454 



THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



[July 6, 



i 



6 



2 



• • 



»» 



> t 



»» 



>i 



ii 



6 Ounces. 

 1 



1 



1 drachm. 



»i 

 i» 



It ia rendered still more effectual when mixed, as in the 

 following recipe, and on being scattered over the parts 

 will speedily destroy the maggots : — 



White lead ..... 4 ounces. 

 White arsenic . • 



Sulphur 



Cinnabar of antimony- 

 Each to be finely powdered, and the whole then well 

 mixed. It may be rendered weaker, and perhaps more 

 suitable when employed as a preventive, by diminishing 

 considerably the proportion of arsenic. The following is 

 the application used at Holkham successfully in the 

 flocks of the Earl of Leicester :— 



White arsenic . . 1* ounce to 1 gallon of water. 



Soap . . • • 3 



Tobacco ... 2 



The arsenic is boiled in a bag, and kept stirred at the 

 time of boiling. The tobacco is also boiled in the same 

 manner, and put into the water when cold. The soap is 

 cut in thin slices, and the whole of the mixture boiled 

 for half an hour. One pint and a half to be applied to 

 each sheep. Earl Spencer observes—" It is better to 

 dip the lambs immediately after the ewes are shorn than 

 after weaning. The shearing the ewes destroys or re- 

 moves the ticks which were upon them, and the dipping 

 destroys those which were upon the lambs ; whereas, if 

 it is postponed till the lambs are weaned, the wool on the 

 ewes will have then grown long enough to shelter ticks, 

 which have come upon them from the lambs after the 

 time of shearing." If the sore, from inattention or 

 neglect, has spread, the application of the following 

 astringent powder will be desirable : 



Prepared chalk . 



Alum ....*. 



Armenian bole . ■ . 



White lead 



Chloride of lime 



Each to be finely powdered, and the whole then well 

 mixed together.— From Mr. Spooner's Work u On th 



Sheep." 



CuUhmtion of Root-crops on Heavy Land.— I must 



first observe that much of my land has been laid out iu 

 wide ridges of eight yards, gathered twice from the flat, 

 and drained where needful with tiles and stones up every 

 furrow ; the remaining part of the farm is in lands of six 

 feet or two yards wide, and has been drained many years 

 since with shallow stone drains in a direction across the 

 run of the furrows at intervals of eight or nine yards, and 

 with tile heads. This method of draining does not 

 answer upon our close and adhesive clay soils, as it does 

 not carry off the surface water readily. It is my inten- 

 tion to set out these lands afresh, and to put them (as I 

 have done the others) into ridges of eight yards in width, 

 and to intersect the old drains, where necessary, by run- 

 ning other* up the new furrows, at intervals of sixteen or 

 thirty-two yards. By this means I hope to give the old 

 di .s a quicker vent, and to enable them to discharge 

 the water more readily than they do at present. Other 

 drains may at a future period be laid in those furrows 

 which are at first missed, whenever it may appear neces- 

 sary. We will now suppose the ground drained, and 

 rendered as sound and dry as such land can be made. 

 We will also suppose the land to be in fair condition and 

 tolerably free from couch and root weeds (for should the 

 field have been run out, as we say, and full of couch, a 

 naked fallow on this kind of soil must of course be re- 

 sorted to). My mode of proceeding will be thus : — I 

 shall in the first place have the ground very carefully 

 looked over, and with three-grained forks dig up evecy 

 blade of couch and every dock that can be seen ; having 

 previously finished, as I said on a former occasion, sowing 

 my winter Vetches and drilled my Wheat. The land- in- 

 tended for a root crop is then to be ploughed, in a direc- 

 tion diagonally to the run of the furrows, into single 

 bouts of twenty-seven or twenty-eight inches •, or into 

 two-bout ridges where Cabbages are intended to be grown. 

 The appearance of the field will then be like garden 

 ground laid up in trenches. I should plough as deep a 

 furrow as practicable, exposing a large surface for the 

 winter frosts to mellow and sweeten. After the land has 

 become sufficiently pulverised and the trenches are in a 

 dry state, with a double mould-board plough I purpose 

 thoroughly to open out and considerably deepen them, 

 directly following with a stout plough, having the turn- 

 furrow taken off, and with a strong team of horses har- 

 nessed at length, subsoil or stir the hitherto unmoved 

 soil in the bottom of every furrow trench, as deeply as 

 may be practicable— six or eight inches at the least. 

