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bales are much easier handled, particularly in loading and unloading vessels, and the above paragraph from the Mobile letter was intended, I suppose, to set forth, ironically, this

advantage. In stowing ships with cotton a great number of bales have to be dragged endwise, upon other bales, half the length of the hold or more; and in finishing, not a few have to be driven, by means of jack-screws, a long distance into apertures scarcely large enough to receive them. The outward pressure of the bale (up and down as it lay in the press, for there is very little sidewise) causes it to swell an inch over the band, on the two sides which may be called the top and bottom. The two other sides of the bale, (of cotton in ropes,) has, of course, a very uneven surface-the ropes on one side and ropes and knots on the other. In driving these bales into a small hole between other bales, with like ropes and knots, they frequently hitch against each other, the knots become torn loose and the ropes dragged off. This is what the letter, in the jesting pleasantry of the writer, alludes to in saying "the ropes are loosened."

All these inconveniences are, of course, avoided by the use of hoops. From conversations I have had with ship-masters and mates, and other authentic information from them, I have been surprised to learn that in consequence of the difficulties above alluded to, it is by many said to be double the labor to stow a ship with cotton in ropes that it would be with bales in hoops.

The letter again says: "A few years ago a lot of cotton came to this port with iron hoops, but it was pronounced unmerchantable, because, in compressing, the hoops had to be taken off and ropes substituted."

It

"In compressing?" I thought the principal object in putting cotton in iron hoops, was to put it into shipment size at once. certainly would be very unwise to put iron hoops on bales which would have to be repressed.

Your correspondent is certainly correct in supposing we can make our bales in good shipping size on the plantation, and thus entirely avoid the expense of re-pressing And we can, at the same time, secure other advantages. One of which is the facility in loading vessels, and consequent lessening of freight. I had a conversation with several shipmasters on this subject, the last time I was in Mobile, who were then taking in cargoes of cotton at that port. They expressed the uniform sentiment I have invariably heard from that quarter, viz.: an unqualified wish that iron hoops would take the place of ropes upon cotton bales; and a readiness to take cotton in hoops at reduced rates of freight, on account of the greater ease with which they can stow and unload their ships, and the greater security from loss by fire.

If there is a mercantile, or any other, objection to the use of iron hoops on cotton bales, it ought to be fairly and seriously stated, and if there be none, then every planter ought to use them. I am well pursuaded there is none, except that it is adverse to the interest of those who are connected, directly and indirectly, by sympathy, friendship, and otherwise, with the steam cotton presses at the import cities.

It ought to be remarked, however, that bales may be so banded with hoops, and no doubt frequently are, as to be unfit for shipment. I once saw a lot of cotton in Yazoo City, banded up in iron bands in so awkward and clumsy a manner, that the cotton ought to have been pronounced "unmerchantable," whether it was or not. When I speak of cotton in hoops, I mean that the bales are to be of the size they come from the steam presses-say 22 to 24 square, and 4 feet 6 inches long-the hoops of proper size and well riveted. The process of putting them on is very simple, and much faster than tying ropes. I would willingly communicate directly with your correspondent on this, or any other subject connected with craft," and interchange any useful information. R. ABBEY.

" our

COTTON-COST OF PRODUCING, &c.— We have seen within a short time various statements published in regard to the cost of producing cotton and what should be its natural price. A writer in the Carolinian declares 5 cents will not pay in that state any profit. He takes an estate well managed, inferior to none in productiveness, and affording more than an average yield in the state. The winter but not summer clothing was manufactured at the place. The number of acres was 550, much of which, four years ago, cost $25 per acre, number of slaves forty, one-half field hands. Estimating the negroes at $300 each, and the land at $12, with stock, etc., the invest

ment will be $20,000.

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200 00 Bill of yearly supply of iron,

Medical attendance, $1 25 per
head......

317 50

average.

100 00

90 00

Plows and other tools purchased,
annual average..

100 00

275 00

810 00

125 00

87 50

25.00

Sugar and coffee for sick, 75 lbs.,
at 10 cents per lb....
Annual wear and tear of land, say
5 per cent. upon estimated va-
lue (6,600)....
Contingencies, such as re-stock-

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ing the place with mules, wear and tear of wagons, etc...... Cost of transporting 120 bales cotton to market, at 75 cents per bale...

Loss by death of old negro, say

100 00 Whole expenses and loss........$1,383 00 Mr. Solon Robinson, a very observant agriculturist, who has been traveling extensively in the South, furnishes some statistics to the same effect. He presents the case of Col. Williams's plantation, at Society Hill, S. C.

