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&
SjGMICtrATVM**.
good Sip* ob OakttvrtfagCcn.
Borne six or seven days after corn
is planted, (a writer in South-Land
says.yvon over it with a heavy iron
tooth harrow, doable team. When
it is about bond high go into it with
the cultivator, the front tooth taken
out, contracting the frame so that
the ftrst two side teeth shall ran as
close as possible without ploughing
up. Straddling the drill with your
double team pass rapidly through it.
Take the hoe, rustle the dirt through
the dtili and around the stalk, be-
cause the cultivator has not thrown
enough. Thin as you go, whatever
distance apart you require for a
stand one stalk in a place.
Remember that a plant has no
greater enemy than another plant of
the same species. Having finished
with the hoe, expand your cultivator
(all teeth in) so as to cover ail the
ground left in the middles. Double
the team and go ahead. Thus, with
wl at is only equal in time and labor
occupied in running two furrows
with a turning plough, you have
dirted your corn, cleaned out and
thoroughly stirred up, to the depth
of the teeth, the ground before it has
h td lime to bake and harJen, giving
thus a mellow bed the full width of
your middles for the tender rootlets
to strike out in search of their prop
er food. This, the first working of
your corn, will just about bring you
to cotton planting, which should be
done when the blackberry is in /nil
bloom.
Having planted your cotton, turn
right back on jour corn. No ques
tions are to be asked as to whether
it needs work or not. Don't be a
shamed to work in it with neither
grass nor weeds to kill, (most prob
ably there are none,) even though the
Work be condemned by some carp
ing neighbor who “can see no sense
in it.” Run around with the sweep.
Judge from the growth whether the
roots have spread across the middle.
If so, then finish with the sweep.
If not, and the stalks will not inter
fere with the passage of the double
team, hitch on the cultivator. Set
the proper width to complete what
ever the sweep left ; chop through
(nothing more) the drill if there is
anything worth cutting out. The
weeds only will deserve attention.
Co-operation among Farmers.
We take the following from an ed
itorial on the subject in the May
number of that excellent magazine,
the Rural Carolinian.
We have, in a previous number,
expressed the belief that the co-op
cralion of capital and labor, in large
agricultural companies is, in certain
cases, perfectly practicable, and, in
fact, essential to the higher success
under the conditions existing here in
the Low Country. We purpose, to
call the attention of our readers to
that subject again and again, and to
urge men of practical talent and
means to take action on it, and test
the plan in the field. Our object at
this time, however, is to speak of
other forms of co-operation, of which
the agricultural community general
ly may take advantage.
Our agricultural societies and
clubs are examples of co-operative
action for the exchange of experi
ence, the comparing of notes, and
the diffusion of agricultural inlorma
tion. We are not among those who
consider these societies and clubs
utter failures. They have done, and
are doing, some good, but they tall
tar short ol what has been expected
from them. There is something
lacking in them, or in their man
agement. What is it ?
The agricultural magazine serves
many of the purposes of a farmer’s
club, and confers its benefits on
thousands whom societies and clubs
never reach. It also has its sphere
and its work ; and it is a wide sphere
and a grand work ; but it leaves
something to be desired above and
beyond. Farmers need a closer
bond of union than they now gener
ally possess—some organization
through which their interests can be
promoted, their rights secured, and
the knowledge and experience of
each be made available for all
something that shall instruct, like
the agricultural journal, bring farm
ers into frequent contact, like the
• club, and furnish a firmer bond of
} union, and a surer guarantee of mu
tual help and protection than either.
It is claimed that we have such an
organization in the Order of Patrons
of Husbandry, which has also social
features which make it attractive,
and give it an elevating and ennob
ling influence. We are not at all
disposed to urge anybody or every
body to connect himself with this
organization; for it may not com
mend itself to aft as it does to us,
but we consider it a duty we owe
to our readers to again call their at
tention to it as one of the many
means of securing the benefits of|co
operalive action. -
It is our own vanity which ren
ders the vanity of others insupporta
ble to us.
