THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



255 



^— - .HFALY beg respectfully to inform 



BRIDGE AND n**r± thev are quite ready to supply 

 1 B XJ2f«!t-ral world that they q ^ fixed & sufo . 



^•S&of ever •«£ ln ^ t - ins that wha t they put 



£r to var ; a "lir Boiler and Furnace arrangement 



' -i'Jaliues of their »°»' er put up one at the Hor- 



SS&tlr "**Tb anS H believe it is considered to 

 ■^ i !! m |o3e n, » * h « re t B h ; a - have also fixed it in connection 

 2jSi wre.en?«d ; they have combinesth qualu 



■STpew drscr.puon loflron i la . which may b pr 



SKSTround Ptpe ^^^aUng Apparatus for Horticultural 

 *^,hf«GrS?rirt, P Epiphyte-houses Melon- 

 *~ rt,Cttl arrangement is such that any gentleman or 



part* 

 *T Tbe 



t^r 



■ "t the whole constructed so as to be put toge 

 "f f iStSsf Jcility by the gardener, first sending* 

 ^th » e ^ r is0i Fleet-street. 



nay *■»*"•; <•' pil j t y by the gardener, nrsc senaing a 

 ^e ^fV^/^Jeet. A Prospectus may be had, 



&c. 



plan 

 ^to/thepri£5! 



IRON WORKS. 



^rvrrvM a>'» H ALLEN, Winsley-strebt, 



nOTTAM a- FOBD . STR eet, London. 



Ox- 



_. BnK v ROLLERS, 18 inches long, 34s.; 



, 4 %^*«,7W. ; 28,84,.; 30, 105s. 



20, 44s. j 22, 50s. ; 



GAEDEV SYRINGES, 9«- 6^- each. 



HIND-GLASS FRAMES for Cucumbers, &c, 18 inches square, 

 %$ W • JO inches, 4a. fid. ; 22 inches, 5s. 6d. each. 



CAST-IRON FLOWER-STAKES, 4 ft. long out of the ground, 

 r«.j 4 ft. 6.9*.; 5 ft., li*.j 6 ft., 15s. ; 7ft., 20s. per dozen. 



Watering-pots, Garden Engines, Mowing Machines, Garden 

 Cbtirt, Superior Garden Tools of all kinds, Garden Vases and 

 Pedestals in great variety, and every description of article used 

 in Horticulture. 



BEST WIRE, for STRAINED WIRE FENCING, at 8s. 6d. per 

 beadle of 150 to 160 yards each. Uprights for ditto, 8d. each. 

 Tbe Improved continued, and every other kind of Fencing. 



Flower-bordering, Trainers, Garden Aiches, Flower-stands, 

 Rote-tree Guards, and every description of Ornamental Wire- 

 work, for Gardens, &c. 



HOTHOUSES, CONSERVATORIES, Ac, made upon the 

 Most improved principle, cither of iron or of iron and wood com- 

 bined, which can be fixed complete in any part of the Kingdom, 

 at verv low prices. 



HOT-WATKR APPARATUS for heating Hothouses, Conser- 

 vatories, and Greenhouses ; Churches, Public, or Private Build- 

 ings, kc, withCorrAM's Patent, or Rogers's Boilers. After 

 IS years' experience, and having fixed upwards of 15p0 Appa- 

 ratus for the above-mentioned purposes, and by various im- 

 provements which they have made during that time, C. and H. 

 with confidence undertake the erection of similar Apparatus 

 u the most extensive scale. For the convenience of those 

 who wish to fix their own Apparatus, they have affixed the fol- 

 lowing low prices :— 



Cottam's fcitent Boiler, 24 inch . 



(Larger sizes in proportion.) 

 Rogers's Boiler, small size . 

 Do. do. large size 



j67 0s. Qd. 



