jpjij VOL. XIX. £»( [APRIL.] No. 4. I Ci Published Monthly. August & Williams, Pbopbletoi J. E. WILLIAMS, Editor TH E DEVOTED TO AGRICULTURE, HORTICULTURE, AND THE HOUSEHOLD AETS. PRINTED AT RICHMOND, Va., BY MACFARLANE & FERGUSSON 1859. SOUTHERN PLANTER.— ADVERTISING SHEET. CONTENTS - 193 Irrigated Meadows, The Capabilities of the South for Fruit Growing, ... War against Wash-Boards Continued, The Horse, A Chapter on Cements. Good Advice to a Farmer, Cure for Big-Head. The Dairy — Selection of Cows, ... The Farmer's Motto. Manures for Pears, 204 An Old Farmer's Note Book. Why Sows Destroy their Young, Why Use Cut Food ? Recipes, Integrity, The Imperial Stables of France, An Essay on Horizontal Plowing and Hill Side Ditching, Harmless and Sure Cure for Warts, Discussion on Drainage, - - 217 A Night with the Mau who Did Not Take the Papers, Chief Aim in Farming, Care of Horses. The Hollow Horn, Sources of Vegetable. Matter, On " Big Head," Curiosities of Commerce, Rearing Calves, - How to Mend China, 195 198 199 201 202 205 206 207 208 209 21G AYER'S Ifc - 220 - 222 - 224 - 225 - 233 - 235 - 236 - 237 The Camel — His Nature, Habits and Uses, 238 Roses, - - - 239 Puffing vs. Advertising, - - 247 Home Embellishment, - - 248 Cottage Homes. Plowing and Plowmen, 249 Edney's New American Pump, - 250 New Wheat Drill. Tobacco-Handler, -251 Our New Office. Green Food for Work- Horses, - - * 251 Tobacco — not Necessarily an Exhausting Crop, and no Demoralizer, - 253 Economical Hints. Tomato Wine, &c, - 255 An April Day. Waiting, All's for the Best, - - - 256 Mowing and Reaping Machine Agency, 633 Market Street, PHILADELPHIA. Where Farmers muy ee= and judge for themselves between SEVEiN of the b >sl Combined Mowera and Reapera now in use, and purchase the machine of their choice. Letters of inquiry, and timely orders will receive our prompt attention. April 59-3C E.MLEN & PAS9MORE. SARSAPARILLA, A compound remedy, in which we have labored to produce the most effectual alterative I nut can lie made. It is u concentrated extract of Para Sa ran pa- ri 1 la so combined with other substances of still grealeralterutive power as to afford an effective antidote for the diseases Sarsaparilla is reputed to cure. It is believed that such a reined v is wanted by those who suffer from Strumous complaints, and that one which will accomplish their cure must prove of immense service to litis large class of our afflicted fel- low-citizens. How completely this compound will do it has been prcven by experiment oil many of the worst cases to be found of the following complaints : Scrofula and Scrofulous Complaints, Eruptions and Eruptive Diseases, Ulcers, Pimples, Blotches. 'rumors, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Syphilis and Syphilitic Af- fections, Mercurial Disease, Dropsy, Neuralgia or Tic Douloureux, Debility, Dyspepsia and Indigestion, Ery- sipelas, Rose or St. Anthony's Fire, and indeed the whole class of complaints arising from Impurity of the Blood. This compound will be found a greater promoter of health, when taken in the spring, to expel the foul humors which fester in the blood at that season of the year. By the timely expulsion of them manv rank- ling disorders are nipped in the bud. Multitudes can, by aid of this remedy, spare themselves from the en- durance of foul eruptions and ulcerous sores, through which the system will strive to rid itself of corruptions, if not assisted to do this through the natural channels of the body by an alterative medicine. Cleanse out the vitiated blood whenever yen find its impurities bursting through the skin in pimples, eruptions, or sores; cleanse it when you find it is obstructed and sluggish in the veins ; clease it whenever it is foul, and your feelings will tell you when. Even where no particular disorder is felt, people enjoy bet- ter health, and live longer, for cleansing the blood. Keep the blood healttiy, and all is well ; but with this pabulum of life disordered, there can be no last- ing health Sooner or later something must go wrong, and the great machinery of life is disordered or over- thrown. During late years the public have been misled by large bottles, pretending to give a quart of Extract of Sarsapurilla for one dollar. Most of these have been frauds upon the sick, for they not only contain little, if any, Sarsaparilla, but often no curative properties whatever. Hence, bitter and painful disappointment has followed the use of the various extracts of Sar- saparilla which flood the market, until the name itself is justly despised, and has become synonymous with Imposition and cheat* Still we call this compound Sarsaparilla, and intend to supply such a remedy as shall rescue the name from the load of obloquy which rests upon it. And we think we huve ground for be- lieving it has virtues which are irresistible by the on dinary run of the diseases it is intended to cure. In order to secure their complete eradication from the system, the remedy should be judiciously taken ac- cording to directions on the bottle. PREPARED BY DR. J. C. AYER & CO., LOWELL, MASS. Price, $1 per Bottle. Six Bottles for $5. All our Remedies are for sale by PURCELL, LADD & CO., Richmond. And by all Druggists. Feb. 1859.— 8w TH E Devoted to Agriculture, Horticulture, and the Household Arts. Agriculture is the nu •sing mother of the Arts. [Xknophon 1 Tillage and Pasturage . | the. State. — Sully. are the two breasts of J. E. WILLIAMS, Editor. AUGUST & WILLIAMS Prop'rs. Vol. XIX. RICHMOND, VA., APRIL, 1859. No. 4. For the Southern Planter. Irrigated Meadows. Mr. Editor: Most of your readers are no doubt aware of the fact that irrigated or " watered meadows" are not uncommon in some parts of our State, particularly in some por- tions of the Valley. Knowing something of their value, the ease of keeping them up, &c, the only surprise with me is, that more attention is not paid to fhem in a re- gion so eminently suited to -this means of improvement, as are the Valley and other portions of Western Virginia. Having made many inquiries as to the modes of preparing the ditches for irrigation, the best times of letting on the water, the time and labor necessary to keep up these meadows, and above all, having become thoroughly convinced of the great superiority of irri- gated over ordinary meadows, I propose to give the result of my inquiries to the read- ers of the Planter, with the hope that by thus directing public attention to the subject, many farmers who may have bold springs on their farms, or small streams running to waste through them, may turn them to profitable account by using the water to irrigate portions of their meadows. Irrigation can only be resorted to with 13 advantage in regions of country that are more or less rolling, and the smaller streams somewhat precipitous, so that the water may have sufficient head to admit of its being carried around slopes of very considerable width, and the slopes themselves may have sufficient fall to carry off all the water so as to leave none to stagnate. In England irri- gated meadows are resorted to wherever water can be had in sufficient abundance ; but in Virginia, irrigation is only practised so far as I know, in the limestone regions, such as the Valley and some other portions of Western Virginia, and even here only to a very limited extent. That irrigation might be practised with advantage in some of the counties east of the Blue Ridge I have no doubt, but as my object is not to recom- mend an untried system, but rather to urge a more extensive use of a means of improvement which from observation I know to be specially suited to the Valley and certain regions to the west of it, I will simply say that, the farmer living in the portion of the State referred to, and who can command the necessary water, could not do better than to resort to it. That those who know nothing of the practice may form some idea of the advanta- ges of irrigation, I would state as the result of my observation and inquiries that, a 194 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April piece of irrigated meadow in this Valley will, if kept in condition, and the water prop- erly used, yield from one and a half to two tons or more per acre of the first quality of hay, and will besides furnish excellent pas- ture from August until winter, or until the meadow is covered with snow. This the meadow will do year after year, without any other manure than that contained in the water used to irrigate \vith. I know of an irrigated meadow that has been in the present owners possession for the last fif- teen years, yielding annually from one and a half to two tons of hay to the acre, with the very best of fall pasture, and I am assured that in all that time no manure of any kind has been applied. The only attention that the meadow has received, has been the cleaning out of the ditches in spring, and the letting on of the water at proper intervals, from early spring until near harvest. It is understood that this same meadow has been under this same treatment for the last forty years. That the crop of grass is* due to the water, is evident from the fact that, if the water is not properly regulated, and made to flow over the entire meadow, the crop of hay is very much lessened, and those strips that have not had the benefit of the water, are frequently scarcely worth the cutting. The hay, if the meadow receives proper atten- tion, is of the first quality, equal to any produced on upland meadow, and the fall pasture is sweet and nutricious, giving a fine flavor to the milk and butter of the cows pastured thereon. From the above facts, it must be apparent that irrigated meadows are very profitable, requiring much less care and labor than any of the other crops saving ordinary meadow only, and the crop when produced, taking into the account both hay and pas- ture, yields a larger annual return than any of the grain crops. In preparing a piece of meadow for irrigation, it is necessary to have such an arrangement of large and small ditches as that, when the water is let on the meadow, it will spread itself in a thin sheet over the entire surface, and yet will not remain on it long enough to stagnate. The usual way of accomplishing this, is to dig a series of main ditches, capable of carrying con- siderable bodies of water, and to take the water from these by a series of very small ones. The first of the main ditches leaves the stream or spring at the highest point practicable, and winds along the hillside, preserving a uniform but very slight fall — the fall being proportioned to the head of water. If the head is strong, the fall should be very slight, as the ditch in that case would always be easily kept full ; if, on the contrary, the supply of water is quite limited, a greater fall to the ditch becomes necessary. The ditch may lead directly from the stream by simply turning the water into it, or a dam may be constructed, and the water taken from that. Unless the meadow is very narrow, additional ditches below this will be necessary ; they should be so situated that when the water is let on the meadow, the spaces between the ditches will be thoroughly watered, and yet no water wasted. Their distances apart will, of course, depend upon the head of water, the slope and nature of the ground, &c. The main ditches having been made, it re- mains to show how to take the water from them and secure its uniform distribution over the meadow. This is done by first damming the ditches at their lowest points so as to throw the water over the whole meadow at once, or what is more common, to have gates in them at regular intervals, so as to flood a section at a time. The best way to con- struct these gates, is to drive down two pieces of stout board across the ditch, leaving a pas- sage way for the water between them, and to have a third piece to slide up and down be- tween the first two. By this arrangement the water can be thrown from one section to another in a moment. These gates should be so placed that, when one is closed the water in the ditch above it shall be dammed up to the next gate above, so as to insure a flow of water over all of the meadow em- braced between the two. The lower bank of the ditch may now be of an exact level from one gate to the next above, and of such a height that when the water is dam- med back, it will flow over the bank from gate to gate- in one uniform sheet. This plan does very well in certain localities, but unless the meadow below the ditch is very favorably situated, it is almost impossible to secure a uniform flow of water over it. A better method is to make small open- ings in the lower bank of the ditch at regu- lar intervals, letting the water flow out of these, and causing it to spread itself over the meadow by making with a hoe a series of little trenches in the soil, all of which 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 195 radiate as it were, from the outlet in the main ditch. These outlets may be made a little below the general level of the water in the ditch, so that as the water flows along in the ditches a portion may always be passing out upon the meadow. If the supply of water is limited, the meadow may be watered in sections by stopping up all of the outlets except those along the section to be watered. By this arrangement very little, if any, damming back becomes neces- sary, but the constant opening and closing of the outlets attendant upon it, is a source of no little trouble and loss of time. A still better plan consists in so cutting the outlets for the water, that their bottoms shall be a little above the level of the water when it is flowing along the ditch unobstructed, and yet so low that when the water is dammed back, it will flow out of all the openings from the closed gate to the one next above. By this arrangement the water is more easily managed, and the letting it on, and taking off, are attended with much less trouble. The particular manner in which the water is applied, will necessarily depend in a great measure, on the supply ; however, whether that supply be large or small, the water should go on the grass as early in the season as possible. It is universally con- ceded that, if care is taken to irrigate well in winter, when the weather will permit, and in the early spring, we have the best guaranty for a good crop. At that season the water may flow continuously for a con- siderable time with decided profit; as the spring advances, however, it ought to be taken off occasionally, and when the warm weather comes, it must be used with great caution to prevent "scalding" and the displacement of the meadow grasses by coarse aquatic species. During the grow- ing season it is important that the grass should have air as well as water, and hence, the necessity for a regular alternation. Some farmers allow the water to flow as long as they can with safety, and after draining it off, keep it off a considerable time, not so long however as to let the sod get so dry as to bake. Others prefer, and insist upon it, that it is the best plan, to put it on from twelve to twenty four hours at a time, leaving it off a corresponding space of time, or longer. When the meadow is large, or the supply of water small, the latter is the only practicable way to irrigate. I know of meadows that are laid off in sec- tions corresponding to the days of the week, so that each section gets the water one day in seven. The ditches, &c, require cleaning out and some little other care in the winter or early spring ; the only after attention necessary, is at stated times to let the water over one section and take it off another, a process which consumes but little time, and gives very little trouble. William Gilham. V. M. Z, March 1st., 1859. For the Southern Planter. The Capabilities of the South for Fruit Growing. The opinion has very generally been en- tertained heretofore, that the South cannot compete with the North in fruit growing, particularly the apple. Various causes may be assigned for this opinion, and prominent among these, has been a want of adaptation of suitable varieties to our soil and climate, and a neglect of proper culture. The idea has too generally prevailed, that what suits one region would suit another, and, when failure occurs, we too often allow ourselves to be- come discouraged and give it up, instead of enquiring into the causes of failure and res- olutely determining to persevere until suc- cess crowns our efforts. Our country in its wide area, presents a great diversity of soil and climate, and this diversity must exert an influence in fruit culture, as well as in any other kind of cul- ture. One fact that has been too little at- tended to, is the length of time and degree of heat that different varieties of fruit re- quire to bring them to perfection. In the South fruit trees bloom in the spring from one to two months earlier than in the North, and have longer time to grow before cold weather, hence a Northern winter fruit ob- tains length of time and sufficiency of heat to ripen it before cold weather commences \ when planted in the South, it then becomes over ripe before winter and will not keep long. This is just what we might expect, if we would look at it scientifically, and a man from the South, moving North, who should attempt to raise cotton as a farm crop there, would be considered as wanting in judg- ment. And yet one conclusion is just as rational as the other, if we would look at it aright. 196 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April Much has been said and written about the failure of our orchards of late years, and the idea is entertained by many that we cannot grow fruit as early as formerly. What then ! Shall we give it up in discouragement, and idly resign ourselves to our fate, and blame mother earth for our faults, or rather shall we not earnestly investigate the cause and apply the remedy ? We all know that our wheat crop is not as certain as formerly ; do we think of giving it up ? I judge not. Ag- riculturists are looking round for a remedy, and endeavoring to investigate the causes of failure. English writers are boasting, that they now calculate upon an average crop of wheat with far more certainty than formerly. They now find that by studying the requirements of the crop and of the soil, that they can apply manure with far more certainty of success than heretofore. Here is a lesson that the agriculturists of this coun- try are beginning to learn, and to learn suc- cessfully. And pomologists should profit by this lesson also. While our soil was in its primitive condition, there seemed to be no difficulty in raising fruit, it only needed planting, and it would take care of itself. But as our soil became exhausted of some of its im- portant constituents by continued cropping, success is not now so certain. And added to this, the dry summers and cold winters of the past few years, have caused a destruction ol fruit trees, the like of which few of us can remember. Our forest trees also have suffered severely. Cannot we see the reason of all these things ? The want of proper culture of fruit trees under the cir- cumstances in which they are now placed, is one main reason of so much failure. A farmer who would plant one kind of crop on Jjis land for 30 or 40 years, without manure to supply the draft upon the soil, would be considered wanting in common sense, and yet how much more sensible is it, to expect a fruit tree to yield fair crops of fruit for that many years without something to sup- ply its wants ? It may be said that the roots of the tree yearly extend themselves farther out, and thus constantly is reaching new soil, but does not the farmer anticipate these roots by cropping that soil, and thus robbing the roots of their fair share. Here is a grand error and one that has done incalcu- lable injury to orchards. Look at nature, look at the forest trees in a state of nature, they invariably throw out their roots close to the surface of the ground, with a net work of fine roots just beneath the surface. Here they come into contact with the decayed vegetable matter furnished by their growth, and thus are yearly manured. How is it with our orchards, we crop the ground be- tween the trees, and of latter time plow much deeper than formerly, thus destroying the surface roots and compelling those left to penetrate deeper into the subsoil, into a colder state, and one almost entirely deficient in organic matter. Experience shows us that however rich in other matters a soil may be, if there is a deficiency of organic matter in it, a good crop cannot be grown upon it. Can we be at a loss why our orchards do not bear better ? When we look at the facts before us, is it not rather a wonder they bear at all, at least many of them ? Want of adaptation to soil is an error with many tree planters. Some yarieties of ap- ples require a strong, heavy soil to bring them to perfection, while others do best in a good but lighter soil. We should endeavor to obtain native varieties for each section of our country, as much as may be. This has been a want in the South heretofore, but is now being supplied. D. Redmond of the Southern Cull ivator, Augusta, G-eorgia, read a paper at the late meeting of the Pomolo- gical Society in New York, on the capabili- ties of the South for fruit culture, in which he gave a large list of varieties of Southern origin, and adapted to that region, of good size and superior quality ; some of which, he says, will hang on the tree till the begin- ning of winter, or even Christmas. Most of these varieties would probably succeed well in the tide-water region of our State, and many of them except the very latest, would suit the upper Piedmont and Valley region ; and as many of them are natives of the highlands of Northern Georgia, North Car- olina and East Tennessee, these might suit the Alleghany region and the Western coun- ties of the State. I see no reason why, with proper care in selecting varieties, and judicious cultivation, we may not raise fruit in this as well as any other State of the Union. The practice of doing things on a large scale, and neglect- ing things seemingly small, has had much to do with the small amount of fruit produ- ced for market, but this in time will correct itself. There are a few earnest pomologists in different parts of the South, that are man- ifesting what may be done, and when they give as they will give, occular evidence of 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 197 the profit of fruit culture, there is Yankee spirit enough even there, to carry the thing out, now that public conveyance will soon be easy to distant markets. Look at Eastern Virginia, how they there are falling into the truck business as it is called, and how they are enriching the country, and building up a business that is a benefit to both South and North. There is little danger of this business being overdone soon ; our cities in- crease faster than the production of the country increase, and then the foreign mar- ket might be made use of, should there be a surplus for home use. HOW TO PLANT FRUIT TREES. In planting orchards, care should be taken that the soil has sufficient drainage, to pre- vent water standing about the roots ; if not so naturally, it should be underdrained. Trees two years from the graft, are now considered by all intelligent fruit growers, better for planting than older ones, they can be taken up with less injury to their roots, and they grow off more freely, and in a few years make larger and better trees than larger ones will. Care should be taken to set them no deeper than they grew in the nursery- — The holes should be 3 or 4 feet square and 1£ deep, and in planting use only top soil if good, and if not, make it so, by adding com- post or well-rotted manure, but use no un- fermented manure. Fill the hole partly up, then place the roots in their natural position, and fill the fine soil closely in and around them, do this carefully, then%>our a bucket of water around them to settle the earth more closely, and cover all over with earth, pressing it down moderately. By planting ! in this way, and mulching the first summer with straw, leaves, or other litter, for 3 or 4 feet around the tree, there will be very few failures, provided the trees have not been! too long exposed to the air before planting. I For several years after planting, the ground should be cultivated in vegetables, say pota- toes, vines, &c, but not in winter grain or I tall growing plants. Care should early be and confined to a colder stratum. These sur- face roots extend much farther than most persons imagine Downing, in his work on taken, not to plow the ground close to the trees, and as they increase in size increase the distance from them so as not to disturb the surface roots, but keep down grass and weeds around them. Much injury is done to orchards in this particular, the surface roots are torn off, and the remaining roots are compelled to penetrate the subsoil, di- vested of the benefit of the sun and dews, fruits, some years ago, advised those who kept their fruit trees in grass, to dig the sur- face over at least as far as the branches ex- tended, but this has been found to be too small a space, and does little or no good. — Roots often extend twice as far as the bran- ches spread out, and as it is through the small roots at their extremities that the tree obtains its nourishment, we may at once see the reason of the injury of crops of grass or other vegetables growing within their reach. Persons who wish to grow fruit with certainty and successfully, must avoid injur- ing the surface roots, and avoid robbing them of their nourishment by cropping over them. While the trees are young the spa- ces, between them may be occupied, but when they attain size, and come into a bear- ing state, crops of fruit and vegetables can- not be successfully grown together without copious manuring, and then the injury done to the roots will be considerable, unless par- ticular care is taken to prevent it. Marshall P. Wilder, in the late Pomological Conven- tion, " mentioned an orchard in Massachu- setts which sends the finest apples to the market, where there has been no grass or plough for forty years. The top of the ground is merely scarified." The small importance attached to fruit by many farmers, will induce them to consider this too much trouble, they cannot afford it, they can take very especial care to provide for a tobacco or other crop, and yet there is no crop which can be put upon land that will produce as much real profit per acre as a well kept orchard. They all love good fruit, and yet don't seem to try to learn its value. It will go very far in supporting a family if rightly managed, is promotive of health and social enjoyment, and a lack of endeavor to obtain it, where it may be had, is pretty sure evidence of a want of that refinement that makes man the friend of man. Our State may be considered as exhibit- ing four distinct regions for fruit growing. The first may include the Tide-water and about one-half of the Piedmont region, with an elevation of say, of 400 feet above tide. Here, for late keeping fruit, we should look to those of Southern origin almost exclu- sively. Much of this soil being sandy and thin, to ensure good fruit manure should be applied. The second region may extend 198 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER [April, from the first to the western side of the Valley region, with an elevation of from 400 to 15U0 feet above Tide-water. This is the best region for apples in the State, and with proper attention and selections of varieties, may be made equal to almost any other in the Union. The chief drawback is, the liability to injury from spring frosts, but there are many elevations where this would only be partial. Here Northern va- rieties do better than in the first division, but still our main dependence should be from the South. The third region may in- clude all the mountains west of the Valley. The valleys in these mountains are many of them similar to the Valley in fertility of soil, but many of them reaching to 2,500 feet above tide-water, would allow of Northern fruit doing better there than either of the other regions, but still the native fruits of the Southern Alleghanies, should be mostly depended on. That part of the State west of the Alleghanies having an elevation about equal to much of the Valley region, would seem to need pretty much the same varieties of fruit. The present system of railroads when finished will give facilities for conveyance that will make the raising of fruit more profitable than heretofore in many places. In reviewing the facts before us, there seems to be no good reason to suppose that Virginia may not become a profitable fruit growing region. Of peaches she has a deci- ded advantage over the North, the trees are longer lived and the quality of the fruit is su- perior. Of apples, with a judicious selection of varieties and proper cultivation, there is decided encouragement. But we must lay aside that careless manner, too much in practice at present, and take up a scientific course of cultivation. The laws governing fruit culture are as certain of producing reliable results as the laws of any other branch of culture, and it is our duty as well as interest, to under- stand those laws, and apply them to our profit. Of pears we have much yet to learn, in many places we see large old pear trees growing thriftily, proving that our soil is adapted to that fruit, but its culture seems to be checked by the blight here as else- where. When we shall produce native va- rieties, we may expect to be more successful, till then we must select those best adapted to our region. The dwarf pear requires such peculiar treatment, that its cultivation cannot be recommended, unless where pro- per