11—1850. ] 
T UCERNE.—JUST IMPORTED a large quantity 
„7 
tities not less than S e 
Sass SEEDS AND CLOVERS FOR PERM ANENT PAS- 
TURE at very low prices; S RENOVATING 
7 2 Ib., con- 
or South | 8 701 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
169 
ANURES.—The following Manures manu- 
factured at Mr. Lawes’s Lenen 2 a 
Corn and Grass M ee .£10 0 0 
Clover Manure, do. si . ie „ 
3 Manure, do. ie ses 5 
hat ery Me A 0 0 
——— Acid and Coprolites 
ont ene William-street, City. etait: 
N.B — 4 Gua 16 per cent. of 
Ammonia N. 15s, = ‘com and for 5 tons or more, 9l. 10s. per 
in dock, = 8 of Ammonia, &c, 
R CONSERVATORIES, 
e a eS te 
to 33d. ber ‘oot, n boxes eet. 8. d. 
— r Under . 6 by 4...12 6 
” * Sara 8 16 6 
a ” 3) ” 73 n 18 6 
32 93 oe 2 20 6 
100 feet iia 200 feet cases of larg: l dics: for cutting 
er foot. British Plate 6 634388 from Is, 2d. to 2s. per 
HARTLEY’S PATENT ROVER, 1 packed in boxes 
of 50 feet 
6 by 4 and 6} by 43 . 10s. 6d, í by e and 7} by 51 8. Od. 
8 by 6 „ wee Ai 13 6 291 by 8 15 0 
wk ATING cL ASSES. 
12 in. an 23. Od. j 1 Satie s. 2d, 
14 ps ‘ais oe 55 ` m 
16 ” es N ee 
18 = woe 6 5 
20 ” „ 55 
22 25 RAS, Bal] ” 1 
24 ” 35 0 1 75 
26 6 0 > ai 200 
CREAM. POTS, 1 35 va 8 t 
from 2s. each, 1 22 Ái Me 
BEE GLASSES, same price. 
METAL HAND AND FRAMES. DCUMBER TUBES. 
12 inches 14 inches lon 
14 „ 
2 See iw oe 16 77 ve ice S 
iS- „ 8 9 0 18 ~ att ref 
» vel 10 0 20 * 8 1 8 
= 0 22 l 10 
tops, s. 0 
Glass "Bhala: Tiles ** Slates of any size ; Was sp Trans, 
3s. 6d. por dozen; Lamp Shades; Rough Plate Glass of eve — 
thickne Lactometers for r trying the quality of milk, 4 tube 
78. 6d; 6 do., 57 Glass Stands for Pianoforte, and wary 
-article in the tr 
JAMES PHILLIPS AND Co., 116, BISHOPSGATE-STREET 
WITHOUT, LONDON 
! Dressing a Spring Crops. 
25 
1E PATENT 3 sg PLATE GLASS 
percent ye 0. 
s’ Dakari of Saturday, 
$ ontin uued experience leaves us no room to a that — 
abe me of rae other kinds for the greater part of Gardening 
4 s for the article substituted for Rough 
— a ee it 
t 1 sample of it which we bcd yet seen was 
8 Messrs. HARTLEYS, AND SOLD BY MESSRS. 
JAMES PHILLIPS & CO., 116, BISHOPSGATE STREET.” 
cases of 5 he ay RO om 23d, 
mall ditto, 10s, 6d. per 1 100 feet, packed in boxes ready 
for immediate nts, 4 3 of Botanical Societies, Florists, 
Rail Age requiring large quantities, will, 
reunions „ estimates at the lowest prices 
m 
Wholesale Wareho 
hades, Gas Glasses, — White 
Lead, Paints, Colones, — Fas for 
Our Catalogue oi of 18 folios is the most com ee ever published. 