Mr: Fetfcf BMttrsom in the Amtr
ism Jgriadtnrut+gijtf* aqjatereiic
ing sketch of a successful track far
son for us ! If three crops can be
no&deio one. season in New Jersey,
shaft we be extent with one, and
often a poor one, in South Carolmia
or Georgia? Mr. Henderson aays:
I bad almost thought ihufXMew
all about market garde* ing }a this
vicinity, that was worth knowing;
but a successful experiment, maj|e
last fall by one of my neighb<gf,
John Reilly, proved to my satisfac
tion that Iv« as not yet too old to
learn. The neighbor in question Is
an old foreman of mine, wbo culti
vates about eight acies, in the way
usually practiced here: first, plac
ing the spring crops of early cab
bages, beets, lettuce, onions, radic
es, etc., which, being sold off by .fit
ly, the land is again planted with the
second Crop, which is usually ceJjEj
ry. Tmkis all that we have* been
requiring of the soil, to give us two
crops in one season. Bui this neigh
bor of mine is a man of more than
ordinary shrewdness, and a close
observer; he saw that the long-con
tinued drouth of last July and Au
gust was certain to seriously impair
the fall cabbage crop, snit that the
consumer in cosequence would pSy
high for a substitute. He knew
that an excellent substitute vifis
spinach, but his small farm of eidt
acres was already planted with cel
ery or other fall crops, and no other
land rich enough to grow the spid
ach was accessible. He also saw
that the drouth that was destroying
the cabbage crop left the celery but
little larger in September than when
it was planted in July, andjhethuje
feetot space between the rows pf
celery were left uncropped; thi3
suggested that a row of spinaih
might be sown between each two
rows of celery ; at any rate,| it might
be worth trying.
Twenty pounds of seed Acre pro
cured, and about six adfes of the
ground planted with celery were
sown with spinach. Mr. Reilly
told me that the experiment net
ted him $1,500 clear of all expenses,
and that, too, without detriment to
the celerv crop.
The s*pinach was sown Septem
ber Ist, and was all cut off, and
marketed in six weeks from the
time of sowing, which gave yet am
ple time to do the work on the celery
crop. I have not (he figures giving
the profits of the three crops per
acre, but judge it to be not less than
SI,OOO in the hands of Mr. Reilly.
HOPE FOB BCOFCEXEOT.
For a veiy cheap and durable
cement far ro#fs pfjiouses and other
buildings, v t6 prevent leaking and
the danger of fire. Good li*r any
kind of out door work, and for farm
ers’ carls, wheels, sleds, tools, fences
foe
It will tighten old shingle roofs
where the leaks or cracks are not
too large, and will prevent tbegrowth
of moss, rotting and sparks of fire
kindling. Good for new as well as
old wood work.
Composition—Four parts of coal
tar.; one of air slacked stone or shell
lime, and one of hydraulic cement
or water lime. The cost of the ma
terial is about three or four cents per
{;allon —a quantity sufficient for a
arge roof costing only a trifle.
Put the tar into au iron pot over a
slow fire and when moderately hot,
sift in the lime an 1 the cement. —
Stir and mix well. Apply it warm.
Any one of common understanding
may apply it with an old coin-broom
or brush—-saving the extortionate
price of a skilled mechanic, oi the
still more extortionate price of a
“patent shaver.”
A second coal will be well to
make sure the covering of St 4 the
leaky cracks and to increase its du
rability.
To improve the color and lasting,
siTt on a coat of while or yellow airy
sand soon, or about as fast as it is put
on, a3 it soon becomes hard.—Ex
change.
Ground Peas.
The ground pea has never been
properly appreciated in our State;
it has no equal for fattening hogs.
I have had six months old shoats to
gain two pounds daily, when run
ning on ground peas and sweet pota
toes in the same field. I have been
cultivating this plant for twenty-five
years and can say from experience,
that there is no correct way of as
certaining land that exactly suits it,
except by experimenting. I have
had fine ground Deas on very sandy
land, and poor ones on stiffland and
vice versa.
