670 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. _[Ocr. 19, 
the liquid to run through, n, and a force- orce-pump or a common npum pı sets free a still more caustic agent, which will not suffer am- kinds are not much lower. Sever rior remaia unsold * 
to force it down upon the meadows, a and apply | — ha a — — — unite with any acid, or assume any fixed fo rm | We have also s increased eke: at ‘She eep and 2 small 
A boy would guide the pipe wherever it was neces what —We know of no difference — the Grass and i Tra — s slow, at a reduction p Shoat 2d. per8 Iba. 
two or three speci imens with him of gutta percha | piping, — the Turnip plant sufficient to point out any differencein the | Calves are too plentifal, and late are pretty well 
beli th The i in ~ method of draining the land on — they respectively — — Holland and Germany — — 1127 Beasts 
piece of piping he held in bis hand was a portion of one he had 4150 erg ui — we 300 
ised for six or eight months, and he had kept a portion ofi it . JL, Sulphur in powder, } oz. ; palm oil, 2 of.; mer- Per d d jp os, of 8ibs—s d s d 
m the Tiel, in order to test the probability of urial ointment, } oz. Mix well together, — well rub in Best — — est Long-wools. 3 4 to 3 8 
by the liquid 8 He fou “pe — so far it was not Injared every second or third day. &. 3 6 to 3 10 Ditto Shorn 
ate eae t degree, an ui Manvres, &c.: G S. You had d better litter your cattle with Bes Short-horns 3 11 8 22 2d quality 2 “ens o 
tta percha piping, È dur he had a 2828 1 the hauim ofthe Mustard: and probably you would find in the 24 quality Beasts 2 4—3 0 to Shorn 
—— last for a very long time. The piping which 1 vr tes held long run that a careful management of the manure derived | Best Downs and 2 ahs we 
was about an — te — ter, and cost about 28. a ard. There from the consumption of Turnip? and oilcake will be as cheap Half- — . 3 10 — 4 0 Calves... ... 5 7. A 8 
was a very simple method of ore it Taen — that — a method of — your land as any. If your analysis is | Ditto S iga . Sheen 
could have it in lengths of 20 or ards, There was also correct, the land must be very stiff, for 19 per cent. of Beasts, 5465; Sheep and i Lambs, 29, T0; ‘Calves, 214; Pica om 
ther kind of piping—a hose = with g ha insid alan is — very great proportion. In that case gm wou T, Oct. 
and ou! e had never tried that, but was told that it acted improve your land — — burning a good deal of the soil. The number of Be * rh ‘gain very large, and trade ex 
very well. It was about an inch in diameter, coa ated on Good guano hea tremely dull. Inferior qualities are scarcely pr even at 
inside with gutta percha, and cost 6d. a foot, or ls. ry Omcaxe: H T. You may — othe cows a cake per day, that is | the low price quoted ; but — is not so much differ in 
the price of choice descriptions. Although the number of 
8 
Hose of the same diameter, coated on bath sides, cost | about 2 Ibs. apiece. Break it, and —5 ex in water, where it 
ža. a foot at 2 inches in diameter cost 10d. a foot, and will, in a day or so, fall abroad ; brow it over the 
e 
na 
liquid manure N y liked with ect ease, and wit EAT CHARCOAL: M — We are not — at what price Mr. 
a very trifling ex He would now wish to a fe ogers o offers it; but if chere be no hindra — — need 
remarks on the ‘subject of sewage manure, He had with him be in no fear of: any 7 105 hinde: — — — making it. 
two packages of ch reoal which had been sent to him by Mr. SHEEP-FEEDING + M A. Sir J. S. Menteath’s method consists in 
Yarrow, acting ‘under MY. Jasper Rogers’s patent for making the use of sheds, 7 feet — — 5 feet high, 15 feet long; the 
peat m ER packages had been sent through the flooring to placed on wheels. These sheds would cost 
post-office, adding another to the extraordinary list of articles 41 each and shelter 208 (they cannot be a large bree: to 
Which had been transmitted rough that med É ly allow of that): Plans are given at page : 255 vol. 11, Quarterly 
sewage ma deodorised by charcoal, This charcoal had Journal of Agriculture. We are not aware that this is more 
been made of peat, and one pa kage was mixed with a tion an a suggestio not t know if it has been tried. It 
of foul sewage manure ; but the charcoal opera com- seems a fair subject for ger 
pletely deodorising the manure, and rendered it so that persons | STRA NS? A If — Beans are cut before the 
could take it away in their pockets. With the unlimited eaves are black, it will — good — but if allowed 
supply 2 peat which we had in this county, they had reall to become dead ripe in the field, it will 
n the 
y 
ir reach a fertiliser which ought to make the land for litter. 
