110 



THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



expenses, &c, and the capital assigned of 30 dollars per 

 ton, and the result will give the amount of profit or loss, 

 which is to be di% d in the manner following: thrte- 

 fourth parts for the State, and oiu-fourth part for the 

 contractors. Art. 15. For the present the extraction of 

 guano is alone permitted in the Island of the North (Isla 

 del Norte), in those of Chincha. Art. 22. The exporta- 

 tion of guano tk ; 9 according to the first article of tins 

 contract, the exclusive privilege of this company, the 

 Supreme Government binds itself not in any case to 

 dispose of any quantity whatever, whether in the shape of 

 recompense, sale, gift, or in whatever mode; nor to 

 perrtiit its exportation by any person not of the association 

 during the lour years applicable to the contract. 



Notices to Correspondents. 



Our CoRfiEsrovoKVTs will oblige us by not mixing: together 

 Agricultural and Horticultural questions, and by writing them 

 on one side of the paper only. Such precautions can give them 

 no trouble, and will save ns a great deal. 



Account Boom.— A Subscriber ttnd Farmer. — If you or the pub- 

 Ushers will Mild or lend us a copy of th<! Work referred to, we 

 •hall be happy to give an opinion of it. 



Beans. — A Yorkshire Subscriber.— You might with advantage 

 mix guan> with the dung before putting it in the drills, at the 

 rate of two cwt. to such a quantity as you intend to put on 

 an acre. 



Bkst way of applvino Soluble Salts to Land. — An Amateur. 

 — Dbsolve them in water. The laMt quantity which will dis- 

 solve the weight pf salt you wish to apply to an acre, will do 

 equally well with any larger quantity, provided you can spread 

 it uniformly overthat extent of land. If your ware- -cart will, when 

 in ordinary work, spread so many gallons per acre, then your 

 plan is, to dissolve in that number of gallons the quantity of 

 the salt which you wish to apply per acre. These salts may be 

 advantageously applied now. You had better give your heifers 

 some Swedes or M. Wurzel along with the Hay. 



Book-*. — North Cheam. — Low's ■* Element! of Practical AgricuU 

 ture" is the best work on Farming in our language. Cuthbcrt 

 Johnson's M Eucyclopsedia of Agriculture" is one of the best of 

 its class. 

 Breed ok Pics.— S. Prockter.—\Ye do not know the Rudgewick 

 breed of pigs, but perhaps some of our readers, seeing this no- 

 tlce, may be able to inform you through us whereabout " in 

 Surrey or Sn«scx" they are to be obtained. 



Burnett's Antiseptic Solution.— A Subscriber.— We do not 

 know it. 



Dibbli.vo Oats, — L. T. — We never heard of Oats being dibbled. 

 What is true of Wheat on this subject must, however, be true 

 also of Oats; the only question is whether the less value of 

 seed saved will more than pay the same additional cost of this 

 mode of sowing. 



Essay on drai.vace.— E. Barnard.— Mr. ArkelV 9 Prize Essay 

 is not published in a separate form. 



Fatting Oxen.— Govi/n.— If you intend giving your cattle alt 

 these things, let them have, say, 2 lbs. of oilcake, 5 lbs. of 

 Barley-meal, and 6 lbs, of Hay. chaff, with Swedes ud lib. 

 Mr. Warnes, of Walsingham, Norfolk, is the person to apply to 

 on a subject like this ; he manufactures a composition for fat- 

 tening cattle, by which it is said that beef may be grown more 

 cheaply than by any of the ordinary methods of feeding. 

 Foreign oil-cake is quoted at per ton, and not at per 1000 cakes* 

 because the size of the cakes differs very much. You will find 

 a plan of a piggery at No. 3 of the Agricultural Gazette, refer- 



yon may advantageously apply six or eight cartloads of this 

 sand per acre, and you will have to mix your 2 or 3 cwt. of 

 guano through it all. 



Management ok Grass-Land.— Warrickus.— "We always feed 



our young seeds down close in autumn with sheep, and con- 

 sider the manuring they thus receive does them good j and 

 probably this management would suit permanent pasture also. 

