460 
URES TO 
vious year, from which he permitted me to make the 
following extract : 
1' 
8000 fanegas (about 21000 bushels) of wheat, 
2000 
U 
( “ 
5250 “ 
) of corn. 
500 
H 
( “ 
1050 ‘‘ 
) of beans [frijoles]. 
250 
Li. 
( “ 
656 “ 
) of barley, 
100 
LL 
( “ 
262 “ 
) of pease. 
70 
wagon 
loads of 
sugar cane. 
From 60 to 80 loads of soap, worth $30, each. 
In addition to the above there was raised a variety 
of vegetables, which were furnished to his laborers, 
and never sent to market. Such were the agricultu- 
ral products of the estate. 
Don Manuel, besides being an agriculturist, is one of 
the most extensive raisers of stock in the country, as 
the following list of animals now on his farms will show : 
16,000 sheep, 
700 mules, 
108 stud horses, 
1620 breeding mares, 
348 cow calves, 
355 bull calves, 
62 young mules, ^ 
269 mare colts, >- product of last six months. 
165 stud colts, ) 
The wool gathered from the sheep is manufactured 
into scrapes^ or blankets. Of these there were made 
by hand during the year nearly fifteen hundred, vary- 
