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"to ?r iwi?????????w VOLUME V. JaaasBsaaBis fcDlTOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS: Jf paid within three months, . - $3 00 11 paid within three months after the . close of the year, 3 50 if paid within twelve months after the close of the yean ' 4 00 If not paid within that time, . . . 5 00 Two now subscribers will be entitled to tl paper the first year for fit* dollar#, paid at th time of subscribing, and fire new subscribe for ton dollar? paid at the time of subscribing , No paper to be discontinued but at the optic of the editor till arrearages are paid. , Advertisements not exdoeding silteen line inserted for one dollar the first time, and fift oents,each subsequent ids irtion. Persons sending in advertisements are reque teu .0 specify the number of times they *rt> to t irJe>-ted; otherwise they will be continued ti >rdered out, and charged accordingly. UrThe Postage must be naid on all comint Hicstion*. _ AdftxatfLTtjnAi. From the Franklin Farmer; MR. StBVBpfSoN: The undersigned has read Mr; Allen eeany in your No.. February lsti with atter lion. Some eight or ten years since* whil riding my hobby at my leisdrc, and ihinh ing no harm, an adversary pounced upo me very unceremoniously, and, as I though v#?rv unnecessarily. Ho w the war was a I ter wards waged, would be tedious to relal at present. It was protracted, ho wever, an not without its incidents ; but peace wns fi nally concluded, and no wisli is entertain^ on my part to enter into controversy wit any human being, the residue of my dnyi much less with so M glorious, a fellow" a your friend Allen. 1 would much ruth* taste with him your u barbacue," and St your fin** Horses and Durha tis, and admit your iuJturiaut blue grass pastures. As fa Mtes, t haVe no particular fondues for their rfaough I reckon R. Cyrus and Wonder hav ft* tang years as the longest { and us fo muKnsk Gen. W. 0. H ardmg*-*-his ares large and stout, a strangle, who should cot rectiy report, might be suspected ofhavinj usurped the traveller's privilege. Before attempting to sustain my own op inions, or to reply to those advanced b; Mr, \ it would not, perhaps, be amiss !< give you a passing notice. You forese there is to be a controversy, as to the supe rior claims of the thorough breds. And yoi incline ngainst them for furming purposes But you admit you have not made trial. A; an off st-t, I plaoe the' opinion ofyour sue. * Tenor, Mr. Pindell. He is for them, anc after acruul and fair trial. On a .'ittJe retire, tion, it will occur to you, that on opinion not deliberately form?*l, ought nut tu have been expressed in opposition to the Award of Orlando Brown. Esq. You selected him umpire ; I never saw him but his decision, of course, binds me to believe he is d man oi judgment and taste. Now to the purpose. Had the proposi. tion been for tbe M best essays on the Horse and his varieties, particularly the farming horse and roadster," the Naragansett Rockers, the Canada Ponies, and New York Trotters would not have been passed with ^ out notice. As evidence of the truth of thi assertion, resolutions were in'roduced, a our last (Joun y Society Agricultural meet ing, to have premiums awarded at our nex annual exhibition, to the best Trotting Racking, and Draught Stallions. The tw< first carried, nern. con. ; the last failed, on< member only siding with me?the speaker* on the opposite side holding that the mui< is bettar adapted to our situation and want* than the horse, of anv admixture of the drai breed. That .my opinions may have their dui weight, and ihnt my prejudicial of educatiot may do no one an injury,abridged sketchei of my history may now be pardon^. Th< good county of Halifax, N. Car. is my na. tive place. A large bay gelding surroundec by a ra'l pen, covered with bought is amonf my earliest r.