STATISTICS OF A CAROLINA COTTON ESTATE.
Capital Invested.

4,200 acres of land (2,700 in cul-
tivation) at $15....

254 slaves, at $350 each, average old and young

......

60 mules and mares, and one
jack, and one stud, average
$60...

200 head of cattle, at $10..
500 head of hogs, at $2..
23 carts and 6 wagons..
60 bull-tongue plows, 60 shaving
do., 25 turning do., 15 drill
do., 15 harrows, at an average
of $1 50 each.

200 pairs of shoes, $175; annual
supply of hats, $100....
Bill of cotton and woolen cloth.
100 cotton comforters, in lieu of
bed blankets...
100 oil-cloth capotes (New-York
cost)...

20 small woolen blankets for in-
fants..

Calico dress and handkerchief for
each woman and girl, (extra of
other clothing)

$63,000 00 Christmas presents, given in
lieu of "negro crop".

82 00

175 00

89,900 00 50 sacks of salt....

80 00

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All other plantation tools estimated, worth....

1,000 00

Стор.

$161,402 00 Deduct other products than cot

331,000 lbs. cotton, at..
13,500 lbs. of bacon, taken for
home place and factory...
Beef and butter for ditto and
sales....

1,100 bushels of corn and meal
for ditto and sales

80 cords of tan bark for his tan yard.....

Charges to others for blacksmith work..

675 00

500 00

550 00

480 00

100 00

ton

Cost of cotton...... $15,464 00 Showing the average cost of producing cotton per lb. a little less than 4 cents and 7 mills. Had this cotton sold at 6 cents, the profits would have been $1,973 68, at 7 cents, $5,385 04, which was about what it brought, being little more than 3 per cent.

STATISTICS ALABAMA COTTON ESTATE.

The following is given by Mr. Robinson

as the results on a plantation in Alabama, in Marengo county, and owned by Robert Montague, Esq.

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$5,756 80
100 00

hibits in calculating the profits of a business investment, is in adding the item of interest upon capital as expense. A person investing money in any enterprise is justly considered to be doing a fair business if he makes a small percentage over interest and expenses; and the statement which Mr. Robinson furnishes of Col. Williams's plantation, only proves that our fellowcitizen makes about 12 per cent. on his capital, and that too with the price of cotton placed as low as six cents in Charlestonfor freight and commission are included in 60 00 the table of " "expenses."

250 00

40 00

100 00 20 00 350 00

$6,676 00

In the first place, the actual capital invested is clearly misstated, as we have shown above. In the second place we deny the principle of adding interest on the capital, as part of the expenses, when the object is to find out the profits upon that capital. In the third place, Mr. Robinson calculates interest upon the cost of the stock of the plantation, which is obviously fallacious and deceptive, where its natural increase must amount to more than the interest. In the fourth place, he omits to add to the income of the plantation the natural increase of the labor employed thereon-an item which is always prominent in the planter's calculation, and 1,400 00 which would unquestionably amount to 5 or 200 00 6 per cent. per annum upon their original 200 00 cost. And, in the fifth place, he has en140 00 tirely neglected the increased value arising 600 00 from the yearly improvement of a well cul1,000 00 tivated plantation. We think the case is 500 00 fairly stated. The result then, according to our views, will be as follows:

$27,500 00
48,000 00
400 00
150 00
2,250 00

$82.240 00

This crop, 128,000, lbs. at 6 per cent. net, will leave a balance of $1,004 20, which is just about enough to pay the owner common wages of an overseer, which business he attends to himself.

The Columbia South Carolinian, however, makes considerable havoc among the figures of Mr. Robinson, to which they present a very open flank. Referring to Mr. Williams's place, the editor says:

of

True Profits of Colton Planters.-Mr. Robinson has included 1,500 acres land not in cultivation. All the land (4,200 acres) in his estimate of capital was valued at $15 per acre, so that here is $22,500 called " capital" in a business where it is no such thing. It may be said that land for fuel, timber, cattle pasture and range for stock, are necessary to carrying on the business of cotton planting, and so it is; but we think one-half of the residue of the land, say 750 acres, would be a large allowance for these purposes. At the least, then, we make a reduction of the " capital" to the amount of 11,250-leaving the real capital $150,152. But the most glaring inconsistency which our agricultural tourist ex

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These profits amount to over thirteen per cent. per annum over all expenses-the Charleston price of cotton being only put down at 6 cents. Suppose the crop averaged eight cents in Charleston, as it would do at the present time, the profits would be $26,614 40, or nearly 18 per cent.

