— 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
SF do not becom ard or stiff in any tem 
pera 
perfect] —— and as they require no — s 
641 
-RUBBER PIPES and TUBING its labou wine extracia Gt 
T uad 11585 BREWERS, DISTILLERS. [eto * 1 e mate 2 ag 15 ga E Pod 3 15 ate du an Ths Slowing 3 taken from 
Fis BSc GAS COMP PANIES, GARDENING and | J. erials which go to build this ft pondence, may prose y of perusal by 
SORPOSES, we. produce may be me, for the air and the soil eee at all 22 they can ot fail to impress un 
E ATENT VULCANISED INDIA-RUBBER | have not akee ds in 3 and the laws which ced persons with a conviction 2 che intelligent spirit 
are made to stand Hot Liquor and Avida regulate their action on one another in plants may 111 inquiry eee is abroad, and of the laudable motives 
5 O are at SO m i 
of those aoe 
c 
in collecting useful statistics on rural ec 
a 
ng 
are 1 Page ye for Fire. | May arise out of all; just as a new order of archi- À: $ 
5 nes, G s, and all purposes | tecture of “shes stone ment bót disseminating these for inquiry, ;ezp eriment, and, if 
tines, . , a 2 
nen, cae . withstanding the unalterable rules o d building. i a Pa ae i e L sity an l A 5 
piach bore oP dia-rubber Garden Hose, fitted With brass taps, rh s, ho ver, the best justification which the T á : PPPO N rge, 
*Falcanised cpa complete, ready to te attac hea to he he question is not whether the food system 
cope branch, — eee dole e cture James term can recei lies in the relations, not new in- | th t, but whether it is no a greater or less 
— — Goswell Mews, eee 88 ‘ ` | deed, but newly perceived, which agriculture has of | de an improvement on the st and present 
— d Steam Pipes nd Vale 1 anised Sheet Ru — late years been shown ess to truth of all] methods of fi dirg. Perfection is not attainable in any 
ee for all kinds er Jointa. ar other purposes. kinds. Must it not be a new husbandry in which | art or science, and many of the general ee in 
any 1 chemists, a and botanists, and geologists, and econo- | husbandry, till of late, prove how little progress has 
HYDRA NGI i b ranch * industry. 
ae 
LEGG begs to return t thanks to his patrons and 
sciences in eet sea more, when agriculture 
in former da 2 received the respectful re- 
— 
improved H 
several im i vements on bis Hydraulic Machine gards of the Etelngent t? Must it not 
n. rhc is able to compete with an y sarah of 
Sees in the construction «f the above machines, ifs 
Ts 
Joun Lecce, Cheltenham. 
WIRE-WORK, HOT. WATER 3 
GREENHOUSES, 
ormo THOMAS BAKER, MANOR-HOUSE, MANOR. |. 
PLACE, KING’S-ROAD, CHELSEA, Manufacturer of it ot be anew husba which engages so 
INVISIBLE WI . to resist Grazin Stock, and ren. | § perior, and e ploys Instruments so muc ore 
deed Rabbit-proof. WIRE-WORK i iners, Arches for fe h 
Flower eae. e antries, Ce. HO R. Perleet, nd produces er ps so much heavier, and 
faire BUILDINGS, — and Hothouses, Conser. | Cultivates plants before unknown, and rears animals 
The same heated wie ciples. ATER APPARATUS | so improved, and which, by the capital and intelli- 
— toc. and Country, and Drawings and gence 7 in it, has ree enero n ex- 
— Work for the Trade. as usual, tent the forests, and w and s in 
- Ward's Cases, or Domestic Greenhouse 
mps, the 
midst of which the old dabant ¢ ‘ug content to 
r? 
