912 
THE FIELD. 
bo Ensign, Sept 9; John Julia. Tullle Hajrlock gcot. to bo Ensl*V 
Sent 10: Kollo Burelem. gent, to bo Ensign, Sc, »t. 1 1 ; William H. 
Baldwin, gent, to be Ensign, Sopt- 1 *- _ 
Royal Glamorgan Light InfantryMllltia—Milo Maher, Esq., 
irst Lieutenant : Saint Vincent Tyler, Esq.. to bo Second Lieut 
First Lieutenant ; Saint 
Sept 6. 
to bo 
ieutenant 
Royal Rifle Regiment of Denbighshire Militia— John Price Roberta, 
gent , to bo Ensign, Aug. 23. 
Tht following Article u substitute! for that which appeared m the Gazette of 
the Ibth of August last. 
Royal North Gloucester Regiment'd Militia — F.nsign Charles Hawkins 
Fisher to bo Lieutenant rice Chamberlain, superseded, Aug. 22. 
From Tuesday's Gazette. 
CROWN-OFFICE, September 19. 
MEMBER Returned to Serve In the Present PARLIAMENT. 
Borough of King* Lynn— John Henry Gurney, of Calton-holl, 
Norwich, Esq., in the room of Robert Jocelyn (commonly called 
Viscount Jocelyn), deceased. 
OFFICE OF ORDNANCE, September lf>. 
Corps of Royal Engineers — Second- Lieutenant Charles John Darrah 
to be First Lieutenant vice Burke, killed in action ; Second- Lieutenant 
John Pophain Maquay to be First Lieutenant, vice Chcsney, promoted. 
Second- Lieutenant Robert Nioholl Dawson to be First Lieutenant vice 
Wrottosley, died of wounds. 
COMMISSIONS SIGNED BY IIER MAJESTY THE QUEEN. 
Royal Perthshire Regiment of Militia — Charles Lennox Kerr, Esq., 
(commonly called Lord Charles Lennox Kerr), to 1ms Adjutant 
4th <>r Royal South Middlesex Regiment of Militia — Henry Mogul, 
gent, to be Paymaster, from 18th of August 1864 
COMMISSIONS SIGNED BY LORD-LIEUTENANTS. 
4th or Royal South Middlesex Regiment of Militia — John Blake, 
gent, to be Ensign, vice George, promoted. 
Bedfordshire Regiment of Militia— Lieutenant William Kenwortl.y 
Browne to bo Cnptnin, vice Pym, resigned ; Charles Buekworth Herne 
Soamc to be Assistant-Surgeon, vice Mac Cormack, promoted. 
West Essex Militia — Henry Levett Boscowen Ibbotson to be Captain. 
Cambridgeshire Militia— Edward Horlock Mortimer, Esq., late Lieu- 
tenant in Her Majesty's 4 0th Regiment of Foot, to be Captain; Robert 
Ashley, gent., to be Lieutenant; George Gillson, gent., to be Lieu- 
tenant 1 William W. Alnutt, gent., to bo Ensign. 
Leicestershire Militia— Ensign George Walker to bo Lieutenant; 
John Mathew, gout., to be Lieutenant 
Royal Glamorgan Light Infantry Militia— Hardress do Luttrell 
Saunderson, Esq., to be Major. 
AGRICULTURE. 
Beasts at market 934; sheep and lambs, 10,800; calves, 408 ; 
pigs, 280. 
Monday. September 18. — We had again an increased supply of 
beasts. The average quality was very inferior, and many of this 
description remained unsold. Prices were rather lower for the best 
kinds. The number of sheep was large and the demand smaller, con- 
mantmT aU*"he rwd'of'the Pe^ru riau" guatlo ! sequently quotations were lower, and a clearance > could no, ;be effected. 
Dor acre in autumn, at the time the seed was sown. The produce of the ! The season is now much advanced for lambs, and only a few choicest 
>, u i*n wu,. «... »<■ c,to “ “ B “" '°” r 
received Peruvian guano, and this Is the result : — 
no presumption so great ns that which glibly cries “ Impossible ” in an 
ago which has produced the electric telegraph. j 
I take the opportunity while writing to you of sending the result of . 
some experiments made by me this season at Baldoon, on the appli- j 
cation of manure to wheat, and in continuation of similar ones made ; 
last year. In the centre of a fifty-acre Held ono acre was left without | 
One acre, with guano, 32 bushels, G31b. weight per 
bushel, at 0s. fid. per 60lb . . ........ ... ••••••; 
One aero, without manure, 251 bushels, GOlb. weight 
per bushel, at 6». ikl. per 601b 
£10 18 
8 6 
Cost of 2 cwt. of guano in 1853. 