 This being not trampled on while in a moist and tender 

 state, will lie light and hollow for the air and frost to 

 sweeten and pulverise. Nothing will have to be done 

 now to the land till the dry weather sets in in the early 

 spring, be it in February or the beginning of March ; at 

 which time I intend to set the dung carts to work, and 

 having spread the manure carefully in the bottom of the 

 trenches, with a pair of horses driven abreast cover it up, 

 by splitting or reversing the bout ridges. These are 

 again to remain untouched till well dried and pulverised, 

 when an opportunity will be afforded of subsoiling or 

 stirring the intervals. Thus, then, nearly the whole of 

 the ground will have been loosened to the depth of twelve 

 inches at the least, and a sufficient tilth gained, and that 

 too at no very ruinous expense. I prefer to cultivate my 

 Turnips and other roots (such as Cabbage and Beet) on 

 the ridge system after the Scotch manner, because it will 

 give me an opportunity of working the ground deeply 

 and frequently, during the growth of the crop ; and 

 because i: will allow me, at the time of singling out the 

 Turnips, to draw the earth well away from the plants, 

 whereby they appear to swell, and form better bulbs — 

 Mr.N. y in the Report of the Gloucester Farmers 1 Club. 



Serious Loss of Sheep.— Some time ago, the extra- 

 ordinary number of 49 sheep had been lost by Mr. 

 Fountain, of Leake, under the following circumstances : 

 —The flock had been for some weeks kept on Swede 

 Turnips, and on being removed, was driven for a few 

 miles, and placed on a piece of meadow land. The next 

 morning, many of the sheep were perceived to be afflicted 

 with symptoms of lethargy, and appeared to be otherwise 

 out of condition ; and within forty-eight hours of their 

 being placed on the meadow land it was found necessary 

 to slaughter from fifteen to twenty; since then they have 

 continued dying, and on Friday night the number lost 

 amounted, as above stated, to forty-nine. The animals, it 

 seems, were afflicted with inflammation of the kidneys, 

 supposed to have been produced by the distance they 

 were driven, and the sudden change of keep.- n ~~* 

 Herald. 



Boston 



Notices to Correspondents. 



Books.— S.-Lows " Element, of Practical Agriculture." 



Bokhara Clovkk.— F. E .-This plant— such specimens of it 

 as avc have seen -is only edible by cattle when it is young; 

 when old it is shrubby. Its name is derived from that of the 

 countrv from which it is said to have been brought. 



CLOVM Sek us.- Car/.— We are in the habit of 8 wing 10 lbs. of 

 Red Clover, 5 lbs. of White Dutch, and 5 lbs. of Trefoil per acre. 

 Our Clovers are all fed off by sheep, and therefore we sow no 

 Rye-Grass, for much of it would be left on the ground uneaten, 

 and the pasture would be left in a tangled condition. A 

 smaller quantity per acre, preserving the proportion of the 

 different kinds, would probably be sufficient seed per acre. 

 We should prefer jronr No. 1 mixture to the other, i. e. t 14 lbs. 

 Red Clover, 8 lbs. White Clover, 2 lbs. Trefoil, 2 lbs. Rib-Grass, 

 half peck of Kvt-Grassperacre to 1 2 lbs. of White Clover, 2 lbs. 

 of Trefoil, and half a peck of Rye-Grass. What may be best 

 for the southern part of the kingdom might not, however, suit 

 the North Riding of Yorkshire. 



Dairv Stock.-X. Z— A cow will generally consume about 

 2 cwt. of hay a week, or about 130 lbs. if, as you propose, you 

 give her 5 cwt. of r ots per diem besides. You can supply 

 with roots from October till May or June; and if your land 

 will yield an average crop of 30 cwt. of hay per acre, halt of it 

 mown will supply you with more hay than you will be able to 

 consume in this way with the stock Which the other half will 

 keep during the summer months, so that you will have to 

 supply them with Clover, Vetches, &c.,from other land during 

 the summer too. The data now supplied will enable you to 



calculate for yourself. «_,««., ., 



Fallow Lani>— H. Jr.— You had better ridge-drill the land up 

 at intervals of 2G inches, and sow a late Turnip as soon as you 

 have rain; or if your land is thoroughly dry and pulverised, 

 you may sow it now— 4 or 5 lbs. of seed per acre— and wait 

 for rain. The failure of the Potato set is a very common 



complaint this year. 



