38—1850. | 
ann aac MANURES FOR WHEAT 
ged (finest Peruvian), Super- 
—— an 
ospat e of «he 
Dried a Prepared 2 e “Urate, Gy — Ps 1 5 od 
e bes — 
meee n and Eng 1 „Upper Thames- st. — — “ap 
THE SES MANURE COMPAN Y beg to offer 
under 
LONDON MANURE COMPANY'S ‘WHEAT MANURE FOR 
AUTUMN SOWING. 
CONCENTRATED URATE. SUPERPHO W igk LIME. 
PERUVIAN GUANO. SULPHATE OF AMM 
TURKEY AND Cama te SALT, GYI 
; also a constant supply z English rod 
“Es to be free herd — 3 
Bridge: street, Blac wae chen: * 
ANURES. — Tisd Manures manu- 
factured at Mr. = pak i Fe * Oreck = 
oad Manure, pe! p : 0 
p Manure, Roj aes 
Soperphosphate of Lime F 
Sulphuric Acid and ee A EUS el SA i 
ce, 69, King William-street, — “ny 
N. B. raur Guan nteed to con 6 per cent, of 
Ammonia, 91. 15s, per ton; and for 5 tons or 5 MN. 10s. per 
ton, — dock. Suiphate of Ammonia, &c. 
PERUVIAN GUANO.— As A r 
the atio 
MANURE, we think it right, for — — of 
table apprise them tha 
artic 
. 
them to apply either to ourselves, to our agents, Messrs. GIBBS, 
Bricut, and Co., of Liverpool and Bristol, or to dealers of 
tablished character, in whose honesty and fair dealing they 
can place implicit confidence. ANTONY GIBBS and Sons 
R. S. n 8 e eee IN- 
Mei nia aoe Illus e, together with a 
ture ding o of G 5 gre tue after cultivation of 
the — phe — on application to Messrs. Dora un and Co. 
21, Red-lion a London. 
RS. NESBIT’S CHEMICAL AND e 
5 * a 
Lon 
culturists to their much impro ethod of 
applying the Tank System to 33 Propaga ating Houses, 
t 
&c., by which atmospheric heat eat is 8 
any required degree, wither tne. a of pi a — — ues. 
S. and Co. have also to state that at the request of numerous 
8 they are now making their Boilers of Iron, as well as 
per, by 5 the cost: ia reduced, These Boilers, which 
own, 
criptio 
— peta mre ses oo 
be forwarded, reference od the. ‘highest authority ; 
as well as to 
may at most of the = bility’s seats and — i 
and Co. beg to info’ t their Manufactory, 
Ti; New Park- street, every article 9 7 rte the no sega 
of Horticultural Buildings, as won an te r heat them 
advantageo 
LE 
law of gf cats AE satiini 
3 I had almost said the very ethics of the 
steam-en of 
thro 
anor, — bot re deseri n, but to 
may | subsoil, which the 
abori 
Whoever would now dream of r ng the 
of the hand-flail in the Thres 4 tachi or that 
of the zai ina 3 or of putting the piston- 
t the lev ia peer nl a pump-handle ? 
255 8 ‘these 8 attempts were all made 
see i 
— oe oe be of e the Ar ed 
I am aware that I am ae en unavoid- | e 
— in so this; but no one 
ing it, the difficulty of m akin ný th 
part of the question intelligible to the agriculturist, | 
The 
añd the agricultural part to the machinist. 
stoking ne has as 
draught. He isa revolutionist 
as easily as a circular | f 
sa into sa w-dust 1 ? As to employing 
a ft he ses wti urn a drum, to wind u 
be A aplough, to turn upa fro a nd all this as a 
mere prelude for an after-am 
a 
| respectable e. for — at the — pull at — 
with 
task erly a 
ee, 
ed work it is put to accomplish, 
jen. a tool with pars of dea 
written upon 
(be it as ancient as it may), for its tyrann oe the 
bears whole burthen inj 
form | 
Beca 
n their ay, — the several inventors had come to a of labour 
n turn vem 
h 
ae so ofen to "the 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 601 
8 = you leave ploughing’ ae tes | diagram, to describe ene. $ the mind’s eye 
Get into steam-power and you hav re to do | an 8 that has fac een ; however it 
with the ia gh, than a Horse * 2 ith a may pay hasera familiar e 1 to my own eye. 
spa It essential whatever of cultivation My notion may be wrong, bu t I am strongly induced 
4 it Kr b done by the traction of the imple- to feel that such an 3 nt alone will ever fulfil 
- Spade-work is perpendicular. Horse-work e Here rads. of th aig ine, which shortens 
is is eisiaa: achine-work is ci semi d remodels every ee t undertakes, and never 
ee dee to old en except where they are 
om wes ves intrinsically perfect in their mode of 
ou nds, a pest art from the 
— inaccuracy, and incompleteness of the work it 
a 
E Stones! There is 
en equally 
ne. uld have been 
rary 2 Lay a, 2 3 ri use of the Plough or 
me Let e instrument in use 
s. 