ost immen: | T 
co! 
hat to do with wage man Vetches should be manured; Rye need not, Common Clover 
d, At present throwing it away, and annot be sown now with any probability of success. 
th B B. They will sag gee seful shoots in spring—but 
y. Lovet oilcake will * affect the milk; 
ARNWATUM: WD C. should have been sown 
fter harvest, when — — ave e be en ready in 
t 
Fass rid of it in whatever manner they could, whereas Tynxxirs: A 
they could only convert the. hich existed in the county] atthe expense of the root. We will endeavour to ene 
s ume. Bu 
N b 
charcoal deodorise it and make it useful upon the series of which you ur next vol tt 
the land. This — im the most important discovery | ‘*Gorbam xeter” warfare, which rages in our bucolics, 
e time wit gard to farming.— ill n by any adë the many who 
„ Winson PATTEN, M.I d he had not taken 2 a in already speaking lou enough in the imperative ood. 
the 1 E 
make a remark on one or two things which had fallen fr ma! manure, if 
on ng 
x —— present. His object in rising was to * that of guano per 3 — h, bef 
£ 
pass a vote of tars 5 Profes ay, Hra ERR 1 1 O BM than ks: for r yo our — ai The 
other gent! * them ssage in a Leading Article, p. 635 and 634, white 
the result of their experience. Ponsa owever, he did . speaks of the propriety oi ixing charcoal dust with urine, 
he would say, sidering th in which the m not be taken to imply t there is amm dy 
principle of e the liquid manure in ta had been formed in h-urine, which weuld oth se be immediately 
vogue, t Mr. Laycock di t do justice to the lost. Ammonia is the p duet of — putrefaction whie 
farmers, but en voured to throw cold water upon them when soon takes place in the urine; and —— of adding 
ae e farmers did not appreciate liquid manure charcoal dust to the fresh liquit "depends on the advantage 
I y ry was the fact; of retaining the volatile products of that decay from its 
conld within t fortnight he had himself t stages. 
ans: yithout 
you have not farm-yard manure, and apply 3 ewt. 
COVEN 
Vegetables are abundantly supplied, and — . Grapes and 
—— plentiful. Peaches paama abundant. 
and are s en 
ed 
riets. 
T GARDEN, Oer. 1 
Sheep is tes excessive, it is larger — = demand 
quently Monday’s quotations are barely suppo orted, 
m0 —— * with 2 5 fe oe s however, be coe 
2 are rather lower. From Holland and G there 
e 483 Beasts, 950 Sheep, 214 Calves, and 16 Pigs; s. ae 350 
easts rom t the northern and midland — vail 98 Milch 
Cow: fro 
Best Scots, Here- Best Long-wools. 3 4 
1 ae * * gms to 3 4 Ditto prin sdy s 
ort-horns — Ew 2d quality 2 10 — 
= quality Beasts 2 — ` Ditto Shor 4 5 —5 0 
es hide 
Half. breds 3 8—4 0 Sarea «os nmr 
Ditto Shorn* Pig SA 
Beasts, 1156 ; Sheep and d Lambs. 5190; Calves, 366; 
Oer. 14. —The supply of Bagian — — mom 
— — ‘the neighbourin ties was all, and taken 
ipar on the terms of t 3 night. ‘The arrival from 
oad amounts to 33,58 85 qrsa of which 9685 qrs. are from 
Dantzic — 6133 qrs. trom Rostock ; — — — 
asing, excepting nner 
lower.—Fine Oats m 8 — — new are 
ery unsaleable, excepting at a . 
PER IMPERIAL QUARTER. cai . 