3 



4 



15 

 10 











H Boilers' fcc' Pe ' D °° rS ' Frames »" and " Feeding Apparatus for 

 *«JileVr»nk System on an improved simple plan. 



wh^TVl^ 8 ? eir Mannfactory, No. 2, Winsley-street, 

 ^nere eshmatetandmry info rmation may be obtained. 



QOTTAM anITIaXlEN, Agricultural Imple- 



WT Maker8 ' &c » 2 » Winsley-street, Oxford- street, London. 



»adealmoAhL,v\ HAYMAKERS » of the best construction, 

 •^ »11 the Utp'rt Si. ron » and containing the double Cylinder, 



CAST-IRON HAY P i°^ entS ' are noW read y- 

 *cn, newptttern. n • stands 2 feet 6 inches high, 5s. Qd. 



,R ON HURDt p« p, etroughs at very low prices. 

 a #r low prices AN ' D F1ELD GATES, of all sizes, at exceed- 



taproved' Prizf^ai 8 ' Sheep a,,d CattIe Weighing Machines, 

 ^ng Macldne- t[° W 1' Field Pollers, Tumip-cuiters, Chaff. 

 T^ leakers Ind e lngr and Winnowing Machines, Oil- 

 W<^lture. ' ever y description of Implements used in 



$tt whewlvVrvVnrn? 1 * 1 !"^ 0101 '^' 2 » Winsley-street, Oxford- 

 THE fnviu mat,0n ma y be obtained. 



L& ^ Roo E a C s\i HOT -5 AT ER BOILERS, invented 



*?**». WoC q r ,, JK. ay S e ° Dtained of an y size ^om JOHN 

 J****** baviugTad .;' SeVenoaks ' . Keut ' 



" v * practice to hrin^f' y °PP° rt »»ity afforded him by an 

 £"* lt »s most effici/n? « i IS a PP arat «s to perfection, begs to 

 E?*- Chandler & Son*. 5 nd economical; it maybe seen at 

 v£k*I ' Messn. nl^! er J> Vauxhall ; Messrs. Loddiges', 

 b2£L5 Sor »'s, Exeter S °^ S ' Pi »e-apple-place ; Messrs. 

 JS'eal Society'^ G ard ' £ Ponte y'S Plymouth ; the Royal 

 ^Horticuit^^ens Regent's Park ; and at the Gardens 



JJ** *>*»e been effected S« , London - Considerable improve- 

 "1»> co„ rse p^e^snice last season, particulars of which 



S T " THOMAS BA v# s ** '"*• ****** 



.fee*. KiNr,.it^ n R V MANOR-HOUSE,MANOR- 



^U r ' R f E "NCE?to A ?i,?J?^ L8E . A - Manufacturer of INVI- 

 S3S?°t W »RE-WOrk i G L* ZX "S Stock, and rendered 

 ^'JtAI S',r, Flower -stands pk Tra,ne rs, Arches for Walks, 

 ^^ BuiLDlN Gs ^ ds ' Pheasantries, &c. HORTICUL- 



e8> 0r D °mestic Greenhouses. 



RENDLE'S TANK SYSTEM OF HEATING. 



OTEPHENSON and CO., 61, Gractfchurch.street, 



^ London, Inventors of the IMPROVED CONICAL and 

 DOUBLE CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, having- been much engaged 

 in heating buildings upon the above system with Tanks of 

 various materials, solicit the attention "of scientific Horticul- 

 turists to an Iron Tank now fitting up on their premises, which 

 offers most decided advantages over every other article hitherto 

 employed for the same purpose. These tanks, which are orna- 

 mental in appearance, can be made from 10 to 100 feet long and 

 of any width and depth, and can be connected or disconnected 

 by any working Gardener without the slightest difficulty, thus 

 affording the opportunity to persons in remote districts of 

 employing this much approved method of heating without the 

 assistance of Engineers. The Tanks can be applied to Boilers 

 and Pipes already fixed, and from the present low price of iron 

 will be found cheaper than of any other material. Ma. Rxndlk. 

 of Plymouth, has kindly undertaken to receive orders and furnish 

 information to any persons in his neighbourhood, and prices for 

 any size will be forwarded upon application to S. and Co. 



