, tumtr.o3,. tpur uttu .• 7. * THE..Ottoiz's:loHa. 1857•H,A; journey, of .some,thresAhotistiudLmileti,,_:_within the; three weeks past, in Now York,' Missu- . . eh a usetts; Rhode Island, New .Tnrayiyenn. syrvaiiitir, DeFaware; Maryland, - Tirginis;- Ptioii. Indiana,. Illinois, ; Missouri and wa—foorteen States in all:--renables us' to give .our .readers the grateful aiSartm-..i no, that the crops of the present • year, ac ,• cording to the present promise,;,,will_ uuSurpassell. The hay. crop. is. , already . secure, .and there is hardly a more •int ; .- '''... portant crop than this; or one .of which . ' many' portions of the: country have...stoo4- in more need during some months past.,.. - • Immense quantiticinf Omit and.cern haie been Sowed in the, Great - V . 1664 if some angieven snuch 7of the' ; Winter; 'wheat has beep killed, the deficiency ' has_boen;_inany = titue_s_ntade_tiOn_the_L -_.sb_unronce Of extra -land 'planted.: . TI season has been everywhere a, . • Ward ono,and_even_Mote-backirerturt:__ the far 'Wok than in the East:. .In the western part:of Massachusetts'imd. New " York, considering the differences of lat. itude,. the crops are more' advanced than alinost any etlr.r portions of the coun try.' In Ohio, Indiana and Illinois,• the fields look us if there could ,be no failure or, famine 9 neither want nor suffering.' • Tho scarcity of tho . present, arising 'from -two eunsesuf speculation-and emigration Wrist, and which - has made •a city • like fit: 'Louis a place - to ' - export' - from - even ; Westward, is 1 , ,t 00i - 4mA:rely 'novel in .its kind, and which can , hardly. occur • - Thethousanas who - have gone_ Wdaufrom New England, the Middle... States,- andthe South, have: had 'to be supplied from sources entirely new, and, , . proince,.thereforp, is about as den•/at Cincinnati, .ChicagO, and Louis, as at Boston and ,New York.' • The year, of 1857 promise, we are" happy.. to say, to be a year of aboindance, ,- ;Farmers - will geldeoaitnand • - and revetchigh - prices,• but"'; • not the exorbitant. rates of the' present time. No greater bldssiug can befall the i.tzation . than good 'crops, and . Wo_ought to • 'pray devOufedly for such.a consummation. Do THE PROFITS OF kOitICE INURE VARY .11.111011 IN DIFFERENT YEARS.-=' Sometimes they do, biit - generally 'not in. 'the loth; run. . 11'hen, they . do .vary.—l.. When the farmer devotes nearly all Ilia strength to the growth of one staple, if that fails him . ho is a looter, andlhis profits.tlit your, , L -are cut off. If a finler._ mes,-wheat alone, or'rritit alone, it is evident that In bad seasons, 'his support is taken. away, or nearly So: - - 2: The saute result follows, in the same circumstances, when, though the 'crop itself,.is not cut off, its,. price is suddenly and greatly low Ced by. the fail tire of the demand, or by some other cause. - But is general, the profits of farming are about equal, one -year with another, foro. - very long tern] . of years, baCause, 1 •ay st aeon is un'averable to any .par ticular- crop; the same sit; on-is commor• ly favorable to.. some o th er crop which -may supply its plate. A. cool wet spring is unttvorable to corn, but it is good for grass. %2. If all crops should be very poor, the aggregate, though small, would cohnniand as high a price us h generous orop could. 3. In every - case where the . _profits of farming vary most, namely, in .! , stances first mentioned above, the profits ono year would compensate Por..the loses of another, so that a very fair average ave every two or three years., . lajerence. —I.. The good farmer, who cultivates a variety, of crops, need ,feel very little anxiety about the seasons; what he loses en one hand,. he gains on the other. 2. It is in general best to have ,tt variety, if one can ; it favors indepef - donee, and equalises one year- with an; other.—Vltio Farmer. GRATE SALE OF STOCIC..-The annual, sale of blooded stock by R. At Alexander, Esq., took place ut his farm in Woodford .' county, Ky., on, Weduesday, Juno• 3d. This sale brought together a larger col lection. of people than any previous