510 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. Aus. 10, 
he best Two-shear Ram, 10 sovs., to John = ons. 8 Ibs. Good Lamb is in request at fully late . 
— d * not so pleat — eget — ae 
a — there are 642 Beasts „ 2970 Shu Sh 
Gregory Watkins, Woodfield, Worcester. LAMMERMUIR SHEEP — Darin ng the past month the Bo 1 ves; from Scotland, 200 Beasts sep, and 
IV. The best pen of Shearling Ewes, 5 sovs., to | thermometer has been high, and the quantity of rain limited, Suffolk, 500; and 1500 0 irom the northern tba iad to — 
Roger Hudson, Kilmore, Tallagh een to). though quite sufficient, except on very burning soils, to keep t. of 8 lbs, —s — a 
Section V. The best pen of five Ewe Lambs, 3 sovs., to Robert =. pastures abundant. Indeed the present summer, so far as — ‘gest, Here. —— — sa 
alane, F een v mae 
Gland: — ů the late a 
CLASS G.—- ANT OTHER vairogi rirau SHEEP. | sprin Since the fleeces were removed, the principal work of 
Not qualified to compete esters the shepherds has — a sharp — yg for maggots, oe ? — d — = 
best Shearling Ram, S sovs., to Sylveeter Rait, which, from the warm weather, have been unusually trouble- 11 2 — mt 04 
nee Edenderry . — , to the same. some of late. When the skin is unbroken, perhaps the best, —_ — ~ pag 4 E 4 
II. mag — wo-shear Ram, 8 sovs., to G. Thunder, | and certainly the simplest, application is a bandful of dry Beasts, 3587; Siber — ren he 900 : “Calves, 264; —3 8 
- earth rubbed into the part grag after carefully rimine ae ; Pigs, 219, 
Section ——j— For the “axe ‘beat Ram of any other age, 4 sovs., to every maggot, and if possible the wool should never be r 8 = a ide 
ry ie ene ** —— —— 6 SE moved. as it greatly i paren — hiha; —— if — — intended being clear, a — ra ae eath a fav ouraht — e rag ‘markets 
— — Wilson, Bookfeld, Ball . s 1 —— —— iting —4 1 ivan ced a abou Ibs. The number of 
Section V. The best pen of five Ewe Lambs, 2 sovs., to James s while it also puts a stop to the operations * po — and Lambs is also — the former make more 
‘Morrogh, Kilworth. “fich may have been missed. Our wool has been sold at about | Although the. supply « the latter cannot be quoted higher 
hich may have n mis Ae as been sold at abou * — supply of Calves is again large they are are pretty 
— 4 H.—SOUTHDOWNS. per cent. above last year’s price, and, judging from the ap- relr disposed of, at an advance x about 2d. 
per 8 lbs, 
best ——— Paoa 8 sovs., to John | pearance of the fleeces, we expect the clip to * . . at‘ Loag-wodis . to 
Cheviot lambs be an t wedder " sat 
Section II i . om — . — any other age, 4 sovs., to exposed at the great lamb fair r held at r lina on the 13th. fords ee. rns . — quality 
William Owen, Jur hands are busy ploughing, horse and hand-hoeing a 2d quality Beasts 2 8—3 4 itto Shorn 3 0 yy 
Section III. The e best pen of five Shearling Ewes, 3 sovs., to | nips, and hay-making. All the Turnips are now pared w't | Best Downs - mbs = 224 
James Hanning, Cloyn small one-horse plough, and the half are horse and hand. -| Half-breds aves 
latter — would have re finished ere | Ditto Shorn N 3 0 ‘ 
his but for the hay- making. As the Clover hay is now rag Beasts, 1202; Bicep and 1 “srg 4 310; ba 65; — — 
a 
8 
o 
— 
S 
ag 
E 
ë; 
7 
4 
=E 
SS I.—CHEVIOTS., 
CLA 
Section e best e Ram, — sovs., to Colonel La 
Touche, pr — Newtownmountkenn re regularly commencing the meadow hay. Turnips are 
„Section TT he best Ram of a any age, 4 sovs., to Colonel La growing pee, thera rae throughout Gernichshiae gene- HOPS.—Faipay, Aug. 9. 
