SB 341 A* I UC-NRLF , : 1 ] * . i .THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESENTED BY PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID JiAjUtA^ it : ONION CULTURE. PRIZE ESSAYS AND OTHER PAPERS. PUBLISHERS' PREFACE. Seventeen of the following articles, as numbered in order, were written in response to a PREMIUM of- fered by the American Agriculturist, (New York,) " for the best plain practical directions on raising onions; to be written by an experienced Onion Grower; not to exceed twelve pages of manuscript; to embrace the various items, from the selection of the seed to marketing the crop all written out so plainly as to be use- ful to those who have had little or no experience in the cultivation of the crop." Many articles were received from various parts of the country, all of which were of more or less value. As but one or two only could ven in the American Agriculturist, a selection was made of the Essays giving the greatest variety of ex- perience, and published in the present form. The work at once became the standard authority on Onion Culture, and edition after edition was called for. In revising the work and bringing it fully down to date, it has been essentially enlarged by the addition of valuable matter. Wherever the prices of onions are mentioned in the following pages, they are those which prevailed at the time when the Essay was written. The current market rates are given in the daily papers of large cities. No. I. [THE writer of the following has, we believe, had an experience of some thirty years in growing onion* for market ED.} BY WM. J. JENNINGS, OF WESTPOET, CT. SELECTION OF GROUND. A deep loamy soil is con- sidered the best for onions, though they will grow on soil a large proportion of which is clay. A light porous soil with a gravelly subsoil should be avoided. The surface of the ground should be nearly level, as hilly ground is liable to wash from heavy rains. In electing a piece of ground for onions, there are sev- eral things that should be considered. 1st. Ground that is stony should be avoided, unless the cost of removing the stones is first considered. 2d. Ground that is overrun by weeds and trouble- some grasses, should not be chosen until they are first ubdued. 3d. Ground that is shaded will not do ; neither that which is too wet to be worked early in the spring. Having attended to the foregoing hints, it is also important to select with reference to cultivating the same ground for onions for an indefinite length of time, lor in so doing, the labor of first preparation is avoided ; idea, each succeeding crop is more easily cultivated, orovided the previous work has been thoroughly ione . PREPARATION OP GROUND FOR SOWING. - - Having made a suitable selection of ground, the next thing to be considered is its preparation. First gather out the stones pretty thoroughly putting the largest ones into fences, the middling-sized ones into blind ditches, and the smallest ones into the mud-holes of the roads. In this way some good is done. Above all, avoid the heathenish practice of emptying them by the road- side, not only disfiguring the roads, but giving a har- bor for briers, elders, and the ten thousand noxiou* weeds that now infest such places. In the next plact give the ground a heavy coat of the best manure Hog-pen is the best home-made manure; next, stable, if not too coarse; next, common barnyard, well rotted As to the quantity of manure on an acre, that must be determined in part by the condition of the soil From twenty to thirty loads of forty bushels per load, make a very good cx>at to begin with. After this i deeply ploughed in, a top dressing of wood ashes say 150 or 200 bushels to the acre, may be given, or fron* 300 to 500 Ibs. of guano, or bones around or sawei HOW TO KAISE ONIONS. ure good, or any well-pulverized manure that wil not be in the way of the harrow and rake may be oe used. But take care not to use seedy manure i you wish to save much labor and patience. Manure may be carted on and ploughed under in the fall, or in the spring just before sowing. If the ground ploughed in the fall, it will not be necessary to re- plough in the spring. Fall ploughing should be put off as long as possible say to the middle of November. Having manured and ploughed your ground, it is now to be harrowed and raked, until it is as even and smooth as a beet-bed. Harrows of either iron or wooden teeth are first used to bring the ground to a general level, and the stones to the surface ; the brush or bush-harrows are then used until the lumps are pulverized, and the surface of the ground made smooth, then wooden hand-rakes, of twelve teeth each, are applied to take off the small stones and fin- ish for sowing. Manure for top-dressing may be harrowed or raked in, and if guano is used, it is well to make a second application during the growth of the crop, which may be scuffled in by the hoe. All manure used should be ploughed under or mixed with the soil immediately after it is spread. SOWING. Now then the seed is to be committed to the ground. And here a word or two of caution is necessary. Be careful what seed is sown. If you are under the necessity of buying seed, procure it of some reliable man, a regular, honest onion-grower. It should not be over one