it oe heth toi sness if the plants themselves, but 
‘Tar A x N or DıssoLven Bonrs places within | or in compost, to Eie eir ra pied or an wae | solely to Variation in the tion of the seed, for it 
r Teac he following ; direct advantages—a s: saving | crop at ple asure. And the importance of this | Will be shorter or longer in exact proportion to the 
aly ost, and a gain in the e produce of the di dep Gr et which grain shall be e placed i in = tees 3 ” 
of W 
s The advantages of an early crop are well known 
e saving of cost arises ror a Suel of dis- when we want food for sheep in the autumn. An plants, pesky year, on ee February (Geom the 
ibones producing A better c ] ill gi 
7 of Turnips, too,will give more food than 
third ary conditi Fact, ¢ as aie b | crop of Rape, iat let us sat a crop of Wheat Tre ek dawn trea ieee 
ad Theo of a host of t experimenters, proves s | after it quite as well. By sowing late occasionally. ones 
eory, as , explains it, st are able 5 o get z vei fallow clean ; and this | at the same meee which I should think cannot be con- 
Ee = in ay een assumed that, supposing {is of impor whole r se Weather sidered either wl om or a Of these 70 
kag es be required to supply the A a also, and other elrcumstatices, in Į had the neck or nal leaf-ste m from 
Fon ene crop; fo s later with fie than usual, Th f| 4 inch to 1} inch long ; ft 
: f Pees crops ; and, conse uently, FNS strong plant, one middling one, is ome remaining 18 
wn our Turnips with 4 bushels of Faiet elie. were “igs TOn Hethi p pig Ba me: under 
on; and o our were 
Su ‘ict cient t has now been said, we hope, to induce ange mid dling, aed hea act $ 4 plants batas srg 
we ought, according to good husbandr 
ive Ty, to 
à su tucceeding ao Wie shels nth har an pra woes e to i inquire further into the theoretical | tible development of this » tem, aid fof these i7 were 
4 m, wes „Ui we} an pra with sudjec 
g apre gain nothing by dissolving | instead of ‘te eating it with scornful doubtings, or | toting Wa plints tho wool ba had d flen on = the milina, 
bushels va Ss Ta ore and expense; for bol d deni crete merely divad $ aes mes: or stem 
just the same 4. on the whole of our arable land, od oth the theoretical and prac actical | from ti these; and two were si renngirhactegtt middling, 
© In amount as 16 bushels per acre | au thoritios, k sanctio; ts ue o novel ; and and one weak. The panaan depth at which the coronals 
ie in nid de 3 This argument looks start- | striking, m e, we n N that it which t 
ely for its st aie the reasoning ; but, unfor- | all cases se with that consideration which its ar- | it "s wi god 1} inch; indee = ihe aiy oe ‘of 
wis based is e ability, the premise upon which | guments, ae heir own merits, ntitled to. Ther re without the aleio of this stem 
i erroneous. Four hels of which mak t di ficult for any- tillered k (he t depth, with the exception of those six 
bs.) contain hosph: ee Cet many, m s r any- that ir d fallen on the surface. 
tot only for the pkan i. en im than sufficient thing that is prepa to cherished opinions to obtai ‘he eer e e A plants tillering d 
PS—66 lbs. of b e leina Di a rotation ayi air footing in our minds. cn the seed, and also from a stem proce eding from 
al in the Si Sauter according to Liebig, | up within the fortifications of prejudice or vait, it; gorr are othiis itk a very short development of 
o 5 of its phosphates to the | lest preconvictions should be assaulted and taken | this stem from the seed to a first coronal, a further 
onal, 
oor, it may be š To be sure, if y f dev g Dá 
Very ina, ered p supposed that 4 bushels will} The value of guano was at first denied, and after | third coronal. I send four plants as specimens of these 
is true ; it if nee oe for a rotation. And two years nig pat as Larges doubte d; ; yet varieties. No.1. The seed deposited 1} inch deep, with 
uppl A prvi; inadequate so far t it is wele development of stem 4 inch long, in a horiz 
Pply of phosphates ; and 16 bushels | garden and the con tory: and ie cit who | direction to. the 
n equally inadequate manuring, far ‘arms a “Mignonet te bom, vies with the lord of a eht to th 
d anythi lse s oronal, mer each of these coronals send up t 
ord i shoti 2. The seed depos 
In excess, but they} On the other hand, there are those who hea ze seareey mre enone of stem to the he first 
d, if we save | matter. | upon a 
ng that which is not ve 12 bushels of bones, | quisite adopts the newes cut. A minnow in “thei y 
d PR uired, this economy | eyes becomes a whale. Their mountain, however, ne thease rene rag n oe cor the patient the first 
ertilising matters which | very often brings forth a mouse, and con eoavenyy | coronal sending up three n the second four Bo 
ini i istedi one in 
e sceptic. and “the ‘enthu- 20 0 plants with stems < ri Toni } to or es Jong). No. 3. 
nehes deep, wi oie yee 
an i 
i! equally os ential. a pae A pees wii 
ìt is true, conta; E lis really true. Peg tt wpe tea possessed of {to about t} inch of = "surface Ne 4. gs Rd de 
reby. perhaps pro: AaB RA 
5, 
ae i Be a 
Reais than ‘night be imagined. an hion sends out two shoots, a curved upright ener 
+ 
e sa ppr; idea from perishing by liida te rther upright elongation of stem of pof of an inch 
ina t 
c y, 
and then enpad . Constituents as ey a: 
Practica Te more cheaply. the othe ens 
for bones, if he ra of giving 20s, | not 
lec P 
relat Mest a and equally erro- within peer inch of the surface 
ous nunc i > that of delay. One A cares that the whole of ye 20 plants, 
for argument, the other does not wait to be | with two “exceptions, having this stem neck over 
i f the 
ught that it rae convinced, and it pieni when the combatants have '% inch long, are very weak — that one-half o 
