THE s OUTHERN TLANTER P. DEVOTED TO AGRICULTURE, HORTICULTURE, LIVE STOCK AND THE HOUSEHOLD. T. W. ORMOl KNIGHT, \i:v, 43d Year. Proprietor. Editor. ES8 Man \ OCTOBER, 1882, No 15, OONTB1TTS Farmers and Farming in Virginia in the Olden Time I >est to Dozen or Shock Wheat directly after the Reaper or Cradle?. An Enquiry Grap<- Successful Experiment with a Hydrogen Locomotive. What an Old Farmer Thinks Borax Injection for Meat Preservation Sunflower Seed for Poultry A New Variety of Oats Man's Treatment of the Horse Drainage An Old Farmer's Ideas Fauquier County Bill Arp's Musings A New Method of Growing Corn < Experiment with Potatoes Another New Cereal What Fancy Farmers Have Done Johnson Grass , Bedding for Cows Something for the American People to Consider Horses Common Sense in the Poultry Yard Sheep : Their Types and Characteristics; Fine Wool- Carbonized Bran for Packing Why? The Wages of Farm Labor , •Saxon Merino. Editorial : The State Fair: Its Postponement and Its Prospects, 206 ; The Planter as an Ad- vertising Medium, 207 ; The Virginia State Agricultural Society, 207 ; What we Saw in the Valley, 209 ; Silk Culture, 210 ; Ancient English Oaks Editorial Notes ; To our Richmond City Subscribers ; Tobacco Notes ; A Word to the Weekly Papers ; J. E. Doherty, Merchant Tailor ; Willard Lottery Scheme 212, Medical Notes for the Household Reports, Catalogues, etc ... Household Receipts— Summer Drinks Special Notice to Our Subscribers Poultry, 217 ; Inoculation of Animals, 218 ; Farming in Rhyme 169 174 17--, 178 179 180 181 182 183 183 184 185 187 l'JO 191 192 194 195 197 198 199 200 201 203 204 205 211 a 3 213 214 Richmond : J. W. Fergrusson & Son, Printers. THRESHERS-FARM ENGINES-DRILLS. LOW PRICES. RICHMOND Farm-Implement House, " NEW EMPIRE " Threshers and Cleaners. Iron cylinders — warranted in every respect. " PEERLESS" Threshers and Separators. Simplest machines made. "GRAY" Threshers and Cleaners. Cheapest Threshers in this country. "ONEIDA" "PAXTON" Most complete and warranted full' power, at prices lower than we have ever sold engines "SUPERIOR," "HAGERSTOWN," "UNION" Grain Drills WITH ALL ATTACHMENTS. The celebrated CHAMPION BARB FENCE WIRE, which is fast taking the place of the old styles. Pricks but does not lacerate. Call and examine any of the above machines. ASHTON STARKE, Office : 1422 Main Street. RICHMOND, Va. FARM ENGINES. MAN Sept— It Chester Strawberry Plants, 75c. doz., $4 per 100. Valuable information in free Catalogue. Address F. I. SAGE & SON. Wethersfield, Conn. BUT O'CK ENGINE fS of COTTON! Invaluable patented improvements found in izo other ENGINES in the world. For Pamphlets and Price List, (also for SAW MILLS), address THE AULTMAN & TAYLOR CO.. Mansfield. Qhio. ricpt— 2t Sepi— i BESTMARKETPEAR! Io '.•ined ray First Grafts of this valuable pear direct from the Originator, and now oflY.r the ^Largest .Stock of Trees in the Country. AIpo other trees, "vines find plants, inoludiper all the Kent Sorts of STRAWBERRIES, RASP- BERRIES, etc. flatatoKiieFRltfF. J. S. COLLINS, MoyroBtown, N. J. H. A. S. HAMILTON, Fishersville, Augusta County, Va., BREEDER OF PURE Southdown Sheep,; My flock took seven premiums at Virginia State Fair in 1881. Am prepared to fur- nish buck of any age at reasonable prices. my 15— m CHEAPESi BISLES Sm\ £*! "ration* ; n e o«: trn features. Both Versions NewTculamcnl Afirwipo \klk WPll FORSHBE & MCMACKiN.Cincinnati.O. M "XilUJ If illUljj* 15— ■THE- SOUTHERN PLANTER. DEVOTED TO Agriculture, Horticulture, Live Stock and the Household. Agriculture is the nursing mother of the Arts. — Xenophon. Tillage and pasturage are the two breasts of the State. — Sully. T. W. ORMOND, W. C. KNIGHT, - Proprietor. Editor. 43rd Tear. RICHMOND, OCTOBER, 1882. No. 15. FARMERS AND FARMING IN VIRGINIA IN .THE OLDEN TIME. No. 3. [What Hugh Jones, Esq., says of Virginia in 1724.] "The most southerly (of the four principal rivers of Virginia) is called James River, and the next York River, the land in the latitude between these rivers seeming most nicely adapted for sweet-scented, or the finest Tobacco. For 'tis observed that the goodness decreaseth the farther you go northward of the one and the southward of the other. But this may be (I believe) attributed in some measure to the seed and management, as well as to the land and latitude, for on York River is a small tract of land called ~Digges s Neck, which is poorer than a great deal of other land in the same latitude, by a particular seed and management is made the famous crop known by the name of E. Dees, remarkable for its mild taste and fine smell. "The land between the logs and stumps (of new ground) they hoe up, planting tobacco there in the spring, inclosing it with a slight fence of cleft rails. This will last for tobacco for some years, if the land be good, as it is where fine timber or grape vines grow. Land when hired is forced to bear tobacco by pen- ning cattle upon it ; but cow-pen tobacco tastes strong, and that planted in wet, marshy land is called non-burning tobacco, which smokes in the pipe like leather, unless it be of a good age. 170 SOUTHERN PLANTER, [October • •-g. ' ■ - When land is tired of tobacco, it will bear Indian corn or Eng- lish wheat, or any other European grain or seed, with wonder- ful increase. Tobacco and Indian corn are planted in hills as hops, and secured by worm-fences, which are made of rails sup- porting one another very firmly in a particular manner. "Tobacco requires a great deal of skill and trouble in the right management of it. They raise the plants in beds, as we do cab- bage plants, which they transplant and replant upon occasion after a shower of rain, which they call a season. When it is grown up they top it, or nip off the head, sucker it, or cut off the ground- leaves, weed it, hill it ; and when ripe, they cut it down about six or eight leaves on a stalk, which they carry into airy Tobacco Houses ; after it is withered a little in the sun, there it is hung to dry on sticks, as paper at the paper mills; when it is in proper case (as they call it), and the air neither too moist nor too dry, they strike it or take it down, then cover it up in bulk, or a great heap, where it lies until they have leisure or occasion to strip it (that is, pull the leaves from the stalk), or stem it (that is, take out the great fibres), and tie it up in hands, or straight-lay it; and so by degrees prize or press it with proper engines into great hogsheads, containing from about six to eleven hundred pounds, four of which hogsheads make a ton by dimension, not by weight. Then it is ready for sale or shipping. "There are two sorts of tobacco, viz : Oronoke, the stronger, and Sweet-scented, the milder ; the first with a sharper leaf like a fox's ear, and the other rounder and with finer fibres ; but each of these is varied into several sorts, much as apples and pears are ; and I have been informed by the Indian Traders that the Inland Indians have sorts of tobacco much differing from any planted or used by the Europeans. "The colony of Germans at Palatines are encouraged to make wines, which by the experience (particularly) of the late Col. Robert Beverley, who wrote the History of Virginia, was done easily and in large quantities in those parts, not only from the cultivation of the wild grapes, which grow plentifully and natu- rally in all the good lands thereabouts, and in the other parts of the country, but also from the Spanish, French, Italian and Ger- man vines, which have been found to thrive there to admiration. "Again ; as for wine, in all parts of the country grapes grow wild and thrive extremely, but at present they are almost only food for the birds, few attempts having been made for the cul- tivation of them and making wines, except that of Col. Robert 1882.] SOUTHERN" PLANTER. 171 Beverley, which was thus : He having read, seen, studied, and enquired much concerning the nature of vintages, reduced his knowledge to practice for his better experience and certainty, in planting a small vineyard ; and having great prospect that this would answer his purpose, he bragged much of it in publick ; but being bantered by several gentlemen, he proposed to give each of them a guinea down, if they would give him ten, if he made a certain number of gallons of pure wine from that vintage. They accepted the proposals, and he distributed (I think) one hundred guineas, made the wine according to the terms agreed on, and won his wager ; which money he afterwards employed in planting more and greater vineyards, from which he made good quantities of wine, and would have brought it to very high perfection had he lived some years longer. "His whole family, even his negroes, drank scarce anything but the small wines, and the strong is of a good body and fla- vour. The red that I have often drank, to me it seems to have the taste of Claret and the strength of Red Port. Not only red grapes, but also white ones of all sorts from Europe, produce and grow there to admiration ; an instance of which may be seen at Col. William Robinson's, upon Rappahannock River, who has planted out abundance ; and I don't question but what he and other gentlemen there will follow Mr. Beverley's pattern, which, if brought to perfection, might tend to an extraordinary good account, and not only prove profitable to the planter, but also advantageous to Britain, even if we could make but small quantities of wine there ; but much more beneficial would it be if there could be made abundance, as in all probability there might be, since the climate and the soil seem so extremely well adapted for that purpose, especially up towards the hills and mountains, which at present lie waste. Would it not be very advantageous to our nation if we could not only raise much wine for our own use, but also sell great quantities to our neigh- bors ? And I know but two trifling obstacles in the way ; the one is, that the clusters of grapes rarely ripen together, which might be remedied by pulling them at different times ; the other is, that the birds devour abundance ; but this might be pre- vented by nets, guns, Priapus, and several other contrivances. This would employ great numbers of people ; has upon trial been proved to answer expectation, and might bring vast profit to the planter, to the merchant, and to the Crown. To encour- age this, I know some that intend to let land for a small acknowl- edgment in wine. 172 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October " Mulberry trees and silk worms thrive there to admiration, and experience has proven that the silk manufacture might be carried on there to great advantage. The heat of the summer has been found to agree with the nature of the silk worm ex- tremely well ; so that the only reason that I know why the gen- tlemen formerly concerned in the making of silk in Virginia dropped their proceedings, was the great profit that tobacco brought them in in those days ; which being raised there only, turned them to an. extraordinary advantage, much better than any other project ; but now when so much tobacco is made, and the gain so much less than formerly, I can't imagine why the silk trade is not there revived ; which I am very positive would turn to a very great account if carried on by good managers. To this Nature seems to invite us, for upon the leaves of the Chinkapin (which seem somewhat like mulberry leaves) I have frequently found a very large worm not much unlike the silk worm, only much bigger. "If the manufacture of silk was carried on in Virginia, every- body knows what profit it must bring to make silk of the pro- duce of our own dominions, in great plenty, and at cheaper rates than we can have it from Asia. "Besides, we may observe that the great numbers of people employed in this manufacture, for the most part, might be the young, the aged, and the disabled, who could not work at any- thing which required hard labor or much stirring. " Most if not all sorts of English husbandry, I know experi- mentally, may be carried on there with much less labor and far greater increase than in England. For instance, it is common only by hoeing up the ground, and throwing seed upon it and harrowing it in, to reap from sixty to eighty bushels for one of English wheat, of a large, full grain with a thin rind ; and I have had two tons off an acre of clover, which we may mow twice ; and as for barley's being burnt up with hot, dry weather, it often has the same fate in several parts of England; besides, some experience and observation of the seasons will make people more expert in the management of that and all other sorts of grain, or seeds, or grass, and that they have not these brought yet to the greatest perfection. "Several English Farmers have indeed been baulked of their expectation in attempts of carrying on their art to great advan- tage in Virginia, but this in a great measure I attribute to their want of judgment and too strict observance of English customs 1882.] SOUTHEKN PLANTER 173 and times, without making proper allowance for the difference of soils, seasons and climates ; besides the vast expense and trouble, and the long time required in clearing the ground for their purpose, in building of barns, farm-houses, etc., so that at last they run into the rapid current of planting tobacco, which they know will bring them in certain gain with but little expense. "Now for the conveniency of husbandry, I know a certain gen- tleman who employs a great number of negroes in clearing plantations and planting corn and tobacco, as usual, with this intention, viz : When these negroes shall have cleared the land, planted hedges, and built barns and farm-houses gradually in a few years, without any hindrance to their crops, then he pro- posed to let these farms, with a stock of cattle, etc., ready upon them, for a small rent and fines, to such poor, honest, skillful farmers as he can procure to come and take them, either upon long lease or for lives, and remove his negroes upon fresh land to prepare more farms. 'Tis pity but this project were more frequently practised, for thereby good estates might be raised in families ; many an unfortunate family might retrieve their bad circumstances and find employment and great benefit, and all this carried on with the same opportunity of profit from to- bacco, as other gentlemen planters have ; nay better, in that the hands would be still tending fresh ground. "Would it not be for the good of thousands of unfortunate people, besides for the benefit of Virginia, if farmers were there settled and husbandry carried on regularly, and all sorts of grain and grass brought to perfection ; if greater quantities of good cider and fine spirits were made there, not only for their own use, but for transportation to the West Indies ; nay, and through England to the Turkish dominions where wine is prohibited? How cheap might ships be there victualled with the best pro- visions, and what quantities of barrelled pork and beef might be exported from Virginia, with Indian corn, wheat, rye, etc., and be sent to several parts of the world, where such things turn to very good account for the merchant and farmer? Many indeed have been baulked in planting and husbandry there, but such have been chiefly Londoners, who are strangers to country business. Any person may conceive the great profit and use to Trade in general, by having the marshes turned into mead- ows, the rivers confined to deep channels by passages being contrived at the falls and the upper parts of the rivers being made navigable. 174 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October " Besides English godds, several merchants in Virginia im- port from the W. Indies great quantities of rum, sugar, molasses, &c, and salt very cheap from the Salt Islands ; which things they purchase with money, or generally with Pork, Beef, Wheat, Indian Corn, and the like. Hogs, horned cattle and sheep thrive and increase there mightily ; and salt and casks being very cheap, vast advantage might be made more than is, by raising of great stocks, and salting up beef and pork for victualling of ships, and supplying the W. Indies and other places with pro- visions, which they might afford to do very cheap, did some of the additional part of their servants before mentioned make it their business to tend flocks and herds, and provide better and more food for them in the winter than what they now usually have." IS IT BEST TO DOZEN OR SHOCK WHEAT DIRECTLY AFTER THE REAPER OR CRADLE? I have shocked directly after the reaper several times, and found when my wheat was perfectly ripe it succeeded admirably ; but on each occasion my wheat crop was near the house, and consequently we had considerable wheat not ripe at the time of cutting, owing to the rav- ages of the poultry during fall, winter and spring, and this portion of the crop put up in shocks of the same size as the others, that is, four to five bushels in each shock, or sometimes more. These shocks sweat so profusely, that we have from fear opened them and dried them out and put them up again. One of our neighbors, an old and good farmer, has persistently insisted that we lost more in waste by this process than would have been lost if we had left them undisturbed; in other words, he believes, or rather insists, that he knows the wheat would not injure from shocking, though immature at the time. This year we had a very fine crop, the best of it thirx and high, and we commenced cutting early, for fear of danger to the tall wheat from storms. We shocked directly after the reaper. On the eighth or ninth day after cutting, we found the shocks quite wet inside, the straw and heads mouldy, and some of them quite black with mould; and on con- sultation with our nearest neighbor, one of the best farmers in the neighborhood, we concluded to open every one, and did so that even- ing and next morning, and made arrangements to thresh as soon as it dried out, which we did, and the grain was pronounced the prettiest and best sample that had been sold on change. 