re 
a Vr wee Se a ee oe ee ee ee Le ee eee, ee ee ee ee ee ee ee T a E E 
See z a 
THE AGRICULTU RAL GAZETTE. 
605 
mists to solve. 
which tl hough not taar in point, is quite wou so | ar 
Pa 
arises froth aa fact that field- -practice is the art of 
pa ne p 
ky A ed in farm work, not only without detriment 
employ! R Shen 2 
y 
live objects, which demand more of | 
i ii ‘than of an zA pores crs hy vi this | 
l t “att 
Wh T 
—the | 
te Mr. Roscoe’ 
farms near 
Suffolk militia quartered in the to 
ea t Mr. Roscoe 
It ap- 
and the colonel 1 oceasionally met, 
s | 0 
pes a sgn | 
AQUAR 1A. 
AMES PHILLIPS anp CO., 3, Bishopsgate 
Street Without, beg res aan f to ‘soit their prices of 
Glass Aquaria of ts ma ape apiti D y Mr. Shirley Hibberd. 
AQUARIA, WIM EPONE STANDS, 
| 12 inches aiameter Mee nches diameter Each 12s- 
{i wee SAL AS 
eve w S0 
wow 15 
dowo ase "DI 
a 
lags ubjects ; amongst others that of hoeing Tur- 
can by steam 
him equal 
-power 
to two ‘months’ | 
so assist man 
TT 0. 
4s.6d, | 17 inches besser each Ss. 0d. 
«5 0 i - 10 0 
at 8 iia, » 6 
15 ” 
nips, à matter in ’ which, to say truth, the lat 
that district were then Jamentably deficient. A 
in full force to fill his true office 
e, 3 f th 
” 
» 
” 
” 
2s. 6d. 
ITTO, GLAZ E GLA 88. 
a this, the e colonel ver y r5 
wy a number of his men to assist i in the work, 
f whi Ths red. 
} 
eS } 
oder 
They gave us a 
good cro of Turnips, with so 
who if y did not show he 3 nati 
won,” = ps them (vas 
Wher 
O > 
f how fields were | 
ves 
mA more to our purpos 
fields were hoed.” 
e) “h 
was the ER i 2) with 
labour in Shis case ? And is Sat de ie a far more 
important object than Turnip hing yarn! ing gene- 
rally in subjec t, there is one 
which I I do not for 
eae question the pirat of reaping mac! 
manual labour as to expedition. Thousands of ac: 
r scores b, 
paine 
the boss and 
have bee have no doubt that there — 
may 
h A 
earl; 
the 
ought 
scarcity of hands, 
would tt not have been better r policy to have made sure ke | 
of what was fit than to spend time and labour in in- 
creasing the quantity | already Mer ot so 
d, I ed nothing 
to say against reaping- cb aha Fen ‘that of themselves 
they are atthe nay worse than powerless, as a 
eather, They will cut down an 
ime, ess the 
ae be 
much to have 
that —_ | 
which to him and us is the staff of life? C. Burch 
London. 
Calendar of Operations. | 
A 
FARM NEAR HEXHAM, 
SE 
» A o the: 
had a fortnight of very warm 
d 
Sth instant w 
md 
o-day 
i p on 
better condition. In 
Seago in the district; but it is b; 
rop is sa ate Stock is doing well. 
WEs 08s, Sept. 2. The crops have made very sl 
gress for ane weeks. -Tha weather has been cold and pl 
and the sun’s countena! retty stranger to us. 
Our Wheat is | much laid, anà laid in all directions. Them 
ints comp: 
m,| 18in. 36 in. 
m = = 
k S 
ai A igata COSM IOPOLITAN 
5 
-6 
i 
TANK D 
| Height. Length. Width. £ 
l6in. 4 
15in, 24in. 
pe 
2 
AR FERN SHADES AND STANDS. 
6 inch ae ag each... 3s. Od. | 12 inch diameter, each.. 
uf E ” 
z ” ” 
” ” 
” ” 112 
” ” 
c |16 .22 
” Perforated Glass, ir Ventilation, ‘feom te 6d, per foot. 
