| f a 
1—1850.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 9 
IR NEWINGTON’S AGRICULTURAL , IMPLE- every plan he makes, that will not be turne ed, for the restoration of that state of mind and feeling 
Di ENTS.—All applications must be made to Mr. H. Do- | bribed, * recalled, or anticipated—this element | to which alone the pure topics of Agricultural pro- 
essed. 
9 don, — t for Dr. 
e 5 212 ene — . rat — sake ver can be ta ught to appraise at its true | gress can be — ad 
YMPANY bes to offer h, 
ort recognise in its s true e proportions, as the] In no country of the — is Husbandry-prac 
under, and pledge themselves that every Manure — — pris secretly presiding architect that ‘giv es | and knowledge more unequal than in our own. -e 
be perfectly Genuine :—Corn Manure — pripean dna a — to the whole edifice of his pu oe es and actions same County, the same Parish, presents the best and 
Capen ney ——ů— and bear the strictest their final issue and developme the worst divided only by a hedge. This is the very 
an: Also URATE, Superphosphate of Lime, Sulphate; Yet there is no ingredient Bi error we more com- | condition, of all others, to whìch thè diffusion of 
hate eof Ammonia, Nitr Nitrate Soda, Fishery and other monly entail upon the yet — Towne, out | practical know germ BP r is the most specifically, the 
soi KE "PERUVIAN GUANO,—To insure this free from | or miscalculating the effect upon of that most urgently applicable. It invites our efforts not 
adulteration, all purchasers, ne A A oeer * receive their | mysterious force whose — we are — orant of, more by the need, than by the encouragement, that 
ae Warcho on Mr Parser essrs. A. GIBBS and penn aie the Importers, and whose pressure we cannot control—the force of such a condition especially resents. What foreigners 
Bridge-street, Blackfriars, EDWanD Purser, Secretary. ime. Unwilling as we often are to judge, fairly | who have visited England have uniformly said of its 
ntry Dealers and Agents supplied. and 6g “wr ge ad ey the Present by the history | educational state—that it discloses the highest and 
f the Past, there is no limit to the incautious | the lowest, with the widest interval between the 
ROYAL LETTERS | haste, to the audacity with which we E into a N be applied with 3 application to its 
8 eee 0 i Future from the Pres Agriculture. Discouraging as the one side of such a 
MAJESTY’S PATENT 
EE But it ost strange of all that this “should bea picture may be, p is however hennan ed by all expe- 
PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA. | not — fault of the Agriculturist. If there is rience, that this is the very condition from which 
DENCH tes the attention of Gentlemen about | a human calling or pursuit which deals with Time the race of — — ta takes its date of 
* to erect A &e., to the vast superiority in every | and — pregnant uncertainties, more emphatically most rapid progress. e past ten years have 
e HOUSES, ie ji, and on a larger scale than any other, it is that of afforded an earnest of that which may be made in 
Las ihe the rieultarist. If to the working hand or mind of a given time; but they who have in this short 
and the Houses when completed —— Is. ôd, any being the lesson is ever rife, palpable, and| interval done — learnt most would be the last to 
root being formed without w 24 . an the 8 written upon earth and sky, and all the assert that nothing more remained to accom- 
principie being wood raft the glass put in with — he waits upon, mixed with every hope and plished, either ik the theory or practice of the art. 
patty. Patent SHEA 80 57 mo paint, front om 7d, 104, pe iy ing upon every iia nt—the lesson not| Eve i 8 
* — too hastily upon the future, not to be taken, and tends to show that the ratio of 
THE IMPROVED “FLUE BOILER” AND FURNACE, ov K z : : 
BY HER 
Tu ractical ere $ 
industry so — to the extremes of Fear and Hope, very nature temporary, While the advancement of 
and to the exaggeration of each extreme. It would that intelligence and skill that overcomes them s| 
fi hu thin 
W. s 9 7 inform the numerous seem as if the Seasons themselves, instead of the as a any human thing can be, irresistible an 
ï “ Sm . BOILER” of ó small and he 8 mal. 
