40.—1845.] 
PINGLI HAND DIBBLING MATEA 
S 
AGENTS ALREADY APPOINTED, 
will be gla 
favour of calling. 
Wed 
n We 
Cre won 
- Jam es Cuthbert, 12, Čiayton-sq 
W. Dru Jer &S 
SW. Dram 
N. B.—W. Dod 
‘s. Prockter, Cathay 
—Mr. Thos. gree Tron Merchant 
FW rshir n Company 
Me: STs. 
isrocK—Messrs. Edgcumbe and Sta 
and at 
a= OTHER AGENTS REQUIRED. 
The Agricultural Gasette, 
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1845. 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
— aa = js nnual Meeting and Ca'tle Show of the High- 
> 
ae 9 
DAT, A 
AY, 
Resse. 
Tavas - 
Tı 
ern Agricultural Museum, Inv 
Ferry RMERS’ CLUBS, es 
rove irenc 
Richmondshire Ost if p ieia 
Blofeld and Walsham Rochford Hundred 
E mf Stoke Ferry — 144 Framlingham 
ae Wrent! Isle of Thanet 
— il—Cardiff — 15—Hapleston 
Wenlock — 17—Halesworth 
— 134 Darlington — 18—Swansea 
W. Herefor. 
4 
1 E MACHINES oF 
LGR RE. Havin yi me T described thes 
phi ich 2 scd properly speaking, kaera of culti- 
we come now er srr comprising 
I thet are employed i in setter ting or planting the 
d peration, and effici- 
icy of these, so far at least as “their bearing on the 
heat crop is concerned, are now fortunately sea- 
topics. 
I is well to use m 
achines for sowing ; there is no 
m ope tion in which it is more desirable to 
toid that peeve ich is unavoidably at- 
t manual EE In the ordi- 
ing broadcast, this oami 
ceeds buried at variou: 
ad io exhibit the Machines to those who 
ond & Sons, realt Museum 
ond & Sons, Agricultural Museum 
Mr. Ri c. Fletcher Ilkeston, nr. Nottingham 
Ed 
at ove an also be seen at the beg Polytechnic Institution, soa 
t the Nort 
land and ne a Society, at Dumfries. 
fI a 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
TS 
bette, 
SARS 
uch boxes here potoka ad all worked by 
= 
677 
| shaft — these cups is made to revolve faster by , pinions from one or more on the axle of the carriage- 
one use of a —— er pinion on its extremity ; if cen pre the uppermost is for Clover-seed, t 
se ired to a larger or a ere seed—Beans| second one for corn, and the lowest for manure ; 
or otik iiio or Turni ip-seed—a bearing does = “that a very com mplex yan is here carried on 
with larger or smaller cups is sabetitated for the re once. e various of 
e pi achinehere exhibited, on which, ho owever, we nee! 
llowing kA a pa vie et of nei eTt’s Drill, | n mr at present dwell; we only pos that 
epa on this prin — There are a | the tubes of which we -= ve eath speak mis 
to c o 
h 
by chains, so 
they be easil lifted uj shee turning the 
sg the la he : Bis 
ing machines generally used in 
ng s achines in 
another principle, and 
cribed. The box aree: oe samen 
ies the ionainn shaft to whi ich re 
s fro 
a oes on 
re of a Turnip drill con- 
Uley, partly on this principle, and 
partly on that of ‘the Suffolk drill. It consists, it 
will be seen, of two portions: for each row that is 
sown. Motion i 2 given to the acting of he sapp in reso 
rollers the first 
2 del livered "tele St 
ame eu s such as geie the same drills. 
T lly 
the dise below 
hronch which 
throug ich they of course 
fall. Theu 
ee 
ngenious man! cleverly 
» This principle h 
seer in a Tod a paret e nt S 
"a by Mr. Bent. f Ma ldon, in Essex, 
which we ref 
mmon Turni ip d rill c consi: 
Pay 
e machines are of three kinds, and for 
ses—for scattering seed broadcast, for | b 
se and for di He The two first 
attention now ; they a i da- | T 
, differi 
e case the seed i is Kiei to vg fos 
rite. ee Serias ng it, some 2 or 3 feet fo 
Sto d t o become well scattered 
its ite and that, th r, this seed, 
ivered, is guided to the ground by 
am ae as 
as that — ‘deliver the kear 
ea 
below the surface of the s In 
at petty in a 
rag Mame EESE the. ceed The, latter are ang | 
milar to that fi 
(fig. 2). Piese ‘Gn c Nadas poe eo spose 
-e ede, holes pierced in their 
to 
s per acre— ma: abe Pats ame. 
this have been devised ; 
them we ‘shall devote the 
we a ben fect: one purpose by | | 
ccession four 
methods are 
a 
of seed above these pea inders, 
pana with hee oul t the extrem mity of t the 
po on which they revolve, and which is hollowed 
for the purpose. e seed-boxes are thus always 
on one of its extromities wor 
rpo! 
equally full, and Diir regularity in the quanti tyy 
ee 
s ens a Big 
egr! 
drill paatanenahly mare es accuracy and aa 
in the most perfect degree. W phox be able, 
when ibi dibbling machines, in another 
article, to add remarks upon other points 
nected with the Sige enn of sowing. 
‘CIDER MAKING. 
Ir may be thought rather presumptuous 
usands who 
of all the thoi 