£2 12 7 
10 0 
£1 12 7 
Profit per acre, besides one-fourth more straw 
The Inferiority in the quality of the unmanured wheat, as shown by 
the weight per bushel, is worthy of notice, as well as the fact that the 
unmnnured wheat was a week later in ripening than the other. 
The second experiment was made to test the value of nitrate of soda 
and common salt os a top dressing to wheat in spring, and the result in 
this case has been extremely profitable. The wheat was sown in 
December after a heavy crop of swedes, all drawn off ; and tho whole 
field was top-dressed In April with 1 cwt. of nitrate of soda and 1 cwt. 
of salt per acre, given in two applications, at a fortnight's interval, one 
acre near the centre of the field having been left undressed. This and 
the adjoining acre have been thrashed, and yielded os foUows :— 
One acre, with nitrate and salt, 42 bushels, worth 
One acre, without manure, 30 busheis, worth 6s. Cd. 
£13 13 
9 15 
Cost of manure, 1 cwt. nitrate, 18s. ; 1 cwt salt, 2s. 
£3 18 
1 0 
£2 18 0 
AGRICULTURAL POSSIBILITIES. 
[From The Times.] 
Sm,— Somo remarks which 1 made at the last agricultural gathering 
at Tiptree have caused a discussion. In which I feci that I have been 
misunderstood, and therefore beg the favour of a little space for 
explanation. 
The most interesting feature of Mr. Mechi'a farm thi9 year was his 
liquid manure system, and on this he cliiefiy enlarged in the way of 
instruction. It is not used directly to the corn crops, but the excel- 
lence of tho mangold fields shows how beneficial it is to them. Tho 
Italian rye- grass is the only unsuccessful crop; and Mr. Mechi, when 
his own illustration failed him, very fairly adduced the experience 
of others. He told us of the marv ellous results obtained by Mr. Ken- 
nedy, in Ayrshire, whose Italian rye-gross affords keep at the rote of 
seventy house-fed sheep an acre. And Mr. Teller, of Ayr, who was 
on the ground, corroborated this statement from his own experience, he 
having got from three cuttings of this prolific gross, In one season, as 
much green food os would have made twenty tons of hoy per acre ! It 
was, perhaps, no wonder that many wore startled by such statements, 
seeing that this is ten times the number of sheep and ten times the 
weight of hoy which are usually got. Men cried out, “ Impossible ! " 
They would not believe it Perhaps it is impossible in the eastern 
counties, and, at any rote, it may bo useful to point out the udvantago 
which the inoister climate of the west gives it in the growth of grass. 
Tho difference between tho annual rainfall of tho east and west of 
Great Britain Is reckoned at ten inches. An inch of rain is equivalent 
to 100 tons of water to an acre; so that, on the average, nature gives 
to tho western larrner 1,000 tons more water per acre than to hi B 
eastern competitor. In the growth of grass we know that it is all 
needed; for in Ayrshire, where these enormous crops of grass are 
grown both Mr. Kennedy and Mr. Telfer feel the necessity of per- 
mitting no waste of liquid. During summer they apply the liquid 
manure early in the morning and late at night ; not showering it high 
Into the air, but directing the stream straight to the roots of the grass, 
so that none may bo dissipated in mist, and as little os possible lost 
by evaporation Now, the mechanical labour, even when aided by 
machinery, of applying 1,000 tons of water to an acre of land must 
ever present a serious obstacle to the farmer of the eastern districts ; 
and even when he has done this he is only on the level whence the 
western farmer starts. I am anxious to press this point on public 
attention at present, that it may be duly considered in any scheme for 
applying town sewage to agricultural purposes. In so far as 1 know, 
there is not a Blngle instance yet published of the profitable use in this 
country of town sewage applied by pipes. The case of Edinburgh is 
on a totally different principle. There the sewage water is run over 
the land by irrigation in hundreds of tons to the acre, instead ot by 
tens of tons, to which it must neeecsarily be restricted in applying it 
through pipes by machinery. And, seeing that the solid manuring 
matter of town sewage is diluted in many hundred times its weight of 
water (as has been shown by Professor Way), we need not wonder that 
the report of the late Board of Health, while fully illustrating the 
beneficial application to crops of rich farmyard sewage through pipes, 
is comparatively silent with regard to town sewage similarly applied 
Great caution Is therefore necessary in founding conclusions ol general 
application from the success of farmyard sewage in the moist climate 
of the west. 