V. dee cata that esh — experience of the Seasons, guide the impulses of e 
aratus, from that alternate expectation and 1 observable 
to sani e of J. inch pip ch pipe to 10 2000 feet of 1 pipe. A List of in that business to which of all others it should Trovon Turnips may be grown and consumed on 
— 5a tobe the most ietiveand economical of any in use seem that Nature bere * most lavish of steady the farm with profit, yet experience has decided that 
Horticultural and moderating instru he culture is chiefly beneficial as affording the 
Why is this ? Why i is i that the broadly based | most approved method of renewing the impaired fer- 
The Agricultural Gazette confidence produced by Trade calculation and the | tility of the soil after cereal crops have been taken; 
habit of mind engendered by it—which qualifies the | but amid all the advances which we have made in 
SATURDAY, JAN 5 uncertain period of high prices and prosperity, and | agriculture, it appears that a ton of —— mke is worth 
——— J e gte e supports by a more cheerful assurance the season of no more now for feeding purposes was nearly a 
‘URSDAY, 10— p. Society of Ireland; pressure—moderating both by a comprehensive and | century ago. e eg 2 — Colchester — 
Mr. Merca oned 
Tav: 
— ry 
Ir it be an old saw that nothing is more precious willing review of ue known causes that have feeder, which 
an Time, modern instances there are enough, been at work to pe e the one, and are at work meeting, who was — Tarnips at the rate 8 
2 . t 3 1 
= 
t ag not only not acquired or 38. 6d. per ton, shows and it must a 
its periodic epochs. The close of one year and the encouraged, but are so observably rejected from the | recollected that this was 1 under very favour- 
commencement of another bring with them a sort counsels of the agriculturist ? ; able conditions, for practical men know well that 
of prescriptive licence, not more for ye than o point back over the three extraordinary years the feeding qualities of Tarnipa are much greater 
i for rellection—farnishin ng the busy wi with an oppor- | that lie behind us, the first, remarkable for a general | when grown on rich land (such as that on both banks 
unity and excuse, and t with an incentive. | scarcity over Europe, the second for an almost gene- of the Stour in Essex and Suffolk or the warp loams 
to look back a ite ‘nd forward 4 1 — a word ral revolu 2 — 3 not more to political of the Waveney) than they are on the hungry sands 
—to think. at no occupation is so order than rai ommerce, the third for and gravels, or peaty fens, which adjoin. These 
assiduous, so — — 8 as not to be allowed | & reactive abundance of ‘the Harvest, before p aralys sed | qualities, however, are often entirely disguised by 
breathing time between the pulling down of the old | Trade, and its resulting demand, had, except in our the practice of Min Dy large quantities of highly nutri- 
: he ° oa Comey: and only lately in our own, ad time | tious food in addi 
eye over the Works — Days accomplished in the to recover; and again, withdrawing our view to po The experi — of r Scotch feeders * s very 
1 one, and see what application can be made of their on Country, to aggravate the list of transitional | nearly — — same t; 38. 4s. 6d. per ton 
d experiences to guide wi te e labours causes by a single glance at the history of the Rail- is the which is — vel ioe Aberdeen 
are yet to come, aid to apply their errors to road Mania, which pawned into circulation more valle Diipa w when eaten on the land by sheep, 
that best and only use which consists in making wer all the spare Capital of the Country upon the withou ut any artificial food. sak also good soils are 
them the warning-points of future steerage, as the 3 of a legion of beef-and-mutton-eating always sought after, as they — far more — 
mariner enters in his chart the each sunken rock or 4 o be thrown out of work again by the tious roots. In the Lothians many fa 
quicksand that his eye has caught or his keel has failure of the schemes that employed them—to re- let out their Turnik to be — 3 the 
— apoti capitulate these unprecedented circumstances, in yards, by cattle, and 78. per ton may 
‘ But the near completion of the former half of a explanation of a season of comparative trial to the | as the usual price paid; but this does not give their 
d con sue the present, and the near entry agricultural interest during the latter part att Of the | real value, as the feeder’s profit requires to be added, 
upon its other—Hope may be allowed to say its riod, would surely be no difficult or ineffective | Oilcake is commonly given to the cattle, but 
better—half, presents to us at this time something task: did it find a willing or considera ate ear only for finishing the vette rocess, and “Sa 
beyond the mere annual turn-over of one of the y does it not ? Why does the simple r trative common allowance gi Trae is 25 pe 
pages time is counted by; and certainly, of of obvious and acknowledged facts in een e of cent. of the amount — af 
all other classes, to the Agriculturists, suggests a existing phenomena meet with unwelcome and sus- cu oy 
cidence of 1 Wy even th but | Picion, as if ad customed by little anxiety and risk to 
effluxion of a Half-century yields in importance to long habit to the simple exercise of the judgment it is questionable if they 
other Transition in which he is more essentially | "Pon the facts presented to its review ? us ausw. 
It is the eat duch a moment w] Let the half-century tha lies behind us answer That Turnips shoulg worth 
help casting a glance over something more than | that question. Let the habit of mind that it has | sumed by cattle unde 
mime» events of a year, both i in reference to the | seen engendered into the e ee ee sheep exposed to all weathers, 1s 
1. ͤ ͤ T..... vith eoni Seog fae Mers AAA lalana 
= we by the events and changes it has given Turn the circu T _— ee ee, om the same weight of 
ot — man employs in the — 
F = 
due—is sper F 1 un a 
fineness of 8 weather is changeable; 
is 0 for a night of sleep—for he 
has known what it is to pass one, restless; he prizes 
he felt sickness ; he blesses 
values raimen he is sensible 
even to daylight, even to fresh 
tribute of a tk i 
foul fai of the crowded | true 
that surrounds him more aes aeo pee sae 
more closely, than the at re h zwe blishea the fact that —— effect Was a 1 
increasing the su y of artificial Ta 
breathes — the sleeping partner that enters Su] a ew eps itis 5 | duced by 
