30—1850. | 
— — —— 7 
GUANO. a — of the Peruvian 
and sale of this valuable 
r ent for = 
MANU RE, we we think i it for "ae protection of consumers 
and table de alere, 1 a Le them that oe — 
an 
s. Gin, 
ers of 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
473 
URE WATER raised to any — from a small 
fall can be obtai by FREEMAN ROE 
The chis 
fitted to = which can be remo when 
required for stirring, These shares whieh are made any 
required width, hoe from 2 t inches now the surface, 
according to the s in ved, * 
RES.— The 878 ing 5 manu- 
factured at Mr. — cc — berg 5 fea : 
Corn and Grass Manure, per 0 0 
Clover — — 0. ee “ s 25 0 0 
urni annie, 75 2 one — 7 00 
Su ie Reid id a Cor molites k 2s 4 
C: 
x Fomos. 69, Ki Fi City, AA 
Peruvian hae to contain 16 cent. of 
onia, 97. 15s. per — ; pkg fort Myx or more, N. 10s. per 
CORN MANURE FOR 
— ae 
HE LONDON MANURE = cei most con- 
the above. e daily receiving 
isfa 3 3 from parties Shs aned it with great 
will be found nly equal 2 and much 
vi ble to produce 
asers can receive it direct 1 the Wate. 
houses of the Importer. -~ 
Bridge-street, * EDWARD Pursrr, Secretary. 
Country Dealers and — supplied. 
BY HER ROYAL LETTERS 
MAJESTY’S PATENT, 
PATENT HOTHOUSE “WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHE 
DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen — 
ə to erect Hothouses, &c., to the vast superiority in every 
respect possessed by his PATENT HOUSES, which he m 
warrant superior in every respect to an others. Good Glas: 
from 16 to 21 oz. pe 
the Ho 
per su 
principle 
another 
patty. —— — 
STEPHENSON 
and eS rea of the Im proved © CAL 0 BLE 
cy ag peer ae yespectfully solicit the attention of 
scientific Hort Et ir much — ed method of 
applying the Pineri es, pagating Houses, 
&c., by which atm * Vell s bottom. heat is 
eure to any Scaled . without the aid of pipes or flues, 
S. and Co. have also to state that at the ed of — 
making their Boilers of Iron, as well as 
Tank "Syete em 
h 
friends they are now m 
Coppers ay whio h the casi 5 reduced. cee Boilers, iga 
now arcely require description, but 
z 8 N — not 7 fides in . prospectuses wil 
be forwarded, as-well a eee of the highest authorit yi 
—— — be seen at most o Nobility’s seats and pri 2 — 
Nur ut the e 
S, oid and 00. to inform the Trade that at their Manufactory, 
17, New een 5 * eg = — construction 
of 3 ing them, ma 
eg — — 1 — on ** — —.— — es 
—— 3 &ce., of Iron or Wood, erected upon the most 
ornamental — — 
Fences, Wire- 
HE CONIGAE : BOILERS ee BY 
Re ROGERS, Esq., are supplied and fixed by Joun 
N, ironmonger, — Also all kinds of Hot —— 
— pag r Churches = Buildings, Mr. S 
2 be Warm 
Pes alt aratus bei 
effici and more durable than — bee * “safer, 
SOIENTIFIC AOADEMY AND AGRICULTURAL TR 5 ING 
e li 
Establishment, 3 
Manufactures, or 1 oe — e influence, 
and wealth of England, depend, i . „upon the 
proper application of scientific — tte working of h 
mine: 
evident that a young man 7 Eek e wd 5 0 
education, possesses a ound ki eof Analytical Chemis- 
try, Mine’ gi aag —— Eiadred subjects, will 1 the best 
B T wih 4 in 2 echnical branch of 
for which e des 8 
In their n, Messrs, Nesbit give a pro- 
minent itlon i — 3 e sciences ; iana experience has 
proved that instead of retarding the pur at the ordin 
S e pupils KATE ta ea 
‘The pupils have re ly ome of th 
_ ae 5 m 2 who — aby some of t t — 
ves y gra with their general knowledg 
their 1 in physical science. oe 
rticula: be 
38, Kennington. — ö — ay be known on application. 
ESSRS. NESBIT’S CHEMICAL 1 — — 
0 z. 
re R 
Chemistry, Geology, Surveying, Levelling, Railway Engineer- 
3 s 17 be 8 — N NESRBTIT's Academy, in 
goo 
Mr, Nrenrr 8 rocks 
on n AA metic, M ensuration, Gauging 
Land 5 arerin J English Tarm &c., are pena by Lona- 
and Co., may be had of all Bookse 
O NOBLEMEN and GEN RYDEN who gw 
a plentiful and — SUPPLY of PURE WA 
to their Country Mans 
EAST ON and ‘AM 
FALL OF R OF AFEW 3 CAN r 3 INED 
and its ae pete durabili e fact t of 
500 of them 5 in England oF —— countries + 
EASTON and AMOS have now been at work ming jou, 
| ample p: 2 its great value and ficien 
Estimates of the expense of the Machine, Pipe s for the con- 
veyance of Water, Fi - Reservoirs, m 
to Messrs. 
ON and AMOS, CONSULTING 
GINEERS to the ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIE 
office in Orange-s . 
at their street 
Works in the Grove, Southwark, London, 
r be ing ab 
ble to 
€ 
the plan nts, reducing the pie of 7 from ás, to 8d. * —— 
0 i the six ti uch m 
t 
ually, , for the nih one doped: — pai hosing 
„ Palisading, Field and Garden 
and. es 
DUFAUR and Co, ken exhibit, at the Royal —— — at 
Exeter, the follow mplements agers —＋ by Dr. 