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 175 . -x. Our old friend, of whom I have already spoken, shocked his after the cradles also, and after the discovery of the condition of onr crop, a neighbor that lives half-way between him and us importuned him strongly to open his shocks, but he persistently refused, declaring that he knew it would not injure. I was told by several good farmers that they feared he would lose his crop, or that it would rot in the shock. Several old farmer* who have been accustomed to shock after the cradles, this year discovered the moisture in their shocks excessive, and, from fear, opened and dried them. Yesterday morning I heard the steam whistle over at my old friend's whose shocks had not been disturbed since they were put up after the cradle. I mounted my horse and rode over to see for myself the out- come. So far as they had threshed to the time I left, I never saw straw or grain in better condition, but candor compels me to say that I did not see any that could possibly have moulded as mine did. The ques- tion I would like those whose constant practice it is to 6hock directly after reaper or cradle to answer, is this, Would there have been any danger to my crop if it had remained unopened till it dried out in the shock, or would it have dried out or rotted ? This is an important question, and we who are only amateurs in the process, would be pleased to have the advantage of the experience and observation of old practitioners. Gentlemen, please let us hear from you through the Planter. G. B. Stacy. AN ENQUIRY. Will the editor of the Planter please publish in the September num- ber a simple and reliable recipe for making cheese? By so doing he will greatly oblige an Old Subscriber. This request was too late for our September number, which was in press before its re- ceipt. We are under the impression that the enquirer is a housewife who only wants to make cheese for family use and limited sale. Household and factory methods are dif- ferent, and for this reason it is important to know the real object of the enquiry. Rely- ing, however, on our surmise, we furnish the following recipes : CHEESE MAKING ON THE FARM. No doubt there are many farmers who would like to have a few cheeses for family use, and made from the milk of their own cows; but living away from any cheese factory and the good wife not knowing how, perhaps never having seen a cheese made, the family goes with- out, except as a few pounds are purchased at occasional intervals. Ac- cording to my experience in store cheese, most of it is not to be named 176 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October in connection with good home-made cheese. Erom a dairy of four to six cows as good cheese can be made as can be made from any number, provided the wife is competent, as most of our grandmothers were, and to my taste it is better cheese than any I have been able to purchase from the stores. The things actually needed are a cheese tub to "set" the milk in, a good basket and strainer cloth for draining the curd, a press and hoops of different sizes to accommodate the different sized cheeses to be made. Take pieces of well-cured calves' rennet, soak them in warm water a few hours, pour off and add more, rubbing them occasionally, adding as much salt as will readily dissolve, strain off the liquor, and put it with the first into a bottle or jar, adding so much rock salt that all will not dissolve, but some always remain; cork tight and keep cool. When the night's milk is brought in, strain immediately into the tub and put in sufficient of the rennet extract to bring the curd in from ten to twenty minutes. As soon as firm enough, it should be cut into checks or cubes with a wooden cheese knife. After waiting as long as necessary, it is again cut finely and left to settle till bed-time, when it is dipped into the strainer, spread in the basket and left through the night to drain. If from any cause the curd should not come sufficiently to separate the whey before bed-time, it may be left in the tub, but this is not so well, as it may sour. In the morning, the tub, having been washed the previous evening, is rinsed in cold water, unless the weather is cool, when warm water is used ; the morning's rniJk is strained into it, and the same process is again gone through with until it is ready to drain, when it is dipped in with the night's curd, and then both are treated together. The whey which runs off in the morning is carefully heated over a slow fire, not so hot as to scorch, but as warm as the hand will bear. When the curd has become sufficiently firm to cut into slices, which condition may be hastened by frequent cutting with a knife, and by a light weight laid on it, it is cut in thin slices, into the tub, and warmed whey poured over it, sufficient to cover the curd well, and the whole is carefully stirred, so that all the curd shall be evenly scalded ; and in from fifteen to twenty minutes it will be sufficiently scalded to be dipped off' into the strainer basket to drain and cool. In about half an hour, by occa- sional turning and cutting, it will be sufficiently cool to return to the tub, be chopped fine, and be salted with the best of fine dairy salt. A teacupful of salt to curd sufficient for a cheese often to twelve pounds is about right, and should be evenly mixed with the curd, which is then dipped into the hoop, having a cheese cloth spread in it, and then put 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 177 to press, subject to a moderate pressure until toward night, when it is turned and an increased pressure added until the press is wanted for the next cheese the following morning, when it is ready to go to the curing room. Care is to be used not to press too heavily, or a milky white liquid will flow from the cheese, which will drain away the best part of the cheese. This method has advantages over some others, in that it prevents the cream from separating from the night's milk, which can never be so well incorporated again ; saves labor in cooling and again warming the milk, and, if judiciously and properly done, it makes good cheese. It is pleasant to know of what and how it is made. — W. H. White, in Country Gentleman. GLOUCESTERSHIRE CHEESE. S. W. T., Utica, N. Y. : The Gloucestershire system of cheese mak- ing in England may be described as follows : The evening's milk is cooled and kept till the next morning, and it is then mixed with the morning's milk, the temperature raised to 80° and 85°, sufficient ren- net being added to coagulate it in an hour. The curd is gently broken with a curd breaker, and a metallic press sieve plate allowed to sink slowly through the whey upon the curd, the whey being then let off by a tap or baled out. The press plate is gradually let down on to the curd, so as to press out the whey. The curd is cut with a knife and heaped up in the kettle, and the pressure again applied. When dry enough, it is broken up or ground once or twice, some of the best makers mixing a small quantity — say one pound to the 112 pounds — of fine salt with the curd, which is then vatted and put in a lever press, taken out again and cut or slightly broken and revatted. The cheeses, which are from sixteen to twenty-eight pounds each, are rubbed over on the outside with salt, and fresh dry cloths are put on daily for three days, while kept in press. They are then removed to the cheese room, kept in a temperature of from 60° to 70°, and sold when ripe at from six to twelve weeks old. — American Cultivator. Southern apologists for the sanded cotton are finding much comfort in the story of heavy sticks of wood used in packing Northern bales of hay. A prolonged drought is causing great distress among the working classes in Spain. The government has consigned large sums of money to the authorities of Andalusia, in order to give employment to the laboring people. 178 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October GRAPES. [For the Southern Planter.] The increasing and continued widespread destruction of vines in the European wine districts by the phylloxera, an insect said to be originally imported from these United States, is causing more and more attention to be given to North American varieties, suitable to wine- making in this country, as well as to the exportations of cuttings and vines phylloxera-proof; these are Labousca (with some exceptions) and Cordifolia types. The (Estivolis type, a grape suited to Southern lati- tudes, is said to be especially exempt from the ravages of this insect. The varieties of the European grapes, while generally unsuccessfully grown east of the Rocky Mountains, succeed well in the climate of the Pacific Coast, and have until recently been cultivated to the exclusion of all others in that section of country. The hybrids which have been produced between it and our native grapes give it an interest to grape- growers. " The varieties of the European grapes differ from ours in their leaves, which are smoothish, and, when young, shining; they are more or less deeply five to seven lobed, the lobes pointed and sharply toothed ; the flesh of the berry adheres to the skin, while the seeds have a narrow and usually proportionately larger beak than in any of the native varieties. Botanists admit eight or nine species as distinct throughout North America, four only of which have yielded varieties of cultivation, viz. : Vitis Labousca, the Northern Fox Grape; Vitis (Estivolis, the Summer Grape; Vitis Cordifolia or Vitis Riparia, the Win- ter or Frost Grape, or the Riverside Grape, and Vitis Vulperia, the Southern Fox Grape. According to Dr. Geo. Engelman, the seeds give, in most cases, more constant marks by which to distinguish the species than could be found elsewhere. The Vitis Labousca, the well-know Wild or Fox Grape, extends from Canada to the Gulf. This grape has given rise to an important series of table grapes, of which the Concord and several useful hybrids are the best known. The Summer Grape, Vitis (Estivolis, reaches great perfection in Missouri, Arkansas and Indian Territory. Norton's Virginia and Herbemont are prominent among the varieties. The Clinton, Taylor and Elvira are best known of the Vitis Cordifolia or Vitis Riparia. The remaining species, Vitis Vulperia (the foxy), is not found north of Virginia, and extends into Florida. This is the parent of the Scuppernong, Mish and others. It is called Bullace, and also Muscadine. The vineyards of California are threatened by as widespread a de- 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 179 vastation as those of France, and the viticulturists of the country must look to the (EsttvoUs and Cordifolia classes (which have phylloxera proof roots) for a new era of vinticulture. These two classes will doubt- less, with care and cultivation, give the true wine grapes of the coun- try, and perhaps the world. M. SUCCESSFUL EXPERIMENT WITH A HYDROGEN LOCOMOTIVE. On the Erie Railroad yesterday a locomotive fired entirely by hydro- gen gas produced by the chemical decomposition of water under tbe action of ignited naphtha was successfully run from Paterson, around by Newark to the depot in Jersey City, making the trip one minute and ten seconds ahead of time, and coming into the depot with a press- ure of 140 pounds of steam, nearly three times as much as the ordi- nary locomotives carry at the end of such a trip. The engine has been specially constructed under the supervision of Dr. Charles Holland, the inventor, at the Grant Works in Paterson, and made several experi- mental trips with freight trains previous to the first regular trip yester- day. The train left Paterson at 1:30 P. M. yesterday, the engineer making so much steam that the safety valve had to be opened nearly all the way. It is claimed that w T hen the engineer and fireman get more used to the new engine, there will not be this waste of force, and only half the naphtha used yesterday will be necessary. As it was, the entire amount of naphtha used for nineteen and three-quarter miles was eighty-four gallons, costing $2.08, about one-third of the cost of coal usually used for the same distance. The system was tried last year on the Coney Island Railroad with an ordinary locomotive, and the discovery of several practical defects led to the construction of this engine specially adapted for her peculiar fuel. No smoke, sparks or cinders are produced, and consequently the danger of setting fire to woods or dry grass is avoided. A number of gentlemen interested in the invention, and members of the New York Heat, Light and Power Company, were on the train, and all expressed themselves as satisfied with the result. The veteran engineer, Wm. Vellner, who ran the en- gine, said it was " the greatest thing since George Stephenson's time." On Friday last the engine, with only one car attached, which was too light to permit high speed being reached, ran from Jersey City to Pas- saic Bridge at the rate of fifty-five miles an hour. [We copy the above from a recent issue of the New York World for two reasons : First, That we had been led to believe that the process of Dr. Holland for the decom- position of water and the development of its principal element — hydrogen — which ia 180 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October the most inflamable of all gasses, will ultimately lead to great results in the cheapening of fuel for all purposes ; Second, For the reason that our friend, E. G. Booth, exhibited at the Fair of the Virginia State Agricultural Society, in 1879, one of "Holland's Hydro-Carbon Retorts," which was attached to an ordinary cooking stove, and did its work most effectually, and evidently with much less cost than ordinary fuel, and without smoke, dust, cinders, and no flavor which could be imparted to the articles cooked. Mr. Booth who had the control of the patent for Virginia, and perhaps other States, we thought had a bonanza, but for some reason he seems to have dropped it and taken up his present, and perhaps better, hobby, in an agricultural view, the BurwelVs Bay farm. Let our friend Booth explain ; but we must whisper in his ear : Do it in short- metre. He will understand our joke.— Ed. S. P.] WHAT AN OLD FARMER THINKS. Editor Southern Planter : I have intended, since your July number returned to the old form, to congratulate you and your readers upon it, and hope you may hold to it in future. I have thought it too cheap, and possibly semi-monthly would keep it more frequently before the people and a price to suit, but I yield to your greater experience and number of pears, and will venture a few ideas for your consideration in furtherance of how our farming interest may advance from its troubles since 1861. Such has been the revolution in it, and what must follow is gloomy to contem- plate, and let us recognize the demand for this change. Do not mur- der the chronic drones. If they will not change, let them die without taking life, and instruct the young in the way they ought to go. Give our boys a practical education — not too liberal to soften their hands and unhinge them from labor, but learn them to be their own mechanics and how to work all kinds of machinery to the best advantage, and not trust it to the dull negro, thus having less for them to do on the farm, but let them follow railways, mines, and to them many phan- toms ; still they are older and wise enough to settle down to home labor, under the white man's direction and care, for with rare excep- tions they are not fit to work land except for others, and then they want more than the farmer can live and pay. As they continue to weed out and disappear, we must learn to do without them, use more machinery, judiciously selected and used, also more fertilizers, banish style and luxury, educate our daughters for domestic ladies, to scorn the life of our past days, and our daughters should learn to be useful and independent of husbands unfit to mate with. Each should be too proud to live on the labor of others, and the girls should spurn all fancy men and accept the harder hands of industrious young men. 1382.] SOUUHERN PLANTER. 181 The press is a mighty lever if it is directed right, and may be useful in that way as well as of crops and all that makes agriculture flourish. Papers on these subjects are far the cheapest literature, and to avoid the opposite and not to be misled by what is not suitable to the location and need of the reader, I am more and more convinced that my theory to work out of our troubles of late years in former contributions is well founded, be how or wheie you may. Be industrious, honest and self- reliant ; love your friends and hate your enemies (the enemies of our State), and labor all the time to improve on the past, and do not fear to speak out and act on your honest convictions, avoiding politics, es- pecially those of these days of degeneracy among men, whilst our fe- males greatly improved in our adversity. In a word, mixed farming and stock-raising suit our country best, and it leads our children in the paths best suited to succeed their fathers and to prosper and reproduce their like in after ages. Many pursuits present themselves that may fall and carry all in the wreck and leave a family stripped and too late to build up again. The farmer has no good reason or excuse to fall, if he is but rationally deserving, and a more common mind and man may float on, while the apparently brighter and more active mind may be carried down by a speculative life in many callings, but there is no place for the idlers here now-a- days. When such wear out, it is to be hoped better will appear of our production, and thus we may hope for a continued and improved stand- ard of people. S. W. Ficklin. BORAX INJECTION FOR MEAT PRESERVATION. We have given from time to time the latest means adopted for pre- serving fresh meat for long shipment in the hope that when the perfect way is secured it may be of benefit to this coast in some way, by re- ducing cost of carriage on flesh which grows at a distance from the market. The last which comes to our notice is different from those which have been described. Instead of steeping the dead meat in an antiseptic, the preservative chemical is introduced into the live animal, and by the action of the heart is sent through the blood-vessels and capillaries into every part of the body. The sheep, which was first stunned by a smart blow on the head, given by a wooden mallet, showed no signs of consciousness or sensibility throughout the opera- tion. A veterinary surgeon laid bare the left jugular vein, and using an ordinary surgical trocar and canula drew off about a pint of blood. 182 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October The preservative chemical, dissolved in warm water and kept at blood heat by a hot water-jacket surrounding the tin can in which it was held, was then allowed to flow through an India-rubber tube, placed to the orifice of the canula into the vein, about two pints being thus in- jected. As soon as the charge had run into the animal, the canula was plugged, and about two minutes were allowed for the injected fluid to pass through the whole vascular system. The sheep was then stuck by the butcher in the ordinary way. The antiseptic used is boracic acid, which, it is said, does not in the slightest degree affect the flavor or quality of the meat, while the results of experiments show that meat thus treated will, in this country, keep perfectly good, without ice or refrigerators, for Ove or six weeks in summer and two or three months in cold weather. The cost of the chemical, it is stated, would be, at the outside, eight or ten cents per sheep, and the only apparatus re- quired would be a tank in which, by means of a sand bath, the boracic acid could be kept at blood heat, ready for use when killing was going on. Note. — This is an important and very interesting experiment, and deserves considera- tion not only for transporting, but for curing meat for home consumption in a simple and cheap manner. We are informed by the Surgeon-General of the late Confederate States Army, that during the war, in consequence of the scarcity of salt for curing meat, an ex- periment was directed to be made, but instead of borax an injection of strong brine, composed of saltpetre and common salt, was used. The animal selected was a hog. It was stunned by a blow on the head, the animal being insensible, the breast was exposed, and the injection thrown into vena cava until the vessels of the carcass were completely filled with the injected fluid. The tail was cut off and the brine was found oozing from the cut surface, tested by the taste. The experiment was very satisfactory. The butch- ered hog was kept for two months. The meat was well salted. Surgeons Petticolas, Peachy, Tally, Dunn and Campbell, with the Surgeon-General, witnessed the experiment. Sunflower Seed for Poultry. — A correspondent, Mrs. M. J. C, Otter, Iowa, gives her experience in raising mammoth Russian sun- flower seed for poultry and for stock. It is eagerly eaten, makes the hens produce eggs plentifully, keeps the feathers glossy and elegant. Our correspondent has grown it successfully on a variety of soils and even in fence corners, and regards the stalks to be used for kindling wood as by no means unimportant. In conclusion, she adds: "It grows to double the size of the common South American variety, and far excels it in the large heads of nice black seeds, if cultivated lik other grains and kept free from weeds. I raised heads larger over than a water pail, and very heavy. I plant a patch every year for ray chickens, if you plant near your barn the poultry will live and grow fat, and one would be astonished at the amount of eggs produced. It takes three quarts for an acre and plant as far apart as corn." 1882.] SOUTHERN" PLANTER. 