nsm [DECEMBER.] No. 12. rx^ PUBLISHED M«)]^THLY. EuFFIN & AuQUST, PeoPEIETORS. FEANK: G. RUFFIN, Ebitor DEVOTED TO AGRICULTURE, HORTICULTURE, AND THE HOUSEHOLD AETS. PRINTED AT RICHMOND, Va., BY MACFARLANE & FERGUSSON 1857. CONTENTS Killing Hogs, - - , - 705 A Pleasant Fable for our Indebted Sub- scribers. — English Blue Breasted Red Game Fowls.— The Different Fairs of Virginia. — Good Sale of Tobacco, - 707 Agricultural Professorship in t|ie Univer- sity of Virginia, - - 708 More Sorgho Molasses.-^Refreshments and Drinking at the Fair, - 710 Winter Management of Sheep, - 711 Cheap Way of Underdraining, ? 712 Virginia State Agricultural Society, - 713 The Practical Utility of Soil Analyses, - 721 Steam Ploughing, &c. - - 724 American Wines, - - 725 A New and Complete Harvester. — Report on Lunar Influence upon Agriculture, 731 Splitting Rock without Blasting, - 733 How they brought the Good News frqn^ Ghent to Aix, &c. - - 734 The Wheat and the Dairy Districts of the United States, - - 335 Domestic Providences, or Domestic Life in the Free States, - - 336 A Horse witli the Heaves — House-Keep- ing in the Country, - - 737 Transference of Vitality, - - 738 Clean Shucking Corn. — Rose Culture. - 739 Hog Cholera, - - - 739 A Plea for Farmers' Clubs, - - 740 On the Application of Lime, - 741 Improving Land on the Five-field System 742 Close Breeding, &c. - - 743 Arabian Horses. — Big Head. — ^Vitality of Garden Seed, - - 744 Caution Required in Selecting Seeds of the Chinese Sugar Millet. — Failure of the Chinese and African Sugar Millet (Sorghum Saccharatum) to Produce Sugar, - - - 745 I^emedy for Mange in Hogs. — Feeding Stock— Cutting Fodder, - - 74G Top-Dressing — Their Application and Ef- fect, - - - 747 Bones : and how to Dissolve Them, - 749 Cattle Feeding in the Western States, - 750 Principles of Agriculture, - - 751 Wintering Milch Cows. — Fattening Tur- keys, . - - 752 Work for the Winter in Garden and Or- chard, _ - - 753 Apples, . - . 755 The Profit of Market Garden Farms, - 756 The Late Fair and the Next, - 758 Root Pruning, - - - 759 Index to Vol. XVII, - 761-768 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER Is publisliecl monthly, in sixty 'four octavo pages, upon the following TERMS: TWO DOLLARS AND FIFTV CENTS per an- num, unless paid in advance. Advance payments as follows : One copy, one year, - - - |2 Six copies, do ... lo Thirteen copies, one year, - - - 20 Twenty do do - - - 30 One copy, three years, - - - 5 And one copy free to persons 8en«ling us the names and MONEY for thirteen or more new subscribers. All money remitted to us will be considered at our risk only, when the letter containing the same shall have been registered. This rule is adopted not for our protection, but for the protection of our correspondents. and we wish it distinctly understood that we take the risk only when this condition is complied with. ADVERTISEMENTS Will be inserted at the following rates : Business Cards of 5 lines or less, per annum, Each square of 10 lines or less, Half a page or Oue column. One page. I oi o unes or less, ( 1st insertion, ) Each continu J 6 months, } (. 12 *• \ 1 1 continuance, without alteration^ 1st insertion, Each continuance, 6 months, > without 12 *♦ \ alteration, Ist insertion. Each continuance, 6 months, > without 12 *' \ alteration. $5 OO 1 00 75 4 50 8 00 6 00 4 50 25 00 40 00 10 00 7 50 40 00 70 00 Advertisements out of the city must be accompa- nied with the money or city references to insure inser- tion. Devoted to Agriculture^ Horticulture^ and the IlouseJiold Arts. Agriculture is the nursing mother of the Arts. I Tillage and Pasturage are the two breasts of — Xenojjlion. \ the State. — Sully. FRANK. G. RUFFIN, Editor. F. G. RUFFIN & N. AUGUST, Prop'rs. Vol. XYII. RICHMOND, VA., DECEMBER, 1857. NO. 12. Killing Hogs. Mr. Editor; Will you be kind enough to say, in a future " Planter/' what are the essentials in salting and curing pork ? Some use merely smoke ; some hot fires, as for tobacco ; some keep in salt only for ten days ; others six weeks. Many prefer to smoke on damp days, and others oV)ject to smoke in "givey" weather. Please enlighten us and oblige more than one subscriber. Respectfully yours, &c. Cascade, Pittsylvania County, Va. Perhaps we had better say something more on the subject of making bacon, than an an- swer to our correspondent's letter calls for. Common as is the business, good bacon is not always made. In the first place, the hogs ought to be fat- tened so as to be ready by the 15th to 20th of November. To say nothing about the economy of this practice, which we spoke of, and gave the philosophy of, in the last number of this paper, a hog killed before the arrival of the winter will make better meat than if slaughtered when a freeze may be anticipated. The salt will strike through better, and the meat will be more uniforml}^ flavoured by it, as well as better preserved. Nor is there any danger in an early killing, with ordinary pru-' 45 dence. For many years our period of killing averaged the 17th of November, and on only one occasion did we suffer loss, and then only a partial one, fuom a warm rain, which fol- lowed suddenly a hard frost, clearing up with a foggy spell. It is best always to kill the over-evening, and to stick no more hogs than can be well butchered by nightfall. The operation is thug more cleanly, and the risk of loss very much diminished, fur a small number can be more expeditiously cut out and packed away on the following morning. Starting at from 3 to 4 o'clock in the afternoon, with all iJmigs ready, hot water, scraping places, knives, gammon sticks and poles to hang on, ten hands can dress ten or fifteen good sized hogs without racino; about it.* *Let no one try to scrape the fat from the entrails w^ith a knife. But let one or two careful hands take the entrils atid begin at the stomach, gently pullii"»g off" the fat with one hand and fol- lowing the course of the intestines to the end. It is done somewhat after the manner of tearing off cotton for a shirt; and when iinished, the fat instead of presenting a disgusting mass of foul scraps, will be found to be a neat and handsome bunch of clean grease. The entrails of a mutton ^ may be treated in the same way; a beef's can- not. Try this, and keep at it until yon learn. 706 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. Let them hang out all night, and if they are very fat and large, and you fear the ^veather, split them down the chine on one side, or both, but not severing the carcass, and cut around the neck so that the head will hang by the neck bone, then press the spare-ribs open with a short stick, thrust in cross-wise. This will ensure their being cool in the morning. Of course some of the negroes must be detailed to watch them during the night, which will be no grievance, as most of them will be pre- ■ paring the chitterlings and other perquisites | on the spot. The whole killing may thus be disposed of Iby detachment with but little additional labour, and with much comfort and economy, and much less risk of loss from sudden changes of weather. Commence to pack next morning at day- break ; and try and get through before the sun starts the flies out to bloAv the meat. You will find the animal heat expelled, and the carcass firm enough to cut up well, and just in proper condition to receive the salt. Everybody knows how to salt pork ; so we have only to say, that for the hams and shoulders, a tea-spoonful of saltpetre to each joint, to colour the flesh, and as much black pepper, to keep off the fly, mixed up in a saucer and kept at hand, and well rubbed in, is a good application ; and if there is poison in the saltpetre, as some French savan has lately charged, it must be very slow indeed in its operation, as we know many who have lingered to a good old age under an almost daily dose of it. Whether it is necessary to cut up the pork cold we cannot say. The best bacon-makors we know always do ; but as good bacon as we ever heard of was made by a gentleman — not of our acquaintance, before our day, in fact — who invariably salted his while the meat was warm, under the conviction that in that con- dition it took the salt better. But it certainly handles better when (not frozen, for then you are apt to have it spoiled, but) cold and stiff. When packed away — in troughs, or boxes, or in regular layers, as you may prefer — the different pieces to themselves, for the conveni- ence of future reference, as one may say, let it remain three weeks, or longer as may suit your convenience. The best housekeepers we know say three weeks, and we have kept it six without harm. Then take it out, hang it up, and smoke it. Smoke it until it becomes of a good " bacon colour," and then stop, except in warm "givey" weather, when it should be slightly smoked by a chip or saw-dust fire kindled in the morning, and not renewed dur- ing the day. What is needed to cure bacon is smoke; not fire. The philosophy of it is very simple: wood, in burning, gives off a pungent oil, which escapes with the smoke in the form of vapour. This oil, called by the chemists kreo- sote, possesses a very singular power of pre- serving meat from putrefaction. It is absorbed by the bacon from the smoke in which it is suspended, and is supposed to coagulate its albumen, and thus protect it from the air, which is the great cause and medium of putre- faction. At all events it preserves it; and we have partaken of hams cured without smoke, but by an application of kreosote in solution, that were just as good as any other, and had the characteristic taste of smoked bacon, a taste, indeed, which ordinary bacon derives from the kreosote of the smoke. There is, then, no use in more fire than will make a plenty of smoke ; there is harm rather : for too much heat will make the bacon drip, and it mmj thus lose some of the very preservative it has absorbed, as it certainly will lose a por- tion of its weight. In damp, warm weather, it should be smoked again, as a precaution merely: the operation may not have been completely per- formed at first; or the dripping which occurs in such weather may run off a portion of the insoluble coagulum which has been formed ; and the flies are apt to be about in such weather and do harm, unless smoked out. When warm weather sets in for good, the joints should be taken down and ashed well with hickory ashes, and put in bags, or not, as one pleases. If they have been properly managed previously they will not need it at all. But the ashes are desirable. They help to preserve the meat, and are a sort of additional salting. Ashes of themselves, if literally applie !, will act in place of salt. During the Revolution a tory in Albemarle, a very honest man by the way, as his descendants still are, was refused salt to cure his pork ; and his wife made as good bacon that year, with one peck of salt THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 707 and an abundance of hickory ashes to the six hundred pounds, as the family ever had. In applying the ashes, it is well to have a bucket of molasses, and apply a portion with a w^hite-washing brush to each joint. When well smeared rub on the ashes, which will thus ad- here firmly and make an impenetrable cement. Then re-hang the meat wnth the joints down. It will save waste in this way by diminishing the dripping. And so we have endeavoured to "enlighten" our respected correspondent and the reader at large on killing hogs and making bacon. AVe think all who follow the mode proposed will have good raio bacon. But a ham on the table is another affair; and as we expect to be in- vited somewhere to eat bacon cured after our directions, and hold ourselves bound in civility to accept every invitation to dine that we pos- sibly can, we beg leave to say a w^ord on the cooking. Be good enough, kind hosts, to have the ham, though we prefer a shoulder, especi- ally if there be brawn upon it, weighing about twelve pounds, put in soak the over-night, and put on the fire in cold wtiter when the cook sends in breakfast. If we are to take a long w^alk over the plantation, or a ride around the neighbourhood, we will take cabbage also : otherwise not. Please be particular to let it come to table with the skin on. A Pleasant Fable for our Indebted Sub- scribers. We lately read how a good priest in some wine growing Province of France had S(V won upon his parishoners, that to show their esti- mate of his ministrations, they determined to present him with a bottle of wine apiece, and gave him notice of their intention. As the parish was quite a large one, the happy priest prepared a puncheon of goodly proportions to hold his testimonial, for such they called it after the fashion of the da}''. At an appointed time they met at the good man's house, and were conducted to the cellar, where, into the selected puncheon each man poured his offering, and filled it to the brim. Thanking tliem heartily, the priest proposed that they should each take a glass of the beverage, when, to their astonishment, it turned out to be pure water. It seems that those worthy people had all brought water, each calculating that his neigbours would bring wine, and that he might venture to bring water, the trick being a safe one amid so much wine. The consequence was, that each parishoner was better off by one bottle of wine, worth a mere trifle ; Avhile the poor priest, who had worked hard all the year, lost the whole of his promised supply. MORAL. Each of you owes us two dollars or more. Do not impoverish us by promises to pay, but fill our chest with the real stuff. You will find your bill in this number of the Planter. English Blue Breasted Red Game Fowls. We are indebted to Mr. J. McL. Anderson, of Caroline, for a fine pair of game fowls of the above breed. The}^ are a part of the very fine stock of game fowls #hich he had on ex- hibition at the late Fair, and a fine judge says they were the best pair he had. If so, we are doubly indebted to Mr. Anderson, first, for the chickens, and second, for the spirit which prompted him to give us his best pair. The same judge, and we believe he is a very fine one, said, that as a collection of game fowls, Mr. Anderson's were the best he had ever seen. We are glad to hear it, and hope he will keep up the breed. They, and a few of their crosses on some other breeds are worth, in our opinion, all the Shanghais, Chit- tagongs and Bramah Pootras that were ever brought into this State. The Different Fairs of Virginia. It would be " Tailors news," a mere repeti- tion of what has appeared in the different local papers, to give the particulars of the late Fairs of this State. It is only necessary to say that all of them have succeeded. The Fair here, especially, was as successful as usual, and if we consider the panic and the weather, its success was very remarkable. Good Sale of Tobacco. The following list of price? obtained by P. Jefferson Archer, commission merchant of this city, shows that good tobacco does not go a begging even in hard times. It is a part of the crop of our friend Dr. R. F. Taylor, of Amelia, whose excellent essay on the cultiva- tion of tobacco in last year's issue of the 708 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. Planter, will be recollected by many of our readers. He shows, what many people do not credit, that a man may write what he knows without losing the ability to practice it. How much credit is respectively due to the Planter and the merchant, we cannot say. Sales of Tobacco (English shipping) hy P. Jefferson Archer. Novcmher 6th, 1857. Dr. R. F. Taylor, No. 1. @ $15. Amelia Co. " 2. " 15. " 3. " 15. u 4. " 15. " " 5. " 15. " " 6. " 15. " 8. " 15. " 9. " 13. Agricultural Professorship in the Uni- versity of Virginia. As most of the proceedings in relation to the proposition of Col. Cocke to endow a Pnifes- sorship of Agriculture in the University of Virginia, have been published in this paper, we have procured for this number of the Planter, the action of the Farmers' Assembly on the reports submitted at its late session, that our readers may be informed of the present position of the sulject. The report of the majority was adopted by the Assembly, and a Cainmittee was appointed under the second resoluti(ni, consisting of Messrs. J. Ravenseroft Jones, W. H. Macfarland, George Townes, William C. Wickham, and Branch J. "VVorsham. ■ EEPOET. The iCommittee to whom was referred so much of the Report of the President of the Soi;iety, and the Executive Committee, as re- lates to Agricultural Education and the Re- port of the Committee on the proposition of Philip St. George Cocke, Esq., to endow a Pro- fessorship of Agriculture in the University of Vii-ginia, respectfully report: Tiiat they concur in the views of the im- portance of Agricultural Education presented in the papers i)efore them, and in deploring the uogloct of the Legislature hitherto, to at- tend to and provide therefor. They regard it as tie highest duty of the Farmers' Assembly to addi-o.^s itself zealously to secure for the f irmiug ohvss.the broadest advantages for pro- gressive ae school should be in- definitely postponed. Then, again, the same enlightened generosity which is capable of dedicating twenty thousand dollars to the ad-, vancement of ;igi-ieultural knowledge, hitherto so much neglected and overlooked, may be trusted not to defeat its own benevolent de- signs, by an unbecoming pertinacity in the choice of a Professor. Your Committee conclude their hasty report by submitting the following resolutions: Resolved, That it is important to secure the munificent donation of Philip St. Geo. Cocke, Es(j., towards the endowment of the Professor- shi]) of Agriculture in the University of Vir- ginia upon the terms heretofore approved by this Assembly, and annexe(i thereto in his communication tendering the donation and in his deed of conveyance. Resolved, That a committee of five be ap- pointed to petition the Legislature to accept the said donation, or cause the Yisitors to ac- cept it, and so to ordain as that the Professor- ship ma_y be speedily e.'^tablished on a footing of entire equality with the other Professor- ships therein. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 709 Mr. Minor, of Albemarle, moved to amend the Report and Eesolutions by striking out the same and inserting the following: The Report of the majority of the Commit- tee, to which wa8 referred the subject of Agri- cultural Education, recommends the establish- ment of a Department of Agriculture at the University, and of an Agricultural Institute elsewhere, on a cheaper scale of instruction, for the benefit of all classes. Granting, for the sake of argument, that both are good in themselves, I believe that the attempt to start both at once Avill end in the failure to get the full benefit of either. To get both into useful operation, will require the annual interest of ^300,000, or thereabouts — a sum which we can hardly hope to raise. $200,- 000 will barely suffice to purchase the neces- sary site for the buildiags of the Agricultural Institute, and the land for the experimental farm, erect the buildings for the accommoda- tion of Professors and students, and make a fund fi)r the salary of Professors, and other necessary expenses, which are never in any college imposed entirely on the students. Less than half that sum, perhaps, will suffice for the Agricultural Department at the University, with three Professors. But if both were equally within our hopes, in respect to the funds required, both are not equally useful and good in themselves. They who have been familiar with the classical schools of Virginia, since the University went into operation, need not be reminded how per- fectly the 2)re.paration of the schools has ad- vanced pari passu with the rise of the stand- ard of attainments for graduation at the Uni- versity. Whether the schools have pushed up the standard at the University, or the Univer- sity has pulled up the schools as itself ad- vanced, I need not now inquire. The fact is indisputable, that private enterprize has been fully equal to the task of preparing students for the classical departments of the University; so will private enterprize be equal to the work of preparing young men to attend the Agri- cultural Department at the University. What- ever standard of attainment maybe reached in the Agricultural Department at the Uni- versity, private Agricultural schools will soon spring up, fully able to teach those elementary branches of Agricultural Education proposed to be taught in the Agricultural Institute. It is a wise principle to leave to private enter- prize all those interests of Society which private enterprize is fully equal to attain, and place under public control only such as are beyond the reach of individual effort. It was in the force of this principle that Mr. Jeffer- son said, " make the University and the schools will make themselves." The sage did net live to see the fulfilment of his prophecy; but we see it in the number and high reputation of the classical schools of Virginia. If we will erect a hijrh standard of Airricultural Educa- tion at the University, not ten years will pass before there will be numerous private Agri- cultural schools of as high grade as our classi- cal schools : and it is not proposed to have a higher grade in the Agricultural Institute, for which we will have to raise $200,000. If we establish the Institute, private enterprize can- not erect the standard of Agricultural Educa- tion on such a height as can be done by a De- partment of Agriculture at the University with three Professors. But if we will raise the money, say $100,000, for an Agricultural De- partment of the University, Agricultural pre- paratory schools, as good as the proposed Insti- tute, will make themselves without cost to us. Whereas, if we r 'ise $200,000 for an Agricul- tural Institute, we shalf still, either now or hereafter, have also to raise the $100,000 for the Agricultural Department. So I say, that the two parts of the system of Agricultural Education, proposed by the Report of the majority of the Committee, are not equally good ; and being neither equally cheap, nor equally good, wisdom demands that we choose the cheaper and the better, since we cannot have both. The Report of the majority recommends an application to the Legislature, in relation to Col. Cocke's donation, in which I cannot con- cur. I know no office in the Commonwealth which is at the same time so thankless and so full of care as a Visitor of the University. It is an office without pay — but not without trou- ble. There is never a meeting of the Board that clamour does not dog its action on some point. This was foreseen by the great men, who in wisdom ordained the organic laws of the Institution, and they placed the Visitors above the control of the Legislature even, and rendered it impossible to eject them from office except for failure to attend the meetings of the Board. If a Visitor attends the meetings and acts, his office cannot be taken away. He was intended to be as ftir above the control of faction, party spirit, and popular sentiment, as it was possible to place him. Like the judge, he needs this independence, derived from .the tenure of his office. Whatever has been done in other States, by the mad spirit of fanaticism, in trampling down official independence, in those cases where it is most needed, the first blow at it is still to be struck in Virginia. It does not become this Assembly to strike it, with these views and conservative feelings. I cannot concur in the resolution of the majority of the Committee, which proposes to appoint a committee to apply to the Legislature to accept the donation of Col. Cocke, or cause the Visi- tors to accept it. Unable to concur with the majority of the Committee in these respects, as well as in some other views expressed in their report, I re- commend the following resolutions as a substi- tute for theirs : 1. Resolved, That this Assembly will make 710 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER an effort to raise, by private donations and by aid from the Legislature, the sum of $100,000, to be invested, as received, in Virginia State Stocks, and to form a fund of which the an- nual interest shall be forever applied to the support of Agricultural Education at the Uni- versity of the State, on such a scale of in- struction as may hereafter be decided on. 2. Resolved, That donations to this fund • may be by bond of the donor, bearing interest from the day on which it shall be ascertained and declared that the sum of $100,000 is raised, or secured to be raised, and payable in annual instalments to suit the wishes of the donor. Provided that the interest on the donation be paid each year, and the payment of the principal be not deferred beyond years. 3. Resolved, That a proper person ought to be appointed, whose abilities befit him, and whose time may allow him to appeal to the farmers in person to contribute to this work. 4. Resolved, That a committee be appointed to apply to the Legislature to grant to the aid of this work, from the public treasures, as much as the farmers raise by private dona- tions. 5. Resolved, That this Assembly deeply de- plores the circumstances which have caused the failure of Col. Cocke's donation ; and in view of his letter of the 15th May last to Hon. Wm. C. Rives, in which he says that the " I'ar- mers' Assembly and himself concurring, can alone modify the terms of the endowment,'' does hereby disclaim all intention to seek to control Col. Cocke in making such changes in the conditions of his donation as his own liberality, public spirit and intelligence may suggest to himself. More Sorgho Molasses. In addition to the sample of Molasses from the Sorgho, sent us by our friend, Mr. Jones, of Surry, we have to acknowledge the receipt of two very good articles of the same kind, sent us by Dr. Gantt, of Albemarle, andj Mr. Harris, of Louisa. We thank all these gentlemen for their pre- sents, but beg them to pause awhile before they go into the market to sell molasses. The fol- lowing, from the Worlcing Farmer, may some- what damp their ardour on the subject. And the extracts from Gov. Hammond, of South Carolina, letters, on the same subject, published in this number, by Mr. E, Ruffin, will be found instructive : As yet we have seen no proof that sugar can be profitably made from the juice in this lati- tude ; and although at the present and late prices of molasses, the boiling of the Sorgho juice to a rich syrup will pay a profit, still such prices cannot be maintained for any con- siderable length of time. Molasses of com- mon qualities, which from 1832 to 1852 were sold in this market at from 12 to 20 cents per gallon, have of late brought three times those prices. As the consumption of sugar increases, the production Mnll also increase, and as the consumption of molasses does not increase in the same ratio, it being a refuse of sugar ma- king, its price must for the future range rela- tively lower. The whole cause of the ir>creased prices has been from tlie immense increase in the distillations of molasses for export: and it is to be hoped that as the grape crops of France are good this year, at least five times that of last year, the brandy makers of France will not require Yankee molasses rum to make imi- tations of brandy. The production of Ameri- can wines will also tend largely to reduce the consumption of alcohol in all its forms, and thus leave the molasses market to regulate it- self as formerly. In a conversation with a member of the house of Vilmorin, Andrieux & Co., of Paris, who has recently passed through the wine dis- tricts of France, we learned that the grape crop was again prosperous, and that prices of common wines would doubtless be low next year. These remarks, however, as to the value of the Sorgho, are only intended to apply to this latitude, as we know nothing practically of its value when grown in the Southern States for sugar-making ; we fear, however, that even there it cannot be successfully used as a sugar- making plant, and it must depend upon the demand for molasses for family use, distilla- tion, etc. For the Southern Planter. Refreshments and Drinking at the Fair Henrico, Nov. 4, 1857. It seems that after the past exhibition, an amendment suggests itself in the order of ar- rangements, viz : the abolition of all establish- ments on the grounds, either for eating or drinking purposes. The first should be shut out chiefly on account of the unconscionable charges made for a small piece of bacon and bread ; and secondly, because the viands afore- said are served up on much greased and little washed plates. Drinking saloons should especially be ban- ished from the premises ; for it is a well estab- lished fact, that some persons exhibit a strong tendency to attain that felicitous state vulgarly known as " tight," if an opportunity be afford- ed them. Such persons would not obtain ad- mittance to the grounds in this state, and if no liquors were permitted on the spot, the chances of this nuisance would be abated very much. — I observed one of this class, so far lost to all moral influences, that he forgot the reverence tu be paid to parents, and after depositing a THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 711 brick in his hat to m5 00 Miscellaneous Articles. — Class 9lh. 471. For the best Pump, adapted to deep wells, Paul Bargamin, 10 00 472. For the best Water-ram in opera- tion, Paul Bargamin, 10 00 473. For the best Scoop or Scraper, M. S. Kahle. 10 00 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 719 474. For the best Leveling Instrument, for draining, James T. Redd, 10 00 470. For the best Sausage-cutter, H. M. Snutli, 2 00 477. F(.r the best Washing Machine, W. II. & R. B. Woodward, 2 00 Agricultural Steam Engines. — Class 10th. 4?^0. For the best Steam Engine, ap- plicable to agricultural purposes, &c., P. Rahm, $50 00 Ploughing Match. — Class liih. 481. For the best Ploughman, with horses, Wm. Shepperson, 10 00 482. For the second best, with horses, Wm. Eubank, 5 00 483. For the best Ploughman, with oxen, James Bailey, 10 00 BRANCH VL Fruits and Fruit Trees. — Class 1st. 490. For the best and largest variety of Apples, labeled and suitable for Southern raising, Franklin Davis, Staun- ton, 10 00 493. For the best and largest collec- tion of Apple Trees, suitable for South- ern raising, H. B. Jones, Rockbridge, 10 00 494» For the best Pear Trees, Jos. Sin- ton & Sons, 10 00 495. For the best Peach Tree, Frank- lin Davis, 10 00 496. For the best Fig Tree, James Guest, 5 00 497. For the best Grape Vines, James Guest, 5 00 498. For the best Strawberry Plants, John Stansbury, ' 3 00 499. For the best Raspberry Plants, James Guest, 3 00 Flowers. — Class 2d. 503. For the largest and choicest col- lection of Flowers, James Guest, 10 00 505. For the best and greatest variety of Dahlias, John Morton, 3 00 506. For the best twelve Dahlias, Jno. Morton, 2 00 507. For the greatest variety of Roses, John Morton, 5 00 508. For the best twenty-five Roses, James Guest,. 