THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 



thn 



in< 



its fer IWfler, and carting part of the grata to a 



« u^—- «~~ mill to be made into meal tor the shepherd* and 



SEt £"11 ~^ fane* »■*»• ^-ather. he .ill be 

 ffi^d a-iMng and cleaning oat pasture drain,, and durioj 



Lammtrmuh- Farmer. 



METEOROLOGICAL RE PORT. -November. 



(C07i<inu€<t /rom p. 749.) 



Date. 

 Nor. 20 



t 



t 



t 



I 



Time. Max. I Min. 



8 a.m. 

 10.50 p.nfc 



29.97 



• 



8 a. Tii. 

 3,30 p.m 



29.69 





Wind and Weather. 



.Northerly. Fine bright, cold 

 6ty. Barometer rising 

 steadily. 



.92 



• • • 





20.61 



32 



30 p.m. 29.86 



>< rum. 

 10.30 p.m. 



. . • 



fta*. 23 7.45 a.m. 



M 



f 



t 



26 

 27 



10.40 p.m 



7.40 a.m. 



1 p.m. 

 10.30 p ra 



8 a.m. 



XOM p.m. 

 MO a.m. 



li 40 p.m. 



7.50 mm 



5 p.m. 



Gentle breeze, and overcast. 

 A.M. W. Noon WN W. Baro- 



meter falling steadily. 

 p.m. NW. Evening brisk; 



barometer rising. 

 NNB. Brisk. Bright sunny 



day. Barometer rising 



steadily. 





a.m. N \V. to W 8 W. moderate. 



Frost. Bright and sonny. 



?.m. S. Overcast, bazy. 



Barometer falling steadily. 

 Night, blowing hard, and 



raining fast. 

 a.m. W. Calm. Horizon 



bounded with heavy cumuli. 

 p.m Overcast. 

 Evening, bright. 



_ 



29.44 



« • 



J9.70 



* • * 



29.7 



\ 



29 37 



MM 



• • • 



29.72 



. - . 



* 



A.M. W. Gentle. Overcast. 

 p.m. WSW. Do. Raining. 

 S. Brisk. A.M. Cold. Overcast. 

 y nn— p.m. Bright and fine. 

 N. Gentte. Hard, white frost. 

 Beautiful day. 



4 



Cominmtion of preceding storm. 



* A storm coming from the westward, and travelling east- 

 ward. 



t This storm must hare come from the southward, lying a 

 long way to the westward, and on approaching this country 

 have carved to the eastward, across England. 



♦ Tun storm came from the westward, and crossed England 

 to the eastward. 



Porcnester Nov. 27. F. j°. ZJ. M. 



(To be ton tinned,) 



Notices to Correspondents. 



BmMTtfGtfAM Poultry Show ; E 9, G W, Clericns, and others. 



I wilt endeavour to answer all your queries under one bead. 

 A suoscriber's card admits at any time during the Exhibition. 

 The entries are more than 1000 in number. AH the corn- 

 ting pens are not made up of perfect specimens, but 

 be best of every breed in England will doubtless be 

 there. I consider flOJ, a prohibitory price for three fowls, 

 bo any one will give that sum they must be sold. It would 

 not be ridiculous if a larger sum were named, because the 

 object ra doting so is apparent. "Emily " may satisfy herself 

 it Is an " exhibition teates," by Vrsttin- it. Tuesday 



Jfe the be*t d*y f as it is a private, consequently a select 

 dsy I do not know the intrinsic value of the large Silver 

 lfeda>. Ft was last year very handsome and very well 

 executed. Being am exhibition advertised for four days, an 

 *• intended large buyer" will easily understand he cannot be 

 allowed to remove his purchases till the close. [ am not aware 

 whether the North- Western Railway Company will run 

 special trains. It is by far the largest and best exhibition of 

 the sort I ever saw; and I do not believe any one who has 

 Bot seen it can imagine what it is, compared with anything 

 else ol like nature: it is the Crystal Palace to the time- 

 hi urea Bartholomew Fair. J. Baity, 1 13, J fount street. 

 Brewing : O P says, "1 intend to try a nine gallon cask of 

 ale, made of suicar instead of malt, adopting Donovan's pro- 

 portion* of sugur and Hop as for a 10 gallon cask; and 

 shaft make use of ' Agricora CasariensisV suggestions of the 

 mu4irn bag to inclose the Hops, and dissolved isinglass. 

