lowiakwl (»* , <««l>» Al , TBUmS. ; ; ; otfE-OOFfc'Olfß 'i’skA', p» ADVANCE. ', ,! *ii 00 ....**» - 158 tpfcot’ififo WmiiS NlNj? MONTHS. 1 .1 n IP [j6T PAID WITMh’TWELY! S MOn4»W.l 300 of miinMliar " Oa ejwotea. : DUti 1 OP pb^.TMABTEBS. roitmaiiaW jae.Wminitd "Otift JoblUha^a.dlreotaO :3 •■■ ■ • -r.. . ;;,seping,§» .. , Owing-, to ; excessive .drought: [g 9t luniiiiejf,) tWffi t is.?» ; , searcrty of hay ind 'fodder ri ?o that, it becomes, important that, not,oply : shall npthing bo wasted, hut lhat tho utmost economy shall bo practis ed in feeding out what, wo have. We therefore recommend the cutting of all :oarse fodder, (hay, straw, corn stalks and shocks,) and mixing with it a little meal tof sqtrio kind, ,corn> oat, barley or shores, and thus commence with feeding oat less hay! than would otherwise be re rmired.' Secure to tho cattle .warknth, clean and loose skiha.by. the. frequent use of the. card, and you. will be.ablo to takoeachan limal through' tho winter in good condition, with some ten ,ot Meed hundred pounds leas hay thaq thoy have been nccustomed to consume. Whero wood is cheap great advantage may be, derived from cooking moat of the food, fed; cut.. Hay steamed with tho grain, would undoubtedly answer the ’.desired < purpose with a considerable less .quantity thari fed ,111 ..on. uncooked state? ' All kinds of feed given to the store swine should bp.pobked. , . Poultry and Egos.—Fowls like the ■warm southern aspect, where they can huddle together in the sun during the mid dlo of tlvbday. Provide them such a place, and'plenty of food, such as corn, barley, ■wheat, cob-meal, mixed with scalding wa tor or hot potatoes,- with occasional feeds of flesh of young calves* plucks of sheep, and constant access to pure water, grav !■ cl, old mortar, oyster or clanv shells and 1 bones, all broken finely, and they will i yield eggs in abundance through the cold | weather. ' : .• j Shklteb for Stock.— Cold acts as a '» stimulant to a system, and that is probably f whv- wo.require animal dietin the winter .I more than in the summer; flesh supplying the waste occasioned by the cold moro ■ readily than vegetables. If, then, the an - imal is co|d, it requires more. food,, ami ot y more nutritious nature, to keep uptho list ‘i ural temperature of the, body, than when • comfortably sacltcrcd. It ; will, therefore, i bo found .cheaper to protect the. animal i from thd cold than to supply an extra *s amdunt of food. _ \ Carrots Poh Horses.— Stable keepers I are beginning to find that :theso vegeta ' bles form a cheap and nutritious food to ■ mix with grain for their horses. It is bet ’ tfer to give a working horse-a peck of car rots and four quarts of oats or corn meal a day than to give him six quarts of meal. ' . TMP’ isiAND OF; CUB.A.—As any f mation ,in refeirenpe tq Cuba is-nt this timo mtorqstjng, ! >ve subjoin a few.- geo graphical facta :-r-The Island js 624 miles hi extreme length, With an average width ) Q f about qO miles, contaimpg an area ol 37,000 aqnaro miles, arid a population ol 1,500,000. The value of jts agricultural productions in 1849 was 562,781,035. Its : exports, during the sanie period were 827,380,021, of which'3,6,oo, 224 vyere to !' the United States. Its imports during the - f aamo period , were 827,607,343, of which ' •87 2801214, were from the United, States. ’ £ The amount'of American tonnage employ \ ed in,the trade with the,lsland,' during the :} same-period, was 601,267 tons. The to “ $ tal nmount of taxes levied upon American f. commerce with the Island,-in theshapoof dudes Upon imports, tonnage. duties and . dutiesmpon oxports, oxceeds «4,-K ,, S l!4:f«Sg3ertS3fsf |f§ iKtv falls, l andthus stop 1 thsTapid aes Jl&* *>f «!*' j£ Ui ,; s P m l ha^4°ESond' ■t* fiieHr tfoutd finally reach. LnKe • B,no * ““ i SfiSiert'lhaV the'Lake Vould.be completj ft Gained. Such an ovont is impossible.-r' ®-!AI already mentioned, - theNsurface forming a rap » . . ,i * : i.'.'Vin.!; ’. V-- * -\ ~ . vi . - , ... r , '.'.ft convenient and cheep meant for the bntinm men of on* county—the merchant. mechßtuo.aaa aHotbon—to extenfl (he knowleden of tbef f leoatldn and buiinttr ‘ Wo enonldr like to iniort "A Card*’ for every Meehanio, Merchant, ead , Profetiional man in the ooncty. .We have plenty er rtom for,aioceneralrnie,the moreeitOniively • Btnidvamiai . tbegrenter willbehiiprotiti, , OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. PEINTBDjINTHE VERt REST STYLE, AND JON TOE SHORTEST NOTlOfc. AT TOE OFFICE OF THE '•CLEARFIELD REPUBLICAN." Number 4. Tho freo navigation of the Rio do ts Plata is an achievement* and commerce Is chiefly indebted to Brazil for it. Honor to Brazil, therefore. It is a gem in the i crown of tho Emperor, which, if it be tar nished not, will make his reign illustri-' ous. ' . Rosas held tho mouth of the river La