, 
_ 441—1853.] , THE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 701 
searifie ers, having skim-coulters fixed on 
xh Ducie' s drag is fitted in this way, which м пера 
working with four horses. It appeared to me very 
com. work for them ; so much so, that I should ea 
ап implement much lighter qwe that could be worked 
with jet horses, as I believe the men cou Mage 3 it 
better, an 
I have — seen a double iron plough u used as described 
in this question. ir such a plough has been made, 
intended to trench down Couch-grass not to inter 
fere with ie working of the land for Turnip, I fear 
will fail, and, in all probability, add greatly to the 
fter 
ed soil to gr 
besides throwing it low down in ib which must be 
n to the surface to get the Couch out, 
turned up again 
as I cannot think tha ch- can be smothe by 
hi 
— lost, and leave only the subsoil to work o 
for future cropping. s would ruin the c in the 
clear off large d es; pee" skim. ploagh. ie three 
inches d harrow well, and use a light two-horse 
grubber 6 vem all weeds to the surface; and after 
clearing them off the land, by burning or otherwise, 
can se bje win- 
crops im. s e the benefit iof ihe manure more i 
put into the drills in the usual way 3 Lia 
d. If the 
it in quite fresh, and — the surface with a 
ight roller; all other manure жы reserve till the 
d was р canes niei i han It can be car 
out during the winter, r,and deposited in heaps either in 
the field it is "eed for, й _at some convenient spot 
ixing for an 
- ridging i 
ing of cattle inm or ya 
pee v ele v aire there is au spears 
dance of s eder) n the farm ; and a farmer need never 
Гн of, 
man 
year. If the only objects “of pebr тар 
have a supply of manure ready to put оп the land at 
the beginn ing of winter, would sos 96.00, antes in à 
very p some difficulty 
in getting the manure applied at the — I wished ; or, 
the nature of the land, I might consider it advisable 
to put on it some fresh-made manure, to keep it as light 
and open as possible during the winter. If I = S" ^ 
Bold still give a little more at the time 
of putting i 
the ee о, if I had it to spare. po the * foregoing sate 
you will observe that I advocate th 
— eulture of land in — now — 
observe, chat I consider it would important | Bee 
‚ if, by bringing this matter b the 
in this country, they could be induced to give it 
а fair trial for a few years, an and, combined with it, the 
proper cultivation of their farms in (gos dem and summer ; 
sowing Grass seeds, instead of the wretched mix- 
ta ld able 
il this dicic ins hat would be of more importance 
this distri ipei «епи e egen, зел 
b 
the same br 
very way, the value of which, whet 
as баан stock, peg cows, or fat to the butcher, 
would be ly doubled, And all this - ig to any 
in the breed, but to the su or quality of 
e ch from the dicia system of 
ter, and 1an that, т think the | 
„Мама ng Corn-stacks }гот\Воойл.— Hazel 
= ferior до... . 36. 60 Fine €. 37076! 
Id CL em 126 130 borde. as „ 55 65 
— r ˙ VT 
COAL MARKET. —Fripay, October 28. 
West Hartley, 22s.; Wallsend igni s Hetton, 26s. ; Walls- 
end Hotton, 26s.; Wallsend South Hartlepool, 26s.—Ships at 
| market, 30. 
9 . October 27. 
The business doi is exceedingly and sales 
in quantity е „ is and brokes without change. 
Lc he spinners are doing a very limited business in n the 
of looms is so considerable that the | 
goo izade, Toe a those worked — are now more 
of preserving Corn-stacks 
i pona or 5 feet long, are stuck round the stack, 
xs an angle upwards, and at a distance of about | tained 
4 yards apart ; oue row a little bel low the eaves of the | aes 3928: Bonovo н MARKET, F прат, October 5. 
stack, and another about haif-way up the thatch, the | 4 | T 8 and Smith re ро ба the A emand for 
a a ussex Hops continues active; of the 
e nige being р» aced е ап * position latter the supply is nearly exhausted. The duty is still variously 
etween the lower; lines of wors trong cotton | estimated, t the prevailing opinion is that it will rather 
are then suspen ed from a small du. on 3 ends of | ехсее 45,0000 
these twigs, and cross-lines also between the two rows, SMITHFIELD.—Monpay, October 2 
as well as lines along each row: the whole thus forming |. „There is a me supply of Beasts, but we are en overdone 
are 
t unsold. h 0 
or three stacks may be time fully protected. The ne Mu Althongh the number of Sheep is very much smaller 
work ey c a full ye ear, if requ uired so long, Т than m Monday last, it is fully pte to the demand, 
t parts of it may оссаѕі one XM S xdi asa кн my edd yery "m , m 
high winds ; and perhaps th can ben oof Md 694 Beasts, 6370 Sheep, and 94 Calves; from Spain, 990 
of the efficacy of the pur € the i fact, that if if — таг Sheep; from France, 20 Beasts; and 2400 from the northern and 
of the worsted has. kar uch broken away, an чет midland counties. 
