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3—1853. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 41 
—— PERUVIAN ROYAL AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE,|whatis the reason of results so different as those 
TIO AGRICULTURISTS.— CIRENCESTER. presented to our view ? It is not owing to the greater 
a) notorious tas extensive adulterations of this pror Doman КАҢ АЫ, Р RINCE, ower warmth of the soil: there h een no frost Ud be 
MANURE are still carried o VicE-PaEsIDENT— Earl warded off the land by the ning water in the 
NTONY cias BS AND SON PRINCIPAL S. HAYGART he land with its 
to 
S, 
NLY IMPORTERS OF. PERUVIAN GUANO, 
the 
t und 
И, MA. 
THE NEXT SESSION will Open on FRIDAY, February 4th, 
g Tuesday. 
THE 
MCN it to be their duty to 
te the Public, again to reco ward Farmers and all others who 
buy to be пу on their gua 
character of the par бов from whom they purchase will 
of be the best security, and, in addition to DE 
attention to that po E ANTONY GIBBS anp SONS think i 
well to remind buyers t 
The lowest lesale p t which sound Peruvian 
who 
Guano has been sold Ny ‘hem during the last two years is 
pcs 5s. x ton, less 25 pe 
re-sales made by dea м id a lower price must therefore 
x din a loss to them, or the article must be adulterated. 
ANURES.—The seg tres) Manures | are manu- 
аит. LAWES Fa 
p Man m Li ton 7 n 0 
8 perphosphate of Lim 0 0 
Sulphuri € Acid and Coproli К 00 
fe 69, King Wiliam y Ciy, L 
N.B. Peruvian Guano, guaranteed to con 122 per cent. of 
Ammonia, 0 105. per t ton; xa 1 5 tons or е 91. Ds. per ton 
dock. 
WAGE CHARCOAL MANURE. 
EAT. CHA ARCOAL, Pan mea we he — with 
London Sewage, will be tive. Manure 
for any crop. It may ad from E osi wage Manure 
"Works, Stanley n Fulham, Middlesex, at 60s. per ton, 
4s, per cwt., and 2s. 6d. per half c 
“Sewage —À “absorbed iy “charcoal , is a first-rate fer- 
tlliser; we tried iton French Beans, balas oe an 
— Plants; we put half a pint to - Es. ach R and Dahlia, 
a few A tahen to eac ch 
plant of Cabbage. 
will be twice as efficace 
— by Mr. Glenn, 
Mr. Jon AXNITT, ‘of the Canal Lock House, renege deri 
writes : — “І €: your Sewage Charcoal ‘Manure very 
yaluable. I have tried it this season asa Manure for a small 
erop of 3 Wurzel and have a finer crop than when I used 
er Man he quantity I used was 4 cwt. to half an acre." 
ious the second year a 
GUPERPHOSPHATE | OF LIME, warranted _the 
Ammonia, бе, Ko., delivered to any Railway Station in London 
at 61. per ton; also CORN MANURE for top-dressing, composed 
of substances ока Nitrogen, Potash, and other chemicals 
essential for Corn . Concentrated Usato, Nitrate of Soda, 
isbery, and анса Salt, Sulphate of Potash, Ammonia, 
and every КОШО Artificial Manu ure, 
PERUVIAN 5 pr guaranteed, the genuine importation 
of Messrs. A. GIBBS & SONS, 91. 10s. per ton, or, in quantities 
or five tons and таш, 91. 5s. per ton in dock. A constant 
. Supply of LINSEED and RAPE a 
Epw Purser, Secretary. 
LONDON MANURE COMPANY, pale mde Blackfriars. 
and the І 
Students are admitted either as Bo arders or as Out-Students. 
The annual fees for Boarders vary from 45 to 80 guineas, accord- 
'The Fee sed Out-Students is 
Practical 
tudents a longer tim is a department 
for general as well | as Tor or agriculture 8 
had on application to the 
Principal. 
COLLEG € OF AGRICULTURE AND CHE- 
AND OF PRACTICAL AND GENERAL 
SCIENCE, жыр, пеаг er 5 
A. NEsBIT, Author A Practical "Treatises on “ Arithmetic,” 
„ Mensurati ion,” “L Surveying,” “Gauging,” “ Englis ish 
C.S., Consulting and nig ban Chemist, 
‘Corresponding ‘Finer of A Central and National Agri- 
cultural Society of slong 
Chemise, Geology; and Agriculture: dis, Ј.С. Nesbit. 
