308 



BEOOM COEIS". 



&ates for this deficiency by the gTeat bulk and goodness of its 

 straw, which grows usually to the height of 8 or 10 feet. It is 

 sometimes sown for fodder in the beginning of April, and is ready 

 to cut in July. It is said to be injurious to cattle, if eaten as 

 green provender, the straw is therefore first dried, and is theii 

 preferable to that of rice. 



This grain is frequently fermented to form the basis, in combina- 

 tion with goor or half made sugar, of the common arrack of the 

 natives, and in tlie hills is fermented into a kind of beer or 

 sweet wort, drank warm. 



Holcus spicatiis, the Panicuvi s])icatinn of Eoxburgh, is culti-= 

 vated in Mysore, Behar, and the provinces more to the north. 

 Prom one to four seers are sown on a biggah of land, and the yield 

 is about four maunds per acre. It is sown after the heavy rains 

 commence, and the plough serves to cover the seed. The crop is 

 i^ipe in three months, and the ears only are taken oft' at first. 

 Afterwards the straw is cut down close to the surface of the soil, 

 to be used for thatching, for it is not much in request as fodder. 

 Being a grain of small price, it is a common food of the poorer 

 class of natives, and really yields a sweet palatable flour. It is also 

 excellent as a fatteniiig grain for poultry. 



The Toa Abyssinica is one of the bread-corns of Ab3'ssinia.- 

 The bread made from it is called tejf, and is the ordinary food of 

 the country, that made from wheat being only used by the higher 

 classes. The way of manufacturing it is by allowing the dough to 

 become sour, when, generating carbonic acid gas, it serves instead 

 of yeast. It is then baked in circular cakes, which are whitCj, 

 spongy, and of a hot acid taste, but easy of digestion. This bread, 

 carefully toasted, and left in water for three or four days, furnishes 

 the housa, or common beer of the country, similar to the q^uas of 

 Kussia. 



BEOOM COEN. 



The production of broom corn is rapidly extending," and corn 

 brooms are driving broom sedge, as an article for sweeping floors, 

 out of every humble dwelling in the United States. There are 

 about 1.000 acres of it under culture in one county (Montgomery) 

 alone, and it brings 30 dollars per acre in the field. 



Messrs. Van Eppes, of Schenectady, have been engaged in the 

 broom manufactory business about eleven years. They have a 

 farm of about 300 acres, 200 of which are Mohawk flats. A large 

 portion of the flats was formerly of little value, in consequence 

 of being kept wet by a shallow stream which ran through it, and 

 which, together with several springs that issue from the sandy 

 bluff on the south side of the flats, kept the ground marshy, and 

 unfit for cultivation. By deepening the channel of the stream, 

 and conducting most of the springs into it, many acres, which 



