188] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 833 
TONDON M 
7 ofier os und ANURE. 
3 ASURE COMPANY S CORNA (LIME 
* a! ” 5 m Imp or feb 
te cian, ie irem de asada as eh ior 2 5 kag 
i — ery oher Ar ictal Man 
The 1 don Ma e Comp uld call “particular atten- 
mg ure and. AR 10 ibe former vet |S 
i ate 
ances 1equ vired fo dg 
. warded + 77 5 ation, 
miy 5 12. wie D a Blackfriars, 
ola. 05 per We 
S for the Whea 
— 8). 
5 51151251 
VIAN GUANO (direct from import warehouse), 
hi ri — — salts of Ammonia, Phos- 
ee — niained in the foreign, at a 
rt hire eworm destroyer), Gypsum 
Urate, Ni- 
— 45 d Potash, Salt, Bore 1 A and all vibes manures 
erben y tar prices Current us above 
ERUVIAN UVIAN AND a AAN ath oat ON SALE, 
TONY GIBBS 22 70 2 575 an Hy el 
We JOSEPH MYERS AND, Co. VEKPOOL; 
t ud by their mati nents TOL ; 
GIBBS, GHT, anD Oo., LIVER an 
orks w DORTH, POWELL, anp PRYOR, , LONDON. 
| prot themselves against t uences of 
erior and spu 2 ea “Gunno, ye hoe ‘om. 
sd to apply only to ot 8 Kut acter, ori 
ab. ve. oe iho will supply the article in i 
p at their fixed prices, deliveiing it irom the Import 
L(obtained from a large public insti- 
ENSUN anp CO, 61, 1 ch-street, 
jondon, and 5 aed 33 tren South Inventors 
anulzeturers of Impr: ved CONICAL nes DOUBLE 
poera “Polis, re: pectfully ot 
ther mu ù improved method 
pg the Tak 8 875 and to Pineries, N Tenses, 
D Stich uimospheric beut as we s botio eat Is 
med to any required degree, withvut ! L es 
& — hog have also to state that ut the r ques est of numerous 
jey are DOW 25 
er, by which the cost is reduc nS these Bo ilers, whic 
s0, weil known, Sicäreely require description, but te 
— pant them in op ration prospectuses will 
be forwarded, as * s tete ende of the highest authority; 0 
— ort at mest of the Nobility’s seats and principal 
the kin gdom. 
8. avd Co, beg to mtorm the wares —.— at their Manufactory, 
N, New Park. street, 3 article red for 
idings, as elt Bt Tor — g them, may be 
-obtained upon the most advantageous term S Teod 
See we poston or a rected upon the most 
ns. Balconies, Palisading, Fiel d Garcen 
re Wrest os: „ g, Field an ace 
> 
ESTABLISH ED TEN YŁARS. 
„ ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT. 
Parry ‘ arm 
date in he other principle 
aly į r Glass alone, w ithour fost or oy. re d 
pe hag 3 taken up, aud showing a smooth 
heated with Hlos grip ot any sert. Loiticu: ha 
"Sere ot water on the most approvea 
5 F maan Y 
me 
og CHEMICAL AND AGRI. 
$ “ues leas * -lane London. 
emisi eo äi àl ond Agricotù 25 
rey sa bee — ing, Railw ay Em» incer- 
i NESBA's Academy, 
ern e education. 
Works A2 —— > nruration, Gauging, 
no 8, iy 0. 
4 eee of ail Bo = — e 
z ovl de had on application either 
ROYAL: LETTERS 
PATENT, 
„Minerva Works, Birmi 
e box rks, Birmingham 
Bee TOOLS ot Patent SPADEs, SHOVELS, und 
S » Gardeners, and 
be foun Agriculiural Labourers, 
of d invaluabie, and Se pone se o‘lesten 
ow coming genera ons 
Aus he surf, 
into ary the ordin } as long as tt 
and Poe es kind, F udes © 
f e c, the Jes Nurserymen, Market-gasdeners, 
tery Toula 1 
See Meeth kuined two prizes at the Roy 
ne 0 al Agricul. 
eat have} a at Northampton, 1847, since which 
rden prizes and cu 
Kom che have be — mmen tier ome 2 
ei 88 n be: j 1 
e at 
Pon — ad —.— bearin g the 
e Tools i Pi, ‘Potat 
pattern, Diggivg, 0 . .— Manure, 
of all Ironmongers in n 
HEALTH OF TOWNS ACT. 
SEWERAGE A fess OF ig tly D “ig ia 
OODE’S IRRIGA ATOR gives for t 
t 61 
any crop upon it. Stas ¢ 700 BN CATARACT 0 
ad in a 
Nu — Agents 
The Aurttultural Satt, 
SATURDAY, DECEMBER, 16, 1848 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWU FOLLOWING VEEKS. 
TUESDAY, Dec. 19— Agricultural Society of England. er. 
Tuupspar, — ‘%i—Agriculture) Im. Society of Ireland. 
