. Farmer and stockbreeder . member*for the council were chosen as mider : Messrs. A. , C. Cousen«. R. J. Dawson, V Everett, J. , F. D. Girling. G. A. Goodchild, .1 A. Reynolds, Fred Smith, ( C iih, and Tho Chairman, in seeking for further help for th-»Relief of Aliies Fund, said the societys fund newtotalled £478. A South Devon hop •.• ad v • S ,rr day week of a disastrous conflagration. At LittleDartmouth Farm, occupied by Mr. Roger Palmer,a workman awoke to discover the • x11 nsive range ofoutbuildings were blaxmg. He aroused the occupierbut beyond releasi


. Farmer and stockbreeder . member*for the council were chosen as mider : Messrs. A. , C. Cousen«. R. J. Dawson, V Everett, J. , F. D. Girling. G. A. Goodchild, .1 A. Reynolds, Fred Smith, ( C iih, and Tho Chairman, in seeking for further help for th-»Relief of Aliies Fund, said the societys fund newtotalled £478. A South Devon hop •.• ad v • S ,rr day week of a disastrous conflagration. At LittleDartmouth Farm, occupied by Mr. Roger Palmer,a workman awoke to discover the • x11 nsive range ofoutbuildings were blaxmg. He aroused the occupierbut beyond releasing his half-a-doseo horses aad acouple of bullocks, he could do nothing to checkeffectively the fire, and the buildings were head of rattl. including dairy cows, fatbeasts and young stork perished, and ini -reed in theAre was all ths agricultural machinery 300 bags ofcorn (threshed on the previous day1, ttraw, root*,potatoes and manure. February 17, 1919. AND CHAMBER OF AGRICULTURE JOURNAL. 249. TO READERS. Would our readers please showThe Farmer and Stockbreeder totheir neighbours, and ask them tobecome subscribers ? LGNDCN GRAIN. Wheat. There is a general suspension of ploughing andBowing, so that threshing and marketing are to thefore. Farmers are apparently pressed for money aswell. The Canadian spring sowings will be verylarge if a State guarantee of two-dollar wheat(68s. per quarter on the farm) can be Dominion Government has not yet decided onthis important matter. A Calcutta cable of the12th inst. reckons that the Indian crop will be63,700,000 bushels less than that of 1918, which gavean export surplus of about 48,000,000 Atthis rate the Indian Empire in 1919 will not be selfsupporting, but unsold 1918 wheat will make up thedifference without difficulty. Imports last weekwere 191,298qr., which were not up to requirementsAverages at the country markets include 71s. 6d. atManchester, 72s. 6d. at Ipswich, 73s. 2d. at Bri


Size: 3104px × 805px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookpublisherlondon, bookyear188