T MOLINA nOlUIKlMj Editor. 50ITI ClSOUJWTjwfrfiil ii taWltflml, men! ind BhjtirjJ rraoartti, lit liid tf uriim ind koine tt tar ifffrttau." 1E0MD1S I. LII1T, luccicti Idlluv , VOL. XLI. RALEIGH, WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 25, 1850. NO. 39. T MM ' Issasvf '"MlaH ""' ll' " ' 'II 1 ' uviajiuJ i . i aim mum) . I'Pi STAR THE WORTH CAROLINA STAR ' IS PCBLIIHSD WUILT, . IT TD01AS J. IE1IT t SOI (Offloe nearly opposite tile Post Offloe. ) Termi f the Ptptr. 41 M par annua, whea paid la advaxcs $3 00 If paTaeeanVis delayed three months. Ttrmi tf Idvf rtiilof. Om iqiin, (16 lines.) flrat inaertiea, $100 " " eack subsequent insertion, 26 sCsart enters and judicial advertisements, 25 per at. bit-bar. deduction of 881 per cent for advertisements by flu jaar . "Ail lettera and communication! must be mi KemittaneM may be made at ear riak. TUB J.AW OK tiKWSPAI-Ellfl. 1. All subscribers who do not give exeats no rma U tke contrary, are eonaidered at wishing to eoatinus ineir suecripoon. t If subscribers order the discontinuance of their jpapera, the publiahen may continue to tend them astil arrearaf-ea are paid, J. If subscribers neglect or refuse taking their papers from the offices to which the.r are lent, the are held responsible till their bills are settled and toeir paper ordered to be discontinued. 4. The Courts hare decided that refusinr to take las tad learies- it uncalled -fur. is 1 prima facia" tftvidOKS Of JSTKKTInXAl. MAI'S. THE NORTH OliOLLYI FIRMER. From the irman Town Telegraph. iMPRmrii NTiirk' sih.-i'p n.i Hue imooctant auSiert most intelligent farmers' f' ' aBlU a JauitabU and. Agriculiural p.t rapidly arousing aiicn tion In it, and our farmers begin to rniton and act, and to denude themselves of llieir old and long eherished prejudices in proportion as the light reflected from "he paite of science upon their th, bwomes mtf ' luminous and well defined. As the natural fOllU!r this, we find that the annual fair now held mn.liiflheSl.nea for ihe nroi.lotion ol Arricultural imorovenient, are ranii.'ly in creasing in imerest ; a more decided anil generous public spirit is ohiious; the animal exhibited are more numerous and of better quality, and far greater p iins are biken by fanners generally lo render these important institutions worthy of the "great interest," snd an honor to the bl:itrs and counties of whose enterprise and prosperity they pek. In n fcrcnee to that most valuable animal, 'the rtiiKEP, the truth, of the foregoing observ a tions is strikingly apparent. The old, coarse, long-wool varieiie.-. though possessing value for particular nurnoM, have alreadi nearly become obsolete. Twenty years, ago, no fann er aniicipaied seeing a flishley, Sdu h Down, or Teeswaler animal at llvese tirs, uny more than the farmer of the present day dreams of seeing there the tjashmere goat, or the Alpaca. I wish to be distincily understood in tnia mailer, lor I am speaking not oi par- licukf lotalilie. w here the spirit uf generuus improvement ' nd emulation dates Iroirt a period long antecedent in point of time to the enminrnciineiit of the chro. iolosric-.it segment - allied u) but to 4lifruiHr hv genwr rai. , At that tim we had no Agricultural press, and on George III to encourage honorable efforts. II ii I the fact is now happily far otherwise. Though in most of the Slates nit lt.rMln,iM I,m.1mI .Amain nltn.kst wholly inactive upon the subject, publ spirit and enterprise, together with au ever restless and enlightened press, are accom plishing much in our behalf, and will no doubt supply in time the want uf legislative patron , age end protection, nt least to a considerable extent. . .. .Awd...iiowMr...IUiiojv.M-..inu agricultural readers are doubtless desirous uf availing themselves of all the advantages which science and experienee so liberally afford In UiB enlightened in effecting the im provement of their flocks, I beg leave to submit the following observations by thai distinguished- f.iend of agriculture AnTiira Yotso iu reference to selecting sheep. In ha first place, Mr. Y. remarks that "tle geaeral priueiples which guided Mr. Rakk will, in breeding a beast or a sheep for- the botcher, explain his own stock, which is in the highest perfection when examined with an eye to these perfections. M. In all hi exertions, his aim was to oIh tava that breed, which, with a given amount of facta, will give the most probtlle meat; that , hi which the pmpomon of useful meat to the qaanuiy oi oITjI, is the greatest. ""I. Foiaui of the beast. On this plan, the i poiats are those where the valuable joints lie: taenwnp, die hip, the back, the rilis, and, af ter these, the flank; but the belly, shoulder, svaejt, legs, and head should be light; for if a east has a disposition to fatten, and to be hum vjr ia these, it will be found a deduction from the more valuable points. A beast'' nerii should be square, flat, and straight, or, if there ia any rising, it should 1 be from a itiapoailion to fatten snd swell about the rump ami Wp bones, and the belly should be quite straight, for if it swells, it shows a weight iu a baa pomt. lie prefers to have the carcass weal anade, and showing a disposition to fattea ia lite valuable points. So far on see- . "J- Feeling.' Mr. Uakewilu in order to Wide whether a beast has the right disposi tion tn fatten, examines by feeling. His KieBd, Mr. Ctu.tv, who has bad an infinite BHaiber of beasts go through his hands, aa-rees entirely with Mr. Baviwii i. in iliis evcuiruiiance. and when with him in Norfolk and Suffolk, was surprised to find lesn bul locks and aheep were alwoluiely bought there by the tyt only. So absolutely is the hand - - - art in choosing either, that they both agreed that if they must trust to the eye in tha Ilght,of to the hand in the dark; they Would nnt liecitatA mnanpnt in nrpferriiur lh latter. 