u N E N A 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
38—1852.] THE 601 
PERUVIAN 7 J ROYAL aiy cn tte COLLEGE, at On the other hand, the least waste of 
RIGULT RISTS.— TRENCES th li f 
Gs A i — I = — ss ng ee IRE ve adulterations of this Patron—His oe hm sins rere — 3 e atine, Eerd e pst pro be application of rir x — 
MAN U RE e “ND SONS, AST THE o ie Present — a 1 Doct. the e interesting view of the nestion. since the 
S OF PERUVIAN GUA r. J. 8. Harosnre, MA, 141 1 of horse-la = is oom ly complained of. 
PESSORS, &e, 2 
r it 1 an G ht sn and 
9 1 all others who 
a 
m they purchase will 
the security, and, 2 apres to particular 
ttention to that —5 ANTONY GIBBS anp SONS think it 
well to remind 4 that 
owes price at which sound Peruvia 
mo has been sold by them during the last tao jiire So 
9l. 58 
either leave a loss to them, or the article must be adulterated, 
12 — The following Ma are manu- 
— at 2 Lawes’s n Deptford eet : 
Turni ton 0 0 
Su aperphorphats o of Lime oak 0 0 
Sulphuric a and Coprolites Ri 0 
fiice, ind asoman yg City, Lon 
N. B. — Guan contain 10 — cent, of 
Ammonia, 91. 10s. mer 11 I ore, Nl. 5s. per 
ton, in dock. Sulphate of ‘ammonia, &. 
per ton, less 23 per v 
Any 3 made by dealers at a lower price must therefore F 
| College miio of Lectures and Pr 
th—though for younger students a longer | 
general as 
20 
Chemistry J. A. C. Voelcker, Ph. D., F.C.S 
, Zoology, and 
Veterinary Medicine and | — T. Brown, M. R. 
Surveying, Civil E tics—W. 
It i e that the construction of the 
baie involved but w Atu 5 be its construction, 
the 
ng, 
Manager of 2 Vallea — 
Assistant to 
The nex be ae -à 
22 41 der 
Boarders 
‘ete in one twelvemon 
i 
erage ed before horses or behind them, 
a * as the Am erican, or three, a 
— case of Mr. Maxx's, going over furro 
i idem not only incre. reases the amoun nt of — sty 
as ba t otherwise tends to injure its working. 
e arises from a difference in 
ete wry ng Eis ay "jlo COMPANY offers on 
r autumn sowing, Linseed, 
8 
g 
a 
4 
sale, 
r ton; highly 
concentrated Fecal N. 19s. per ton; e 
of Lime, A perton; Turnip Manare, "4.108. per ton 
Gypsum, 1 ig per ton 
Orders and applica cr for agencies to addressed to 
pe Dopps and Co., Managers, 102, Phe Rar pon Dlg 
[LINSEED C CAKE, Foreign and English, Rape 
vian Guano, Gypsum, Salt, Peat be gre 
and sit . Manures > komn vai oo on sale.— pply to 
MARK FOTHERGILL, 204 a, U es-street, — 
Euglaud. 
Association may be ha 
| stamps 
be had from the ae 
Joux Moraan, jun. 
Offices—No, 2, + ee 2 Union Passage, 
-| THE DORSETSHI RE = ASSOCIATION FOR THE | 
MPROVEMENT OF gee POULTRY.—The first 
Exhibition of this Association l be held in Dorchester, on 
THURSD 1 n to all 
tion, may 
or 
ps — the — 2 — Ah to be made (on the 
Forms only), on or before the Ist of October. 
Dorch . J. Arpnrews, Hon. Sec. 
THE HYBRID W 
8 for sale by Mr. R. RAYN 
(YHARCOAL AND wide MANU RE. Pro- 
use of that valuable manure PEAT CHAR- 
with the fertilising matter o 
Fulham, Middlesex, at 60s, ds. per cwt. 
half cwt. * 1 Nee 
and Wealth of Town and Country by | Uni 
Le MANURE conveyed over- 
land by 
REEMAN ROE, 
HYDRAULIC ENGINEER, 70, STRAND, LONDON. 
Farms supplied with water by the 
HYDRAULIC RAM. 
WELLS SUNK AND BORING DONE IN ALL PARTS 
Town or Coun: 
RMICK’S PATENT AMERICAN Ri REAPER 
ad by th 
11 — e Fire Bogine or or Liquid Manure 
it is by far the c! 
out. Galvanised Iron 
ft Pam te price, 
Gutta Percha Pumps, Gutta Percha Tubing fo for ligua M 
— — ser Gutta Per ae 2 ‘for 
—.— — dated it „* — 
— Lan — Leather Hose and B anda, 
and 8 Improved 1 Knife Chaff M “ye 
obtain 4 e prize at the R. Sh 
2 55 — and every kind of Agricultural Implement 
BURGESS & KEY, 103, NEWGATE- STREET, LONDON. 
ATERPROOF ea pera — would 22 s 
their Gardens during the winter nths should con- 
struct their walks of PORTLAND CEMENT eS 
which are formed thus :—Scree A shag of — the no 
is at present made — — it, a 
to every part of clean gravel add one of — 7 r — 
five such mixture add one of Portland Cement, 
and ate the whole well in the d te before applying 
the . It may then i thick. 
has 
— ms ly handle “the simplest implement of the 
Society's Show wile towel and j 
at every ” Starbuck's American Ploughs, 
2 werner Suffolk. Price 60. x per qua. ee sacks 
and d ey tothe Bury St, Edmunds — a the Eastern 
on Ran way. The collection of specimens of rii phan 
cmt wa be Mr. H. RAYNBIRD is ‘highly spoken of iu 
of the Juries of the Great — — Class — 
ae. letters have 
seed w: —— 
— * — 
—.— to whom 
Furth — — rs will be sent 
ame op tion Maai Mr. LN of Hengrave, — to Mr. 
