r 
FP K E ͥ ̃ͤ ůOui M r ⁵— ] ͤꝗw— e é f ß . | e ]. , .. f , , ¾¼—“06— eek 
OEA %¶ ! ˙ A ee ee — ie 
37—1850. | THE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
585 
.. 
THS LONDON an COMPAN Y beg to offer 
asu 
LONDON MANURE COMPANY'S ‘WHEAT MANURE FOR 
AUTUMN SOWIN 
2229 UKATE. BUPERPHOSPHA AHS = LIME. 
PERUV AN SULPHATE OF AMMON 
RKE CU 3 3 GSO, and 
tant supply of English 
© bost quality. 
an pan — sis the Guano they 
free from the slightest st adulterat ion. 
Blackfriar: ARD PURSER, Secretary. 
ANURES. Ti following Manures are 
factured at Mr. Lawrs's 1 8 ee 
d — 
manu- 
0 0 
0 0 
0 0 
0 0 
0 0 
Basaks 
City, Londo 
N. B. Peru vian teed to conta ae of 
Ammonia, 9l. 15s. pon per ton and for 5 tons or more, N. 108. per 
ton, in dock. Sulph of Ammonia, &e. 
UANO AND OTHER MANURES FOR WHEAT 
G.—On Sale, Guano (finest Peruvian), Super- 
osphate of Lime, made from Bone, Bone-dust and half-inch, 
ed and Prepa: 1 — 8 Urate, Gypsum, &. Also 
esi: asas ‘a 5 
80 phuric Acid. al Copro rolites 
Office, 69, — William, street, 
ae and English 
to MAR a Fomor oe 204 a, Upper Thames-sti 
ERUVIAN —— ad Agents of the Peruvian 
guage and sale of this valuable 
ony GIBBS * Sons 
BY HER ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT. 
PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA. 
ERNY a invites 
seed Oop 2 of the best quality. 5 ; 
has varied from “a partial failure to a “ perm 
nent improvement.” They furnish, 1 50 LS to 
eae of the instances described, the e 
and cost 
of the operation, the nature of the soil, “he ‘direction, 
epth, and material of the drains, the cost of the 
digging, and the condition of the land before and 
after the operation. They may thus surely be deemed 
worthy of study; and we shall endeavour, accord- 
ingly, to point out some of the lessons which they 
i er tot 
s to the — of the drains, it is worthy of 
in every instance in n which they had been 
Be 
a eek sen 
nity as drains cut aslant the slope off oe 
y | for pere — at from the conduit through 
be 
On depth of drains these reports do not 
iiaii diane comparative statements. In the 
W cas which a i 
the roo 
another principle with wood rafter: 
ut 
ee HEATING BY HOT WATER, 
HOW TO KEEP A HORSE FOR LESS THAN ONE 
SHILLING PER DAY. 
Do you bruise the Oats you give your horses? “No. 
n: Bo: e ae bushel out of every three, * your — 
TARY W 3 2 CO 8 OAT RRITTSING i 
LS. Superior nes, 
doing from 50 to 500 dackels dell, and more. 4 all 
brewers and coachmasters in London use these implements. 
118, Fenchurch- street, sepion: A pamphlet on the above, by 
2 12 postage stamps. Chaff-cutters, Linseed, Bean, and 
e glas 
atent Sashes, requiring no paint, Pese 7d, to 9d, per — 
Agricultural Gazette. 
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1850. 
Tav aspan, Sept Melee 9 
THUBSDAT, 26—Agricn Imp. Society of Irelands 
Ir u not be generally known that ae ares 
red 
oO 
tc! 
q 
ti 
: em 
obtain instructions a the further steps necessary to 
be will, no doubt, compete for 
these prizes, and our —— wo imagine, would not 
like bo hold back. The characters as to wei 
quality, and uniformity of sample will determin 
merit of the different 
e the 
ls exhibited, and certainly | w 
in what may b 
e, by foreigners, if 
pa E — ourselves, a very interesting section of the 
426 in our number for wy 6 of the i 
ular state 
E 
ß 
AT p 
present yo, there bine be found a 
ment of certain DRAINAGE Reports, Kindl 
lying nglan Seotland, and- Ireland. The 
include every variety of soil, describin ng it as strong 
clay,” “hard clay,” “weak clay,” “stubborn clay,” 
“heavy „* “alluvial clay,” “clay of various 
wate coarse sand, ” “blow sand, 
They describe cases in = the dpi o Pias 
adopted varies from 22 inches to 60 the inter- 
yals betwoun $ them from 16 feet to Tiin which the 
acreable cost the o ration varies from 2. los) 
material has b 
„ “tiles and soles,” “ cape 
th 
re | 
have ma tured thei 
2 d 
4000 with the of a ch appe 
re r land inconsistent with the — of shallow drainage in | . 
= a i 
d clay were Aea 4 fe eep, 
t x Peneira all ex- 
etter 
appear to have been perfectly 5 fs a depth of 
30 inches — the drains being 18 feet apart. In r 
read an art icle on “ 
appeared originally in No. 
terly Review,” and has 
There is ample experience in favour 
in very stiff clays, and their suc- 
cc By oe corresponds 
with the . of the ory. Water 
from land s 
the 
thus the depcb in 
eep from the nied is the 
which there is height 8 oF water in the lan 
v ion which tends 6 
retain it. 
ex- 
was rep ele 
sis 
0 ot 
matter for which may still 
he eee how, by 2 
Barley after Turni 
ep on, 
solved i in . and t thus 
CLXXI. & Quar- | 
lately been republished i in a — 
will not filter | 
of iina than the per centage of alumina its soil 
ad on ce: es other points to which our 
w enter—we must be satis- 
efer not n 
| fied for the ‘inet with berii exhibited what they 
appear to express upon the depth and direction 
of drains 
THE wis AND TES AIR. 
LAGE LECTUR: 
needs, and without which it cannot A 
0 
and s0 Me vag that one thing is a ded it it 
is at once — fertile a 
The ashes of plants contain ll or 12 of the 60 dif- 
barren for other crops, the mineral 
be present. 
each taking it ow 
that the period when 
al . 
Wheat, and the urnips, s0 
eturned to the land, it it wil be a Aio long time indeed, 
if ever, before soil, un managem 
will have 2 per frina of ‘al pete food for — 
that it co 
This mineral gn for er does not enter beg in 
as sand, it can only enter them when 
of the roots. 
with — 
a * of bladder, the pores of which are large en 
rough, but small enough to 
m through, and so 
ulls the water —.— a it rises in the tube. Just so the 
ises i and pulls in the water out 4 —— 
all those mineral subst 
Faney a soil full of 
falls on it just rolls over 
e general adoptio 
stiff clays. 
There is a eS deal in the reports we are Re i 
o upon the intervals hse ibe the drai the 
ib 
the correct 3 of this Be e than the nature 
the soil; that the 3 2 N the 
3 e = receive during 24 a more 
mportant datu 
tiles,” and “ stones oyver tiles, —in which the result 
* © Agricultural Drainage.“ Jon MUBBAY, London. 
of 
to think 
l 
0 sock, distinct 
in determining the Pie interval zs ey 
land be 
starve. 
soil is just like. a man would be 
gdp 
man h 
alll Marve; th ou ugh in the midst of 
o so if there were not some 