2 00 509. For the largest collection of Chrysanthemums, James Guest, 3 00 510. For the best Floral Ornament, John Morton, 5 00 511. For the bes! hand Bouquet, John Morton, 2 00 _ 512. For the best and largest collec- tion of V^erbinas in bloom, John Mor ton, 3 00 513. For the best and largest collec- tion of Evergreens, John Morton, 5 00 514. For the best and largest variety of hardy Flowering Shrubs, John Mor- ton, 5 00 Vegetables. — Class 3cZ. 515. For the largest and best assort- ment of Table Vegetables, A. S. Storrs, 10 00 516. For the best dozen Long Blood Beets, Wm. Smith, 2 00 517. For the best dozen head of Cab- bages, A. S. Storrs, 2 00 518. For the best dozen Cauliflowers, A. S. Storrs, ' 2 00 520. For the best dozen Carrots, L Chamberlain, 2 00 521. For the best dozen Egg Plants, L. Chamberlain, 2 00 522. For the best peck of Onions, Mrs. L. C. Binford, 2 00 523. For the best dozen Parsnips, L. Chamberlain, 2 00 524. For the best bushel of Irish Po- tatoes, J. Stansbury, 2 00 525. Fur the best bushel of Sweet Po- tatoes, B. W. Talley, 2 00 BRANCH VII. Butter. — Class 1st. 526. For the best specimen of fresh Butter, not less than 10 lbs., Mrs. Mary Newman, Orange, IQ 00 527. For the second best, not less than 5 lbs., Mrs. C. Stringfellow, Hanover, 5 00 528. For the besr tirkin or tub of .sal- ted Butter, not less than 6 months old, Mrs. Lucy Rowe, Sjiottsylvania, 10 00 529. For the second best, Mrs. E. A. L. Tiller, Hanover, 5 qq Honeij~Bec-Eives, a7id Bacon Earns. Class 2d. 531. For the best specimen of Honey, 10 lbs. or more, N. S. Paleske, |5 00 532. For the best Bee-hive, J. AY. Johnson, 10 00 533. For the best Ham, cured by ex- hibitor, Mrs. L. C. Binford. ' g 00 534. For the second best, divided be- tween Mrs. J. C. Burton and Mrs. P. Woolfolk, 4 00 Eovsehold 3Tanufacturcs.~ Class 1st. 535. For the best Quilt, Miss Mary J. Hammersle}'', 5 OQ 536. For the second best. Miss Nan- nie Eubank, 4 oo 537. For the best Counterpane, Mrs. Lewis Tudor, 10 00 538. For the second best, Mrs. Jones, Westmoreland, ^ ' 4 oO 539. For the best home-made Blankets, Mrs. Jolm Sanders, Wytlie, ' 5 00 540. For the best hon^e-made Carpet, Gilson Via, ' 5 qq 541. For the best home-made Hearth- rug, Miss Virginia Bradley, 3 00 542. Far the best home-made Cur- tain.s, Mrs. L. M. Harrold, 5 qO 545. For the best piece negro Cloth- ing, for negroes, woven by hand, Mrs. 720 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. J. M. Patterson, Buckingham, 5 00 546. For the best piece heavy Woolen Jeans, woven by hand, Mrs. J. M. Pat- terson, 5 00 547. For the second best, Mrs. Isham Seay, ^ ^ 3 00 548. For the best piece Linsey, woven by hand, Mrs. R. H. Allen, 5 00. 549. For the second best, Mrs. Isham Seay. 3 00 Class 2nd. 550. For the best fine long yarn Hose, Mrs. Nancy Anderson, 3 00 551. For the best fine long cotton Hose, Mrs. Mark Tucker, _ 3 00 552. For the best knit Hose of home made Silk, Mrs. Jos. C. Burton, 5 00 553. For the best specimen of home made Wine, Mrs. R. F. Stubbs, 5 00 554. For the best specimen "of home made Bread, divided between Mrs. Wm. Robinson and Mrs. J. Q. Winn, 5 00 555. For the best home made Pound Cake, Mrs. Wm. Breeden, 3 00 55G, For the best home made Sponge Cake, Mrs. Dr. Lyne, 3 00 557. For the best variety home made Pickles, Mrs. R. F. Stubbs, • 3 00 558. For the best variety of home made Preserves, Mrs. R, H. Duke, 3 00 559. For the best variety of home made fruit Jelly, Mrs. Willis, 3 00 560. For the best sample home made Soap, Mrs. E. B. Stovin, 5 00 Ladies' Ornamental and Fancy Work. Class ?>rd. 561'. For the best specimen of Embroi- dery, Mrs. M. Gilliam, Prince George, 8 00 562. For the second best, Mrs. Sarah B. Scott, Dinwiddle, 6 00 563. For the best specimen of Worsted work. Miss R. T. Thorn, Fredericksburg, 8 00 | 564. For the second best, Miss Whitte- more, Fredericksburg, 6 00 565. Fe)r the best specimen of Crotchet work, Mrs. Semmes, Richmond, 8 00 566. For the second best. Miss Maria Cooke, Richmond, 6 00 567. For the best specimen of Wax work, Miss J. E. Turpin, Ric'uuond, ' 8 00 568. For the second best. Miss Lucy Crouch, Richmond, 6 00 571 For the best specimen of Leather work. Miss Ella Dimmock, Richmond, 8 00 572. For the second best, Mrs. Chs. Paleske, Henrico, ' 6 00 573. For the best specimen of Block work. Miss Susan B. Srott, Amelia, 8 00 575. For the best S|)ccimen of Knit- ting, Mrs. S. Bernard, Richmond, 8 00 576. For the second best, Mrs. Mary Page, Henrico,' 6 00 577. For the best specimen of Net- ting, Mrs. P. Woolfolk, Caroline, 8 00 578. For the second best. Miss I. Gray, Caroline, 6 00 579. For the most extensive variety, &c., Mrs. J. D. White, Pittsylvania, 10 00 Domestic Manvfaciures. — Class 1st. CERTIFICATES OF MERIT. 580. For the best Flour from white wheat, Thos. Patterson, of Bedford. 581. For the best Flour from red wheat, Dunlop, Moncure & Co. Class 2rd. 583. For the best Shod Horse, McKinly & Smith, 5 00 584. For the best Horse Shoe, E. P. O'Dell. 5 00 Class 4th. CERTIFICATES OF MERIT. 590. For the best and greatest variety of coarse, strong, cheap Shoes, C. S. Maurice, Richmond. 591. For the best and cheapest Wool Hats, Richard Moore, Richmond. Clc )ih. 594, For the best set Plantation Bas- kets, Dr. J. G. Lumpkin, Special Premiums. — Class 2nd. 598. For the best Drained Farm, or part thereof, the formerly wet and then well drained portion of land, not less than 100 acres &c., Edmund Ruffin, 599. For the best Drained 20 acres, Samuel S. Bradford, Discretionary Premiums. 603. For Morrison's Reaper, R. J. Morrison, 604. Plough for opening Corn Rows, A, P. Routt, 605. Embroidered Dress, Miss Sally Lambert, 606. Knit Vest, Miss L. H. Sheppard, 5 00 50 00 20 00 10 00 5 00 5 00 5 00 *■ Among a variety of articles recommended to the consideration of the Committee on Dis- cretionary Premiums, besides those on which awards were made, the following are deemed worthy of honorary mention. A Case of Edge Tnols, by Royal Allen. A Hay or Wheat Ladder, for hauling wheat, hay or straw, exhibited by J. B. Trimble, Esq. A Shingle-Getting Machine, by Wilson & Bosset. A Machine f()r Turning the Spokes of Wheels. Elegant S{)ecimens i)f Work in Marble, by Mr. John W. Davies. Elegant Coaches, by Mi-. A. King, and Geo. A. Ainslie. Duif's Book-Keeping, and. Duncan's Pen- manship, in clegantl}' bound volumes. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 721 From the Genesee Farmer. The Practical Utility of Soil Analyses. Friend Harris : — I have just read your leading editorial in the July number of the Farmer on "Agricultural Quackery;" and while agreeing with you in feeling and sentiment on the principal points dis- cussed, it strikes me that you have been less guarded in your remarks in reference to the value of soil analyses than the im- partance of the subject demanded. Still taking an interest in the reputation of the Genesee Farmer for the extent and ac- curacy of its information, as well in the science as in the practice of agriculture, I shall regret to see it undervalue analyti- cal chemistry as applied either to the in- vestigation of manures, or the composi- tion of vegetable and animal products, or ol the soils from which these products are necessarily derived. You justly com- mend the analysis of Gould's Muriate of Lime, made by Prof. Johnson, and confi- dently appeal to forty-two analyses of barley and wheat by " reliable chemists," to show that the former takes more of phosphates than the latter from the soil ; and at the same time you tell your read- ers, in positive terms, that "no chemist in the world, by the most rigid analysis of the soil, can determine the point whether water ascending into a soil in dry weather, by capillary attraction, brings with it salts of soda, potash, lime, and magnesia, S^^c, or not," as stated by Mr. Pell. In many cases, the difference in th« amount of soluble salts in the earth, at and near its surface, in dry and wet weather, may be inappreciable ; but that such is always the case, there is no good reason for saying or believing. On the contrary, the subject deserves a more thorough investigation than it has yet re- ceived in any country. If true, the fact would be extraordinary, that a chemit^t of the experience and attainments of Prof. Johnson should be able to determine the value, as plant-food, of an earthly " stuff inferior to leached ashes," consisting, like soils, of six or seven })er cent, of "or- ganic matter," of " sand, soluble silica, alumina, iron, lime, potash, soda, magne- sia, chlorine, sulphuric and carbonic acids, and water," and not be able to give any useful information in reference to the presence or absence, scarcity or abun- 46 dance, of any of these cont-tituents of crops in cultivated land. Destroy the value of chemistry in its application to the organic and inorganic food of ao-ri- o to ^ o cultural plants in the soil, aad you virtu- ally damage it to an (;qual extent in its application to these substances when or- ganized in the bodies of all living beings, although life may be extinct. Certainly, you did not contemplate any such injury to agricultural chemistfy, but only wish to shield it from the abuse of quacks and quackery, and protect unscientific readers from imposition. All upright men will appreciate and applaud this purpose ; and at the same time, they would wish you not to intimate that all knowledge derived from the analyses of soils is a humbug, unless you have good })roof that such is the fact. Even in that case, the proof should follow closely the mere assertion of what chemistry can or cannot do in all questions of doubt and controversy. Athens, Ga. D. Lee. Remarks. — We thank Prof. Lee for his friendly criticism. His views on this im- portant subject are worthy of respectful consideration, and we cheerfully accord his letter a prominent place in our col- umns. We do not " undervalue analyti- cal chemistry as applied either to the in- vestigation of manures, or the composi- tion of vegetable and animal products." We believe that correct chemical analy- ses afford a true criterion of the value of manures, and furnish important and satis- factory information in regard to the amount of plant-food which the various crojis remove from the soil. On these points Dr. Lee and ourselves are perfectly agreed. It is only in regard to th« practical utility of soil analyses that we differ. Here is a soil too poor for profitable cultivation. Ten acres of it do not pro- duce grass enough to keep a cow, — and the last time it was sown to wheat, it yielded only four bushels per acre. ' Now, Mr. Chemist, I want you to analyze this soil, and tell me what it lacks to make it. produce good crops. Can j'on afford me the desired information.?" Such inqui- ries, are frequently addressed to us. We alvir'ays reply, " We can make an analysis of your soil, but to be candid, we think it. will be of no use to you. It will not show' '22 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. you what your soil needs to make it 'produc- tive. The analysis may afford some in- teresting information — it may point out the presence of some deleterious sub- stance — but it will not furnish you the in- formation you desire." Our reasons for this advice we will briefly state. In addition to the four organic ele- ments, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, and carbon — and of which the atmosphere is the original soured^ — all • our commonly cultivated plants contain potash, soda, lime, magnesia, phosphoric and sulphuric acids, silica, and chlorine. When a plant is burned in the open air, the four former are dissipated in the form of carbonic acid, ammonia and water ; the eight lat- ter substances are found in the ashes. The}'- are usually termed " inorganic ele- ments," or soil constituents. Plants can obtain them only through their roots, from the soil. If a soil is destitute of even one of these substances, no agricultural plant will grow on it. ^U cultivated soils, therefore, contain every one of these inor- ganic 6ubstances. If they did not, no plant would grow upon them. All nat- urally fertile soils contain a full supply of these substances in an available condition, or in such a state that they are rendered available by the ordinary processes of tillage. Poor soils may be unproductive, and even incapable of profitable cultiva- tion, from a deficiency of some one or more of these substances — but they are not entirely destitute of any one of them, if capable of producing a blade of grass or a Canada thistle. It is unnecessary therefore, to resort to chemical analysis to ascertain the pres- ence or absence ol" any of the inoiganic element of plants. Messrs. Bramble, Thistle & Co. assure us that they are all present in the soil, and their authority on this point cannot be questioned. If an analysis of a soil, therefore, is of any practical value, it must be in deter- mining not the presence or absence of this or that particular substance, but whether it exists in sufficient quantity for the growth of maximum crops. JVe think that the most thorough chemical analysis cannot determine this point. For instance, we have seen, growing side by side, two crops of turnips. One crop yielded less than seven hundred pounds of bulbs per acre, while the other yielded over ten tons of bulbs per acre. One soil was evidently too poor to grow turnips, while the other gave a fair crop. Now, what w^as the difference between these two soils ? Sim- ply this : the one had been manured with superphosphate of lime and the other had not. In all other respects these scmIs were alike. One acre contained fifty pounds more of phosphoric acid than the other. Could any chemist in the world have determined by the most rigid analy- sis which soil contained the extra fitty pounds of phosphoric acid ? Let us see. An acre of soil seven inches deep, weighs at least two million pounds. Fifty pounds of phosphoric acid mixed with it wodid be one par.t in forty thousand. Such a minute quantity is far beyond the range of quantitative analysis. The determina- tion of phosphoric acid in a soil is so diffi- cult that a chemist congratulates himseif when duplicate analyses of the same so'l agree v.'ithin one part in a thousand. If our friend Dr. Lee should make two anal- yses of the same soil, and one analysis gave the percentage of phosphoric acid as 0.1 and the other as 0.2, he would con- sider the analysis a good one, and, taking the mean — say the soil contained 0.15 per cent, of phosphoric acid. This, at least, is the usual way. Now, according to one of these analyses, an acre of the soil, seven inches deep, contains 2 000 pounds of phos])horic acid, and acconiFig to the other 4,000 pounds. The {icual quantity present in the soil probably lies between these figures, but the ^xact amount it is impossible to tell, and theie is no certainty w^hether it is nearest to two thousand or four thousand pounds ppr acre. How utterly impossible it is, theif'- fore, to determine the difference between two soils, one of which contains fi'sy pounds more phosphoric acid than tli^^, other, and yet one is poor and the other productive. Admitting that it is some- times possible to get duplicate analyses > agree within one ten-thousandth, 1"^ chemist would be still utterly incapa'- e ol" telling the difference between these two soils. These same remarks will apply to am monia. We have seen, growing side b^ side, two crops of wheat, one yielding thirty-five bushels per acre, and the other fifteen bushels. The only difference be- tween the two soils being, that one con- THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 723 tained one hundred pounds of ammonia per acre more than the other, which had been applied in the form of sulphate and muriate of ammonia. This one hundred pounds of ammonia mixed with an acre of soil seven inches deep, wonld be one part in twenty thousand. VVe hazfird nothing in saying that no chemist could deter- mine so minute a quantity. It is far less difficult to determine the amount of nm- monia in a soil than phosphoric acid, but if duplicate analyses agree w^ithin one- tenth of the per cent., (0.1) it is consider- ed good work.* In other words, if one analysis showed a soil, when calculated to the acre, to contain 2,000 pounds of ammonia, and the other 4,000 pounds, the chemist would think this a very accurate analysii?, and, taking the mean, put it down at 3,000 pounds. It is evident, therefore, that the one hundred pounds of ammonia, w^hich changed the compara- tively poor soil into an unusually fer- tile one, could not be detected by the an- alyst. Chemists who undertake to prescribe for a sick soil, frequently say : " Your soil, according to analysis, is deficient in potash and soda, and phos])hates and am- monia ; you should, therefore, ap{)ly twen- ty bushels of unleached wood ashes, a bushel ©f salt, four hundred pounds of the improved superphosphate of lime, and two hundred pounds of the best Peruvian * Some years ago, an English gentleman em- ployed a London chemist to determine the ni- trogen (ammonia) in a number of samples of turnips grown under different mannrial condi- tions. He agreed to pay ten dollars a piece for them, provided duplicate analyses of the same tiu'nip agreed within one-tenth of one per cent. i)uplicate samples of the turnips were furnished, marked Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, &c., the chemist not know- ing which w^ere the duplicate samples. In due time tlie analyses were completed, and the re- sults fm-nished ; but on comparing the analyses of Nos. 1 and 3, which were samples of the same turnip, it was found that they differed con- siderably more than one-tenth of one per cent., R.ud others dilfered as much as 0.2 and 0.3 per cent. Such analyses were of no value to the gen- tleman, and he refused to pay for tLem. The matter was referred by the consent of both par- ties, to Professor Graham, — and he decided that the analyses were as accurate as they could be made ; that the variation was within the usual range ; and that the money ought to be paid. The money was pa)d, ($500.) but the analyses were never used. guano. These will furnish what your soil lacks," &c. Now, no honest chemist will claim that he could tell, by analysis, whicTi part of the field had been so treated and which had not. The facts which we have mentioned above show that it is utterly impossible for the most rigid analysis to determine Ih 3 least difference. These considerations lead us to the con- clusion not only that five dollar soil analy- ses are a great humbug, but that the best soil analyses that can be made are, in the language of Boussingault, " more curious than useful." Dr. Lee thinks it strange that w'e should admit that a chemist can give us reliable and useful information in regard to the composition and value of manures, and deny his ability to "give useful informa- tion in reference to the presence or ab- sence, scarcity or abundance," of the same ingredients " in cultivated land." The cases are very different. The quan- tity of ammonia, phosphates, potash, &c., in a manure, can be determined.with suffi- cien.t accuracy for practical purposes, but such is not the case in regard to the soil. For instance : here are two samples of guano. Their value is in proportion to the amount of ammonia and phosphates which they contain One is found to con- tain 18 per cent, of ammonia and 20 per cent, of phosphates, whife the other con- tains 9 per cent, of ammonia and 10 per cent, of phosphates. We say one is worth as much again as the other. Now, the fact that a chemist cannot determine the amount of ammonia and phosphates with any degree of certainty nearer than 0.1 per cent., does not affect the value of the analysis at all. If it can be deter- mined within 0.5 per cent., or even within 0.1 per cent., the analysis still indicates the value of the manure with sufficient accur:^cy for practical purposes. Rut in soil analyses, if there is the slight varia- tion of 0-1 per cent., the analysis is utterly valueless ; for when calculated to the acre, it causes a variation of 2,000 pounds — a quantity of ammonia that it would take six tons of guano, or two hundred tons of barn-3^ard manure to furnish. The same is true of phosphoric acid, potash and other constituents of manures and soils. Dr. Lee is surprised that we doubt the ability of a chemist to " deterrnine the 724 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. point whether water ascending into a soil in dry weather, by capillary attraction, brings with it salts of soda, potash, lime, and magnesia," &c. It will not be claim- ed that the water which ascends during the drouth of a single summer, brings to the surface more plant-food than is re- quired by a large crop. If it did, where would be the necessity of manuring? Supposing, then, the water ascending dur- ing the summer from the subsoil, brought to the surface enough potash (leaving out of the question other ingredients) for the growth of a crop of wheat of fifty bush- els per acre, say fifty pounds, could any chemist discover that the soil contained naore potash in the fall than it did in the spring.'' This fifty would be mixed with (2,000,000) of soil, or one part in forty thousand. Now, when duplicate potash analyses agree within one thousandth part, they are considered very accurate. To determine one part in forty thousand, therefore, is utterly impossible. Dr. Lee says : " Destroy the value of chemistry in its application to the organic and inorganic food of agricultural plants in the soil, and you virtually damage it to an equal extent in its application to these substances when organized in the bodies of all living beings, although life may be extinct." We cannot see the force of this argument. If it is true that soil analyses are of no practical utility, the fact should be known. The cause of agricultural chemistry cannot be promoted by the suppression of truth, or by un- founded pretensions. It is a good cause, and truth will not hurt it. The London Engineer Steam Ploughing. in a recent arti- cle on tl^is subject, holds that few appear to comprehend the weight of a traction engine necessary to serve as an anchor, or to counterbalance the resistance of a tilling implement in steam ploughing. The weight of a portable engine of the ordi- nar}^ size, such as is used for threshing, is about three (on?. It is a common conclu- sion that if such an engine could be o;ot up too light for sustaining the resistance of five ploughs, each of four horse draft — total, twenty horses — the endless rail or shoe slipping on several occasions, allow- ing the wheel to turn round without ad- vancing. Moreover, it will have been seen from Mr. McAdam's report of a trial of a similar engine between Thetford and London, that the construction of such engines must be heavier, and not lighter, in order to avoid vibration and breakage. So far, therefore, as experiment will yet warrant a conclusion, traction engines must be heavier, and not lighter than those now in use. On the steam culture by rope traction, the English are also divided as to the poiinds of potash I tear and wear of the rope and implement, two million pounds and their compressing action upon the soil. The conclusion is general that less harm will be done in this case on level Vv'et clayey land, during winter, than by horses' feet ; but great apprehensions are entertained as to the effect in stubborn, stony land, especially in working over a convex surface. And not only will the tear and wear of the rope be greater in working over a convex surface than over a level one, but the compression of the wheels of the implement upon the soil must also be greater. Again, from the experiments of Mr. Hannam, of. Burcot Park, in 1849 and 1850, and those made by others during the past and current year, it is the general conclusion ihat the wire rope will require to be heavier and not lighter than it now is, and that this will throw greater difficulties in the way of cultivating large fields. Mr. Smith, of Woolston, for instance, says that he must divide a forty-acre field into forty divis- ions of ten acres each, which consequent- ly cuts it up into a greater number of headlands than if the whole field were ploughed from end to end ; so that, be- tween turning and anchorins;, such head- lands are consolidated and deteriorated in value, especially clayey lands, during the wet weather of winter. — Scientijic Am. < • • »- > High Aims. — Aim at perfection in eve- rything, though in most things it is unat- so as only to weigh two tons the problem ofStainable. However, they who aim at it, steam culture by direct traction would be and persevere, will come much nearer to solved; and yet at Clemsford, in the heavy Jit tnan those whose laziness and despon- land field, Boydell's traction engine, weigh- 1 dency make them give it up as unattain- ing upwards of nine tons, was proved to be ; able. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER, 725 From "' Cozzon's Wine Press," (published in New York.) American Wines. In Georgia, the luscious njuscadines, gathered in the wild state, j)roduce a wine of considerable merit; as yet, no atten^pt has been made to give them a formal train- ing, except here and there, upon a small scale.* This is also the case in South Carolina. But here we are in a sister State, a land of promise, of vines, and pines, and mines ; of tar and turpentine ; the natal soil of the Isabella, the Catawba, the Herbemont, and the sonorous Scupper- nong — North Carolina ! We siiall have occasion to speak of the Catawba, the Isabella, and the Herbemont, hereafter; the two first, unquestionably owe their reputation to the skill of the cul- tivators of Ohio and New York, and have only a limited growth in their native State ; but Scuppernong vineyards are found from Currituck on the extreme north, to the southern counties on the Cape Fear River, and extend inland, almost to the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountains ; while so vari- ous are the qualities of wine produced, that some kinds command three or four dollars per gallon, and some kinds can be purchased for five or six dollars per barrel ! There are two species of this grape, the best having a white, silvery skin, with a rich, raetalic lustre, while the inferior kind bears a small, black berry. Mr. Longworth says, "the black Scuppernong bears from one to four berries on a bunch, and would, in times of war, if lead be scarce, be as valuable, even when fully ripe, as the Fox grape, for bullets." The white Scupper- nong, also, has a very small bunch, and is a bet er grape than the black. But the skin is thick, and the pulp hard ; it will never be valuable as a wine grape, unless to give to other must aroma and flavor. If for no other purpose than this, name- ly, to mix with the must of less flavorous grapes, to give character to the wine when made, this Scuppernong will prove to be most valuable to this country. The " Tra- * Dr. Cammack, of Athens, Georgia, has quite a large vineyard, and raises quantities of grapes annually. Whether he makes wines, we do not know. There is much wine made for family use in various parts of G., from the wild grapes. miner" of the Rheingua, a small berried grape, abounding in saccharum, and full of aroma and strength, is so used to mix with the "Riesling," the favorite grape of the Rhine, in the production of the first class German wines. And that the gene- rality of European wines owe their excel- lence to the judicious mixture of various growths and vintages, is so well known as scarcely to need repeating here. In par- ticular, Madeiras, Sherries, and Cham- pagne wines are so composed ; the cnpitaz, or head butler of the Spanish bodega, or wine-cellar, being a most important per- sonage, to whom is confided the exquisite task of balancing flavor against body, and lusciousness, which might cloy, against acerbity, which might repel until the whole perfected vinous mass becomes the golden potable which even the gods might envy. So highly are the services of this great functionary prized, that the capitaz of a large proprietor seldom fails to amass con- siderable wealth, a.i an instance of which, Juan Sanchez, the capitaz of the late Pe- dro Domez, died recently, worth £300- 000. But the value of the Scuppernong as a wine-grape, has not yet become fairly tried ; at least, not in North Carolina. Of all the samples we have tasted, not one was the pure and original fermented juice of the grape, but, in every case, more or less sophisticated with sugar or honey, and not unfrequently with whiskey or brandy. It is usual to add three pounds of sugar to one gallon of the must, and then a little distilled spirits of some kind, is poured into every barrel of wiiie, " to make it keep." Subjected to this treat- ment, the fluid degenerates into a sort of vinous grog, and its peculiar character as a wine is almost entirely lost. Still, in spite of this, it has an aroma which is somewhat grateful. This mistake must be rectified, as a larger experience obtains among our vine dressers of the South ; let us look into the matter a little closer. That species of the muscadine, called the Scuppernong, is a very sweet grape, but sweet grapes are often wanting in sac- charine matter. For a familiar instance, take the Catawba and Isabella grapes. To the taste the latter is by far the sweetest fruit ; nevertheless, in making a sparkling wine, the Isabella needs a liberal allow- ance of sugar, while the Catawba wine re- '26 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER quires but little. McCuUoch, in his trea- tise on wine-making, makes a very accu- rate distinction between tiiis "sweet prin- ciple," and that which constitutes the " sugar," in fruit. The latter, the saccha- rine principle, is the element which, by the process of fermentation, is transmitted into alcohol, or spirit of wine, a certain percentage of which is necessary in all vinous fluids. This spirit of the wine is derived directly from the sugar of the grape. Now, the difference between the sweet element and the saccharine element, is very clearly shown by Mr. McCulIoch, who illustrates the subject by comparing molasses with refined sugar — the first be- ing much the sweetest of the two to the taste, and yet not comparable to the latter in its proportion of pure saccharum. And, if we may venture upon a theory, we should say " that the reason why sweet grapes make a wine less sweet than those not so dulcet to the taste, lies in this : — that in the sweet grape the whole quantity of saccharum is absoi'bed in the produc- tion of alcohol, while in those more abounding in sugar, di portion only is trans- muted into alcohol ; the superflux of su- gar remaining in undisturbed solution, and sweetening the wine, less or more, as may be." Now, the Scuppernong grape produces a wine naturally hard and diy, with little to recommend it but its peculiar aroma and flavor ; and, in consequence, the must is artificially sweetened to make it a mar- ketable or a saleable commodity. So long as this method of treatment is practiced, neither it, nor any other American wine so used* can rank with any wines of Eu- rope, except with the spurious produc- tions of Cette, Lisbon, and Marseilles. The difficulty lies in this — our vine grow- ers are afraid of a hard, dry wine — because popular taste so far (especially in the ru- ral districts) has been corrupted by the sweetened, sophisticated, poorest class of imported wines, the sweet malagas, and pure juice ])orts, that are current in every country town. Pure, wholesome wines never are, and never shouM be, sweet ; a glass of syrup, is no refreshment for a la- borer, is is a miserable solace for the stu- dent, and as a daily beverage for anybody, actually repulsive ; and as we are looking forward to the period wiien our wine shall be used, not only at weddings, merry-ma- kings, balls aod dinners, but a« the com- mon drink for all classes of people, we should define now and here, that hy wines, we mean the pure, fermented juice of the grape, without the admixture of anything else whatever.