183 A NEW VARIETY OF OATS. Editor Southern Planter : As the oat crop of Virginia is almost an entire failure this year, I would like to say a few words in regard to a new variety that I have. Last spring I purchased of Messrs. D. M. Ferry & Co., of Detroit, Mich., one and a-half pounds of Russian White oats, and was so much pleased with them that I bought a bushel this spring. What I raised last year and the bushel bought this. I sowed on an acre of ordinary land without any fertilizer, except 250 pounds of plaster. I sowed sixteen acres in ordinary oats, and 200 pounds of a standard fertilizer per acre. Now, as to results, the one acre I sowed in Russian White oats, with- out fertilizer, made four times as much per acre as did my ordinary oats with 200 pounds of fertilizer. They are so far superior to any- thing I have ever seen in the oat line, that I think it will pay any farmer to get in the seed of them. Although I am a young hand at farming, I take quite an interest in all kinds of improved seed and stock, and firmly believe that to im- prove your stock, seeds and lands, is the only way to make farming a success. Yours truly, Warrenton, Va., Aug. 14th, 1882. A Young Farmer. Man's Treatment of the Horse. — The man has cut away the frog, because he thinks the horse vyill be injured if the frog touches the ground. He has then cut a deep groove at the base of the frog. This is to give a well-opened heel, as he is pleased to call it. He has scooped away the sole to "give it spring." He has scored a deep notch in the toe for the shoe. This is evidently a conservative relic of the time when nails were not used, and the shoe attached by three-pointed clips hammered over the edge, one in front and one on either side. Then he has improved the whole pf the outer surface of the hoof. As the Creator has furnished this part of the hoof with a thin, hard, polished plate, forming a sort of varnish which is impervious to wet, the farrier, as a matter of course, rasps it all away up to the crown. And as the Creator has placed round the crown a fringe of hair, which acts as a thatch to the line of junction and throws oif the rain upon the water-proof varnish, he cuts this away with his scissors. * Lastly, the Creator having given to the horny hoof a mottling of soft and par- tially translucent brown, gray- blue, yellow, black and white — never exactly the same in two hoofs, much less in two horses— the farrier takes a blacking-pot and brush, polishes up the hoofs until they look like patent leather boots, all four exactly alike, and then contemplates his work with satisfaction. In his own words, he has " turned out a finished job of it." 184 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October DRAINAGE. Editor Southern Planter : I am glad to receive the Planter in its old familiar form again, with more in it, too. You say drainage is a hobby with you; it is a necessity with me, and, unfortunately, my land that needs it most is at the foot of the first range of hills from the Rappahannock river, and all the open ditches are often filled up by the wash from the hills in very heavy rains, making it very expensive to keep them in good order. It has occurred to me that this land might be well drained by boring with a small well-auger and putting in tile to a foot of the surface and capping with stone. There is a strata of sand and gravel from fifteen to twenty feet below the surface, and it seems to me it would be much better and cheaper than the ordinary way of using tile. The well- auger would be expensive, too much so for me to get one to experi- ment with; therefore I ask your private opinion on the subject. I wrote to the Planter on this subject once before, but it did not seem to strike any one forcibly enough to attract attention. I hoped some one had tried it and would give his experience. If it is not asking too much, please give me your opinion on the subject, and oblige Yours very respectfully, Wm. Tayloe. Comorn, August 11th, 1882. [We are glad to submit the enquiry of our correspondent, as it may elicit responses from others better able to give them than ourself. A stranger to the physical condition of the locality cannot be expected to give a reliable opinion. Assuming, however, that the " strata of sand ! ' below the surface would be a safe medium for carrying off the sur- face water, and that the strata, when tapped, will not, on the principle of hydraulic pressure, bring its water to the surface, we may venture the suggestion that the surest plan of drainage will be to run a horizontal secret drain at the foot of the hills, filled with loose stones, or with plank troughs, such as we have described, and have this drain tapped at proper distances with wells, filled also with loose stones, reaching to the sand strata. Tile cannot, we think, be safely used in* such a form of drainage. We have, in several instances, where basins would, in wet weather, hold water sufficient to destroy crops, effectually drained them by what are termed dry wells. These wells, and only one was required at the lowest point, were dug deep enough to reach a strata of sand or gravel, and filled with loose stones, and so the accumulating surface water was rapidly taken off. The question is an interesting one, and we should like to have light on it from some of our readers. — Ed. S. P.] Latest news from Continental Europe report cold weather and hard frosts in the valley of the Danube. Fruit trees, vines and young wheats in Roumania are almost entirely destroyed. I 1882.J SOUTHERN PLANTER. 185 AN OLD FARMER'S IDEAS. Editor Southern Planter: We hear a great deal said now -a-days. about hard times. It mnst be confessed they are so hard with many of ns, we can barely make buckle and tongue meet. But my observation satisfies me they are more so than they need be. Circumstances are, with us, very much changed within the last twenty years. We must try to adapt ourselves to this change. We must heed the advice I once heard an old darkey give a working fellow-servant, viz.: "G-o to work, go to work." This will be best for us every way. It will not only contribute materially to the supply of our needs, but will allow us less time for croaking and give us a more peaceful and contented state of mind. True, some of us, by reason of age and infirmity, cannot perform much manual labor, yet such ought to do what they can ; supervise and do what an old friend used to call head-work. My own experience and judgment convince me that better results from the same labor might be obtained than is often realized, by a more judicious management and culture. For example, we often see acre upon acre cultivated, the proceeds of which do not pay expenses — 1st. Because the land is poor. 2d. It is not properly prepared before plauted; and 3rd. It is not well cultivated. Sometimes, when the land is fairly of good quality, the yield is not remunerative for lack of good preparation and culture. If one has poor land, either originally so or worn out by bad culture, let him take such part3 as are most susceptible of improvement, and, by every possible means, gradually make as much of it rich as he can, and cultivate such parts thoroughly, breaking it up as deep as the na- ture of the soil will allow, and, if need be, following the turn plow with a subsoil plow or coulter. Let his land be put in the best possi- ble order before planting. Let him keep the land well-stirred and clean, working his corn or other crop3 as soon as they will bear it, and, I feel sure, if he will persistently pursue this course, he will make far more than by the slovenly management too often witnessed. I have said he must improve his best lands gradually — either with or without capital, it cannot be done in a day or year. But he must aim to increase the area of his good tillable land as time and means allow, and thus I am sure, he would make more, perhaps double, in crops and money from the same labor. I know the plan here recommended has been urged by others time 19 186 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October and again; but really it seems so bard for us to get out of old ruts, tbat we need "line upon Hue" to stimulate us to tbe necessary effort. I add a word or so on the aid a good vegetable garden affords to- wards cheap and good living these hard times. But few things pay better or add more to comfortable living. I speak only of a vegetable and fruit garden. Let the soil be worked deep and bountifully sup- plied with manure. Let everything be planted and worked at the proper time, and the whole kept clean of grass and weeds. Let it be so arranged that the plow may do as much as possible in its culture. Let no grass or weeds go to seed, and let every foot of the ground be utilized in some way. I know some small families who derive a large part of their subsistence from such a garden. To avoid the conse- quences of severe summer and fall droughts, the land should be worked very deep and stirred often. M. B. S. Fluvanna county. FAUQUIER COUNTY. Editor Southern Planter : Fauquier county is one 01 the largest and most fertile in the State. The Plains is a station on the M. G. R. R., situated in a country beau- tifully undulating, well-watered and covered with grass, which affords grazing for many cattle. Some of the wealthiest and most intelligent farmers in the State live near by. In walking over the fields, one is reminded of the observation of Mr. Burke, "If you enter the fields of Old England, you will hear the importunate clinck of the grasshoppers, but do not think for a moment that they are the only occupants of the field, where thousands of fat cattle chew their cud in silence under the shadow of the British oak.*' This is classic ground! Jackson passed through it to reinforce our army at the First Battle of Manassas, and Lee, at the Second Battle of Manassas, passed through the grass of the Bull Run Mountains and fell upon Pope. The Bull Run Mountain is the local name for this portion of the southwest range, which runs parallel with the Blue Ridge, about twenty miles apart. All kinds of fruit, especially the grape, grow and mature in great perfection in this mountainous region. The Catawba grape, which of late years has failed in so many localities, ripens well here. The mountains are, in many places, cleared to the top and bring good crops of grain and grass. The land, though stony, is very fertile ; in evidence of which the old men will tell you that, "Where you miss a stone, you'll find a dollar." 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 187 Cool, bold springs burst out in every hollow. It is destined to be a great dairy and wool country, as the cows and sheep get away from the flies on these elevated pastures and thrive well. The space I have al- lotted to myself is filled, or I would like to canvass with your readers a question now occupying the mind of the farmers of this region, viz.: The advantages, pro and con, of the use of plaster, some of the best farmers thinking it has lost its effect and is no longer a specific manure for clover. How is this? It is contrary to my experience and obser- vation of fifty years, for in those good old times we believed that land in Piedmont Virginia could be improved with great celerity by the use of clover and plaster. "An Old Farmer." [In another communication we should be glad to have our correspondent's views on the use of plaster, or any other matter of practical agriculture — Ed S. P.] BILL ARP'S MUSINGS. I take The Country Gentleman, and like it. It is a good paper, but it is a better paper for the North than for the South. It has, in every number, a great deal of matter about things that don't concern us much, such as about onions, and hops, and bee-keeping, and ice houses, and live stock sales, and dairies, and ensilage, and the weather up there, and so forth. May be we will get to all that after while, but a South- ern journal can better tell us what we want to know right now. Then, besides, there is now and then a fling at us in its columns that don't digest well. One of its ablest correspondents, Mr. B. F. J., from Illi- nois, is always interesting, but he came down here to the Exposition on the fly and went back home in a sort of a fog. He says he did see some fine corn and wheat and other products on exhibition, but don't know where they could have come from, for he saw nothing but poor land and shabby farms. Well, that kind of an endorsement about settles us with the Northern readers of that paper. It is unfortunate for the rep- utation of our State that our principal railroads run along our poorest lands. From Chattanooga to Atlanta the prospect is not very inviting, and from Atlanta to Macon is worse, and the Georgia Railroad is not much better. If Mr. B. F. J. could spend a few weeks perusing around such valleys as Cohutta and Fairmount, and Cave Spring, and Cedar Valley and along our rivers and creeks, and climb upon our mountains and look around him, may be he would find out where that corn came from. In a late number, B. F. J. gives us a dig for pretending that our soil and climate is equal to theirs, and says that we are so pos- 188 SOUTHERN" PLANTER. [October sessed with these ideas that we won't even admit that one- third of our population, in portions of the South, is now on the verge of starvation from the drought of last summer. Well ! that is news to me. I haven't heard anything about starvation. The fact is, starvation is an unknown affliction to our people, except it comes from war or Sher- man's march to the sea, or the late flood on the Mississippi. Our peo- ple don't get rich as a general thing, but they never starve. We have no beggars going from door to door in the country. We have no tramps cruising around scaring the women and children to death. I never lock a door at my house, and hardly ever lock a corn crib or a stable. I live five miles from town on a public highway, a market road, that is travelled a great deal, and I never had but one person to call for charity, and he was a mute who wanted to stay all night. There is a poor-house in most of the counties, but it is hard work to get any- body to go there. They are not popular. Our poor folks can turn out any time and make money enough in one day to feed 'em for two or three, and they can do this all the year round. We don't have to work for six months to raise provisions to go into winter quarters with for the next six, and therefore our people are not as industrious as our Northern brethren, for there is not the same necessity for it; and the further South the people live the more indolent they are, and this is according to nature and no fault of the people. Bees don't lay up a store of honey where the flowers bloom all the year round. Now we don't hanker after immigration. We welcome 'em when they come, but we don't want 'em bad enough to tell a lie about it, and say our people are not starving when they are. Our land and climate is good enough for us, and we can tell B. F. J. one thing he never thought of, a hundred of his people come down here to live where one of ours go up there. That means something, or else there are ninety- nine fools to one man of sense. Another correspondent seems mighty well satisfied where he is, and I hope he will stay there, for I do love to see folks contented when they are doing well. He says we have many complaints of great heat, and frequent droughts and ravages of insects, but their folks can alwaj^s depend on average crops, and their stock is larger and healthier, and their people live longer, and that history proves that Northern nations are always the most powerful and hold the keys of nationality. He says that our long summers are a disadvantage and make us careless and slothful, and we do everything in an easy-going-lots-of-time style, and winds up by asking us, "is this not so ?" Not altogether, my friend. Nature has been right kind in distribu- 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 189 ting her favors. There is no land or region that has got them all. The law of compensation comes in and tries to equalize everything and everybody. The colder the climate and the longer the winter, the harder a man has got to work, and that makes him diligent and indus- trious and careful and economical, and gives him good habits. He plows deeper and takes better care of his stock. If our folks were to work as hard and be as saving as the Yankees, they would get so rich in ten years they wouldn't have to work any more for the rest of their days. It is a fact that most of our second-class farmers do things in an easy-going-lots-of-time style, and all that comes not so much from cli- mate and long summers as it does from the way our forefathers started out. Before the war the negroes were the farmers mostly, and they used the old-fashioned tools and scratched about on the ground and made about enough to feed and clothe themselves and white folks and not much over, for our habits were plain and simple, and siuce the war our people have been so poor and broken up they couldn't get a start for a long time, but it is wonderful what they have done. We are getting along pretty well now and are able to buy machinery and better implements, and we will catch up before long. We can make as much on our lands as anybody anywhere, and hundreds of our farmers have proved it. As to health and long life, I don't know ex- actly, but a life insurance man told me not long ago that the balance of trade with old Father Time was in our favor. I know that Florida is being filled up with Northern invalids, but I never heard of our peo- ple going North for health. As to the Northern nations holding the keys of nationality, I can't see it in the light of history. England has held 'em a long time, but that was on account of race and not of cli- mate. The Irish live close by and never had a door to lock, much less a key. The truth is, the nations occupying the temperate zones, neither far north nor far south, have held the keys mostly. To make a vigor- ous manhood, people must be neither melted or frozen. Even Judge Tourgee admits that the Southern States controlled this government for fifty years, and says they will do it again, and they will and they ought to until they get like the majority of our Northern brethren and love money more than country. They taunt us with being poor, why the best and greatest men are generally poor; poverty is no crime, we would rather be poor than be rich and miss Heaven. — Bill Arp, in So, Cultivator. Know most of the rooms of thy native country before thou goest over the threshold thereof. — Fuller. 