396 List of Patents. 



and other like purposes ; and certain processes employed in the manufac- 

 ture of the same." — 5th March 1847. 



44. To Robert Stirling Newall, of Gateshead, Esquire, " certain 

 improvements in locomotive engines." — 5th March 1847. 



45. To John Wood, of Leeds, in the county of York, machine-maker, 

 " certain improvements in machinery for spinning fibrous substances." — 

 8th March 1847. 



46. To George Lowe, cf Finsbury Circus, in the county of Middle- 

 sex, civil-engineer, " improvements in the manufacture of and in burning 

 gas, and in the manufacture of fuel." — 9th March 184-7. 



47. To James Roose, of Durlaston, in the county of Staiford, tube- 

 manufacturer, " improvements in the manufacture of welded iron tubes." 

 — 9th March 1847. 



48. To Charles Richardson, in the county of Middlesex, being a 

 communication from abroad, ' certain improvements in making and re- 

 fining sugar, and in the application of the products of the sugar-cane to 

 manufacturing purposes, and also in the machinery and apparatus em- 

 ployed therein."— 10th March 1847. 



49. To Albert Robert Cunningham, of Sydenham, in the county of 

 Kent, gentleman, and Joseph Threlfall Carter, of Sydenham afore- 

 said, engineer, " certain improvements in propelling carriages on rail- 

 ways."— 22d March 1847. 



50. To William Newton, of the Office for Patents, QQ Chancery 

 Lane, in the county of Middlesex, civil-engineer, being a communication 

 from abroad, " certain improvements in engines to be worked by gas, va- 

 pour, or steam, either separately or in combination." — 22d March 1847. 



51. To Charles Fox, of No. 3 Trafalgar Square, in the county of 

 Middlesex, engineer, " improvements in the construction of presses in 

 shearing, cutting, or punching pieces of metal in welding or uniting 

 pieces of metal together, and in pressing or forming pieces of metal into 

 forms or shapes." — 22d March 1847. 



NOTICE. 



Several articles, as Notices of New Publications, OAving to confusion in the 

 Printing-office, caused by a strike of the printers, have been necessarily post- 

 poned until our next. We nuiy however mention, that the American, British, 

 French, German, and Indian Periodicals have come to hand. Also Mr Dar- 

 win's lately published valuable Geology of South America ; the 2d volume of 

 Professor Owen's Classical Hunterian Lectures, and Mr A. Henfrey's very in- 

 teresting " Outlines of Structural and Physiological Botany," in one volume 

 12mo., which will prove a good text-book for private study, and also for pupils 

 attending lectures on Botany. 