* ♦ That the Scuppernong is a hard, dry wine, when made without sugar, is doubt- less true ; but the question is, "what char- acter will this very wine assume when mellowed by age ?" The Sercial, the king of Mederas, is a harsh, austere and repul- sive drink, for the first few years, nor is it drinkable until age has corrected the acer- bity of its temper — but what then } Then it becomes one of the most exquisite fluids in the world, and commands a ])rice supe- rior, in some instances, to any known wine, with the exception of Imperial Tokay. The real merits of the native wine of North Carolina, then, still need development; age and proper treatment must, in time, produce something; for the Scuppernong is not destitute of delicate aroma, an important quality, indeed. The mode of culture is peculiar — the vines (layers, not cuttings,) are planted one hun- dred feet apart, the main branches have space to run fifty feet each way, at right angles from the centre, before meeting. — Each vine may be represented thus -|' the laterals interlacing over head and forming a canopy. The branches are never pruned, as it is said, "the vine would bleed to death." Like the vines in Lombardy, these are high trained (haut tige,) the low- est branches being eight feet above, and parallel with the ground. The yield is most abundant ; a single vine often bear- ing thousands of bunches, the berries small and but few to the bunch. Instances have been cited of single ones yielding enough grapes to make several barrels of wine, and covering two and a half acres of ground. We have no data to estimate the yearly produce of these vines, neither the quantity nor value ; but we are well convinced that even now the statistics of "Be assured," says President Jefferson, in a letter to Maj. Adium, April 20, 1810, "that there is never one atom of anything whatever, put into the good wines of France. I name that coimtry, because I can vouch the fact from the assurance to myself, of the vignerons of all the ])est wine cantoned of that country, which I vis- ited myself." THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 721 grape culture in this State would present an imposing array of figures. We have already seen specimens of na- tive vines of Virginia, of excellent qual- ity. The Catawba there is an abundant bearer, and the wine made from it is es- sentially different from that of Ohio. The climate of this State wonld seem to be peculiarly adapted for the purpose, and the wild and Avaste land might be turned to profitable account in the production of vines. To Virginia we are indebted for many species already popular, among which, we may instance " Norton's Seed- ling," the " Woodtion," and "Cunning- ham." Here, too, the Bland grape grows abundantly," under the name of the Vir- ginia Muscadel. In Maryland and Dela- ware, also, a variety of native grapes are cultivated, some of extraordinary produc- tiveness. One vme, raised by Mr. Willis (near Baltimore,) in 1832, yielded twenty- five thousand bunches ; and in the follow- ing year, Messrs. C. M. Bromwell, and R. Monkland certify, that they counted upon it, fifty-four thousand four hundred and ninety bunches, omitting small and young ones, which would have added at least three thousand more." * Why Messrs. Bromwell and Monkland could not wait till the young ones grew up, is a question. To leave three thousand bun- ches out of the tally, because they were small and green, is an insult to Young America. That part of the United States between the tbirty-eighth and forty-fourth parallels of latitude, so far, is entitled to the su- premacy in grape culture. Already the wines of Ohio and Missouri begin to sup- plant the imported Rhine and Champagne wines here, even at the same prices. Ter- races rise above terraces on the hill sides of the Ohio river, and the led bluffs begin * At Mr. Weller's vineyard, about eighteen miles from Wilmington, N. C, two gentlemen, (Mr. J. R. Reston and another,) made an esti- mate of the produce of two vines. They laid out a square by measure, and picked the grapes within it, and by taking the number of square yards of the entire space occupied by the vines, they were able to tell from the quantity gathered in the square, that the two vines would yield one hundred and fifty barrels of grapes. Taking the weight of a barrel at 200 lbs.,' this would amount to 15,000 pounds to each vine, or seven and a half tons ! foreign ried and abandoned, and to disappear beneath masses of vine foli- age and puiple clusters of fruit. In Penn- sylvania, at the end of the last century, an association was formed for the purpose of cultivating the grape, for wine, and vineyards were established at Spring Mill, under the superintendence of Mr. Peter Legoux. This was a failure : wines were finally the wild grape called the Schuylkill Muscadel met with temporary success. It was on\y pro tempore, however, and the failure of that vineyard threw a broad- brimmed shadow over similar enterprises thenceforward. But the vine begins to flourish again in the land of drab, and we presume by and by Pennsylvania will not be behind the rest of the middle States. In our own State there is already much wine made from the Isabella grape — in Orange county ; in Columbia county, among the Shakers ; and on the banks of the Hudson, in the neighborhood of the city. We have tried many of these wines, and although want of experience, and im- proper treatment is manifest, yet there is sufficient merit in them, to insure us in the prediction, " that the grape culture will soon prove to be one of the most val- uable fields for enterprise ever presented to the people of New York." Here is the soil, here is the climate for the Isabella; as Ohio is to the Catawba, so will this State be to this grape. Here, too, is the market, so that the cost of transportation will be trifling, and the day may not be far off when ships shall lay beside the rich vineyards on the Hudson's banks, to re- ceive the golden fraughtage for distant Europe. In New Jersey the vine has been culti- vated for many years, especially in the neighborhood of Burlington. The soil of some parts of this State is peculiarly adapted for the purpose, and we may hope hereafter for better wines than those she now furnishes under a variety of foreign brands. Still further w^est we find that Indiana, Illinois and Michigan are impro- ving the hint given by Ohio; in fact, In- diana must be recognized as one of the pioneers ; for, in the beginning of this century, the most considerable quantity of native wine made in the United States was from the Cape or Schuylkill grape of Vevay, Switzerland county, Indiana. 728 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. Missouri already ventures to contest the palm with Ohio. In 1852, the vine- yard at Hermann embraced some forty or filty acres only, and this year, we are in- formed that no less than five hundred are under cultivation there, besides many other vineyards in the interior of this thriving State. At the Crystal Palace ex- hibition, in New York, six prizes were awarded to vine growers of Missouri for samples of superior native wines, both Is- abella and Catawba, still and sparkling. — The last grape is the favorite there, as it is also in Kentucky and Tennessee. In St. Louis, the native wines are rapidly supplanting the foreign, especially the sparkling kinds; at the hotels there the majority of wines on the tables ai'C of home production. Now, good friend, if you are tired with our long itinerancy, take the cool, green glass, and reach yonder long-necked, am- ber-colored, Rhenish looking flask, if you be a hock drinker; or if not, let us cut the cords around this other cork, for the luscious fluid confined within the fair, round bottle, hath that propulsive spirit it must needs be imprisoned, and held with ligatures of flax and wire. You will try the first ? Aha ! you like it, do you ? Com- pare it with this Rudesheimei-, the " Berg" of 1846. Is not the aroma of the last the most agreeable ? You think not ? That smack of the lips speaks loudly in favor of the other ; and what think you of its farewell taste — the arrier gout ? " Fine," you say, " and delicate, and leaves the mouth sweet and cool'." Which do you prefer? " The first," you say ? Bravo for Catawba! Good friend surprised, holds forth his empty glass, and says, " You don't say so?" We fill it, and repeat that it is true. Good friend much animated, " Why, when I was in Cologne I paid twenty florins for a bottle of Metternich Schloss Johannesberger, and although it was an old wine, and had the arms of the prince on the seal, yet, to my taste, this wine appears even better than that." We set forth fair champagne glasses, and cut the strings of a bottle of different shape. " Try this," (good friend tastes). " By the moist, purple globules of Bacchus's great plant, this is delicious ! (he drinks). What is it?" We answer, "Isabella." (Good friend, watching the sparkles with the glass up to his eye) — " Not our Isabella?" We reply in the affirmative. "And where' in the natne of roses and raspberries, was itvintaged?" We answer, "Cincinnati." " Not in the city?" We respond, " The wine is made and the grapes grown within the corporate limits of that celebrated western town." (Good friend, anxiously) — "Proceed with the i'tineracy.' To Ohio the praise belongs of first pro- ducing a pure, native wine, of great merit. Patient, careful cultivation of the fruit, with judicious management of the fer- mented juice afterwards, is always neces- sary in the production of a fine wine ; and this union of scientific culture with scien- tific treatment had never been brought to perfection until the vine dressers of Ohio set the example. And first and foremost among these stands Nicholas Longworth, as he is familiarly termed there, ''The father of grape culture in the West.'' It is not alone by years of patient investiga- tion ; it is not alone by the success which has followed those eflx)rts ; it was not by the vast variety of experiments he has tried, and by the untiring energy which, in spite of numberless disappointments, still survived and triumphed over every defeat, that he has won this title from his fellow-citizens. But it was because every efl^ort and every experiment was for the benefit of all; because, with him, the success of grape culture in this country was paramount to personal consideiations; because, by every means, he spreads as widely as possible the results of his inves- tigations and labors, so that the young vine-planter of to-day might stand upon even ground with himself, the veteran of nearly half a century's experience. Ad- lum and Dufour predicted the success of grape culture in the United States, but Longworth, their cotemporary, lived to see the prediction verified, and mainly by his personal exertions. Would that all patriots were so rewarded. The two principal wine grapes of Ohio are the Catawba and Isabella; the first, however, in the proportion of twenty to one. Both are natives of North Carolina. The first was found and noticed merely as a wild grape, in the year 1.^02, by( olonel Murray and others, in Buncombe county, N. C* There it reposed for upwards of Buchanan. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. '29 twenty years without attracting attention, and so would have remained probably until now, had not its merits been discovered by Major John Adlum, of Georgetown, N. C, in or about the year 1826. Major Adlum, an officer of the Revolution, for- merly surveyor-general of Pennsylvania, was a great cultivator of the grape, and devoted the last years of his life to that purpose. In the course of his experi- ments with native vines, he found this one in the garden of a German at Georgetown, and after a fair trial, was so convinced of its value as a wine grape, that he sent some of the slips to Mr. Longworth, with a letter, saying, " I have done my country a greater service by introducing this grape to public notice than 1 would have done if I had paid the national debt." Adlum paid the debt of nature soon after, but the slips fell into good hands. For nearly thirty years, with patient perseverance, these grapes were nurtured by Mr. Long- worth, until the hour has arrived when the prophecy of Major Adlum seems certain of fulfilment. Thirty years of patient la- bor ; thirty years of unfaltering faith ; thirty years of man's life ; what a span it is ! stretching from hopeful youth to hoary age; a long while, my good friend, to look forward to, a long way to look back. In the thirty years to come we may have occasion to thank these pioneers — we may see greater results than either of them dreamed of. The Isabella grape w^as first introduced to notice by Mr. Geo. Gibbs, of Brooklyn, L. I. The slips were brought from North Carolina by Mrs. Gibbs, his wife, and the vine, in compliment to her, was named the " Isabella." Originally it was called the "Laspeyre grape," Mr. Bernard Las- peyre, who resided near Wilmington, N. C, having the parent vine from whence these slips were derived. By him it was supposed to be a foreign grape, but all sci- entific writers on vines in this country as- sert that the species, in a wild state, is quite common, and is unquestionably an indigenous production of the United States. From these two grapes the best wines are made in Ohio. We may also mention that the " Herbemont," another variety of " the natives," produces an extraordinary fine wine, the flavor being like the purest Amontillado, and essentially different from the other two. Heretofore the demand for home consum.ption has prevented the shipment of these wines east of the mountains ; but, by the increase of vine- yards in Ohio and elsewhere a limited quantity is now being sent to this city and Philadelphia.* An estimate of the entire wine crop of Ohio has not yet been made. Within a circle of 20 miles around Cincinnati there were raised in 1848, - - - 84,000 gallons- 1849, (the worst year for rot ever known there), 36,000 " 1852, - - - 125,000 " 1853, - - - 340,000 " This year,t on account of the severe cold weather in the spring, and the heavy, long, continuous rains, the crop will be a short one; but new vineyards are multi- plying, and, if this year does not promise so well as the last, yet, from the increased number of cultivators, there must be a continually increasing yield of wine, as there certainly is a constantly increasing demand for it. In comparing those wines with those of Europe, we must bear in mind that they are distinct in flavor from any or all of them. Sparkling Catawba is not Cham- pagne, nor can Isabella be compared with another wine known in the world. It is a peculiarity of these wines that no spurious compound can be made to imitate them, and in purity and delicacy, there is no known wine to equal thein. From the experiments made by eminent chemists, we find the percentage of alcohol ranks thus, according to Brande, and others ; Madeiras, ', . . .22 27 Ports, .... 22.96 Sherries, .... 19.17 Clarets, . . . . 17.11 Sauternes, .... 14.22 Burgundies, . . . 14.57 Hock and Rhine Wines, . 12.08 Champagne, . . . 12.01 Tokay, .... 9.85 Thus, it will be seen, that the most ex- * The Isabella and Catawba wines of N. Long- worth, were first introduced in New York in May, 1S52, by the editor. t 1S54. The crop was a short one. 730 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. pensive wine in Kurope, the "Tokay," is also the lowest in alcoholic per centage. But, we find, by the analysis of our good friend, Dr. Chilton, that "Still Catawba" shows a per centage of 9.50 only, being, in fact, the lowest per cent of spirit to be found in any wine in the world. We could pursue this subject for a page- or two more, but the wine tide is at ebb in the bottle. We did intend to speak of the late Col. Alden Spooner, formerly editor, in fact, first editor, of the Long Island Star ; a man of many virtues, and one who was zealous in introducing the grape in the Empire State. We did intend to speak of a gentleman of Ohio, Mr. Robert Buchanan, to whom we are indebted for much informatiou on this subject. We did intend to speak of other eminent vine- growers, but there is a time to squeeze grapes, and a time to squeeze hands, and so reader— ?;«/e.^ A New and Complete Harvester. The reporter of the Chicago Tribune, writing from the Illinois State Fair at Peoria, gives the follow^ing description of a Reaper and Binder: Messrs. Manny, Van Doren and Grover, o^ Ottowa, 111., show something new in this line- it dispenses with the ordinary binding, by phr cing the grain in small stacks. The cutting is done in the ordinary way, with an obtuse scol- lop-edged sickle. This machine, drawn by four horses, is claimed, in the hands of ordinary careful men, to cut seven feet wide, and discharge the grain into a moulding box, where one man forms the stack, with the heads inside and the buts out- side, binds the same with two wires, and then dumps it as a cart load of earth is dumped, set- ting the stack firmly on its base, perfectly thatched and " shingled" to defy any harvest storm. Shocks — The stocks or stacks are 4 by 4 feet on the ground, and six feet high. From four to six of them make an acre of ordinary grain. Their style and appearance is symmetrical, and give an evidence of perfect power to resist storms. Binding — This is done with fine wire, which costs only about twelve to twenty cents per acre, and will last many seasons. Should this succeed as anticipated, it would save a large amount of labor. The owners say : "Of 140 acres cut by this machine, (the only one yet built,) not a single shock took dama: through each of them. "When we consider THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. that in the days of tlieir origin, chronometers md ahnanacs had no existence, and astronomy was in its infancy, we cannot but admire the )eauty of the system us well as appreciate its itility. It made a magniticient time-piece of ihe star-span<2;led canopy, and the hosts of hea- ven pointed out the length of days, months and years. What a perversion it is, tlien, to make ihese signs or constellations the station-houses )f the 7nooii as she passes round the earth. It jonverts them into food for superstition and ig- lorance, and they carry with them a train of nconvenience. The moon^s transit through ;he signs is rapid, occupying but little over two iays in each, and the almanac makers place |her in one sign two days or three as best suits 'their convenience, w^ithout regard to fractions .tf days. For example, the sign is in the Crab for two :)Y three days, according to the almanac, and xlthough the weather maybe fine, and the field m excellent order, the farmer who consults the moon will not sow or plant in that inauspicious tars from the earth, })y considering that the { jun is 95,000,000 of miles from the earth, and j phat the nearest of the fixed stars is 212,000 J iimes farther distant. A cannon ball flying ] i.YJth a unifi)rm velocity, 500 miles every hour, j. .Yould require 4,595,000 years before Jt could nove from one of those stars to the earth ; and ,i ;he different stars of the same constellations I nay be at still greater distances from each oth- i |?r. Such immensity of space is bewildering i> the ordinary'- mind : but these considerations ] iliow plainly that the moon's position in regard (> any of the constellations, can have no infiu- 'nce upon the earth, which is but an atom in he universe, la coiuduslon, your committee would state hat the iacl.s embodied in this report, are such y \'ri are agreed upon by astronomers and mathe- maticians — such as are found in the lessons in- 'iided for the schools; but your committee do • t expect this report to meet with much favor ! om a large portion of the communicy. In- deed, truth is never more unpalatable, than when she brushes away from the mind, a Ion cherished fallacy, and exposes error in all its naked deformity. Many wnll not believe that they have all their lives been in error. They cannot make up their minds to surrender their whole stock of " knowledge." They will hold on to their blind faith, and continue to regulate their labors and their lives by the signs. But w^e trust there are others in whom the presen- tation of well established truth — matters-of- fact and of calculation and observation, will awaken rejiedion — that they will see the folly and superstition of the signs, and be ready to follow the teachings of reason. The Scripture speaks of husbandry — of plowing, digging and manuring — of planting and sowing — and of the early and latter rain — but not a word of any signs to regulate the husbandman in any of his labors. And Solomon who was esteem- ed a wise man in his day, M'as entirely ignorant of the signs which some of our modern Solo- mons understands so well, for he is profoundly silent on the subject, although he says: "In the morning sow thy seed, and in the evening withhold not thine hand, for thou knowest not which will prosper, either this or that," &c. — Is it not time that the agriculturist should emerge from the superstition which has so long enveloped him, and follow the advice of Solo- mon, instead of the devices of the Egyptians and Chaldeans ? Facts and arguments might be adduced to show^ that all the effects attributed to the influ- ence of the moon, could be accounted for, ou truly philosophical and scientific principles, but they would swell this report, which is already sufficiently extended, be3'ond endurable bounds, and we therefore forbear. All which is respectfully submitted. Theo. II. Cremer, Thos. F. Stewart, R. M'DiviTT. Huntingdon, Nov. 13, 1856. Splitting' Rock without Blasting. Some French inventors have taken out a pa- tent in England for splitting rocks by the gene- ration of heat without causing an explosion. — They used a substance composed of 100 parts of sulphur by Aveight, 100 of saltpetre, 50 of sawdust, 50 of horse manure, and 10 of com- mon salt. The saltpetre and common salt are dissolved in hot v,-ater, to which four parts of molasses are added, and the ingredients stirred until they are thoroughly incorpt)rated togeth- er iii one mass, Avhich is then dried b}' a gentle heat in a room or l)y exposure to the sun, and is fit for use. It is tamped in the holes bored for blasting rocks in the same manner as pow- der, and is ignited by a fusee. It does not cause an exph)sion upward like gunpowder, but generates a great heat, which splits the rock. 734 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER How they brought the Good Hews from Ghent to Aix. The following beautiful lines by Browning, aside from the powerful presentations of the scenes described, are particularly interesting for preserving the exciting galloping meter hroughout in such distinctness. I sprang to the stirrup, and Joris and he ; I galloped, Dirck galloped, we galloped all three ; " Good speed !" cried the watch as the gate- .bolts undrew, "Speed?" echoed the wall to us galloping through ; Behind shut the postern, the lights sank to rest. And into .the midnight we galloped abreast. Not a word to each other : we kept the great pace Neck and neck, stride by stride, never chang- ing our place, I turned in my saddle and made its girths tight. Then shortened each stirrup and set the pique right, Re-buckled the check-strap, chailied slacker the bit, Nor galloped less steadily Roland a whit. Lokeren, the cocks crew and twilight dawned clear ; At Boom a great yellow star came out to see ; At Dufneld 'twas morning as phiin as could be ; And from Mechelm church-steeple we heard the half chime. So Joris broke silence with " Yet there is time.'' At Aerschot, up leaped of a sudden the sun, And against him the cattle stood back every one, To stare through the mist at us galloping past, And I saw my stout galloper Roland at last, With resolute shoulders each butting away The haze as some blulf river headland its spray. And his low head and cre?t, just one sliarp ear bent back, For my voice, and the other pricked out on his track ; And one eye's black intelligence, — ever that glance O'er its white edge at me, its own master, as- kance ! And the thick heavy spume-flakes which aye and :inon His tierce lips shook upward in galloping on. By Ilasselt, Dirck groaned; and cried Joris, " Stay spur ! Your lloos galloped bravely, the fault's not in her, We'll remember at Aix" — for one heard the quick wheeze Of her chest, saw the stretched neck, and stag- gering knees, And sunk tail, and horrible heave of the flank, As down on her haunches she shuddered and sank. So we were left galloping, Joris and- 1, . Past Loos and past Tongres, no cloud in the I sky; \ The broad sun abov'e laughed a pitiless laugh, 'i 'Neath our feet broke the brittle bright stubble like chaff; Till over by Delhelm a dome-spire sprang white, And " Gallop," gasped Joris, " for Aix is in sight!" " How they'll greet us !" — and all in a moment his roan Rolled neck and crop over, lay dead as a stone ; And there was my Roland to bear the whole weight Of the news, which alone could save Aix from her fate, With his nostrils like pits full of blood to the brim, And with circles of red for his eye-sockets' rim. Then I cast loose my buff coat, each holster let \ fall. Shook off both my jack-boots, let go belt and all. Stood up in the stirrup, leaned, patted his ear, Called my Roland his pot-name, my horse with- out peer : Clapped my hands, laughed and sang, any noise bad or good. Till at length into Aix Roland galloped and stood. And all I remember is friends flocking round, As I sate with his head twixt my knees on the ground. And no voice but was praising this Roland of mine. As I poured down his throat one last measure of wine, Which (the burgesses voted, by common con- sent,) Was no more than his due who brought good news from Ghent. The scratches in a horse may be cured, un- less veryinveterate, by washing thoroughly with soapsuds, and then rul)bing with lard fried out of salt meat. Keep clean, and wash and grease every other day until a cure is effected. Leav- ing nmd to dry upon the legs of a horse is one great cause of this disease, and many horses arc injured by want of care and cleanliness Avhen driven in muddy weather. — Etu^al New Yorlvcr. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 357 From the American Farmer. The Wheat and the Dairy Districts of the United States. Some few years ago, we published one of the most valuable papers in our journal, which it has ever been our privilege to present to our readers. It was from the pen of our late lamented friend, Chauacey P. Ilolcomh, Esq., of Delaware, in whose death the agricultural classes of our Union, have lost one of the nn st able and zealous advocates of its rights and interests. The paper in question was on the Wheat Region of the United States, in which it was shown, that there was a portion of territory, running through a part of Penn- sylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, and including some portion of the western States to Michigan — not embracing all the ter- ritory of the States named, but including a belt which might emphatically be considered the permanent Wheat Region of the country. The land-holders of Maryland and Virginia, in particular should have had that paper circula- ted, by the million, as a kind of agricultural tract, to call attention to settlers from other quarters to tlie peculiar value of tlieir lands — so many thousands of acres of which are un- cultivated — for the production of the wheat plant. We may hereafter republish the article in question — and in passing, Avould remark, that since its appearance in our pages, we have had an eye upon the subject, and are fully sat- isfied that the views taken by the respected writer, were in the main correct. Our object at present is to call attention to the admitted fact, that the cultivation and power of produc- tion of wheat in the great State of New York, is, and has been for years, on the decline. We remember that shortly after the publication of the article in question, we had the pleasure of attending a delightful meeting around the hospitable board of Mr. H., at Devondale, at which a number of the most prominent farm- ers, jurists and statesmen of Delaware, all identified with agriculture, had assembled, to consult upon the best means to secure an en- dowment of a Professorship of Agriculture in New'ark College — which object, through the plans then concocted, we believe, was accom- plished in a spirit of liberality worthy of the ns of that little Diamond State, and of the imitation of their neighbors. As we were, about starting for the cars we received one of the agricultural periodicals of the State of New York, in which the regular decrease in the production of wheat was admitted, which f we remember aright, we read to the meeting alluded to. Our attention is again directed to the subject, by reading the proceedings of a meeting in the city of Albany, to dedicate a lall to be devoted to the purposes of agricul- ure, prepared for the State Agricultural Socie- ty of New York. lion. T. C. Peters in his ad- Iress before the Society, in directing attention to the importance of the Dairy, to the agricul- turists of that great State, the region for which he defines, admits " (hat the crop of icheat has very largely decreased — so Dnich so, that the State can no longer he classed among the icheat exporting States." It will be remembered by many of our readers that the Genesee territo- ry and the western portion of New York, were at one time considered the best lands for the production of wheat in this country. W^e may draw attention more fully to this subject at a future day, in the mean time we append an ex- tract from the remarks of Mr. Peters, on the occasion alluded to; they are suggestive of re- flection to the statesman, as well as to the far- mer : — "The real Dairy region of the United States, as compared with its whole area, is very small — compared with the land now in use it is but about one-fourth, compared with its whole area, it is less than one-tenth. The western and southern line of Pennsylvania is the ex- treme limit west and south of the true or pri- mary dairy region. The basin of tlje lakes may be considered as within the dairy zone, but it is secondary to this. "Our own glorious State, from its confirma- tion and situation, is the heart of this favored region, and is peculiarly fitted, both by soil and climate, for the fullest development of dairy products. It becomes important then to know whether it constitutes the most profitable bran(;h of farming. "To obtain a satisfactory solution of this problem, permit me to submit a few statistics. The acres of land in use in 1821 1825 1835 1845 1850 1855 5,717,494 7,160,907 9,655,420 11,757,270 19,119,084 20,758,182 " The land in use includes all that belongs to the farm, whether in wood or under cultivation. j If the figures of the last census be true, it I would appear that there are less than three ; millions of acres of land in the State yet to be brought into use. I "The land brought into use daring the Inst I thirty years has nearly quadrupled, yet it does i not appear that any crop or kind of stock has j increased in an equal ratio. Thus in 1821 we jhad 1,215.04^^ head of neat cattle, and in 1855 : there were but 2,105,404. Of horses, in 1821 j there were 202,023, and in 1855, 508,700. A Imost remarka1)le change in oar stock is in re- { gard to sheep: in 1825 there were 3.490,539, and iin_1855, 3,207,024— nearly 300,000 less than 'thirty years ago. But in 1845 we had 0,443,- I 855, there having been a steady gain from 1821 I to that date. From that year they have steadi- !ly decreased, so that the loss in the last ten ! years has been 3,230,858, and the decrease in m THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. the quantity of wool produced is not far from five millions of pounds. As this great decrease has been in the fine wooled breeds, it is evident that wool growing in this State has ceased to be a profitable branch of general farming. This decrease in sheep is the