Touche, Lugge — rally, we have seldom seen this crop so forward at this date, |. Messrs. PATTENDEN and Smita report that there isa good 
Section III. Il” The b est pen of five Shearling Ewes, 3 sovs., These is an old saying, that if Turnips are meeting in the hand-to-mouth trade for wr new and fine yearling Hops, at 
to Col. La Touche, Luggela ; the best in the above classes, the | Grills —.— — — the 5th of August, they wi eavy | full as much money as last week. 
Medal, to 4 5 eo Watkins, Woodfield, Worcester; the | crop, here will be few fields which are not in this 
‘breeder t Ram in the above classes, the Medal—to — ga ney crops all promise an pe nd harves the COAL MARKET.—Fripay, Aug. 9. 
Gregory Wa — — lowlands will begin in about ten days. A Lamme i $ Holywell, 14s.; Wallsend —— 1525 9d.; ; Wallsend 
CLASS ee Hetton, 158. — — ge Lambton, 15s, 3d.; Wallsend Tees, 
Section I. The best Boar of the large breed, 5 sovs., to 15s, 6d.—Ships at market, 123. 
Edward Croak e — * — best Notices to Correspondents. as 8 
n n Li ast oyne, TW. Lo ae e e iculture or Stephen’s és pot 
Tt, ‘The best BO 7 pve — . Boo Daa va “ve "Cyclopedia of hae lon’ — — Meadow “gen — a Clover... ... ... 708 to 848 
ony „ . 3, the second best ditto, Mes osre. Blackie, ja 8 — complet — ditto... + 72 
2 sovs., to Alex. W. Lawe, Glanmire, bor 4 Oar : Attentive Reader, Sow 1 atk on of seed in shallow gon nog po 7 
Section III. For — best Breeding Sow of the large breed, drills 3 3 feet apart — the rows of Wheat early in spring. ar 
4:sovs,, to H. Stanley M rear —— Ki cullen; 2 sovs. The land must be in good heart, 
to Moses Cartwright, Staunton-hill, Brenton-on- Trent, Staf- a a Ms Ignoramus. The best horse-hoe for corn in dril ine — w ay 708 pes 
is that manufactured by —.— — Saxmundham, Suff. — Inferi = — 
=] 
=E 
E 
UMBERLAND MARKET, * 
Inferior . . . 58s to 70s 
— ew Clover 70 
Section IV. For the beet Breeding Sow of the Saye breed, It also answers for rops sown on the flat. It cuts | New 2 sins thei eee 
4sovs., to James 8 Sibe Gurrane, 1 2 sovs. to Robert — — to its edi coh ch must be that of the drill by Old Clover. ... | J 4 BAKER, 
W. Goold Adams, amesbrook-hali, Midleton which the crop was sow Worn PEL, Ang. 8 
e F. For the best lot of three Pigs of the same litter, Micpew : A and 4 B Gregory Your Wheat being “always | Fine Old Hay 70s to 755 New Clover ... ... 658 to 72s 
not more than ‘nine months A 3 sovs., to maa 5 more or less affected” would be liable to a severer a tack | Inferior ditto — afer orditto.. .. — — 
B.D. St Anne nse Blarney ; 2 sovs. to Charles C. Coote, then usual this year on account of the late period of harvest New Hay ~.. ... 58 es diy e 
te, Kilmallock. and the very rainy er — July. a ue gence of mildew Old — * | 
CLASS N STOCK. seem most frequent in of luxuriant and protracted 
Bulls: Thomas r „ Oastledowu, Celbridge, for Fromth-—the germs of the disease seem ree en everyw ARK LANE 
his sh janet, — ready to take 3 the circumstances favrourable to Mo: ONDAY, Aud. 5. —the supply of English Wheat by land 
Cows: The Earl -y —— Glengariffe Lodge, Bantry, for its development.—Canfordiensis. The mildew from which carriage samples this morning was smaller than this day 
this Cow an your Wheat is suffering is ———— by the growth of a bey ght, and disposed of on the terms of last week. Foreign 
— wo Owen, Blesinton, for a pen of — * fat ewes, — parasitic fungus—Puccinia gramini t but a limited inquiry, and prices may be considered nomi- 
: Major Bush, Glencairn, Lismore, a Boar and Mores: JEG. It is eee that they killthe wireworm. We matty unaltered.—There was a fair — for Barley, Peas, 
Sow, — „N. do not suppose the ustard kills or drives away the wire- and Beans, at Aaron rates,—Oats are held firmly for late 
Ñ CLASS M.—POULTRY. worm, — 3 that effect on ‘the fly from whose eggs | prices, but the sale is slow. 