'I'he form rrf the bone, in sheep, is ' quite hidden, it U the hand alone that raa co able ua lo decide whether the back is flat and broad and free from ridge on the back bone; or can examine, correctly, if the otherpoints ,r" ey..ldbe.sTJxe disposiiwo to tu, ten w discoverable only by feeling. Speaking ofthe aheep geneially, the points lo examine are ha same as iiitheox. Flat asaa, breadth of hack, a spreading barrel cr ease, with flat belly, end by bo means curved f banging. The essential ia the carcass. Mil disposition to fallen in the carcass. od perhaps to hare the least tallow on the idee. The keeping aheep on most of die upland and hilly farms of ihta country, ia generally Paking, lucrative buaines. If selected b reference to their ineawrrsibi J or Wool Inducing properties, and with a well digest- ed system of breeding ind management, these ' animals are rarely debilitated by disease? it it principally owing to neglect and carelessness thai Uiev sicken. By most farmers the winter management of the sheep is deemed a matter of trivial importance, whereas the reverse of the proposition is true: If sheep are housed in large numbers in confintdand poorly ven tilated enclosures, with in inadequate supply of pure water, and with poorer food, the legi timate consequence is premature debility, dis ease, and death. At the period of producing their young, the most assiduous attention should, be accorded to the dams. They should be provided with warm quarters, well littered and ventilated, and supplied with food of a generous and etrrngilicmng description. 1 he young, when dropped, should he carefully looked afler, and food calculated lo invigorate the system, and to produce a healthy and vigor ous action of the lactescent organs, be liberally supplied to the dams. - In the summer, snd during those months when they are permitted to run at large, they require to be carefully watched, esiecially when depastured in large flocks. The free use of salt is highly beneficial, or a mtiture of salt and ashes, and if the forage i shortened by drought, or of an uiigcuial or innutri tions order, the deficiency should he sup plied by daily feeds of grain, roots, or by soil ing. As a general rule, however, it is injudicious 1 10 rrowJ ,l"m together in large numbers, i,e" " PM"" rH"gp are m- io lesser divisions, and lo appropriate to a certain number an allmted space,. WV doing, many unpleasant contingencies f obviated. Si. oiler, eten in summer, is es sential often times lo the sheep. During this period, showers are ollen experienced. - - ;".VT.TJ? " j ' 1V" wmpw uil4cn.lX ' ' . ' T M duces disease and even dcalh. - One error, and a icry essential one, in the practice of fanners, I will here notice. Afler incurring a heavy expense in purchasing valuable animals, many proceed as if they supposed they had actually accomplished ail that is necessary. Instead of providing good and secure pastures in which the animals may find abundant and nutritious herbage during their range, and isolation from other flocks, they turn them into ihe highway to he Crossed by breeds ol interior- traits, and emasculated lii!t'UTved I'rpin a. lack .of. timely and proper food. The cnusrquenc--of this insane procedure is, that lltey are dis appointed ihe animals to eagerly sought lor and purchased at- perhaps an exorbitant p rice, fad lo real iso their ex peetatiofls, and all subsequent etlorts at improvement in thatue parrmenr. nrFprHTtiaturelyandforcverrTnoiinc-jTSIhS i.eii. i ins is necessarily an injury 10 me com munity; ii tends lo induce skepticism and unbe lief as in the legit imate meril and feasibility of the eiitcrprtsn, and thereby to discourage all tauduabte efforts on the part of many who would otherwise have embraced an eartjropportunity Lojissisttby tlicir own pjgtattiiiilf kaiiiile antlia. fluence, the advancement of so good a cause. . Suggcilioni in Hi lotion to the Seeding oj Wheal Oi Drilling. Mode of seeding and putting in. If sown broadcast we would prefer ploughing, orcullt 'iiMmcSr&XSf'WV"Tat tiifire'T than 3 inches deep: to beaftcrwards harrowed arid rolled. Either of these methods more ef fectually cover the seed, than wheu done with the harrow, and by placing the seed deeper, serve measurably to protect the roots of die plant from the effects of frost. .grilling the wheal in by . a juachine we I think a better plan than eitlter of the above ones ; and for the following, among other rea sons: 1, It requires th less seed lo set an acre of wheat when drilled in, than when broadcast ed, it requiring but 5 peeks by the former mode and 8 pecks by the latter, if well done--a sav ing of 75 bushels in a hundred acre field, is, therefore, effected. 2. The seed are more equally and eligibly distributed, as regards space and depth, than can pnssihly be done by hand, however skil fully performed. 3. By drilling, the labor of forming the drill, dropping ihe seed, covering and rolling, is perluruieU at oue and the same tune . thus saving the labor and expense of these separate operations, which are indispensably necessary to be perlormeu, whenever wheat may be ploughed in, put in with the cultivator, or har rowed in. 4. By the drilling machine, a slight ridire is raised on either side of ihe drill, which, to ils extern, protects the roots of ihe plants from ihe injurious ctlcctsol cold and wet, the slight elevation acting as a barrier against the wind aUtl-venler. 