Vol. v.— No. 18. 



NKW ENGLAND I AJIMKR. 



Crair..- 

 weok to fl 



Far Slti:is one i/ear eld. 

 ilr W. B. iiarringtoM, of tiraflon, tor his 

 pair oryear'iin}.' Steers, tlie fiist preiii. 5 



Col. Stephen Davis, ot"0.\lbid, for his pair of 

 yearling Steers, the seoon I prein. 3 i 



Vonr Cominiltee noticed with great satisfaction, nt II cent.s per pound. 



Rye advanced in New Vork tlie last 



cents per busliel. Uarley is $1,13 



higher than any otiier grain. Country 



18f) 



NI'JVVAUK AIJ';.\UOVV.s. 

 Much has recently been said about the Newark 



e fine lot ot'cattlc presented by his E.vcellency 

 ;vi Lincoln, for examination only. 

 Imported Bull " Admiral." j 



Bull " Durliam," h blood by Mr Williams's im- 1 

 rted bull •' Denton." 



One three year old Heifer,now just from the pas- l^ngland at ;!U cents a pound. Hamp. Gaz. 



re, J blood •• Denton." ! . 



Two Heifers, the red one by "Admiral," but two 



J)e.,tsp.gallpa..c.erbrandy.«'-;;:2!iS^ 



?:";/!"'!5."'".*'°"', ^"^'^"^ ^-- -'-' °" ^•^'•"'"y : to encounter has been the want of pure fthlva 



ter. They have been subjected to the trouble and 



The prospects of the wool-growers of the north i expense o^n.n po • in7i7 from tL Y ""' 



d thocotton planters ofthe south are as gloomy several ndlesdllTnce.^ ='' ^'°""'' 



In the interior of Alabama cotton h 

 at () cents per pound ; this is about l- 

 j profitable as raising full blood merino wool in New k 



l.oo., o„ii ,r. , ,.'. " — i ^^^ Disbrow, so well known for his succa^i *n 



been sold at (.cents per pound ; th.s is about as boring for water, has been en 



The Cincinnati Commercial Register, recom- 



ars old in A'lgust last: the other by " Denton," 'ncnding the estalilishnient of an Agricultural So- 1 Tu 



mployod by the Hobo- 

 en Banking and Grazing Company, and at the 

 distance of 104 feel from the surface of the ground, 

 [about two miles west of the Hackensack Bridge,' 

 inear the junt:tion of the Bclville and Newark 



oni a native cow two years old last spring. 

 One bull Calf by " Denton," seven months old, 

 |uing half the milk of a cow, running with anoth- 

 calf in the pasture. 



rnpike has found an abundance of pure water. 

 The following' memorandum may be useful to those 



ciety in Hamilton County, Ohio, says : 



|\*iie uiui V an uy " I'eiituii, strvuii iiKinius om, ' ifonoraf Wasfiington bent the whole force of{ 

 uing half the milk of a cow, running with anotli- '"^ 

 ■ calf in the pasture. ^"d his correspondence on this subje 

 One Bull Calf by " Admiral," now four months P'^^served, as conlainiug a body of the most inter- i ^„ «■;^l, «,.;«,,„ t «■ i ^V'\~"S ■""'"" 

 ,d seven days old; and Steer Calf by "Admiral," \ esting documents we possess. It is said /,. held ^' '' " "'''' '° "^""^ '^''^^ ^° ""= '=""°"^- 

 ,1 1 .„.. J..., „ij many coiumuiiicnlwiis icilh the late Kinix of Eng- : ■'^I'niurandum made hy the men who bored for water 



■• ucnerai wasningrton bent the who e force nf t- i . .. • .. .r -- "■^^■". w 0,.^.,,^ 



is powerful mind t°o the subje tfo„7n™rs' ^T /r"''^^^ '" "" 



„j I ■ 1 ,.■',.■'""'! "Pel'ifrist It may not bo unaccentable The differ 



nd his correspondence on this subject will be lonff ' pnt ,„^n.„ ,.,»,.„ ;.„,..,„„. ..iu '^, ' = _, "'"''' 



ent strata were measured with all practical accura- 



: 



lur months and ten days old. 



This part of the exhibition surpassed by far any i^^nd, himself an able Agrieuliurist, on this import- j 

 irmer show of the kind, and to your Committee is : <^nt pursuit." 



i A correspondent of the Richmond Whig recom- 

 mends the cultivation of the vine in Virginia, as ' 

 aspire a patriotic zeal to call forth their energies ' °"° °^ ^^'^ ^''^I'l'-' '^''°P^- The climate and soil, he [ 

 the use of those means,which a kind Providence ^*>'* '^^'^ admirably adapted to it. Wheat and to- i 

 3 so liberailv bestowed for the increase of wealth : °"'^'^° '^^" ''^rJly be made to yield six per cent, on j 

 . 1 the enlargement of the comforts of human life. "": *=^P"'''' '1"'^ •cotton is a drug. The time re- ' 

 With much s,-.lisfaiiion your Committee congrat- ■ l^'red for raising grapes is less than for apples or 



071 the JVewark meadows. 



full and satisfactory demonstration of all that has 

 !en said of crossing our native breed of cattle. 

