10-1848. THE AGRICULTURAL. GAZETTE: 161 
CHEAP — DURABLE ROOFING. poe than any other tha® is grown, it will reward | our bodies. Every or organ they possess is not only fitted 
ie ae at skill or punish those Ado are without it. to the bady itself, but is also fitted to something external 
jek Te ROYAL LETTERS | It is tlie risk attendant on the alter management of to it. The ear conveys intelligence to the mind by 
BY the crop that make its “ account” so vari 1 e: it is means of sound. But however well co ived the 
MAJESTY’S — rr phe skill which reduces that risk which reaps the | micht be for the body, of what use would it be unless it 
3 eward, and the blunders which create it that api were equally well Ssadi io the: oimorphuro Zia gyo 
3 anp Co., of 3 buildings, Bunhil 28 loss. It h een said sige farmers ought Sohne ys tateliges vagal, 17 mann of 1 5 > 
t however true and ornamental the eye ma 
— 3 TWO SILVER MEDAL 
. Agricaltur ows, it is this Felt 
a y patronized and pe eevee ed by 
Bora s Pa 
es of th 5 Dikes ‘of 8 "Norfolk, Rut- 
S Buccleuch (at Ri 8 
e ane st of the Nobility and Gestis; ; 
i Societys H ouse, nore r-squar 
other description of Rooting, ee 
mber in the -aeniea of Roofs. 
ide. 
E Foo 
f ples, Directions for la Te 200 ‘Testimonials 
seven rs’ experience, with references to Noblemen, Gen- 
a daes, Architects perier Builders, sent free to any part of the 
country, and orders by post executed. 
pn oreo Kunne is cautioned that the only oh a London 
* wher gei A 1 5 made, 
ND CO 
rar Tes ebe ee buildings „ Bunbill-row, 
k The ge- Chancellor's e 
Ags Fett 7 45 m 
t the 
minster Ta „were roofed with F. M‘NEMLL — Co” 8 del * 
since, under the Surveyo * of . rry, Esq., 
RA. Her . s Commissioners of V s or P orests are 
h the result that they hire ordered the Com- 
$ f Pa Beg n op roofed witb 
go more than th 
| r inform afo of Roofs, or 
id any proposed ation of 8 ot jtik Felt 
$ RTLAND CEMENT.—Tes Se ee 
all quarters prove this CEMENT to possess the rare pre 
perty of withstanding the severest frost. 51 to. ee 8 
to every other for 3 purposes, such as building 
Aud lining of Reservoirs, Cisterns, Baths, Fish-ponds, &c, For 
1 al plastering and acer 8 . i Tair es K 
colour nor paint. It never vege and w rry fr ee 
to four times its own body of aa 
Manufacture 
‘Westminster. 
rs, J. B. WBITE and —_ Millbank-street, 
The Agricultural Gazette. 
SATURDAY, MARCH 4, 1848, 
en LEOS AUE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
s 
superintend the z owth of t 
Fie an ling 
f the cr op a and i 
55 land will not remunerate more than the growth 
and sale any. othe? crop as easily cultivated. 
The purchase eos them would be made a prices 
not remunerative, os they m fp so 
dh, salen those 2 ee s t manufactured” til 
to cover the risks w 
ers saint benefit by 
landlord's aoe it is clearly Lan hg with that 
of the other classes dependent on the land. 14 K it 
raises their rofte, it must raise his rents. This is 
simple truth, requiring no qualification by reference 
“ deterior ating” influence of the 
5 mystery of that mode of 
aid t o be t 3 ex- 
don are grown only by 5 
farmers, for they only know not how to me the 
difficulty. Let alone all the information we “have 
received from Sir R. Kane and oth ers regardin 
the very petty robbery committed on the land 5 
the 1 part of the crop whigh ought to leave it ; 
an AP exh austs a receiver, ed that i in rhet h 
cases the exhaustion may be removed by the 3 
restoration of what has been taken. 
Ascertain w hat ike crop oe taken from the land, 
and there is no magie power in the“ fama“ so we 
conose ted wit iha chara sa of the Flax rop 
an upset the obvious anih that if the ab- 
seared meee oe restore soil will bes as it 
spat, —Agricultural p. Soe relanu. 
ee a -Agricultural Soc. of England, 
Tı 3 ip. So g 1 
WAY. N — e, Durham, Melrose. — March 6: 
Clay ian = March 10: Mars fi fia tare Ee Great Oastey, a Yoxford, 
Ham; stead.— March 14: Botle March bs: — — 
2 — * A h17: Hales worth, ia adie ig 2 St. Aust 
ent, Reading. 
only natural to oo. that pe pes 
25 ele will be abun- | 
y rewarde vation is no ex- 
e capital which have created 
. of the details of the art 
E A is of i = aggregate 
is to this circ dance no doubt. * we o anit 
e à t 
as regards the labourer, it 
method of destroying national 
ersy on n has been raging 
us of 3 gricultural se aes pieh ; 
has al e rred to in 
or at i fequeney, we a salsa too clad 
it 3 s to us. however, that 
mes lose sight of 
ths aay sometin : they may be 
ii it turn upon nothing 12 Lee 
e dis n E bal 
ras crop which more aA an 
y other that the | 
aia skilful management. And 
was before that material was ta 
r r 
arkable proof of 
so much labour | @ 
And 
of what use wo 
true to the rays of light. 
