THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
[JUNE 22, 
be benefited in proportion 
ith respect to Crosskill’s roller, Mr. Brown 
sed then d erised by the fro: He was no great 
advocate for rolling.—The Cr CHARMAN | said, it would t be well if An 
some improvements 
the cultivation of strong cela; — 
an acre was a goo 
of seeds, he thought ood 
round sum of money for —— the and away to — sup- 
posing it to be a free soil. „Ar. G.: No! inferior clay.) Well! 
thinking 16s, an acre an exorbitant sum, that he thought it 
much too little, — * refer the 3 first, to 
Th — . — treati seeds. Then 
— ere] * 
Mr. Brown rx could not make — 3 — 
t be free on the oil t poo other 
hornhill’s specimens of G. — seeds, a 
an acre. 
a sufficient sum for perm 
Some farmers - recomme and. at g the first crop. 
to ee stand — t feeding — d of stoc 
to = number of 
A. Brown was so far from he 
— 
— checked — saying he meant Pn — 
you selected but a few of the ba. you would — that — a 
and he has attained all the shape and feeding 
Don to ver many breeders sacrifice 
This 
siti on Mr. 
, | positi breeder, 
ne meaa of . he wins e year arrokan proves; : 
all this in the e 
what 
ans which are within the reach of most 
a that 
different fairs, but he has always been most care 
in the selection of his bulls, and in purcha 
Hi 
Bes turn 
pas 
upon it until it = “quite ripe, and then allowi 
hey 1 io 
plan. ficien 
A 2 
Bee 
Bp 
as 
JÈ 
8 
om d, 
„ move a of thanks rs ‘the Secretary for his paper, 
oa Glover 5 a life and soul of — Club, and 5 — — 
gratitude of its members. (A — 2.)— Mr. ROBERT ORM 
seconded the motion, and it bona — by — 
Farm Memoranda. 
SaLTHROP FARM, NEAR re pO some pro- 
fessional breeders, Mr. Stratton is a go 
hipa as an sae His farm, which consists of 8 acres 
excellent land, lies partly on t of | 0 
hills bres hich sueeed the high chal hills « of ithe D North 
Owns, ppe 
the multitude and size of the Whe oie whi ch 
the both of the fertility « of — land and — 
vell-dog — — occupier. Here th arge 
ard and several smaller ones apt by breeding 
ers, aa of which = 5 herself, one-half 
covered over he ofthe herd roe ders 
the vale, wh -Stratton on holde 500acres of Grass land. 
This part of as a dairy farm with 
the strictest — to . the breeding department 
is made not exactly subservient be but 3 con- 
sistent with, the profitableness of Its 
has no 
ing i t to shake, as 
armer as | in 
ed 
Continue 
Mr. 1 r are 
they deserve to be, 
Lincoln's- inn, who 
e 
n, on aah 10004 is sat 
mi = be laid out by the landlord. The farm, which 
very well, is a ae one, 
eatendng to 11,000 acres. Its situation is precisely 
similar to Salthro e being about two miles to the 
a — able and willing to 
n share of the adven In what a different 
pasion are — lish —.— ds 
aren Aer 
English a 
details 
have 
| seconded by their “Tandlends, they would bei in better 
— n than man 
he does not — good en 
The selected herd is kept in a 
from the dairy, consists 
such hem as 
8 to keep for pom 
separate half a 
eese | very exhausted — it is ‘desirable to o landlords to 
5 warm | i 
e|for accommodating their stock. 
land has been drained, and proper iis supplied 
from one-fifth to one- aight be kept. 
acceptable of 
he e present race of 2 “i nrs AM dd Counties 
h | Farmer, in the Daily N. ews. 
Miscellaneous. 
Exhausted go y Green a that so 
many small es e thrown „ mostly in a 
k see. in Sie Neue course, will be a 
practical uainted 
ACX CUIL 
8 * 
with it 3; and apworing | 
-| avail; but it wou 
meet with at the 
ful | upo 
| inconvenient to many whose chief incom 
land rental ; and with litle prospec aa pe a 
cres are said to be 
a plough or a yu 
reduced, and 
| green 
crops d 
growing N suited for this purpose vould not 
Id be very useful if su 
eap quick 
of 
tried them, would tpl men 
two years since for this purpose ; but I have 
j : 
P 
ently, if 
„., Sa 
Y | Turnips, per doz. bun., 3s to 68 
landlords, as the 
out, and to have proper yards and buildings e Sp 
nd dairy far 
as well as culture, more than 143 
r acre „ Belgium! 
un pe 
ort, J. Pilar: in e Herald. 
Notices to Corresponden 
PHEASANTS —— asks for — — to — pheasants 
eating their © He has — — — lays 
te — every 0 da ay, wed devours t — * oon as 
s dropped. She used to lay from 5 ode 
noon, but since he has watched her camels, — — ‘in th 
mo rning. She —— to lay — — the express 1 — of 
eating them. [Remove them as lai a. T r with 
—— d-boile ed egg just out of the 
al Knapwete that will not 
_ them up, when the 
rkets. 
COVENT GARDEN, JUNE 22. 
Vegetables are — h supplied. Str — and Hot 
house Grapes are both plentiful, and the same may be said 
of pples ve of Peach 
Carrots a nd 
e Potatoes fete from from “a. 
are sufficient for the 
s. French Beans, — 
Rbubarb ar — plentiful. Cut F Blowers — —.— * aths, Pelar- 
gonium merar — — e Vall Carnations, 
Rho — — Ros — 2 
Lemons, per daz., 1s to 28 
Oranges, o a i a — is 6d 
1 
P. 
Nuts, Barcelona, per 
20s to 228 
— Brazil, p. bsh., 128 to 16s 
Kent i 905 to 1008 p.400 Ibs 
2d to 7d 
p, doz, I n 
8 
E 
Hy 
£ 
berries, green, per half 
sieve, 2s to 3s 
Apples, kitchen, p. bsh., 4s to = 
— 
. 
und., 9d tots 
Red Beet, per doz., Is to 2s 
— each, 6 64 to 1s ts, p 
Leeks, per bunch, 3d to 4d 
Celery, p. p. bundle, Is 6d to 28 
Carrots, per bun., 6d to 1 
inach p. sieve, 1s 6d 
ry, ch, 
Parsley, } P. — — — 
r bunch, od 
rices to be ton 
7 ae . to 100s. Pes 4 
day’s Heaps, Ts, -York 8 Ding 505 0 0A I Rhenish 
Prime Meadow Hay “Tosto tas Clover 
— a.. ery re 65 — Sipra 2 cw 
oe ade 82 60 | Straw e = "i 
Ne — bes — 
y little doing. 
MARKET, June 20. 
— — 708 to 7586 Inferior ... + 
Inferior ditto... 65 
New Hay... 60 
Old Clover 
vee ee 
165, 0001. 
= Not ae Maar wish is is troublesome to get © 
| 
