48 LINCOLN COUNTY SOCIETY. 



W. Emery, So. Thoraaston, 20 bushels on one acre; third to Amos 

 B. Harding, Union, 27 bushels on l^acr^s. 



Barley. First premium to Thomas J. Simmons, Waldoboro', for 

 crop of 27^ bushels on five-eighths of an acre, (44 bushels per acre.) 



Rye. David Starrett, of Warren, 25| bushels on 152 square 



rods. 



G. W. Morse, Union, 28 bushels on one-half acre of burnt land, 

 Jackson Russell, Waldobpro', 27^ bushels "white winter rye onl| 



acres. 



Oats. Jackson Russell, 52 bushels per acre; David Starrett, 

 67 bushels on 150 square rods. 



Peas. Sumner Leach, Warren, 5 bushels on one-quarter acre. 



Potatoes. First premium to Charles Crockett, of Rockland, for 

 454 bushels of the Cutting's seedling on one acre, one rood and 

 30"square rods, — fifteen cords of manure. 



Benjamin T. Foster, Thomaston, second premium, for 300 bush- 

 els on one acre ; also 6 bushels of peas on same acre, — seven cords 

 manure and plaster in the hill. 



Gilbert Ulmer, 200 bushels snow ball potatoes on one acre, — pas- 

 ture land, broken in spring, and four cords manure. 



Maff golds. Charles Crockett, one-third acre, dug and measured 

 an average square rod, and found 11 1 bushels of 64 lbs, — clayey 

 loam ; under-drained and well manured. 



Sumner Leach, 150 bushels on one-eighth acre. 



Turnips. John Lindley, 200 bushels of English turnips on 

 more than one- quarter acre. 



Parsnips. W. E. Tolman, 50 bushels on 20 square rods, — for- 

 merly pasture ; under-drained, manured with compost. 



Onions. Nathaniel Tobey, Waldoboro", 17 bushels on 3 square 

 rods. 