year old, and should sink when placed in water. Better not trust to seed-merchants, unless actually obliged to. Rather pay $5 per pound for reliable seed, than get doubtful seed for nothing. Having obtained your seed, say from three to four Ibs. per acre, you now proceed to deposit it in the ground, which is done, where onions are raised to much ex- tent, by a simple machine, (costing $5,) drawn by hand, making two drills twelve inches apart, and dropping the seed in them at the same time. Next comes the covering process, which consists in drawing a band-roller over the ground lengthwise the rows; '*, which is the most common way, pushing a clean oright Loe over the drilla This may be done by uoys, as they make smaller and lighter tracks than men. Commence the work straight, and then be careful to keep it so ; not but that crooked rows make straight onions, but for the beauty and neatness of the thing. A man accustomed to it will sow three acres a day. The time for sowing is the month of April, earlier or later, according to the state of the ground. It is gen- erally found that the earliest-sowed onions, other things being equal, do the best CuLTiYATioif. About four weeks from the time of owing, cultivation commences in earnest The first riling to be done in this department is to go through them with an onion hoe. as soon as the rows can be distinctly seen, when the dew is on in the morning. The hoeing this time must be light just skimming the top of the ground the hoe being put forward and drawn toward the hoer. In the course of a few days weeding must be commenced ; removing all the weeds from among the onions. This part of the work is usu- ally performed by boys, for various reasons 1st. Be- cause they can be hired for about half the price of men. 2d. A good active boy, fifteen or sixteen years old, can do as much, or more work than a man ; and also because it is less tiresome for boys than full-grown men : for it must be remembered that the stooping or crawling posture must be assumed in weeding onions. In other words, whoever does this work must get down to them, eyes, fingers, and all, and not be ashamed of his occupation, or of soiling his clothes The tools needed for hoeing and weeding onions are lew and simple. The most approved hoe in use, is U8ually made from a buck-saw plate, either new or worn, cut about eight inches in length, and from one to two inches in width, with a goose-neck riveted on the inside of it; or to make the hoe stiffer, two goose- necks are used, riveted as before, but about one and a lalf inches from the ends of the plate, and uniting in one shank in the handle, which may be about five feet iong. This hoe should be kept clean and bright, so hat the dirt will slide over it without being much dis- placed. A push or scuffle-hoe is sometimes used in the advanced growth of the crop. The tools used for weeding, aside from what nature has provided, are a Tooked knife, (common case or shoe-knife with the ower end bent up,) and a weeder made of thin steel plate, about two inches long and one wide, riveted with a goose-neck, like the hoes, and fixed in a handle about eight inches long. Later in the season, a largei weeder is used, about four inches in length, and set in a handle about two feet long. This is used, when the mion-tops have become large, for the purpose of tak- ug out single weeds, and when hoeing the ground would injure the onions. After this description of tools, we will return to hoeing and weeding. As no definite rule can be giv- en for the number of hoeings or weedings, this must )e left to the discretion of the owner, or the person in iharge. Suffice it to say, the oftener the ground is tirred, the better for the crop. Ground should usu- ally be hoed about once in two weeks during the earlier part of the season, and the weeding must be governed by numbers and growth of the weeds. It is all-important that the weeds be not suffered to get the advantage. Keep them down keep them out be vigilant. Think of the old adage about the stitch in ime, and apply it here. This same vigilance must be exercised during th* growth of the crop. Some persons, owing to extra work during harvest, are apt to neglect their onion* This should never be. July is an important month te EXPERIENCE OF PRACTICAL GROWERS. the onion-grower. If neglected then, the crop is aa good as half-lost Neither is it true that onions are injured by working among them when bottoming, although care is necessary cot to knock down the tops, nor disturb the bulbs when growing ; but bad usage is better than entire neglect. Neither should weeds be permitted to go to seed on the ground intended for ouiojs the next year, after the crop is removed. It is sometimes necessary to hoe the ground over entirely, and carry off the weeds that may have grown after the onions have been pulled. The great pest of onion ground usually is purslain ; and this must be watched and dealt with in a summary way. It may be hardly necessary to suggest here that the fences and Borders of onion-grounds should be kept entirely clean and tidy. A man will hoe from half an acre to an acre of oniobs in a day. A smart boy will take care of from one to two acres of ground during the season, and have an odd day now and then to go fishing. HARVESTING. This