HOT-WATER APPARATUS FOR HEATING 

 HORTICULTURAL BUILDINGS, DWELLING-HOUSES, 

 CHURCHES, and MANUFACTORIES, upon improved prin- 

 ciples, and at very moderate charges, erected by DANIEL and 

 EDWARD BAILEY, 272, HOLBORN. 



D. and E. Bailey having devoted much time to the considera- 

 tion of this subject, and had much experience in the erection of 

 apparatus for the above-mentioned purposes, have, by improve- 

 ments suggested in their practice, rendered their mode of heat- 

 ing not only very efficient, but very simple, and have combined 

 durability in the apparatus with economy in the charge. They 

 have erected apparatus in England, Scotland, and Ireland, for 

 many noblemen and gentlemen, and have had the honour to be 

 employed by the Horticultural Society ol London, in executing the 

 works of their splendid Conservatory, lately erected at Chiswick. 



D. and E. Bailky also construct in metal all descriptions ol 

 Horticultural Buildings and Sashes, and invite noblemen, gentle- 

 men, and the public to an inspection of their various drawings 

 and models, at 272, Holborn, where they have the opportunity of 

 exhibiting, amongst other metal works,an extremelycomplete and 

 convenient kitchen apparatus, or range, adapted lor the continued 

 supply of hot water, and an arrangement of the oven more com- 

 plete than has hitherto been brought before the public. 



D. and E. Baimcy were the first to introduce metallic curvili- 

 near houses to horticulturists, and can refer to the Conservatory 

 attached to the Pantheon as one of their works, besides many 



others in this country and on the Continent. 



D.and E. Bailky have prepared a quantity of the Galvanic 

 Plant Protectors, which are now ready for immediate delivery ; 

 they beg to introduce to public notice anew Trough Pipe, for 

 Orchidaceous or other Houses where vapour is constantly, or at 

 intervals required, and which may be seen at their Manufactor\ . 



1 



B 



MANURES. 



OAST axd Co.'s PATENT INORGANIC 



MANURES. These strong and productive manures have 

 already proved their superiority over all others yet adopted. It 

 is now' thoroughly understood and acknowledged by intelligent 

 agriculturists that each plant requires a distinct manure, and it 

 is upon this perfectly scientific principle that these manures are 

 prepared, being formed so as to supply nil the substances taken 

 from the soil by each particular crop. They are immeasurably 

 more efficacious, far more economical than all others, and pos- 

 sess the great advantage of being easily applied to the land. 



Prospectuses, with full particulars, may be obtained ; or will 

 be forwarded by post on application at the Manufactory, Bow, 



Middlesex. 



*** By the use of these Manures, any land may be rendered 

 fertile. Wheat, &c. may be grown on the same land every year 

 with immense advantage to the farmer, and without injury to 

 the soil; whilst all the other crops are greatly increased. 



GUANO, superior to the foreign, at a reduced price. 



Manures prepared expressly for Gardeners and Florists. 



1 PERUVIAN GUANO, of first quality, and in any 

 quantity, direct from the Bonded Stores. Also African 

 Guano and Nitrate of Soda. — Apply to H. Rounthwaitb and 

 Co., 6, Cable-street, St. George's Crescent, Liverpool*. 



GUANO (GENUINE PERUVIAN & BOLIVIAN) 

 ON SALE, BY THE ONLY LEGAL IMPORTERS, 

 ANTONY GIBBS and SONS, LONDON j 

 Wm. J. MYERS and CO., LIVERPOOL; 



And by their Agents, 



COTESWORTH, POWELL, and PRYOR, LONDON; 

 GIBBS, BRIGHT, & CO., LIVERPOOL and BRISTOL. 



<7, Lime-street, April 19, 1844. 



UANO ON SALE BY THE IMPORTERS, 



JOHN BOYD & Co., 

 Wellington Chambers, L ion -bridge, Borough. 



