Dairy Business. Otra*admix,. friends-most look sharply to ktAltoinV:their pastures, root, and othe r a „ ,xicipattor, r n him,- North - Caraliti , „ . and, Tennusee are already in th ffialitaa. competitors in the dairy, busmess.— i - rietyPis not a State-in the Union in which . .. - b6lt, eheleie and butter can not be Made. r i be 0 iither arte, that of rearing gOod milk -. ;keeping them well end cheaply, and a -Num time manufacturing choice butte .L . „i theese for Market, demands ' experien • , - ina itudy -The operation is ,anvil x:. • . , i -•• in those seasons of the year, !he ' animal substances, like milk, whey, butter . • ilk, and curd, are extremely liable to cheini-1 . changes which'injure the products of the, , ryman. Only a sma ll portion of the but-I , I * and cheese made in the United States :is'. , Ily first rate. And why not ? The Milk! ..- - .. , 'when drawn frOm the udder, but ; it is I. I hal:idled over after. Less attention isr ..' I *a to keep' ing ' milk pails, pans, chUrns,l A I eese tubs Or VMS, perfectly sweet and clean ;than is required to secure the best re-I 'Olt& Butter when taken from the churn is *t properly -, worked over; nor salted With ,pixre salt; nor protected from the influence at' atmospheric air, as it should be. The . I .i lierni of that peculiar change, known by 'the ,ientnmon name of " frowy, is early planted Ix a mass of butter, although. undeveloped tior weeks or months. z ',l' Butter and cheese which are put up wreni, :ir kept any time s will never come out right. e changes which they undergo present a an' for close and curious study. AS in .1.1103 et m/aring meat, good salt, pure air, and the en tire exclusion of oxygen from butter in kegs, - , r [ ;clad cheese in well oiled, inperieus And, the leading matters to be attended tal i , TA eheesamaidug, the heating of the Milk the condition of the rennet, the quantity used, land the quantity-of salt, the degree of prei nnie on the curd, the time for it to be in press, the turning-of cheese, surrounding with eleth, é., ikc., are details of great importance.i— T incorporate into the cheese all the casein ( d) and butter which the milk contained,- 4I 'pt ivierve both sweet and delicious with *dui, peculiar to each, are the objects, tobe attained. Beeping milk too long, bad slam, us 'g too much rennet, too much scalding; hn , , - salt,. excessive pressing, neglect in - , .. and oiling, and an offensive atincis-: phere in the dairy room,-are among the most oortunon causes which injure cheese. Butter is damaged by, permitting cream or milk to stand too long before churning; hy the defective working out of the butter . tar ; bad salt ; and too long exposure to the it ospheri before. it is packed down in croc6 nit bs. Beep the` air from your butter as, i • /nu a s , practicable. - Plant carrots and corn• in drills for yo Ir ' cows; and see that they are milked regularly' iiiiil'cican. A' little labor' will often produce a good crop of pumpidns. The main point' is to raise afull supply of good food, and take, due to. husband ail their manureas well as other pieducts.eriesee Farmer; p the Swinish Multitude ut Rome. }4. MOORE :—The suggestion of yoar co :.-: .. .-. nt H. Y. that communications . . i , , be appropriate for the season, I think • 'good one, and would suggest to.yoar 1 . . as I think this is the proper time, itthey wish to promote a public gocid -tarn money into their own pockets—a) to a friendly relation with their neigh contribute their mite to the prom.)- , a correct rural taste—to abate a vel nuisance—and to appear at the bar of : , t with a clear conscience, and- nOt any Of• their neighbors there as witnei ," . r, them ; That this spring, just 1.4 , - i, y turn their swine into the highwl ,1- t any wires in their noses, they put in and turn them into the pasture where ' can find them at feeding, time ; and thut, the poor creatures the trouble of ear. tore ears, and goin,„won three I%Y$ ". .ed ht the help of their neighbor'a •. d dog in an ejectment from - his fielda. we say, commence the spring of 1849 ; turn the pigs into the pasture and nits, and save the green grass by , . e of the road which' adds so muck to sty of a fanning district, and keep* .. . ,us weeds,—for we all know. thrit . the turf ,is rooted off, the- seeds Of will lodge and grow. . .' I We Were to judge from appearances, wa . think .that, -in some neighborhoodN _went the only highway laborers, and •they labored most assidiously too g , owever to make the passage over the . aid' and agreeable, or to make the -.- interistiug." Itis almost sickening , y revolting, to see how some roads are . tip bflialf fed swine. Half fed, I full fed would be at home at rest.—; right has my neighbor to turn his pigsL roakand compel me to watch them,: save my crops, fence against ltags of, est dimensions f :Would he' not be t . far trespass if his pigs come and ' rootiT . :grass plat in the goad before my door I, ' should take a hoe and dig it up.him.f What the law is I do not blow; but country laws me all right our country: are -ImA. But a man that will . Orr only as the law compels him, I like ' said, ought to havitta wire in Itis - u* Aumedout with his p ig s , for they a ll ' til Ife;eaele other in ; hogralmess. If far-. . ; mat - ture the -highway, sheep are.; '-I- if they - will not get tOt they theroad nri fences, and are iy frightened from. ) means, hoWever, inial into thahigh itienf -41 the- good /lest-his neightocers alma I find I 1 have boy' Ye, I ane alive I C B I ~. ake If rho swift that not road into anti I . the liable uP ' ae self! if our de resew -^ they vine their influence to - get their neighbors Ito ahanden this nefariOns prieticeof staining the road; or to get them - ,to-talle, and Iva& the Farmer, and if there is any , pride_ or spirit of emulation in them they will abandonit Icofuntarily • Mr. Editor you are at liberty to do with ,this just what you please. You can publish any, all, or none of it,. and it will be all the (same with your friend in 'VAN BunuN. Onondaga Co., N. March, 1843 , . . ' ' Important Experiments.