Limk.— Calx.— If stone-lime be burnt and left in the heap ex- 

 posed to wet and winds, &c. (it not being wanted for use be- 

 fore next spring), its power of action on the land will be in- 

 jured, but not destroyed. 



Liquid Manure.— Constant Reader.— It is not right to put 

 caustic lime amongst urine; it will volatilise the ammonia. 

 Mr. Dimsdale has been applied to. 



Lucerne.— J. Heaton.— Your Chinese Lucerne is darker in the 

 flower, and is also a more luxuriant specimen than any we 

 have seen this year, but it does not otherwise appear to differ 

 from the common variety. The dry weather we have had 

 has made it fortunate that you did not wait till after the first 

 mowing for your seed-crop. 



Manure, &c— Cottage Gardener.— Your fault must have been 

 one of omission, not of commission, i. e., if the failure of 

 your Onions is chargeable on you, aDd not on the weather ; 

 the manure you applied cannot have killed them. 



Super-phosphate of Lime. — Subscriber. — It differs from the 

 phosphate in containing twice the quantity of phosphorus, 

 and in being soluble in water. Apply 2 cwt. per acre, mixed 

 with turf-ashes early in spring upon your Grass-land. 



Tithe and Rent.— G.— Theoretically, tithe is one-tenth of the 

 produce. Rent may be one-half, one-fourth, one-sixth of the 

 produce, or any other fraction, dependent upon the expenses 

 and returns of cultivation, and the demand, whether natural 

 or artificial, which may exist for land. You will thus see 

 there is no necessary proportion existing between rent and 



tithe. 



Weed.— B. H. C— Your weed can be extirpated only by per- 

 severance m cutting the plant off whenever it appears. We 

 know of no easy plan of destroying it. 



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



JJtarfcets* 



SMITHFIELD, Monday, July 1.— Per stone of 8lbs. 



Our 

 mo 



MARK-LANE, Monday, July i. 



>ur supply of English Wheat by land carriage samples tw. 



rning was moderate, nevertheless the trade ruled excessively 

 heavy, and a large proportion remained unsold, although 

 offered at a decline of from Is. to 25. per qr. The arrivals of 

 Foreign are rather large; Millers evinced great reluctance in 

 purchase, and where sales have been effected, late prices wer# 

 barely maintained. The Flour lately arrived from Canada 

 appears to be of good quality, and is saleable in retail at 30*to 

 31*. per barrel.— Barley was held at our quotations which 

 buyers were unwilling to comply with, and business was verv 

 limited.— Beans must be written from is. to 2*., and Grey Pets 

 is. cheaper, but the value of White is supported.— Having 

 large show of Oats, sales were slow at a decline of la. to 2s. per qr 



BRITISH, PER IMPERIAL QUARTER. 

 Wheat, Essex, Kent, and Suffulk . . White 

 Norfolk, Lincolnshire, and Yorkshire 



Barley, Malting and distilling 27s to 31s Chevalier 

 Oats, Lincolnshire and Yorkshire • . Polands 

 Northumberland and Scotch . • Feed 

 Irish Feed 



Malt, pale, ship • 



Hertford and Essex . . . • . 



Rye 



Beans, Mazagan, old and new £9 to 34 Tick 



Pigeon, Heligoland . 34 to 38 Winds. — 



Peas, White . . . . 35 to 38 Maple 30 



8. 



M 



BO 



32 



80 



20 



13 



58 



60 



80 



30 



8. 



53 

 56 

 34 

 23 

 23 



2;> 



62 

 63 

 32 

 35 



34 



m 



Red . 



White 



firind. 25 



Feed l» 



Potato 21 



Potato 13 



s. 



N 



M 



Harrow 3! 

 Longpod^ 

 Grey *j 



35 

 33 



ARRIVALS IN THE RIVER LAST WEEK. 



Best Scuts, Herefords, &c- 3*10 to 4s 2 

 Best Short Horns -36 3 10 



Second quality Beasts - 3 9 3 6 

 Calves . - - - 8 4 

 Pigs - -34 



Best Downs h Hal f-breds 3slOto 4s 



Best Long-wools - - 3 8 3 10 



Ewes and second quality 3 4 3 8 



4 I Lambs - - - 4 4 8 



4 



sts, 2519; Sheep and Lambs, 33,570; Calves, 1D7; Pigs, 369. 