TO GARDENERS AND AGRICULTURISTS. 



SUPER-PHOSPHATE of LIME is capable of pro- 

 ducing a more rapid vegetation in Plants than any sub- 

 stance known. It may be had at Mr. Lawes* Factory, Deptford 

 Creek, price 7s. per cwt. Phosphate of Potash, 15s. per cwt. 



Soda I2.v. ,, 

 Magnesia gs. ,, 

 ,, Ammonia 1$. per lb. 



*** Super-phosphate of Lime in a concentrated form may also 

 be procured of Messrs* Warner, 28, Cornhill, and other Seeds- 

 men, in 71b. packets, price 1*. 



99 



99 



THE URA.TE of the LONDON MANURE COM- 



1 



PANY, 5/. per Ton. It is with the greatest satisfaction, 

 after three years' experience, the Company are enabled to recom- 

 mend the above as one of the best manures for Barley, Oats, 

 Spring Wheat, and more especially Turnips. By promoting a 

 rapid growth of the latter it secures a full plant, at the same time 

 producing a great weight per acre, and extending its beneficial 

 effects to the succeeding crops. The Urate may be sown broad- 

 cast, or which is preferable, by the drill, at the rate of one ton 

 to three acres, and it is desirable it should not be placed more 

 than two inches below the surface. As a top-dressing for Wheat 

 the Urate has been used with great advantage. Gardeners and 

 Florists will find it very useful for Dahlias and other roots. Full 

 particulars and Testimonials will be forwarded on application. 

 Genuine Peruvian Guano; Phosphate and Sulphate of Ammo- 

 nia ; Gypsum and every other artificial Manure. 



Edward Purser, Secretary, 40, New Bridge Street. 



XJ he 



HALLETT'S LIQUID FERTILISER.— The 



beauty of Flowers, with their power of perfecting their 

 Seeds, and the flavour and size of Fruits and Vegetables, must 

 ever depend upon the food supplied to the plants producing them, 

 and these a very extensive series of trials on various soils has 

 shown, may be secured by the use of Dr. Hallktt's Coxchn- 

 tbatkd Liquid Fertiliser, which contains all the essential 

 ingredients of the best foreign Guano, with others equally so, 

 but not to be found by Sea Fowl, in the Atlantic Ocean. Sold at 

 Mr. G. Hallett's, Factory, Broad Wall, Blackfriars; Messrs. 

 Winstanley\s, Chemists, 7, Poultry; Messrs. Warners, 28, 

 Cornhill ; Messrs. Hurst and M'Mullen's, 6, Leadenhall- 

 street; N. and M. Godwin's 41, Ludgate- street ; and every 

 respectable Chemist's and Seedsman's, with directions, in stone 

 quarts, at 1$. 6rf. each, and in bottles, six times the size, at 

 7s. 6d. The quart requires 32 gallons of water to reduce it for 

 use, for watering soils and growing bulbs in. 



GLASS SUPERSEDED for HORTICU 



WHITNEY'S CHEMICAL 



1 V WATERPl 



JRAL PURPOSES by 



TRANSPARENT 



ATERPROOF COMPOSITION, rendering Muslin, 

 Calico, or Linen, for the Frames of Greenhouses, Pine, Melon, or 

 Cucumber Stoves, &c M impervious to rain or moisture, admitting 

 light equal to Glass, much warmer, and the plants never burn 

 under it. 



Noblemen, Gentlemen, and Gardeners will, by using this com- 

 position, have the only effectual protection for their Fruit-trees 

 during the blooming season; it is a certain defence from frost, 

 sleet, wind, and blight; its transparency admits the general 

 beams of the sun, with abundance of light, which causes the 

 bloom to expand with increased luxuriance, the fruit to set and 

 swell more freely, much earlier, and a crop of fruit to any extent 

 may be warranted. The covering not to be moved by day 

 (except to thin the Fruit, which will be necessary , till the month 

 of June. It is recommended that the Calico be prepared early, 

 so as to bo thoroughly dry before using. 



