9 
17—1850.] 
ANURES.—The following Manures are manu- 
factured at Mr. LaweEs’s — semana beg £ 
Corn and Grass Manure, per to: = 3 : 
Clover Manure, w. 12 
p — * 13 
S . 0 0 
huric ge- danai Cor rolites 
Office, — a City, Lo 
8 
5 
ndon 
eruvian er mye 16 per ce cent. of 
N 15s. per ton ; — for ns or more, 91. 10s, per 
ton. in dock, * aoe of en , 1505 
RENDLE 12 ma 00. „FI ymouth, are 
— TAM E 3s Wholesale E s ty — the 9 = pra 
MANURES, and can supply * 
— at his Fa a Deptford “Greek, apply to et sa E. 
RENDIE and Co., Union-road, Plym 
UANO AND 
OTHER MANURES. —Superphos- r 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
| charges of that journal in this respect have been | 
ceived in Wigtonshire. The following letter is 
ough now resident in Dum 
nin * and well acquainted 
Age and th culturist tha 
— of Scotland. Mr. Ha aay 2 s Secretary to the 
7 oTHERGILL, Sola, = —＋ . nd management about a year ago, and from such data, 
ERUVI UANO.—As Agents vian and a acquaintance Ir. CAIRD for east 
J Government for the importation and dale of this valuable Six can confidently and deliberately say that 
MANURE, oe bere it right, for the 1 of ——— there is not a word o rie ok the charges brought 
d respecta ers, t the adulteration 5 
of the Adele f. is still extensively pract tised, and to recommend Against g at gentleman by t ald's corresponden 
them to apply either to ourselves, to our agents, Mes aeri GIBBS 5 He Say much as fou wit an acre sed to be 
Bricut, and Co., of Liverpool ‘and Bristol, or to dealers of the average rent of land in this district, and he in- 
established c haracter, in whose hon * and fair d tenting they sinuates that Baldoon, once th i 
d 
can place yee to eS- nd Son 
London, April 
CORN MANURE FOR WHEAT, BARLEY, OATS, BEANS, 
&., &c. 
4 LONDON MANURE COMPANY most 
fidently recommend the above, as ee 
very satisfactory accounts from parties who used 
success last season. It — eg 2 fay —— to — mu 
cheaper than Peruvian t so liable y 17 
con- 
s large a growth of — pes Se 4 Gui uineas per ton, 3 ewt. 
Iso beg to offer ‘their Concentrat — Urat te, 
— Lime, Nitrate of Soda, Sulphate and Phosphate 
of Ammonia, Fishery and other Salt, Gy ypsum, Sulphuric Acid, 
and genuine Anian ‘Guin’. To insure this free f adul- 
teration, all purchasers can receive it direct from the Ware- 
“houses of the Importer, 
Bridge-street, Blackfriars. EDWARD PURsFR, Secretary. 
Country Dealers and Agents supplied. 
CORN MANURE. g 
ia tgs PATENT COPROS.—A new Ma- 
orn an na, other Crops, oe ng pr pate 
Soda, Magn ade of 2 
mngside a vessel, or an 
— 
8 
y the 
en don 
Superphosphate of Lime, Gypsum, Sulphate of Ammonia, 
Sulphate, and Nitrate of Soda. 
OHN BAILY, Purveyor to Her Mas 
R. H. 
quare, London 
Ornamental POULTRY iad WATER. FOWL, Dorking, Ham- 
Gold 
po „ Poe. = Co — 1 Fowls. an 
11 sd Pea Fowls. Gold, 
Si — Died ana Mang ecbed Ph — Tame-bred Phea- 
2 —Priced 
numbers. Live ef for turnin g ome 
d Estimates f forwarded by post, on applicatio 
The Agricultural 0 
SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 1850. 
MEETINGS FOR THe TWO FOLLOWIN 
Wepnespar, May 1—Agricuitural Society of E . — 2 
S 
Tuuxsbar, r 
Tar Morning Herald considers that the character 
1 of Baldoon, as a pra tome is of 
h 
ortance at the toh 
lately devoted its leading article 
attempt to prove that the testimony of this 5 
on 1 
tural subjects ought con- 
l of any authority 9 i bie gr 
that Baldoon was 
asserts t among t ost fertile 
farms of its locality, and is among the shost st exhausted 
very lo 
untar, an „ When 
Hi 
ess 
write 
very properly diminish ; but. what | sort of logic is it 
that at the agricu culture of an 1 through 
his * character ? Blackiood w es 30 pages 
in attempting to mainta anity, and 
e 
is kept E by slander f which, 
unfortunately, can in the leat t tend te toa 1 „ 
Conclusion of the discu 
We however with ‘the Herald in thinking | d 
that the a 
such 
JESTY AND 
at | sim 
d general a 
Herald 3 erg aie without havin 
systems — iani 
a charge tres 
ces on behalf fics — a E krs e 
in such matters 
111818 
is a bert pth ae which their readers may indulge a 
r 
eterior: of that district. 
glaring misrepresentations. . Neither the farms of t 
district, nor of any portion of Wigtonshire ever averaged 
four gui ; the farm aldoon, certainly a first- 
class farm, of heavy clay soil, never was in so highly 
improved, in so well cultivated, and so productive a 
condition as it is now unde manag t. 