A Drop Drill fo the > 
implement to supersede tet Pret ce 
power; the same by hand power; an in ip 
ca sting = mag — Bg rng or depositing i 
power ; y hand po ai a horse 
vere ‘pibtles 8 ya Be Plou a Scarifier 
a paring Plough ; a single pty Plough; — d 
and i agg with various other fittings; a strike Plough. 
—Apply essrs, Duraur and Co., 21, Red Lion-square, 
1 wie are — * — — turers and vendors of Dr. 
NEwIxdrox's inventi 
Fr — A GREAT SAVING 
ABOUR is effected by the ae 
DRUNMONDS IMPROVED REAPING SCYTHE, in 
down all sorts of corn The demand for these r is 
yearly increasing, — the y continue to give hpi ~ 2 
May be = Troen the subseribers = = s. 6d., or 9s. ea nase 
when t d forw 3 
ta 
paid to 1 Hall, . ‘anid to all the stations 
along the lines of the Caledonian —— 2 British Railwa 
RUMMO 5 & Sons, A —— — Stirling, N. 5. 
N.B. —Orders from aiae ph oon * ondents will not be a 
tended to unless accompanied by a remittance, 
The Aavtcultural Gazette. 
'ATURDAY, JULY 27, 1850. 
MEETING * THE FOLLOWING WEEK. 
Taunspar, Aug. 1—Agricultural Imp. Society of Ireland. 
“THE PRI ie ADOPTED HERE IS TO prays. FOR 
EVERY CROP.” mes Commissioners val 3 A 
has 
practice pri 
-e they should be prepared See thoroughly 
un an est manufacturers have been ™ 
ear we look forward most confidently to the 
universal adoption Mr. Hupson’s plan of 
MAN 8 
s that ee e 
o ev very 5 besides, 
ing such 
5e in of either farm manure or gate 
to rac — at shorter cons of time than four o 
five 
The "plist adopted by Mr. Hunson and man 
other farmers in Norfolk is to apply the farm ir 
le to be desired, ae 
pe with the syst 
a bare fallow, on Which we 
A 
ana two white crops an 
persist in letting their land from year to year, will 
still shut the — eyes to the contrast afforded by — 
Hupson’s — and saed un miserable esta 
Mr. Hups ee by the report of a 
se fire is, 
te Co 1 wid a with clay marl 
nce in a lease of 21 years. e we see a ten ant 
ne effecting an e on another person's 
roperty, and for the repayment of his outla ay; 
ee 3 during pse lapse of a 21 years’ 
ch a thing ever occur on a yearly |t 
holding ? aise Mr. * s farm were let from 
is farm then be covered over 
ink not. Who would then 
the application of man 
use we believe that this high an a le 
ore 
commented a few 
ago. 
Can it be possible that those landowners, who | 48 
on. To those of our readers who are not so fortu- 
nately situated, 25 oe t of a lease, our remarks 
have no applica 
For the reasons alre ty named, it is 
4 ance = the cy 1s of applyin 
Het Se out with the ordinary re 
the full development of 
irs are evidently the 
obviously 
g Manure to 
of the f arm ; an for 
this e — 
av ieee means within reach. 
sul 3 N 
~ 5 bie clearly the value of these ma r the 
wth of Turnips; but their apelidetin ion to the 
Cereals (though bee! useful), has n 
igh so successful. — 1 Z acres 
orme: ar m 
AN 
d 
, anà — would be glad to 
any of his ae if 
e. We by 
0 
milar result for the 
d ht about om improvements in the 
paration, o or Å raeg skill in the application “of chew 
valu ven 3 post gig ide. 
e meantime, we are glad to be j 
on the aut of a series of vars riments, that artificial 
manures are likely to prove very v. valuable for 5 
Clover 2 Should our anticipations 8885 correc 
this instance, it will be a great boon on — 
11 where Clover has hitherto ite the only or 
oe green crop, 
substance which, amidst a host of others at 
er’ 
able to report 
woul 
Attention bined first 
by 1 — t 
always — ‘late it fied | been used for Turnips. 
We observe in one of last week’s eo $ reports in 
the Mark Lane Express, a 5 2 aoe been 
noticed. Such, then, is the prese our 
— dge in n the ae and 2 of "artifical 
ures, and we would recommend our r ana = 
= "iheir, horar ba t next spring on the Clover. It 
e be long and many a day before Mr. one s 
n will be universally adopted ; e after so much 
aa ne with Turnips, if we eet means 
of extending the il be bal 1 Clever crop, a very 
or has 
5. | aai rtant step will be 
Ir is a somewhat singular fact that the farmers, as 
a body, are almost, if not altogether, 2 in ied 
cause of Roap Rer ee wane . who 
avowedly averse to any alteration of the ma et 
system, because ey fortunately happen to be 
situated i = the 1 of a statute-labour a con- 
mar pis t-town. In these cases the 
un ie such roads by only paying 
and, 
er case pay: 
e viae i in the sag 
th and those he does not use. If i 
how comes it that a with to 
is assessed is for repairing the statute-labour roads ? 
by a fund raised, with- 
an age charge on land. 
me objections may, no doubt, be pian against 
3 horse lpr 8 and pos 3 
9 causing more des o public 
e r ere eee — quit be: ces 
nual payme ent. ome t, in this case, the appa- 
mary injustioo would e than counterbalanced 
ater boon, viz., ‘test. E libe ny to travel at 
al directions 1 let or 
drance, or additional expen m rate on 
lieu of turnpikes — statute-labour assess- 
mode of conveyance, 
dmits of the — route being tak 
of Bm. detours are made 
country gentleman, for the special purpose 