 We have a very fair supply of Beasts to-day, both as regards numbers and 

 quality; buyers are also numerous, and the dead trade of late having 

 been pretty good for Beef, there was a brisk demand for the best qualities at 

 an advance ol nearly 2d per 8 lbs on last Monday's prices; although 4s 2d 

 was obtained for several of the best Scots, and 3h lOd for several of the 

 best Short-horns, yet many very good of both descriptions were sold at 2d per 

 8 lbs less. In Sheep and Lambs there is an increase of numbers, on the 

 whole ; the supply of the best qualities of Sheep, however, is but moderate; 

 they hilly maintain, and in some instances rather exited, our late quotations, 

 some of the most selling Downs, &c. making 4s 2d, and Longwools 4s per 

 Bibs; still, the trade ruled very heavy, and these prices could not be cur- 

 rently obtained. There were a great many Lambs, and the trade for them 

 very heavy at rather lower rates. Calves art heavy trade, at rather lower 

 prices. Pork remains about the same, but a dull trade. 



Friday, July 5. 



We have quite enough Beasts to meet the demand, though rather fewer 

 than last Friday ; prices are rather lower ; the best Scots, &c , make no more 

 than 4s, and the best Shorthorns 3s 8d. The supply of Mutton is good, and 

 prices remain the 

 the trade for 



during the week ; come or the very best make 4s 8d per 8 lbs, but many good 

 ones are sold at from 4s to 4« 4d. Calf-trade is a little brisker, but no higher 

 prices are obtained, roik about the same. 



Beasts, 742; Sheep and Lambs, 12,150; Calves, 469 ; Pigs, 309. 

 __ . 41, West Smithfield. 



WOOL.— British, Friday, July 5, 



Wk are able to report to-day as favourably of our English Wool Market as 

 we did last week. At the several Wool Fairs which have recently been held, 

 the greater part offered has been sold, but not at an advance upon our late 

 quotations. We see nothing in the prospects of the trade which leads us to 

 look for any material and peimament advance in orice. 



per lb. 



Hid to 1*0) 



me wn .^norinorns as Hd. ine supply ol Mutton Is good, and 

 i the same as on Monday. We have a large quantity of Lambs, 

 which is very bad, owing to immense quantities being sent dead 

 eek : ; come ot the very best make 4s 8d per 8 lbs, but many good 





Flour. 



1 



Wht. 



Barl 



English 



. 6372 Sks. 



— Brls. 7187 



7W 



irish • 



• — ,, 



mm » 



— 



137 



Foreign 



• — »t 



73 „ 



12497 



[ 4919 



Vlalt.i 



Oats. 



Rye. 



Bnt. 1 



7883 



3338 



— 



35 



— 



17910 







— 



14031 



- 1 



5015 



P«s 



Ml? 



Friday, July 5. 

 The English Wheat left over from Monday has been pretty 

 well cleared off at that day's prices; the demand for Free 

 Foreign is exceedingly limited, but the trade nevertheless very 

 firm, a considerable quantity of rain having: fallen (luring; the 

 week, with an appearance of more.— In Barley there is scarcely 

 any business doing. — Beans and Peas are difficult to quit, and 

 rather cheaper.— The Oat-trade continues very heavy, and most 

 be written fully 6d. lower than our late quotations. 



ARRIVALS THIS WEEK. 



English 



Irish 



Foreign 



Wheat 

 4160 



11120 



Barley 

 350 



4880 



Oats 



Flour 



4620 



4310 Sk 



8080 





1 0090 



^ 



IMPERIAL AVERAGES. 



May 

 June 



£4 



31 



7 



14 

 21 

 23 



per Quarter. 



6 weeks' Aggreg. Aver. 



Duties on Foreign Grain 1 



Canary - - per qr 

 Carraway - per cwt 



Clover, Red, English 



— — Foreign 



— White, Knglish - 



— — Foreign 

 Coriander - 



Hempseed - per last 



Linseed - - per qr 



_ Baltic 



— Cakes,Eng. per 1000 



Wheat. 



Barley. 



Oats. 



Rye. 



Beans. 



[ Peas. 



