goel 
of members periodically 
ted, — remain- 
of their obligations to a —— ety 
luntarily entered, and whos 
the chartered regulations of the gen 
casione 
unwilling compliance w 
neral body, have thus 
e Society and 
discriminate application to all i 
united — 2 ‘ie great and use eful ob- 
incorpora 
their bounden duty to the body at large, acting 2 their 
representatives and the ex guardians of their 
e mos 
unty courts 
administration of “tho Society being 
apial — the jurisdiction c of the metropolitan courts, 
the Cot 
— 
at 
to those. 3 such of their members in an nd abo 
don as are more — — w arrear 8 — sub- 
peas i! and who ar 
in circumstan in s to justify, in their dnd. the full 
enforcement of the claims in = — onses 
having been issued, the parties, ing them, have, 
with a single W ‘exception, “declined ‘offering any further 
opposition to t 
be | tensi 
- | dule of prizes — * oe 
the 
- | the Society. 
„ and for} J 
on | of last 
enquiry, | t 
co 
part of the Society, and have paid into court the whole 
of arrears, as wel as the costs incurred. In the 
1 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
single day hitherto devoted to that object, the Council | 
E l the ex- m 
namely, oe i 
have decided this year 
to try, 
ion of that period to a day 
e- 
to be as 
u 
y | ity of an extension, on ‘their oa a privileges no — 
liberal operation bom 
uncil have a 
cepte r. „ar mstar of his prizes 
for ploughs to cut out to a certain extent, and to fill in 
rains ; and from the South 
ed of „stock, known as 
ttle ; all of which 1 will be open 
to general 1 under the general regulations of 
The Couneil have also accepted the kind 
— homas ‘Dyke Ac —— Bar . — P., and 
. Turner, of Barton, to subm el: 
during the ee of the Tague as 
n of their and w water.meadows 
„a i 
E 
© 
m 
, e ety. 
* ng probably — fase 
of the 
of its body, 
whole ; white ‘the 
re-arranged. 
„ valine of districts, will peste any failure that Saki 
ther 
Council, 2 ar f not i 
the year 1851, the 
ment for the year ead, 
| accordingly their distri 
co tin, 
the e e N years, 5 have NR 
agreed to the e losing 
tatio 
1851, Middlesex District, consisting of the coun’ 
1852, South- — —.— District, comprising — Kent, 
ussex. 
1853, South-Wales District, comprising the whole of S 
S, with the addition of the N of —— 
Here ford, Monmouth, and Worceste 
1854, Bast Midiana Distric: 0 
rs of the Society 1 part o of the 
next 
's show of cattle being held 
in Hyde-park w will meet the 2 — of a great a i 
bly oceur in ae 
roba at a time when ano 
— will be drawi 
ng public attention, in an especial 
d details o 
b=] 
urposes 
have adopted, o 
mittee, the * . for investigation during 
Ickleton, in Cambridgeshire, h 
a steward of cattle, 
appointing the judges for implements and stock as that 
—namely, 
i Be ars qualified and 
e particular classes for 
the de defendant’s either 8 the — or maki 
ance the 
they will feel it to ir duty to 
n a similar legal m 
to meet 
condition fully 
hall have thus cleared off the London list of | to receiv 
be 
as they do deeply, how ei the e 
the y Seriy and the value of its d 
ent, experience, and integrity of the judges by w 
wards are made, and fro i 
by requesting the . at T 
and that when 
the ensuing 12 m 
1. The continuation of the 2 into the absorptive 
properties of soils, 1 
— The — properties of th 
. The cultural pro; — of baa s and marls. 
i 2 — chemical properties of water, with 2 xian to its effects 
n irrigation, and on the health of an 
y 
teration at present pre revaili ing in it, which pua — 
n the far 
who purchases the spurious article ; the second, on the 
absorpti ae powers of soil i referer 
w faculty in certain soi 
truth of 5 
ee e ae tae 
us on 
is no appeal, are fully sensible e impe 
attendant on all the modes hitherto adopted for their 
nomination, selection, and e eg t; and they are 
anxious è and 
n parties hi 
n the different eae of the syn omen whom } b 
kingdom, to its dif- 
bY LICOU 
to b 
rapes and and who by th by the time of r 
eir just st obli- 
gations 0 the —.— , however, having 
sea = — 3 on 
ts northern and southern coas varied agrieul- 
ter of the south- aar counties, of which |1 
culiar at 
being thus 
i Tet 
Society 
i 
no doubt of 
e 
rfection a 
sh 
ation, and the 
members of 
nicatio 
hardy and prolife: eres of 
's farm at Osborn; 
| poses of agriculture. 
the Earl Grey, H.) H.M.’s Principal 
the Colonial wi 
manure from Vice- 1 DAL oF Piik 
Commander of H.M.’s Naval Forces on the 
weekly meetings 
however, of the month 
e business 
d interesting 
numerous 5 | 
L2 
income and expenditure o of the Boni D at all times 
Reco 
is subject, 
gress 
— wikch R Piy bosar one of She 
recommend 
Bense the coun 
ure of time and Ropo di : a mutual con- 
„ to the agri- | 
great 
objects of the 
throug 
ark in that year; bu 
— ; sal on those occasio 
co-operation of the e members generally of 
are at all times desired an d esteemed as a favour by the 
By order of the Council, James Hunson, Secretary. 
the motion of Sir Hugh > gang es 
this report 
the ae 
Downshire, the President, then took 
‘Challoner, rman of the 
to lay before the meeting 
and to make a few remarks. 
required ‘in court to es 
have included in the arrangemen their own ex- 
| hibition a department for agricultural implements, 
due election and mnb of any d ulter under 
e those circumstances, The ady — f this arrange. 