 "Will he oblige me by stating what quantity of isinglass 

 abo< i be dissolved for my nine gallon cask ? and what time 

 should be allowed for fermentation at this season of the year 

 before the cask is permanently driven in ? Will it be neces- 

 sary to wire the corks of the bottles ? I generally brew a 

 60 gallon cask at a time, and hitherto of malt and Hops. 

 Supposing I should prefer the use of sugar, what quantity of 

 sugar and Hops should I make use of for draught ale ? as 

 bottling so large a quantity would be inconvenient, and when 

 would such *0 gallons be fit for use V 9 

 Cabbages: Difcipulus. 1. Do the open or hearting taint the butter 



— <iood_butter is made from cows ted on either, but 

 perhaps the firm part of the Cabbage Is more likely to give a 

 toad taste. 2. Do Cabbages taint butter more in summer or 

 ifriater ?— In summer Cabbages are generally free from 

 decayed leaves, which cause a bad taste in the butter- but if 

 care is taken to remove these, we do not think that either in 

 summer or winter can the b .d taste be often traced to feeding 

 on Cabbages. 3. Does it matter whether the Cabbages are given 

 X after milking, or at any other time ? — In winter, Cabbages 

 are sometimes given just before milking; we give them when 

 the cows will eat them up clean. 4. Will any article put into 



i r ^ ea ! n P re y ent the tainting?- in a dairy where 



ime, 





" DacrMBroMD'i Patent Anti-metallic Churn :" A Constant 



Sub. We do not know it. 



Hops. to. : WK. asks, M Has the bine of the Hop and the stalks 

 of Beans evr-r been tried for manufacturing purposes, if 

 treated on the principle which Chevalier Clausseu applies to 

 flax V 9 [We believe it has been tried, but not successfully, 

 as material f >r the paper manufacture ] 



Insect Destroyer : S Myers. Y«>u nhuuid advertise it. 



Liquid Manure Carts: OF. Mr. Chard, Milk-street, Bristol, 

 late Mr. Stratum, can, no doubt, give satisfactory informa- 

 tion on the liquid manure carts made by Mr. Stratton, which 



were probably the best. 



Liquid Manure Tanks: A Landlord says— "I shall feel much 

 obliged to any of your correspondents who will inform me, 

 from experience, what is the size required for a liquid ma- 

 nure tank for a farm of 300 acres of average land, farmed on 

 the four-shift course. In Mr. Ewart's essay (Journal of the 

 Royal Agricultural Society of England, vol. xi., p. 248), it is 

 stated that 10 feet in diameter and 20 feet deep is a proper 

 size ; but in his treatise on agricultural bui'dings (p, ,16), 

 8 feet diameter and 12 feet deep is counted sufficient. Now, 

 as the former of these is about two and a half times the 

 capacity of the latter, it is evident that if the smaller one is 

 large enough, the larger one is considerably larger than is 

 necessary ; and as I am about to construe tanks on some of 

 my farms, any information tending to discover what has 

 practically been found to be the golden mean with respect to 

 size, will be esteemed a favour. [No tanks at all is the right 

 method. This, with the adoption of box-feeding in Stables, 

 as well as in feeding-stalls, is the most economical mode of 

 manure management.] 



One Acre to Sutplt Winter Food for Three Cows : Ab 

 Initio, i to Cabbages = 10 tons ; J to Carrots = 5 tons ; £ to 

 Mangold VVurzel =* 16 tons, fatter the first cut Cabbages 

 in September to Rve = 1$ tons. In all 324 tons » or 650 cwt -» 

 which is more than 1 cwr. a day for three cows during the 

 half year, between September and Ap'il, which is all they 

 will want in the way of green food; You must give them a 

 little hay with it, or some straw-chaff with Beao-meal and 

 Linseed. Put all your manure on the arable la, d, and buy 

 guano as well. If you break up pasture this winter you can 

 lay it down again in any future spring. 



Pigs : A B C. We do not remember having previously received 

 your inquiry. You had better apply to Mr. Moore, of Coles- 

 hill, near Farringdon. 



Pond Mud : Eboracensis. We would not carry it a mile ; but if 

 it be close bv we should be glad to use it, unless, indeed, the 

 land were already rich enough, which is a possible thing. It 

 is not a saleable article. 



Small Farm: fi. "How you can turn the field to the best 

 account," is a great deal too general a question to ask. 

 With six acres you can easily keep a "cow or two." You 

 may grow Wheat and Potatoes enough for your family, anu 

 do this as well ; by cultivating Cabbages, Vetche3, and 

 Lucerne, as summer food ; and Cabbages, Mangold Wurzel, 

 Carrots, and Rape, as winter food. If you have the back 

 numbers of this Paper, look at the schemes of cultivation 

 there given. 