more remarkable from the fact that the crop of wheat has also very largely decrea.sed — so much so, that our State can no longer be classed among the luheat exporting States. " In 1840 we produced 12,286,418 bushels of wheat, and in 1845 the product was 13,391,770 bushels. From that year it declined till 1855 ; the product of spring and winter wheat was only 9,092,402 bushels, and the product of the past year probably did not exceed six millions of bushels. In our spring crops there has been no material change, except in corn. This corn, perhaps the most important grown upon the earth, has been rapidly increased during the past fifteen years. In 1840 there were 10,972,- 28G bushels," and in 1855 there were 19,290,091 bushels. " We find Avhen we turn to the dairy statis- tics, thaf the tendency of our farming has been in the right direction. In 1845 we had 999,490 cows, and in 1855, 1,058,427, though the number had decreased to 931,324, making the increase during the last five years equal to al)out 25,000 annually. In the products of the dairy some facts are disclosed worthy of notice. In 1845 we produced 79,510,733 pounds of butter and 36,744,976 pounds of cheese, making an aggre- gate of 116,246,706 pounds. In 1850 the but- ter had increased only ab;>ut 100,000 pounds, while the product of chepse had gone up to 49,- 741,413 pounds — nearly thirteen millions of pounds during the five years. But in 1855 we produced 90,293,073 pounds of butter and 38,- 944,249 pounds of cheese — the aggreo^ate dairy product of that year being 129,237,322 pounds, against 129,507,000 in 1850. This large in- crease in butter and decrease in cheese would seem to indicate that butter making was more profitable than the manufacture of cheese. It is not improbable that the census of 1860 will show a still greater difi'erence, for there can be little or no competition with our best butter in an}^ market. Its continued advance in price, notwithstanding the large increase of land brought into use in the United States, is a sufii- cient guarantee to the farmers of this State, that in one branch of agriculture they have nothing to fear from the fertile' lands of the West.' " Herein then is our strength, and through this branch of agriculture we can distance all competition, and create upon our own farms a perpetual mine of increasing wealth, unlike all other mines, possessing within itself tiic power of perpetual replenishment. If we rightly direct our energies, our agricultural supremacy is as certain as our commercial." Domestic Providences, Or Domestic Life in the Free States. What a mysterious Providence ! say the farmers' wives, as they come together to look for the last time on one of their number ; and they glance pityingly on the bereaved husband and the family of children, varying in size, from the tall youth or blooming maiden, down to the little child. Truly, it is a mystery, that she should be taken away in the prime of life, when her children need her watchful care and counsel more than ever before. But let us ex- amine into the life led by most farmers' wives, and see if we can gain a clue to the " Mysteri- ous Providence," which so often leaves th« family circle desolate. A young farmer marries, and for a year or two his wife can do very well without help ; but by and by, his work is too much for him alone, and he must have a hand ; and one by one, little children increase the family until the wife's burden is much heavier than when she took it up. But he is just getting a start, and if they want to get rich, (as everj^ body does,) they must economise; so she "gets along " with- out help. She rises early, milks the cows, gets breakfast, often for several men, dresses the children, washes dishes, skims milk, churns, perhaps sweeps rooms, makes beds, prepares dinner, " cleans up," snatches an hour to sew, keeping a restless baby quiet meanwhile, gets supper, milks again, puts children to bed, and after they and husband are asleep, resting from their weariness, sits up to sevv', that she may save paying a seamstress. In addition to this daily routine, she does all the washing, ironing, baking, scrubbing, house- cleaning, soap-making, and hog-killing work; it costs so much to hire help. So year after year she toils and drudges, not allovring herself the least opportunity for improving her mind, so that she may be a better guide and counsel- lor for her children. And very soon her fair face is faded and care-worn, her temper soured and fretful, and herself prostrated now and then by fits of illness, only to resume her wearying labor as soon as her returning strength permits. And thus she yearly becomes loss able to bear the burden of her increasing house- hold duties. If the husband is a kind, con- siderate man, who ^las been taught to assist iiis mother in boyhood, he makes her work lighter, by carrying wood and water, anujsing the children, and doing numberless little things, which may be trifling in themselves, but are of much importance in the aggregate. But too many men leave the wife to draw water and carry wood, and if she finds it cut part of the time, she considers herself fortu- nate ; and as for the baby — he thinks it a woman's place to nurse children, so it frets and cries, or mamma must work with it on her arm, while he reads his paper, or talks with his iiircd men. Well the farm increases in value and fertilit}^ and his labor in producing THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. r37 for his family becomes lighter, as he is able to hire more help ; but it is an old thing, both to himself and his wife, for her to do all the house- work, with what little help the elder children, if they are girls, can give her ; for if they are boys, they cannot work much for her ; as soon as they can use a hoe, they must help father ; and so the toils on in the same old fashion. And when the comfortable new house is built and nicely furnished, and her children are beginning to be a real help to her, the pale, sickly wife, and mother lies down to die ! Truly, her sun goes down at noonday. She has saved, by ceaseless, wear3'ing toil, hundreds of dollars for her husband, and he has lost — what money is powerless to recall — the companion of his youth, the one who has walked beside him through life's most thorny paths. And friends say it is a " Mysterious Provi- dence V Just as if God ordained that the mother should be taken from her children when they are most exposed to temptation and danger ! Instead of laying it on Providence, let us remember the days spent in toil, when the weak, exhausted frame was suflPering from dis- ease, induced perhaps by over-exertion ; the hours stolen from needed slumber and devoted to labor ; the numberless household duties per- formed with a fretful infant upon her arm ; the immense amount of time spent in cooking over a hot fire, and the many sleepless nights passed in anxious watching over sick children. When we look at the subject in this light, is it so very mysterious that so many women die in their prime ? — New Jerseij Fanner. tions of disease is visible, and he would pass for a sound horse with the most knowing in such matters. There is no doubt that clover hay, probably because of its dust, often induces the heaves. Stable keepers with us, refuse it altogether for this reason. Many suppose that the wind of the horse is affected by the heaves, so that fast driving at any time will, as we express it, put him out of breath. With my horse it is not so. When the "General" was at the worst, rapid driving, when just from the stal)le, woul.d in- crease his difficulty, but a mile or two of moderate exercise would dissipate the symp- toms entirely. We have, occasionally what are called wind-broken horses, which are nearly worthless for the want of wind. They can never be driven rapidly without great distress, and frequently give out entirely by a few hours' driving. This is thought to be a different dis- ease. The "General's'' case is, I suppose, a a f^iir example of the heaves. I have no doubt that regular feeding with chopped and wet fodder, and exclusion of dust from hay fed to other animals in the stable, would render many horses now deemed almost worthless, and which manifestly endure great suffering, equally valuable for most purposes, with those that are sound. — Indiana Farmer. A Horse With the Heaves. I tried all sorts of heave powders on my patient with no effect whatever. It is said that in a limestone country this disease is unknown, andlime water was prescribed with no apparent grace, a whole quarter which you cannot possi American Agricuhurist. House-Keeping in the Country—No. II. Is the list so long ? Meat that will not keep, bread that will mold, butter always soft, scarce vegetables, skim milk and stale eggs, the very articles that you imagined sprang up spontaneously good everywhere "in the coun- try." Is the butcher an unknown institution ? or have you one who reigns tyrant over the neighborhood, granting you now and then, of advantage. Some one told me to give the horse ginger, and strange to tell, I found that a table- spoonful given to the "General" with his oats, would cure him for the day, in half an hour after he had eaten it ; but on giving it daily the effect soon ceased. It is a jockeys remedy, and will last long enough to swap upon. Finally, I was advised to cut my horse's fodder and give it always wet. I pursued that course carefully, keeping the "General" tied with so short a halter that hd could not eat his bedding, giving him chopped hay and meal three times a day, and never more than a bucket of water at a time. He improved rapidly. I have kept him five years, making him a factotum — carriage-horse, saddle-horse, plow and cart horse — and he bids fair to remain useful for five years to come. Kept in this way, his disease does not lessen his value for speed or labor, a single dollar. When the boys grow careless, and give him dry hay, he informs me of it in a few days by the peculiar cough I have mentioned; but sometimes, for six months together, no indica- 47 bly eat before it spoils? And last, worst of all, the flies, flies, flies ! I remember a friend of mine once summed up her experience in these words: " I could be happy but for servants that won't work, and preserves that u'^7Z." Of course she lived in the country. You will be glad to know that there are remedies for nearly all these troubles, could one only find them out ; but for some of them it will be necessary to go back to the very foundation of your house-keeping, viz : the house itself. Comfort and convenience ought not to be sac- rificed tObShow in the city ; but in the country they must not. There are some things about a house, which are worth all the carved rose- wood and gilt hangings in the world, for they are absolutely indispensable to your living with comfort, elegance or economy. In the city, where you can buy your stores as you need them, it matters little where you keep them ; but where you provide each day something which you will £at for dinner six 738 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. months hence, it makes a great difference in- deed. Without a dry, cool cellar, convenient pan- tries and closets, an ice-house, or its best su^v Btitute, you cannot expect any satisfaction or comfort, unless your talents for management and contrivance are extraordinary indeed. Nor should these additions to a house be over-ruled on the score of economy. The price of one carved arm-chair vrill build an ice-house, and the interest on the cost of a set of lace curtains will fill it every year. It cannot be so great a trial to a house-keeper to live in a house fur- nished ever so simply, as it is to endure such constant waste, confusion and annoyance in the kitchen department. I have seen some things in my time. A good ice-house is the greatest of luxuries ; so great, that I would say to those of compe- tent fortune, have it at any cost: but if it is impracticable, and you cannot depend upon your cellar, a spring-house or well-house will serve as a tolerably good substitute, costing as much to build, but nothing to fill. I suppose everybody knows what a spring-house is ? A well-bouse is for those who have no spring, and is built in the same manner, of brick or stone, with a paved floor, and a channel through which runs the water from the pump. The channel must be shallow enough to stand the milk-pans in, and if the building is shaded and kept dark, it will keep milk and butter very cool and fresh. If you have a good drainage, such an arrangement could easily be made in the cellar. A well-box is another substitute for an ice- house on a small scale. With four or five strong nails firmly driven in the side, and as many ropes, you may have butter, yeast, fruit, meat and the cream-kettle, all swinging in it at once, as we have had many a time. Butter that has "come hard" will stay as hard in it as in ice. There are few cellars in which bread and flour will not mold, in warm weather. They should be kept in a dry place on the ground floor, the first wrapped in a cloth, or in a tin box, the other in a wooden bin. Preserves, if made rightly, will never fer- ment in a closet on the north side of the house. Of course, it ought not to be next a chimney, where a fire is kept up. Your cellar should either be paved, or limed and sanded through its whole extent ; the milk-cellar partitioned off, white waslied, well aired, darkened most of the day, and as clean as hands can make it. You may think, per- haps, that to those who keep but one cow, and make. only butter for the family, all this care will not be necessary. In fact, it is rather more so ; fin- it is needful to turn a little to the utmost advantage. I have mentioned these things, not so much as directions for preserving stores, for you can find these in any domestic receipt-book, but as hints to those inteadiug to build or buy in the country what conveniences they should make sure of securing. Without these, you may dwell in the most picturesque of Gothic cottages ; your columns may be wreathed with ever-blooming roses, and your windows overlook the Vale of Arcadia itself, but Contentment will never nestle under your vines, or Peace make her home in your bosom. EMILY. WiNDHOLME, Pa., July 18, 1857. Transference of Vitality. Let parents read and ponder upon the follow- ing, if they would save the lives of their little ones : Parents and aged persons — although these latter exhibit a remarkable fondness for sleep- ing with children — should be careful not to permit young persons to repose in the same bed nor in the same apartment with the ema- ciated or the aged, for the transference of vitality from the young to the old, is not a nursery tale, but a serious, and too often a fatal fact. Children who are habitually placed in con- tact with the aged, however vigorous before such a disposition was made of them, became wan, sickly, contract diseases which properly belonged to persons in advanced life, and if the contact is continued die from pure vital ex- haustion. Their fresh and positive magnetism is thus absorbed by negative or non-magnetic persons, to the benefit of the latter, and the in- jury of the former. The life of the aged may be prolonged by these means — at the expense of the existence of the young. Many of the children who die in this city are thus prema- turely cut off. Parents should know this im- portant fact, and at once correct the evil, if un- happily it exists in their families. Says Dr. James Copeland : A not uncommon cause of depressed vital power is the young sleeping with the aged. This fact, however explained, has been long remarked, and is well known to every unprejudiced observer. I have, on several occasions, met with the counterpart of the following case- I was, a few years ago, consulted about a pa!e, sickly and thin boy, of about 4 or 5 years of age. lie appeared to have no specific ailment, but there Avas a slow and remarkable decline of flesh and strength, and of the energy of the functicms — what his mother very aptly termed a gradual blight. After inquiry into the history of the case, it come out that he had been a very robust and plethoric child up to his third year, when his grandmother, a very aged person, took him to \ sleep with her ; that he soon afterwards lost his good looks ; and that he continued to decline progressively ever since, notwithstanding medi- cal treatment. I directed him to sleep apart from the aged parent, and prescribed gentle tonics, change of air, etc. The recovery was t rapid. But it is not in children only, that debility is TH'E SOUTlIEmsr PLANTER. 739 induced by this mode of abstracting vital power. Young females married to very old men suifer in a similar manner, although seldom to so great an extent ; and instances have come to my know^ledge where they have suspected the cause of this debilitated state. These facts are often well known to the aged themselves, who consider indulgence favorable to longevity, and thereby illustrate the selfish- ness which in some persons increases with their years. Every medical practitioner is well aware of the fact, and parents are generally advised not to allow their infants to sleep with aged persons. — Waverly Magazine. Clean Shucking Corn. c Among the multitudinous insects that infest grain, and especially corn, there is none, per- haps, more destructive than the weevil, (known zoologically, I believe, as the " Bill Bug/' or Corn " Borer,") and any effectual means of protection against the ravages of this insect would be a d sideratum to corn growers. In the Patent Office Report for 1854, the Agricul- tural division, Mr. Montgomery, of Colorado, Texas, states that he has tested " with complete success, a plan for preserving corn against the ravages of the weevil. It is to store the corn dry, and in good condition, in air tight cribs. ' My cribs, says ' Mr. Montgomery, are built of logs, pointed and plastered with clay, and shedded all round.'" Mr. Montgomery, how- ever, does not state — and I regret the omis- sion — whether his corn is husked [shucked is a phrase better understood with us) before it is put up, or whether it is housed in the shuck. Corn being the most valuable of all the cereals, its preservation from the ravages of insects is as important, and deserves as much consideration, as its growth; and as all growers of the article should impart such information as they may possess on the subject, I will con- tribute my experience. For some years I fol- lowed the example of my neighbors, and housed my corn in the shuck ; that is, put it in the barn or crib without stripping the shuck from the ear — and, much to my annoyance, I invariably found, as the summer advanced that the corn would be much eaten by the weevil ; so much so frequently as to leave little else of the grain than the outer shell. Five years ago, when harvesting my corn, I put up a por- tion of it in the usual way with the shuck on, and the remainder was clean shucked, and put into a separate house — the o1)ject being to ascertain whether both parcels would suff'er in an equal degree from the depredations of the weevils. The result was, that the corn housed in the shuck was infested by the Aveevil as in previous years, while that which was clean shucked was as sound during the succeeding summer and fall as when first harvested, and scarcely a weevil to be found among it. Since then, and for the last five years, my corn is hauled from the field to the barn-yard, where it is thrown from the wagon into heaps, and entirely divested of the shuck before it goes into the barn. The experience of five years has confirmed the result of my first experi- ment ; and my old corn in the summer and fall is as free from weevil, and as firm and heavy as when harvested the preceding fall. — Corres- pondent Pee Dee Times. Rose Culture. Four things are absolutely essential in high rose culture — a rich and deep soil, judicious pruning, freedom from insects, and watering when requisite. If any of these be wrong, the success will be in proportion incomplete. Soil is the first consideration ; what is termed a sound loam, they all delight in ; the soil should, be adapted rather to the stock than to the scion, or kind worked on it. The common or dog rose stock, thrives best on strong loamy soil ; in half-shaded situations near water, without manure ; cultivated roses require the latter, because they have more hard work to do ; their amount of blossom, if weight alone be allowed as a test, would, in most cases, doubly and trebly exceed that of the dog rose — added to which they have less foliage. Roses, on their own roots, require that the soil be modified according to kind ; we should not use so adhesive a soil to a Tea or Bourbon rose as to ordinary kinds ; organic matter is here required. Depth of soil is of great impor- tance to all 'kinds ; it is the deeper series of fibres, situated in a proper medium, that sus- tains a good succession of flowers, in defiance of heat and drought. Judicious pruning reduces the rampant growths, and increases the energies of those which are of a more delicate constitution — relieves from superfluous shoots and useless wood, and reduces the whole outline to a com- pact or consistent form. Insect ravages must be guarded against — tobacco water or fumes will do this ; bathing them twice a day with water from a barrow-engine is only objectiona- ble from the time required. If you have not provided deep culture, watering, in dry times, will be requisite ; but this should be done thoroughly rather than frequently,- and the soil should be frequently stirred without injuring the roots. Liquid manure — say two ounces of guano to a gallon of water — should be given once a week. With this treatment every one may have fine roses. — Horticidturist. IIoG Cholera. — The Alexandria Sentinel learns by a gentleman from the neighborhood of Dumfries in Prince Edward County, that large numbers of hogs are dying there of the above distemper. One farmer had lost 34, and two others 12 each. The vomitings, purginga and cramps which mark the disease are such as at once to suggest the name by which it is known. 740 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER [From the Papers of the Albemarle Hole and Corner Club.— No. 2. A Plea for Farmers' Clubs. The growing disposition among farmers to combine their efforts and invoke co-operation in their business, is a happy augury of success and progress. The dispersed situation in which they live, and their past indifference to the necessity of union and concert, have been unfriendly to the protection of their interests and the improvement of their practises. It is quite a shame to contemplate in how many respects the law leaves them exposed to bur- thens and depredations, to which no other citizens, with readier means of combination, would think of submitting. Take a few in- itances : the principles of tlie Common Law, which constitute the basis of our system, are boasted of for the sanctitjj it imTpavts to the free- hold ; and yet in this State, where there are no rights by prescription, the freeholder who does not at an enormous expense and labor, keep his lands enclosed, finds them exposed to an unlimi- ted right of common; and eveii where his fences : are lawful, trespasses are so difficult to be redress- ed without disagreeable collisions and offensive ;agencies that they virtually go unpunished. His personal rights do not fare better; his sheep-fold may be invaded, and the most extensive havoc committed upon his flock at night by vile curs ; and unless, in the morning, he can follow up and detect the marauders, he has no indemnity for the past, nor security for the future ; and this, too, through tenderness for the unfed dogs of a village ; and the negroe's pet, which is not only his faithful companion, like Syke's dog, but too often his ally in plunder ; and his spy, and his guardsman against the patrol. The law will guard the markets against imposi- tions upon the buyers ; but what effort does it make to save the farmer from the unexpected depressions, which speculators and interested scribblers can easily bring about by falsehood and exaggeration in the absence of the authentic statistics of crops, which the State should feel an interest in collecting through its officers of the revenue; and how much more ruinous is this mischief to the farmer than the crime of regrating, forestalling and monopolizing, to his customer at the stalls of the market house. But we need not only protection for our inter- ests as tillers of the soil; we want more efficient means of advancement in our calling. We feel the necessity of a wider sphere of observation and a more extended practice than can be afforded us on our several farms. We are continually craving for the experience and practice of others to enlighten and instruct us in our ovrn management. To accomplish these ends, an organization is extending throughout the various counties of the State, denominated " Farmers' Clubs," or " Hole and Corner Clubs.'' They are de- signed for particular neighbourhoods com- prised in limits not transgressing a pleasant morning or evening's ride, so as to secure the regular attendance of members. Our Club is the offspring of the " Hole and Corner Club'' of this county — perhaps, the first of the kind in the State ; and gives earnest of the growth of this interesting family. This agency would seem at first to be humble. It is confined to a narrow circle, and that properly, because it gives a similarity of soil and season for the experiments it ordains. But, in truth, these associations are doing a great deal for agriculture. It is the reproach of our calling that we have no settled princi- ples to serve us as the axioms of our science in agriculture. Every thing with us is embarked on a sea of conflicting conjectures and trials ; and scarcely will two persons be found of the same opinion on any given question. One postulate we boast, — that annual manure is of advantage to crop and soil ; but the mode and time of application -will vary with each advi- ser. And so in regard to many other princi- ples that may seem to be admitted, there is such a contrariety of opinion as to the condi- tion of their application, it becomes hazardous to put them in practice. It is one of the chief aims of these clubs to project a series of expe- riments on all debatable topics, so as to ascer- tain the truth and thus find out a secure and profitable basis for our individual operations. It is easy to perceive how trials thus made under the supervision and control of intelli- gent and interested proprietors, will save us from the false deductions and dangerous generalization into Avhich many of our breth- ren are betrayed. With the majority, per- haps, something, — (no matter how immate- rial provided it strikes the imagination, or enlists the superstitious feeling, — ) ti;at is found to precede a certain marked result, is at once accredited as its cause; and none of that caution, which pervades other sciences, is ob- served by them in pronouncing on the obscure relations of cause and effect. • Hence, our pro- fession is flooded with absurdities; and our be- lief in the uniformity of nature, shocked by the popular theories of wheat degenerating into chess ; the worm of a fence rising or sink- ing according as it is laid in the light or dark of the moon, and other kindred mistakes springing only from careless and erroneous observations. Another t-ask assumed by these Clubs is scarcely of less importance, namely : the visita- tion and critical examination annually had of each member's fiirm, its stock, its cultivation, its management and crops. Discharged, as this task ever should be, with candor and freedom, it offers valuable suggestions to the owner ; gives encouragement to the successful ; reforms bad practices — discovers and approves new modes ; explodes fallacies, no matter how ven- erable or universal ; and, finally, spares not its rebukes of neglect or mismanagement. Of its THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. '41 fidelity in this last particular, our club gave a notable instance to one of its members, who had the temerity to convene them at his house on the breaking up of the last unusually severe and long vv'inter, in its unflinching and just animadversions upon the sad condition of the tenants of his barn-lot, stable, sheds, and styes. And it is interesting now to witness how that gentleman, (who shall be nameless,) has profited by the merited castigation ; what pro- jects he forms of the use of "Young Ameri- ca," roots, &c., for winter feeding ; and, above all, how his overseer has been aroused by the talk, which this official report has provoked of him. Nothing, indeed, can be more salutary than the emulation and reforms which the faithful conduct of this examination, into each other's practises, will be sure to provoke as well between the several members on the one part as their respective overseers on the other. The debates, too, of these clubs upon contro- verted matter, are of eminent utility. The'y exercise the mind and sharpen the observation. They finally conduct to stable opinions ; and never leave the farmer halting between two opinions like some other poor sinners. These discussions, too, are highly honorary to our craft ; they show a clearness in thought, an ingenuity in argument, a command of lan- guage, and a prolixity of speech scarcely infe- rior to any to be found among the gowned fra- ternity. The social benefits and charms of these gather- ings are worth enumerating. They brighten the chains of sympathy, and strengthen the bonds of interest that unite us ; they beget companionships, and lead to intimacies that improve intercourse, and sweeten the charities of life ; and above all, they encourage that esprit de corps, which is more wanting among the tillers of the soil than any other class. With all these tendencies to good, it must be confessed, there are some tenxptations and some partial ills. When the stated meeting arrives, one feels such a strong inclination to abandon himself to the pleasures of social converse, and to the spirit of hilarity that prevails, that he feels an instinctive shudder when the hammer of the president strikes for order. Amid the appliances of good cheer and the resources of mirth : "The quips, and cranks, and wanton wiles, The nods, and becks, and wreathed smiles," it is difficult to command due respect for the grave visage of business and care. The goodly repast, too, is apt to leave no ap- petite to discuss other things ; and the spirit of application ceases with the bounteous meal. Yet, it may be well said, that there is time enough for all things provided the proper order is maintained. However fascinating the per- fect abandon on such an occasion, there is always serious business enough on hand to dissipate all undue levity, and engross the at- tention. The punctual attendance of members at an early hour, so as to afibrd time enough for the ride on the farm, and the dispatch of business, and the calls of jollity, should always be enforced. This cannot be done without penalties, and the example set by this Club, is valuable. A pecuniary forfeit is incurred by want of punctuality ; and that can only be re- deemed by a written essay. This mulct is so considerable as to compel the pen to its re- demption. And it is not a little amusing to see the farmer quit his field for his closet ; or the farming lawyer — a monster that we some- times meet with, of two natures, like the fabled Centaur — pushing aside his briefs or his black letter to indite his lucubrations on agri- culture. Perhaps if the curtain could be raised, some such secret would account for the appear- ance of this brief plea for Farmers' Clubs. For the Southern Planter. On the Application of Lime. Experiment in stripping Corn-stalks of blades. Whilst it may be considered presumption in one with as little experience as I have, to dis- course on the subject of the above caption, nevertheless I propose to ofi"er some remarks and suggestions on the subject, — the results of my experience and observations., which, if attended with no other benefit, may elicit information from those better qualified to give it. Lime being considered the basis of improve- ment for exhausted lands on tidewater, it be- comes necessary to ascertain the quantity and a.pplication, which will best insure this end. In my region of country, twenty-five and one hundred bushels are the minimum and maxi- mum quantities per acre ; the first on the most exhausted, and the last on the more improved land, — whilst in France, ten and twenty bush- els are the minimum and maximum quantities, applied on the first or second rotation of crops, and the results, so far as I am informed, are as favourable as those of larger application. My experience is in accordance with the last results, as I have derived more benefit from the application of twenty bushels, than I have from ninety-six. If this hypothesis be correct, as I believe it to be, the means of improvement are placed in reach of all who cultivate the soil where lime can be obtained. Now let us test the relative advantages of the greater and lesser applications. First, — the average quantity of the larger application would be sixty-two bushels ; and lime having a tendency to descend, this quantity, before it could be well incorporated in the soil, and ta- ken up by the rootlets of the plants cultivated in the rotation of the crop, would have de- scended to a depth beyond their reach, thereby 742 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. causing a loss of at least one half of the out- lay on this article ; whilst the average of the lesser application, say fifteen bushels, would be incorporated in the soil, and taken up by the cultivated plant before it would have descended a depth beyond its reach. In illustration of the above theory, we will Etate the proposition thus : Sixty-two bushels of lime applied to one acre of land, would in- crease the product one barrel, whilst that quantity applied to four acres would increase it four barrels, — being a gain of three barrels to the smaller application, independent of the loss by the descent of lime on the larger, before its benefits were imparted to the land and crop. Let us recapitulate : Sixty-two bushels of lime applied to four acres of land, at 10 cts., would be, $ 6 20 Yield of one barrel of Corn per acre by the application would be four barrels, at $3 per barrel, . . . 