takes place during the latter part of August, and first of September. The time to pull onions, (which should be done by hand,) is when the tops have fallen down and turned a brown or yel lowish color. Sometimes on account of the season, or seed, or both, there will be more or less that will not drop down and dry up. Some have proposed in such cases to roll a barrel over them, or break them down in some way, but it is of doubtful expediency. A scallion will be such, whether standing up or bent down. When the main crop has ripened down, it is best to pull them all, and sort out those which are not fit for market, to feed out to the cattle ; for which purpose they are esteemed of considerable value. The cattle generally devour them greedily ; they should not however be fed to milch cows. The most approved way of curing onions after they are pulled, is, to let them lie scattered about the ground for about three days, and then pile them up in small stacks, containing about a barrel each : after re- maining so about two weeks, open them, and give them frequent stirrings for about three bright drying days, then house them in a perfectly dry condition. The stacking gives them an opportunity to sweat, and keeps them in a measure from the weather, so tha* when opened, the outside skin shells off, and gives them a brighter and clearer appearance, than they would have if left to cure, scattered about the field. Onions cured in this way may be put up in bins, or bays to* the depth 61 four or five feet, without any danger of injury; there to be kept, if desired, until the following spring, provided the tops are left on them. If put in barn bays, a rough floor should be laid down on timber a few inches from the ground, in order that a circulation of air underneath may be ob- tained. Onions should not be kept in cellars unless remarkably dry and cool A slight freezing does not hurt them, provided they are not disturbed in their Vozen state MABKETINQ. Th 8 may commence aa soon aa onions are ripe, and continue until the middle of May follow ing, provided communication is open. The moat com* mon way of sending onions to market, is by putting them in barrels with one head, and sending them in vessels ; as freight by water is cheaper than by land. This holds good, however, only for those who are for- tunate enough to live in proximity to the water. All the preparation onions require for market, is to cut or strip off their tops and put them in barrels. A man or boy will prepare fifty bushels in a day. Onions always keep best in their tops ; therefore they should not be removed until ready for market. The price of onions varies from $1.00 to $5.00 pet barrel, but the average net price, taking one year with another for several years back, has been about $1.50 per barrel. The onions sent to New- York market are usually wholsaled from vessels to the dealers, and resold by them in smaller lots, they selling from 25 to 50 centi per barrel, in advance of cost, so that by the time the consumer gets them the first price is nearly doubled, GENERAL REMARKS. There is no crop, perhaps, more sure than that of onions, They are liable, it ia true, to blight, but this seldom occurs unless they are neglected. Rich soil, with a good application of ma- nure every year, and proper attention, will almost in- variably insure a good crop. Five hundred bushels to an acre is an average crop, though eight hundred are frequently raised. There are three varieties of onions commonly raised, namely, red, white, and yellow. The red onions take the lead, as they are more hardy, grow better, and bear handling better than either of the other kinds. The foregoing directions apply equally to each variety, though white ones require more attention in curing, and gentler handling. White onions in limited quan- tities and in good condition sometimes sell for fifty per cent in advance of red ones. Onions, unlike most other crops, may be raised on the same ground for an indefinite length of time, without any deterioration in quality or quantity, pro- vided the ground is in good heart. The writer knowi ground that has been used for upwards of thirty con- secutive years for this crop, and the last wss as good, or better than the first. It may not be amiss to remark here that skill in the onion business and it is an important item is only acquired, as in every other department of labor, by practice. Therefore it is better for a new beginner in the business to commence on a small scale. And let no one delude himself with the idea of becoming suddenly rich from raising onions. Patient, honest industry will here, as every where else, be rewarded, and when a good market ia within a convenient distance, and the soil suits, pernaps no crop pays better than onion* 18375574 HOW TO RAISE ONIONS RA.ISIXQ ONION SEED. As it is a law of nature that like produces like, it is of the utmost importance that great care should be taken to obtain seed that will pro- duce the most perfect specimens of its kind. This holds true in regard to onion seed, for it is a notorious tact, that this esculent has been improved in shape and col- or within a few years, from a flat turnip-shape and pale red color, to nearly a round or spherical form, and a b ight clear red. In saving onions for