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T!aldwell, Rutherford, Wilkes, Hertford, Burke, and Orange. Great 
fatality, involving three-fourths of the entire stock of dewberry, South 
Carolina, is reported, and small losses are mentioned in Spartanburg 
and Lexington, in the same State. . 0 _ 
Georgia has suffered little loss; 50 per cent, is reported m Clinch, 30 
in Morgan, and small losses in Bartow, Mefiuffie, Lumpkin, Jackson, 
^Harris, Catoosa, Floyd, Butts, Forsyth, TOwn\ Pike, Walker, Clay, 
Milton, Clayton, Putnam, Newton, PuteskiFwhiM Franklin, and Heard. 
Our correspondent in Dallas, Alabama, ]J>$t of 56 old hogs ; pigs 
were not so generally attacked. In Mwij&ngp spWs of 25 per cent, is 
returned, but the mortality was repomkl g'ight iff Tallapoosa, Marshall, 
De Kalb, Calhoun, Clarke, Jefferson,imoWah.n j^ 
Very little disease among swine ^reg^tp|HA Mississippi; a tew 
cases have occurred in the following %^uqties: Attala, K emper, 
Neshoba, Pike, Amite, Tippah, YalaLiMia^azW, Lafayette, Winston, 
and Carroll. In Gonzales, Texas, j a dig*®?, burned to be “ an affec¬ 
tion of the lungs, 77 carried off most of thepTgs and a few hogs. Ihe 
fattest were first to fall; of a litter of pigs, fat and apparently healthy 
at night, half would sometimes be found dead in the morning. In Up¬ 
shur, a loss of one-tenth of the pigs is credited to carelessness in per¬ 
mitting them to eat ad libitum freshly ground cotton-seed. A few losses 
appear in Austin, Collins, Harris, and DeWitt. 
There is scarcely a live^pig in Benton County, Arkansas ; the result ot 
a cough and wasting away. A loss of 20 per cent, is returned from 
Newton County. Large losses occurred in Clarke, attributed to ‘ too 
much cotton, and want of corn. 77 One third of the stock in Jackson 
County died, generally in full flesh. Losses are also reported ln uohn- 
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