Assistant Chemist: Mr. E. Lan 
маа, T Philosophy, Surveying, Paape, and Mathematics: 
с mo 
Dreviog an се tue ti wlins, *. C. E., Professor 
of Drawing, St. Mark's 8 {А ales 
y, and Natural History : C. обави, Esq., Рго- 
osp ital. 
tion in o Lad 
тир in Rhetoric at Cheshunt College. 
Classics and Modern Languages: Able Assistant Masters. 
roe NrsBIT take under ^s eir charge about 30 students 
resident or non- MN who er in the Cone every aid and 
кауме A for Scientific Educa tion, which immediate vicinity to, 
London е imde. 
In this T stitution unusual facilities are peius for acquiring 
a thorough knowledge of every departmen Analytical Che- 
mistry, a ty of the Assaying of Gold, silver, and poe ge 
Ores . Nesbit has an extensive prac LM an Anal 
tical Chemii- : and in ри Yaborglories pt Stade acquire a 
lla 3 al knowledge of perhaps the most 
Commercial enenge ands 
pare youth for = d of ХШ, 2 ning, 
Manufactures, the Arts, the Naval and Military ferros — for 
the Universities. 
The Laboratories are extensive and complete, and are amply 
provided with every 3 essential for the most important 
s to a well-selected Library of up- 
wards of two Padawan. м. comprising the most recent 
orks in. Science and Literature; 
Метка and Geological Specimens; and extensive suit of 
AGE OF N D. 
R begs to Detern Landowners 
to any extent, together with the laying out and mapping of the 
on most approved onera and will contract ‘tor the 
work. ference given.—Address, Halberton 
"a von. 
Mathematical = Philosophical Instrumen 
etween four and five acres of land, rre to the premises, 
are ipponin M the exercise and recreation of the pupils. 
he senior * eo ры а commodious 5 for private 
study, enl are ей@ prov: bed-roo 
Mr. J. ieee att seg pé consulted with 8 to every 
ariety of Ge cal Patent and Manufacture, and the окна 
S Artificial i gutes. Analyses e Assays o of all desc 
UE: promptly a eret kr ehe at the Coll а 
terms and other particulars may be had on application. 
35 
separa te 
ГНЕ EAE LAND rn бс ag AND 
PROVEMENT So lan 
HENRY ка SEYMER, Esq., M 2 N 
Sir Јонх SHELLEY, Bart., M. b. „Deputy Chairman, 
wered by Act of Parliament to execute all works of 
тена (including Outfalls signee. adjoining ше to erect 
Farm-buildings, and to carry out every kind of permanent im- 
* nt upon Estates, under datilenient or disability, t to арна 
the money, or to enable the landowner to emplo capital 
and execute the works under the superintendence of ‘the C Сх 
r 0 of the iioi "ad uL 2 ndant Сеи being 
Charged upon the property by w: uit ishin the 
$ ob M. е 2215 of 8l. per tent. Jor Farm: re and Sipe per 
ont. for Drainage, Roads, and other Im ments, 
Li Canoes Secretary. 
$ Offices, 52, Parliament Street, London. 
TINTON’S PARKES'S CELEBRATED STEEL 
: G о 
best for churning sweet cream, wf 
ter from milk or cream, in any form 
been i 
5 ы pcd. are ch 
a ре i jands for machinery, hose for pumps, 
and hn assortment of prize and the best farm implements. Price 
catalogues sent on application—Burarss & Key, 103, Newgate 
sl London, agents for M‘Cormick’s American Reaper. 
Ly sy mia ЕТЕНЕ ae AND COTTAGE 
Cast fon Pumps for the use of Farm 
won Manure Tanks, and shallow 
d. 
Patent P a 18 0 
Patent Pump, with 15. feet "of lead 
pipe attached, a and n 
ready for fixin E^ 855 x 10 0 
Larger sizes if requ uired. 
To Emigrants Pare t to the Gol 
h to be the тем 
Мау һе 3 of any Ironmonger or 
Plumber in Town or Country, or of the 
Patentees and Manufacturers, 
ны WARNER SONS, 
8, Crescent, JEWIN STREET, LONDO 
к description of Зву for Raising Water, Fire 
WA ___ 
IRON HURDLES. 
STEPHENSON AND PEILL, 61, Gracéchur ch Street, 
outhwark, Manufac- 
vee cali the atten- 
prices of 
ATURAL GRASS SEEDS, 
FOR Uma sis PASTURES AND IRRIGATED OR 
CAT 
CH MEADOW. 
Which ma M 155 separate or mixed, expressly to suit the soil. 