-collections. The heat hut overcome him, and he had dropped in th< plough, {[n the summer of 1837, sevora in ttie neighborhood of Nashville droppeti in Hke manner in the fields and in tin roads.) Shortly after, I recollect to have seen Eclipse lea home. He was a gon< bay, handsomely murked; a son ol Baylor'! Shakespeare mare. He is known in th< A. T. Register as Harris's Eclipse, ant favorably known as the sire of Ge?de'< Brimmer, the Wilton Roan, Louisa, dart of Peace-maker, Drew's gelding, who win no contemptible competitor of the evuicibl* Florixel. The next year, I remember, t little tidy, light chesnut, round built filly brouJ white hlaze down her face, and boil hind leiw half up white. She was a daugif ter of old imported chesnul Janus, out of t sister of the not d H irlot. Eclipse w?i ttbout 15 hands 3 indies high, and site win about 13 1.2 hunds high. So soon us could art on a horse I was set on tne Janui filly. She was a good trotter, and bred u: two fillies and a colt by EHipse, good? one of the fillies produced a colt by a soi of Shark, and another by Druid, both gooc and both performed repeated long journey i in good time, and on one occasion in par ticular, mounted on the grand son of Siiark returning Irom Nashville to our residence in Carolina, with other company, wo nu: with a Kentucky gentleman travelling east One of my original companions was moun led on a large horse, Tennessee bred ; tin Kentucky gentleman was a large man, but b was mounted on an adequately large horse Hots long the Kentucky gentleman kep company, 1 disrememder. The circumstance might have escaped my attentioi % ^ ARM] AJVD CH CHERAV entirely, but for the fact that we encountered wt Spencer's Hill on one of the day*.* The die day was hot, very hot, in June. Ifhe Be ncomparable ease with which my little ip horSe, who was hardly lb hands, and light sul at that, went op, afforded me the pleasure a toe roan on a journey feels when he knows he is on "a good one." Our Tennessee tui friend kept company to a gap in the Blue an1 16 Ridget when he filed offto'the left, and went of '? into Virginia. Trun, he was an older man thj " than his then careless comrade, and his eai in prudence regulated our stages, and saved trif (lis steed, but it had become very apparent the ? what a hard push* for a day or two, would hir ? have done for his wind and legs. My other tin " ? ? ^ II ? I . MAlKifAll AH I ikf g. companion WHS tt i/aruuinaii| iiiuuhi^u uii iik k? n Galloway of the riflht grit. 1 dropped Pr H him, not his horse, in Orange county, and Ti went ott m lively as a lark, to Louisburg. do *" The same Eclipse mare produced a filly by po Coeurde Lion, and she a filly by Truxton^: Icn and s ?e a colt by Timoleon* reserved for we higher purposes* The other Eclipse mare bo produced a filly by Silver* and she a colt tht by Cour d? Lion, who was loo small lor a on stock horse, consequently, geldeJ, and put bet 8 under the saddle. His match I never met A{ ' on the road. I do not believe there is a un e trotter in Norfolk, or that there is a mixed Lc breed* with the Norfolk cross* in New Vork Mi n that could have kept with him more than the h three hours. I am confident* no half breed Mai ^ could bave lived with him twelve hours. I for e rode him several years, and after I sold pri d him he fell into the hands of S. Johnson of fig Kentucky, and years after he was seen at to d Lebanon, and recognized as Williams's pei ^ little sorrel, with long Sam, as he was then in V called, on h;m. And on enquiry of Mr. fig 8 Johnson, how the horse had performed, , for T was advised h? reported **a better was never of * wrupped rn a hide.'* Some of his family Oc 'e have been worked t they neither founder bet >r on the rpad, nor drop in the plough. In 6 r '* 1806,1 purchased a full bred daughter of sto e Wildair. She whs obout 15 hands high, Co >r very lady-like, ond a splendid trotter ; she Hij ? produced me two fillies by Coeur de Lion, bly * one good, the other splendid. In action S and wind she equalled Exile, the sorrel gel. tim ding, out of the Silver mare ubove, but she the * wanted something of his strength, and ability ,fira Y to endure. Occasionally I have rode other dal 0 horses, but have never been quite satisfied Ba B with anyother, than of these two families of i " : ? ~ ""n I /Imvu fnr cnmn IV*. III uiiu iifsm i ui'#?