eee. 
VIAN GUANO 
ee PTO AGRICULTURISTS.— 
t being notorious aon extensive adulterations of this 
E iil carrie 
auf ANT “ON “GIBBS à AND SONS, AS TH 
to be th vian Government and 
i con and all others who 
e par vies ‘fron whom they purchase will 
of course be the best security, and in addition to particular 
attention to that point, ANTONY GIBBS AND SONS th 
well to remind — iyers tha 
The lowest wholesale price at which sound Peruvian 
d by = elgg | the last two years is 
Any resales 
made sei dealers at 4 bate price — therefore 
either leave a loss to t he ulte 
icle must be a rated, 
‘MANURE CORTINI 
. Also a constant sqpply of 
— for Agricultural Purposes, at = low raie. English and 
Ponia! * Cake, Rape Cake, 
Porsex, Secretary, Bridge — Blackfriars, 
TENURES —The followin are manu- 
factured at Mr. Lawes’s Factory, Deptiord Creek: 
urnip Manure, per ah nwo 
gf sar sre of Lim 7 
ulphurie acid and Co 
Ammonia, 9l. 10s. per ton; and for 5 tons or me 
ton, in dock. Sulphate of “ammonia, &e. 
FOSSIL BONES —— 4 
(FROM THE SUFFOLK * 
1 PACKARD AND Co. “of I wich, h 
very powertul Machinery tor the purpo ose of 
ing these Feet Nodules toa fine Powder, and being in 
the immediat: y of where ie are found, are now pre- 
—— to — — on the most economica: terms, in any 
— apd —— 3 e or Dise solved in Acid, The 
eapest the market, 
and are ‘pecultarly eligible * manufacturing Superphosphate 
of Lime onjunctiou with 
Prices dyed — ra — — with their use for- 
a. on 1 nn to Pe an Patrap and Co., Artificial 
swich Ak. 
ARMERS AND GARDENERS are invited to t 
eee PEAT CHARCO aL 
sex, at 608. per ton, 4s, per 
N AND Co ai: e 
London, aud 17, 7 Pash-strest, Southwar 
and Mkn — urers of the Im ed CONICAL rae DOUBLE 
CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, respectfully solicit the attention of 
scientific Horticulturists to their m method of 
ank 5 
eet, 
aS 
„ Inventors 
y ric hèat as well as bottom heat is 
red m any required degree, ＋ the aid of pipes or flues, 
8. and C ot numerous 
be hee as s references of the highest authority; ; or 
they may b Nobility’s seats and principal 
Nurseries wo ce pale th „ e 
and Co. beg to 7 the Trade that at their Manufactory, 
17.5 New Park-sireet, every article required for the construction 
of, Horticultural Buildings, as well as for heating them, may 
Conservatories, &., of Iro r Wood, erected on the most 
ornamental souse. 'Baloonies, Palinit, Field and Garden 
Fences, Wire-wor ä 
“to's. H. BOOBS “SUPERIOR LOCKS WAS AWaRDE 
patent n RAKES, SCYTHES, 
th 
raming aaa er Garden Tools, Mole Traps, 6s. per 
dozen, Carpenters and Smiths’ Tools, &. Ladies’ Garden 
Tools, 7s. 9d. a set. Sword-scrapera for Gardens, ls, 2d. each 
it Fumiga ng insects on plants, in green- 
„ &.? at H. BookRTER and Co.“ (late 
SturcH and BooBBYER), Ironmongery, Brass-foundry, Nail 
and Tool Warehouse, 14, Stanhope-street, Clare- market, 
London. Established nearly 200 years for the sale of goods 
from the best Manufactories at the lowest prices, Goods for- 
warded to any part on the receipt of remittance, 
The Agricultural Gazette. 
SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 1852. 
MEETINGS FOE THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
hiiel Jan, n= ee ae Agri. Society. 
- Tuvsspay, gricultural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. 
Tuuasspar, — icultural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. 
E have to beg the attention of our readers to 
_ the interesting annual statement, in another column 
F ga * ape cult n 
? 
which the Hon. 
ONLY IMPORTERS 7 PERUVIAN GUANO, | 
ink it | patie 
YER, AT THE GREAT EXHIBITION 
eference will be 
idance many years to come. all 
may acquiesce in the Sondid to which the author 
of the 
are sure that all m ni 
tient and continual industry which has supplied 
us all with so large a store of poe — data. 
Tuere are others besides the a of Ireland and 
2 Celt of Scotland who will improve their condi- 
on by emigrating. The Gee xon —— of England 
or if of the Lowlands of Scotland, in every district in 
T 
in the British colonies, if they are steady - 
dustrious, that comfort and independence which 
they can rarely attain at home. w country, 
y enough to 
farms of their own ; . to establish every child they 
may have, ho owever numerous, in the same inde- 
pendent circumstances. 