attention can be given to it. Much im- position is practised by tree venders in this particular, and the want of information in many, renders them easy dupes to these schemers. Persons from other States have been distributing fruit trees from the North into this State the past two years, professing to furnish better fruit than can be obtained here, and selling at higher prices than nur- series here sell for, and thus imposing on the credulous and ignorant, most of whom will not soon realize the return of their money, and many of them never. This evil should be corrected, but while our citizens delight more in politics and making a show in the world than in the quiet and peaceable prac- tice of adding to our comforts, and making our homes a blessing to our families, as well as ourselves and all around us, there is but little prospect of a remedy. A word to the wise is sufficient. Yardley Taylor. For the Southern Planter. War against Wash-Boards Continued. The attention of house-keepers was, some months since, called to the great injury done to the clothes of a family, by the weekly use of a wash-board. In most cases, the lady of the house sees the clothes delivered to the washer-woman, and, in some instances, takes a list. If the clothes come in at the usual time, and are clean and nice-looking, she is satisfied. When the Spring of the year comes round, and the good mother sees the time is approaching for the little ones (and the old gentleman too) to shed their Winter apparel, she orders the Summer clothes to be brought out. As they are spread out before her, she, with a flushed cheek and ruffled temper, exclaims, " how on earth did these clothes get so ragged and torn ? Some, I know, were made up late last Summer, and even they are rubbed to pieces." The washer-woman puts in a word or two to the effect, that " the boys, mam, are monstrous hard on their clothes ', they get them so dirty and greasy I has to rub them with all my strength to get them clean." " But how is it, Evelina, that the girls' clothes are so linted up ? Only look, new dresses, new underclothes, even the stock- ings, are all rubbed as though you had scoured down the kitchen steps with them/' 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 199 il Oh, mistis, you know the girls, they's just like the boys. You know they are up the cherry-trees, down in the raspberry patch, up the chinkapin bushes, anywhere and everywhere." The mother concludes that she never knew such children, and resolves to whip for every rent she sees in the future. If the good wife (it is presumed all wives are good, if they are not they should be, or the chimneys are sure to smoke,) would only pay one or two unexpected visits a day to the washer-woman, she will find one of those wonderful goods destroyers sitting up in her tub, or if its use has been forbidden, it will be found lying flat at the bottom of the tub. I have not space to enumerate the fine and costly articles belonging to the young and old folks, of every family, that are rubbed to a perfect lint on the wash- boards used in one large family. Every old cobler that can handle a saw and a chisel makes them for the colored folks, and every merchant and grog-shop keeper has them for sale. And why do they? Is it for the small profit made on them? No, it is not. What then ? Why these merchants have learned from the thoughtfulness of Northern men how to calculate, something after this fashion : " Every wash-board I can sell will, in all probability, lint out, in one season, three dozen shirts, two dozen fine and costly handkerchiefs, to say nothing of the fine under-garments worn by every young lady, and a host of fine and costly things besides, on which I make my profit." And the washer-woman has learned from the mer- chant, that if she will purchase and use wash-boards, (even if she has to use her own money,) that she will be able to collect rags enough every year (at one cent a pound) to supply her with everything she might want from the store. Thus, you see, the merchant and washer-woman are deeply interested in the destruction of all linen and cotton goods — the more clothes are worn out the more goods are purchased by every family, and the more rags are sold by the good and faithful old washer-woman. Persons who do not look into family mat- ters as they should, and as their interest oftentimes requires, may laugh at this ridi- culous war against wash-boards. But only think for one moment of the poor farmer — these uncertain seasons for cropping — who is toiling from year's end to year's end, and his wife and a sewing girl, are hard at work with their m needles six months of the year, (or, perhaps, Wheeler & Wilson's family sewing machine, the best in use, making 1000 stitches a minute,) all to be paid for by the farmer, crop or no crop ; and who is benefitted? Who makes the money these hard times? The merchant. How does he do it ? By selling goods to the far- mer at 30, 40, or 50 per cent., and by sup- plying a machine to wear them out in time to be purchased back again at one cent a pound, to be taken North the next season. Will not some observing man join in trying to bring to the notice of house- keepers the loss sustained, yearly, to every family in which wash-boards are used. I estimate the loss to each family at $50 per year. A Valley Farmer. February, 1859. From the Valley Farmer. The Horse. As the present high price of horses will in- duce all who can to raise and bring them into market, it is but reasonable to suppose that many mares will be used for breeding, whose progeny will prove of very little value. In the presentinstance I propose toconsiderRomething of the results to be expected from a judicious course of breeding, and vice versa. In the se- lection of a stallion to breed to, inasmuch as nearly every one is within reach of a good many, most persons are called upon to exercise some judgment in making a choice, and in order that the choice may prove a wise one, see to it that you consider well the object in view, viz: What kind of a colt do you wish to produce? Con- sider the qualities of your mare and also the horse, and after all do not breed to the price of the insurance instead of breeding to the horse. A dollar or two now may make a differ- ence of fifty or more a year or two hence. In order to a perfect development in the foal, the mare should be relatively larger than the horse. A large, loose-made mare, from a smaller but muscular and ambitious horse, will rarely fail in producing a valuable colt. The mare being large and roomy there is ample space for devel- oping in the foetus the full powers of the horse in an eminent degree, giving it. remarkable strength, activity and constitution. The cor- rectness of this principle will be readily seen in the effects produced by this course of breeding. Doubtless every reader can point to a number of small horses, (Canadians and others,) which have sustained a high reputation amongst stock raisers throughout their whole lives. The justly famed Morgans, and the advantages to be deri- ved by croasi ng them upon common stock afford a striking illustration of the truth of this remark. The Mustangs of the western plains, as well as 200 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April all xcild horses, are remarkable for their hardi- hood and bottom. When it is remembered that the medium and smaller sized horses are always masters in a herd and consequently the race be- ing perpetuated by them, another example is afforded, carrying out the truth of this observa- tion. By crossing the large English mares with the (smaller sized) horses of Arabia and the Birbary States, some of the fleetest horses in the world have been produced. The superior hardihood and endurance of the mule may certainly be attributed, in a great measure, to breeding upon this principle. Jacks being smaller than mares, there is a full development of the powers of both parents in the offspring. Some may say that the jack is a more hardy ani- mal and not subject to so many diseases as the horse, hence the result, but this does not ex- plain the true cause of superiority. If this had been the reason, the produce of the stallion with the jennet ought to be equally as serviceable as the mule, but experience has proved that the offspring which is called a Hinny is a worth- less animal. Colts produced by crossing small mares with large horses are frequently tall and ill-shaped, awkward and sluggish, also deficient in constitution. Of course there are exceptions, but this is the natural tendency. From this fact the improvement of our stock by importing very large horses, has not been attended with such marked results, as has been attained by a different course of breeding. An error has been committed in importing large horses instead of mares, and although a good many valuable horses are to be found among the colts of im- ported draught horses, there are many others that will not compare favourably with the com- mon breeds of the country. A large breed cannot be kept perfect and condensed by rais- ing from females of smaller size. Either the form, the spirit, or the constitution must be sacrificed, perhaps all. But you are ready to ask, How are we to keep up the size of our horses and practice upon this principle? Many small horses breed large, and their colts will, in nearly all cases, be large enough. If, how- ever, you have a small mare, I would not ad- vise breeding to a still smaller horse, but after breeding to a larger one, if the colt should prove deficient, correct again by reversing. Perhaps enough has been said upon this sub- ject to lead you to think, and observe. If so, my object has been attained. Lessons of ex- perience are always readily fixed upon the mind. Some difference of opinion is entertained as ,to which exerts the greatest influence upon the offspring, the male or the female. I think, however, that owing to the peculiar treatment and habits of the stallion, a deeper impress is generally made upon the side of the sire than of the dam. Taking this for granted, and also bearing in mind that " like produces like," it is a matter of great importance that the stal- lion especially be free from defects and blem- ishes. Spavin, curb, predisposition to splints, windgalls and all such things are hereditary. All these tilings are formed easily enough, without breeding to horses which have them. I would, for this reason, always discourage the idea of keeping a horse, unless entirely free from defects If a horse's legs fail he is use- less, and if he inherits spavin or any such diseases, there is little prospect of his ever be- ing permanently cured. Some suppose that if a horse has an eye knocked out, or is other- wise rendered blind by accident. or ill-usuge, his usefulness as a breeder will not be effected, but this idea is erroneous. A healthy action and exercise of any member, muscle or limb, in- creases its vigour and power. Inactivity pro- duces an opposite result. After the loss of the eye the nerves around that organ becomes para- lized, and for want of exercise (whatever may have caused the blindness) become to all intents and purposes the same as if they had never existed, and consequently materially affect the progeny of the animal. Although the effects may not be seen in the first generation, they will surely be manifested at a later date by an exhibition of weak eyes, dull and sleepy-look- ing eyes, very small and bad colored eyes, and finally, total blindness. Stallions are perhaps more liable to go blind than any other horses. If used as work horses, they are very apt to pull too hard. Many horses have been ren- dered blind from this cause. If saddle horses, by undue exertion in training they are some- times strained and the eyes lost. If over-taxed during the season the eyes often fail; and again, a horse will often be seen looking through some crack in the stable, with his eyes fixed intently upon some object for many minutes in succession, thereby straining the eye and resulting finally in loss of sight. If any of these causes or even accidents may have rendered a horse blind, rest assured that the effect will be sooner or later manifested in his stock. Old Copperbottom, during his life- time, was paced a distance of 90 miles, which he accomplished in less than 9 hours, but this resulted in the loss of his eyes. We find now that his descendants in this State, (Ky.,) as well as many others, are weak-eyed. I know a grandson of his whose eyes were, to outward appearances, as good as any I ever saw, now entirely blind, and his eyes failing without any apparent cause. It is also a well-known fact that the Copperbottoms are addicted to blun- dering. May not this be attributed, in part, to some defect in the formation and structure of the eye? If so, this is an important item for consideration. In conclusion, upon the subject of defects, let me say, if you are raising stock, breed to an animal in all respects free from blemishes ; if you are buying stock, purchase such as are free from defects. These things are often produced by causes which you can- not control, and when selling time comes, (especially if the market is dull,) you must 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 201 account for every puff, lump, or hair that is out of place. II. A Chapter on Cements. To "A Subscriber/' who requests us to give a few directions for making a cement that will be useful in joining pieces of glass or earthen, and in uniting pieces of chemi- cal apparatus, we would say that he will find, in the various works on chemistry, di- rections for making cements and lutes, by which flie object he desires can be attained. We, however, furnish him with the follow- ing, which are laid down in the "Imperial Encyclopedia/' a work published some 45 years ago in England. For the purpose of holding together broken pieces of glass, chi- na, or two pieces if not broken, but which you wish to hold together, the writer says the juice of garlic is excellent, being strong, and, if the operation be performed with care, leaving little or no mark. Quick lime and the white of an egg, mixed together and ex- peditiously used, are also very good for such purposes. Dr. Lewis recommends a mixture of quick lime and cheese, in the following manner: "Sweet cheese, shaved thin and stirred with boiling hot water, changes into a tenacious slime, which does not mingle with the water. Worked with fresh quantities of hot water, and then mixed upon a hot stone, with a proper quantity of unslacked lime, into the consistence of a paste, it proves a strong and durable cement, for wood, stone, earthen- ware, and glass. When thoroughly dry, after being applied, which it will be in two or three days, it is not in the least acted upon by water." Cheese, barely heated with quick lime, as directed by some of the chemists, for uniting cracked glasses, is not near so efficacious. A composition of drying oil and white lead is sometimes used for this purpose, but it is not very good. The Germans use a cement prepared in this way : Take by measure, two parts of litharge, one of unslaked lime, and one of flint glass; let each be separately reduced to finest powder, and worked up into a paste with drying oil. It is said this compound will acquire a great degree of hardness when immersed in water, and is very durable. Another German cement for joining wood, is made with pitch mixed with bullock's blood, linseed oil, and turpentine, — the whole of this must be put over a fire, in an iron pan, and as much brick dust added as will make them of the consistency of thin paste. The tub or cask to which this pre- paration is to be applied, must be perfectly dry before being laid on, and the chinks and crevices filled up with tow while the cement is warm. Japan cement for pasting paper is made by mixing rice flour intimately with cold water, and then boiling it, — it is beautifully white, and dries almost transparent. It is much used in joining paper boxes and other articles of curiosity or commerce. A cement for damp walls is made in this way, — boil two quarts of tar with two ounces of grease for a quarter of an hour in an iron pot; add some of this tar to a mixture of slaked lime and pounded glass which have been passed through a flour sieve, and been completely dried over a fire in an iron pot, in the proportion of two parts of lime and one of glass, till the mixture becomes of the consistency of thin plaster. This cement must be used immediately after be- ing mixed, and therefore it is proper not to mix too much, or no more than will coat one square foot at a time, since it will quickly become too hard for use, and care must be taken to prevent any moisture from mixing with the cement. For a wall merely damp a coating an eighth of an inch will be suffi- cient. This coating may afterwards be plas- tered with a plaster of quick lime hair and plaster of Paris. This cement will join and hold stone together strong. — Me. Farmer. Good Advice to a Farmer. " Many years ago," said a Quaker friend, who told us the following anecdote : " Many years ago, a brother of the celebrated Ben- jamin West, who had been a cooper in this city, a man of sterling sense and integrity, purchased a farm some miles out of the city, which had been suffered to be over-run with briers and bushes. He was, for a short time, considered by his neighbor farmers as very far from being as wise as Solomon, or even themselves; but, in a few years, his was the best and most productive farm within fifty miles around him, and his fame as a farmer spread far and wide. One day a man came to him who was desirous of improving his farm, and asked him how he should do it. 'Go home/ said Mr. West, 'and make five or ten acres as rich as thee wants, and come to me and I will tell you 202 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April what to do next.' 'But,' said the farmer, 'I have not manure enough to do that/ ' Very well, then go and prepare three acres, two acres, or one acre, in the same way; but what thee undertakes, do well.' The far- mer," said our friend, "perfectly compre- hended the advice, and, what is unusual, practiced upon and benefitted by it — leav- ing at his death, one of the best farms in the country." Go, and do thou likewise. — Philadelphia Herald. -*■••»* From the Prairie Farmer. Cure for Big-Head. I have lately had letters addressed me re- questing a recipe for curing the big-head in horses. The recipe was published (by my request) in The Prairie Farmer some years since, and if you think it best you may publish it again. It will or has cured ninety-nine cases out of the hundred: Oil origan 1 oz.; spirits ammonia 2 oz.; ditto turpentine 2 oz.; olive oil 1 oz.; pulverised cantharides 1 drachm; mixed and well rub- bed on the enlargement once a day. Yours, Stephen Millikin. The Dairy— Selection of Cows. We are not going into a discussion of the different breeds of the cow, as understood by cattle-breeders, but of the general char- acteristics of those best suited to dairy pur- poses. We care not what her breed, whether it be Short-Horn, Ayrshire, De- von, Hereford, Alderney, or Native, further than that she be a good milker. As to the quality of her milk, it would always be rich ; as to the quantity, that may depend upon the size of the cow, and the amount of food she consumes. We have known cows that yielded thirty quarts of milk in the height of the season, which were not so economical to the dairyman as others not giving over twenty quarts. One ate enor- mously, the other moderately. It depends much, also, on the quality of the pasturage as to what description of cow the dairyman should adopt. A compact, even-bodied cow will frequently live and thrive, and do her best in milk, where a large* rangy beast would barely live, and yield less milk than the other; while, in abundant pastures, where the food is easily obtained, the largest animal, giving a proportionate quantity, would be preferable. So, in the selection of his cows the dairyman should understand the quality of his pastures, equally with the description of cows with which he is to stock them. DESCRIPTION OF A DAIRY COW. As a rule, we should say, that a compact, small-boned cow of her kind, whatever the breed may be, is the most economical for the dairy. A rawboned, big-jointed, loose- made beast is usually a huge feeder, and a poor keeper, and although sometimes an extraordinary milker, is not, on the whole, a profitable one to keep. Our own style of dairy cow should have a small head, with a lively eye, and a light horn. Her neck should be thin, her shoulders open, or well spread apart; her ribs round, and extend well back towards her hips; her back straight ; her loins and hip broad ; her rump level ; her flanks deep ; her belly capacious, without being paunchy; her twist full and low ; her udder clean, silky in the hair, with fair-sized taper teats, standing well apart as they issue from the bag. When milked dry, the udder should be small, and shrunken — not meaty — but when full, it should be plump, and hard ; her tail fine ; her legs and feet small ; and with all these she should possess a quiet disposition. It may also be added, that she have a yellow skin beneath the hair, be the hair what colour it may, and the hair be fine, silky, and if possible, wav- ing, or slightly curling. These qualities, of course, will make a handsome cow — an objection in the eye of no one, and certain- ly none to the disadvantage of the cow possessing good milking properties. A beast the contrary of this description, al- though possibly a good milker, is not de- sirable; and when the kind we have de- scribed is just as easy to be obtained, as the opposite, if one will but take a little pains, the standard of perfection, or as near to it as possible, may as well be adhered to as otherwise. We say a yellow skin, as distinguished from a white, or pale one. A yellow skin usually indicates a rich milker, while a pale skin indicates that of inferior quality. All observing dairymen will acknowledge this fact. Exceptions occur, but the rule ob- tains. Now, in contradistinction to our choice of a cow, let us see, for a moment, how the mass of dairy cows are generally obtained. At " the West/' where the cattle breeders 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. usually pay little attention to the milking qualities of their cows, and breed them promiscuously without regard to that quali- ty, and also in various other parts of the country among poor farmers who raise now and then a cow to sell, the cow drovers, or buyers go out to make their purchases for dairy markets — the dairymen, as a rule, do not rear their heifer calves, but depend upon purchasing their cows, either of the drovers, or go out and pick them up them- selves, as best they may. Of course the selection by the drovers or dairymen, is not of the best, for the owners of them prize their superior quality as valuable to them- selves, and the purchasers, consequently, are enabled to buy such only as the owners are disposed to sell. They are therefore a promiscuous lot — a few good, some indiffer- ent, and many inferior if not decidedly bad. These cows are taken by the dairymen, and after trial a year or two, the worst are cull- ed out by them as not worth keeping, and in turn are sold to another passing drover, who proceeds on his journey towards mar- ket, and sells to a further dairyman, till the poor rejected beasts are finally brought up in the butcher's shambles ! And such is the history of every man of the dairy herds in our country — a short-sighted, miserable, unprofitable mode of keeping up a supply of milch cows. In opposition to this, we would propose a different plan. Having selected the best herd of cows we could find, instead of get- ting a wretched inferior bull, with just vi- tality enough in him to beget a calf, as the means of enabling the cow to produce her yearly supply of milk, and then destroying the calf soon after birth, we would select a bull of some distinct milk-producing breed — and that breed should be of a kind fitted for our own soil and climate. This bull should be descended from a good milking dam, and also from a sire whose ancestors were of a good milking tribe, if possible. A close examination into these facts would give the bull a pedigree, of course, which we w T ould demand. In addition to his milk- begetting qualities, lie should add those of good shape, fineness, and "general quality peculiar to his breed. We would preserve the heifer calves by this bull from the best cows, and rear them to keep the number of our cows good, as the calves grow up and the cows are worn out or displaced. Ac- cording to the general physiological rules of u like begetting like," our young cows would nearly all turn out the first class of milkers. We would educate the calves to the developement of their best milking faculties, thus : They should be well fed — not pampered ; allowed plenty of new milk for the first month, then gradually led off into skimmed milk, or oil meal, and be kept all the while in a sweet grass pasture. At four months they would be fit to wean. From that time forward, pasture in good grass until winter. Through the winter, I soft sweet hay, and perhaps a quart of oats, or half the quantity of Indian meal a day, until grass in the spring. Then good grass pasture another summer, and hay through the winter. At two years old, grass again for the summer, and turned to the bull in July — even her own sire, if he has proved a good getter, for such close breeding is not hurtful for a second generation. The young cow then comes in a finely developed beast, and being gentle and docile, as she would be if properly treated, she furnishes a fine milking cow, perhaps a little extra cost, but one which, in the natural order of things, is worth one-and-a-half, or two that can be obtained out of a common drove for dairy use. • Three or four good heifer calves thus raised every year by an intelligent dairy- man, will well keep up his herd of twenty cows, and in that proportion for a smaller or larger number. As a proof of the advantage of thus breeding up a herd of dairy cows, the wri- ter would relate his own experience : Many years ago we kept a milk dairy for supply- ing the town people near by with milk. Our herd was a mixed one of different breeds — Short-Horns, Devons, and Natives, with intermediate crosses, and grades. We selected two compact, well-made bulls — one Short-Horn and one Devon, pure in blood, each of his kind. To the pure bred cows of each breed, we bred the same blooded bull, and crossed them upo^ the grade and native cows, as we judged best to effect our object of producing milkers. Our thorough bred calves of each breed, we of course raised, and selected the most promising of the grade heifer calves to raise for future dairy cows. In the course of our oppera- tions we bred and reared about sixty heifers, and with one exception only, when they came into cow's estate, every individual turned out a superior milker, with fine form, and excellent quality of carcase as well. 204 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April But we will give the .sequel. After some years continuance, not because the business was unprofitable but because we could not give the personal attention to it that it re- quired, we discontinued the occupation, and sold off the most of our herd, chiefly grades — a part of them at public sale. Coming in as they did, at different seasons of the year to give a regular supply of milk as far as possible, our cows were in different con- ditions as to flesh. The full milkers were in moderate flesh ; the dry, and nearly dry ones were in excellent condition. As they were put up to be sold, «incc every buyer wanted "a first-rate milker/' the question as to her milking quality was asked of each one when offered. There w T as a difference, of course, some better, some not equally good. Yet, no matter what the answer might be, the /attest cows, in every instance, brought the most money ! So much for the eye, over utility ! But many dairymen say they u cant af- ford to raise their cows. It is cheaper to buy them, and run the chances." We do not believe it — at least, as the chances run within our own experience, and observation. It may be objected, and with considerable truth, we admit, as in the late examples, that the Short-Horns and Devons are not milkers. To this we reply, that they are naturally good milkers ; but the modern breeders have bred for flesh, and symmetry of shape, chiefly, and in striving for these have measurably bred out, or sacrificed the milking quality. But the milk can be brought back again by breeding. That quality is still latent in the animal, and use and education will restore it in the manner we have indicated. Still, we are not advo- cating breeds of cattle, we speak only of selecting good dairy cows, and perpetuating their best milking qualities in their descend- ants. — JLm. Agriculturist. The farmer's Motto. Gen. Bierce, closes an Agricultural Ad- dress at Twinsburgh, Ohio, Sept. 17th, 1857, as follows : " Let the farmer's motto be, then, l good farms, good stock, good seed, and good cul- tivation.' Make farming a science, in which your head as well as your hands are employed ; let there be system, reason, in all your operations; study to make your farm beautiful, and your lands lovely ; en- tice, by kindncgp, the birds to visit, and cheer your dwellings with their music; I would not associate with the man or boy that would wantonly kill the birds that cheerfully sing around our dwellings and our farms ; he is fitted for treason and mur- der. Who does not, with the freshness of early morning, call up the memory of the garden of his infancy and childhood ? the robin's nest in the cherry tree, and the nest of young chirping