The possibility of growing such crops of grass under any circum- 
stances was doubted by many . But wherefore impossible ? A good 
crop of meadow hay weighs about two tons. A stalk of Italian rye- 
grass i« twice the length of meadow-grass. If the stalks stand equally 
thick on the ground, the Italian rye-grass will thus weigh twice as 
much as the meadow-grass. But If there are two stalks of Italian rye- 
grass for one of meadow-grass, the crop of the former will be four times 
the weight of the latter. To those who have seen Mr. Kennedy's and 
Mr. Teller's crops it is unnecessary to say that both these conditions are 
fulfilled ; and it needs but the repeated application of farm sewage to 
this rapidly growing grass, in a favourable climate, to secure three such 
cuttings in n season ns Mr. Telfer affirmed he hud got. To the diligent, 
as Mr. Mechi said truly, time Is money, and the axiom could not be 
better illustrated than by growing three crops in a single season in place 
of one A startling statement of any kind is always doubted, and 
disbelief in mature of this kind is usually In proportion to limited 
knowledge Many farmers, because they have never seen it themselves, 
would soy that it is impossible on any land in this country to grow 
suDerb crop* year after year without manure— to have beans, wheat, 
mangold potatoes, cabbages. oats, and swedes following each other in 
, -uocottlon (provided the land Is kept clean), each crop most 
Profit per acre 
These two experiments supply little that is new, os they only corro- 
borate hundreds of others made in various parts of the country In pre- 
vious years. But they are useful in impressing upon the British grower 
the power he might possess of Increasing the produce of his wheat 
crops. It Is not merely a question of profit to the farmer. Here arc 
two substances, the application of which in certain known quantities to 
the soil give an increase which may be stated, on the average, at one 
quarter of wheat per acre, or an addition of nearly one-fourth to its 
natural produce. An addition of one quarter an acre all over the 
country would be equivalent to the food of one-fourth of our popu- 
lation. It would make all the difference between plenty and scarcity, 
between the cheap loaf and the dear loaf, between steady prosperity and 
a drain of gold, with all its commercial disturbance. And yet the 
arrangements for the supply of articles known to possess such qualities, 
instead of being a prime object of care to the British Government, are 
intrusted to the charge of some uninfluential consul at the antipodes I 
9, Little Rydcr-street, 8t James's. James Caibd. 
Cattle fbom Europe. — The ship Antarctic at New York, fromLiver- 
pool, brings 180 head of cattle, consisting of bulls, cows, sheep, pigs, 
and horses, for the Kentucky Stock Company . — Boston Dailp Advertiser. 
North Sea.— At the end of August, 1853, the export of cattle to 
England from Tonnlng was 7,761 oxen, 7,216 sheep, and 43 horses. 
At the end of August, 1854, the export was 7,269 oxen, 6,487 sheep, 
and 48 horses. 
To Destroy Insects. — A French gardener has discovered that by 
painting his hot- houses with gas-tar all the insects so destructive to 
plants and fruits die. 
Establishment of a Hop Market at Hereford. — A large and in- 
fluential public meeting has been held at the Old Town Hall, Hereford, 
the mayor presiding, for the purpose of establishing a hop market. 
Resolutions in favour of the project were carried nem. eon. — Local Paper. 
Gigantic Ear of Oats. — Yesterday we had handed to us a splendid 
ear of oats, which was cut in a field belonging to Mr. Cronkshaw, of 
Belthom, a neighbourhood by no means celebrated for its fertility. The 
car consisted of 200 grains. If we suppose these grains to be all sown 
again, and that they would increase In the same ratio for five years, the 
yield from a single grain would amount to 17,860 tons, estimating 500 
grains to weigh an ounce . — Blackburn Standard. 
Contract for the East. — Messrs. Scott, of Belfast, have contracted 
with Government for hay to the Ordnance and cavalry horses in Turkey, 
and they are shipping a prime article. 
To be Noted. — In a cloudy morning it is a matter of importance 
to the farmer to know whether it will be sunshiny or showery in the 
afternoon. If the ants have cleared their hole nicely, and piled the 
dirt up high, it seldom fails to bring a clear day to the farmer, though 
it may be cloudy till ten or eleven o'clock in the forenoon. Spider-webs 
will be very numerous about the tops of the grass and grain some cloudy 
mornings ; and fifty years' observation have shown the writer of this 
that these little wcathcr-guessers seldom fail in their predictions of a 
fair day. 
