. The Mark Lane express, agricultural journal &c. awarded as follows- — Buckinghamshire, Mr. J. II. B Farm, Drayton Beauchamp ; ~\irubridgc-sbife, Messrs. I!. T. Morris and Son, Oakinnrtci :I ex, Mr. William Nisbit. Beridysb Hall. *winter: Hampshire. Mr. II. II. Myers, ,per Mr. F. II. Molvneux, Swimnore II u seFarm. Bishops Waltham; Kent, S. Bus--St Nicholas, Birehington s Norfolk, Mr. F. , Sutton Stalham: Northanbs. Mr. Kinyscliffe, Wansford ; Oxfnrdsiii-e, Mr.(!. Smith, South Weston: Suffolk Fasti. D. Pratt. Well Farm, Witnesliam : and Suf-f


. The Mark Lane express, agricultural journal &c. awarded as follows- — Buckinghamshire, Mr. J. II. B Farm, Drayton Beauchamp ; ~\irubridgc-sbife, Messrs. I!. T. Morris and Son, Oakinnrtci :I ex, Mr. William Nisbit. Beridysb Hall. *winter: Hampshire. Mr. II. II. Myers, ,per Mr. F. II. Molvneux, Swimnore II u seFarm. Bishops Waltham; Kent, S. Bus--St Nicholas, Birehington s Norfolk, Mr. F. , Sutton Stalham: Northanbs. Mr. Kinyscliffe, Wansford ; Oxfnrdsiii-e, Mr.(!. Smith, South Weston: Suffolk Fasti. D. Pratt. Well Farm, Witnesliam : and Suf-folk (West). Mr. F. Isom. Kingsbury, Cormard. The- quality of the exhibits wns. on the whole-,very good, though the season can hardlv lcdescribed as being a pood one, mnnv of thesamples having unripe kernels, though, on theother hand, there were some verv ripe. Suffolk contributions were decidedlv below the average,the best counties being Oxford shire. Northamp-tonshire, Kent, and Essex, there being some lineconsignments from the latter The Royal Agricultural Society. Sin,-—Doubtless many of your readers will haveI ecu much struck with the complete dissimilarityin tone of the two letters on the Royal AgriculturalSociety of England which have recently appearedin your columns, the first from the pen of SirWalter Gilbev, the second written by^Mr. JohnJ. Cridlan. The former relates more- particularlyto the past, and reads more like the touching andpathetic of a fon<l parent whose hopes and aspira-tions concerning a favourite child have notmaterialised, whilst the latter breathes that spiritof determination and firm belief in the justice ofhis cause whic h is certain to result sooner or laterin victory a victory, too, which will be wonwithout serious loss to anyone save those who,for reasons which are not on the surface, objectto the removal of an injustice. For the life of me, I fail to see who is one pennythe worse for the change to the first of Decemberinstead of t


Size: 1973px × 1267px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjec, booksubjectagriculture, bookyear1832