birds in the currant bushes ; the flowers planted by his mother and nurtured by his sister ? In all our wan- derings, the memory of childhood's birds and flowers are associated with our mother and sisters, and our eafrly home. As you would have your children intelligent and happy, and their memory in after life, of early home, pleasant or repulsive, so make your farms, and your children's home." Manures for Pears. During the late Pomological Convention, held at Mozart Hall, New York, we were much interested in observing the appearance and quality of pears there exhibited. We have long known that all kinds of pears flourished with us when supplied fully with soluble phosphate of lime and potash, and that even the Napoleon, so generally dis- credited, always succeeds most fully under such treatment. Among the fruits exhibited were a num- ber of specimens from the garden of Dr. Boynton, of Syracuse, New York, who is now lecturing on Geology at the Cooper In- stitute. These pears were of superior qual- ity, having a peculiar wax-like surface, and surpassing in color all others in the exhibi- tion. Our attention was called to these pears by Dr. John A. Warder, of Cincin- nati, who informed us that the manuring was said to be special, but he did not know the precise treatment. To-day Dr. Boynton paid us a visit at our place, and we had the pleasure of a long conversation with him on pear culture. He states that he believes the entire superiority of his pears to arise from the fact, that he has used the super- phosphate of lime and potash freely as ferti- lizers, with full underdrainage and thorough deep disintegration. He states that although his garden is 180 feet above the level of the surrounding country, and is a free, dry soil, still he underdrains, and thus secures a full and efficient aeration of the soil, and perfect 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 205 security against drought All this fully ac- cords with our practice, and we are glad to know that the best colored pears wc ever saw, were fertilized in the manner we have so often recommended, and on soils prepared similar to our own. We hope Dr. Boynton may be induced to make public all the facts In relation to the methods he has pursued in producing the unequalled specimens we have referred to. Their beauty certainly excels that of any other specimens we have ever seen, and the methods, so far as detailed to us by the grower, fully endorse the doctrines we have so long advocated. Until Napoleons and other pears of generally admitted doubtful success shall be grown equal to ours without the use of super-phosphates and potash, we shall claim as a truth, that such special fer- tilization is superior to the ordinary practice of ordinary cultivation of the soil by sur- face-ploughing alone and the use of farm manures. We would again remind our readers, that a saturated solution of soda applied to the i bodies of pear trees, w r ill remove the louse and scale perfectly, by a single application. [ Working Farmer. signs of Buffering. This restlessness some- times increases till it amounts to l'ren/.y. 1 have bad then become so savage as to at- tack me fiercely, though at other times per- fectly gentle If not stopped, this frenzy may increase with the pains of labor, and the sow will then destroy her young, or any other living thing within her reach. Cure the costiveness, and this restlessness and ir- ritation will be cured, and if she was a good natured sow she will become gentle and ., of Alabama. The author of this interesting Essay, (who re- tains the copy-right in his possession,) has kindly permitted us to transfer it to our columns, from the Transactions of the North Carolina State Agricultural Society. A premium of $50, was awarded by the Society for this Essay. PREFACE. This Essay was written in compliance with the demands of the North Carolina State Agricultural Society. The writer having felt the need of such information, in days past, feels he would be uncharitable and ungrateful to withhold, and not impart his knowledge on the subject, to his brother farmers. He has endeavored to serve them in a feeble manner, in a matter deeply concern- ing their pecuniary welfare, and tried to arrange the subject, in a systematic form, and explain the different methods of the horizontal culture, so that the humblest mind can understand and appreciate them. Each article is separate and distinct from the others, and yet all are connected to- gether by the general bearing of the subject. Should this small effort in behalf of the soil of North Carolina, meet with the ap- probation and requisitions of the members of the Agricultural Society, and receive the careful perusal, study, and application of its principles to the soil, by the farmers and planters of the State, the writer shall feel that his labor is not lost and his talent not buried in oblivion. INTRODUCTION. It has been but a few years since the sub- ject of this Essay was brought to the notice of the American farmer. It now occupies an important and promi- nent position among the scientific opera- tions of the Southern Farm. It may be considered as a new branch of agricultural science, founded upon correct and well established principles of the sciences of Engineering and Hydraulics; and essential to the welfare of the farmer, 14 to the preservation of the soil, and to good husbandry. Forced, almost by necessity, and the strong sense of self-interest and foresight, a few intelligent minds have been brought to discover the urgent need of reforming the old destructive system of plowing in straight rows up and down hills, and of substituting the better mode of horizontal culture. The absurdity of the old method is really a subject of astonishment and modification, to those who practice the new methods. The arable lands of the South have been nearly exhausted by it and a careless and wasteful culture. The beauty and simplicity of the princi- ples and practice, as well as the advantages of the new methods, can only be realized and brought home to the farmer and planter, by observation, study and practice, and when once understood, they will wonder at their past folly of land-killing, and grieve | to know they practiced it so long, when a different and better system is so easily learned and pursued. When we reflect upon the disasters to the soil, occasioned by the pursuit of the old method, and see the apparent apathy to, and indifference with which the more perfect and better system is viewed by some in- telligent farmers and planters, at the present enlightened era and golden age of agricul- tural science, we feel alarmed for them, for their lands, and the succeeding generations. What a poor inheritance to hand down to an industrious son, an old dilapidated home- stead, with an old worn out, galled and gul- lied farm! Think of it, farmers and plan- ters! The very sight of decay all around, ex- cites in the mind of the young man, disgust, despair, a disposition to abandon the old place, once so dear to him, and the family, now so much abused, and seek a newer and better place, richer land, among strangers. He has no desire to cultivate the worn out- old-fields, and perhaps there is no new land to clear. The old method of plowing up and down hill, has much to answer for; it has driven many a young man to the South- west, and perhaps, eventually, to prison, or the gallows, who might have been a useful citizen, could he have remained at homej and made a living. Whilst the horizontal culture and the ridge and furrow system are attracting the attention, and being, adopted. by- the intolli- 210 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April gent planters and farmers, its principles must be studied scientifically and practi- cally, and new discoveries in the art ap- plied, tested, and settled in the minds of men, or else there will be no end to the di- versity of opinions that may arise, and lead to discussions that may retard the advance- ment of the new science. It would require much time and space to elucidate the different methods of the hori- zontal culture, as fully as some men may de- sire, perhaps. We have endeavored to simplyfy it, and should some of our readers not comprehend it perfectly, all that we can say to them is, study the principles laid down here, and then take the level and follow the plumb, and it will lead them over more tortuous and obscure lines than we have penned here, and a few horizontal rows run with patience and care, will teach them more about it than was ever dreamed of in our philosophy. Our aim has been, in writing this Essay, to collect together our ideas on this subject, to compare them with others, and deduce from them correct principles, and upon these principles establish with fidelity, prac- tical rules, and thus accomplish by a gene- ral survey of the subject, and a brief enu- meration of the details founded upon our own experience and observation, all that we think the State Agricultural Society of North Carolina requires of the writer. \ HISTORY OF HORIZONTAL CULTURE. We regret to state that we have not been able by a careful research of all the Agri- cultural works that we have been able to ex- amine, in the English and French lan- guages, to find the origin of this system of culture. Mr. Thomas Jefferson, who was a close observer of improvements in Agriculture, in a letter dated "Monticello, 6th March, 1816," says, " My son-in-law, Colonel Thomas M. Randolph, is, perhaps, the best farmer in the State; and by the introduction of the Horrizontal method of Plowing, instead of straight furrows, has really saved this hilly country. It was running off in the valleys with every rain, but by this process we scarcely lose an ounce of soil. "A rafter level traces a horizontal line around the curve of the hill or valley, at distances of thirty or forty yards, which is followed by the plow; and by these guide lines the plowman finishes the interval by his eyes, throwing the earth into beds of feet wide, with large When water furrows be- tween them. When more rain falls than can be instantly absorbed, the horizontal furrows retain the surplus until it is all soaked up, scarcely a drop ever reaching the valley below. "Mr. Randolph has contrived also, for our steepest hill-side, a simple plan which throws the furrows always down hill. It is made with two wings welded to the same bar, with their planes at a right angle to each other. The point and the heel of the bar are formed into pivots, and the bar be- comes an axis, by turning which, either wing may be laid on the ground, and the other then standing vertically, acts as a mould-board. The right angle between them, however, is filled with a sloping piece of wood, leaving only a cutting margin of each wing naked, and aiding in the office of raising the sod gradually, while the de- clevity of the hill facilitates its falling over. The change of the position of the share at the end of each furrow is effected in a mo- ment by withdrawing and replacing a pin." It seems Colonel Randolph introduced this method of plowing into Virginia, previ- ous to 1816, as Mr. Jefferson states, he was acquainted with it two or three years previ- ous to writing this letter. This is the earliest notice that we have seen of the use of the horizontal culture, as practiced in the South at the present day. It would be gratifying to know from whence he introduced it, and where it originated. In "Taylor's Arator," published in Vir- ginia the beginning of this century, on the subject of plowing hilly lands, it is stated "that such lands will admit of narrow ridges, as well as level, by a degree of skill and attention so easily attainable, that is has ex- isted in Scotland above a century past under a state of agriculture otherwise execrable, and among the ignorant Highlanders. It is effected by carrying the ridges horizon- tally in such inflections as the hilliness of the ground may require, curved or zigzag, preserving the breadth. The preservation of the soil is hardly more valuable than that of the rain water in the successive reser- voirs thus produced to refresh the thirsty hill-sides, instead of its reaching to and poisoning the valleys." It is very strange, if this system was pur- 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 211 sued in Scotland so very long ago, that there is no mention made of it in English works. During an extensive tour, and residence of over three years in Europe, from Great Britain to Naples, Italy, through Holland, Belgium, France, Switzerland, and parts of Germany, we never saw, heard or read of its being pursued in any of those countries, as it is done here, and we cannot conceive how it could have ever been practiced in Scotland and not kept up now-a-days. In our travels throughout the United States, we have seen it pursued from Mis- sissippi to North Carolina. We have been to Monticello, several times, when a student at the University of Virginia, and though remarking the productiveness of the soil there, and around Charlottesville, we were too young to notice the mode of culture, but we are sure we never saw a rafter-level or any other level applied to lands in Vir- ginia. Had we seen it, we should have noticed it, because we had followed it before we went there to school, in 1836. In "Thair's Principles of Agriculture," a standard German work, in speaking of plowing ridges, he says, "the most advan- tageous disposition of them that can be made on an inclined surface, is to give them a horizontal or standing direction;" but he says nothing more on the subject. Had he been acquainted with the method as pur- sued in the South, he would have written considerably on it. "VVe are inclined to believe the horizontal system of plowing is of Southern invention. We are astonished at the fact, since the Southern planters and farmers have the reputation of being such careless and waste- ful cultivators of the soil. We consider it the most important dis- covery of the modern agricultural era. So important is it to the South, and to the soil in every part of the world where it rains like it does here, that the discoverer of the method deserves the lasting gratitude of the Southern people, and a place upon the tablet of memory next to that of the father of our country. Hill-side ditching and guard-drains, were discovered subsequent to the origin or intro- duction of the horizontal system into Vir- ginia. They were first introduced into that State soon after the introduction of the horizontal method, about 1815 or 1816; by whom, we do not know. The first written notice of the horizontal culture and hill-side ditching that we ever saw, was in the pages of the "Southern Cultivator." Major E. D. W., our step- father, first introduced the method of Hori- zoltal Plowing on the level system into this county, in the spring of 1834. He had read a notice of it in some paper, which in- duced him to try it on some hilly land at the Dial Place. He used the rafter-level and plummet- line, and ran off rows to be plowed four feet apart into beds for corn and cotton. I was a boy tKen, and carried the hoe and made the chop marks for him. He was so well pleased with the results of it, and with his experiment, that he has continued it ever since with great success on two plantations. He has a thousand or more acres under the plumb. He has tested it thoroughly, and has preserved the fertility, retained the soil, and improved his lands, aided by a proper ap- plication of manures, under a severe course of cropping. Without this system, all the manure he could make would not preserve half of the land in its present state of fer- tility for five years. He would as soon abandon planting as to abandon the hori- zontal system of culture. We have assisted him in the work a good deal, and induced him to try guard-drains and hill-side ditches about 1851 or 1852, in order to lighten his labor and lessen his care and attention to it, as he is getting old and the confinement to the field and ex- posure to the cold during the winter and' spring are injurious to his health. But, he says, he could dispense with the drains and ditches if he could attend to the plowing in person every spring, and direct the work and correct the errors of the previous year's work. An old negro horizontaler lays off the rows, and attends to one plantation where there are between six and seven hundred acres under the plumb; and manages it astonishingly well for a man of his under- standing. His lands were originally of a good quality, and are of a mixed character. On one plantation, the grey and mulatto sandy land prevails, the subsoil being yellow and red clay a foot, and eighteen inches origi- nally, in parts of it, beneath the surface soi'. The balance of the land is a chocolate loam on a red clay subsoil. Some of it is con- sidered stiff red clay land. On the other plantation, the chocolate loam prevails with 212 THE SOUTHEKN PLANTER [April a close, stiff red clay subsoil, requiring a long and sharp-pointed plow to penetrate it when moderately dry. The rest of the land on this plantation, is grey and gravelly sandy soil, loose and porous. Most of the land on both places, is gently undulating ridges. Some of it is hilly, and some knolls. The stiff red clay land is the most difficult and expensive to cultivate, and is the best land for grain. It is also the most difficult of his land to manage on the level method of culture. I took my first lessons under him in the science, and owe him a debt of gratitude which can never be paid. He taught me the level culture, and I taught him the grading method. I commenced planting in 1844, in Hinds county, Mississippi, near Jackson, in copartnership with a brother. The level culture No. 1, and the grading method No. 1, both combined, without drains and hill-side ditches, had been in use a few years on that plantation. The soil, a close, tenacious, marly clay, of a yellow color, changing into an ashy colored soil, when thoroughly disintegrated and cultivated a year or two. I was partial to the level cul- ture, and he to the grading method. I found out, after a better acquaintance with the land, that the level culture retained the water too long, and made the land too wet for cotton. The grading method drained, but washed the land a good deal. After testing both methods to my satisfaction, I gave into his views rather from an avarici- ous motive than otherwise, to make better crops, though at a sacrifice of some land that took the streams and disappeared. From one to three inches fall were given to each row, when practicable, and the short inside rows plowed on a level. The land was rolling, and drains between the ridges conveyed the water into ditches and branches. We continued both systems until I Jeft in December, 1850, and moved back to this place. The grading method has been kept up by him. I commenced a mixed system here in 1851, and have practiced both of them to a certain extent. My land is chocolate and grey sandy land, on a red and yellow clay subsoil. The grey land is of a fine texture, and much of it runs together .and bakes. The chocolate land is loose and porous. It is generally a little undulating, some flat basins and ponds, ditching and surface rolling, and some It requires much and some drainage, under-draining. Forest growth, pine, oak, hickory, chestnut and poplar, with a variety of undergrowth. My experience and observation teaches me, that the level culture is the best method ever discovered to prevent arable land, of the majority of soils in the South, from washing by rains, but not the best always to secure good crops. The grading method is the safest as a general rule for the culture of cotton, and can be pursued to great ad- vantage on many soils that could be culti- vated well on the level method, when one is willing to lose a little soil to make a better crop, by draining the land. No one system of culture is, then, applicable to all soils; and on large plantations of mixed soils, both the level and grading systems should be ap- plied. He is a fortunate man who under- stands the different methods well enough to apply them to the best advantage to the different soils, on a large plantation. It re- quires close application to field study, a good knowledge of the geology of the soil and the agricultural character of the land, with years of experience, to know how to culti- vate land to the best advantage to the soil, and to the increased size of the purse. SECTION I. Definition of Horizontal Culture. Ilorizontalizing, Circling, and Leveling land are different terms employed by Agri- culturists, in the South, meaning all the same thing ; viz : cultivating land in parallel lines run by a leveling instrument to direct and control rain-water with the plow. SECTION II. Its Objects. The objects of the System of horizontal culture are, to irrigate, to drain, and to pre- serve arable soil, in the simplest and most economical manner. 1st. By collecting, retaining, and distri- buting rain-water, on the surface of arable land, it effects natural irrigation. 2d. By conveying it away, by artificial channels, it effects drainage. 3d. By a proper system of irrigation and drainage, the soil and food of plants are re- tained, and the fertility of the land is pre- served. SECTION III. General Considerations. Bain-water being a solvent of the food of 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 213 plants, and the medium of supplying them with many of their elements, the system of horizontal culture teaches us to control, and diffuse it in the soil, and distribute it in such a manner that the food of plants it contains, may be made available to the ut- most degree, in promoting their growth; and, when it exists in excess, to remove it without injuring, or washing away the soil. Hence, we conclude that a correct system of manuring and improving land, depends greatly upon a proper regulation of water by the horizontal culture. We perceive, then, that the horizontal culture is a beautiful branch of the science of Agriculture; that it is a mixed art, a combination of irrigation, drainage, and manuring. We cannot, therefore, study it well, appreciate it properly, and practice it successfully, without some knowledge of agricultural engineering, of the geology of the soil, and hydraulics, and the application of them to irrigation and drainage. We can then realize and appreciate the several advantages and connections of these branches of science with each other, in de- veloping the chemical and physical proper- ties of soils, and in the improvement of the fertility of land. To practice it scientifi- cally, and successfully, we must study and understand the geological formation, and the agricultural character of the soil, and ascertain by observation and experiment what plants grow on it best, and are most profitable to cultivate. Drill-husbandry, that is, the cultivation of crops in drills, by the ridge and furrow method, is indispensable, and the check and hill-culture are inadmissible except on level lands, as a general rule, by the system of horizontal culture. Of course, the broad- cast mode can be employed, as well with one method as with the other.' The horizontal culture, by the ridge and furrow method, conflicts with *the practice and opinions of many farmers, in the oldest of the Southern States, who advocate the check and hill culture ; but an acquaintance with the hori- zontal culture changes their practice and opinions. SECTION IV. The Different Methods of Horizontalizing land Are divided into two principal systems, viz : 1st. The Level Method of Culture. 2d. The Grading Method of Culture. The Level Mode, (or Irrigating System,} is divided into two modes, viz : 1st. Horizontalizing with an instrument, on the level culture, without the aid of guard-drains, and hill-side ditches; and, 2d. The level-culture, aided by guard- drains and horizontal ditches. The Grading Method, or Drawing Sys- tem, is divided into four different modes, viz: 1st. Horizontalizing with an instrument, giving a grade to the rows, without the assistance of guard-drains, and hill-side ditches. 2d. With a grade to the rows, the same as that given to the drains and ditches, ac- companied by guard-drains and horizontal ditches. 3d. With a grade given to the rows so a,s to empty their water into the drains and ditches. 4th. The straight-row method. The rows run up and down hills, and empty into hill- side ditches. Besides the above methods, there is the old mode of horizontalizing with the eye, without the aid of an instrument, or guard- drains, or hill-side ditches. section v. The Different Methods Explained. The old method of hill-side plowing by running the rows around hill-sides with the plow, directed with the eye, is mere guess work — of course very imperfect, and only an approximation to accuracy. It is done with the object of retaining the rain-water in some instances, and of remov- ing it in others; in either case, it cannot ef- fect the object in as perfect a manner as the new methods of level and grade work done on correct principles, by the leveling instru- ment. When the object is to retain the rain- water, it answers tolerably well in some countries, on porous, poor, sandy soils, where the showers are not frequent and are light, and where the leguminous crops are culti- vated mostly on high beds and lands, as a substitute for artificial irrigation, and where the spade and hoe are used, generally, for the purpose of forming the ridges. When adopted to drain hill-sides by the plow, unless the soil is not disposed to wash, it is very liable to do more injury to the land by washing it away than benefit by re- moving the* water. 214 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April It should not by any means be resorted to now, since we can substitute better methods for it. It is the first step towards the hori- zontal culture from the straight-row method; and was, perhaps, invented for the purpose of retaining instead of removing water. 1. Level Culture or Irrigating System. — By this method the rows are laid off with a leveling instrument on a perfect level, and the land cultivated without the aid of guard- drains, or hill-side ditches. Here, science steps in to correct the im- perfections of the eye. It is impossible to lay off a level row by the eye. The most skilful horizontalizer cannot judge with accuracy the degree of inclination of lands, and discover all the inequalities of surface well enough to hori- zontalize land on a level by the eye. But, with a rafter-level properly made and ad- justed, it can be done, on an even or un- even surface with perfect accuracy, on a dead level: and if the land be properly plowed the rows will hold all the water that falls on them. It is the best and only system ever in- vented to prevent comparatively level, and gently undulating lands, from washing. It is intended to retain all the water that falls on land just where it falls: this is natural irrigation. We all know the value of water for the nourishment of animals and plants. They cannot live without it. Crops often fail for want of it. By this method none is wasted. Enough water is absorbed during winter and spring rains by land cultivated on ' this system, to almost make some crops, especially when aided by light summer showers, that would fail to do so, cultivated by the grading method. This method is mest applicable to all poor, thirsty, porous sandy soils, whether they rest on clay or sandy subsoils; and to many varieties of clay soils not too compact and retentive of water. We think we may say with truth, that we never knew, in this country, but one kind of clay soil, on uplands, that this system was not applicable to, on the ground of making it too wet for profitable culture. That is the fine, close, tenacious, marly-clay soil, resting on a retentive yellow clay subsoil, of the black-jack, post-oak, and hickory ridges of Hinds, Madison, Yazoo, Carrol, Holmes, Warren, and other parts of Mississippi. Besides this kind of soil to which the level culture is objectionable, are the com- pact red and yellow clay soils of some hilly lands, and the blue and white clays of low- lands. The red and yellow clay lands may be cultivated by it, if they admit of subsoiling to advantage. It is seldom that the level culture is objectionable for corn and small grains, and the root crops. But when it causes the soil to become too wet during the cultivation of crops, to plow well, and hastens a rapid growth of grass and weeds that destroy the crops, it is an evidence that it should be abandoned, and a grading method substituted for it. 2. Level Culture with Guard-drains, or Hill-side ditches. — The rows are plowed on a level, and guard- drains, or hill-side ditches are added, with a slight grade to correct the evil of the excess of water, and remove it, should the ridges break. Some soils, such as close tenacious clays, though plowed deep, may absorb a great deal of water during heavy and repeated rains, until the plowed soil becomes well saturated; the water will then sink until it reaches the impervious strata, not broken by the plow, and move along that strata on steep hill-sides, until it accumulates in such quantities as to break the ridges, and flow downhill, carrying the soil with it. Again, in clay soils, plowed shallow, a heavy rain succeeding another heavy rain, that had caused the land to run together, to be baked by the sun, and its pores to be closed, may cause the water to accumulate in level rows until the volume and weight of water makes a breach, then some of the ridges give way, and the water is precipi- tated from row to row till it reaches an out- let. A mole, a stump, bad plowing, the wheels of a cart or wagon, and other causes may break the ridges, and cause the land to wash. To prevent such a disaster, guard-drains, — hill-side ditches have been invented, to aid and protect the level culture, and to correct the ignorance and errors of the inexperi- enced horizontalizer, and save his time, labor, and soil. But, in many instances, they en- courage careless work, and are sometimes of evil tendency. They should not be relied upon too much; the remedy may prove worse than the disease. 