— 3 a t| dilution of its r min 
——— —̃ —üK—é—ͤ—A f of three ree crops of 63 b ushels agains eral co onstituen ents į 
ndon o years before and | average o so that, if I had con ntinued | appears equally questionabl in another 
tried it a — Bes huis ‘ot — € "men ae * 5 whole field at first, I should | ch: — — carbonic acid e ir pos 
le w yas — Carbonated 1 s 6k e have had on the three crops 1324 bus els of Oats |s the 2 is contains not only the carp Bl dune 
As the nation: ‘opted v rst piec ich, at 2s. 6d. per bushel, be y arene Passing thron oni adda 
was — . with vl y lite N ee till the more i 5 zo dun aod cred the field | carbonic acid arte from the de Tm 
h ared, 
secon de 
more estie would b be atter of the soil) has the OF the 
occu rrt iil s : sa dn i d cro f nae es better tr eatmeht; so I fall owed it, and soluble phosphates of the sol. Sole i 
. i d commenced by | limed the ammonia, of common salt, and nt ich ef 
Oats Was - —— i — 2 per a 8 per e D ght into a re egular « morali = my | same effectson the n altis qe ES 
the other part I prepared for Swedes, hoe x fege - md eT 8 after s dug — meine 18 solvent an ea 
drilled with bones, —— 2 qu uarters per ac since r at fA df Sider tell the ien but on tlie contrary (t ag 
— — — 2. ), ^ i 
his feet.” Liebig), “the quantity oft 
b malm art b the difference of — to y of the 
—.— pat arom 25 s he ny u n p s here and — Be up AA tena : A — [ot d im 
and Tu urni ps. of the med. pa art was also attempting to ale the vids a o which | salt, - a] does mot e - 
Lus has and t hese | vi th the amount o salts in 80 
mg the dihti i 
f the full the di : € of those fluids» Ñ 
part t that had edi: limed rs sown to green erops, | extracts ill we hope —.— ‘te pages " of the | gr ny comparison da Diet a i, 
and had been well trodden with nw, ji sow: se poat whi e gives pages —.— ase merely on the money o ai at 
to Wheat, and produced a good crop. e par 0 rd 
limed, and not — to a green edis was very light 5 have no C uc on abs 
and unfit for Wheat; I —— sowed it to Rye, ON LIQUID MANURING. nor hav I been 
which answered remarkably and from that Vo one will suspect me of dt i ough they u 
time till the whole deno inte a 2 value the great ese conferred “on agricnlt tur ists s by | I have questioned the deduction E 
course, I have iem “th on part of m heat | Dr. Voelcker; and if with a few s 
field, if found to be loose and light,. which was | ee o which * „Das recently given expression, because they are openly at cla 
en tee the case roi the re vd had nip it is simply i p riving oncl — s with — own interpre cause eme 
own g retation Well attese 
| e er a aer an à liquid manure Dr. lch 
2 pe T p^ EM oy e = 3 for ang enunciates this See other doctrines: mi liquid | In the valuable paper which has suggested suggested this 
40 bushels per aere in a ver nds e nures which I examin — compar — other = two suggestive "Wd rl 
ES 1 th in d 4 th ye fort: — are . am and l and * e 
m 844 the tenant began to vt any mar — um “fertile land. : ca th 
he 
annot avoid n ing the j 
ill then he had not made d eoa: ym ulis te the tota’ ala t of the mind ee , line of En f 
—— — 105 the land, , having s spent a t all in im- | An Ha es for oth of. ctor T hthat liquid à: “fre 
t pi 
ex 
ava 23 "fertilis ising “substan in 
ements, but th acth | 10 inches deep, wi neral and ical. only « on right soils, while on md 
of corn, i the ags M well. Some further anie matters in e . which th the amount it can produce no marked 
details of experiments he gives:—He had tried of manuring $0,000 gallo — Jurious 
carbonate of soda d for Wheat with bad results- g “I belie m clay soils are — more un 
ascendi with no results lt — the early part of the year; 
— yvan discouraged ty its results, After the e application o of p manure to rere soils and fertile quantity “of water supplied i in ary 1 
obtaining a lease he proceeded with frech loams. f n LEN MN. 