*? ivi w*?w IV/I J y^ars a grand dum of Mark Anthony, and p0l she was uli I could have wished { and the ver best gig horse I ever saw was n grand son the - of Mark Antl>ony ; both perfectly tractable, \Tl ' though Mark Aathony was said to be vici. mn ions. The inferior daughter ofthe Wildair gUi, mare bred me a filly by g Cleaveland buy. w0, ' Stie was a good one ; was a good trotter, Sp ' and worked and bred for me till 18 years old, ' when she was traded in good health. And t>eS ? that is the only trial I have made of a Cleve- fh ,f land cross. 1 know another doing good gOC work at twenty years old in this neighbor- gp hood. me My father as he ndvnnded in age, bred <jer 1 on Eclipse mnre to Free and Easy, from 5,^ Narrugansctt* He wus a natural racker, l (or, as sometimes called, a natural pacer.) anc So soon as H e produce grew up* the old slf( 5 man quit the trotters, nud rode the pacer till anc 1 shortly before his death. Free and Easy ^ was a hght chesnut, about Id hands high, dor 1 handsome forehead and good clean limbs, pfo, ' but rather scant in the middle piece. For 9 ease and celerity in the rack, I never saw |jg, 9 his fellow. But the blood was wanting to fen - ? ?.?...j 3 give coniuluance, lor a 100 long proirucieu 3 ride in August cost him his liR 8or 5 In my younger days, ' I saw a match, hot f (they call them a span, we, improperly 4 a 0b? pair,) tof Canadian Ponies, dark browns, ejg 3 torn muzzles, cropped and bobbed, round |ar 1 arid muscular, about 14 hands high, and a* 0U( s bout as like as two black-eye peas, or a be I 3 handsomer comparison, black-heart cher. hat * ries. 1 admired them loose, and under the abi ' saddle, but, hitched to a sleigh, their brow ' bands and collars decorated with tincliling I h I little bells, making strange music to a South- ?ta * ron*s ear, and keeping time to their tramp, we I as they glided swiftly over the snow, the as- adi ' semblnge of sights and sounds, was to me mo ' quite fascinating ; and had you, Mr. Ste. 3 venson, on that occasion, bt^en seated behind I tliem, comfortably enveloped in warm furs, * 5 you must, of necessity, have pronounced it I 3 admirable, and the * whole turn ou:," J with the exception of the cropped ears, in 3 good taste. ( 1 N.or am f entirely ignorant of the deserv. cet 1 ed high character of the New York trotters, brc * Without ** telescope or spy glass," but look, wh 1 ing quietly through my old spectacles, I viz * ihmk I can see their principal excellence? Rn 1 their indurance is derivable from Messen. su| * ger. My thought approaches knowledge, me * p;?L- t?n- mp Mamhrino. his sire, is I ~ *vur?ii ? v.rv ivii9 ?t.w ? g twr 8 brought the trotter in England nearly to per- for s lection, and when Colderr assures me that apj ' nothing short ofu full breJ can be relied on Nc B in great emergencies. ne: 8 The New York trotters beat the PennsyK 1 " vania horses in the mail stages. Very good. Br 1 Remove the same horses to old Virgin'a, if On * they then keep even pace with full breds, I pet s pronounce, before hand, they have not more doi - than oiu\.eighth of the Norfolk blood. I ro[ , should question about more than 1 _ 15:h. Ni And yet I tun not so fond of going to Eu? art > rope or to Asia, to gain light and gu . knowledge. 1"object not to going to the nc Northern members of the Union when it fac s suits our interest. The Norfolk trotter, rel e broug t to New York, has no doubt done Ar . good. For oil ordinary work, the half bred cu i will do well. If the utmost exertion# are to tut - be made, no half bred can do it, that's all. fro n What horse in Norfolk county, England, or of i * EES' E RA W 'J. 7. SOUTH-CAROLINA, I ? * tilt half bred in New York, under the sad. H could keep company with Wagner or istoria week, or a single day. One man a hundred thousand} informed on such Injects, would not believe it. It is almost i plain a case to have been propounded^ Mr. A. states the English were eight cen? ies trying to make a superior race horse, d never effected that object until the reign George I. Lawrence, 1 concede, states it-they were fond of horse racing from on rly day} add in Aihelstan's time had their lis, mere senibberiea, as I understand no, over Smithfieldi?'