1. The Grading Method, {or Draining System.) — The great object of this method is surface drainage, of arable land : hence it is divided into, 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 215 1st. Horizontalizing with a grade given to the rows, without the aid of guard-drains and hill-side ditches. Every row is designed to drain itself, and of course the other drains are unnecessary. It is a kind of self-sustaining system, and a substitute for straight rows. It is beautiful in theory, but difficult to practice, as a gen- eral system, on all soils. In some fields, and parts of fields, no grade is necessary, whilst in others different grades are re- quired according to the inclination of land, the physical properties of soils, and the length of rows. The length of rows is very irregular by this method, and short rows emptying into long ones, pouring their water into them, force them to wash into gullies. Hence, it is impossible to prevent the soil from washing by this method. It should be confined, therefore, to close clay soils. This method answers best combined with level culture. 2d. Horizontalizing with a grade given to the rows the same as that of guard-drains and hill-side ditches. This method was adopted, doubtless, to correct the evils of the preceding method. When the drains are well made, they check the flow of water descending down the hills from the broken rows, and thus convey it away and protect the land beneath them. Without their aid much mischief might take place, but if the work by the preceding method be well done, there is no need of the drains to aid it. Imperfect work, then, excuses their employment. But they are indispensable evils to the system they are used to protect, and are much em- ployed. 3. Horizontalizing with a grade given to the rotes so as to empty their water into guard-drains and hill-side ditches. This is truly a draining process, employed on clay-uplands, and low-lands, and answers a good purpose when the rows are not too long, and the fall is correct. Of course the drains and ditches require considerable fall, and to be very capacious. It is popular with those planters who have clay soils, and trust much to overseers and negroes, and kind Providence for gentle showers, to make them crops. But overseers make mistakes, plowmen do bad work, and the clouds pour down heavy rains, and the soil, as it were, melts and runs rapidly away. To answer a good purpose, the overseers, plowmen, and drains require strict attention, or the land will be injured by this method. 4. The Straight row Method, with Hill- side Ditches. — The ditches in this instance are cut on hill-sides with considerable fall, and the land is plowed on the old straight-row method, the plowman raising his plow over the ditch banks as he passes them. It is evidently a troublesome business to raise the plow over the ditches, and keep them clean. If the soil be sandy, and disposed to wash, the ditches must be deep and large, the fall great, and the plowman careful, which is contrary to negro character, or else every heavy rain will fill up the ditches with sand, break their banks, and cut the land into gullies and galls. However, it has the re- commendation of being simple, and better than the old up and down hill method, with- out the protection of ditches. Experience will soon teach any one that it is a bad system for hilly lands : for low- lands, it answers a good purpose for quick and effectual drainage, and enables some low-lands to be cultivated that could not be without this kind of drainage. On the rich low wet lands, and the roll- ing up-lands, in the prairie or lime lands of Alabama and Mississippi, when too wet, this kind of expeditious drainage is the sine qua non, — the proper method to remove the water, and dry the land in time to prepare it for a crop, and to save the cotton from damage by excess of water. SECTION VI. Philosophy of the Level Method. It is true there are deep, sandy, alluvial soils that absorb all the water that falls on them during the heaviest rains ; but, again, there are other soils, when cultivated on the straight-row method, that are injured by the irregular distribution of water, one part of the field boing drained too much, whilst the land below it is being drowned; thereby, both parts sustaining an injury. The crops on such land grow and mature irregularly as the consequence. The level culture cor- rects these evils. It retains the water and soil in their proper place, and when the land is cultivated alike, all remains nearer the condition of dryness, and the crops grow off more uniformly on the same quality of land and mature nearer the same time. Should the land be manured, the ele- ments of the manure remain where de- posited, and are not removed by the first 216 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER April rain to the nearest ditch or branch. It ir- rigates and preserves the soil, when properly done. It is the best method to employ to aid in restoring exhausted lands. It is very difficult to lay down any set of rules by which to do the work; because, the physical properties of soils are such, and the inequalities of land vary so much, no one rule or set of rules would apply to any great extent of surface. One part of a field might require the level culture, and another part the grading method. Hence, we are forced to adopt the one or the other, according to circumstances, and to do the work correctly, we must be acquainted with all the different methods. It matters but little where the work be- gins or terminates in the field, so the rows are laid off accurately, on a level. The most important rule is to follow the level, let it lead to whatever point it may. It will run at every point of the compass, and form rows of every imaginable form and length, terminating wherever it may. It will lead the new beginner in the art into a maze from which he can scarcely extricate him- self, but he should have patience and perse- verance, and all will come out right and no land be lost. He must be content to follow the level, but not try and make it follow him, and force it to any particular place or termi- nation. The only way to terminate a row at a certain point, is to start the level at that point : but ten chances to one, in returning, if the next row does not go off at an angle, and terminate at some distance from the first starting point. It is immaterial whether the rows be long, short, straight or crooked, or where they begin and terminate, so they are on a level, and the land be well plowed in rows or ridges. This should ever be borne in mind. The horizontalizer will make mistakes, and be awkward at first, but will learn to do the work correctly. » SECTION VII. Advantages of the Level Culture. This system is the best mode of cultiva- ting land ever invented, to prevent the de- vastating effects of rain-water washing away the Foil and the manures put upon it. It enables the soil to absorb more water, and retain it better, and give it back to plants when needed, more effectually and regularly than any other mode, thus preventing the deleterious effects of drought. It makes the soil more uniform in production ; improves its fertility by retaining the manures; makes it easier to work, with less labor; causes the crops to grow faster, to be more uniform in growing and maturing; and as the rain-water is evenly distributed on all parts of the field alike, so that when one part can be plowed, all can be done at the same time; saves time in turning around at wet land. Disadvantages of the Level Method. It seems in the order of things in this world, there is an »evil attached to almost •every good. So it is in this instance, but we shall find that the disadvantages are over- come by practice, and are counterbalanced by the advantages. The disadvantages are, the unavoidable necessity of having so many short rows ter- minating at any part of the field, forcing the plowman to turn around often, and lose time by so doing: — (this time, however, is made up in the greater number of long rows:) — The injury to the crop, done by the plow, the mule and the hand, in turning around at the end of the short rows: The difficulty at first of doing the work well, and of plowing the rows out without breaking up the work and deranging the rows: The constant care and attention, by the over- seer or employer, to maintain and keep up the system. And the necessity of using the ridge and furrow system and abandoning the check and hill culture. [TO BE CONTINUED.] Harmless and Sure Cure for Warts. Take two or three cents worth of sal am- moniac, dissolve it in a gill of soft water, and wet the warts frequently with this solu- tion, when they will disappear in the course of a week or two. I have frequently tried this cure for warts, and it has never failed. A. P. [We are inclined to believe in the efficacy of our correspondent's cure for common warts, because we know that alkaline solu- tions softens them, and gradually eats them away, as it were. We have removed some of these unpleasant skin excrescences with a weak solution of potash applied in the same manner as the sal ammoniac. — Eds.] Scientific American. It is a sign of extraordinary merit, when those who most envy it are forced to praise it. 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 217 From the British F(ir»icrs' Magazine. Discussion on Drainage. The following lecture was delivered by Mr. Robert Bond, before the Halc&worlh Farmers' Club, convened on the 24th of September, 1858, for the discussion (by previous appointment) of the subject of Drainage. The Chairman having introduced the lec- turer to the meeting, Mr. Bond said: Mr. Chairman and Gen- tkmen — It is with pleasure I appear before you for the purpose of introducing the sub- ject of drainage for this evening's discus- sion; and I presume we meet here to give our own individual experience in preference to quoting the published opinions and state- ments of the great and antagonistic leaders upon the questions of deep and shallow draining. 1 shall, therefore, adhere to the accounts of my own doings and my own con- clusions, knowing well that your kindly feel- ing will absolve me from the charge of ego- tism, to which I do not fear in this case to expose myself. I only desire to see the sub- ject divested of dogmatism, and resolved into sound and safe principles of action, that science and practice may not be dis- united. Hitherto drainage discussions have been too much the battle-field of opposing parties, who have aimed rather at the tri- umph of their own pet dogmas than at a calm philosophical deduction — it has never been the arena of insipid unanimity, and I trust this evening we shall have that friend- ly dissent which excites discussion and leads to the general experience. We want to ad- vance the subject, if' only one step, toward the solution of scientific truth; but it will be as well for us to bear in mind that it has ever worn a cameleon hue, which for a prac tical demonstrative question can only be ac counted for by the fact that diversity of soil and climate admits of correct and equally truthful variations in opinion and in prac- tice. Where physical condition is the same, we can probably square ourselves to one no- tion, and agree upon depth and distance of drain; but physical differences as to subsoil, climate, and inclination, create practical dif- ferences in treatment. We may not attempt to discover a universal panacea for every ill applicable to the entire kingdom; this has been our vain and fruitless aim, but, as in physic, so in drainage, we can have no Hol- loway's ointment or Morrison's pills for the cure of all hydropical disease. We must vary oar treatment according to our patient; but it is for us to pronounce our opinion as to tlu- best system suited to this our own lo- cality. To revert once inure to the contro- versy for universal principles, we have often been interested to observe how fully the fashionable world of agriculture has followed a leader, and propounded the doctrine of deep drains at wide intervals, even in the spirit of a Cochin China mania ; whilst the advocates for a shallower system at closer intervals have borne much condemnation whilst adhering to their principles, and they have in reality been somewhat prejudiced against all opposing claims. I mentioned I would confine myself to my own experience, but it is desirable I should inform you what that experience is. I have practised the different methods of drainage at various depths on different characters of soil, and my operations have extended over an area of upwards of one thousand acres of land, and containing in lineal measurement five hundred miles of drain. I have, therefore, necessarily devoted much time and thought to this subject, and it is one in which for years past I have felt considerable interest. As to the advantages arising from drain- ing, they are so self-evident that I need not enlarge to any extent on this point; let us remember, too, as Suffolk men, that if our forefathers were not the inventors of the art, they at least were amongst the fore- most largely to adopt the practice and to appreciate its usefulness. Drainage is un- doubtedly the foundation of all improve- ment, and I know of no greater agricultural revolution by art or nature than the effects of good sound drainage upon wet clay lands. Only let us consider for a moment its effects from our own observation. We can recal to mind the actual state of an undrained, thin- skinned, cold, clay farm. Can anything look more uninviting, or present a more un- promising and unproductive appearance ? — It has the very aspect of barrenness; whilst its water-logged, sodden surface, covered and infested with every species of water-loving semi-aquatic weed natural to the soil points out the cause of its condition. Take it in its cultivation ; 'tis labour! labour! labour 'for man and beast, the result unrequited toil, and the effect upon the soil but an ex- change in the extremes from homogeneous mud to baked brick earth. And what is*the produce but a stunted and scanty yield, with its narrow rows of dwarfed straw and puny 218 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [Aprii oars. Nor can we wonder at such results, for our cultivated plants require moisture and not saturation, percolation and not stag- nation, heat and not cold, aeration ef the soil and not suffocation, friability and not compactness, manure and not poison. I have before said that drainage is the foundation of all improvement; without it, cultivation and manure are of but little avail; and I have observed upon such undrained farms that master and men, horses and eattle, buildings and fences, usually present the ap- pearance, and apparently imbibe the air, of the surrounding property. I can well un- derstand that a mismanaged impoverished farm produces poverty in the purse, parsi- mony in the outlay, ill-paid labourers, half- fed stock, and all ditto to match with the " Hungry hills/' " Van Diemen's fields," " Upper and Lower Wilderness," which are the appropriate cognomens of such wretched spots of mismanagement and slavery. — Drainage, then, is the main point ; it is de- sirable ; it will pay. Why, by that one op- eration we remove the very poison and pre- ventive of fertility; we remove the curse to our corn crops, and the food of the semi- aquatic weeds; we reduce the amount of necessary labour in cultivation ; we produce friability, admit the renovating air, the in- vigorating rays of the sun, the enriching shower ; render the manure applied availa- ble, producing so marked a change at har- vest that we have an abundant crop of a su- perior character, arriving much earlier to maturity. Consequently, with the same rent- charge and rates, with diminished horse-la- bour, and other advantages, we have an in- finitely better return ; and we are enabled to improve and extend our root culture, by adopting autumnal cultivation, thereby in- creasing our return in stock, which has usually ruled disproportionately high in price, espe- cially in times of cereal depression. I repeat, I am convinced no investment pays better, whether upon arable or pasture land. The arable becomes, under a sound system of continuously effective drainage, totally chang- ed in character and fertility; double the amount may be produced, while the previ- ously wet pasture is equally benefited, and changes its herbage. Remember in Job it occurs, " Can the rush grow without mire ? can the flag grow without water V Thus the* water-grasses — from the lack of food, stagnant water, to sustain them — die out, and are succeeded by clovers and other nu- tritious grasses. Upon one pasture in Col Bcncc's possession and occupation, there is an extraordinary instance of change. It was four years since an undrained pasture, pre- senting that blue poverty-stricken appear ance peculiar to wet grass lands. The her- bage, if it deserved the name, was a short, thick, broad, rush-shaped, sharp-edged grass, which the stock neither liked nor thrived upon ; but now, since drainage, a change has gradually taken place, and it produces an excellent crop of fucculent grasses. At the present, I had rather pay a rental of thirty shillings per acre for it than fifteen shillings previously. Since drainage, the surface has been continually covered with the old-sered plants which have died off, and I believe at one time many might have presumed that the pasture was even injured by over-drain- age ; this would have been a great mistake, and it is certainly improved fifty per cent. Allowing, then, that drainage is desirable, and that it will pay, still the question natu- rally arises — Which is the most efficient and the most economical method ? I have drained with pipes at the depth of three, four, and five feet, at various distan- ces; I have also drained with whins and bushes; and I have used the mole-plough. With your permission, I will now give you the conclusions at which I have arrived. I am decidedly in favour of tile-draining; but, as it is an expensive operation, and a per- manent improvement to the soil, it is essen- tial that a part of the expense be borne by the landlord in connexion with the tenant; and the proportion of the outlay must be governed by the length of lease granted. — I believe as a general rule, where no lease exists, nor an agreement for the payment of unexhausted improvements upon quitting — I believe, if the tenant's outlay is governed by the cost of bush-draining, and the land- lord pays the surplus for substituting pipes, it is a safe rule, and mutually advantageous. In such cases, those gentlemen under whom I have the pleasure to act, have adopted the safer course of arranging that their own pipe-layer shall place the pipes in the drain, quite irrespective of the men executing the digging. In every case it is desirable that the men contracting for the draining should have nothing to do with placing the pipe, as it prevents that hurried and imperfect work- manship which has repeatedly brought pipe- drainage into disrepute. What does a man care, who is only interested in executing the 1 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 219 work as quickly as possible? He knows well he can bury the defects; and we have known instances in which the low spade has never been dug, and the pipes, consequent- ly, not placed. Presuming, then, that land- lord and tenant have made an equitable and fair arrangement, which is the best, the cheapest, the most efficient, and most judi- cious system of draining for our neighbour- hood ? what the depth and distance? which the best direction ? what materials to use? the size of the pipe? the c»st, duration, and return? Upon our clays, I do not approve of five-feet drains at intervals of forty feet, as depth, I find, does not compensate for the distance apart; the land is not thoroughly drained; the crop is best nearest the drain; and wetness is plainly perceptible in the in- termediate space midway between the drains. Five feet, too, into hard, dry, blue, tenacious clay, is no joke; and the expense of the manual labour is very considerable ; but, as such drainage is not sufficient, we must dis- card it as unworthy of our adoption, as ours is not a subsoil of gaults and gravels, where, I believe, such drainage answers well. I have drained at four feet deep, and twenty- seven apart, in stiff", chalky clay. I am sat- isfied it has answered, but yet not perfectly : the extra depth has not compensated for the additional distance. I would mention a fact in connexion with one field of fifteen acres I drained in this manner. I attempted to dispense with the water-furrows; but it would not do. The field, after a heavy fall of rain, was quite flooded, the furrows standing full; even the sketches themselves were partially under water. The water-furrows were, of course, again resorted to as a necessity. — Upon this same field, the tenant who suc- ceeded me, not being satisfied that the drain- age acted quickly enough, cut drains of whin transversely above the pipe-drains; but, to his astonishment, they have never acted, the pipe-drains carrying the entire quantity of water, thus most plainly proving that water enters the drain from the bottom, and not at the top and sides, as many have supposed. It is clear to reason that water gradually rises in the subsoil, with the fall of rain, till it reaches the level of the drain, when it naturally runs off in the aperture to the adjacent outlet. To return : I consider three-feet pipe draining, at sixteen feet apart, the cheapest and most effective. It has always answered my purpose best. The land has been more fully drained: There has been a freedom from wetness, also from too great a dampness, even at the extreme points from the drains; the crop has been even uniform in result; the pipes have been fully protected from injury, either by tread- ing, or by the roots of our cultivated crops; and I pronounce it the most economical and the most efficient system of drainage for this neighbourhood. Three feet has proved effi- cient depth to prevent the slightest injury from capillary attraction ; it has also allow- ed of ample depths for the roots of plants to work in. And it is singular that, whilst in agriculture some are advocating an extreme depth of subsoil, in which the plant can search for food, as if a mine of immense wealth existed there, often in the culture of fruit-trees, even after deep drainage, the de- scent of the root is prevented, because ad- verse to productiveness. I know objections have been raised to the use of pipes, espe- cially on lands with but a slight fall. I have used them where comparatively flat, with perfect safety; but in such cases I pre- fer the two-inch-diameter pipe, in preference to the inch'and-half ; and I strongly recom- mend the use of the theodolite, or spirit- level, to secure the best fall. I believe it is often impossible to discover the best direc- tion for the drain without an instrument of the kind; and I have often been surprised to find so great an inclination on such an ap- parently flat surface. As to the course of the drains generally, if the angle of descent is not too great, I drain with the best natural inclination, much preferring that principle of action to cross- ing it diagonally. I object that the drain should be in precisely the same direction or parallel with the furrow; consequently if the greatest gradation is in the line in which the field is generally ploughed, I afterwards alter the direction of the ploughing as I find desirable. I observe we frequently neg- lect to clear the eyes of our drains, and to scour the water-courses, as necessary. I be- lieve it desirable we should not only careful- ly attend to these essential points, but it is also requisite that we frequently send round, at suitable times, to examine each outlet, that we may assure ourselves the drains work freely. I am of opinion that the pipe drains will last for a vast number of years, probably fifty, or even for a much longer period. — Thus durability is one of the great advanta- ges which pipes have over bushes, whins, 220 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [Apri or straw bands; where I have used such perishable substances as the latter, the drain- age has been renewed after eight or twelve years. Further, whilst the pipes remain ef- fective and the land yearly improves, the bush drains gradually fall in ; even after four years they become impaired, and gradually get worse, until renewed; consequently du- ring the latter part of the term the land has the disadvantage of partial and imperfect drainage. Again, rats and rabbits are great destroyers of bush drains; and I have one one field now, in which this description of drain is literally overrun with rats. The dif- ference in cost between bushes and pipes I have found to be about £2 5s. per acre — £4 10s. for the pipe drainage, and £2 5s. for the bush drainage; consequently the ten- ant at will, or with a short lease, or of un- certain tenure, without a covenant for the allowance of unexhausted improvement, or without any direct assistance from his land- lord in the draining, adheres to the bush system, which answers his purpose; nor would a heavier outlay be prudent under the circumstances. I have chiefly used the mole plough upon comparatively wet pastures, and in every case it has answered well at the small cost of 20s. per acre; and the drains have lasted eight years. As to returns generally, I have found that drainage repays the outlay, according to the amount of the first cost, in two, three, or four years; and sorry indeed should I be, to farm wet clay land without such a system of tho- rough drainage. The advantage of drain- age to the country at large is immense, and the benefit might be vastly increased by en- lightened covenants between landlord and tenant. We want to ensure a larger extent of drainage, and of better quality. If a proprietor of clay land, I should certainly make the drainage with pipe a matter of ar- rangement upon letting an occupation, and I know in the course of years I should be greatly a gainer by the combined investment. I would here remark that I am in no way opposed to deep drainage; I have found it to answer in West Suffolk upon springy land, upon gaults and gravels ; but upon clays I am especially opposed to the expense, be- cause depth does not compensate for dis- tance. In executing the work, I plough out the drain to one foot in depth, and the drainers draw two spades of one foot each — three feet. The items are : Eight score rods of digging at 4s. 6d. £\ 2,600 pipes at 18s. - - -2 Expense of cartage, laying pipe, also drawing drains, - - - Tl) stab illc £4 1 To recapitulate : We have considered th poverty and infertility of undrained lands we have shown that drainage is the found tion of all improvement, the precursor c many advantages, ensuring a better retun in grain and gra$s, allowing of improved an* extended root culture, and of an increase profit from stock farming. I have recom mended three-feet pipe drains at sixteen-fee intervals as the cheapest and most efficien system for this neighbourhood, the expense to be shared by the landlord, the pipe to b laid by a trustworthy person, the direction of the drains to a certain angle to be witl the fall, larger pipes to be used on flat land the theodolite or spirit level also to be used water-furrows to be retained, that the wate enters the pipe at the bottom of the drain the drains and furrows not to be parallel the superiority of pipes over bushes ; th( cost and probable durability of each system the great advantage which has accrued tc the country from drainage, and the need o a better agreement between landlord anc tenant to ensure its more extended and mor( perfect adoption. From the Southern Agriculturalist. A Night with the Man who did not take the Papers. It is a dismal day, truly, and as this cold nor'-easter drives its half-frozen mist into every fold of our outer covering, we are for- cibly reminded of the old Scotch Proverb, " That a wind fra the east blaws nae gude for man nor beast/' But we will draw our great coat more snugly about us, and, peering from beneath the visor of a weather-beaten cap, strive to find something more cheerful to think aboutj than the weather. We are drawing near a settlement — these old fields grown up in pine and broomsedge, tell us that man has been here in times past. Now we approach fields yet full of dead trees and stumps, disfigured by bald spots and gullies. Wheat has been sown upon them, too — we know it by the stripes of deeper green running up and down the hills far away, as it fell more thickly between the cotton-beds. :i 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 221 The cotton-stalks stand high and low, and at about the right angle to throw a cradle- full of wheat to the wind at harvest time. — On our left is a big clearing — " more fresh land for cotton, to enable us to rest the old land." Rest!! Wheat, pastured by every living thing in the neighborhood — corn, oats, and so on — this is the common rest. On our right, upon the highest point of the plantation, looms up a huge log gin-house, and the uncovered screw. Why do people always select the highest ^point for a gin- house? and why are they always so hard run, that they cannot take time to cover a screw ? The piles of cotton-bales are arranged to show well — ten, fifteen, twenty-five, thirty- five and seven — forty- two — pretty good. — These people are taking the cream out of the hills pretty fast. Hard by, on the hill-side, are rows of low log pens which we take to be stables, from the head of a disconsolate horse now and then sticking out between sundry fence rails, which are jammed into certain apertures, in- tended, we suppose, for doors. A few colts lean shivering against the wall, amusing themselves by a search after a stray blade of fodder in the gable. A wagon-body lies upside down in the yard, and the "running gear" stands taking- it coolly with its tongue lolling out upon the ground. The yard is perfectly bare — no in- dications of manure-heaps or littering. At the gate, an interesting fraternity of razor backs stand squealing; poor fellows! this gloomy evening has made you anticipate Sambo's evening hoo-ee ! But the odor in- sinuating our olfactories just now, as well as certain unmistakeable signs by the road-side, warn us that the "c'uppen" is near; here it is on our right, on a bleak knoll, so as to be dry, we reckon. The remains of a few straw- pens, which, having been undermined, are tilted over about the lot, and the poor dumb brutes are scattered about, some trying to pick a palatable morsel out of the mouldy, half-rotten heaps, while others are propping themselves against the worm fence to keep off ihe wintry blast. It has always seemed to us that a cow must have a very strong imagination, or a great deal of philosophy, to think a worm fence a protection against old Boreas. But here we are opposite the house — a two-story framed wooden building, 30 by 15, sheds and piazza to match. The front pi- azza is decorated by sundry strings of red pepper, seed bags, saddles, bridles, blowing horns, and tin pans. Night is drawing her sable curtains round, and we must take such quarters as we can get. Our host meets us at the door, and ushers us into the " big room," where we find all the members of the family .seated around a glowing green wood fire, before whose in- fluence we soon find our humanities begin to flow. The price of cotton, probability of rise or fall, increased production, horrid condition of the roads, railroad hopes, and enterprises of great pith and moment, were discussed in turn, till supper was announced. As we expected, fried ham and eggs, sausages, corn light bread, blue biscuit, cold pies and weak coffee, make the course. After supper, we return to the blazing fireside. I glanced round the room, with the hope of finding a book or newspaper. Fox's Book of Martyrs, Remarkable Shipwrecks and Disasters, and Gunn's Domestic Medi- cine, made up the assortment. "Can you give me a late paper, sir?" " Well, I don't take any paper now; I took the By-other Jonathan a while, but them cussed Yankees got so ripping on abolition, that I quit the whole concern." Drawing the first number of The South- ern Agriculturalist out of our pocket, we re- marked : " Here's a paper, sir, we picked up where we lodged last night, that promises to be a valuable acquisition to your depart- ment." " What paper is it, sir?" " The Southern xlgriculturalist, a paper — " "All humbug — I don't believe a word in this book farming. I never seed anything in one of them papers but stuff about ma- nuring, ditching o' hill-sides, subsiling, and sich like." " You don't believe in manuring, then ?" "No, I don't; it'll do very well for gard- ings, and turnups, and sich as that, but a body that plants a full crap never has time to be dickering about manures — its in the way of everything." "Don't you believe that one acre well ma- nured and well cultivated, will produce more than two badly managed ?" "Well, it might; but, like the Injun's gun, it'll cost more than it comes to. I can clear a piece of land and pay for it out of the truck made on it before I can bring an old piece back to what it was." 222 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER [ApriI "Granted; but, my dear sir, after you've paid for it, what is it worth ? You've worn your's out paying for it, and just the moment your's is gone, mine is good for a bale to the acre." "Pshaw, stranger! that's all book farm- ing; it looks mighty pretty on paper, but it won't work out the right answer. I tell you it won't do; I've got a neighbor who's al- ways at it, and does nothing else; its ma- nure, manure, subsile, subsile, and write for the papers; all stuff, sir; his crib's always empty, stock poor, and everything out o' fix, except his fancy patches — they're great; but there's the Injun's gun again pinting at you." "Granted, too; but, my dear sir, did that neighbor succeed better before he commenc- ed book farming? — did he ever succeed at anything he went at?" "Well, I can't say that he ever did." "That's the misfortune, my friend — when- ever you find a humbug among the book far- mers, it is trumpeted to the world, but when success crowns one's efforts, its, oh ! he's a practical man. Nothing is ever said of your practical humbugs. Have you, my dear sir, no neighbors who never read a book, and still make poor crops?" "Oh, yes; but you see that's owing to bad judgment." "And it's bad judgment, exactly, that makes a bad book farmer — nothing else; the man who is not able to sift the chaft out of his wheat, we take it, will rarely get a good loaf of bread. In book farming, as in everything else — nothing should be taken for granted — the best of judgment, common sense, should be applied. If you put an in- experienced hand to work with a set of cabi- net-maker's tools, the chances are that he will cut himself badly; he must become ac- customed to their use, before he can employ safely or profitably; so in farming — a man must, by the exercise of good common sense and observation, learn something of the practice and the nature of what's to be done, before he can safely or profitably apply the learning of books. But there is one thing I know we will agree in, deep plowing, what say you?" "I don't believe in it — its ruination to land — it turns all the clay up, and makes the ground hold so much water that it's nev- er dry in the winter or wet in the summer. I never could make plowing and reading go together." "Well, don't you think if you had ditch- ed those hill-sides in your wheat-field ove the way, you would have made more whea and saved your land?" "I don't; it wastes too much land, thes ditches; I'd as leave have 'em where natur puts 'em as men. This eternal turning %n< twisting about over a field, a body gets mjL work done, besides cutting your land all u] and ruining the looks of the field in the bar; gain." Beaten at all points, to the evident deligh of the youngsters, who thought the old mai had used us up right, we struck our colors and begged to be put to bed; and after s night's immersion in a spongy feather bed with two little pillows for our companions — about as big as a goose-egg — in a shed-room neither ceiled or plastered, sundry vacant window-lights stuffed with old hats, our ol- factories regaled by a compound extract oi dried peaches, sole-leather, and ing'uns sets. we dedicate to you, dearly beloved laborer? in a good work, the benefit of our musings. DOBBS. Chief Aim in Farming. There are many cultivators of the soil who seem to have no well defined purpose in their husbandry. They have no plans laid far ahead, which they are seeking to realize in their practice. They exist rather than live, are listless in their efforts, and effect no beneficial changes in the soil they attempt to cultivate. Everything about them wears the aspect of decay. The farm buildings are never repaired while it is pos- sible to get along without it. You can see the gaps in the roof, where the winds have blown off the shingles, and the missing boards- and swinging clapboards from the sides of the building. The fences are never re-set, no stones are dug from the mowing fields, and no drains are made in the swamps and low lands. They simply con- trive to get along, their lands and them- selves growing poorer every year. There is another class, who have purpose and energy enough, but it is not wisely di- rected. Their aim in farming is to get the most possible out of the soil, and to put the least possible back, in the shape of com- posts and fertilizers. Their whole farming operations are based upon the theory that the soil is a living well that will always send forth its waters as long as there is any- body to draw. They plant and sow as long as they can get remunerative crops, and 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTKU 223 then cither sell outf, or resort to concentra- ted fertilizers, which stimulate the soil to part with its last elements of fertility, and leave it nearly barren. They arc generally energetic men, work hard, and push their help as hard as they do their acres. They plant a very large breadth of land, and in a few years exhaust a whole farm. They do not believe in plowing in crops, or in making composts, or in saving the stable manures. They cannot see any utility in carting dirt into the barn-yard, and then carting it out again. It looks like a waste of labor. If near the shore, they rely upon fish to stimulate the soil when it fails to produce otherwise, and thus crop after crop of grain and grass is taken off, until the land is exhausted of its carbon, and runs to sorrel. If inland, they rely upon Peruvian Guano, which in a few years serves the soil in the same manner. The theory of these farmers is to get great crops, at whatever expense to the land. This is the skinning method of farming, and the more energy these farmers have the sooner the land is ruined. Now, we believe the chief aim in all good farming to be the improvement of the soil until it reaches the point where maximum crops are produced at the least expense. Wise husbandry regards the farm simply as a machine for turning out crops. The ma- chine is the matter of first importance. This is always to be kept in good running order, and its efficiency is to be increased by all economical methods. The man who farms upon this system will never sacrifice soil for a great crop. His aim is to have every crop taken off, leaving the land in a better condition than he found it. He aims in every working of the soil to increase its depth, and to add to it more elements of fertility than he removes in the crops, and to make the crops not only pay for them- selves, but to pay for the improvement of the acres upon which they are grown. In carrying out this aim, so as to realize these results, a man shows his skill as a cul- tivator. Ir is a comparatively easy thing for any one, who has money, to improve the soil so that it shall produce crops paying for the labor of growiug them, and the interest on two or three hundred dollars an acre. Stable manure enough well plowed in will do this. But it is altogether another mat- ter to make this improvement pay for itself. Yet it is a possible thing to do this, and there are farmers skilful enough to accom- plish this result, and this we hold to be the true aim in the 1 cultivation of the soil. All good farming, then, must look to a permanent occupation of the soil. Eco- nomical improvements can not be made in a single year. The most judicious improve- ments, those which finally pay the (arrest profits, require several years to bring in their full returns. It is a matter of great importance that our farming population should not only be settled, but that they should feel settled, and plan all their opera- tions upon the farm as if they expected to spend all their days upon it. Here is a ten acre lot now in mowing, cutting ten tons of hay, worth one hundred dollars. It has in it some stumps, more boulders, some brush by the wall, and a few wet places, growing nothing but sour grasses and flags. It can be cleared of all obstruc- tions, be underdrained, subsoiled and ma- nured, so as to produce three tons of hay to the acre for the sum of say one thousand dollars. It will v not pay the present occu- pant to do this the coming year, if he is going to sell out the year following. But he may accomplish all this economically in five years, furnish profitable employment for his help, introduce the mowing machine, and cut more fodder upon the field than he now cuts upon the whole farm. He may get crops enough from the field during the five years to pay for all the improvements, leaving the increased value of the land, certainly not less than a hundred dollars an acre, as the reward of his skill in hus- bandry. This is an illustration of what a farmer's aim should be, and a good example of the kind of improvements that are needed upon most farms, at least upon the seaboard. The fields want to be cleared of rocks, the swales need deep underdrains cut through them, with smaller side drains running into them at right angles ; old walls want removing, and the fields enlarging to ten or twenty acres ; the whole surface need to be thor- oughly worked and manured, so as to pro- duce maximum crops. By this thorough method, horse labor may be substituted for that of man, so as save full half of the present expense of raising and harvesting crops. In smooth land, nearly all the plant- ing and hoeing can be done by a horse ; all the mowing, reaping, cradling and raking can be done by the same method. 224 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April The man who will lay his plans wisely to improve his soil, making this his chief ob- ject, and who will judiciously expend his oapital in the improvement we have indica- ted, is in a fair way to gain a competence. This kind of farming in the long run, will pay amply, and we believe more surely than any other business. The skinning process, which is reckless of the soil, and looks only to the crops, is bad policy both for the farm and its owner. Let it be abandoned. From the American Stock Journal Care of Horses. We may not hope to remove existing evils, simply by calling attention to them, but we can point them out, and leave the work of reform to whom it belongs. Let us confine ourselves, in this brief article, to some of the more prominent features in the care of horses. Assuming that an animal which has good treatment, will be sound and healthy, while one that does not receive this care will be diseased, we are led to believe that to pro- mote the health and comfort, and to secure the kind treatment of animals under his charge, should be the constant aim of the breeder. It does not necessarily injure a horse to work, or to trot fast, provided he receives good care after performing the labor. The practice is an inhuman one, of driving a horse fast, and then putting him in the stable without a good brushing ; or letting him stand where the cold wind or night air comes upon him, without throw- ing a blanket over him as a protection. This is a simple matter, yet any one who neglects it, has no feeling for the health or comfort of his horse. Feeding is an item of great importance in the care of horses; but as every breeder has satisfied himself in regard to the best and most proper method, it will be necessa- ry to treat of it at length. Be sure to avoid musty feed of whatever kind, whether hay, straw, corn, or grain. It is dear at any price, and should never be fed to a horse. Give only good, sweet hay; and clean grain. It is an excellent plan to cut hay, and mix it with Indian meal or middlings. Salt the feed once a day, and often as once a week throw in a small handful of wood ashes. Pure water should be provided with regu- larity. If this course is uniformly pursued, horses will seldom be troubled with any dis- ease, but will be healthy and sound. If those who now feed dry hay without cutting, will try the plan given above, my word for it, it will not only be found cheaper, but your horpes will look fifty per cent, better. Horses should have plenty of room in a stable, and not too much deprived of the liberty of motion. Close confinement after hard work, is apt to abate their circulation too suddenly, make them chilly and stiffen their joints. When horses are kept in stables, as they always are the coldest half, if not the whole of the year, the curry comb and brush should be used faithfully every day. This treatment, will not only make them look better, but they will be more healthy, and have more courage and activity. It is a bad practice to omit this operation ; more especially is it necessary after a hard day's work, when they begin to grow cold from being sweated by labor. Then it should never be omitted. In warm weather, it would be better for the health of the horse if he were allowed his liberty, to roam at pleasure in the pas- tures, provided a shelter is afforded as a protection, both from the intense heat of the sun, and the damp, chilly atmosphere of night ; as well as from cold winds and pelt- ing storms. Horses that are worked every day in summer, should be kept on green fodder in the stable, in preference to grazing in pastures. It is no great burden to tend them; and a large quantity of manure will be saved. Is there any good breeder who fails to per- form these simple acts of kindness to his horse, contributing as they do in so large a degree to promote his health and comfort ? Can- not our horses be kept in better order ; re- ceive more attention and greater kindness the coming winter, than they have previous- ly ? Is not the merciful man " merciful to his beast V S. L. B. Broohdale Farm, Maine. The Hollow Horn. — " The disease of cattle, known as hollow horn, is causing an annual loss to be estimated by millions of dollars in this State alone. This disease is spinal, caused hi/ the skin adhering to the banc of the hack and preventing circulation, and may be cured as follows : " Rub with the hand with as much force and friction as possible the hide of the ani- mal, on the back-bone, from the tail to the horns, thereby restoring circulation." 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 225 From the Horticultural and Botanical Magazine. Sources of Vegetable Matter. BY DAVID CHRISTY. The elements entering into the composi- tion of vegetable matter, are of two kinds — organic and inorganic. The former class of elements, comprising by far the larger portion of the bulk of vegetable bodies, consists of those parts which during com- bustion, disappear in the state of gases, and the latter, of those that remain in the form of ashes. Combustion, therefore, in effect, is merely a separation of the organic from the inorganic elements of the substance which is burned. The same may be said, also, of the process of digest ion. Vegeta- bles, eaten as food by animals, undergo a process, in digestion, similar in its effects with that which takes, place in their com- bustion : a separation of the organic and inorganic parts being effected, by which the former are converted into flesh and blood, while the latter pass off as excre- ment. The process of decay, or decomposition, which dead trees and plants undergo, pro- duces the same results as to those of com- bustion and digestion : it being only a much slower one, and requiring years to ac- complish that which, in the other case, is done in an hour or a day. By careful analysis, chemists have also discovered that the ashes of plants, left by burning, do not contain a single inorganic element that did not belong to the soils in which they grew; and repeated experi- ments have demonstrated, that a plant will not come to perfection in soils lacking any one of the elements found in the ashes of the mature plant of the same kind or spe- cies, except that one of the alkalies is some- times substituted for another. It is inferred from this, that all the inorganic parts of vegetables are derived from the soils : that is to say, all that portion of vegetable mat- ter which remains in the ashes after com- bustion, is taken up from the earth during the period of the gfc)wth of vegetables. An examination will show how fully the chemical constituents of the ashes of vege- tables correspond with those of the soils, and these, again, with those of the rocks from which the soils have been derived. Such an investigation will enable the rea- der to see, very clearly, the relations exist- ing between the earth and the vegetable 15 kingdom. A comparison of the organic elemonts of vegetables, with the ele- ments of the atmosphere, will also show that with a single exception, they are all derive^ from the atmosphere. The rela- tion, then, that the earth and atmosphere bear to the vegetable kingdom, is this : the earth supplies to all vegetables the inor- ganic elements of their growth, while the atmosphere affords to them their organic elements. In proceeding to describe the chemical elements to which reference has been made, the gases claim the precedence, as occupy- ing the most important position; and these being disposed of, the remaining part of the chapter will embrace a notice of the non-metalic elements, existing as solids at the common temperature. Oxygen is a permanent gas, when un- combined, and is the most extensively dif- fused element in nature. It forms more than one-fifth part of the atmosphere, and nearly eight-ninths, by weight, of the water of the globe : enters as a constituent into nearly all the earths and rocks, and, with a few exceptions, into all organic products. Oxygen gas is prepared by disengaging it from some substance with which it has en- tered into combination. By means of the galvanic battery, it may be obtained in large quantities from water, and, by the action of heat, from the oxyd of mercury oxyd of maganese, or chlorate of potash. Oxygen may be made to unite with all the other elements except fluorine, and forms what are called oxyds, of which the rust of iron is an example. With the same ele- ment oxygen often unites in several pro- portions, forming a series of oxyds, which are distinguished from each other by the different prefixes enumerated in chemical nomenclature. Many of its compounds are acids, particularly those which contain more than one equivalent of oxygen to one of the other elements, and compounds of this nature are those which it most readily forms with the non-metalic elements : such as car- bonic acid with carbon, sulphuric acid with sulphur, and phosphoric acid with phospho- rus. But oxygen unites in preference with single equivalents of a large proportion of the metalic class of elements, and forms bodies which are called bases : such as pot- ash with potassium, soda with sodium, lime with calcium, magnesia with magnesium, protoxyd. of iron with iron, &c. A certain 226 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April number of its compounds are neither acid nor alkaline, and are therefore called neu- tral bodies : such as the o.ri/d of hydrogen, or water, id tb iefull; Ik joil ke The think l Now, 1 ntlit' our pi; K cities fields, that I lave broke From the National Intelligencer. | The Camel— His Nature, Habits and Uses. Washington, Nov. 29, 1858. To the Editors of tha National Intelligencer : (tKntlemen : I observed in the National Intelligencer of the 24th inst., a re-publica- tion of an article from the Alabama Senti- nel, " On the Uses of Camels, by a corres- pondent who signs himself " Jatros." The purpose of the article is to induce inquiry as to the usefulness of the Camel in the production of corn and cotton, and on our plantations generally. Having been occu- pied now ten years with the experiment of introducing the Camel into this country, per- mit me to offer, through your columns, brief- ly, to " Jatros" and other inquirers, a few of the results of reading, observation and thought upon these points. To do so con- cisely, and at the same time sufficiently, I will follow them in their order, as presented by your correspondent. The Climative range of the Camel, within which he has been known indisputably to live, thrive and be useful, may be stated at from 50° to 52° of north latitude. The mean temperature of this zone may be rated at from 50° to 68° Fahrenheit. As ani- mals, we know, are diffused over the globe, first, according to zones of climate, and, second, according to degrees of longitude ; and as we know that " camel land" and the United States are included in the same zones of climate; and as, further, the secondary order of arrangement (by longitude) is but of trivial importance, your correspondent is right in his supposition "that the camels would flourish in any latitude within the United States." The cost of a Camel, a good serviceable one, landed at Mobile or Pensacola, may be put down at from $150 to $200 — not more, I think, if the purchase and transportation are judiciously managed. The greatest ex- pense in general will be in the freight. In any project, therefore, for the introduction of the animal, this must be the main item for close calculation. So far as the voyage is concerned, there need be no apprehension, for I know of no animal of so little trouble and so comfortable at sea as the camel. I speak from a tolerably large experience in the transportation of horses and mules dur- ing our war with Mexico. So far as the motion of the vessel goes, whether in calm or in gale , one hundred camels would n< cause as much anxiety or give as muc trouble as ten horses. The camel does not consume more fooj than a horse or a mule ; prefers a coarse] diet; satisfies itself readily with either scant grazing or browsing; requires feeding bi once a day, being a ruminant; and woul ] be with difficulty distressed for water, requires no close stable; only a shed pre tecting it from cold northerly winds an from falling weather; and requires no groon ing, though certainly healthier and better like all other animals, for a clean skin. Th camel is undoubtedly a hardier and thoughe animal than the horse; not surpassed, il equalled in these respects, by the mule ; am, with half the forage of either, and witl two or three hours of grazing or browsing can be kept in condition. In addition t the economy of forage, the use of the camel saves the outlay for wagons and carts, har ness, shoes, and the necessary repairs them. The pack-saddle being so simple ii its construction as to be readily made on th plantations, its cost will be but trifling. It; weight, moreover, compared with that of i b T"l wagon or cart, increases the physical energy devoted to the transportation of goods. Foi short distances, say about a plantation, Oi for six or eight miles on the road, a strong camel will carry on an average from eight hundred to one thousand pounds. Th(| Tiulus of Asia Minor, the produce of the double-humped Bactrian male on the single' humped Arabian female, will average, foil the same distances, from one thousand tc Ta J fifteen hundred pounds. All of the state- ments in my official report of what was done by the camels under my direction in Texas ; are made from accurate weights and closely computed distances. So far, the general advantages from using camels may be summed up as follows They will flourish as well in the United States as either horses or mules They may be introduced at Mobile or Pensacola at rates not greater, certainly not much greater, than present prices for good mules. expensive to feed orflin chopi pi fen, They are not as expensive : ; t as horses or mules. They require no close stabling or groom- ing. They are as tough and as hardy as either horse or mule. 1859.] THE' SOUTHERN PLANTER. 239 They save a heavy outlay for wagons, carts, harness, and shoes, and a constant tax for their repairs. Their physical energy is not largely drawn upon for the draught of a wagon or cart, J and therefore is proportionately given more usefully to the transportation of goods. They will do more work at the same cost and keeping than either horse or mule. These are the genera'l advantages that I 1( ( think may be fairly claimed for the camel. Now, let us examine how far this animal, with these advantages, may be suitable for «' our plantation or farm uses. *j In Egypt I have seen the camel used in '1 cities and in the country, on plantations, in fields, and on the road, for eve/y purpose \ that horses and mules are used with us. I ! &jhave seen them transporting bricks and , broken stone from yards and quarries for building, sleepers, rafters, scantling, boards, or flooring, &c. I have seen them carrying chopped straw, corn, cotton, fodder, mer- chandise of all kinds, men, women and chil- dren, and with their burdens stepping intelli- gently and with sure-footed n ess into and out of clumsy ferry boats. And I have seen them usefully occupied in carrying burdens on the dams and check banks of our rice plantations. Is there anything more than these uses that our plantations and farms re- quire ? As a Southern man, from a cotton, corn, and rice growing section, I believe that in many respects we might use camels with ad- vantage in our agricultural labors, while pulling corn or fodder, or picking cotton, in transporting them from the fields to the barn or gin-house, in carrying seed, manure, fire- wood, &c, about the plantation, and in transporting produce and goods to and from the railway or market. So far as the negro is concerned, I am satisfied, from a know- ledge of the nature and habits of both, that no animal better suited to him in all re- spects than the camel can be given to his management. That the preceding may prove of interest enough to find a place in your columns, and result in benefit to our country, especially to that section of it we both hail from, is my apology for trespassing upon you. Very respectfully, Your obedient servant, Henry C. Wayne, Major United States Army. n 1 as loin- tlier From Dickens' Household Words. Roses. 