irit, and ultimately reclaimed “the whole I must dispute these principles. — s Ts 
land, making 403 acres arable. Th be diluted than even any of the p" g through the soil 203-7 
te hase a profitable one at 1 th, though m produces very marked effects on naturally — The frst sentence in this e Ce 
sie dry the tee -" E h — * 2 and — — A found my experience on a the fi will AL pN Tiquid manare fa il 
sometim is at ey vini ich t 7 | loa The t approved appliances have been it 18 not wa ä 
^ prospect tothe 1 tenant. é —.— and er follo owing | Concise facts s wil leave ! little fact of he land con 
[ g is an Mi aecount of the|room for dou os the inaccuracy, at all events | truly remarks, on 
— | foe danger o f the Professor" — "The seaso having it i 
Most, T suppose, . it is very well 3 has been in many parts of the which th 
well, chalk or malm will also do good ; bat! Pas | United Kingdom a trying one. The Grass in our 
persons, I have witnessed such extraordi- | ?eighbourhood xal, Krieg, for want ol Dr. Voelcker, knowin 
TP am about to relate Plate from th e use moisture. Now, by the i ion with liquid | feel grat or a jud 
of the latter. In 1841, I wished to o try malm on a manure we had an excellent — - pene Rye-grass manure, be it ever so dilut 
std sare CIS VN, which was covered with |}, une rel ike tao many ot h aid our cattle must — P 
very short H eath and F ave suffered like those o To ers in the country. | * week am mem 
m Ta with à a : little Grass of| An ds the Which I write these sentenc 23: | that that pie a - 
on heavy lands, à 
igh- 8 — y but am e 
all "i to di : weigl ed very Mas the produce of manageable than v^ 
at 3d, per load ff Dive nothing oth ki 4 perches — of the — "t the irri ted | i in à my advocacy of a À 
t to 
e t e to and | amoun e almost incredibl : ani 
ik about 35 loads E acre, ata oost ot about 5l. 17 tons 10 ewt. per imperial orti s aiiquid saj T 
covered about 6 acres of t rst pa i nis fully concur. 
which has i 
Dr. Voelcke: 
eep were tu Dr. V. 
opposite end of the field, in E R at manuring, the original cost of the und nd pi 
inus of them would y on - virer aloe hase, nd sim 2 "fi reg lira se . zm 
CI to vi 
regret the tendency of Professo: rV wecker 
4e p iquid man pi- 
and nice; but when the —— ~~ out em United Kin iom a sii e wok Eee en e s — ae, EL f ERA 2 5 
abou came on to an applicati is kind of m. n it p 
on it was of quite a di Es M 
bo A quite a different | as the past H — ears a re that is 
1 ‘omen I and most t unpleasant smell | river containing ta — d with — 57 — ** 
from co Ve it a quarter of = al matters, and found in ited for the purpose. Being 
and in another ni —— "this — me [matter and as I suspected t 
ot imagine — "pon a fallacy in the Professors illustration of the old adage 
to ee Ys 7 ore it is the q 
k e no 
such a 
2 mile off. [n 
fact, a gentleman walking wi 
3t about that distance could noe ea han 
whence the sm smell came, and had 
l | Im; ex ive; 
chain gon, rather than to the price at which he can | ipes are nov 
1 from other Spiran destruct 
pe 
ts of manure — i in a do not ; advocate the i brs 
m of liquid manure 
evin, and 
; S9 um 
field, a: 
ut little rotted on a water i 8 ern Agr 
e par rt ut malmed, 18 utterly incapable of dissol enge 
su ving allt 
= me it all to Oats, and the result was substances required by pl is Ta 45 e mineral 
ncede 
hat plants can assimilate | lar refer 
0 | am far from an ^ ritheet “ite being in —— but 1 an pt of 20 mih — ae talian Rye- 
with: — p * Suggestion so much at variance 2 of irrigation; a fact 
p — Ysiological laws, and every day — aa — - — 
View 
mii — — Dr. Voeleker’s argument that liquid manure This is one — — sujet pner aa 
"^cious because of the extreme state qur 
7 of e considered, not on 
— —— ma 9f, will it pay? b 
t t Tbig, p. 546. oh M — 