They should be shelled and plant
ed on land that has been well broken
up, but not bedded up as they do
not require -a 'ridge. The 'rows
should be 2 feet 8 inches or 3 feet
wide, not wider on poor land, and
may be checked and cultivated en
tirely with the plow. With one
hoeing and twice running round—
once with a scooter and once with a
sweep in the middle of the row, f
made as fine a crop tbis past year
az I ever have made, although they
got very grassy after I quit working
them. The, work they receive,
should be given early before they
have become so grassy as to be in
jured in getting the grass out of
them. Land that contains lime is
the best, but almost any land that
j have seen soutlr of Macon, except
.iTVI AifiqA 5 * »
jfew* >iaUing Ao4 tbeVj feme
piece, tbaLwheq h«ii wejjijillowed
io root toem 6utoftne patch that
the lamdl wm hpyfijtfj. -So .much
so, Inal life poorest part ola field of
10b acres that wgrisnted for five
years io ground per 8, became actu
ary <3 bri best**-
Having lost fifty bushels of seed
and a crop, frdiH hrit knowing that a
freeze would ia. th erg ,*iulei a J£ , e~
i£y metnoa
saving seed or peas for vaarkeL-*-
When the vines seem fully matured;
and begin shed their leave/ i. am#’
the vine, plow them up and have
v aoMpbi
dirt out of the vines,; let the vines
and have them placed not exactly in
a pen or house when fully dry.—
Pack the vine&. vyijbujhe peas on
them always iu a dry place and
pick off at your leisure. The viues
will be fine food oxen or
horses ami mtijba,", : 3Fhe peas can be
in mark& if » frifeuneifAing price
the cows amfrflW'ses wUI eat the
vine, or the horses and cows can
have peas, vjne and all. In the
manner described, shands can gath
er from 3 to 500 bushels a week and
house them away. The poorest
land will produce them, ana belter
without manure than with ft. 4
The blue grass and, clover men
may count'up tfiedost of raising
pock, jvill take our common
land in South-west Georgia and by
having peaches,
ground peas, field pea’s, potatoes,
oals, millet, rye, &c., guarantee that
I can make more-'prvir W flieGtarid
than hecan and at less cost. I have
raised a thousand pounds to the
hand every year since the war and
a full crop of cotton besides, sold
SISOO wort more than I
needed for my tmfl use, and lost 10
or 12 head by bad management, dis
ease and accident. I mention this
to illustrate my preaching, that there
is no necessity of our buying any
thing to eat or any stock. Instead
of that we can make good cotton
crops, some bacon and corn to sell,
and a few horses every year; aud
one of our Georgia raised horses is
worth two bought ones. *
G. W. C. Munro, in So. Cultivator.
SOW TO UTILIZE BONES,
A correspondent in the Country
Genllemam } asks the following ques
tion:
“Can whole bones be dissolved
and worked, down by beingjnixed
with untfeached* wooa 'ashesj and
whether in this condition they will
be good as a fertilizer- Will you al
low me to give you my plan for mak
ing one of the very best fertilizersi
have ever used, either in the hill or
otherwise? And here let me state that
lam as ca,refill in looking up and tak
ing care of the bones about the farm
as the rag-gatherer ot the cities is in
picking up and caring for the rags,
and when I have bones in sufficient
quantity, I treat them as follows:
Take a water tight box or cask of a
suitable size, and in the bottom put a
layer ot ashes, say three inches in
depth, then on this a layer of bones,
and so on alternately until the cask
is nearly or quite full, the last layer or
bones being well covered with ashes.
I then have my family pour upon
this, all the urine from the house
every day, and on washing days pour
on a quantity of the strong soap-suds.
In a few months this cart be taken
but with a shovel all dissolved, ex
cept it pay be the large enameled
joint bones, which may have to be
broken and put through another
sw'eat in the like manner. It is un
derstood that the ashes must be good
hard wood ashes, unleached, or the
job will prove a lailure.”
WASH FOB INSIDE AND OUTSIDE WOEE.
In answer to a correspondent, the
Maine Farmer gives the following
directions for making a good white
wash for ifiterior works, and also for
outbuildings, fences, &c., if desired:
Os course every farmer knows
how to slack lime for making the
wash. Select a large clear lump of
lime, and in slacking it use only
boiling water. Turn the water on
slowly, and when fully slacked dis
solve in water a small quantity
of sulphate of zinc and a little salt.