No Gardener or Farm Bailiff s be without one. May be 
281 E * 
jia Glass 2 tr swe for office.stand desks, = 
00! 
al 
had Gratis on sending two postage stamp — to Messrs, COGAN | 
and Co., 48, Leicester-square, London 
GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, HORTICULTURAL 
PURPOSES, &c. 
D 
Trester CUCUMBER üs e FLOWER DIEA 
- MILLINGTON’S SHEET GLASS, which is of 
e the best description, 
. per according to size. 
te Glass, ribo $ to 1 inch in 1 from 
Glass Slates and T wie s from 
fiom 28. to 58. Tubes, 
— 
0 24 inches long, at 1d. per teh, "bast tometers , 78. 6d. 
ts may 
te-street ithou 
ne lei tae sheeting 
HOT WATER APP Aaa DING. THORTICULTURAL 
announce that his 
. en ier eah "e — BOILER ” may now in sizes 
s, from that of 100 feet to 
description constructed upon 
the best prin principie. Buildings of any h Wind heated by hot water. 
Ti „ A liberal Discount to the Trade, 
+ Hitt, Horticultural Works, Greenwich. 
e wholl y unfit for any horticultural purpose. 4 
vee saan they included : 
ritish | of th 
before the more vi = — — the 
drai finds a burning of 
ainage of wet iff clays 
present. And to n soma measure, no ruig: is 
ue na 1 Lacie tion of geology as the 
e But it is chiefly from the 
amed of its pretensions that its 
Wass PATENT MA 
ILLIAM E RENDLE Axp CO, Poot are 
Mr, Lawes’s Wholesale Agents for m on Yer} ma 
MANURES S, and can en them at Mr. Law 
fevered at his 1 i — Ry —Apply ‘to ‘Waste E. 
RENDLE and Co., Union-road, Plymou 
5 *, GENUINE he Import Desk ‘GUANO, warranted, at 
91. 1 mport 
ano A9 OTH 
ported by the Con 
of Lime, =, * Nitrate — Soda, Salt, a 
8 known value. o Manx — 201A, Upper 
es- street, t, Lon 
5 GUANO; — This effective ee ee, 
mproved, is confidently recommended 
It is equal to Peruvian 2 
cent. cheaper. a SUPERPHOSPHATE of 
LIME, GYPS M, and SULPHATE of AMMONIA, all of 
guaranteed quality, and — . than at any other establish- 
winie r country. 
255 CLAPHAM ROAD PLACE, LONDON, 
ENUINE han hae EVANS. gora from ** 
mporter’s Stores, LINSE KES, all kind 
avtificial Manures, iiy be had m Lond on re nen for Suan 
Messrs. Opams and PICKFORD, 15, Mark-lane, London 
HE LONDON MANURE COMPANY = to offer 
end 
it will be found .cheaper than 1 and bear 
RATE, Superphosphate of Lime, Sulphate 
mmonia, te Soda, F. and Othar 
E 
NO. —To insuré this free he 
adulteration, all purchasers, if they prefer it, can receive 
warrants from Mr. Pur — se — the Guano direct fror 
the Warehouses of Mes 2 — vig Sons, the Importers, 
Brides stress — D Purser, Seer 
Country Denen ane Agent supplied. 
LASHFTELD'S PATENT ‘COPROS. —A new Ma- 
ure for Corn and other Crops, prepared from the nitro- 
r matter deposi ited on the banks of the Thames, in 
— — with other substances 9 for the growth of 
corn, &c., price 8l. per ton. Sold, in a gow state, at 
No, 3, New London street, Mark-lane; also, a Works, 
Mill-wall, Poplar; Waterloo Deck ambeth ; 33 Praed- 
street, Paddington Basin, 
PATENT COPROS, for Corn crops, o for Turnips, &c. 
