S tfU^S L^V O VOL. XVIL [MAY.] No* 5. Y& y^ Published Monthly. Puffin & August, Proprietors, ji^ FRANK: G. RUFFIN, Editor TH E S5. £?*3» "*^ DEVOTED TO AGRICULTURE, HORTICULTURE, AND THE HOUSEHOLD ARTS. PRINTED AT RICHMOND, Va., BY MACFARLANE & FERGUSSON 1857. CONTENTS. Superphosphate of Lime, Farming in Jefferson County, stated in the Form of Account, The Game the most Profitable Breed of Stock. — Baked Tomatoes, - Smith's Patent Single or Gang Plow, Lecture on Agricultural Chemistry, - The Supplies of Mutton, Butter Making, - Starting and Shying Horses, - Willis' Improved Stump Machine. — Cul- ture of Carrots, - Cultivation of Cucumbers. — Millet, - Microscopic Discoveries of the Nature of Blight in Wheat, - Lam pas in Horses, How Cured. — The Sheep-Shearing Machine, Culture of Tobacco, - Chinese Plants. — Agricultural School, For Whip. —A Good Cake. — Wheat Drill. Enquiry about. Lands in Nan- semond. Wyandotte Corn, Osage Orange Hedges. — Peas and Snaps. Bugs in. — Land Paying for itself in one Crop. — Love of Flowers, A good Market Garden, &c, Preserving Fruit by Hermetical Sealing, Home-Made Bread, ... Valuable Receipts, ... Sheep-Shearing, - The proper Time for Cutting Timothy, Growing Rubber in the United States. — A Superior Washing Fluid, 257 265 266 267 268 281 282 283 285 286 287 288 289 292 293 ! 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 To prevent a Horse from Breaking his Bridle. — Farmers, Note This. — Usin.g Up the Pig.—Tobacuo Plant Beds, Preserving Wild Fowl. — Wheat and Corn, EDITORIAL. The Eli Thayer Invasion, Irish Potatoes— The Fall Crop, Sheep : Washing them, and preparing the Wool for Market, One Hundred Thousand Dollars propos- ed to be Given towards the Endow- ment of Agricutural Schools at the University of Virginia, Little Giants, &c, - Richmond Cattle Market, Tethering Work Horses at Grass.-^The Hundred Mile Trot, The Wheat Crop.— A New Tow Boat and Lighter Line, - Louisiana vs. Virginia. — Cleveland Bay Stallion. — Haw's Woodpecker Saw Mill.— Peas for Fallow.— Corn Plan- ter. — Tobacco Plants, Emigration from Virginia to the West. Richmond Cattle Market, HORTICULTURAL DEPARTMENT. Cauliflowers, - The Irish Potato Crop, Watering Strawberries, Manure for Fruit Trees. — Encourage Home Production. — Frosted Vegetables, Flowers for our Railroads and other Roads, - 301 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER Is published monthly, in sixty-four octavo pages, upon the following TEEMS: TWO DOLLARS AND FIFTY CENTS per an- num, unless paid in advance. Advance payments as follows : One copy, one year, - - $2 Six copies, d» ... io Thirteen copies, one year, - - - 20 Twenty do do - - 30 One copy, three years, ... 5 And one copy free to persons sending 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, 1st insertion, Each continuance, 6 mouths, } without 12 '• J alteration, 1st insertion, Each continuance, 6 months, ) without Each square of 10 lines or less, Half a page or One column, 12 One page, alteration, 1st insertion, Each continuance, 6 months, ? without 12 " $ alteration, $5 00 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. TH E Devoted to Agriculture, Horticulture, and the Household Arts. Agriculture is the nursing mother of the Arts. — XenopJion. 1 Tillage and Pasturage the State. — Sully. are the two breasts of FRANK. G. RUFFIN, Editor. F. G. RUFFIN & N. AUGUST, Prop RS. Vol. XVII. RICHMOND, VA., MAY, 1857. No. 5. For the Southern Planter. Superphosphate of Lime. Mr. Editor : — The fact that so many establishments for the manufacture of su- perphosphate of lime, are springing up in and around nearly all of^our large cities, Richmond included, indicates very clearly that there must be a very considerable and rapidly increasing demand for this manure — a demand which, there is rea- son to believe, has not arisen solely on account of the intrinsic merits of the ar- ticle, but from the' high price of guano, the extraordinary virtues ascribed to su- perphosphates by manufacturers and ma- nure venders, and several other causes. It may not be out of place, therefore, to call the attention of farmers to the com- position and properties of bones and su- perphosphate of lime, explain the differ- ences between them, to show how the superphosphate ought to be prepared to ensure its good quality, what farmers have a right to expect in the purchase of it, &c, and, what is of more practical im- portance to them, to show that there is no manure of more uncertain composition, and no oth^r which falls so far short of what it professes to be, as this does in nine cases out of ten. I have given the 17 subject very considerable attention, and propose in the present paper, to' discuss it so far as it is a chemical question. I have nothing to say, however, in relation to the value of superphosphate of lime, for this or that particular crop, or how it ought to rank as a fertilizer ; but leave these questions to be answered by the farmer after he has had time and oppor- tunities for thoroughly testing its value. The bones of animals are composed of moisture, animal matter, phosphate and carbonate of lime, and very small quanti- ties of chlorides and sulphates. The bones of different animals differ somewhat in the proportion of the various ingredients, and no analysis could be given which would apply to all cases ; the following, how- ever, will pretty fairly represent their composition : Water and animal matter, Phosphate of lime with a nesia, Carbonate of lime, Chlorides and sulphates, little map;- 48 46 4 2 100 Their value as manure depends mainly upon the phosphate of lime, and the a mo- ma which results from the decomposition 258 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER of the animal matter. When whole bones are applied as manure, they undergo de- composition in the soil so slowly, that their effect is at first scarcely perceptible ; and it is only after years of exposure, that the full benefits resulting from their ap- plication are experienced. By breaking the bones into small pieces, and thus ex- posing a larger surface, something is gain- ed ; and a still greater gain is effected by using the bones in a fine state of division, as in bone dust. But even here the ben- efit is not so immediate, or, at first, so marked, as we are led to expect, from a knowledge of their composition. This arises from the extreme insolubility of the phosphate of lime contained in the bones; the same remark is applicable to the min- eral phosphate of lime, to bone ash, and the bone black of the sugar-refiners. It matters not how finely they may be divi- ded mechanically, pure water has no effect upon them ; and the weaker acids, such as acetic (vinegar,) and carbonic, have very little. Hence when they are applied to the soil, in which the principal solvent is water very slightly charged with car- bonic acid, they may be regarded as al- most inert, and yield their phosphates with extreme slowness. But if bone dust,*or either of the other phosphates mentioned above, be subjected to the action of muriatic acid, a complete solution of # the whole of the. phosphate of lime takes place, and if to this solution we add an alkalie, such as potash or ammo- nia, until the acid is completely neutral- ized, the phosphate of lime will again as- sume the solid form, but in an exceeding- ly fine state of division; in other words, it becomes precipitated phosphate of lime. Chemically this precipitated phosphate is the same as the bone phosphate, — it is composed of lime and phosphoric acid, in the very same proportions that they are found in bones, or in mineral phosphate ; but in consequence of its lightness and extreme fineness of division, its proper- ties with respect to solvents are essen- tially different. The precipitated phos- phate is insoluble it is true, but when the water is acidulated with a weak acid, as acetic acid, it is readily soluble, and hence when it is applied to the soil, water charged with carbonic acid dissolves more or less of it, and thus it finds its way into the circulation of plants. The superphosphate of lime is a com- pound of lime and phosphoric acid which is soluble, and contains more phosphoric acid in proportion to the lime, than is found in the neutral or bone phosphate ; it may be regarded as a compound of neu- tral phosphate, with free, or uncombined phosphoric acid, in which the neutral phosphate is soluble, just as it is in muri- atic acid. Whenever this compound comes in contact with the various bases, such as lime, potash, etc., which are present in every fertile soil, whether naturally or by the addition of these bases to it, the free phosphoric acid unites with one or more of them, when the neutral phosphate is precipitated, and becomes insoluble phos- phate of lime. But as it is in the form of a precipitated phosphate, it is in a con- dition to be acted upon by the ordinary solvents of the soil. The free acid, by its union with the bases, forms phosphates which are also in a fine state of division : if it meets w T ith lime and magnesia, in- soluble salts result, — if with the alkalies, soluble phosphates are' found. It is im- possible that the superphosphate, unless applied to a sandy waste, should continue for any length of time in the soil as such ; neutral phosphates are formed, but these, although for the most part insoluble in water, are readily acted upon by the sol- vents in the soil, and are consequently immediately available to growing crops. This fact first led Liebig to suggest the use of the superphosphate, and it is upon | this, that its superior advantage over bone dust, bone black, and mineral phosphate depends. The superphosphate of lime is not a natural, but an artificial product ; it may be formed from the natural phosphate by the addition of a certain proportion of phosphoric acid, or the subtraction of an equivalent proportion of lime from it. The latter course is the only practicable one. The substance used to separate the lime is sulphuric acid ; this being a stronger acid than phosphoric, and Waving a powerful affinity for lime, it will, when applied to neutral phosphate of lime, take away a part of the lime, forming sulphate of lime, or plaster, — leaving the phospho- ric acid in the form of superphosphate of lime. In preparing this substance, very much depends upon the proportion of sulphuric THE SOUTHERN PLANTER, 259 acid used ; these should be enough to convert all of the neutral into superphos- phate ; less than that would leave a por- tion of the neutral phosphate unacted upon and more than sufficient for this would only involve the maker in unneces- sary expense. It is also important to at- tend to the state of division of the bone, or other phosphate acted on ; some works upon Chemistry applied to agriculture, re- commend the use of whole or broken bones, if ground ones cannot be had, and say that by the use of more acid, the bones will soon crumble. This is a mistake; the material should always be in a fine state of division to insure complete re- action between the substances ; and even them great care in mixing them is neces- sary. Again, it is necessary in the prepara- tion of the manure, to dilute the acid with a certain portion of water ; first, to pre- vent the acid's charing the animal mat- ter ; and second, to make the mixture of such a consistence, that the materials may be thoroughly incorporated, so as to in- sure the most intimate contact between the acid and the phosphate. After the reaction is complete, this water must be gotten rid of by drying the manure in the air, or by artificial heat; or it may be absorbed by the addition of some other substance, which substance may give ad- ditional value to the manure, or may be worthless. So variable is the composition of this manure, that no two brands are alike, and very few of them come up to any- thing like what should be the proper stan- dard of excellence. This results from ig- norance and want of skill on the part of |ome manufacturers ; but in very many crises it results from design. The man- ufacturer deliberately prepares an infe- rior or adulterated article, knowing that very few persons can detect the fraud for themselves, or will take the trouble to have the manure analyzed before pur- chasing. Many manufacturers and agents publish analysis of their manures, made by distinguished chemists ; but their anal- ysis are not always to be relied on, — not that the chemists are parties to the fraud, but the manufacturer supplies them with one article, and the consumer with an- other. Let us now see in what- proportions the acid and bone dust should be used, and what would be the composition of a ma- nure so, prepared ; then we shall be bet ( ter prepared to decide upon the results of the superphosphates now in the market. The composition of neutral phosphate of lime is — Phosphoric acid, 48^ Lime, 51 h 100 That of superphosphate of lime is- Phosphoric Acid, Lime, 28$ 100 Now let us suppose that we wish to con- vert 100 parts of neutral phosphate into superphosphate. In this there are 48^ parts of phosphoric acid ; thus : 71*; 48£; 100: 68 very nearly. That is, 100 parts of Neutral phosphate, will yield 68 parts of Superphosphate, which will re- quire the removal of 32 parts of lime. Lime and sulphuric acid will unite with each other in the proportion of 41* parts of the former to 58£ of the latter ; to form plaster, therefore, the thirty two parts of lime which is to be removed from the 100 parts of neutral phosphate, will require 45 parts of absolute sulphuric acid, or 55 parts of the best commercial acid. If now we refer to the original composition of bones, we find that 100 parts of bone dust contain about 46 per cent of neutral phosphate of lime, hence, according to our calculation, this will require for its complete conversion into the superphos- phate, about 25* parts of the last commer- cial acid. The bones also contain about four per cent of carbonate of lime, which is decomposed with the formation of* sul- phate of lime the moment the acid and bone dust come in contact with each other ;. this will consume about 4* parts of acid. The whole amount of acid, then, necessary to effect the transformation of the neutral phosphate in 100 parts of bone dust into superphosphate, need not exceed 30 per cent of the whole ; or say, any amount of bone dust, can, by proper treatment, be converted into superphos- phate of lime by the addition of one third of its weight of good sulphuric acid. The mixture of 100 parts of bone dust, and 30 of sulphuric acid, would, after the 260 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. reaction was complete, and the manure had dried as much as it would by expo- sure to air, give a product having about the following composition in 100 parts- Moisture. 10 Animal Matter, 2 Sulphate of Lime (Plaster) 39 Superphosphate of Lime, 24 Equal to 35 per cent of bone phosphate. The animal matter would yield from 1 to 1| per cent, of ammonia. In this cal- culation we have supposed the transforma- tion to be complete, and all the phosphate to have become soluble ; but in practice this is never the case, as more or less of the bone dust will escape the action of the acid, and therefore remain insoluble. When this compound is applied to land, and moisture is present, the free phospho- ric acid immediately enters into combina- tion with the bones present, forming neu- tral phosphates which are in an exceed- ingly fine state of division, and more inti- mately blended with the soil, than they could be by any other mode of application; while the neutral phosphate which was soluble in consequence of the presence of the^ree acid, is precipitated in an equally fine state of division, and also intimately mingled with the soil. If, instead of allowing the manure to dry up, some foreign substance is added to absorb the water, its value is deprecia- ted in proportion to the quantity of foreign matter used, unless the addition consists of some highly concentrated manure, such as Peruvian guano, the sulphate of ammonia, or dried blood. If the substance added contains any bone, such as oxide of iron., lime, or magnesia, the free phosphoric acid unites with them, the phosphates become insoluble, and there is no longer more than a ver} T small per cent., if any, of the su- perphosphate of lime — the manure has re- turned to its original condition. From what has been said before in rela- tion to precipitated phosphate of lime, it follows that these phosphates, although in- soluble, are far better suited to minister to growing vegetation than the original bone dust, but then the intimate mixture and incorporation of the phosphate with the soil, which results from an application of really soluble phosphate to it, cannot be attained by the use of one which has al- ready been neutralized. But this is not the greatest objection to the use of sub- stances which will neutralize the free acid present ; so long as the practice is counte- nanced, so long will frauds be almost un- limited. A farmer purchases what pur- ports to be a true superphosphate of lime, he has it examined by a chemist who tells him that it is not superphosphate ; that not one particle of it is soluble, or, at most, but a very small per centage ; and that all the phosphate there is neutral phos- phate. How, I ask, is the farmer to know whether his manure ever was soluble, or contains precipitated phosphate, instead of the original bone phosphate, just as it came from the mill, or from the sugar re- finery ? If the amount of soluble phos- phates is to be no index of the value of the manure, it will be made, (as it sometimes is made,) by deliberately mixing ground plas- ter with finely ground bones. The only way Jo check fraud, and secure a manure that is worthy the name of superphosphate, is for the purchaser to insist upon there be- ing a certain per centage, and that not a small one of soluble phosphate of lime in every particle purchased. Bone black is prepared in large quanti- ties for the use of the sugar refiners, by heating bones in close vessels so as to ex- clude the air ; after repeated using to clar- ify the syrup, it loses its properties, and may then be profitably used in the manu- facture of Superphosphate of lime. In its preparation the animal matter is all de- composed, and in its stead there is left a certain amount of charcoal. When treat- ed with a proper proportion of sulphuric acid, so as to convert all the neutral into superphosphate of lime, it becomes just as valuable as the superphosphate from unburned bones ; it is true there is no ani- mal matter to yield ammonia, but the in- creased per centage of superphosphate* more than compensates for this loss, when we compare the money values of ammonia and superphosphate of lime. Refuse bone black has been found to contain from 65 to 75 — say 75 per cent, of neutral phos- phate of lime, 10 or 12 of carbonate of lime, and about the same proportion of charcoal. 100 parts, therefore, would re- quire about 12 parts of sulphuric acid to decompose the carbonate, and some 38 parts of the same acid to transform the bone into superphosphate of lime ; or the bone black would require about one-half its weight of acid. THE SOUTHERN" PLANTER. 261 This would give us a manure yielding 32 per cent, of soluble or superphosphate of lime in 100 parts, equivalent to 46| per cent, of the neutral phosphate ; and as the proportion of sulphuric acid used was larger., it follows that the proportion of plaster would be considerably greater than in other cases. We see, therefore, how valuable refuse bone black is as a source of manure, even when compared with ground bones, and how groundless is the belief, which is quite prevalent, that bone black is greatly inferior to ground bones as a source of superphosphate of lime.* By using bone black instead of bones, we shall have some 8 per cent, more soluble phosphate in the 100 parts, equivalent to about 12 per cent, of neutral phosphate, together with a material addi- tion to the amount of plaster, which, as I have said before, is more than sufficient to compensate for the loss of 1^ per cent, of ammonia. Boiled bones have lost most of their fat and some of their other animal matter, while the proportion of phosphate of lime in them is something greater than in raw bones ; in using them, therefore, as a source of superphosphate of lime, a little more acid is necessary than for common bone dust, and the composition of the ma- nure will be somewhat different; there will be a little more soluble phosphate and plaster, and less ammonia. Bones that have had all their animal matter burned off in the open fire, are sometimes used; they contain some 80 or 9(f per cent, of phosphate of lime, and consequently require more acid than is necessary for any other form of bones. Mineral phosphate of lime, Mexican and Columbian guano, may all be used for the same purpose ; the quantity of acid, and in each case, should always be determined by reference to the proportion of neutral phosphate present. I have before remarked that the com- plete transformation of the phosphate is not attainable in practice, particularly when the manure is manufactured on a large scale ; yet a reasonable approach ought to be made to the numbers given above. In an experiment made in my laboratory, with bones that were not by any means in as fine a state of division as they should be, I prepared a superphos- phate in which their was 18 per cent, of j soluble phosphate of lime, equivalent to 28 per cent, of neutral phosphates, the en- tire phosphate present was 35 per cent., so that 7 per cent, of it remained untouch- ed by the sulphuric acid. It also contained the usual amount of animal matter capable of yielding ammonia, and the proportion of plaster due to the quantity of sulphuric acid used. Had I "added some foreign substance, the proportion of soluble matter would have been less ; suppose, for exam- ple, that 25 per cent.' of some other sub- stance had been added, then the propor- tion of soluble phosphates would have been reduced to about 14Jr per cent. Prof. Way, chemist to the Royal Agri- cultural Society of England, after having examined numerous samples of super- phosphate of English manufacture, says, that the farmer has a right to expect from 8 to 11 per cent, of soluble phosphate, and from 1 to 1| per cent, of ammonia, in every sample purchased. Now, I think this estimate is too low; I think that the farmer has a right to expect some 16 or 18 per cent of soluble phosphate, and from \ to 1| per cent, of ammonia in every sample ; and if the proportion of soluble phosphate is less than this, then he may fairly expect a proportionate increase in the per centage of ammonia, otherwise he certainly is not getting an equivalent for his money. To show this, let us take my own sam- ple, in which the proportion of soluble phosphate was not, I am sure, more than ought to be obtained in practice by any one who is at all conversant with his bu- siness. This contained 18 per cent, of soluble phosphate ; the addition of 25 per cent, of foreign matter would have reduc- ed it to 14| per cent. If this addition had been Peruvian guano, we should have had an increase of about 4 per cent, in our ammonia, and about 7 per cent, in our neutral phosphate; then the manure would have contained 14| per cent, soluble phos- phate of lime, 14 per cent, insoluble or neutral phosphate, about 5 per cent, am- monia, and the proportion of plaster due to the acid used. Sulphate of ammonia or dried blood, or a mixture of either of these with guano, would also have been usefui additions, be- cause they would have materially increas- ed the per centage of ammonia ; but to have added any other substance, such as 262 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. bone dust, bone black, wood ashes, etc., would have reduced the proportion of so- luble phosphate, without returning an equivalent. Again, let us take the superphosphate prepared from bone black ; I have already shown that the theoretical amount of solu- ble phosphate in this should be about 32 per cent., equivalent to 46|- per cent, of neutral phosphate. Allowing that there re- mains 25 per cent, of the neutral phos- 'phate untouched by the"" acid, the manure ought still to contain some 24 per cent, of soluble phosphate, which would be reduc- ed to 18 per cent, by the addition of 25 per cent, of guano, then the manure would con- tain about 18 per cent, of soluble phos- phate of lime, 16 per cent, neutral phos- phate, 4 per cent, ammonia, and a larger proportion of plaster than in the last case. Superphosphate of lime is sold to far- mers at from $40 to $50 per ton of 2,000 lbs., the prices varying with the brands. — Now it can be shown by a very simple calculation, that the materials required for its manufacture, to wit : sulphuric acid, bone dust, bone black, guano, etc., are sold at such prices that the manufacturer would realize a handsome profit from his manure, supposing it to come fully up to the stand- ard of the two samples just referred to. I repeat, therefore, in view of these facts, that superphosphates which have had no manure containing ammonia mixed with them, and which consequently contain but from 1 to 1| per cent, of ammonia, should on analysis yield from 16 to 18 per cent, of soluble phosphate, from 8 to 10 per cent, of neutral phosphate of lime, together with a due proportion of plaster, &c. — And that those to which guano or some salt of ammonia has been added, by which a very material increase in the proportion of ammonia has been made, should con- tain from 12 to 16 per cent, of soluble phosphates, some 15 per cent, of neutral phosphate of lime, together with the plas- ter due to the sulphuric acid consumed. Let us now look at the composition of a few of the superphosphates in the market. De Burg's is probably better known, and more extensively used than any other. So many certificates are published in relation to the very great superiority of this ma- nure, and so much is said about subject- ing each supply to analysis by well known chemists, etc., that I must confess I com- menced this investigation with the settle conviction that De Burg's superphosphat e would furnish me with a practical standard of excellence for manures of this class, to which I could refer all "others — the sequel will show how far my expectations have been realized. I have analyzed two samples of De Burg's superphosphate; the analyses were not what chemists term complete in all re- spects, but sufficiently so for all practical purposes. The first one examined had been in my possession for several years ; it was made about the time, or soon after, De Burg commenced the manufacture of superphosphate, and had been sent out for distribution among farmers, that they might test its virtues, and was no doubt intended as the ne plus ultra of superphosphates. — This sample contained about 5 per cent, of ammonia, 6^ per cent, of soluble or real superphosphate of lime, some 30 per cent. of neutral phosphate of lime, together with about 30 per cent, of plaster, and small quantities of other less valuable constituents. The manure had been pre- pared from bone black by the action of more or less sulphuric acid, with the after addition of some Peruvian guano, and pro- bably a little sulphate of ammonia. When these results were first obtained, I thought that the manure had been made in good faith, that originall}' there had been a much larger proportion of soluble phos- phate, and that the phosphoric acid had been precipitated by the after use of the guano ; I am now satisfied, however, that there never could have been more soluble phosphate than the manure now contains, because I have ascertained that the addi- tion of guano will not precipitate the neu- tral phosphate of lime. The second sample I obtained direct from the agent in Baltimore, and may be regarded as a fair average of the manure now offered by Mr. De Burg and his agents to Southern farmers.* With the manure the agent sent me an analysis, from which I naturally concluded that it was a very superior article. This analysis gives us 7. per cent, of ammonia, 41 per cent, of phosphates (without saying, however, how much is so- luble phosphate,) etc., and says there are 37 parts soluble in cold water, from which one would naturally infer that there must be a very considerable proportion of soluble THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 2G3 phosphates present, as the manure is pre- pared for the express purpose of render- ing the phosphates soluble. Instead of that, however, I found something less than two per cen.t. of soluble or superphosphate of lime. Whilst filtering the aqueous solu- tion the finer particles naturally ran into the filter first, leaving the coarser ones still in the vessel in which the solution had been made; something peculiar in this residue attracted my attention, and after washing and drying it, I, instead of ana- lyzing it, inspected it carefully with the aid of a powerful eyeglass. I found quite a number of small transparent crystalline plates, which looked very much like the minefal selenite, or crystalined sulphate of lime, (plaster) together with a great num- ber of white grains, which were evidently not particles of bone dust. By the aid of my glass and a pair of forceps, I pinched out and placed in separate piles a number of both crystals and grains and on subject- ing them to analysis, I found them to be selenite and gypsum (i. e. plaster and noth- ing else.) In other words, B$r. De Burg does not add the requisite proport on of sulphuric acid, whereby he would get a large proportion of soluble phosphate, and makes up the deficiency by adulterating his manure with ground plaster. The pro- portion of neutral phosphate I will not de- termine ; I concluded that it could not be precipitated phosphate, as it should be, bu-t must be, the greater part of it — the origi- nal and unaltered bone black: 1st — be- cause the adulteration proves that instead of sulphuric acid having been used in proper proportion, plaster was substituted for it ; and 2nd — if it had been soluble, the use of guano or sulphate of ammonia would not have precipitated it, and ren- dered it insoluble. To put this matter be- yond the possibility of controversy, I took a portion of the superphosphate of lime that had been prepared by myself, and to this I added some guano and sulphate of ammonia, 70 parts of the superphosphate were powdered, and made into a thin paste with 20 parts of guano, and 10 of the sul- phate of ammonia, by which I got a prep- aration containing- a higher proportion of ever contained. ammonia than De Burg's The materials having been mixed with wa- ter, even in the most favorable condition for the mutual reaction between the solu- ble phosphates and the substances added, and yet no reaction, suck as to make ikephos r phates insoluble, took place. I determined the proportion of soluble phosphates in the manure \>y careful analysis and found ft to be the same that I would have gotten by calculation, supposing that 30 per cent, of foreign matter had been added without precipitating any of the soluble phosphate of lime. I conclude, therefore, that De Burg's superphosphate of lime does not now, and did not when first prepared, contain the requisite proportion of soluble phosphates; that the neutral phosphate of lime is prin- cipally, if not entirely, in the condition th.at we find it in the unaltered bone black, which is the foundation of the manure nnd that the manure is largely adulterated with plaster. I am thus particular in sta ting facts and my deductions from them because De Burg's superphosphate has generally been held in high estimation, particularly in the South. Mapes' Improved Superphosphate of lime is another manure which has been a good deal used, and is now making loud calls upon the Southern agricultural com- munity; large supplies of it are to be had in Baltimore, and pamphlets containing numerous certificates, analyses, etc , are freely distributed. I obtained a sample from the Baltimore agent, which like De Burg's, may be taken as a fair average of the manure Mr. Mapes and his agents of- fer- to Southern farmers. This manure in- stead of being a superphosphate, is, I ma} 7 " say, perfectly destitute of soluble phos- phates, as I could only find traces of phos- phoric acid in the V\ater which contained all the soluble matter of the manure. The pamphlet asserts that it contains 7 per ct. of " actual" ammonia, besides 2 or 3 per cent. of "potential ammonia." I, however, could only find 3 per cent, altogether. In filtering the aqueous solution, I found a res- idue of coarse particles, consisting of bone black, dirt, white grains, &c, somewhat similar to that found in De Burg's. After picking out a number of these white grains, which by inspection with a glass, it was plain was not bone dust, but some crushed mineral, I soon found them to be carbonate of lime; and since there are large num- bers of them through the manure, I con- clude that it is largely adulterated with that substance. How much soluble phos- phate there was originally, it would be im- 264 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER possible to say, as the whole would be pre- cipitated the moment it came in contact with the powdered limestone; but, when a manufacturer descends so low as to adul- terate his manure with such stuff, 'and then sell it to farmers at $50 a ton, we may safety conclude that he will not concern himself much as to the condition of the constituents, but will make it at as little cost as possible. Mapes says in the pamphlet, that he makes the manure of bone dust, sulphu- ric acid, Peruvian guano, and sulphate of ammonia, but forgets the mention of the limestone; instead of using bone dust he uses bone black, which by the way is just as good, but prefers to use the term "bone dust," because he knows that there is a prejudice against the bone black. The guano used must have been applied byway of seasoning, as salt is to food. There are several very elaborate analyses given in the pamphlet, which were made by distin- guished chemists, but they are the analy- ses of samples furnished these gentlemen by the manufacture?