1 ee 
33—1852. | 
entries 
Best South 
Osberton Hall, Workso, 
SOUTHDOWN SHEEP. 
down ram of 3 * pge, 107., G. S. Foljambe, 
p. 18 entri: 
EXTRA STOCK— 
First prize, Samuel Swift, 5 E set i 
Southdown wethers ; secon awson, Sower 
Burlington, one shearling ram. wh 
a 
best boar, rge bree Jos Knowles 
nes — ; second do., 2., T, A. tie Hibald- 
w, Kir ton Lindsey. By ved 
in oe or milk, 51, W. Abbott, 
Matchles 
. Aet Leeds Tuley, s House 
Keighley. 7 — — 
Fo st boar, sm 5 breed, 5l., Timothy Town, Keighley, 
22 A, F. Lacy, P anton, Wra gby. 27 competitors. 
r the best sow, small breed, in — or milk, A., William 
Youle, gone ll, Sheffield A., A. H. Smith, S Snittles, moos ton, 
eeds, 
of the lame litter, from four to 
Fullerton, Thrybergh Park, roria 
ham ; 2 Lord Wenlock, Escrick Park, bred by his lordship, |! 
4 tors, 
For 1 sow of any breed not gr to 8 in 
classes 21 or 23, ., R. Owston, Brigg, Lio colnshire. II com- 
petit 
HORSES. 
For the best * for hunters, "10l, R. Stockdale, Skerne, 
— N., T. 2 KEAN Hall, Knaresborough. é 
com 
For ape 8 5, a Thomas Danby, 
e best stallion for roadsters i iot, — Fulfor rd; 
3L, F. Newbold, Sheffield, 5 com 8 
t stallion for a —.— l purposes, 10l., Thomas 
Renton, Otley ; 3l., James 
competitors 
For the best mare and foal — hunting, 5l., J. Bainton, 
Wans ford, yer gens 1 mpetito 
Stead, Bishop Thornton, Ripley. 17 
For che best d foal for “coaching, Bl., J. Robinson, 
Leckby, T lit. “3 1 ka 4 
or the roadster mare and foal, S. Wylie, Bransby, 
e best mare and foal for agricultural purposes, 5l., 
J. ange Thrybergh Park. 3 8 
e best three-year-old hunti: a gelding, 5l., John C. 
Athorpe 3 innington. 3 co 3 
For the best mc ve hunting filly, 5l., F. Wharton, 
vers Hatfiel 
For the best three-year-old — gelding, 5l., J. Johnson, 
Brigham, rifield. 5 compe 
best two-year-old — filly, 5l, J. n 
Ruby Y. Yarm. 6 co tors. 
For the best —— -yea —— hackney — or filly, 5l., B. 
Swaffleld, Chatsworth, Bakewell. 5 co: 
or the best hackney gelding or — me bo than — 
years Se ig nor exceeding six, 5ʃ., J. Booth, Killerby, 4 © 
petito 
For the best pair of horses of either sex, or — 
5 worked during — season, 5ʃ, 
3 * igg, 3 competitor: 
four-year- — 38 colt or filly, 5l., F. W. 
T hod — ‘Priory, okenne 27. 10s., W. Wood, Bank, 
chfield. 5 com 
For ee 1 — old mare or gelding, of the heavy 
— or v orse — 5l, H. Owston, Killerby 8 
Scarborough ; ri 10s., R. Booker, jun., Norton, Sheffield, 2 
4 competitor 
*. — best two gilts of the small breed, not less than 
more than twelve months oia 5l.; 2. 108., Samuel 
Wiley, Bransby, York. 7 competitor: 
Farmers’ Clubs. 
Bi ite GATHERING AT TIPTREE Hamn, J 2 
e regret we have not space for a 
— — dings at Tiptree the other day; the ee is 
Mr. Mechi’s 33 
With to agriculture or other opera „ he would 
"say he — they — atl te to p. everything in n the best 
E — = 7 — Prejudice was a great 
e who re, it ay 
e lan 
ot think is was; 
through | poor 8 3 this 
* toy. ‘hat he hoped we should farm 
high, and speu ut them, by the adoptio 
re productive districts. Now 
sensible ns supposed that the rent of land in England was 
g to „ 
number of o 
a 
on 
order and — it was quite clear that, so aa 
good government, land and rr rent of. land 
= or be sensibly dimi —.— lle said this as his = ate 
op ton for he wished to co 
——.— — — they were to — to pay the same rent rand 
8 n competition with pe * res and those 
—— g a ir that Mr. — ee acquainted with, 
= 5 t de done by in ting —.— bey more —.— more 
elligence, and he wo ud say less rere on our own broad 
acres. (Cheers.) With r respect to h 
endeavoured to impress on them 
Peeriments, he felt that he was an 
mage — he felt that he was tell 
bene! w 
For instan ‘ae 
the question ? 