seed then, care should be taken to select those of the desired shape and color, and of medium size, or a little above it The best time to do this is when they are pulled, as then the perfectly ripe ones are more easily distinguished, than when they are oared. Another advantage to be gained is, that tho earliest may be reserved, it rfder to get an earlier crop, if desired, the next year. Onions intended for seed should be set out about the middle of April, or at the usual time of sowing. The ground should be pre- pared in the same manner as for the regular crops, and then laid out in drills about three feet apart, and four inches deep. In these drills the onions are to be placed, four or five inches apart, covered with fine dirt and gently pressed down with the feet, or hand roller. As soon as they are well out of ground, they should be gone through with a hoe or cultivator, and the weeds kept down by occasionally hoeing the ground, and weeding, until the seed is ripe. The writer has found that digging a trench between th* rows, either with a spade or hoe, about tte time tne seed is in blossom, arid working the dirt thus dug oul around the onion stalks, is beneficial. Care should oe taken after the onions have blossomed, noi to handle them, or disturb their roots. The seed matures about the same time hat. oniont raised from the seed get ripe. The time for gathering is when the heads assume a brown color, and the balls begin to crack and show the seed. The heads should then be cut off and exposed to the sun on a blanket or floor, until the seed will readily shell ; then by rub- bing with the hands, or threshing with a flail if a quantity is raised, the seed is made ready to be passed through a fanning-mill, or exposed to a winnowing process. After this is done, the seed should be put in a vessel of water, and only that which readily sinks .a to be preserved. It is then dried in the sun for two or three days, and put away in a -jag, in a dry, airy place, until wanted. Onion seed should never be trusted after it is two years old. The price of seed varies as much as the price of the onions themselves, ranging from $1.00 to $5.00 pei pound. The different varieties when planted for seed, should be put at considerable distance apart, as the seed readily mixes. From three to five pounds of seed are usually raised from a bushel of oniona No. II. BY JOHN H. SHERWOOD, F AIRFIELD CO., CT. THE Onion has become an important vegetable in our markets, and the demand is yearly increasing at prices which make their cultivation profitable. Large quantities of onions are produced in this vicinity, and I will offer a few remarks on their cultivation which I have derived from much experience and observation, trusting they may be of advantage to those who wish to cultivate them. Experience will be found the best teacher, but a few facts and general ideas put in print, will be a great help to new beginners. THE SOIL most congenial to them is a strong damp loam, and I think the crop is generally larger where a small quantity of clay exists in the soil. I have known large crops on quite stiff clay soil when the land is well under-drained. To have onions succeed well, the ground on which they are planted should have been cultivated at least two yeare with some hoed crops, and highly manured for those crops. Commencing with grass land, the first crop might be corn, next year potatoes, or what is better, carrots, as potatoes are apt to rot with high wanting. My reason for cultivating two years before the onion crop, is, because the grass- roots in the soil require that time to decay besides, the soil is so loose, that worms are apt to injure the onions, if not destroy most of the crop. The kind of onion usually grown here, is the red, and those are preferred which approach the nearest to a globe in shape, as the yield per acre is greater. The white, though better for the table, and command- ing near one third more in price, is but little cultivated, as the crop is seldom as large, and the care required in curing them, prevents their general cultivation. They are very liable to mildew and decay, which, be- ing conspicuous on their white skins, makes them less salable than the stronger red skins SEED. Nothing is of more importance in securing a good crop of onions, than having fresh new seed of tht right kind, as many fail when they depend on imported seed, or that which is raised we know not where 01 how raised to sell, probably. Many men in this v> cinity loat their crop last year from this canse, the fault being entirely in the seed, as that raised by them- selves or neighbors, planted side by side, did well EXPERIENCE OF PRACTICAL GROWERS. while sefcd obtained from a distance, in numerous in* Uaces, went to tops, or made " straight onions," as we call them. To grow good seed, select the globe-shaped bulbs of g instead of taking each one singly, and boys that are used to it will top them very fast. BUNCHING. To bunch onions rapidly and handsome- ly requires much practice, but some boys will make from three to four hundred bunches a day. It is done th'is : Take about two feet in length of the butt end of rye straw, and in size nearly as large as a broom- stick when drawn together by the twine. Commence at the bottom, and wind