-, and are not to be relied on. The same manufactory also turns out Mapes' JYitrogenized Superphosphate of Lime, Mapes 1 No. 1 Superphosphate of Lime, and Mape's Cotton and Tobacco Fer- tilizer. I have not yet analyzed either of these manures, but would say to farmers beware of them, until you have something more than the manufacturer's statements regarding their composition or value. From what I have said it is manifest that neither De Burg's nor Mapes' Super- phosphate have any claim to the confidence of the agricultural public; of the two, however, De Burg's is far preferable, as it contains more fertilizing matter, and its price is considerably less than that of Mapes'. I have also examined a superphosphate made in Richmond, and sold at the modest price of $40 per ton ; it does not contain any soluble phosphates, and the neutral phosphate of lime present amounts to but scant 18 per cent ; it contains also about 25 per cent, of plaster, anil 17 per cent. of water, with a superabundance of wood ashes, and a seasoning of about 1 per cent, of salt. The condition of the manure shows very clearly that a very considerable portion of the bone phosphate was never acted upon at all by the sulphuric acid, and what little superphosphate was form- ed, was precipitated the moment the ashes came in contact with it. At the present prices of bones, sulphuric acid, salt and ashes, this manure could not have cost the maker more than from $20 to $22 per ton, and yet he sells it at $40. From all that I can learn I am satisfied that the great inferiority of this manure is the re- sult of ignorance and want of skill, rather than a deliberate attempt on the part of the manufacturer, to defraud the agricul- tural community. Last summer, Prof. Johnson of the Yale College Analytical Laboratory, analyzed eight samples of superphosphates of lime from five different manufactories, and out of these eight, " only two, viz: De Burg's No. 1 ammoniated, and Eve's Improved, were manufactured with any respectable combination of knowledge and honesty, two indispensable requisites for this kind of business. And these manures contain- ed respectively but 2| and 4|' per cent, of soluble phosphoric acid. Hildreth's super- phosphate (New York) contained 5-| per cent, of phosphoric acid, and of this none was soluble ! In face of these facts, he is a bold man who now buys superphosphate of lime." Hildreth's superphosphates, summarity disposed of by"the Prof., is advertised in the American Farmer of Baltimore, and a letter from Dr. Jackson of Boston, is pub- lished in which he states that the* manure contains 24 per cent, of soluble matter, a large part of which we are led to infer is phosphoric acid. These examples are sufficient to show that very few, if any, of the superphos- phates in our country are genuine, and that farmers should exercise the utmost caution in their purchase. Farmers are frequently recommended to protect them- selves from frauds and high prices, by pur- chasing the materials and making the ma- nure for themselves ; and full directions for the preparation of superphosphate of lime, have been given in most of the agri- cultural journals. For myself I cannot think such a course advisable; besides there are very few farmers who can be in- duced to adopt this plan. The farm is the place for making compost heaps, and for saving stable manure, but not the place for the preparation of mineral manures ; and if superphosphates are not to come into general use until farmers make them, the THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 205 day of their popularity is still far distant. It seems to me that the most effectual remedy against frauds, would be, for all farmers who feel at all interested in the matter, to jnform themselves as to what they ought to expect in the purchase of a superphosphate; and refuse under all cir- cumstances, to purchase any article which on analysis will not come up to the stand- ard thus fixed upon. There is a mode of treating bones which deserves more attention, in my estimation, than it has heretofore received. If bones and wood ashes are thrown together, and kept for some months, the ley from the ashes forms soap with the fat, which is readily removed by water, and the bones themselves soften so much, that if they are thrown into the compost heap and then on the soil, they soon break down and be- come thoroughly incorporated with it. If finely broken bones, or bone dust is used, the softening process is more complete, and the mixture becomes a very active manure. The potash, besides removing the fat, which, when bones are used, pro- tects them from the action of the solvents of the soil, has a strong affinity for the phosphoric acid, and takes a portion of it away from the line, forming soluble phos- phate of potassa, leaving the remaining phosphate of lime in a porous condition, and capable of being much more readily acted upon by the solvents of the soil than when in the form of simple bone dust. — Such a manure would be very cheap, and when mixed with manures containing am- monia, would, I am satisfied, be more effi- cient than many of the so called super- phosphates. WILLIAM GILHAM. Virginia Military Institute, Feb'y23, 1857. should be known. It is this, what per cent, are those farms producing, deducting all agricultu- ral expenses? Being desirous of information, and at the same time willing to give it when in my power, I have thought it not amiss to give you a brief synopsis of what some of us are doing in Jefferson county, Va. Your humble correspondent was born and raised upon a farm in this county, and in 1840 bought 425 acres of limestone land at $54 25 per acre, - - - $23,056 00 Also have invested for farm pur- poses, personal property to the « amount of - - 5,500 00 J 28,550 00 Farming in Jefferson County, stated in the Form of Account. March 19th, 1857. Mr. Editor: — I believe I have been your humble subscriber since the commencement of your valuable agricultural journal, and have read many .communications which alone have paid me fully for my subscription. None how- ever have interested me more than those head- ed — What Kentucky can do and what Rocking- ham can do. Interesting and instructive as they are, there is one point omitted in both communications which, in my humble opinion, above all others, Number of acres of cleared land, - - 355 Number of acres of timber 70 425 My fields are all surveyed, and I have a plat of the whole farm. Not being satisfied with working in the dark, I commenced in 1851 to keep a farm journal. I have relied on wheat, corn, grass, and clover seed as staple productions. Also have raised beef, pork, and mutton for market. I find, in referring to my journal, that I have planted uppn an average 80 acres of corn per year, commencing in 1851 and ending in 1850, which corn averaged 40:1: bushels per acre of shelled corn. The worst crop being in 1854, only 16 bushel per acre ; the best in 1855, ave- raging 59 bushels of shelled corn per acre. — During the same time I have seeded annually 150 acres in wheat, which has averaged 17 bushels per acre, being fallow, stubble and corn land. Best yield of wheat being on 40 acres of fallow ground in the year 1852, 32£ bushels per acre. Also raised oats in 1855, product between 50 and 60 bushels per acre. Product of meadow for same time 2 tons per acre. Have at this time on farm, March 19, 1857 — Cattle of all ages 48 head ; horses, mules, and colts, 14 ; , sheep, 45 ; hogs, 67. Keep more cattle in the winter season than in the summer. Work 6 men and 1 boy on the farm, and oc- casionally employ extra labour. Average ag- ricultural expenses per year for 6 years being store bills, taxes, labour and all bills for farm- ing purposes, - - $1,168 00 Average net profits (per year) for 6 years, after deducting all ex- penses, - - - 3,232 00 Interest on $23,056, at 6 per cent. - - $1,383 Interest on $5,500 of per- sonal property at 10 per cent. - - 550 $1,933 Whole investment paying 10 per cent, on first cost of farm. 266 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. Present value of farm from $75 to $85, hav- ing expended $1,100 in farm buildings. Have never used 500 weight of artificial manures, relying mainly on barn-yard manure, clover, and plaster as fertilizers. I have not charged, or given credit for what has been consumed on the farm in the form of corn, meats, provisions, &c. Respectfully yours, A SUBSCRIBER. Jefferson County, Va. The Game the most Profitable Breed of Stock. I well know the sentiment here advanc- ed will meet with many who will doubt its truthfulness. Some will imagini they can, from their experience, prove to the contrary. I 'will ask, have you ever rais- ed the game with your brag fowls, the same year and under the same circum- stances? If not, then you must hold your peace. Others know it is false, for naturalists say of all fowls the game is the most bar- ren. In reply to this, I will say the fowls we now get from England as game, are very different from that barren stock which Goldsmith says " will not cluck more than one brood of chickens a season." I will now prove that I have not jump- ed at conclusions, by showing that I am well fixed for raising more than two or three species of fowls the same year. And secondly, that the treatment is the same with all. In the first place, I have eight hen houses, four separated by a paling fence, the others by distance. In each hen house I have the boxes for nests made of plank twelve inches wide, with partitions ten inches apart; the nests are made three times a year, of nice grass and trash to- bacco ; the feed is alike at every lot ; the fowls, being of a different breed at every lot, all have the same attention paid them. They are well fed, and have water in the summer twice a day ; and in every lot I have calcined bone for them to eat, as they cannot get lime enough in the lots. I like to set as many hens as possible in February and March, though I never put more than thirteen eggs at this season un- der a hen unless she is very large, for in cold weather the eggs should come in con- tact with the body of the hen, to insure a good hatching. After the chickens are hatched I put them with the hen in a hovel, and keep them stopped up for two or three days, unless it is warm weather ; then they may be turned out for three or four hours a day, until they are strong enough to fol- low the hen. Some trash tobacco should be put in the hovel, and if they have ver- min, grease the hen with lard and spirits turpentine stewed. The chickens should not be greased .unless they are covered with vermin and over a week old. I feed three times a day with dough made up with grease from the kitchen. Now this method is followed at every lot, and I can truly say the game will compare favoura- bly with any other breed of fowls I ever saw. To show I believe what I write, I have this year seven kinds of game, and with the exception of one stock, they will lay as many eggs, set as well, and raise their young better than any fowls T have ever seen. I know it is said the game do not grow fast enough, for chickens hatched the same time, of the larger species, such as the Shanghai, Chittagong, or Black Spanish, will be a fourth larger at the same age, or by the time the first named are large enough to eat. I admit this: but the price com- manded by the game will, when they are marketably, justify you in keeping them a week or so longer, and this is not all, for the game may be sold to amateurs from $2 to $10 per pair. Many are prejudiced against the game on account of their fight- ing qualities. If you turn out two or three young Cock* the same year, they certainly will have a battle the next spring. But I would advise all who can to build two hen-houses, and put a dozen hens and one cock in each, I will insure it if you pay any attention to them, you will get more eggs, and raise more chickens than you commonly do by having thirty or forty hens ciowded in one hen-house. I will close by asking for this a place in your paper, and in the future I will write an article on breeding in and in, and go into the rearing of fowls more fully. I am yours, respectfully, J. McL. ANDERSON. Baked Tomatoes. — Tomatoes, pealed and baked on a Sat dish, as we bake afjples, (or even baked without pealing), when done seasoned with salt, butter and pepper, is, we think, the most luscious way of preparing this excellent fruit. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 207 o. ft « H H % H Bh <^ ft 02 M H DO © ©.,1 bCfl.i © hj, g- g.S £££ g«fS ° ^b - a -g * ts * £ zf 3 ^ ^ I -9 3 © £-2 © 43 S S c3 a 'ffij © p- o & © uo rO bi O P P ~ P :2 © „i ! Jo ^ s t s §^ s -t-s T3 s-s ^ +_| -C ^ t>. o ■*" 3- 3 "S o «_=; E g i « Tr © £- t oj - j? a> c5 o ... CUtS o3 "^ *P, o © P* 3 tC i o C 3 K S3 >P t» cS go © pVd .5 rj 'P *£ eg. nd .5 o P 5* '© s 2 S3 P-^= § « 9 g J .g,g o .2 P .-£ += Jj T3 © m © "p< PCrrt 02 -©.£.-£ *? J ■*■&£ So | ^« § ^.s^pus — ^©^; p S^c3©©S©-,rtP^ ^ "^ rr-P ^C^ tC+ t P r^^i2^^0_©c© (:3 C *5 ^ 9 © r P -P .o ^ 2 p v © CO tt) ,-.s w a d a a c3 c ©.P ^ gU© jiPg g d k ^ § - r^ .8 p ^ © a r - - ^1 p p'^^^J © ^ ©-§ g b g © g g\-s,a on a &r_a ew S © >•- ^^5 sua ^rl^ © 0° .2 £3 P- 1 © § © § 268 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER From the British Farmers' Magazine. Lecture on Agricultural Chemistry. BY MR. J. C. NESBIT. On Tuesday, Nov. 11, 1856, a lecture on General Agricultural Chemistry was delivered in the Central Subscription Rooms, Launceston, Cornwall, by J. C. Nesbit, Esq., of the Agricultural and Chemical College, Kennington, in fulfil- ment of an engagement entered into by him with the committee of the Launceston Agricultural Society. In consequence of the lecture being de- livered in the evening of the day on which the cattle show was held, and im- mediately after the dinner, the attendance, w r hich amounted in all to about two hun- dred, comprised a very large proportion of the members of the society and the lead- ing farmers of the district. The lecture was illustrated by the use of tabular dia- grams. The chair was again taken by C. Gurney, Esq. Mr. Nesbit then came forward, and said : # # * # # Allow me in the first instance to point out to you what I have termed "the ap- plication of science to agriculture." Ag- riculture, as an art, has existed time im- memorial. Our fathers and our grandfa- thers and our great grandfathers, and all our ancestors before them, ploughed the land and harrowed the land and tilled the land ; they obtained crops and realized certain results from certain operations — in our country one way, in another country in another way. But the facts of their art, however numerous and important, had never been collected — had never been strung, as it were, together; they were like the beads of a necklace, each unim- portant by itself, but when strung together forming an important whole. Now the application of science to agriculture at the present time is to collect the facts of ag- riculture, facts with which you have be- come perfectly familiar in your own expe- rience, and to show why certain causes produce certain effects ; and I believe I shall be able to point out to you something to-night which will enable you to trace some of the facts with which you are your- selves acquainted, to certain simple and definite causes. The first point to which I shall direct your attention is the nature of soils, because I think that before we commence any investigation into the na- ture of plants we should know something about the character of the soils in which they grow. Viewing our planet as a whole, we may regard it as consisting of earth, or solid matter ; water, or liquid matter; and air, or gaseous matter. These three kinds of matter are quite capable of changing their form. The solid may be- come a liquid or a gas, the gas a liquid or a solid ; and a liquid may become either the one or the other. The particular mode in which any of these forms of matter is presented to us depends upon heat ; so that, you see, the old myth of the ancient philosophers, that fire, air, earth, and wa- ter are the four elements, is not in reality so very far wrong. Taking a broad and general view, it may be affirmed that the solid matter, the liquid matter, and the gaseous matter, aided by the light and the heat of the sun which acts upon all these, are the great elements upon which the ani- mal and the vegetable existence of the whole world depends. Now in this coun- ty (Cornwall) we are blessed with a very large amount of a certain rock called £ra- nite, which is regarded by geologists as the primitive rock of the world, containing within itself the material from which most of the other rocks have been derived by action of some kind or other upon its sur- face. This granite, supposed to be trie primeval rock, has been subjected to the operation of certain causes. Now granite rock consists of certain substances which are subject to the action of the air. — Without mentioning at the present mo- ment those properties of the air which act upon granite, let me point out to you that one of the chief ingredients in granite is feldspar, which is found in all the granite in Cornwall. This contains 65 per cent, of a substance called silica, which you know very well under the name of sand. I am not speaking now of the shell-sand of the coast, but of the hard, gritty, sili- cious sand. It contains 18 per cent, of a substance called alumina, which is the base of clay; a pure alumina is. in fact, a pure argillaceous matter. It also contains a substance called potasli, to the extent of about 16 per cent. Now nothing at first sight appears more indestructible than gra- nite rock. But there is abundant evidence that granite is very destructible, especially THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 269 if it contain a large amount of feldspar. Porcelain clay, which is found in such large quantities in this county, is obtained from the decomposition of granite, and what is called china-stone is simply gra- nite partially decomposed. Now what is the nature of the action of the air in this case ? There is a certain principle in the air called carbonic-acid gas, which acts upon the potash in the feldspar, and dis- solves it out ; and of course, the effect of dissolving the potash is just like that of taking the mortar out of a wall — the other materials fall to pieces. If in the district of St. Austle parties did not wash out the clay in order to use it for various artifi- cial purposes, the rain which falls from heaven, and the continual action of the air, would eventually produce the same result. And without entering into any description of other substances similar to feldspar, I would simply observe that the general origin of clay soils in the decom- position of substances containing alumina in quantities. While you find the alumina which is a very light substance, wash- ed down into one part, you have the si- licious matter washed down into another part ; and this disintegrating and washing process on different rocks goes on until you get every variety of soil that can be con- ceived, from a clay to a sharp sand. Well, now, having seen that soils owe their pri- mary origin directly to the disintegration of rocks, of which there is such an abun- dance in Cornwall, let us now proceed to consider the effect of atmospheric action upon soils themselves when they have been formed. Now, gentlemen, there are certain substances in the soil, which are, as I have before intimated, soluble : pot- ash, soda, lime, magnesia, phosphate of lime, &c, are some of them. These sub- stances are continually acted upon in the soil by the air— that is to say, they are liberated from their insoluble combinations in a soluble form, provided the air acts upon them ; while in the absence of at- mospheric action they are not rendered soluble. Thus we at once see the neces- sity of exposing the land to the air by ploughing, by harrowing, and by every other mechanical means that is suitable, in order to secure the liberation of those substances which are essential to the growth of plants. In order, gentlemen, that the soils of any given district may be properly tilled, it is necessary that they should be regularly exposed to the action of the air, that they should be properly drained, and that if lime be absent it should be supplied in sufficient quantity. Let me — taking these points in the order in which I have mentioned them — first speak of the action of the soil upon the air. Every substance — a piece of chalk, for example, has a certain amount of surface, and the surface of every solid body at- tracts air and moisture. It has been prov- ed that there is more air and more mois- ture within the 100th part of an inch from the surface of this glass [holding up a tum- bler] than within the second 100th part ; the truth being that the surface of any solid body attracts aeriferous matter. You would hardly imagine, but it is neverthe- less a fact, that a piece of charcoal like this [exhibiting a piece] would, if expos- ed to ammonial gas, absorb 90 times its own volume of that gas. This piece of chalk has now a certain surface. If I break it, it will have two surfaces ; if I break it again, it will have two more. And as the absorbent power of any substance depends upon the extent of surface, so, you perceive, the more you pulverize your land the greater must be the extent of sur- face which you expose to the action of the air. (Cheers.) Every division that you make exposes a greater amount of surface, and the finer the. division is, or, to use a phrase which is common in another part of the kingdom, if not here, the finer tilth you make, the better the land will be adapted for the growth of plants. I again repeat, all solid bodies have the power of absorbing the liquid and gaseous bodies which are found in the air. Thus you have the ammonia absorbed from the air; and all the other materials in the air which are required for the proper development of the plant — you have all these absorbed by the finely pulverized soil, and you have that soil at the proper time liberating those substances for the roots of the plant. Let us take a case in point— a case which will serve to illustrate the necessity of stirring up the land in order to its proper cultiva- tion. I will suppose that you have a field of turnips. In such a season as the last, when there was a considerable amount of dry weather, you might perhaps have con- siderable amount of dry weather, you might perhaps have considered it was not 270 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. desirable to practise horse-hoeing at such a period — you might have supposed, that loosening the soil between the turnips would let in heat to the roots of the tur- nips, and dry them up. Now, gentlemen, remember that, if you have no rain com- ing down in the day, you have dews fall- ing at night ; and let me tell you that to have a thoroughly-pulverized soil, and to keep continually exposing it to the action of the air, is the best mode of absorbing the greatest obtainable amount of dew from the air, so that during the very best por- tion of the day the plants may have a cer- tain amount of moisture, which they have taken from the air in the night, to sustain them. Let me, then, recommend to you the stirring and horse-hoeing of your root- plants during dry weather, if you wish to secure the greatest development for them which is attainable under such circum- stances. # # # # # I now go on to speak, therefore, of the use of lime. This is a matter of conside- rable importance to all western farmers. — Throughout the eastern and the midland districts of England lime is found very generally disseminated, not only in the limestone rocks there, but also throughout the clay soils ; and, consequently, the ap- plication of it to the land is not required there to anything like the same extent that it is here. On the other hand, in those soils which prevail toward the west, lime is, as I know from my own analyses, found generally only in very minute pro- portions, and then not always in the con- dition in which it ought to exist in the soil in order to develope its best charac- teristics and powers. Hence the large amount of lime which has been found practically useful here in the'fjrm of sim- ple lime; and further to thr south and the west in the form of shell-sand, which is carried on to the land in large quantities. Now, the action of lime, gentlemen, is this : it helps to'liberate a certain amount of the insoluble materials in the soil, which would otherwise not be liberated within the same period of time. If I were to powder a piece of feldspar, mix it with common water and some lime, and then leave the whole for a twelvemonth, I should, at the expiration of the period, find a much larger amount of potash liberated through the action of the lime than could have been liberated had there been no lime. So that lime, you see, produces a very powerful effect in liberating and making soluble some of the mineral ingre- dients of the soil. It also operates pow- erfully in relation to the dead vegetable matter which exists in the soil, helping it to assume the form in which it is best adapted for the production of vegetable life. Let me mention a case which will serve to illustrate how powerful is the ef- fect of the use of lime. A few years ago, having had some soils at Exmoor sent to me for examination, my report upon them was this : "You may use guano, you may use superphosphate, or anything you please to stimulate production ; but if you do not also use lime the result will not be satis- factory; lime is the first essential, and af- ter that has been applied, you may have recourse to artificial manures." Well, a twenty-acre field, on Exmoor, cultivated by Mr. Smith, the well-known and intelli-. gent steward of Mr. Knight's property was pared and burnt, and lime was applied to all but about an acre, where, in conse- quence of there not being enough lime brought up for the whole, none was used. The whole of the land had guano applied to it, and the turnips were drilled with su- perphosphate of lime. To one inch, where lime was put, there was a beautiful crop of turnips ; and to one inch, where no lime was put, there were no turnips at all. — This is a case which clearly proved neces- sary is the presence of lime. But, gentle- men, if I were to tell you that you might go on liming year after year without doing anything else, I should be saying what might lead you into a very great error. — Lime ought to be regarded by you as an amendment to the soil, not as a manure. — You ought to consider lime as a substance to be added to the land occasionally, chiefly in order to ameliorate its condition, and render it better adapted for the application of manures, though of course at the same time it supplies a certain amount of lime to the plant itself. You should on no ac- count apply it indiscriminately, and to any amount. If you do that, you will bring your land into a bad state, and will lose a certain amount of income — a result, which is to be carefully avoided in these days of high rents and taxes. In order to proceed on the right basis, you must, as I have be- fore intimated, view lime in the light of a THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 271 substance to be used occasionally, and not in place of a proper and continual supply of manure. I have mentioned this matter thus minutely because I know there is in many places a very great want of a proper understanding with regard to the use of lime. If you have enough lime already, to apply more is like sending coals to New- castle, or throwing them into the sea: the addition of more will produce no effect. — I know that many of the farmers in the southern and western parts of- Cornwall have declared that ihey do not like using shell-sand, because they do not find it to act in the land. I have discovered by analysis that this view, at least in some instances, is correct — that many farms have got enough of this extraneous matter already. When such a substance has been carted on the land year after year for per- haps two or three hundred years, it is but natural to suppose that there is now suffi- cient calcareous or limy matter for the purposes of cultivation, and that the pe- riod has now arrived when, if other sub- stances are applied, the land will, in con- sequence of the presence of lime in ade- quate quantities, be perfectly prepared to make the best use of them. I must now speak to you, gentlemen, of vegetables, or the various crops which you grow. What are they, and what do they contain ? — Without speaking of the vegetables which grow in the sea, and which only require roots for the purpose of being attached to rocks, and having a hold there, I may ob- serve that the vegetables which are culti- vated on the farm are found to have a rpot and a stem, or at all events to have a por- tion which grows in the land and a portion which grows out of the land. That por- tion which grows in the land, and which is called the root, serves two purposes : it serves as a holdfast for the plant in the land, and it also serves, by means of *the little pores which are found throughout the root, to absorb those matters from the soil which the plant requires for its devel- opment. The plant also sends leaves into the air, and these act by absorption upon any materials contained in the air which may be essential to the plant. Now, gen- tlemen, if you have been in the ha^>it of considering that plants derive all their materials from the soil, you have been in the habit. of considering wrongly; for they derive on the average nine- tenths of their weight from the air, into which the leaves shoot, and about one-tenth — and many of them very much less than that — from the soil in which they grow. It is on this point that I wish now especially to address you. If I burn this piece of pa- per (holding it up,) paper in fact a vegeta- ble, the ash which is left behind is what came from the soil : that is called the mineral or inorganic matter, consisting of the phosphate of lime and the potash, and the other materials which the plant may happen to have derived from the soil. — Alt that which burns off and goes into the air was derived originally from the air. — So that this analysis is exceedingly sim- ple. That which does not burn off, viz : the ashes, originally came from the soil; that which burnt off, came from the air- — Now, gentlemen, I wish to speak to you of those materials which plants derive from the air, and from the water which comes down from the air. There are only four substances which plants derive from the air, and, though lamverymuch afraid of introducing too much chemistry, I must give you some account of each of them. One is called oxygen another is called ni- trogen, another hydrogen, and another carbon or charcoal. I must, I say, endea- vour to convey to you some idea what these four substances really are. I am probably addressing many persons who are as well acquainted with these sub- stances as myself; but I think it best to go to the bottom, in order that none may be without the. requisite information. — Here we have, then, oxygen, nitrogen, hy- drogen, and carbon. Now let us begin with oxygen. Oxygen, gentlemen, used to be called vital-air, because animals are absolutely dependent upon it for their life: they cannot exist without it. If we were deprived of the oxygen which is found in the air, we should all die by suffocation. Death by drowning is nothing else than the cessation of breathing for want of the vital power in the air. Common air con- tains oxygen in the proportion of one-fifth, that is to say, five bushels of air contain one bushel of oxygen. This substance in air is diluted by another substance, called nitrogen; and if it were not so diluted, we should be placed in considerable diffi- culty, because it is so powerful a burner, so strong in its action; that it would burn everything up. If I had a jar of oxygen, 272 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. and were to introduce within it any burn- ing body, you would immediately see the combustion increases to an enormous ex- tent. I have got a little oxygen in a glass on this table, and if it has stood the journey from London you will see the ef- fect which I have mentioned. [A piece of ignited wood was here inserted in the aperture of the glass, where it burnt with greatly increased intensity.] The increas- ed intensity is entirely owing to the oxy- gen. This substance it is which serves to burn up all our fuel. You can now un- derstand why, if oxygen were not diluted by four times its own volume we should be incapable of existing. Everything would then be burnt as quickly as a piece of paper when put in the fire. Now let me introduce into ajar of oxygen a piece of ignited charcoal or carbon, which I was speaking of, in order that you may see how much more brilliantly it burns there than it does in ordinary atmosphere. [Experiment performed.] The produce of this union is called carbonic acid or char- coal gas, and of its properties I shall shortly speak. Well, now, gentlemen, af- ter what you have just seen, you cannot be surpised when I tell you that this sub- stance, which is always found in the air, is most active in the decomposition of ma- nure-heads and of animal vegetable mat- ter generally. To this point it is my in- tention to allude further in an after-part of the lecture. Well, now, oxygen is also found in water. Water consists of hydro- gen, one of the other elements of which I spoke, and oxygen. You must bear in mind the difference between these two substances. Oxygen is the body which consumes everything ; hydrogen is one of the substances which is burnt. All tallow, all oils, all wood, all things generally which burn with a flame contain hydro- gen. Hydrogen is, as I have just stated, found in water, and it can be liberated from water with perfect ease. Water, as I have just told you, consists of oxygen and hydrogen. # * # # * I have now spoken to you of oxygen, which is the active burning principle of the air, and one of the constituents of wa- ter; and of hydrogen, which is the other constituents. Let me now speak of nitro- gen. Nitrogen exists in the air to the ex- tent of four-fifths of the entire bulk. It is in itself very inert, having no particular action by itself. Some of its combina- tions are very curious. For instance, ni- trogen a»d charcoal, with some hydrogen, forms the powerful poison called prussic acid. Saltpetre, which contains nitrogen, mixed with sulphur and charcoal, forms the gunpowder by means of which men blow each other to pieces, and, in fact, nitrogen is found in almost all our power- ful explosive compounds, such as fulmi- nating silver, gun cotton, &c. Nitrogen, existing in nitrate of soda and guano, is, however, used for the far different purpose of assisting in the growth of the farmer's crops. So far, however, as the farmer is concerned, what it is chiefly necessary for him to know is the main constituent of ammonia, and of nitrate of soda, and of guano, which are all so very valuable to the cultivator of the soil. I now come to carbon or charcoal. I gave you just now an example of the burning of charcoal, but I did not point out the properties of what was then produced by the burning of the charcoal. Has it never struck you that when coal or wood is burnt, nothing but the ashes seem to remain ? What has become of the bulk of the materials ? It has passed into the air in an invisible form ; and, so far as the charcoal is con- cerned, that portion has passed into the air in the form of a substance which is commonly called carbonic-acid gas, but which we will also call charcoal gas. — Now carbonic-acid generally exists in the form of a gas ; it comes out in the form of an effervescence in bottled beer, in champagne, or in soda-water; and it is also given out in the burning or decompo- sition of any animal or vegetable matter containing carbon; and when I tell you that it is this carbonic-acid gas that kills so many men who incautiously descend intd wells or brewer's vats, and that it is, in fact, identical with what is termed choke-damp by miners, you will admit that it is a most important agent wherever it is found operating. Let me now ex- hibit to you one of the effects of this gas. It is a substance which has the power of uniting with lime-water, and forming a white sediment, which is, in fact, carbo- nate of lime, or chalk. I will take the bottle in which I burnt the charcoal in a previous experiment, and will introduce some .lime water; on agitation you will THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 273 observe that the lime water, which at first was transparent, is now'white like milk, [Experiment performed. Mr. Nesbit then showed by similar experiments that car- bonic acid was given off by burning wood, paper, wax ^ and other similar bodies con- taining carbon.] I may here observe that we ourselves, and other animals, are all like so many steam-engines. We are ob- liged to take in so much food every day to maintain the animal heat, and to keep the machine in motion; by every inspira- tion we take in oxygen, and by every ex- piration we give out carbonic acid, which is derived from the combustion of the char- coal of the food which we have eaten. If I pass the breath from my lungs into this lime water, you will find the same kind of de- posit that you have before observed produc- ed from the gas proceeding from the burn- ing of charcoal. [Experiment performed.] So that you see, gentlemen, whatever may be the manner in which charcoal or carbon is burnt whether it be burnt in the form of charcoal itself, or as it exists in paper, or wax, or tallow, or as food in the animal system, the result of the combustion is carbonic acid gas. Now, in order that the properties of this substance may be well impressed upon your minds, I shall place it before you in tolerably large quan- tities, and will endeavour to show you some of its properties. I have here a quantity of chalk, which is carbonate of lime — that is to say, a combination of lime with carbonic acid. I dare say many of you have heard of poor unfortunate peo- ple sleeping near lime kilns, and being killed by the fumes which came from them. Those fumes consisted of carbonic acid. Now, I can liberate the carbonic acid in an easier way from the carbonate of lime than by heating it; all I have to do for that purpose being to put a stronger acid to the carbonate, when the strong acid will take the lime, and the carbonic acid will escape. The acid I shall use is call- ed muriatic or hydrochloric acid, or spirits of salt, and I shall now put it over the chalk in this jar. [Experiment performed.] — You here see a very considerable efferves- cence, which is caused by the liberation of the carbonic acid. Now, carbonic acid, gentlemen, is one and a-half times heavier than common air, and that is the reason why it collects at the bottom of wells and pits, and other places of the 18 same kind. We have it now collecting in this vessel [pointing to the large glass jar;] though we cannot see it, it is cer- tainly there. I speak of carbonic acid ; I speak of what is contained in the appa- rently-empty space above the liquid in the jar, I will send down into the jar what I may call a little searcher [referring to a little ignited wax taper at the end of a wire ;] and as soon as this searcher comes in contact with the carbonic acid gas in the jar (which may represent a well con- taining this gas), the light will go out. — [The flame was here let down into the jar ; and was instantly extinguished.] If a man were to go down into a well of the same kind, his life must go out just as that flame went out; for what prevents the combustion of a candle would prevent combustion in a man ; the man's life would be as utterly extinguished as was that flame. But I have to show you also that this gas is identical with that which I have previously produced by the burning of charcoal. [Some of the gas was here poured into a vessel containing lime wa- ter, and the white precipitate of carbonate of lime was immediately produced.] — Now, gentlemen, I have been the more more particular with these experiments upon carbonic acid because, although the thing is invisible to your eyes, it is never- theless quite capable of proof that it is from this gas that every one of your vege- tables derives the whole of the charcoal which they contain. I have just one more experiment to make before I proceed. If I take this glass, containing carbonic acid, and pour the gaseous contents over one of these candles, I have not the slightest doubt that the candle will go out. [Ex- periment performed, the result being what was intimated it would be.] 1 must now endeavor to give a practical turn to the subject matter of the lecture. I have en- deavoured to point out the nature of the soil and the effect of drainage upon it, and the necessity of keeping it in a pul- verised form, in order that it may be in a proper state to absorb moisture, and to appropriate the various substances con- tained in the atmosphere. 