w 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
649 
41—1 ain THE 
mAb ge 78017 TURTE 
AGR — 
ASh ON TO A extensive adulterations of this 
ed o 
MANURE are still kr AND SONS, AB THE 
ONLY sgh enh faf PERUVIAN | GUANO, * 
their 
ora rable: eag pte recommend ee — all — whe 
t 
the parties pa whom they purchase will 
course ey the best security, and, in addition to particular 
attention to that — 3 GIBBS anp SONS think it 
gwellto . be buy: 
lowest po te price at which sound Peruvian 
Guano een sold by ~~, oe the last two years is 
91. 5s. per 
Any 8 mads by 8 5 a lower price must therefore 
either leave a loss to them, or the article must be adulterated, 
Dose bost LONDON MANURE pec agli’ offers on 
s Wheat Manure for autumn sowing, Linse 
o Cate, es gem an Urate, oon —— of Lime, 
— artificial man of Salt, the 
— dg N ammonia and 
ae than — ordinary agricultural sa 
ER, Sec., ge-street, — London. 
58 following Man are manu 
factured — — ain a Factory, Deptford Cr wt 
Turnip M ＋ on tee 47 0 
8u — aia woe 1 0 0 
9 e ed. Kine As oy 
N. B. — bart, — 
Amoibnia, 91, 10s, n; and re 5 — or more, 91. 5s. p 
ton, in dock Suipha — ammon 0. 
INSEED „Foreign and English, Ra — 
Cake, P. n Guano, Gypsu e 
K FOTHERGILL, 204 a, Upper Thames- 
0 
mote the Health and Wealth —— 
increasing the — of that valuable ma 
ont 8 ed wit 
mantel The ammonia, 8 an 
and Country by 
e PEAT CHAR. 
and soft, 
— Oe per cw 
M PATENT — REAPER 
rous Prizes during the present season; 
others, tho. e award of the Jury appointed by the R. A 
r, after NINE — trial upon all kinds — 
peter er. — Winton’s Fanti enn. —— 
recommended b; 
y Mr. 
ur; they obtained the s Sliver Medal ae 
Roya 
and Garden purposes, Gutta 
ery m price. 
perap Percha Pampa, G Gutta Percha Tubing for Ligata 21 
u 
th 
ate 
a and Bands, 
and Chandler’s proved Scroll Knife —— Machine has 
be erry the dict x the R. A, Society's S 
er show this — 10 
Grain Bruisers, and ev: 
— make four 
ving, and importan — ent of the 
RS, Chaff. Cutters, Plougbs, Threshing 
M Flour Mills, Light Carts, Mining Toole 
ick and Tile ditto, Corn — 
achine u Order 
8 
EF 
ae 
AL. ANTI-CORROSION 
Sr sete n 
ny, the c 
public — by t rate Nobility, 
seats, 
„ and w 
society of those who — od given “them, have 
anything of the kind hitherto brought ber 
í 
treet, Royal 
Agents, All orders are particularly 
IN NGLANE D v WH EAT. 
AM GRIFFIN, Eydon, Davent: 
that vering at Banbury 
Wheat, in quantities of not less . half quarte 
52s, per ing saske. 
F 
— 5 makers — erably more | œa 
-| the 6th of NOVEMB 
L AND SEWAGE MANURE Fro. ved 
t we have all 
os GENERAL LAND en AND 
IM T. 
ag ets 
Sir JOHN SHELLEY, „. P., puty Cha 
Empowered by Act of Pactianient to . at vi 
— phei (including outfalls through adjoining estat vey to 
erect farm- fang cng and to carry out every kind of permanent 
— vem = n estates, under settlement or disability, to 
ride the m ney or to enable the landowner to employ his 
— capital ate execute the works by hie agents, under the 
superintendence of the Company, the fe rn of the outlay and 
gae a tendant expenses being charg the property by 
way of annuity, Baia the debt 2 “the rate of 6l. per 
ent, for farm-buildings, and 5l. per cent. for drainage, roads, 
— other — LIFFORD, Sec. 
Offices, 52, Parliament-street, London, 
HIN AND HOME COUNTIES 5 
2 
POULTRY 0 NG 
The First Annual Exhibition of this Society, will be — eld at 
Hitchin, on the 20th, 22d, and 23d of S0 an 1852, when 
Prizes amounting to upwards of 800. will be offered for ‘public 
competition. 