0! the ineffable delight of a trip into the country, to see a show of roses, when you have a high-spirited, fast-trotting, rose- fancying hobby-horse to ride ! " Cato," — one of our most learned authors, informs us — " Cato seemed to dote on cabbage." Myself may boast of out-Catoing Cato, in one re- spect: for I dote to distraction on cab- bage-roses. Take a full-blown Provins to bed with you; lay it on your pillow within reach of your nose; sniff at it an amorous sniff from time to time till you fall asleep; perform similar ceremonies the first thing when you wake in the morning, and you will not be too hard on my. infatuation. I par- ticularise a Provins, because although the tea-scented roses are delicious, while the Macartneys smell like apricot-tart, and the Jaune Desprez is a happy blending of rasp- berry jam with the finest otto, or atargul; nevertheless, all roses by name do not smell equally sweet. In fact, some roses are no roses at all. The Christmas rose is a helle- bore, which deserves a little protection with a hand-light if we desire it to wish us a happy New-year; the Guelder rose is a sterile snow-ball, which ought not to repu- diate its classical title of Viburnum; the Rose Tremiere, or Passe-Rose, is a hollyhock, which renders excellent service in the decora- tion of garden scenery; the Rose of Jericho is a cruciferous individual (?) — the note of interrogation shall be discussed hereafter — belonging to the same Linnaean class as cab- bages and turnips, and in no way related to any sort of rose, " for, though it be dry, yet will it upon inhibition of moisture, dilate its leaves and explicate its flowers contracted and seeming dried up;" the Rose-Laurier, or Laurel Rose, is the Oleander, an elegant shrub with bright pink flowers, delighting to grow by the water's edge, but which, Algerian colonists say, poisons the brook that runs at its foot. The Rosa Mundi, the World's Rose, or fair Rosamond, was a pretty young woman who was considered by her friends to be under no particular obligations to Queen Elenor; the Rose Effleuree, the Handful ofRoseleaves, or bouquet for children and families, is a nice little volume of tales and poetry. I am sure that the roses of heraldry — stained-glass roses and gothic stone roses — have no right to claim any other than a verbal relationship with the le- 240 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April gitimatc family of Rosacea). And the rose on the spout of my watering-pot is only a bit of red-tin pierced with holes. All these, (with the exception of the lady) are false, sham roses, of fleeting merit, and mere out- side show; whilst a real rose, even in its grave of pot-pourri, exhales a pleasant odour, and is sweet in death. Know, ye who are unfamiliar with roses, that the queen of flowers, like the changeful moon, presents herself under different aspects. There are roses which resemble the beauties of the South; they blossom once in their season, they dazzle you with their charms, and then they depart. You have to wait for another generation of blooms. There are others — we call them perpetual roses, while the French style them rosiers remontants — which do not begin perhaps quite so early but which, having once begun, go on continu- ally, till old Father Nip-nose comes to town. Even then, if you can shift them into warm, light and airy quarter, in their pots or tubs, they will go on flowering and flowering till you fear they will flower themselves to death. Observe, that some of the old-fashioned sorts maintain their ground against new-born rivals. What an indefatigable bloomer is the old crimson China, or semperflorens ! What an emblem of perseverance and hardihood is that sweet-scented, semi-double, faithful friend, the Portland, or Paestan rose, which will present you with a cluster of bright red buds, reflecting the gleams of December sun- shine ! The biferi rosaria Passti merit their repute of more than two thousand years; for after all we stand most in need of flowers which will carry a cheerful face under adverse circumstances. Any plant, or man, can be full of bravery during the hey-day of summer and prosperity; but our strongest sympathies are with whatever will make a goodly show, and even bear blossoms, in spite of the insults of the north-wind and the disdainful looks of the sun. Amongst the most unflinching bloomers is the Stanwell Perpetual, a spinosissima, or Scotch rose, with small double flowers of a very pale blush, which assumes for its motto, Never say die! Another stout-hearted flower, be- longing to quite a different race, is Aimee Vibert, with its bright and almost evergreen foliage, and its thick clusters of pure white blossoms. Perhaps, though not the most continuous in its succession of blooms, yet for lateness, as well as for the combined perfections of form, scent, hardiness and colour, the best autumnal rose yet raised (certainly in the Portland or Quatre-Saisons class), is a turn- coat flower whose history I blush to relate. But it averts your censure like other fair offenders; for, if to its lot some floral errors fall, look in its face, and you'll forget them all. It made its appearance during Louis the Eighteenth's time, and was named Rose du Roi, or the King's Hose, in compliment to him. But when Bonaparte came over from Elba, and put the legitimate king to flight, the proprietor, thinking that this new rose with any other name would bring in more money, deemed it good policy to rechristen it Rose de 1'Empereur, or the Emperor's Rose. But the hundred days were a limited number — fate did not choose to make them a hun- dred and one- — and the battle of Waterloo again changed the aspect of political affairs, The rose ratted once more, and was re-styled Rose du Roi. It is known in England as the Crimson Perpetual — I should have called it the Crimson Weathercock. To complete its diplomatic education, it only wanted to have passed for a time as the Rose de laRepublique Rouge, or the Red Republican Rose. No autumnal rose-garden is complete without the two Desprez, the red (or Madame), and the yellow, or rather the salmon-coloured. The Geant des Batailles is also a hero whose prowess and whose manly beauty insure his gracious reception by the ladies. None of these are what the nurserymen call new; most of them are quite antiquated ; but they will hold their own, and maintain their ground, long after Louis Philippes and such-like loose ragged things have been swept clean away by the breeze of forgetfulness. I think that if you can make only one voyage of rose-discovery during the summer, it is better, more sentimental, and altogether more poetic, to defer it till the robin has com- menced uttering his autumnal notes. One out-of-the-way rose-garden that I wot of is a gem in its own peculiar style. To get to it, you put your square-built old pony into your rumble-tumble four-wheel; you drive through high-hedged lanes and over breezy commons till you reach the turnpike-road, which traverses a rather secluded district of the country; you pass gentlemen's seats on the right and on the left, with their ver- dant parks and noble timber-trees; you drive through a village, with the prettiest of gardens before each cottage — no two of the cottages or gardens being exactly alike — 1859.] HE THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 241 while overhead is a flickering bower of cherry, plumb, and walnut-trees, chequering the road with sunshine and shade; you pass a brick- kiln or two (symptomatic of the soil); and, after peeping over clipped quickset hedges at the brightest of pastures and the richest of crops, you reach a solitary way-side inn — the Merman. The pony knows where he is as well as you do, and stops. From out a stable- door steps a hale young man, with one hand partly bound in a cotton handkerchief, and the other covered with scratches more or less recent. He has been budding roses these many days past, and, as our noble allies say, II vaut souffrir pour les roses (Roses are worth a little pain) ; nevertheless, he unharnesses old Smiler, who straightwith proceeds, snorting and whinnying, into the well-known stable. You enter the house, and find everything clean, countryfied, and way- side-inn-like, without the slightest pretensions to metropolitan adornments. You are met by a tall, gaunt, dignified woman, certainly not handsome, and assuredly never better- looking than she now is. She is the mistress of the house, and the rose-grower's wife. She looks as if she thought it would be a sin to smile more than once a week; but she is an admirable cook — and did you ever know a good woman-cook who did not look dreadfully cross at times? You order dinner for five precisely, and step into the garden by a side- door, invisible from the road. The master, the enterprising horticulturist, has heard the sound of your rumble-tumble's wheels, and is coming to meet you — with slow step, unfor- tunately, for he has lost a leg since he began to grow roses. You have before you a tall, stout man — stouter since his loss — not hand- some, but with an honest open face, which pre- possesses you atthe very firstglance. Between brother enthusiasts, preliminary ceremonies are short; so you walk up and down amidst hundreds and hundreds of roses — tall, mid- dlesized, short, and level with the ground, climbers, dwarfs, standards, pot-plants, white, blush, cream-colour, straw-colour, pink, crim- son, scarlet, slate-colour, spotted, edged, striped, and blotched. You investigate the character of the early summer roses, whose bloom is past — you inquire into the prospects of the newest new varieties, and often get a shake of the head as the only response of the oracle — you ask whether the good old sorts still remain at par in the market, and Jove replies, with a complacent nod, that they are a wholesale staple article of public consump- 16 tion. " This bed," he says, " entirely of Bath white moss, has been budded to order for America." You then look round and decide upon your plants, combining a sprinkling of the unknown and the speculative with a larger proportion of the approved and the true. And, then, a sharp magisterial voice rings the dinner-bell with the tongue of authority. You dare not remain longer in the garden, even if you wished to, which you probably do not; for, immediately after crossing the threshold of the side door, you enter, to the left, a neat, snug little parlour with the window open, staring point-blank at the roses, and a little white-clothed table, hardly big enough for your party, but tending much to merriment and good fellowship. You take your seats, and instantly stern Minerva drops amidst you such mutton-chops, such green peas, such potatoes, and such melted-butter, followed by such a currant tart and such a rice-pudding, that — oh ! — words may express thoughts, but not sensations. The goddess concludes her miraculous performance by the production of a cream-cheese of her own manufacture. Expressions of your appre- ciation and delight burst from your lips, and — marvel of marvels — she smiles ! Then, a bottle of wonderful port, and an invitation to the master to partake of it; he obeys the summons, and sets on the table a dish of Elton strawberries and a green-fleshed melon, grown in some hole and corner stolen from the roses. Then you ride your hobby-horses full gallop : how such a thing, sent out at such a price, turns out no better than a handful of coloured rags; how so-and-so's stupid gardener committed an outrageous donkeyism: how such another's inventive genius would produce leaves and flowers from a ten-year-old broom-stick; how this year's committee of the Highanmityshire Horti- cultural Society is working; and, above all, whether the rose-fever has yet attained its climax. Then you stroll once more round the garden to fix upon a few additional pro- teges; you drink a parting cup of tea; Smiler takes his place between the shafts; you drive homeward through the cool even- ing breeze, and, as you watch the glow- worms lighting their lamps amidst the dewy wayside grass, you make a vow never more to judge of a woman's good qualities by her looks alone. Verily, rose-gardens are bits of consecrated ground, cut out and separate from common earth. If you could drop into the midst of this one, at the end of July, 242 TIIE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April after having been shut up for nine months in a smoky city, you would go down on your knees before the flowers. Roses have had a good deal to go through j it is true they have had a good long while to go through it in. When I began rose- growing, no body would look upon a rose in any other light than as a pretty sort of thing, very well for school-boys to talk about after a course of Virgil, Horace and Ana- creon, and permissible for kind-hearted old maids to shelter in the obscure retreats of their obsolete gardens; but as florist's flowers, the idea was not to be entertained. Dahlias were then all the rage, and were carrying off exclusively, innumerable silver cups, tea- pots, sugar-tongs, medals, certificates, and highly-commendeds. Mr. Cathill (horti- culturist, Camberwell,) records that when Mr. Rivers first began to speculate largely in rose-growing, his old foreman, long since gone to his last resting-place, came one day, with a very grave face, and said : "Master Tom, you are surely out of your mind. What are you going to do with all those brambles? It is a shame to plant them on land that would grow standard ap- ples I" And so it was with myself and my friend : a lady, who imported the art from France into our neighbourhood, and who did me the honour to make me her disciple. We were looked upon as benighted 'heretics, hu- manely tolerated as amusing enthusiasts, and just escaped ostracism as hetrodox gar- deners; because, while others were running mad after Mexican tubers with repulsive ef- fluvia, alike offensive to man and beast, we eared only to complete our respective collec- tions of a hundred fine varieties of the rose. If many were too polite to say so, they cer- tainly thought, that it was a burning shame, so it was, to grow nasty prickly roses in a garden that would produce double dahlias; and the scorn of the public attained its height when it heard of our begging ladies for their worn out parasols to shade both our very dark crimson and our double-blooms and when they over-heard us rejoicing at a pic-nic water-party when a thunder-storm drove muslin skirts and white chip bonnets pell-mell below the hatches — that the deli- cious shower came just in time to save our last-inserted buds! But it is a long lane which has no turning; and the poor neglec- ted roses soon came to a path which led them to make their triumphal entry. I daily make use of some convenient plate, engraved with the cyphers H. H. S., which my roses won at the Highanmityshire shows. My roses and I well deserved the reward thus bestowed in the shape of pieces of silver; for I worked them all with my own proper fingers, and they exerted themselves to the utmost to return the obligation. I strained just now at the word individu- al, as applied to plants; because it has been a question, among the dons of vegetable physiology, — What is an individual in the world of botany? and judgment has been pronounced that a bud is an individual. A bulb, therefore, such as a Tripoli onion, which is nothing more than an overgrown bud, may claim to be no more than a simple individu- al; but an oak tree is a herd, a crowd, a throng, a joint stock company, composed of as many individuals as there are buds on its trunk, branches and twigs. What most concerns us here, is, that buds enjoy a vi- tality of their own, which is more or less in- dependent of the rest. In cold wet climates certain plants being unable to flower to any useful purpose, revenge themselves and have their own way in the end, by throwing off living buds, which take root and settle them- selves in the world with the utmost facility. Such plants are styled viviparous, or plants which bring forth their young alive. There are even leaves whose fecundity of constitu- tion engenders a crowd of little budlings round their outside edge. Unless the prac- tice of budding were extensively employed, the supply of choice roses could not meet the demand. New varieties of roses (with a few rare exceptions) originate from seed. Suppose you have raised an invaluable novelty, like the Rose du Roi, or my own Maria. Your plant is, at first, unique; only a single speci- men exist in the world. How to propagate it, distribute it, bring it into the market, and make money of it? Its seeds, suppos- ing any attainable, would probably produce offspring inferior to itself. Cuttings are a tardy and limited means of multiplication ; besides, several subsections of the genus Rose strike root, as cuttings, with difficulty. Layering is a still slower process, and often not a bit more certain. Budding accom- plishes all wc can desire. It has been discovered experimentally, that the buds of shrubs and trees, if skilfully and surgically inoculated upon other shrubs and trees nearly related to themselves — that n 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 248 is species belonging to the same genus — will grow and thrive. In a few cases, the facul- ty is extended a little more widely; thus, a lilac scion, grafted on an ash-stock, will live just a little while — a summer or two. But the nearer the relationship, the greater the success; but even then, vegetable caprice has often to be contended with. Pot in- stance, many pears do well on quince stocks, others do not do well; and there is no know- ing, except empirically, what the exact re- sult will be. Therefore, if any gardener tells you gravely that he has budded a rose on a black-currant bush, or grafted a white- curraut scion on a red-cabbage stump, look him full in the face; do not laugh, if you can help it; but set him down in yoar pri- vate memorandum-book as — I will not here say what. Now though, theoretically, any one spe- cies of rose may be budded upon another, this general rule will scarcely be carried out in practice; because common sense would prevent your budding a vigorous species on a weakly one, or a hardy species on a tender one. There are families of roses — the tea- scented, for example — which are killed by any but our mildest winters, and must be treated almost as greenhouse plants. For general purposes, the best stocks are furnish- ed by the dog rose (Rosa-canina.) Choose such as have grown in exposed situations, and have well-ripened wood, i» preference to the green and immature, though pretty stems, that have been drawn up lank, under the shelter of trees. The sweetbriar is not sufficiently hardy. Extra robust and tall stocks may be obtained from the Highland rose, which grows in the valleys of the Grampian hills. If you want to cover a wall with a climbing rose on which to bud a number of varieties, the crimson Boursault will answer satisfactorily, and all the better that it is a thornless species. Beginners are apt to be too fond of over-tall standards; but experience will tame down their lofty ambi- tion to> from twfc feet to two and a half. You will have remarked the beautiful ef- fect of looking down upon a valley or a for- est from the commanding eminence of a mountain side. Remember this principle when you are planting the stocks that are to form your future rose-parterre. Standard roses, once budded, grow but little, if at all, in height. They increase in thickness; and it is curious that in that respect the growth of the stem is subordinate to that of the head; that is, a vigorous head will form a corpulent stem, while under a puny head the body will remain puny — an apt lesson lor administrations and governments in gen- eral. Wild rose-stocks arc now an article of commerce. By giving any order to proper persons you may obtain a supply to any rea- sonable amount. The nearer home they are found, and the sooner they are replanted in your nursery, the better. November is the i month of months for the purpose. In the j early dawn of rose-growing in England, you could not get what you wanted through such regular channels as now; but what you did get were finer stocks, in consequence of their being less sought after. I . had an agent in my service who was an enthusiast. On be- ing shown a collection of standard roses in splendid bloom, he instantly caught the idea, and impatiently longed for the arrival of autumn, to be let slip, to scour the country. He seldom brought in large quantities at once — nor did I want them; but what he did bring were magnificent fellows, such re- cruits as are not easy to enlist at present. — One evening he came to me out of breath, but radiant with triumph. From a small bundle of clean, well-rooted dog-roses, he selected one, and; waived it in the air, as a theatrical fairy waves her wand. "This, sir/' he said, " c@st me three whole days and part of a night; but I was determined you should have it. I had known of it all sum- mer long, in a retired corner of Squire Pre- serveni's park, and I had no need to tie a knot in my handkerchief, to bear it in mind. But the other day they warned me off the land; they thought I must be a poacher. — They wouldn't believe me, and treated me as a liar, when I said that I enly wanted to stub up a few old briars for a gentleman of my acquaintance, to change into roses. But I watched my opportunity, and took it at last. I crawled up one ditch, down another; wet or dry, was all the same to me. I lay squat for hoars in a bed of nettles, and af- terwards crept on all fours through a thick- et of furze aad holly bushes. Never mind that; here it is, at last. Isn't it a beauty, sir?" It was a beauty. The following summer I headed it with that bright-cheeked gal- lant, Brutus or Brennus (for he is so doubly christened,) who grew, and grew, till he form- ed a shade beneath which I could sit in my , garden-chair. 244 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April In a few words, I will let you into the se- cret of converting a brier into a standard rose; but still, you must take lessons of some obliging friend, like mine. You must see the thing done, and then practise it yourself on the first straggling hedge-rose that Falls in your way. • Note, too, that cherries, peaches, and apricots may be budded in the same way as roses. Your pupils arrive, in autumn, at your seminary for young roses. You will have previously engaged a sufficient number of what the French call tuteurs, tutors, or stakes, to support them in an upright course of behaviour. Arrange them into forms, or classes, according to height. Inspect care- fully their lower extremities; remove all ever is likely to sprout into proud flesh, or suckers. Plant them at exactly the same depth as you observe them to have grown in in their native site. Fasten each individual stock either to a stake of its own, or to a long horizontal twig supported at each end by two upright post's. They will thus pass their winter vacation, though they will not remain absolutely idle; for they will be making themselves at home and pushing root-fibres at times when you believe them to be fast quick as if you wished to spare your pa which form the letter T. The perpendicu" lar stroke will run along the branch and ter~ minate where it springs from the main stem; it must be a little longer than the bud you intend to insert. The horizontal stroke will be formed by a cut across the branch, and must be a little wider than the bud you want to put in. You must just cut through the bark, without dividing the wood beneath. — Cut those slits with a pen-knife on a piece of paper, or on any fresh twig whose bark peels readily, and you will instantly see what their object is. With the handle of your budding-knife gently push or lift the bark on each side of the perpendicular slit, or stem of the T. so as to cause it to rise. Or you may do it with your thumb-nails. As fingers were made before knives and forks, so thumb-nails were invented before ivory- handled budding-knives. Do nothing that can injure or irritate the interior of the wound. If you poke inside it for half an hour, and plough up the skin, you will in- jure its delicate organization, and in nine cases out of ten you may whistle for your bud. Instead of that, the bark once raised, take the bud out of your mouth, and slip it in gently till it reaches its place. Be as asleep. In spring, watch the swelling buds tient's sufferings. It really is a surgical op- that show themselves the whole way up the j eration. The bud once settled between the stem. When they are about a' quarter of an divided bark, bind up the wound with liga- inch long, cut off all but two, which will be allowed to grow, to be budded, at the height required. Of course, select strong, healthy buds, as near to and as opposite to each oth- er as possible. Into these the whole vigour of the brier will be directed. In July, after a thunderstorm, or when the ground has imbibed a soaking shower, some kind friend will send you a twig of a match- ture of softest lamb's wool. If you have not been clumsy, the bud will grow; and then you must unbind it, and let nothing else grow on the briar either at top or bot- tom. At the end of two or three summers you will have a handsome -headed rose-tree, from which you may gather basketsful of bouquets, if you prune it properly — some- times if you abstain from pruning it. less rose. Take it into your left hand, look j The other day I saw an outer barbarian out for a plump, healthy, dormant bud; cut clipping the head of a standard rose with a off the leaf, leaving half-an-inch of the foot- ' pair of shears. I thought, and was very stalk; insert your knife a quarter or a third near telling him, that he deserved to have of an inch above the bud; cut downwards, I his own nose thrust between the blades. — and bring it out a quarter of an inch below; j There are roses, such as t\\4 old unrivalled remove with your thumb-nail the woody por- 1 cabbage yellow, and the pretty little Bank- tion, leaving a small shield of bark with a bud in the centre. This is the bud you want to make grow on your brier. To keep it moist, while you are preparing its new rest- ing-place, you may drop it, if you like, into a glass of water; a snugger and more conve- nient receptacle is at hand — your mouth. On the branch to be budded, make two slits in* the bark like the two straight lines jsias, with their white or nankin-coloured tufts of tiny violet-scented flowers, which, I believe, cannot bear even the smell of iron. They will refuse to flower if you come near them with a knife in your pocket, even if you do not take it out and open it. You may get rid of their dead and used-up wood as well as you can, by breaking it off; but the scent of steel agrees not with their con- 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 245 stitution. What becomes of them, then, when they fall into the hands of these mer- ciless butchers and assassins of roses? — Many other roses, and exquisite ones too, if cut too close back, will produce nothing but leaves, year after year. Fearfully numerous instances of this wanton ill-treatment may be seen in the suburban villas that swarm round large cities, where simple people get ignorant jobbing gardeners to prune their roses by the year. But rose-pruning is a fas- cinating amusement which grows upon you, like billiards or chess; and I had as soon en- gage a fellow to eat my dinner, take my walks, or perform any other pleasurable ac- tion for me by the year, as prune my roses. It is true, different roses require different pruning, and you say you know nothing of the art. Never mind. Try. By entering thus into intimacy with your roses, you will become acquainted with every phase and condition of their existence. You will learn to distinguish one from another by the look of the twig, as well as by the aspect of the flower. Your humble servant would readily name a hundred varieties of roses, on being- shown a handful of leaflets, trimmings, and prunings. That, however, is nothing. — Doubtless, Rivers, Paul, or Mitchell, have men in their employ whose more practised eye would extend the list further. One of the great hyacinth rearers in old times, in Holland, has asserted that he could recog- nise, by the bulb, almost every variety out of a collection of two thousand ! The sports of roses deserve to be men- tioned, because several beautiful varieties have resulted from their antics. The New York and Lancaster will now and then bear blossoms one half side of which is white, the other half red. The common Provins took it into its head to send forth a branch bearing the crested Provins, which the art of budding has rendered more or less per- manent. The darling little moss Pompone metamorphosed itself out of the common Pompone (itself a miniature beauty of the highest merit,) some say in the neighbour- hood of Bristol, others in the garden of a Swiss clergyman. The caprices of roses must be complied with, if you would have them smile upon you. The coal-smoke of eities disgusts them utterly ; the most toler- etnt of a highly carbonated atmosphere oeing perhaps the maiden's blush and the bid double white. It is of little use to olant yellow roses within I don't know how many miles of Temple Bar. I have never seen 'that admirable rarity, the old double yellow cabbage, blossom well, except when growing at the foot of a low wall, over the top of which it could straggle as it pleased. Nor has any good been done with it by budding, that I am aware. Perhaps we have no stocks on which to bud it, but must ransack the wilds of Persia, to find them. The enemies of roses are legion. Of insect vermin the host is fearful. The maggots and worms and caterpillars and grubs which attack your heart's delight in spring, must be picked out patiently with finger and thumb. Aphides, " our little green cousin who lives on the rose," are comparatively harmless. A thunder-storm proves an ex- cellent preventive ; but thunder-storms are not always to be had at command. I take