1 have also de- scribed the four substances which consti- tute the organic matter of plants — the ox- ygen, which burns; the hydrogen, which is burnt; the nitrogen, which is found in saltpetre and nitrate of soda, and the 274 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. charcoal, which, when united with oxy- gen, forms carbonic-acid gas. With re- gard to this las.t, I may add that it is found in the air, in the pioportion of one part to every two or three thousand ; and from this source it is that plants derive al! their carbon. It will perhaps be our best course to direct our attention now to the nature of plants. As I before remarked, vegeta- bles have roots and leaves. Their rootlets go down into the soil, and thence obtain the nutriment in the soil ; their leaves go out into the air, and there seek the nutri- ment which is contained in the air. Now it is a curious fact, that when the light of the sun, or the diffused light of day, is shining upon the leaves of plants, these leaves have the power of taking in carbo- nic acid gas from the air, of retaining the charcoal or carbon of the carbonic acid. and the hydrogen of the water, within themselves, and of giving the othei> con- stituent of these substances — viz : oxygen, or vital air — back again to the atmosphere. However strange this may seen, it is nev- ertheless true. One single experiment will suffice to prove this. If you intro- duce a sprig of mint into a bottle of wa- ter containing carbonic acid, you will, af- ter exposing it for a time to the light of the sun, find it covered with little globules; and if you collect all these into one glo- bule at the top, you will find pure oxygen gas. Another experiment is that of a cel- ebrated French chemist, who placed a liv- ing branch of a vine in a glass tube, and then covered the tube all over with black- ened paper, so that no light could pene- trate, and he sent a current of air through it containing about five per cent, of car- bonic acid gas. He sent this through the tube, and did not expose it to the light. — He found that the tube at the other end, "which passed through lime water, gave an abundant precipitate, showing that the leaves had no action on the charcoal gas. He then took off the paper and exposed the tube and vine branch to the light of the sun ; and on now sending the stream of air and carbonic acid through the appa- ratus, not a trace of carbonic acid was found to pass through at the other end. — Another point which you have to remem- ber is, that plants obtain the largest amount of their nutriment from the air. You shall plant a forest upon land which contains no vegetable matter, I might say, upon Brown Willy or Rough Tod ; you, or some one else coming after you, may, at the end of, say fifty years, remove cart load after cart load of timber, and yet, at the expi- ration of the period, the soil shall be richer in vegetable matter than it was when the trees were first planted. Where did all this vegetable matter come from, if not from the air ? Again, in the case of a field of turnips, it is the action of the leaves of the turnip upon the air that se- cures the greatest amount of vegetable matter. Bear in mind, then, that plants are dependent in a far greater degree upon the air than upon the land ; that so far as the land is concerned, you can only, after a due supply of mineral matter, assist the plant in endeavoring to obtain more organ- ic matter by its roots from] the land than it could naturally obtain by its leaves from the air ; and in this consists the true prin- ciple of manuring. I must now proceed to speak to you about the production of farm-yard dung. That is the sine qua non of farmers, and I am afraid that some far- mers attach too much importance to it, re- garding it as if nothing else could possi- bly equal it in value. Now, gentlemert, what is farm-yard dung ? I am not about to speak now of all the various modes of manuring which are adopted, though I have heard it stated that the decomposing vegetable matter differs greatly in differ- ent counties. Farm-yard dung is neither more nor less than decomposed vegetable matter, derived from plants which once had life in the soil, and which, when re- turned to the land, will furnish the neces- sary elements ' for reproducing vegetable life. The manner in which it is decom- posed — the mode of reducing it to a prop- er state for its application to the land — is quite another question. Is what I have heard stated true, that in Devonshire and Cornwall there are parties who are in the habit of strewing their straw on the high roads and bye-roads ? Is it true that in this county it is the practice to place vegetable matter in a position in which everything in it that is valuable is likely to be washed away ? If that is the mode of making farm-yard manure which is adopt- ed in this district, or in other districts, all I can say with regard to it is, that it is not a mode which I should recommend for imitation. Gentlemen, in considering the subject of the decomposition of vegetable THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. matters, you must remember that some elements of vegetables are volatile, and some soluble, and that those which are least volatile and least soluble are also least valuable. The substance in manures which is most volatile is ammonia ; and where there is bad management this will pass away into the air ; while the potash and the soda, and the other soluble mate- rials, will be washed away. As compared with the practice which 1 have mentioned, would it not be well to put your straw in the farm-yard sheltered from wet, and place your feeding animals upon it ? be- cause, in that case you would have the dung of the animals upon the straw, and the vegetable matter also. The truth is, that every possible precaution ought to be taken against losing anything valuable that is contained in vegetable matter ; and with this view you should seek to have a proper amount of moisture and no more, and en- deavour to associate farm-yard manure with materials which will tend to fix the ammonia, and so on, and prevent it from passing away. Now the quality of the manure must depend on the quality of the vegetables on which you feed your ani- mals. If you feed them merely upon straw, the value of the dung will be in proportion to that of the straw ; whereas, if you add oilcake and other substances of a similar nature, there will be a propor- tionate increase of value. There is no ultimate action in the animal economy — no .action, that is, in relation to the food which the animal consumes, that does not take place in ordinary decomposition. If you decomposed a large quantity of veg- etable matter, whether it were oilcake or straw, you would have just the same ulti- mate result as if you passed it through the body of an animal. The animal sys- tem does not add anything whatever to its value : the animal only gives forth what it received. Indeed, so far as ma- nuring is concerned, the dung of the ani- mal is always less valuable than would have been the food on which the animal had subsisted. It must, therefore, always be borne in mind by practical farmers that the animal adds nothing to food, but only substracts from it. Many persons are apt to imagine that the fact is otherwise ; but they are certainly mistaken. If you had more turnips than your sheep required — and I have known such an instance — and were to chop up a field of turnips and plough them in, the result would be that you would afterwards get a far better bar- ley crop than you would have done had sheep, by eating them, robbed the turnips of a portion of their value. I have seen that experiment tried over and over again, and it has always been attended with the same result : therefore theory and prac- tice perfectly coincide in this matter. — Well, now, with respect to the making of farm-yard manure, let me impress upon you that, so far as the quality is concern- ed, that depends on the food of the ani- mal ; and that in order to its conservation you must protect it agains"t water. It is my opinion that, with the view of most effectually preserving the ammonia, you had better make a kind of compost heap, first spreading a quantity of ditch stuff, road scrspings, or other earthy matter, and then putting a layer of dung, then another layer of earth, and so on, alternating the earth with the dung in such a manner as will be most likely to cause the earth to absorb the substances which would other- wise pass into the air, and to prevent the wasting away of the soluble materials. — You will, i believe, secure a far better kind of farm-yard dung in that way than by any other mode of proceeding with which I am acquainted. It is the duty, or at least the interest, of every one to try and make the vegetable matters of the farm go as far as he can ; though, howev- er, he may aim at doing this, he will never be able to produce upon the farm all that it actually requires ; and hence he will oc- casionally be obliged to resort to extrane- ous sources to supply the deficiency. lam afraid I am detaining you, Mr. Chairman and gentlemen, at too great length. The subject is such an extensive one that there are one or two other points which I de- tire still to introduce, but it must depend upon yourselves whether I shall do so (loud cries of "Go on.") Well, I will first mention the rotation of crops, and af- terwards speak for a few moments in ref- erence to artificial manures. With res- pect to the rotation of crops, I wish to point out to you a very clear and simple illustration. Taking the four-course shift as the example — though it may be ex- panded to six, or eight, or ten, or any number that you please — I will suppose that you have turnips and barley and seeds 276 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. or peas and wheat as your rotation. I am aware that you are in the habit of leaving seed for two or three years. I do not wish now to express any opinion with regard to that practice ; but I will just state what I consider to be the true theory of crops, taking the four-course system as the rule, and bearing in mind that it may easily be expanded. After draining your land, and getting it into proper condition, you sow it for turnips. Now turnips are plants having a large development of leaves. They send their roots downward in search of nourish- ment ; they send their large leaves into the air. With every breath of heaven that passes over the plant, the leaves ab- sorb the carbonic acid of which I have been speaking; they give out the oxygen, and retain the carbon ; they absorb the ammonia from the air, and their roots draw up from the soil the mineral matters; and these, uniting together, are the sources of the materials which the turnip stores up in the form of its bulb. The turnip intends, from these accumulated materials, to pro- duce turnip seed. But you, gentlemen, step in and say — " We a"on r t want turnip seed; we want mutton or beef." And in order that you may have these, the turnips are eaten by your bheep or bullocks, and the manure produced is used for obtaining a crop of barley. I know you do not feed sheep here to so great an extent as they are fed in the eastern part of the kingdom, but the argument is still the same. The matters, therefore, which the turnips ob- tained from the air are employed in pro- ducing more barley than the iand would produce naturally. Barley being a narrow- leaved plant, you obtain for it, by means of the turnip plant, a large amount of the substance which barley most requires; this is put into the' soil and taken up by the roots, and is assimilated by the barley, the result being that you produce four or five quarters of barley instead of the one or two quarters that you would obtain naturally. So that you employ, in fact, the great absorbing powers of one plant to assist the smaller powers of another. — You must recollect, however, that if the relative prices of the productions were diffeient, the whole of your operations would be different, so artificial and rela- tive are the processes of agriculture. — Well, with respect to clover, although clo- ver is not a plant with large leaves, it is a plant of great foliage, and every little leaf that it sends into the air sends a rootlet downwards ; so that in exact proportion to the amount of foliage above the ground will be the quantity of the roots below. — Well, then, supposing it possible that you are constantly feeding off clover in the spring, I w r ould remind you that every time a sheep bites a leaf off, it stops the growth of the rootlet connected with that leaf, for each leaf has its. corresponding rootlet; and as it is the roots below that furnish increased nutriment for the wheat, so if you do anything whatever to stop the growth of the roots, you to that extent di- minish the amount of the wheat crop which you intend afterwards to get from the land. Now* if, instead of feeding off the clover, you were to cut it twice, re- moving the hay each time, and were then to plough the roots into the land and well work them, you would, I am sure, get a larger amount of produce from the land than you can possibly obtain under the system of feeding off. Gentlemen, this may be new to some of you, but it is not the Jess true. I will give you an instance — I might give you fifty. A friend of mine in Northamptonshire had a field of twenty acres of clover. It was all cut at Midsummer, and the hay removed ; one- half was subsequently fed off, and the other was allowed to grow until Septem- ber when it was cut, and a good crop of hay was removed from the land. A por- tion of each part of the field was then dug up, and the clover roots separately weigh- ed. Where it was cut once' and fed once, there were thirty-five hundred weight of roots per acre ; where it was cut twice, there were seventy-five hundred weight of roots per acre — being a difference of two tons of valuable vegetable matter in the soil in favour of the land where the upper growth had been twice cut and wholly re- moved away. It is, you perceive, the decomposition of the clover roots in the land which furnishes the additional amount of manuring matter necessary for the in- tended increased crop of wheat. Having now said all I intended to say with regard to the rotation of crops, I proceed to say a few words with respect to the use of arti- ficial manures. I am persuaded that there is no part of the country which is more likely to derive benefit from the applica- tion of artificial manures than Cornwall. — THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 277 Owing to the hilly character of the dis- trict, there is great difficulty in carting farmyard manures, even if it could be produced in adequate quantities; and T need not tell you that, where you have to put ten or fifteen loads per acre, the ex- pense of cartage must be much greater than it would be if you could obtain the same result with one load of another ma- nure. What I have now said indicates, in some degree, the position in which you are now placed. I am certain that in the next five years the agriculture of Corn- wall will receive an impetus such as it has never experienced hitherto ; because the Cornish farmers will now be enabled to grow abundant crops, with the aid of arti- ficial manure, in places where manures hitherto have, in consequence of their bulk, been practically unattainable. But let me tell you, gentlemen, that you have to guard against adulteration. I have my- self spent a great portion of my time in exposing the various adulterations of ma- nures. 1 have, too, recently met with an* instance in which parties, calling them- selves a company, have presented them- selves before the world as being associated for the special purpose of protecting the interests of that unfortunate being who is supposed not to be capable of protecting himself — the British farmer (laughter) ; and these gentlemen declared that by them, at least, no adulteration should be sanc- tioned. Gentlemen, a guano which was offered by these parties to the British far- mer at about <£10 per ton — the price of genuine Peruvian guano being, you will observe, .£12 per ton — w r as ascertained by me on analysis to be worth only about £2 10s. per ton; while a quantity of su- perphosphate of lime, which was offered at £7 per ton, was also ascertained to be worth only about £2 14s. per ton. These analyses were made within the last few weeks. Of course, these adulterated ar- ticles were sold to some one, and it is as likely, perhaps, that they will be offered in the West of England as in any other part of this country. (Laughter). All I can do is to recommend you to take proper precautions against imposition. Imitate the conduct of honest manure dealers who never allow anything to come into their manure works without knowing what it is. Never allow, if you can help it, a single artificial manure to come upon your farm without having ascertained previously of what it consists. The cost of an anatysis is very small compared with the loss which you would sustain by using a spurious ma- nure to assist you in the growth of your crops. If we could only induce the far- mers to join us in this work of detection and to have their artificial manures ana- lyzed, the whole tribe of dishonest ma- I nure dealers would vanish from the face of the earth as quickly as so many mush- rooms. # # # # # The Chairman said he concurred in al- most everything the lecturer had said. He saw considerable doubt depicted in the countenances of some gentlemen present while Mr. Nesbit was explaining the sys- tem of catting clover twice and relying on the decay of the clover roots for ma- nure for a wheat crop ; but he had himself said, in the presence of four or five per- sons whom he met this morning, and with- out knowing any opinion of Mr. Nesbit, nearly word for word what they had just heard on that subject. He had found that in other parts of the country clover was the crop that preceded wheat ; and any one who would take the trouble to exam- ine carefully when he ploughed up clover, would perceive that the abundance and size of the roots were likely, when in pro- cess of decay, to afford to the wheat crop a large quantity of valuable manure. The only question was, whether the moisture of their climate might not prevent the roots of clover from producing the same effect that they produced in other parts of the country. (Hear, hear.) Of that he could form no opinion. Mr. R. Wise was desirous of putting to Mr. Nesbit a question having reference to his remarks on the subject of clover. In that neighborhood it was the practice to eat down clover ; and there was, he be- lieved, a clause in all the leases prohib- iting the cutting of clover twice in suc- cession. He would be glad to hear from Mr. Nesbit whether or not his remarks were applicable to the laying down clover for two years. Mr. Nesbit said he knew that was a question which admitted of a great deal of argument. He was aware of the practice of la3 r ing down clover for two years. But they lived in two enlightened times THE SOUTHERN PLANTER to follow the practice of their ancestors, merely because it was their practice ; cir- cumstances might have arisen which re- quired that they should deviate from it. For example, their ancestors did not use artificial manures to stimulate the growth of their crops ; and hence, in their wis- dom, they laid down the ground for a cer- tain number of years, in order that veg- etable matter might accumulate there. It was in this way that he accounted for the prevalence in that county of the practice of laying down seeds for two or three years. He thought it would be worth while to ascertain by expsr'iment whether one year would not suffice ; whether, by means of a sort of modification of the four-course rotation, they might, in four years, obtain a better return than they had done under the present system. (Hear, hear.) The Rev. E. Phillpotts observed that the agriculturists of that neighbor- hood were in the habit of seeding out, not only with clover, but also with some of the other grasses. He would be glad to know whether or not that practice inter- fered with the application of the princi- ple laid down by the lecturer. Mr. Nesbit said, the grasses generally did not enter so largely into the question as clover. He had been speaking more particularly of clover. The grasses were not of the same race as clover; and, not having so large an amount of roots, did not follow exactly the same rule. When they were laying down a regular pasture, of which clover would form only a small portion, the principle which he had laid down was not applicable to quite the same extent, that it would not answer to feed with clover unless they were laying down the land for a great number of years, and even then it would be better to let the clover grow for a certain time than to let it all be fed off as it was produced. They could keep a much larger quantity of ani- mals by thai means, than by allowing the stock unlimited access to the pasture. The Chairman said, a gentleman had re- marked that he thought the leases in that neighborhood contained a clause which prohibited the cutting of clover twice. The gentleman was quite right ; such a clause was always inserted, and it was im- portant to bear that in mind in discussing this question. The Rev. Mr. May thought it might, in tome cases, be desirable to feed sheep on half the crop, and to cut and plough in the other half. Mr. Nesbit said, what he had been ad- vocating was, the allowing the clover to be fully developed before it was either fed oiF or cut. To cut it completely, and then allow it to develop again, would cer- tainly be preferable to continuous feeding; but by ploughing in both the top and the bottom growth they would of course ob- tain the greatest result in the after-crop. The best course to be pursued depended to a great extent on the amount of vege- table matter in the soil. The plan of letting clover acquire very large roots might not always answer on some peculiar descriptions of light land, a certain me- chanical compressed condition of the soil being required in exceptional cases. He knew that Mr. Hudson, of Castleacre, found that it would not do for him, in cer- tain cases, to cut clover twice, because his land was too light. Mr. R. Wise said, he had dressed some clover, just- after the barley was cut, so that it was protected all through the win- ter. He grew two tons of hay per acre on very poor land. He laid it down for permanent grasses, and he found it an- swer very well. The Chairman : There was a top ma- nure afterwards ? Mr. Wise : Yes. # # # * # # Dr. Pethick said there were two or three questions which he would take the liberty of putting to the lecturer. The first question was, whether, in the ap- plication of bone-dust as a manure, it was not better that it should be applied on the surface, and harrowed in, so as to secure the free access of air to favor the decom- position of it, instead of being, according to the prevailing method, turned entirely under the funow? Secondly, he wished to know whether ammonia existed at all as ammonia? his opinion being that the ammonia which was evolved in the de- composition of organic substances was generated at the time that decomposition was going on ; the nitrogen and hydrogen in the act of Hying off having a strong affinity for each other, and then chemi- cally combining and forming ammonia. Ammonia being nothing more than a com- THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 279 pound gas formed of nitrogen and dydro- gen, was it requisite that they should ap ply to the soil artificially that which was so abundantly supplied by nature ? Had not plants the means of obtaining from the atmosphere all the nitrogen, and from the water in the soil, all the hydro- gen, essential to their development and perfection? Again, the lecturer stated that land was less injured by a double cropping of clover than by being frequent- ly eaten by sheep and cattle ; since, with the growth of the plant above the soil, there was a corresponding increase of roots beneath, which roots afforded a large supply of manure for the succeeding crop. Was not the effect of carrying off a large amount of alkalies and phosphates in the two crops of clover more than any equiv- alent afforded by the accumulation of roots ? and was the carbonaceous matter produced by the roots at all required by the wheat grown after the clover, seeing that, according to the lecturer's statement, the atmosphere would -afford in the form of carbonic gas all the carbon the plant would require ? Mr. Nesbit said, the first question was whether it was not desirable that bone- dust, when applied as a manure, should be applied on the surface, and not plough- ed in too deeply. His reply was, that it would be the best not to plough in the bones too deeply, because they would not in clay soils of this district decompose quickly ; but with decomposed manures the question might be different. The more the bones are exposed to atmospheric action the better, and that was the reason why it should be finely powdered as pos- sible. The second question was, whether ammonia existed at all as ammonia in farm- yard manure ? Ammonia certainly did not exist as such in a piece of straw ; but as soon as the straw began to decom- pose, ammonia was produced, a portion of the nitrogen and hvdrogen of the straw or other decomposing matter uniting to- gether to form ammonia, while the carbon and a portion of the hydrogen united with the oxygen, producing water and carbonic acid gas. 9 Dr. Pethick : Pn the act of evolution ? Mr. Nesbit : Yes ; and if the decom- posing and oxydising action of the oxygen went sufficiently far, the ultimate result would be nitric acid, eventually produced from the nitrogen of the vegetable mat- ter. Then with regard to the last ques« tion, he must remark that he spoke from practice, and not from theory alone, in what he said about clover crops. With respect to the question of whether plants could obtain from the air all their nitro- gen, there was no doubt that some plants could obtain all they wanted from the air, but that others could not, at least in the quantities essential to produce the abnor- mal crop required by the farmer to pay his rent and taxes. As to, the supposed abstraction of the phosphates by the clo- ver from the soil, it must be recollected that what was in the hay was brought back again as manure, and therefore there could not, under proper management, be any robbing of the farm. Had he been speaking of the exportation of farm-yard produce the objection would be applicable : as it was, it fell, he conceived, to the ground. Mr. Geake would be glad to know whether the Professor could recommend any simple test by means of which the farmer could ascertain for himself the pu- rity or impurity of manures? Mr. Nesbit tnought it perfectly impossi- ble to do so. The great point for the far- mer was to take care that he dealt only with those dealers who had something to lose, that was to say, a character. (Hear, hear.) He could give them no other test than that. If they wished to go further, they must either learn chemistry them- selves, or they must entrust to others the task of analyzing for them. M. Huxham wished to enquire of Mr. Nesbit whether salt would be a good ad- dition to manure, and whether it were not desirable for farmers to have their soils analyzed before applying artificial manures to them. With regard to the breaking up of clover for wheat, a friend of his had told him that he had tried the experiment, and the result was that for some time the thing answered well, but that after a time the clover died away. Mr. Nesbit said he believed the appli cation of salt to be very useful in in- creasing the strength of the straw and the delicacy of the grain. There could be no doubt that salt ought to be used for grain crops. Even so near the sea as Launceston was situated, the application of three or four cwt. of salt per acre for 280 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER grain crops must prove beneficial, and there should be a smaller quantity for mangold-wurtzel and other root crops. As to the analysis of soils previous to the application of manures, no doubt it would be well to know the nature of the soils in different parts of the kingdom, but at pres- ent he thought it was more desirable for them to consider what crops they should grow than the nature of the soil. The analyzation of soils often reminded him of the man who, having a house to sell, came with a brick in his pocket as a sam- ple of the house. (Laughter.) They had to consider what drains there were in the soil, and what was their direction, what subsoiiing there had been, and so on. There might be almost fifty kinds of soil in the same field. The question, what was the nature of the soil of any particu- lar farm ? was, in fact, a complicated ques- tion ; and, with one exception, he thought the farmers of the present district had better confine their attention to the crops which they had to grow. The exception to which he referred had reference to lime. It was very easy to ascertain whether there was sufficient lime in the soil; if there were not, lime should be supplied ; if there were, it would not be of the slightest use to add more. A Gentleman said, that as it was now generally understood that plants derived their nourishment partly from the soil and partly from the air, he had often been puzzled at finding that the mangold with a small top was generally the largest. Mr. Nesbit observed that that fact was very easily explained ; there was such a thing as over-manuring. This would pro- duce a large amount of foliage and a great development of the cellular tissue of the plant; and if the season should not be favorable, the plant would not fill up the cells with the proper amount of starch, sugar, or other similar materials. The large amount of foliage would have pro- duced a large root had the circumstances been such as the plant required. Mr. Huxham wished to repeat that a friend of his who sat near him, stated that some wheat which he sowed after clover, in a light soil, did exceeding well for a time, but that the benefit afterwards died away, and eventually the crop was not half so good as it had been. Mr. Nesbit said it was impossible for] him to state exactly what w T as the cause of that. It might be the wireworm, or some Cornish insect with which he w r as not acquainted. He could not undertake to give a receipt for every evil in the soil. (Hear, hear.) The Chairman said, the time having come for terminating the discussion, he wished to make one or two observations before they separated. With regard to clover — in the management of which he took very great interest — he confessed he still entertained some doubts whether what Mr. Nesbit recommended should answer in the West of England, on ac- count of the moisture of the climate, which was better adapted for grass than for grain ; and whether, in fact, the clo- ver-root manure might not make more straw than grain. The experiment has never been fairly tried in the district. It must be borne in mind that in that part of the country clover was what he might call the last crop. Wheat, barley, tur- nips, and barley, had been taken from the land before they put into it clover. To make the experiment fully, he thought nothing but clover should be sown with the barley, and then some lime, or other ma- nure, should be given to the land. The lime acting on the roots of the clover, w r ould con- tribute tothekerningorformingof the grain, and in that way, perhaps, counteract the tendency of the land to produce straw rather than grain. At all events he hoped the experiment would be fairly tried. There was another point which occurred to him. The lecturer recommended that in forming a dung-heap, the dung should be laid several feet thick, and that it should be covered with earth, which he said was the best deodorizer they could possibly have. That is, no doubt, true ; but then another question naturally arose, whether there is any occasion for a dung- heap at all. This question might startle the farmer, who prided himself on his dung-heap ; but still he repeated, it was worth while to consider whether it would not be better, after all, to cast the dung direct to the land, and thus prevent any escape of what in the discussion they had heard so much about, viz : ammonia. Now, he was sure that all present were very much gratified by the lecture which they had heard that evening ; and he hoped that the Launceston Agricultural THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 281 Society would be enabled to secure the at- tendance of Mr. Nesbit on some future occasion, when additional information would, no doubt, be imparted. Such lec- tures as that to which they had just listen- ed was, at all events, adapted to set ag- riculturists thinking. And he hoped that many of those present would ponder what they had heard, make experiments, as far as practicable, in connexion with his sug- gestions, and communicate the results to the Society. In conclusion, he would, on behalf of the audience, thank Mr. Nesbit ; for his lecture, and express a hope that that was not the last time they would see him amongst them. (Cheers.) The meeting then separated. From the British Fanners' Magazine. The Supplies of Mutton. Although beef furnishes the standing dish at our Christmas dinners, yet the prize South- downs that were exhibited at the great Smith- field market, suggest the expediency of a few facts respecting the condition of our mutton. Leaving out of consideration at the present period of the year the fleece, we will confine ourselves exclusively to the carcase. It is re- markable how uniform is the supply of sheep shown at the Smithfield Christmas market. The average of the past seven years has been 23,724 head, and the past two years were near- ly equal— 22,870. Of about 4,000,000 sheep required annually for the metropolitan supply, more than one-half would seem to be sent up to market slaughtered. It is not a little remarkable, that while the sale of cattle at Smithfield market has steadily increased from 184,524 head in 1844 to 263,008 head in 1854, that of sheep has remained al- most stationary. In 1844, 1,609,130 head were sold, in 1854 but 1,539,380. Indeed if we refer back a quarter of a century, we shall find that nearly as many sheep were sold at Smithfield in 1829 as in 1854. Mr. Dodd, in his recent work on the " Food Supply of London," attributes this to an increased sup- ply of country-killed mutton, while the in- creased supply of beef is in the form of live cattle imported from abroad, and mainly sold at Smithfield. Twenty years ago the sheep were eightfold the number of cattle ; now they are less than sevenfold. Scotland had this year, by the agricultural returns, nearly six million sheep (5,822,478.) In Ireland, there were in 1855, 3,598,471, the number then having increased nearly 1,500,000 in four years. England and Wales have pro- bably about 28,500,000 sheep, which would bring the total number in the United Kingdom up to 38,000,000 ; but we may safely take the whole number at 40,000,000. Average these at 30s. per head, we have an aggregate value of £60,000,000 for the sheep stock of the Brit- ish Isles. Assuming one-fourth of these to he slaughtered annuallv, and the average weight to be 80 lbs., we have 800,000,000 lbs. of mutton supplied to our population annually, worth at the set price about £20,000,000 ster- ling. Large quantities of sheep and lambs reach Liverpool from Ireland, the numbers being about.200,000 head per annum, and nearly all these are slaughtered for the consumption of that town ; in the Newcastle market the num- ber slaughtered is about 300,000. About 6,000,000 head of sheep are now transported annually from their pasture grounds to the large markets for town consumption. We only commenced to import sheep in July, 1842, upon the repeal of the prohibition, when 650 head came in ; but the numbers received from the Continent, it will be seen from the following figures, averages about 200,000 head ; although the imports of sheep are on the decline, while those of cattle are increasing. The imports in the last six years were — in Sheep and Lambs 1850 - 143,498 1851 - - 201,859 1852- 330,476 1853 - - 259,420 1854 - - ' - 183,436 1855 - - - 162,642 Our neighbor France had, in 1840, 32,151 ,431 sheep, and killed of these in the year 5,804,700 head ; but while the number has not very greatly increased, standing at about 36,000,000, the proportion slaughtered annually appears to have risen to about 8,000,000. In France, however, sheep husbandry is directed more to the production of wool than flesh ; hence the return of meat is scarcely half that of our well-fed sheep. If France feeds less sheep than we do, she pastures more cattle. The ag- riculturalists of France have, however, wisely come to the determination that their breed of sheep would be much improved for food by a cross with the English races ; and their breed- ers and graziers have been large purchasers of stock for breeding. During the nineteenth century France has made rapid strides in wool production, and there is little doubt that breed- ers will now combine the two requisites of flesh and fleece. Owing to the increase of population in the Australian settlements, the demand for meats, necessitates more attention to the flesh as well as to the wool. The recent discovery of sev- eral million acres of very fine pa.