Hg sinner erstoke, near Andover-road, Han 
FAR 3 
4 Ree LET, ESS MAISE 
* b capital Sheep and © arm, — 
310 acre, of w 3 are Arable, » * due e Field 
Barn The Farm is i f bein 
"al 
„ ately on either si at the middle of the 
Prospec — noes and information can be had on application to ridge. In the furrow this generally arises from a 
the Principal.—Oirencester, Sept. 18, 1852. less depth of soil ; at the centre of the ridge as often 
THE BIRMINGHAM CATTLE anp POULTRY from improper manuring as an extra depth of soil ; 
pins J: ear 97 157 Foorh GREAT. IX ANNUAL EXHI. for in laying o e ridge, an open furrow is left 
: — : ? 
näs of DOM TIO POULTRY will be eld in BINGLEY = apd which twice the quantity of manure is tu 
— ALL, BIRM yed Lath 15th, 16th, and ith of ere is also, generally, a finer mould at the middle 
Decem 2 Brion 2 any farther in than half-way from it to the furrow ; hence, a finer 
and closer braird. Now, 
harvest is obvious ; for at t is pe 
the 8 e 
furrows, like the hair on j — 
to either side; a state of U 8 
from improper — and presenting 
the reaping ine almost insurmountable. 
It is very obvious, therefore, that, to prepare the 
ground an * Da of the reaping Lain wae in 
the mos ssful manner, furrow-draining or 
ie e — carried out to a 
2 
oe to 
d of perfection than bas yet been 
egree of perfe attained, 
generally speaking ; pal ee e this, a — Ap level 
rer: or oe — is im 
we have 
ws fertility, — qi 
o the in ew cannot be obtained, 
if w we — — * se 2 Armas obtained, then 
the whole of aer — „if laid at all, would be laid 
in one directio bein ng laid thus, it would not 
that N Pate to the reaping — 
which is now found in every instance of laid corn 
d Hom 
thoroughly — | which is 7 — pt — — om se will 
— —For particulars apply to Messrs. BRAVEN — ER and 
TR — Laud Agents and Surveyors, Cirencester, 
The Agricultural Gazette. 
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1852. 
gages FOR THE es. WEEK. 
Tuvnsnar, Sept. 23—Agricultural Imp. Society of Ireland. 
e a 
>i iquely it cannot be who lly 
— 222 — 
1 to sre old wed roe an apprenticeship 
ork 
f 
and therefore its application to the r 
0 we moc rd admitted. If it 
we are efficient workers of the reaping mac 
The question is a broader one than at first sight 
t to be imagine 
labours of harvest, but those of seed-time also; and 
i principally in consequence of this latter view 
at another, with 
e | such i give rise to ag with a 
with open furrows, instead o ing ! 
cut the corn imperfectly out of them. + 
The reaping machine ds 3 
ds, with low fences of equal height; for whe 
aom are sm ey a greater waste of 
labour in turning, besides less or more dam 
age 
“eg the crop, while the crop itself is more liable to 
irregularly laid and twisted about in bad weather 
than in large open gt ; and this latter result will 
i d ing in fields or hedge- 
eir consequences. 
In many wood tricts it would no doubt be 
difficult to comply with this request, owing to their 
subdivision. But, at all events, if we cannot ke 
unequal manuring, &c., as bas y 
shown. 
The rag bres mand of the reaping machine brings 
of the question that we at present return to it, for we 
ing our Wheat lands for seed, and it 
ri 
is of importance that in doing so we should be s e ee te o work it, as is the case with 
paying attention to the demands of the reaping sowing, threshing, and c g machines ; and 
h ng harvest. we are driving | where the en e aan are equally difficult. 
est field, where special hands will 
in 48 hours it becomes ard as a rock them t horses mere 
egetation cannot grow through or upon it, and it resists the te a A of having to undersell few of our ordinary plo — en pap. á 
a ca m frost, 15 3 8 pool; and if o bourers continue to leave us for e of the state of bp i T 
towards the sides.—Manufacturers © p the “ diggins at the hey are now doing, it is | of the machine under ance: 
and Sons, — Westminster, een A dificult to say what may be the position of our | idea of driving Bey! horses — e 
(YARSON’S OR ORIGINAL ANTI-CORROSION harvest in — or how ieee we may of taking breadth crop, wi 
C snes at i gg n gine British eek other upon the reaping machine for the security of the | to ` 3 of the ga fren the ability 
Dock Companies, most publie bodies, and by the Nobility, epee gins o: nae s ihe 
Gentry, and Clergy, for out-door work : t demand of the reaping machine in a mower to talk of going over th 
The Anti-Corrorion is particularly recommended as as the most "Head is 7. land, free from deep furrows, with his s ; and | 
every deseription A — “Wood, Stone, 1 a e d other unevenn ‘ing obstacles ps tic la, = 80 ret 
work, as has been proved by the practical ’ upwards | to successful w inequality of | we fear, have imagined during the bygone harvest, 
= and by the numerous (between B00 and 6 600) testi- | f he horses; 1 long agon of crop, and although it is one which must be 
Än its favour, and whicb, from the rank and station in aranght to th di by success can oximated, 
society of those given thew, have 1 been | hence its being : ae 
publio mete e . — E the| weather; and unequal resis = the seen, | Haren is = = = tom ing 3 
282 Bl bosons on eppliceton oe Waren e 2 beet cata caving haggle stubble of ere ved that the latter most no aot be laik ight of during 
ALTER Carso e S. 25 
2... . varying angles, the machine |the former, and hence our present ou 
requested to be sent direct, can never work well, even waiving the question of preparing the groun 
