0 
15—1848. ] 
THE PORICULTVE AL PALETTE. 
241 
55 A. og ce and C. MAY, wich, 
Kn ee rove of a ohana 
on app 
or er ON AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. Ry 
J. cise Ransome, published _— DGWAY, Piccadilly, may be 
bad through gh any Book: Seiler, price 
— [IMPROVEMENT IN FARMING IMPLEM ENTS. 
od h CRUSHER, simple i in construction, for 
A hgg oat oi er, 11l. 1ls,; ditto, woe Bean og -_ 
, 101 A 
merous persons arming e tensively, and w 
machine), price 60 guineas 5 1 107. 10s., will prepare 
40 to 50 bushels of food a d horses, and other cattle. 
— 3 WEDLAKE & 00. 840 OHAFE-Cl gate ING 9 
do 100 
i= 
2 
1 a day. l. Ts., and a 
orse-hoe, Dressing- W Turnip OURE, 
— — ex dag eed age bigasan Breaker, Bean and Qat 
wo Horses, Subsoil eo 
don 
PROVED WHITE SWEDE TURNIP.— This 
I 1 Turnip is of quick g wth, and is found to 
eli S llow . — stores 
ls. Gd. per Ib., delivered * to London, 
Bristol, or any intermediate station of the 
Skirving’s Liverpool Sw: 
? 
small quantities at usual market prices. time Italian 
hye Grane, 78. . hostel —Particulars may be had by post on 
HN SUTTON and Sons, Seed Grown, Reading, 
ESSRS. NESBITS’ CHEMICAL AND AGRI- 
>= 
— 
F 
Chemistry, Geology, & 
ing, — Ait be obtained in Messrs. NEssITS? Academy, in 
3 
n Arithmetic, Mensuration, Gauging, 
1 i Paeng, &c., are published by Lone- 
way and Co., and m all Booksellers. 
terms of the Rady — oe had on application either 
personally or by letter. 
Che Agricultural Sazette. 
TURDAY, APRIL 8 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
Wepnespay, April 12—Agricultural Soc. of England. 
URSDAY, — 13 5 E: Soc. ea Ireland. 
BD) ay, 9 — al Soc. ot England. 
Tuurspay, —.— — p. Soe. of Ireland 
Paamens’ CEuzs ril 11: Bot! Apri} 13: Carlton on-Trent.— 
r= Ee l4; Halesworih, W e eee N 5. — 
April 19; Harlesons 1 
A CORRESPONDENT asks us to state the particular 
fice which Gypsum sustains when applied as a 
manure. In the present crowded state o 
ising 
of ammonia not er sai 
as the car 25 í A e ert the most 
n 
cc 1 he a Rand to benefit green crops, 
Turnip, Cabbage, na Si vie and legumi- 
as 
the 
ni ar all the other nie regardi 
manes, soils, an d plants which ne withi ring 
4, A to the ra 
a te per acre at which this manure 
a be used, that of ¢ ependent upon 
Whose po mon of the soil and of the plants for 
ad è benefit it is tobe applied : points so difficult 
ice of 30 T rtain, that the common prac- 
0 ou 4 or a ewt. per acre broadcast over 
way, 
ig i 
w 
| fertiliser, 
r of amm 
mended by some writers. 
Tue following figure ee a Drain 
e | Levet, lately invented by Mr. 
Land Sur 
niously t 
simply an angular frame 
a 
5 
me 
eap enough, and of itself — asa 
te gy ly 5 æ indirect value as 
nia. of its a 
ewt. of it to 
e have been 
wards per 
AGE 
BERT BLUNDELL,* 
rveyor, which 
o unite simplicity with efficiency. It is 
dk 6 
edge. 
e up 
with tangent sad clamp screws for the purpose of 
gradually a the line of view, or of fixing it in | side to 
any one pos 
The “ 
peculiar construction 
endless tube, bent into 
Novel.” indicating the horizontal line, is of a 
T he ee is erate wg in an 
shape somewhat resem 
bling an isosceles anes, and having an e 
mber 
globular 
vertical, 155 or base 
free to 
instrument, wit 
cha at the angle opposite the smaller r, 
of the triangle ; m 
w any course and travel t 
8 is 
indicates 
— | thereon the angle made Aio the line of sight of the 
5 the line of true level. 
The li 
stands at 
or up, according as the level of the spirit is below 
or above that point. The comparativ ge 
lobular tog in eliri most of the liquid remains | 
ki this effect, that for small variations of evel in in 
the vert enii 505 of the tube, along which the 
is written, rk a the spirit in the globe (w 
is t e are on which the index is | chi 
val 
angles, o 
distance. 
describing 
ine of sight is horizontal when the sper 
rded) m 
equal divisions on the 
zero on the scale, and it points down 
Dus 
g | fectly to 8 the mode of its use. 
a | po 
ction in this |“ 
latter Hebie: wouid probably require in the case of | 
rich manure nearl y prani Pages arg a 
ed aes much greater than z 3 3 aeons ti 
We add 
followi ng references to the letters on the figure. 
ns 
sigh C, a re throws 
the tangent out of gean and leaves the . * tree to move up 
dent o this must the pao a 
lways tight before on Bn — used. 
Om- | screw which 1 1 the cs —.— motion of the — —— 
| and also fixes the head or fra carrying the tube to the 
—— EE, the arene si oa P ‘the ag erma 2 a 
coloured fluid. i the globular poner? oir of the 
— — tube. H, the graduated in 
The dotted lines are, oue ‘of them, the line of 
sight, and * other, the the line of true level. 
ON THE DOMINION OF MIND OVER MATTER. 
Ir wet pam a 3 in ve 2 4 
one of its 
will sett 
remarkable for ee E 
and his friend “ that the 
great that dey e was — able to bear th 
man's son arkable for the abundant returns 
which the — yielded to him, and for the possession 
ks and herds by him, He was neighbour 
to, or rather apn amongst the, subjects of King Abi- 
melech. The latter contended for t wo wells which the 
former had He ‘ ud Isaac leaving wells of 
e and hatred, and peaceably settling down by one 
w the oom. I g Isaae 
with Abimelech, we find the greater measure of 
the moral qualities belongiag ac, for he 
the two men proves 
that the mind and fortunes - Isaac we 
n 
n the increase, Laban — rd He 
wy nis” s wages and his son-in-law was the object of 
his 
The connection | between men’s out- 
mons and the m ities of 
minds mee 
dent in the succes D 
as it is in the baat ingratitude, and ignominious 
death of Bru 
If he tak Caio dying, and exclaiming “ ‘Tu 
quoque Brute,” as the apex of Roman 
and from it descend 300 years on either side, we 
shall find the human at the interval of "600 
years presenting in every thing points of pe 
At the earlier period hall find 
ignorance, greater co 
ho 
_ : 
would h: 1 
e the moral endowments of 
th 
5 be the index wi constant : and thus 
an equal rise 
p little e 
requires 
— — 85 — along with | 
chi hed | 
y this instrument, N will be found per- 
13, Thiberton- street, Islington. 