Every organ of the body, therefore, is not only fitted 
ees external to 
y 
uld it be unless i it were —— 
for the body, but is also oe for son 
i, and ma woes to tie us with cord 
universe of matter aro — us, In matters a 8 
ledge 2 mes stand on 
hich we ‘Took with ty upon the — ‘philosopheas, 
xine priests of ancie Yet in the lessons whi 
rofessed guides of the publie 
fo vaa in spite at jihati elves, ý 
having their backs turned as it were in the direction of 
their progress, they dra 8 
caution from what 3 alre 
f Rom e pas Cat 
in a vance, ] 
Perhaps in this 
their success. 
The character of mind which * ge to the 
a cre 2 a i 
7 
hate 
Thati is, “be 1 xn 
= es 
A pected oc lay the whole secret of 
sO w 
esses S of mah. 
tle 
dowa bya weigh erence for the opinions and 
practice of their forefathers, we may rest assured that 
in this distriet the fruits of the earth are capable of 
bein pats eee Lan so much by an increase of 
nowledge as by a the minds of the in- 
8 9 oi hen and pharisees in 2 
net squaring everything by law and zealous for th 
raditious; but their minds are -dead to the life and 
ep a 5 or INION UF MIND O OVER M ATTER, 
D filled with admiration of the ac am ot 
Science w vould y to ot 2 Haase engine transporting its 
leads both by sea land, as one of the fittest illus- 
ee, hat could 15 found of the dominion of mind 
over ay 
Letas avage see a.gun discharged, and a bird upon 
the wing brought an me ground, and he will be ready 
to worship you as a superior being y his surprise 
and gestures of nites te he will convince zo that he 
mind ora 
regards it a as one of the aer 4 8 hs 
mat o ma acquai ted w 
the aana si a gun; ; 3 to hae the nature E 
5 let him know = p miopa of lead and the 
LOUD 
sets it of the esas a pA 
aa: rable as less as 
s the eye of the body is turned towards an obj 
before the feet can carry it thither, so the eye of the 
ind an be capable of elevating itself towards an ex- 
eee otherwise no power on earth will be equal to 
the tasks of Pea it. On ceount it may be that 
the value of land is so various in different parts of the 
r however little the real nature of the suil 
climate vary. As the soil is alive to the influence 
of heat iat light from material creation, so it is a 
1 of i be gs ka from the love and the joy of 
u mind. Every wise farmer knows the inti- 
r which a heav sesses of 8 Pe 
ity. 
and ball with 
he re pai yon 8 
triumph of mind e e disco of 
powder and in the invention of the 7 is sof the same 
nature as that which is displayed in the construction of 
i e illustration may serve to 
3 by the Komansi in their conquest 
iba ssage over the 
er in his conques st of ‘Asia, were all pi very ry dif. 
Hgts om ei The mind of the 
r be: er affinity to the mind of the 
avage 1 to cy habits of thought possessed by 
s literature, 
by 
Alexander 
s got charact 
e 
by the unin- 
error? Isit true or 
every Jon odern Fý aue 
whe 
enanta n 
9 — has at ah hts of ern learning, as 
mankind, previous to the lights of mo 2 
to poin nt ae something ra adically and essentially a part o of | 
the hu min 
No vt * “nothing useless or oh tah about | 
2 
t is called this | man 
ancient 
how his ox or 
of a loving eye, aud he se 
| thoughts writes the haggard s tate of his own mind ben 
3 
the coats 2 
Füllt ds of the peasantry with iti of death 
and melancholy and 8 fields will be covered w 
solation whate 8 the ount of skills or quantity of 
— en em. = 
. life eof ho ope and ea and e rong 
witness improved cultivation, althouzh it 
off from “all access to ) greate. tores of know 
anure. 
na neighbouring country we — a waa 
may be taken as an approximation to a 
world never before saw. 
n 
time of trouble such as the 
All men look to A soil as the source from which 
i ion € heo 
bestirring th i 
doing so. Why it is by teachi 
ing prizes for high fed | cattle dwell cultivate 
thie tke a ~ 1 indso 
strongest ù influence opi it, og . me 8 0 
peasantry. Wh wide chasm 
mass of Irish mind and that state a ich ca 
improved by a know! sap of chest o or timated e 
.the rewards of farmin e possible 
a te legitimately’ em- 
h ul 
ployed ia devotin its 2 m this object, and vot 
. — tot sould it o make them believe that 
they were ied, is W of th 
troducing agents in to the country w 
r per by the arms w. 
as i of wrath siy m they are 
! h mind! on ſeeds ĩt with images 
