168 



NEW EiNGLAINI) FAUiMEH. 



Dec. 11. isjg. 



MISCELLANIES. 



ver insult liiin by snyiii!.', " Vou do not want it" 

 J'liiictuulity is a key to LVi-ry man's chest. 

 ^'-'-^Ci. By constaot temperance, habitual, moderate 



Composed for tlio occasion by Bartholomew Brown, exercise, and unaflected honesty, you will avoid 

 Esq. and sung by him at the Agricultural Dinner, the fees ol" the lawyer and the sheriff, gain u good 



in Bridgewatcr, the •1th Oct. 



Ye brown, bonny ruslics and lords of llic ^oil, 

 Come, Id a hliort ililiy amuse you iiwliiln j 

 For farmrra, mIio li%c bv the awcai of ihebroi 

 Oft join ill a *""(,'- OS ili«.v follow lli« plougli. 

 \\ iih (liillant and Oildir^ and DoU/iir 

 Wliilu- our fields loud re-cvlio <iee if an 



^ Uu 



report, and probably add at least ten years to your 

 life. 



When a friend calls to see you, treat him with 

 the utnio.st complaisance : but if important busi 



last Bcacon. lie gays be is perfectly satislied thi 

 the United States are in every respect suited 

 the euUvrc of silk, and that it might soon heron 

 an iimnense source of wealth, as both the old al 

 ii.lirm, and the children may be profitably ei 

 ployed iu it. 



I Salt. — The Kcnlmwa, Va. .Suit Springs ha 

 yielded 2,000,000 bushels. Two foreigners bougts^ 

 them. Ouc soon got discouraged and retii-e 

 i ncss call your attention politely e.\cuse yourself^ The other held on, and hag made an iiniuen 



Vt'c f.irmcn awake al Ike break of tlic mom, 

 Wtipn ihi' ihrusli mounts llio pinc-lo|i fiomfcramble or thorn j 

 While iimngcrs lifl snoring, our ialior goosjon, 

 \Villi our briclit cattle moving brisk over ine lawn. 

 Willi UjUant, ttx. ] 



la the dny? of our sires, hut a short while bro. 

 It was dieniLMl a dishonor to plciii»li and 16 Ii'l ; 

 And now "l is ihi- pride of oar (;r''atc>.l ol ticn. 

 To trim tlnir grein rorn-fields and mow llip sv ocl glen. 

 With (JallaiU, &c. 



Time was, when the plough, with lis haggle and jog. 

 Just turned up the lurf,like the siioul of a hog ; 

 Bui modern jinprovcmenl, with stout sturdy team. 

 Goes the depth of the soil, though il reach to the beam. 

 Willi (JalLuU, ice. 



Our lowlands, once covered with rushes and fern, 

 A lair for the dony , and home for the hem. 

 Reclaimed by our industry, plainly disclose 

 That toil, makes the wilderness bloom like die rose. 

 With Gallant, &c. 



Our broad-cloths imported, with gewgaws and trash. 

 Our corsctted dandies may wear tor a dash j 

 Bat fine, Yankee homespun, the w'orld mustcontess, 

 Is Cl lor a King's or a I'rcsideni's dreas. 

 With Gallant, &c. 



See labor g'wc health to our country around. 

 And our stalls und our markets with plenty abound ; 

 On beef of Old Kngland let epicures dine, 

 Yel nought can excel a rich Yankee sirloin. 

 With Gallant, &c. 



John Bull calls uspumpiiVis— what arguGcs that. 

 But to prove that our soil is both mellow and fat? 

 lie may rail, if he please, but 1 guess 'tis agreed, 

 That John has found pi7/i in a small pumpkin seed. 

 With Gallant, &.C. 



But bark, what foreboding is heard in the street ? 

 " Hard times," is the by-word from all thai we meet. 

 Still ihc breast of the lariner a cheering hope feels, 

 While his crops scent the valleys, and flocks crown the hills. 

 With Gallant, dec. 



Some growing ambitious, and purse crowing lank, 

 To fill up their coflcrs, resort to Ihc Bank; 

 Bui wealth, llie most lasting, is purchased by toil, 

 And Ihc farmer's best bank is a bank of rich soil. 