-turage in Northern Australia, near the Clarence River, by Mr. Gregory and his exploring party, will have a very beneficial effect, in increasing sheep stock and extending the production of 282 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. wool, Especially to the owners of sheep at Moreton Bay. The Americans are not fond of fat mutton ; a carcase of 50 to 60 pounds is just fat enough to suit the American taste. Of the varieties of domestic animals, the flesh of sheep is that least used in the States, except in a few cities, in proportion to the quantity that might be profitably provided. And yet mutton is per- haps the best kind of meat that can be con- sumed by a civilized people. New York is beginning to consume large quantities of mutton, 600,000 to 700,000 head, or about one sheep per annum to each of the population, be- ing now the ratio of consumption. Philadel- phia slaughters about 100,000 head. In Ohio four or five million sheep are now owned. Considerable attention is now paid to the rearing of sheep in the United States. The merino crossed with the common breeds is the stock of which the flocks are composed.* The high price of wool and mutton has given in- creased impetus to sheep husbandry in the States ; and they have even begun to export sheep and wool to a small extent. From the Plow, the Loom, and the Anvil. Butter Making". [Our attention has recently been called to a very valuable and eminently practical Prize Essay, read before the Royal Agricultural So- ciety of England. We published several arti- cles on this subject, in our last volume, and are happy to find our own views confirmed by the very careful and scientific experiments, the results of which are given in the report de- scribed. We beg leave to invite the attention of our farmers to the following portion of this subject, being all that relates to their particu- lar business. The experiments were conducted by Professor Traill and the late Dr. Bullock. Their accuracy was subsequently tested by the writer of this essay, and his results, with one exception, " agreed remarkably with those made by the gentlemen named, "J One series consisted of the comparative quantity of butter yielded by the' following : 1. Sweet cream churned alone. 2. Sweet milk and its yream churned to- gether. 3. Sour cream churned alone. 4. Sour milk and its cream churned to- gether. 5. Scalded or Devonshire cream churned alone. On the 24th of May, the milk of four cows was drawn in the same vessel, passed through a strainer, and then divided into five portions of six English pints each, which were placed * Which allows that the writer does not know al ahout 6heep in the United States.— Ed. So. Pl. in similar basins of earthenware, in a place, the temperature of which ranged from 55 to 60 degrees Eahr. Monday, 25th. — The temperature of the air was very hot, 76 degrees ; but that of the milk- house, by constant evaporation of water, was kept about sixty degrees. Tuesday, 26th. — Thirty-nine hours after the milk had been drawn from the cows, it was removed from below the cream of No. 1 and No. 3, by a syphon ; the cream from No. 1, and the milk and cream from No. 2, were im- mediately churned in glass vessels. No. 1. — Sweet cream churned alone. From previous trials, it was found that the addition of cold water to thick cream facilitated the separation of the butter ; half a pint of Avater was added to the cream ; the temperature of the mixture at the commencement of the churn- ing was 62 degrees. . In fifteen minutes butter appeared in grains ; the churning w T as con- tinued for twelve minutes longer, or twenty- seven minutes in all, when the temperature was found at 70 degrees. The butter was collected, but from the warmth of the weather was very soft. It was put into cold water until the next day, when it was worked and washed in the usual way, and weighed 1386 grains. It was of a good color, and perfectly well fla- vored. No. 2. — Sweet milk and its cream churned together. The mixture of sweet milk and cream was churned at the same time ; though cold water was added,, after one and a half hour's churning no butter was seen. The churning was continued three hours without obtaining butter. • No. 3. — Sour cream churned alone. On Thursday, the 28th May, the cream of No. 3, which had been separated on Tuesday, and placed in the milk-house, was now slightly acid, and was churned after half a pint of cold wa- ter had been added to it. In twelve minutes butter appeared ; and in eight minutes more united into one mass. During the churning the temperature of the cream had risen from 54 to 63 degrees. The butter was well washed and worked, and weighed 1756.5 grains. The color and taste were good. No. 4. — Sour milk and its cream churned to- gether. On the same day, 28th May, the milk and cream churned together, and half a pint of cold water was added. It was fully fifty- seven minutes before any butter appeared, and before the churning appeared to be completed one hour and fifty minutes had elapsed ; show- ing clearly that more time is required to churn milk and cream together, than to obtain the butter from cream alone. The butter was dif- fused in small grains, and when washed and worked as long as any color was communicated to the water, it weighed 1968 grains. Color paler than the last, but of good flavor. No. 5. — Clouted cream churned alone. On Tuesday, the 26th, the milk and cream of No. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 283 >, were placed in a vessel of warm water until he temperature of the milk rose to 156 de- crees, a Devonshire dairy-maid assisted in the iperation. The milk was drawn from below he cream by a syphon, the latter being kept ool until the following day, when it was hurned. It was ascertained that by churning the milk >f Nos. 1 and 3, a few more grains of butter ould be obtained on some occasions, but on no •ccasion from No. 5, so completely does the calding process separate the butyraceous mat- er from the milk. The butter of No. 5, when pell worked and washed, weighed 1098 grains, t had a rich yellow color, and tasted agree- ,bly. _ Similar experiments were repeated, the re- ult of which was, that the largest amount of iutter was produced by the Devonshire method ; he next in quantity, by churning the milk and ream together by a little acescent; the third a quantity, was afforded by cream kept till b was slightly sour. The smallest quantity pas obtained from sweet cream ; but on no oc- asion was butter obtained by churning sweet tiilk alone. In order to decide on the keeping qualities of he butter obtained by the four processes previ- usly detailed, samples were exposed to the ree action of the atmosphere. No. 1 was always found to remain longer vithout any rancid taste than the other kinds. Nos. 3 and 4 were nearly on an equality — if ny 'difference, it was in favor of No. 3. No. 5 became rancid more quickly than No. and No. 4. When salted for keeping, rancidity appeared q about the same order, commencing in No. , or the butter from scalded cream ; next in ^o- 4, from some milk and cream : then in No. , or sour cream ; and lastly, in No. 1, obtain- d from sweet cream. The rancidity was sup- losed to arise from varying proportions of ca- ein ; and on instituting experiments to as- ertain this fact, it was found that casein as- isted in preserving its freshness. In order to ascertain the effects of over- hurning, the cream of six pints of milk was eparated by a syphon, and churned in a glass essel. The butter was formed in about half ,n hour; but the churning was continued for ialf an hour longer, when the butter had lost ts fine, yellowish, waxy appearance, and had tecome pale and soft, while vciw little liquid emained in the churn. This butter could not >e washed or worked until it had remained ome hours in cold water, being so exceedingly oft when taken out of the churn. After wasti- ng it was pale, rather soft, and weighed 2566 rains, which was evidently beyond the due quantity, when compared with the other ex- )eriments on the same quantity of milk, which ave the following results : No. 1. The sweet cream overchurned yielded 2566 grains. No. 3. The acid cream duly churned yielded 2187.5 grains. No. 4. The acid milk and its cream duly churned yielded 2397.5 grains. No. 5. The scalded cream duly churned yielded 2671 grains. The butter of No. 1 tasted insipid, never be- came firm, and soon turned rancid. It was found to yiel'd a very unusual quantity both of casein and watery fluid, which could only be separated by melting the butter. It is a common opinion in some districts, that by adding hot water to the churn, more butter is obtained than by using cold water. Experiments made for the express purpose did not show that the weight increased very much, and it was attended with a perceptible deterio- ration in quality, giving it generally the ap- pearance of overchurning. The results of the experiments above detailed are : — 1st. That .the addition of some cold water, during churning, facilitates the process, or the separation of the butter, especially when the cream is thick and the weather hot. 2d. That cream alone is more easily churned than a mixture of cream and milk. 3d. That the butter produced from sweet cream has the finest flavor when fresh, and ap- pears to remain the longest period without be- coming rancid. 4th. That scalded cream, or the Devonshire method, yields the largest quantity of butter ; but if intended to be salted, is most liable to acquire a rancid flavor by keeping. 5th. That churning the milk and cream to- gether, after they become slightly acid, is the most economical process for districts where butter-milk' cannot be sold ; whilst, at the same time, it yields a large amount of excellent butter. Starting and Shying Horses. Persons frequently place these failings in the same category ; but there is a wide distance between the two, and they are frequently the result of widely different causes. They are both annoying to the rider ; and, if carried to a great extent, are often attended with considerable danger to man or horse, or perhaps both — the danger being more or less in accordance with the situations in which both happen to be. For instance, a horse shying in the coun- try matters little ; it is, in fact, a mere de- viation from the straight line in which he was going ; but in London this deviation may possibly bring horse and rider in con- tact with an omnibus, or one of Picford's vans. Horses on first being brought to London are very apt to shy, but not to start, and for this reason ; they meet or 284 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. pass many things to which they have not been accustomed ; they fear, and conse- quently avoid close contact with them, by shying out of the way. The human pas- senger will pass horses, dogs, sheep or cat- tle, in most cases, without alarm or avoid- ance — he has seen such from his child- hood ; but let him or her meet a camel coming, the wayfarer will probably, like the horse, shy away from it. It matters not whether it be an omnibus or a camel, if, from being unaccustomed to meet, either bipeds or quadrupeds feel them as objects of alarm. I have some lines back remarked that on horses first coming from the country to London they are apt to shy, but not to start. It will be found to be usually the case : the fact is, the shying prevents their starting. Their attention is so occu- pied by a continuity of objects, at which they shy, that they do not come on any one, as it were, by surprise. If they did, they would start. Starting is usually the result of surprise ; shying that of fear. Now, on the contrary, horses in the country will more frequently start than shy, from there being by far fewer objects to shy from ; and, again, their attention not being engaged, a bird flying from a hedge, a wheelbarrow in a ditch, or a man's hat by the side of, or in the road, will frequently cause a start ; but this said hat on the London pavement would pro- bably escape their notice, if that notice was occupied by a coming carriage. Even a London horse, who will after a time walk the streets without either shying or starting, would very probably, it ridden upon Rottenrow, start at a dropped hand- kerchief if it lay in his path. He sees but the one object : it surprises him, and he consequently, probably, starts at it. I have endeavored to show the causes of starting and shying, also the difference between the two acts. They arise from his seeing objects that surprise or alarm ; but there is a far worse cause for some horses doing either, which frequently is from their not seeing them clearly. There are far more horses going about London streets with defective eyes " than is dreampt of in our philosophy." An acquaintance of mine, with whom I was riding, was mounted on a very clever cob ; he both started and shied, two or three times ; his master, who was an irri- table man, laid an ash stick very severel about the cob's ears, saying, with an oath " I will give you something else to thinl of than shying;" the poor cob shook hi; ears at this infliction of severe punishment. Now, I had before this, from seeing him s< frequently start and shy from slight causes and from the peculiar motion of his ears had my suspicions. " Stop," said I " allow me to look at your cob's eyes." did so, and figuratively speaking, foun< him to be in technical phrase, " as blind a; a bat." He certainly would not rui against a cab, and could find his way int< a stable-door : but his sight was so far de fective that most things appeared to him probably as what they were not ; and, a no man can tell what they did appear, iti little wonder the poor brute started. I hope this true anecdote will act as hint to my friends and readers. Ther are many persons who have slightly de fective sight, without being aware of it depend upon it, many horses have ver; defective eyes, without their owners sus pecting anything of the kind. I woul< recommend to every one who has a hors that shies, if he does so at objects no calculated to cause alarm, to have him ex amined by a veterinary surgeon ; he wil then either learn the worst, or if the shy ing does not proceed from defective vision he may then take measures to cure him c an objectionable habit, with a fair prospec of success. I have not the smallest doubt but tha horses are affected like human beings with sundry variations of vision. I coni sider the two that are most common ar confused and deceptive sight, and shoi sight. As we can neither ask questions c the animal, nor apply glasses to his eye to ascertain what kind of defect he labor under, we can only be guided by his acts Inflammation or weakness of the eye is easily seen, so are cataract specks o the eye, and many other ailments ; but horse may, and frequently has very impei feet vision, without any of these apparen 'causes. We will suppose that it is with horse thus situated we have at present t I do, and I will, to the best of my abilit and experience, state by what symptoms or rather by what acts, we may generall judge of the state of his vision, which t | any one but a scientific professional man ; THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 285 nay appear from superficial examination :o be perfectly good. If in going along a road we were met by i led bear with a monkey on his back, or a nan seated on a velocipede, we found our lorse astonished, and then shying or start- ng from the approach of eith'ir, we need lot be surprised at his doing so ; but if we nerely met a man driving a calf before lim, and the horse showed evident symp- oms of astonishment and alarm, I should strongly suspect there existed something lefective in his sight that occasioned his ilarm at the appearance of such a com- non object. I do not mean we are to :orae to this conclusion at once by his loing so; but if he continually shied from )bjects he must often have met with, or, it least, similar ones, the inference I hould draw would be that imperfect vision lisabled him from seeing what the object vas, or that it appeared to him a some- hing that it was not. Such horse may ee his way along a road well enough, and [uite answer the purpose of a road horse ; >ut ware the man who would ride him at i fence, for then the secret would out. I have no doubt many of my readers have bund a horse or seen one, in technical term, 'buck" on coming to a (say) large white tone on the road, without its appearing to ave attracted his attention until close ipon it. I have no hesitation in giving an pinion that a horse in the habit of doing his is near-sighted. If, on the contrary, te cocked his ears and raised his head on eeing* the stone at a distance, I should nfer his sight was confused, and that the tone was magnified to his view, or ap- >eared what it was not ; but the sudden tart on seeing it, as it were, under his eet, clearly shows he had not seen it till lose on it — then he starts, often produ- ing an almost electric shock to the rider. have seen a horse thus start so suddenly nd violently, as almost to bring himself n his nose. Depend on it, no horse will o this but under the influence of defect- ve vision. The attempt to cure a failing the result f an infirmity, must prove abortive, nless we could cure or palliate the origi- al cause of it. The treatment of horses hat start or shy from habit cnly, will pro- tbly form the subject of another article. Harry Hieover, in the London Field. Willis' Improved Stump Machine. PATENTED MARCH 6tII, 1855. Farmers, Mechanics, Road Builders, Specula- tors, and all progressive men, your attention is called to this Valuable Patent. My Stump Machine has great power. It has no equal. It is simple in its construction, easi- ly worked, and not liable to get out of repair. Its common weight is about 1500 lbs. It is easily borne from place to place, and it can be loaded in three minutes, and unloaded, set up, and a lusty stump drawn, all within fifteen minutes. Once fastened, it will pull an acre and a half of stumps without changing anchorage. A single yoke of cattle, or one strong horse, is sufficient to work it. With such a team, if ne- cessary, a power of from three to five hundred tons, can be made to bear upon a single stump! One can work it, though two work it at bet- ter advantage. The time required to extract stumps from six inches to four feet in diameter, will vary from two to ten minutes. With this Machine, standing trees may be taken out, large rocks removed from their beds ; and it is the best Machine ever invented, not only for pulling stumps, but for moving buildings, and other heavy bodies. All the iron used, is wrought, of peculiar quality, imported, sus- taining 57 tons to the inch ! The price of these Machines varies according to weight and size. I will furnish the Ma- chine at my manufactory, together with an in- dividual right to work it, for $200. I reside at Orange, Massachusetts, where I manufacture this article, on a large scale, and hold myself ready to furnish it, or sell rights to use it, in any State or Town in the Union, now unsold, on terrhs most reasonable. This patent begins to be appreciated ; all who wish to bring so good a thing into use, and thereby make a "pile of money/' should come to Orange, see the inventor, see the work- ings of the Machine with their own eyes, and if not perfectly satisfied respecting its merits, all their expenses shall be cheerfully paid. WILLIAM W. WILLIS. Culture of Carrots. Several queries have lately arisen in relation to this valuable vegetable, by reason of sug- gestions from those experienced in their cul- ture. First, what depth should the land be plowed for the advantageous culture of the carrot? Second, can the carrot be advantageously 28G THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. grown several years successively on the same land ? As to the first inquiry, Ave had sup- posed that deep stirring of the land, say from 9 to 12 inches at least, would be beneficial to the crop of carrots. It had not occurred to think otherwise, until we had heard a practical man who has grown as fine crops as we have ever seen, (more than 1200 bushels of 50 pounds each, to the acre,) say, that hi used only a single horse in plowing his land for car- rots ; — and rarely plowed more than 5 or 6 inches deep. We asked him why he plowed this depth ? and he said he would not thank any one to plow any deeper than this. In fact, he knew this depth would yield a better crop than if the land was plowed deeper. He then rela- ted his experience in this manner. One season he had engaged his neighbor to come with his oxen to aid in plowing his carrot field. By reason of some delay, only about two thirds of the field was turned, before night came on ; and he turned the remainder next morning, with the liorse alone, without the oxen. The entire field was manured alike and treated alike, in all other respects ; and the part plowed with the horse alone produced larger carrots, and a heavier crop than the other part of the field. Ever since he has used only his horse in preparing land for car- rots, and usually plants from a half to two acres. He is not a man who boasts of what he does, or who is fond of having his name appear in papers. He is a man who understands very well what he is about — and what he says can be relied on. As to the second inquiry, I know no definite facts bearing upon it, but have heard opinions very different, from those equally well experi- enced. Whether there is actually anything peculiar in relation to crops of carrots follow- ing each other can only be answered by those who have been observant of facts. If my re- collection is right, the cultivators of Worcester county have maintained that they grow abun- dantly five years or more successively on the same land. In Essex, the opinion pre- vails, that it is not well to. attempt to grow them more than two years in succession. If you or your correspondents can throw light on these inquiries, they will do a good service to the farmers of the community. *#* Remarks. — It is minute, special inquiries, in regard to crops, that lead to beneficial results. Our correspondent is one of the most untiring and critical observers, and has done good ser- vice to the cause by this habit. Theory and practice have generally been united. It is cer- tainly unusual to hear one advocate shallow plowing for this crop ; the theory, however, may be a correct one, — we cannot, positively, gainsay it. The common practice is against it. We have cultivated carrots on the same piece of land four years in succession, with a gradu- al increase of crop. Is not this the correct course? Manure highly, with manure as free as possible from all seeds, cultivate thoroughly, so as to utterly exclude all weeds, and then occupy the same land for the carrot crop from-i year to year. The main cost of the carrot is- not incurred in plowing, manuring or seeding, but in weeding ; this is a slow, tedious and ex- pensive process, — one which the farmer who is accustomed to active habits cannot endure, and which deters thousands from engaging in it. New England Farmer. We will add to the foregoing, that we saw rich land which was deeply subsoiled for car-l rots, and the crop treated in the best manner, that produced, in our mind, a very unprofitable crop. The carrots were from 14 to 22 inches in length, but very thin and weighed very lightly. We also saw the same season, a crop, j the ground on which it was planted was not subsoiled, and plowed only the usual depth for a root crop, which yielded a much greater amount in weight, though the carrots were scarcely more than half as long. The roots penetrated the hard ground, then spread, and the carrot thickened. The labor of digging also was not more than half as much as the sub- soiled crop. — [Ed. Tel. Cultivation of Cucumbers. " Last spring a friend of mine and myself were planting cucumbers at the same time, i was planting mine, as is usual in gardens, by mixing a small portion of stable manure with the earth, and raising the hill an inch or two above the surface of the ground. Observing it, he jocosely remarked, ' Let me show you how to raise cucumbers.' Never having much luck in raising them, I cheerfully agreed to his pro- position. He commenced by making holes in the earth, at the distance intended for the hills, that would hold about a peck — h& then filled them with dry leached ashes, cover- ing the ashes with a very small quantity of earth. The seeds were then planted on a level with the surface of the ground. I was willing to see the experiment tried, but had no expectation of anything but a loss of seed, labor and soil. But imagine my astonishment, (notwithstanding a drier season was never known, and almost a universal failure of gar- den vegetables,) when I beheld vines remarka- bly thrifty, and as fine a crop of cucumbers as any one could wish to raise, and they continu- ed to bear for an unusually long time. I will not philosophize on the subject — but say to all, try it ; and instead of throwing your ashes away, apply it where it will be of use, and you will reap a rich reward". — Ohio Farmer. Millet. Millet is an excellent substitute for the Ordi- nary meadow hay. It is perfectly adapted to a Northern climate, and succeeds equally well at THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 287 the South, where hay is not generally produced. As forage it is equal in nutritious qualities to the best timothy hay, while the land of tolera- ble fertility is often double that of the best meadows. When cultivated for the grain, from forty to sixty bushels per acre may be easily grown. It should be sown exclusively for the hay, or for the seed. It is too frequently sown with a view to secure both seed and hay from the same crop, and 'consequently the seed is light and chaffy, and the hay coarse and inferior. When hay is the object, from sixteen to twenty quarts of seed should be sown upon an acre and harrowed in. It may be sown any time from May to the middle of July. If sown early, it will be ready to cut in August. In order to have sweet, nutritious hay, it should be cut before the seed is ripe and while the straw is green, and cured the same as timothy, or, after being exposed to the sun a few hours, it may be racked into cocks and cured like clover hay. When well cured, cattle and hor- ses pefer it to the best hay, and for working animals it imparts more strength than any rough food. It is sometimes cultivated for the grain, which for feeding is equal to corn and more valuable than oats, but it should be ground and the meal mixed with the cut hay or straw. Hogs and chickens are also fond of it ; but the present demand for it for sowing renders it too valuable to be fed to stock ; the demand has long been greater than the supply, and he«nce the price is high. If farmers would sow it with the exclusive object of raising good seed, it would be made a profitable crop. It has commanded from $1 75 to $2 a bushel during the present season. When millet is raised with a view to obtain the best crop of grain for seed, regardless of the hay, it is best sown with the drain drill, putting from six to eight quarts of seed upon an acre. On good land, well prepared vand sown in this way, the heads are large and well filled, often yielding sixty or seventy bushels per acre. One advantage in cultivating millet is, it can be sown at any time most convenient for the farmer, from spring to midsummer. — Valley Farmer. Miscroscopic Discoveries of the Nature of Blight in Wheat. " M. C. Davaine has lately published, in the Oumptes Rendus, the result of his researches into the nature of blight in wheat, of which account the following is an abstract : Wheat is subject to a disease, which, in rainy seasons, is very prevalent in certain districts; it is known under the name of blight. This disease is caused by micros- copic animalcules, whose organization is similar to that of the cylindric worms, which live as parasites in the vorticello, and in man. They are helminthes, of the order of nematoides — -thread worms. — These wheat worms have the remarkable capability of remaining in a dry and horny state for years, and then regaining life and motion on being moistened, and this pro- cess can be repeated eight or ten times. It was long disputed whether they were animals or vegetables. On examining a grain of blighted wheat, it is found to con- sist of a hard shell, filled with white pow- der. This powder contains no trace of starch ; it consists entirely of microsco- pic threads, which are dry, stiff worms- When placed in water, these worms exhi- bit hygroscopic motion for a few moments. When the wheat is new, they soon make other manifold and considerable move- ments, which are unmistakeable signs of life. When the grain is old, it requires several hours, or sometimes even days, be- fore they resume motion and life. In a single grain of affected wheat, there are generally several thousands of these worms. They have no sexual distinctions; they are the offspring of other forms. Be- fore a blight comes on, there are found from two to twelve larger worms in each kernel which is about to be affected, and the females of these larger worms have been observed to lay eggs. If blighted wheat is sown with sound, the worms, after a few weeks, and when the sound wheat is germinated, are awakened into life by the moisture of the earth, break through the thin shell which has confined them, and follow the dictates of individual enterprise. The great mass die an unfruit- ful death, but the few reach the germina- ted wheat, and effect a lodgment in the stalk under the forming leaves. They are carried up by the growth of the plant, and in wet weather by their own exertions. — As they are dried up most of the time, they suffer no considerable change, until they enter into the forming kernels and lay their eggs. The blighted wheat is no more grain than nutgalls are fruit. Its tissue is composed of hypertrophical cells. It is only after the worms have entered this tissue, that their re-productive organs become distinct. Both males and females become much larger, but the females are larger than the males, and lay a multitude of eggs, in which can be seen an embryo. 288 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. that soon breaks through the membrane of the egg, and commences its larva life. Bv the time the sound corn is ripe, the pa- rents are dead ; their remains are dried into almost nothing, the egg-shells are ab- sorbed, and the grain is apparently filled with nothing but white powder. This is, as before stated, the dry helminthes. — An- nual of Scientific Discovery, 1857. . 