190 SOUTHERN" PLANTER. [October A NEW METHOD OF GROWING CORN. Mr. J. S. Winter, of Montgomery, Ala., has been making experi- ments in growing corn. From a letter explaining his views and their results, we extract the following, which will explain his method. His first experiment was in planting in rows fourteen feet apart and one foot apart in the drill, or at the rate of 3,640 stalks to the acre, to cor- respond with the number common to the acre when sown in the usual three feet by four feet way. The returns from this trial induced a further experiment. Twenty acres were put down in rows twelve feet wide and one foot apart in the drill, and notwithstanding the prevailing and unusually disastrous drouth of the last season the crop realized was double the best grown on the land for years, and twice that grown on the infinitely richer adjoining bottom lands cultivated with equal care, but planted in the ordinary mode and ordinarily producing double the crop usual to the land devoted to the experiment; the 'increased return being greatly due to the increased exposure of the plants to the influences of light and air, as also in a measure to the greater moisture- retaining capacity of the wider and amply cultivated spaces incident to the change. After making several efforts in the demonstration of the greatly su- perior advantages of the wider row system of corn culture, Mr. Winter regards with most favor the plan of planting two rows four feet apart, with the distance in the drill say from nine inches to two feet, deter- mined and regulated by the quality of the land; then skipping sixteen feet — two other four-feet rows, followed as before, and so throughout, the yet wider beds being necessary, as he conceives, to the freer and less hindered use of the intervening spaces for the adjunctive crops which he has in view as part of the system, such as field peas, millet, fodder corn, etc., to be put in after the corn crop has received its final cultivation. Mr. Winter remarks that "the distance in the drill thought best on the particular lands devoted to these experiments is one foot, so that the number of stalks to the acre will, in theory at least, be 4,853, or just a third more than the 3,640 due to the current three by- four method; while the latest experiment warrants expectation, under average conditions, of one-half more weight of corn to the stalk." Mr. Winter thus further sums up the advantages of this system : "And thus 20 acres of the 100, say, ordinarily surrendered to the corn crop, it seems possible indeed to gather — and especially in seasons of protracted drought, for the wider beds secure absolute immunity from its usual pre- 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 191 judice — double the corn to be otherwise produced on the entire 100 acres, and of vastly better quality; while the field pea sown as early as the 1st of May may be alternated with German millet, fodder corn, and other quickly maturing crops, to be put down in this latitude as late even as the middle of July and gathered by the first of September, and these in turn by the native crab grass, which will be all the better for the later start. "And the promise is, accordingly, of adjunctive crops rivalling in value and in their uses, to the practical farmer particularly, the main or corn crop; while, again, the cost of growing and gathering each and every of the entire of these products is infinitely reduced, if aided in the work by the improved power implements now-a-clays at every good and thrifty farmer's command." — Saunders in Tribune. [There is some novelty in Mr. Winter's plan of culture. It deserves experiment to see practical results. The greater facility for sowing peas to be fallowed for wheat is a strong point. We would like for some of our Virginia readers to make a note of this matter and try an experiment next year and report results, whether good or bad. — Ed. So. Planter.] EXPERIMENT WITH POTATOES. [From Elmira (N. Y.) Husbandman.] Perhaps the followiug statement of the result an experiment made by me this summer, may be of some interest to the members of your Club. The object I had in view was to ascertain the amount of plant- ing material requisite to reach satisfactory results. For this end, I planted in my garden ten rows of potatoes, each row consisting often hills. The potatoes (Early Ohios) were planted April 26th. The har- vesting took place to da}\ The product of each row was accurately weighed. Here is the result : 1st Row— One eye in each hill. Product — 40 pounds of well developed potatoes. 2d Row — Two eyes in each hill. Product — 55 pounds of tubers, rather mixed as to size. 3d Row — Three eyes in each hill. Product — 56 pounds of mixed sizes, many small ones. 4th Row — Seed end of medium potato. Product — G3 pounds ; very few small tubers, mostly large. 5th Row — Butt end of medium potato. Product — 51 pounds ; few large tubers, mostly small. 6th Row — One small potato. Product — 60 pounds, mixed as to size, many small ones. 7th Row— One potato of medium size. Product — 73 pounds tubers, very fine and large, few small ones. 8th Row — One large potato. Product — 102 pounds of uniformly large size. 192 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October I do not suppose the result will, under all circumstances, be the same, but this Dutchman is bound hereafter (until better informed) to use large potatoes for planting. On the correctness of the above statement you can fully rely. Hans Buschbauer, Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 12, 1882. Agricultural Editor Germania. ANOTHER NEW CEREAL. Rev. H. B. Pratt, of Winnsboro, S. C, who was for some time a missionary in South America, calls attention in the Southern journals to a food plant which grows abundantly in Colombia, and which he believes will do remarkably well in portions of this country. Its espe- cial merit consists in its ability to grow during severe and protracted drouths. He does not give its botanical name, but calls it millo (pro- nounced meel-yeomaize). He states that it forms the ordinary and favorite grain food of the laboring classes in Colombia, and that it is also used for feeding animals that are trained to work. He has been cultivating it in South Carolina for the past four years and has met with excellent success. Recently he has had some of it ground and made into cakes, which he has sent to various persons that they might test their value. The bread made of it is pronounced superior to that made of corn. The chemist of the Savannah Guano Company pro- nounces the grain superior to wheat for food purposes. Mr. Pratt's experiments indicate that from fifty to a hundred bushels of clean seed can he raised on an acre. Some of his statements about the plant and its products are here given. " The plant is allied to the sorghum and Guinea corn families, and should not be planted where there is danger of mixing them. The grain is smaller and miore mealy than the Guinea corn, the heads are larger and less compact, and the color is milk-white instead of red. It differs from the sorgum in this, that the sugar it contains is fully con- verted into corn when the grain matures, so that the pith of the green stalk becomes as dry and tasteless as that of Indian corn when the stalk is dead. Except for this, and as the valuable product of leaves is green till frost, the whole might be converted into ensilage, after the grain from the main stem is harvested. If desired for the latter purpose, it can be planted on wheat or oat land, by improving the first good sea- son after wheat is cut. Planted about the 1st of July, it will be in blossom, and therefore ready to cut, about the 1st or middle of Novem- ber. As a green food for cows, to be cut repeatedly during the sum- mer, it has few equals. 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 193 U I have seen it growing in the United States of Colombia at all ele- vations, from the sea level to an altitude of four thousand feet — never higher, I believe — and in all climates, from the wettest to the dryest. In Barranqailla, on the coast, where we have a dry season (which is really a ' drouth ') of five or six months' continuance, I have had it planted in my garden, and after it had ripened one crop of seed I have cut it down to the roots, in the midst of this dry season, and had a second crop (of inferior quality, of course,) to shoot np at once from the roots. I have been told there that a third crop of fully ripened seed can thus be made from a single planting. I do not know what this can imply (for the soil at that season gets to be as dry as a potsherd, and nearly as hard) unless it means that above most other plants this lives off the atmosphere, which there certainly is densely charged with mois- ture from the sea. It was this unlimited capacity to stand drouth which induced me to bring the seed home, in the belief that it would be of incalculable service to our Southern States, where our grain crops so often fail from drouth, and where a really good crop comes perhaps once in five years, if so often as that. " The ordinary planting in South America, which I have followed here, is in rows about three feet wide, or less, the hills a foot and a-half apart, and three or four grains to the hill. They never thin it, and it stools, more or less according to circumstances. Thus there are nearly ten thousand hills to the acre, and even in this exceptionally dry sum- mer, and under unfavorable circumstances to be detailed hereafter, I have raised scores of heads which would each yield four or five ounces of clean seed. When, then, one remembers how many hundreds of thousands of dollars go out of the State every year for corn, and how many hundreds of thousands more go for bacon, he will be prepared to estimate the value of a nutritious and palatable cereal which laughs at dry weather, and furnishes abundant and wholesome food for man and beast."— The Mill Stone. [Onr great staples, wheat and Indian corn, as food plants, will feed the world, and with proper cultivation will meet all demands upon them. In this respect we are like the old woman who preferred the " old-fashion,ed way." But still we would like to hear more of this new cereal. — Ed. S. P.] Pittsburg, Pa., produces more than half the glass made in the United States. One should bring about neither friendship nor even acquaintance with a wicked person ; charcoal, when hot, burns; when cold it black- ens the hands. 194 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October WHAT FANCY FARMERS HAVE DONE. They tested theories while others raised crops for market; they have given the glory to farming which it would not otherwise have possessed. Fancy farmers have changed the wild hog into the Suffolk and Berk- shire, the wild cattle of Britain into Shorthorns, the mountain sheep, with its long body and hair fleece, into the Southdown and Merino. They brought up the milk of cows from pints to gallons. They have lengthened the sirloin of the bullock, enlarged the ham of the hog, given strength to the shoulder of the ox, rendered finer the wool of the sheep, added fleetness to the horse, and made beautiful every animal that is kept in the service of man. They have improved and hastened the development of all domestic animals until they scarcely resemble the ones from which they sprang. Fancy farmers introduced irriga- tion and under-draining ; also grinding and cooking feed for stock. They have brought guano from Peru and nitrate of soda from Chili. They have introduced and domesticated all the plants we have of for- eign origin. They brought out the theory of the rotation of crops as a natural means of keeping up and increasing the fertility of the soil. They ground up gvpsum and bones, and treated the latter with acid to manures of particular value. They first analyzed soil as a means of determining what was wanted to increase its fertility. They intro- duced the most improved methods of raising and distributing water. Fancy farmers or fancy horticulturists have given us all our varieties of fruits, vegetables and flowers. A fancy farmer in Vermont a few years ago originated the early rose potato, which added millions of dollars to the wealth of the country and proved a most important acces- sion in every part of the world where introduced. Another of these same fancy men originated the Wilson strawberry, and another the Concord grape. But it is unnecessary to enumerate ; any one who will take the trouble to investigate a little or reflect, will readilv see and cheerfully accord the praise that is justly due to the men who are called " fancy farmers." — San Francisco Chronicle. Reports from the north part of Vermont are to the effect that the maple sugar season has been a bad one, and the product of compara- tively small account. Make the doors upon a woman's wit, and it will out at the casement; shut that, and 'twill out at the keyhole ; stop that, 'twill fly with the smoke out at the chimney. 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 195 JOHNSON GRASS, This has been called Cuba grass, Guinea grass, Egyptian grass, Means grass, Alabama Cuinea grass, etc. It seems pretty well agreed now, however, to call it Johnson grass and leave the name Guinea grass for the Panicum jumentorum, to which it properly belongs. In many periodicals and books, and in letters and common usage, this grass has been far more generally called Guinea grass than the true Guinea grass itself, thus causing vast confusion. It is therefore assur- edly time to call each by its right name. It is the coming grass for both grazing and making of nay. It is perennial, succulent, contain- ing much saccharine matter, very valuable for dairymen, stock grow- ers and farmers in all parts of the United States. It is undoubtedly the best forage plant known. Has strong, vigorous roots like cane, an abundance of long and tolerable broad leaves. Its stems attain a height of seven to ten feet, with a large, spreading pinicle. The flow- ers and seeds are much like broom corn, but the pinicle is finer and more spreading. Sow early in the spring at the rate of one bushel to the acre. Col. Killbrew, in his valuable work on Grasses of Tennes- see, thus describes it : " It rises with a stem from four to twelve feet high, according to the soil on which it grows; erect, smooth, leaves linear, flexous, graceful, curling down at the ends like corn ; flowers in a panicle at the top, at first green, changing gradually to brown." It not only thrives well on bottoms, but it will grow just as well on up- land, and, though on poor upland, it will make but little hay, it makes fine pasture. It likes dry, hot weather, and while all other grasses seem to feel the effects of the hot sun, this retains its deep, rich green color, being but little affected by the drouth. This is because of its long roots, which, like clover, run deep for moisture, often reaching two or three feet below the surface- Breaking up the land every few years gives it all the culture needed, while a liberal top dressing of stable manure, or some good fertilizer, rewards the grower abundant- Among all the grasses that grow, none is attracting the attention of the world as much as the Johnson grass (Sorghum Ralapense). Experi- ence proves that it is worthy to stand at the head of all cultivated gras- ses. Some of its virtues are as follows : It is perennial, a rapid grower, very nutritious, being eargerly devoured by all kinds of stock, comes early in the spring, grows until the frosts cut it down in the fall, stands the drought better than any grass, having long cane-like roots which penetrate the soil for moisture, superior 'both as a grazing and hay 196 SOUTHERN PLANTER [October grass, has abundance of roots, which decay, thereby enriching the ground rather than exhausting it as timothy does; belonging to the Sorghum family, it contains much saccharine, which is an important factor in feeding of stock. It will grow on any land where corn will grow (in fact corn is only a larger species of grass). Some confusion has arisen by calling this Guinea grass. Panicum Tumentorum is the proper classification of the Guinea grass, while Sorghum Halapense is the botanical name of the Johnson grass. ■ They look alike, but the es- sential difference is that Guinea grass is too tender to grow at any great distance from the gulf shore, rarely matures its seed even in Florida, while Johnson grass will thrive almost everywhere, maturing its seed anywhere in this country. In preparing lands for the Johnson grass this is requisite : Break your lands by deep plowing, then, with a good smoothing harrow, pul- verize the surface until every clod is destroyed, giving a good seed bed. Then sow broadcast with extra clean seed, at the rate of one bushel to the acre, and cover with a light brush or sow just before a heavy rain. An excellent rule in sowing seeds is to cover them in depth not exceed- three times the length of the seed. With this preparation a good crop can reasonably be expected. Eich bottom lands give the best results for grass culture. They retain the moisture longer than the higher lands, and usually get the wash of the uplands. Sandy soils raise good grasses, but are not as profitable as black soils. When stock are not at work they do well on the grass or hay with- out grain. A top dressing of stable manure, cotton-seed meal, or land plaster will materially increase the growth. After the land has been in grass for three or four years an excellent plan is to break it up, and sow it in oats, which mature early enough to give two good cuttings of grass besides. An ignorant prejudice has arisen in the minds of some people who think the grass cannot be gotten rid of if once well set. Experience proves to the contrary. By plowing up the grass in August and September, with a two-horse plow, the roots are exposed to the hot sun and killed, so that the following year crops can be cultivated with no more trouble than other lands. This grass enters into the ro- tation of crops as well as any of the clover grasses. An experience of over forty years of 1ST. B. Moore, of Georgia, led him to select this grass as the best, and plant this only, and no amount of experiment will pro- duce a better. No farmer who gets a good field of this grass will de- sire to be rid of it, but rather increase its area On land that will produce 'a bale of cotton to the acre, four to six tons 882.] SOUUIIERN PLANTER. 197 f hay can be cut per annum, cutting three and four times. Heavy utilizing would produce greater results. The best results following sowing the seed in August and September, nabling the seed to get a good root by fall, and forming a better turf he following season. The ground is usually cleaner in the fall, and if \w weeds start the)- are easily killed by the frost, or the vigorous growth of the grass kills them. Three good crops the following season vill be the result if the season is favorable. Sowing in the spring does veil, but the crop would not be as heavy the first year. But if a farmer s ready to sow in the spring, he had better sow then than wait, as he , r ains so much time in growth. — South and West. BEDDING FOR COWS. Here in New England cords upon cords of good dry sawdust and :urning shavings are put into the streams at the several sawmills, cab- net shops, etc., and farmer A's cows only a mile away never have one mite of bedding the whole winter. Having talked with some of the folks that have used turning shavings or sawdust for years, it is their opinion that it pays more than double the expense iucurred in getting the sawdust, for the amount of manure it makes; it saves all of the liquid manure, makes the manure pile fine and easy to work over ; and it will be obliged to be worked over unless you have hogs upon it to keep it from heating with considerable sawdust in it ; but that can be done on leisure days; then it will be fine, all ready worked over for the spring work, and in its best shape for the crops to get the benefit. Green manure from cows that receive no bedding and not worked over only as it goes in and out of the cart, is not worth one-half as much as fine, properly prepared manure. It not only pays that way, but how much more comfortable the cows are; keeps them clean, much better milking, etc. You receive a profit in more ways than one. — Mirror. A planter of South Carolina has over 1,000 tea plants. Some of them are six feet high, and over ten feet in circumference. The sites of prospective Western cities are sometimes determined by capitalists, who have special facilities for securing a population. A party of men, wishing to build up a town in Dakota, took a tract of prairie laud, appropriated about $100,000 for public buildings, and se- cured car shops, stock yards and other interests enough to insure 10,000 inhabitants within two years. 