Swelling : D. The ointment of biniodide of potass is the best 

 for removing enlargements ; but in the case in question, 

 excision by the knife will probably ba most advisable. W. C S. 



Tanners' Waste : S N. We should prefer composting it with 

 the lime to using the two separately. It is only in the ca^e 

 of ammoniacal manures that there is loss by mixing the 

 lime and the manure together. 



Yeast : BMP say, "Will any reader of the Agricultural Gazette 

 kindly inform me how to get the bitterness out of yeast?" 

 He uses 6 ibs. of Hops to 8 bushels of malt, and the yeast 

 Spoils all the bread, and gets s<ur very soon. 



;jttarfert£» 



COVENT GARDEN, Nov 29. 

 The supply of English Pine-apples is well kept up, and Grapes, 

 both foreign and English, are plentiful. Small quantities of Pears 

 are still brought fr-m the Continent. The best English kinds 

 fetch 2s. to 4s. adoz.,and 8s. to 12s. per half sieve. They consist 

 of Glout Morceau, Crassane, Beur/eDiel, and Chaumontelle. 

 Oranges are plentiful. Nuts are nearly the same as last quoted. 

 Carrots, Turnips, Cabbages, Ac, are sufficient for the demand. 

 Potatoes are generally good in quality. Lettuces and other 

 salading are sufficient for the demand. Mushrooms are 

 dearer. Cut flowers consist of Heaths, Pelargoniums, 

 Mignonette. Heliotropes, Stephanotis, Bignoniavenusta, Chry- 

 santhemums, Camellias, and Roses. 



FRUIT. 

 Pine-apples, per lb., 3s to 6s Almonds, per peck, 6s 

 Grapes,hothouse,p. lb., 2s to 5s — sweet, per lb., 2s to 3s 



— Lisbon, per lb., 9d to Is Oranges, per do*., Is to Is 6d 

 Apples, kitchen, per bushel, Is — per 100, 6s to 10s 



to 2s 6d Nuts,Barcelona,p.bsh,20sto228 



the most ? 



Pears, dessert, p. doz., 2s to 4s 

 Lemons, per doz.. Is to 2s 

 Walnuts, per bush., 12s to 24s 



VEGETABLES. 



Brazil, p, bsh., 12s to 14s 

 Filberts, per lOOlbs., 70s to 90s 



the 



excellent butter is made, a tablespoonful of chloride of I™*, 

 dilu ed in a quarter of a pint of water, is put to two gallons 

 sahnlt£\^ another remedy is, 1 oz. of 



w rtVa?t£ «n p f7*7*J? l ? e same < * uamit y of c,!eam I or 



*o din. ahoSrtS. l °« the latt€T is a,9 ° P ut int0 a Pa** 



Cabbages, per doz., 8d to Is 

 Cauliflowers, p. doz.,6d to 3s 

 Broccoli, per bunch, 8d to Is 

 Potatoes, per ton, 45s to 80s 



— percwt.,2s to 5s 



— per bush., Is 6d to 2s 6d 

 Turnips, p. bunch, Id to 2d 

 Cucumbers, each, 6d to Is 

 Radishes, per doz., 9d to Is 



— Turnip, p. doz., 9d to Is 

 Celery, p. bundle, 6d to Is 6d 

 Carrots, per bunch, 4d to 6d 

 Brussels Sprouts, p. half sieve, 



ls6d to 2s 



Spinach, per sieve, Is to Is 6d 

 Onions, p. bunch, Id to 5d 



— Spanish, p. doz., Is6d to 3s 

 Endive, per score, 9d to Is 

 Beet, per doz., 6d to Is 

 Parsnips, per doz., 6d to Is 

 Leeks, per bunch, Id to 2d 



Shallots, per lb., 6d to 8d 

 Garlic, per lb., 6d to 8d 

 Artichokes, Jerusalem, per hf. 