‘i — I. wey eng best Cock and Hen, or two —— P — 8 — batched., pa W Burien run Imnn TAU Quanses. 
0 2 ’ Lodge, Oarrigtwohill; 1 sov. to es may ocal— 
— — Kill, — we should set Ashleaf Kidneys, — Whites, — and eah * Ane Kent, Selected rans White 46 2 
Section III. G The best couple of Geese, 2 sovs., —_ — 4 are None of them late Potatoes—but the last 2 
James Glas Cork ; 1 to J Nash, M a eeping well in sp 
~~, heen, recen c 2 USTED Y REAT : tev: P E. You — waen the tines W — Norfolk, Lincoln, & Tork. White} 
Wir. dane Us best Decke and bo Musea bees. tolerebiy ripe- en 3 — toesig O o TE eer 
to James Perry, Glasheen, Cork; 1 sov. — „to William —— — he of oe pri Tis fitness for seed Barley.grind. & Sir po 238. —.— 22 
pends on its present state vou mus 
Extra.—34, to Thos. O'Grady, Brynllithrig, St. Asaph, Flint-| ascertain by trial i in kan garden, befo — in — field. N= — ces 
. — Gn. Uc = z the he — | =. Dish 
—— Lass N.—DAIRY PRODUCE— BUTTER. =e SS Naik coe ee TS p cons add are ane mi Foreign. . ... 
; rc „ make a — acid would not facilitate the 55 tha ae 
best quality of batter for the . ree et ee dy it inene parry dilu ted x WNN Ho 13 times | OTO monl; Toroi. 
made on own farms during the of 1850, not | jts and in the proportion Lofeul phu ric ac acid meant, Mazagan . - 
being less than one firkin, of 70Ibs, weight, on on the following to about 150 or 200 of — a good — — Pigeon 8 i i 
— R volatile Peas, white, Eesex and Kent. . Boilers 23 —26 Suffolk 
produets of 22 10 . 248 to 27 „Gren 22 
ek soarta ie DADA orons ane — . White 23— 
, arcoal dust, it might the water. Piaur hes 
x 8 — 1 8 town 8 cannot be Flour, — ks, delivered... per — ro eb 
John N — —— “ba 24l Per s 
rest, Clogheen, Blarney ; sovs., to John M‘Auliffe, ARRIVALS IN T WEEK. 