To the working 3 with a large family, strug- 
gling vainly at hom n 
with skill unequal te the 
pay high rents with low prices, Nort merica 
: out pmpa prospects of comfort and indepen- 
den We sa — ö rmer article, that to both 
‘ine, classes, pp of improving their —— 
without dissolving their ritish ee our 
eld of 
made for elt mas 
And whether 
with large tracts of unoccupied land, they will find | bee 
d | ploughmen, in the pro 
North American colonies offe atot: 
prise, at — equal to the United States. In proof 
of this, ill now cite from Professor Jounston’s | on 
-x no Ay pan having — 3 for ne a As 
a own 
a 
ent, they be ae 
involved in great difficulties. The Colonial Legisla- 
re, however, assigned them 1 and supplied 
them with provisions for t year. Though 
the firs 
they endured great hs rdships during their first 
Winter, which settlers in their vicinity would not 
ow be exposed to, vide two deaths occurred in six 
tare: against 33 births. There are now 53 families, 
comprising between 300 and 400 individuals, each 
family possessing a ree to five cows, and 1 
acres of land at lea 
however, are the place for idlers. A man,” said on 
these settlers, “ must as hard as at ine sha 
urs uild his own house, m 
found handy, many i their friends and relations 
home would joi 
rofessor JOHNSTON, — his return, made a 
on that well farmed district on both sides <3 the 
Sc oe * hior at the foot of the Cheviots, whence 
eople e 3 and learned from the report of 
92 arish minister, that in the small village of 
Yetholm there were 30 able-bodied men, accus- 
tomed to work for the neighbouring farmers, who 
were unable to obtain a day’s work. “ Alarmed,” 
he says, by the fall nen, very foolishly, I think, 
in the case f pastoral wen like chat, 
the holders of * and had ceased to employ 
a single a ee they — 8 with. * * 
Had I known of a bit of good land Bandy to that 
— 2 could have felt it in my heart to urge 
these labourers to make e up a party among them- 
selves, with a view of going there, and to offer my 
aid to them in their views. How it would have 
Te 
“ill-feeli ing and prejudice iint. it. 
And th then it is that we took upon he quiet 
t most substantial annual reports of our valued 
„ Me L. V. 5 as of at least 
. o agricultur al progress and im- 
ment, with the noisy d 
8 iii a > 
The 5 spry of two of the 
Mr. 
volum GrīrvES was a shepherd at Whitting- 
ham pa abe Border. 
1837, with a family of, oie and only 7s. 
his patos! of land, 
he got an acre of his land cleared. After seven 
vears of service, he settled on his land himself, 
building a house for his 
without the previous erection of a log hous se, and a 
us have.” He has 
in different lots, and has 
on each of three or f 
ery ou 
now 700 acres of lan 
The | clearings of 20 acres, 
The 
tish and English settlers, and of the old loyalists, 
He landed * Frederickton 1 in | © 
family right away, that is, me 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 25 
sae will present to readers a standing record of; of these lots, intended for his sons. His 
ertained, under specified Seema a a success has above the ave rage, which 
reference to to . — tivation, manures, sowing, and pla he attributes to his having had a very good 
to whi 
rofessor Jounston after- 
qually 
grateful for the warm attachment and zealous 
ervices of so good a hind. Had I m to begin 
again,“ said Mr Grirves, I would come out here; 
for, though I might have been more comfortable my- 
self, there is the satisfaction of providing wdi for 
my family.” 
Another of —— settlers, Mr. Pass, affords an in- 
stance of the ess of a small capitalist. He had 
been the maniga chemical work in one of the 
Midland counties, and had saved 1507. He brought 
up his only son a carpenter, and settled at Harvey. 
“ He had done well,“ he said, through hard work; 
and all who have done well sa He 
t home, an 
cou ald be better than that ntry. He 
considered it also to be 3 xy e for the 
labouring man; not worsen aani and, if he 
is comme is always getting bett 
apan river in Northu — county 
any thriving nottlérd from Dumfriesshire, cele- 
brated as the best farmers,and their sons as the best 
vince. Omne of these settlers 
‘Lean, by name, commenced in 1822 with a 
capital of 5l, 3 e carts and a i 
provisions. 
cleared. He Tatr “aM himself without hina 
and three horses, Arig 11 cows, eight or nine young 
a few sheep. Four of his sons are settl 
7 by emigrants from the neigh- ne a —— as himself. He c ers t 
bourhoo d of Wooler, i in Northumberland. Te nty- man would 1 2 legos in that district, who 
a came out Sig d do 
come out for the purpose of settling on the lands of | 1007., but ought not to hive 0 much f 5 5 pv 
the NovaScotia and New Brunswick Land Company ; | labour N ly to prosper. Mr. Nixon, on 
t et ac river, settled 18 
valued at 1000/., and he 
The land and buildings in a a period of depression 
are now wor ore om i. siders America a good 
who are cane! table > 
z3 
Seri = hilly from 
are all thriving, not ney; 
ut taupe sak bringing up families, which are 
usually large, in comfort and plenty. There are 
some irish” Satte oi them who appear in 
pip to be doing w 
In the early part of his 2 Professor Jonn- 
ston visited an Irish ent between the 
A paige’ River and the rend Falls. ribes 
them as i 
r| fi ? 
he valued at 100“. An emigra 5 
20“. in his pocket after paying | for his Teed, i 
be easy, only — — a little to carry him on till 
his first crops e gathered. Another had "Veh 
three years; a "thi rd only one year. were 
, and had an excellent ore with new chop- 
ind rea dy for burning nex is w. 
the most meron le specimen of an Irish settle- 
ment he met with. 
Six ‘allel 1 the Harvey settlement, where the 
borderers from Northumberland were thriving, was 
a settlement soppe neon of Cork men, who 
have not prospered as yet m had 
gone into Maine, thinking to better — but 
a found out their mistake, and had com 
an they went. e of Scot- 
he 
e | tented, depending, as 
re they can get it, more than upon their own 
rry 
spree far above the ev ery 
well furnished houses, and plentiful meals 
days of the week. But mingle same men in 
our | twos and threes, among a great 8 of a 