 Marl.—/. I 'orke.— Your specimen will probably be valuable as a 

 top-dressing for land deficient in calcareous matter. It appears 

 to he almost wholly carbonate of lime ; but you will find, by 

 reading Sprengel's articles in this Paper, that the value of 

 marl frequently depends on the existence in it of matter, 



whose presence can only be detected by a tedious analytic 

 process. 



Market Foa Fkkdin-g Stock.— J. Clark.— Romford-market, in 

 Essex, is one of the best in England for stock ; during the 

 autumn and spring months great numbers are offered weekly 

 for sale, and are mostly purchased fcr fattening. 



Moss-land.— A Tees Fanner. — Judging merely from the inform- 

 ation you give, we advise you to pare and burn this land; 

 break it up, take a crop of Turnipsoff it, working the land well 

 during their growth, and lay it down to Grass along with the 



succeeding crop of Barley. It is no good trying to tear the 

 Moss out. 



Pkas.— Govyn.— Peas prefer light soils, but they may be growu 

 on stiff soils, like t he Bean ; if, after ploughing, your land gets 

 well frozen, then it will harrow down well, and you may drill 

 the seed in with the Suffolk drill, in rows, say, 9 inches apart. 



Potatoes.— A Constant Subscriber.— Place the dung in the rows, 

 and ir it is well rotted, you may use the horse-hoe to mix it 

 with the bottom earth of the furrow. Plant the Potatoes in the 

 loosened earth, and then hoe or plough the drills down to 

 cover them. It will take about seven sacks of Potatoes to plant 

 an acre. 



Quantity op Guavo per Acre.— Tuesd iy.— In ordinary cases, 

 3 cwt. per acre. Mix it thoroughly with the soil before sowing. 



The quantity required depends upon the present condition of 

 the land. 



Soils.—/. Marshall.— If your soil is similar in character to the 

 specimen No. 1, the clay, then we doubt not that it would be 

 greatly improved by a dressing of No. 2, the calcareous sand 

 you sent. The clay, No. 1, is not a marl- it contains hardly 

 any hmc,and would do very well to make tiles and bricks of. 

 No. 2 contains at least 30 per cent, of lime; and rather than 

 send 12 miles tor lime, you had better try a good dressing of 

 this which is at hand. If you resolve to do this, please to let 

 us know the result ofthe application. As for the sulphureous 

 smell you speak of, the cause might be ascertained by an accu- 

 rate analysis ofthe material from which it arises : i. e. 9 if you 

 are not mistaken in its existence. 



Stkkfixg op Skeds.— Gentleman Farmer. — Mr. Campbell in- 

 forms us that "after steeping the proper time, the grain is to 

 be taken out and spread to dry under a current of atmospheric 

 air (not by heating). The time of steeping for Wheat may 



! 



[Feb. 1 7; 



Canary 



Carraway - per cwt 5S 60 



Clover, Red, English - 64 7'; 



— — Foreign - 64 76 



— White, Knglish - 84 105 



— — Foreign - a\ 105 



Coriand.T . 12 13 



Hernpseed - per last 84 36" 



Linked - - per or — — 



— Baltic - r \ _ _ 



— Cakes,En<».per lOiH) 10/os 10/10 



SKEDS, Friday, Feb 



perqr Ms to 53s LinseedCakes.Fo 



16 



Musi 



2il 



Saintfuin *. .' P " ">* - . 

 KlMMFeu AND l7i. 



8 



14 



1 







MARK LANK, Friday, February 16. -The Market u 



scantily supplied with English Wheat s if ice Monclav »i *?•*** 

 at the full prices of that day. Free Foreign is held for an ? *>** 

 winch renders the transactions limited: there isnnf 1 ? Vanc «. 

 in Bonded, but the few sales effected have been at ,,r? rfoia * 

 exceeding- the late rates.— Fine Malting Barley is mori in* rathcr 

 ut we cannot alter our quotations—Beans and p„. H 

 rfthout alteration.— Oats are fuilv as dear h.,t k...*. rem ^ 



but 



w 



extensive. 



BRITISH, PKR FMPRHIAL QITARTRR. 

 Wheat, Essex, Kent, and Suffolk . . White 



Norfolk, Lincolnshire, and Yorkshire . 



