Papurau Newydd Cymru

Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru

Cuddio Rhestr Erthyglau

15 erthygl ar y dudalen hon

LLANYBYTHER.

CAERFYRDDIN.

O'R BUNT PAID BOD 'N ESGEULUS.

EMYN HWYROL.

Y WIWER.

SOUTH WALES ASSIZE CIRCUITS.

MISCELLANEOUS.( __-

IFARM AND GARDEN.

Advertising

REVIEW OF THE BRITISH CORNI…

Newyddion
Dyfynnu
Rhannu

REVIEW OF THE BRITISH CORN I TRADE. The first fortnight of June has improved the wheat holders' position by 500,000 qrs. It has done this by adding that amount to the burden of supply cast upon the present cereal year. The rainfall of the past fifteen days has been welcome in many—perhaps we may say in most-parts of the country; but, while it has freshened up plant life and added to the bulk of the hay crop, it has not assisted the wheat towards ripening, neither has it been attended by a ripening temperature. The nights have been very chilly for the time of year, and even when the sun has shone the wind has mostly been in the north-east, thereby robbing it of much of its effect. It is the standing fault of our climate that we do not get much hot weather until the hours of daylight are on the decrease. The long hours of light in May and June are but seldom accompanied by any really ripening warmth. This season May was dowered with many hours of bright sunshine, but there was little actual heat in the brightness. June thus far has been very gray and cloudy, and unless July proves fine and hot throughout, harvest will be nearly three weeks late. For ten days delay we were already prepared, but so little ripening progress has been made since the end of May that if we take a mean date for the general commencement of harvest to be August 1st, the likelihood on June 1st was probably for this year commencing on the 10th To-day we should hesitate to suggest an earlier date than the 20th. We are not speaking, of course, of early Talavera wheat or of the crops on the southern side of the Sussex Downs, but of the regular beginning of wheat harvest iu middle England, round Rugby, Peterborough, or Leicester. The spring sown corn has grown a good deal of late and looks very well. English wheat is returned in a list of fifty markets, as against holders at thirty-six. This is a large proportion, yet London quotes a rise of 9d. on the average, together with sales sufficient to test the price. Lincoln, too, a very important market, quotes Gd. to Is. advance with an improved enquiry from millers. Wakefield, on Friday, reported of English corn that there was a better enquiry, and that considerably more business might be done if factors could see their way to meet millers." We cannot, however, see that factors have any right to lower present prices, nor do we at all despair of the small existing reserves of English wheat fetching present extreme rates between this and August. The London average this week is 34s. 6d, on ,569 qrs., and the imperial average is 32s. 6d. on 57,338 qrs. The imperial average for the same week in 1889 was 28s. 4d. on 41,765 qrs., while the tithe or septennial average was 34s Id. on 42,423 qrs.— Mark Lane Express.

MARKET S.

QUOTATIONS OFF STANDS AT MAUK…

THE SIGNALMAN OF THE MIDLAND,

TENBY AS A SEASIDE RESORT.

Advertising