sieve, Sd to Is 

 Lettuce, Cab., p. score, 4d to Is 



— Cos, per score, 3d to Is 

 Small 8alads, p. punn.,2d to 3d 

 HorseRadish.p. bundle, Is to 4s 

 Red Beet, per doz. ,1s to 2s 

 Mushrooms, p. pot., Is to 2s 6d 



— per bushel, 7s to 10s 

 Sorrel, per hf. sieve, 6d to 9d 

 Fennel, per bunch, 2d to 3d 

 Savory, per bunch, 2d to 3d 

 Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d 

 Parsley, per doz. bun., 2s to 3s 

 Mint, per bunch, Id to 2d 

 Basil, p. bunch, 3dto4d 

 Marjoram, do., 3d to 4d 



Watercress,p.l2bunch.,4dto6d 



5i£ e ' !!l!l a ^ f ;« f r om decayed leaves, or in fact anything 



tt butter to taste, feed your cows upon some- 

 end in lfee*tf*5he ^^ in tb * 6 ^ 

 to the cows willimprove theT^tf^ 6 V" ^T't given 

 W.rh reference to CabbV* 5 £ wh £ P ^T the . batter - 

 COW, we should say from 50 to Ki h iVT* ^"i t0 eaCb 

 var^ wich the other fo<5 1& °^ J™ 8 * 

 either. Cabbage seed ma* be Town fl k a l teed .^ 0B 



part of July or Ausrust iWa ♦! 0wn m beds in tbe latter 



from ,eed 8o ; n early in the ,£ffi X r '.f «. he P' an „ ts 

 »ntumn .own we h*!.*™ <riv.th.TL g * nccee( » these, but the 



the Dramheaa Sbt »p A ^Tb'T^' ** ^ 

 Cattle : The onlv imenifta hroed* th« ~l£' 



Hay.— r er Luaa oi -*o » i uoses. 



?& els? an?W> er I? *****> feed your co * 9 u P on *>»•• * ri ™? Meadow Hay 70s to 75s i Clover . ... 

 Tmng eise, and be attenti™ tn H«<,«u nflBB »,,♦!. i«**w. *-,__ l Inferior-ditto 60 67 | 2d cut 



5 owe « «0 63 Straw 



New Hay _ __ | 



A large supply and a heavy trade. 



COMBEELAND MARKET, Nov. 27. 



• «. 



• • t 



• •« 



• •• 



eee 



08s to 80s 

 .. 60 70 

 .. 22 26 



J. COOPEE. 



Prime Meadow Hay 75s to 80s 



Inferior ditto... 

 New Hay 



Old Clover 



• t • 



• •« 





*•• 



• •• 



60 70 



• • • 



• t • 



■ •• 



ittle : rne only specific breeds that rerW* «^**i i * 



cle,,n the '%^clopedi,/UretheshorT h o Z V »!lT T art ^ 

 Devon*, with the Axrsh.re and Jmq^'S™***** a " d 



Mr w h i' r bre !i s wm »>• described in the ^article ^ *"**' 



Mr Wilson, of Edinstnti M«in« artlcle 



All 

 M 



CoCRIM 



columns 



Fine Old Hay 

 Hew Hay 



Inferior ditto...' 

 Straw 





... 



. . . 



••• 



Inferior 

 New Clover 



Straw 

 80 86 



Whiticuapsx, Nov, 27 # 

 72s to 76s j Old Clover 

 65 75 j Inferior ditto 

 50 63 New Clover 

 21 24 I Inferior ditto..; 



••• 65s to 75a 



... 



24 28 



Joshua Bakeb. 



• •• 



• • • 



• •• 



80s to 84s 



75 

 55 



80 

 70 



Ox," by 



ngton Mains. 

 t-<Hi!u Eoos: Animal Bib. Tmpl. See on* «a .. • 

 «*■ M, Baily>of Mount-street, an^er ^ZfT/r 



P^u'tr, corespondents. 



S5 l .ii ESIW " L ° B We a "> ""able to answer It t™ 

 »«>»«» apply to a chemical periodical on the roSS. 



Hues.— t bidai, Nov. 28. 

 Messrs. Pattenden and Smith report that there isahetter 

 trade for Sussex Hops, and prices hare advanced S, per c"t 

 since thu day week ; there is also a steadv dantiaH fVJSf ™~ 

 sorts, at a shade more money. 