Oats, Lincolnshire and Yorkshire . . Polands 



Northumberland and Scotch . . Feed 



■ J'"" y ef . A 



Hurley, Malting and distilling 28 to 33 Chevalier 

 Malt, pale, ship • 



Hertford and Essex 



R y« 



Heans, Mazagan, old and new 22 to 29 

 Pigeon, Heligoland . 23 to 38 



fully as dear, but business is 



s. 



50 

 15 



16 

 32 



S. 



67 

 57 

 25 



23 

 37 



Red . 



White 



Peed 



Potato 



Potato 



(irind. 



t. 



46 



IS 



17 

 18 



2i 



cot 



I. 



M 



21 

 2S 



-I 

 30 



Peas, White 



3» to 3 J 



Tick 

 Winds. 

 Maple 



2> 



30 



27 



31 



36 

 23 



Jan. 



ence to the letters on which having then been accidentally 

 omitted we now supply. F, F, F, F, farmyard; R, R, R 

 roads ; A, A, A, shed, with yard in front for store-pigs- T tank 

 for drainage of sties, yard, and sheds; S, steaming room' • the 

 double row of sties below the steaming-room ar*e for the' fat- 

 ting pigs, two being fed in each ; and the single row at one end 

 of the steaming-rooni are for a boar and six brood sows. 



Gas-Limb.— A , S. will find information on this point if he looks 

 over this section of this and previous Nos. ofthe Gazette. 



Gas-watke.— Wem.— The salts of ammonia in gas-water will 

 differ with different qualities of coals used fur making the gas 

 In some cases the liquor contains much sulphate" and but 

 little carbonate ; whereas in others the latter predominates, and 

 when tins is the case, and gypsum is at hand, the sulphate of 

 ammonia maybe produced by its agency (the mineral being 

 added in powder to the liquid), but the addition of sulphuric 

 acid is the best and certain road to the formation of this salt 

 in whatever state the ammonia exists. Boil to a pellicle and 

 crystallise. 



Glossary op Scientific Tkrms.— Literalis.— If we understand 

 you right, this is what you want. We shall take the subject 

 up in some future Number of our Paper. 



Goii-e.- Charles 1 Etheredge.—liiformtMon on this subject has 

 been published in th.s and last Paper. We hope to be still 

 more explicit on the points you refer to shortly. Mr. Ransome 

 has a Gor.e-crusher, and a Chaff-cutter applicable to the cut- 

 ting of Gorse may be had at Uley Iron Works, Gloucester- 



i f'» Tuesda y- -Furze grows in nature on "wettish clay 



land, pernaps because it has been eradicated from all the 

 better description of land. It prefers a dry loamv sand 



Horsk-ponds.-/. JJ.— Undoubtedly, cattle should be supplied 

 with clean water. We shall endeavour to obtain for vim a 

 statement of the medicinal properties of that which we often 

 see in horsepnnds, discoloured by the runnings from the stahle 

 cow-houses, &c. ' 



LiMK.-Creta.crementa.-You state the results of an experiment 

 which was favourable to the plan you propose - t facts, such as 



Turnips and Rape-seed, from 10 to 12 hours. The grain must 

 not be kept in a wet state after being taken out of the liquid • 

 but the drying must commence immediately. When sown' 

 much less seed must be used than is commonly done as the 



plants idler into numerous stems." Oakley.— The Leaain' 



Article in No. 4, and Mr. Campbell's answers above, will pro° 

 bably serve your purpose. We doubt if soaking Potatoes would 

 be beneficial. The experiment had better be tried now with 

 one in atiower-pot; see if it sprouts vigorously there, before 

 trying the plan in the held. 



Stall-feeding. — G. C— Next week. 



Stall-fkeuing Oxen.-W. T.-In East Lothian it is generally 

 considered better to adopt the system of hamels, as they are 

 termed, i.e., to place fatting oxen two and two in small yards 

 each with a shed, rather than tie them up singly in a feeding- 

 house. By this means, in addition to the greater comfort of 

 the animals, and the consequent greater rapidity of fattening 



the farmer is enabled to get his straw trod into dun* more 

 rapidly. 



