THE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
PATENT. 
. e e Bunhill- 
Patentees of 
obta 
he Fe lt Meur patronized a oon By othar d by. 
sTY’s Woo D FO 
HE 
HONOURABLE . — vd gieiz erkin 
HoxounABL ee INDIA COMPANY, 
HoxoURA BL. CustTo 
a sages s ESTATE, ISLE OF Wien," 
5 GARDENS, 3 s Par 
Samples einn Directions for its Use as Testimonials 
years’ spetiance, with references to Noblemen, Gen- 
bee hitects, and Builders, sent free to any part of the 
d orders b t executed. 
t the only Works in London 
set where the 1 a Roofing | is made, are 
— vs buildings, Bunhill-row, 
“Tinton, whe oofs c he Felt m e seen, 
cue Ae Vice Cnaneelior s Court, at the — to West- 
Manutactory, Tami 
re roofed w F. M. NAIL and Co. 's Felt about 
the 'Surveyorshi 
oods 9 5 Kom are 
ave ordered Com- 
heh Bs * * with 
been Are on the construction of Roofs, or 
‘proposed particular application of the Felt. 
ABLE ROOFING, 
s can be roofed at less than 
g the 
3 y 
{i i FRANCIS RITCHIE anp SONS, BEL 
also make Inoporous FELT for lining damp w walls under 
1 ee 1 and all oncom ps! 
t free, on appli ication to the Manufacturers, or 
any of the following * — 
Manchester James Hurst, 14, 
High-street. 
Neweastle-on-Tyne — Richard 
Warham 
8 Vaux 
Anderson, and | Whitehaven — Randleson and 
T, Newington Butts Forster. 
ni 8 6, ene London. 
TO BRICK AND TILE 
Werl BRICK AND. TILE MACHINE 
y’s Office, 1934, Piccadilly, from 10 = to 
Serivener, who has been appoint lager 
9 —— a mile of t ury 
e wanes haiie — two 
on of the Great Western — : 
5 — Chas. Barry, Esq., | 
are to be seen at work at Alperton, and i 
R ted Mar 
f Mr, John Ainslie, w va base the 9 * nents the to the i 
n 
7 lbs. of acid, and 790 bushels of bones. It may 
paro to state that the land is in the occu- 
ion of a tenant-f; 
me 
earth 
nce ; some drills where they 
“ig omitted ae J month after sowing, full 
0 days later than the 
Of oe whole den of acid aha as sold last 
year ge sake upwards of 97,000 lbs. were dis- 
pos — of dir s acid, ony bos 30,000 Ibs. 
a manufa 
e mode 
in 
e thoroughly soaked, and in 36 or 48 hou ones, 
they have got into a state of high 3 
hey are spread abroad as, in making ortar, 
re 
asin, a layer of 6 dust, a 
8 surrounded by an 
k or rim which is trodden 
mass is mingled together, and remains untou che 
for a few ne ata which 20 bushels of peat 
ashes for every acre of the land to which the bones 
are to be applied are mingled with them, and the 
whole is once more dampe rare) to cause fer- 
mentation e it is required for ing. 
Mr. Pusey paid a visit to the ineca Wolds 
a few Ah ago, and Aten be many by his account 
of the energy and intelligence with which agri- 
culture there is prosecuted. 
will, doub 
the lan weight 
Lincolnshire fens. The acreable outlay of 15 lbs. 
pe acre of Ade rier! as a first at which we had |i 
in a solu 
Seal 
this acts 7 as 
a soluble su 
0 
— 
> 
= 
greater 3 of square inches on whic 
r te 
manure simply to the ec ante which in this 
finely divided state they prese 
rain- water. 
fa ace; an 
thus par act ther, contains ‘Phosphorus 
ble and Turnip plant has 
—Rain water contains oe acid, sige 5 5 
the sulphuric acid in forming 
perphosphate of Sine he out of bone earth, 
e inch e surface it acts 
an equal — 1 in the total, owing to the 
it can 
solu 
cak, by acting on the large sur- 
any prea in 253 bushels of bone- 
s the werner 
t to the action of 
A less quantity ‘iui an equal sur- 
e-dust as a 
y depen nd on 5 7 1 of soluble 
me months ago to record of a in Dartmoor, | will genera 
is hardly more ems 8 in the iinit of agricul- phosphorus it can be m 
tural improvement than the annual outlay of 15 lbs. We have alluded to this erie now, as the pre- 
per acre sulphuric acid. How ridiculous the sent is the proper time to purchase pa and prepare 
prophecy of such doings would have appeared years these composts of it, in anticipation of the Turnip — 
xperience acquired in the laboratory of the | seed-time. And the subject i is proper for exhibition 
chemist had rie then been 2 d capable of 2 at any th arkably illustrating, i 
history, up till now 2 various degrees of ene 
reg 
thoroughly. arousing the 
mportance of his deen to offer 
tions founded on a chemical experience w hich hav 
with s 
so rapidly proved their excellence in the ee 
ed, price 60 gui 
A Gorse M$ uineas, including N 
ences given and tes testimo nials p 
Aar Viblakn, 118, Fenchurch- — 
. 
