Agiiculture is the most healthy , the most useful , and the most noble employment of man .*— Washington. 
VOL. VIII- NEW YORK, APRIL, 1849. NO. IV. 
Messrs. Allen, Editors. C. M. Saxton, Publisher, 121 Fulton Street. 
THE 
AMERICAN AGRXCULTURIS1 
AND 
IS PUBLISHED ON THE FIRST OF EVERY MONTH BY 
C. M. SAXTON, 121 FULTON STREET, NEW YORK. 
JOSIAH TATUM, 50 NORTH FOURTH ST., PHILA. 
F. S. SAXTON, 19 STATE ST., BOSTON. 
TERMS. 
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OUR HINTS ON THE WORK FOR THE MONTH. 
In our hints and directions on the work for each 
month, as plowing, sowing seeds, planting trees, 
&c., it will be observed that they do not, in all cases, 
appear to be adapted for the season. But when 
the wide extent of country is considered, to which 
these directions are presumed to apply, together 
with the variety of climates embraced, at a time, 
within its limits, it is obvious that discrepancies, 
in these respects, must unavoidably occur. For 
instance, in the southern parts of Florida, Louisiana, 
and of Texas, where frost seldom or never is known, 
the operations of planting, harvesting, &c., may gen¬ 
erally be commenced at least a mdnth earlier than 
in the northern parts of Carolina, Arkansas, and 
of Tennessee. Again, similar operations on the 
farm, in the southern parts of Virginia, Kentucky, 
and of Missouri, may be commenced a month or two 
earlier than in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, or 
in the northern part of New York. 
Hence the necessity, in general directions like 
those under consideration, of adapting them to the 
most southern limits of the regions they are de¬ 
signed to be applied. If too early for the first of 
the month in which they are published, the saga¬ 
cious husbandman can readily postpone them a few 
weeks, when nature and experience should alone 
be his guide. 
WORK FOR APRIL, NORTH AND WEST. 
General Remarks .—All work neglected to he 
done last month or impracticable to be performed 
in consequence of frost or snow, as directed! in 
our last number, may he accomplished in this. 
Fences may be repaired or new ones built : sward- 
bound meadows and old fields , as well as fields of 
winter wheat and rye ^may be harrowed, top-dress¬ 
ed, seeded, and rolled; tobacco beds prepared and 
sown; the operations of the kitchen garden , market 
