——-S:—( a 
14.—1845.] TH 
E ao e ET URAL GAZETTE. 220 
anv CO., 61, Gr ase, ch-st es et. 
Park- rot 2 Southw: 
mprove 
NSON 
d 17, poy 
culturists to approved m: 
g ie wank system to Pineries, sisi mig g i Kp &e. 
La h atmospheric heat as well a s bottom-hea| 
tific 
Soy yyhich the co: redu 
wellknown, pent y require de sri 
tseen them in operation, pros SW 
se z onas reference of the highest authority or they 
may be of the ponin ts and principal 
Rane tarongnont t the kingdo! 
Aan w Par See oe street, arney article required for the construction 
ob sen Buildings, as well as for heating them, m 
obtained n the most advantageous terms. 
conservator = &c., of Iron or Wood, erected upon the most 
amental Ba gns. Balconies, Palisading, Field and Garden 
ces, Wire Work, & 
dG 
fally solicit the attention a eie Hag it. 
ethod of | the 
secured 
. | method 
o. beg to inform the Trade that at their Manufactory in 
of 
we must depen ad & i 
aie 
for our success in removing the 
e influence of frequent artificial 
Ver often both these 
and then of course both of 
results of farming in any two districts, so as t 
termine upon the skill of their farmers ; nor, in oe | 
ual o 
pag ll an w 
efor 
pail eg 
us laid 
o 
ei e benefit whic 
land, apparently drys has received ra om m on nt 
ENGLAND INDEPENDENT OF ICHABOE FOR G 
RAIN’ S GUANO.—This being the Aiea 
BR introduction to the Agricultural, world, it has brka 
Eey! almost every description ofc 
dra 
year “ot Smith’ 
ain system. Nie — ge 
Mr. | each to te 
is cquestiontBly 
edb 
me's er by considering 
i 
stt 
connection with the siesta nan which, and the 
soil upon whi he far med. I e 
ftot 
pro’ in eis w bea N 
ath to Ti superior to the importe a fg ‘on alwa i be | Ing : "i sma proportion to | details of far nd nature an 
depended on, Sale’ — e ed ‘tet that which isin a wet state rhe the retention of quantity of the produce of the land in the different 
impurities; me "TESTIMONI Wi na er whi ch falls upon- the surface i in the : state of portions z the district, the Farmers’ Club would 
act of a ] the opin ‘ead’ its b d 
Fart, near Folkstone, Kent, ok not only have t pin members expresse 
r Guano has turned o out t well, sitcqeanahaic ult sche ai PN arema dry, is so far | at monthly intervals thro t na year, but it 
stmout Sexpectatin it has urnips best at the poorest faja the tardy and imperfect esc at the it those same opinions 
part of the pie bolag the spot where 1 emp nero ett ill | Water, dencbially in winter, and during long periods} as embodied in their practice ari tested by the 
on ? > 
Onia y yours re ageet aliy, ; a ie Kersey. of ee in ote fon a a Pe that the work: | rescles of that practice. 
Tahe rice 9/, per = nc P a sacks, whar. elivery to e land is o en aitiicult an recarious an 
m enne peg age atypia po Pie Spl sical icc hat p » al ut such rome statements would also be of 
from London, deliv re ioe iso, BRAIN’S HIG con. y era nly exist a eier to culture ge nerally ; ar possess 
CENTRATED LIQUID GUANO, for Flowers, Plants, Shr uas a state of thorough &ryne To this, there ein he iri of scientific m t is of 
agreed = 1s. 9d. per quart peo hich, 
one c , eiik make. a tnost powerful Liquid. Men Lee wat hich fall a ed by t the e retention of fineness that the theory of "agriculture be per- 
To be had of ‘ait stespaseable eee ‘Seedamen, ee Chemi adve er whic alls dip its surface—let u t as cted, and to this end those y 
c 
ists, 
ng 
GENUINE CRUSHED BONE uarter, includin, 
ed p 
Steam Mills, Thomas-st., Stamford. st., Blackfriars, London, 
The Agricultural sos mined 
SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1845. 
EETIN R THE O FOLLI EE 
Wepnespay, April 9—Agricultural Soci roa England. 
Tavurspay, April 10—Agricultural Ta S oc. of Ireland, 
L Aen ee et ion see of F; koged 
TauRspa 17—Agricultural I: 
FARMERS’ CLUBS. 
London Grove Ferry 
April 75 Ste’ ey April17 Richmondshire 
April at n eee and Walsham 
8—Abergavenny Sto! 