4 <» 9 o p Lampas in Horses— How Cured. BY R. JENNINGS, V. S., CLEVELAND, OHIO. Lampas, as it is termed, is a fulness or swelling of the bars, or roof of the mouth, caused by the cutting of the molar teeth. In all colts, lampas will be found. In many, however, little or no inconvenience maybe observable; while in others, the great tenderness of the parts involved, causes the animal to refuse his food, sub- mitting to hunger, rather than pain ; in consequence of which, he is compelled to submit to an operation as barbarous as it is cruel, which is no less than burning out the bars with a red hot iron, leaving the mouth sore for some time after. This mode of treating lampas, has been practised for years, and is, at the present day, almost the only course pursued in such cases, not- withstanding it is of no practical benefit whatever; but on the contrary, is often very injurious. Still, the owner will gen- erally ridicule the idea of remedying the evil by any other means. It is an estab- lished fact, that children, during the period of dentition, are subject to the same dis- ease. While some cut their teeth with little or no pain, others suffer severely. — What father would submit to an operation upon his child ? what mother would see her darling babe thus cruelly tortured ? — Wo be to the practitioner who would dare to make such a proposition ; yet men will submit their favorite steed to such tor- tures, believing that course to be the only sure means of abating the evil. In this, they are much mistaken. We do not de- ny that a horse thus dealt with, will not regain his former appetite, but we assert that, had not this operation been perform- j ed, he would have resumed his feeding] equally soon, by means less painful, and ! more humane. In the child, the human j practitioner seldom does more than lance the gums. This, certainly, is a more ra- tional mode of operating, and my expe- j rience teaches me, that my lancing the | inflamed parts, the swelling soon subsides, and the horse feeds as usual. For this purpose, a common pocket knife will an- swer the purpose very well , after which the mouth should be washed with a solu- tion of tincture of myrrh, two ounces to a pint of water ; this should be repeated twice a da} r , for three or four days, during which time give bran mashes, flax seed gruel ; and, if to be obtained, new grass would be very desirable. No hay, corn or oats should be given for a week ; the teeth, then, will be in condition to masti- cate such food. By pursuing this course, you save your animal much inconvenience and suffering, without doing him any inju- ry. — Ohio Farmer. The Sheep-Shearing Machine. Most of our readers have probably heard something in regard to this machine, though it is very likely that the account of it has been received with some incredulity. That the shearing of sheep can be successfully done, by machinery, is an achievement which affords another evidence that this is an inventive age. We saw this machine in operation at the late show of the N. Y. State Agricultural Society. It was used to cut the wool from a dried skin, the skin having been first moistened, so that it could be pressed over a block in such a way as to present a smooth surface. The appara- tus is a box, about the size, and something of the shape of a common brick. It is fastened to the arm of the shearer, who works the cutting part by moving a lever with his hand, so as to produce a rapid oscillating motion of the knives. The knives are shielded by guards, similar in principle to those which are used for mow- ing machines, and although they can be made to cut very close, it is impossible for them to cut the skin. The machine seem- ed to work more rapidly than shears ordi- narily do, and the wool was cut very even- ly — the staple never being cut more than once. The inventor stated that he had sheared a sheep in twelve minutes, but he did not tell the weight of the ileece, and we are without any means of accurately com- paring this mode with the ordinary way of shearing, as to dispatch. The name of the inventor is P. Lancaster, of Burr-oak, St. Joseph's county, Michigan. The ma- chine is made by Alexander Allen, of Rochester, N. Y. The price is $10. Boston Cultivator. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 289 Culture of Tobacco. Some gentlemen, new beginners, have asked us to give some information in regard to the preparation of land for tobacco and the culti- vation of the crop. In lieu of a fresh article, which, if we were to prepare it, would be mere- ly a rehash of others that have appeared pre- viously in the Planter, we subjoin copious ex- tracts from two excellent ones that appeared, the one in January 1852, and prepared for the Planter by Messrs. William Garth, and R. W. N. Noland of Ivy Creek, Albemarle, in pursu- ance of an order made by the Hole and Corner Club of Albemarle, of which other gentlemen were members : the other by a gentleman of Prince Edward, -but not the gentleman who still owes us a good article on the subject, which we hold him bound to write in the penalty of a " sharp stick :" Preparation of Soil. — The land selected for tobacco should depend somewhat upon the prospective price of the article. If we have reason to suppose it will com- mand a high price, we pitch the crop upon our best lands, and either increase the number of hills, or at any rate, by apply- ing the manure to rich land, increase the weight of the plants. But if we appre- hend low prices, we put it on poor land, and find the enrichment of the land no in- considerable part of the -profits of the crop. But of .this we will have no more to say hereafter. We like to break up to- bacco land early, particularly red land, so as to let it be thoroughly pulverized by the action of the winter's frost. If possible, we would like to do this when the weather is just above freezing point, in order to destroy the insect deposit in the soil, and with the same end in view, to harrow in the cold weather of February. We plough with a three-horse plough followed by a sub-soile coulter. During March, April and May, haul out and scatter the manure intended for the crop — sow one bushel plaster per acre, and plough in with a one or two-horse plough. Such red land as has no sand in it, after the first ploughing, should not be ploughed the second time, except with a coulter or shovel, so as to break it to the proper depth, without turn- ing under the pulverized soil on the sur- face. For this purpose a coulter is to be preferred. When the land is properly re- duced by harrowing, lay off with a shovel 19 plough three feet four inches each way, and throw up a large hill. This hilling should, if possible, be done early, while there is a season in the land, so as to be ready to receive the plant when the time for planting arrives. This brings us to the end of the subject embraced in our first division, which we beg leave, with an apology for the imper- fect manner in which it is gotten up, re- spectfully to submit. In our first article upon this subject, we brought the crop up to the process of hill- ing, and this we recommended should be done early while there is "season" in the land. In a full crop this is often imprac- ticable, and the planter is forced to de- pend for season upon the rains that fall after hilling. This should not change the shape of the hills. They should still be pointed and only so many cut off in antici- pation of a shower as you have plants to fill. If cut off and allowed to stand for any considerable time the hills bake and require freshening up before being planted. Plants stand better in hills freshly cut off. It is a common error to cut off hills too high. An elevation of six inches above the common level is sufficient on ordinary land. Indeed we consider land unfit for tobacco that requires higher hilling. Wet spots, however, occasionally occur in land cropped in tobacco, which rather than leave unoccupied we plant, and do so by giving increased height to the hill. In advocating low hilling and priming, our friend Gilmer says, " it is better to have lugs at bottom than at top" and we agree with him. Planting w 7 ith too muck season, (upon red stiff land particularly,) is fatal to a crop, as clods are thus formed about the roots of the plant that no after cultivation can re- duce. A safe rule is never to plant to- bacco until the land is sufficiently dry to work with a hoe. Many persons, (overseers particularly,) err in not allowing plants to attain proper size before setting them. Small plants may be used in new ground, but never in old land, except very early in the season, when the beds require thinning. In planting it is only necessary to ob- serve the following precautions : First, to insert the plant a little below the depth at which it grew in the bed — straightening the roots in so doing. Secondly, to press 190 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. the soil well about the roots ; and thirdly, to avoid bruising the plant either with the stick in pressing, or the fingers in holding it. Then fold the leaves gently to the north, and place a clod or stone on the south side so as to shade the plant from the sun. This clodding is necessary ex- cept in long continued rains, when the roots will take hold before the sun kills the bud. A thunder shower is not suffi- cient to dispense with clodding ; on the contrary the hill being heated by the sun, a sudden shower will scald the plant, un- less protected, as recommended. The clods should be left on until the roots have taken hold, which is usually in from four to seven days, and then removed in the evening. If planting be done late, plaster should be applied to the bud as soon as the clods are removed, but if the crop be forward, this operation may be deferred until the first of June. Plaster is indispensable to the tobacco crop — increasing its weight twenty-five per cent. When applied to the bud, a very small quantity is necessa- ry — say. from one half to a thimbleful. It is hardly necessary to say that missing hills should be re-planted. This, however, should be done as soon as possible, so as to insure an even crop, and it is better to get a perfect stand upon one land before you commence on another. The amount and kind of cultivation de- pend so much upon circumstances, that it is difficult to lay down any general rules for working this crop. It is all important that tobacco land should be kept at all stages of the crop thoroughly light and clean. Ordinary seasons, as a first work- ing, we break the land, if free of grass, by striking three licks to the row with a new ground coulter — or if there be much grass, running twice with the coulters and the list split- with a shovel plough, and then with hilling hoes scrape down the hills, covering up what grass the ploughs have left, and breaking the crust around the plant. In dry weather it is well to draw a little loose dirt about the root. The next working we give with the shovel ploughs and, breaking the land and covering up the grass, and follow with the hoes, drawing the dirt to the hill, or "hill- ing up," and if the plant be of sufficient size, "priming off" the lower leaves and putting fresh dirt about the roots. This will suffice for new ground, but old land will require another working, which is given with the plough and hoes, if the size of the tobacco admit of it — otherwise with the hoe alone. The height at which tobacco should be "primed" depends upon the variety culti- vated. We prime the Ruffle to about six inches. When the plant has attained suf- ficient size to give the proper number of leaves above the priming, it should be at once topped. This is done by breaking out the bud with such care, as not to injure the top leaves, which are very delicate and easily injured by rough handling. Experience soon renders a hand expert at this operation, and it is well to leave it to a few hands who have acquired this expe- rience. Like every other operation in to- bacco topping should be done in time, as the smaller the bud the slighter the wound inflicted upon the stalk by breaking it. Early plants on rich land may be topped to nine leaves, but we aim to bring the crop generally to eight, to which number we top until the 10th August, when we fail one leaf for each week. About the 10th August it becomes ne- cessary to "worm and sucker'"' the crop once a week. Suckers should, under no circumstances, be allowed to grow longer than a man's finger, as their growth great- ly exhausts the plant. Every planter should wage constant war upon the tobac- co fly, and to this end we advise the cul- tivation about the house of the sweet or monthly honeysuckle, of which the fly is very fond. One of our neighbors, from a few bushes, destroyed several thousand flies last season. As the tobacco plant ripens it thickens up, becomes brittle, (breaking when gent- ly pressed between the finger and thumb,) and loses that peculiar fuzzy appearance it has when green. Experience is required in judging when a plant is ready for the knife. More persons err in cutting too green than in letting the crop stand too long. As a plant is cut it should be in- verted over its own stuble and allowed to stand until the sun timbers it sufficiently to admit of its being handled without break- ing the leaves, then collecting the plants, stack and cover with bushes, etc., so as to protect against sun-burning. It is well to freshen up land on which tobacco is stacked to prevent codling. The plants THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 291 may either be hauled to the house and hung, or hung in the field, shingled down, and hauled upon the stick. We usually hang about nine plants to the stick, and place the sticks about eight inches apart in the house. We prefer housing the crop at once to scaffolding. Having allowed the crop to yellow, we apply slow fires at first, and increase the heat gradually until about the third day, when full heat may be applied. The great danger in firing is in applying too much heat at first. We think a better color is given by allowing the fires to go down at night than by keeping them up constantly. The firing should be continued until the stem is thoroughly cured up ; and if the crop be allowed to hang in the house until warm weather, must be removed in warm damp weather to prevent mould. Wm. Garth, R. W. N. Noland. Icy Creek, Albemarle, Va. The land for tobacco, if it be an old lot, and particularly a clover lot, should be broken up close and tolerably deep in autumn. If the subsoil be a clod, wet or tenacious clay, only the surface should be inverted by the ploughs — and a subsoil plough ought to be run in -the furrow of the turning plough. But if it be a dry, red clay a few inches may be thrown up by the turning plough without injury. In any case, the land ought to be rough- ploughed about mid-winter, say in Janua- ry, for the better amelioration of the soil, and still more for the destruction of the cut-worm. I have not often been troubled by this pest except when this ploughing has been omitted. The best time to ap- ply manure is at this ploughing — but if not applied then, let it be .put On by all means before the corn crop is planted — and plough it in as fast as it is hauled to the ground. A heavy drag ought to be run over the land just before it is bedded, and the beds thrown up with one-horse ploughs. When ready to plant, send a steady fellow, with a three-foot stick in his hand, walking along the beds and test- ing his stride occasionally by the stick. Chop in his footprints with hill hoes, clap and plant thus in the beds, If the land has been prepared as early as indicated, there will be season enough in it to plant any time in May,, without a rain, and the plants will live better than when planted just after a rain ; and if the weather con- tinue dry after planting, there will be less danger of injury to the tobacco from the formation of hard lumps around the roots. If proper attention has been given to the plant-beds, the plants will be ready by the middle of May. But if it should be ne- cessary to plant in June, or to re-plant much in that month, it is an excellent practice to put a good handful of dry wheat chaff upon the plant as soon as it is stuck. This covering is better than any other I have used, and so far as I know, the credit of discovering it is due to an overseer, in this neighborhood. The chaff must never be removed j every living plant will grow up through it in a few days, and thus all " missing" hills will be easily recognized in re-planting. Instead of "ridging down," or "scra- ping down," it is Tar better to put a little fresh earth to the plants at the first work- ing. Run three-tooth cultivators twice in the row, and deep as one horse can draw them; and then let every hoe-hand take one bed and work it as in weeding corn. As soon as the tobacco starts, or as soon as the grass begins to spring up, or when- ever a crust forms on the surface, it will need a second working. I am disposed to think that the growth of the crop depends mainly upon this work. At any rate I have never seen a good crop made that had been slighted at this time ; it is now that the plants take a set, either running up with a slender stalk and narrow, short leaf; or spreading out, broad and leafy. It ought to be thoroughly stirred now, and this will be done best by running broadfoot coulters close to the plants, two or four times in a- row. Follow the coulters with small dagons, throwing the earth to the plants. Then.with hoes dig deep in the step, and finish by putting up moderate hills. An old and skilful planter of my acquaintance says that fire may be pre- vented, in a great degree, by making small hills. He says facts led him to this belief, and he shows his faith by his works. The explanation is, that a large hill absorbs more water and retains it longer than a small one. It is probable that very deep ploughing is a better preventive. It is chiefly upon light soils underlaid by tena- cious clays that the worst fire appears, and deep ploughing is certainly the preventive 292 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. in snch lands; but the two may be com- bined. After the second working, one or two slight scrapings up will complete the cul- tivation. These lemarks, Mr. Editor, about the cultivation of tobacco, are based upon either experience or observation, and indi- cate the mode I intend to practise in fu- ture rather than that I have pursued. I have either tested in my own crop or seen in others the value of every part of the process, except the subsoiling. As to the proper time of cutting tobacco and housing it, or the best mode of curing and ordering it, I shall say nothing. Thsse are mitters, in my opinion, which every one must learn for himself by actu- al experiment. General instructions in- deed may be of some service, but would mislead as often as not. Yours, A Planter. Prince Edward, January, 1853. < m »-o-> Chinese Plants. "With regard to the Sorgho Sucre, or Chinese Sugar Cane, the New Orleans papers, published in the midst of the only sugar section of the United States, contains facts that look favora- ble to its introduction. Thomas Affieek, Esq., of Mississippi, writes that he has closely stu- died the plant, and watched the results of the various experiments made, from its first intro- duction into France until this time, and thinks it possible that it may supplant the sugar cane, but thi iks the sugar-growing State cannot lose, even if that be the result, as it will yield more sugar there than further north, beside attain- ing a vastly larger growth. The South will have an additional advantage in its supply of machinery perfectly adapted to the purpose, and its thorough knowledge of sugar making. Mr. George W. Kendall of the New Orleans Picayune, writes a letter to that paper on the , same subject from his plantation near New Braunfels, Texas. He has made partial expe- riments with its culture, and says that of its properties for the production of sugar, he can as yet say nothing; he only knows that it tastes like the common sugar cane, and is full of juice about the time the first heads ripen. He adds that as a green fodder it beats everything tlrat grows ; horses, sheep, and hogs are inordinate- ly fond of it, and so full are the stalks of sac- charine matter that they must be both nu- tritious and nourishing. Mr. Kendall says it stands a drought better than any thing he has, and does not seem to require rain after it is once up. Prof. Bacon, of Boston, said in a lecture at the Medical College, that the saccharum of the Chinese sugar cane is not cane sugar, but what is well known as grape sugar or glocose — the same kind of sweet substance that is ob- tained by boiling starch in diluted sulphuric acid. We presume most of our readers are aware that the sugars from beets, maple trees, corn stalks, and sugar cane appears to be alike, and naturally inclined to granulate in solid hard crystal, while grape sugar is more inclined to remain in a soft mass, without granulating, and is much weaker in saccharum, though rich as a food. Grape sugar is abundant in fruit of all kinds, but does not crystalize, except imperfectly. The white sugar in raisins, however, is of this kind, as is also that portion of honey which solidifies. The chemical constitution and the practical values of the two sugars are very dif- ferent. Two ounces of cane sugar, according to the text books, are equal in sweetening power to five ounces of grape sugar. . 4 • • »■ ► For the Southern Planter. Bedford County, April, 1857. Mr. F. G. Puffin : In perusing the first article in the April number (Southern Planter) on "the plan of in- struction in the principal and auxiliary depart- ments of the school of agriculture," &c, we felt convinced that the maturity and precision of the writer deserve the cordial approbation of the farming communit}' - of this Slate. Yet we beg leave to offer to your readers a sketch of dif- ference of opinion, which, although at first sight of seeming, unimportance, yet attacks the very vitality of all institutions, but especially that of agriculture. Virginia, the " farming State," as emphati- cally termed by a great European orator, has need of a not only "nine months preparation" for agricultural purposes, but of a thorough scientific agricultural school. The mere "abili- ty to read the English language, &c, to write a fair hand, to compose upon the occasion an essay in English twenty or more lines in length, correctly spelled and dictated," and the "ac- quaintance with the theory and notation of arithmetic, with addition, subtraction, multipli- cation and division, &c, &c," are far below the "dignity and importance" of that science, which is followed by a majority of our citizens. Even the subsequently calculated extension to two sessions will upon such a basis prove in- effectual. The numerous Academies and Colleges of this State would labor in vain to attract the young student to the literature of Greece and Rome, their halls would soon be deserted (should the above plan succeed) and intrinsic learning exchanged with a one-sided, superficial and unstable acquisi- tion of empiric suggestions. For, although agriculture is at once the mother and offspring of science, yet it is the only social calling that has proportionally least profitted by its pro- THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 29: The " dignity of labor"* demands a pedes- tal, through which it may be dignified, and more than any other profession should that of the farmer act with the motto, Magnum fac animum habeas spem bonam. The gradual or guttatim elevation of agricul- ture can obviously never reach the gigantic advances of her sister sciences, even because this only observe, analyze, and prove what agri- culture assumes as experimental facts, and common honesty and the open avowal of their approval demand that the votary of that science should be fully acquainted with the nature of the principles assumed.. The farmer should be versed in the character of those elevators which lead to his position, and we much rather antici- pate a good farmer in one well educated with a view to this science, than in one with the knowledge of ploughing, draining &c, and without a scientific preparatory course. And this is natural. While the former has the ca- pacity of reading his soil and of applying p. e. the laws of chemistry to raising its productive qualities, has the latter the more qualification of appreciating and following matter of fact im- provements (if suited to his locality) and of knowing in what-others have had the occasion I to instruct him. With these views we are still advocating his collegiate course (of at least two years) as pre- paratory to an admission to the agricultural school. Our plan of such an institution has been demonstrated in an essay delivered at the District Fair, held at Jackson, Tennessee, and published in the Agricultural Report of the year 1855, (Tennessee.) Since the number of copies printed was necessarily limited, we will with great pleasure (at your demand) either send our copy or transcribe the essay; should you, however, be yourself in possession of the document, you may as you deem fit make prop- er use of it. The details of the plan advised by the author of the article in the Southern Planter, are upon the same principles with our own, and we feel it as an additional reward for the labor be- stowed upon our essay, that a man so highly endorsed by you entertains thus far like senti- ments with ourselves. B. R., M. D. * Vide: Address of Ex-Gov. Jones, Tennessee, before the Agricultural Society at their Fair, &c Report. Agricultural Bureau of Tennessee for the year 1855. For Whip. — One pint of cream, {- pint of new milk, a wine glass and a half of white wme. Take a lemon and squeeze in part of the juice, and then slice it, and put it into the cream. Sweeten to your taste. Beat it well till the froth is stiff and serve in glasses. < m • m » A Good Cake. — One tea cup of sugar, 3 eggs, 6 ounces of butter, 1 pint of milk, 2 cups of raisins, 1 cup of yeast, 3 pints flour, cinnamon and nutmeg. Very nice for lunch or tea. Wheat Drill. Enquiry about. Lands in Nansemond. Wyandotte Corn. Messrs. Editors, — Having it in contem- plation to purchase a wheat drill for the purpose of seeding my next crop ; but first being desirous of ascertaining whether 'tis politic to use a drill for that purpose, can you induce some of the large wheat raisers of this and the adjoining State of North Carolina, to give us their experience in the use of that implement, and if advisa- ble to use, which is the best for distribu- ting guano at the time of drilling the wheat. At our last State Fair, I examined all the implements on exhibition designed for that purpose, and then thought a drill exhibi- ted by a gentleman named Suddith, pre- ferable to all others ; but as I failed to pro- cure Mr. S.'s address and he has not deem- ed his drill worthy of being advertised in the "Planter," or any other agricultural publication which I have seen, I hereby call on him to let us know where he man- ufactures his drills and the actual perform- ance of the same (in the form of an ad- vertisement,) or let us have the experi- ence of those who have used S-uddith's implement. Permit me here to ask (en passant) if 'tis not an unwise policy for manufactur- ers, &c, &c, to pursue, in not advertising their implements, &tc, for sale, frequently being the case, that the net profits in one article alone, which they would not other- wise sell, more often than otherwise would pay for all advertisements for many, many years. The wheat crop is very promising in this county; an experience of twelve years confirms my opinion, that this is a very desirable section of the State for wheat raising ; here the crop is subject to fewer disasters, matures early and there- fore generally escapes rust. The lands are light, with a substratum of clay, easily improved, materials for which are accessi- ble and abundant, such as marl, decompo- sed oyster-shells or Indian shell banks, swamp mud and woods mould; which 'tis only necessary to make a judicious use of, to render the lands very productive. But there are some draw backs to our advance- ment as an agricultural community ; oys- ters abound in our rivers, rail-wood and lumber in our forests ; various public works arein progress, all of which draw off the more valuable and efficient labourers : leav- 294 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. ing the superanuated and women and chil- dren to cultivate the farms ; men of enter- prise and capital might go farther and fare worse than to settle amongst us ; here lands are cheaper than any portion of the State I have ever been in, possessing as many natural advantages. I have seen much said of late about Wyandotte Corn, which having planted for several years, I will sum up my experience by saying, that I think it about the most productive corn I ever raised and affording a greater amount of fodder than any whatever ; this may be a recommendation to those who approve of stripping the blades from corn (I do not.) I think it invaluable for sowing to make corn hay of, as each grain produces many suckers, which grow from the root and not the side of the parent stalk; can never be a merchantable article, as it is a very light, soft, flintless corn ; may be fed to stock, but is doubtless less nutricious than other kinds or corn ; should be planted early, as the blades are often green, when caught by frost. Should you deem the foregoing worthy of publication, you can insert it in the Planter; but if not, throw it aside and no offence will be given to d: h. h. Nansentumd Co., April 10, 1857. Osage Orange Hedges. To the Editor of the Southern Planter. A few more words if you please, and the last, of the Osage Orange Hedge. Whatever may be the expense of preparation for "planting, subsequent cultivation and man- agement in Missouri, as practised by the Mess. Sigenors, whom you quote in your April num- ber, I know nothing and shall say nothing. But I do know that here in Virginia, a space of 3 or 4 feet (even less) in width, well prepared with plough and harrow, a furrow or trench in the centre, deep enough to receive the plants without doubling up the ends of the main roots, and that furrow made rich enough for a ten barrel crop of corn, will be found fully suffi- cient for successful planting — that good plants of one year old, set from 8 to" 12 inches apart, are the best. Of subsequent culture and prun- ing, little need be said ; good culture and for the two first years, close pruning/, are indispen- sable, and not materially expensive or trouble- some. xVnd as to the time necessary here, to form a perfect hedge or fence — if any respectable and unprejudiced man will make the experiment faithfully and properly, I will give plants for the purpose, and if the experiment does not succeed in the half of seven years will forfeit ten times the value of the plants to him, as compensation for labor and trouble. WM. H. IilCHARDSON. April 13, 1857. Peas and Snaps. Bugs in. A correspondent wishes to know how to kill bugs in seed peas. The following, clipped from the Germantown Telegraph, contains all we know about it. To Kill Bugs in Seed Peas. — J. Perkins, of Euclid, Ohio, says : — On the day of sowing, put the peas into a tub, or barrel; pour on hot (not boiling) water, sufficient to immerse them ; let them remain about two minutes, or until the bugs are dead ; then turn them into a basket, or something that will separate them from the water quickly, and they can be sown without applying anything to dry them. This has been my practice Avhen I have sown peas for a field crop. The degree of heat required can be as- certained by trying a few, before applying the water to the whole. Bugs may be kept out of Snaps by sowing the seed from a fall crop, planted in August. Stop them up as soon as dry in a glass bottle- For the Southern Planter. Land Paying for itself in one Crop. Mr. Editor. — I have noticed a communi- cation in the March No. of the Planter, (taken from the Dispatch, ) stating that some gentle- man purchased a piece of land in one of the upper counties for $800, and sold a single crop of tobacco for $1000. Now, as an offset, I make the following statement : I purchased a tract of land a few years since, in the county of Surry, for $600 cash. Last year, 1856, I sold 1329 bushels of vdi%atat$l 60, $2110 40 200 bbls. of corn at $3, 600 00 $2710 40 I reserved corn enough for the use of the farm, and 100 bushels of wheat. I used two and three-fourth tons of guano on the wheat, — none on corn. The land, of course, has been improved since I bought it, by marl and peas. The above crop of wheat was made from 80 bushels sown, or 163 for one. W. C. Jones. Surry Co., Va. Love of Flowers. Flowers are considered the ornaments of vegetable life, and have in all ages been cultivated by persons of leisure and taste, for the pleasure they yield to the eye and the fancy. While generally healthy and THE SOUTHERN PtANtfefe. exhilarating, from being pursued in the open air, floriculture is justly considered to be a fine and harmless recreation, which by leading to tranquil contemplation of natural beauty, and diverting the mind from gross worldly occupations, has a pos- itively moral, and therefore, highly bene- ficial tendency. It has also the advantage of being open to the pursuit of high and low, rich and poor, the over-worked man of business, and the industrious mechanic. It is confined to no particular degree or situation. It may be followed with equal enjoyment by individuals of both sexes, and as is well known, on every imaginable scale, from that of the single flow f er-pot, or ornamental border, to the princely green- house and the exquisitely varied parterre. We love flowers. We even love the wild flowers of our woods and fields, and their cultivation has afforded us great pleasure. The natural grace, simplicity, and attrac- tive coloring of flowers, have afforded end- less themes for moralists and poets, and volumes have been written to show how many associations of feeling, simple and sublime, these beauteous objects are cal- culated to excite. As our desire is to improve the taste as well as the understanding, we hope to be excused for pausing a few moments over this agreeable view of flower culture. Few natural objects are more poetical, or more calculated to refine the morals and taste, than flowers. "From the majestic sun-flower, towering above her sisters of the garden, and faithfully turning to wel- come the god of day, to the little, humble and well known weed that is said to close its eyes before impending showers, there is scarcely one flower that may not, from its loveliness., its perfume, its natural situation, or its classical association, be considered highty poetical." As the welcome messenger of spring, the" snowdrop claims our first regard ; and numberless are the lays in which the beauties of this little modest flower are sung. The snow T drop teaches us a les- son, too, it marks out the progress of time. We cannot behold it without feeling that another spring has come, and immediately our thoughts recur to the events which have occurred since last its fairy bells were expanded. Whether the "cowslip which spangles the green," or the violet, while it pleases by its modest, retiring beauty, possesses the additional charm of the most exquisite of all perfumes, which inhaled with the pure and invigorating breezes of spring, always bring back in remembrance, a lively conception of the delightful sea- son. Thus, in poetical language, the "vio- let-scented gale," is synonymous with those accumulated and sweetly blended gratifi- cations which we derive from odors, flowers, and balmy breezes ; and above all from the contemplation of renovated nature once more bursting forth into beauty and per- fection. An error, not uncommon, in deciding which flowers shall be planted, is to select numbers, merely for their variety or novel- ty, without reference to what will be their appearance when in bloom, and which gen- erally leads to disappointment. Unless for botanical illustration, make a choice of flowers on two principles — those which will be beautiful when in bloom, although common, and those which will bloom at the particular season required, to ensure a succession of variegated beauty from spring to autumn. The true amateur gardener takes a pride in cultivating and improving even the common wild flowers of our fields, urging them, by careful culture, to the highest state of perfection, as to size and brilliancy of coloring, of which they are susceptible. C. N. B. Genesee Farmer. *«•»■ * A Good Market Garden, &c. In a private letter, enclosing a subscrip- tion to the Genesee Farmer, our esteemed correspondent, Samuel Williams, of Wa- terloo, N. Y., gives an account of a visit to a market garden in his vicinity, which we take the liberty of extracting, for the benefit of our readers : "It was by no means at my suggestion that you get one of our best practical farmers for a customer, as I had not seen him in a year or more. He said he had exchanged the occasionally with a neighbor, for the Genesee Farmer, but it was a bad plan, as he always wanted a paper at hand for reference, and to study at leisure its weightier matters. True, we have but few such farmers, and 'pity 'tis, 'tis true.' "I have just been to see an English- man's market garden, which beats any one I had ever before seen, even my own, ex- cept in corn, wurzel, cabbages and Lima 296 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER, that sweetmeats are giving place to a more simple, healthful, and