48—1850. | 
THE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZE 
TAB. 761 
SE 
T= LONDON 2 COMPAN Y beg to offer 
under 
N M Antan COMPANY’S “WHEAT MANURE FOR t 
SUPERPHOSPHATE or LIME, 
LONDON 
UTUMN 
CON GENTRATED E 
PERUVIAN GUANO. SULPHA 
FISHERY AND AGRICULTURAL SAL om 
TE OF aaa MONTA, 
e Com 
ly to be free $ th li htest adultera 
po from — 2 Ep w. — oe Secretary. 
Mieze i — N 
3 1 Fac . 
0 
3 
ton, in dock. Sulphate of NUR EE 0. 
oe ee and 
English 
gu caramel e the Guano they 
tion. 
City, London. 
contain 16 per cent. of 
1 mig 15s. per ape a for 5 tons or more, 9l. 10s. per 
Some of the speakers also mentioned that 
ie i “wth adva aae 
s to rec 
they, w 
thè opinion and practice of pam farmers, as we fee 
assured that wherever r luis 
be much less hesitation a — our readers to adopt 
it, than if — ee ice had been founded merely on 
our own a 
an will object that by 175 plan a peo greater 
unt of the able matter of the manure will 
h i fae pend- 
RES, — PRI ee IN. 
Mr. Mitnr’s report, which took place at a recent 
Kast of Berwickshire Farmers’ Club, 
d this practice, | can 
we aay fortify or our recommendation by thus quoting | ; 
In 
n be done there will 
Bush. pks. 
Wheat not hoed produced per acre . A 
7 well hoed ditto 28 i 
1 that it i is s injurious to hoe 
ree from w and conse- 
ee il i 
Wheat where che — te 
3 it ee not be 
y m 
n grown 
ns without change; this I call 
The other p part of the fie * was also drilled in 
y, with the same kind 
rom the same — as No. 1, but the 
STRUCTIONS in 1 aan Most ap: objection by oe excellent crops produced, we believe | of at, an 
proved methods of making Artificial — are. ikisi by | that other brought fo rward t 8 render | year preceding it t to grown on a farm I 
J. 8 a K F 3 R tag 3 Laboratories, Scientific it probable that sworn ed less will go waste. | occupied pi Rutland ; about a rood, also, from this 
e analyses es of Soils, Manures, Minerals, &c., performed as hen is thrown up into heaps in — usual | piece, N and adjoinin g No. as measured off ; 
usual, on moderate te fashion a — fermentation immediately takes | oth 1 — sdy were after red Clover, ‘eaten on the Jand by 
place, evo ee much heat as to drive off on sheep. e next baraat both pieces were reaped on 
BY HER ROYAL LETTERS | n w e am — ‘produe was | the same day, and when threshed— ee ch 
uall 188 case with s lanure we pen fo „ 
MAJESTY’S PATENT. y or No, A produced per acre 5 — i 
PATENT HOTHOUSE ont, KING’S ROAD, CHELSE 
DENCH — the atte 
e to erect Hothouses, &., to the vast s 
respect possessed 1 — his PATENT HOU 
warrant superi ny o 
from 16 to 21 oz. pe 
and the House 
su) al fe 
SES, 
thers 
ara 
m ls. 3d. t 
Say 
2 8 
per 
principle the roo: 
another principle 
a Paten 
HEATING BY HOT WATER. 
HE 5 
Sashes, requiring no paint, from 7 . 
TED BY 
tention of Gentlemen aa t 
supe 3 3 in every 
eet ka 4 furnished, | 
- s. 6d. quantity of am 
h =e 
ontain, we wou 
admit = — a total loss as that 1 showed 
ust be rious r terioration of value. On the 
other band, 0 n the manure is spread on the land 
in a comparatively “fresh state, and immediately 
ploughed in, a very slow Spree takes place, 
and ff 1 as fast as 
1 in 
ing there 
stig toile; and by t 
ae e the re weather 
1 eee 1 EMIGRANTS are — 
have from time 
time — — ner an r ~ it Rive er, Port Natal, pr 
Australian Colonies, with 1 IMPLE. 
tock, a. 
ure 
Sanking purchasers m 
parties Known to the 2 ae either of the above-named pla 
L'on DRAINING AND IMPROVEMENT 
COMPANY, 30, Parliament-street, London; and Bedfi 
8 a having been in active ration fi 1 
years, is als o a undertake Works 22 * the 1 — 
Loan, eee its Act of Parliament. 
oer arbor rticulars and refere mae 2 obtained at the 
rn AY, 3 
-ESSRS . NESBIT’S 5 AND AGRI. 
al knowledge of Analytical and Agricultural 
Railway Engin 
ESBIT’s Academy, 
in 
i Surveying, i English Pa i ae a blishea b, ty tome! 
n Ars! . are NG- 
Mirani Oo., 608 TO re had of all 5 — 2 
ZE MACH 
OTTAM AND HA ILLEN ave a now brou 0 1 to per- 
RCHILD’S PATENT FURZ 
ep 
tural 3 may be 
The Agricultural Gazette. m 
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1850. 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
A brewer ice Dec. eee Society of England. 