Sold In Bottles, with directions for use, pints, 2*. 6d., quarts, 

 4s. 6d. each. One pint is sufficient to coat four Frames twice 

 over, each Frame to be 5 ft. by 3 ft. 3 in., or thereabouts. Prepared 

 by George Whitney, Chemist, Shrewsbury. Seedsmen, 

 Florists, and Merchants supplied by Mr. W. Bailey, Chemist, 

 North-street, Wolverhampton. Appointed Agents :— Messrs. 

 Butler and Mucklky, Covent Garden, where a sample of pre- 

 pared calico may be seen; Mr. Watkinsov, Market-place, 

 Manchester; Pace and Sox, Southampton; T. and C. W11 alley, 

 Nurserymen, Liverpool. 



Agents Wanted for London and the country. 



THE NEW CHEMICAL MANURE. 



HUMPHREYS'S FARMERS 9 COMPOUND, 

 stronger than OflMMM, nrtd without its caustic rankness. 

 Samples on view at the Royal Polytechnic Institution. On Sale 

 with the following Agents :— Thomas Girbs and Co., by appoint- 

 ment S» dsmen to the Royal Agricultural Society of England — 

 corner of Half Moon-street, Piccadilly; Cottam and Hallkv, 

 Agricultural Repository, V\ msley-street, Oxford-street; Ki.rch- 

 fikld, Smithfield ; Batt and Rutlky, 412, Strand; Clark, 

 Bisbopsgate-street; Chari.wooii, Tax 1 tock-row, Covent Gar- 

 den; Flanagan and Son, Mansion-houM reet; Butler, 

 Covent Garden ; Fothkruill, 40, Upper Thamea-fttreet ; Hurst 

 and McMullen, Leadenhall-street; Lockhart, Cheapside ; 

 William and John Noble, Fleet-street; W. J. Kuttino, 

 Cheapside; Wedlakb, Fcnchurch-street; Samuel Howard, 

 38, Mark-lane; White, Phoenix Wharf, Blackfriars ; Allen, 

 Shrewsbury; Copkrman and Co., Wells, Norfolk; Dickson 

 and Co., Edinburgh; T. S. Kino, Rochester; W. F. Moles- 

 worth, Banbury; W. Maddock, Tunbridgc Wells; W. E. 

 Rendlk, Plymouth; Thomson and Co., Macduff, near Banff; 

 Thomas Watkinson, Market place, Manchester. Price 12*, per 

 cwt.— Daw, Mackmurdo, and Co., Manufacturing Chemists, 

 100, Upper lliame^strertjjLondon. 



important"toXgriculturists and others. 



ANALYSES OF SOILS, MANURES, &c. arc 

 conducted by Ma. MITCHELL, Analytical Chemist (late of 

 the Royal Polytechnic Institution), No. 5, A., Hawley Road, 

 Kenti>h Town. 



N.B. Gentlemen instructed in Agricultural Chemistry. The 

 course will comp rehend the Elements of Analysis. 



YORKSHIRE LAND-DRAIN1NG ASbOClA i ION 

 Capital, 500,000/., in stock of 252.— Deposit, 5 per cent. 

 Patrons.— The Ri^ht Hon. Lord Beaumont. 



The Rieht Hon. Lord Viscount Morpeth. 

 Sir William M. Milner, Bart. 

 Edward Stillingfleet Cayiey, Esq., M.P. 

 Provisional Committee. 



Mr. James Andrew, Kirkham 

 Cottage, Wakefield. 



Mr. Caleb Angus, Neswick, 

 Driffield. 



J. Barkenridge, Esq., Bretton, 

 Wakefield. 



Thomas Bradley, Esq., Rich- 

 mond. 



Christopher Bradley,Esq., Rich- 

 mond. 



Henry Briggs, Esq., Overton, 

 Wakefield. 



