510 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND M UHEURAT, GAZETTE. [Jone 11 
> . 
2 ee ee ee ted and | failure in the 8 or the P 
veri ng ian — 3 tiv mper co his e for that crop that wes otatoes, or any 
wing h luxury: other 
not do. But Icann w the Turnip aem which | instructive. hat would keep, these many differs ent “farms” in Sijs Suriande over 
i versal | diffi growing Turnips that wo keep, L 8 inSilsoeand 9 
I used to do.“ Thi was the almo ty s igh. 
~ a se fifi ie th 
Mr. Owen Wats had a similar complaint with | manures, in the increa 4 328 FEX bo prier ri part A 
erence : e Wurzel.—Mr. SwrrHrES, occupying clay pared with that of a 
= inferior — E ihe ie p ved not grow I. gia in four ae lane ae —.— perhapei their E cle tn ditm 
„ ? i nan 8 on t » 
č faul ttributed for the most part | sown Mangel Wurzel an 15 
to the ie fr s har eii of these crops in the wit perfect success. His pow was :—1, ents peg. 1 is ub eae the gen 
four-course — On light lands Turnips green crop (Mangel . ; 2, white 2 75 E OEA PEA TOENN mer s ub la t Monday ? y 
should alternate with — Wurzel in an gate Paley * Oa: 3 [E vem OP, . : — 2 sR edes, for cr 0 
course 4 e 1 - » thus only once in Be ad T^ 60 Ey g 
— followed by Wheat d Miser, on the county of of Kent, ee ent of 1 lig cht i rest that a oi ns cultivation is succe cessful when 
h a dat — — 
d Dutch with Trefoil sil; but still growing Tarnips wit a — — 
he of y Ee pe Wheat. In some cases amount of suce err e too, but yet, with aD ar. x MANUF ACTURING a 
Oats may follow the green crop, and Wheat follow | an occasional turn of the Giant ae growing | 
Oats instead of Barley after Wheat, Under a tolerable crop rT of Clover.—Mr. th m A 
man ement there is no risk of the land INSON spoke very decidedly, not ; merely on the ne acid, in an agricultural oink of view, a 
Sonat be al C but ek their Er und à n ed hence thi e nitrogen o 
d, id in the autumn | the use of guano and artificial manures, buto ir|is o mic and the come ere ial pim 
Cone before, the e is ee for the prevention | standing to one another in the relation of cause | pounds co ing either “of these substances d 
of perennial weeds, and a spring hoeing of the and effect. We force the spop s its early "e practical c bau to look upon any new method of ob. 
will keep down annual weeds. Care| without supplying it with e food w derata of the day, 
mut — be Mia taken that while destroying | all the more requires during its later stages, So is The at "arto mat Er Mee Penes the elements 
weeds with one hand you are not sowing them with | long as farm manure and bones were theonly Turnip acid, — ing t paupe 2 hes mds A 
the other. Mr. Waxtis has for several successive is we had no Me B. in def on guano crops of | formed; : iy o 
3 4} n 
mi r rod 
1 2 pet . god. 21 arley ; 3, | of ammonia or nitric acid from the elements by meu 
ar: a der sed " erops with those weeds | Red Clove er; 4, Wheat; 5, Turnips ; Mais which would admit of practical application," 
to which the f: exposed, , 9, seeds fazed during those successive years; | After having been engaged for many 
Under Mr. Warrre s fiveyears course three-fifths 10, Oats or Wheat. o spoke of the CAS: mana on this subject, I have arrived at the prises 
of the land are in grain—the Turni Yd [mr mie of salt—3 ont per acre applied wih guano under p * ; nitrogen and 
a half-dressing of dung and a half-dressing of o visus "m ng Whea Ydrog gaseous, or e 4 bre ee 
superphosphate, all the young bert 8 a sHER H t ble 1 „ commer- 
Tp , cially available. To make them unite in any quantity 
dressing of 8 loads of rotten dung a "the eneral subjeot of = meron recom- it is necessary that the — should, in its nascent 
third of the Turnip crop is pulle d ond earried to mending rm growth of Rape seed or other oil kas De brought en [^ aa 
the yards to be consumed by battle, and only seed cro as profitable in itself, and — union will take place, but this co pv 
thirds are consumed on the land with sheep; on a by wa K g tl readily 71 
small portion, some 10 or 12 acres, of t e corn |a rotation. He also spoke of a method of | pro- 10 — nascent a it is of course necessary 
stubble Rye is sown be mown and fed in the curing three green crops fr ee the same land in f its unds, and thus far I had 
— 8 g p mpo 
spring, and afterwards to yield a erop of Turnips, | one year by taking Vetches after Wheat, feeding 2d arrived at t the same o condlusion as every one 
and these have generally proved one of the best them off in April, and ifie Sindis "the land The object of 8255 paper is to direct attention to a bye. 