 With Gallant, <^c. 



John Clover, ho wedded die sweet Molly Bean, 

 Who learned of her mother to knit and to spin, 

 "To milk, and to churn, and make cheeses, and such ; — 

 They managed with prudence, and ' thrived like tbo Dutch ! ' 

 With Gallant, &c. 



Would mtillier, ami failiT, and daughter, and son, 



Here lake a good lesson foiii .Mollr aiidjohn, 



And let :heir expenses and noiioii^ i»c less, 



■rhcn health and conlciitincnt Ihiir labors would bless; 



With (iiil/mu, and Golding, and IJvbiiin, they'd go, 

 And their fields loud re-echo Oee tip and OttO' 



and he will excuse you. 



Keep a memorandum-book, enter 



I fortune, which is still increasing. 



all notes. 



An extensive l)ed uf Iron Ore has been recei 



whether received or given ; all moneys received |^, ^u^^^^.g^,.,, ,,^3^ ,|,p iiead water!* of Deerli. 



or paid out ; all expenses, and all circumstances of 



importance. 



If your domestic animals are not clean, they |,ioductivc and excellent quality. 



will not be comfortable ; and if they are not com- — ^— ■— — ^— ^^■^^■— 



forlable, they will not thrive. 



river, about 17 miles from IJiatlli-horough. 

 ir;iet is said to be large, and the ore of a _n 



INTEMPERANCE. ! 



A late number of the .American Journal of the ' 

 Medical Sciences contains some very curious re- 

 murks, in which the' author, John II. Kuin, of, 

 Tennessee, considers anil treats of Intemperance | 

 as a disease. Instead of considering intempe- 

 rance a moral disease, and one to he ctircil by 

 moral leiiieilics, he says, medical men might as 

 well attempt to argue with a fever, aud relieve 

 the sull'ei-er by moral, considerations. 



Mr Kaiii thinks too much ignominy has been 

 attached to the propensity which many individuals 

 have for inebriating draughts, and reasons from 

 the analogy of the cases that men of otherwise 

 unexccptioiuihlc characters are no more to be 

 branded and ignominiously treated for allowing 

 themselves to be seduced and made crazy by 

 the influence of the bottle, than is any other ma- 

 niac, for the evil he may do when in his moments 

 of fieii/y ; .■..,.! Mr Kain thiiik.s, we hope wiili 

 reason, that as the light of science advances, this, 

 with other morbid appetites of mankind will be 

 brought to bow before the medical art. 



It is considered as a disease which has its scat 

 in the stotnach. 



Ha Hied, 



.\n Apprentice, in a Book Printing OlTice. An 111 

 ligent boy from the country would be preferred. 



inquire at the New England Farmer Ollice, N" 

 North Market Street. if Oct. -: 



Powder al 23 per lb. 

 nUPONT 'S POWDER, quality w.nrrauted, for sail 

 Cnp'lanA's Ammunition Stin-f, 65'Broad si, al rrlail. 

 ;<llor, CAPS. &c. ol the best qualiltf— cheap for cash 



Roots of the Pie Plant or Tart Jlhuharb. 



A supply of the roots of the Rheum palmatuni, 

 Tart Rhubarb, or Pic Phint, an excellent arti< '.• 

 early summer use, (see N. E. Farmer, vol, vi. pajf' ' 

 and Fessenden's New American Gardener, article K 

 i'\RB,forit8 culture and uses.) The root« arc lai 

 and in line order for transplanting this fall 



For sole at the AffriculturaT Warehouse, N 

 North Market street — price 'J.t cts. per root. Oct. It 



A'ew Enf;land Panncr''s .■llmanack for 1830- 

 Just published by Caktfr & Hexdle, corner 

 .•^chool and Wasliinirton-slretts, and by J. B. Ri »sr 

 .No. 52, North Market-street, the .Vfir f'.nglunJ /'u. ... 

 .llmanack for l>:iu. By TnoM-ts G. Fessem^e.-s, cd 

 of the New Enjiland Farmer. 



