| Show manufacture OF MOLASSES the numer number of mills for grinding sorghum sucre in n this city and county has been greatly increased during this ks eason as ms well as in other places that we have seen and heard from and in all probability there will be a aa many in operation this fale fall falas faias as will be needed to manufacture all the cane into molasses that has been produced this sea season son ere the weather becomes so cold that the manufacturing process cannot be carried on to advantage as was the case long before the crop raised last year was made into sweets the crop of sorghum so far as our knowledge extends is not as good as it was last season and there is not much of itt it that hathas has hab matured sufficiently to make a good article of molasses unless more mor eskill skill is exerted in its manufacture than was manifested I 1 by some in working up the crop 0 of 1859 which however we have reasons to hope will be the case and that in one particular at least a material improvement will be made by those who in consequence of the sEar scarcity city of fuel or from some other cause have frequently made a very ien fill lit article scarcely of sufficient density to prevent it from acidifying acidify ing 0 in warm weather the immaturity of most of the cane this fall will require a more scientific process in its conversion into molasses of a good quality than if fully rip e and all the experience that has been gained pained ill in relation to the matter will be in requisition in working it up successfully which if not done those who have cultivated tivai it extensively will realize but small profits if any and maybe induced to abandon its culture altogether in PC this part of the territory where it evidently cannot be grown as successfully asin agin as in the extreme Sop southern thern settlements tle ments as the summer season is frequently too short for its maturity tho amount of sorghum that has been il A A grown this yar is also more limited than soine some have supposed who have not trave traveled leq through throy gh the settlements t s very extensively of late and the beet crop crop is no large under th these thase e se ciaci circum mx stancl ts with thebert of management in manufacturing where abere will not be a sufficiency of molasses made in this vicinity to supply the deman dand there should none be wasted pasted basted nor burnes normade nor non made so filthy that it will be unfit for ua use le there are several mills aills now in operation in this thia c cly cay 1 lly ity and and daany more w will ill lii soon be ready for worl work t there seams however to be no pir ticul I 1 r g rry an fn the matter as it s i the cane is and will begetting b ettig etti g better everyday ay so long as the thwart 4 warm Aek weather ther wit with which the people are and have beel blessed of late shall continue but th sooner ner lecan be worked up after it is aa as ri ail api an a it will I 1 bc be al the bett better cras eras I 1 as frost I 1 will I 1 C certainly er t y do it no good goed profit of 0 n maturing some fifteen years ago sa says writer in then the N E farmer in one of the e nilly lly ily I 1 toms towns in new Ilam llam hampshire shire a man purchased h ai a farm of about acres which thich was pretty pre pro t y well ivell worn naturally productive land paying but a small portion of the cost dawn as he e had haa lut tut a few hundred dollars to begin life with one oyie of 0 the first he did was to draw manure from the village full two miles up hill at which the beig ors predicted his speedy bankruptcy but atch was not the result on the oth er hand he still continued to buy manure and in consequence consequence got the best crops of any man in town an anauo day he haa baa the richest and most productive arm in that vicinity all paid aid ald for and his nein neighbors ghiors say it is worth at ret met least ten thousand dol doi dollars lars laTs |