em look 8 790 — an 
t 
T Lonau on the N ented a hed metropolis, 
a bed of solid clay, 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 525 
ä — Low Caythorpe, Burlington. 
and surrounded by chalk = but unless that land was over thi s$ pri ple they must drain, provi ta 
ficially drained, — dare not put the refuse of London on care of their manure, oo * ‘cultivation, er È pio 
tin a liquid fi the lands were too wet already, and if they | much labour; and w respect to Mr. Lawrence, 
put more 2 Bd would sjes. instead of — roving them would state that he pey a paper by ue Delafield, Fog 
But when y had got Mr. Fowler here hi odred iar long grown tobacco and other 
— a Nag he woul | drain their 4 for — — they should | 8 "e hy that kind in the United * 13 that they did did 
A ould draw a wedge under the fields, a: good as the told them to 
psi nes io n 1 — but a small cut in the surface, — study Tiebie, — see the EXA he laid 42 for the fact 
the next morning they would find drains formed and pipes had taken out tobacco n from the her 
wa 
at a small cost. Well, then, let them r ý 
— caer 88 drain De lands they must drain their heads, 
r.) 2 a man full of prejudice and 
0 —— oo ove 
ther improvements, that 4 not teil] him, * hones 
truth is I = we * 1 Pig ~ pre judice 1 hae 
nl 
is t said, Gave a 
orm in — En nglish * — out i Ae Ao and the 
—— would come brn m the ee. = * look at what 
or th ey cou 
—.— the principle that Nat ture 
acted upon, and this w ig ae principle 3 fol lo 8 win 
their practice, e 
East A mn oe re 12. Liquid Manuring.— 
After the reading of reports athe soiling and pasturing 
of horses and N ni hap Boy give future 
Numbers, Mr. ? i r 
was done about railw: other places they rs, ingto m Mains, said Mr. 
ld not have the Palas nt mt me 4 no; they | Hardie, towards the close E — referred to an 
drove ie * far 1 pe e osaid; ; * geven — — A are * xperiment that he ago in 
o ma e branc nos, u or secure the benefit for the > 
224 8 the 1 1 to — — —— . pe h did n — of be out eneg È 
first * 4 — ore, to effect improvements, they i that experiment Mr, 
— an 2 on the 9 ee a ek 2 the die e A toned ane t years ago, and wh 
poe et, an money w only he (Mr. Wilson) afterw visited Mr. Kennedy's farm 
how it was — — they removed prejudice, and the 1 
ng would “Cheers Therefore 1 1 that at Myremill, he told him of Mr, ies attempt to 
within 100 83 en his urned i large apply ligi id ure, a èd him if he could 
a bege £ a —— free 89 Nature mould explain how it could so totally fail in one and 
not le asted—she 
was carrying on a constant system —— then this APpeur to — Fe Pera in another. The only 
matter would be 8 and the — and all other | diffe e, edy replied, sent * 
n re 
n for t yeh the pe 
speedily find their way Seok to those who sen 
them, to sustain their fe chef — refresh erai fertilise 
pa —— and re same articles to be sent up again. 
rington 
e seeing that had not been — 
u 2 or iger e enough, employed 
to bring out the fall — . orb a con must 
alter that, and this bro e ritje of * 
tion. He lived her N ier: 
raising a sub — to build a 2 
a room 15 feet by 11 feet, and a female 
and how — ipapa — — <a 
nt 
they w 
he they had only 
rintend 
catio! ulation, He — 
had 2 to the — wes show and ted o 
for they would have seen that they — — * a — — at must 
involve the 8 of a —— 
3 aay — Sone ; but n 
ry | was no doubt a important one, 
rough E 
s | tho chews it aa be of ane 
Mr. Hardie — his liquid man 
duced, whereas Mr. Kenned 
instance to e fi usi 
GEORGE SUTTIE said that the subject | before 
ure was 
— ed hie in 
men who had adopted th soiling cattle to 
ntion to $6 the: su 5 tof band manure and 
the best way of applying it. This was a matter, as they 
deat all which engaged 
day, 
doubts on the subject. 