5. Should the roois of the plants be up rooted by the contraction and expansion of cold and heal, the earth forming the ridges sctUe down on them, and thus afford a tolera ble fair protection, rendering it an easy opera tion in spring, when the frost is out of the ground, and the earth settled and dry enough, to replace the roots, by passing the roller over ihe field, an operation of infinite service, and wntch hould never be omitted. 6. The space bctwen the drills, fives free circulation lo the light and air, matter of great moment in the plant in the course ol lis growth thereby letting in "the light of the sun and the meliorating power of the atmosphere. nose kintHf fbntienrcs cannot lie too hifhlr appreciated; hesjdes which, it opens a direct channel fof the feviving action of ihe dews'ad milling ihem at once on to the esrlby to lie there absorbed and taken up aa food lor" the growing plants. "TT Drilling is said, by une offhe Tt, one ofthe most enlightened, and one of the most enthusiastic farmers in the county, to render wheat less liable to rutl. He does not assign the reason, but we presume theory of the thing to be this: that, owing lo the free admission of sun and air between the drills, the plants do not. aufler. aa much ititm u)eraiMiiidanee of walcr, as do those sown broadcast, and, a consequence, vegetation goes on more regular ly; plants, therefore, are not so liable to be forced into an absorption of art excess bf sap. and by thu means escape the evils which" would Ke consequ -Tit upon an exuberance of that fluid ; the vessels of the stalks avoid disruption, do exudation takes place, to that should the close, murky weather, whiclt so favors''' the pararslie plants, or fungus, to which the rust is referred, occur, the stalks re maining w hole, and there being no weeping. out ofthe sap, iro lodgments sb be -made by theparasttie tribe I and they are wafted wajr i ' without doing harm, by the current of air pass ing through the spaces of tlx drills for the erhcacy of this we do not answer. So much for theory; and now let us see what that sterling, strong-minded fanner, of Wheatland, Delaware, says, with regard to the results of its practical operatiou. In a W ler to the Commissioner of Patents, Major John Jones, says: "W hen 1 commenced drilling, and for two or threcyears, 1 was ridiculed by my neighbors; some would advise me tu lake the implement home, break ii up, Hid cook'my dinner with it," Smart neighbors these! "1, however, disregarded iheir jeers, and rsrsevered. And now the best evidence; that cau possibly bring forward in support of the drill, over the broadcast system, is the lac I i that all my neighbors adopted the drill for sowing their w heat, and most other small 13 or 20 acres thickly. This will render the grain; and that we have, three or four drill-! clover exceedingly valuable to Southern plan builders besides II. W. Pcnnock, the in-! tors. From a lot of 9 acres af good clover, he ventorofthe improved drills, all of w hom cwild not supply ihe demands for New Castle cjuniy the past season. 1 think I am war- ranted in saying, lhat three-fourths of all the j wheat that will be grown in .New Uaslle coun- ly the next year, will be from land sown with the drill. One of the great adianfci e of the drill over the broadcast is, that they ran be coijitrueU'd for sowing the concentrated manures, guano, poudretle, bone-dust, 4c I have one lol of 100 acres, upon which 1 sow- ' ed at the s une tune with my wheal, Al leen tons ol gu.ino: on a part of which I sow-j 4"801T pftun3C'a1iUoiTiepar J poll per acre." The yield of additional straw on the drill- ed acre, 12 per cent. The yield of additional wheal on the drilled acre, per crm. ( ouch ficis.miuirc no comment Ihey writ heir own history , ; . I line ol seeding. We have ever been the ! advocate of earl)' sowing; and rrmwrhsTanrfi ing the oft repealed attacks uf the llessian-lly, to which early sown wheat plains are subject. we remain unshaken in our belief of Ihe pro- prieiv of the practice. It is not our purpose to designate the day on which wheat should be sown ; hut merely to urge, that it should . be gol in as early in this month as possible;' -and lo express ihe hope, that when done, it may be well done, as the manner of putting , in a crop, exerts a powerful imltience over its product. Water furrows.- So soon as you have finish ed seeding, run y,uuc..wator furrows, and pass the roller cross wise over them. Quantity of Seed per acre. Ifiowh broad cast, it will require 8 pecks per acre; if by drill, 5 pecks, per acre, will be ample; ta frrall uy uiiiiiu, . jinna ,ji atn-u mil ur Rami oil, each acre; a matter of considerable mrtmenf economical fanner; hes?3cs which, oiit ol the many experiments made to lest the rela tive productiveness of the sysurms, the results are signally in favor of pulling in wheat by the drilling machine. t. IRON FOU APPLE THEES. - A eorresyowdent of tlwArharry "Cn M raTSf , writing from Fredericksburg, Vn., says: A friertd who has a large orchard of It.iw le's Jannett apple, has ten trees upon each corner of the orchard which always, produce fruit a third larger, and flavor so much supe rior, that it was supposed by all who saw and aie'tfi'e apple thaTiliey were"a i'aiiperior varie- ty of the Jannct. I his spnng 1 exam ined the soil, and found that a vein of iron ore passed under the ten trees, so near die sur face that it had been -plowed and worked up with the soil. A variety of ti e large blue plum growing upon the same ground, is also yey.fiuej-.wlMle.grafts :takett;lriu. the samtyt plum trees. and worked upon the