the tip of each twig in my hand, and brush off the clustering parasites with a painter's brush. An amateur (who deserves to be looked upon favourably,) has invented a double aphis-brush, closing with a spring handle, which, says the advertisement, in a very simple and easy manner, instantly cleanses the rose from that destructive in- sect the green fly, without causing the slightest injury to the bud or foliage. Fi- nally, encourage lady -birds and the sightless grubs of lace-fHng flies, which latter though blind, find out the succulent aphides, and instead of reserving them to act as milch- cows, pump them dry at once and throw away the empty husk, exactly as you would treat a St. Michael's orange. There are roses which ought to make more way than they do — they are too shy, retiring, and perhaps fastidious in their habits. The microphylla, or small-leaved rose, bears most voluptuous flowers amidst delicate foliage ; yet it is, like the cuckoo bird, seldom seen though often heard of. The multifloras, a charming family, compri- sing the seven sisters, would gratify us by ^making more frequent public appearances. The white Chinese anemone-flowered rose is all that is simple, and pure. It is clear that certain roses have suffered somewhat, both from evil tongues as well as evil eyes. Lis- ten to the indignant complaint of that high- spirited horticultural traveller, Robert For- tune. " In the first volume of the Journal of the Horticultural Society I noticed the discovery and introduction of a very beauti- ful yellow or salmon-coloured rose. I had been much struck with the effects produced 246 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April by it in the gardens of North China, where it was greatly prized, and I had no doubt that it would succeed equally well in this country. But from some eause — probably ignorance as to its habits or to the treatment required — my favourite wag-jan-ve, as the Chinese call it, was cried down. It had been planted in situations where it was cither starved or burnt up; and in return for such unkind treatment, the pretty exotic obstinately refused to produce any but poor miserable flowers. Then the learned in such matters pronounced it quite unworthy of a plaee in our gardens amongst English roses ; and I believe in many instances it was either allowed to die or dug up and thrown away. Five or six years had elapsed since the introduction of this fine climber, and it had never been seen in its proper garb. But the results in two places proved it to be a rose nearly as rampant as the old Aryshire, quite hardy, and covered from the middle of May, with hundreds of- large, loose flowers, of every shade, between a rich red- dish buff and a full copper-pink. The old standard plants in the open ground were one mass of bloom, the heads of each being- more than four feet through. The success- ful cultivators would inform you that no great amount of skill was necessary in order to bring the rose into this stile. It is per- fectly hardy, scrambling over old walls, but it requires a rich soil and plenty of room to grow. The Chinese say that night-soil is one of the best manures to give it. Only fancy a wall completely covered with many hundred flowers, of various hues — yellowish, salmon, and bronze-like, and then say what rose we have in the gardens of this country so striking; and how great would have been the pity if an introduction of this kind had been lost through the blighting influence of such ignorance and prejudice, as have been shown by the person to whose care it was first intrusted." I have eased my mind by speaking a word in favour of ill-used, mis- managed roses. I will now mention a woeful blank which some enterprising rose- raiser ought to fill forthwith ; we sadly want a thoroughly double Austrian briar, with the petals orange-scarlet above and yel- low beneath. The desideratum only bides its time. As to gathering roses ; — when you wish to offer your affianced love something as charming and as fresh as herself, avoid making the attempt in windy weather. If a gentle shower will not come to your aid', water liberally all day long. Next morning, at three o'clock, or a little before, turn out of bed and cut the choicest specimens, — none of them more than three-quarters opened, — before the sun has had time to kiss the dew off their leaves. Arrange ac- cording to your own, and your Dulcinea's fancy, and tie with a true-lover's knot of blue satin ribbon. When done, put the bouquets, in water, in a cool, unoccupied room, with the blinds drawn down, till the moment arrives for the roses to appear in the divinity's presence. Every one is acquainted with the French fashion of decorating graves with flowers. The way in which those flowers are gene- rally respected, is an equally well known fact. But every body does not know the severity with which any violations of the little grave-gardens are punished. The Moniteur for September the twenty-second, eighteen hundred and fifty-two, states in its police report, that a woman named Bade, employed to keep up the flowers on a cer- tain tomb in the Cimetere du Sud, con- ceived a singular method of fulfilling, with- out cost to herself, her office, which was liberally recompensed. Two handsome rose- trees, which overshadowed # this tomb, wither- ed and died. Shall she go and buy others to replace them ? By no means. She re- members that, on another grave some dis- tance, there are growing two magnificent plants of the same species. She takes them up ; steals them ; and employs them to adorn %he grave which is entrusted to her care. The guardian of the Cemetery had already noticed a similar abstraction on the part of that, bad woman. A complaint is made, and she gets for her pains — a year's imprisonment ! Better law this, I think, than we usually get at home. Dear reader, I write as one — may you not read as one !-*• who has put Roses on the graves of the be- loved. A beautiful oriental proverb runs thus : — " With time and patence the mulberry leaf becomes satin." How encouraging is this lesson to the patient and desponding ! And what difficulty is there that man should quail at, when a worm can accomplish so much from a mulberry leaf 1 The secret pleasure of a generous act is the great mind's great bribe. — Dryden, We k p r 8111s gj fflKiors, Ties '''fCllli): sdveni; lave n e 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 247 Cj}* j$0itij}tnt flatter, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Puffing vs. Advertising. We copy from our neighbors of the " American Farmer" their Editorial on a subject in which all agricultural Editors are alike interested. It expres- ses precisely our own sentiments, and we shall follow suit, that we too may "show our hand," that subscribers and advertisers, may know what our course is, and will be, in reference to articles occupying the space in our columns devoted to reading matter. We have never received one cent for anything published there— while we have always charged certain rates for every ad- vertisement inserted in our sheet devoted to that purpose. This is the proper place for adver- tisers ; nor can we afford-to let them occupy any other part of our paper. We take it for granted that each one of our readers has caution and good sense enough, to look well into the merits of all articles presented by vendors to their notice, before purchasing them, and is capable, consequently, of protect- ing himself, in most instances, from being hum- bugged. We certainly do not expect to be held responsible as the endorser of each and every advertiser. We expect our advertising sheet to be filled up by persons wishing to make public the quantity, quality, and variety of wares which they wish to sell — but every man is ex- pected to put his own value on the advertise- ments he reads, and determine to buy or not, as his own good sense may dictate. We do not intend, nor can we afford, to pay the printer's bill for an advertiser's benefit — thus giving him the benefit of a " quasi-editorial endorsement," while we "pay the Piper." These remarks are called forth by present ;ircumstances. We have lately received a long idvertisement from parties interested in the manufacture of a certain article, (of which we lave never used one pound,) with the request that we would "copy." No doubt by our com- pliance with so unreasonable a request, they would, to a certain extent, be benefitted, while we would have the costs to pay and the respon- sibility to bear, which belongs exclusively to, and must remain with them. While we are no believers in "one-sided bargains," we must an- nounce our readiness, at all times, to do any- thing in our power, that is just, and of "good report," to promote the well-being, happiness and comfort of any of our fellow-men. We have, during a part of our previous life, had the good or evil fortune to practise physic in a large country neighborhood. In this position we acquired as large an experience as we de- sire to possess, of the comforts and profits de- rived from " working for nothing and finding yourself." For instance, we have carried our disposition to accommodate other people, so far as to lend our tooth-drawers to a man, to pull his own teeth — uncomplainingly giving up our own fee in the case. We think this is going far enough, and as we wish to retain possession of our molars, and to have employment for them too, we cannot consent to furnish the instru- ments for their extraction, merely for the amuse- ment of other folks. We hope, therefore, that all advertisers will in future be willing to pay their own way into public notice, a»d to shoulder their own respon- sibilities. ADVERTISING VS. PUPPING. We have received from a gentleman, a city paper, containing a favorable notice of an article of merchandize, in which he is interested, and marked "please copy." With a disposition to oblige every body, as far as we can, there are reasons why we must decline applications of the kind, and not to appear unreasonable or dis- obliging, we will give them. First — a due regard to the prosperity of our advertising columns forbids, that an article, which is a legitimate subject of that portion of our publication, should be inserted as reading matter. To copy such an article as a matter of interest, and thus give it a quasi endorsement, would be worth much more to the party inter- ested than an ordinary advertisement, and much less to us. In the second place, our readers have a right to infer, that whatever we present to them in our columns of reading matter, is, in our opinion, of sufficient interest to command their attention, and if we, as a matter of favor, insert a special commendation of one super-phosphate, for in- stance, or one plow or implement, to the exclu- sion of others, we not only do injustice to others, so far as our opinion is worth anything, but al- low a false inference as to our estimate of its value. 248 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April In the third place, we abominate the practice of "purling," and will ajlow no man to stand behind our editorial chair, for the purpose of '•blowing"' his wares into public favor. An ad- vertisement, where a man in his own name offers his goods to the public, is a fair, open, legitimate transaction. The party interested says what he lias to say, or what others have said, in favor of his goods. No one is neces- sarily misled by it, even if it is over-colored or untrue ; because the very type gives him warn- ing that he is to be on his guard, to discriminate between the absurd exaggerations of flash "catch-pennies," and the sober man of business, who, in the consciousness that he has an article of substantial value for sale, is satisfied to say what lie has to say, without designedly over- stating or unduly exaggerating its merits. But an advertiser who "climbs up some other way" into notice, and gets the editor, either for pay or favor to say for him, what he thinks might not be believed or attended to as coming from him- self, does, in our opinion, what he ought not to do. He intends to make a false impression on the public mind, that there are peculiar merits in his merchandize, which challenge the spon- taneous notice of intelligent and disinterested parties. This we call "puffing," as distinguished from advertising. We wish our own course to be distinctly un- derstood on this point. We have not unfre- quently had it suggested as a legitimate business transaction, that a favorable editorial notice would be paid for as an advertisement. The answer to this is, that when a matter of the sort is, in our view, of sufficient interest to put into the body of our Magazine, it is our duty to put it there, and we would not, of course, receive pay for doing so. If it is not of such interest, it is an imposition upon the reader to have it there at all. If it conveys a false impression of the editor's opinion, it is a fraud. The only value of such a notice, is in the reader's reli- ance upon the candor and good faith of the editor; and it would be a gross abuse of that confidence, to subject his opinions to any such bias. While our rule, therefore, does not exclude a proper notice of new and interesting matters of merchandize, under no circumstances do we, or will we, for any consideration, take advertising matter to appear in any other than our usual advertising type, or receive compensation for one line that goes into the body of our Magazine. Home Embellishment. It gives us great pleasure to witness any and every attempt to improve and adorn the country homes of our own State. While, to us, she is more attractive than any other in the Union, and we are proud to claim her as " mother," still, we should love her none the less for devoting some- what more to her dress and appearance. We have never felt it possible that any one could enter into, and participate in, the enthusi- asm and effection for home, as described by the poet in the beautiful old song " Sweet Home," who was the occupant of a dismal, lonely, di- lapidated and uncomfortable house. Such an one, if he can believe "there is no place like home," must find its delights solely in the feel- ing of independence he there experiences, and which he might express "my right there is none to dispute." Certainly there can be no pleasure to anybody in witnessing the want of taste, con- venience and adaptability, so often conspicuous about the residences of farmers who can afford to do better. We are no advocates for mere dis- play, of any kind; but we like to see some at- tention paid to beauty in buildinga house, when this can be secured without any sacrifice of im- portant features of utility and purpose, or proper regard to economy. We, like most others, must confess our fond- ness for "creature comforts," and this, perhaps, may be a sufficient reason why we should urge upon our readers more attention to the subject of building than it has hitherto received. But there is a reason — a good one too — why many of the old-fashioned structures should be altered, or at least have no imitators, viz: a residence in a house, badly ventilated, is injurious to health, the best boon of a good Providence. Pure air is vitally essential to comfortable life. Little share of air, fit for breathing purposes, can be secured in a low-pitched, small room. In such rooms, the air is breathed over and over again, to the injury of its occupant, and the rapid diminution of his stock of '■'•good blood" and nervous energy. Into such buildings disease is apt to enter, and to find there a ready coadjutor of his attacks. Good chimneys, too, are a most essential item of a comfortable house, as well as large windows. A smoky house would destroy not only the eyes of the inmates, but the temper of an angel. As an evil, it has ranked always with a scolding wife. Of course, none but "Benedicks" can ap- preciate the force of the comparison. May it never fall to the lot of our "worst enemy" to possess them both at the same time. Again — surrounding objects exert, to a greater or less degree, their influence on the mind. Wit- ness the effects, upon most people, of an even- ing's walk through a grove of pines, with the wind sighing and moaning through their branches. Under such circumstances, it might be said of almost any man, that "Melancholy had marked him for her own." But the same person, in a different place, taking in at a glance the various beauties of a landscape, neathouses 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 249 beautiful trees and smiling flowers— breathing an atmosphere warmed and purified by th bright rays of a genial sun, would be cheerfu' in feeling and thought. Delights for the eye tend to promote a happy gaiety of disposition- It is natural to admire the beauties of nature — those of art, deserve appreciation and imitation. Home, of all places, should be the most at- tractive. Nothing should be left undone to make it so. While it is well to be serious sometimes, gloom should be banished from the domestic hearth. There should be the shrine of innocent gaiety, to which every member of a family should bring his offspring. " Do not keep a solemn parlor," says Ike Mar- vel, " into which you go but once a month with the parson, or Sewing Society. Hang around your walls pictures which shall tell stories of mercy, hope, courage, faith and charity. Make your living room the largest and most cheerful in the house. Let the place be such, that when your boy has gone to distant lands, or even per- haps he clings to a single plank in the lone waters of the wide ocean, the thought of the still homestead shall come across the deso- lation, bringing always light, hope, and love. Have no dungeon about your home : no room you never show : no blinds that are always shut." " Whatever leads man to assemble the com- forts and elegancies of life around his habita- tion, tends to increase local attachments, and render domestic life more delightful : thus not only augmenting his own enjoyment, but strengthening his patriotism and making him a better citizen. There is no employment or recreation which affords the mind greater or more permanent satisfaction, than that of culti- vating the earth and adorning our own pro- perty." Cottage Homes. Home, Jan. 10th, 1859. Mr. Editor: Taking a deep interest in your valuable publication, we wish to call your attention to a subject that never fails to interest and ex- cite our feelings. We are much pleased to see the gradual improvements in farming in this beloved land of ours. But why is it that so little is done for the " Cottage Homes of Virginia" in the way of embellishment ? You may drive to houses through fields (thanks to the use of guano) as green as Erin, but will be pained to, see unsightly enclosures, broken down, or perhaps none at all. The steps wanting repair, and things about the premises having a " Castle Rack-rent" look, that give no promise of the comfort within doors, the good cheer, and warm-hearted hospitality which greets you at every homestead. Mr. Editor, we like the simple style of liv- ing in the country homes of Virginia. The extempore ways which will make a gentleman ride a mule instead of a baddle-horse, rather than stay from church, — and gentlewomen, never thinking themselves compromised by riding in a cart if the carriage is away. We wish to see progress in attention to turf, and trees, and beautiful flowers, which are as free to the poor as to the rich, and which beautify every dwelling however lowly its inmates. These things belong not only to the " Pal- ace Homes" of Virginia, those noble relics of olden times which we admire and love, with- out one spark, of envy. If you can stir up your readers to bestow greater attention to this subject, which has the power to make home attractive, and to refine, elevate, and purify the heart, you will make your mark on the age in which you live, and we will honour you as a benefactor to your native State. These improvements cost little money, and amply repay any expenditure of time and taste, which is one of the wants of the age. Let the poor man go to the forest, and remove carefully, at the right season, the beautiful trees which a kind Providence has bountifully supplied us. Let him aid his wife, mother, or sister, in her endeavours at raising flowers, however simple they may be. We honour every such attempt, if it be only a Hop-vine or Convolvolus, or even a Mary gold, growing in a tin pan for want of a flower-pot. Hoping you will excuse the warmth with which we have written, and give a corner to this subject, We remain sincerely yours, St. Martin's Parish, Va. Plowing and Plowmen. Now that the time has arrived when all the team of the farm will be employed continually, it will be well for each farmer to look closely into the manner in which this work is done — that neither the land nor team may suffer from hard usage, and improper treatment. We take it ibfcgranted that every man who knows the importance of attending to his own business' interests, will see to it, that his land is no- plowed too wet, and that the furrow slice is ent tirely cut loose and turned over, so as to ensure as thorough pulverization as is practicable with the plow alone. But we have not as much faith in their proba- 250 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April h\e practice, so far as keeping a strict eye to the necessities, and comforts of their team is con- cerned. While we know that every plowman will do his duty more thoroughly, if he is looked after by his employer — every man has not an eye for a horse, nor to a horse either. Many persons use and abuse them — taking no care of them after work hours. We recommend, there- fore, to look closely into the condition of the gear — collars especially — and back bands. See to it that the first are not too large, or you will have a used up team, from shoulder bruises and '•Swinney." Keep the collars free from any accumulation of sweat and hair upon the inside. Scrape them off clean, and oil and beat them, until the surface which goes next to the shoulder of the horse is soft. Don't allow your plowman to slip the back-band too far back of the shoul- der, especially as the means of preventing the plow from "going too deep in the ground." It is a usual thing to do this ; but it is death, (in the course of time,) to horse-flesh. If the horse is tolerably formed, the centre of motion will be just behind the shoulder-blade. There will be the strongest point to bear* up against weight and pressure — while if the back-band works nearer to the " quarters," the nearer it does, the harder is it for the horse: he will be liable to greater fatigue, and a difficulty in bringing his hind feet well up under him. When the teams are brought to the stable, they should have at least enough currying to "straighten the hair," and remove the conglomerations of dirt and per- spiration : But the more rubbing they get, the bet- ter they thrive. " Rub him hard, his skin wont come off," while the process brings about an equal, general circulation of the blood through his tired muscles, keeping up thus, health and nervous energy. Bathing the shoulders in cold water will har- den the skin, so as to prevent any abrasions of it by the collar. The ankles should be kept perfectly clean: the fetlocks cut off, and if you should find any of them with scratches, make up the following ointment, and use it by rubbing over the ankles after having washed them well. Our word for it, it will soon make a cure : Soft soap, ... 2 parts. Sulphur, ... 1 part. Lard, ... 1 part. The next thing to be considered is the proper feeding. Those who may have reconciled it with their system of economy to have saved it, and consequently have a plenty of nice, well- cured fodder, or may have a good supply of hay, and a well stored corn-crib, need little instruc- tion on this head. To them we can only say, feed with a liberal hand. Your generosity in this respect will cause you no loss, by the time the season for hard work is over. You will be amply repaid for your expenditure, in the in- creased efficiency, (to say nothing of the im- proved appearance,) of your team. Feed at regular hours, and change the food as much, and as often, as the resources of the farm will allow. Don't forget to give your stock of every kind green food, as soon as you can pro- cure it. Several acres planted in " Chinese Su- gar Cane," will furnish a large quantity of green food of the very best quality, for all kinds of farm animals. We refer to the interesting arti- cle of onr contributor, in the February number of the Planter, signed " Stover," on this subject. In the absence of green food, give your mules and horses some wheat bran, to open the bowels, and act as a " refrigerant" to the system A few carrots given everyday, will greatly aid in keep- ing them in health and good condition. Their beneficial effects are speedily manifested in the softness and gloss of the coat, and the looseness of the hide. Keep an ample supply of air-slacked lime, mixed with two thirds of its bulk of salt, within reach of your horses, or give them a handful of the mixture several times a week, in their food. An old friend of ours has been in the habit of keeping a small trough, (nailed to the manger of each horse,) filled with this mixture, for many years. He has had scarcely ever a sick horse, since he commenced the practice of al- lowing them access to lime and salt, whenever they pleased, while his teams attract very gene- ral remark, for the superior condition in which they are kept. Edney's New American Pump. (PATENT APPLIED FOR.) In our advertising sheet will be found a draw- ing of this Pump, with Mr. Edney's advertise- ment. We got one of them from him, which we have put into operation on our farm, and like it so far very much. It brings up a continuous stream of water, with little or no labor to the person working it. If it shall prove dura- ble, (and we see no apparent cause why it should not,) it must meet with a ready sale, and speedily grow very popular. 