198 SOUTHERN PLANTER, [October SOMETHING FOR THE AMERICAN PEOPLE TO CONSIDER. "The richest agricultural and horticultural contributions have come down to us from the master minds of Greece. They drew their inspi- ration directly from nature herself, and not from what some earlier writer had said about nature." The pupil of Socrates, the leader of the immortal retreat of the ten thousaud, from his farm at Elis, wrote : "Agriculture, for an honorable and high-minded man, is the best of occupations and arts by which men procure a living, for it is a pursuit that is most easy to learn and most pleasant to practice; it puts the bodies of men in the fairest and most vigorous condition, and is far from giving such constant occupa- tion to their minds as to prevent them from attending to the interests of their friends and their country. A man's home and fireside are* the sweetest of all possessions." So long as Greece gave proper attention to her productive interests, and especially to agriculture, her star stood at the zenith, but as luxury increased labor was degraded, education diverted from a practical to a speculative course, and agriculture be- came subordinated to trade and commerce; the star of her glory gradu- ally sank to the horizon, from which it has never again risen. The policy of Rome was to "secure to the plowshare what she won by the sword." Twice was Cincinnatus called from the plow to save his country, and not until effeminacy and luxury supplanted the rural tastes and habits of the people was she overrun by the hordes of the North. Did time allow we might run through the whole catalogue of nations that are or have been powerful upon the earth, and show that in pro- portion as they dignified labor and fostered their productive industries they have been great, powerful and stable. Read the histories of these nations, and we find that the development of their productive indus- tries, either by just law T s or the fostering care of their governments, has marked the era of their progress, prosperity and highest civilization. The accumulation of capital in the hands of a few, by trade and com- merce, and the oppression or neglect of the productive industries, equally marks the era of their decline and overthrow. — Dr. Thomas P. Janes, before the American Agricultural Society. Assuming the average length of mankind to be a little under four feet, the bodies of all mankind, living and dead, placed end to end, would just make a bridge from the earth to the sun. 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 1M HORSES. Three classes of horses are in demand and the demand cannot be ignored by the breeder. The draft-horse, roadster and racers. He must adapt himself according to circumstances, and his tastes, and breed accordingly. The time has gone by when intelligent men ex- pect any one class to come by chance or without breeding with a spe- cific object in view. The heavy, muscular draft-horse, with the strength of half an ele- phant, is what is needed for heavy team work. A pair of such horses for many places are worth three pairs of light-limbed stylish animals. Strength iu these Percheron and Clydesdale horses is massed in a compact form. A pair attached to a strong wagon can go with a two- ton load where a six-horse team cannot enter or be handled. For ex- press wagons, carters and the army, they are in the highest degree in- portant. Too much push can hardly be manifested in their production. Great height and long legs a're not desirable, but compactness of body and strength of muscle. Great lathy, long-legged, flat-sided hay- mows and oat-bins are not what is wanted. The strength of neither man nor horse can be estimated by the amount of food they cousume. One of the flat-sided overgrown horses may devour twice the food of a compact muscular animal and not possess half the endurance or strength. The exact extreme of this horse is the roadster. He does not carry a pound of superfluous flesh or bone to weigh down his fleetness. Every ounce of bone and muscle is utilized for strength and speed. He has grace of head, ears, open forehead, intelligent eyes set far apart, clean throttle, arched neck, light, airy cylindrical cone-shaped body that scarce exposes a bony protuberance, with fleet and sure feet. Such a horse is a thing of beauty, and, if well kept, will be a joy and a comfort for many a year. He is a roadster, and too intelligent to be a shyster. The spirit of the war horse is in him. He is too proud to be scary ; feels above it; knows his master, and has an iustinctive concern for the safety of his mistress ; tells, as plainly as mute language can tell, when anything about the saddle or harness is out of order, and is never so proud as wheu assured that his fleet steps are pleasing to the master, who fondles and pets him. It is wise for any man of means to have such a roadster and keep him till worn out. If well used, he will be good at twenty-five or even thirty, as we have known. Some horses are too noble by nature to be 200 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October used in the drudgery of the farm. It is a shame to put them to the cart. Akin to this horse, but used for different purposes, is the light, airy, clean-limbed, intelligent racer; too proud to touch the ground or to make a display, only in the presence of his peers on the race-course. He loves it. The very sight of it fires his blood, quickens his pulse, and converts his muscles into springs of steel. It is amusing to watch him. If I worshipped an animal, it would be an intelligent roadster or race-horse. What a pity he should be abused. His usefulness has been greatly lessened by the invention of the telegraph and the use of the iron steed upon the rail. But he will always be admired, and trials of speed will always be common, but the evils connected with it may be greatly lessened. Another class of horses might be named, but they need not be bad — scrubs. As among men, hewers of wood and drawers of water will always exist — so will these, do what we can to improve the breeds. — Practical Farmer. Common Sense in the Poultry Yard. — The " poultry " that every- body keeps are technically designated hi fowls," or " barn-door fowls." As a rule they are kept in small flocks, fed chiefly upon what no farmer misses. On most farms a flock of twelve to twenty hens will pick up a living without receiving a particle of grain from May to October, in- cluding both months. Their food consists of insects, seeds and grass or weeds ; they need fresh water besides. What wonder is it that fowls thus kept are demonstrably more profitable than any class of stock or any crop on the farm ? This is the best way to keep fowls, provided they can be induced to lay where their eggs can be found while fresh. To accomplish this a house of some kind is needed where the fowls may be shut in occasionally for a few days at a time, so as to make them roost and lay in convenient places. If fowls can roost in the trees, lay all over the farm and u dust" themselves in the road, they will almost surely be healthy, lay a good many eggs and keep in good condition. Besides, every now and then a hen will unexpectedly ap- pear with a brood of ten or a dozen chicks, hatched under one bush where she had "stolen" her nest and done her hatehing. That is all very well, so far as the hen is concerned, but no one wants it to hap- pen. We wish the hens to lay and sit where we can put what eggs we please under them for hatching — and what is still more important, we wish to be able to collect the eggs for use or for sale daily. A fresh egg is a joy, a delight, a good gift of Heaven — a " perfectly good" egg is an abomination. An egg to be fit to eat or for sale, must be fresh beyond peradventure, and utterly untainted with suspicion of having been brooded or weathered. For this reason it is a most untidy thing to use natural nest eggs. The nest egg after awhile is almost surely gathered and of course is not " right." — American Agriculturist, 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 201 SHEEP, THEIR TYPES AND CHARACTERISTICS, Fine Wool— Saxon Merino, It is not a matter for wonder that in the hands of so painstaking and intelligent breeders as those of Germany, whose attention was early attracted to the Merinos of Spain, that this susceptible animal should soon assume a distinctive type, and a high order of excellence. Sev- eral of the German States, as well as their neighbor Hungary, possess flocks upon which have been bestowed every effort at improvement that was within reach of science or wealth. In 1765, the Elector of Saxony, Augustus Frederick, by permission of the Spanish authorities, imported into his own country 300 Merinos — about 100 rams and 200 ewes, mostly Escurials — placed most of them upon his private estate, and afforded for their improvement every facility within law and personal effort. A commission was appointed to look after the management of the highly esteemed flock, and every possible means used to bring tha excellence of the newly acquired Me- riuos to the favorable attention of Saxon breeders. It was not, how- ever, until the expiration of several years, and after experiences with The Spanish stock that in some instances was compulsory, that the pre- judice against innovation upon the traditions and practices of their an- cestors, characteristic of most peoples, was so far overcome as to insure the newcomers a welcome to the sheep-folds of their adopted home. When the value of the new acquisition began to be appreciated, and the reaction in their favor fairly set in, so great was the demand for rams that to partially meet it a new importation was determined upon. Accordingly, in 1777, an envoy was dispatched to Spain, commissioned to purchase 300 animals, in which he was but partially successful — re- turning with 110, pronounced superior to the animals of the first im- portation. Other breeding establishments were at once founded and stocked with these animals, schools for the education of shepherds were established. The commission before mentioned was active in dissemi- nating among the people information as to the importance of sheep culture and the details of its successful prosecution. In some instances the royal tenants were required to become the owners of a certain number of sheep — and there was laid the foundation of a peculiar fine- wool industry that has since widened iuto a world-wide celebrity, and has made a lasting impression upon the husbandry and wool manufac- ture, not alone of Europe, but the civilized world as well. As evidence of the exceeding care with which selections of rams des- 20 ^02 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October tined for use in improving the Saxon flocks were made, Youatt quotes a letter from a breeder detailing the process of determining the fleece merits of individual animals, viz : " when the lambs are weaned, each in his turn is placed upon a table, that his wool and form may be minutely observed. The finest are selected for breeding, and receive a first mark. When they are one year old, and prior to shearing them, another examination of those previously marked takes place; those in which no defect can be found receive a second mark, and the rest are condemned. A few months after they in like manner receive a third mark, when the slightest blemish causes a rejection of the animal." From the first, the efforts of those directing the management of the Merino in Saxony, seem concentrated upon the refinement of fleece. This was rapidly secured, though not without the sacrifice of certain attributes for which the animals w 7 ere most highly esteemed in their native country. The hardiness for which the Spanish Merinos were conspicuous, would seem to have been almost entirely eliminated, from the accounts of the routine management of the most highly-prized flocks, which required dainty housing and dainty food to which the " hot house " animals of this and other countries are strangers. One account, given by a prominent herder, says, after enforcing the neces- sity of housing every night, " even in summer, except in the very finest, weather," until the dew is oft the grass, that "if they are permitted to eat wet grass, or exposed frequently to rain, they disappear by hundreds with consumption." The most careful attention was bestowed during the lambing period. The ewes and young lambs were placed in a pen by themselves, and remained thus until the latter was old enough to travel to the pasture, the while being tempted to eat by such dainty morsel 8 as could be found for it. Under the enervating influence of such a treatment through a period of sixty years, the Saxon Merinos, in 1824, the date of their introduc- tion into the United States, were poorly calculated to endure the ex- posuie and privations that awaited them this side of the Atlantic; and any other result than that which befell the attempts to engraft their characteristics upon American fine-wool flocks, might properly have been esteemed a little short of miraculous. A large proportion of the animals included in these importations, according to contemporaneous evidence, were impurely bred — high grades picked from such flocks as had an annual surplus for market; which found its readiest purchasers among those supplying the u fevered" American demand for Saxon sheep. Here the fact of importation became the passport into folds that afterwards went down in the general disaster that overtook, with 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 203 few exceptions, tlit> line wool industry of the United States. Men who hud been identified with the importation and improvement of the Spanish Merino yielded tO the " craze," a&d crossed upon their Hocks the light-ileeced favorites of the hour. A few breeders saw the mistake into which they, in common with others, had fallen, in time to rescue a portion of the flock from the general maelstrom which so dearly en- gulfed the descendants of Spanish Merinos in America ; and to this fact is the country indebted for the American Merino of to-day. As in the Saxon Merino, everything was sacrificed to the texture of tleece ; the weight of fleece was considerably reduced. This fact, coupled with the deteriorating influence of the cross upon the standard of hardiness, which was a recognized necessity to successful sheep hus- bandry in America, soon made evident the policy of eliminating the Saxon blood, and now for more than forty years the tendency from that type and blood has been as rapid and direct as breeders could make it. Saxon blood is claimed as remaining pure in a few flocks, but the individual animals composing these flocks bear little resemblance to their ancestors which lorded the sheep walks of fifty years ago. The fleece has been Americanized ; though fine, the fibre is lengthened and the weight greatly increased ; while the carcass is equall} 7 improved. This animal commends itself to breeders who aspire to the production of a superfine wool, for which the tendencies of fashion will, ere long, create a demand ; and this, probably, in advance of the ability of the breeders of American Merinos to supply. This class of breeders will, however, be limited; and the man need not be much of a prophet to discern that the day of popularity for the Saxon type of Merino among American breeders is altogether a thing of the past. — Practical Farmer. Carbonized Bran for Fruit Packing. — The California Fruit Ship- ping Co., of Vaeaville, Cal., furnishes the following information in reply to a query from an Eastern paper: " Carbonized bran" is made from ordinary wheat bran burned in a retort, under which treatment all moisture is driven off and a species of charcoal is obtained. This coal bran is used in packing green fruits for long shipment, and the paten- tees claim that grapes, when thus packed, may be shipped from this coast to Eastern markets by slow freight with safety, thus avoiding the high charges on fast freight. The company claims that tomatoes have been kept for six weeks when packed in this bran. It is stated that peaches will keep twice as long as under ordinary conditions, but this fruit, having a porous skin, is not as well preserved as other fruits. 204 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October WHY? • Crop reports often give the wheat yield of a locality at "10 to 25 bushels per acre; " or 10 to 20 bushels; or 20 to 30; or sometimes even 30 to 40 bushels. Do the 10 to 15 bushel men ever inquire how the 25 to 40 bushel men get their big crops ? Or does the man who gets a 40 bushel crop in one field and a 20 bushel crop in another, ask his land why such a c difference exists? Here is a text from which every wheat field could preach a sermon on Seed, Tillage and Manures. If the full heads on the stout stalks of the 40 bushel field could speak, they would say. " We are descendants of choice selections of the fam- ily of Clawson, or Fultz, or perhaps of Russian or Australian origin. Our parent seed has long been noted for strength of character, vitality and fecundity. Our farm owner is a man of brains and sense. Having paid a good price for our parent seed, he determined to make the most of his purchase. This soil had long been cropped, though kept free of weeds, but he plowed and cross-plowed it, and harrowed it, and pulverized it, until the whole broad field was a fine seed bed; and at the last harrowing he gave it a liberal dressing of bone -dust, 400 pounds to the acre. Then he sowed the seed after danger of our worst enemy, the Hessian- fly, was past, and rolled the ground with a heavy roller. The rains came, and in the warm, rich earth our seed found a congenial abode, and sprang quickly to life and flourished and grew strong in spite of winter's cold and rain. In early spring Mr. Farmer came to our aid in fighting the Weed Legion, and with a great fine-toothed harrow driven lightly over us swept off the weeds by millions, while our strong foot- hold preserved us unharmed from the iron teeth. Then we waxed strong and grew mighty. Wise old Nature, always appreciative of good work, helped us more than our weaker neighbors because we were better able to accept and make use of her well prepared soil, her warm and life-giving sun, and her refreshing, nourishing rains. And here is the result of wisdom. You see us, a proud army of wheat heads, ready to make a rich return to the pocket of the wise man who hath given us a chance to show what was in us." In similar view would speak the 30- and 25-bushel fields. But the 10-bushel field would lift up its weakly heads, and, in a weak voice, say, "We are the product of the wisdom of fools. Our family is non- descript and nameless. Our parents were a bad lot, grown in poor soil, and having intimate acquaintance with the weeds. This soil is in possession of our old enemies, the weeds, to whom we have long been 1882.J SOUTHERN PLANTER. 