- Mr. 11. Ma.ssy, of kew °York, took a'sMall portion of the.seed-cora with which he plant ed a field, and soaked. it in a solution of salt nitre• comonly - called salt-petre,' and planted five rows with the seed thus prepared.— These five rows yielded. more than twenty five similar ones, planted -with seed without any preparation. The-five rows were un touched by the worms, while the remainder Of the field suffered'seyerely frown their dep redations. 'We should judge that not one kernel saturated with saltpetre was touched, While almost every hill in the ajoining row, suffered S:everely:- . Mr. M. also 17.38 the result of another experiment tri by him last Spring, upon one of his appl tree-s:': It is a fine thrifty, healthy tree, about twenty-five or thirty Years old, but has never in any one year :, produced over about two bushels of apples. While in blossom last spring, he ascended the tree, and sprinkled plaster freely on the blossoms, and the result was that it yielded ' i twenty bushels of apples. NOW if the plas ter Will prevent the blast, it is a discovery of .great importance. Mr. M. was led to make the experinient by reading an account of the :production of trees adjoining a meadow where ,plaster had been sown at a time when there iwas a light breeze in the direction. of the or 'chard the trees contiguous to the meadow hearin t , e , well, while the others produced no fruit. 1 1, ~ Iran Weaving. ' Messrs. Witkerhliam and Walker, of this City, lave the present right of a machine which, with sufficient power, is enabled to 'Weave into meshes, iron as large as railroad ,as small as the smallest description (it. wire. The Method of operation does away with! the,necessity of rivets, in lieu of 'which an indenture into. the wire is . substitutecl, formiriEr .u_sno_kat, for duo twit wire __ With_ this pachine, the, following articles can be prodheed. A material for carriage bodies, light{ durable, and at less cost than Wood, 'wire railings of endless variety ; wire tree bcka, some of which have rlready been put into Use ; sacking-bottom s, window shutters, guards and grating for doors and windows, net .Work for decks of vessels and steamboats, besides an endlesS variety of uses to which the material can be applied. The invention was originally applied to prepare the wires :tor coal-screens.—Bouyen's N.Amer. Fanner. Ax 01110 CHEESE rs LoxDow.—The London papers mention the arrival there of an enormous cheese. The milk of mien , hundred cows .used in making it, and it Weighs 1474 pounds. It is thirteen feet in eiretunference, four feet and a quarter in di ameter; and eighteen inches in thickness.— It was offered for and obtained a prize at:the 'Fair of the American Institute in N. Y. city. -Tv - r r• 9 , 5 • - A ; _ gkki 1. CHERRY PECTORAL; Fir: - Fier the Care ter cougars, cora:my. HOAR ESTEEM, BROW. ! ' CHITIO • . CROUP, ABTA.. MA, W . OOPING•00IION AND ONIIIINEPTION. • rr HE most distinguished P i hysicitms in this and : 1 other countries before Whom this preparation ; has been laid have bestowed upon it unqualified , rai as an article of rare-excellence and one better :calculated to cure all: forms of Pulmonary disease Anal any other remedy known. ( Rinul.the folioolg testimony and judge care fully from it—it i.v Ervin men of known respvta: bilitY, not from per Sons of Whom you have never 'before heard. • ,Dr. J. Y. Smith, ,glirgeon of the Port of Boston, sayis—" It gives me pleasure to speak with appro bath* of such a medicine as is here, offered — to the Public, If any preparation can subdue diseases of the lungs, Cherry Pectoral Can do it." . The Editor of thd,Zondon Lancet says: We can speak with confiderfoi of its intrinsic mirit. ' Dr. Perkins, the venerable President of Castletoss Medical Collegecot*iciers it a composition of rare excellence for the Omit formidable type, of disease in: our climate—ConSamption. ;Prof. Cie:Th.la, of, Botedobs College, writes:— I have witnessed the effects of your Cherry Pecto raf in my own ramily,!and that of my friends, and it has given great satisfaction in cases of both adults and children: , ' Valentine gat, XI D,' Prof. of Surgery, New Pork! City, says':—lt Gives me pleasure to certify in faior of this beautiful and truly invaluable rein s* *diseases of the !Lung& ' ; 4fridreie Vontbe, .21E ..11 1 ., PR. S. Pleyeitien Extra . oidb 4 zry to the Queeri of Scotland, writes :—This '..new Medico Chetnical'adds another proof that the 1 ski . -,- and arts aminpidly adVancmg in Anieriea. • T 1k Res: Lord Bishop of .1 4 410' Potaidla, nd ..- in a letter to ins friend, who was fast sink ini,n , ~ -r the -affection of thei latnge:. ! —Try the ICh.I , Pectoraliand if any medicine can give you f ith the blessing of God Gat will. 11, 1. "IT - Canadian .;,arof ',Medical. Science," , 13t4siles t "the preutl;! Asthma of this incletn -1 eatieli to has yielded with =prising rapidity to , 4,Yer'elCherry Pectoral; and we eannottoostrongly, l irrG. , ~ ,-. , this sidlihdirepsratke to rthe Proftsi : ti all .d.l == lllY.7 thS ' et,dts Prof:Aare, of Minnow 1 , .egt.of Medicine, says• - ut gm' bxtutit bare hit This. ele g ua- compound by:An • eminent *suit of•New_Eogland sirtirdeyousn!itnrshiable- I. in.freaVng the various disesisesoftheinstis • : tic