f i Per st. of 8 Ibs.—8 d s d Рег st. of 8 Ibs.—s d 
after a short time is sure on that Bes Here- Best Long -wools... 4 
of the stack. — T. Burroughs, English A fords, &c.  ..4 2to4 4 d 
Saciely'a Journal, No. Best Short-horns 310—4 2 
asts 2 6—8 4 
6 
.0 0 
Ewes £2 qualify 8 8 
Do. Shorn .0 0 
40 0 
0 
4 
m 8—5 + 
Calendar of Operations. Do. Shorn .. ..0 0—0 0 Pigs 
The number of Beasts is large to-day, but the quality of the 
v is ушу, inferior, We retain our top r of Monday 
however, so few good Beasts on offer, that t 
о 
. пие стн Devon, Oct.25.—The continued rainy weather which 
e have had for some time Lega age эры all field operations 
that iti is difficult to find anything worthy of reporting just now, — UA чь 
Тһе Mea crop is of course the main stet and 882 
are being made for it, whenever the weat - * фил 12 
nside pred as merely nominal. Although the supply of 
е аур — — is about as usual on — ca at this ed 
ries s the "aem 
E now sme particular attenti — ded э ш "x ew ving 1 N ber d — — . — t the 
actively engaged collecting the — from "ander the trees . as on Monday, but it is enirn Чеш to - of "Inferior 
they fall, —- оная the sorts mapa ra — which all qualities, The trade for Calves ^" — ery dull, owing to the 
adopt w re particular as to th * vy of their cider. The | Unfavourable weather and Holasà there are 
re pet; ater beh — 1 —— in a heap, ore. left unii ev f — fit 426 Beasts, 1760 Sheep, aan 107 Calvers пуч Spain, 90 Sheep; 
rge vat a aid up 
in the press the d am "follo uidi: Me ju * „ 400 — from — northern and midland, and 90 Milch Cows 
| Rest Long-wools... 4 4 04 g 
partial 4 | Do. Shorn X 
first anticipated. The rops are generally good, but in many | | 2d пау. Beasts 1 1 cs quality 8 
pieces very Soa weeds; this in a great measure arises fro Ec and | L ` par. 
e heavy ra t almost genie to enter the lan nd | | саи 8 —— 
— the wen or ч . Grain 8 still command EE Do. — 2 vt c 
| 
| 
one 
By 
ia 
oo 
хф. 
‘ ! : o— Pigs in 8 
high prices. Beasts, 1252; Sheep and s 5800 ; Calves, 341; Pigs, 360. 
о to Со а. ms 11 October 
Pies AT qucm “ Suber a ae st wes 1 The weather si jda has — pe with — winds, 
Rick “Т fear ry trying r the poor is | This morning's po of Wheat from Essex and Kent was 
MS "n am thinking ог laying m a меи of Rice and very small, and sold at an e of 2s. to 3s. Жы on the 
selling it itoat cost; will you or some of prices of this day se'nnight. Having & lar ttendance of 
your гарыда 2 — — qne receipts to your Journal in- country buyers, a ey ein usiness Жы — in foreign 
t r qr. ^ ay 
last. Barley of all descriptions и — last week's prices. 
Beans are scarce, and dry parcels sell n advance of 1s. to 28. 
LZ qr. White Peas are К in value e; Grey, 1s. to 2s. per 
r. dearer. Oats command n improvement of 1s. to 2s, per qr. 
| The price of ete arc Flour is raised 5s. per sack, and barrels 
| are fully 1s. 2 
PER 
V т, QUAR 3. 
Harkets, | Wheat, Es Essex, Kent rhe Bull ^ White iw 0 a= mo — 9-4 
70 
E == d Td ésessussasses sese 
14 bushels of fresh slaked lime on wy evening 
when the slugs are at o This will be — likely to ya jure 
the young plants than salt. 