Swedes o.vCLAY-LAYD.-J/.S.—Wesupposethelandisdrv. Cul- 

 tivate it and manure it in autumn, and leave it rough for the 

 winter s frost. Scarify and stir it 4 or 5 ins. deep in spring as 

 often as it is necessary to bring it to a tilth j beat it up towards 

 the end of May in drills 26 ins. wide, and sow. 



Task-work.— Midland County.— We shall endeavour to put your 

 plan in execution. ' 



Toll Exemption.-^. A. P.-We think the decision of the 

 Borough Magistrates was wrong. The exemptions in the Acts 

 are to be construed liberally in favour of Agriculture • and 

 without resorting to a forced construction, we think the peat 

 under the circumstances described would be exempt under 

 either of the terms, " soil " or " manure '» 



Tre.vch Plough 1NG.-.4 Subscriber.-lt is rarely advisable to 

 Plough below the full depth of the active soil. Your best plan 

 if your land is well drained, is to subsoil- plough it once every 

 fourth year, and by and by the soil will become mellow to a 

 great depth, and then you may trench-plough it with advan- 



snaa be Y ;;tend U ef to" l ° U ^ "*"* *° » "^ °" ™ 



*** As usual, many communications have been received too late 

 ror answering this week. atc 



Feb. 



5 

 12 



ID 



2i 



-• 

 9 



per Quarter. 



TMPKK1AI. AVKKAOES. 

 Wheat. Harley.] Ohm. 



Harrow 25 85 



Looped 28 ao 

 trrey tt 2j 



49t\0d 

 50 9 

 61 8 

 5> 3 

 52 6 

 52 7 



32s Id 18* 



33 Iff 



33 



33 



33 



33 



Beam. 



51 7 



6 weeks' Aggregate Aver. 

 Duties on Foreign Grain 19 





Peai. 

 31 



30 a 



30 10 



30 8 



30 tj 



Saarlfd . . 

 Irifth . • • 



Wheat 

 4610 



Scotch • • 



«_ 



Korean • • 



4220 



ARRIVALS THIS WEEK. 



Barley 

 8110 



800 



1280 



Oati 



4650 



Flour 

 5053 Sk| 



KrwoaFORn a*i> La* 



COVENT GARDEN, Feb 16,-The sup^I^F^^^f 

 Fruit and \ egetables, during the week, have been tolerably eood and 

 trade continues much the same as in our last report. Pine Apples 

 are selling at nearly the same prices as last week, and little altera- 

 tion has taken place in those of Grapes. Good dessert Pears con- 

 tinue to get scarce ; Beurre Ranee do not ripen well this season and 

 are very liable to decay. English-grown kitchen and dessert Apple* 

 are rather scarce, and are advanced a little in price ; but foreign ones 

 consisting principally of common sorts, are abundantly supplied! 

 Oranges are offered at nearly the same prices as last week. Lemons 

 bring from 6s. to 14.s\ per 100. Chesnuts are offered at nearly the 

 same prices as in our last report. Among Vegetables, Cabbages are 

 scarce; Brussels Sprouts are selling at from 1*. 6d. to 3*. 6d. per half- 

 sieve. Broccoli continues scarce. French Beans are much the same 

 as in our last report, as are likewise Greens. Celery has a little 

 advanced in price during the week, as has also Endive, the latter is 

 selling at trom Is. 6d. to 3t, per score. Seakale is good and sufficient 

 for the demand. Asparagus is offered at from 2s. to 105. per 100. 

 Lettuces are selling at nearly the same prices as last week. Cucum- 

 bers bring from 4s. to 85. each. A few of the Early Horn Carrot are 

 offered at from Ad. to %d. per bunch. Cut flowers chiefly consist of 

 Erica gracilis, Burcheliia capensis, Epiphyllum truncatum, Lache- 

 nalia tricolor, iEschinanthus grandiflorus, Azaleas, Acacias, Rhodo- 

 deudrons, Camellias, Cinerarias, Tulips, Primulas, and Roses. 