-But if 1 remember n, very little attention had been paid to s Eastern or South Eastern horse before < -I <C1 n tUn i* accession 01 me oiewans. uurm^ mo otectorate. Mr. Place had some good irks, and there had keen previously, n6 ubt, some good Arabians and Barbs imrted, and though I have no means of owing precisely how many years they re trying to breed a good race horse, the ok lies before me to shew, that in 1708 ;y had bred a good one. Duke of Dev.. shire's Basto, in October of that year, rat the Lord Treasurer's Squirril, 4 miles, fain, in November, he beat Lord Treasir's Billy G miles. In March. 9, he beat >rd RoyIston's Chance, 4 miles; in October * Pulleine's Tantivity, 5 mil* s,?he beat i Marquis of Dorchester's Brisk. 4 miles; nd was looked upon to be in very high m for racing. He had an appearance of de and spirit, which added greatly to his ure; was remarkably strong, and allowed be the most beautiful horse thnteveraprared in the Kingdom." Old Scar figured 1810, and *as a good one. Childers ured in 1821, and the accounts ofliis per" marlces are more circumstantial. April - ' ? AA ! j J ?1 mnt year ne won ouu guineas, * mnr?. tober received 600 forfeit. October 22<l, i! Chaunter, 10 stone ench, 1000 guineas, niies. Ran a trial, Round Course, 9 ne, 2 lbs. in 6m. 40sec., the Beucou urse, Weight not stated, in 7m. SO sec. ijhflyer, perhaps was his equal and possi. ' Eclipse may have been his superior. To shew what may be done in a short e, I copy some of the performances and pedigrees of Monkey and Dismal. . The. t was foaled in 1725, got by Lord Lons. e Bay Arabian ; his dam by Curwen's y Burb, g. dam by the Byldry Turk, out in Arabian mare. April ^60, he beat 800 guineas, the Bolton Fearnought, ly.Grasshopper, and Grey-legs, all in y high forms, dec. The last was got by Godolphin Arabian, dam by Alcock tbian : s. dam Curwen Bay Bark. Barb re, bred in '38 won great stakes, 1000 neat, 4 miles, and King's Plate. In '36, n King's Plate at 4 heats, beating Blaze* ctre Kauli Khan, Blacklegs and two era, dec. dec., and was never beat, and ide, brought them near to perfection, ese, it seoms to me, were as fair tests of >dness as the modern experimenting at som or Dancaster; but 1 know sports, n think differently in England; our brees seems to rely on 4 mile heats, and ed for bottom. The thorough breds have more dense I stronger bone; sinews of finer and >ng fibre :* better brenthing apparatus, I perspire more freely: and coupled with I, finer and better organization ; their ur'jemulaiion and courage bear them triummt over difficulties, dangers and deaih. The objection to the thorough breds i against alt animated creatures* a idency to degenerate* Some are eedy." Remedy ; breed to the stout t Where are the favorite Longns ? Gone. Men degenerate* in cure villages, not preserved by forn marriages* they are scrofulous; in ge cities, dwarfish* Remedy; cross ; to the stout country lads; if still aw the mark* brinz down the tall " " ~~~ * o # dy mountain boys. They would if mdoned for three or four generations, generate in mind too, and must, "as eard a learned L; L. D. hold, to a te of barbarism \ and that great and 11 directed efforts were necessary td ranee any given variety to a higher I ral and intellectual culture." WILL, WILLIAMS. "Facilis descensus Averni, terertere hoc opus est, hie labor est." AMERICAN INDIAN COTTON. Our readers are aware, no doubt, that tain parties in England have lately night up a auestion as to this subject; ich materially concerns this country; . whether there is any probability that gland can hereafter raise her own jplies of the new material* for her imnse cotton manufactories. Some light thrown on this matter, or at least on eign views of it, by a Report; which pears in the London Athenceum, of >v. 23d, As it is voluminous, we anc the whole, "A paper was then read by Gen. iggs, 'On the cotton trade of India.'