delicious article, namely, fresh fruit preserved in its natural state, by perfectly excluding the air. Fresh peaches, strawberries, &c, are certainly a greater luxury in mid winter than the same fruit preserved with sugar, while the expense is less, and the amount of skill required no greater. The self-sealing tin cans, now exten- sively introduced, are far superior to the old kind, as the housewife can put them up quickly and safely without ihe aid of a tinner ; they are as easily opened as closed, and the same cans will do for successive years. These self-sealing cans are made in different ways. Some are sealed by screwing a cork upon a rubber compress and applying melted bees-wax ; others by warming the cover and pressing into a rim of cement, which surrounds the top of the can ; others again are sealed with a pecu- beans ; and he would certainly beat me in the Limas, if he could so far over- come his English prejudices, as to plant them. I doubt whether a larger quantity of onions was ever grown on the same space on the earth's surface. Five years ago, his garden w r as a wet, sandy swale, where the muck had given the drab sand a blueish tint. He began by cutting an open ditch to let off surface water, so as to make the land fit to plant in the spring ; hereto- fore it had not been dry enough to plant before the middle of June ; his crops were better, but not large or early. He now runs tile drains 2^ feet deep, and 40 feet apart through the lot ; one of them was un- der his large onion bed. The anions were planted in rows twelve inches apart ; the space is only ten inches after the onions are grown. In these rows the onions were from the diameter of a dollar to that of a half dollar, and some smaller; they not only touched each other in the rows, but liar kind of soft sodder. most of them were turned up edgewise, | The chief agent in the work of preser- and still there was not space enough be- vation is heat. If after the application of tween the onions, throughout a sixty footj heat for a certain time, (by which process row, to place your finger. His tomatoes the air is expelled,) .the article be sealed were earlier and larger than common; so J up hermetically, it will remain unchanged were his potatoes. His bean crop very! for an indefinite period. We will briefly large ; but his corn and cabbages, though! describe the method of putting up fruit in excellent, were no better than is grown on this manner, as given by several manufac- good heavy soils. - " To the eye this man's soil was coarser than a prairie soil, and a shade or two high- er colored; but it was pulverulent, and rich in that muck or organic matter it had been collecting from the Mr. Foster said manured at all. A sub-soil of calcareous beginning, his onions had not been turers : First, select good fresh fruit or vegeta- bles. Stale and fermented articles can never be preserved. Vegetables decom- posing quick, such as green corn, green peas, asparagus, should be preserved within six hours after being picked, particularly in hot weather. Berries always within t wen- clay here is several feet below the surface; i ty-four hours. Peaches, quinces, pears, the neighboring; knolls of drab sand, being! apples, should be pealed, and the seeds re- less aluminous than this swale, need much and constantly applied nitrogenous manures to make them anything like as productive. Here in this drained mucky swale, English turnips in part distanced worms and grew well; but all English, as Fo'ster is, he had sweet corn growing in drills, as a sec- ond He crop, after peas and early potatoes. Le says his cow prefers corn fodder to pithy turnips, and it yields much more in bulk." — Genesee Farmer. Preserving Fruit by Hermetical Sealing. We are glad to see that year by year the old practice of making large quantities of preserves in every family, is declining; and moved before preserving. Vegetables should be partly cooked first. Such as corn, peas, and potatoes, should be boiled a half an hour ; asparagus, a quarter hour. To vegetables, add a half a pint of the water they are cooked in to the quart. Fill the can with ripe fruit, adding, if desired, a little sugar — simply enough to render the fruit palatable, and set in a ves- sel of water, (warm or cold.) Let the water boil, and continue boiling until the fruit is well heated through — say for a half an hour. Direction has been given to simply let the water boil but such direction [is defective, as at this time the fruit in the THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 297 centre of the vessel will be scarcely warmed. Should the vessel be then sealed, fermentation will take place. The heat must thoroughly penetrate the contents of the vessel. As soon as the fruit is sufficiently heated, seal the can and the work is done. Another was to make a syrup of two pounds of sugar for six pounds of fruit, using half a pint of water for every pound of sugar. Skim the syrup as soon as it boils, and then put in your fruit and let it boil ten minutes. Fill the can, and seal up hot. Some make a syrup of a half a pound of sugar to every pound of fruit — and some use only a quarter of a pound of sugar to a pound of fruit, while some use no sugar at all. To keep peaches, pare and cut them up. If thrown into cold water, they will retain their firmness and color. Heat them in the cans as above, or boil them ten minutes in a syrup. In this way, strawberries, raspberries, cherries, plums, peaches, &c, &c, may be kept any length of time, in the same condition that they were when sealed up, and with their flavor unchanged. For small fruit, it is best to make, a syrup without water, and boil the fruit in it only for a few minutes. Mr. Doddridge of this city has experi- mented largely with the use of different kinds of cans, and gives the following in- structions : Peaches, quinces, pears, apples, should be pealed, quartered, and the seeds removed before preserving. They should be placed in a kettle and be brought to a brisk boil, with as little stirring as will prevent them from scorching, to avoid breaking the fruit. The fruit should be kept boiling while the cans are being filled. Tomatoes should be boiled and the skins taken off, and then placed in a kettle and brought to a boil, kept so while filling the cans. Fill the cans quickly from the boiling material in the kettle, and immediately place on the cap, (which should be warm,) fitting it closely to the shoulder of the neck of the can. Blow or wipe the moisture out of the gallery which the heat of the can within a little time will dry off. Then fill the gallery with cement. This takes less time than filling with cold fruit, and heating the can up in boiling water. Fresh stewed fruits of all kinds may be kept in these vessels. It will only be ne- cessary to stew the fruit as for the table, adding the amount of sugar necessary to make it palatable ; — fill up the vessel with the hot fruit and seal at once. All ripe fruits preserved in this way, will be found as fresh in the winter season as when it is taken from the tree and stewed. How to know that the can is hermetically sealed, and that the contents will keep — The contents as soon as they cool, will slightly shrink, leaving a vacuum, and the top and bottom of the can will become concave, from the pressure of the external air. This shows that sealing is perfect. Set the can in a warm place, and if, after four or five days, the concave condition of the top and botton remain, all is right. But if they swell out, fermentation has commenced. As soon as this is perceived, open and heat the contents as at first. # These directions apply to every kind of can, the only difference being in the mode of sealing, and for these particular direc- tions accompany the cans. — Ohio Culti- vator. Home-Made Bread. In the " Newspaper" of last week, (which by the way, is an especial favorite in our family,) I saw an article on the sub- ject of Home-made Bread, which accords precisely with my own ideas on that very important subject, and I am therefrom prompted to send my own infallible recipe, for the benefit of my sister housewives, readers of the Newspaper. You must know then, honored sirs, so numerous are the applications for my re- cipe, I have seriously, several times, before this, considered the expediency of making' it generally known through the medium of a newspaper, and thereby save a deal of scribbling. I therefore now ask the honor and favor of its insertion in your excellent journal. Invaluable Recipe for Making Bread. — In the first place, there are three indispen- sable requisites for making good bread, viz: Good flour, yeast, and a careful hand. From three quarts of sifted flour, take one half pint of it in a separate vessel, and scald it with boiling water; let the paste cool to blood heat, and then add one egg, one tea-spoonful of sugar, one tablespoon- ful of salt, one cup of well risen yeast; whip the whole well with a spoon, and 298 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER then pour it into the midst of the three quarts of flour; knead it well, with as much warm water as will make it into a moder- ately stiff dough; let your bread rise till at least twice its size; then, after again knead- ing a great deal, mould out your loaves or rolls into smooth, regular forms, wet them over with cold water, to prevent cracking, and set them to raise again under a clean cloth, till by touching on one side, they will quiver on the opposite side, then wet again with cold water and bake imme- diately. If the fermentation has not ar- rived at this point, the bread will not be sufficiently light — if it is suffered to go be- yond this point, the bread will lose its sweetness. A tin kettle with a closely fitting cover, is best to set your bread to raise in, particularly when it is set to raise over night, to be baked for breakfast in the mornieg. Your bread should be set to raise in a moderately warm place, in win- ter, and a cool place in summer. I use yeast cakes, as more convenient, more easily kept sweet, and less "expensive. I make them thus : — Boil as many hops as I can grasp in one hand, in a quart of water, down to three half pints, then pour it over a cupful of sifted flour, through a seive or cullender; let it get cold; then add a pint of well risen yeast, and as much Indian meal as will make a stiff dough; set it by to raise, and when quite spongy and light, sift your board over with meal, make your cakes thin and lay them on it to dry; turn them frequently while drying. After they are thoroughly dry, hang them in a clean bag in your kitchen, to insure from moisture. Do not dry them in the sun or near a fire, either will destroy their life. I usually put my board of yeast cakes to dry on the highest shelf in the kitchen, after sifting them over with meal, which can be skaken off with the dust, which will unavoidably fall upon them. — In Dollar JVewsjxiper. Valuable Receipts. We are requested to insert the following recipes by a kind correspondent to whom we are indebted for some seed of the JWar- tiiioe and vegetable egg. A friend has handed us the subjoined re- ceipts for publication, with the remark that they will be found satisfactory in every respect by good housewives. Soda Biscuits. — Take two quarts of flour, one pint of sour milk, two pieces of butter the size of a walnut, two teaspoonfuls of cream-tartar, two teaspoonfuls of soda ; mix cream-tartar with the flour, and soda with the milk. To Pickle Martinoes. — Soak in brine : take them out and drain them ; put them in an iron pot and cover with weak vine- gar ; simmer slowly until they turn dark and are tender enough for a straw to run through them ; drain them and put thern in a jar with some sliced onions ; boil strong vinegar, cloves, allspice, red pep- per, and horse radish, and pour it over them boiling hot; tie up closely, and in a few weeks they will be ready for use. Su- gar is a great improvement; if used, it must be boiled in the spices. French Pickles. — Take one peck of green tomatoes, one-fourth peck of onions, one-fourth pound of white mustard seed, one ounce of cloves, one ounce of allspice, one bottle of mixed mustard, two table- spoonfuls of black pepper, one table-spoon- ful of cayenne pepper, one ounce of cele- ry seed, one pound of brown sugar. Slice the tomatoes and lay them in salt for twelve hours, pour off the brine, slice your onions and put. a layer of tomatoes, onions, spices and sugar, in a bell-metal kettle, until the ingredients are all in. Pour on vinegar until the tomatoes are covered, and boil hard for one hour. Sweet Mango Pickles. — -Fill a gallon jar with mangoes and cucumbers, and cover them with strong brine; after lettingthem stand for several days, pour off the brine and boil it and pour it hot over the pick- les ; do this every third morning until you have scalded them three times ; you are then to mix equal quantities of water and vinegar, and scald them three times as be- fore, keeping them closely covered with cabbage leaves to keep in the steam. The filling for mangoes, cucumbers and pep- pers : One tea-cup of black pepper, one tea-cup of allspice, half tea-cup of race ginger, one ounce of cloves, one ounce of mace, one pint of black mustard seed, one pint of white mustard seed, two cups of scraped horse radish, two and a half pounds brown sugar. Beat the spices, but not fine ; one small cabbage chopped fine ; mix all well and fill your mangoes. Take two pounds more sugar and buil with the vinegar ; pour it hot over your pickles. If THE SOUTHERN PLAxN'TER. 299 you have too much dressing, put it in cot- ton bags and throw it in the pot with your pickles. <«»♦♦■» From the South Carolina Farmer and Planter. Sheep Shearing. From time immemorial in the wool growing Districts, the first of June has been set apart as a holiday, when scenes of unusual mirth and festivity ushered in the first day of the sheep shearing season. At the present time, in many parts of Europe, the first day of June is known as a holiday, as the beginning of the wool harvest, and is celebrated by feasts and dancing. Even in the United States, the North- ern portion of these where there is much atten- tion paid to sheep husbandry, the first of June is a day of general jollification. But with us in the Southern States, where the spring is some two months in advance of that of our Northern neighbors, we must begin to shear our flocks of their fleeces, near the first of April, — some do even before that, but there may be some risk in so doing. If we leave our sheep late in the spring, before we begin to shear, we find many that are poor, exhaust- ed and even look sick, which is caused by their thick, heavy fleeces keeping the air away from their skin, and is keeping the system in a fe- ver all the time. Such sheep will lie in the shade, and will rarely be seen feeding through the day, but early in the morning, and late in the evening, they will do so with a voracious appetite, proving that sheep will endure hun- ger, rather than expose itself to the scorching sun of early spring. Many judicious planters object to washing sheep, from its tendency to produce colds and catarrhal affections to which sheep are par- ticularly liable, but it cannot well be dispensed with, as the wool is always more saleable, and if carefully done, need not be attended with any injury ; warm, settled weather, however, is indispensable to washing with safety to the general health of the sheep. When the planter has bat few sheep, and needs all the wool for home consumption, he can consult his own convenience about wash- ing his sheep ; but with a large flock, and the wool for a market, the sheep must be washed ; it gives the staple a lively look, and a softer handling, and can be got cleaner if carefully washed on the animal than can possibly be done after it is taken oif from him. To, wash your sheep, build a small pen in such a manner that the sheep may be easily caught, close by a running stream ; have one man in_ the pen to catch and tag the string, (which is the removal of all the wool near the extremity of the sheath and scrotum of the males, from the udder of the ewes, and from below the dock, the inside of the legs and thighs,) for two to wash. I have seen some so careless as to drag the sheep in the water on their backs, or any way to get them in. Such practice is very wrong, as well as a hard way to handle sheep. The easiest way is to take up the sheep and carry it. By dragging a sheep into the water, the sand and mud gets in the wool where much of it will remain to the great annoyance of the shears when the sheep becomes to be shorn, besides injuring the sale of the wool. The sheep should be caught by a man in the yard, and^ carried to the edge of the water, and then held on a bench or stool, until the washer is ready to take it. The washer then carries it into the water to a suitable depth to perform the opera- tion ; having squeezed the wool sufficiently in the water, he leads the sheep gently to the shore, and then finishes the operation by squeezing the water out of the wool as much as possible. In this way we serve a double purpose; first, if any filth remains in the wool after washing in the water, more can be squeez- ed out than will naturally drain out ; and second, by squeezing the water from the wool, the sheep is relieved of a heavy burden, which otherwise would cause it to tumble down in the mucl, sand, or gravel, running off, which is too often the case when let go with the water in the wool. In such cases they need be taken up, carried back and washed over again. After all are washed, the sheep should be confined in a close pen until they begin to sweat or steam, and then turn into a clean lot covered with pine leaves or straw, kept clean until ready to shear. Catch your sheep gently as possible, turn it on its back, set yourself down on a low stool, and lay the sheep's head on your left leg, put your arm over across its body, and with the "left hand raise its fleece off from the points of the shears as you work, this* is the easiest and safest way to handle the sheep. After the fleece is off, take it and spread it with the outside uppermost on a smooth bench or table, push the wool carefully together to render it more compact, double the sides over to the centre, throw the clear loose locks into the middle, and roll together from each end ; this makes a smooth, dense package, which is secured by passing a stout twine one or more times around the sides and ends ; this is now ready for market, and all the wool from the extremities cr the second qualitv, should be closely sheared and saved by itself before dis- missing the sheep, but not put up with the, choice fleeces. If wounds are made, which is some times the case with unskilful hands, a mixture of tar and greese ought to be applied. After shearing, such horns and hoofs as are likely to be troublesome, should be sawed and pared. From the improvement in the price and de- mand for wool, and that of the coarser quali- ties, the prospect now held out of a steady market for the article, and a still further en- 300 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. hancement of prices, we are inclined to think that planters who have suitable grazing grounds for sheep, would consult their own in- terests by increasing their flocks. No animals pay better for their keeping when the demand for wool is good and the prices fair ; and there is, perhaps, none that requires so little atten- tion during the grazing months, or less food during winter. It appears to be the true pol- icy of planters to diversify their products as much as possible, and we are sure that there is none more available than the production of wool, and for the reason we have already as- signed. But independent of the value of the wool of the sheep, there is certainly no meat more delicate, more generally relished or nu- tritious than theirs ; and although the price is greatly reduced to what it was in former years, still when the value of the fleece is taken into account, there can be no question as to their being a profitable kind of stock, while the fact of the supply of wool being greatly inadequate to the demand at present, should operate as an inducement to the extension of sheep hus- bandry. D***. The Proper Time for Cutting Timothy. BY JA1IES P. KIRTLAND, M. D., OF CLEVELAND, OHIO. The proper time for cutting Timothy mea- dows, (herds-grass of New England,) with reference to securing the best qualities of hay, has been a fruitful subject of observation and remark. Little or no attention has been paid to the influence of the time and manner of cut- ting, over the health, permanency, and pro- ductiveness of such meadows. A vague idea prevails, among farmers, that if the mowing be performed before the seed of this species of grass is ripe, it will run out, from a failure to re-seed the ground. Every observing farmer has noticed that, in some instances, extensive tracts of Timothy sward have suddenly died, soon after the removal of the crop of hay, while, in others, the sward continued healthy, and for a series of years produced abundantly of this grass. The rationale of such opposite results, under apparently similar circumstances, had never been explained, so far as my infor- mation extends. My neighbor, Richard McCrary, an intelli- gent and practical farmer, has recently pre- sented me with the annexed propositions and conclusions, as the result of his experience on this subject. These he illustrated by speci- mens of the grass, in every condition to which he alludes. It is hoped they will be thoroughly scanned, by persons competent to test their ac- curacy. If they bear this test, to Mr. Mc- Crary the credit of the discovery of the facts solely belongs ; and I have no doubt the com- munity will consider him as having conferred an important benefit. 1. Timothy grass [PJileum pratensc) is a perennial plant, which renews itself by an an- nual formation of " bulbs," or, perhaps, more correctly speaking, tubers, in which all the vitality of the plant is concentrated during the winter. These form, in whatever locality the plant is selected, without reference to dryness or moisture.* From these, proceed the stalks which support the leaves and head, and from the same source spread out the numerous fibres, forming the true roots. 2. To insure a perfect development of these tubers, a certain amount of nutrition must be assimilated in the leaves, and returned to the base of the plant, through the stalk. 3. As soon as this process of nutrition is completed, it becomes manifest by the appear- ance of a state of desiccation, or dryness, al- ways commencing at a point directly above either the first or second joint of the stem, near the crown of the tuber. From this point, the desiccation gradually progresses upwards, and the last portion of the stalk that yields up its freshness is that adjoining the head. Co- incident with the beginning of this process is the full development of the seeds, and with its progress they mature. Its earliest appearance is evidence that both th.e tubers and seeds have received their requisite supplies of nutrition, and that neither the stalk nor the leaves are longer necessary to aid them in completing their maturity. A similar process occurs in the onion, just above the crown of the bulb, indicating the maturity of that organ. 4. If the stalk be cut from the tubers, before this evidence of maturity has appeared, the necessary supplies of nutrition will be ar- rested, their proper growth will cease, and an effort will be made to repair the injury, by sending out small lateral tubers, from which weak and unhealthy stalks will proceed, at the expense of the original tubers. All will ulti- mately perish, either by the droughts of au- tumn or the cold of winter.f 5. The tubers, together with one or two of the lower joints of the stalk, remain fresh and green, during the winter, if left to take their natural course ; but if, by any means, this green portion be severed, at any season of the year, the result will be the death of the plant. * JVIr. Lapham, in his valuable article on the - Gras ses of Wisconsin," (Transactions of the Wisconsin Agricultural Society, Vol. 3, 1853, page 425,) says : " When growing in very dry places, bulbs are fre- quently formed on the roots of Timothy grass, as a sort of store-house of moistuie, &c, from which to draw supplies of nutriment, for the future growth of the plant." Mr. McCrary supposes it occurs in all localities, and is the nature and habit of the plant. In this, he is probably correct. t Florists know that if the stalk of the white lily be cut, prematurely, a similar result ensues; and that, by cutting oil the stem and leaves of herbaceous peonies, before they are mature, the tubers will be so much impaired as to fail to bloom the next season. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 301 From- the foregoing considerations it is con- cluded, 1. That Timothy grass cannot, under any circumstances, be adapted for pasture ; as the close nipping of horses and sheep is fatal to the tubers, which are also extensively de- stroyed by swine. 2. The'proper period for mowing Timothy is at any time after the process of desiccation has commenced on the stalk, as noted in Propo- sition 3. It is not very essential whether it is performed a week earlier or later, provided it be postponed till that evidence of maturity has become manifest. 3. All attempts at close shaving the sward should be avoided, while using the scythe, and, in gauging mowing-machines, care should be taken to run them so high that they will not cut the Timothy below the second joint above the tuber.— Pat. Off. Rep. Growing Rubber in the United States. Messrs. Editors. — After a long interval of country life I again open a communication with you, my main object being to present to the American public, through the medium of the Scientific American, the cheering intelli- gence that the question so long propounded, as to whether there was anything to be found in the wide expanse of our national domain that partook of the nature and characteristics of caoutchouc, or India rubber, may now be safely answered in the affirmative. I have the gratification of being able to state that the article not only exists in our country, but thftt it is a common product in all of the States south of latitude 39°. I send you a small specimen of the substance, remarking that it is found in this country in a solid form, in- stead of the fluid or milky condition in which the ordinary rubber is found, consequently being in minute parts, cohesion of those parts can only be effected by the action of heated rollers, such as are used in all India rubber factories. The specimen I send you is small and rather ragged, from the cause already stated, the cohesion in this case being effected by the action of a hammer with a heated plate of iron.. From a very imperfect and unprofes- sional analysis I am led to believe that the physical properties of this article and the substance imported are identical. Without pretending to absolute accuracy in my results I think the approximation is C.87'2 H.128. The flame resembles the imported article as well as the smell and taste. " Honor to whom honor" is a motto I some- times find to fail in the application ; lest some other person should set himself forth as the discoverer of this American product, I shall invite the attention of such to the announce- ment I now make, and if any one has preceded me in the field, let the fact be known during the coming six months, or I shall take to my- self the credit, if any be due. As I before stated, the growth of this substance is general, and though unlike the other, it can easily be reduced to a suitable shape for export or do- mestic use. Joseph E. Ware. [Trie sample forwarded looks like the real caoutchouc, and exhibits the same elastic properties, but we do not detect any smell.. If it differs from common rubber, it is, for aught we see to the contrary, as likely to be better as worse. Will Mr. W. give us further information ? — Ed.] — Scientific American. A Superior Washing Fluid. Messrs. Editors — I send you a receipt for making a superior Washing Fluid, which I have had in use over two years. There is no precipitate if prevented from freezing and properly made. In the .following proportions it will not cost over three cents a quart: Dissolve 1 pound of sal soda in 1 quart of hot water, and add to it 4 quarts of lime water; when this settles pour off the clear. Next dissolve 3 ounces of borax in 1 quart of boiling water, and add it to the 5 quarts of clear water. When cold dissolve in it 2 or 3 ounces of pulverized carbonate ammonia. Put it in bottles, and keep it tightly corked. This fluid makes strong, thick "suds," makes washing less injurious to the hands, and it cleans the clothes with less rubbing. Use 1-2 pint, or less, to about five gallons of water ; put it, with some soap, into the tub of clothes the night before washing-day, or a short time before boiling the clothes. I think this chemical fluid, nmong the. list of washing compounds, will take "the rag off the bush" — and clean it. Trenton. Trenton, N. J., March, 1857. [Washing fluid made after the above re- ceipt we have no doubt will be found an excel- lent article, and we are much obliged to our correspondent for it. Many who are in the habit of using wash- ing fluids do not appear to be aware of their nature and specific objects. Why should they be used at all in washing ? We answer, sim- ply to provide a slight excess of alkali to com- bine with the grease and dirt on the clothes. They should be sparingly used, at best, and wholly discarded in washing laces and fine linens. Good soap suds of sufficient strength makes the best washing fluid for fine white textile fabrics. The chloride of soda makes an excel- lent fluid for whitening linen that has become yellow in color, and as a washing fluid is in- ferior to none. The use of strong caustic alkalies impart a yellowish tinge to fine linens and tends to in- jure them, and therefore should be used (if at all) with much caution. — Scientific American. S02 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. To Prevent a Horse from Breaking" his Bridle. A subscriber from Mississippi, writes in a P. S., as follows. The information is worth, to any man having a bridle-breaking horse, the price of the Farmer and Planter at least one year. — Editor F. & P. P. S. — Have you a horse that breaks his bri- dle ? Go to the store, buy a large fiddlestring, tie one end of it to his bit, pass the other up under the head-stall and tie to the other side of the bit. Tie the string from half to three- quarters of an inch snorter than the head- stall, take loose the martingales and hitch him with the reins (strong ones) and let him pull. Thus you see all the strain will be upon the cat-gut, and that cutting down on his naked head soon brings him to terms. I have never yet seen one make the third attempt under this treatment, and rarely a second. Try it. — Far- mer and Planter. Farmers, Note This. In a cloudy morning, it is a matter of im- portance to the farmer to know whether it will be sunshiny or showery in the afternoon. If the ants have cleared their holes nicely, and piled the dirt up high, it seldom fails to bring a clear day to the farmer. Spider-webs will be very numerous about the tops of the grass and grain some cloudy mornings; and fifty years' observation has shown the writer of this that these little weather-guessers seldom fail in their predictions of a fair day. — English paper. Using Up the Pig. What crocodiles were in Egypt, what cows are in Bengal, or storks in Holland, pigs are in Ohio, with this trifling difference — their sacred- ness of character lasts but as long as their mortal coil; and this is abreviated without cere- mony, and from the most worldly motive. In life the pig is free, is honored ; he ranges the streets, be reposes in thoroughfares, he walks between your horse's legs or your own, he is everywhere respected, but let the thread of his existence be severed, and, shade of Moham- med ! what a change! We think of nothing but making the most of him. A million of his kind perish annually at Cincinnati, to augment the vast prosperity of the city. About thirty years ago, when it contained only one tenth of its existing population, a few bold speculators began the trade. Selecting the hams and sides of the animal, they made pickled pork ; of the rest they took small ac- count. Soon, however, the idea occurred to one more cute than his fellows, that the head and the feet — nay, even the spine and the verte- brae — might be turned to account. Trotters and checks had their partisans, and these parts looked up in the market. About this time the makers of sausages caught the inspiration ; they found those luxuries saleable, . and so many pigs were to be slaughtered, that the b.utchers were willing to do it for nothing, that is to say, for the perquisite of the entrails or offals alone. The next step was due to the genius of France. A Frenchman established a brush manufactory, and erected a market for the bristles, but his ingenuity was outdone by one of his countrymen, who soon after arrived. This man was determined, it seems, to share the spoil ; and thinking nothing else left, col- lected the fine hair, or wool, washed, boiled, and curled it, and stuffed mattresses with ^. But he was mistaken in thinking nothing else left. As but little was done with the lard, they invented machines and squeezed oil out of it; the refuse they threw away. Mistaken men, again ! This refuse was the substance for stearine, and made a fortune to the discoverer of that secret. Lastly came one who could press chemistry into the service of mammon. He saw the blood of countless swine flowing through the valley of Deer Creek, west of the city ; it was all that was left of them, but it went to his heart to see it thrown away. He pondered long ; and then collecting the stream into reser- voirs, made prussiate of potash from the blood! The "pig was used up." — Ohio Valley Farmer. For the Southern Planter. Tobacco Plant Beds. To the Editor of the Southern Planter : The season has too far advanced for.trte readers of your paper to reap any benefit from the following suggestions in relation to plant beds this year, but I hope that the ideas advanced, proceeding altogether from the writer's experience in the rais- ing of plants, may not fail to exert its in- fluence and benefit to those who may try the experiment the coming season, and continually. The scarcity of wood in this portion of Piedmont Virginia, and the much greater scarcity of plant land, ren- ders it extremely important, that some method be devised — some practice de- veloped, by which tobacco plants may be more easily and more certainly raised, and the exorbitant consumption of wood diminished at the same time. Upon almost all estates, large or small, there are some good localities and suita- ble soils for the growing of plants. Wet, post-oak land, (indicating a close, com- pact soil, it matters not whether rich or poor,) I prefer for plants. Let so much of that character of soil, with a good THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 303 South or South-eastern exposure as may be necessary, be burnt, hard enough to destroy all the grass seed which the soil may contain. After the planting is over in the spring or summer, the remainder of plants are with a scythe or hoe, cut dowji or dug up, and the patch covered over about six inches deep with leaves, wheat straw, or corn stalks, — I think the stalks or straw are preferable, inasmuch as they furnish more nutriment to the soil and allows more atmospheric action upon the soil. The stalks or straw are allowed to remain upon the bed until the time of farming comes round again, when it is burnt upon the bed, which, with the addition of a covering with brush, old wood, or nothing at all, is amply sufficient to secure a bed as clean, and free of all seed, as it was after the first burning. The soil is now in a much better condi- tion to receive the seed than it was at first, and the preparation not half so te- dious and vastly better. This practice I have continued consecutively for three years, and am convinced that it is the best if not the only method we have in our pow r er to lessen the amount of wood consumed, and render more cer- tain the raising of tobacco plants. Yours, very respectfully, Edward T. Page. Buckingham Co., Va. Preserving Wild Fowl. — Remove the intestines carefully, and wipe out the blood with an old soft tow r el, until the flesh is quite dry ; then dust flour over the inside, and scatter two or three drops of cre- osote upon a piece of blotting paper, and put that in and tie the bird uptight in another piece of similar paper, upon which put a few drops more creosote ; then hang up each carcass separate, in a cool, dry place, and it will keep sweet for a long time. Never remove the feathers from a bird you wish to preserve. — Germantown Telegraph. