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.-ABEICUISOEE ' ---+--

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ABEICUISOEE -+-- Position and Prospects of the Hop Trade. The following remarks in regard to the hop trade are from the annual trade circular of Messrs. Woollo- ton and Son, of the Borough :— After five seasons of comparative scarcity it is satisfactory to be favoured with a crop of hops which will probably be remembered not less for general excellence of quality than for extraordinary abundance. It is to be regretted that no accurate statistics can be obtained as to the number of acres under cultivation, nor as to the actual amount of pro- duce, but guided by the most careful observation, we appre- hend that there are now scarcely less than 60,000 acres producing hops, and that the crop of 1865 is equal to more than an old duty of £ 300,000. Consumers are perhaps somewhat better supplied with stock than at this time last year, but few brewers are large holders, and from the great scarcity on the market of year- ling and old hops, a demand may be expected for the new growth, so soon as it can safely be affirmed that prices are in conformity with reason. We think it unvrise to take alarm at the reports indus- triously circulated of mould, blight, and red rust: so im- mense a crop must alwai s be partially affected with some misfortune. It is indisputable that throughout the season there will be an abundant supply of prime quality, and an maportamt surplus. As to the foreign crop, large importations must at one time be expected, for Belgium produces the largest and best crop known since 1846, Bavaria quite one-third more than last year, and of the finest quality and condition; while Bohemia and the other European districts grow consider- ably more than sufficient for their local necessities. From America we again hear of "blight" and total failure," pos- sibly to be followed by as large exports to this market as last season, when similar accounts were repoi ted. We pronoun ce no opinion as to the stability of the pre- sent nominal value of hops, and only add that with judicious care in the selection of their stock, or else by confidence in the judgment and fair trading of those to whom they en- trust their orders, brewers (in the moderate price of hops) will this season have some compensation for the partial failure in the crop of barley, and also for the direct taxation exacted from them on the abolition of the Customs and Excise Duties. TT-in French have added to the list of diseases of animals, which in England is circumscribed to cows, pigs, and prawns, by giving the same disaster to fowls and silkworms. THE annual show of the Pouch Wexford Farming Society was held last week in a field adjacent to the town of Wexford. It was attended with considerable success, the number of entries, particularly in short horns, being greater than last year, the quality of the stock very superior, the spectators numerous, and the weather all that could be desired. A GENTLEMAN near Wareham, in Dorset, who has a small field in which there are crops of carrots and mangold-wurzel, with which hares and rabbits have been making free, has put a dog's house in the field, which a small puppy inhabits. The puppy is loose by day, and he barks all night long. This effectually scares away the hares and rabbits. THE potato disease is computed to have destroyed half the crop in the neighbourhood of Spalding. A Boston report states, however, that in that part of Lincolnshire, the disease is very partial in its effects. Rocks and regents are nearly all bad in some districts, while flukes and seedlings are generally well spoken of. There is a good supply of potatoes about God- manchester; unfortunately, however, the disease pre- vails to some extent, and increases its ravages the longer the roots are kept in the ground. ME: THOIVTXS MAJOR, bailiff at Greenway-farm, Brixham, has furnished the following particulars of what is presumed to be hydrophobia among the cattle of his farm:—"A mad dog broke loose from Torquay in the early part of July, and we found him dead on our grounds on the 11th of the same month, amongst a herd of nine or ten dairy cows and on the 9th of August we found one of the cows show strange symptoms. A veterinary surgeon was at once called in, who seemed, for the time, to be unaware of the nature of the malady; but the following day nothing could 'be more plain than that it was a case of hydro- phobia. At once all proper precautions were taken to prevent other cows from going near the one affected, and she was shot and buried after twenty-four hours; and all straw, dung-, and everything near where she had been were burned. Fourteen dajs afterwards another cow was taken with the same symptoms, but Tiot so violently, and she grew weaker hourly. She was also shot and buried as the other. Since then all the other cows have been and still are healthy and well." IT will be remembered that some months ago several meetings were held in the midland counties with a view to secure the abolition of statute hirings, or "mop fairs," as they are termed, and the substitution therefore of register offices. As far as Warwickshire was concerned it was resolved that the members of the committee then appointed by Lord Leigh's suggestion should distribute blank forms amongst the landholders in the different divisions, for the purpose of getting as many signatures as possible in favour of this proposal in order to obviate the evils of drunkenness, and worse species of immorality which the magistrates find re- gularly follow "statutes" or "mops," at which ser- vants are hired in the open streets. A meeting to re- ceive a report of the result was held at Warwick on Saturday last, at which there were present Lord Leigh, Mr. Adderley, M.P., and several other zealous sup- porters of the movement, when it was stated that -eighty of the tenant farmers of the county had given their signatures in pledge of their determination no longer to hire in this way. Some had refused to give their signatures because they would not pledge them- selves, and it was, therefore, resolved to make such an alteration in the forms of subscription as would meet their views of the case. The hiring business, it would be mentioned, at the mops has considerably diminished since the above movement began.

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