stocks grown on different soil, prove worthless. . GRAPE CULTURE. About five years ago a gentleman planted three and a half acres in grapes, on his own land, a lew miles below Cincinnati, and last year he made 2500 gallons of wine. This wine he sold for for l 28 and 91 50 per gallon; and after paying expenses of manu facture, the tliretf and a half acres of vines gave him a net profit 'of $300! Five hundred gallons to an acre is not an uncommon yield; any thing less than 300 or 400 gallons is con sidered a very small one. All kinds ofgrapes are cultivated for the table, and as experiments: bul the grape relied upon lor winu, and most ly cultivated, js ihe Catawba. ALMO.NDS. In Georgia almonds have been cultivated with success;-and there is now, or was in 1840, in the garden of a gentleman near Ma con, Ga., a large tree, fifteen or twenty feel high, which has borne in,.ny bushels of fine almonds. The tree much resembles the peach tree bul is taller, and Ihe fruit, while growing U readily mistaken for the peaeh. Halt, limer. SUBSTITUTE FOU RINGING SWINE. If two of the tendons that erect and support the run of nose is cut across, about an inch and a half from the extremity, it effectually destroys their ability lo root. It is best per formed wheii" two 'tir three months old, but we see no trouble in performing the operation at any sge, by using a sharp knife, and cut' ting down to ilia bone, which has a very thin covering. The usual manner of ringing is an unsale operation, as well as a barbarous one, as they oft n give way, and the first notjse you have is the disfiguring and injury don toMlic fields by plowing them aip in a very htlggiiih manner. This operation is don with no prejudice J to the animal, and very little sunVriiig 5not hall so much, il you can juuge Dy tneir musia, a in the ordinary method ol twisted wire. Froa the Southern Christian Advocftte, A NEW AND VALUABLE CLOVER , FOU THE SOUTH. During the past spring I was much interet- cd tocMwiMH .. a -net epecies of Clover, whrcb is raised hy two geuuemcn tn tne vi cinity of Falkland, Ala. This clover when growing, before blon!iing, resembles the red clover in some res pec is, but in other it i entirely different, 'I'he blossom is yellow, and the seed resembles a bean in shape, though.it is but little larger than the seed of tin red clover, and is contained in a very singular burr, which i about the size of a large pea. Again, this grass, roots and all, dies annually; yet the same piece of land treed never be sown but once, as the seed produced in very great ioundJtvc. and comes up very freely and surely every autumn. Aain,jujtU eu- ii rely a Fall and Wilder grass It commen ces growing in October, and grows on ninety through the while winter, affording the finest pasturage, and continue to grow well, if pas- iiirru, unm ine isi oi may: annul mis time the seed begins to ripen, and the grass grad ually dies, and leaves the ground thickly cov ered with the dead branches and seed: When the cool Fall rains and dews renirn, it then re appears, and grows as before stated. I have said it yields an abundant crop of seed ; indeed, the quantity ot seed is so arrest. that this is a striking and very important pe culiarity. From my own observations, and from what one ofthe gentleman above allud ed to has tulil me, I am well satisfied thai it will yield, on good land, at least 80 bushels. probably 100 bushels of seed in the burr per acre, and this will be amply sufficient to so will raise seed enough to sow 100 acres of cutum land, and ihus ei-cure a rich sward of grass to rovei the land during the winter, and j protect it from washing rains, and atford him i the best pasture in the world. This is not mere fancv, for its growth on fair land is luxuriant as 1 ever saw of the red clover, on the finest lands in Virginia or Kentucky, I carefully examined a lol of this clover, which was closely grazed lo the 1st of M .reh lasl and about the 1st of May a great many of its branches were four feet long, I have often admired ihe luxuriant pastureji an4.ni,edy,ya but I think I never saw a better crop of grass in all my life than that was. Any person who may be desirous or getting further information about this grass, can obtain iltfi writing to Dr. II. L. Keunoii.or Mr. J IW Snedeeur, ratkland, Ala. Ihe tellers rslioulil .be post paid, as Una . j .wjJiouI ilitsit knowledge. f My apology fof Iroiibtihg ""you " with this communication (if one is needed) is this. I was brought up in agricultural pursuits, in the rich and beautiful alley of the Ohio, where the fertility of their lands is easily increased an hundred fold, by judicious system of graee iiur. and ever since 1 became a citizen of the South I have regretted to see her richest lands rapidly wasting away without the hope of fu ture improvements; and I desire, as a sincere lover ol my adopted home, to call the atten tion of planters to the above named grass, be cause I firmly believe it can he made incalcu lably valuable to the whole planting interest of the South. i. Falkland, Alula., July, 12, 1830, J-;. HONEY. Honey is, according lo Mr. Millon, who has lately published a treatise on bees in England, a universal specific ; and among its" other valuable properties, he declares that it prevents consumption, and-vtates that that destroyer of human life is not known where honey is regularly taken as an article of food. Those who have less faith in the specific, may perhaps attribute- the cause "to difference of cliiiiale rather than llis hon ey. The Italian singers it Is said are great ly .Indebted to honey ; but their practice is to sharpen it with