638 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. Oer. 
5, 
found also among all plants, Wheat, Barley, &c., 
which prvi late hoed or stirred have a tendency to 
art ish 
of roots so good because of the — — 
in which they — About the insect, see “ Not 
Correspondents 22 
n 
sech friend of Mr. —— bailiff to Mr. Kinder, 
of Sandridge Bury, Herts, I was led to take some little 
St 
may e road. 
the eulogies, without exception, bestowed on his system 
of management, in the letter referred to, either that Mr. 
Haute! ha friend i 
is 
standing. at present as fine a erop of Docks as I think 
can be alg in the N pons f whieh have shed mir 
S of a fair allowan ce of Thistles es; 0 
n 
Mr. hout, i 
knowledge of the management and skill.of very.many 
farmers in the county. A Hertfordshire, Farmer, 
T Calendar of f Operations. 
Sept. 30, 
a tural year, and in looking back upon it, we veggie no 
reason to complain. The wea eather, upon the whol oF at 
fayourable, and the tha Wass ogo oro th some slight — — 
š a fair arerage 5 there has Hg eS a wine Rugby k sami ie parta 
althoug agd any extent E this, and 
harvested in very good order, Barley is 2 Ae ‘a 
1 is hardly so good as formerly. The crop of hay 
pe 
in water meadows has been good, t ry gronnd is light, 
as we had some very dry weather in June, which stopped its 
growing ; but, upon th yaa mw th pply of 
it for the winter, T 1 average 
crop. I do not thi x war Ton od this 
locali I haye no doubt it is ps to the ‘xtra uaa 
sown, are much superior to those 
quantity of — kind of manure, spread in the drills 
usual time. Besides, the former method 25786 much time Beasts fro 
which meres the same limited to advance prices. From Holland a 
— 
at the there are 327 Beasts, 1780 Sheep, 110 Calves, and da 2 Pigs 8 
ed is of the utmost | Cows from the . counties. a93 1 
rnip sowing, when a few days gai Pi ea 
consequence. Of course it can only be practised where the Best Scots, Here- Best Long. 
ound is clean. Our Turnips have been greatly refreshed by for e. „ 3 6 to 3 10 Ditto ger ools 3 4 to 3 3 
the recent rains, and are an excellent crop. Harvest is gene- Best Short-horns 3 4—3 8 Ewer & 2d quality 2 “ss * ` 
[Your notives gen oe com 
y post them a day earlie 
r reece ay A Lammermuir Farmer. 2d quality Beasts 2 - 6—2 10 Ditto Shor 
e day too late. Will you kindly Best Downs and Lambs. 
Notices to Corresponden 
ADDRESS : An Esser Labourer 3 oblige ae 
to keep within. 
JOURNAL OF 9 — 
Half-breds , 3 10 — 4 2 Calves ... 11 
Ditto Shorn  ... Pigs “3 re 4 
Beasts, 1121; Sheep. wot: Lambs, 86203 Calves, 323; ; Pigs, 426. 
HAT. — Per Load of 36 Trusses. 
is address. SMITHFIELD, Oct. 3. 
CYCLOPEDIA OF mai ose le W WRP. It is 2 work. Prime Meadow Hay. e Clover 70 
is the limit we shall honestly endeavour — 4 . Second cut — 3 ne 
— s Socrety : Member of Royal Ag. a — 9 „ „ — _ 1 zj 
te with A. — Polytechnic Magazin . e en be 
You may comm 
Office, 4, Beautort-buildings, SÈ 
PERMANENT PasT 
KET, Oct. 3 
Cums D Ma f ' 
n Pare and stifle-burn your | Prime Meadow a “Bs to 758 | | Inferior s. ses oo GOSTO 
Wheat stubble, — esd by. up "bef ‘ore winter; cultivate and 
clean it well, and manure heavi as or r Turnips. Feed them e. it * 5 —ͤ— — — 
ff on the land if it be dry enough, and plough up for Barley | Old Clover ... ... 78 84 e 2 28 
crop, which put in with a thin, seeding early in —: an WHITECHAPEL, Oct, 3 à Bares, 
hen it is up sow the following ture of seeds n damp Fine Old Hay . 688 to 72s * i 
weather, and bush-harrow it into the land : —— pr Inferior ito 3 we n to 80s 
tensis, 1 Ib.; Avena flavescens, 1 Ib.; Dactylis glomerata, | New H „„ RR yak FAS, 3 
21bs, ; Festuca duriuscula, 2 lbs.; F. heterophylla, 1 lb.; Old, fi 78 84 sea n epo eee 26 
F. rubra, 2 lbs.; Lolium enen A lbs, ; L. perenne, 5 Ibs. ; 
Poa nemoralis, 2 lbs. ; P. pratensis, 1 Ib.; Medicago lupu- 
lina, 1 b.; Trifoli 
| a tbs „Total, 28 
papira 52 SEASE. Since the last“ 
um pratense perene s 
lbs. You can get the kinds 
3 lbs.; T. Mo S 30. The ed W. 
a repens, ONDAY, SEPT, 30.—The supply of Wheat fro 
from the | be made was penne ye Kent ay ad = NN a 
t es u! 