? e of the principal objects of this par was to snow that the people of Hinstall are as capable of furnishing Euje with cotton as the inhabitants of irth America; and that, under proper angements, both the quantity and ality of their produce would fulfy sufe for all the requirements of our manu:turers, without the necessity of our ying on the slave-labor cotton of nefica. The paper began with a callation of the quantity of cotton acdly used in dress by the natives of iia. Specimens of the several articles costtime were exhibited; and it was . - ? r. '/jr -10X' ft A! W-* 10 r js 0 T WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1 shown that the dress of the male Hindoc contained 24? square yards, and that ol the female about 8? square yards, which, allowing that they were renewed, on ar average, at onCe a year, the consumption would amount, among the whole population, to 375.000,000 lbs.; and it might be fairly inferred* from the various othet domestic uses to which cotton was applied in India, that as much again was so employed, making a total annual consumption* by the natives themselves* ol 750.000,000 pounds* The quantity inU ported into England is froth 4 to 50Q,000,000 pounds annually, and this is chiefly raised in America, not more i C. n f 1? ?PL _ than ontftenth coming trom inaia. ine questioa naturally arises why should this be?-*" 'Hie cause of the deficiency o( the supply from India, Gen. Briggs stated, were closely connected witntneadministration of the country; he should not further allude to them in that place, but would proceed to demonstrate his position, that India might supply cotton'sufficient for the manufactures ql England, and, if necessary; for the whole world. It is needles to follow the details presented, but the details presented but the result of a great number ol statements and reports from the best sources, showedlevidently that scdfcety any portion of the surface of India was unfit tor the growth of some kind of cotton. The great table-land of the Dekkam, the soil of which is formed of the debris of trap mountains, is the cottor soil par excellence, and is suited to the gassypitim herbaccum, the,indigeniou3 cotton of India. This soil lies upon limestone. It is in vegetable matter, and is retentive ol humidity; but in hot dry weather it cracks into large fissures. It is at that season hard and clayey, and brittle, like coal; This clayey soil, so fit for the indigenous plant, is. unsuited to that u! America, which grows best in a iigni, dry, sillicious soil, and as most formei attempts to introduce the American cotton into India have been-made upon the trap soil of the country* they hau necessarily failed. But the soil best adapted to American seed is also found in Indiej near the coasts, where the original plant does not succeed. This was proved at the various experimental farms established by the bast India Company and on which the American plant was grow ing to perfection. In order to point out the differences which existed betWeet the various kinds of cotton in use, dia f;ram was exhibited, showing the various engths of the fibres of different kinds In many specimens of cotton the fibre had & flag tabe like appeareance, while in others it looked like a string of oval beads* pointed at each extremity. Some kinds were more cylindrical than others, and the Surat and Sea-Island cotton i? thickest and narrowest, and the TaVoj and New Orleans flattest and thinnest. Id length of staple* the American surpasses the East Indian, biit the latter was the finest. Some idea of the ei? treme minuteness of the fibre of cotton might be formed from the fact that it required thirty-five fibres to make the smallest thread spun at Manchester, 350 hanks of which weighed only one PPumL and would measure 165 miles in length) But it had been shown that the natives of India could spin thread with the hand) four of which would be required to make Up the bulk of one rtiade by machinery at Manchester."