don and w n such case, W 
ins 
n (and 
e and minute as that o 
go score k fe ere of ee tany fair on the most | of its ts la rious blundering path. long in 9 —.— 2 A were not 
ornamental designs, =, Balconies, , Palisading, Field and Garden say the Plough has sentence of death written | under the supposition, received at second hand b 
Fences Wiis ga upon it, because 4 — essentially imperfect. What it them, and therefore the more difficult to eradicate, 
1 o — 2 3 towards the work of cultivation; but arr ploughing is a neces: 1 0.1 7 4 to 
; at little i tainted b aradical imperfection—dam; e kept in 0 t the Q. e clearl 
Yom For Chur ches and Public Buildings 1 cartes to the subsoil, whi ch is b bruise: PE hard by pa nd ai them, once let them be made fully a 
uld be consulted, Bis wee a a fer, | share, in an exact rati ith te weight of soil lifted, | perceive that ‘ploughing’ is merely the of a 
F t of the force required to effect the cleavage, | long series of means a s the oe of 
3 WEDLAKE an FOr ee ae are in, and the weight of the recs aer If. Were there | a particular end, that end 3 ng the production of 
ai pyme lied the first settlers to Swan River, Port Natal, 2 and no ot eason for sa it than this, 8 cape a seed-bed, o ii depth and — and wit 
would entitle the philo — machinist to the soil as ne: possible inve 
all the Australian Colonies, — 1 IMPLE- 
MENTS ; they beg an oe of their k, a 
church- street, near the gree wall Railway, N. B. Pe 
coming pure rchasers m ay e benefit of an ‘introduction ¢ = 
parties known to the frm a either of the above-named place 
The Agricultural Gitte 
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1850. 
MEETINGS FOR THE FOLLOWIN 
26—Agricultura’ 
3—Agricultural 
G WE 
Tuavespar, Sept. 11 Society of 1 a 
Tausspar, Oct. feo. Society of Ireland, 
Havine received a copy of the pais, lately 
eet y Lord Wittovensy D’Eressy, giving | 
a et of Hoos Pasi: I feel 
a nto called i 
upon a few observa 
it, as I saw, when abroad ately a long quotation of 
some remarks of mine? on Ste ange ti aan ap- 
55 a eects 
achin Illustration Baeral, (che ma aris 
, “lustrate News,) by M. Sr. Germain Le-pv 
But wo views of the subject, I fear, can be 
Ea — than tho se of his Lordship, and my own. 
I hold it (under favour) to idea funda- 
mentally erroneous to attempt 5 — steam- 
ublished last year of Agriculture, 
aan which the extract in the French Journal above in 
mad 
the tilling of the earth. = 8 t what I have sai 
before, that soe contrivance 2 
applying paa annA to tillage Get out of animal 
GHBY’s | 
n | motive 
ee 
= Se» page 75, in No, 5 of the Agricultural Gazette, 1850. 
ka Ee 
e invention of the subsoiler is a standing 
the phate die by the plough. 
Why then should we ere for its survival 
under the new dynasty of Steam 
is 
rid of it. ke an i 
inc der the clod, to tear it up in a lump by b they $ ‘ 
ng ct for aoe ve act upon, toiling e have many rolling agregar a thea in 
ating and treading it down again, in 42 1 field, but we rai ve o 
— attempts at cultivated wbo lesale—when by |revolving implement. The c te -crus ier a the 
simple abrasion of the surface by arevolving-toothed | Norwegian-harrow roll, the ji y-tedding = 
nstrument, with a span as b: the ding | (one of the best pa ruments ever 1 pam 
e, or wo comand clod-crusher, you can per- I use the ca eg ewhat arbitrarily, but the “he 
form the e work of comminution in the most git impo ortant. The first are 
light, compendious, 1 3 
such an — ary rolling on the 
Wr; bu t) per 80 
hind its eee cutting its way do 7 
surface abrasion, into a semicircular trench about a 
T and a agi wide, throwing back the pulverised | s 
soil (just 
t flies back from the feet of a dog 
scratching at a E rabbit-hele) 
then imagine the loco- 
hard ground with a 
independent 2 ee. 
d 
ference I allude 
liable to the evil of ‘ clogging ; 
oil as lar-saw ac 
— of a 3 upon t 
teeth of a saw c 
motion they communicate to the 1 ree — 
moving forward on the hard 
slow and equable mechanical motion 
s 
the revolve 
T pon. Aci 
clan steam-driven will do the same, for I 
according te ar the 
proved it «H does so more effectual lly a 
vard m. lea aving 
This last incident is as it should be ; for aps is Dot 
i ealt with 
behind W 8 e ergja er mo ee. 
nd “a revolving action, a seed- eight in 
never 
s deep, one over again D any 
an aat except the 
better follow at once, attached 
b — to p 5 Srp se 
It is hard, re language and without a 
ehind “with a light 
h had much be 
the The 
ear themselves, by the joie . 
— ·—— ͤ (—— — — — 
F ĩ a e a e 