65s\0d 



30* 7d 



21 1 2d 



3)s 7d 



33*114 



3U U 



1 55 6 



30 9 



21 7 



34 



34 10 



33 4 



65 6 



31 4 



21 11 



83 11 



35 Jl 



34 1 



65 9 



31 10 



22 6 



32 4 



80 11 



34 1 



55 8 



82 8 



22 8 



34 8 



37 10 



35 8 



65 9 



84 

 31 10 



22 9 



35 



39 



36 1 



55 8 



22 1 



33 6 



36 3 



34 1 



17 o 



7 



; c o 1 



8 6 , 



6 6 



8 « 



60 

 60 

 64 

 100 

 84 

 12 

 85 



54 

 74 

 74 

 130 

 125 

 18 

 40 



10/ lOZlOs 



53 



6 



7 



10 



2U 28/ 



SEEDS, July 1. 



55s to 60s LinseedCakes,Foreign,p-ton67to7nQi 

 "' Mustard, White - p. bush. 



— Superfine „ 



— Brown „ 

 Rapeseed, English, per last 

 Rape Cakes - per ton 

 Sainfoin • 

 Tares, Eng. winter p. bush. 



— Foreign - • - — 

 Trefoil - • per cwt — # 

 t Turnip (too variable for quotation). 



KlNGSjrORD -AM) LAY- 



8 



8 



HOPS, Fridav, July 5. 



The accounts from Sussex, Weald of Kent, and Worcester, continue to 

 come unfavourable, and the market remains the same as last week. 



jPatiilvdkn <V SurrH, Hop-Factors: 





COVENT GARDEN, July 6. — The supply of Fnu. and 

 Vegetables have, in most intances, been very good during tne 

 past week, but trade for some things has been dull. Fine 

 Apples have not varied much since our last report, urapes 

 are also selling at nearly the same prices; among them we oo- 

 served fine specimens of Black Haraburghs, which are very 

 plentiful. Melons are good, and although not abanda %. ~J 

 sufficient for the demand. Peaches and Nectarines arc quite a» 

 plentiful as they were last week, and are offered at «^J™* 

 prices. Cherries are likewise good and plentiful. btr J* D ""~ 

 are abundantly supplied, and are low in price j am°ng wem 

 are good samples of Myatt's British Queen and Keen s! Seeai mg, 

 as well as of other varieties. Ripe Gooseberries are p ei titui, as 

 are also Currants: the later are very good in qaaJit y. " 

 Vegetables, except in one or two instances, there is an ' » . 

 dance. Peas, in particular, are very plentiful j ^^.J 6 ?!^ 

 for them is not good, and, consequently, they are low in pnee. 

 The best French Beans are offered at about 105. P« "f™^ 

 A considerable quantity of new Potatoes, of good Q^my, 



ported from Holland, has been in the ^^^Jlver, 

 Asparagus is becoming scarce ; a small quantity may, juj - » 



still be procured ; the best is selling at 4,. 6d. per 100. Rhubarj 

 is not plentiful, being nearly over for a season, int ■ 

 been little alteration in the prices of Cauliflowers, twj fa 

 Carrots, and Turnips since last week. Vegetable wa r^^ 

 offered at from Is. to 2s. per dozen. Leeks ar ; ^ ; t F i w- 

 Lettuces and other Salading are abundant. Among Heliotro- 

 ers we noticed Erica ampullacea end cennthowe., LUy 

 pium peruvianum, Lilium longiflorum, Sweet Pea; >, r F j lsiaS| 

 of the Valley, Verbenas, Pelargoniums, Gardenias 

 Cacti, Moss, Provence, and China Roses. 



Pine Apple, per lb., 4*to 8s 

 Hothouse Grapes, per lb., 2t to Cs 

 Melons, each, 3* to 6a 

 Peaches, per dozen, 6s to 12* 

 Cherries, per lb., 1* to 3* 6d 

 Currants, per half-sieve, 2s to 5s 

 Strawberries, per gallon, 6d to 2s 

 <ioo8*eberries, per hf.-sieve, It to 3s 

 Walnuts, pickling, perbsh., 6s 



I*ng-«rooled Wethers 



Do. Hoiwitu Is 1 13 



Southdown Fleeces 11$ 1 lj 



price. 



o * P er 1°- 



Southdown Hoggltts Is 0$ to Is 2$ 



Kent Fleeces 11 12 



Jamxs PitERix, Wool Broker. 