portions of the whole n the fi illi ant chemical 
ne 
i d 3 which is exactly adapted for our purpose. 
i 88 "s The animal and bees ast have been so 
pee MER Ma ea € tota- enough to an common —— ims or bre searched by th 2 ea — 
Crops ended, viz., 1, , M nthe <3 land may be — and whi n DPR ve 
Temps 3, seeds mown ; 4 ACIE S MAE; 5, ia 0 come u with a second erop my» now mi gen cmon idi in fe laa á 
apr 
d 
t 
autumn ed to th l js "x tig ry 
Tho second year . e is an certes be succeeded by another | beco — — — ages dd 5 
pem 0 ad pes. 
ur of 7 it enables the Wheat 4 5 8 eU referred to the proper manag kho own for years that nitric se, oe 
— ing of a larger breeding 4 stoc san alter- | ment of fences recommended in opposition to Mr. | Ez ends of 
Me Oats may be grown after 255 second year's | WAzLIs'sannual Meer Neira rmed, which ens d therefore the Eo 
seeds and Wheat taken after the Oats. —.— leave the hedge ridge — heier sloping | Lae no novelty; but 2 we can o obtain 1 
Keeping lan rass longer than one side, angular at top — wide at botto n -— from nitrate of soda as a s bye rolas, w M" 
£ di sion a a have ea pud Hap har facilitating the mant | 
" This, I be I have accomplished. Of the thou- 
e prac- | the four-course system of ero ping. Mr. Warrrs's x ually imported into 
d recommen sands of — of ite of ida ann impo! 
» " — imi Od d them paper was no doubt perfe ell Set to the cds this country, I have been told, on good EE. that 
It is well known that sulphuric acid is 
SA ords— | from cial manu ing the cause of Turn urnip | factured in a large leaden chamber having po 
cost of eultivation—the half of the failure, 1 1 HAF not there be grown without it a burner where sulphur is kept constantly Aeg- 
the probable Te-Invigo- | them. had grown acres 2 year with by which it is converted into sulphurous acid. 
n once in six seven or pm heavy loads of good farm dung and | great difficulty of the manufacture is to give 
e to 
— 
d er. Into each 
zu — dr al d as suun the i k few 
s of ung alone, and it was plain to rege 
imet of food for stock, every observer that the crop on those places was peter —— dum M 2 * Sulphate of so lt 
hi He cake) remains in the pot, whilst nitri qe pass rides i 
acre 
| ha 
ust come — here and there over the field without the — in the following ma 
iving e heavy se th peine 
e ago | oth: 
3 red ne^ 4 he yeh. ago he grew 8 acres— | sulphurous acid into the leade 
jing on 40, all up and looki U. Thei fi i ds, and becomes 
m „ we eir manuring was from the nitrogen compounds, and! 
8 z rie hich, with wat 
aay is, | cwt, and 3 ewt. of nitro- | into sulphuric acid (S O,) whic! a 
and R. 
ut to 
ee ge hate per aere applied through the liquid | by steam jet or otherwise, conde 
greatly to ceo mi i iti i a 
R TE ander ads mated ef managemen He found a difficulty in , 
ALLIS concluded his very excellent | per aere, but he no di 
ere wi ith a recommendation to tenants to farm | 4 ons of Ma: 
h 
s e does not wi trav, | of farmers is against him—b LS T ae * 
it rather strengthens it) —to stand for the most 1 agai but t we is we mem should be taken ¢ up. and that sud ni This t) 
part, exceptin such modifications as ** circum 8 oe — — e Pepe vari M 21 
week of riding with | as 
ift.“ andlords ! F 8 Mr. TnETHEWY , of i bable that sulphurous acid, * 
— — reser " the are! ni retation of — i of ‘of 500 ieee emere Wheat |a Tv ibis oxide (N 
ments as would enable an intelligent tenant | has been taken eve — — 
i ty other year since the date ecompos i 
farm bel eoe Re em, "rh ch akez new Poor where = p have Wee [tede to etsi the sient ve 
accordance stances” whi n 
Spas c tal ken nearly as often, There as no evidence | ledge of the fact that a chemi pt 
v 
8 and impossi 