The greater portion of the land is very tenacious clay, 
and in a wet and paoir ard season it is most cult 
carious to work rop. This a a emy more 
a year ago, and 
cellent heart (after * draining at the 
tenants s own expense); his dairy stock, Ayrshire * 
ere firs — well fed, and manage 
| Sieny pe in W of 5 were of prime 
quality and sym ; his Swede r were also fi 
2 his drain hae + liquid, as 
so 
scien 
ewartry 
The Her "r adn er, refers 
d and farming of which 
„ but I question much if f throughout mi that 
med “agrieultural distri 
ell et: ted ne — as ely as 
n. Mr. CAIRD — — as a 
bad neighbour? he i is universally esteemed as a good 
one; instead of being considered ‘a bad W or 
en bad tenan t, not only the whole neighbourhood, b 
the whole — is and all who have the pleasure of his 
aequain him to be an intelligent gentleman 
a kind, 1 and bene an exce ellent 
2 agriculturist, and 1 1 "feel it to be 
lej ate these tru opposition to 
ey | chalpic ab unfoun would say, malevolent. 
“ Whether Mr. “Cans publications 
the aps toe and practice of From. s 
dp and the exa — le of A 
with safety be recommended ‘a ‘high fa 
od management for the tenantry of Great Britain aba 
which the i 
g recou 
e baseless inventions of fancy, or the 
a malicious corre- | 
ent has unquestion 
is, therefore, all the frien 
of the a agriculturists to Spek this difficulty fail in the 
face, investigate the 8 and page 3 
— on a pea „ with 
the e of anie 2 ace of food at com- 
vely less outlay. This seems me a course 
and necessary in the p prosent emergency 
ure Mr. Caird "E 
Herald, if at all 8 may 
Upon the facts now stated you re fen They 
pon 
can be substantiated by 
We should apologise 1 eg = Mr. i Caan and to our 
eaders for making pe 
only 
; ; and we h thing has in 22 
enquiries viih tie view of ascertaining how r 3 cal tal T ol 
“ I hav i far hag “Baldoon = ee ards P | 
20 ma ie bef re Mr. Cand became tenant of it. 
I was very generally acquainted wet a ine — of 
the county t into t n years ago, 
esided there, and took a deep wih in ap ai ishin 
the Rhins Farmers’ Club, which w hly 3 
y Mr. Carrp, and in which club the principles of hig 
r good farming were advocated so far back as 45, t 
and afterwards. Finally, I examined Baldoon farm 
265 
which seems fairly 3 from the t histo: 
bef the Auchness controversy, that i 
er agricultural = W. 
the abo ove be wele 
tion, but) 
if he 
for if Mr. 
t 
aan “system, rthe 
dislike in the en districts te s the measure 
at 8 under Parliamentary consid 
We are far from thinking that our present system 
of R Py M ANAGEMENT is perfect ; on t j 
after M nN has shown us that 5d. out of every 
Ir. Pac 
IId. goes in pr e nie the tolls upon our highways, 
Dre can be but one opinion of such a system, and 
evil the public would = readily rag» erst them. 
overnment * hel 2 out 
quo 
is — ead had — 
what Pen changed the line of traffic 
„ 
rro- 
N roads have now , the 
the c 
t and a 
2 may be a SW 
leeren well qualified to judge 
manage 
1 fear 
ago ) 
necessity for Government ob rth nce 
ship roads, a case where the e 
of turn 
draw is, that railways have com- 
ous the old 
pike roads with which they often 
aes opened out so many me resources isaf the 
main thoro 
fares of — * 
ut omparison between tlie —.— superior 
3 — of bee 8 roads by 1 over 
the 
mer 
e — — i 
1 and w crease, V 
a farmer whose jana | 115 between a turnpi 
om ip road, by each of w 8 
s case the contribu- 
e road 
‘on t is 
e quo ase, 
means a solitary one, edy it su chrom shows de 
bu or management on the Part o of the 
pike mia —— 
ate thanks of te community are due to Mr. 
N for having i an 0 = 
called attention to the iniquities of the pike sy: 
—it is truly one far i ar of the e 3 
t 5 e frigh souks of riot, which took 
place in the quietest portion of the empire, 
necessary results of its sa when it arrives at 
pris Certai t method of 
collection 
ive 
the tax 
the Tiquidation of “this debt should be oer ort as 
e an area as possi not | an a 
lar 
commis and 3 it be raised 7 a tax on ‘aca 
is immaterial. 
cst 3 raising the necessary funds. for 
powers for 
r the subject of a 
ae i ag 
a set off aga 
epithe so a 
might produce. wie 