— — Kent, & Suffolk. „ White 43-46 Red 38—45 
— runs . ditto 4448 Red s.. —— 
— hak aeyiysewe 4 y 
— Norfolk, Lassi & Yank. White — Red — 
Foreign . . . . . . f 34—50 
Barley, grind. & d distil’, 228 to 23s,..Chev: 26—29| Malting 24—26 
oreign... Grinding and distilling|17—23| Malting |20—24 
Oats, toon and Suffolk . ressa 
— Scotch and Lincolnshire . Potato 20 —23 3 Feed 19—21 
— Irish Potato 16-21 Feed 15—17 
— Foreign. . . Poland and Brew i822 Feed 1618 
Rye e bees e 26—29 Foreign, | — 
Haana, foreign. . vue per ton} — 
Beans, Mazagan . . 258 to 278... . Tick 2628 Harrow 26—28 
Pigeon . 288 — 328. Winds Lo 
Foreign . . . . , Small ee Egyptian|22—23 
Peas, white, Es sex and aan ee ; i 
— Maple. .31s to 338 ....,.......Grey 29—30 Foreign 
White — Yellow... 
*** 
— Suffolk... ditto 29-86 Norfolk 29—36 
— Forint DOF, barrel 21—24 Per sack 30—34 
ARRIVALS IN THE Port or LONDON Last WEEK. 
— — K Malt. — Beans. fom 
English ......... 5606 — 2210 | 15 513 852 
a. eee — 14 9881 — — 
reign sess.. 33585 _ 0083 15933 3612 1471 
PE ong te Oct. arrivals of English grain this week 
a 
— 4 influence upon our market, rendering it dificult to 
effect sales of eiae Wheat, Barley, or Oats, unless — 
although there appeared rather a 
iteration 
concession t g ere an 
ed . — MWheat.— We observe no al the 
value of Beans or Peas.—Flour is a slow sale, but not . 
Some ——— have taken place during the in 
floating of Odessa Wheat, at 378. to 39S, and Galatz 
Maize at 29s, 6d. per qr. 
ABBIVALS.THIS WEEK. 
Wheat. ; Barley, Oats. 
kis 1 
Fluctuations in the last six 
Prices, | SEPT, 7. Srrr a 
pot., 16d to 286d 
78 
— bargni y the white onar — p pasaet, 19a pisoi 
“ the bargain ; white ones are: somewhat better | £ — ) i 
but not good; they want more wet t we have had in Essex oe ral eye 8 68203 tsar: — 240048 
—— — a nearly: — — ood | Shallots. — 6d to e —— dtodd 
ä eee EE E e E, 
Ju! a 
— 5 — — ‘and | Holywell, 16s. ; h Eden Main, 158. 9d.; Tanfield — — d.; 
ded at night on some of the Beam lard intended for Wheat; Wallsend Haswell, 16s, 9d.; Wallsen ewarts 9d.; 
with the ewes t like to Wallsend Tees, 16s. 9d. — Ships atm paeme `n a 
as have the lambs drop early; they never month 
the spring. E. X., near Braintree, Fg aS — 
Prime Meadow Hay 728 to 78s Clover s 
i ; Inferior ditto... ... 63 70 | Secondeut ... 
Ws: Inquiry has boom made f “og e enerom — 
; bin — 17 8 *. 
farm is 100 acres only. ea — Oct. 17. 
Me 728 to 77s Inferior 
: Pen. An althy Inferior dito. rer 
absence of right food for the plant, or — a = — — = wo — 
season during Po. Old Clover é 84 
to the —— E they generally — 17. 
ns smear for sheep— . Fine * | New Clover 
into Scotland: About t pickles for Wheat, > arrams paa > in 
l. for 1849. We use w. ——— 3 New Har 63 70 Stra 
to wet — Old Clover 78 
0 Nie Oct, 18. 
alone — bad — TOT by lating tect da sl iy | Stil 
baits n 
pall we 
—— Fast, o. IL We fave been rather seantily 
ez lee last and ani ~ rt of foreign grain 
* rn — i ‘Flour, 
and 
wit | The st nee 
of: 
Beans, and Peas rather slowly to gef 
summers, at late prices. Oats not plentiful, and” — 