UTTO SONS havin g for y ye pai 
upp 
soil for which iui 
is usually i incu 
SUTTON & growers of Turnip, Carrot, 
Mangold Wurzel, nds other — ЛА — which om seli 
at the lowest market prices, carriage free, and which t 
warrant new a 
Any particulars peter respecting Grasses or other Seeds 
will be promptly given to 1 addressed to JOHN SUTTON 
d & Sons, Seed-growers, Reading, Berk: 
3 
Che Agricultural Gazette. 
SA адан Y, JANUARY 15, 1853. 
SETINGS em тив TWO INS TEPER, 
Sogea Jan. pay aro and Agricultural Soc 
THURSDAY, cultural Imp. —.— of Wei 
Tuuks par, — 27— r Imp. Society of Ireland. 
w 
à calcareous clay, not exac etl 
n natural pope — e 
land is full of water; ther 
gw 
either we There 
d similarity eno 
flicient to excite some surprise singula 
PS | difference of appearance which ‘they now i 
In OH one 
or cattle: in the other * has not 
but decay rushes, and dead 
have served to keep perhaps one sheep per acre in 
as ation during the past autumn. 
The с 25 this contrast of course is, 
e case we have a water meadow, and 
p^ Mi dnined pasture field on | post 
.; and for Ca feet lo: 
at 5s, ttle, 6 get long, 3 feet 3 inches high, with 
ES: — for 8 6-1 feet. pac 8 foot high, pO qua in th 
cla} 
y land, But, to go a step further in our inquiry, 
toa valuable collection of РЕ 
| ы иа 
———$—————— 
see from the window near which we are | 
ri past 
least as full of all the elements of fertility as the 
spri ater is which irrigates ile meadow. 
The only cause, and it is one which explains the 
advantage of draining as well as of irrigation, and 
the advantage that sewage irrigation which 
Mr. Mehr has this day alluded to in our 
columns, as well as that of the common irrigation 
which makes just now many a v еуі in Gloucester- 
shire, Wilts, and Hampshire, green and growing in 
the midst of uh looking water logged hill pastures 
y which they are surrounded— y cause of all 
these contrasts is to be — in the fact that i X m 
ne case water is stagnant, and in the other 
moving. No doubt the drop of irme и ок it falls 
upon the му ground is mea n drink ; 
^ d Nr it the elements of food or plants 
well a elements of water; but while it э 
in itself lefu] as food at the анла p of 
plant, its chief importance 1 bac BS 
such 17 excellent = It i 
or | what i is as for what 13 that it must be 
valued; z^ its EE as a mere vehicle of food 
nnt be overrated, 
Of that of course every farm 
r has experie 
— knows tha 
an enormous — of fertility ig is 
able, not so much from adding manure, not 
from growing beter sorts of plants, not from adopt- 
arm iam, ce 2 simply 
all upon the 
of 
rid of water, it is to make use o 
the condition of a soil full of „ condition 
—so 
that most of our fields are in at present that 
y rai falls upon it, jus the 
gei into the nearest ditch. Of course the plants 
st s mber 
tarve. 
that a p in the zt is in much the same position 
asam , who stood аце by he 
eg to 1555 poe, in the 4 8 The lar ү 
full of food, but as soon 2 the man had ES I that 
was in his reae „de wo e, though i 
s plenty; that is, he pager ce if ngs zom — 
ntrivan operation for riri Ar he dishes b 
bim as he stood, so that he 958 10 roose his food as if 
= within his reach. Now, in il 
e drops of rain water, in an ini e 
ning spring water, is just s y cum lvance as 
In this way the nutritive pit ot the soilis dissòlve 
e 
is 
28 5 lant has eaten what it can within 
its reach -: must starve, it cannot go in search of 
food likean animal; it is like an animal chained 
y the leg—it is stationary, and must die if food 
be not brought to it. 
This mode of illustrating en epa. which we 
ish t volume 
perfect justice. Certain] 
and undrained fields visibleat present from 
house beside our own, is sufficient to prove 
that it is not excess of water of which E land has 
n to it t of drainage, 
without which water, which, in erer quantity, 
might add to our ferülity, stagnates and poisons ns all 
within its reach. 
ауа 
were deliv > thie examiners by ine rer 
whose nam " the ey bear. Th wers we 
fact all written in the examination-room withont 
time or opportunity of чөн ce to or notes ; 
ached us just as it 
ave 
the examinations in agriculture table 
piyi and botan y, which | we Shall publish as 
аэ LCi LALL > 
s 