12 00 $18 20 Sixty-two bushels of lime applied to one acre of land, at 10 cts., . . $6 20 One barrel of Corn produced by the application, 3 00 $9 20 Loss by descent of lime before its incorporation with the soil and its being taken up by the plants cultivated, 3l bushels, [conjectural,] at 10 cts., . . . 3 10 $6 10 ■Gain by the lesser application, leaving the land by such appli- ' cation equally benefited, . . . $12 10 In addition to the above, I will submit the following experiment, made with a view of testing a subject in controversy, in relation to the best mode of saving fodder with the least injury to the Corn. I commenced the experi- ment on the the 31st day of August, on four rows of Corn immediately adjoining. The Corn on row No. 1. was cut ofi" at the ground and ricked ; No. 2., the fodder was stripped to the ear in the usual mode of gathering ; No. 3., the fodder left on the stalks ; No. 4., the tops cut above the first joint above the ear, leaving the blades on the stalks below the ear. On the 5th of October, twelve ears of each row, of as equal size as could be obtained, were selected and weighed. No. 1. weighed 9 tt)s. ; No. 2. weighed 9^ fts. ; No. 3. weigh- ed 11^ lbs. ; and No. 4. weighed 8^ lbs. RICHARD ROUZEE. Essex County, Ya. Note. — Taking No. 4. as the lowest, the per- centage of gain in the other experiments is as follows : No. 1. gain 6 per ct. No. 2. " 12 «' No. 3. " 331- " This last is so remarkable a gain that we apprehend an error in our friend's experiment, though there can now be no doubt that tiie gain is very great, and that this experiment quadrates with others on the same subject. How long will it be before principle prevails over habit, and our farmers stop losing both Corn and time by pulling fodder ? — [Ed. So. Planter. For the Southern Planter. Improving Land on the Five-field System. LoNGWOOD, King "William Co., ? Oct. 15th, 1857. S Mr. Editor. — Being a rainy day, which gives me a few leisure hours, and being a devotee to agriculture, I have concluded to write some lines for your paper. If you think they can be of any use, or can in any way do my brother farmers any good, publish them ; if not, cast them away. I have been farming about five years- I came into possession of an exhausted piece of land, which had been rented out for fifteen or twenty years. Everything that had been made on it, — wheat, corn, oats, straw, shucks, &c., had in all that time been carried ofi"; and as that was done, fences were left down, and everybody's stock came in and grazed to the quick, until the following spring, — and then, of course, the same process was begun again ; and so it went on until I took possession. This is a brief history of the farm as it was when I took it. As soon as possible, I adopted the " five-field system," I began on the first field by applying thirty-five bushels lime per acre, and then putting the land immediately in corn. The folloAving spring I sowed peas on corn land, (not following the practice of my neighbours, of putting corn land in wheat.) In the fall I fallowed the peas, and sowed wheat. The following spring I sowed clover ; and the next fall twelve mouths the clover fal- low was sowed in wheat. The abov^ represents my system and my ro- tation of crops ; and I am clearly of the opin- ion, from all I can learn from books and ex- perience, that land will improve faster under the above treatment than any other ; and the farmer will, of course, be better remunerated. Some will say, what will you do about graz- ing ? Well, a man must put off that thing un- til he gets his land in condition to bring grasses ; and then have a small number of stock — but GOOD stock. I Avould advise a standing pasture, and then I believe the sys- tem would be near perfection. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 743 Mr. Editor, I am satisfied thei-e are more blunders committed by farmers than by any other class of people in the world. Farmers generally work in the dark ; they apply a ma- nure, and they don't know whether or not the land needs what they are applying. We will take, for instance, a grain of corn, and, accord- ing to Prof. Norton, (good authority,) its con- stituents are 49 per cent, of phosphoric acid, 17 per cent, of magnesia, and 23 per cent, of potash, lime, soda, &c., making up the 100. Wheat has 47 per cent, of phosphoric acid. 15 per cent, of magnesia, 29 per cent, of potash and lime, 29 per cent, of silica, sulphuric acid, &c., making up the 100. Now, in improving land, ought we not to have an eye to this ? If we want to make a crop of wheat or corn, should we not have re gard to what kind of manura we use ? We see from the above analysis, that it requires a very large per cent, of phosphoric acid, mag- nesia, and potash to make a crop of wheat , therefore we should endeavour to apply these principles to the soil in some shape or other. Now, let us see what is Prof. Norton's anal- ysis of the pea. Nearly 3 per cent, of lime, nearly 8 per cent, of magnesia, 38.34 per cent. of phosphoric acid, 27 per cent, of potash, and soda 17 per cent. ; silica, iron, &c., making up the 100. How can some of my countymen oppose the pea-fiillow as an improver, when by it you are giving the soil the very thing it wants to make a crop? My brother this year raised twenty one and a half bushels of wheat to one seeded on pea- fallow ; and I think I raised quite as much, but did not measure mine. I must conclude, wishing you and my brother farmers success. C. S. Garrett. Close Breeding. There has long been a controversy among men on the subject of close breeding, some contending that it is very injurious, others that it is not seriously objectionable. By close breeding is meant, breeding by animals of near affinity of blood. It is contended by the objectors to -close breeding, that fowls, sheep, hogs, and cattle that are bred for a long series of years in the same flocks, without the addition of any alien blood from other flocks or breeds, surely degenerate and become less useful. And this is given to account for the unserviceable fowls, the gaunt hogs, the weakly sheep and the scrawny cattle that are so frequently found on old fiirms, among old- style farmers. Those who see no objections to close breeding cite many examples of it to sustain their views, such as Flying Childers, a horse of unrivalled beauty and speed, known to have been closely bred ; the Darl)y Game fowl, bred at Knowsley Park for several hundred, with flour. years without change from the blood of the original stock ; the pair of wild geese brought by Col. Jaques, of Sommerville, Miss., from Canada, in 1818, whose stock at this time, bred in a direct line from the original pair without the addition of any strain of new blood, is not the least degenerated. But notwithstanding these isolated cases of the seeming safety of close breeding, we must give our testimony strongly against it. W^e cannot but feel that close breeding among human creatures or an- imals is generally attended with bad effects. It is true, cousins may sometimes marry with safety to their offspring, but it is very common that bad results are known to follow. We have seen nor read of no great man or woman the off- spring of cousins. And we believe that the children of cousins are generally inferior to their parents. The same physiological laws are in action in both human and animal crea- tures. It is a law we believe of human physi- ology that similarity of temperament is un- favourable to the offspring, whilst dissimilarity of temperament is favourable. Now, it is a general rule that similarity of temperament obtains in families. This will be especially the case if families should breed in-and-in for several generations. Even in this view of the subject it is best often to seek favourable crosses in breeding animals. It is well known that the barn-yard fowls on manyfarms are very unserviceable. It is known, too, that this is not for the want of good fair, shelter, &c. It is known, also, that in many instances these fowls have been bred-in for many years without a single fowl from any other flock being added. The inference is very plausible that close breeding has affected them unfavourably. We know a woman whose hens have for several years been very serviceable. She is the wife of an intelligent and successful farmer, I and she laughs at the mania for foreign fowls. She thinks she can show as large eggs and as many from a hen, as much profit with as little expenditure as anybody. Her plan has been for many years to breed from her best hens, to set only the largest eggs. If she sees a fowl in any neighbour's yard that is very fine, she buys it or swaps for it ; if she sees a very large egg elsewhere, she secures it if pos- sible ; thus constantly bringing new strains of promising blood. Her fowls are large, healthy, and thrifty. Being well cared for every way, they are very productive and serviceable. We believe this is the best plan to secure useful fowls. The same general principles will apply to raising all kinds of stock. — Val- ley Farmer. Earth is eaten as bread in several parts of the world. Near Moscow, a hill furnishes earth of this description, which will ferment when mixed 744 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. Arabian Horses. In Mr. William C. Prime's interesting: works^ recently published by the Messrs. Harpers, " Boat Life in Egypt," and " Tent Life in the Holy Land," frequent mention is made of the Arab horses, renowned all over the world for their beauty, docility, fleetness, power, endu- rance, and value to their masters, who live and roam upon the great deserts of the East. Mr. Prime says the Arabs prefer the mare to the horse, on account of her superior power of en- durance. They trace their genealogy by their mother, and not, as we do, by the sire. The favorite tradition is that they are descended from the five mares of the Prophet Mahommed, and that these came originally from one com- mon stock, to wit, the Kohailah. The finest breeds of horse, are to be found among the Annazee and Shaumar tribes, east and south- east of the Damascus, extending quite to the Euphrates. The value of an Arab mare is, literally, not to be estimated in gold, since no amount of money will *efi*ect the purchase of one of the pure blood. This fact arises from causes that are evident to one w^ho knows the Bedouins. In the first place, money is of no use to an Arab. He needs very little for his ordinary purposes, and more would be an incumbrance — to be buried, given away, or lost. His mare is his life ; with her he is free to travel on the desert, to fight or fly, to rob his legitimate ene- mies, and protect his friends. If he should exchange his mare for gold, he would be a fair subject for plunder, without the means of de- fence or escape, and having no home, would be at a loss to bury his treasure where it would be of practical use to him. The colour of the Arab horse varies, but is most frequently white, or light chestnut. They are not large, rarely above fourteen hands high, and while at rest, none but an experien- ced horseman would observe their points. But when in full motion they ai'e glorious animals. " A high bred mare should hide her rider be- tween her head and tail," saith the Koran, 'for the Koran is not silent on the subject of horses, and many of these animals nearly perform this duty. Mr. Prime says, it is only by accident that an Arab horse of pure blood is obtained, so that out of hundreds of horses imported into England and America as Arabian, it is not probable that until within the last year, one horse of pure blood was ever brought into either country. He mentions that he met a gentleman in various parts of Syria, who was from New Orleans, whose object in visiting the East was to obtain these animals. [This gen- tleman was probably A. K. Richards, Esq., who has imported several Arabian horses. — Eds. Bos. ,Cult.j He had, by a fortunate oc- currence, obtained one mare, a noble animal ; and when last heard from, was about to go down among the Annazee to look for others. The inferior horses, not of high blood, are al- ways for sale, and bring prices, in the desert, varying from ^150 to $750. There is but lit- tle Arab blood in any horses out of the Ara- bian country. The attachment of the Bedouin to his mare, Mr. Prime observes, is not that afi^ection which has been so frequently the subject of poetry and prose. On the contrary, there is no sort of affection existing on the side of the man, and the beast receives only just as much care and attention as will ensure her against illness and death. Seldom covered and never housed, it is often a subject of the utmost astonish- ment that the Arab horses do not perish from exposure. But for their incredible powers of endurance, they would undoubtedly do so. After a long day's journey, or a sharp ride of hours over precipitous paths, without food or water on the way or halt, the horse is left standing in the air, the saddle is not removed, being a substitute for clothing, as well as a preservative against sharp stones, if she rolls, and while the rider lies under the shelter of his black tent, or on the ground, wrapped in his boornose, the steed shivers in the desert starlight ; but she is no less ready for the road in the morning. — Transcripl. "Big Head May be cured with very little frouble. A horse with the big head becomes stifi" all over, and the large muscles leading from the eye to the nostril becomes perfectly rigid. Annoint those muscles well with the oil of Cedar, and sear it in with a hot iron three or four times, with an intermission of six or seven days, but rub the oil on every day. Take a pi^ce of poke root, about as large as a goose egg, put it in six quarts of water, and boil down to three quarts ; drench the horse with one pint of it every other day as long as it lasts ; fill the drenching bottle with a pint of fresh water after the poke tea has been put in it. This prescription has cured horses when they were so very stifi" that they could scarcely step over a door sill six inches high. — Valley Farmer, Vitality of Garden Seeds. Parsnip, Rhubarb, and other light, scale-like seeds, will scarcely retain their vitality for more than one year. Artichoke, Asparagus, Egg Plant, Endive, Corn Salad, Lettuce, Mustard, Parsley, Skir- rett, and Spinage seeds, will keep from three to four years. Brocoli, Cauliflower, Cabbage, Celery, Kale, Radish, Kohl Ral)i, Rape, and Turnip seed, will keep four and five years. Beet, Cucumber, Gourd, Melon, Pumpkin, Squash, Burnet, Chervil, and Sorrel, will keep five and six years without their vitality being much impaired. T. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 745 From the Richmond "South." Caution Required in Selecting^ Seeds of the Chinese Sugar Millet. Within the hxst few days I learned, from a more careful observer than myself, that there are plants growing among the Chinese Sugar Cane, or Millet, which have no^ saccharine juice, and yet are so similar that they would not be suspected to be different, without tast- ing the sap. All the crops observed to be thus intermixed are of the second year's growth, from seed supplied from the Patent Office. It may be that this intermixture, (or degeneracy?) is not general. But every cultivator will do well to examine his plants saved for seed, and to be sure that all such non-saccharine plants are excluded. The spurious may readily be known by tasting the sap of the green stalk. Even without this surest test, one who lias well compared the two plants may distinguish them by the eye. The sweet or true plant has its seeds covered by a close-fitting sheath or envelope, which, when ripe, is perfectly black and glossy on the outside. Some of these sheaths, (but not generally,) have a fine and soft hair, less than a quarter of an inch long, extending from each. The other plants have most of the seed-covers of a brow^nish black color, not glossy, except of a few of the seeds, and with a hair about half an inch long, stand- ing out from every seed-cover. The pith is white, comparatively sapless, and without sweetness. These plants are generally the tallest and strongest, and stand erect in many cases^ after all the surrounding true canes have been prostrated by wind. The heads of the worthless plant are usually larger, fuller, and more beautiful, and hang slightly and grace- fully drooping to one side. Specimens of both plants hare been placed in the office of the State Agricultural Society. There is a rule for selecting seeds of the true cane, whether African or Chinese, which it may be well to observe, or at least to test, but which I report upon information, without any personal or experimental knowledge of the facts. From Mr. Leonard AVray, the intro- ducer of the Natal Sugar Millet, (or "im- phee,") into France and this country, I lately heard that the practice of the Kaffirs, (directed by long experience,) is to cut ofi" the heads de- signed for seed when they are barely ripe enough for the seeds to germinate. The pro- per time is when the seed is still partly in the milky state, and when the solid and harder part of each seed may be mashed between the finger and thumb. The theory is, that unripe seeds produce a growth that goes most to form sugar, and (as I infer,) the most perfect or fully ripe seeds are more productive of seeds than sugar. Late as it now is, this notice may still enable many persons to test the opinion, by saving and, next year, trying their latest seeds, which otherwise would be rejected as unripe and of no value. If this African practice is correct, and the opinion on which it is founded, the spurious Chinese Sugar Millet may be the result of suc- cessive plantings of well-ripened seeds. Either this plant is a new production, (degenerated as to sugar, but improved as to grain,) owing to some unforeseen cause, or otherwise there must have been some few seeds of this, a dif- ferent sorghum, not distinguishable among these of the true seeds of the Sugar Millet dis- tributed from the Patent Office. EDMUND RUFFIN. September 28th, 1857. For the Southern Planter. Failure of the Chinese and African Sugar Millet (Sorghum Saccharatum) to Pro- duce Sugar. Mr. Editor, — With the permission of Ex- Governor Hammond, of South Carolina, I send to you, for publication, the following extracts from two letters recently received from him. From these, in addition to all other known and recent testimony, I deem that there can remain no longer any doubt of the impossibility of ob- taining sugar, to any useful end, from the juice of either the Chinese or the African Sugar Millet. Gov. Hammond had grown these on a large scale — on more than 100 acres — em- bracing 15 or more of the African varieties. Every proper care was taken for 'the culture — and a fine crop vt^s raised. No proper ex- pense was spared for the machinery, &c., for grinding the cane and boiling the juice. The results are stated in his letters. But though (in contradiction to former gene- ral expectation, and to much prior and particu- lar evidence,) it seems that sugar cannot be produced from these plants, that conclusion, in my opinion, detracts but little from their value for this region. There is no doubt that excellent syrup may be made, even by very rude means and methods — and, by proper means, probably in profitable quantity, for general home consumption. This is enough for us. Also, the feeding value of the green plants is of much importance. Even when I formerly gave credence to the many assertions that sugar could be made, I did not then sup- pose that the practical operation could be pro- fitable here, or as cheap as to buy the sugar made from sugar cane in hot climates. I hope that numerous experiments and fiiir trial will be made of the Sugar Millet, and of all its varieties, so that the true general value, and the most productive kinds may be known. EDMUND RUFFIN. Redcliffe, S. C, Oct. 15th, 1857. My Dear Sir: ***** J gQi; jjjy new wheel made, and started my mill again on the 2nd October. 746 THE SOUT^HERN PLANTER But Mr. Wray, who M^as absent and unwell, did not commence his experiments until the 6th October. He did not try my battery, but used his little apparatus, with steam evapora- tion. He selected his canes, and had what juice he wanted, and made I don't know how many boilings during that and the next four days. The juice was good — standing several times at 10° Beaume. But neither by his patented nor any other process could he make sugar from his Imphee. He has brought up some syrup which he thinks will grain yet. I don't think it will, or that sugar can be made from either the Imphee or the Chinese cane. I dare say both of them have a small portion of cane sugar in them, but I fear not enough to be worth looking after. If the saccharine matter indicated by 10° Beaume were cane sugar, this plant would be far superior to the sugar cane. But I give it up for sugar pur- poses. The Imphee, as you saw, is a larger growth than the Chinese cane, but from all that I have seen and heard, I would [not?] like to say that any variety of it is superior to the Chinese. With regard to the seed, I am now fully satisfied that all the varieties of the Millet readily Jiyhridize ; and I think also that the Kaffirs were correct in telling Mr. Wray that if the 7'ipe seed were long planted the cane would lose all its saccharine qualities, and take rank with Dourah corn. I found so large a proportion of worthless cane — with the largest stalks and finest heads generally — that I cannot have any part in selling the seed. I have gathered the seed of the few assorted canes that seemed purest, and placed them at Mr. Wray's disposal. The remainder I am feeding to my stock. I would not be willing to guarantee that a single seed will be pure — but if Mr. Wray will make, as he says he will, a careful selection, head by head, they will probably be as pure as most of the Chinese. It so happens that these assorted seed are per- haps his best varieties. They are the Neeazana, Booiana,|Koombana, Boomvwana,and Enyama. These and the E-engha, and Slagoova, are so different in appearance from Dourah corn, that Mr. AVray, in assorting his seed last spring at my request, was more successful in selecting them than the others — but they were all near enough to the Dourah, or degenerate Imphee, for some hybridizing to take place, and there- fore I guarantee none. I shall plant all the varieties next year, (by no means omitting Chinese,) but not so largely as this year. I shall only aim to make what syrup I want for my own use, and to test more carefully the forage value of the plant. I shall plant upland that is good for twenty bushels of corn, in five feet drills, and expect 100 to 150 gallons of syrup per acre. Unless alcohol may be made ect)nomically out of this plant, or it proves better for forage than I now think, it will produce nothing /or sale — and syrup can be made from it for use only when there is no other pressing plantation work — or at some distance from the great highways of commerce. -^ -5^ * * -s^- * __J. H. HAMMOND. " Oct. 23, 1857. * * * * -x- "I find the cane has greatly deteriorated in the last ten days, in all respects, from over-ripene s. Beaume's saccharometer stands at 0° both in the cane juice and water. Yet the cane juice makes good syrup, at the rate of 1 for 8 of juice. In the juice of cane cut and shocked a month ago, Beaume's sac- charometer disappeared entirely. Yet this made fair syrup. My conclusion is, that how- ever valuable Beaume's saccharometer may be as a test for sugar cane juice, it is utterly worthless as a test for any variety of this Millet Sugar Cane. The Imphee juice, at 10° Beaume, and at half an inch below Beaume, is almost equally good as far as syrup is con- cerned ; and also as to sugar, as neither degree produces that. * -h- * "J. H. HAMMOND." Eemedy for Mange in Hogs. To ilie Editor of the Southern Planter : In answer to your inquiry, whether arsenic is a remedy for mange in swine ? I have never tried it; but am perfectly satisfied that mange in swine is always produced by local and external causes, such as wet and rotten beds, hogs sleeping in hot stable manure, &c., &c. Changing the range of the bogs, and re- moving the local causes, is usually sujficient, with some flour of swlphur mixed in corn meal, or salt given occasionally in dry weather, in March or April ; but when it does not readily yield or disappear with this treatment an external application of two parts of tar to one of fish oil, and a large table-spoonful of the flour of sulphur, well mixed and well rubed on with a corn cob. One application will al- ways be sufficient. This application will de- stroy all vermin on the hogs, but where it is applied for that alone, a less quantity of tar and more fish oil is best. ,.;. If you think this worth an insertion, it is at your service. JNO. B. COLES. Kelson Co-, Octobe r 22nd, 1857. From the Germantown Telegraph. Feeding Stock— Cutting Fodder. 