% 
[ 300 } 26 
The substitution of infusion for fermentation of the plant, has rendered oe 
extraction of the dye,a light, simple, brief, cheap, and healthy proc 
What more could be said to prove that indigo m ay now be profitably ares 
duced Per by our poorest families, for home consumption and the foreign 
market 
ae? y years, much labor, and more money have been spent in 
valida Mid reas" ~ po tless experim sant » acclimate the 
of Europe i 
wine grape * 
n the United States, and Government has even repeatedly 
condescende a to grant o forsioncis certain irheie of our richest soils to 
encourage the introduction and promote the sue of the vine, which bears 
bat one uncertain crop of fruit each year; how much more worthy of the labor 
of individuals and the bounty of Gorerdinent the enterprise of domesticating 
on the poorest calcarous siipfaks of tropical Florida, the “wva de todo 
” or everbearing grapevine of Campeachy, whose clusters of fruit 
ripen everv month in every year. he natural coffee trees of the rest 
soils of Arabia yield the finest flavored grains from fallen berries of paints te. 
maturity; and the pulpy portion of these coffee cherries is there converted 
ee a commercial org, which may be profitably distilled into spirits. The 
artificial coffee bushes, of the richest soils of the West Indies, yield larger 
grains of inferior avor extracted from picked berries anal barat ripened ; 
and the pulp is thrown away, or used as manure. But, a 
e Spanish 
plonters of Cuba pave lately bagti to discover that it is shoes pte: to 
shake four or five pounds of fine flavored coffee from unmutilated trees. 
on arid eis. than to ae four or five ounces of bad flavored coffee from 
mutilated bushes in vegetable loam, it is hoped that our poorest people, 
who, in preserving the pits of peaches for sale are not guilty of He Se the e pulp 
for manure eer sit also soon discov 
cco of xclu oduct of 
; yet, as by his own showing, the fae Soe olely 35 natural 
pocendees of small and distant portions of its surface, no that is necessary 
*February 22, 1838. The subscriber does not believe that it is either practicable or 
desirable to have great plantations of great staples in pean rida. ‘agg —- mr of 
small ¢ ulttvators, on small farms, may, however, raise tea, co chocolat 
fo the small surplus for sale will soe a grea ~y age aitgue for the 
hi ts leet of the 
ome mar eto ouhet 1 States; in the sam 
popbed ty Welracesriec, e way that apples,’cherries, currant fy ass 
“3 