MEETINGS Fi 
ei 8 
THE TWO FOLLOWING WEE 
Ante Soc. of England, EA 
8 cee ec oc, * nand. 
Melrote—Feb. . 7 t 
ley Feb, 17: Carlton on Trent.— 
TET Austell.—Feb. 19: Readi ing, 
SSSR ARSE NENE 
AND TWENTY-SEVEN THOUSAND 
“es "Institution, R 5 —.— of the agriculturist. KESHIRE.—In answer to 
— — ny, 103 a Piccadilly, Gorpon, It can hardly be necessary to repeat an explana- | your 9 7 to ining, I proce d to furnish r 
y yan led as r. 1 Leith- tion of th de in which sulphuric acid increases quota, for mda a, the leas thet ¢ granitic’ any in- 
treet, e uiries pu you e i 
Hi were Mill- "hill, Leeds s; Messrs. Penny the fertilising influence of bone-dust. dient a follow your exainple wh n you ask information of them. 
TY s. Drummond | however, allu it again, as it is ex lanatory also s of Ope . Years 1841, 1842, and 1843. 
r. Pusry’s experiments lately published in the Bal 7 8 itr pe 20 
IMPROVED FA FARMING IMPLEMENTS. „Journal“ of the English Agric tural Society. It Wah oe 5 “Soil, -Ano a retentive ned soil and 
* NG MENES . Power) has been found that bones in a heap with moistened . bein Sere all in 8 whe: in hand. 
m 25 to 88 loads of Wheat-s 1 ashes or sand ferment so intensely as soon entirely eof D 
to lose their structure and form. 5 hye ae 
have acquired greatly more power br 
man 
5 85 case 17 bushels of 2 yielded a — vor 134 
of Turnips per acre, w crop w . 
obtained pine half E ee of bones that had 81 10 
eated in sand. In another case 144 tons of Turnips mp; F 
l che ap enol of 253 bushels of bones, 
while 123 rr s heated in yr 1 a crop 
_ per ne former cas 
sulphated ” bones pie ake ced 14 rane to 
of roots, seat in witha latter r bushels of“ sulphated“ 
ex- 
be 
Barley in 
water, would be useless as a manure 
unite with two differen 
acid ; andt 
Squa 
t luble, as biphòsphatè 
nk of phosphoric acid) it is very easily soluble 
And the advantage of adding sulphuric 
| 1 ra: ae 
m pra and as instance 
ee benefits iat prabels hei" derived rate its union 
LA 
Castte MALGWYN, PEMBR 
Mod 
deep 203 18 feet a 
oken so as to go thr 4i he 
drains 36 inches 851 "he small phe right do 
the fall 
Cost of 
eve acre ; some o 
a ludes rryi 
break * placing in the 
crops previously grown 
to 25 tons of Turnips, 2h to 3 tons of hay, and O; 
n proportion 
1 plough ( (Sans of Deanston) 8 
ued until 
nes as a manure is 
rsa due to the phosphorus with which they |S pore sod us i found t gl 5 
furnish the plant. The chief constituent of bone- j To 
dust i 8 of lime, a compound of phos- — e ee, 1 . 
phorie acid and lime, which is insoluble in pure by ditches, but the whole is ploughed 
water, and which, therefore, if rain water were pure whit T 
No. V. 
—1842, 
n farm 
AND DRAINAGE he Birkis 106 175 
8 — The small ef zan 30 inches 
apar A 
ring. 
the Operation was, on the average, 
f the fields more, some 
qua 
were e little 
the whole has 
Bir jorown.— Date of Operations. 
1843, ori 1045, and 18 
ent Draine 
to ger is. simply this—that it converts the 
e phosphate which they 8 into the * of 150 imperial aeres 
soluble biphosphat From one of the aot v. ay uniform eee Wr 
phosphate of lime it detaches the phosphoric acid, Turnip soil on a very retentive and imp 
and, taking its place, unites with the lime thus gu A 
isolated, forming gypsum, while the phosphoric acid | Mode of 1 —For the first two yours 
which it has detached combines with another por- eommenci 
bof ck acid, and — bushels of Monee 
ast year the quantity used was 
tion of phosphate forming a biphosphate. Bone were 
made in pa y er 2 feet pA 0 
ing opera on the carse 