3fr. Editor, — It has ever been a fault in the husbandry of this country, that we have per- formed most of its details more by guess than by rules deducted from experience; and especi- ally has this been the case in relation to feeding our domestic animals. If you ask yonder aged firmer how much hay his cows consume dur- ing the winter, per head, he will probably an- swer that, uijless the season is unusually pro- tracted an 1 severe, he finds one and a half tons to be amply sufficient, without either grain or roots, and fed without cutting ; but his neigh- THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 747 )();- will assure you that he never has been able carry a cow through, in good condition, with e:s than three tons — making a difference of )iie-half. Why this wide discrepancy? You [uestion another as to the quantity of grain he iillows per acre, in sowing, — say, for instance, pats. He will tell you that on good soil, well n-epared, andM^hich was the year previous in ndian corn or potatoes, measured in the hill or ow, he usually allows one and a half bushels, nd that, he thinks, amply sufficient for any oil; but his neighbor, over the fence, or across, ows. three. Some plant four, some five, some ix quarts of Indian corn to the acre; and in potato culture, the usage varies still more jvidely. Each is certain that his method is the ight one, and will not be satisfied that it is iot when he sees his neighbors harvesting dou- ilc the quantity of produce in consequence of lursuing a course diametrically opposite to his |wn. There must be something wrong some- It^here ; all cannot be right, if it were, all Irould esperience the same results. The Wool Grower, not long since, published I, statement in regard to cutting fodder for cows, a which it is asserted that three cows were lept o}i,e hundred and sixty days on a daily al- nvance for each cow of SJ ft)S. of hay, and 9 uarts of shorts, and that each continued to ive twelve quarts of milk per day for the ,'hule period, and adds that "they came out 1 the spring, good beef.'' Now many allow ivicG the amount of food here indicated, and i^me even more than that. Why, I repeat, do TQ encounter such wide discrepancies — such mphatic contradictions in practice and its re- ults ? If we allow — as we no doubt should — aat there is often a very great diff'erence in le nutritive value of the food, still it does not leet the exigency of the case, by any means, jr a difference of two-thirds would often be squired to do this, and such a difference can ever in reality exist. In the case of oats, and tlier field products, much may, and doubtless oes, depend upon circumstances ; yet not Qough to render so wide a diversity of practice ecessary. The fact is we are, as we ever ave been, guessing our way along — a very oor method, indeed, and one that can scarcely e expected to produce, in the aggregate, how- \'ev successful it may occasionally prove, other- ise than the most disastrous results. Exact nowledge is no less necessary on the farm lan on the ocean, in the counting room or the orkshop, if we would reap the largest profits •om our labors. And this knowledge, we trust, ; ahead}'- beginning to dawn upon us, and if e are only true to ourselves, " the good time )ming," of which we hear so much, cannot be ir away. We must endeavor as far as in us es, to " magnify our calling,'' and to keep our ves open to the many new things which are resented for our contemplation. AGKICOLA. . Loioer DuUin, Nov. 15, 1856. From the British Farmers' Magazine. Top-Dressing^s- -Their Application and Effect. "Nitrate of soda is the only artificial manure which can safely be used as a top dressing at any time; the nitrogen, being in the form of nitric acid, is not volatile, as it is when in the form of ammonia. When guano or sulphate of ammonia is used for a top dressing, it should be sifted very fine, and sown before or during rain." So Mr. Lawes advises us in " Rendle's Directory," and, undoubtedly, it is sound wisdom to follow his teaching in such a matter. But observe the theory upon which the recommendation, or rather, in- struction is founded ; It is, that the nitro- gen, whether in the acid or alkaline com- bination, benefits plants through the soil, and that the portion of ammonia which ex- hales into the air around the stems and leaves of vegetation is wasted. By chang- ing our theory, we get a very different rule for practice. Thus, Prof. Buckman, in his " Essay on the Roots of the Wheat-plant," inclines to the use of such top dressings for wheat as are rich in ammonia, and of such a consistency, or in such a condition, as to be capable of giving off this gas equally and abundantly. And the theory upon which he builds (though cautiously and with due diffidence) is, that the stem and flag of the plant respire ammonia. Hence, one reason why "the surrounding the wheat-plant with ammoniacal manures at the season of its most vigorous grow^th may be productive of benefit." "While we look over a wheat-field," he says, "on a fine sunny day as summer ad- vances, and see the dazzling dancing in the atmosphere a few feet over the plants, which is caused by the evaporation of wa- ter through the cellular system of the leaves, we may know that the crop is pumping up its food from the soil ; but as this is just the time for liberating the am- monia also from the soil, there is, I think, reason to believe that the atmosphere charged with carbonic acid and ammonia is, at this very time, being eagerly respired. . . . . Wheat in its growing history is completed in a few weeks, although the production of strong plants for growth oc- cupies, in the winter varieties, many months : and it is just as the new growth commences that ammoniacal manures are 748 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. * =: SO beneficial, as the nitrogen therefrom has to be eliminated in a short time ; and as the leaves are small and upright, if we suppose ammonia to be respired by them, they will require a quicker and more con- stant and greater discharge of this gas, commencing, too, at a certain time, than is the case with a plant with large leaves which grow without any serious interrup- tion from their birth, and whose under- surface is the only inhaling one, and which is so arranged as to insure the due but more gradual and more certain performance of this office without loss." Let us now turn to other authorities on the subject. Mr. Haxton, who gives the following directions for top-dressing wheat: "Guano is more liable to be affected in its results by the weather at the time of sow- ing, than nitrate of soda; and, indeed, its success depends, in a great measure, on being well washed into the soil when ap- plied as a top dressing. Nitrate of soda, on the other hand, is not volatile, and is so easily dissolved that the dew melts it sufficiently for the plants to suck it in both by leaf and root. By mixing the tw'o to- gether, the result, according to the chemi- cal law of catalysis will, in all likelihood, be that the guano is rendered more soluble w^hile the solubility of the nitrate is in some measure lessened ; and even laying aside the operation of the law, the mere affinity of the nitrate for moisture would, of itself, tend also to dissolve any minute particles of the guano in contact with it, and both these pass into the circulation of the plant, even, although little or no rain should fall." Guano is adapted for early dressing, and nitrate of soda for later dressing in spring; the former being less soluble, less active to begin with than the latter, and lasting longer in its efiect. If it is found neces- sary to top dress wheat late in spring, the manure should be as soluble as possible, and the nitrate surpasses all artificials in this property. Mr Hannam tells us (in the same Cy- clopcedia,)- that in all manures which are designed for application in autumn and winter, the ammonia or nitrogen should be supplied in a form that will, as far as pos- sible, prevent it operating too quickly ; "for example, it would be preferable to supply the nitrogen in union with other or- ganic matter, as in rape-dust, bones, wool- en rags partlially decomposed, blood, gu- \r, sat bvia jnc letlii 3me fsaso lace ie ano mixed with charcoal and gypsum, 8s rather than in the shape of salts of amn nia, which are so speedily soluble." . winter dressings of artificial manure sho^ be mixed in the soil. All mixtures which the ainmonia exists in a saline foi should be applied as a spring top dressi upon the crop, if possible, in wet weath ''^^' All mixtures containing organic mat rich in ammonia, as rape-dust or guano applied with spring crops, should be h ' rowed in immediately ; and if applied a top dressing, should be used only in \^ weather. Spring top dressings, containi ''^'J organic matter, should be applied earl than those purely saline. These rules are based upon a considei'"'| tion of the degrees of solubility and la ing or evanescent action of different re nures, and also of the requirements of v rious crops at different stages of thi growth: the inference for practice bei ■ the same as that arising from a considei tion of the volatility of the manures, wh accepting the theory that the ammonia nitrogen feeds plants by their roots. Yet the practice of applying highly vc atile ammoniacal manure upon the surfa of land upon which a crop is growin which may follow as a deduction from tl theory that plants inhale ammonia by the leaf and green stem is not without its sha of reasonableness. If the vertical stall and branching flags of wheat can arre' this gaseous nutriment from the air, it m< be worth while to load the atmosphe immediately around them with this usef element, by placing upon the soil, and h neath the overshadowing mass of leafag substances which will gradually dissipate into the air. As an illustration, we ma take Prof. Buckman's allusion to one of th , uses of farm-yard-raanure to the turni j crop: "It is buried in the soil and gradi ' ally decomposes, at first slowly, but faste the longer it is exposed to atmospheric an chemical actions, giving its inorganic ma' ters in solution through the roots, whih ammonia is given off into the atmosphere indeed so quickly in some of the warr close days of the early part of September that every farmer knows when this valua ble crop is growing fast by the peculia odour" that he is aware of, in passing a tur nip-field." Of course, as a general rule, we wouh advise the farmer to bury his manure ii THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 749 e safe-keeping of his soil, or if applied a top dressing, choose cool weather, to viate waste by evaporation, and showers wush in the soluble riches ; but we are no means sure that these are the only thods that should be pursued. For me purposes, and in particular stages of e growth of some crops, it may be quite asonable and profitable to manure the at- isphere as well as the soil ; that is, to [^,ace rather volatile ammoniacal manure derneath the foliage of a crop, as well mix it into the land. Considerable loss ere would evidently be ; but when arti- ial manures are ploughed or harrowed , there is also a large proportion carried jjgjit of reach of the roots of the plants, locked up in a form useless for their re- tirements. And it shoukl be borne in ind that the kind of top dressing referred is not at all of the prodigal and absurd aracter of the scheme by which the rmer was to generate immense quantities carbonic acid gas and ammonia at his rmstead, dissipating them into the at- osphere, so that the winds highly charged i'ertilizino- ele- ith these invio-oratino; and ents might amazingly force on the vege- tion of his farm ! nitl Bones : and how to Dissolve them. We have frequently referred to the value unhurried bones as a fertilizer. That )ne dust is superior to any and every her manure purchased from outside of , e farm, we are so strongly convinced by 1^ |. [perience and observation, as well as by "f, eory, that we buy no other fertilizer, and afag Date ;iii3 cfti turn /radi ■fasti icao ;iTia wlii 1-iere wai'i ci atul ffool irei obably shall not, so long as this article n be obtained at anything like a reason- le price. The chief reason for our not riting more on this topic is, that the sup- y is so limited that it hardly seems worth hile to wake up an interest in the matter, create a demand for what cannot be sup- ied. The present year we had about one- urth of an acre planted with a great va- ety of garden stuff, using bone sawings, btained from a bone comb and knife-han- e manufactory,) in the hill or drill with ery variety of seed. This was put on thus the rate of about five barrels to the acre. '^e held in reserve the sink-slop vault, scribed on page 157, (July No.,) expect- g to draw largely from it. But the damp ason has left no demand for watering, and as for additional fertilizing material, why everything has grown so rank and fruitful that a pruning knife or hoe has been constantly needed to thin out orlop off the superabundance. We should hard- ly be believed, did we write down what beets, turnips, tomatoes, corn, asparagus, kohl rabi, cauliflower, strawberry plants, rhubarb, &c., &c., &c., we have raised. — We attribute these chiefly to the bone dust, so finely pulverized that it was all ready at once to nourish ever3'lhing it came in contact with. An assistant at our elbow says, " that two to four feet trenching must come in for a share of the credit." — Well, allow for that, and the bone dust still did the thing. Please turn to the ar- ticles on manure, in the first numbers of this volume, and look over the reasons there given why bones are so valuable to plants. We said bones are scarce, and so they are, comparatively, yet a vast amount could be gathered in the country were there a general, thorough " bone-hunt" instituted upon every farm. Give the boys ten cents a bushel for all they will collect for you, and you will soon find a cart load. There are plenty of vagabond boys in most neighborhoods who might be engaged in such a job, with profit to the community as well as to themselves and friends. But the great difficulty is in using bones. They should not be burned, for that des- troys at least seven-eights of their real value. They should not be dissolved in ashes, for that is almost as bad as burning. They are best when ground io powder — not merely crushed into small pieces. In this form (pow^der) they can be put directly into the hill, or dri'l, with seed, or around and in contact with growing plants, with- out the least danger of injuring them. — They furnish most excellent nutriment and stimulant to all sorts of growing crops and vegetables, no matter what the kind or variety. The greatest difficulty lies in getting them ground, since bone- mills are scarce, and few of those in operation grind the bones finely enough for immediate benefit. There are few farmers in the older States who could not afford to haul bones 20 or 30 miles to have them ground, but even this is impracticable in most cases. We do not know of twenty bone-mills in the country. Some get bones pulverized in 750 THE SOUTHERN PLANTEE. a mill used for One of these is oetter man no does not grind finely enough. ■rinding tanner's bark. — better than no mill, but DISSOLVING BONES IN ACID. A very good fertilizer may be prepared by dissolving bones in sulpliuric acid, com- monly-> called "oil of vitriol." It is a cheap liquid, nearly twice as heavy as wa- ter, and costing, by wholesale, at the man- ufacturers, about two cents per pound for a good article. At a distance the price is higher, proportioned to the expense of transportation. It is put up in large glass bottles, called carboys, each holding from 120 to 160 pounds. The carboys are cov- ered with boxes or basket work to protect them, and cost from $1 to $1 50. Sul- phuric acid is a very caustic burning fluid, which will destroy the flesh or clothing wherever a drop touches. On this ac- count great care is necessary in handling it. We knew of one severe accident from setting down the carboy too suddenly after pouring out — a portion of the liquid flew up into the operator's face. There need be no difficulty with proper care. We have used very many tons of it for sundry purposes, and have never suffered in the least. If by chance any should fly upon the skin or clothing, an immediate apj^li- cation of water should be made. Ammo- nia (" hartshorn") applied afterwards, will generally restoie colors changed by it. Old garments should be worn in oper- ating with it. To dissolve bones in sulphuric acid, choose any tight barrel or cask, — an old meat barrel will do, wooden hoops are best — and put into it, by measure, two to three times as much water as you have acid to be used. Into the water in the barrel pour the acid slowly. If all be put in too quickly a great heat will be the result. The bones, broken or unbroken, can now be packed into this liquid until they rise some distance above it. Cover the barrel closely with a board, or wooden cover. — The contents should be stirred with a stick, and the bones pushed down from time to time. As they gradually disappear, more bones may be added, so as to keep the liquid filled with them. In the course of four to eight weeks the acid will cease to act. If the dissolving is required to be done more speedily, the bones should be broken into small pieces with a hammer, before adding them to the acid. Some persons havj tried to dissolve bones, and become disl couraged because the operation was nc completed in a day. For large whol bones two months is often required for th complete solution, and it is better not t try to dissolve the whole. Keep the li quid filled with them, and the portions un dissolved can be used in the next batch. To use the liquid, pour it off from th remaining bones and mix it with a larg quantity of dried muck, or dry swamp mu( pulverized. Almost any kind of earth except sand, will answer to dry the liqui with, and sand might be used. The mor dark colored vegetable matter it contain the better. A cart load of earth to ; bushel of bones, dissolved, will be bette than a smaller quantity, though one-fourl of this amount may be used. Mix th mass thoroughly together and work it fim with a shovel, hoe and rake. This ma; be done on a floor, or on a hard groun^ surface. W^hen finished, pack away intt barrels or boxes to be used weeks o months afterwards. American Agriculturist. Cattle Feeding in the Western States. Our Eastern beef markets are now s( dependent on their main supplies from th( States west of New York and the Allega nies, and for all future time must so re main, that it becomes a grave question fo the Cattle feeders of those States, to in quire into the fact, whether they canno produce better beef, and at cheaper rate; than they now do, and consequently at j greater profit than the present loose meth od of feeding will admit. An examinatior into this matter within the last few year; convinces me that very little of cer/am/} is known, among many of the Westerr Cattle feeders, as to the comparative pvo6.t or loss in their business. In my visit to Ohic and other W^estern States, I have had fre- quent conversations with sundry individ- uals who follow this important branch ol Ap^riculture as to the details of their oper- ations, and the cost of producing flesh on their beef Cattle. In order to get at the question, I will place it thus : — A feeder buys a drove of steers at the age of three years past — as that is the usual age of good steers, grade Shorthorns, or Devons — bought by them THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 751 for this purpose. I do not take into myj calculation 'scrubs,' or ' Co|nmon Cattle, as they are universally admitted to be be- 3'ond the rule of ages with the others, and" must grow to four, five, or six years old, before they can be profitably fed for mar- ket, and give beef of but inferior quality, after all. This drove of steers is purchased at any time during the sunnmer, say pre- vious to the first of October, m^gooA grass condition, and ready for corn feeding by that time. They are then put into the ' feed lots, 'and fed until fit for market, or until the price of beef warrants their sale, •which may, according to their condition when put up, be from December, until the next April, or May. The usual manner of corn feeding, is so well understood at the West — viz : corn in the stalk and husk, out of doors, and without shelter — that further remark on that head need not be made. In reply to any questions made indis- criminately to Ohioans, Kentuckians, In- dianians and Jllinoisans — for the sreat feeders are in those States chiefly — and to the most intelligent of them, their answers have severally varied for four months feed- ing, say from October to February, from fif- ty, to sixty, seventy five, or eighty bush- els of corn per head, reduced to shelled measure. Others have answered, that it takes about an acre of corn to feed a bul- lock for market, with out statitig what ' one acre' of corn is, but calling it fifty to sev- enty-five bushels, on the 'bottom,' or oth- er of their best lands. Now, this is the report of intelligent men, who understand their business, and have got rich by it and are supposed to know what they are about. And how vague it is ! — what certainty is'there about all this supposition,' or ' reckoning,' or ' guessing,' if they were Yanl<:ees. But if like the ' Yankee,' or the ' Yorker,' it costs him thirty, to fifty cents a bushel, to grow his corn, would not the Western feeder 1^ know how many bushels of corn, with plen- ty of ' good English hay,' or corn fodder, it takes to feed his bullock, and of course whether he can make, or lose by the busi- ness } Our Jforihern feeders never feed whole grain, for they cannot afford it. A part of the Cattle business of the West has undergone an almost entire rev- olution within the last five years, through the transportation of their stock to market in ^ ittie lega ofoi oiii' iDiiO rate 'at! lifth' atioei year itti] stern liil Oliio IIVI clioi oper •Soil on the rail roads. And here rail roads have produced the same revolution in the value of their corn crop, by the facilities of getting to market, and increased prices they give them, but as yet, hardly so well appreciated by the farmers, as in the pri- ces they get for their Cattle. In many places M^here corn, a few years ago, was worth ten cents a bushel, it is now worth thirty cents, because a rail road pen- etrates their vicinity, and so in proportion, more or less, as they are near, or distant. These increased prices are every year growing more general, because rail roads are penetrating, and will continue to pen- etrate the country wherever people live and make crops to carry away. It there- fore becomes the Cattle feeder to begin to count the cost of his feed, and conseqtient- ly to ascertain wheiher he cannot econo- mize in its expense, so as to maintain his business at an equal profit in the face of such increased cost, as he has heretofore done, for corn, with the facilities for its production, will ])robably, for our time, at least, be the great beef making staple of the West. A consideration of this, will be the subject of another communication. Ohio Farmer. ive t-as (lie Principles of Agriculture. A paper was recently read before the Farmers' Club of New York, by Dr. R. L. Waterbury, which seems 1o have conflic- ted with the views of the savans of that illustrious body, consisting of Messrs. Mapes, Waring, et id omne genus, who un- dertook to answer it. On reading the report of their remarks. Dr. W. found it necessary io disclaim the views attributed to him, and in doing so givgs the purport of the paper read by hifn as follows : — That without the use of any foreign fer- tilizer, produce enough may be sold off from a farm in most portions of the Union to pay the expense of conducting it; and 3'et, by judicious management, the soil may be annually improving in condition ; That this can be effected easiest in those portions of the Union where .the value of land is the least, and where, consequent- ly, the farms are largest, and the longest rotations of crops can be profitably resor- ted to; That no system of farming is deserving of our attention that does not recognize necessity of farm exports ; 752 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER That a State may, to some .extent, export a«^ricultural products, without di- minishing in capability to produce them ; That an inspection of the census re- turns of the United States and of the State of New York, shows that the amount of crops of this State has increased for the last ten years much faster than the area of improved lands in the State, and that consequently the lands cannot be " running out ;" That the processes of Nature, to which we owe the present alluvia condition of the surface of the earth, are still at work, and that land left entirely to itself will, by the action of water and vegetation, im- prove in fertility ; That the process of tillage alone may be made to accelerate this improvement, and help to provide for the necessary waste of marketing; That rain penetrates the porous parts of the earth's surface, and percolates through them until it comes impervious strata, and that it runs along this impervious strata until it finds egress as springs, and that spring water is impregnated, more or less, with saline substances ; That the evaporation which is continu- ally going on of the water from the sur- face of the earth, leaves the saline matt^^r in the surfact\ as but a small part of the water that falls as rain ever reaches the sea ; That the mineral springs of Saratoga and other localities, are exaggerated illustra- tions of this process, and the more fertile conditions of valleys is to be in part re- ferred to the same cause ; That, in the present thinly populated condition of our Continent, the true pur- pose of America agri( ulture at this time is to wisely direct these natural forces, rather than apply pinches of guano and tea-spoonfuls of super- i>hosphates to indi- vidual plants, although such applications may pay on some farms, and probably do pay well on all market gardening opera- tions. The objection to soil analysis is this : — The difference between the early soil of Virginia and the same soil in its present condition, has been made by loss of 1,200 lbs, of alkalies to the acre. But this 1,200 lbs. forms not quite three ten-thousandths (000.27) of the soil to the depth of a foot. The idea that any amount o( variation within such infinitesimal limits can be measured and defined by quantitative anal- ysis, is absurd. Top-dressing of the same amount would, in the same way, fail of be- ing detected. That directions given by agricultural chemists have led to successful results, is undoubtedly true ; but these directions have been founded rather upon experi- ence and observation than upon chemical analysis. — JYew England Farmer. Wintering Milch Cows. A word on feeding cows for milk and. but- ter. I have experimented for the last five years upon different kinds of dry feed — corn, barley, oat and buckwheat meal, fine and coarse mid- dlings, shorts and bran, wet — with cut straw, hay and stalks. My cows give more milk and make more butter, from corn meal, wet, with cut straw, than any other food, by from one- third to one-half. It will not do to feed hay or stalks at the same time — it fattens the cows too much. Try four quarts of meal and one bush- el of straw per day — that is, two quarts morn- ing and night — the straw at noon ; they will gain in flesh at that. It is true, as you have retnariied, that "corn meal is bad for milk," if if it is fed with hay or stalks. Two quarts fed with hay or stalks is first rate for other cattle, or the same amount on straw is cheaper and better than hay and stalks without the meal. — Stabling is indispensable in the above feeding, S. B. Barnard. Livonia, N. Y. \^Rural New Yorker. Fattening" Turkeys. The alimentary properties of charcoal are very great ; indeed, it has been asserted that domestic fowls may be fattened on it without any other food, and that, too, in a shorter time on tlie most nutritious grains. In an experi- ment made to test the value of the article, four turkeys Avere taken and confined in a pen, and fed on meal, boiled potatoes and oats. Four others of the same brood were also confined at the same time, in another pen, and fed daily on the same articles, but M'ith one pint of very finely pulverized charcoal mixed with their meal and potatoes; they had also a plentiful supply of broken charcoal in their pen. The ei^ht were killed on the same day, and there was a difference of one and a half pounds each in favor of the fowls which had been supplied with the charcoal, they being much the fatter, and the meat greatly superior in point of ten- derness and flavor. This would appear to es- tablish, beyond a doubt, the benefit of charcoal for fattening purposes. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 753 lortifultnral iFpartmrai E. G. EGCJEtlNG, Contributor. , Work for the Winter in Garden and Orcliard. The Winter days are come, and our readers may perchance be thinking that there is noth- ing to be done in the Flower Garden, Kitchen Garden, or Orchard, until the Winter solstice has passed away, and the sweet breathing Spring wiikens all nature into life and loveli- ness again. A very natural idea certainly, in view of the biting frosts, the howling winds, the leafless trees, the congealing streams, and the bleak, drear aspect of the season, but an erroneous idea, nevertheless, as we hope to convince all those who honour us by a perusal of our lucubrations. This is the time emphat- ically for work, which greatly needs to be done, and which neglected now, will likely go undone altogether. As the Spring and Sum- mer draw near, there is so much requiring im- mediate attention upon the fiirin, that Madam's flowers, and vegetables, and fruit trees, will probably be overlooked entirely, or if they re- ceive any degree of attention, it will be in scanty measure, grudgingly bestowed. Now there is comparatively little work for the farm hands, and whatever is done in the garden or orc'nard, will be so much gained in the ensuing season, and will be that much less to be done at the busier period of the year. To promote as far as we may the convenience and profit of all concerned, we purpose in this, and the en- suing number of the Planter, to suggest cer- tain things which ought to be done now, with a view to the permanent improvement of the garden and the orchard. And first, we will walk in to the Flower Garden and see what work there is which can be performed during the winter. If there be any flowers, which are tender and likely to be injured by the frost, the first thing of course is to give them sufficient pro- tection. Dahlias, to instance, need to have the stalks cutoff, and the roots taken up, laid in the sun to dry, and then put away like pota- » toes, in some place where they will not freeze. The same remark applies to tiger lilies, gladi- 48 olas, and other roots, which will occur to the reader. If the present winter should prove severe as the two preceding ones have been, it will be well to protect the roses with a few brush, or leaves scattered about the roots, and so of other out-door plants, which severe cold is likely to injure. About the ground there will be probably dead stalks, all of which should be cut dowa and taken away, and the entire surface should receive a top dressing of manure, put on two or three inches thick. If Hyacinths, Tulips, Jonquils, and the like have not been planted earlier, plant them now, breaking the ground deep, and making it very rich, and putting the bulbs about five inches below the surface, and putting them in a bed to themselves. After planting, cover the en- tire bed with manure, or litter of some kind. Honey-suckles put out very early and should be taken in hand sometime in December or January, and all dead wood and leaves cleared away from the trellises, and the vines re-ar- ranged and trained. If the trellises are old and decayed, remove them and supply better, and where poles have been used, supply such as may be wanting. Layers which have been made from roses and other plants, may be taken up now and removed to the place where they are destined to stand. i\.s to the mode of planting layers, see former articles on the R ise, &c. This is a good tim6 for making and repairing gravel walks, especially as in your walks in the garden at this season, you are very likely to detect how aud where your ways need mend- ing. When you observe a defect in the walk, don't pass it by with the thought that in the Spring you will have it repaired, but haul the gravel at once, and have the work d(me while there is opportunity, and while the need is ap- par3iit. And so if you hav* iieglected the making of walks during the Summer, neglect it no longer. In every well arranged, well reguhited flower garden there ought to be some nook, or corner, appropriated to a compost pile, ami to this spot you should haul during this season, oak leaves, woods earth, and the like materials, for com- post, so that in the coming Spring and Sum- mer, you will have all the materials for your 754 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER operations at hand. Throw it all into a neat, compact heap, and there let it be until it is wanted for use. The Lawn should come in for a share of attention now. The moles will be moving about and turning up sod, and doing great damage, unless they are watched closely. To guard against their mischiefs, roll the lawn frequently with a heavy roller, and rake the whole surface nicely to remove all dead grass, leaves, and litter of every kind, and after such raking, give the lawn a top dressing of manure. The snows and rains of winter will dissolve this, and take it down to the roots of the grass. the roots. Near the trees stir the ground with a fork or hoe, working the manure into the soil. Where young plantations have been made this fall, the trees ought to be properly staked, and fastened securely to them, so as to prevent the winds from disturbing the roots. For want of this simple precaution, young fruit trees oflen fail to grow, and then the nursery- man is anathematized for a result which has been brought about by the stupidity and care- lessness of the cultivator. The Kitchen Garden must by no means be neglected. We- shall find there probably a few cabbages, parsnips, carrots, salsify, turnips, feeding and protecting it, and preparing the | ^uta-bagas, beets, &c., &c. These our first way for a vigorous and beautiful growth nest, care will be to take up and put away carefully, seas,)n. If there are any bare spots in the | guarding them as much as maybe from the lawn, let them be re-sown with grass seed now, action of the frost. After having done this, cover the whole garden with good manure, and if it can be done spade it in deep. We say use the spade, because the plough ought never to go into the garden at all. Better have a small one, to be well cultivated with spade and hoe, than a large one, to be run over by the plough every year. If there are wet, marshy places about the garden, this is the time for making ditches and drains, and as our farmers almost -invariably put the garden on a slope, it is generally the case that there is need of such drainage. or re-turfed, as you please. If there are trees on the lawn, now remove all dead branches, and trim them as needed, and if other trees are needed, which are to be removed from the ad- joining wo(>(, this is the time for transplant- ing th;m. In taking up such trees do not bring mere poles, without roots, but take up trees with at least two (jr