Glass Tiles and Slates, 
Ik Pans, 21s. per. dozen ; Propagating and Bee Glasses. 
, Lord Camoys’ Milk” Syphons, Wasp Traps, Plate, 
ntal Glass, Shades for Ornaments, and every 
Glass 
Mireia 
T pa or Thame! 
Article in the Trade. 
HO SETICULTURAL GLASS WAREHOUSE, 
et Witho 
Scapa ate Stre ut, kanea 
7 SHIRLEY HIBBERD. 
LETTERS 
PATENT. 
oy 
Ts ae 
“GLASS a EE E 
bane & WARING, Managers, 296, Oxford Street, London. 
ONG HORTICULTURAL 5 SHEET GLASS m 
UGH PLAT 
B 
ROYAL 
pose that they had been stooked. And besides the colour is any- r foot. CROWN SHE UARES, in 100 feet 
thing but that golden colour which we so much like . Not | under 10 b; .; per box. FOREL 
only have those fields that are laid got this dark, I m col SHEET, in 200 feet cases, 348. p 
but th yet t much he same un-| PERFORATED VENTILATING GLASS from 
ys. so heavy 
not, yield a pes worn of vai grain. 
have been cut, | foot, 
ached for | 21s. 
ios 
NS, 
A r sae he quantity of Oats | Cucumber Tubes, Hyacinth Glasses.. 
what advantage is their pedition? Iam glad | this year grown will not be sufficient to meet the requirements of | Hand Lights, er Labels, 7 7s. per 100, and the New 
to see the subject of Locusts ttle food attracting the | the — mene L a a mt rae : ae ones 
i i 5 scarce from the small bre: s n g N A 
publie attention, The hard stone-li mentioned erfully; indeed the progress has been such that we question GLAS: R CONSERVATORI pa GREENHOUSES, 
by Mr. Easton are inly an objection, as tending to | whether, at this season, they ever looked better. So ETLEY 4 np COLAO H upplying 16-0z. Sheet Glass- 
injure the teeth of the animals the pods, t if | they already in many fields that it gas pe cut to! tell e $ tah kA, tec bases! “containing 100° 
le in pects, especially as to price, I have | which direction the drills run. ‘The k demand | sare feet each, at the fllowing REDUCED PRICES for cash. 
: A * : : for Turni ee bese es previous prices, va wintering €" hoggs. sq made on 
considerable faith in the ingenuity of our agricult lii field of ‘nips will fetch from 5l. to Tl. per A reduction 000 feei 
machinists to devise ways and means of S for this Pae ie “Nhe Potato dis n at work | Sizes. —Inel Duh "Inches; at a is ae 
greater i his. r, ter, | for some wee! and the fields are gradually blackening. 
25, PASE Shis. S., Liaylars Clouces E if the disease onh not have visited o this Tara, teu From z Prt AA Ai 4 ” a2. ” js A z 
x yiel ould have been under an average; but as it is, their ” ” ” ” s- 
Boydell’s m Locomotive.— Both “ G. P. S.” and wth is prematurely stopped, and few of them will reach the 8 , 6 » 10, 8 » Md» 1 O10 
“RS, ies in s ate Paper fall into ps same error Soe OF atka Stalas." aTa people are by no means Ree mi í 12» 9 » 2d. 4, 121 
dlatag movements round the azie tthe flerom (ss athe aur aleghoarersardaty at ge | yp, alsa dar om sng aan 
$ ew da; ago, @ farm: 1 mal Al s 
stead the bot of the wheel when it rests on the | gown a few acres of Tere and, on the morning appointed a band ee rt n 33d. to 
ground ; such being their reasonings fall | of nearly 100 appeared offered their services, and speedily „34d. to Tid. 