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Wheat and Corn. — The auditor of Ohio has made his report on the grain sta- tistics of that State for 1856 to the legis- lature. The number of acres sown with wheat was 1,407,773; bushels gathered, 19,569,320 ; the average yield 13.81 bush- els. The whole number of acres of corn planted was 2,205,282 ; bushels gathered. 87,782,434; the average yield, 39.71 bushs'. TERMS AND CONDITIONS. Two Dollars and Fifty Cents per annum, or Two Dollars only, if paid in Advance. Subscriptions may begin with any Number, but it is desirable that they should be made to the end of a volume. Subscribers who do not give express notice to the contrary on or before the expiration of their yearly Subscription, will be considered as wishing to con- tinue the same ; and the paper will he sent accord- ingly. No paper will he discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except at our option. Subscribers are requested to remit the amount of their Subscription as soon as the same shall become due. If Subscribers neglect refusorto et ake their papers from the Office or place to which they are sent, they will be held responsible until they settle their account and give notice to discontinue. If Subscribers remove, change their offices, or per- mit their paper to be sent to an office that has been discontinued, without directing a change of their pa- per, and the paper is sent to the former direction, they will be held responsible. All Payments to the Southern Planter will be ac knowledged in the first paper issued after the same shall have been received. All money remitted to us will be considered at our risk only when the letter containing the same shall have been legistered. This rule is adopted not for our protection, but for that of our correspondents; and we wish' it distinctly understood that we take the risk only when this condition is complied with. It is indispensttbly necessary that subscribers re- mitting their Subscription, should name the Office to which their papers are serft ; and those ordering a change should say from what to what post office they wish the alteration made. A strict observance of this rule will save much time to us and lose none to them besides insuring attention to their wishes. Postmasters are requested to notify us in wriling- as the law requires, when papers are not taken from their Offices bv Subscribers. RUFFIN & AUGUST, Proprietors. Office : No. 153, Corner Mam and Twelfth Streets. The Eli Thayer Invasion. Clarke Co., April 1857. Mr. Editor. — Having seen several articles in one of the late papers relating to the intended encroachment of the North on the soil of the Old Dominion, I cannot forbear to sound the alarm to my brother Virginians, to arouse them from their slumbers, and implore them to make every elfort to repel the invaders. One of the articles alluded to above, stated that there was a Great Northern Emigrant Aid Society pro- jected, with a capital of three or four millions 304 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER of dollars, to be invested in lands in Eastern Virginia, to be settled and cultivated entirely by white labour. And this society is headed by that rank Black Republican, Mr. Thayer, who was for- merly actively engaged in the organization of the Kansas Aid Society. Now, I ask, Mr. Editor, what will be the re- sult if this project is carried into effect? The answer is apparent; in the first place there will be an increase of not less than 16,000 white inhabitants thrown into our midst at once, and with all their northern prejudices, all their ab- olition principles, and violent oppositon to our Southern institutions, they will be so many firebrands in our midst, contaminating our ne- groes, by working t upon their excitable and ig- norant minds: estranging them from their mas- ters, and inducing them by their insiduous de- vices to abandon their homes and take passage on the underground railroad constructed for them ; and in the short space often years they will have accomplished their aim in making Virginia a free State. Virginians may hoot at the idea, but I tell you, sir, that they can and will do it if they are not crushed in the bud. Let them once get themselves fully established, and they will have a strong and hearty co-operation from the Wes- tern section of the State, and with their united efforts they will entice the poor negroes from the protection of his master, and the comforts of home, and cast him on the cold world to — die. But is there no way to stop this invasion of our rights ? I think there is. ' Let Virginians but be true to themselves, and to their dear na- tive State, and they can preserve and protect their dearest rights. Let every father in the State educate his sons as farmers, instilling into them from their ear- liest infancy the beauties of agriculture in every branch, teaching them by precept and example to love their rfative State dearer than all the world beside ; and endeavour to discard from their minds all ideas of emigrating either South or West, but remain firm at their post, rising above every difficulty, proving themselves true Virginians by endeavoring to restore the worn out soil of the State that it may bring forth and blossom as the rose. Young Virginian. A correspondent sent us the above last month, and we received it too lftte for the April num- ber of the Planter. Since then a friend has sent us a copy of the Herald and called our special attention to a letter of Mr. Thayer's therein, in which he avows a purpose to colo- nize different parts of Virginia with companies of Yankees, who arc to settle among us on purely business principles, and without any philanthropy in the case. Our correspondents evidently think it a case in which the views of the farmers should be expressed, and one of them, as has been seen, appeals to them through our columns. The only reluctance we feel to engage in the question proceeds from the principles on which this paper is conducted, which impel it to re- frain studiously from anything that may be supposed to have a political aim or bearing. — This matter, it is true, is one which should rise I to the dignity of a social, and moral, and eco- 3 nomical question, and we shall attempt so to treat it in the brief response we propose to make to the gentlemen who have " called us out." In the first place, then, we have to say that at present we do not anticipate any particular harm from the proposed colonization of Eli Thayer and company. We think all history and the very principles of every society prove, that even where a country is conquered and overrun by invaders, it gives more impres- sion by the impact than it receives, ,* The principles of the British constitution at this day, and the language and manners of that people prove that the Anglo-Saxon element predominates over the Norman. The Common Law has nearly absorbed the civil law; the Parliament is the legitimate successor of the Wittenagemote ; and the feudal system of continental Europe has left but few traces on Great Britain, though it was. forced on it by what seemed at the time an iron hand. Its best features, including pri?no geniture, which, for that country is the best mode of lauded dis- tribution, are the most that remain. Two cen- turies ago, these same British people of such exclusive individuality themselves began to colonize India ; and though they have held sway almost ever since over the most abject people in the world, they have not yet cracked the crust of caste, though they have been in_ cessantly hammering at it. The larger expe- rience of Rome is to the same effect. If wo might condense her history into one sentence, we should say, that overrunning all the world she colonized herself to death. How could it be otherwise ? One nation cannot in a day transfuse itself into another ; and yet it is only by daily contact of multitudes that great changes are wrought in opinion; and then, how slowly! God never THE SOUTHERN PLANTEE. 305 meant it to be otherwise. For what would have "been the state of the world if all its different societies could have been made to assume each various phase its rulers w T illed. Consider, in this connection, that the popula- tion of the South is about half that of the North; and then say what chance there is for a mere handful of Yankees to subvert our in- stitutions by any moral power they can bring to. bear ; and how much more likely it is that such a detachment of colonizers would b$ ab- sorbed into one mass as a herring might be swallowed by a whale. Nor need we apprehend danger from any overt act of theirs. If they were to attempt anything of that kind they would be immola- ted at once, ground between the upper and- nether millstone of instant retribution. And ithey know it. As little have we to fear from secretly insti- gated rebellion. The alacrity of preparation and the readiness of defence which the alarm of last winter developed must have convinced the negroes and their friends that their " deliv erance" lay not in that direction, if any where. Spartacus, at the head of white slaves, many of them their masters' equals in intelligence and education, and some of them trained sol- diers captured in battle, failed to obtain suc- cess over a race no braver than Southern men, and, for their times and circumstances, not more martial. The most we apprehend directly from this particular movement is that a few negroes may be seduced from their masters. But this may be easily stopped if the Legislature will only do its duty, and declare kidnapping a negro a felony punishable by death, and provable, in the case of a citizen of a free State, by the tes- timony of the negro. This perhaps is unconsti- tutional; but it is self-defence, and self-defence "the higher law" of the South. It may be thought harsh, and condemned by that class }f humane people who have given a premium o crime by the establishment of penitentaries, and the abolition of the whipping post. But we have tried grass so long on our rogues that it has become necessary to throw stones. Such considerations as these cannot fail to be ntertained by our colonizers ; upon whom they will exercise a wholesome restraint, and thereby issure us against much of the anticipated an- noyance. 20 We presume that the real purpose of the leaders of this immigration is to make money, and to engage servitors by any means that it is thought may attract them. They have learned by the census that Virginia is far richer than New England taking out Boston, and they have probably heard that it is a plcasanter country to live in ; and they have heard that the lands are " dilapidated and abandoned," until they believe|it, as too many of our own unthinking people do, though statistics prove the error. They may have even heard, as we have — (from a Maine lumber man, now a resident of Vir- ginia), that here in this county of Chesterfield — deemed, improperly by the way, one of the poorest in the State, and where one cannot ride five miles in any direction without hearing the drumming of the cooper's hammer, that the lum- ber, much of it the second growth, is better and more abundant than it ever was in the deepest woods of Maine. They certainly have received, or pretend to have received, good accounts from our neighbour Dinwiddie. They may have seen the rich freights of all sorts' with which the Chesapeake pays Virginia's annual tribute to the Union. These, we opine, and res angusta domit have stimulated them to " colonize Vir- ginia." But hardly would they venture to come as the old crusader's philanthropist, Banditti saints disturbing distant lands. For one, therefore, we feel inclined to let them come, be their intents wicked or charita- ble, and to invite them to eat us up if they can. But they will not find it as easy a matter as they think. It has been tried by some of their countrymen before; and they have failed. The colonizers of Fairfax county, as we lately showed, " have not done very well :" and in Charles City and New Kent the timber getters from New England have not found themselves a match for the persons they have dealt with. Of Eli Thayer himself we know something. He is a mixture of knavery and folly who has not the least consideration in Boston, where he is well known, and whence on one occasion he was driven by a mob, because of his demonstra- . tions against the authority of the Court at the head of a party of abolitionists from Worcester during the time of the Anthony Burns — Fu- gitive Slave question. If he is not treated to a coat of tar and feathers on his arrival 'in 306 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER Virginia/' if he comes, it will be because of that gentlemanly forbearance which distin- guishes our people. . Another aspect of this subject is, we confess, more serious; and that is whether or not it is the commencement of immigration from the North to fill up the vacuum created by the ex- portation of our negroes to the South. On that matter we have some very strong convic- tions both as to substitution of white for slave labour, and the effect on our social system of such an inundation. But it is not necessary to discuss the first of these questions now, and our columns are probably not a suitable place to say all that we think might be said on the other. Irish Potatoes— The Fall Crop. Most people plant their Fall crop of Irish potatoes in May, usually after they have done planting corn ; and therein they make a mis- take; In a hot climate like ours the vines grow very well in warm weather, but the tubers ma- ture best when it is cool. The best natural climate for the potato is in Ireland, where it is cool and damp, in Nova Scotia and the New England States, where they have a short Sum- mer and an early, cool Fall, and in the moun- tainous regions of Virginia, where elevation is equivalent, in point of temperature, to latitude. We do not believe a mean potato can be grown on the Blue Ridge. We have raised the long Johns — a large potatoe with a flesh-colored skin and a productive kind — in Albemarle to great perfection of size, but of such a strong, brassy taste that they were hardly fit to eat ; and we have eaten the same variety, raised at the foot of the Blue 'Ridge. The latter was a rich, mealy, well-flavoured potato, equal to a Mercer from the North. Let us consult climate, then, when we plant, and come as near the proper latitude as we can by artificial means. Late planting will enable us to do this. A late neighbor of ours said, that his father, one year, failing to get tobacco plants enough for all his land in August, planted the remain- ing hills in Irish potatoes ; and the product was the best he ever had. A market gardner of Richmond, two years ago, confirmed the statement by his own experience. We then tried to follow the plan, but failed to get our seed and lost the crop. Last year we planted in May to be sure of the seed, but it was after the first drought had set in, which lasted from the 6th day of May to the 3d day of June ; and the potatoes either rotted in the ground, perished in the sprout, or died after they came up. We were so fortunate as to obtain another supply of seed, and on the 10th of July planted again. From the 7th of July to the 4th day of August was another period of very severe drought, and most of the potatoes shared the fate of the first planting. But the crop was prodigious. As there were so many missing hills a good deal of guessing was necessary to get at the quantity of land actually growing the potatoes. But measuring the area and the potatoes, and guessing at the vacancies, we found we had made over four hundred bushels per acre of the largest potatoes we ever saw. They were curiosities ; a gentleman at our table measured one — a sample of many — and it was nine inches long ; several of them weigh- ed a pound and a great many, fourteen ounces. Their size, and the failure to get a stand, were owing to the mode of preparation, which was this: the land having been previously well ploughed was laid off in rows three feet apart ; the furrow they were dropped in was made by the plough going twice in it, up and down ; guano, at the rate of four hundred pounds per acre, was scattered in the bottom of the furrow, and on this was laid stable and farm-pen ma- nure indiscriminately, filling the furrow about two-thirds its depth. On this were planted the potatoes, cut into pieces, having two eyes each, — the cut part on the manure — and nine inches apart. They were covered lightly with the plough, returning a portion of the dirt thrown out by its up and down furrows. In the drought which ensued, the manure absorbed the moisture from the superincumbent dirt, and prevented any from coming up from be- low ; and the potatoes perished in consequence. A row treated with guano alone grew off very very well, and produced a good, but not great, crop. This is one of the Norfolk plans. We would advise a trial of it : — only a trial — by other persons, with this precaution: Let them prepare the ground as we did, but not plant until after a rain has saturated it. It will only be necessary to do it soon enough be- forehand to ensure that the crop will not be planted too late. We would not wait until August; for a drought and an early frost THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 307 might keep the crop back until frost. Ours was slightly injured by that cause, but mainly by the drought: a light frost will do no harm. "We presume all our readers are familiar with the plan of raising potatoes under straw. If the covering is nine or twelve inches, thick, fine tubers may be grown in that way on the hard ground, though it will be better to plough and harrow until a good tilth be obtained. But do not plant too early in this way. The premium crop of Irish potatoes, at the late Fair of the Virginia State Agricultural Society, was grown by Francis Staples, Esq., of Hen- rico. He planted under straw on the 20th of June, and made, on a measured acre, three hundred and ninety bushels of the finest pota- toes we ever saw. They were not as large as ours, though of fine size, but they were greatly better, round, smooth, and uncommonly mealy. Ours were not well-flavoured as compared with Mercers, though they were very fair potatoes. Whether this inferiority was due to the variety, or to the mode of growing, we cannot tell un- til after another year. The after cultivation in the Norfolk plan is very simple — throw the dirt from them and weed once — throw the dirt to them, without weeding a second time.. This is all : and for a Fall crop that much may not be necessary. It was so dry last Summer that no weeds grew ; so we could not tell. Reader, try this plan on a small scale, if you please. The labour saved in harvesting and handling a crop of large potatoes is worth the labour and value of applying the guano and dung; and the satisfaction of having a nine inch, pound potato, for your guests, is some- thing. < —<»«»>■ Sheep: washing them, and preparing the Wool for Market. Wash your sheep before you shear them ; else do not wash the wool at all. If you do you will lose by it— take our word for that. The manufacturer who buys the wool samples it, i. e., he assorts it. In tub washed wool the va- rious grades are so mixed up, by the fleece be- ing torn to pieces, that he cannot sample it. The consequence is, that as different parts of the fleece are used for different purposes, he must work up into his fabric a mixture that does not suit : and besides, ho cannot sell off what he does not want. So he will not pay as high a price for it. Wash the sheep therefore, or do not wash the wool. The mode of washing is very simple. Get a hogshead and fill it with water. Let it stand by a brook with a clean gravelly bottom, where there is a hole deep enough for a boy to fish in with a pin hook. Build a small pen close by and drive your sheep into it. Let two hands put the sheep into the hogshead, and wash the wool until you learn when it is clean, which you will in washing ten sheep. Then, with the assistance of two hands more, put the sheep into the water ; move him about in it- and squeeze the dirty tub water out of the wool ; help the animal up the bank and let it go on a clean sward where there are no galls or roads ; the sheep will certainly make their lair on such spots and soil the fleece again. Use soap with the first four or five sheep : after that the yolk of each fleece will make soap -enough to wash its successor. If the sheep need tagging, as they certainly will, tag them before you put them in the water, and see when you take them out if you did it well. If not, do it over again. There are still better modes ; but the plan we give will do for beginners. In preparing the wool for market, get a bag of stout linen, say five or six feet long, by two feet wide — sow up both ends and leave one side open. Swing this bag to the joists of the barn so as it will just miss the floor, and will bear the weight of a man in it. As each fleece is rolled up, pack it in that bag lengthwise, across its bottom, with the man's weight until it is full ; then sew it up strongly, and prepare another bag, or keep the fleeces until you have finished shearing and then pack it in. Roll the fleece as follows : spread it on a floor, or large smooth table, with the flesh side down. Then "fold in' both sides, putting the loose locks into the middle and making the breadth of the^-folded fleece from 24 to 30 in- ches, according to its size. Then roll the fleece from the tail towards the neck, tightly and neatly ; and when arrived at the neck put a knee upon the fleece and draw out the wool of it, (the neck,) twisting it into the form of a rope with both hands, as far until it will go round the fleece ; and then holding the fleece tight at the lower end of the rope. thus made, with one hand, remove the knee, and still holding the point of the rope in the other hand, wind the rope tight around the fleece, making it fast un- «i^"i 308 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. I der the rope. The fleece, as a bundle, is easily carried about, having the clipped surface out- side." Another plan is merely to twist the neck wool around the middle of the bundle and se- cure the fleece by two twine strings at each end, tied around it as around a bundle behind a saddle. Either plan shews the shoulder wool which is always the finest part of each fleece. Haying thus prepared and packed the wool, send it to Crenshaw & Co., in this City. No doubt there are other gentlemen here as honest as they are : but .they are the only concern that has a wool depot and employs a wool stapler, of whose services the grower gets the benefit. If the wool has burs in it, you had better not attempt to pick it. You will be sure to injure the fleece, and there is machinery which does tBat work better than you can. As each fleece is' sheared from the sheep? make a small round hole in its ear, right or left ear according to sex, with a punch or shoe- maker's plyers — one hole for each year of the sheep's age. You can then tell sex and age with half the trouble. We have tried the plan for years. — * + »»*- One Hundred Thousand Dollars Proposed to be Given towards the Endowment of Agricultural Schools at the University of Ya. The author of the following letter modestly withholds his name. But he is a man of means, and able as well as willing to make his words good. Any words of ours would fail to express our sense of the magnificence of this offer, It is a worthy seconding of Col. Cocke. We still hope that this latter gentleman may be enabled to present his proposition in a form which, whilst it may be acceptable to himself, will be unexceptionable to the visitors. And that then agriculture may get all the benefit of the generosity and patriotism which arc ready to be heaped upon her. Certainly no reflecting man who read the synopsis of Agricultural Education in the last Planter can have failed to see how much agri- lure needs a system which shall place her at once on the footing of the sciences, and en- rol ber name among the liberal professions. Clark Co., April 7, 1857. My Dear Sir : — I have read with great pleasure the " Plan of Instruction in the principal and auxiliary departments of the School of Agriculture at the University of Virginia," as detailed in your last val- uable Southern Planter. If the plan can be successfully accom- plished, it will raise Virginia to the first standard — elevate her agriculturists sci- entifically, and the good old State will be made to blossom as the rose. I think that the present embarrassment of Virginia, and her important and con- tinued appropriations for the completion of her main lines of Railroads, will put it out of her power, if she was so disposed, to make any liberal grants for this noble purpose, at an early day. Therefore, it devolves upon the bone and sinew of the State, to lend a helping hand to accomplish this highly important plan. I cannot doubt that a large number of gentlemen farmers would unite in contrib- uting a fund sufficient, at least, for a com- mencement. Being impressed with this belief, I would propose, with your impor- tant and efficient aid, to make one, of twenty gentlemen, to donate $5000, mak- ing in the aggregate $100,000. Should this proposition fail, then I would propose to make one, of one- hundred gentlemen, to donate $1000, making a similar sum of $100,000. Should this fail, I will take Ihe liberty of making one more effort to rouse the farmers of Virginia from their deep sleep, by urging the great importance of the donations, to resuscitate the State, and awake her from her lethargy. Under this consideration, I now make the third proposition. I will make one, of two hundred gentlemen, to donate $500, making a similar sum of $100,000. I have brought the third proposition to so low a figure, that I hope you will soon succeed in raising the amount; at all eventsfit will have the effect of inducing the farmers to think seriously upon the subject, and prepare them for a subscrip- tion at our next State Agricultural Fair, — where I hope to meet you, and sub- scribe to. either of the above plans, that may prove successful, and will be prepar- ed to pay in either case. THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. :00 Little Giants &c. It is against our rules to permit a maker of implements or machinery to appear in that portion of our columns devoted to reading, as distinguished from advertising matter, for the obvious reason that they might be all filled up with praises of such commodities. But the following communication from Mr. Hedges is an exception to the rule ; because he really warrants what he sells. He is not only the maker of the Little Giant, but of another thing which we deem still more valuable ; and that is a steam boiler for cooking food for cat- tle. We hope soon to have one of these uten- sils on trial, and shall report progress on it, as soon as we have tested it, in order, if it comes .up to the description, to give our readers an opportunity of supplying themselves with them before the commencement of next winter. We think it is true of the Little Giant that Mr. Hedges warrants that. We know he warrants the Boiler because he told us so not three weeks ago ; and he means by the warranty that if the Boiler does not come up to his description he will take it back. This is honest ; and we shall try and help every man who comes be- fore the agricultural public with a plausible invention, and shows that he is disposed to act so fairly by them. Moreover, we liked what we saw of Mr. Hedges ; and we thought of him, as we do of our friend " George Watt, the Ploughmaker," as he loves to call himself, that he was a man out of whom any sensible farmer might M make expenses" in an hour's chat. For the Southern Planter. Mr. Editor \ — In perusing your valuable paper, my attention was arrested by the article in the March number in which you have no* ticed the contest between the Little Giant and Young America Corn and Cob Mills; For the complement bestowed upon me for my inge- nuity and mechanical skill, I am duly grate- ful. But there are limits to human efforts. In regard to making cheap mills, strong mills, and at the same time durable ones, some points are involved that can hardly be combined in one and the same mill, although you will find that nearly all who have tried their hand at the cast-iron mill business claim for theirs all these and many other desirable qualities. The following points in construction, and use of mills we are compelled to observe : 1st. All cheap mills must run slow, as gearing, will in- crease expense and liability to derangement. 2d. The rate of grinding will "be in proportion to the space or openings through which the meal has to pass. 3d. The durability will be in proportion to the depth of the grooves, the amount of surface exposed to wear, and more especially, as to the angle at which the grooves or cutting edges cross each other ; for if the meal is made to slide by the great angle of grooves, much power will be required, and rapid wear the consequence. In our experience, we have adopted, as the best means of obtaining the desired object, (of economy in feeding stock,) so to construct our mills as to obtain the greatest amount of grinding surface, with as little diameter of mill as possible ; by which means we have no trouble in making true and strong mills. We make such depth of groove as to enable us to grind to suit the majority of feeders, and with sufficient speed to enable a farmer to feed an ordinary amount of stock with a few hours' work of grinding. Bat. as we were well aware, for more than twenty ■ years past, just as soon as the farmer's at- tention could be fully brought to the system of cooking food for stock, he would surely adopt it ; in which case, fine grinding would not be requisite. We have looked to that era with confidence ; and I now predict that five years will not elapse before every farmer, who stu- dies the true philosophy of economy, will not only grind but cook his feed for his entire stock. I am aware that many difficulties pre- sent themselves to the mind of the feeder, but it matters hot, for difficulties to the mind of the Anglo-American are like disease in a strong and vigorous human constitution, which if not doctored too much, will work its own re- lief. The greatest obstacle to agricultural ad- vancement is in the tendency of inventors and mechanic^ in their incipient efforts in getting out new machines to yield to the pressing de- mand for very cheap ones, and hence they sometimes get them so cheap as to be worse than valueless, for they not only fail on the hands of the farmer, but deter him thereby from trying a good article from fear of a simi- lar result. Most implements have increased in price owing to the increase of construction. For instance, twenty-five years ago I made threshing machines and sold them for §65. Good machines now cost from $250 to $350. I sold good ploughs for five and six dollars , they now cost from ten to fifteen. We sold corn mills at first at $40. We have sold more at our Cincinnati establishment at $50 the past season than at any less price ; and in the in- terior of Kentucky, they prefer our $60 mill. Farmers, in selecting implements, consider the fact that they are likely to, and in fact, almost sure to increase their business whereby that which will answer for to-day will be insuffi- cient a year hence. I have therefore adopted the rule of first making the implement to do the business re- quired, and then see what it costs ; and then 310 THE SOUTHEEN PLANTER. sell it at a remunerating profit or quit the bu- siness. Respectfully, J. A. Hedges. Eichmond Cattle Market. Mr. Shook? s Reply to Mr. H. B. Jones. By request of Mr. Shook, we insert, from the Whig, his reply to Mr. Jones' article on the Cattle Market in the last Planter. We did not know that Mr. Shook was the party referred to by Mr. Jones, or we would have given him notice. We do not feel called on to take part in the controversy, but we would suggest that the grea*t difficulty consists in the fact, which no skill of the agents or salesmen can remedy, that there is not a pack- ing house in the city of Richmond. It is very possible, if there were, that there would still be gluts of cattle ; but though they might never bring as high prices as they now do upon an open market, they would not be as low, be- cause the surplus could be worked off by the packers. The dissatisfaction which many now feel, is owing to the extreme prices which a glut and an open market now alternately pro- duce. Each man likes to sell as high as his neighbor, and icill not understand the cause of the great fluctuations in the Richmond mar- ket. If there were more uniformity, even un_ der a lower average, there would be less com- plaint because there would not be 'such wide degrees of comparison. We are sure of this, because we were once both grazier and feeder and know the general course of trade in the Richmond cattle market. We shall make an effort shortly to have a packing house started in Richmond by some of our enterprizing and public-spirited citi- zens. If they will not do it, and such men as Messrs. Cullingworth & Lindsey will not, then the graziers themselves ought to get up one. We would like to hear from our friends of the South-west on this matter ; and would like to know why an extensive packing establish- ment might not be got up at Wytheville, or at some point still nearer the Salt Works. If Alex- ander Mathews, theCloyds, McGavocks, Kents, Prestons, Sanders, and Crocketts take such a thing in hand, we should not anticipate a fail- ure. They pack both beef and pork by the tkousar.il in Illinois. Why not in the inte- rior of Virginia? Gentlemen, let us hear from you. Call your meeting for the South-west, and have your tierces ready by the time the steam ferry line goes into operation. Why should cattle be driven to Baltimore and Piiil- adelphia, and " drifted" the full value of the fifth quarter, and fed at nearly the same cost, when all this might be saved except a little freight ? In Baltimore they import the salt, the tan-bark, the staves, and the cattle. All these, you, gentlemen, have at your own dThe late Gov. Randolph had a noted hor*se Dromedary, that he rode several years, and on that horse he never drew bridle between Charlottesville and Richmond; and he was a pacing horse at that. The same horse, or an- other, was once ridden the same distance by the Governor's man Phil in one night. Both horses and men under training, or even without it, if inured to fatigue, «and of good constitutions, can perform journeys, and make time which would be thought marvellous. Mr. Zachary Lewis, now living near Scottsville, once, when he was in his prime, walked from Richmond to Scottsville — a distance of seventy- five miles^-in a day. An Indian at Fort Craw- ford, after a fortnight's training, ran on the parade ground forty-one miles in two hours ! And in a subsequent race, for his life, he out- stripped twelve Winnebagoes — he was a Sioux ; and the horses, ridden by our officers who were to accompany him to the boundary of his own country, were so thoroughly blown in attempt- ing to follow him that they gave in after a run of four miles. We wish we had space for the whole of this Indian story, for it is exceedingly interesting. The Wheat Crop. A friend who has lately paid a visit from Al- bemarle to Loudoun writes us : This country is now looking badly. If you are collecting wheat statistics, I can speak for the crop of Fauquier and Loudoun as being the most unpromising I have ever seen. All the early seeding is destroyed by the fly and hard winter. Many fields show no sign of life at all. My father has a thirty acre field which cannot make thirty pints, and there are others equally un- promising. The wheat in Albemarle is look- ing better than any I saw between that county and this. I am inclined to think that the Al- bemarle "dogs" are about "having their day," and that other parts of the State are to pass through the period of bad-luck under which we groaned so long. Another friend from Amelia writes that his wheat crop is a very good one, and the other crops of that region are fair. We hear conflicting accounts of the wheat from lower James River. Probably the river farms are promising ; the uplands not so good. Late sown wheat, especially, is not apt to be a good crop after such a hard winter and late Spring. The crops in Augusta is only tolerable. A gentleman who has recently been over a part of Fauquier, Prince William and Stafford, informs us that he saw but three promising crops of wheat. Other information from neigh- boring counties.is of like import, and unless a very material change takes place the crop will be unusually light on the eastern slopes of the Blue Ridge. — Fredericksburg (Va.) Herald. A New Tow Boat and Lighter Line. One of the purposes which it was thought would be subserved by the Dock connection was, that a line of lighters- capable of entering the basin and discharging and receiving car- goes at the mills would be established. This would save a good deal of expense to the far- mers and to the millers who now have to haul to and from -Rocketts, and load and unload twice. The lighters might take down the flour directly from the mills, and call at the different landings -on their return for wheat. We are happy to be authorized to announce to the farmers on the lower James that there is a prospect of such a benefit being done them. 314 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. Our friend Tompkins, who is at the head of the present tow-boat line, is a very fine fellow, as all his acquaintances know, and a very public spirited and business man. We have no wish to to see competition against him ; but if he does not undertake this enterprise himself, he may rely upon it that it will be done by gentlemen who generally make things go if they take hold of them. And it can be now done in time for a portion of the next crop of wheat. Louisiana vs. Virginia. Our friend, Mr. Pryqr of " The South," late- ly turned over to our hands a paper printed in New Orleans which had indulged in some very disparaging remarks about Virginia. At ano- ther time we may attempt to show that no State in the Union is as much underrated as Virginia is, compared with any other in the confederacy. We have no time to do it now ; and will merely say that if it were otherwise, it certainly does not lie in the mouth of Louisiana to cast a sleer upon us. She is the only State, North or South, whose main staple comes into serious competition with a similar foreign product — sugar. And she is utterly unable to compete without a high duty on that article, as she con- stantly proves by loud and incessant clamour for protection. Were our staples as well pro- tected as hers, Virginia could in a few years buy out the whole of Louisiana. 