Germany and Holland there were 2,510 beasts; 6,970 sheep; 174 
calves; and 83 pigs. Spain: 470 sheep. Scotland: 13 beasts; and 
2,800 from the northern and midland counties. 
Per stone of 8 lbs- 
d. s. d. 
Best Scots, Herefords . 1 4 — 4 8 
Best Short Homs 4 2 — 4 C 
Second quality beasts . . 2 10 — 3 6 
Calves 2 10-4 2 
Pigs 3 0-4 
Per stone of 8 lbs. s. 
Best Dns. & Half-bds. Sh.O 
Best Long Wools 4 
Do. do. Shorn 0 
Ewes and second quality. 3 
Do. do. Shorn 0 
Best Dns. & Jlnlf-brcds..4 8-4 10 Lambs 4 
d. s. d. 
0-0 0 
4-4 Q 
0-0 0 
4—4 0 
0—0 0 
C— 6 
Beasts at market, 
pigs, 380. 
,607; sheep and lambs, 36,970 ; calves, 362; 
MARK LANE. 
Friday, September 15.— The quantity of English wheat on sale this 
morning was trifling In tho extreme, and factors experienced no 
difficulty in obtaining an advance of 2s. per quarter upon Monday's 
rates. The finer descriptions of foreign, whether white or red, were 
saleable at a like improvement. Barrel and foreign sack flour must be 
noted fully Is. dearer. Somo thousand sacks of town-made flour are 
reported to have been sold for shipment to Paris, where prices continue 
to advance. Oats were in short supply, and again improved in value Is. 
per quarter. Barley, beans, and peas were each held with increased 
confidence, and the turn in price was against the buyer. London 
averages: Wheat, 6s. Id. ; barley, 29a; oats, 28a 7d.; rye, 38s ; 
beans, 46s.; peas, 38s. 7d. 
Monday, September 18. — There was a fair show of English wheat 
at market this morning by land carriage samples from Essex, Kent, 
and Suffolk ; but from Lincolnshire and Cambridgeshire there was not 
much offered. The town millers were tolerably free buyers, and had 
to pay 4s. to 5s. advance upon the rates of Monday last Foreign wheat 
wus in moderate request, and 2s. to 3s. dearer. American flour must 
be noted Is to 2s. per barrel dearer. English barley sold slowly at 
former prices. The receipts of oats during the week have been small 
Beans and peas were in very short supply, and higher prices were 
readily obtained. 
Arrivals into London from Sept. 11 to Sept. 16. 
Wheat 
Barley . 
Oats .. 
Malt .. 
Quarters. 
English. 
Seoteli. | Irish. 
1960 
.... .... 
127 
.... .... 
5 
49 800 
2730 
6 
Flour, 1,378 sacks, and 4,204 barrels. 
Foreign. 
2470 
650 
4426 
HAY MARKETS. 
Smithfield. — M eadow hay, £2 15s. to .£4 12s.; clover ditto, £3 Os. 
to £6 ; and straw, £\ 10s. to £l 14s. per load. A full average supply, 
and a sluggish demand. 
Cumberland. — Meadow hay, £3 to £4 15s. ; clover ditto, £3 to 
£5 15s.; and straw, £1 10s. to£l 16s. per load. Both hay and straw 
sold slowly, at late rates. 
Whitechapel. — Meadow hay, £2 15a to £4 12s.; clover ditto, 
£3 5a to £6; and straw, £l 10s.to£l 15s. per load. Trade duU. 
Edinburgh, Sept. 1 9.— Supplies of all kinds of straw these last six 
days large. Prices as foUows Oat straw 7s. 6d. to 10a, wheat do. 8s. 
to 11s., barley do. 8s. to 9s. per kemple of 16 stones tron. Hay lid. to 
Is. Id., new hay 8d. to lOd. per stone. 
BANKRUPTS. 
JHnrkrta. 
MONEY MARKET. 
Monday.— Consols, which left off on Saturday ot 95} to } for money, 
and 95 A to 4 for the account, were quoted throughout the day 95} to $ 
for money, and 96} to } lor the account Although there were arrivals 
from India, China, the West Indies, Australia, and America, there was 
no Intelligence calculated to exercise much influence, and public 
attention is exclusively directed towards Sebastopol. India Bonds lett 
off at 7s. to lls., and Exchequer Bills at 6s. to 9s. premium. Exchequer 
Bonds quoted 99 J to }. 