?Boston Notion. From the Farmer's Cabinet; BOILERS; In some former numbers of the Farmers' Cabinet I have read essays on the n/l?mnlAfwAA /?f tlrvtJinrv rvrai D SUUJCtlin UlC auvauiajto ui uvnmg ?iain and roots for stock, which arrested my attention and induced me to examine some of the boilers which are in operation, and I find that they far exceed the expectation farmed of them. Those who have erected them in d proper manner and have brought them into use for cooking corn, oats, and potatoes, for hogs and cattle, would not be willing to part with them for three times their original cost; A farmer who has had one in use for some years, says that he is now sure his stock gets the whole of the grain, and what is of great consequence, it is all digested; There is now no going to mill and giving away ten per cent, of the grain besides, the otherwise unavoidable waste which some allege amounts k about four per cent. more. He says, the feeding of cows with boiled oats is the most profitable application, of it which he has ever made, for it puts marrow intc their bones, and *n the spring and summer the dairy maids draw it out in the shape of tine rich butter, which brings a good price since these piping days o! steam-boats and rail-roads whieh have set the whole world a travelling. Some have erected expensive structures foi ctpnmino-. hut it seems now to be' admit O' # ~ ted that a simple boiler, set in a propei manner in brick work with a grate un derneath to support the fuel is the cheap est and best plan hitherto adopted. Tht demand for these boilers having inorgas ed lias induced the manufacturers o them to improve them, and also to sel them at a less price than was formerlj given of them< and recently a friend o mine purchased one of great beauty an excellence at a. fair rate No.? M&r'jn street, Philadelphia, just below Se^o'm on the north side; Dil worth I is th ZETT t X E R. 7, 1840. mm?? > dame df the seller; those sold there ftfte p< T lighter add handsomer than any casting* th , of the kidd 1 have seen and come cheap- of r en Savery <fe Co. who are the founders, of i it is said, use the iron which is made at m Lyman's furtiatej Fottsville, with ant thraCite coal. ' P* Content* of thi Southern Cabinet for April. . , Notes on Eurepean Agriculture; By a Charles' tonian. No. 5. * _ *J 'f On the Ambiguity, of Terms?tiirad and iUi aalta h) ?'their applicability to Agricultural pur- wl poses. * do i On the Renovation Of the SpU; . Agricultural Sdrirdy ofSt. Matthews, S. C; By the Editor, (concluded.) th< 1 Agricultural Meeting?On Corn; mi ' On the Management of Negroea. ;0 I Farm Hornet. ' .: r Diseases peculiar to Cattle?Remedies; _ Poultry. . fa Abstracts; ttl? ' Effect of Lightning on TrOOs. ad I- TALIS, SKETCHES, OtC. nn The Revolution,of IT19, [* Ldve and Death. JBy Mies Mary E. Lee. 'D) An Indian Legend.* ho . Scene of the Revolution. By Mrs. Sirournoy. Notes df an E*cnrsion from Philadelphia to Jacksonville, 111., made in the summer of \ 1839. , The Sky Leapers p Wedding in Kentucky* Bn Oriental Field Sports; .. " . ; The Heiress. Maximi for Carried Ladies. ' LITSR4KT NOTICES. (1U I Thejptouse Book, er a Manual of Dduestic E* pa condnijr. . The Orchard and Froit Garden, gp aorIcoltbr/ti, itiai. , i_. Beath's Gin for Sea Island Cotton. * ft fetation iff I - Crops in Gardening. Soaking Seeds. -New.. 1 l way of raising Beets. Churning Butter,' Ct miscellaneous itejftf. w( . Bonaparte's Burial Place. Private Fortunes of' some of the Great. Personages of Ancient ttT Times. Hiltra'ordinary Manner of Manu. ' ) factoring" Cloth. Embalmings Singularf Scientific Error. Manufactures in ?f7Pt. P? Conclusive Argument; Assam Tea. The id; l