205 subject. You see the surface is flat, and the field has never been drained. It was plowed once, harrowed once, and not manured. Our master is poor and says farming does not pay. He does not read the market and crop reports, and we heard him yesterday agree to sell us at 85 cents a bushel. Perhaps we are worth no more, as there are so many weeds among us ; but the birds tell us that No. 2 Red Winter is selling in Chicago at $1.05. We think our master had better go West." Have we answered Why ? — Farmers' Review. THE WAGES OF FARM LABOR. A Washington letter says : An investigation of the rate of wages of farm labor made by the statistician of the Department of Agriculture, shows an increase of twenty-four per cent, since 1879 in the Eastern States. From 1875 to 1879 the decline was heaviest in manufacturing sections, where artisans, thrown out of employment, competed to de- press the rate of farm wages. The advance since 1879 has been four- teen per cent, in the Western States and thirteen in the Southern. Comparing with results of former investigations at different periods, it is shown that wages declined gradually from 1866 to 1875 ; very heavily from that date to 1879, when a rapid recuperation began. An excep- tion is noted in the South as to the period between 1866 and 1869, when the high price of cotton advanced the rate of wages. The fluc- tuation has been less in the South, the improvement in quality and efficiency in labor counteracting largely the general tendency to lower rates. Thus the average rate per month was $16 when cotton was thirty cents per pound, and $15.30 when cotton was twelve cents per pound. The influence of manufacturers in advancing local rates of farm wages is exhibited, as also the proximity of large commercial cities. The effect of varied agricultural industries on wages is shown by com- parison of rates in contiguous districts. The districts of high wages are also those of large production and net profit in agriculture. The pres- ent average rate of wages are: In the Eastern States, $26.61 ; Middle, $22.24; Southern, $15.30; Western, $23.63; California, $38.25. These averages indicate a recovery of the status of 1875 in the West, a near approach to the rate of that year in New England, and a partial resto- ration in the Middle States. There is still a decline of twenty per cent, or more from the inflated rates that followed the flush times immedi- ately following the civil war. 206 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October Editorial. THE STATE FAIR: ITS POSTPONEMENT AND ITS PROSPECTS. The Fair has been postponed one week, say from the 25th of Octo- ber to the 1st of November. The reasons for this action were good. Prior to the war the State Fair was held uniformly during. the first week of November, which period is usually within the Indiam summer; and all know what this kind of weather means. Since the war, and the adoption of our present Constitution, fixing the Tuesday after the first Monday in November for all political elections, the State Society has been compelled to drop its Fair back one week to the last in Octo- ber. Under this rule, the date of the opening of the Fair was fixed for the 25th October. Without noticing the run of days, it has been found that the last week in October this year occurred at the earliest period and most remote from election-day, which also, by one day, was as remote as possible from the first of the month ; and that the Fair, commencing on the first day of November and continuing three days, would not make a nearer approach to the general election-day than in former years. The President and Executive Committee were, there- fore, prepared to entertain the suggestion of the Lynchburg Agricul- tural Society, that if the State Fair was advanced one week, it could also advance its Fair in like manner, and thus prevent a conflict with the days of the Piedmont and Staunton Fairs. For these and other good reasons, the postponement of the State Fair one week has been ordered. The prospects of the State Fair, we may say, are brilliant. The bet- ter condition of the farmers by reason of the most bountiful crops known for many years; the activity in mechanical and other business pursuits ; the restoration of easy transportation to the Fair Grounds by steam-cars from the centre of the city ; the enquiries which are coming in from those who propose to exhibit; the interest manifested by the business men of Richmond in a splendid trades-parade ; the fire-works for night exhibition in the city; the low fares which will be given by the railways. All these, and other things, contribute to give assurance that the approaching State Fair will be the best ever held. We repeat, then, what was said in our last issue — prepare to come to the Fair and enquire at the nearest railroad station for particulars of personal and other transportation. Life-members who may buy, with their railway passes, a coupon attached for admission to the Grounds, will have the amount of same refunded on application to the Secretary on the Grounds. 1882.] 80UTIIKRN PLANTER. 207 THE PLANTER AS AN ADVERTISING MEDIUM. Richmond, Va., September 9, 1882. Col. W. C. Knight, Editor Planter: During the week ending to-day I have received letters for goodfl and enquiries after forming implements from Rangoon, British Burmah, and Wellingborough, Northamptonshire, England. Parties stating that tliev saw my advertisement in the Planter, which they subscribe to and receive regularly. This speaks well for the circulation of the Planter, and should com- mend it to advertisers, I think. Very respectfully, &c, Asiiton Starke. The receipt of the foregoing letter from Mr. Starke somewhat sur- prised us. Whilst we have some subscribers east of the Atlantic and extending to British-India, and others west as far as California and Oregon, yet we had not thought that our advertisements would attract attention in these remote localities. It appears, however, that they do. And why not? The agricultural implements and machines manufac- tured in the United States are the best in the world. They are artistic as well as essentially practical. Then why should the)' not be appre- ciated in the old countries which use heavy and illy-constructed imple- ments which their home markets only supply ? Progress is a word which is now being understood the world over, and hence localities do not confine themselves to themselves, but look around and abroad for all they need. A\ r e have some exchanges from the South American Republics, but no subscribers, and we are pleased to see that much attention is di- rected to the various manufactures of the United States of North America. There is a great future for the lauds of the South and all the products of our manufacturers, wherever they may be, if they properly advertise themselves. THE VIRGINIA STATE AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY. Office of the Virginia State Agricultural Society, Richmond, Va., September 13th, 1882. To the People of Virginia : To put the Virginia Agricultural Society upon a solid basis, it is necessary that it should have some funds ahead to protect it from cas- ualties, and not be compelled to rely solely on its gate fees for its revenues. I have therefore determined to appeal to you in behalf of the Society to largely iucrease its life-membership. 208 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October The material interests of all classes of people in Virginia are so inti- mately connected with the agricultural prosperity of the State, that the success of the Virginia State Agricultural Society is a matter of impor- tance to them all. And as in my judgment the Society is calculated to improve the agriculture of the State and to advance the interests of every business connected therewith, I confidently ask you to sustain to Society in its efforts, and to aid the management to revive the inter- est in the welfare of the Society that in former days so strongly marked the conduct of the active men of our State. When I remember the enthusiasm that used to pervade the meetings of the Society in its earlier days, and the emulation that those meetings produced in the improvement of cur land, our crops and our stock of all kinds, I cannot but hope that our people will again take hold of the Society, and that our old members will see that the succession of mem- bership is kept up in their families. Certificates of life membership in the Society are obtained by the payment of twenty dollars, or if parties prefer it, by the payment of five annual instalments of five dollars each. Upon this subject address, at Richmond, Va., George W. Mayo, Esq., the Secretary, or your obe- dient servant, Wms. C. Wickham, President. We give place to Gen. Wiekham's appeal in behalf of the State Agricultural Society. No institution has more benefitted the State than this ; and had w T e time and space could prove it. Let the fact, then, be accepted, and come forward and sustain the Society as in former years. The State is prosperous in all the callings of her people, and the farmer, manufacturer, merchant, gardener, orchardist, viti- culturist, and the lawyers, doctors and preachers can all afford to con- tribute $20 and secure a membership for life. The first and greatest privilege of such a membership is that of sustaining an organization in which there are no personal emoluments, and works for the encourage- ment of all the producing interests of the State ; and the direct benefits, as some may regard them, are the free admission during the life of the member to the Fair Grounds of the Society, together with wife, sons under twenty-one years of age, and unmarried daughters ; the right of exhibition at the Fairs without tax ; and the right to participate and vote in all the general meetings of the Society. The Society's roll of membership now contains names in every county, but in the past twenty five years it has been sadly reduced by deaths, without a proportionate accession of new members. Now, before the opening of the next Fair on the first day of November, will not ten persons from each county come forward and take life-member- ships and thus add One Thousand to the roll and $20,000 to the So- ciety's treasury. We sincerely hope that President Wiekham's appeal will be properly heeded.— Ed. S. P. 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 209 WHAT WE SAW IN THE VALLEY. We made a recent trip to the Valley, and in passing from Staunton to Harrisonburg, and thence to the Rawley Springs, saw some things that rather surprised us. It being our first visit to this beautiful por- tion of Virginia, our first surprise was a settled feeling of admiration. Admirable is the country for all that would seem requisite to consti- tute each homestead a place of health, beauty and happiness, and afford to the husbandman all the pleasures and profits which intelligent cul- ture cau reasonably demand. Our second surprise was, that the lands appeared to be wearing out under bad farming practices, and its occu- pants — satisfied with their beautiful mountains and streams — appear to rely on the bounties of Nature as a continued and inexhaustable supply which needs but little effort to perpetuate it. We never saw, or read of, any country so blessed by Nature and occupied by the homes of men, that did not require the fostering care of its occupants. The matter with us is purely an agricultural one, and to this end our observations are directed. First. We saw but little vigorous grass, except on the borders of streams. Second. Large and beautifully undulating fields which might be in timothy, orchard grass, or clover, were in wheat or oat stubble, and but little show that either of these grasses had been sown. Third. We saw plows fallowing wheat stubble for wheat again. Fourth. We saw new houses being erected to hqld the commercial fertilizers which were required, in large quantity, to fertilize the fields which were to reproduce the same crops the coming year. Fifth. We saw no regular rotation of grass and other fallow crops, interchanged with grain crops, for the perpetuation of fertility. Sixth. We thought we saw, but we hope not, that the farms were wearing out. These notes are made, as we have stated, on a very limited view, and what we did not see was judged of by what we did see. This is a rather unfair advantage we have taken, we will admit, but, at least, it opens the question, How far are our observations correct? Again ; it may put our Valley farmers to thinking on the injudiciousness of re- peated tillage, though they may attempt to pay the land back with the richest of commercial fertilizers. It appears to us, as a fixed fact, that land must rest in grass, with moderate pasturage, to secure continued fertility. We would like for some observing farmer in the Valley to inform us 210 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October whether an established rotation does prevail; and if not, as we have supposed, are not their lands gradually wearing out for the lack of it? We will stand corrected if we are in error, and make the amende honorable. SILK CULTURE. Odell, Nebraska., September 5th, 1882. Editor of Southern Planter, Richmond, Va. : As the subject of silk culture is receiving considerable attention in the United States, I thought a few items from this section might prove interesting. I live about twenty miles from a colony of Russian Mennonites — a class of Russian citizens who formerly resided in Germany. Their re- ligious convictions were such, however, that they could not serve in the army. About the year 1850 the German government insisted that they should serve or leave the country. The Czar of Russia then offered them a tract of land in his country, and agreed to exempt them from military duty. They accepted his offer, and have continued to reside in Russia from that time until they came here some seven years ago. Many are still in Russia, but several colonies can be found in this country, in Kansas and in this State, as well as a few in other lo- calities. The Russian mulberry was introduced into their colonies in Russia by the Russian government for the purpose of silk culture, and to facilitate rain fall. They were compelled to buy these trees of the government — each land-holder must plant a certain number. After cultivating them until they learned their value, they voluntarily planted them very extensively, and learned that silk culture was not the only consideration in raising them. They found the timber very valuable for fence-posts — outlasting any Russian timber. It was also found very profitable for cabinet work, and was considered one of the most desira- ble trees for fuel. It also bore edible fruit, which was marketable in Russia. When they came to this country they brought the seed of this tree with them. They also brought the seed of several other trees, but planted these more extensively than all others combined. We be- lieve that several of these trees will prove very valuable to nurserymen and fruit-growers here. The Russian mulberry is a very rapid grower. Trees, the seed of which was planted by the Mennonites, are now twenty feet high, and large enough for fence-posts. They grow very large and bear abundant crops of fruit. This fruit resem- bles blackberries in appearance. A very great per cent, are a jet black, and the balance a reddish white. They vary in flavor from sub- acid to sweet. When mixed with something tart and made into des- sert, they are sometimes mistaken for raspberries. The habits of growth of this tree is like that of the apple tree. Many of the leaves are lobed or cut with from five to twelve lobes. The Mennonites also use it as an ornamental hedge plant, and it makes a beautiful hedge, and stands 1882. SOUTHERN PLANTER. 211 shearing as well as any tree. In the estimation of some nurserymen this is tin* only tree sufficiently hardy to be valuable tor silk purposes north of the fortieth parallel or north latitude. The Mennonites liave interested themselves in the silk business to some extent since they have been in this country, and have some cocoons for sale. G. P. Clark. The foregoing communication is from a very remote section of our country. It is interesting in its brief account of a peculiar sect of reli- gionists and their proposed pursuit in respect to silk culture. Much is said in our agricultural journals of late of this business, which, it is thought, may be successfully pursued in almost any section of the United States. The Russian mulberry, too, may be something better than morns multicaulis which enfevered the country many years ago. "We suppose the author of the communication can give information as to the seeds or plants of the Russian mulberry, if addressed at Odell, Nebraska Territory.— Ed. S. P. ANCIENT ENGLISH OAKS. Among the ancient oaks of England few are more interesting than the gigantic ruin now standing in an arable field on the banks of the Severn, near Shrewsbury. It is the sole remaining tree of those vast forests which gave Shrewsbury its Saxon name of Schobbesburgh. The Saxons seized this part of the country A. D. 577, when they burnt the Roman city of Uriconium, where Wroxeter now stands, four miles from the village of Cressage; and underneath this now decrepit dotard it is said that the earliest Christian missionaries of those times — and possibly St. Chad himself — preached to the heathen before churches had been built. The Cressage Oak — called by the Saxons Christe-ache (Christ's Oak) — is probably not less than fourteen centuries old. The circumference of the trunk was about 30 feet, measured fairly at a height of five feet from the ground ; but only about one-half of the shell of the hollow trunk now remains. It still bears fifteen living branches, each 15 feet or 16 feet in length. A young oak grows from the centre of the hollow. The noted oaks of England, thanks to those who have preserved them, thanks to the universal veneration for timber, and to a stirring and lengthened history, are innumerable.' Windsor Forest is particularly rich in historic oaks, and Sherwood Forest, though disafforested, still contains some memorial timber, like Needwood, once a crown forest, now a fine estate of well-farmed land. Dryden's "Three centuries he growg and three he stays, Supreme in state, and in three more decays." is a poetical statement, and some of the dates on trees cut down in Sher wood forest, and marked 600 years before, in the time of King John, prove that it is an under-estimate. — The Gardeners Chronicle. 212 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October The Southern Planter. SUBSCRIPTION: $1:25 a year in advance, or $1.50 if not paid in advance. 4S*Expired subscriptions will be designated by a blue X in pencil on the cover. TERMS OP ADVERTISING. PAGE RATES. 1 Mon. 3 Mons. 6 Mons. 12 Mons. One-Eighth page One-fourth page One-half page.. One page $ 2 50 5 00 9 00 15 00 $ 7 00 12 00 25 00 40 00 SI 2 00 22 50 45 00 80 00 $ 20 00 40 00 80 00 140 00 COLUMN RATES. 1 Mon. 3 Mons. 6 Mons. 12 Mons. One inch Two inches Three inehes Half column.... One column $ 1 50 3 00 4 00 5 00 9 00 $ 4 00 8 00 10 00 12 00 25 00 $ 7 00 14 00 20 00 25 00 45 00 $12 00 24 00 40 00 50 00 80 00 >B®~ Special rates for cover. 