Aprilis{ Rochford Hundred’ aa 184 Wrent 
Framlingham ril 19 Cardiff 
April 18—Halesworth Swans 
HE principles on which TAHE ART or DRAINING 
finan will form suitable subject- matter for two or 
sist in this work must be ne with facts and 
materials by the practical m But eg se 
And, é t the outset, in order that we may be safely oe 
inde ed, that the results of a Timited experience can 
guided in our search after ae Page at us 
consider what the > objects of drai 
The 
in of Grins age 
is to hinder the stagnation of wate ale This, 
of course, it effects caf ia its gn removal Wa aei 
water, rehend is not the objec 
i ie e means it rome to effect its 
d perhap; 
it is only from the average of large ex xtents or 
seo eon epee per correct inferences can 
| her be dra ue of ac fy i ote of 
large distri “of ail ts pren ver eat. 
| persuaded that scent men would sestiigly ilitia 
f this subject to the attention 
orrect Eyr E, statistics, if of districts of 
| any extent, are valuable, lastly, i in the cc eee 
t 
| moving, just as that whic 
| here dra ainage cannot effect t 
ke pr flowing e fast as o sach, which has been already sre considered i in 
it it flows off, and ¢ the fact that aper—the policy of breaking inferior 
Sepe rass-la artes s hall next week apply th infiiemige 
stagnation of water, not to dei its re- | tion c « M.S.” in the tables 
It may be said, “ This is mere 
play upon words ; whateve r the object may | be the 
| hi nder the 
| ble aes is its object. | before | red at pages 195, 196, and 215 
€ 
remarks on the details of its pronti must appe ar 
_ elsewhere: the former, whether w 
of them 
ON CALCAREOUS SEA SAND AS MANURE. 
_, [IN an r toa correspondent who asks for informa- 
. elsewhere, » we ot the li 
Sages ın 
out of the land the better.” Thoug h we admitted 
“ the fact,” as it is called, which is ty no mea 
isputabl t we contend it in! Bets rp understand | 
y obj ct of d : the 
| explanation of it, by reflrclies’ tô de effect if drain- 
age of irrigated meadows, is full of instruction. 
his, however, and other matter bearing on this 
subject, we must postpone till a er opportunity, 
whi oh is rhinos pid oad as manure in differe: 
it. 
T ÅGRICULTURAL | parts of i It is, as w TAa 
thrown up an: rtly an 
E 
geology of the dis- — 
} dhl. 
_ THE IMPORTANCE oF Cor 
i 
pa 
when the relative levels ‘of sea a 
stan those we now find, th 
JIE ins 
i of our 
ety. 
vd Ne at t once enter | 
Bee 
sed. was em) 
rena 236 years ~~ as a 
Cx 
pi 6 acres of l 
kt are to c onfine a 
ze 
off 
saturated a 
op ven baits aa easy to believe, ae x 
d hardly 
Bien y be aie that a ditch not m 
it—la 
co 
and, cia its i a 
the waters of a| statis 
i overspread | 
Cornwall (1602). Big 
aii nd-carriage 
for this sand at upwards of 30,0007. per annum, * Dr. 
, that 4000 horse- 
norse 
loads have been taken from Bude i in one day. + No t only 
eer and if 
o so, we should soon 
Partai a body of facts connecte 
canal, ‘with its branch extending to Holsworthy, the * 
hiaf Thich ic th f hi a 
: ifo 
30 inches es deep will in a 15 or = oe from 
nd te is wetted, n nto t 
heart of wh ad 
ough no 
considessble depth; a 
e | by giving up 
thei fx neighbour urhoods they are 
o the 
, tho 
20 feck are wd be tig fis “ sages Waters | 
but it is conveyed overland abundantly in carts, 50 that 
tion contained i in any existing agricultural library. 
The, -= d by farmers that 
m management in 
only laying t haii 
ya and Devon are noe re it from Bude. A good 
arwith Boome: = aoe the 
ani near Camelford, pepoty ry conveying thi 
an account of the farm 
selves o 
is, we t ink, ny m t by the assertion which i “ Large quantities of sand are obtained upon the 
Dun 
bar in Padstow harbour, employing constantly about 80 
barges. 
e, that i is only ignorant landlords 
his men in several od ial amount of sand taken from 
otc as fi on this subjet a are 
are peara ely opposed to 
y ce sou 
nd to injure it; in the 
is manifestly inapplicable, and 
to the Cet See from which it em 
n} Th w 
be so, it s es. 
hey ome! 
| comes the 
a 
into the interior ig nki Wade Dildos 3 the Bodmin vail 
a- | Way, and its branch, up the Camel, to Wineford. _ Not- 
armers’ Clubs would possess great 
its ene foe's we were pi ch ae pene persons 
also be very useful in other ways :— 
let 
| | * View of the Agriculture of Cornwall, p. 128. 
ar a letter in the pee e Transactions of April, Ta i a 
soil, ts place aiet 
&e., as dependently oft the general im mprovementin the agri- 
full statisti statement, we Geia compare Pi culture of the country, wi 5 yea 
within 2 
