322 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE. [Jan., 



let row. — Mohawk 30J lbs, 



2d " Triumph. 26| " 



3d " Clark's No. 1 62|" 



4th " Genesee Beauty 40^ " 



5th " Dnnmore 14 " 



6th " Burbank S 53^ " 



7th" Bliss' Triumph 24^'* 



8th " Magnum Bonum 15:^ " 



9th " Bloodheart 76i " Seedling." 



10th " White Star 5U " 



11th " Seedling No. 5 59| " Colored. 



12th " Beauty of Hebron 77 " 



13th " Queen of Valley 53^ " 



14th " " " 52| " 



15th " Belle 77i " 



16th " Mammoth Pearl 51| " 



17th " Pride of America 55^ " 



18th " Early Vermont 59| " 



19th" Seedling No. 4 65|" White. 



" The location, I think, was somewhat unfavorable to the 1st, 2d, 13th, and 

 14th rows. The seed on the 5th and 8th failed to the extent of about one-third." 



Messrs. Hale, of Glastonbury, exhibited the Early Essex, a seedling or Jack- 

 son White — very handsome ; also some eight varieties of strawberries, put up in 

 alcohol ; also about a dozen lithographs of new fruits. 



P. M. Augur & Sons, of Middlefield, exhibited nineteen plates of apples ; also 

 about twenty-six lithographs of fruits. 



S. W. S. Skilton, from Prospect Farm, Morris, exhibited the Litchfield County 

 premium white corn from the thirty-first successive crop of that variety grown on 

 that farm without changing the seed. Crop this year, ninety bushels of shelled 

 corn per acre ; has raised 1 1 2 bushels per acre heretofore in best crops. 



E. Williams, of Montclair, N. J., showed fine specimens of two varieties of 

 Dent corn. 



I. Gallup, of Ledyard, Conn., five varieties of excellent corn. 



D. H. Van Hoosear, of Wilton, good specimen ears of the Barrett rom. 



O. E. Pettiss, of Lebanon, five dishes of apples ; also potatoes and onions. 



Amos G. Hake, of Bethlehem, Conn., specimens of Datton and Cap corn. 



George T. Piatt, of Milford, four varieties of corn. 



N. S. Piatt, of Cheshire, Conn., eighteen varieties of apples, very fine ; also 

 two kinds of corn. 



N. S. Hollister, of Glastonbury, sixteen varieties potatoes ; also Rowley corn. 



G. N. Miner, of Waterville, six varieties potatoes; six cans of fruit; two 

 squashes. 



Storrs School Farm, a fine sample of oats, onions, potatoes, and com, highly 

 creditable to the farm. 



J. G. Burrow, propagator of the Jefferson grape, three fine clusters of Jefferson 

 grapes, in good condition and of fine quality. 



Rev. W. W. Meech, of Vineland, N. J., three very large Meech's Prolific 