4®- Reading notices, 25 cents per line, of brevier type. $£&" Look out for cross mark on wrap- per. This indicates that your subscription is unpaid. EDITORIAL NOTES. TO OUR RICHMOND CITY SUB- SCRIBERS. "We have much trouble with each issue of our Journal to secure its prompt deliv- ery to subscribers in the city, and to ad- vertisers to whom we send it without charge. This trouble grows out of the postoffice regulations which require all mailable matter not deliverable through boxes or the general delivery to be prepaid by stamps if delivered by the carriers. We cannot know who have boxes at the postoffice, or who call for their mails at the general delivery. Hence we have each month a large number of papers returned, and their proper delivery is delayed a week or longer. When these papers are re- turned to our office, we put on them the necessary stamps and place them back in the postoffice for delivery by the carriers. The result is a delay in the receipt of our paper by our subscribers, and inflicts on us a heavy mailing cost which we have to prepay. In view of these facts we have to request that all subscribers and advertisers who get their mail matter through the car- riers will call at the general delivery win- dows for the Planter on the first day of each month, and. thus get it; and the same request is made of subscribers in Henrico and Hanover counties who get their mails through the city postoffice. The advantage to them will be the prompt receipt of the Planter, and to us it will save a heavy ex- pense. We mail our Journal to every State in the Union and to Canada, at what are termed pound rates — two cents per pound, or about one-sixth of a cent for each copy, whilst a city delivery by the hands of carriers requires us to prepay each 'copy with a stamp of not less than two cents, and sometimes three cents. The plan we sug- gest will be for the material benefit of our- selves and our patrons in the city. Tobacco Notes. — 1. Although born and reared in the centre of the tobacco section of Virginia, we have said less than we ought, probably, about this great staple. Its culture is thoroughly understood ; and, possibly, it is too much regarded as the money crop, to the hindrance of a system of diversified farming which would bring better profits. The various reports we get through our exchanges as to production, sales, shipments, etc., in tabulated forms, will not edify the planter, .and are made mostly in the interest of dealers, and there- fore we cannot afford space for them. The planters, who must take their chances in the lottery of prices, must be content to produce only. It is useless for them to bother their heads with bewildering statis- tics which will do them no good. 2. It is said that Virginia this year may produce two-thirds of an average crop, and that the prospects are best in the bright section and worst in the dark. Such is the latest statement of the tobacco journals and other printed reports. 3. Our advice to all planters is, to man- age their crops well so as to disarm all 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 213 dealers of frivolous complaints to lessen prices when the day of sale comes. 4. We ask the leading tobacco journal of New York why an extract was made from our serial articles on "Farmers and Farm- ing in Virginia in the Olden Time" on the cultivation of tobacco in 1672, without credit to the Planter? The manuscript of the Report of 1672 is ours. 6. We should be glad to have and print anything from a real tobacco planter — his views of the crop, its culture, management, etc., which will be of practical value to others A Word to the Weekly Papers. — We do not wish to interfere with other people's business, or even to appear to do so. We have, however, a word to say to the weekly papers of the country. It is noticeable that many of these papers purchase their stock printed on one side, which printing is of a stereotyped character done at the North. This is all legitimate, and even commendable economy, in localities where it is difficult and expensive to get suitable compositors and convenient press facilities, and our object is simply to make a sugges- tion in the interest of agriculture and other industries of the State. It is this : keep open on the unprinted side of your paper a column which may be devoted to the meth- ods of agriculture, etc., in your own State, which may be made up by special contri- butions, or selections from your own agri- cultural journals. In this way the agricul- tural reading will be localized, and better adapted to the wants of readers. • We call special attention *to the adver- tisement of J. E. Doherty, merchant tailor. There is no one whose business we can more thoroughly endorse than Mr. Doherty. He has been supplying us our clothing for for the past fifteen years, and we never had a mis-fit or a suit that did not give entire satisfaction. He uses the best materials, which retain color, and it is a remarkable fact that we never were able to wear his clothing out. We have had to get new when we had worn the old so long as to make us ashamed of ourselves. His prices, too, are moderate, and we believe less than charged by good houses in the large northern cities. Try Doherty and, our word for it, he will please you. Liberty, Va., September, 5, 1882. Mr. Editor, — The frequent occurrence of the advertisement of the " VVillard Lottery Scheme," and also the occasional endorse- ment editorially of the manager of the same, one 4 ' Col. W. C. D. Whips," in your trusty farm magazine all during last summer, attracted the attention of many of your subscribers and readers, and they are now in vain looking either for the drawing to take place, or to have a return of their money, as was the promise made in the last advertisement. Can you throw any light on the plans of the company, and say what they mean to do? Many letters have been written, but no answers are ever re- turned. Please give us some advice upon the subject. Subscriber to S. Planter. We wish it distinctly understood that the present management of the Southern Planter had nothing to do with the lottery scheme referred to, or any endorsation thereof. Col. Saunders, a previous editor of the Planter did, we believe, publish an advertisement for Mr. Whipps, and made some editorial notices of it. We know no more about the matter than Subscriber does, and must look on it with the same suspicious eye. If this should fall under the notice of Col. Saunders, he can proba- bly explain. MEDICAL NOTES FOR THE HOUSE- HOLD. [Selected for the Southern Planter.] Common rice, parched brown, like cof- fee, and then bottled and eaten in the ordi- nary way, without any other food, is, with quietude of body, one of the most effective remedies for troublesome looseness of the bowels. Some of the severest forms of the dis- tressing ailment called dysentery, that is, when the bowels pass blood, with constant desire but vain efforts to stool, are some- times entirely cured by the patient eating a tablespoonful at the time of raw beef cut up very fine, and repeated at intervals of four 214 SOUTHERN PLANTER. [October hours until cured, eating and drinking nothing else in the meanwhile. If a person swallow any poison whatever, or has fallen into convulsions from having an overloaded stomach, an instantaneous remedy is a heaping teaspoonful of com- mon salt and as much ground mustard, stirred rapidly iu a tea-cup of water, warm or cold, and swallowed instantly, ft is scarcely down before it begins to come up, bringing with it the remaining contents of the stomach; and lest there be any rem- nant of poison, however small, let the white of au egg, or a tea cup'of strong cof- fee be swallowed as soon as the stomach is quiet; because these very common articles nullify a larger number of virulent poisons than any medicines in the shops. In cases of burning or scaldiug the body, immersing the part in cold water gives en- tire relief at once. Meanwhile, get some common white flour and apply it an inch thick on the injured part Fhe moment it emerges from the water, and keep sprink- ling on the flour through anything like a pepper box cover, so as to put it on evenly. Do nothing else, drink nothing but water, eat nothing until improvement commences, except some dry bread softened in weak tea of some kind. Cures of frightful burns have been made in this way, as wonderful as they are painless. Erysipelas, a disease coming without premonition, and ending fatally in three or four days, is sometimes very promptly cured by applying a poultice of raw cran- berries pounded, and placed on the part over night. Insect bites, and even that of a rattle- snake, have passed harmless by stirring enough of common salt into the yolk of a good egg to make it sufficiently thin for a plaster, to be kept on the bitten part. Neuralgra and toothache are sometimes speedily relieved by applying to the wrist a quantity of bruised or grated horseradish. Costive bowels have an agreeable rem- edy in the tree use of ripe tomatoes at meals— their seeds acting in the way of the white mustard seeds or figs, by stimulating the coat of the bowels over which they pass, in their whole state, to increased action. A remedy of equal efficiency in the same disease is cracked wheat, that is, common white wheat grains broken into two or three pieces, and then boiled as soft as rice, and eaten mainly at two meals of the day, with butter or molasses. We once saved the life of an infant which had been inadvertently drugged with laud- anum, and was fast sinking fnto the sleep which knows no awakening, by giving it strong coffee, cleared with the white of an egg, a teaspoonful every five minutes until it ceased to be drowsy. — Hall's Journal of Health. National Cotton Planters' Associa- tion of America. — We are informed by the advance sheets of the Planter's Journal, of Vicksburg, Mississippi, organ of the As- sociation, that the next annual meeting will be held at Little Rock, Arkansas, on 16th and continue to 21st of the preseut month. Whilst cotton is the leading idea of this Association, and claims to be the king of Southern products, yet there will be, as we are assured by the circular of the Society, much work done in promoting all the productive interests of the South ; so that cotton 13 disposed to divide its honors fairly with all other products. Go and see. Catalogue of Belmont Stud and Stock Farm, near Charlottesville, Va., S. W. Ficklin, Proprietor. This is a neat pamphlet setting forth the pedigrees, etc., of all of Mr. Fic&lin's val- uable stock of horses,; cattle and hogs. Mr. Ficklin will have a public stock-sale on his place ob 3d October, 1882, of which hand-bills are distributed. It will be a good opportunity for farmers to supply them- selves with thoroughbred stock. American Politics (non partisan) from the beginning to date. By the Hon. Thos. V. Cooper, of Pennsylvania, and H. T. Feuton, Esq., of the Philadelphia Bar. Pp. 1058. Published by the Fireside Publishing Company, No. 20, North 7th street, Philadelphia. We have been in receipt of this book 1882.] SOUTHERN PLANTER. 215 several months, and had hoped to get a | proper notice of it prepared by a friend better informed on American politics than we are. It seems to be a complete com- pendium of political history from colonial times to the present year. It embraces the platforms of all parties ; great speeches by great men en all issues ; elections, State and Federal, from the beginning to this date; a tabulated history of all Federal and Confederate debts; and much other similar information. It contains also what is designated the Federal Blue Book, with all the Federal officers, their duties, loca- tions, salaries, and an accurate statement of the influences by which they are ob- tained. The chief value of the book is its Mm-partisam character, which is fully maintained so far as our examination and knowledge extend. It should be in the possession of every educated citizen of the country. We hi 4 ve no information as to its price, but this may be ascertained by a postal card addressed to the publishing company. the Southern interests of the house and field. We have received several favors from the musical publishing house of Luddon & Bates, Savannah, Georgia, and now ac- knowledge their latest donation — "Send Me a Leaf." "Send Me a Leaf." l * Send me a leaf ere the summer dies, Kissed by tbe light of my native skies ; Seud me a leaf trom our trysting tree, Over the sea, love, over the sea." The Breed3rs' Gazette. Chicago, Illi- nois : Saunders & Co., publishers. This is one of our best exchanges, de- voted exclusively to live-stock. It is well illustrated, and all of its articles will be interesting to stock breeders. .$3 per year, or $2 to clubs of ten. The Planters' Joirnal, Vicksburg, Miss., is one of our latest exchanges. We have received the August number, which is filled with matter of value to Southern agriculturists. W r e think it worthy of praise and patronage, and commend it to the attention of all who are connected with Thorburk & Titus. Seedsmen, 158 Cham- bers street, New York. We have been favored with their Cata- logue, which seems to be complete in the line of grass, garden and flower seed. The Art Amateur, a monthly devoted to the cultivation of art in the household. M. Marks, editor and publisher, 1i Union Square, New York. The September number of this journal is an excellent specimen of art iu its varied illustrations, besides the art topics, which are treated of in a practical and interesting manner. Price, $4 per year, or 35 cents per copy. The Monthly Wool Circulars of W. C. Houston, Jr., & Co., wool commission merchants, Philadelphia. We are in the regular receipt of th^se reports, and farmers and others dealing in wool should correspond with this house. Pedigrees, Descriptions, etc, of Short- horn Durham cattle ; improved Ken- tucky sheep; Angora goats; W'oburn, Irish-Grazier, White-Bedford and other hogs. By Col. Robers W. Scott, near Frankfort, Kentucky. Col. Scott is an old and reliable breeder, and all farmers who are interested in stock- breeding, cr desire to improve their iarm stock, may find it to their interest to com- municate with him. The Textile Record, published in Phil- adelphia A Pa., is a large and well illustrated monthly on all textile materials, fabrics, and subjects. We acknowledge the usual monthly re- ports from the Agricultural Department at Washington of the condition of crops, and of special reports from the same source, of the climate, soil, and agricultural capabili- ties of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. The North American Review for Sep- tember contains, among other good matter, a significant article by H. M. Hydnian, the t^ a 5 03 c3 c3< *S«a /•% ^ £ 03 Vj eo a-o>^ s 111 I fgftg o S3 *a >>r* • a. do S -° *3 OS 5 o3 «-> *5 a ja os »a _ S. -~ a a j, j» >"d po pC 0) c3 a; -l* a 03 n-j o-,t; ,a k s- * .a * ® a o ^ SPoj^j a. a 03 2 a .a ea 03 03 J- 03 ~ s- o3 a g £ 03 03 <-s -> — I? C3 a ^ J" £* 03 q^ 17X.LERSI.ZE FARM. THOROUGHBRED HORSES, Shorthorn Cattle, Cotswold Sheep, AM) BERKSHIRE PIGS Bred anil /•'"?• Sale In/ R. J. HANCOCK, Overton, Albemarle Co , Va. G. BILKER ESSES and FAHCY (mMH)S Gift with Every Book! ClrtA^ WOKTHO n USEFUL GIFTS vPlUUJ WITH IV1KY I.OOO BOOKS. Sond 3c. Stamp for Catalogue. Agents Wanted. PHILADELPHIA PREMIUM HOOK CO., 262 north Eighth street, Philadelphia, Pa, mch 16 121 iven Gold Watches. Floreston Cologne. A New and Fashionable Perfume, Fra- grant, Refreshing, Lasting. Sold by deal- ers in Drugs and Fancy Goods. Hiscox & Co.. N. Y. PARKER'S GINGER TONIC. Ginger, Buchu, Mandrake, Stillingia and many of the best medicines known are com- bined in Parker's Ginger Toxic, into a medicine of such varied and effective pow- ers as to make it the greatest Blood Pu- rifier and Liver Regulator and the Best Health and Strength Restorer ever used. It cures Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, Xeu- ralaiii, Sleeplessness and all diseases of the Stomach, Bowels, Lungs, Liver and Kid- neys. Remember! This Tonic never intoxi- cates, cures diunkeness, is the Best Family Medicine ever made, and is entirely different from Bitters. Ginger Prep- arations and other Tonics. None genuine without signature of Hiscox & Co., Chem- ists, N. Y. Parker's Hair Balsam The best, cleanest and most economical hair restorer and dressing. Sept. LANDRETH WHEAT! UNSURPASSED WINTER VARIETY Send for Descriptive Circular, Teattmaah ills, Prices, ivc. Address postal < D.LANDRETH&SOMS SEED GROWERS, oc— 2t PHILAD'A, PA. HOLLAND BULBS ROSES AND PLANTS MILLIONSofTHEM Our Fall Catalogue is the fin- est and most complete ever issued. Full instructions for cidture by an experienced horticulturist. Sent FREE. HIRAM SIBLEY & CO. SEEDSMEN, Rochester.N.Y. & Chicaffo.IB THOROUGHBRED Shorthorn Cattle. MERINO SHEEP and BERKSHIRE Bred and for sale, at moderate PIGS. prices, by s. s. ia 1 — 1v BRADFORD, Oidpeper* Va. T? J. GREGORY & CO., X-j . (BnccesKora to Bain, Parrack >t Gregory,) COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 102 Shockoe Slip, Richmond, y.y. [E. J. GREGORY, late of Bain. Parrick 4 Gi Prompt personal attention cdVen to the >;ilo of all produce cousigned to us. Leal Tobacco, Cotton and drain specialties. D. E. Davidson, Book-Keeper. V. Gregory, AssM Salesman. To i— I2t w. J OH 1ST E. DOHERTY, 822 EAST IVIAIIM STRSET, Solicits an examination of his Fine Stock of FOR t^ALL AND W NTER, UNEXCELLED FOR VARIETY. STYLE AND QUA LFTY by any offered in this market. Will be made by skilled workmen in the LATEST AND MOST APPROVED STYLES at PRICES THAT MUST SUIT. N. B.