Royal Cheese, Horse Racing among the ^ Cosaabke; Useful Mechanism. .A Good Arbitrator. Malik of Gatlanti* West. A pr - Hint to Wives. ' ?ij r ?? to ? Content* of the Farmer'* Register No. V. su a Vol. HI. Original Communication*. ^ . The mari and Lirrieiiotie df thb bdftfofs of ^ | thb ffeuse and.Trertt; m > Address to the Agricultural Sbfclciy of Cum I oenanu. .. C| Sheep husbandry; w . On the cuitivottdn of cdrn. Pulling fodder I fa I more aboiii fiaden corn. Apple ahtl pc pear cuttings. Multicaulis, Deep t ploughing. h) I Of lime and other matterii * t . Blue marl and free# tfMid,- a f, j Setettionti ' * " Culture of the'potato. & 1 Dionaea itiuscfpula. , -t! 5 Durhams wl Devonshire*. lc ' Heceipt for octroying catterpilldrt. w J Apples for fattening geese. . c< > Rolling, a protection from fly. 1 Agriculture of FrariCe. Bees. ' Proceeding* of the tobacco convention. Afilk. Curing liny. . ' Epidemic artlcfiig hotted; ^ ^ 1 Modern jriiproteoieiiiJ Id Europe W Sifti t0 .Culture. ' # ! Agricultural papers, ?? A Gloucestershire vale farm. au ^ Anti lime. 1 A farmer's life and duties. , . ?* 1 Mr. Jacob Sheimer's Sy&em of lafmtng. " Swamp mud for manure. *' Hussars'reaping machine. lJ Usefulness of birds and toads. ^ Grape cubure; v Mnrtdrefii i .1? To snVe seeds; Root culture. _ Dfeo rd**rs of the currency add the Remedy. l7V " Rye in \^rtodlandi # Rearing chickens. . \L Calcareous manures; . "JJ Value of ashes; Sf P ^l. * ; Durham cattie?at what age/to import them 813 ?will thrive on our worst pastures? dnd may be bred from at one year old. . . Experiments on rmnures. jj* Hay-making. ; Speech of Daniel Webster, esq. cr Appendix tofamC; v I Impfovemehit of the soil resultirig from the m 1 gruzing system of Kentucky. 01 1 The times [in South Carolina.] i- Squashes. ? " Different soils. i ^ . ?: h< BEET SUGAR W FRANCE. pi 1 In France* sil thousand acres of land 07 ! ate devoted td the tultftatioirof the Su- .M gnt Beet, which yielded one hundred ^ i millions of pounds of sugar, and the ca^f' > tal engagement it is estimated at twensy _ eight millions of dolUrs. The ciffr aj i employed in the manufacture of *r ' t from the cane in this country, is & t:mf *ted at forty-five millions of doTftf" ^ i. number of acres employed is ufU ,en 5 sand5 yielding sixty million* ^ pmiiids r anriuafly. The Yankee Farmer g. *4\yefcaye r seen the above in ^evet^ ^ "of ourexchan and we copy it fr^the purpose of - showing ther. ross ror jt contains. It 5 says 'six tri03gj)jir ^ acres 0f land piwduce - one hunr^jj iri\,|jon pounds of beet su-1 J Sar,1 fhis K at the rate, of sixteen thoul saw 4 gjx hundred ant), sixty-six pounds f 0 . ctfgar per acre. Now an acre of sugar ? beets will riot avefftge more thgft two J thousand seven, hundred lbs. of sugar* fet three thousand porinds is a Irirge viefd, 1, An acre of car^ produces, according to ie the abov^ ?&ragraph? four thwtsand * .. # * 6L-' e **MagNUMBER 3f, * jSa^Hu gar; +hi?i? an error; fa it atearge yield in sugar from ati acre * sugar cane is but one thousand pounds raw rugar and five hundred pouudtof olasessi" / I, POWERS OP THE ARAB HORSE. * I am tempted to mention to you one feat 'fin Arab horse the property of a peraon ? Nd had more than once been mentioned ' me in those letters, Aga Baharm, shd lich has not, to far as I know, bean ubted. This animal Came from 8ira& Tehran, 250 miles, in sis days; remain^ ire three dgy s^went, back in five* jC ? lined at SmrauS nine, arid returned agpin . Tehran in seven dayjs; another horse qf 4p s own from Tehran 13 {ToSW, twenlylbur P :SiJrks, or a hoot eighty four miles, betwefg * s-dawn of m morning near to Ah#4<|jwaox, d two hours before stit?et~that is, out ten hours. This, too, is ?; hot A mi Bah ran had ahiavs the best -" ~ " " |1 . """" j* tt rtoi in Persia. FrazetTatter Journey. tomato winbT Dr. Hoi-face (j. Gillette,, of feist Wind, r, informs us(that he has succeeded in proicing, from tnpjuioe of the Torrvtfo,"a fu # oh sdarcelj to be distinguished, in its