51—1852.] 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZ ETTE. 
809 
1 270 hd 1011 DIS 8 
NT 05 i GRI .— 
— be 2 otorio us that ose adulterations of this 
AS THE 
blic again to —— F rmers and all othe — 
de ay on their 
bez'a co af the — fr rom bem they purchase will 
of e ~g T best security, and, in addition to * 
to that — ANTONY GIBBS anp SONS think it 
— buyers that 
m low olesale at which sound Peruvian 
price at 
has been sold by mer during the last two years is 
$l. 53. on, l per 
Any 25 made by — = ut a low ce must therefore 
either leave a loss to them, or the settee 2 rh adulterated, 
MHE LONDON MANURE COMPANY offers on 
the best terms Wheat Manure for autumn sowing, Li 2 
= Cakes, “Fe pien Guano, Urate, Superphosphate of 
Also a er of th the 
p makers, considerably more 
— the ordinary — salt. 
Eo wand PORER, „ Bridge-street, Blackfriars, London. 
AN URES- Tho —— owing Manu manu- 
t Mr. s’s ee Deptford ert 
, Turnip Manure, — „7 0 
te of Lim 7 o 0 
and Cop: rollte 0 0 
fiee, 69, King William-street, City, Loud 
N.B. Peruvian Guano, guaranteed to contain 16 — 7 of 
Ammonia, 91. 10s. per ton; — for 5 tons or more, 91. 5s. per 
ton, in dock. Sulphate of ammonia, &c, 
MANURE. 
Ser CHARCOAL, completely saturated with 
m, Middlesex, at 60s. per ton, 
Sewage m manure eria i in charcoal is a first-rate fer- 
tiliser; we have tried it on French Beans, Dahlias, Roses, and 
— H plants ; we put half a pint to each Rose and Dahlia, 
sowed it in the row with Beans, and put a few pinches to each 
of The effect is perceptible very set; but it 
e second year as the first.“ — The 
Garden, by Mr. Glenny 
INTON’S PARKES CELEBRATED STEEL 
t has 
— wir me ee manure * — — — Rag 
Mechi has one working admirably, These pumps are cheap, 8 
durable, and effective. Gutta percha tubing, bands for 
A MoN — pumps, ** m — 0 prize and the 
Vra 
best farm im . Price 
Ker, 10 Mee e, London, agents for 
wy — — Reaper 
The Agricultural Gazette. mn 
84 TURDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1852, 
MEETINGS duane THE 4 * WEEKS. 
Tavaspar, oe ‘al Imp. Society of Ireland. 
Tue 2 from Dr. Pensai in another column, e 
1 e to us with i 
once more under o intend, 
however, j just now, 15 Rag in detail to the style of 
education . at Cirencester or elsewhere, but 
merely to a remark in illustration of its 
ortance and necessity 
ns of garde eners and farmers are 
similar in their object, to justify a comparison of the 
in Wea 
increase o 
if this as „it is e 
. the different * ‘of education omy 
and farmers ee have to 
reaching the position of a master 
a lenothe 
—— 
e sin their details, and sufficiently | taki 
is possible for agriculture : and the farms as well as 
tively false ere are ve 
** de of farms into which tke — of the eles 
s divided, cultivated by men the standard t 
* all will by-and-bye be r * — by the educa 
tional establishments which are required. English 
agriculture has never repete e prosperous as soneg 
day will see a. whe shall never think o 
adopting it they have —.— 
ng i a p til t 
gone wt eee Phe tener Pim both at the desk 
— in the field 
the® iat superintendence of which a dozen 
which gardeners undergo, and for 2% 
labouring at this national task, and although not hitherto 
with 
re ns of this country will, by-and- SD; be in the | crowned that success desirable, yet pr — 
hands of men like Mr. Fett, able to justify their has always been made, an maA n the present occasio 
sitet and na re to improve it, by reference to sufiicientiy pane as nsure the rea sation 
natural law which it is * ed. ourse 1 uecess. The opposition which Sonan 2 
ess, to 
rae are man nhs at nt. Such an assertion, | Ji On. 8 3 255 
deal wich a party by no 
relinquish the A aarp of " forefathers, however 
antiquated ; yet gold medals and silver medals, with a 
liberal allowance of gw ah together with the 2 
fr them 
effici nce 
Cirencesters shall be in active operation, 
THE ROYAL AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. 