Rahminsky, Cork. der the best of all —— butter exhibited Flour, 12662 sks Wheat, erie: | Malt. 8458. | Beans, Peas, 
at the show, the medal No, 22, — ai 0. Martin, Buttres- Markets. — 3812bris rs. Qrs. | Qrs. | Qrs. | Qrs. | Qrst 
‘town, Glanmire. GARDEN, Ave a: 10. En eer 3245 110 480 441 486 159 
Vegetables are —— su lied ; and | rich... wet re a 38, 75 nae | 
Miscellaneous. Pine-applee plentiful. The supply of ‘beaches and Nesvarines | Foreign . 22189 4 sis | 1165 , 
i „ ĩÜW . Ripe Gooseberries . — — 
! roaduce in Lan i g | per half sieve. Oranges and 2 though boag “are | sips a swede morning wae 
scale may be considered as the general rate of uce | sufficient for the demand. West Indian Pine apples are len- ud the 2 Foin atendet; Aid bainas 7 
in this county, comparing the average produce of the —_ ren yore na nat Ope ty. —— morn 2 may . of new were shown, e not ke, nite ~ wel for fature 
county, per acre, with that of the best cultivated farms; cheap. Lettuces and other salading are eufticient for the de- | delivery, were — Barley was sinf ir demand, and 
variations of the ere TEN according to the mand, and so are Mushrooms. — Beans are scarcer, | ful oS are hore has : 
‘quality of soil and the sea Flowers Heaths, Pelargoniums, Lily of the Valley, been Gars meet a ag bail former prices — 1 
sis pigs Carn rnations, Picotees, and Roses. peer but litle pasting i in Fo jou, a 
the — * Canen, FRUITS. heard of no business, and ——— Analterod.- ne the 
Wheat, Et 24 3 ... from 36 to bush, | Pine- apples, per Ib., 43 to 6s Lemons, per dos., 1s to 3s 2d inst. very heavy rains have fallen in vari parts of the 
5 3 N Grapes,hothou use, p, 1b.,28 to 5s | Oranges, per doz. 28 to Bs country, from whence, particularly this morning, the accounts 
Oats, „ eee m 8 — zg Peaches, per doz., 4s to 15s per 100, 8s to 24s Lom plain greatly of 9 defect rd th a mildew, 
Beans, „ 0 . Nectarines, wre 48 to lis | rust, & A disease in in — Potato, destr ing the baulm, and 
: . a S per don, is ae her nite ona "ig. the roin > hear 
oe bad tbo ” apes ST uts, p. 100, Is 3 teadily progre “both it E st a go d Ireland, and ne i 
Clover, two cuttings, 24 5, q, Ss» 4 „ Melons, each, 3s to 5s p. bush., 16s to 2 ef some . Se but 235 cher it * 
; ditto Š „ 1 half sieve, Nuts, Barcelona, per heh 5 as that of 1846 appears do 
The produce of cheese from a well-fed dairy stock, Curran to 228 ARRIVALS THIS WEEK. 
è f sie 
rr R chats half sieve, 3s to 4s | Brazil, p. bsh., 128 1 — 
W e il asp s, P. pottle, 4d to 6d Ars. 
that from a stock GETAB 10 
fed, This is supposing the dairy-maids to be equal i in | French Beans, p. sieve, 8s to 4s | Shallots, per Ib., gd to iki 
t; but the value of the produce Py ceca i g Ib., 7670 
2 7 i á . . 
would be still less in proportion, a dairy. 8 K , B. 0 
th a ly fed, ill managed stock. The per sieve, 1s 6d to 28 21s 6d 
cheese made in of Leigh has b. hf, sieve, 6d to 9d 21 9 
co best in the county ; but I consider Potatoes; partons 50n tate, 21 5 16 
pi s 1 — per cwt., 2s 6d to 48 
t in North ; quite equal, if not — per bush., 18 6d to 3s 22 3 8 
superior, to the best “ h The hi Turnips, per doz, bun., 3s to 5s | Mus a $F 8 
produce I am aware of, for a whole dairy, is 4 ewt. Red n f A 
per cow in the season. T 2¹ 11 
3 per , 2d 3d $ 
meerd pig ne i The produce for one on p. bundle, Is to 1s 6d n., Is to 2a 0 1 0 
month (the first month at Grass in the spring), was | Carrots, per doz., 4s to 6s — ts, p. bdle., 9d to 1s Av 
from a dairy of six eoii i. 2 eliidi — . p. sieve, 28 6d Marjoram, bunch, 8d to 9d li . eee à t six moeke” Com hry 7 ave. 3. 
orse Radish, p. bdl., 1s to 6 Mint, green, per bunch, 2d T | rome — —— 
720 lbs. The value varies more in 2 from a Onions, p. bunch, 2d to 6d Watercress, p. 12 bunch. , 6d to 9d 
cow, 3 full milk cheese is mad Rothwell’s | — Spanish, p. doz., 1s 6d to 4 > As ' — — 4 Si 
Agricu i SMITHFIELD, Monar, Aug. 5. 2 f 2 —— 7 
è From crop 1841, one farmer sold 4500 loads, of 252 bs. than aay sy int oe =< — have a — ip — i — 
from 36 acres, which is better than 14 tons per acre, price, on of nearly the latter about 2d. per 40 9 — — 