This causes the wash to harden.—
The sulphate of zinc sbould he used
in all wash .intended for outside
work, but nrtay be omitted—if, salt
be used—ls that for interior Walls.
For colors use the following : II a
pleasant cream color is desired add
yellow odhre until the desired lint is
Obtained. For fawn color add four
parts amber one part Indian red,
and one part lampblaok. For gray
or stone color, add four parts raw
amber, and two parts lampblack.’
'These lints wjll he fipnd more dt»j
rable than Common whitewash, and
fences outbuildings, Am*, look very
well ooverej with tha®». a toh l <
TbeVe ere growing in Trenton, N.
J., two cork trees raised from acorrts
sent oql Xcom Washington a few
years jjfy fiy the patent office.—
There are others in North Carolina 1
ana Florida,
, a . D J Stances of about
jseven feet, set small cedar posts,
fpr an or
dinary board fence, but much small
ter. Then commence to lavjm the
walfo, ana’-form ilie fourieftkfc#'2A
jfeeuikdajiE the base. Mnch-Je
this
(ginning right.
] iTkft ■foaes'dtfit bffJCarefoliy yet
•quickly placed jn their position;
practice will soon enable the build
er to avoid having to fit them,, or
move* *theib j a second tirfte. - The
Iway a stone is laid is, also of great
cbbqpquencetAs it must always be so
placed as to have the largest end
outride, to it&tall the stories will
have a tendency to fall inwards in
stttd pf. outwards. The 'two -slo
pingsldes thus formed will, ir the
large enough* bear one
jagainst the other; or if toe small,
thejrWill press the middle
stones used to fill up wuh ; gradual
and: w£en ihe i
wall reaches three feet high, the top
is about 12 to 16 inches wide, and is
finished with a rounded capping of
smaller stones. These fences are
permanent aad good, and when
one or two fence boards
are nailed along the top from post
to Abfiatrtvo feet
through boards may
jbe narrow, and placed several inch
es apart, as smaller animals are not
likely to lie templed to get on the
)op of the wall, and the boards ef
fectusjjyl prevent largej ones from
disturbing the stonC/—G., In Can
ada Farmer.
BU* Expedients zed their Besalts.
In January, 1870, I commenced
on a piece of pine food .which had
been in cultivation thirty years, with
little rest or manure during the time.
It had been cultivated in cotton the
year before. ,1 laid .off my rows
four Ifct aparl with* ft rihbvel plbugh,
running in the same furrow with a
jtemporary subsoiler made by knock
ing the wing ofl of a common bar
and sword turning plough, using the
bar fon# little altera
tibn as a subsoiler. This ran down
to the depth of about seventeen inch •
es, I then applied cottonseed, green
or sound, at the rale of 1,000 lbs. to
the acre, lUftwing two turn plow
furrows otJ.|» seed, aad left further
preparation until April, when I broke
out the regaining land with a turn
ing plough running in every turn
plough furrow with (he yubsoiler to
the same depui as before.
Another piece, I prepared in like
manner except that I applied about.
350 bushels of stable manure to the
aerp|he first of April. To another
ptged} with the same preparation, 1
applied Isaac Reynold’s phosphate
250 lbs. to the acre. I cultivated
with what is called a Buzzard Wing
Sweep, shallow, leav
ing, when Uotie ctfltivaiing, the land
ahrToM,% not nltagefher, Hat. Col
ton planted middle of April did well
and promised finely until the middle
of July,, when it began to wilt and
burn, apparently for want of rain,
but not so; for in spire of the fine
showers it continued to burn and
ihrawrtftTpntil almost dead. It was
not excessive drouth nor excessive
wet that caused it to fail, neither
was it rust, or at least it was not like
any rust I ever saw. Perhaps it
frenched as Mr. Booker, of Marengo,
Alabama, remarks, at least mine
took French leave, sure; and nothing
was made after the 25th of July.
The result^ after being gathered wns
as follows:'
FERTILIZER USED. YIELD PER ACRE.