 It must gladden the heart of every farmer, and 



104 feet, 



ate this Socisty for the happy effects which re- Peaches.and the labour of making no greater than! ^ 



lit from a spirit of emulation among ourgoodfarm- "'f ' of making dder. Brandy is also easily man- \ at which depth we came to Free Stone Rock, and 



•s in the improven-cat of their Neat Stock, and ," ^'^t"''^"- j finding that the seven feet strata of sand gave us 



The American Farmer mentions,that an orchard I "" fibundant supply of excellent water, we ended 



of 300 apple trees,planted in Maryland in J81'i,has °"'' '^''o"" '^jie water rises within two and a half 



flourished to such a degree that "the owners esti- , '^^^ °*"^*''f «"• face of the earth, through a cast iron 



mate its product this year as capable of yieldi: 



ten thousand gallons of cider. 



arlicularly that part which passed this day under 



■J view. 

 -All which is respectfully submitted. 

 ALEXANDER DUSTIN,"] 

 LOVt.TT PETERS, | 



JOSHUA W. LELAND, } Committee. 

 SAMUEL BROOKS, | 



JOHN R. NYF, 3 



BARLEY. 

 We last year took occasion to recommend to our 

 igricultural friends more attention to the cultiva- 

 .ion of Barley. We were in 'uced to do this by the 

 sigh price of the article at the tifne, and the pros- 

 pect of a continued demand, afforded by the in- 

 crea.sed consumption of malt liquors in our country. 

 The price which it brinirs the present seasoa con- 



pipe, of eight inches in diameter, into which a pump 

 is iuserted — A'. 1'. Statesman. 



Remarkable.— Ur J. Whitcomb, of Swanzey in ' ^° ""*''* Poimona wine.r—The directions publish- 

 tbis County, aged 95. husked with his own hands, e*! ''>' '*^''.^'°oper of Now Jers.^y, for making a 

 the present season, 148 bushels of corn in 18 .lays. I ^^"'"^ of cider and other ingre.!ients,are as follows: 

 Mr W. is in perfect health, and does not t.ppear to \ ^^^e cider of the best running of the choese,made 

 have grown much older for 30 years during which ^'^^"" so"nd apples, and if possible all of one kind: 



time 

 diet. 



he has subsisted 



e.\clusively upon milk 

 [Keene Seatinei.j 



Curious Phgtarism — The last Providence Jonr 

 nal contains a singular instance of literary theft. 

 A Priic Sssay of one of the students of Brown the same kind of cider, kept for the purpose, until 



and add as much honey as will make it bear an e£_ 

 strain it, fill the cask, with the addition of two gal- 

 lons of brandy, (Mr Cooper says cider spirits) to a 

 barrel — set it in a cool place, with bung hole open 

 to ferment: fill it frequently as it ferments, with 



firms the correctness of the remarks we then made. University, is found to be a literal transcript from 'J'^ fermentation has nearly subsided, then bung it 



an article in Blackvyood's Maga.:ine. 



and furnishes the best encouragement to our farm 



ers to appropriate more of their land to this species 



of grain. By an advertisement in our paper this j Many of the fruit trees and forest sh 



week it will be seen that one dollar and ten cents j Charleston, S.C. nrr again in full jlooni,the weath 



3 bushel are now paid for barley at the Brt^wery er being remarkably mild for the season. 



in this place, and at half this price, if we are cor- - — 



rectly informed, it would not be an unpro.'^tablc | Mutinners. — The mutineers of schr. Fairy, were 1 wers as well, perh.aps better. — By John Mcholson 



lightly, and when it has done fermenting, close up 

 the vessel. The next spring, rack off the liquor 

 lbs at into a new cask ; clarify it with sweet milk, the 

 whites of eggs, and clean sand, beaten up and well 

 stirred into the cask. It is, however, found that a 

 quart of sweet milk to a barrel, well stirred, ans- 



crop. The quantity raised in tiiis state is so small 1 delivered to the United States authorities en Mon- 



that the brewers are obliged to procure most of 

 their supplies from abroad. It is certainly desira- 

 ble that our own farmers should avail themslves of 

 the demand for this article. [Con. Cour.] 



Worcester's Memoir on Longevity, state.', that 

 the proportion of persons in the State of New 

 Hampshire, who attain the age of one hundred 

 years, is greater than in Sweden or Russia. Nine- 

 ty-three persons are enumerated who were from 

 100 to 110 years of age ; 59 were women, and 34 

 men. Five are mentioned who reached 110 and 

 upwards ; all of them were men. 



y aflernoon from H. M. S. Chebueto, and con 

 veyed to the jail in this city. On Tuesday fore- 

 noon two of them, Charles Merchant and IViixs'ow 



Esq. of Herkiner County. 



Greece. — The last Paris papers, which are as 



late as the 15th of October, give consolatory views 



''ij.'fi's, vv ere brought before Judge Davis, of the ' of Grecian aflairs. The Turkish division which 



U. S. District Court, for examination on a charge 

 of piracy and murder, and we understand that one 

 of them, we are not able to say which, acknowledg- 

 ed having killed the mate of the Fairy, Joseph D. 

 Je'ikin::, but the other remained silent. The wit- 

 nesses, viz. John Murray and John Hughes, also 

 a part of the crew, were present in Court. The 

 examination was postponed. 



had invaded Athens, has been driven from that 

 quarter, and sought safety in Negropont. The ex- 

 pedition of the Turkish Grand Admiral against 

 Sanios had been defeated, and some of his troops 

 were cut to pieces. Lord Cochrane arrived at 

 Napoli on the 8th of September, ha.ing with him 

 the steam vessel in which he left England, and six 

 other vessels. 