z p ae B petagaar tb Brde ; PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK GROWN GLASS, and 
tothe ground as fallacious. Again as hardly pre- | the whole was into the stoo 
a > PATENT PLATE GLASS for Horticultural purposes, at 
pared to find that any of your readers did not know | „West Sussex, Sept. 3.— —Sin nce our He report we peers i reduced prices, by the 100 square feet. 
ar annd that any of yonr rendera dia ot wan | hrouga gne most irrpartant sean of the year, amidst, man | GLASS TILES AND SLATES mado to any sie ot patter, 
double that of the bottom. [The bottom of a wheel | Wheat secured, and perhaps rather aie than half x $ va cut, either in S r Rough Pla c i G 
moling along the ground is statio Lastly, there | and as there were a good many of the shocks blown down and site i Pans Glass Water Pipes etete 
isnothing in th tion thik f lied to | Sot more ore wet thanif standing, some few str Attlee og 
E e propomion # rorco apima-=07 0r Irn Sate hare is eed so much of this as to do much harm ; eae 
the top of the wheel will pi double th we should hardly think enough to make it peroontible in the PATENT PAS i an Pay A tts male i 
applied at the axle. The roposition to which I | bread, = a of the Wiron corns blow aw: a the r inferior window glass in a 
referred is the saving of Baso Aia the motor force | dressing: what was my as oreda > „between, wiat abot alteration connected with the sash a required. 
gains by translation when thus applied to the to of the 
wheel. W, B. PP P 
was pro or = sprouted. But by dress- 
GLASS SHADES, as o0 
Sisk derrig of 
s of fair 
P oval of the excise misceiak pemr one-half. 
w Tillage—Some people once a off in| quality. Barley bas suffere especially that which was | List hy jest rie Estimates forwarded 
quest of the 5 find th: cut before the rain ; itis aiutare n the maltster, and what Joar Square, London, 
e philosopher’: 8 stone : they di not d t at, is very much dam: so that we shall have the James HerieY & Co., 35, Soho Square, London. 
but j was not cutis very maged, ; TU 
‘in the search they bled upon pon pebbles, | quality very various, and Barley fit for eating Rar r, while for ILLIA 8 BURTON'S Bock on END Bae; 
i i feedin: poses it will be in good supply; je consequence WILL how Iron 
FE pandation Por ae ee here i = ray ia chins fat pigs will command | Ss m money. As the Oat | Brass Bedstead: hildren’s Cots stands unrivalled either 
Vitæ » went off in search the lixir rop does not grow so rapidly there is not much h: done to it; | for extent, Tat ies or modera‘ . He also- 
i ;” they did not find that, but they advanced the | the chief loss is by shaking out, as they have had to be turned | supplies Bedding and Bed Hangings of guaranteed quality and 
of medicine, which iate often, and the rain made them tender. The Potato , | workmanship. Common Tron Bedsteads, from 16s.; Portable 
Pains and pangs of suffer’ it Others went which ed for several wee fined to the tops, now | Folding Bedsteads, fi 2s. 6d.; Patent Iron osian, ae 
after p : shows itself in the roots to a tent; but even with a few —- dovetail ete prot pines sacking, from 17s.; and Cots 
eg otion ; however they did not disco’ bad ones there is the prospect of a fair crop, so that altogether if some Ornamental Iron and it 
ey were immediately in search of, but es the quality is not all that we could wish, the ity is >e: up great v: t variety, from fom 2E 7s, 6d. to 15l. 15s. 