- | 40 years 
ing, 
wW —— tae to ‘him the — 4 and — — * of 
0 hine wig Ee a yo ge 23 s give Bro 
mind to understands b 
developing it.” An 
ren me th < 
the 5 siate of Rew Fork, they m e had been her s — 
ers.) on hrar aghe 1 
2 hear, — 1 
these things; he hoped — gree of railway bawani- 
. and the of 3 thoughts by the prese, w. 
to which they were greatly tadebted, w uld t end to eff.ct that 
eformation which he hoped aid mon for he was quite 
sure we could compete with the — to in ‘the production of 
: k to what was done in manufactures by tbe appli- 
cation of science and machin 
in that b 
2 e Pyp ati ome in 
ny 8 pha orang “Really 
apes gage 2 — at appeared 
talk and reason; and if this had d 7 reds ‘or — — 
— ould it n 45 fo it for The laws 
lating 9 required — eation. * law said, 
it he transferred . 1 his vag oh me to a — i 
not 
— they came to him fer a razor they did not 
ask it; and ‘bg "iia say tbat pa law M . — — of land — 
o the t tim ond there w 
nies e farms, kept so 7 j 
aee ; 80 that sometimes | 
uch was wasted in 
Tnis must be 
nitary condition, what was London 
e but quartern loaves and rounds of beef in another 
so 
ery. afr Mark piept —— that 
ghee stry ha — 
ates Mississippi, they 9 not r * current A | 
dr: of 
n pro 
— public tg They had heard of ae 
200,000 mt = — n Lincolnshire, and 
e by? 
say it 
* * t afford the po 
not they afford 10 000 
e said tha ae oxen that 
n Friday must be back here in the 
—— and he 
into 3 on the Tuesday, to go 
Pr 
id re 
reflected that this great agricultural 
‘00 
for ein it; and if on any future 
asion some of the gentlemen presen 
— attention to mh it oo t be 
wee, as the subject was by no Serer 
een two opi lidé they might deri e advan 
i | tagoous e E ores tho e heel chat 75 y mixing the 
liquid man escriptions of 
rtable 
’s plan 10 ope tek 
the solid a as well as the e liquid manure, he em 
portio: ly the most — — 
— 
ih raporto ea ion of liquid 
— Tew not the application of the mere liquid 
but of both 
ote ai — apply t the business principle of my - 
cial li ” and he had done so, (Gheers.) 
He saw, ea it was making its wi and if they wanted to gef 
eru. sanay 
laughter.) 4. could only say they must stimulate — padlle portion of thei — liquid and solid, and 
mind by s — meet ue es Royal "it was — fate 33 to this ought to be borne i +e ' 
soy tot e counei of the Royal Agricu as A 2 ~ 
did now, to days in the gear and his| Truuds and 3 in Guano.— — piece 
friends pitied him m, as they said they did sak want Tees ence, they said it was unnecessary that Shou 
wanted practice; but the feeling on this was improving, and rg e time ee the in stating what 
the pa- emaga College 5 Cirencester = — ig an, — was unfot y so well known, namely, that 
was sorry ey had not one farmer’s son amongst the lo f 
Inst you, ears Haan not make this as a charge, but it was — adulterati ano are now se 1 
1 riune. He said, ce, it is the parent and n for e time | is country. It had 
e of practice; and 3 wad een Meet an a iiiflons n stated that the quantity of adulterated guano 
| K cosy any noone if ey po 1 pal 3 hem. He annually put i ; —— Britain was equal 
felt the dh r, 0 enden vo ii 
toc — men whose minds 2 above prejudice, for progres- to the whole quantity of genuine guano imported from 
sion in eS was inert and bast Ve Iped on by mind, as it Peru; words, 100 0,000 tons of adulterated 
pea nd — i d oot be 2g — — there, and guano — a sold in Great Britain in addition to the 
e i s 
fumbling down, t the field Deal sae smothered with fences, ne 000 tons of genuine guano el oat This rien, 
full o non-employmen ni and he had, he might an amount of ro e practis on the farmer of 
say e in changing its char r, for when he 
reat B 
5 it — the ‘duty of all of them, in self. pe el 
= protect themselves from this system of wholesale 