This .Almanack, it is thought, will be found to be c 

 siderably improved upon that of the preceding y- 

 Tlic Astronomical calculations have been prepared 

 revised with great care by a gentleman of tliis cily— 

 tides particularly noted — a complete Calendar of 

 and this, we believe, is not to be ' Courts (of each state in New Enjjlond, including 



doubted, — produced by a perverted or distorted ^■■''''"''', '"""'''^ °*^ -^'''■'""""''"'"'•'*~''"' ^""''"''''^''"'' 

 n/<r°.r..< ..r>i,..r .-:c«..„ •• • . • .- — a tabic of Roads .and distances from Boston, <.Vc. 



action ol that viscus ; it is a constant cravin'^ after' . ^ • n .• , • 



' ■•■ "^ " ^"""'""i >->">iiio ••■ii.i Bcventecn pa^cs of miscellaneous articles, princip 



ulture and Cardenin 



and others supplied upon the n 



that which is a momentary relief for a thousand upon A 

 distresses of the mind or body; but in this, uit-' IP'C 

 like other diseases, that which is a palliativo.is no '""""' '•^'■'"''' ^y ^'"^ thousand, grocei or dozen. 



cure; it is certain to inflame the desire, and in-! '''^'' ' " • 



crease the disease 



He proposes to disgust the taste of the patient, 



Heifer wanted. 

 A gentleman in Maine wishes to purchase a first 



HINTS TO YOUNG FAK.MERS. 



Instead cH' spending a rainy day at the dram- 

 shop, ns many do, to their ruin, repair whatever 

 wants mending ; post your books. 



N«vcr trust your muiiuy in the liaiids of that 

 man who will jiut his own to hazard. 



AV'hen a debt becomes duo, pay il at the time, 

 whothcr your creditor wants it i»r not. Never 

 auk him to " IFait till next week,'' but pay it. Ne- 



Gardening Business. 

 Gcnilemen in w.int of n coin|>ctenl person to prune (!i 

 I'ines, Fruit Trees, A:c. arrange liol iK-d; 



ifinr 

 I,.'. 



Silk. — Mr A. Purvianco, of Camden, .S. C. has 

 been successful in the cidturo of Silk during the 



business connerird with gnrJens, can l>e a 

 calling on Mr Si.xiou. at bis Green Houie<, in Kuibu 

 will attend to the atwve business himself, or furnish a con 

 person. 



and iirodnce nausea by mixing with the litiuor heifer, for milk, about two years old, of the Imnro ' ■ 



some harmless drug, and ,.roposes the following bJ^' """""^ ''''3^''-^'''''"' ^"°" '''""xov.: 



remedy, which ho has himself used with success. 



He does not promise that it will always cure, but 



says that a temporary relief is certain, and cites ' y 



as a maxim in favor of constant temporary relief ,ses, pot plants, arrange Uieni''in greenhouses, 



for what cannot be cured, that " chronic diseases ' 



require chronic cures." 



A convenient preparation of the medicine is S 

 grains of tartrite of aniimony dissolved in -l ozs. 

 of boiling water ; half an ounce of the solution 

 to be iiiit in o half-pint, |iinl, or quart of the pa- 

 tient's favorite liquor, and to be taken, daily, in di- 

 vided portions. If severe vomiting or purging 

 ensue, I should direct laudanum to allay the irri- 

 tation, iinil diminish the dose. In every patient 

 it should be varied according to its efiucts. 



Aiotice. 

 Subscribers 10 the New England Farmer are informed 

 Ihev can have their volumes lu-nily nnd fmihlnllv half |.o 

 and lettered, ui 70 cts per volume, by le.ivin^ ihcm at 

 office. 



Published cjery Friday, nl 53 per annum, pavoblr .; 

 end ofihe year— l.ul those who pay within siMy diivs fi. i. 

 limiMif subscribing, nrc entitled to a deduction of lifiV ei his. 



(D ■ No paper w ill be scut to * distance without piivmenl 

 ine niailu in advance. 



Printed for J. B. Russell, by I. R. Butts— bv wk 

 all descriptions of Printini; can be cxcculeil to mo t the »i> 

 of cumoiners. Ordersfor priming receiv«l by J. B. Rus-> 

 ■t the A^riculiur.il Warehouto Ho. 5! North Market i^lI 