Stable Manure 920 pounds,
Phosphate Guan0.*....300 ««
No Manure. 115 “
I have laid off my rolling land with
grade ditches, from 1& to 2 inches
fall in 12 feet, borizontalize my rows
so as to compel each row to hold and
absorb or drink ifs own water, not
intending to allow the ivater to go
running over my land : but as soon
as 1 put Mr. Dickson’s theory of flat
culture into practice, away goes all
the water whiriiqg down the first
ditch, sometimes filling it up, caus
ing it to break over, and on down to
the second dftchj&ifogiit vzarse than
the first.
I like the plan of fiat culture for
several reasons. I approve of hori
zontal rows in order to hold the wa
ter where it fajls, and to do both is
what I would like to learn.
THE SOBE EEAD IN POULTB7.
I notice in the March number, a
cure for “Sore Head” in Poultry,
and desire to give your readers the
benefit of a remedy which has never
failed me.
In the absence of a belter cogno
men, I have called the disease the
“swell hea,d.” The first symptoms
are a watery and frothy collection
of matter in the eyes, often accom
panied by-> warts or sores on the
head, if riot attended to, the for
mation, a white, tough matter be
gins inside of the eye lid, and always
below eye, aeqampanied by con
sideable inflammation. Theswelling
increases rapidly, frequently extend
ing to the inside of the throat, which
becomes ulcerated. The fowl be
comes blind io-one, or both eyes—
as the diseaaoaanetimesHttaciU on
ly death
ensues. The disease is highly con
tagious, and' frequently sweeps the
poultry yard ts not I
have never * csge
even when the fowl’s eyes were
completely shut from the swelling.
The frothy matter first collects To
the front or outer,corn,er.pf ‘the eye,
then to some extent impairing the
vision, which will be percieved by
the (owl striving often to wipe it a*
way on its feathers. ~ •
Poultry thus affeeted shoe Id at
once be placed in a coop by them
selves! Make a strong Bribe Itt i*
old cup, or some other suitable rear
sel, and waslvthe bead at least twice
a day, using a sou rag. Suffer the
brine to go hito the eye, as it seems
to arrest the formation otbard tough
matter alluded to. It aoßMriimes
occurs that this, formation has at*
ready taken platte before the disease
is discovered. In such cases I
sharpen a piece of chip, and by daft
fully inserting it between tbe eye
and the lid remove it entirely. If
not removed by an operation, though
the eye become will al
ways be an unsightly protubersncp.
If the head and gills have Warts
on them, the scabs should be remov
ed by the finger nail, or by a pock
et knife previous » washing. Plte
not remember of ever losing but One
case, under this treatment, though I
have often bad to feed them by hand
for two or three days, on acdount of
blindness from swelling; and this
case was so far gone whetl I took it
in hand, that ulcer had gone in the
windpipe. In addition to the above
treatment, the nostrils must be kept
free of matter by pressing with a
rag outward along the beak.—H. D.
M.ln Rural Carolinian.
From the Southern Farm dqHome
Food for Milch Cows.
Few of our farmers are aware, I
believe, how the quality of the milk
varies according to the kind of food
upon which their cows are ted. Cer
tainly, very few give much apparent
attention to the subject further than
to give “a little bran and slops” to
their cows, and even this is an ex
ceptional case of tender considera
tion. Wheat bran is, however, an
excellent milk-producing article of
food. It has been found by careful
experiment in some of the great dai
ry-farms at the North, that wheat
bran will make more milk, pound l
for pound, than corn meal, or wheat
or rye shorts ; but it would be very
injudicious to feed milch cows on
bran by itself for any length of time,
because the inevitable result wouldi
be that they would fall off in strength,
and cease to give milk. Tbe strength
of the animal must be adequately
sustained as well as the flow of milk
encouraged. Tbe one depends upon
the other, and when the former fails,
the latter necessarily fails also as a
consequence. Therefore I recom
mend as the best food I know for
milch cows, two parts of wheat-bran
to one part of coarse corn meal,
ground with the cob, and a small a
mount ol chopped hay or fodder
sprinkled with salt and water. If
the stables are kept warm, clean and
well ventilated, this food will keep
the cows in good condition and in
full milk.