greatly vanced th led f hanics. 2 emark. And now we have fine weather and the barom: AH ent n Bedstead, 3 feet wide, with 
What like th Sinop meng ee pare? of ery high, so tbat harvest will be finished this week and ind e eter Bedding, & cu, complete— 
Cultivation e above cases will this problem o; steam best order, and there will be no want of dry corn for the mil fl 4 6 
vill an will d The rains havi to the Turnip crops where they had Chintz furnitu: 0 
~ Surpass it, ll be found that — of steam | not altogether failed, and perhaps at no former time has a a wool. p Eey bolster, “and pillow... ro Wii Oe, 
th manure recommended itself more, for where it is and li A pair of cotton sheets, see blankets, eae a 
e work ioe it will peg aries do the , 150 
Work, Some — used tl is seldom much fear of a crop; some have spent ettin coloured co’ peyrera 
tillage ; started in steam | labour this year enough to have supplied them with abundance of as 
my expectation Cite tha that of miax naas persons) it, and the 1d have now had the satisfaction of looking at a 
_ this: ft oe fi yor vate eby crop instead of naked fields. Our work will getting 
til land with sh i , Vetches, and Trifolium sown on the Wheat stubbles. I A double Bedstead, same ... ies 25615 9 
*pParently h ooy an = us remo ove a have always preferred ploughing for Trifolium na for the _ "Half-tester and nå Furniture— a 
p eavy tax u sie ion, ter | sake of being better prepared for the tr 80a p of Turnips ; Sing comple! We we 
the investigation, it on remains for me to lay before but as it does t Tiaka oe rag in upon the oe be apie y o, writ 
i i | Wheat stubble we must give up ploughing. G. ETTE W. WARE. AM 
digegy, of ural tte what I have S. BURTON has ONE LARGE SHOW ROOM devoted 
Tonihi kan re ene, on -the principle that small exclusively to the display of BATHS and TOILETTE WARE. 
| Maults of j i rst es to ea aa ondents. ‘The stock of each is at once the largest, most varied 
| | form of sid or field in in the | Norta ieee a ea 8S. We mast refer v the ever tien ange ey ogee yos 
a. | positi i disti: i r Newspaper i fist with those have make a 
$ tat these jeie bi pti cnt L pera = of the tat t which his lordship referred | distinguished in this country. oe ag eine bee = Ža yg 
A tillage eae 1 That tillage Sa raga nave mee been and will again be discussed in the Agricultural _ e ii gph set 15s. uncom ye ma i mama 
g Means ie, á is 0) Gaze: P, . s, pen A 
Productisy eld Practice and that, therefore, it is life | Sare jes P BHORT-HO ‘ORNS : Correspon: The principal feature in | C Vi oiee egra ee Toilette War: 
4 ‘last week ae neg disposal of two bulls of | in great variety, 
Practice 2. That on t the d| Mr. Sainsbury’s sale pin iiy br tho 
ence “iffers from all natin i arts in exist- | the.“ Duchess” blood, the 4th Duke of Oxford and tae Duke | ‘The la to additions to these miyo premisi (akoiy by foe 
i ” sol largest in such 
Materia x That there j be th Cambridge, A S-yearold heifer ington 6,” sold to the laren USES is devoted to the display of the most magnifi- 
|e at ce EP Mr. Thorne of New York for 900 gut ong ERAT, HOUSE IRONMONGERY (including 
i i i estead and li 0 gui and 120 - cent stock of GEN 
cmetial in th p Stra re ae ee: a G. It is now a somewhat unseasonable e subject, | Cutlery, Nickel Silver, Plated Goods, Baths, Brushes, Turnery, 
Course e field. 4. H it follows that that | Tussr Fiy: hich the same’ iers, Iron and Brass Bedding and Bed- 
; of $ AÀ; k - but we may mention ‘the giiir: penne: on whi correspon: Lamps, Gaseliers, T rs 
Bay be eding which is right in the homestead ent of the * Journal of the Society of Ante depends are—thick hangings), 80 arranged in Sixteen Large Show Rooms as to 
-° wrong in the field wing common Turnip along with the Swedes, the aioe sone Pare ere. y in the selection 
mete i fomndea ¢ hat our present fie seag 108 i apon ieh to P be hoped for elsewhere. 
d iud in a mi on = ori ormer erica,” in the notice of et rated Catal caer Coe 
eae et a r is and mau. The words a Puroip needa in mera” in the n Turnip ena 5 grak RE e Street; 4, 5, and 6, 
a mi: _of the real ager seeds in AUSTRALIA,” &c. Perry's 