a few drops of acid, though they sometimes take it in a pure suite- THE GUANO MARKET. The Baltimore Price Current of Saturday thus quotes guano: There is none in importers' hands, either of Peruvian or Patagoniani We quote sales from dcaleiS,of Peruvian, which is scarce, at 00 per 2000 lbs., and for Patogonian, 38 to 4)40 per ItWH demand good The American of the lutk says: GUANO. The scarcity of this much valued fertilizer has been a subject of regret to the farmers of this vicinity, who are very desirous of using ii in pulling in iheir wheat crops. We are hnp py lo state that two vessels from Peru arrived at this port on Monday, and. one yesterday, bringing in all about M00 to 1.600 tons of Peruvian Guano, which is the kind most in request at present. The names ofthe vessels are the barques John Mayo and JennvLind, and ship Icomum. They all come direct from the Chincha Islands, and are consiged to Sam uel K. George, Esq. j - THE COTTON TRADE. Mr. George G. Henry, a well known bro ker of Mobile, has recently issued au interest ing circular, in which he emliodies an array of statistics concerning the production and con sumption of Cotton, and deduces the conclu sion, "(hat consumption is at present outstrip ping the production, and that great consequent advantage in the regulation of prices must en sue to the American grower and "dealer." The Augusta Chronicle, in connection witu the circular remarks: - . ----- "We are of opinion that the time is at hand when a litile junta of spinners in Liverpool! and Manchester will no longer be permitted to control! the price of the World's great' commercial commodity presenting that anion-, aly in trade of the buyer alone, regulating, through a series of years, the price of that which lie desires lo purchase and must have. The power exists on this side the Atlantic, and should be exercised, to fix the price of the staple, and bring tho purchasers to the door of the grower. Heretofore the planter has in effect sent his cotton to Liverpool, and beg ged the privilege of saying to the Cotton I Kt&, W hat will you give for my Cotton? "The balanco is turned, and if the planters of the South wdl but exercise a tilde sound discretion, and compare the production with, the consumption. thi'V jnv.have ll' eonsilmrJ era at theirdoor asking, trhat ao you aemana for your Cotton, Mr. Planter? ' Parsr kvation or Pcarxixs through the great er part ol the winter, if sound and well ripen ed, is easily attained, bv stowinir them, in a mow ol ary nay or straw, or placing on a oarai" n d loor and rjfi&witri fW'&.''nf?S!,''$ !ry eclief will freuuonuy ' keep" (Jicta " sound; but these are usually too moist for this pur-' pose. ' They ought occasionally to ho looked after, and any showing evidence of incipient decsy, should be immediately used... All the partially ripe, small, and imperfect should be fed soon after taking from the field. From the American Agrienlturist, FATTENING ilOGS. i. Fob several yean, I have paid some attum. lion ttTaU,qiug..hj thrive much lasieruu corn and aweet potatoes, or oo peas and sweet potatoes, than Uiey will on any one of these alone. 1 am well aalisfi-, Falser in his Agencies forthat purpose in! ber well enough when sua was one of low ed, sleo, that they will fallen much faster on several principal cities in the Union by I most promising bodies about here. , Hut hat boiled and raw bod mixed, tlian they will on . whirh merchants, traders, and all others wish. I father was fool eiiouvh to aJta a snmr. The year before last. I turned my hoes into a potato patch, and every evening fed them w iih corn. ' L' ndet this treatment, the old hogs soon got very fat; but in the lot there were ten long legged pigs not a year old, which, at the lime 1 killed the old ones, were in as . good order for running races, perhaps, as hogs could b put in forjhal niirposKt jkpairidof making them lat enough for bacon; but as I did not wish lo keep them another y ear, I de termined to try what effect cooked fond would have on tiiem, as I was well convinced that they could not be made fat on raw com and potatoes; and with this view, 1 put them into a close pen, with sufficient pine straw in it to keep Ihe hogs from the dirt. I theu boil ed sweel potatoes until they would mash up freely, into which 1 stirred corn meal until the whole liecaine muh; and afler feeding them on this, until they appeared satisfied, I gave them raw potatoes, and sometimes turtiipi, with the lops on. I nder this treatment, thy fa tu ned faster than 1 had ever seen hugs lie lore.. In two weeks alur 1 put litem mto the close pen, ihey were lat enough lor any ue, fatter than ihey ever could have been m ule on corn at that age, or on any one kind of food. Hogs osightnever to be pntoti a floor of plank, nor rails, il pine straw can be had: because Ihey cannot be made comfortable on a floor of pKuudAll l pen Iwo feet dw:p wrtrrprne4tffrreT,-a eynnriirriyprr; straw, and whi n it becomes Mil, put in wore straw. Iu this way, the hugs cau bp made comfortable, and no 'part of the in. mo re lost. A. E. ERNEST. Macon, Ga., July, 1850. ti. SELECTION Or8EEJCORN. Th mouth seed eofe ehotjM'b eehscteil. Il can only be well doiieHawrfe field, by gutli cring those can with "siii ond ripe, and taken I mm stalks which have two or more well tilled ears lo each. In this way, the best varieties of com in cultivation have been obtained. ft ' AfUriTALTOMATO RECIPE. The following has been handtul to us as the recipe of a good house wife, for preserving or curing" tomatoes so effectually thai they may be brought "Ut ut any lime between the sea sons "good as Jiew," with precisely the same flavor uf the original article. Get sound tomatoes puul tiiu u, aud pre para just the- sauiu as for cooking; squeeze them as fine as possible, ptit them into a kettle, bring them to a boil, season with pepper and salt; then putolirm. instone jugs, fciken directly from water in which thev, (the jugs.) have been boiled. Seal the jugs immediately, and keep j mem, in a jjwiu coui piaee. iu. TO MAKE HENS LAY. 