Plata; Brazil,Banda-Oriental, Paraguay, andßolivia, (all independent sovereignties) owned navigable water-courses which emptied into it; but Rosas would not allow any of these powersto those \yutors through his part of tho river to the sea. Brazil made war with him, drove him out of the country, and tho first fruits of tho victory the commercial World is about to receive is Books, Jobs and Blanks, the free navigation of those noble streams. With a quarrel more just than -that wicked one about opium, Brazil, in her triumph, followed the generous example of England in opening the ports of China, I without any claim to exclusive privileges. Brazil has not opened the ports of so populous a country as Chinn, but she has I opefied tho water-courses of one with I which commerce will in 1, a fow years be I more valuablo than it is with China, These arrangements about tho La Plata navigation are not completed. They are thought to be in a fair way of adjust meat; and therefore, in giving honor to whom honor is due, I give it to the Em peror of Brazil, upon the supposition that I I no untoward thing will occur to thwart tho 1 measure. But the commercial world haa been sparing of its commendations of Brazil for her seeming liberality with regard to the free navigation of the La Plata. They say—and have, alas! but too much reason for saying—that there was no generosity, no liberality, no sign of any fairness what ever, in the course of Brazil with regard to the navigation of the La Plata. Bolivia, Paraguay, and Banda-Oriental, they say, had each as much right nS Brazil to claim the free use of the La Plata for getting to sea with their merchandise; and if, upon the fall of Rosas, Brazil had then attempt ed to extort from Buenos Ayres any ex clusive privilege in the nge of those wa ters, shoknew that not only would these re publics—her next- door neighbors—all have turned against her, but that the three great commercial nations of tho north would have stepped in to prevent any such exclusive and selfish appropriation of Na ture’s highways. As a proof that Brazil was not actuated by any of those really enlarged and liber al views which it is the policy of commerce to carry out, I point to tho Anazon*— * Inhere Don Pedro is the Rosas. He holds tho mouth of the Amazon —ho shuts it up. Five sovereign and independent nations own its headwaters, and all of them have provinces and people upon the banks of its navigable tributaries ; but not one of them is allowed to-fallow thecourseof thesena | vigable streams through Brazilian waters to tho sea. Justice, the policy of commerce, the sen timent of the age, all the principles of na tional law, and the rights of people, are in favor of tho free use of that river by those five Spanish republics; and it canno' be said that Brazil ucted from principal in the case of the La Plata until she makqs, of her own accord, the navigation of the Amazon free. Formerly there was a Rosas who threat ened to stand at ihe mouth of our Missis sippi, and wo, who then owned tho head waters only, claimed, and were ready to assert with tho sword, our right to follow thorn, and to use thorn for commerce and navigation, until they mingled with and were lost, in tho sen. It has now not been quito four years ago since this subject of the free navigation of the La Plata and the Amazon was brought to tho. attgntion of this govern: ment. The proposition was, that we should, of fer to Brazil our friendly mediation with Rosas, and use our kind offices to induco him to make free the navigation oftheLor ’Plata, and so end the war. It was proposed, also, that we should treat with Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Npw Grenada, and Venezuela for ports of to foreign vessels and commerce up their navigable tributaries of the Amazon, and thus turn upon Brazil with the same argu ments for the free navigation of the Am?- zon that Brazil stood ready to urge in fa-, vor of her right to navigate the La Plpita. Brazil got wind of this. She found put that such a thing as the free navigation of the Amazon began to form the subjecujf conversation in commercial und politico,! circles heic, and she immediately took the most active steps to render of uo avail, any attempt on our part having for its object tho • free navigation, oif tbo Amazon, • Shb redoubled, her elegies in the war against Rosas,' and she despatched injiot haste ministers extraordinary and pleni . potentiaryto JPSru, to Bolivia, to Epwido**'. and Now Grenada, and Venezuera, treat with'each "of : .thbso : five, Spapisfi-i 1 American republics for the ezclikivejitfit 1 to hovigato their Amazonian tributojries, ' For the Portuguese, who had owned the l Amazon for ages, who had not had tho > power to make an impression upon itsjfor -1 cats, nor to launch a steamer upon its bo som, to go and talk to the Bolivian* and