Farmers’. CIV .- Dec. 29; Stranraer, 
Tnar certain plants are so far Dale — fea 
soils and climates, that they may be regarded as 
the natural produce, where others are eed with 
difficulty, if they ean be cultivated 2 all, is an agri- 
— doctrine ad least as o e. e Georgies. It 
is a sound doe e, though o ften „ by the 
great doctors of the far niente school of farming, 
where they argue from it that long experience has 
a 
mprovement on them is impossible. Under a low 
aaa of agriculture the Spesi of the farmer is 
10 collect the natural produce of the soil with the 
expenditure of as little labour as possible. ae 
a high standard, the cultiv ass s — grudge 
ense of labour and manu order to ober a 
pa portionate increase of ‘oad ce ; sat he studies | 
o obtain this by cultivating crops congenial to the 
weil by growing them in such order — 1 Peta 
powers shall be beg ad the best advantage ; 
he pps aced ree. 855 thing else he ae 
25 
When, however, we talk of ene a and 
of plants congenial to the soil, w member 
veat or ttl Wheat and Barley came from 
uo ody knows where. ho ever saw them wild 
far from the 7 of men? Our native flora 
than in the oaths. oleracea, a bitier sea-side plant, 
the singe ek cultivation of which would be deemed 
strong evidence of lunacy in its cultivator. 
field culture of Turnips and Man n Wurzel was 
a 
de 
to Peru t o find a substitute — this—to use the 
stock pnate—vsle able esc 
It has become evident as Clo ver and Turnips 
recur 5 frequents in our most popular rotations. 
are more liable to failure than when the soil} a 
wis fresher to them, an w the brightest Sriti ol 
our Agricultural Associations would be awarded to 
him who should in aie eae gd crops o 
— 
between fields 
tired. We thi oe however, that the efforts of those | 
ei gaged in this laudable undertaking are 3 
too exclusively to the acelimatising of ex 
that among our nati eeds are plan 
migh cultivated with advant he 
foreign origin which form cur. stape crops were 
ither weeds in their native climate, mon- 
or ar 
strosities formed trom weeds by cultivation. If the i 
2 Swedes and Mangold Wurzel of our shows 
re placed reside the wild stock from which they 
were derived, it would puzzle the judges of the 
show to trace a relationship which the proud and 
d roots might blush to acknowledge. We 
discovered the course of crops and the system of |t 
Wen except on pasture land, the ote: — of | enabled 
ur crops are either exotics or the creatures of culti- | 
makes no nearer approach ie the Swedish Turnip | soi 
equal value, pig would allow of longer interva’s |i 
he 
why even they should not be cul 
Mustard should be sown as * —— — — 
wn 
crop, while its first cousin Char i 
ar 
On the contrary, we should deem it the very 
enemies 
a saan Ps o — with a plan ‘of 1 native — ye 
value — 1 as a forage re is pe — — 
but n established b 
limited ae 4 which its cultivation i is — = 
s a perennial pani ; it —— an annual crop which 
ott wbod the ground in t e districts i in which it is 
cultivated for a abet sum 2 the finest crop of 
eat, i 1 no manure and no cultivation, 
except during the first year; it is not particular 
hout soil, 1 it can have a dee eep dry bed, no 
though the Roy al kp * have set 
their seal to value. In number of their 
and lan 
wor nh! 3s. the acre e yields ar rent of more than 30. as 
other they have as 
pee of f pace es we: embodying t 
of practical 
men ina Gorse growing 
district, of thie best etida of raising a crop of it, 
and its money value on the eons matt: a A e 
— ifs value as food for milch cow y ha 
given us also en analysis of its —— and have thus 
us to estimate the quantity of alkalies, of 
in homeopathic dose ey hav 
what a powerful engine it it ai for the i 
e| ment amide surface of better soils, moe worthy of 
surfac cultivation. An ii ye et we have conve 
the Ro yal Agricultural Societ who hesitate tó 
d its culti vik 
8 
=H 
2 
oo 
tn 
7 
= 
ô 
2 
8 
ia: 
. 
* d 
5 
4 
so 
8 
35 
less in their present state? ould ba 
many. such. ut putting that Sahaty out 2 — 
question, we shall, on a future occasion, poin 
an extensive district in the south of England, “ying 
organic manures, which are essential auxiliaries to 
| improvement by claying and marling. 
constant, and if all their intricacies were accurately 
own to us, pest ha 9 
am 
8 occasionally to plead for similar nurture © 
i ur true Briush w In this attempt 
e on the support nly of the men of 
ogress, but of the e class of farmers, 
those whose 3 for e e usages, local 
experience, a isdom Aare zi 
frequently m-nifest ite results in * id crops | 
nifests 
of Docks, Thistles, and C arlock, 
Couch, varied with the vanations ot soil— 
weeds have their tastes—by Foppies s, Corn M A 
golds, and Ragwort. The successiul ‘cultivators © 
these modestly renounce all share of merit in pale 
creps whic they produce in such luxuriance ; 1 
give the e credit of them to the a ey 
for even 
Mari- 
ai TO r 
bide di fhe though x o not advocate 
ds 
11 Vi Aion of suc : 
bj —.— sti grow Wheat or Tis —— 
object 
. and . n be made 
a; | subservient. o the 
n 
of kn 
science, and we co 
reasures to the very utmost of her productive power; 
but many of: them yet remain unexplored, and many are 
obscure, and theorists groping thei wa; 
nthe dark are apt to pune over obstacles whic 
“they did rt ieee and the v 
not unders It is 
= “el by experim 
ay k 
neces 23 
what the . are which she haags 1 
m 
ma upon pa r eue 
y ae ends of any great 
T bave, heer, again investigated tb 
ferent nd the effects o 15 
e four manures applied to j 
iwọ failed ae aad eae of an ‘the two 
sulphat 
Demet rar e latter in 