wer to the question, “ Mention 
ment ing stock,” 
candidates for the College pi 
> 
hotas o Gazette, if 
the i- 
may mention t that we 
furnish — E e * he 
in connection with the Royal 
pa 3 eek. 
object of the farmer in oe — ow r 
ady is to make them lay on the greatest a 
flesh and fat i 5 the 3 e * at the least cot, ‘in 
order to do this, mal's system must n fit 
order to digest and — the food which is supplied, 
and which food should be given 8 with the objeet 
in view; is it flesh-forming 
principles, But if a cone s given, in 
the case of ruminants particularly, digestion and conse- 
que 8 d : i 
ent 
that some bulk of an inferior kind be conjoined 
with the — nutritious, s such as hay, straw, roots, rA 
nces rich in fatty matters and tei 
iie g 11 supp lied to silty hares, 2 75 bee food, 
flesh and prepar 1 for the 
| tinually pips“ 
da 
3 College, „ during the 
0 the 
inereased unti animal is fit for the butcher. 
e one hand it is consi t 
* raw,” no — his 
in weight in proportion to food eonsum 
— it is equally well known that the manure from lean 
beasts is erez tape A inferior, — that fried fat | 
ones is decidedly su th nD — ered 
the food is uselessly — or at all ev 
fulfil or profitably carry out the object Wedel Again, 
it may be considered that, so far as the fat is con aaa 
an animal 5 a furnace ee — is a daily waste 
combustion going on, and = op maet if the 
being regulated ing to cireum- 
piesn is aad housed tre * in 
. and a n course of study 
5 with * r man ng at — a ce he 
to ur for yea 
zd skill and with onl 
of furnishin 
e | THE SMITHFIELD CLUB’S NEW PRIZE LIST. 
, | fat stock, the EEA, object of the Club; 
| giv: 
1 
be given. It a Appen * that 
wether sheep of pn same 
ceed 2 
rm place, pi carbonace ll be red 
if the Lear is pantie and me adapted to “the! kind the 
us foo 
during the first a of this fattening, and i 
rs | System is right, a large proportion of nutritious 
ought to be 
a the 
unprofitable, 
per 
to be both wasteful 
he present position of agricul affairs, the 
e Smithfield Club is 3 of special 
are agreed that they 
ience, cabs the 
= 
barrassmen 
in e management of 
for, although it | 
at ent encouragemen in 
ment, as will show, yet its main efforts are 
sup -o to increase it to a large —— 
appears and fat 
e! an 
ae among cattle, sheep, and ae e Fa 
earning [upwards of half a century it has been laudably 
to the far 
poxhibition, —4 afte rwards 3 Lr the 
Land's En Ato ohn o’Groat by the E press * yer 
ave not yet attained to perfection in the art o 
feeding cate will readily be granted—the preponderance 
of fat to roves the contrary. 
the genuine 
pounts ne y a task to m 
ma 3 quantity of vegetable produce the 288 
st quality, the grand 
before 
re a hope that such a Lage 
at s 
1 2 dongs hy o distant date. The following 
the impro {aed patie Bak offered by the 
ele Club t to pr it. The whole live stock is divided 
atter com- 
prchending a description of ook which aad not in 
rness be included in pig Regge S 
okies: 
classes, and the latter into five. r to obtain 
the results sought, viz., the best beast in any breed as well 
as in individ re breeds and cross breeds, a farther 
classification is e; the whole is divided into the 
three families of oxen, Bote and pigs; and these again 
| into different breeds, thus: are subdivided into 
six breeds, viz.: 1, Devons; 2, Hesetores ; 3, short- 
orns; Me Sats, Welsh, or Trish b eeds ; 5, other pure 
ains bree bon are sub- 
5 
eross 
e breeds; 
years old, and cows abov ur years 
subdivided jo two 
four 
Th. fon fourth and fifth are 
ach ; first, oxen of any age ; and second, cows 
or heifers of any age, and the cross breeds i to three 
classes, viz., first, steers 
exceed 
old. 
five b 
age, but “ eac 
. live weight.” The s 
8 qep breeds, — 
ow fat wether pens other 
to . € one 
gee gem B could not do were a they. 2 as 
23 
e first d one 
first, pigs of an 
months old, omg 
breed 
—first, the best ox of any breed, age, or 