three feet of roots around, and, if possible, bring along with the roots some of the earth which adheres to them. And in selecting such trees, take those which stand in situations where they have free access to sun and air, as such always have more fibrous roots, aud thrive better when removed to exposed places, than such as are grown in thickets. From the Lawn we will pass into the Or- chard, and see what we can do there. First we will have a peep at the trees, to see if they need pruning. And here observe, if the trees are sickly, unhealthy, and rather deficient in growth ( f wood, prupe them at this season, as Winter pruning tends to augment the growth of wood ; but if the trees are healthy and suffi- ciently woody, leave the pruning for the Sum- mer, since Summer pruning tends to fruitful- ness. If there is moss or dead bark adhering to the trees, it will benefit them to scrape it off" with an old scythe blade, or other sharp instru- ment, and look about the limbs and forks of branches for insects, and destroy them. Give the whole orchard a good dressing of manure, and plough it in deep, taking care, however, iiOL to g«) too close to the* trees, so as to injure Next season we shall want a considerable quantity of poles and stakes for beans, peas, and the like, and now is the time to have them collected, and put in place ready for use, so that they may be in hand at the very moment that they are needed. If this be overlooked, we shall probably find ourselves next season so busy with field work that our beans and peas will be injured before we can spare a hand to gather poles and stakes. Look after your herbs now, and if you have none, or a few, get a supply from a neighbour, and plant them. Sage, parsley, thyme, pot magorum, leeks, chnlotts, tansey, horse-radish, and other useful and desirable herbs, if planted now, will come in very nicely on many occa- sions. ■ The strawberry beds may have now, as we directed in a former article, a covering of pine- tags, not so much to protect them from the ^ cold as to keep the fruit from contact with the THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 755 earth, and if not done, manure the plants as heretofore advised. For several vrinters past, the raspberries have been so injured, that they failed to bear the ensuing season. To guard against this, take poles, and level the canes down to the ground, laying these poles on them, and then cover them with straw, pine brush, or some- thing T)f that sort, which will protect them from the cold. In the Spring,^ remove the poles and the covering, and the canes will re- sume their erect position, and then trim them. A gentleman near Richmond, who adopted this plan last Winter, had a fine crop of rasp- berries the last season, whereas none of his neighbours, who neglected this precaution, had any. All this work is of course such as can only be done during fjiir weather, when hands can safely work out of doors ; but there are some things which can be looked after during foul and inclement weather. Among these is look- ing after the seeds which have been saved for the next year's planting and sowing. If these be left too implicitly to the care of Uncle Jack, or Uncle Bob, the chances are that when they are required for use, he will bring you a box; or barrel, in which you will discover a mouse's j nest, and perhaps a brood of young ones, but| precious few seeds thatliave not been destroyed ! by the vermin, and what remains so hopelessly mixed and mingled, that radish cannot be dis- tinguished from cabbage, or turnips from mus- tard. Overhaul your potatoes, and see if they are sound, and if there be decaying ones, remove them, and see if the mice and rats have gone into them, and made channels through which the water can pour into them. These hints must suffice for the present is- sue, though there are many others which might be mentioned and enlarged upon. These, how- ever, show that there is no need to be idle du- ring the Winter months, any more than during the Spring and Summer; nay more, that he who would reap the fruits of the earth in the season of their ripening, must be "instant in season and out of season." A well kept farm, orchard, or garden, furnishes employment for the skill, tact, and energies of the cultivator, and excellence can only be purchased at the cost of ceaseless and continual vigilance and exertion. Apples. A LETTER FROM HENRICO. An ii.telligent friend, living a few miles from the city, has forwarded to us the following let- ter, for which he will please accept our thanks, and which we publish as an interesting verifi- cation of our remarks on the topic of which the letter treats : October 28th, 1857. Dear Sir: I was much pleased, as well as instructed^ by your article in the last Planter, on " Apple Trees." In confirmation of your theory, that apple trees will bear fruit annually, I take pleasure in giving my experience f )r the past two years. Last year my orchard bore abun- dantly, as well as many trees scattered about the farm. After gathering the fruit, I felt it would be ingratitude on my part to pay nothing back for this rich yield. So I hauled and spread out in the orchard a pretty good cover- ing of manure from the stable yard. In Feb- ruary, 1857, I ploughed this in, and planted Irish potatoes. To my great surprise, (and gratification,) my trees bore nearly as many apples as last year, with a decided improve- ment in the quality of the fruit. I had al- ways been of the impression that apples were produced in alternate years — and I believe this is a fact when the trees are not regularly ma- nured and properly cultivated. As a proof — not a single one of the scattering trees before mentioned, had an apple upon it, though in more fiivorable positions for bearing. These were not manured, nor well tilled. It hag long been a matter of surprise to me that Vir- ginia fiirmers neglect the culture of this most delicious fruit; ore not only of pleasure and comfort to the household, but profitable to the husbandman. These hasty lines are at your disposal. Henrico, "Remarks. — Henrico's experience is that of every individual who has fairly tested the the- ory to which his letter refers, and our only wonder is that anybody should ever have sup- posed that apple trees would yield fruit annu- ally without manuring and appropriate culti- vation. The fcirmer who expects to raise wheat, corn, or tobacco, knows that his land requires to be fed with manure year by year, and to be thoroughly cultivated besides, and if 756 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. he failed to meet these wants of the soil, all his fields would soon become barren and un- fruitful. Why should he suppose that the or- chard would prove an exception to this law of universal application ? Certain it is, this law does apply to the orchard as well as to the wheat field or the tobacco lot, and he is not wise who forgets it, and will not only find his apple trees yielding their fruit only once in two years, but sooner or later will have an or- chard of barren, unproductive trees. We have another fact in this connection, whi. h is even more striking than the fact detailed by Hex\- Rico. Near the city is a gentleman, who has a row of apple trees which are planted on the side of a road, with cultivated land on one side, -and the hard, beaten track on the other ; and this singular and significant fact is patent to all who look upon the trees, that while on the side of the trees next the cultivated land the fruit is large and fine — on the other next the road the fruit is decidedly inferior. Is there :any -method of accounting for this difference, •except by looking to the character of the nourishment drawn by the roots running out from the opposite sides of the trees? The roots running i^to the cultivated land take up much more suetenance from the soil, because it is manured and worked. The idea which Henrico seems to have en- tertained heretofore, that apple trees are not to be expected to produce fruit oftener than once in two years, has, we believe, been very preva- lent in this State, and had its origin in the fact that farmers usually bestowed no labour upon the orchard, never manured it, and consequent- ly one crop of fruit exhausted the energies of the trees, aiid-ai^st year was absolutely neces- >saryrto their recuperation. But let those who have OFchards aot properly, give the trees every year, and during the Winter season at that, a good manuring, and every man that has an apple tree upon which to try tlie experi- ment, will 80011 learn that apple trees will, and ought to produce annually. We have advised that this manuring be done during the Winter, and we will state a few rea- sons. If the ground is stirred at that period, it will expose many insects to the cold, which would otherwise live in embryo until the ensu- ing Spring, and then hatch out to prey upon the tj-ee nxxd upon the fruit, it will tend to keep back the blossoms to a later period of th® Spring, so that the late frosts will be less likely to destroy the young apples, and the rains and snows of winter will dissolve the manure, ond carry its elements down into the soil where they can be readily taken up and appropriated by the roots of the trees. But whether at one period or another, our earnest, urgent advice to each and all is, to manure your apple trees, and give them all needful cultivation ; and we shall be pleased to receive from Henrico, or any other person, any and all facts within their knowledge, likely to convince our Virginia farmers that the apple orchard is a desirable and valuable adjunct to every well regulated homestead. The Profits of Market Garden Farms. Scarcely a year passes, but some individual, misled by a false estimate of the profits of mar- ket gardening, in the vicinity of this and other interior towns and cities of the Commonwealth, breaks up his establishment, buys at an enor- mous price a few acres of land near the city, and enters upon the occupation of raising veg- etables for sale in the market, dreaming all the while of the wealth which is to be won by his industry, energy, and skill. A year or two suffices to dispel the delusion, and the experi- ment winds up, with the wreck of a fortune which would have sufficed for the comfortable maintenance of the unfortuujite man, during the term of his natural life, had he onlj^ been, content with the surer, if slower gains of le- gitimate farming. There always w'li be men, who in their haste to be rich, will fall into temptation and a snare, and peril w^hatever of fortune they may possess ; and it is with no hope of benefitting such that we have underta- ken to devote some space to a consideration of market gardening and its profits, but with the view of doing what we can to save others who would probably act upon false information, and so heedlessly rush to ruin and the wreck of their fortunes. That under proper conditions, market gar- dening can be made profitable, it is no part of our purpose to deny. The statements which from time to time have been published in the Planter, put this beyond all question ; but we call attention to the fact that in every instance these profits have been realized from farms THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 757 which were so situated, that the cultivator had access to the markets of the large cities of the country, such as Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York, and Boston. There has been, so far as we know, no authentic report of a profitable market garden farm situated elsewhere, and in our judgment none such can be found. Cer- tainly within our knowledge there is none, and we have enjoyed very large facilities of obser- vation among the gardeners of the State, The result of that observation may be summed up thus : That while market garden farms, which are so situated that the cultivator can have ready access to the markets of the cities before mentioned, are very valuable, and may be ren- dered highly profitable, that such farms located elsewhere are the least profitable and valuable property which a man can possess, and that culture less profitable than any other form of agricultural pursuits, upon which an individual can enter. "We write this as the deliberate conclusion of our judgment, after years of inquiry and in- vestigation, and we doubt not that every man who has reflected upon the subject and taken the trouble to inform himself, will concur in the opinion, and we could bring to support it did we deem it necessary, facts and arguments which would establish its correctness beyond the possibility of cavil. Suffice it to say, however, for the present, that during the period of our residence in Richmond, numerous persons from different parts of the State, and some from other States, have tried this experiment in this vicinage, and it is a knowledge of the result in every such instance which has induced us to write the present article. We have yet to meet with the man who made money, and we could tell of numbers who have suffered losses whiah they can never repair, losses which have entailed poverty, deprivation, and in some instances suffering upon wife and children. Nor were these isolated examples, which after all, might be regarded as mere exceptions to a general •rule, which might be explained by mismanage- ment, want of skill, extravagance of expendi- ture, or some other fortuitous circumstance. These things would prevent the realization of profit from farming anywhere, and under any circumstances ; but the cases to which we al- lude were the experiences of men who would have succeeded had success been possible, but who failed, because in the nature of things failure was inevitable. The demand here for garden products was not sufficient to justify their production in such quantities as would pay, the profits of this culture arising more from the sale of large quantities than from the procurement of a large price. Do the best he could, raise as many vegetables as he might, the owner of the market garden farm could sell but a limited quantity of truck, and that far too little to enable him to make money. There are localities now in Virginia where it is otherwise. To instance, the people about Norfolk and Portsmouth have a direct connec- tion by water with all the large Northern cities, and in those markets ready sale can be found for any quantity of vegetables, and for all the productions of the market garden farm. Such culture there ought to be profitable, and we believe that it has so been found ; but cut those people off from their access to the mar- kets of Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York, and Boston, Avithout affording them an equiva- lent demand for their products, in some other direction, and market gardening will at once cease to be profitable there. If they had to depend upon the sale of their products in the Norfolk market, they would starve, or break, in less than three years, every mother's son of them. Now just what would be the condition of the market garden farmers, about Norfolk and Portsmouth, if they were cut off from the mar- kets of the great Northern cities, is the fact with those who come to the vicinity of Rich- mond or any other of the interior towns and cities of the State, and purchase land to be cultivated as a market garden. That they can make money is impossible, that they must lose is inevitable, and they are not wise if they al- low themselves to be deceived by contrary rep- resentations. Our interests would be greatly promoted by making an impression contrary to that which we are seeking to make, as the greater the demand for land near the city, the more valuable would be all that we possess, — but we hold it our duty to tell the truth, even if in so doing we lessen the value of what we own. We know that these things are true, not only from our observation, but by a fair exper- iment ; and our earnest advice to any farmer 758 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. •who is thinking of leaving his country home, to tend a market garden farm near the city, is to abandon the idea forthwith and forever, or until the demand for the products of such farms here, is much greater than it is novr, or is likely to be for many years to come. It is not pretended that an individual living upon a farm v^ithin a few miles of the city, and pursuing general agriculture legitimately, may not increase the profits of his farm by raising for sale in the market, every kind of vegetable, in addition to the staples which he cultivates. That is certainly true, and we have more than once endeavored to convince the farmers all over the State, that a degree of attention to many little things which they have been wont to neglect, would tend largely to enhance the profits of agriculture in the State. That is a very difi'erent thing from the cultiva- tion of a piece of land solely with reference to the supply of the markets with vegetables. The one case, what vegetables are raised and sold at an}^ price whatsoever, is so much addi- tional profit derived from the culture of the soil, while in the other the owner of the mar- ket garden farm has no reliance except upon sales of truck, and if he cannot sell that at re- munerative prices, and in large quantities, he is a gone goose, there is nothing which he can fall back upon. There is then nothing incon- sistent in the views we have expressed con- cerning market garden farming, and the advice which we give all farmers to raise vegetables for family use and for sale in the market ; and we say in all candour to our readers, if you must have a market garden farm, go where you can do a profitable business, to some locality which gives you access to the markets of the larger cities of the Country ; but unless you desire to become poor, settle not in the vicinity of any of the interior towns or cities of the State to pursue this business. The late Fair and the Next. The last exhibition of the State Agricultural Society, while fully equal to any which have preceded it, when regarded as a whole, was certainly much inferior as an exhibition of the products of the flower garden, the kitchen gar- den, and the orchard. There were but few ex- hibitors in this department, and those chiefly individuals residing near the city of Richmond, and hence the fact developed by the list of premiums awarded, that nearly every prize was taken by persons living in counties con- tiguous to this city. This ought not to be, and we hope will not be the case another year. It is discreditable to the farmers, gardeners, and people of the State at large. There is no department of the Fair, which could be so well supplied, and with so little cost and trouble to the exhibi- tors. It is a matter of considerable expense, trou- ble, and annoyance, for one living in Augusta, Greenbrier, Wythe, Pulaski, or other remote county of the Commonwealth, to bring to the city for exhibition, a fine colt, heifer, sheep, fat ox, or superior hog, but it would cost compar- atively nothing to bring a pot of pickles, a jar of honey, a dozen fine apples, a bushel of su- perior potatoes, a parcel of mammoth turnips, a pound or two of superior butter, a cake of home made cheese, a bottle of domestic wine, a jar of jelly, and such like articles. Not only could these things be readily brought to the Fair, but could as readilj^ be procured. There is not a member of the State Agricultural Society, but could do something to add to the interest and success of this de- partment of the Fair. All are engaged in the culture of fruits, vegetables, and esculent roots, or if they are not, they ought to be. Each one has a dairy, and is engaged in the making of butter, and many are making cheese every year. Every family bakes bread and puts up preserves and pickles. Why then should there be any deficiency in respect to these things at our annual exhibition ? It is to be feared that there is a disposition on the part of the mass of the members of the Agricultural Society, to shift from their shoul- ders all responsibility for the success of these annual exhibitions, and devolve the whole work upon a few individuals. It is expected that Major Kent shall show a fat ox or two, that Col. Ware shall bring down a few pens of su- perior sheep, that Mr. Rives and others shall- have their stallions on the ground ; but A., B. and C, to the end of the alphabet, appear to think that their Avhole dutj' is done when they have come to look upon what is exhibited by others. This is a most erroneous view to take of the THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 759 matter, and one that will infallibly lead to the entire cessation of these annual exhibitions. A few individuals cannot keep up these exhi- bitions. They can only be perpetuated by the conjoint efforts of all the persons comprising the Agricultural Society, and each one must be willing to do whate:\|er he can to, promote the success of each exhibition. Each one, must accustom himself to think of the exhibi- tion as something which concerns himself in- dividually, and its success as depending in a good degree upon his individual exertions. Be- lieving thus, his action will be respondent, and instead of twenty or thirty exhibitors, there would be at each as many hundreds, all deeply interested in the success of the Fair. It is not difficult to perceive how largely this would in- crease, not only the list of articles on exhibi- tion in every department, but also the atten- dance of persons at every exhibition. But we must not pursue this train of thought farther, as it is leading us away from our main purpose in this present writing, which was simply to ask all our readers to do something this year to have the horticulture and floracul- ture of the State better illustrated at the Fair of 1858. We commence to urge this subject thus early that all may have it in mind from now until the period of the exhibition arrives, and may make their arrangements to bring some contribution, be it ever so simple, to the common stock. Perhaps you can do but little, and you may be tempted to think that little unnecessary. Cast such thoughts from you and do what you can. There are but few who can do a great deal, and it is only by each do- ing something that a great deal can be accom- plished. The ocean is a vast body of water, but all its vastness is but the aggregation of an almost infinite number of drops ; and the solid earth on which we tread is composed of an in- finite sum of particles of matter. Let each one of the thousands who make up the mem- bership of the Agricultural Society, bring something to the exhibition of '58, and it will be extensive beyond anything which has been dreamed of heretofore. Discovery of Nitrate of Lime. — There has been discovered on the farm of Mr. James Peage, near Staunton, Va., an apparently in- exhaustible supply of nitrate of lime, contain- ing large portions of saltpetre. Root Pruning. Everybody knows what pruning is, what its advantages are, and have an idea, mure or less correct, of the manner in which it should be done. We speak now of the pruning of the branches of trees, shrubs, and plants. But there is an- other kind of pruning which, in certain cases, is of infinite advantage, and with which the majority of fruit-growers in this region are not quite so familiar. This is root pruning, — a process something similar to that other pruning of which we have spoken, only it is applied to the roots of trees, instead of the branches ; and since there is often need of its application to fruit trees, we propose now a short descrip- tion of the cases to which it is applicable, the results attainable by the process, and the man- ner in which the process is performed. The class of trees which are chiefly benefit- ted by this process, are those which have an exuberant growth of wood and foliage, but which, on account of that* very exuberance, fail to produce fruit, or produce it in very lim- ited quantities. The difficulty in all such cases which is to be remedied is, that the tree draws an overplus of nourishment from the soil, or sometimes an improper kind of nourishment, — and in one case or the other, the remedy is,, to diminish the amount of nourishment, or to change its character. AYe have heretofore shown, that where the tree is unfruitful from an excessive supply of sap, it can be rendered, fruitful by partially girdling it ; but in many cases even this proves insufficient, and then root pruning is the only remedy. And in the cases where the tree produces fruit, but of unpleas- ant and harsh flavour, it often happens that a resort to this process, by changing the charae. ter of the food furnished to the tree, changes totally the character of the fruit, greatly im- proving its flavour. Besides which, this pro- cess applied to trees in the spring tends to check the early development of the blossoms* and thus to preserve the fruit germs from the late frosts, which so often disappoint the expec- tations of the orchardist. These, then, are the cases to which root pruning is applicable. The process of root pruning is simple and readily comprehended. Having ascertained that the tree needs such treatment, the first thing, of course, is the removal of the earth from al^out the tree, so as to get at the roots ; 760 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. and if the tree has tap-root, they are the ones to be pruned. This digging down is to extend at least so deep as through the surface soil, as it would not answer to cut the root close to the trunk of the tree. Having reached this point, take a sharp chisel, or other sharp in- strument, with which it can be neatly done, and cut through the root in a slanting man- ner, making a smooth, clean cut. When there is no tap-root which can be pruned, any other of the leading roots may be cut in like man- ner. Wherever this cut is thus made, numer- ous fibrous roots will put out in every direc- tion, spreading themselves all through the sur- face soil, and draining nourishment thence for the tree. The amount of pruning proper in any given case, must of course be left to the judgment of each cultivator, who looking to all the facts, must take away so much of the roots as may seem likely to promote the ends he has in view. No general rule can be given for the guidance of those who attempt this process, but a little good sense and observation will prevent any fatal blunder. Of course when the pruning is done, the earth is to be put back over the roots, and a little manure would do no damage ; and in every case root pruning is to be done during the winter. » The immediate and direct effect of root prun- ing is, of course, to diminish the amount of nourishment drawn from the soil by the tree, thereby stunting its growth, and so producing , fruitfulness. Why this should make the tree fruitful it is not easy to tell, but that the fact is so, is beyond all question. An analagous instance is presented in the case of a budded or grafted tree. If it be allowed to stand where it was when the graft or bud was made, a prodigious growth of wood will be the result, and but little if any fruit. The removal of the tree impedes the development of wood and fo- liage, but hastens the period of fruit-bearing — and the oftener the young tree is removed, tbe-sooner will it bear fruit. This is accounted for by the fact, that every removal breaks some of the roots, which is but another form of that very process which we have before described. In the case of a tree where the tap-root is pruned, another result follows, that instead of draining nourishment from the lower strata of soils, the new-formed roots will drink it in, from the richer surfsice soils, and thus often the character of the fruit is greatly improved. ' ^ We have thus far spoken of this process as applicable only to fruit trees, but it is equally applicable to all floAvering shrubs, and to some vegetables. The Cauliflower is one instance of a vegetable. Two examples, illustrating the value of root pruning, will very apy?fc"opriately conclude this article. The first is the case of a pear tree, which stood in the grounds of a gentleman in the city of Richmond. At the precise spot where the tree stood, there had once been a deep well, which was filled up, and afterwards the pear tree in question planted. There was, consequently, a very deep soil into which the roots penetrated. The tree had grown prodigi- ously, but year after year it produced nothing but leaves and wood. The owner directed that it should be cut down, but his gardener insist- ed that he should be allowed to try what a lit- tle management could do with it. He first girdled it partially, thinking that would render it fruitful ; but a year passed and it bore no fruit. He then resorted to root pruning, dug down until the tap-root was exposed, and cut it off as direc,ted, and the ensuing season the tree produced a crop of pears, and has contin- ued to bear ever since. The other «ise was that of two apricot trees, planted at the same time, and not far distanf ; one of which at maturity bore fruit abundant- ly, while the other out-grew the former, had more and more beautiful foliage, blossomed season after season, but produced no fruit. The owner applied to the Editor of a horticul- tural journal for a remedy, who advised a re- sort to root pruning, supposing that the un- fruitfulness of the tree was occasioned by an over-supply of sustenance from the soil in which it stood. The remedy was tried, and the result was, that the barren tree becaiue as fruitful as the other. Plant Evergreens. — Evergreens scattered about the grounds relieve the dreariness of winter, and give a cheering aspect to the home- stead. The e3'e rests upon them with pleasure standing amid the desolation and decay of the season; and they may serve to remind us also of the better part of our nature which survives the decadence of the physical frame. INDEX. A. PAGE. American Cotton Planter and Soil of the South, 13 Ammonia, Inquiries about 14 Algeria, Tobactoo in 49 Advertisers, Notice to 61 Advertizement, 62 Agents for the Southern Planter, 74 Acknowledgments to the Press, 74 Address of Franklin Minor before the Vir- ginia State Agricultural Society, 81 Agriculture, The Beautiful in 95 Ammonia, Peat and Peat Charcoal as Ab- sorljents of 145 Agricultural Professorshi]) in the Uni- versity of Virginia, 177 Agricultiu-al School at the University, Plan of Instruction in 193 Analysis of Soils, Value of 209 Agricultural Topics, Discussion of, by Far- mers at the Exchange Hotel, 223 Agricultural Society of the Valley of Va., 226 Agricvtitural Society, Va. State 228 Asparagus, Salt for 237 Asparagus, Cutting 238 Annuals, Biennials and Perennials, 240 Agricultural School, 292 Agricidtural School, .$100,000 proposed as a Donation for, at the University of Va., 308 Animals, Effects of Exposure of, to a Low Temperature and to Moisture, 321 Agricultural Professorship at the Uni- versity of Va., Mr. Cocke's letter con- cerning 372 Animals, On the Culture of Domestic. . . . 396 Antiquities, Agricultural, of Virginia,. . . . 398 Army Worm, 437 Animals, curious Diseases in, at various times, 512 Agricultural Professorship at the Uni- versity, Proposed Joint Donation to. . . 533 Agricultural Society, U. S 538 Agricultural Periodicals, Prejudice against 615 Asparagus, Full Directions for the Culti- vation of C23 Apples, Salt Barrels for Preserving 656 Asparagus, Giant 666 PAGE. Apple, The 689 Agricultural Society, Va. State 713 Agriculture, Report on Lunar Influences upon 730 Agriculture, Principles of 751 Apples, 755 B. Books, New, 12, 73, 228, 370, 12 Blood as a Fertilizer, 26 BreadstufFs, Export of, and Tabular State- ment, 30 "Big Head," (Osseous Disease of the (Plorse,) 47 Bones arul Guano, British Statistics of. ... 