 ! Mid <fc East Kents 140s to 252s j Yearlines 

 , Weald Kents ... 120s to 147s Old flops '" 

 1 Sossex iu5 s to 126s 



steady demand for other 



:^5s to 112s 

 'Wsto 60s 



[Nov 



29 



POTATOES 



Tbecoromittee'rep^ ^"atTKoT^ 



both coastwise ^^3^2^"^ the ^ 



caused an advance in oriee^ .u VL^VL l }mx **, whirnA?! 

 lowing are this day 

 Scotch do., 60s. to 

 ditto Shaws, 60s. to 65gJ 



n price for all sorts of ?Z>o' Wh J ch *• 

 •« > quotations :-York R^ 2^70. >J* 



75s. ; Kent and E S8e x A? *lr\ x **H.i 



88 ex do., 65 8 , 



tom^^^SR***** 



*•••*; 



indeed, middling qualities are scare"; ^alea'bl.lS h ' ?htt 5 

 ciallv tor big Sheep, : imlng^ \^*"^r«£2£ 



W — O ~l — ^--«»'»^U esse c 



The number of Sheep is larger 



trade is heavy, at about Friday's p.ice- Pm Weatb «. C^ 

 Germany there are 30D Beasts, 4910 Sh PP , ir n land tnd 

 23 Pigs ; from Spain, 210 Sheep ; from France 90 #** *«* 

 Calves; from Norfolk, 100 Beasts; trono * IreUnH ^ tBd * 

 2400 from the midland counties. "eland, 150; ^J 



Per st. of 8 lbs —g 



Per st. of 8 lbs. 

 Best Scots, Here- 

 fords, afec. 

 Best Short-horns 

 2d quality Beasts 

 Best Downs and 



Haif-breds 

 Ditto Shorn 



s d s d 



3 8 to 3 10 

 3 6 — 3 8 

 2 6 — 3 



* ■ i 



••t 



4 — 4 2 





orn 



mt: sVorn qnalitJ 2 10 



Lambs 7 a A 



^ives ::: - , 



•M 



-3 fl 



-a 10 



Beasts, 4763 ; Sheep and Lambs,27,89n • CaiVes 997 i2 "" * * 



Friday, Nov. 23. w **> 22 * .' ^g«,460. 

 The supply of Beasts to-day is sm-ii), but eonal t A «: * 

 mand. Monday's prices are with difficulty nUrf * . 

 3s. lOd. is an extreme quotation, and ouIf reilisi • ' 



instances. We have, for the time of year a f • a ^ ew 



Sheep. Trade is exceedingly dull, at about'tbe IrLV 7 ° f 

 on Monday last. Good Calves are scarce, and fX T ai 

 inferior qaalities are lower, and it is 'difficult to Pf? * " 

 clearance. From Germany and Holland we ha™ iotd - 

 1050 bheep, and 182 Calves ; from France 120 %hlL a** 9 

 Calves ; from the midland counties, 300 Beasts- anS is* u-i 



i 



a 



Cows from the home counties. 

 Best Scots, flere- 



aad 105 Milch 



fords, <tc. 

 Best Snort-horns 

 2d quality Beasts 

 Best Downs and 



Half-breds 

 Ditto Shorn 

 Beasts, 716 ; 



3 6 to 8 10 

 8 4 — 3 6 

 2 4 — 3 



4-3 8 



ess 



4 0—42 



• • • 



Best Long-wooh . a 

 Ditto Shorn 



Ewes <fe 2d quality 2 10 '1 8 n 

 Ditto Shorn .;. ° 



Lambs ... \[] 0^0 4 



£? lves 2 6-3 



Pigs 



10 



• •• 



Sheep antl Lambs. 3.520 . Calves, 262 ; Pigg 430,° 



Red 



Red 



Red 



Malting. 

 Malting , 



Feed 



Peed 



Feed 



Foreign . 



i. i. 



35-18 

 38-40 



25-28 



MARK LANE. 

 Monday, Nov. 24.— The supply of Wheat from Essex and 

 Kent to this morning's market was moderate, and sold slowly 

 at the terms of this day se'nnight. Foreign was in limited 

 retail demand only, but fully former ptices are insisted on. 

 Floating cargoes continue in demand for the Continent, but 

 they are very scarce.— The value of Flour remains unaltered.- 

 A few picked samples of Barley brought last week's prices, but 

 other descriptions of malting were the turn lower; grinding 

 sells readily —Peas are scarce, and white boilers bring 3s. p«r 

 qr. more money.— Beans fully maintain late rate*.— The Oat 

 trade is firm, and the advance of Friday fully established. 



Pes Imperial Quarter. ,s. 



