THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
~ * Feprvary 19, 1859.] 153 
its nine character. The of its high nutritive properties as good for stock. Its } would have yielded the heaviest weight of produce, 
inspection M etus — fa fare — the utmost attainable productiveness far ex 1 d known ag ge nd it is the time the — o n = ed, the lot s ith 
demand wou ce moderate as compar ith an wh r Barleys are not arowa dissolved bones and West an guano exhibited the 
supply, enis 1 Pla givea very large profit to the | The. The m alone uini chjection able; I suppose it is gre eenest a nd healthie st moe and probably would 
— rain, The waste and refuse of a great fishing | gro n China. T. T., Emsworth, Han. weight if they had n | Brn in 
* ly the materials cheaply and without e Longe essing.—Your correspondent, vers pulled. "The variety Turnips, Fosterson's 
prm PEES ill be a t gain hing | anre about this composition will find i T ‘he soil is open clay, ver on ep n- 
— e tain a certain and constant demand for respect. completely eff. without „and is rather deficient in or gani tter. 
rr Et abel unsaleable fi h, the es “a pid way injuring the the animal, the s sece nd crop of Turnips since the feld was 
E t of m: — stories for fish m will lead to body here speaks of it in highest — and one 8 and no farmyard manure has ever been 
pea where, without such aid, ey could not | person, who has tried several “kinds of sheep Produced i spp a 
mmenced. pronounces it y anyt hing ea uce o IX.—Conducted € = tht Scott, Mossilee. 
riety Hee the chief fishing station in England, hc that Mer HW Nu Gaag Lincolnshi: Man ys st. bis ight. 
tbe adjoining from Lowestoft to Aldborough, Bond's Paper Manag —Ia PuRME dui íi " aid 
offers rery advantage for such a manufac M K sorry T was not able to 5 nd the Farmers’ C Club Pay em — do. car a 24 
emplort s early boats, from eed tons each. | Mr. Bond's paper. should have fe od essary to — TH = 9 38 2 5 
The fford from tons of broken have differed very e uch from him e sheep — aie : d 16 3 
shod 5 - ling at about 17. 2s. per to ps he b experience: Ist, »" es are not so Ammoniacal 19 
smokin ng- -ho ouses, sold as refuse ; and from | healthy i in sails as in the end are apt to contract foot Md RE: "m 1 da ero x land. of ad 
„and the expense if accounts like mine are kept, ui soil. They were "E em with bor nd- 
E t of nitrogen and a very large m of | changing for every horse, man, woman, and child, would —the dissolved least. The Turnips were White 
phosphates, and — for V. re This be 1 enormous bringing home t nd taking Globe sown June 15 . and wei November 18th. 
i sof dog out the manure; and, 2dly, it is quite impossible » ghe 
is independent of the wa ate e 1 N.B. Mr. Scott’s experiment differs from the others 
fsh and others useless for f food, S f which no account is z in opinion a flock of 500 ewes and lambs can m pere 
et which are caught in very large quantity, and | 
d eid an unlimited —. 2 might be — if the 
fishers cou! Last was the 
- I do hope this will cause some 
freni discussion. Z. Beale Browne, Salperton Park, 
| Andoversford. 
in respect that he applied equal weights of 
"d kinds. 
a — es — Such a e results of the experiments con- 
re th 
ld obtain a sale. ear, so grea cted by a few nde the — of the club; and although "1 
h ese do not presen rfect correspondence, 
glut of herrings at Lowestoft, ^ — un time z ample, on the whole, they are 9 * by no marked rad 
were carted by the far mers at 4s. 6d. per ton. An ample, So cieties — ih expetnadte were conducted as A 
e~ * ey could possibly e different manures were applied at 
from the first, pf simply nn from the fishermen —— quae e vaigo — fully — ege Each manu: 
what they will only be too pt to sell; and the RO AGRICULTURAL OF ENGLAND. Lec earn a ial reas EE a prie — 
manufacture, d would be every sense sense of t —— WEEKLY Counc eb. 16.—Mr. Raymond Barker, steclyards, xa that whether — periments. = ore 
national benefit, A small v. P., in the c etter was read from Mr. | garded as having produced negátive results or not, there 
outlay, and large profit. wo G. J. Neal, on his mode of cultivating the Tu nip crop ; | 5e no doubt as re e aocu mode in wi ey were 
to follow out the value of the street sweepings, | and from Mr. W. Ru erford, offering to communicate | de — E 5 - MEN pena — w^ 3 
collections, es, &c, obtained in this a plan he had found successful in the management of | cither in the autumn or spring preceding the Turnip crop, for 
metropolis and other . towns, but the subject would his Potato crop. 2 1 a wetter as of the ented p mai of —— 
curry me too much into detail, and I have not the Adjourned to Feb. 23. — 3 eon corse roll peri iR * es 
figures as to the large sums es to different districts = haracter, but vary in condition’ The result RUP — 
for the contract or privil carting away the waste. F , — bs. tain the superiority of phosphate over ammoniacal manu 
The tion of Antwerp, which pay 10007. adiri os ier In one experiment only, No. 1, does Peruvian guano loce 
- a year to get rid of the refuse of their city, now receive GATAS ents with Manures | the * TA. This soil — wl € psa T= 
: » improved—is rich in vegetable matters, and the result obtain 
of a year for the sw of the on Turnip Crop d 1808, (contin ro vows 9. 206) — pie nds with the results hitherto produced in this distri 
streets and the contents of the cesspools, contractors VI.—Conducted by Mr. Hobkirk, e Weit. that Peruvian guano, as the first application Sat ih he 
converti — Paris soils, superior ny known "on whic! ve 
ing the nu into powerful guano. At srani „ Tonewt. been nder a lengthened course to which 
and Mi is manufactured, which has extra- | Peruvian dms 22 166. 18 7 | pe ano has been fi Eun p nied, such as Nos. 