POTATOES.— Southwark Waterside, July 1. 



The weather has been all that could be desired since our last ; there was a 

 fine rain fell in London and Its suburbs on Tuesday last, which, without 

 intermission, continued for eighteen hoars, and being followed by some 



rery beneficial to the crops. There was but little 



cloudy days, must prove ve 

 done in this Market dur'-~ 

 several damaged lots ha 



done in th'is'Market during the past week. Perth Reds have finished badly, 



ve been sold for the cattle at 30s. 



York Reds 

 Perth . 



rly Devona - 

 Late Devons 



rnwall • 



Dutch Whites - 

 Kent and Essex Kidneys 



• 60s to 80s Essex and Sussex Blues 



. 45 60 Wisbeach Kidneys . - _ 



— — Blues - - __ 

 90 — Whites - - — 



— Jersey and Guernsey Blues 60 

 #0 Prince Regents . . _ 



— York Shawt^ . m _ 



— s to — ■ 



- 85 



45 



66 



Cabbages, per dozen, *fc/ to 1* 6d 

 Cauliflowers, per doz., Is to 4s 

 Sorrel, per hf.-sieve, 6d to 9rf 

 Asparagus, per 100, Is to 4s Gd 

 Artichokes, per doz-» 2s to 4s 

 French Beans, per hf.-sieve, As to 10* 

 Greens, per dozen, It 6d to 2s 6d 

 Potatoes, old, per ton, 50* to 80* 



— per cwt., 2* 6d to 4* 



— per bushel, 1* 6d to 3* 

 ~ Kidney, p. bush., 2* 6d 



— New, per cwt., 8* to 10* 

 per half-sieve, 1* 6d to 6s 



New Turnips, per bunch, 3d to 6d 



Peas, per bushel sieve, 1* 6d to 3* 6d 



Red Beet, per doz., 1* to 6* 



New Carrots, 4d to 1* 



Radishes, Tur.,p. 12 bchs.,1* to 1*6* 



Basil, per bunch, 4d to 6rl 



Horse Radish, per bundle, 2* to8* 



Savory, per bunch, 3d to 6d 



FRUITS. , ,.tft?i«i 



Oranges, per dozen, U W »» 

 _ perl00,6*to!6* 



Lemons, per dozen, 1# to ** 



_ per 100, 6* to II* 

 Almonds, per peck, 6* 1 <r f ^ u 



.Sweet Almonds, per I*. --* 

 Nuts, Spanish, per bushel, iw 



_ Brazil, 16* 



_ Barcelona, 20* to 2i* 



__ Cob, 14* 

 VEGETABLES. 



Cucumbers, each, 4d t0 Jfi u to* 

 Vegetable Marrow, P e '*?fi i 

 Spinach, per sieve, !*«£* 

 Leeks,per doz- bun., 3* to ** 



Shallots, per lb., U to N* u 



— Green, per bunch, *» 

 Lettnce, per score, 6d to -* 



Celer 7 , per bunch, 6dV>£ »* ■ <# 



Mushrooms, per pottle, -* ^ 



Small Salads, per V™n*t,»* # 



Watercress, p. 1? ■ m -^ n J , .Jtf , 

 Parsley, per ht.-sieve, UtoU <» ^ 

 Tarragon, Green, per bunch. J- 

 Green Mint, per bunch, »» 

 Marjoram, per bunch, 4* « 

 Chervil, per punnet, id tol* 



HAY.— Per Load of 36 Trusses. 

 Smithfield, July 5. 



Prime Meadow Hay 90s to 98s I Clover - 100s to 1 30s I Straw 



"'1 , '^m.Sita* 1 * 



. aastoa** 



interior » 



80 



85 



to* 



Cumberland Markkt, July 4. 



Superior Old Hay 100s t r* j Superior Clover 135s to 140. ^ 

 Interior - • M I Interior m U *■£ 



. 70 84 | New Clover^ *> fi JJ0, U *1— * 



New Hay 



Old Hay 

 New Hay 



WHITECHAPBI., J 01 ? 6 ' , aw .w. fH• #,>, 

 . 84. to 9* I Old Clover 11» IJgT I S *** W 



. 60 64 New Clover 80 W | ^^ 



Supply large, with.a dull trade at the above f«»- 