Wheat, Essex, Kent, <fc Suffolk... White 33 



— — fine selected runs. ..ditto 40 



— Norfolk, Lincoln, & ; York." White 3i 



— Foreign 31 



Barley,grind.& distil., 25s to26s...Chev. 29 



— Foreign... grinding and distilling 22 

 Oats, Essex and Suffolk 16 



— Scotch and Lincoln shire... Potato 19 



— Irish Potato 18 



— Foreign Poland and Brew 18 



Rye 26 



Rye-meal, foreign per ton 



Beans, Mazagan......26s to2»s Tick 27- 



— Pigeon 28 — 83... Wiuds 31 



— Foreign Small 22- 



Peas, white, Essex and Kent Boiler- 32- 



— Maple 28s to 30s Grey 25 



Maize White 



Flour best marks delivered ...per sack 



— Suffolk ditto 25 



— Foreign perbarreljl5 



Frida*. Nov. 28.— The arrivals of all descriptions of grain 



continue small; to-day's market was thinly attended, ana tne 

 inquiry for Wheat limited : nevertheless, holders were moil- 

 ferent as to selling, and on the little business done eitreoe 

 prices were realised. There continues to to some inqrarywr 

 floating cargoes for the Continent.— The trade for spring com 

 of all descriptions is very firm at Monday's q uotatlon fl s, h Tt„ 

 arrivals of Oats are very short, and in some i? 9ta ™ e *J»jQ 

 prices are realised.— In the value of Flour there is no auenw - 



Arrivals this Week, 



s. 



41 

 44 



46 

 36 

 48 

 32 



26 



20 

 24 

 21 

 22 

 28 



18-11 

 18-20 

 16-19 



Harrow 

 Lon^pod 



25-27 



31 



32 

 3o(EgYptianj23-35 



5 Suffolk... IBS— M 

 2S Foreign,. 27-35 



Yellow... — 



39 

 ■32 

 -21 



Norfolk . 

 Per sack 



25-3! 

 28-31 



• ■ • 



English 

 Irish .. 

 Foreign 



Imperial 



Averages. 



Oct. 18 



— 25 



8 

 15 



22 



Wheat. 

 Qrs. 

 1710 



2440 



Wheat. 



Barley, 



Qrs, 



2620 



440 



M r 



Oats. 

 Qrs. 

 940 

 4360 

 1370 





Flout. 

 182D sackl 



1350 



Nov, 



. 



363 0d 

 36 9 



Barley, i Oats.j Bye. i 



Aggreg. Aver. 

 Duties on Fo- 

 reign Grain 



36 

 36 



36 



6 



1 



9 



24s 



25 



25 



26 



26 



27 



9dll7s 



5 



7 

 1 

 7 

 



36 5 25 11 



1 



1 



17 



17 

 17 

 18 



18 



17 7 

 7~0 



0<i 



235 6<f 



5 



23 8 



5 24 10 



6 25 1 



1 26 



9 



23 2 



24 4 



1 o 



Fluctuations in the last six weeks* /^\V.iSof. 22 



Orr. 18. Clr+. 9K tfnv. 1. NoV. B.j«° T - I — 



Prices., Oct. 18. 





36s 9d 



36 



'J 



36 



6 



36 



4 



36 



1 



36 







• • • 



• • • 



••• 



■ 



] 



III 



• •• 



• t • 



ess 



• »t 



• •• 



• •• 



• •• 



• •• 



#*• 



#•• 



• •• 



• •» 



.!# 



Liverpool, Tuesday, Not. 25.— At our m 



■5WSS5 



there was a good display of samples, P"neipa"J atte no- 



scriptions of American Wheat, and having a J?" ^ a t W 



ance, there was a fair amount of business iQ « fae sa me^ 



full pHces of Tuesday last ; farmers' Wh ! a J n a Vlour **»**% 

 realising the highest quotations. American i f Fr eooo 



the improvement of Friday, whilst choicest ma fld jfg^ 

 and Irish brought extreme rates. Malting d Q&N* 



in the absence of supply, are unchanged in ano^ 



m- al is 3d. per load dearer. Beans and t e»» f ridW; 

 Iad>an Corn more sought after at the redutto ^ ^ w> 



Friday, Nov. 21.-Having few ^"^d^eriptlo^o/^ffi 

 Exchange to-day, tbe transactions in aD y^ n Sing, &*J£Z 

 Wheat we«e limited in amount ; notwr hsta nd^ ^ 



effected were at the full rates of Tue ^ a L , are r. B«rf«fj" 

 Wheat was in good request, and tbe turn u day# ^ 



Malt ranged precisely the same as !«** "** bflt whicbj^ 

 and Peat were held on rather higher term* m oder*^ 

 scarcely attainable. Oats and Oatmeal, up Corfl ^ w 

 mand, supported our last currency. «* 

 requeat at a further decline ol 6d. per qr. 