The calculations of the Alabama plantation would, perhaps, show a still greater errror but we cannot arrive at correct results, as the whole number of acres, and not the quantity under cultivation, is given; and the statement made, that the plantation having on it 120 slaves, only made about $1,000 over in

terest and expenses, as Mr. Robinson says,, first of all, necessary to observe that, though just the common wages of an overseer! We know not what this tourist's object was in giving publication to a statement so much calculated to deceive. We have no doubt, however, that he unwittingly made the mistakes referred to. We have shown that cotton planting, at a moderate price for cotton, pays 13 per cent. profit.

COTTON.-ANALYSIS OF.-One hundred parts of cotton wool, on being heated in a platina crucible, lost 85.89 parts. The residuum, on being ignited under a muffle till the whole of the carbon was consumed, lost 12.735, and left a white ash which weighed nearly 1 per cent., or 1.9347. Of this ash, nearly 44 per cent. was soluble in water. Its consituents were as follows: Carbonate of potash (with a trace of soda)....

.44.29

Phosphate of lime (with a trace of mag

nesia)...

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25.34
8.97

6.75

2.90
1.40

100.00

no one will dispute the paramount importance of the chemical constituents of the soil, yet these may be considered in some respects to be only of comparative value, as it is equally necessary to attend to the physical state of the soil, and to both, in connection with the climate of particular localities. The mechanical state of the soil, its greater or less degree of porosity or of tenacity, enabling the roots to spread with more or less facility, so as to fix the plant steadily in the earth, at the same time that they supply it with a large portion of its nutriment, is necessarily of great importance. But as a considerable portion of the food of plants is supplied by the air, its different states and due supply require also to be attended to, in addition to climate: no chemical composition or mechanical states will compensate for unsuitableness of climate. We all know that our oaks are as little likely to flourish within the tropics, as South American palms in our meadows; and no one now expects that our rich variety of orchids would flourish, if, 4.12 supplying them with every requisite of site, of soil, of culture, and even of temperature, we denied them a moist atmosphere. And yet a few years only have elapsed since it was considered a rarity to flower these air 6.23 plants, and also, since mountain rice was attempted to be cultivated here in the open air, because it came from a cool climate, and was said to be cultivated without irrigation. But it was forgotten that, during the season of cultivation in its native mountains, rain falls almost every day, and the air is in a state of continual moisture. So also in the culture of cotton, a certain state of the soil, both with respect to its chemical composition and its mechanical state, may be well suited to one situation, and yet not be desirable in another, .31.73 chiefly from a difference in the condition of 2.65 the atmosphere. For instance, a certain de1.68 gree of porosity of the soil may retain and .47 being just enough of water within the reach .27 of the roots, and yet if the atmosphere be came more damp, the soil may require to be made dryer by drainage. Again, if in another situation the air is more dry, and evaporation necessarily greater, both from the surface of the earth and from that of the leaves, a soil more retentive of moisture will be more suitable than one which is more open, and which thus allows moisture to escape, not only by evaporation, but by drainage. These varieties may be observed, not only in the soil and climate of different localities, but even in the same locality at different seasons of the year, especially in a country like India, which, in the language of meteorologists, is in many parts one of extremes. As plauts obtain from the ground their water, holding in solution saline and earthy particles, and are dependent upon the air for the elements of organic matter, it is evidently essential to pay equal attention to both cases, for it is difficult, nay, impossible, in both cases, to say whether the

Analysis of Cotton Seed.-One hundred parts, treated as before, lost 77.387, and the residuum, after being burnt under a muffle, left 3.986 parts of a perfectly white ash, the composition of which was as follows: Phosphate of lime (with traces of magnesia)

Phosphate of potassa (with traces of

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61.34

.25

and loss, 1.68

100.00 With respect to these analyses, we may for the present observe, that the seeds yielded nearly four times as much of the ash as the cotton itself did, and at the same time contained a much larger proportion of the phosphoric acid and of lime. In this respect, the quantity of both these substances is greater, as shown by the American analysis, than in that of Dr. Ure. Whether this may be owing to different kinds of wool having been employed, or to differences in the modes of analysis, can only be known when the analysis shall have been repeated by chem

ists with different kinds of cotton.