powers as a x ferti liser. Bone-dust JL 15 822, 4, 6, and 8, — Aal the ts obtained that that manure is 
ext). Dissolved bones 19 6 inferior to a * _— guano and dissolved bones, 
Peruvian E and bone dust, mixed eb ^ 91 83 as well as pedi. à The weight of bulbs 
equal val oo ii 4 | produced from P Periti om xperiment No. 8 less 
— den e. aom than the weight peodneed fro from. four distinct Ra guanos 
om 
lages.—As — plans of EU nd their cost 
have been uim discussed lately in your Fue 
hIh 
pulled: and itd on the 13th of 3 Var iety— 
Parple- $c p ES llow. The soil is of a light £ friable 
and is man 
urial — tion. Soon after 
med a 
plan ee per 
Cheshire, and t cost. The 
three 
ouse roo: 
a kitchen, 
ry 9 feet by 5 feet 
15 staircase, 2 feet 
ht — 
FSS! 
S DSS SSS 
— 
b o 
d e S. 
„ DL 
— peh p 
» BEBIS Z5 
So ee 
wm t bo to 
i 
|e 
1 
ns Total for three 
nal obtain a 
— 
rim 
c e e 
each 
oven, | being epe 
described 
róbin, 15 fest — [omes 
e} esr 19 12 7 Chilian 
small Baller and manure 
g A 
Ap — umo dm 
plots assu 
mon 
ured with 
dar 
followed by t " ve with the mix- 
in the 
he crop, an 
the comparative small wei: hts, con- 
sidering the condition of the soil, the sound 1 only 
e 
aa 
aon vian e appe and bone-dust mixed 
Odams b blood manure. 
Dissolved "t oe 
Remarks.—Variety of Tu rip Wii ke Globe. 
were sown on e 12th of June, 
on the 5th of ber. Whe 
p ia i 
cane 
Peruvian guano 
Peruvian —À and dissolved bones 
mixed . 
C 
est Indian Le 
= ‘ 
. £2 2s. 04, 
h 3. 
prom s Britis à 
2 e Eus manure 
[i 
nes (Ovens) 
were sown s" 5th: of June, | 
he lots 
and o quc ye and weight on the 3d of December. They 
the plot sown i with Pert 
the 
jured by the TE but There has n 
erar ian guano suffered m ost. With | 
excepti 
with which it was —ů e à to show the average results 
obtained from six experi 
Ton. cwt. ar. 
Peruvian guano produced 21 16 
Peruvian guano mixed with dissolved 
bones, or bone-dust * 
25 : i 
Dissolved bones alone aterson n) 24 
anure stands at the top of two out of — pi 
Townsend's m 
h manure has proved inferior in all the experi- 
— 
more frequent i it 15 me 
— tr food for plants 
creasing 
not Pd» d of the ambition 
eal agriodi ai, but also 
of the practi: 
of science. 
contains a detai 
— rts on the imple 
wem and rer exhibited at Chest 
mposition n-cake— directi 
he management of Portal ble Steam 
the We e of N 
British guano, the 
and blood memi 
lin Smith? histories and desc 
About the end of A 
med a 
wie * mang so well t ees is no prier 
n presen 
riance in shaws than any of the. the other lots—so much 
that if both shaws and bulbs had been n weighed, it 
Mr. Henfrey’s pape and 
Dr. Voelcker’ sanalysesof Cotton-cake! die liquid a in. 