1 Cleveland Bay Stallion. We are happy to learn that our friend Dr. Jno. R. Woods of Albemarle is daily expecting a fine three year old Cleveland bay Stallion from England. This is the third of that valu- able class of English horses that Virginia will get the benefit of, Mr. Rives' Emperor, and Mr. Dulancy's Premium stallion Scrivington being the other two. We heartily wish Dr. Woods as much success with his colt, should he come up to the description we have of him, as his public spirit deserves. He is already pretty well known as a breeder of good stock. His hogs are very fine, his sheep very good, and his cattle very respectable, except the Khaisis. Considering that stock as possessing all the qualities that the best breeders have been try- ing for years to breed out of their Tattle, we can but regret that Dr. Woods is wasting time on them. Barring this whim of his, he de- serves all we have paid of him, and this in ad- dition : that he is a liberal man with his stock, and gives away almost as many as he sells. ■»♦»»► Haw's Woodpecker Saw Mill. In addition to what a friend has already said to us about the above machine, Dr. Wm. H. Macon of New Kent, who has one in success- ful operation, instructs us to say that, in pre- paring fencing plank as a substitute for rails, and in sawing for all plantation purposes, it is indispensible to him, and will be. to all others who use it. Dr. C. W. Wormley of King William, also says the same. As to John Haw of Han- over — the maker of it — we have known him all our lives, and can truly say he is an honest man and a mechanical genius. Peas for Fallow. As there is an active enquiry for peas, we refer those in want to the advertisement of Thos. Branch & Sons, Petersburg : who have a limited supply for sale. They are very scarce and high, and those who want them had better apply early. To the tide-water farmer, who has no clover, and does not drill wheat, it is hardly necessary to say that they are indispen- sable. Bat they will not answer where wheat is drilled, at least until a new drill that we know of is made and brought into successful opera- tion. Farmers from the upper country ought to try peas very cautiously as an experiment. We, when in Albemarle, Mr. Noland of Albe- marle, Mr. F. Lewis Marshall of Fauquier, Mr. Old of Powhatan, and one or two others of that region have failed with them. Corn Planter. We are both pleased and sorry to hear from two agricultural implement-makers, that in consequence of our article last month on corn planters, they have been unable to supply the demand for them. We beg that those who have obtained them will notify us of their mode of action, as we have taken some respon- sibility in advising their purchase. We repeat to those who may see this in time, that they need not fear to use them in moderately cloddy land, as we first saw them at work in a field of Mr. Ilarvie's in Amelia, which was rougher than the Portsmouth and Roanoke Railroad. Tobacco Plants. Nearly all "the early sown tobacco plants were killed by the hard spell which followed 'the THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 315 warm weather about the last of February; and the prevalence of cool weather since will make the plants on resowed beds late. But the man- agement of plant beds has improved so much of late, especially in the use of guano, that there will probably be a better supply than is usual after such an untoward season. Still it must be short. Emigration from Virginia to the West. We have lately seen lugubrious accounts of the depopulation of large sections of Western Virginia by emigration to the West. However much it may be regretted, this emigration is not peculiar to Virginia. Ohio, Pennsylvania, and some other free States are suffering much more from the same cause than we are, and making much louder complaints about it than we do. 4 m »-» > Richmond Cattle Market. • April 16, 1857. Reported by Messrs. Crockett & Shook. Beef cattle are bringing by scale weight from $4 50 to $6 50 ; and they will probably remain at these figures for the next six weeks. Hogs are worth $9 ; not much in demand. Sheep are in demand at 6c gross, with the fleece on, 4 to 5 with the fleece off. HHT Book Notices omitted for want of room. inrtirnltatal Department E. G. EGGEIING, Contributor. Cauliflowers. This vegetable, which is very highly prized in England, France, Germany, and in some of the Northern States of this country, is very little known in Virginia. Many persons who have seen it growing in our garden have mis- taken it for cabbage, to which it bears a stri- king resemblance, except that its leaves are. long like tobacco, and it grows to an enormous size, spreading out like the branches of a tree. These outer leaves however are not the parts of the plant which are eaten. The only portion which is brought to the table, is what we shall call the flower which grows out from the top of the stalk from the very midst of the leaves. Properly cooked and served up, it is a great delicacy, and as such deserves perhaps more attention than it has generally received here- abouts. The seed may be sown at two periods, either in the month of September or in May. If sown in the fall, the plants are to be taken up before the cold weather of winter sets in, and planted in a cold frame, there to remain until the following spring, when they are to be re- moved to the open ground, and placed about three feet apart. This mode of raising them does not suit this latitude well, as the hot weather is likely to come on before the flower forms, when the plant runs up and fails to produce the flower, or if they are produced, seed are formed immediately, which equally unfits them for the table. The proper season to sow the seed in this climate is about the first of May. They are to be sown in beds, just as cabbage seed are sown, and by the first of July ordinarily, the plants will be large enough to bear transplantation. They are then to be removed to the open ground and planted in rows three feet apart, and the plants to stand the same distance apart in the row. To raise Cauliflowers requires that the lands be worked very deep, the clods well broken, and the soil .rendered as light and pliable as possible, and most important of all, the land must be made as rich as it can be made with the application of good manure. This is so in- dispensable, that we advise no man to attempt to cultivate this vegetable at all, unless he will give earnest heed to this direction. It is idle to attempt to raise it on poor land, or even moderately rich land, for it requires an exceed- ingly rich soil, and will not flourish well in any other. The land should be broken with the spade, as the plough does not go deep enough, unless the land is ploughed time and again, and this is scarcely less troublesome than if the spade had been used originally. When planted on land thus prepared, the chief cultivation required, is an occasional hoeing to keep them clear of weeds. As the flower previously described, is the only part of the plant that is eaten, it is the great object of solicitude and care with the cul- tivator. It usually makes its appearance in the latter part of September, or the first of Oc- tober, ancj when first developed is very small, and has somewhat the look of the head of asparagus when it first appears above ground. At this time it is entirely covered by the leaves of the plant, and would not be seen 316 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER unless these were lifted or pushed aside, and from this time it increases in size until it at- tains its maximum. The usual size is about as large as cocoanuts, though they are occa- sionally grown double that 'size. We have raised some which measured fourteen inches across, weighing several pounds. They are fit to' be eaten when they measure from four to six inches across. The development of this bud or flower may be considerably accelerated by stunting the plant, which may be effected in two ways. One is by running a plough moderately deep within six or eight inches of the plant on two sides, and throwing the earth from the plant. The other by taking a spade and chopping down into the earth, all round the plant, at a distance of from ten to twelve inches, so as to cut the roots of the plant at that point.' Neither process however should be resorted to earlier than September or October, and when it is judiciously done, an early crop may be se- cured. At all stages of growth, this bud must be carefully protected from sunshine and rain, as either causes it to grow dark, and makes it tough. An effectual screen can rought to perfection with so little trouble and xpense, that we could only wonder and admire. Chink of a soil into which you may drop the >otatoe, and which is so well adapted to its •ultivation that almost without work they grow iff finely, yielding a half bushel to the hill, and ometimes producing so liberally that the rich leposit actually bursts the soil, as one gentle- nan assured us had happened on his farm re- eatedly. And this too, occurring, as he told us, when the tuber was merely dropped in corn rows and left so without special care. And another, a gentleman widely known not only in Virginia, but throughout these United States, showed us potatoes of most prodigious size, grown on his farm, assuring us at the same time that they were raised with little trouble, yielding a most bountiful return. Facts like these coming to us from the most reliable sources, satisfied us that in the Greenbrier lands, and in other lands of like qualities, we have everything that could be desired, and we see no longer any reason why we may not raise in Virginia an ample supply of Irish po- tatoes. As to the quality of the potatoe raised in this region, we speak what Ave know when we pronounce them to be unsurpassed in all the requisites of good potatoes by any raised any where, whether in this or the old world. They are altogether different from the wa- tery, insipid productions of our gardens and farms hereabouts, and as they are of necessity planted late, and matured late, they must pos- sess those very qualities which will enable them to withstand the frosts of winter, preserve their good qualities, and may, for all that we can see to the contrary, entirely supersede the necessity of sending North for potatoes for spring seeding in tide-water Virginia. A little incident will perhaps confirm our judgment of the quality of these roots. See- ing some Irish laborers at work, and ascertain- ing on enquiry that they earned but seventy- five cents per day, we asked, "why don't you go to Richmond, where you can make double these wages," when one of them replied, his face beaming with satisfaction, "faith and you should see the praties they have here." Heretofore the farmers of the part of the State to which we now refer, have had no in- ducement to cultivate this crop extensively, be- cause shut in by the hills, they could find no market to which they could carry what they could not consume. This hindrance will spee- dily be removed, and it is in view of that fact that we call upon them to raise the po- tatoe in sufficient quantities to supply the market of our eastern cities and towns through the winter, and until the crop of the summer is sufficiently advanced for use. At present, in Richmond, Petersburg, Alexandria, Norfolk and other places from October to June, the whole 318 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. demand is filled with potatoes raised in New York or Maine, and during the greater part of that. pe- riod they sell readily at prices varying from one to two dollars per bushel. Shall we ask in vain, that the large contributions thus levied on Vir- ginia, by the Yankees year after year, be stop- ped, and the money which is now sent away, be retained within the borders of our own State. If the information in our possession is relia- ble, there are a number of counties, above tide- water, lying along the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad, and on the line of the James River and Kanawha Canal, where this crop can be raised as readily as in Greenbrier. Will not the farmers in those counties take note of our appeal and govern themselves accordingly ? Let them count the cost, and tell us what they can take from their soil which will pay them better than this crop of which we write. Is there anything, and if they answer negatively, as we are sure they must, will they not this year devote a larger space and more attention to the cultivation of this crop. Very much of what wo have written concern- ing the soil of Greenbrier, we know to be true of the lands about the Blue Ridge range. Two years ago we had occasion to remark, the excellence of the potatoes on the Blue Ridge at Rock Fish Gap, and we understood then, that at all points along the ridge, they grow well, and of a quality as good. In private in- terviews with some of the farmers of that vi- cinage, we endeavored to encourage the exten- sive culture of the crop, for sale in the Rich- mond market, but we do not know that the effort was crowned with any marked success, and we advert to the subject again in this place, with the hope that something better may come of it, and at a future day, we shall endeavor to show, even more conclusively than we have ever shown, that there is need here at home, for at least two millions of bush- els of Irish potatoes more than are at present* grown in the State. In the meantime, we earnestly invite gentle- men in every part of the State, to give us the benefit of such information as they may possess cognate to any of the facts discussed in this article. It is surely well worth the attention of all the farmers and other citizens to ascertain what is the actual consumption of Irish pota- toes in Virginia, over and above the actual production ; what? sections or counties of the State are best adapted to their cultivation, what profit may be realized from the crop, what are the best methods of planting, working and preserving, which are the best varieties for cultivation, in any latitude, and to what extent we can dispense with their importation from the States of the North? While we have no disposition to create or foster sectional pre- judices among the people of our State, we are anxious to have our people raise whatever is needed for consumption in the State, so that to that extent we may be able to practice non-intercourse with our friends in Yankee land. And certainly, with all our broad acres and sturdy farmers, it is preposter- ous that we should be compelled to get our supply of Irish potatoes from non-slaveholding States, when we could easily raise enough, not only to meet our own wants, but to feed a world of Irishmen besides. Watering Strawberries. In general, we are opposed to the system of watering plants which some persons so much affect. Strawberries, however, require water in large quantities, and from our experience we are convinced that it is every way proper to give them water constantly and liberally even in the wettest seasons. It has been our habit for many years to water our strawberry plants, from the time that they bloom until the fruit is all gathered, and the beneficial results have been so marked and striking, that we cannot hesitate to recommend it to every cultivator. The advantages may be briefly stated, as secu- ring much larger berries and increasing the crop fully threefold. Where water is freely ap- plied almost every bloom will bring a berry, and the quantities which can be gathered from a small plantation are really astonishing, to those who have never tried the experiment. Those of our readers who doubt are earnestly request- ed to try an experiment of watering half their plants, and withholding water from the other half, and whatever may be the character of the season whether wet or dry, the results will be of the most surprising character. The water should be poured from a sprink- ling pot and should be plenteously bestowed. A slight application will do very little if any good. It may be applied evening or morning THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 319 is convenient, but never during the heat of the lay, and all the trouble and expense will be imply compensated by the grateful return of mproved fruit and an increased crop. Manure for Pruit Trees. Many persons in this State, perhaps it would lot be amiss to say, must, when they, have slanted out trees in what they term orchards, leglect them altogether, as if they could thrive veil enough without' attention. Such fruit growers do not seem to consider that the trees iraw all their sustenance and nourishment roni the soil, and that this continual waste if lot as constantly repaired, will inevitably soon- r or later exhaust all these qualities upon vhich the tree must depend for its vitality 'and ruitfulnes^. They know that in order to make ood crops they must manure the land on vhich they grow wheat, corn, tobacco and the ike crops, but they seem totally unconscious f the desirableness of similar applications to he orchard. A friend living near Richmond has a num- er of well grown, healthy, thrifty apple trees, rhich after bearing plentifully for some years, ,11 at once became barren, much to his sur- >rise and chagrin. After pondering the matter while, he resolved to see what effect manur- ng them would have. Accordingly he hauled nanure to the spot, and after pulling up the oil, scattered it about the trees. The result ras an abundant crop of fruit the ensuing eason. The best season for this application is the utumn, but where it was neglected then, it nay be done with advantage now, and it is lever too late to do well. Our advice is, al- vays before putting the manure about the rees, fork up the earth well, as then the rains vili dissolve it and carry it in a solution to the oots of the tree. And this suggests the remark that liquid aanure is the best kind for the orchard, and he further suggestion that soap suds, slop wa- er and similar things which the farmer wastes lsually, is an admirable manure for fruit trees. Vith but little trouble and less expense enough f this could be saved to answer any purpose. It is proper to add that all fruit trees do not qually require manuring. Thus we all know hat peaches thrive much better fti poor soils han apples would, and this fact must not be overlooked. Excess here would not be less fa- tal than total neglect, and the quantity must be left to the sound discretion of. each individ- ual. Be it remembered meantime that some is absolutely indispensable, and the farmer who would have good fruit, must not altogether ne- glect his orchard. Of this let all take heed. Encourage Home Production. It is our purpose at some future day, when we have obtained the requisite data, to give some account of all the Nurseries in this State, with "the varieties and quantity of trees on hand in each, and we hope to be able to show that there are enough fruit trees raised here at home to supply the demand, and to save our farmers the trouble and risk of going out of the State to get orchards. The object we have in view is certainly praiseworthy, at least we trust our readers will so consider it. They can but agree with us in the sentiment, that no Virginia farmer ought to buy abroad, what he can get on as good terms within the borders of his own State. A just pride demands this, let alone that his own interest demands it, and we ask all to wait until they have seen this ex- pose, before ordering their supplies for the en- suing fall. Trees raised here in the soil and latitude in which they are to remain, must be better suited to the wants of Virginia fruit growers than those raised in a different climate and soil to that to which they are to be trans- planted. This we could prove to the entire satisfaction of every unprejudiced mind, but it looks so like an axiom that it is perhaps use- less to elaborate the argument. All we ask is that fruit growers will look at home before they resolve to buy abroad. Is it an unreasonable request ? Frosted Vegetables. If vegetables, such as radishes, beets and the like, have been frosted by the cold weather which has visited us during the last month, we advise all persons to sow another crop immedi- ately, even where those before sown have -not been entirely killed. Our reason for giving this advice is, that such vegetables will soon go to seed, and unless others have been put in, they will last but a short while. Without at- tempting now to. explain the why, we merely remark the fact, that nearly all our edible roots 320 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. -when once frosted fail to endure the heat well, and soon begin to shoot into seed stalks and thus become urifit for food. Such at least has been our experience. They may be allowed to stand, but to guard against the result which is likely to follow, let others be put in. Such has always been our custom, and Ave have frequent- ly found the advantage, when we had ample supplies, while our neighbours are entirely des- titute. Nothing can well be more disagreeable than to be without vegetables, and there is no sufficient reason why any individual should find himself so circumstanced. A little foresight will ever prevent it. Flowers for our Railroads and other Roads. A traveller in France notes the fact, that at all the stations on the Railroad, between Tours and Paris, as well as on other roads, he saw neat and well-kept flower gardens, kept up by the railway officials, to serve merely as ornaments, which would attract and interest passengers on the temporary stoppage of the train. What- ever may have been the motive which actuated the French railway 'men, it is a very pretty custom, which our Railroad managers in this country might advantageously imitate. There is scarcely one of our Railroads which would not be improved by the adoption of this cus- tom. The ruling principle with our Railroad managers seems to have been to have every object on the line as hateful and unattractive as possible, probably for the purpose of de- terring passengers from sticking their heads out of the windows, or from leaving their places when there is a stoppage. The only exception to this remark which we remember, is the justly lamented Tunstall, who happily blen- ded utility and ornament in all the structures upon the line of the Danville Railroad, and if his successors shall be actuated by like good sense and good taste, this will be one of the most attractive public ways in the State. It is perhaps idle to expect our Railroad companies to do anything in this behalf, unless they could be convinced that by adopting this custom, they would be likely to augment tra- vel, as they are eminently utilitarian in their views ' but may we not address ourselves more hopefully to private individuals living on the line of our Railroads. Why may they not give some attention to the cultivation of flow- ers, as well for' the gratification of public taste, as for the improvement and adornment of their homes. A home without flowers always seem- ed to us to lack an element of grace and beau- ty which no contrivance could supply or rem- edy ; and judging from the tenacity with which we cling to our memories of the buds and blossoms around our birthplace, we should say it lacks as well a strong and undying tie, which would charm the children of Hhe family to the homestead. Make home cheerful, make home beautiful, give it shade-trees, and ever- greens, and flowers, if you would have the children love home, — but neglect all these if you would have them unmindful of home, and your desires shall be gratified. But we have wandered from our main pur- pose, which was, to put up a plea for flowers along the line of our Railroads and other roads. No man that has travelled in 'Virginia, can have failed to observe the air of sternness and repulsiveness which our farm-houses wear, for the want of a little attention to ornament. One journeys day after day, without meeting with a plat of rich-tinted roses, the graceful honeysuckle, or woodbine, — but all is barren and bleak ; houses, fences, and out-buildings stand naked and drear, and there is nothing to relieve the eye, or to excite pleasant emotions, unless it chance that the fields are waving to the harvest. How much would the pleasure of travel be enhanced, if every farm-house had its flowers and flowering shrubs, stately shade-trees, clambering vines, hiding unsightly objects, and giving a grace and beauty to all, which the dullest nature can appreciate and admire. Nothing impresses a traveller in the old world more gratefully, or makes a deeper impression upon his mind, than the flowers which he sees surrounding every dwelling, as well the hovel as the palace, and consequently we find every traveller making constant allu- sion to this peculiarity. Why may not Vir- ginia people be equally noted for their love of flowers ? Let us have flowers about all our homes, but especially, dear friends, let us have them all along the line of our Railroads and other roads. About four miles from Petersburg, there is a farm, which never fails to attract the notice and to elicit the commendations of every pas- senger who happens to be seated on the side of the car from which it can be seen in pass- ing ; and we have heard hundreds give utter- ance to a wish for just such a place for a home. Yet it has no peculiarity beyond this, that the proprietor has beautified the grounds about the 1 house, with grass, cedars, hollies, and other evergreens and flowers ; and after passing series of homes whose owners give no heed to these things, tjiis spot comes into view like an Oasis in a desert, and elicits universal admi- ration. LIST OF PAYMENTS From March 23, to April 22. All persons who have made payments early enough to be entered, and whose names do not appear in the following receipt list, are requested to give immediate notice of the omission, in order that the correction may be made in the next issue : do do do do 1857 J no McRae, Jan 185,8 J no W Gross, do S W On tie ii. Nov 1856 W D West, Jan 18qS B F Budgins, July do J M Conway, Jan Dr Geo Field, do. Win F Gunn, do Jno Wjckham, S Rijjey J r, Ro Meredith. Ro Collins, April J H Jameson, 15 March do J A Scott, Jan 1858 J R Thompson, do M McFerran, Feb do Wm M Turner, Apr 1857 Dr J R Taylor, Jan 1858 Rev Win Crawford do R A Hill, do C S hurcheson, Mav do Edw'd Carter, Jan do G T Cralle, do 1860 Rev J McDonald, do 185S Win Bosher, do Jno Robertson, do S W Montgomery, do 18q7 H C Land. do 1858 T S Garnett, do R Sampson, Oct do Wm T Walker, do J C Laird, Jan do E T Morris, d« Miss A M Moon, do Mrs M F Brooks, do Jas T Redd, W W Oliver, U Herbert, B W Bass, Col Chas Conner, Jno Grasty, do do do do do do Hedges, Mockbee, & Co., Jan 1858 J Ferneyhough, Jan 1858 Jas H Chowning, do M F Finks, do O Finks, do H E Weston, do Col J McClanahan, do R Lipscomb, do T H Brown, April 1858 B E West, Jan 1858 JosP Tenill, Jan 1858 Jas A Bruce, Jan 1858 Jno Workman, Jan 1858 J A Earlev, Dec 1857 J W Hill,' J an 1854 Dr H Field, Jan 1858 Jas M Spiller, Jan 1858 Geo W Doswell, Jan 1858 Ro Pollard, Jan 1858 S D Tucker, Jan 1858 Jno A Montague, Jan 1858 R W Wheeler, Jan 1858 Wm Matthews, Jan 1858 MC Pegnes, Jan 1858 A Pointer, Jan 185S Jno R Quarles, Jan 1858 Dr J Michaux, Jan 1858 D M Wharton, Jan 185S Mrs E M McDonald, Apr 1861 J H Rowlett, Jan 1858 J C Boxley, Jan 1858 $2 Win H Eulmnk, Jan 1858 1 Wm S Dupree, Jan 1858 1 Wm TBallew, Jan 1858 2 C C Tinslev, Jan 1858 2 Wm Smith, Jan 18qS 1 G O Markham, Jan 185S 2 Dr R H Nelson, Jan 1858 2 R A Tavlor, Mav 1858 5 M Tutwjier, Oct"l857 3 00 D J Hartsook, Nov 1857 2 00 Dr W D Boarz, Mar 1857 3 00 J B L Williams, Jan 1856 1 25 R WTunstall,Jan 1858 1 83 B Vaughan. Mar 1858 2 00 J H Vaughan, Jan 1858 2 00 W P Shepherd, Jan, 1857 1 Oil Jno T Childrey, Jan 1858 2 00 Win S Carter, Jan 1858 2 00 W S Fontaine, Jan 1858 3 00 Win A Sweet, Jan 1858 2 00 Win C Peatross, Jan 185,8 2 00 Jno Burr, Nov 1857 1 00 Dr J D Spraggins, Jan 1858 2 00 P Reynold*, May 1857 2 08 Geo S Blakev, Jan 1858 1 50 F Saunders, Jr, Jan 1S60 5 00 Ro B Moorman, Oct 1858 5, 00 T N Clarke, July 1856 5 63 Wm N Williams', July 1857 5 00 H Harrison, Jan 1858 2 50 Lanev Jones, Jan 1858 2 00 Wm B Davis, Jan 1858 2 00 Ro L Brown, Jan 1858 2 00 C B Claiborne, Dec 1858 5 00 D M Wood, 15 Jul v 1857 3 00 San.'l T Miller, Jan 1858 2 00 T H Walthall, Jan 1858 2 00 W M Wjngate, Oct 1858 3 00 Mrs A J Harrison, Apr 1858 2 00 R W Williams, Jan 1858 5 00 Wm G Maddox, Jan 1858 2 00 Jno Strong, Jan 1858 3 17 Wm M Payne, Jan 1858 2 00 J R Jones, Jan 1858 1 83 J C Browder, Jan 1858 2 00 Jas Miller, do 3 25 W B Barley, do 4 00 Dr R S Apperson, Jan 1858 3 87 Dr M Pendleton, Jan 1858 3 25 D C Anderson, Jan 1858 1 00 N B Gav, Jan 1858 2 33 W W Alvis, Jan 1858 2 00 G W Taylor, Apr 1857 2 00 Geo Payne, Jan J854 1 §5 Jos L Watkins, Jan 1858 1 75 A S Barksdale, Jan 1858 2 62 E F Redd, Jan 1858 1 67 Dr D C Jones, Jan 1858 14 50 F K Nelson, Jan 1858 1 00 Jos Tuley,Jan I860 5 00 Nicholas Mills, Jan 1858 2 00 J Jones, Jan 1857 1 00 T J Hodnet, Jan 1858 2 00 C H Winfree, Jan 1858 2 00 Mrs L C Bintbrd, Jan 1858 1 84 W C Jones, Jul v 1S57 100 E T Page, Jan 1858 2 50 J B Whitehead, Jan 1858 2 00 C D Grav, July 1856 5 00 J T Butler & Co, Jan 58 2 00 Wm A Turpin, do 2 00 00 IB F Randolph, April I860 50|Bland Rea, Mav 1857 50 A Edwards, Jan 1858 00 |Jos W Butler, Mav 1858 00 L C Boas, Jan 1858 OOjDr S S Griffin, Jan 1858 00 I A Burton, Jan 1858 00 E D Christian, Jan 1858 00 Ro B Thompson, do Win A Daudridge, Apr 1858 E H Herbert, Jan 1859 Dr L Roane, Jan 1858 J W Gresham, do T Michaux, do J C Thorn, July 1858 Geo W Fones, Julv 1856 G H Dashiell, 15 June 1858 Jas M Harris, Jan 1858 Col D B Hancock, Jan 58 M B Jarman, do A K Bowles, do G R Calhoun, Oct }S£7 B A Donald, Julv 1860 Dr F W Power, Julv 1856 P M Tabb, Jr, Jany'1858 G Hanes, do P Woolfolk, do J R Micou, do R U Brooking, do M H Effinger, do W E Cloptqn, do L B Price, do H E Coleman, do Dr G W Glover, do D H Hatton, July 185£ Capt Wm Walden, Jan $8 L Flippo, do J T Harrjs, do P P Nalle, July 1858 Thos Paiamore, July 1858 Thos L Trower, May 57 E Ruffin, Jr, Jan 60 Thos Carroll, J any 1858 Jas T Twitty, do Jas C Hart, do Jno L Andrews, do Hart & Hayes, do J Michaux, May 1857 Hon B Brown, Jan 1858 Wm Cowherd, do D Witt, do J B Lightfoot, Julv 1857 J M Waller, July 1857 Ro Wilkinson, Jan 1858 U S Giav, do R G Grigg, do W C Carrington, do Ro Marks, do B Burwell, Mav 1857 J A Clark, January 1858 Jno D Hunt, do Jno L Cowherd, do C B Killebrew, do D B Sanders, \ A Sanders, ) Ro Jackson, S D Sanders, R W Sanders, \ Jno Sanders, J T S Watson, Jan 1S60 Jos Alsop, do W F WickhatmJan 1858 $5 00 7 08 2 00 3 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 1 25 3 00 3 25 2 00 2 00 2 00 4 79 5 00 2 00 2 00 3 00 2 00 1 00 6 00 3 75 2 00 2 00 2 00 3 25 3 25 2 58 2 17 2 00 2 16 2 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 3 00 2 00 5 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 2 70 2 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 1 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 2 00 83 2 00 5 34 2 00 2 00 Jan 58 10 00 5 00 5 00 3 25 v^. SOUTHERN PLANTER ADVERTISING SHEET. Our readers will find much to inte est them in the advertising columns of the " Planter.' We call their attention to the following "New Advertiseinents?' to be found in this number : Jos. Segar makes known the attractions of that "Elysium" of Summer Resorts, Hygeia Hotel, Old^Point Comfort, Va. His advertisement will speak for itself and be found on page /. M. Thorburn & Co., of New York, offer a large and varied assortment of a - ricultural, garden and flower seeds, Also an importation of Northern Sugar Cane Seed grown in France, ■ Stebbins & Pullen, Richmond, offer the Gas Apparatus of the Maryland Portable Gas Company of Baltimore, W. W. Dingee & Co,, York, Pa„ offer 100 one and two horse Hail way Powers and Threshers, Doyle & Sullinger, Fredericksburg, offer Doyle's Patent Grain Cleaner, E. P. Nash, Petersburg, says there is " No risk in trying a Piano," and requests you to "suspend your decision as to the purchase of one until you can test those" offered by him, Dr. D- B, Sanders, Jackson's Ferry, Wythe Co,, offers 3 or 4 Pure Blood Short Horn Bulls, by " Norfolk," C, S. Wainwright, Rhinebock, N. York, gives notice of his "first public sale of thorough-bred North Devon Cattle, to be held at "The Meadows," on the 17th day of June 1857," Thos. Branch & Sons, Petersburg, offer 1,000 bushels Clay and Shinney Peas for sale, N. August, Richmond, offers " a desira- ble Farm" in Cumberland county, on Wil lis' River, containing 228 acres, W, R. Prince & Co., Flushing, N. Y., offer Fruit and Ornamental Trees and Plants, Chinese Sugar Cane, Seed,