Tuesday —Consols for money opened this morning at 96} to }. being 
a decline of an eighth, and returned to that price alter a period, during 
which there were sellers at 95}. For the 17th of October they opened 
without alteration from the price of lost evening, namely, 95} to c , and 
the final quotation was 96} to }. India Bonds left off ut 7s. tolls, 
premium ; Exchequer Bills, 6s. to 9s. premium ; and Exchequer Bonds, 
99} to}. 
Wednesday.— Consols for money were first quoted 95} to and 
they left off at 95} to fi. For the account they began at 95} to fl, 
advanced till there were buyers at 95}, and closed at ; 06} to }. After 
regular hours, in consequence of higher prices from Pans, transactions 
took place at 954 to 96. India Bonds were quoted 7s. to 10s. premium ; 
Exchequer Bills, 6s. to 9s. premium , and Exchequer Bombs 99} to }. 
Thursday— The news of the landing of the idlied forces in the 
Crimea has caused the English funds to maintain with great firmness 
the improved quotations of last evening. Consols for money opened at 
95} to 4 and left off at 95}. For tho account they began at 95} to 96, 
and closed ot that price after an interval during which there were 
sellers at 95 1 India Bonds were quoted at 7s. to lls. premium; 
Exchequer Bills, fis. to 9s. premium ; and Exchequer Bonds, 99} to }. 
Friday. — Consols opened at 95} 6. 
Friday — Thomas Youngman, Pitfield-street, Hoxton, linen draper— 
John Cullen Penfold, Park-terrace, Chelsea, oil and colour merchant— 
Horatio Collier the younger, Painswick, Gloucestershire, blanket manu- 
facturer— Darid Scott, luto of Deansgate, Manchester, pork butcher— 
William Thomas, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, and Noble-street, commis- 
sion agent and boarding-house keeper— Ebenezer Williams, St. David’s, 
Pembrokeshire, druggist, grocer, and farmer— Stephen Harris, Kingston- 
upon-Thames, ironmonger — Ann Maria Edwards and Thomas Cooper, 
Coventry (and not of Birmingham, as heretofore advertised), iron- 
mongers— Joseph William Hall, Cardiff, dealer in agricultural imple- 
ments— WUliam Holbrook, Nottingham, joiner— John Thomley, Bolton- 
le-Moors, Lancashire, drysalter and manufacturing chemist— Thomas 
Hutchings, Axminster, Devonshire, nursery and seedsman, stationer 
and general dealer — William Brailsford, Nottingham, smaUware dealer 
Thomas Parker, Southport, Lancashire, hotel-keeper. 
Tuesday.— Ebenezer Heath, Bridge-house-place, Newington-cause- 
way, leather-mercer — John Clarke, New Cavendish-street, Portion J- 
ploce, and Upper Marylebone-street, surgeon— Eliza Mary Ager, 
Victoria-terrace, Kennington, baker — Henry John Steuart, St James s 
Hotel, Jermyn-street, hotel-keeper — William Crole, jun., Rood-loiif, 
East India merchant— William RoUason, jun., Birmingham, tlnplak- 
worker — Charles Doody, Stoke-upon-Trent, tailor — John Moats, sea, 
Spalding, coal-merchant— George Gillatt, Barnsley. Yorkshire, confec- 
tioner — John Swales, Openshaw, Lancashire, ironmonger. 
any succession (provided . 
luxuriant. uU carried off the ground, and not a particle of manure ap- 
plied And yet this may be seen in half an hour's ride from town by 
the North Kent Railway, on the drained portion ol Plumstend-mareh 
occupied by Mr. Russell. When guano was first introduced, many 
deemed it impossible that a brown powder, brought thousands of miles 
across the ocean, would be n hundred times more valuable for the 
growth of crops than an equal weight of good farmyard manure. In 
Truth, one of the most serious obstacles to agricultural "nproveinont .» 
to be lound in the limited standard which some agricultural teachers 
the fixed boundary of agricultural progress. I here is 
SMITHFIELD. 
Friday, September 1*.— The number of beasts is not large but fully 
adequate to the demand. Owing to the warm weather and dull trade 
at the dead markets, there is great difficulty in effecting .1 clear- 
ance ut rather reduced rates. Trade is very dull for sheep, and several 
remain unsold notwithstanding a disposition to take lower prices. 