'JThc SoHth Ciiroliti inn say s a neighbor slaves that hog's lard is the licet thing that he can find to mix with the dough he .gives to his JjAOfc-. 11 aAjjUlwi uut cut ot'.tkis-firt a large as! a walnut, will set a hen to laying immedi ately after she hat been broken tip Jruut -sitting, and that, by feeding them with the fat occasionally, bis hens continue laying through the whole winter. lb. -THE PKKSS, ESSAY ON ADVERTISING. In tho view of the writer, the advantages of Advertising are more important that has been usually supposed. They are, to Ilia mind, three-fold Fiisi They benefit the person advertising. Third To the community at large. ' 1st. That the business of AdveriisingeXlon sively, as it is now conducted, js not in a pe cuniary sense advantageous lo the owner of goods who wishes to dispose of them, and a- vaila himself of this medium to it known, is indeed a reflection upon the shrcwednese of the business world, which results in other re spects will not justify, Tits writer dot-snot doubt that the business of Advertising in litis country (and particu larly in New England and the Middle States,) has nearly, if not quite, i t i i.... . fi'L- . ... uounieu 111 llic last leu yearn. i uo reason is obvious. Those who have done il have found their account in so doing, ll has yielded an ad ditional profit, by widening die circle ofcustoin ersaniitliiiseiiabling them u run off a larger quantity of good, in a given time. This point is worthy of a moment's consideration. A mer chant may say, 1 have a fresh lot of goods ny run of custom is established 1 shall cer tainly sell them why should I advertise! There orr somo who reason thus. But they stand as certainly in their own light as though they kept Iheir stores open but kill' the basi I less hours. True, their old customers may continue to trade with them! hut, ever new customer that is drawn in by the advertise ment issued, assists to dispose ol the stock in so much less lime than before so that, if by availing themselves of the advertising medium they sell their stuck in half or three-fourths the time they otherwise would, the additional profit is increased on the increased snle in a much large ratio. The sale of die first h ill was attended wilh eeruiiu necessary-expenses of rents, clerks,' &c.t but thn portion sold in addition had lo bear but a small per ccntage of the neo;ssary expenses of the sumi, . The rents, the clerks, the incidentals were nearly the same as formerly, but the goods were sold in half the time, and the profits thus increased. Tliut AdoertMne inakei biuintu, it a fact to welt (itublhkrd at to teaoi no room for doubt. It is the testimony of all experience. How are advantages offered by the advertiser, to be extensively known, except through the universal. mcih.u!lu.jioy cojisuit:slbjf, li Jiie. MEWSPAPBRI . A judicious system of Advertising has ziven that large class of businessmen who have been so sensible as to avail themselves of it, an ad vantage ove those who do not follow it that cannot be surmounted except by the adoption i'm "pq uiuue w .u. i nririitir ahiea the hilsioess oi to proclaim what' he has M dispose or, llfroughoui the landj ilia ol a eonsequence to disHMe of it more rapidly than his neighbor whois not put up lo the times in this respect. Aud thus selling rapidly, lie turn his money oliener and can sell lower than Uiat neighbor, and yet make as mucli money a kc an as hk sells moue eootw in die same lime. The maxim of a "nimble sixpence bring worth more than a sluggish shilling." is never more clearly illustrated than in the ben efits as shown in Advertising. These advan- .lageaare bovumiee; more md rrmre aparenlj t am happy to say, undr the excellent system of Advertising now well perlrcu-d by Mr. me puniic ear, may nave ineir Advertising done at established rales, with but slicht trou ble to themselves: A system too, which is fast gaining the confidence of ihe public, and which must ultimately do an immense busi ness. : I now come to my 2d proposition, that Ad vertising lienrhls the purchaser the great con lumiiig puhJicu netnitf con vice the candid mind of this truth. The newspaper, at the pressent day, is not consult ed only for ci ents that are transpiring - all over the world, or hir interesting essays, or in structive and pleasant reading. It is ron.ulted as eagerly in regard to buying aud selling in regard to the wants of the community, or its redundaiici as for any other matter of infor mation:." The advantage is reciprocal. I have an article to ae'l some one (perhaps many.) are in want of that very article. They patiently await the issue of that map of "mov ing incidents by flood and field,'.' the newspa per, and there find, w hat weeks of personal, anxious injury might have otherwise failed to disdosr, that thu artiete-thev want, tfieTihip; ihe house, Ihe goods, are with me. A hall doz en lines, a trifling sum expended, have saved that purchaser the trouble thai otherwise would have ensued, and of days' ttino lost. Both parlira are pleased and benefited the medium of exchange paeses from one to the so indispensable has this system become, that a business community of the most mode t size, would lie almost thrown