FRUITS, 

 Pine Apple, per lo.,8ito 12* * 



Grapes, .Portugal, per lb. 1* to2*6J 



Apples, dessert, p. bush. 8* to 25*; 



„ Kitchen, p bus. 5* 6d to Qi 

 Pears, per half-sieve, 4s 10 12* 

 Oranges, per do*en, 9J to 2s 



— per 100,2i* 

 Lemons, per doz. 1/ to 2* 



— per loo, 6* to 14* 



Rhubarb, per bundle, 6d to 1* 3d 

 Bioccoli, per bundle, l*to 5* 

 Brand!*' Sprouts, p.h.-8v.,l*6Jto3*6rf 

 Cabbages, per doz., Gd to 1* 

 Red Cabbage*, per doz. 3* to 8* 

 Sorrel, 1* toi«6</ per half-sieve 

 Asparagus, per loO, 2* lo 10* 

 Seakale, per punnet, 9J to 3s6d 

 French Beanc, 3* to 4* per lou 

 Autumn 1'otatoes, 3d to tid per lb. 

 Savoys, per doz. 6,/ to 1* 6d 

 (Jreens, per doz. 3* to 4* (id 

 Potatoes, per ton, 50* to 80* 



— per cwt., 2* Gd to 4* 



— per bushel, I* fid to 2* €d 

 Kidney, p. bush., 2* to 2* Gd 



Almonds, per p*vk, £* to 7* 

 ^weet Almonds, per lb-, 2$tid to 3* 

 N ut», Spanish, per bushel, lti* to 18f 



— Urazil, 1(3* 



— Hazel, 2s to 4* 



— Barcelona, 20* to 22* 



— Cob, per 100 lbs., 80* to 100* 

 Chesnuts, per peck, 3* to 8* 

 Filberts, fcnghbh, y loolbs.,60*to65* 



VEGETABLES- 



Leek*, per doz. bun., 9rf to 1# 

 'iariic, per lb. QdtaHd 

 Onions, I'd to id per bunch 



«*- .Larjre, per bushel, 2* to 3* 



— Spanish, per do/., 1* to 4* 



— pk-kling, p hf.-sv.,2# to4* 

 -ihallou, per lb., idU Sd 

 Hiilis, per 100, l*to2* 

 Lettuce, < 'iiib., p. score, Gd to 1$ 



— Cos, per score, 6d to 1* 

 Celery, per ban., 6d to 3* 



Mathraom*, p^r pottle, 1* to 2* 

 Small Salads, per punnet, id to 3d 

 Watercress, per di>/. sm. bun. 3'/ to 6d 

 Parsley, per doz. bunches, 3* to 5* 

 Tarragon, Green, per bun.4<itotw/ 



Turnips,perdoz. bunches, l*6rfto 2* 6d Endive, per score, 1* 6d to 3* 



ittarbm, 



Ro .^ S ;' IT J H r? L P' Mo * DA *> F^. 12.-Per stone of 81b?. 



ul S"^ rds ' fc *' ">*:!•? I Beat Downs & Halt-bred 3 VXi 



Best Short Horns - 



nd quality Beast* 

 C.tives ... 



- 3 



- 3 



- 4 



6 3 10 I Best Lonp-wools - - 4" 4 4 



3 4 Ewes and second quality 3 6 3 10 



Pigs 



<» 



let it remain till it slakes. You mar apply so much per acre of 

 the compost as contain, say 100 bushels of lime, early in sunnr 

 011 your grass-land, and it may also be applied with adva-Wc 

 to your arable land Clays generally require a greater dress. 

 mg: of lime than li^ht soils. 