160 Bee Hive, A Cheap 219 Butter, Ptancid, To Sweeten 221 Barley, Beardless 227 Beet, Distillation of 233 Biennials, Annuals, &c., 240 Butter Making, 282 Bread, Home Made 297 Butter Cooler, A Simple 373 Barometer, A Natural 373 Barometer for Farm(?i-s, 420 Butter and Cheese, Comparative Cost of Making 457 Buckwiieat, Why will Corn not succeed after it? 458 Beer, Corn 464 Building, Hints on 479 Bee Keeping, Economy of 524 Broadcaster, Seymour's, Failure of 537 Bulbs, Flowering 631 Books, New 645 Beef Steak, Plan for Cooking 670 Breeding, Principles of 674 Breeding, Close 743 Big Head, 744 Bones, How to Dissolve them, 749 c. Chinese Sugar Cane, 10 Corn, Wyandot, 36, 76, 36 Cattle Killed by Chewing Corn Stalks that Hogs have been fed on, 39 762 THE SOUTHERN !? L A N T E R . -IA^i>^X Cattle, Cooked Food for 40 Corn Made into Whiskey, 42 Corn in Pork vs. Corn in the Crib, 44 Corn, Seed Saving 45 Crops in the Lower Part of the Valley,. . 50 Cows, Machine for Milking 59 Cattle, Messrs. Mathews & Saunders' Stock, 73 Cattle, How to Cure Hoven in 75 Corn, Hicks 76 Cob and Corn Meal as Food for Stock. ... 94 Candles, Hardening Tallow for 120 Cattle, To secure Male and Female Pro- geny at will, 124 Corn in the Ear for Fuel, 136 Cattle Feeding, An Establishment for. . . . 144 Cooking for Stock, 146 Chimneys, Construction of 157 Cutting Fodder for Stock, 164 Corn Planter, Mecham's Patent Foot 169 Clarissa Parvin, Short-Horn Heifer, with Portraits, 173 Crushers, Grand Contest between 174 Corn, in Turkey, Wallachia, Moldavia and Hungary,. 174 Celery, Cultivation of 176 Corn, Experiments with Guano on 205 Cooking Salsify, 206 College for Farmers 211 Cheese Factory, A large one, 211 Candles, to make them Hard of Soft Tal- low, 212 Corn, Seed • 217 Corn Planters, 222 Cattle Market of Richmond, Mr. Jones' Letter on the Abuses of 230 Crysanthemums, 240 Cabbages, Transplanting 238 Catterpillars on Fruit Trees, 253 Chickens, Game, the most Profitable Breed, J. McL. Anderson's Communication,... 266 Chemistry, Agricultural, Lecture on 268 Carrots, Cultivation of. 285 Cucumbers, Cultivation of 286 Chinese Plants, 292 Cattle Market of Richmond, Mr. Shook us. Mr. Jones, 310 Corn Planter, 314 Cauliflowers, 315 Cattle Market, The New, of London, 337 Cattle Raising in the West, 353 I Crops, in Loudoun and Prince William,... 358 Cattle Market of Richmond, Mr. Jones' Rejoinder to Mr. Sliook, 358 Cattle and Hogs, Cooked Food for 364; Cherry, The Morello 381 ' Gov/, A Remarkable.. 391. Chinch Bug destroyed by Chickens,. ■ 400 Corn, Replanting, , 405 Cultivation by Steam, ■ 409 Corn, Indian, History of 417 Clover as an Improver of Wheat, 426 Charlottte vs. Albemarle, 453 Cheese and Butter, Comparative Economy in Making 457 Corn, Why will it not Grow after Buck- wheat ? 458 .Corn Beer, 464 Corn Harvester, 486 Cows, Garget in 488 Cucumbers, for Pickling, 500 Celery, Planting 500 Chinch Bug, Application of Remedies against 508 Clover and Grasses, Amount of Roots from 521 Corn Crushers, Failure with 531 Corn Planters, Successful use of 531 Connecticut, Deterioration in Farming,... 542 Cattle, Beef, Rearing 543 Cattle, Sexes of, not attainable at will. Prolificacy, Colour, &c., of Short-Horns, 528 Cabbage for Spring, 558 Cabbage, Keeping, in Winter, 641 Cattle Killed by Eating Corn Stalks that Hogs had Chewed, 646 Corn Stalks, Stacking 646 Cattle, Short-Horn, and Leicester Sheep, 652 Corn, Indian, Exports of 657 Cow, What is a Good 672 Carpets, Sweeping 672 Celery, Culture of 695 Currant, Two of the Newer Varieties of 698 Corn Shucking, Clean 739 Chinese Sugar Millet, Selecting Seeds, 745 Cattle, Feeding, in the Western States, 750 Cows, Wintering 752 D. Department, Home, of Agriculture, by the General Government, 3 Ducks, Aylesbury .- 12 Dwarf Pear Controversy, 18 Ditching Machine, 72 Dun, A, in the Runic Measure, 74 Dry Cellars, 95 Dulany, R. H., of Loudoun, his Stock of Cattle, Hogs and Horses, 119 Diarrhosa, Preventative of 160 Domestic Animals, Culture of 161" Dahlias,.. 240 Drains and Ditches, Proper Slopes for 335 THE SOUTHERN P L A N T E R .— JA7)^X 763 Ducks, Wild, Trade of Norfolk City in... Dairy, Farm, Extracts from a, for the last Forty Years, Dairy, The, Directions for 'its General Management, E. Emperor, a Cleveland Bay Stallion, with Portrait, Emigration from Virginia to the West,... Experiments on Various Subjects, by Members of the Nottoway Farmers' Club, Evergreens, Pruning Essential Oils, How to Extract F. Fertilizer, Blood as a ; Furniture, How to Choose Fence, Portable. , Flower Garden, Work in the Four Fire-side Saints...... Farmer Gripe and the Flowers. Flowers, How to Plant Fruit Trees, Catterpillars on i Flowers, Love of Fruits, Preserving, by Hermetical Sealing, Fruit Trees, Marmre for Flowers for our Rail Roads and other Roads, , Farming, Improved, in Virginia, Fodder, Green, Plan of Preserving Fever and Ague, Cure for Fence, Improved, of Cheap Plank Flowers, Accessible to all, , Free States, Domestic Life in Farms, Small vs. Large Farming, High, in England, Fruits, Something about. New Fruit Trees, the Experience of a Success- ful Orchardist, Flour, How to Select Fire-Proof Ladies' Dresses Frank, Peyton? Who is Farmer, The, in his Relation to Ornamen- tal Gardening, Frosty Weather, Building in Fat, Source of Fowls, Game, English Blue-Breasted Red, Fairs of Virginia, The Dili'erent. Fair, Refreshments and Drinking at the Farmers' Club, A Plea for Five-Field System, Improving Land on Fodder, Cutting — Feeding Stock, . . - 418 465 593 232 315 346 447 566 26 159 175 189 214 239 239 253 294 296 319 320 344 352 353 357 379 392 412 421 444 501 520 522 644 659 671 681 707 707 710 740 742 746 Farm, Market Garden, Profits of 756 Fair, The Late, and the Next, 758 G. Guano, Testing > 17 Guano, Durability of - 48 Gloucester County Agricultural Society, Meeting of 71 Guano, Manipulated , 72 Grass Seeds, Number of, in a Bushel, 79 Guano, Mexican. Comparative Estimate ofits Value, 93 Gardeners, Young, Hints for 106 Gardening, Landscai^e 108 Guano and Bones, British Statistics of. 160 Guano Monopoly, 183 Guano, Experiments with, on Corn and Wheat, 205 Gilliam, Prof. Wm., his Essay on the Cur- rent Superphosphates of Lime, 257 Guano, Supply of 341 Guano Crisis, The 342 Grass, How to make One Hundred Tons to the Acre, 399 Guano, Permanence of Improvement by... 428 Green Crops, Ploughing in 411 Grasses and Clover, Amount of Roots from 521 Gilham, Prof, his Lecture to the Farmers of Powhatan, 538 Guano Trade, The 592 Grapes, How to Cultivate them, 629 Gardens, Fall Ploughing 642 Guano and its Consumption, 669 Gearing Teams, What is the Right Way,... 648 Garden and Orchard Work, in Winter, 753 H. Home Department, by General Govern- ment, 3, 135, 3 Horses, Random Thoughts on the Feet of, and on Shoeing 20 Hogs, Fattening 22 Horses, Value of Racing Stock 25 Horse Shoe, A New, for Ice, 30 Hogs, Cooked Food for, 40, 110, 364 40 Horse, "Big Head," (Osseous Disease of the,) 47 Horses; Warranty of 57 Horse, Death of a Celebrated 61 Hedges, Ossage Orange, 71, 228, 294, 344, 362, 71 Hoven, in Cattle, How to Cure 75 Hut Beds, How to Make 75 Happiness, A New Prescription for 78 Horse Radish, Cultivation of 94 764 THESOUTHEKN PLANTER .—INDEX, Hereditary Influence, 99 I Horse, A Remarkable 101 Horses, High Prices for 149 Harvest, The American 154 Housekeepers, Hints to 155 Harness, Blacking for 159 Horses, Treatment of Brood Mares, 16:2 Horse's Foot, Sensitive Faculty of 163 Highlander, Short-Horn Bull, with Portrait, 172 Horticultural Department of the Planter, 186 Hogs, Kidney Worm in 215 Horses, Work, and Oxen, Cost of Keeping 255 Horses, Starting and Shying 283 Horses, How to Cure Lampos in 288 Horses, To Prevent from Breaking the Bridle, 302 Hogs, Black Tooth in ,309 Horses, Tethering at Grass, 312, 368, 312 Horses, Dr. Woods' Cleveland Bay, 314 Home Production, Encourage 319 Horse Charm, A Secret for Taming. 352 Husbands, A Chapter for 395 Horses, Colic in 406 Hogs, Goods vs. Bad Breed 431 Hogs, Disease Among 431 Hydrophobia, Cure for 418 Harness, Training to 455 Harvest, To Bind or not to Bind Wheat,. . 475 Horses, Feeding 485 ^Horses, The Upperville Union Clid), for the Improvement of 508 Hogs, Experiment in Fattening 521 Horses, Corns in 517 Horse, How to Prevent from Biting down Corn, 536 Horses, Small, not the Best, 538 Horses, Wolf Teeth in. Lameness from Contracted Pleels, Cure for Bots in 544 Hogs, The Cholera Among 565 Hogs, Fattening. A Gotxl Plan 586 Hogs, A Certain Cure for Kidney Worm ia 590 Hogs, Mange in. How Cured,. 591 Horses, Arabian, in Kentucky, 615 Hay, To Measure in Mows, 631 Hard Times, 637 Highland County, Ya., Sales of Land in. . 639 Horse Charm, 648 Horses, Foundering 658 Horse, Points of a Good 685 Health, Influence of Agricultural Pursuits on 699 Hogs, Killing 705 ilarvcster, A New and Complete 730 Heaves. A llorse with the 737 House-Keeping, in the Country, 737 Horses, Arabian 744 Hogs, Mange in, Remedy for 746 I. Iron, and its Chemical Changes and Com- binations, as Exhibited in certain Soils of lower Virginia, 35 "Isomeric Con)pounds," Prof. Mapes' Lecture on. Reviewed 129 Insects of New York, Dr. Fitche's Re- port on 437 Influence of the Scion upon the Stock,. . . 541 Indebted Subscribers, A pleasant Fable for our 707 J. Jeiferson County, Farming in, stated in the form of an account, 265 June, Weather in 480 Jars, To Cleanse the Inside of 485 K. Kossuth, Stallion, 12, 437, 12 Kitchen Garden, The 46 Kirby, Miss, Short-Horn Com^, with Pedi- gree, 123 Kentuc^kv, its Agriculture Compared with that of Rockingham County, 140 Kitclieir Garden, Work in the 188 Kale f( ir Salad, 559 L. • ■ Lime, SoM'ing by Hand, 34 Lime and Salt Mixture, 74 Lambs, Raising 103 Land in Spottsylvania, Paying for itself in One Crop, 149 Lice, Hovv' to Destroy, on Plants and Ani- mals, 160 Lemon Butter, 168 Log, to Load on Wagon, withour taking ofl" the Wheels, 231 Linu*. Sui)erp'hosphatc of. Prof. Gilliam's Essay on 257 '•Land Paying for itsell' in One Crop,"' Statement of Mr. W. C. Jones, of Surry Comity, '. 294 Little Giant, &c., 309 Labour Lost, 402, 537, 402 Limestone Soils, 410 Lightning Rods, 454 Labour. Free, to what it Leads, 45 THE SOUTHERN PL ANTER.— /iVD^X r65 Lime, Superphosphate of, its Standard of Value, , . . . . Lawn, To Make a, in New Land, Lightning Rods, Lettuce, How to Secure, for Spring, Location, as it Effects Temperature and Vegetation, . . . , Lard and Resin, for Tools, Leathers, Greasing Laundry, The, with Directions for Wash- ing, &c., Life in the Free States, Domestic Lime, Application of M. Milking Cows, Machine for Machine, A Ditching Manipulated Guano, Messrs. Mathews & Saunders' Cattle,. . . . Minor, Franklin, his Address before the Virginia State Agricultural Society,. . . . Meal, Corn and Cob, as Food for Stuck,. . Mushrooms, Raising Manure, Barnyard ,. Manure, Covered vs. Uncovered, Milk, Quality of Milch Cows, and Escutcheons,. Meat, Supply of, at Home and Abroad,. . Manures, Letter from M. Payen to Mr. Lawes, of Rothamsted, concerning. . . . Mangel Wurzel and Sugar Beets, Mutton, The Supplies of, over the World, Millet, Cultivation of Market Garden, A Good one, Market Garden Farming, in Norfolk County, Mulching, Mignonette, Manures, Experience with Bought Ferti- lizers, Milking, Murrain, The, or Cattle Plague, in Eu- rope, . Milk, Ordinary and of Spayed Cows, Dif- ferences in Meadows, How and W^hen '.o Seed, in dif- ferent Grasses, Mowing Lands, Feeding, Machinery, Agricultural, and its Results, Machine, How it may be Easier to Work than to do Nothing, Meat Manufacture, Mignonette, Mecklenburg, Crops in 459 498 531 558 605 64 8 6S1 701 736 741 81 94 109 113 143 147 148 150 238 281 2S6 295 361 400 445 449 457 513 523 535 539 608 608 609 630 656 Machines, for Husking Corn, Maxims for Young Farmeis and Over- seers, -. Machines, Labour-Saving Molasses, More Sorglio McCuo, Letter from N. Notice, General New Hampshire an^l Virginia Compared, Norfolk, a Short-Horn Bull, with Pedigree, Nansemond County, Lands in . Norfolk County, I^Iavket Garden Farming in Nitrates of Soda and Potash, How do they produce their Fertilizing Etfects ? Nitrogen in Plants, On the Sources of, by Prof. Wrn. B. Rogers, News, Good, from Ghent to Aix, 0. Ohio, Farms and Farming of Oats, Successive Crops of, not Exhausting t(j Land, Onion, Wild, or Garlic, Destroyed by suc- cessive Oat Crops, 68, 139, Osage Orange Hedges, Orchards, Old, Topgrafting, Orchards, Old Apple, Improving Orchards, Hill-Side, Cultivating Oats, An Additional Fact about Continu- ous Seeding Orchard, Work in the Oats, as an Improver, 216, 231, Oxen and Horses, Cost of Keeping. .."... Orchards, Products of our Overseers, Characteristics of Overseers, Recommendations to Okra. How to Cook Ohio, Agriculture of Onions. Cultivation of Overseers, JMaxims for P. Pear, Dwarf, Controversy about Plant Beds for Tobacco, Planter, Southern, Enlargement of Potatoes, Irish, Making, by a Covering of Straw or Leaves, Peas, Early Garden Peat and Peat Charcoal, as Absorbents of Ammonia, Peas, Cultivation of Peaches from Seed, 662 671 686 710 711 14 65 122 298 361 408 472 734 55 68 68 71 123 158 171 187 189 216 255 377 416 435 462 618 662 671 18 34 72 75 75 145 176 205 766 THE SOUTHERN P L A N T E R .— IA^Dj^X Patent Office Report, Peach Buds Killed Poultry, Raising Pears, Dwarf Pears and other Pears,. . . . Premiums, Schedule of the Va. State Agri- cultural Society, for 1857, Plants, Time of Introduction of several into England. Peas and Snaps, Remedy for Bugs in. . . . Pig, Using up the Potatoes, Irish, The Fall Crop Peas, for Fallow, Planter, Corn Potato Crop, The Irish Pump, A Surge Potatoes, Irish, How to Raise and Kee}:*. . Potatoes, Zachy : Drummond's Directions for Making Peach Trees, Disease in ! . . Pickles, Put up, for Market, Pink, My, and other Pinks, Plaster, as Preservative of Ammonia,. ... Peaches and Peach Trees, Potatoes, Irish, Spring Prices always good, Pears, Time to Gather and how to Keep. . Powhatan, Prof Gilham's Lecture on the Soils of Potato Fly, The, Injurious to Irish Pota- toes, Plums, Magnum Bonum, A Specimen of. . Peas, Difference in, after Crop of Wheat, when peas are removed, or ploughed under, Ploughing, Deep and Shallow, Relative Terms, Plough, A Steam Plants, Bosingault on the Alimentation of Periodicals, Agricultural, Prejudices a- gainst Planting, Early, of Certain Vegetables,. . Plough, A. P. Routt's, Draining. . Pumpkins, He and She Pears on the Red Haw Stock, Ponds, Ice, Plan of Making, Pickles, Directions for Making Ploughing, Steam Pruning, Root Q. Quackery, Agricultural, of R. L. Pell, of New York, and others, K. Rye amortg Ruta-Bagas,. 207 211 221 234 241 256 294 302 306 314 314 316 368 401 404 405 44:2 447 462 493 499 502 •538 540 558 559 565 896 602 615 616 637 642 681 687 697 721 759 476 48 Razor Strops, Powder for 160 Reaping Machine, Morrison's, An Im- provement to 228 Receipts, Valuable 298 Rubber, Growing, in the United States,. . 301 Rain, Signs of, "Farmers note this," 302 Reapers, E^litorial on, and on Best Mode of Working, 366 Rats, To Expel 391 Roof, How to Make a Sound Shingle 400 Rotary Digger, Mapes & Gibbs' Exploded 419 Rhode Island, Farming of A. B. Chadsey compared with Farming in Norfolk County, Va., 451 Ruta Baga and Beets, Mode of Feeding to Stock, 452 Rough Creek vs. Ivy Creek, Charlotte vs. Albemarle, 453 Rat Story, 462 Reaper, Morrison's, Editorial Report on. . 505 Roll on the Ball! A Burlesque on Bought Fertilizers, 510 Rose, The, Essay on, by E. G. Egeling. . . 551 Rheumatism, A Cure for 564 Rail Roads, Past and F\tture Policy, 607 Raspberries, Ever-Bearing Autumnal. . . . 684 Reaper, A New one, which Delivers, Binds and Stacks, 687 Rose Culture,. 739 S. Sugar Cane, Chinese 10 Strawberries, Princess Alice Maud 12 Strawberries, Seedling, Peabody's New. . 13 Soil of the South and American Cotton Planter, 13 Subscribers to Soil of the South and American Cotton Planter, 14 Strychnine, 16 Sewing Machines, Query about 16 Sheep, Winter Management of 24 Sheep, Parturient Fever iu Ewes, 25 Subsoiling, Effects of, in the Valley of Virginia, , 50 Sheep, Silesian Merinoes, 56 Soils, Analysis of 57 Salt and Lime Mixture lor Land, 74 Salt on the Kanawha River, 98 Sheep, Merino, Cross of the 103 Sheep Husbauilry, Encouragement of , . . . 105 Shelter, Importance of. to' Animals, under title of '• One S(innre Foot of Boards,"' 112 Snow Storm of January, 1857, 136 Stock, Cooking Food for .', . 1-16 Sharpening Old Files with Acid, 159 THE SOUTHERN P L A N T E R .— IA7)^X 767 Sheep, English, Statistics of 160 Stove, To Keep Bright 160 Stock, Cutting Fodder for 164 Saws, Circular 165 Shovel, Anies* American 170 Sewing Machines, 191 Salsify, Cooking 206 Soils, Value of Analysis of 209 Sanitary Improvement, 212 Sewage of Large Cities, 212 Swine, Kidney Worm in 215 Subsoil Ploughing, : 217 Sassafras, To Destroy, 217, 218, 217 Sugar, Domestic, Quere about Making. . . . 218 Sugar, How to Make 227 Sorgho Sucre, 227 Salt for Asparagus, 237 Sugar Beet, and Mangel Wurzel, 238 Saw Mill, Woodpecker, 254, 314, 3'56,. . . 254 Superphosphate of Lime, Prof. Gilliam's Essay on 257 Smith's Patent Single or Gang Plough. . . 267 Stump Machine, Willis' 285 Sheep Shearing Machine, 288 Sheep Shearing, 299 Sheep, Washing them and Preparing the Wool for Market, 307 Strawberries, Watering 318 Soil, The, Essay on. From Morton's Cyclo- pedia of Agricuhure, 321, 385, 321 Stock, Lxiproved 333 Short Horns, Rising. . 336 Sheep-Killing Dogs, A Trap for Catching 363 Strawberry, The .' 374 Superphosphates, Additional Letter from Prof Gilham on 403 Saw Dust, Benefits of 407 I Steam Cultivation, 409 Saws and Shovels, as made in Philadel- phia, " 419 Sheep, Good Mode of Marking 420 Subsoiling Land in Jetferson County, Ef- fects of 429 Sweetmeats, Somethtng Better than 446 Superphosphate of Lime, its Standard of Value, 459 Straw, Nutritious Properties of 460 Scratches, Receipt for 460 Snakes, A Plea for 461 Sugar-Plantation, A Louisiana 484 Soil, Pulverize The 4S5 Statistics of the Late and Prior Land Valuations in Virginia, 486 Strawberries, Transplanting in Summer,. 501 Superphosphates DeBurg's and Rhodes', " Failure of, in Henrico, 536 Superphosphates, Mr. Rhodes in Reply to Prof Gilham, 56G Sugar Cane, Chinese, its Yield and Proba- ble Value,. . 584 Superphosphate,* DeBurg's, Messrs. Tur- ner's Reply to an article published in the Planter, 591 Sugar Plantation, A Cuban 60q Sugar and the Sorghum, 601 Sugar Cane, Chinese, Does it Make Sugar? 606 Statistics of English and French Agricul- ture, 617 Superphosphate of Lime, Rhodes', Prof Gilham in Reply to Mr. Rhodes, 617 Seeds, Garden, A Plain Talk about 625 Seeds, Proposition to Distribute Various Kinds at the Fair, , 639 Sheep, Leicester, and Short Horn Cattle, 652 Steam Walking Engine, 656 Starch Made of Flour, 656 Stables, Close 661 Sheep, Improved Kentucky 663 Sheep, The Babraham Ram Letting, 682 Sweet Potatoes, A Short Chapter on Keep- ing 685 Sheep, Fall Management of 698 Sheep, Winter Management of 711 Soil Analyses, Practical Utility of 721 Splitting Rock without Blasting, 733 Sugar Millet, Failure to Produce Sugar, 745 T. Tobacco Plant Beds, 34, 78, 94, 34 Tobacco Plant Beds, 37 Turkeys, Fattening !* 39 Tobacco, Stock of, in the United States,. . 49 Tobacco in Algeria, 49 Tobacco House, Plan of 77 Tobacco in Connecticut, 168 Tobacco Houses, Hints on 254 Tomatoes, Baked '. 266 Tobacco, Extracts from two Essays for- merly published on the Culture of 289 Timothy, Proper Time for Cutting 300 Tobacco Plant Beds, 302 Thayer, Eli, His proposed Invasion of Vir- ginia, 303 Trot, The Hundred Mile 312 Tobacco, its History and Value, Essay from Papers of the Nottoway Farmers' Club, . . ? 346 Tobacco, in Albemarle, Sale of Mr. No- land's Crop, 353 768 THE SOUTHERN P L A N T E R .— ZA^D^X Tomatoes, How to Grow Early, also for Pickling, &c., 380 Tobacco, On Abandoning Culture of 427 Tobacco, Reform in Inspections of, called for by Merchants of Richmond, 440 Tobacco, The Insects that infest it, and the Remedies, 489 TurnixJS, About Sowing, in August, 500 Tobacco Crop, Jno. Dumpling on 533 Turnips for Salad, 559 Tobacco, Criticisms on Action of Merchants in regard to Inspectors of 620 Tobacco Plant Beds, Sowing, in December, 648 Tobacco, Receipts of, for 1856, 699 Tobacco, Good Sale of 707 Top Dressing, Application and Effect, 747 Turkeys, Fattening 752 u. Udder, Caked 39 Uddor, Caked , 381 University of Virginia, Agricultural Pro- fessorship in 708 Underdraining, Cheap Way of 712 V. Virginia and New Hampshire compared, 65 Verbenas, 240 Vegetables, Frosted 319 Vinegar, 395 Virginia Statistics, of the late and prior Land Valuations, 486 Vinegar, 550 Virginia State Agricultural Society, Ar- rangements and Order of Proceedings, for Fifth Annual Exhibition of 559 Vegetable Market of Norfolk, 590 Virginia, True View of its Alleged Sparse Popi^ation, 591 Vitality, Transference of 738 w. Wyandot Corn, 36, 74, 7G, 293, 36 Whiskey, Corn Made into 42 Washington, George, Letter from him on the Management of his several Planta- tions, 1789, 51 Warranty of Horses, 57 Wheiit, Prices of, In England, 58 Whc at. Harrowing and Dressing, in Spring, 124 Wire Fences vs. Snow Drifts, 149 Wheat, and its Preparation for Bread- Making, 151 Wheat in East Termessoe, 171 Wheat, Experiments with Guano on 205 Wheat, Application of Saltpetre to Seed. . 216 Wheat Crop in Clarkt; County, 217 Wagon, To Load a Heavy Log on, with- out Taking Off the Wheels, .-. . . 231 Watch the Weeds, 238 Wheat, Microscopic Discoveries of the nature of Bli":ht in 287 Washing Fluid, 301 Wheat and Corn of Ohio, for 1856, 303 W^heat Prospects in portions of Virginia,. 313 Vv'orms, Watch the ; 381 Wheat-Cutting by Reaper, Mr. Turner's, of Hanover, Plan, 406 Wheat Drill, Benton's, cf Loudoun, opinion of the best 407 Wheat among Ruta Bagas, 430 Wool, Clip, of 1857, 434 Wheat, Prospect for, in Virginia, 436 Wheat, Speculations on the Price of 503 Wheat Seeding, &c., A^gricultural Discus- sion at Ridgway, Albemarle, 529 Wheat, Smut in, does 7iot result from a Parasite, 535 Wheat, Fine Yield of, in Accomac, 537 Wheat and Corn, Exports from U. S. to Great Britain and Ireland, 543 Wheat Drills, with Guano attachment. Dr. J. R. Wood's letter concerning 562 Wheat, Proposition and Reply, concerning appointment of an Argent to sell for the Farmers of the State, 577 Wheat, Account of Preparation of Land for. Seeding, Application of different kinds of Manures to, and especially of Lime in small quantities, by George C. Gilm.er, of Albemarle, 587 Wheat, Difference in Growth and Yield of a Crop in Essex County, upon Peas fallowed under, and upon pea land cleaned ofl', 589 Wheat Culture, Results of certain Foreign Experiments, 597 Wheat Turning to Cheat, 604 Wheat, Drilling in Land, Whether it in- creases the Croj)? 6("5 Wheat and Tobacco, Great Yield of, in Caroline County, 631 Wheat and Corn Trade, Prospects of a Market for the Current l^ear, 632 Wheat and Corn Trade of Great Britain, 633 W heat and Corn, New York Markets for . . 634 Wheat, A New Kind, from Mr. A. F. Robertson, of Auiherst County, 633 Wheat Machines. Remarks *on, by a Cor- respondent, 638 Wheat, Rolling in Tar, Major Dickinson's, of New York, plan 643 Wheat Crop, Late Failures of, in the Val- ley' of Virginia, 644 Wheat Grain, On some Points in its Com- position, its Products in the Mill and in Bread, 649 Wheat, from Patent Oflice, Caution against 648 Water-Proof, To Render Textile Fabrics. 659 Waler-PixK'f Mixture for Leather, 672 Wines, American ' 725 Wheat and Dairy Districts of the U. S., 735 LIST OF PAYMENTS From July 2\ to September 28, inclusive. All persons who have made payments early enough to be entered, and whose names do not ap- ear in the following receipt list, are requested to give immediate notice of the omission, in order lat the correction may be made in the next issue : r Wm Wirt, July 58 I ' Wirt, W Battaille, Jan 58 i G Coleman, Feb 58 F Moses, July 58 uy F S Trigg, Jan 60 W Gook, Jan 58 i A Reynolds, Jan 58 High tower, Jan 60 . Cauthorn, Jan 58 •r J G Brodnax, July 58 •r Geo C Scott, Jan 58 'hos S Martin, " i^arner Lewis, " ^ Samuel, aac Hudson, " >r W S Morton, Apr 59 ohn Jeter, Jan 58 [ L Taylor, Jan 58 Vm J Weir, " 10 P Fickle, Nov 58 ^m Townes, Jr, July 58 E Woltze, V M Hite, Jan 58 as Arnold, , " V C Hundley, Jan 58 N Gresham, " T M Rust, Jan 60 Lo Wilson, July 58 )r Jno S Jackson, Jan 58 no G Wright, Apr 58 )r J S Lewis, Jan 58 M Goddin, " )r J G Cabell, " no G Hughes, Jan 59 /[ G Harman, Jan 60 List, Wm Kidd, Jan 58 i B Penn, no Willis, " •ami A Guy, " I C Williams, OS A S Acklin, Apr 58 11 McConneli, Jan 58 r W Walton, " V A Horseley, July 58 ^ W Smith, Jan 58 ■ P Marshall, Jan 58 ::ol G Scott, Jan 60 )r G P Holeman, Jan 58 I K Fitzhugh, " I T Bibb, V. E Smith, " P White, ' H James, 15th Feb 58 OOlEdgar Burroughs, 15 Ja58 $■ 00 Jno R Barnes, Jan 58 J J Burroughs, Dec 57 J L Ransom, Dec 58 Dr J R Woods, Jan 58 Dr H L Jeffries, " Dr A J Brodnax, Aug 58 Gen H B Woodhouse, Ja 58 H F Woodhouse, " G D Scates, " B N Robinson, April 60 Gen S F Patterson, Jan 58 Jno M Preston, Apr 58 W Fitzgerald, Jan 58 E Jacob, W T Mason, J D Smith, « Wm Gi.lison, Jan 60 C D Nelms, July 57 J Sangster, Jan 60 Col J S Dillard, Apr 58 N H Turner, Jan 58 Wm C Jones, July 58 W A Turner, Jan 58 H P Corprew, June 58 B M Rhodes & Co. Jan 58 R F Hannon, " Wm Gough, " Jos R Bason, Aug 58 R H Harwood, Jan 58 ,J C Coleman, Aug 58 J S Atlee, July 58 N Quesenberry, Jan 60 M B Carrington, Jan 58 Jno Morton, 6 OOJA T Moir, 4 SOjDr J T Hughes, 2 50 Dr E F Gimter, 87!j Massie, OOJThos M Hughes, SOjRo Savmders, July 58 OOJCapt R O Jennings, Ja 58 OOiW E Coles, 1 OO'S M Pettit, " 2 00 2 00 2 17 6 56 3 88 3 24 5 00 1 00 2 00 1 00 2 30 3 25 3 21 1 00 4 00 2 00 3 25 1 00 5 00 2 00 2 25 4 92 1 00 3 29 4 40 5 63 2 50 2 00 5 00 3 OOj Jno D Hughes, July 58 2 00 Wm H Fowlkes, Jan 58 2 00 Jas Garland, " 5 OOl J D Belfield, July 59 2 00 Jos Johnson, Jan 60 2 OOj G A Fowlkes, July 58 2 00 Dr F N Mullen, Jan 60 3 00 Jos A Peck, Jan 59 3 00 Wm M Willeroy, Jan 58 3 25 Ro McCurdy, July 58 8 00 Jno Haw, Jan 59 1 00 M Clarke, Jan 60 2 00 Dr J R Baylor, Jan 58 2 34 S T Peters, " 1 25 Geo W Morton, Oct 57 2 00 M Durrett, Jan 58 2 60 W E Preston, May 58 7 50 J B Lucas, Jan 58 2 00 L J Bowden, Jan 58 5 00 H T Drewry, Jan 58 00 J T Taurman, " 83 H E Dennis, Sep 58 00 H M Bowyer, Oct 58 00 W M Radford, Jan 60 00 Jno T Greenlee, Jan 58 00 F B. Whiting, Jan 60 00 Geo Stillman, Sept 58 00 Dr Thos Smith, Jan 59 00 W^m Worsham, July 58 00 Benj R Woody, Jan 58 00 C B Easley, " 00 2 2 2 5 2 OOiE T Winston & Co, Jan 58 2 00;Jno Sturdivant, OO'Jas T Crockett, 00|D Byars, 62'W Godsey, Dec 57 62 W P Dabney, 25 E J Thompson, 50 :N Mason, 00!C H Lynch, 00 R Allen, Jan 58 00 00 uO 00 00 00 42 30 00 25 25 40 25 00 42 5 00 9 00 50 00 25 00 42 J Flippo, A D Upshur, July 59 W C Daniell, Jan 58 John Ellett, April 58 E Legrand, June 58 Rev A B Davidson, Jan 58 W H Harrison, Jan 59 Chas T Friend, Jan 58 C H Rhodes, Dr J H Ellerson, Jan 59 Dr R Eppes, Wm Copland, Sep 58 Chas Guerrant, Jan 58 A Bailey, " C A Anderson, " A D Pollock, G H Adair, July 59 J H Anderson, July 57 A B Carter, Nov 57 Wm Woodson, Jan 58 Jno A Harman, Jan 59 Col D S Johnston, Oct 58 Dr O F Baxter, Jan 59 2 00 1 00 1 00 5 00 5 00 2 00 5 00 5 00 2 41 2 00 5 25 5 00 1 25 2 00 2 00 5 62 2 00 2 00 6 25 3 25 2 00 2 00 5 00 5 00 2 73 5 00 2 66 3 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 5 00 2 21 2 00 2 00 3 25 2 00 2 00 3 00 2 00 5 00 2 00 5 00 2 00 3 00 2 00 5 00 4 00 2 00 2 00 5 00 2 75 5 00 OVERSEER WANTED. I wish to employ for a gentleman near Richmond, an Overseer, to manage a small farm. To I person who thoroughly understands his business and can come well recommended, liberal ar- angements will be offered. Address N.AUGUST, office So. Planter, 153 Main Street. 3t SOUTHERN PL INTER- ADVERTISING SHEET. Corner of Grace and Foushee Streets, EICHMOND, VA. The next Session of this Institution will open on the FIRST DAY OF OCTOBER, and close on the First Day of July, 1858. TERMS FOR THE SCHOLASTIC YEAR, 1857' $200 20 6 40 20 40 20 16( For Board, - . For Washing, - - - For Lights, - . _ For English Tuition, For Modern Languages, (each,) For French, when studied exclusively of the English branches, For Latin, - - - For Music on Piano, Harp, Guitar, Or- gan or Singing : For one lesson (of an hour) a week, REFERENCES: The Patrons of the School. — Right Rev. Bishop Meade, Right Rev. Bishop Johns, Right RevJ Bishop Elliott of Georgia, Right Rev. Bisliop Cobbs of Alabama, Rev. Moses D. Hoge, D| D., Rev. Charles H. Read, D. D., Rev. T. V. Mo -re, D. D., Rev. B. Gildersleve. The Cierj of the Episcopal Church in Virginia. HUBERT P, LEFEBVRE, A. M, 40 For two lessons (of an hour) a week, For three lessons (of an hour) a week, For four lessons (of an hour) a week. For the use of Piano, Fur Drawing, from Models, For Drawing, from Nature, For Painting in Water Colors, For Oil Painting, Primary Department — for Children un- der il years of age, Rev. H. S. Keppler, William G. Williams, a. m John P. Little, M, D. R. A. Lewis, M. D. Eliodoro Camps, John A. Calyo, C. W. Thilow, W. F. Grabau, Mrs. a. E. J. Gibson Miss Mary Gordon, MAD'ELLE L. VILLEMET, French Governess All letters to be directed to Hubert P. Lefebvre, Richmond, Va. PrincipaL Miss E. Bartlett, Mrs. M. Taylor, Mad'me M. Estvan, Mad'elle Lacy, Charles II. Roseen, [July '57— ly This is a School for girls, entirely under the instruction and superintendence of Mrs. B. am myself. My aim is to leach what the girls sent to ine are prepared to learn — giving specijil attention to fun\ damental branches, jjnd sparing no labor necessary for teaching thoroughly. The girls are treated as members of our family, and have such daily religious instructions, as christiai parents give to their own children. The friends whose names ure below will give information as to the sort of influence likely to be exert- ed in my family : Gen. John H.Cocke of Bremo; Dr John R. Woods, Albemarle ; Rev. B. M. Wailes, Greenfield ; Rev. Peyton Harrison, R. J. Morrison and Mrs. Juliet Drew, Richmond; VVm. B. Harrison of Braudon ; Rev.l Geo. D. Armstrong, Morlolk; Rev. Wm. S. White, Lexington ; Rev. S. B. Wilson, D. D., Hampton Sydney; Geo. F. Harrison. Goochland. The present Session closes on 3d July next. Number limited to 14. There will be several vacancies on] 1st February next. For terms, die, address REV. S. W. BLAIN, Dec 1857 — ly Greenwood Depot. Albemarle Co., Va. AGRICULTURAL REGISTRY AND EXCHANGE OFFICE, For the sale and purchase of Lands, Negroes^ Horses, Stock of every description, Agriculi ral Implements, Patent' Rights, Produce, Fertilizers, &c. The undersigned, in consequence of repeated applications, the advice and suggestion of friends, and h opportunities of seeing the great necessity for, and the..::reat advantage to be derived by the Farmers aii^ others of Virginia, and North Carolina in having a well organized niedium of conmiunicalion for the abovl purposes, has determined to open at the Office of the Soutnern Planter, in this city, books for the registratioj of the above subjects, both for those wishing to sell as well as those having to purchase. Through the medium of such an agency persons who ^* ish to buy or sell anything, Overseers looking fo situations and those wishing to employ tllem, can have access to the Register, uv at once thrown into com munication with the opposite party, and thus be enabled to cflect u speedy sale, purchase, or negotiation a small cost. A small uniform registration fee will be charged in all cases, to be paid in advance. If advertisement are ordered, the money for the cost thereof must accompany the order. A moderate commission charged on consignments or purchases. N. AUGUST, Richmond, March 1867. 153 Main Street-