COVENT T GARDEN, Octo | No Мик * 
Most kinds of Vegetables and Fruit . to be wi en eee eee 
supplied, but trade remains dull. English vol Zo are rd og Davey, grind, & distil., 848 — .Chev.|40—44|Malting .|36—40 
Pears chiefly consist of Beurré d' Amanlis, Bro eurré, Gansel's oreign...gi giinding and d stilling 245 Malting.| — 
Bergamot, and Marie Louise. — =» Potatoes from Oats, Essex and 8 nd TU ME —91 
the Continent are still kept up. Carrots and Turnips fetch from — Scotch and Lincolnshire... Potato 29 —94| Feed ......]17—9f 
2d. to 4d. per bunch. Potatoes are much diseased, but prices for Tris! to| 21—23 2 e... 19—20 
them keep up. Mushrooms are more plentiful. Cut flowers — — ‘Foreign PR n Poland and B 17—80|Р‹ 
consist of cn, Fuchsias, Roses, Mignonette, and tree R К : 
Ca rnations, Bean ‘foreign [дш 
FRUIT. Beans, M tanga ne to 42s ...... Tick |39—41 
Pineapple Де: 1b., 3s to 6s 2 Led 100, 3s " to 8s | — Pigeo "445 — 508. Winds“ 
Gra Ouse) p. Ib., 181088 | Alm 5s 6d imm ж" Small] 40 
gal, per Ib, gd to iss — "elt, pu А 28 to Зя | Peas, white, Essex and Kent......Boilers|62 
Apples, pe per bush, 3s to 6s Filberts, р. 100 lbs., 95s to 1058 | — Siasa penes to 488... Grer 4145 Foreign - 40—66 
р. hf sieve, 2з to 4s | Walnuts, per 100, 18 to 1s 6d Р, White Yellow...) — 
atk, уша per doz., 1s to 3s Nuts, Barcelona, per bush., 22s Flour, best marks delivered. .. per sack 70—75 
Lemons, per doz., 1s to 2s eg, p.100 Меи tol20s — 294 ditto ditto 55—65 Country ./|55 —65 
VEGETA — Fo PU EEE e "m — 135 —45 Per sack. 55—62 
Cabbages, doz., 9d to 1s Lettuce Cab., p. score, 6d to 8d 
башны tech, M 44 ee e an. M io ts | The supply of all sorts з э of grain this week has been mode 
Greens, per rie 1s 6d to 3s Radi ishes, per Aot, oe te to 2s | Although there were — Wheat buyers at — 
Brussels Sprouts, do., 1s 6d to 28 | Small Salads, p. pun.,2d to 3d this morning, r thes attendance was — aller mg we 
Potatoes, per ton, 60s to 160s Horse ish, p. dle, 2sto4s have been used to of late, and the business as less; 
— per ct., 58 to7s Mushrooms, p. pott, 1s to 2s 6d but the full prices of Monday were obtained. 25 floating cargoes 
— per bush., 2s 6d to 5s — per T 6s to 8s * from the South there did not appear to be any ý 
Turnips, per doz., 2s to 3s Sorrel, per hf. sieve, 6d to 1s Barley, Beans, and Peas bring Monday's rates. Oats eld 
Cucuinbers, each, 2d to 6d —— hs doz., 3s to 5s for rather more money, and in этү: instances 6d. per qr advance 
Celery, per bundle, 6d to 1s 6d — Jerus.,p. hf. sieve, 15 01564 has been paid. 
Carrots, per doz., 4s to 6s ennel, per bunch, 2d to 
Spinach, per sieve, 1s to 18 6d | Savory, per bunch, 2d to 3d een MU ARS CT 
1 
r doz., 1s to 1s 6d Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d " — 
Onions, Spanish, p. doz. 1s to 3s | Parsley, p.12 bunchs., 1s 6d to 38 English ... 
ee 1 — 2 * to 3s Mint, Б, per bunch, 2d For суат 
s, per bunch, 2d to 3d Basil, do., per bunch, 4d VES EE sis 
ыр рег ut bat to 8d Marjoram, do., do., 2d to 3d IVERPOOL, TUESDAY, 
Garlic, per 1b., 6d to 8d Watercresses, p.12 bun, 4d to 6d was vell attended 
HAY.—Per Load of 36 Trusses, 14. to 9d. per bushel, and 6d. to 1s. per barrel on Flour over 
SMITHFIELD, October 27. Friday, making since ' se'nnight 4d. 
Inferior do. . ин LE» — o NAE PRO ee 233 Beans 
АЕБ e eo tee 
New „ ae х . Davis. рег loai een e I 
Prime Meadow Hay онол Inferior Cover 2.50 1108 # | a large 
Inferior do. 85 | New du ue ят | 
New Hay «+ ce se ee dU 349 | gem 
Old Clover 128 182 Josnva Ваква. | 15.6d. per barrel, and 1s. per 
WHITECHAPEL, October 27. 
Fine old Hay „1008001068 | F Fine old 2d cut . 1128 to 1158 
Inferior do. ... „„ 90 95 Fine new Clover ...105 = 
Fine new Hay ..80 86 — A — * 90 
were ever remembered previous period; and as the 
Burnley turn-out птен i will add more t» s 
stocks in the market, mee this judicious course they would 
ve been augmented to an unwise extent; but — — 
marked canon it is not "баробар their value will be mair- 
at the turn of the the year activity ша; y prevail. | 