1*0*10 :.I ANuriK.-C. E. F.-Yonx tank might be 6 feet deep and 

 9 m diameter, flagged or paved at bottom, and with ordinary 

 stone and mortar walls. It is certainly worth your wnile to 

 adopt means of this kind to save the liquid manure 



JfAvt-RKS.— /?co»fiinu/.— Cloacine should be mixed with black 

 turf-ashes and dry earth and after a while you will be able to 



lt '— Constant ^'"^'.-Horse-flesh must be greatly more 

 valuable than woollen rags as manure, but how much more so 

 we do not know. Bones ar* p-pnpr*»iiir finra ow — ^i.-j l - 

 themselv 



large boars to »piup iM c article on this subject in our Home 

 Correspondence). \\ e 1 .all answer your question about tithe- 

 charge next week.--Tr. II. ^.-Substances employed to mix 

 with artificial or condensed manures are of two kinds • viz such 

 as are intended merely todilutethem asit were, so that by their 



S IV.\ fe bein §^ J^ger bulk to apply to the land, we may 

 be able do so more uniformly ; and such as really increase the 

 value ofthe manures they are mixed with. The sand you pro- 

 pose to mix with the guano may belong either to one or other 

 of these two classes: if it be ordinary sea-sand, it is of the first 

 kind, and earth from the surface ofthe field would answer your 

 purpose much better; but if it be such as is found on the 

 northern coasts of Cornwall, 60 or 70 percent, of which is car- 

 bonate of lime, the sand itself beu,g chiefly comminuted sea- 

 shells, then it belongs to the second class, and may be usefully 

 employed as you propose, especially if the land you are about 

 to mauure be deficient m calcareous matter. In the latter case 



Horse iladish,per bundle, 1* to 6* 

 Kadish, p. do/, hands, 1* to 2* 

 Carrots, p. d«»z. bun., 2s 6d to 5* 



— Early Horn, 4d to Sd p. bunch 

 Cucumbers, 4* to «* each 



^pinai-h, pnr *ieve, 2* 6d to 3* 



Green IW int, id to 9d per bunch 

 Marjoram, green, p. doz.bun-U6ito2* 



Chervil, per punnet, SdtoSd 



Isafy, per tmndle, 1* to 1* Qd 

 Scorzonera, per bundle, U to \>6d 



* « „ , HOPS, Frioav, Feb. 16. 



n,. 3 H . B f? op ^J* 1 * 61 continues firm, and last week's prices are fullv supported. 

 Mid & -ast Kent Pocks. 8/0s to 10/ 10s Sussex Pockets - - 67 0a u>6l 3s 





Choice ditto - -110 



Weald of Kent Pocks. 6 



Choice ditto - -70 



6 15 



Choice ditto 

 Farnham 



- 6 12 



- 9 9 



10 W 



difficult to make 5s per 8ibs of anyth.W * * ^ adv< "'^. " *>eii* 



IS um«««..- Ueasu, 580; sheep, 2950; Calves, 106; Pi ff8 . 312. 



41. West SmithfieJd. 



POTATOES.— Southwark Watkiisioe, Feb IT 



>ot know. Bones are generally spread or drilled br DtT * , ' c « . th . e «»"r p«« of the past week our markei was depressed \„a ,u 



es without mixture. Sulphuric acid would not reduce aTYe?™ o"'^^ 



** to a pulp (see article on this subject in o«r HnmS SSStiL'SSJifJSXm 2l ^ITifeAk D ™»- »»« bee-/ 



PATT ENDKrc k Smith, Hop-Factors^ 



HAY.— Per Load of 36 Trusses. 

 _ , rr . Smithmkld, Feb. 16. 



Prime Upland H^y a/ 6s to 3/ Hs | Clover 4/ Os to 5/ As | Stra*- l/«stoI/l» 

 — inferior 2/ 10s to 3/ Os | Jons Coopkf, Suleiman. 



Whitkchapkl, Feb. 16. 



£ tt,', «10sto3l Clorer 4/ 5s to 4/ I. ts I Straw, 1/ 5s to"™ 

 — hne Lpland,3/ 5s to M 12s | — fine, 41 18s 10 6/ 5f | 



Ci/MBKuLA.vn Marxist, Feb. 16. 



Meadow Hay 3/10sto3/15s Clover 4/ 15s to 5/ | Straw USstoW^s 



— inferior 21 16s to 3/ 3s | —infer. 4/4* to 4M01 | 

 Trade very dull. J. A BaK»*, Hsy Briggg; 



PRINCIPAL MANURES. 