into chaos, if it were broken up, jMcn consult I lit morning sheet and hioro business is dune through hints gathered from that, than by all oilier hints put together. That sheet has become as indis pensable arjhr Icrlger, und tt ntr it Implicit-' iy studied abd. heeded, by the mercantile com- mwilty. - The 3d proposition, that Advertising is of advantage lo the community at large, irreyvrect ive of buyer or seller Ins one which, ifeustuUl- f d by proof, will much commend the buirm-si lo the public upprouaUon, in a, higher sense than it has often been viewed, and give a dig nity to the transaction above the mere sum of dollars and eenta involved. To sustain the important position I assume, I must allude, for a moment, lo thu value lo the community, uf a will conducted newspaper. . ..... i i , il is ioo laie 10 question una ana lew uo so. Tft fact is admitted itt ils .-broadest, aetiae i- this land of newspapers and readers. 'Who does not avail himself of this medium : of in telligence? 'I'he laborer and the employer the mechanic aud the capitalist-ldte mereliant and die mau who Tivea oil his inleiest all ac knowledge ihe power of the newspaper jiress anffcoitsuUlts cotiiufniTroiif flay to day with iucrtascd zeal. Tha influence of the news paper is immense in iliis country, and no one who is a lover of rational liberty and a Repub lican form of government, can wish it less Whds the press is free aa now, tvrannv or op- -nrenio'tt Tfatl WfeT ' overeoine our national manhood, J he glory of tins land, which is u radiaung the w hole earth, eanoot be d i mmed, And ycl lew newspapers in this country can live and become strong, without devoting a portion of llicir co'utnns to Ivcrtuemenuj. The rate of newspapers is so low among as 'thaHhe-iiii'rc suliw;rfoioir-pric-wrtTrm oilier aid, will not sustnn diem. The ablest, most permanent, und most iulluential papers in this country arc those mat are enabled, ny yielding a portion of Uieir columns to adver iiietueuts to put a quota of the income front that source on to the paper itself for its im provement devoting that expense to it which ierrurimm The writer's observation iu this respect has been ot long conltnuance, and the lact baa com mended, itself to bun very many limes in the last twenty years, iu tho rise and fall of news papers. - -I . If then the newspaper n so indispensable as the guardian of our liberties addressing Itself lo thousands where Die living voice can reach but hundreds-how valuable is any mode by which it obtains strength aud permanency. How important a duty it becomes to sustain it. How few tii ink that, in the communica tions they make thiough the columns of a news paper which iu expense is bul trilling and re. lurtra with tenfold interest to Ilia advertiser bow lew indeed diiuk, that besides this pecuni ary advantage growing out of their liberal views, is the higher, nobler one, ol strengthening ihei.newspaper of tljpir choice of giving ha widercirciilation,iirnl more pow er to Its elforts of speeding tt with more cer tainty and ellieiency into the family circle: thus laying the foundation in die youthful members ul'lhoae circles, by jinpcrcrpliblerdoj grees for good men and women elrengthening the. patriotism and virtue or nil, and blessing the state with ihosBrirlcsl jewels, good citt- jtens! And yet, out of well digested ays tern of Advertising, springs, IcgiUmately, such advantages na these; growing as they spread, till tit good tlioy do Iwcomej iintnense, ua-al- eulable. , lie is not wise, either in a worldly. nioral, or social rente, with so great results springing from such a line of business con duct, who is not the ocxr.jtors r Aran or a juuiciora sYstca or aovkktisino. " Palmer' IlegUler, t aTun o7 a j n e viTivir. it . "' ' A 1'rartiral Story, J'truMnlli Tuhl Pleasant day this noighbor Gaskill," said tins farmer lo another, coining Into the barn of the latter, who was engaged in separating the chaff from ihe Wheat crop, by the meiui of a fan. . , ... Very fine day, friend Alton any uewsf' returned Ihe-individual addressed. N othiiig of importance! have ciillrd over In see if you wouldn't join Cariienter and my self intaking the paper tl.is year. The price w only ta.aO." ... Aouiiiic cheap that you ilun t want re- hirned Gankill, in a positive toncf "1 don't be lieve ill newspapers: I never heard of una do- wg-any good; nd notriinj; (Sin tie got'oot oft them unit! n; reartitirottglli ,:T.hy wotrtit Oa; Be goou Kir a rent il a paper came every we; com hill.". . ,- .- "Hut think, neighbor Gaskill, how much iu (urination your gals would get if they had a fresh newspaper every week, filled with all the latest intelligence. The time they would spend in reading, would be nothing to what ther would cam." v-t - z And what would they gaijv, I wond-r! get their heads filled with nouscnsu al stones, -Look at&iLl S Plackj is'utshea line specimen of your newspaper reading g.i!? Not worth to her father three ptimkin seeds. Ircnti m- Aay n could see a change in Sally 1 tsha- began to spruce up and look smart. First came a bow on her Sunday-bonnet, and ihen gloves logo to meeting. Alter thai, she must be scut to school again, and that at the very lime wheu she began to be worth something about home. And now she ha got a forty piano, and a fellow Co toes every weuk to teach Then vou won't join us, oeiirhbort ' Mr. Alton aaid, avoiding a useless reply to Uaa , kill. - - - - , - -ft "O no! that I will not, Mo.iey, thrown away on newspapers ia worse than wasted. I , never heard of iheir doirg any good., Too lime spent in reading a newspaper every weak would be enough lo ratsea hundred bushels of IKiiatoea. Your newspaper, in toy opinion, is a dear bargain at any price," . .. . Mr. Alton changed lli subject, and sooa left neighbor Gaskill to his luneies. , . . ,; About titn-e inuntlis ulWrwarda, however, they sgaiti met, as they had frequently dona) during die intermediate time. . . 