Good Iambs are saleable at late rates. Calves are lower krern Ger- 
many and Holland there are 216 beasts, 2.090 sheep, and 366 calves; 
100 beasts from the Northern and Midland; and 90 nnlch cows from 
the home counties. 
BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, AND DEATHS. 
BIRTHS. 
On the lSthinst, at Guildford, Surrey, tho wife of Alexander Gil- 
christ, Esq., burrister-at-law, of a daughter- On the 1 8th inst., at Lynch- 
field near Taunton, the wife of Graham Willmore, Esq., Q.C., of twin 
daughters— On the 18th inst., Mrs. Charles Farlow, of the Strand, of a 
son— On the 18th inst, at 52, Welbeck-strcet, the wile of Eustace 
Smith Esq., of Sydney, New South Wales, of a daughter— On the 19th 
jnst, at Bristol, the wife of Mr. John Simpson, jun., of a daughter. 
MARRIAGES. 
On the 18th inst., at St. Mary's, Aldermanbury, by the Rev. Charles 
Collins, Mr. Jos. Randall, of South Berated, Sussex, to Miss Emma 
Green of the George Hotel, Aldermanbury. London— On the 19th inst. 
nt tlm parish church, Clapham, by the Rev. Henry Pritchard, B. I , 
Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, Philip Pritchard, of New York, 
fourth son of Henry Pritchard, Esq., of Clapham, to Adelaide Ann. 
second daughter of Thomas Howell, Esq., of Clnpham-common— On me 
19th inst ut St. James's, Paddington, by the Rev. A. Taylor, M.A., John 
Buck Tokcr, Esq., Lieutenant, R.N., of the Onks, Ospringe, Kent, 10 
Anna, only child and heiress of the late Rev. Richard De Burgh, 01 
Clonmahon, in the county of Cork— On the 19th inst. .at St .Bride >. 
Fleet-street, eldest son of the late John Lowe, Esq., to Matilda, eldest 
daughter of John Quids, Esq., of Willesden. 
DEATHS. 
On tho 16th instant, at the Government House, Royal Military 0 
lege Sandhurst, Lady Scroll, wife of Sir George Scovel), K.C.B , m> 
81st yeur of her .gr.-O,, «1.« 18th 
year Ol ner age. — wu me ~ , c . . 
ness. Lady Macdonald, widow of tho late Lieutenant-General bn 
Macdonald. G.C.B.— On Sunday, tho 17th instant, Martha Winsor, 
beloved and affectionate wife of George Winsor, ot Great *^-**[V 
Bermondsey, after a few hours' illness, aged 59 — On the 17th tasts*^ 
at his residence, 36, Brunswick -square, Brighton, Lieutenant-t o 
Newbery, aged 64, deeply regretted.-On Sunday morning, the 17 
instant, ut half-past 8, at Walworth, Clementina, aged 18, and ai 
mhmtes past 9 Jemima, aged 21, the third and fourth .urrh”* 
daughters of the late Mr. Jua Wallworth, of Lambeth, after a few ho ^ 
illness.— On the 18th instant, at Elsenham-hall, Essex, George 
Rush Esq., ol Earthing hoe-lo<lgo, Northamptonshire, after a shore 
_At No. l, Grange-walk, Bermondsey, Thomas Jones, son oi m. 
have set up as 
Per stono of 81bs. s. 
Best Scots, llercfords ..4 
Best Short Horns 4 
Second quality beasts ..3 0—3 8 
Calves .... 3 0—4 4 
Pigs 
Best Dus. Si Half-brcds..4 
Per stone of Slbs. s. d. s. d. 
6—4 8 
Best Dns. & Half-bds. Sh.O 0-0 0 
4—4 6 
Best Long Wools 4 4 — 4 8 
0—3 8 
Do. do. Shorn 0 0—0 0 
0 — 4 4 
Ewes and second quality. 3 -4 — 4 0 
0—4 4 
Do. do Shorn 0 0-0 0 
8—4 10 
Lambs 4 8—5 4 
ness. 
late Stephens Jones. 
I'lrov, of No. 3*. Robcrt ilrcct, Holton, Pariah of 
ai ih» Prinlinromco of Tayi-.i. ond Gamn.ivo. -N^ 
■Man. . and puhlbtied by him n No. 40?, Siread, °W>«“ 0 A 
v iaI .1 Couuij.— nrrnmuin S3, le>4 