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 251 New Wheat Drill. Our friend, George Watt, — the Plow man, as he calls himself, — showed us, a few days since, a Patent for a new Drill, which he has just gotten out. From the drawings and description, which we examined, we think it a "good thing." The Drill has some entirely new features — one of which is, that no part of a stubble, which has^ been plowed under, can be dragged up, while the seed sowed will be covered as deeply as is usual with any other Drill. He expects to get Messrs. Samson & Pae to put up some of them as soon as possible. Their manufacture by these gentlemen will be a guarantee for the excellence of their construction. While we have such confidence in the mechanical ingenuity and practical good sense of both Messrs. Watt and Samson, that we should feel very well assured, if they pronounced the Drill a good one, that " there is something in it." It has a guano at- tachment. t Tobacco-Handler. gentleman from Powhatan county, Va., has showed us a model of a simple and effective machine for putting the bundles of tobacco into good shape before prizing. It works admirably, and as soon as he receives his Patent, (applied for,) we shall have one at our office, open to in- spection, together with some tobacco which has been subjected to its operation. jivecdotes of Love. By Lola Montez, Countess of Landsfelt. We are indebted to Messrs. J. W. Randolph & Co., for a copy of this new and amusing work, which is the last production of the well-known authoress. It seems to be a record of the doings of the "little god" for a "considerable" time past, and will serve to make more of his pranks known to the public, than he ever had exposed, at one view, to their scrutiny before. Our New Office. Our country friends will find us at the old stand of Messrs. Baldwin, Cardwell & Co., on Main street, opposite to Messrs. Kent, Paine & Co. We will be glad to see them there whenever they may choose to "drop in," and can safely promise (unless they have a note to pay) to make them feel at home, and comfortable. Articles intended for publication in our papea should be marked, "For the Southern Planter." Do not write on both sides of the paper. If this rule is not regarded, mistakes are very apt to occur in printing. Green Food for Work-Horses. We trust our readers have not regarded the able and instructive communication of our cor- respondent "Stover" on "Sorghum and other substitutes for Blade Fodder" which appeared in our February number, as of that ephemeral character, which they might dismiss from their thoughts as soon as read, or retain in their memories only for a day. Far, very far different is our estimation of it. We regard his suggestions as of national impor- tance. Their full adoption into general practice throughout the State, would inaugurate a new era in Virginia husbandry by adding hundreds of thousands to the annual profit of our agricul- ture through the retrenchment of expenses effect- ed in this one branch of farm economy — namely: the maintenance of our teams. And not simply their maintenance — but, as compared with the present system, a decided improvement in their condition, rendering the application of their power the more effective in proportion to their gain of strength and endurance in the per- formance of their labor, heightened by the in- creased activity and sprightliness of their move- ments resulting from the healthful effects of the larger amount of green provender afforded them. With these views of the importance of green food for work horses, we suggest for the con- sideration of our readers the importance of ar- ranging ther plans for the present season so as to secure a sufficient variety, and regular succes- sion of green crops for the use of their teams during the progress of the season. Those who have a field of rye for this purpose already on hand, have a good resource to begin with; clover too, will hold an important place in the general arrangement; in addition to this, sor- ghum may be planted, at different dates, so as to secure successive crops adapted to different stages of the season, oats may be sown in like manner, for the same purpose, and so also of Indian corn, millet, &c, &c. We conclude these brief suggestions, with the following interesting letter addressed by a gen- tleman in Georgia to his friend in this city, which will be found to corroborate the views ex- pressed by Stover, and to enforce the recom- mendations we now submit to our readers: My Dear Sir:— I informed you last sum- mer of my enlarged experiments this year with the Sorghum or Chinese Sugar Millet, and also promised to inform you of the re- 252 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April suits. All my expectations have been realized, both for Syrup and Forage, and in some re- spects exceeded. I plant in latitude 33° 30 / in Central Georgia. I this year planted 50 or CO acres on all the quality of land in my farm, from rich creek alluvions to my most exhaust- ed uplands — all did well — produced a more luxuriant crop than any other plant I culti- vate on the same kind of soil, and on ex- hausted soil a much heavier crop than I supposed the soil capable of producing in any thing, even peas. I planted at different times, from the middle of March to the 17th of July, it all matured, but the late planted did not bunch so much as the early. After ridging up and planting, it requires about half the amount of culture that corn does, and I think produces about double as much of forage for stock as corn does per acre, and matures two or three weeks earlier than our common crop corn, and if you can get a stand, it will grow and mature with almost no rain. It also grows well on land too moist either for corn or cotton. I have been feeding my hogs, horses and cows on it almost entirely since the first of August, and never had them to thrive and do better, and no deaths have occurred that I could trace to the Sorghum. I planted also 7 different varieties of the African Millet or Imphe. I have thrown all that away as inferior to the Sorghum except one, a white seeded millet that I am going to try this year as a bread corn — (we will see,) I have now, I think, an abundance of millet forage to carry my stock through the winter, and then seed enough to mix in the corn half and half to feed my work stock 10 or 12 weeks next summer. In the summer I grind the corn and millet seed and feed it on cut stuff. In this way I fed millet seed last summer with the most satisfactory results. I feed about 150 head of stock cat- tle, but the cows also have the corn shuck, and do not appear to be so fond of the millet as my other stock. I think it peculiar- ly valuable to feed to hogs and horses not at heavy work, but some of my neighbours have fed their riding and work horses with it alone, and they say they stand work as well as when fed on old corn, but then the seed and stalk should be fully matured and fed together. I don't think the plant is nourishing and proba- bly not healthy for stock until the seed and saccharine matter are matured. It will wait on you in the field to cut for either forage or syrup 6 or eight weeks after the seed is fully hard, and for syrup I think it improves for 4 or 5 weeks after the seed have dried. The sap diminishes, and it requires less hauling, and I think the syrup has less of the peculiar vege- table matter. I made this year 12 or 13 hundred gallons of the syrup. The apparatus, an iron mill, 2 rollers 12 inches long and 12 inches in diame- ter, and 4 shallow iron kettles holding about 60 gallons, each put up in furnaces. (I would prefer the kettles to hold 75 gallons.) The stalk has the tassel and seed cut off and stript of the fodder, then cut and hauled to the mill, and pressed through the rollers, strained and emptied into one of the kettles over a slow fire until the kettle is full. By that time there will be a thick skum on the top, skim that off and then kindle a strong fire and boil it as rapidly as you can, stirring it all the time, and the faster you boil it the better the syrup. Say boil it down to l-6th in four hours, and if your cane is dry and fully matured, it will at least make 1 gallon of syrup to 6 of the juice, if sappy and green .about 1 to 7 or 8. My mill expresses about 300 gallons of juice in the day, and that makes from 45 to 60 gallons of good syrup according to the con- dition of the cane. The 2d, 3d, and 4th ket- tles are filled and disposed of in the same way, and I think dry, sap-wood that will make more blaze is much better to use as fuel than hard wood, the heat is too intense from the hard wood. All my syrup this year is de- positing quantities of crystalized sugar, and I have no doubt an economical mode of making sugar from it will be discovered yet. & I have planted the Sorghum 4 years, and my experience has drawn my attention to another idea. In a rotation of crops in re- storing the peculiar fertility for other of our cultivated plants, it may turn out valuable as it feeds on and develops sugar or elements not used by our other cultivated crops. (We will see.) My observations this summer in the mountains of Tennessee and Virginia led me to think that it does not grow so luxuriant- ly there as here. If it does it will be immense- ly valuable as a forage crop, and also for syrup, as they can make it at a leisure season of the year, and save the expenses of trans- portation. You see I have given you my ex- perience and my conclusions as short and as clear as possible without any effort at compo- sition. I have striven more to be accurate than elegant. Kind regards to yourself and family, I am, dear sir, yours truly. P. S. — I plant my seed thick enough to be sure of a stand, and let it stand until the plant is 6 or 8 inches high before I touch it, I then plow it and have it thinned out to a stand about twice as "thick as I would leave cotton, and when 20 inches or 2 feet high, I plow or sweep it again just to clean it, and if thick enough, do nothing more. A beautiful oriental proverb runs thus : — " With time and patience the mulberry leaf becomes satin." How encouraging is this lesson to the impatient and desponding ! And what difficulty is there that man should quail at, when a worm can accomplish so much from a mulberry leaf? 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 253 For the Southern Planter. Tobacco, not Necessarily an Exhausting Crop, and no Demoralizer. [No. 2.] Mr. Editor: In a previous contribution to the Febru- ary number of your journal, I have re- viewed, in part, an article, which, attempt- ing to prove Tobacco " the bane of Virginia Husbandry," asserts that it is the most laborious and exhausting of all crops, and that "it is a demoralizer in the broadest sense of the term." Your March number contains a continuation of the article I have attempted to review. I perceive my op- ponent is Gen'l John H. Cocke, of Bremo, one of the best farmers in the State ; but the identical gentleman, to whom I have al- luded as being possessed of an " Alabama adjunct" to his estate here, which enables him very well to dispense with the cultiva- tion of tobacco in Virginia. So far as relates to the charge, that to- bacco is the most laborious of all crops, I have already shown, that this labor is so dif- fused throughout the year, as to be at no time oppressive, and that notwithstanding the care and labor incident to its cultivation, it PAYS better than any crop yet attempted in Piedmont and South-side Virginia. It has also been proven, by the testimony of all unprejudiced observers, that it is not neces- sarily an exhausting crop, but made so by land-shinning Vandals, who ignore rotaticm, and all means of keeping up the fertility of the soil, it matters not what be the staple cultivated. Your correspondent has sought to establish, that tobacco "is a demoralizer in the broadest sense of the term," that its cultivation involves labor that is oppressive on the producer, and that the effect of such cultivation, is to exhaust, and reduce to sterility, those sections where its cultivation obtains. Were these assertions unheard be- yond the tobacco-growing region, they could produce no harm. But, when a writer of ability, and a resident of Virginia, known throughout the North, attempts to prove, through your journal, that Southern men, with slave labor, are systematically exhausting and impoverishing whole counties; that they are doing this by an unreasonable exaction of labor from their slaves, and that their energies, thus improperly spent, are em- ployed in the cultivation of a poison, a " de- moralizer in the broadest sense of the term," I cannot, though entertaining the highest respect for the gentleman, allow such un- supported assertions to go unquestioned. His strictures amount to a charge of im- morality upon a large class of our rural population, which constitutes, as he has every means of knowing, one of the best elements in our social polity. He has at- tributed to gentlemen, engaged in the cul- ture of tobacco, the habit of cutting tobac- co on Sunday, to prevent damage from an anticipated frost on the Monday following ; and in his last article, this is his remarkable declaration : " From time immemorial, in the history of tobacco, it has been the prac- tice, when a moderate rain falls on a Satur- day night, to plant on Sunday morning, rather than run the risk of losing the season, at a critical period of the year." This declaration is so expressed as to apply to tobacco-makers as a class. It is not con- fined to the few men, in every neighbor- hood, who habitually desecrate the Sabbath. No such system prevails. Not one planter in five hundred can be found, who, once in ten years, has been induced thus to violate the Sabbath. My associations have been with them from infancy, and I do not recol- lect one instance of Sabbath violation, oc- casioned by the crop, which any good or moral citizen has yielded to. Virginia, the ene- mies of her peculiar institutions have been accustomed to say, was once the mother of Presidents and statesmen, but is now the breeder of slaves. I protest against the completion of her degradation, in the eyes of Northern fanatics, on the part of your correspondent, who presents to the world this great mother of darkies, as tasking her slaves to the last limit of physical endur- ance, as desecrating the Sabbath, and ex- hausting the soil in the cultivation of "a demoralizer in the broadest sense of the term." All the impoverished fields of the Old Dominion have been attributed to the culti- vation, either at present, or at some past time, of this staple. But the truth is, thou- sands of acres, in Virginia, have never been impoverished. They have been poor since the Creation, and poor they will ever remain, until a redundant population, cultivating truck-patches instead, of farms, undertakes to supply what nature lias denied, viz: wanting elements of fertility to the soil. Even where originally fertile, a regular diminution in the productiveness of the soil, 254 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER [April under improper cultivation, and where no tobacco is grown, is everywhere observable. Thousands of acres in the Southern States have ceased, from this cause, to repay the cost of cultivation. Though tobacco culture is unknown in South Carolina and upper Georgia, and Alabama, their sterile districts appal the traveller, by a barrenness unknown j to Virginia. Examine the statistics of the ; New England states, with their annually de- j creasing yield of wheat, mark the dimin- ished products of even the alluvial prairies of the West, under a system which ignores drainage, rotation and rest, and you will find, Mr. Editor, that exhaustion of the soil is nowhere caused by the cultivation of any one staple, but by the improper culti- vation of all; that it is due to the neglect of known laws, and to that grasping spirit, which, exacting from the bosom of mother earth all its nourishment, returns nothing to keep up its supply. A bountiful Providence, seeking to mitigate the primal cause of labor, has everywhere provided remedial agents for the resuscitation of the soil, but ignorance and folly reject the boon, and are finally forced to leave their country "for their country's good." Such was the case in Tide-water Virginia. A few years ago it was a wilder- ness for miles. Broom-sedge and stunted pines had usurped the land ; its population fled in dismay from a country which seemed to be under a curse, abandoning their home- steads, or selling them for a pittance. Yet underlying these deserted farms, were inex- haustible supplies of marl, which it was only necessary to apply to restore them to fer- tility. When that man, Edmund Ruffin, whom I honor more than the whole race of Virginia politicians, all put together, pub- lished his views, and the remedy which the remaining population had at hand, he con- ferred a boon upon Virginia, which, though for a time undervalued, entitles him, in the estimation of all, now, to the very first position among the benefactors of the State. But to return to the objections advanced by Gen. Cocke. I will state that one of his great arguments against tobacco, that you have the crops of two years on hand at one time amounts to really nothing. If the crop is sold in winter order from January to March, the only work done for the new crop during this period, is the plowing of the to- bacco land and preparation of the beds. — Farmers frequently sow their wheat crops before delivering the crop seeded the pre- vious year, but I have never heard this pre- sented as an argument against wheat cul- ture. The "watching, nursing, and pushing- forward of the plant beds," mentioned as one of the items going to prove the laborious character of the crop — does not usually com- mence until the 1st of May, and one hand, in about 10 minutes, does all that is neces- sary, an application of manure, or plaster, being all that is requirod. Your correspon- dent, in order to make out his charge that it is the most laborious of all crops, has enter- ed into details, which include every pro- cess connected with the crop, and upon the whole, (though undesignedly I am sure) has written thus far the best essay I have ever read on the cultivation of tobacco, and is en- titled to the premium offered by our Socie- ty. The history given by him of the man- ner of its cultivation is complete. It will be the guide of my whole future cultivation, and I recommend it to all enquirers as to the proper method of cultivating, housing and curing the crop. But as to the results, we differ. He says " Tobacco makers buy a large portion of their meat from Western drovers, and often not a small portion of their bread." In reply, I have to say, that it is well to make a crop which furnishes the i means to buy bread when the seasons fail. "It rains on the just and unjust alike," and frequently for long seasons rains on neither. The farmer fails in corn, and consequently in meat, and has nothing to buy with, al- ways supposing their is no "Alabama ad- junct" in the case. But the tobacco plan- ter can in unfavorable years, purchase to supply deficiencies with proceeds of his to- bacco crop. He says the farmer cannot spare manure to keep a grass lot, or an acre or two of meadow. In reply, I have to say, that the best possible way to insure a stand of grass, and form a permanent meadow is to prepare the land by a crop of tobacco.- He says it is neither meat, drink nor clothing for man, nor provender for beast, and that it starves both man and beast. This remark strikes me us plausible, and to my know- ledge, I do not know of its being used for the purposes above stated, but it buys cloth- ing, meat and drink, it insures provender, if you will sow grass seed, and after enriching a lot with tobacco will keep it in corn. Be- lieving that there is no force in the objec- tions thus far urged against the cultivation of tobacco, not one of the various operations described, involving anything like the la- 1859.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 255 bors of the harvest field, and premising that all this labor pays, I urge for its continued cultivation, in the districts where it is now grown, the following convincing reasons : 1st. It is a great conservative of the in- stitution of slavery in our State, keeping thousands engaged in its culture and manu- facture who would otherwise be sold out of it. 2nd It gives employment to the farm force in winter. 3rd. Thus preventing the exposure or idle- ness consequent to a force not employed at all, or if employed, subjected to the weather. 4th. It is the best possible preparation for the wheat crop, and will ensure a stand of grass when every other preparation fails. 5th. It encourages the making of farm- pen manures, and the husbanding of all the materials the farm affords for that purpose. 6th. It is the best of all crops to eradi- cate weeds and briers to prepare new land for general field culture. 7th. It is peculiarly adapted to small farms, and leads to the subdivision of es- tates, as the value of the yield per acre ex- ceeds any other crop. 8th. It is a crop easy of transportation, costing less than any other to get to market. 9th. It stands drought better than any other crop. 10th. Consequently if the grain crop fails, it furnishes the means of purchase. 11th. By cultivating it, you are sustaining a vast industrial and manufacturing interest which keeps up the price of lands, and fur- nishes to Virginia commerce the most of its exchange upon the North and Europe; and finally, when connected with the cereals and the grasses, this system affords the largest share of comfort and profit from the pro- ducts of the soil, and affords reasonable prospects of maintaining, if not increasing the productive powers of the earth for an indefinite time. In conclusion, Mr. Editor, I hereby de- clare my intention, with your kind permis- sion, to defend this much abused weed from any farther assaults of your respected cor- respondent. I apprehend nothing from a fair discussion of the subject, but that the argu- ments adduced for growing the crop, by your many correspondents, will too greatly stimulate its production, and lead to a de. cline in prices. Yours, very respectfully, J. B. McClelland. March 10th, 1859. Economical Hints. 1. Have a work bench and a few tools in your woodshed, or in a little room at one end of your barn. There are many .small jobs in the course of a year, which any man of common ingenuity can do as well as a professed carpenter. And there are many rainy days and " odd spells" when these jobs can be done. And how much waiting and patience this would save ! 2. Have a place for everything and every- thing in its place. Those tools — why should they be lying around, the auger here, the jack-plane there and the saw yonder, and the adz and screwdriver no where ? .Don't put away a shovel, hoe, spade or any imple- ment without cleaning it. This may seem needless care, but in the long run it is a saving of time and money. Rust corrodes and weakens the best made tools. There are men who leave their plows standing in the furrow, or lying by the side of the fence from one year to another. And the " bran new" scythe is often left dangling from the crotch of an apple tree month after month. Hear what a sensible farmer says : " Drive in stout wooden pins to hang your yokes upon, nail strips of board from joist to joist to hang chains upon, make a rack overhead for pitchforks, rakes, turning sticks," &c. To all of which we respond, So let it be ! — Am. Agr. Tomato Wine. Superior wine from the tomato is now man- ufactured. It is made with no other ingredi- ents than the pure juice of the tomato and sugar, and very much resembles champagne — a light transparent color, with a pleasant, palatable flavor. It can be made equal to the best champagne. To gain a correct acquaintance with hu- man nature, it is not necessary to move in a public or extensive sphere. A more limited circle of observation conduces to greater mi- nuteness and accuracy. A public mode of life is favorable to knowledge of manners; a private, to a knowledge of character. One's breeding shows itself nowhere more than in his religion. A man should be a gentleman in his hymns and prayers. — 0. W. Holmes. The secret pleasure of a generous act is the great mind's great bribe.*— Dryden. 256 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [April » Waiting. " Wherefore dwell so sad and lonely, By the desolate sea-shore ; With the melancholy surges Beating at your cottage door? "You shall dwell beside the castle, Shadowed by our ancient trees ! And your life shall pass on gently, Cared for, and in rest and ease." •' Lady! one who loved me dearly Sailed for distant lands away; And I wait here his returning Hopefully from day to day. " To my door I bring my spinning, Watching every ship I see : Waiting, hoping, till the sunset Fades into the western sea. " Every night, behind my casement Still I place a signal light ; He will see its well-known shining Should his ship return at night. " Lady ! see your infant smiling, With' its flaxen curling hair ; — I remember when -your mother, Was a baby just as fair. " I was watching then, and hoping ; Years have brought great change to all; To my neighbours in their cottage, To you nobles at the hall. "Not to me — for I am waiting, And the years have fled so fast I must look at you to tell me, That a weary time has past! "When I hear a footstep coming On the shingle, — years have fled, — Yet amid a thousand others. I shall know his quick light tread. " When I hear (to-night it may be) Some one pausing at my door, I shall know the gay soft accents, Heard and welcomed oft before ! " So each day I am more hopeful, He may come before the night; Every sunset I feel surer, He must come ere morning light. " Then, I thank you, noble lady ; But I cannot do your will : Where he left me, he must find me, Waiting, watching, hoping still !" . I m » m > All's for the Best. All's for the best, be sanguine and cheerful, Trouble and sorrow are friends in disguise, Nothing but folly goes faithless and fearful, Courage forever is happy and wise. All's for the best, if a man would but know it, Providence wishes us all to be blest, This is no dream of the pundit, or poet, Heaven is gracious, and all's for the best. All's for the best, set this on your standard, Soldier of sadness, or pilgrim of love, Who on the shores of despair may have wandered A way-wearied swallow, or heartstricken dove. All's for the best, be a man but confiding, Providence tenderly governs the rest, And the frail bark of his creature is guiding, Wisely and warily, all for the best. All for the best, then fling away terrors, Meet all your fears and your foes in the van, And in the midst 'of your dangers or errors, Trust like a child, while you strive like a man. All's for the best, unbiassed, undoubted, Providence reigns from the East to the West, And by both wisdom and mercy surrounded, Hope and be happy that all's for the best. M. F. Tuppbr. SOUTHERN PLANTER.- ADVERTISING SHEET Liberal Offer for 1859 ! MSB'S TRIAL PIANOS ■ray ' We will take upon ourselves the trou- T "13 hie nnd responsibility of ■electing nMfrJ pianos. »r nnil forwarding to such persons ns may wish to ■rchuse, and if the\ ilo not torn out to lie reully good. e WILL BEAK ALL THE EXPENSE. We know what the PIANOS are, and have no hesi- iliou in taking the lisk of giving satisfaction. E. P. NASH & CO., April 1859. Petersburg, Va. A Purm, situated in Spotsylvania conntv, Va., 12 iles from Guinev's Depot, on the Richmond & Fred- jcksburg Koad/and 19 miles from the latter place, ontains 830 acres, one-half in cultivation, and the lance in wood. It lies well, is well watered, pro- ive, and admirably adapted to tobacco as well as i. It is also a good p razing farm. The buildings are extensive and excellent, einhrae- t every house usually found on well improved es- "es. There are also houses for curing from fifteen twenty thousand pounds tobacco. The place is re iikaldv healthy, and in a good neighbourhood, liar- ; churches, post-office, shops, mills, &c. conve- nt. The farm is sus eptihle of division, and will he Wed if desired. Price §10 per acre. Terms lihe- . Post-office, IMt. Pleasant, Spotsylvania Co., Va. ,,59-tf D. M. WHARTON. University of Virginia, .May 13th, 1 808. Gentlemen— In my letter of last week I gave x a percentage for the Phosphate of Lime in s SOMBRERO GUANO you sent me for analy- , which I suspected at the time to be too high, I informed you. An error was probably made the weighing. The analysis has since been repeated by both i Tuttle and myself, and I submit the follow- i as a reliable result: Phosphate of lime* 83.43 Carbonate of lime, 3.45 Insoluble matter, 1.18 Moisture and organic matter, 11.47 lere'l 111".!1 99.53 "he organic matter in the Guano was too Dnsiderable to be deemed worthy of separate mation. Very respectfully your ob't serv't, S. MAUPIN. [essrs, Edkond & Davenport, Richmond, Va. he above was an average sample of Som- o Guano from the bark Christiana's cargo, tons). We refer to a former advertise t as to what other eminent chemists think his Guano; and anion? planters of our own j, to whom we would refer, we name the 'j. S; Armistead, of Cumberland, who has based for himself and friends some twenty EDMOND, DAVENPORT & CO. dv 1858— tf ,ANKS printed at this Office* THE SOUTHERN PLANTER Is published monthly, in sixty-four octavo pages, upon the following Terms: TWO DOLLARS AND FIFTY CENTS num, unless paid in advance. Advance payments aR follows : One copy, one year, Six copies, do Thirteen copies, one year, - Twenty do do One copy, three years, And one copy free to persons sending us the names and money for thirteen or more new suhscrihers. All money remitted to us will he considered at our risk only, when the letter containing the same shall have been registered. This rule is adopted not for our protection, hut for the protection of our correspondents, and we wish it distinctly understood that we take the risk only when this condition is complied with. per an- $2 10 20 SO 5 ADVERTISEMENTS Will be inserted Business Curds n One-eighth J of a column. ] One fourth of a column, One-half of i column, One column, or Half a page One page, at the following rates: f 5 lines or less, per annum, 1st insertion, Each continuance, 6 months, ) without 12 '• J alteration, 1st insertion. Each continuance, 6 months, ) without - 12 " 3 alteration, 1st insertion, Each continuance, 6 months, ) without 12 " $ alterations, 1st insertion, Each continuance, 6 months, ? without 12 " I alteration, 1st insertion, Each continuance, 6 months, ) without 12 " $ alteration, $5 00 1 00 75 4 00 7 50 1 75 l 25 7 50 14 00 3 25 2 50 14 00 25 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. R. M. NIMMO, GENERAL AGENT & STOREKEEPER VIRGINIA PENITENTIARY, Ao. 27 PEARL STREET. Keeps constantly on hand a supply of the following articles manufactured at the Penitentiary of the most faithful and substantial manner: BOOTS SHOES, BROGUES, HARNESS, KERSEY'S LINSEYS. COTTONS, BAGS, WAGONS, CARTS, WHEELBARROWS, AXES, &c. Orders Promptly Executed. Nov 1868— tf SOUTHERN PLANTER— ADVERTISING SHEET. 3Vair. Lefetovre's School Corner of Grace and Foushee Streets, RICHMOND, VA. The next Session of this Institution will open on the FIRST DAY OF OCTOBER, 185 and close on the First Duy of July, 1859. TERMS FOR THE SCHOLASTIC YEAR, For Board, - |200 For Washing, - 20 For Lights, 6 For English Tuition, 40 For Modern Languages, (each,) 20 For French, when studied exclusively of the English branches, 40 For Latin, 20 For Music on Piano, Harp, Guitar, r- gan or Singing: For one lesson (of an hour) a week, 40 $ 3 11 1( For two lessons (of an hour) a week, For three lessons (of an hour) a week, For four lessons (of an hour) a week, For the use of Piano, For Drawing, from Models, For Drawing, from Nature, For Painting in "Water Colors, For Oil Painting, Primary Department — for Children un- der 11 years of age, REFERENCES The Patrons of the School. — Right Rev. Bishop Meade, Right Rev. Bishop Johns, Right Re Bishop Elliott of Georgia, Right Rev. Bishop Cobbs of Alabama, Rev. Moses D. lloge D., Rev. Charles II. Read, D. D., Rev. T. V. Mo>re, D. D., Rev. B. Gildersleve. The Clerg of the Episcopal Church iu Virginia. P. LEFEBVRE, A. M., Principal John A. Calyo, C. W. Thilow, W. F. Grabau, Mrs. A. E. J. Gibson, Miss Mary Gordon, MAD'ELLE L. VILLEMET, French Governess. All letters to be directed to Hubert P. Lefebvre, Richmond, Va. HUBERT Rev. II. S. Keppler, William G. Williams, a. JonN P. Little, M. D. R. A. Lewis, M. D. Eliodoro Camps, Miss E. Bartlett, Mrs. M. Taylor, Mad'me M. Estvan, Mad'elle Lacy, Charles II. Roseen, [July '58— ly PAINTS. PAJGSTTS. P^IJSTTS. ■ PUKCELL, LADD & CO, GrISTS, No. 122 Main Street, corner 13th, EICHMOND, VIRGINIA, Offer at low prices, a large and well assorted stock of articles in their line — embracing PAINTS, COLORS, VARNISHES, OILS, &C, J J LEWIS' WHITE LEAD, NEW J. WHITE ZINC, HorBehead brand, CHROME GREEN, VERDIGRIS. TERRA DI SIENNA, LINSEED OIL. MACHINE OIL, PARIS GREEN, CHROME YELLOW, TURKEY UMBKE, LAMP OILS, SPTS. TURPENTINE. All Colors for Painters, Coach Maker*, and other*, Dry and in Oil, Paint Brushes, Sand Paper, and a ve| large stock of best WINDOW GLASS, omprising nearly every Bize made. We are also prepared to take orders for Imported Polished Plate, Sky Light and Ornamental Glass.^ I3P* Particular attention to packing and forwarding all goods — and the quality wnrrnnted. PURCELL, LADD & CO, Druqguts, June 1838. 122 Main Street. Rirtormwi.