ap? artice and flavor, from tome of the best ecies of purd wine/ At the close of the it season, when it was becoming difficult rtger td preservd the ripened fruit from do.' _ y, he tt>ok a quantity of Tomatoes, by .' iy. of experiment, and extracted ?fie juicw ' simple pressure until be had obtained : v o quarts. To this after having strained; ind put it into a glass bottle, he added two unds of sugar?the common article * town as molasses sugdr. it tfrafl theft &fcl ide and left to go through the natural ocess of fomentation! and, be jng out of jht, was soon out of mifld^jfOn recurring the esperiiqeru a few daybiince, the re? It was found as above stated. If the medicinal properties of the Tomato, hich are now generally understood to be tluable, are in bo way impaired or lost by is operation, the discovery of Dr. Gillette qy be of nd small odvantaga to medical' rtfctidC; inasmhch as it renders it practi. iblfei with very little trouble or expose, to Uie essential, virtues of this vegetable i a state of perfect presevrotion, and in a irrfi ittoat agreeable for use by invalids; Since (he above was in type, Dr. Gillette as presented a specimen of the new article Tour office. Though it rosy be inferred 001 the foregoing account, yet it may be ell to state expressly* that no alcohol has ecu added to assist in thtf preservation; and mt nb lu?h addition seems to be necessary i. prevent acetous fermentation, towards hich? scarcely the slightest tendency is disavored.?Connecticut Observer. % feotlBS. *> We publish td-day ? csbjla/ fctier froni [r. WHIiamS.advocating if.i claims of the ooded horse forth*saddle and draft.? fr. Alleh, Mr. Stevenson, or somo other kampidn of the **cold blood'*,' must Come the rdScue. Since OUr iormer notice, e have made repented enquiries among ?r farrrtetsand stage contractors tfpon this W a um Hi na*n miiAk fiHtflr u. 11 K lujvgu tf g tvi j wuvifvii w,,?? e re[>ly tit tide; 'He said the superiority ' the blooded hbrse, in point endurance, at as great in the hard work tff a hot cornild; al in the race courte, had be thought e former almost as good to leaf gamef h? b'totter. He mayndt have, be^ri vety-far rung. We apprehend that ihfe grdhtt'.r irt of the stallions standing for (nareS, in is rich.centta^ portion of itfe. S atfy 'arc eased upon the tliorough bred bo'If' vand at all ttthe. .hiogs being equiH, 4 deciddu oferenco wouid<be given w thtf through td stallion, A- prejudice tt$ -Ingt them , it gdrie abroad among sotff^ account a deficiency in size and Sbtf' tlance, We id tired in'and in to horses, until Be and vigor had been sft> lfioe(J| Qnj.some f eat defects entailed opt jIV lhe progeny.? ow wo have among tit 0f lhe Bel ipse ?nd lifted stock, stullltf ^ roly bredfsixteen inds high, finely ' ?portioned; they will oss admirabjy dp ^ QUT foffnor aio^t and e will be slow V ^ begw0 tbm grea er size required &f an_ usefu! purpoae in thw tuntry. A GfliSAT YIELD. re informed that George C. Har? 9* -*sq->.of Hardy count}-, raised tive J? . season, from-one acre of ground, i hundred and eighty bathe o f com. r. H. cultivated The same with a view f premium at the approaching agricultural exhibition of Hardy cotfrtty* and the husking and measuring of the' torn was attended to by a disinterested, intelligent, and higblyjrespeetkfofe citizens ' of Moorfleid. Thisls tfrti most extraordinary yield fcqtl^ one acre of ground, that we"have eter heard of. Truly, may the South branch JRoftoins be termed the in "*UIC gpiu^M vpyis ui inc \jui\w* Romney Intelligencer. The culture of ftuta Baga i3 exceedingly simple. . The great thousand antf eleven hundred bushel crap? that have been raised in this vicinity, were retired On a deep loamy soil, a little inclining to. day, which had been highly manured and had been cultivated and kept clear from weeds the year before. The'wholc secret then lies in this. Choose a good loamy soil that is completely subdued, and pulverized by previous cultivation. Manure it highly. Plough,-harrow, and *