23 of Lime, Gypsum, ca ine and saturati with 
liquid manure, CEMENT for Bi el — Tanks, Malt 
House Floors, and Barn-floors, d by J. M. Brasn- 
FIELD, successor to Wyatt i — —— ring 3 Patentees 
ot Parker’s Cement, Established 1796. Drain Pipes, Tiles, &c. 
|The Agricultural Gazette. ii 
URDAY, MARCH 16, 1850. 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS, 
WEDNESDAY, Mare! 
A 
— —Agricu 
Tavespatr, — hy ne ee Po 
Farmers’ CLUR.— Mareh 2 adie Í; 
Ir is not very many years since THE RELATION 
GEOLOGY TO AGRICULTURE were first to an sapi 
$ 
ability of those who enunciate 
8 Pede er too high an importance to tho 
1 3 — usual fate of Whatever excites un- 
was essential to the attainment of a perfect texture 
of soil. And two inferences were immediately drawn 
fr hem—viz., That a geological map was at 
„ an 
diately had the character of the soil e ut the 
and—that a knowledge 
ous strata which English a includes, 
and of ker s 3 ntents, was of . — tial im 
rtance to the onomy o glish nl 
ture. Now it is — — — a knowledge 
na he the mineral pags of the ill of 
material value to landowners, — in relation 
its ers or its manufactures; but the 
the chalk, or with one another, without great expense 
of carriage; no doubt this point, which geologists insist 
is practically use and i j 
mar 
n apparent. But the 
developed. — then the novelty of the eee, * 
well as 
the equivalent for a land-sur- 
concerned. ances, beds of 
transported materi ial lie between fean and the soi 
t 
that so even ce e no such obli- 
terations okt the older geological features of the land 
had taken place, and the soil might | be aP 
have been reg 2 from the 
rocks bel 
others of gin n less remote ; and it BPP that 
there is a complete gradation in the series between 
the few cases of soil which have been kinst wholl 
by the 2 2 85 of the immediate subsoil, an 
few where it has n formi e wholly 
f| disintegration of eo a dist 
brought down ‘fa 
buted the po failure of geologists as agricu 
o both we > — their reren 
eyes of far And thu 
1 the case that the 1 
far less importance to geological knowledge than is 
properly its due; for to give 2 facts and doctrines 
of geology their proper ran position among the 
facts and e of an certainly appears 
a very desirable thin 
There are two grounds on . the prem’ 
R knowledge to the farmer may 
ended for ; and these are pee — on ‘eda 
— advocates have already stumbled. The know- 
ledge of the mineral contents of any formation has 
of late years, in some instances, proved of far higher 
agricultural i pa tine ce than ever was ped acquaint- 
it x 
Farnba am, has ee g 
to certain hi 
geologists regarding t 
the Be accumulation of phosphoric 
they are now k to contain, may 
courage search in other formations also after 
raw 18 of euch gy 92185 — rn 
icultural manufac regards the 
position of 8 — the ee of the opere in 
which the 5 of the subjacent rock has 
contributed to the formation of the soil above it, 
and he aterial is 
of the extent to which the drifted m 
present will, when the composition of 3 known, 
of the very same value which a knowledge of the 
rock alone was formerly believ: 8. 
These remarks are suggested b; perusal of a 
m tely p by of 
1 
: and in nds Pehi leet to 
the nature of the i 
he ale a ; 
examination of the cial de and their 
eposits 
influence on the soil is Ieh to afford. We strongly 
eee the pamphlet to the notice of those 
landowners who are desirous of a more ore than surface 
knowledge of their property. 
ON A pte 5 OF FURZE. 
M. ILMORIN, 
I mave the honour to r Academy so! 
variety of pei Ulex 
asw 
europæus, which is of considerable aA ellin an 
as in a scientific ie : 
A few years ago M. Frochu, the c d agricul- 
turist, me a = fields a few plants of the 
common Furze any s is 
nstead of 
soon become woody, as is tho ease 
ex 
this method of altering a faulty texture PES fallen 
* Ripeway, Piccadilly, 