— SHIRTS, COLLARS and CUFFS made to order as heretofore and satisfac- tion gnarauteed. VIRGINIA AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL THE ELEVENTH SESSION OPENS SEPT. 6th. 200 Slate Students Pay No Tuition. Necessary Expenses for 10 Montis, $132. Apply to your County Superintendent of Schools, or address T. N. CONRAD, President, Sept 1— 2t BLACKSBURG, VA. Mi! FOR SALE 469 ACRES OF In ALLEGHANY COUNTY, Va, On Little Ogle's Creek, three miles from Calleghan's Station, on the Ches. & Ohio R. R. There are two dwelling-houses on said land. Apple orchards of various kinds ; about 1000 sugar trees ; an abundance of fine wood thereon, and about 50 acres of under cul- tivation, adapted to corn, wheat, oats, and grass. Also thought to be fine for the culti- vation of grasses. Seveuty one acres are of the richest unimproved mountain land. Persons wishing to see said land for the purpose of buying, will please call on Mr. J. F. RICHARDSON, at Calleghan's. r P. A. JOHNSON, August 14, 1882. Alleghany 6 T o., Va. USTOORPORATED 1833- ^^*" VIRGINIA Mil MAKING INSURANCE COMPANY RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Half a Century in Active and Successful Operation. ASSETS, $557,000.00. Has paid hundreds of thousands for losses in this State, and over three millions altogether. All kinds of Farm Property taken at lowest current rates. Insures against Fire and Lightning. Agencies throughout the South and West. Home Office ; Rich- mond, Va. WM. H. MCCARTHY, See'y. W. L. COWARDIN, Pres. feb 1 — ly ,^ BTO « a ™ TO1 » B «^^_.._™ w _«__«« NEW WHITE GRAPE DUCHESS ! AisoPRENTISS^OCKLINGTON.LADYWASHINGTON.LADY.YERGENNES, JEFFERSON, BRIGHTON, MOORE'S EARLY, DELAWARE, WORDEN, etc. PIITUDCRT P&EPfi flLSin TAYLOR, Wacliusett's ThornJess, SNYDER, UU I nbtn I ■ Ulf £UUj UHlUj Sharpless, B1DWELL, etc.; Kieller's Hybrid and other Pear Trees; CHERRY: PLUM ; PEACH: CIIAxRPION OUINCE; Lee's Pro- lilic Black, and other CURRANTS t GOOSEBERRIES, and a g-eneral assortment of Fruit and Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, Climbing Vines, ROSES, Seeds, Bulbs, etc., at lowratea. Descriptive Catalogue and Price-List/ree. Address H. S. ANDERSON, Cayuga Lake Nurseries, Union Springs* N. Y. Successor to Faslex & Anderson, jan 1 The New Kxtraqnatlty^Warrantcdtrue u Prentiss, Pockllnarton, Duchess, Lady Washington, Yer-~ fen n em Moore's Early, Brighton, Jefferson, etc rices reduced. Also other Small Fruits and all older varie- _ _ ties Grapes. LARGEST STOCK IN AMERICA. mail. Low rates to dealers. Illustrated Catalogue free. T.S.HuBBABP,Fredoni&,N.Y. sep 9t UMIVDEilOT at ¥im©lirS4 The Session begins on the FIRST OF OCTOBER, and continues until the Thursday be- fore the fourth day of July ensuing. The Institution is organised in separate Schools on the Eclectic System, embracing FULL COURSES OF INSTRUCTION IN LITERATURE AND SCIENCE, and in the PROFESSIONS OF LAW, MEDICINE, ENGINEERINa AND AGRICULTURE. THE EXPENSES of the student (except such as enter the practical laboratories), exclusive of the cost of text books, clothing and pocket money, ^are from $856 to 1391, according to Schools selected; or, for those who economize by messing, these expenses are from $266 to $;](X). No charge for tuition candidates for the ministry unable to meet the expense. Apnlv for Catalogue? to F. W. Page. Secretary, P. 0. University of Virginia, Albe- marle county, Va. JAMES F. HARRISON, M. D., Chairman of the Faculty. apl 16 -ly PREMIUM CHESTER WHITE, BERKSHIRE & POLAND-CHINA PIGS And FINE SETTER DOGS Bred and For Sale by ALEXANDER PEOPLES, West Chester, Chester Co., Pa. Send stamp for circular and price-list, jan 1— ly HEALTH IS WEALTH. Dr. E. C. WEST'S NERVE AND BRAIN TREATMENT; a specific for Hysteria, Dizziness, Convulsions, Nervous Headache, Mental Depression, Loss of Memory, Sper- matorrhoea, Im potency, Involuntary Emissions, Premature Old Age, caused by over- exertion, sell abuse or overindulgence, which leads to misery, decay and death. One box will cure recent cases. Each box contains one month's treatment. One dollar a box, or six boxes for five dollars; sent by mail, prepaid on receipt of price. We guar- antee six boxes to cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, aecom panied with five dollars, we will send purchaser our written guarantee to return the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued by BODEKER BROS., Druggists, 1414 Main street, Richmond, Va., Wholesale and Retail Agents. Orders by mail will receive prompt attention. jan 1 — ly UMETKP9H1S For the MARKET GARDENER wECL/O For the PRIVATE FAMILY CrOWn hy niircfllvpc on our own Farms CF" Handsome Illustrated Catalogue and Rural Register FREE TO ALL. MERCHANTS, SEND US YOUR BUSINESS CARDS F^R TRADE LIST. DAViD LANDRETH&SONSjSEED GROWERS, PHILADELPHIA my 15— Jy ^» Orchilla Guano has been used for corn quite extensively in Maryland and Pennsyl- vania for several years past with the bet-t results, and also, to a limited extent, in some port'ons of Virginia very successfully, and we offer it feeling fully satisfied that a trial is all t'at is needed to convince the most skeptical that it is not only the cheapest but the best fertilizer in the market. A liberal application of the Orchilla (say from 400 to 500 lbs. 10 the acre) will not only produce a good crop of corn, but will leave the land in ex- cellent condition for the wheat crop, which may be very safely sown on the same land after the corn is gathered without any additional application of any kind of manure', and where it is desired to follow the wheat with grass, the effect of the former applica- tion of Orchilla will be seen in the production of from three to four crops of good grass. Thus its effect does not by any means cease with the crop on which it is first u sed, but is of positive and lasting benefit to the soil. WOOLDRIDGE, TRAVERS & CO., Importers, No. 64 Buchanan's Wharf {Foot of Frederick St.), Baltimore, Md. JBQ^Send for Circular and see what farmers say. jy 1 — 2t SAUL'S NURSERIES, WASHINGTON, D. C. The undersigned offer* a fine stock of the following, al Low Rates : NEW PEARS, NEW PEACHES, NEW CHERRIES. NEW GRAPES, NEW STRAW- BERRIES, *c. FRUIT TREES OF ALL KINDS— An extensive stock, viz : PLUMS, CHERRIES, APRICOTS, APPLES, SUITABLE TO THE SOUTH, «C. GRAPEVINES, STRAWBERRIES, RASPBERRIES, &c. New sorts EVERGREENS, NEW ORNAMENTAL TREES, NEW SHRUBS, Ac SMALL SIZES, suitable for Nurserymen, as well as large stock in great variety. DUTCH BULBS. Large importations direct from the leading growers in Holland. First qualitv Bulbs — HYACINTHS. LILIES, TULIPS, &c. New and rare GREENHOUSE PLANTS: WINTEiB BLOOMING PLANTS. ORCHIDS— East Indian, Mexican, &c. NEW ROSES— Bennett's, Hybrid Teas, Queen of Bedders, New French and English Roses, &c. B^Everything at LOW RATES. CATALOGUES mailed to applicants, sept— 2t JOHN SAUL, Washington, r>. O. Feed Your Lands and They Will Feed You. FERTILIZER FOR THE WHEAT CROP! Farmers in the Wheat Country will be able to procure this season, as usual, their supply of the OLD STANDARD "Anchor < J-V\ > Brand" PATENTED FERTILIZERFORTHEWHEAT CROP! Reliable Agents attend to its sale at all points of any importance in the Wheat-Grow- ing Region ; and receiving it in quantity, will furnish it at bottom figures. This article, in the thousands of tons that have been used of it during the past sixteen years, has demonstrated its reliability in the field against all comera. For further particulars, address SOUTHERN FERTILIZING COMPANY, Sept— 3m RICHMOND, VA. WILLIAM L BRADBURY NASON, ORANGE COUNTY, VA., IP8IITE1 BREEDER. I'D Ml AGENT, OFFERS FOR SALE Shorthorns, Jerseys DEVONg eOVSWOIS 8B1B*, PROM THE CHOICEST HERDS AND FLOCKS IN VA. He would call SPECIAL ATTENTION to a very superior lot of— YEARLING COTSWOLD BUCKS that sheared an average of fifteen pounds last spring. Also, BUCK LAMBS, EWES, and EWE LAMBS. MERINO EWES for Sale Low. They are a SPLENDID LOT OF YOUNG SHEEP. Can supply both Thoroughbreds and Grades. STOCK SHEEP, delivered in Car load Lots at any Railroad Station in Virginia. JERSEY-RED PICS. HOUDAHS, LIGHT BRAHMAS, SILVER SEABRIGHT BANTAMS. GENUINE WINTER OATS FOR SEED. (Send for Special Oat Circular.) 'ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE AND PRICE-LIST— FREE/ Sept— ly Address WM. L BRADBURY, Nason, Orange County, Va. N ORFOLK & WESTERJf IUILKOAH. Time Table in effect Aug. 27, 1882. WASHINGTON TIME. \Ve8TWakd Daily. No. 1. No. 3. Leave* Norfolk Huffolk 12.26 p. in. 1 i:; '• 3.50 " 6.11 " y.oo " 9to " 10.38 " 12.18 ft. ni. 1.32 " 3.22 " 4.26 " .>.;;:> •* 6.UD " Leave Petersburg Leave Lynchburg Liberty 2.40 p. m. 8.82 " J. 30 u " Chriailaosburg Wyliievillu 6.00 " i'Ui " Arrive Bristol .0 45 " CONNECTIONS. At PETERSBURG, with K. ft P. R. R. for Rich- uioini and bpringa on C ft O. By.. Frederiokaburg, Washington, Baltimore and tbe North and Ea&i. Through Pullman Car from Petersburg to New York, feoliu trains Petersburg to Washington. At 14UKK.LA ILLb, with B. :< U. K. It. for South. At LYNCHBURG, with Ya. Mid. R. R. to and from the Soutn and North, and with Richmond A Alleghany R. R. for Buchanan, Clifton Forge and C. <£ O. Ry. points. loiob, with East Teun., Va. & G*. R. R for Knoxvillo, Daltuii, Chattanooga and all points south, West and Southwest. WASHINGTON TIME. Eastward Daily. No. 2. No. 4. Leave Bristol Abingdou 11.35 p. in. 12.07 a. m. 1.13 " 2.17 " 4.08 " 5.35 " 6.55 " S.OO " S.20 •' 10.14 " 11.00 " 12.55 p. m. 1.05 •' 3.28 " 4.15 « 5.00 a. m. 6,28 " 7 Bl " " Uhristianaburg " Roanoke 9.28 " 10 45 " " Liberty Arrive Lyncnburg 12 15 p. ni. 1 15 " Leave Lynchburg Rurkeville Arrive i'e teisburg Leave Petersburg Sutfolk Arrive Norfolk CONNECTIONS. At LYNCHBURG, with Ya. Mid. R. R. for Dan- ville and North Carolina points, and for Washington and Eastern cities. At BURKEV1LLE, with R. & D. R. R. for Rich- mond. Through car from Lynchburg to Richmond. At I'ElERaRURL., with R. R. R. for Weldon, Raleigh, GoldsOoro, Wilmington and the Southeast. At jNORFuLK., witn Bay Line Steamers daily, ex- cept suutlay, lor Baltimore— thence rail to 1'hila- deipniaand New York; with Old Dominion Steam- ers on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays for New Yoik, and on Tuesdays and Fridays with M. ft M. T. Co. lor Boston and Providence. First and second class tickets as low as the lowest —150 lbs. of baggage checked free to each- whole ticket, and 75 lbs. to each half ticket. 1,500 mile tickets, $37.50; 1,000 mile tickets, $30.00. Forlunher information as to tickets, rates, bag- gage checks, &c, call on or address the Gen'l Freight and Passenger Agent, Lynchburg, Va. HENRY FINK, V. P. and General Manager CliAS. F. HATCH, Gen'l Ft. and Fass. A«t. W. A. CARPENTER, Ass't G. F. and Pass. Ag't. Lynchburg, Va. Beckwith's Anti-Dyspeptic Pills. These Pills, once compounded by a phy- sician ol extensive and long practice and of high reputation, are recommended by gentlemen of the highest standing both in and out of the medical profession. They are used by the most cultivated people in our country. They contain no mrrcttri/, and profess to do no more than one medicine ought to accomplish. They have stood the test of more than sixty years, and have lost no reputation. Beckwith's pills will PREVENT AND CUKE DYSPEPSIA. They are an unri- valed DINNER PILL, mild aperient, and admirably adapted as a FAMILY MEDI- CINE. Prepared solely by E. R. BECK- VVITH, Petersburg. Va., from the original receipt of his grandfather, Dr. John Beck- with, and sold by druggists generally. For sale in Richmond by POLK MILLER & CO. feb 1— ly PAYNE'S AUTOMATIC FARM ENGINES V bs- ease however Blight. Apply for your just dues. Widows, Mothers, Fathers, Children and Brothers and Sisters are paid Pensions. Under new laws KN- flJttl'AMflfiOf Pensions are due thou- sands oi Pensioners. Patents secured _ for Inventors. DOQJK'O ECS are duo ihousandsof Soldiers and Heirs and do not know it. Relerences furnished. Address, (with stamp,)— B^l-IiUM MBJLI^ER A CO. U» S. Claim Attorneys, LOCK-BOX 233. WASHINGTON, D. C my 1— 6t ino riditsvi, attiituj §un BEER ever quaffed. S Purifies the blood. CURES Dyspepsia, . .. V i Liver and Kidney dis- JACKAgyifi^ eases. Sent by Mail Ion receipt of 25 cts, in postage stamps. Addrtcs: BEAN & RARE, Wholesale Druggists, Nos. 47 & 49 N. 2d St., Philadelphia. ap 15— ly f* fi WI^TTTa OFFICE, 202 O A AM IsXLJTXo west 4th St. New book on treatment and cure of Cancer. Sent feee to any address on receipt of stamp. Address, Drs. GRATIGNY & NORRIS, Box 598, Cincinnati, a je 1— 6m Greenfield Cutlery C< Manufacturers of Superior Solid Steel Silver Plated Pie, Butter. Table, Dessei and Tea Knives, to Match. ALFOED, WARD & TAVENPOB 85 CHAMBERS ST., NEW YORK. In order to introduce our goods to the people, will send by mail, prepaid, 1 Pie Knife, 1 Butter " 6 Tea Knives, mch 1 — ly $2.00 | 6 Table Knives, $3. 50 6 Dessert " . 3. 3.00 J or any portion pro ra c^tta-TiTiie: Beech-Loading SINGLE SHOT CU! Side Snap Action, Pistol Grip Stock. Cho Bored. Either Brass or Paper Cartridges c be used in it. Bore, 10, 12, 14 and 16. Nickel. Mountings. PxICE, $!Q. Auxiliary Rif Barrel can be used in this gun, thus maki virtually two guns — a Breech Loading Sh Gun and Rifle. ALFORD, WARD, DAVENPORT & CI 85 CHAMBERS STREET, NEW YORK. feb 1— ly SMITH, MYERS & SCHNIER, Manufacturers of ALL. sizes of Circular Saw Mills Steam Engines and Boilers Shafting, Pulleys, Hangers, Couplings, Gearing and General Machinery. OUR No, I Plantation Saw Mill, $2 • II (SEND FOR DESCRIPTIVE CIRCULARS.) SMITH, MYERS & SCHNIER, 323, 325., 327 & 329 W. Front St., CINCINNATI, OHIO- je 1 — 6t FOR FALL PLANTING. Fruit and Ornamental TREES, SHRUBS, ROSES, Ac. The largest and mod oomplete general stock in the ('. s, including many ( Abridged * ic mailtd /'Ym to all applicants. Addreai ELLWAMtfh'K&BARKlf, "JESS. CHESAPEAKE A\D OHIO BA1LWAY Opened through the beautiful BLUE ( i K ass region ol Kentucky to Louisville and Cincinnati. Connecting at these cities with all ol the Great Lines ol Railways diverging lor Indianapolis. St. Louis, Chicago, Kansas City, Nashville, Mem- phis, and all principal points West, bouth and {Southwest. SOLID TrtAlNS with Pullman Sleeping Coaches, run through daily between Wash- ington, Richmond, Charlottesville, Waynes* boro, Staunton, (Jhitou Forge and Louis- ville and Cincinnati WITHOUT CHAKGB. SHORTEST & MOST DIRECT ROUTE and the only route without transfers, Avoiding the uncertainty by other routes of making connections. For rates ami lull information, call on the nearest Chesapeake aud Ohio agent, or addi C. W. Smith, H. W. Fullbb, GeuT Manager. GenT Pass'r Agent. For the North and West. Do not fail to see that your Ticket reads by the NASHVILLE, CHATTANOOGA and ST. LOUIS KAILWaY. For speed, safety and comfort you will find this line to be unrivaled. Emigrants wishing to go West either to locate or as prospectors, will find it to their advantage to go by this route. Round trip emigrant tickets on sale te Texas points. By this line you have no tiresome delays. Through coaches are run from Chattanooga to Columbus without change. Sleeting coaches on all night trams. Good Coaches, Good Koad and quick time. For Alaps, iime Tables and all informa- tion in .regard to this route, call on or ad- dress A. B. Wrenn, Wm. T. Rogers, Traveling Agent;, Passenger Agent Atlanta, Ga. Chattanooga, Tenn. Or W. L. DANLEY, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Nashville, Tenn. JERSEY RED PIGS From largest herd South, which took Five Premiums and special mention al Virginia State Fan- 1881. This bog is free from df* i natural graier. prolilic and early to mature. Catalogue free. T. LOVELOCK, Gnrdonsville, Va. lie Pups in April from imp strains. jan 1 — ly are seat anywhere on trial to operate ngums-t all other Presses, the custom- er keeping (ho one. that suits best. No one has ever dared show up ary other Press, as Jjcderkk'sPrcsa Is known to ho beyond competition, and wilt bale ■witn twico tho rapidity of any other. Tho ouly way Inferior machines can bo Isold is to decelre the in- experienced by ridiculously f ilse statements, and thua ECllwithoutsij:li tor seeing, and pwindle the purchaser. Working any other Pres3 alongside of Dederick's al- ways sells the purchaser a Dederick PreBS. and all know it too well to show np. Address for circular and location of Western and Southern storehouses and Agents. P. S. DEDERICK & CO., Albany, N. T, fe 15— ly WANTED 50,000 FARMERS To send for Illustrated Circulars of our Adjustable and Folding IRON HARROW. Cuts Six, Seven* Eight, Nine, Ten and Twelve Feet Wide at Pleasure. Does fine or coarse work, adapting it to different seeds and soil. Best Harrow for cultivating corn, potatoes, cane, cotton, tobacco, &c, as each section goes between the rows. The only Harrow adapted to small farms, large farms, nurserymen and gardeners. The frame can be spread to a distance of eighteen feet and narrowed to fourteen inches. JBgr* Low freight and low prices. Address ROMKEY BROTHERS, Sept. Burlington, Iowa. fllwf ilTlIl.t7w.fi .CAR FAY'SBUILDING MATERIAL iuimwin.M.ui-.Limv «"u i iiuTH iu oiace oi niasTor. .Nam-, ulee and catalogue mailed tree. W. H. FAY.C»md«n.M. J fleceiYefl Melal AND fflQnZSI AWABD OF MERIT AT CENTENNIAL. Send for Catalogue; SAWMILLS STEAM ENGINES, O.FARWAB,Iork,Pa., Cheapest and Lest for all pur poses — simple, stroiv,', mhJ du- rable. Also Horse Pow- ers and Gin Gear. Saw, Grist aot> Cob Mills, Gins, Pbesses ANDMAcnraEKT ftcner- ally. Inquiricsproniptly i§l§ answered. ~J3 VerticalEngines/with or without?, g- *?- wheels, very conveni- ent, economical an< complctoin every de tail, best and cheapest Vert- // ical in the //0 world. Fig. 1 is engine iniise»Fii». 2 ready for [road * Fig. 2. The Farqishar Separator (Warranted) Agricultural Works, Tork, Pa. Lighte-t draft, most duraM». iimpk.it. most economic ,1 «ci l' rfect. ia C3e. kVas'.osno " pain,-' i{( *Ul&X Cm Barjjet. ftwARGEB SEPARATOR. THB SILVER UESAIi Paris Exposition, »~ae. Address A. D. Farquhar, York,P<*- sep 1 — eot LANE & BODLEY €0. AWARDED GOLD MEDAL BY THE ATLANTA COTTON EXPOSITION, Steam Engine and Saw Mi Exhibited at Atlanta in 1881. Manufacturers of Steam Engines, Boiler?, Saw Mills, Gang Edgers. Lath Machines, Hub and Spoke Machinery, Shafting, Hangers, Pul- leys, Couplings, Gearing, Grist and Flour Mill* Send for Special Circular of our .No. I P.AuUtion Saw Mill, which we sell for $200. Special attention given to Plantation Ma- chinery. Illustrated Circulars Free. LANE & BODLEY CO., John & Water Sis., Cincinnati. O. my 1 — 8t COOLEY CREAMERS Greatly Improved Tn daily use in over 15,000 factories and dairies. For securing cleanliness, purity and greatest possible, amountof cream, have I no equal. Made in four styles, ten sizes each. Du- rable and ornamental. Skim automatically with or without lifting the cans. Most pop- ular in the cream-gathering plan. Four gold medals and six silver medals for supe- riority. Davis' Swing Churn Best and. Cheapest. No inside fixtures — always right side up. No danger of .cover falling out, let- ting all of the cream on to the floor. Nine sizes made. Three sizes Nesbitt Butter Printer. Four Sizes Eureka Butter Worker. THE laS^CFDRO^^^ID EVAPORATORS Make Better SYRUP, SUGAR, and JELLY, with less fuel and labor than any other ap- paratus. Will condense Sorghum Juice faster than any evaporator in use. The best appratus known for making jelly from sweet cider. Thousands in use. Send for descriptive circulars of Evaporators, Cane Mills, &c. Every implement warranted ex- actly as represented. VT- FARM MACHINE CO., Bellows Falls, Vt. ASHTON STARKE, Agent, Richmond, Va. mch 1 — V2t Q ueen™ E South PORTABLE FARM MILLS For Stock Feed or Meal for Family U3e. 0.0,000 I3fl" tj-se. Write for Pamphlet. Simpson & Ganlt M'fg Co. Successors to Stkaub Mill Go. CINCINNATI, 0. je 15— 6t rimes Change and We Change With Them!! LARGE REDUCTION in PRICES. rHE OLD and STANDARD BRANDS: THE ORIENT lomplete Manure,: (WITH POTASH.) $35 Cash at Factory. OUR ACID SUPERPHOSPHATE — OF LIME. $35 Cash at Factory. $22 Cash at Factory. With LIBERAL DISCOUNT for ONE or More CAR LOADS. MANUFACTURED AND FOR SALE BY ITLANT1C k VIRGINIA FERTILIZING COMPM. WM\ O. CRENSHAW, President. >FFICES :— 6 and 7 Crenshaw's Warehouse, - RICHMOND, VA. 1 A OR T ES :- RICHMOND, Va-, and ORIENT, L. I. ■ALSO ON HA i m ammmm, of our own manufacture, i t bigh-grade Chemicals. S^Send for Circulars and Testimonials. SPECIAL ATTENTION! IS CALLED Randall Harrow. TO THE This is a S1eol-l>i*k pul ig Harrow, Is used after a fallow for cutting sod-land to pieces; ii harrowing, for pulverizing 1 and tear- ing to pieces to a deptb which no other harrow can reach; for getting in grain, &c. The driver, on his seat, can change the position of the disk at will, making it heavy draft, cat ting; tloep ami pulverizing thoroughly, or to'a position which will simply cut the heavy sod to pieces: in which position it is the lightest draft harrow made. This harrow is particularly recommended fordecp and heavy harrowing*. We can fully recommend the RKTiFORl) A HUFFMAN DRILL. In offering it toour customers, we can guarantee satisfaction in every particular, for drilling Wheat, Oats, Corn and Peas with all kinds of Grass Sexd and Fertilizers. It has a non-corrosive bottom. The quantity per acre of seed and fertilizer is accurately and easily regulate:!. One motion takes hoes up and throws every working part out of gear. WHEAT DRILL PORTABLE ENGINE. Our SMALL PORTABLE ENGINES are well adapted for cutting Ensilage and other feed, shelling corn, driving- small grinding mills, sawing wood, Ac. These Engines are particularly recommended for their SIMPLICITY, DURABILITY, SAFENESS, PERFECTNESS and the little skill required to manage them. We also have LARGE ENGINES, Portable and stationary. The CYCLE and the BELLE CITY are the most perfect. They never clog or choke and require very little power ; they will cut up any kind of feed. We keep the SINCLAIR and many other good cutters. We call atten- tion also to our superior WHEAT DRILLS, SORGHUM MILLS, Evaporators. Corn Sbellers, k. J^Sknd for Circular and Catalog im<:. Ensilage Cutters. H. M. SMITH & CO., 1 ™"™* ™ L t6T! ' P.O. BOX 8, RICHMOND, VA.