Mr. George Baker, Roundhay- 

 road, Leeds. 



Joseph Dent, Esq., Ribstone- 

 park, Wetherby. 



J. Bailey Denton, Esq., 9, 

 Gray's-inn-square, London. 



John Grey, Esq., Dilston. 



Mr. Edwin Green, Havercroft, 

 Barnsley. 



James Hall, Esq., Scorborough, 

 Beverley. 



James Hammerton, Esq., Helli- 

 field Peel, Skipton. 



J. Mildred Hustler, Esq., Brad- 

 ford. 



R. M. Jaqueg, Esq., Easby 

 Abbey, Richmond. 



James Smith, Esq. ; Deanston), 

 13, Queen-eq., Westminster. 



Mr. William Tuke, Bradford. 



With power to add to their number. 

 Bankers.— The York City and County Banking Company. 

 Standing Counsel.— H. Bellenden Ker, Esq., Lincoln's-inn. 



Draining Engineer.— James Smith, Esq. (Dean-ton.) 

 Solicitors. — Messrs. Blanchard, Richardson, and Gutch, York. 

 Secrktarv.— John H. Charnock, Esq., Wakefield. 

 This Association is formed for the purpose of afforaing to the 

 Agricultural Interest, by means of its collective capital, t-he funds 

 necessary for the THOROUGH DRAINING OF LAND; and of 

 executing and superintending the execution of the works required 

 for this purpose on the most economical and effective principles 

 <— repayment of the money advanced to be made, with interest, 

 by such equitable half-yearly instalments as in the several cases 



maybe determined. 



Among the various objects to which of late years collective 

 capital has been more or less successfully applied, it is not a little 

 surprising that the one which, of all others, offers the most cer- 

 tain and profitable return, with the soundest security, should 

 have hitherto been almost disregarded. The time, however, has 

 arrived, when an urgent desire for Agricultural improvement 011 

 the one hand, and a dearth of safe and profitable investment for 

 superabundant capital on the other, renders such an Association 

 highlv desirable to both the landed and monied interest, whilst 

 to the community generally an almost incalculable advantage 

 will be secured by a proportionate increase of labour and food. 



At a meeting of the council of the Yorkshire Agricultural 

 Society, held in York, on tbe 20th of December, 1843,'a resolution 

 was passed, approving generally of the objects of this Association, 

 and at the monthly meeting of the Wakefield Farmers' Club held 

 on the 5th January, 1841, a resolution approving of the principle 

 and objects of the Association, was unanimously adopted. 



At the meeting of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, 

 at Liverpool, in July, 1841, Lord Stanley remarked— that "there 

 was no bank in the whole country — no commercial speculation- 

 no investment so safe, so sure and profitable, as that in which 

 even borowed capital may be engaged, by investing it under the 

 ground of your own soil." And in reference to this Association, 

 his Lordship, in a letter to the Committee says:— *' I am fully 

 satisfied of the benefits which such an Association is capable of 

 conferring on the country, if confined to its legitimate object — 

 the lending of capital on the security of an investment in drain- 

 ing; and I think it very probable that many landed proprietors 

 would avail themselves of the facilities afforded by an institution 

 lending money on land, repayable by instalments— a condition 

 on which few private parties are willing to lend. 



Bearing in mind the important objects of the Association, and 

 the perfect security with which its operations can be conducted, 

 at a comparatively trifling expense (no large expenditure for pre- 

 vious outfit being required}, it may be reasonably expected that 

 the return for the capital embarked will be such as to insure the 

 support of prudent and permanent investors, thereby divesting: 

 it of that speculative character which has stigmatised so many 

 modern projects, and which it is the especial desire of the Com- 

 mittee to avoid. f rt k* 



Application for prospectuses, and further P art ' cula " ™ 17 

 addressed to the Solicitors, Messrs. Blanchard, Richardson, 

 and Gutch, York ; or to J. H. Charnock, Esq., tne secretary* 

 Wakefield. 