R epg e of 18. 8. per 
“Poultry Miscellany“ was mitte h arge, a pe = 
a om a trustworthy remained unsold late in the eet the beengten is inferior to 
, that about half a teaspoonful of cod-liver oil in what it has hitherto been. Business in foreign is 
r has been mixed, is an li éea. and — must be considered nominal. — The value ct 
ne pep 
efficacious remedy for the sneezing and “ pip ” crying disease. | fine malting Barley is fully su areas in f 
Nearly a teaspoonful, is a dose for a large adult bird; for — Beans remain pei last — n as ve then caret 
ounger and smaller patients, less in pro ortion, Remem- There nas been a fair nate for 121. ats at our 13 71 
ering that cod-liyer oil was a new invention, and fe i PER Imperial QUAR 
that this medicine for fowls pmen be of the same fashionable Wheat, Essex, Kent, & * z 
and ephemera! nature that. Mustard seed, Praag y and salt, — — . fine. 
& „ have been for men aid . women, I inquired if any | Tal 
oil See ane er aie” pu osè, and what oil had “been thus; — Norfolk, Lin bin, & Fork. 
used before that from cod's liver came into vo The 3 
answer was, that, e oil; been 80 employed, Barley, „grin & distil., 228 to 238... Chev. 26—29 
At the same time a correspondent — „L have. fo 
head (a clove e is meant) o ‘of Nele the most efficacious ress. Oats, e 0 eee 
Are, may — s 
s gn....Grinding. and distilling * 
Both these of course, empiric ; still t d Lincolusbire. 
ee . Too late for thi = 
UNDRIES} oo late for this week. — Foreign. . Poland and Brew 18— 
Tunwirs: A B. Dale's — 4 id may be depended on in ordinary s P aiam y “peas 17 
frosts— 0 ‘oiléake you can put 3 — rurale Be forei ipa 8 - Per ton 
be rar without aay! falling of. Get the med to Beans, eee 4 — to 278. 
the Turnips by bringing a few to them in the — 328. “Winds 
8 
COVENT GA 
Vegetables are a bandantly Supplied, 
5 
Maize 
Gee Grapes and Flour, best si delivered... per sack 2 
For 
Peas, white, e and Kent. . . B 
Map 328 to 348 „ 
e-apples are anca former. Peaches are tto 32—36 Norfolk 32—36 
less abundant, and N 1 fe Oranges and Lemons | — om — eee — agi ee 5 82—35 
though scarcer are snfficl ant for the demand. Plums and Pears S IN THE WEEK. 
are'still received from the, Continent in great undance. Flour fi. Wheat. e Ae Malt. ae, Gane a Beans, Peas 
are er. Carrots and Turnips may be had at 3d, 7850bris Ars. | Qrs. rs. Qra, Qrs. 
to 6d. a bunch, Potatoes are good and cheap. Lettuces pes English ......... 4073 1034 3393 817 671 870 
other salading are sufficient for the demand. Mushroom aT A E am 4 — — 
scarce, as are also French Beans. Cut A statin consist 4 Foreign . . 15023 2747 — 1 5874 295 137 
ee e, Dahlias, | FRIDAT, Ocr, 4.— The supplies of grain, bo English and 
Heaths, Pelargoniums, Asters, Fuchsias, Mi 
Verbenas, 
3 
yenusta, Stephano 
viscosissima, Japan Lilies 
T * since Monda ay, bari, TN moderate, 
guard against being a spurious article; if we tropes, Tales a, Ja hese e 2 which the fam 9 The 
open our ey s. perhaps we may eek that it is not in. all cagas FRUITS, narket could only 
8 tg ought to be. ipin my my simplicity, have Ë ieia at 8 Pine- apples, per Ib., Lemons, per doz., 1 s r. 
that was com vie a a nothing t i A t ta 
else—is it so? because, if it is not, iF tought to be, as any other | e par — 1 . i A ni Oranges, per doa, 26.2 * rates.—Flour 8 a 
i chalk, or ashes, or ev: N a? mix | Peac bie, par ds SA 0s onds, per peck, 6 ; 225 
t ourselves in the proportion that we k best. It is Pigs, punnet, 2 asto. sweet, per Ib., 28 to 38 VALS THIS 
true that we do not possess e cal knowl t to ui eh Is to W. p. 00, 18 to 28 at. Barley. Oats. 