—— = Agricultural Soci 555 
BDNESDAY, ety o ngl 
TEURSDAT, n p. Society of Irelands 
a $ 
1 
„will be save 
It is 
1 SCHOOL, 38, Kennington-lane, London.— | i 
ll | answe 
and as t een erop is is sown befo 
umm mes on, when a more rapid fer 
eke end ‘ile pices, there seems s little doubt | bat 
that the greater part if not the whole of the ammonia 
this plan 
The other ingredients s required by 
are found i in an insoluble state 
are also protecte 
plants, which 
in 15 fresh manure, 
ted from the waste of the sy code jerre 
d | by the extreme slowness with which the ferm 
tion take place when the manure is applied in "the 
oem * because ar weather is * cold, and 
eee, spread over the land in 
oak adii giisititia 
7 
It this 
rly | from a change of seed, although the soils were very 
a the seed for this i eee 
et 
No. ditto ditto 
appears from trial that no advantage — 
apart (amounting 
the lands which 
e = the dis tance 40. mile 
almos 
etween 
ah is absorbed by | ag t 
ee 
and the remaining part of t 
apart between the rows on — oe day, wi 
same sort of Wheat 
rom each part adjoi 
— e as follows: 
Drilled T — acre 
Broadcast e 
The difference in yield being 1 but little in favour of 
drilled Wheat, yet it confirms neral opinion that 
drilling is th 
b Wheat but the trouble, ex 
0 ettin bem done 
ing m 
4 drilled 1 now Sy (ak 8 E en dla 
the eee will admit of, — has not 
in the plan 
failed in . well p 
rs, pmb ty when the Wheat was 
of. ‘his plan of autumn 
had porn it -= adapted | 
drilled « on m very light Jan land, — a crop of Sa or 
Bents, the 3 m which was killed by a long and 
severe fros 
22 aren in Wheat has been troublesome to se 
take place too vn a sgt 
circulation of the 
1 known 1 Wheat sown on a farm ay -= seed not having 
ing is capa 
affording to — clay soils “(should it be 8 to 
r our expectations on further taa, will be 
the saving of time in aiy h will be 
of ike 
1849, when a small piece 
A 
seived au 
the sam e out ae ucing smut, un 
of land was drilled with Where 
in the spring in a dry titty which proved very smutty. 
Various are the opi a respecting th and 
Salih applied. oo however, 
* 
myself, with 
e ee 
uring be ed to n land, a 
e practice, and of course the land 
With these cautions we would range the 
trial of IGD pS fut a ring. 
Upon all er hia t is found t er, it 
ill be of great con 2 enc, because the work will 
our correspond es — the 
p state in which farm-yard manure should be 
aie to t he soil. Some, on the one hand, recom- 
y fresh—others 
Sone 
time i comes 
sit to that vations’ s farm, which 
between this diver- 
hich 
are to e epring i so that the soil has 
timeto be thoroughly impregnated with the « elements 
quired for the 3 Trop.” 
by this means uc ar 
breadth of green crop — accompli sh 
ON THE CULTIVATION OF WHEAT.—No. III. 
before your readers the result 
For e ti 
es oots, and t 
nt a greater tendency to fall ; also, that, as 
z res Aee solid soil, the und aan not 
oved, except where it is nec gees ey an it. 
Being myself of this opinion, 5 ad not, ainis, 
b nfirmed 
We first observed this practice on some 
soils in Roxburghshire ; it was there the sal “lan 
5 . n the mn fresh 
tubble "lad N for 
Turnips—nothing but Seis or guano being u 
the spring. is practice bis followed by the 
best results. W e discussion 
een con by facts, and as hoeing was very advan- 
eous to many crops, I thought it might not b 
g | Prejudicial to Whe me imagined ; “Grilling | 
the followi xperi ade by drilling 
* Report of a Visit to the Farms EPER &. 
g. 
the e flowing tr tri 
n of m 
confin clea any root seis 
wee eds that we in the soil wal 1 sure to ne greatly ker 
sed 
„and a greater | i 
ed. 
frar which 
My practice is frequently to pick 
my best white Wheat for seed, to keep the 
e mue 
mined or on sowing it again, 
Friend; aceordin ly, 
he way is chea y in preparing the and 
the Wheat drills much better tha any other 
method that I have tried. The Wheat can be sown or 
lled hour after preparation, and will keep, if 
required, an ble time without 
rit as t 
ous to ha 
Girling’s Hessingland Wheat, g ite | tendency to do pa: The e 7 aie were for 
Clover. Early in nee spring of the present year one in “ermine and advantage, on which I rely 
of the plots was we d-hoed, although quite free pe — 2 your readers, 
other plot left without having the to T. E. Pawlett, 
soil in any way | Beeston, priri in Weekly Messenger. 