 Weight per bush., about lbs | Weight per bush-, about lbs 



' fl P er,ou • . — Rags,a0flio— * pfrtim • ' "" 



united the trade, is" gone off them Ver^ 



esarded as nonunal. The last two of three dayVIhe hol2. *"" """ be 



regaraea as nominal. The last two or three dav* th. hr.u I 



eh Reds have been asking 70s, Lut°few saleJYav^ ^ been e^Jc^ 

 price; yet should we have a continuance of cold weather? U Sexlt 

 the annexed prices will be maintained. «*uier, u is expe^ 



holders of the best 



at that 



60s to 80s 

 65 70 

 70 

 70 — 



70 

 6'0 — 



expected that 



Kent and Essex Whites - 559 



,».T", — Kidneys - 



Wisbeach Kidneys - - 



— Blues 



— Whites - 

 Prince Regents 



6* 



85 

 00 



j — 



70s 



."> 



1 



York Keds 



Perth 



Early Devon* - 



Late Devons ... 



Cornwall • 



Jersey and Guernsey Blues 



i here have bt-en several arrivals from YorkshTrV n ^bnr]» n i4 "r\« 

 the Channel Islands on and since Saturday l„ t Zw ? ii nddS «T h {. Wf and 

 h.ve on hand, will be r ather a libe ral supply. ' Uie,e ' in Edition to those we 



-r, « u WOOL.-Hriti7u, Friday, Feb. 16. ~ 



^ Or: R Market continues in the same state as reported last week \VUU th* 

 exception or Kent Fleeces, noalter.: h** t.ken place in nri!e\ h the 



pt*r lb. 

 Long-wooled Wethers 



Do. 

 Southdown Fleeces 



prioes. 



per lb. 

 1* li to Is 9k 



Wool Broker. 



pi*r lb. 

 Wethers Is Id to Is 2d Southdown Hoggitts 



Hoggin* 1 li 1 3* Kent 1- >-i 'es 

 leeces (10} 1 1} I Jambs Ps^eih, 



Alum, S 



Bleaching Powder, 23s per cwt. 



Brimstone, 200s per ton . 



Bone-dust, 17.-* per quarter . . 42 



— Hair-inch, 16s ditto . . 45 



— Calcined, 8s per cwt . 



Carbonate of Ammonia, 65s per cwt 84 



— of Lime, Is to lsGd per cwt — 



— of Suda, 26s to 30s p-r cwt — 

 Chloride of Lime, 30s per cwt . — 

 <J raves,— s to 11 Os per ton . . — 



Guano,2i5sto2iiUsp.ton,acc.toqu:in. 80 



— Potter's, 240s per ton . 60 



Gypsum (Sulphate of Lime), 30»0d 

 to 35s per ton . ... 84 



Humphreys's Compound for Hya- 

 cinths, Is 9d per bottle . . 



Muriate of Ammonia, 24s per cwt. 



— ime, 5* to 6s 

 Nitrate of Soda, 15s 6d to 16s Od 



per cwt , duty paid 

 Phosphate ot Lime — s to 14s p/fcwt 



— — Super, 13s per cwt. 



— of An. omnia, in crystals 



2s 3d per lb . 



— ■ — — in fine pow- 

 der, 24s to 80s per cwt. 



80 



m 

 m 



70 



M 



en 



Rape Cake, 110s per ton • 



— Dust, 115s per ton • ; 

 Sal Ammoniac, 60s per cwt- 

 Halt, Agricuitu :< per ton 



— clean, 36s per ton . 



— Hide, 21s per ton • ' 

 Saltpetre (Nitrata of Potash) 2^ 



per cwt., duty paid . 

 Silicate of Potash, in powder, 60s j 

 per cwt. . . • ; ^ 



tp Ashes, 10s to — s per ton 

 da Ash, 14s to — s per cwt. 

 Sulphate of Ammnnia, 330s to 310s 



per 



ion 



— of Copper, 38* to 40s p- cwt. •- 



— otM* ia(imp.)10M'*^ w 

 mm ofM esia(purecryst-; 



U^p. cwt. 



— of P01 , 16* per cwt. — 



— of Soda, :>- 6d per cwt- • ^_ 

 Scutch, 2*^8 per 1 baldroil • • -- 



Iphur, 14s per cw. • • 



tlphuric acid, London made, J5 d 



perlh. • 



_ Country n , lidperlo- -^ 

 . . — Willey Dust, 84s per ton . « ~ 



Expenses ol shipping about 5s to 7s per ton. accoruing to quantity. 



Mabic ForHKKOii^ 



\ mt 