'Have you sold your wheat yet!" as'.sj' Mr, Alton. , .. m 0;' .. i;t .',.(. :(i. "V ia I sold it day heforo yestcrday.l,'. "lluw much did you gel lor ill" . , "Ei8ht-fiv conts." . , r . , : . - ,; "No uiore! Why, I thought every one knew, that the price had advanced to ntnety-tiva- 'errr.lo"whom'rj'ttsa tettf "To Wakeful, the storekeeper in R ' He met me day beforo veaU-.-iiay, aud asket' - me if I had auld my crop yeu I aaid I hail not. lie then oliered tu take it at etghtv-hvw cents, tlie market prioc; and 1 said he might as welt have It, as there was doubtless lilil chancn of in 'tteiiig. Yesterday he sent over; his' wagiba Slid Uiuk "it' away -'"C ..iiT5 "'I'lns win hardly fail in Wakeful. He Naflio lo Uwalao, ajidoffurcd tr buy my crop at eighty-livi, llut i had just received my newspaper, in which I saw that in oonsequeitirss -of aeeouiivs froul Europe of a short crop, grant had gone up. 1 asked him ninety-five, which, afler some haggling, he consented to give."- 1 'lid he pay ytrn nuiety-.livel ,'excUitmed . Gaskill, itj surprae aud chagrin,- i ' . - ' : "lie certainly Utd." , i J " Too bad! N better than downright ohent- - ing, to take such aahainef.il ad vantaju ofinau'r ignorance."' ,. ,.- . -,, -.i "Uerumiy, WaRelul cannot be justtbed irt his comlucV'. refilled Mr. Alloti.--lnsnot rijrbi fer one man to take advantage ol another man ' ignorance, and get his gootU for less than Iheyi are worth. Hut does not any man deserve to suff.-r who remains wilfully tgnomnl, iu a world wfieri he knows" there rd "alway a nough ready ttl JtHil tliemstlvea of hut ujno ranoet Had you been willing to 1 eiend (2,50 for the use of a newspaper fora whole? year, you would have saved in the single tfein of your jvheat crop alone, fourteen dollara! just diink of that. Mr Wakeful takes the new-, ijJtinsrjbJxy.U alwaya- prepared to maita good bargains with somo. halt dozen other around here, who have not. fwit enough to provide themselves with tlie) only stir avenue ol information on all subject tlio newspaper." , "Have you sold your potathes?" asked Caot kilt, wilh some couoern in hi voice, . , 0 rwrrotyetir-Wakefbl ha been making Die oilers Cor the lasl ten days. - Hut fiom tlitt, -. prices they are' bringing in Philadelphia, I uu well satisfied they are about 30 cents here, About thirty! Why, I sold lo Wakeful fut about twenty-six cuius.".,,: . 4 A great dunce yon were, if I uust speak; so plainly! hejiffureif me'J cent, .for 400 . liUahets,' 'But I declined iinj I was right. ' They are worth 30 uday and at that puce ( -am going lo sell," ; , : . . "Uu'i it loo bad!" ejaculated the ntorufiedj ' farmer, walking backwards and forwatda, inv ' patiently. "There are literally sunk is) the sea. .That Wakeful ha cheated ova moat Outrageously ," .... .- , ... "And all because yon were too close to take. newspaper, I should call that saving at tlie spigot, and letting out at tlie hunjholu, uwigh.. bor GaakUU'V ,- "I should think il was indeed. . This very day I'll scud off money for newspaper! aud if any one gala ahead of me again he'U have,, to be wide awake, 1 can tell hnu.'' -, "Have you heard of Sally mack! ukei) Mr. Alum. alter a brief sileuue. , ' , : "No. .What stflsarr - .. I kfc!h loaves home lo-morrw, snd goes ta R ." , - .. , . . ,., Indi-ed! , What fort" kllr father takes die ncwapapcx, youj imw. . Yas And has given her a good education." . . v-So they a.iy but 1 sould never see that it, has done any good for her, except to niaks Iwr good for Bottling." " v : - ,v - ...j -- "Wot quits so bad a thaVxIricnd Gnskillv Dm to proceed; two weeks ago, Mr. lilack saw an advertiatnuent in Ilia .paper for young; lady to leach muaus and some other branulies is ills seminary at' R ..11a showed it la Sally, snd she asked hi in to ride over and see about it. . He did ao, then returned for Hally,' aud went back again- 'I'he trustees of tum, seminary liked her very much, and engageit her at tlie salary ol V1UU a year. J o inor- row site gut'i to take charge of her respyclivo . classes," ,,,; ,.T;. , , .(...,. '.',-) t Von cannot, surely, be in earnest!" former Gaskill said, with look of profound asiuuish, -iiitnt,.' ... ..... "It's every word true." replied Mr. Alton.. And now you will hirdtyeay llut newspa- i per is tuur at any price, or that the reading of them has spoiled SeJIy Ulack," . . . s -tjWI Hfced upon tlut Bud, fx uiay . moiuWab J lieu rauung hj iiad, lie hall ejac uuited with a sigh: , , ( - 7 fll I haven t been a Confounded fool, I came plaguey near it! Hut! will 08 a I out no longer. , I'll mbsKribe lor a nnwspaper to morrow sco if i don'tr--; --:---"r:,:- . inXT3,TJ.VCf)KBi:SFOXDESTS. 1. VVhcn you take an article to an Editor, expecting him to tell you directly itbethcr he will or won't print iuyou might better take along a horsew hip, li mit, he will be apt to enusider it more reasonable and proper that your article should wait ils turn tor perusal aud judgement than that he should putaside tlie work pressing upon him in order to suit your convenience. , . 3. It is not TeasonaWe to send an article to i an Editor, without iituiiating whither he shall transmit in case he does not print it, and jj ' Oand lit h'lunt a wrek or a;ore aftirwanl. U ia far easier fur you to keep Vcopy of any J -at l , -- " -1 : fcOT..;(.KJ.rf,-,w,wvJj.,,., tasSviiiityu