Hitchin is a first class station on the Great Northern Railway, 
30 miles from London ; at which epee ad a junction with — 
and Eastern Counties R ations a 
t ay be had on application, pi the Secretary, by 
inclosing two pay stamps. Entries for Exhibition — on 
ER. p —.— to the private view on 
Saturday, November 20th, by a 5s. 2 1 — 1 
——— ey — available for the three days hibition, 
n Mond he 22d, or — the: 23d, 1 
“i Goopwin, S 
The 8 a the G pnt 2 and Easte rn Count 
Railways have agreed to strates s on the — So sie 
to pode sich 83 — SIP Ne for — ee (at owner’s 
risk), and to we k free 8e that is unsold. 
of B. T. 
, Corner o 
ceadilly, 
f Halt 2 Street, 
summer are also favourable, a fair crop may, afte 
all, be reaped; but these are but exceptions to the 
ge eneral e experi f that failure in the harvest 
field which ordinarily follows por a state of things. 
closer examination of the chain of facts which 
any impre those 
drained, . the whole of the subsoil wi 
w 
c 
by th he d and removed faster than 
otherwise they would be; so that when the sowin 
eat comes it finds the subsoil open fa 
which the surface 
(the Agricultural Gazette, 
TURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1852 
MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. 
— October ry a ome ie Imp. Society of Ireland. 
0 
and certainly the par sent season is no 
to the general ru 
There is another — effect produced b 
and au 
an exception 
5 = Se eee dr ands while they render that o 
Autumn rains are now beginning to tell which A undrained more sour and rious to the f 
the drained and which is the undrained field. plants. In the former e carry off of 
i the difference between ye two (ot other those mineral substances which give to soils of this 
things being equal), is such that = riya is n class their peculiar tenacity, thus increasing their 
necessary to gi curate idea On subsequent porosity, and hence r capability of 
average of years the quantity of rain which f s being e easily and effectually drained duri 
et this season is greater than that which falls inter w 0 re more frequent and less 
uring winter, spring mmer e average h 3 : : x 
th of the 12 months be 2 inches apiece, that for 9851 oe a my press ga ere pond 
1 — 2 ; Fg 3 demand as Panie siderable, for in Huntingdonshire pond-water con- 
pon this stock of water and the 3 ion o i . 
the surface of the earth are reduced to the yi. h as 40 grains. to. the imperial gallés ; 
1 
2. 8 
=< 
0 
5 
to the 
e ss 
while water from wells yields 
allo: 
ciay 80 
farmer sagem 7 to the dr ary soils of Berkshire, 
Berwick, o if ted i 
gz 
ould be are 
at a loss; certainly the practice with 4 h he = 
n the most familiar and ithert 
2 that of 3 off Turnips with ese. would 
the last he would think of—and he w 
E 
— 
off will, of course, depend upon the quality 
of the soil. th I e La wid 
drained, such washings of the soil, 1 with the 
action of manur ures, and of the heat of the upon 
it, and the e the air throughout it, mt 
c EN sterile appearance of 
clays of the las, yawe, and coal 
probably kis some difficulty in re the effects |‘ 
uch a simple agent as an inch and a 
t of a healthy and fertile loam. On e ther hand 
on a ict land, until its fissures 
closed, hea i i 
|p or r inch draining pipe. 
The grand w — nae —_ is the 
harvesti ot crops, si angold 
and Swedes, — * getting ; Wheat i into the ground ; 
it is in these ns that such differences as 
aded t more particularly ` expe- 
rienced. The Pissing of Wheat- — for the 
ensuing green yet be performed wi 
8 
— 
— 
or the cups become the recipients of a mass 
= _well-worked olay, which when hardened by the 
as mpery many bricks. The 
= 9 Whig Hy We such a state of things 
— — scarcely be mentioned, for the 
soil becomes a 
ody, so worked, that w 
return rns, it 
have been favourable 
ring 
ig, and if an inch or A of the we soil | ex 
verised so 
re 
— — and if the first months of 
ſurzel d 
Such soils cling to 
e horses; 
arable or 
8 
Wr have received from a Bahr Denton, 
whose name is well kn 
may petent 
to existing Sal piv on the N will 
kindly do so. 
Ist. Are the woodlands upon r estate profitable? (In 
answering this question ap — be had to the average 
annual return — a series of years 9 from timber, bark, 
underwood (if the woods bead nd) rad 8 of all 
outg „and ex. 
nin a compared with the pira or annual ien * adjacent 
1 
8 
| or pasture situate 
2 