Turnips cut up coarsely, beets and
carrots, are first rale milk produc
ers, and are also strength-sustaining
food. Irish potatoes and refuse ap
ples are also good.
In very cold weather milch cows
should never be allowed to drink
perfectly cold water, which retards
digestion. The water given them
should be at blood heal. I would
always place a lump of rock salt in
the feeding troughs. In this way
the cows eat as much as they need
and never suffer for want of salt.
Free access to water, or if they are
kept in the stable, a plenty of water
three times a day, i3 essential to &
full flow of milk. i
The Almond.
There is no apparent reason why
the culture of the almond should
not be pursued to a profitable extent
in the warm and favorable climate
of some of the Southern Stales. It
so strongly resembles the peach tree,
that it is difficult to distinguish it by
the leaves and wood only. The
chief distinction between the two in
our gardens lies in the fruit, which,
in the almond, consists of little more
than a stone covered with a thick,
dry, woolly skin, while the peach
has in additiou a rich and luscious
flesh.
The almond thrives best in a
warm, dry soil, and its general cul
tivation iu this country is precisely
like that of the peach.
The Common Almond, the Hard
Shell, Sweet Almond, and the Bitter
Almond, are hardy in. the latitude
of New York, and bear tolerable
crops without care. The Soft Shell
or Ladies’ Almond is the finest of
all the varieties; it is the very vari
ety common in shops of tbe confec
tioners. These cap be obtained of
any of the nurseries.
Lime for tour Fruit Trees.—
It is a good plan for fruit growers to
apply lime freely in their orchards
every two or three years. A half
bushel to each tree, or 100 bushels
broadcast, per will suffice.—
Upon land particularly tenacious,
we have know as high as lour hun
dred bushels per acre; but this was
used for a truck garden. Light
loamy lands will be best benefited
by the lime, and shell lime is belter
for fruit trees than the usasl atone
hme.—HorticvUnrut,
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Plane*, Organs, Meiodeon* and any other Mnsiaelinstmnentfamished *1
- •». .: teic-i* 1 • btvh-vr.-i a & !>;*.. - . ■'* ..
M anufaoturers* J? rtos 3 .
if' ! ’ ; t
When Rlargeorgea or pieao is sold, we send a man to pot it np, dree of charge.
Miscellaneous.
■ ?ii* ... ■ ci ,'i'jd l
pi ■
.
GOLD AMD BTSHL PENS, i ,
GOLD PEN AND PSNCIL CASES, a !•
ENGLISH, FRENCH AND AMERICAN WRITING 'PAPERS
; COfllltO BOOKS, ’
COPYING AND SEAL PRBSgSS. 1:
ENGLISH AND AMERICAN COPYING,
WRITING AND XNDBUBLR IRKS; 1
LETTER, HOTS AND WEDDING ENVELOPES,
PORT FOLIOS, WRITING DBSJCE, V . '.,
CHESS AND BACKGAUCMON BOARDS AND MEN,
DOMINOES, CROQUETS,
PLATING AND VISITINGTtABDS,
SEALING WAX, .
INDIA RUBBER BANDS,
; j'" *, ; PEN KNIVES,
r . v DRAWING AND TRACING PAPER, K
MATHEMATICAL INSTRUMENTS,
SDRVRYORS' COMPASSES,
PORT MONIES, fko., Ac.
- ' . iii,
SobseripSovu isssfrof for an j Periodical, American or Foreign! payable in aH easaoitt i
Foreign BtMk* iwported at New t
Books are being constantly ordered, and A single volume of the smallest vain# may at any
Ume be sent for. :
Si ill pirdlsfi withyEspresser meiiata verysMghtcost.
Partiss nnknawn I* n* most reaott with their orders., :' r ’•
Poekogeo sent by Rsprsts eollect on delivery, when desired.
AH Inqniites as to eost of opy orticie, most bo oeoompsnlod with n stwsp lor rotan MHS
withprieolialo As. .... ; 'V.' ;
Ad i>o«s ofl sewnolrotisns to
R. A, HAIUUWN A C#., s
Mny 5, Wl, 1