In resuming our observations on soils, it is

soil or the climate has the most influence, ral soils, we must consider in connection with upon successful cultivation, and it is nearly as climate. useless, to use the words of Mr. Neill, as "attempting to decide which half of a pair of scissors has most to do in the act of cutting, or which of the factors, 5 or 6, contributes most to the production of 30."

COTTON PLANT-ANALYSIS OF THE.— At the Farmers' Club of New-York, the Hon. Dixon H. Lewis, of Alabama, remarked that the seed of the cotton made With respect to the practical inferences rather more than three-fourths of the plant, deducible from the chemical analysis, we and every 1200 lbs. gives 350 clean cotton. may first quote the opinion of Mr. Pidding-"The Club, in accordance with his sugton, that carbonate of lime was essential to gestion, resolved upon having prepared a good cotton soil. Subsequently, he observed complete and perfect analysis of the stalk, that the American, the Mauritius, and the best boll, fibre and seed of the cotton plant." Singapore soil, contain a considerable per- The analysis hitherto made by Dr. Shepard, centage of vegetable matter, and some part extended only to the wool and seed. The of it easily soluble in cold water, while the results as we have them are :-One hundred Indian soils contain very little vegetable mat- parts cotton wool lost 86.09 parts in a platina ter, and this wholly soluble in water; but crucible, leaving a charred residuum, "which that the best contain a far larger proportion on being ignited under a muffle until every of carbonate of lime, and some of them their part of the carbon was consumed, lost 12.985 iron in a different state from the others. The and left an almost purely white ash whose lime, though not indispensable, he supposes weight was 0.9247. Of this ash about 44 per may be highly useful; but he ascribes greater cent. was found soluble in water, value to the presence of vegetable matter. tained 12.88 of sand, an adventitious product For a soil in Bengal, which contained exceed- of harvesting. Deducting the sand, the coningly minute proportions of lime and carbona- stitution of the ash is obtained; and abstractceous matter, and in which he cultivated cot-ing the carbonic acid as the result of incineton, worth from 9d to 11d per pound, as an

It con

.31.09 pounds.

.17.05

66

3.26

66

.12.30

1.22

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experiment, for seven or eight years, during ration, Dr. S. shows that to constitute every which he had always good, and often abun-100 parts of the ash, the cotton plant will take from the soil the following important dant crops, he ascribes this effect to the plants mineral ingredients : having been constantly manured with the black, pesty earth, so abundant in the jheels Potassa (with possible traces of (pieces of water) of India, and of which an soda). average good specimen contains 26.00 per Lime.. cent. of vegetable matter, and 15.00 per cent. Magnesia of carbonate of lime, yielded chiefly by the Phosphoric acid. small shells contained in the above deposits. Sulphuric acid. Mr. E. Solly, as the result of his analyses, remarks: " that the goodness of the soils from Georgia depended, probably, far more on the mechanical structure than on the chemical composition, and that the presence of lime or any other substance would appear of far less importance than that the soil should be, not too rich, but of a light and porous character, so that delicate fibres of the roots might penetrate easily in all directions." This opinion is probably not far from the truth, wherever the climate is most suitable to the cultivation of cotton..

Dr. Wight, after practical experience of some years, states that where it is in his power to choose, he prefers "a deep, darkcolored, light, almost sandy loam, and if it has been long out of cultivation, so much the better." The black cotton soil, in which so much of the cotton of India is grown, and which is generally considered the best for the purpose, is remarkable for its power of retaining moisture; while of the red soil, he says: again, I am informed that in some parts of the country, for example, in the Vizagapatam district, the finest cotton crops, both as to quantity and quality, are raised on red soils, and the redder, the better for the purpose." But the suitableness of these seve

64.92

Or, for 10,000 lbs. cotton wool, there will he taken 64.92 lbs. of these elements.

is derived from experiments upon Cotton A table corresponding with the one above

Seed:

Phosphoric acid.
Lime..
Potassa.
Sulphuric Acid.

.45.35

.29.79

19.40

1.16

95.70

In comparing the above table with that afforded by the cotton wool, a marked dissimilarity presents itself. The ash of the cotton seed is fourfold that of the fibre; while the former has also treble the phosphoric acid possessed by the latter, as will the more clearly appear when we present the analysis, under another form, corresponding with the second table under cotton wool.

From the foregoing analysis, it would appear difficult to imagine a vegetable compound better adapted for fertilizing land than the cotton seed; nor can we any longer be surprised at the well-known fact, that soils

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