character best to our 55 — pi bush., 128 to 248 9 8 a 5 
surely N Fan Bann! Daa ale r oe gam oi 0 on 
n 8 F 
gs e 15 07 em ers por 0 Ibs. ng: a — red OATS — | BEANS, | PRAS 
i to E ns, p. ve, 3s 3 alle, ee | 2 . 45 G — 2175 Md 2220 
at „ Erench . „38 to 48 : 
a s Agh, 15 er Cabbages, per doz., 6d to Is Saen ee ‘eee — Bh. 43 
drop ertiem ofast daes in dur ark ja pcone eae ate i Greens,p dos, bunches, 35 tos ha preg e arrows, per doz., 1 dene a 1 1 in Wn — 3 
í fais, ned, she. danig is etter, than it hes bern for, sever: F —. 42 7 24 10 17 126 4 
' or Fork i ). hf, sieve, 6d to 9d Lettuce ah. P.O ee EF s 
tn, and we hava begun plowing etches, pa "We — per to = 808 sat eos, ôd to 1s 6 ae 28. N 8 | %-8 fié a ee 
Save had the weather extremely * est, and were T Per oa . ws 6a Endive, per score, 1s to 18 i Aggreg. Aver. 43 0 23 7 17 5 24 10 
TCC bete % n Gen 1 1e 
ttle in the b 1 shee PR. Se Red eet, per dozi, 1s to 28 Mushrooms, p. pot., ts6dto 2s6d | $78; : 1 0 2 —. 0 ji y 
oue cattle in the hauad on e SOS Sapi Wana. | O P. do,, Is to %s | — .perbushel,Ss'to7s | “Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Corn 
Out 8 T fe daf. We shell ,per bunch, Id to 2d Fennel, per bunch, 2d to d | “Parces, 496. 2 5 ves; — i — a 
Wh W Ch E % ; p. bundle, Is to Is 6d | Savory, per bunch, 2d to 3d - - r 
to sence a 83 Wurz 821 we e e per doz., 38 to 5s Thyn „ per bunch, 2d to 3d 433 * wie 
nothing but Grass; but we shall have to give them a little hay, foes ite ” Aspe iota Boag: Aes bun. hy 2a 48, 6 re E 
by night, soon, 8 * m 7 the H G. S. Onions, p. bunch, fe, ; Marjor per 5 2d to ‘ ‘eae z 
UIR SBEEP FARM, Sept e 1 bunch. 
e now been Htepored of, and the last lot will, be Salis. ber p. ee Ome ‘Mint, green, 7 dtS 91 ＋ Z 
pic adi in 2 n e pata ree 8 arti P ig te sd I Watercreds,P, ssh ae 2 IE EA 227 SEEDS. SEPT 30. Le 
away, an e — i rawn, and part of them HOPS.—Frwar, Oct. 4. 52s to 6 e ere ei gis 
eran fas soon as pos 88 Ou Dey whole, — me ith Messrs. PATTENDEN and Suta report that the demand for r words: — Mustard Pte fai § 
pe. * ear, and when contrasted with new 7 2 continues very brisk, at improving prices. Duty, | Hempseed, per qr. ...34 — 35 "brown do. s. it 
„grain farmers, we must say at stock masters have compara 215,00 r eat i, 261. 
' tively little ground for E Sa- rarely te ar e 12 Fel 5 
ferent breeds is now and most of the ARKET.—Frimay, Oct. 4 241 e . een fol n 
of. e course of a fortnight the pet og oe pot Holy well, 1555 ne ; nha den Main, 158. 6d. ; Wallsend Haswell, 
into a small well-fenced losure, both to keep them out of | 17s. ; Wallsend St reer 168. 9d.; Wallsend Tees, 16s. * 
mischief, and to have them in fresh condition Ships at market, 2 
turned è We inténd beginning. the bathin, 
ret z the. Te 
Ly efor our pastures the past autumn ripe: bas been highly | 2 
pastures, et f hea 
has been t TA . ro, 869 Beas 470 Sh 94. Calvi 81 8 nuet ta Veld Bt 
Germany we ts, eep, j eas, conti 1, VOPR RSN 
; and about a fom, the bees ess was apparent to-d: 
3 e trad 
consequen “a tr 
have ue joe sequen! 
the 2 and mii 
me now, k 
ne past Du ri 
soot ana 1 these 
á h have been lying b : 
ing of stubbles — be comme 
made m Bere on the 
immediately, Our Turnips, on g 
autumn, with the 11 of 2} owt? of 
„ Here- Š 
Tens ae 3 
Beasts 2 
Ditto 
Shorn 
Beasts, 3703; and Tae 
; ‘Sheep: 
Downs and Lambs 
Half-breds ough Wim & 2 r> «: 
ie pl et Monpary, Sept. 30. 
uch eee a weite worth nam 
very m 
ade has improved. The 
at. of 8 Ibs.—s_ A vats Per st. of 8 Ibs.—s ae 
Daten oh 
seas 9 
8 to 3 10 
323 6 
8 — 3 0 
on 6 y 
T, Oct: 4 
ualities the supplies from 
tances exceeded ‘Our. t Pare Tne ra t 
, however, slow, and | Wh 
95 Good Calyes are ra 
. dearer, From 
V. 