The Agricultural eine er 
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1848, 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
bag Fe py 1 Oet. 2: Claydon, Moreton ea 
Oct. 6: St. Austell.—Oet. 7; Newcastle, Durham 
ham adjoining page an abridged report of ruer | 2 Volu 
from 
— 5 Porato Harvest all parts of the eri is founded, and the theory ofi it Severed 
is given in a tabular form. e leave the departm -AWSTORNE does not pretend 
sh ) form his opinion from the statements ther do so sich as this; he e es himself to the 
onfi 
practical division of his subje 85 and, at least for; pe 
made, without any attempt on our part to strike 
their a for him. A pec Rarity connected | Present, to details of cultivation alone eavin 
with the Potato crop is, however, deserving of par-| We 4 is he ace, the sae treatment of 
ussed in a — 3 
e, present work does not 2 eee 8 — — 
al performance; it is for th st part 
ee aii is fairly derbe 15 the following | 
extract from oe yaa 
“Itm 
exe e 
1 i might be sup- 
n he bi 
ived; and 1 oe oni had been per posed that such we „when he professes | j 
d parts of Cumberland an 1 lay claim to little other Welt 2 that ‘of labour and 
RUTE ease been active long |r ; h xious to give the i of | wy, 
l People Pe could find it in Northumberland and othe more able ind intelligent than himself, rather , 
mathe Stier places this year, just as the than obtrude his own, and to such arte 
md aa parison of yea uf- their works, ll better serve his purpose, than any 
— in 8 p 5 ier | language he can command, he is from such impu- 
er latitudes, owing to x i 
ipness of ae g : condense and br s as 
= in the . plants thero i 8 E =- aael 4 P- | sible the leading and most striking parts of farmin 
oth "pr “pa wetter — ts agement which th ks in, and to illus- 
erwise inexplicable irre- trate em, 905 such critical rem as the subject 
— 
teat me must, we suppose, be attributed. naturall such eee iik as his Own 
575 — 
s rise to, an 
; Seltener * practice vill ae ” 
sat 
t 
the later authorities on agricultural subjects — 
itten. It is liable to. the faults of all compilations | P 
or 
n a chea 
k 
nce has always taught the 
no differences betwee 
aeg oh practice. errors of this kind. lt is only fair to add, that o 
c 
all, 1 he Sens. that but little = 
h 
ry 
being | a reason for 
that great improvements ea in t 
des of feeding to fat both cattle and sheep. 
hort Rotations, eee sate your rotation is 
short. Many good farmers known to me follow the e six, 
me the seven eee “thinking their te benefit by 
ying long out. notion is rapidly passing away, 
and the sooner the bett he great advantage of short 
i e land 
es, by su baling or even 
by ae ape nna pnia A ‘euch’ their soils m 
ons 
Havinga liguid manure 
8 shift or course o 
The work is in fact a oomp ano, presenting, | Turni 
eap 
course it enjoys the advantage of compilations also : 
it condenses a a manageable space the sub- 
ork reasoning « it.is arate enon which it would take 
; for i m on writings of all ages 
urged upon agricul- 
i which will then more nearly vindicate its claim to 
the title of “A Complete Code of Modern Agri- . 
culture. 
many things to 
tif th 
ew husban iky Fany e 
NOTES ON ROTATIONS, BOX FRED ING, &e, 
Ukin fro 
mended in this journal some 
An serena in the north, with a farm 
8 to adopt an te gah 
st who 
n s ago. 
e demands harontor | a 200 acres, being desiron 
meagre produce ri 
so far as cultivation tevalts approved of that system for information 5 reve) 
p of it than used to reward Lag stating the nature of his rotation (a five-course 
8 the extent of his feeding- houses, folds, ten with 
da Complete Co de of Modern Agri- 
lanted in 
, | sown E in 3 1 
ce | I would advise a 
the view of ascertaining how far these required enlarge- 
$ — — of 1 obar most eminent ; T 7 
ton ation. B ould be very desirable if, on the completion ¢ 
y H. Oae, po it were furn ished with an index. This would e 
a somewhat involved arrangement of its contents, 
as you can, to be pee in „green food 
solely, o of zariem sorts. InitI would 3 Tealian Rye- 
be cut and carried to your stock in e ouse. 
tank to . the u jade 
eows, hor is manure N 
ie and watered cut ground as you go on eut- 
ting. In the field so set and managed I would 
Rape, put in as kai crops are ed. 
Sue ea a Feld would, thus man pater (manured with every: 
ked 2 
By such a plan it is easy to se a great or 
permanent inprovemen nt would = ‘made 0 on the land, 
such varied and successive green 
rops in one ee fel you pant have a regular 
of Turnip in another part 
ting t 
for hay or soiling, with 
8⁰ 
shee enrich Pj 
In , the “ode np — be looked to as the 
ou probab 
ore your Swedes s 
again by Whit prep Aa or et Ist June, if ra 
when cut, with tan and it would. cut two or 
. | three times after — daring the season, if 
same way. 
if treated in the 
— and white Turnip 
winter is 
would rush up, and be fi oe food to be given with 
an aar and third. cutting of aa lan Rye-grass * 
en the yellow or Dale’s Hybrid kinds would come o 
tinmas, when 
variety of early spring food for 
stubble to be ploughed, 
planted sa w drilis w 
g fo or cows , youn 
raising 
food, is part and pare 
int e Inu spri spring | and e e ; 