common wrapping twine around it for three inches, drawing it up tight, then put on a circle of four medium -sized onions to begin with, take a turn round the cock of these, draw them up snug to the straw, tying the next on the top of them. As you proceed, press them down snug upon each other with the thumb of the left hand, and wind the twine once around to each onion, tapering them up from a good-sized one at the bottom, to the size of a large walnut at the top, and from ten to twelve in length. Keep the rows straight, and with a little practice, you can make a neat bunch that will suit, fas many markets, better than loose onions, and also USH up and make salable the small-sized onions. An average crop with us may be stated at from four hundred to five hundred bushels per acre, though we sometimes get six hundred. The price varies from thir ty-five to fifty cents per bushel delivered at the landing on tide-water direct from the field. When the shippers pay from two to three dollars the hundred bunches, of three pounds to the bunch, for large quantities, taking the whole crop at once and directly from the field, it is considered a profitable crop. There is little done in the retail way, except for a few early ones in our home markets. STORING. Store your onions in a dry cool place, to keep through the winter. The garret is a good place for those who wish to keep a few for family use, cov ering them with some old cloth to prevent their thaw ing when once frozen. But if you wish to keep a large quantity, any out-building that is tolerably tight, will answer by packing the sides with hay or straw, and covering the top with the same. The cellar, unless very dry, is not a good place to keep them, on account of their growing if kept too warm. A basement-story perhaps would answer if not too warm. They should not be moved while frozen, except you wish to cook them immediately. I have written especially with regard to the onion as a field crop, for in this section they are raised aa such, by farmers who cultivate quite large tracts, and in fields from one half-acre to three acres. No. IV. BY D. C, REYNOLDS, CLINTON CO., PA. THE onion tribe, consisting of the onion, leek, garlic, and shallot, are all natives of Eastern countries, but they seem to be well adapted to certain portions of the United States, and acquire considerable pungency of favor in this climate. ID order to be successful in growing the onion, the oil must be rich, light, and deep, and in a situation well exposed to the sun. You must not think of sow- *ng the seed until you have worked the bed well to ttie depth of eighteen inches, enriching it, and beating ft flat and firm with a spade. Some may Kuppoee it early, but I always sow ray onion seed sometime in March, not being at all parti- cular as to the precise time of the month, or having any regard i the superstition so prevalent in regard to ii?M. No good gardener can dispense with the line: he will therefore scratch drills by the line just deep oousrh to be clearly oeen. and then distribute the seeds along the drills about three or four seeds to the inch. Next, sift fine sandy earth over the seeds, and pat the surface even. Finally, scatter leached ashes over the bed, evenly, to the depth of about one eighth of an inch. Be careful to allow no weeds to grow up and choke Uie young plnnts This is a very important pre- caution, as I think the shade caused by rank weeds ia one of the greatest causes of small trops in this coun- try. As the onions grow, they must be thinned out; allowing alternately a space between, fully equal to the breadth of the onion from bulb to bulb. There are some who prefer to sow onions broadcast, but I am satisfied they lose more by their indolence than they gain in point of economy of time. After the oniona have somewhat advanced, it will be beneficial to scat- ter common salt among them, the chemical propertief of the palt seem to cavue them to enlarge KXPKK1ENCE OF PRACTICAI. GROWERS. This is about as good a way to cultivate trie onion from the seed to the perfect large onion, as I have ever seen, or tried and it is my custom to examine every new idea, or experiment, that comes before the public, with a view to a correct plan, not only with the onion, but all kinds of vegetables. In September, the necks of the onions should be twisted, and after the leaves become yellow, take the crop up, and place tho onions under a shed, exposed to sun and air until they are quite dry on the outside. Of the different Kinds, I prefer the white, as not being so rank to the tuste, and we know they always bring a better price in the mnrket. Although I confess to having been often diaappoiuted in my experience with Patent Office Heeds, owing to their age before they are placed in the gn>und, yet I can safely recommend the " white onion" obtained from England, as of superior quality both as regards size and taste. Besides the onions raised from the seed, we can grow them so as to have a supply in July. The ground, in this case, must be prepared early as the weather will permit, in February, and for seed take a number of those small bulbs that are aUays found in the beds just described, and which are no; above an inch broad. The bed being ready at the end of the first week, form it into squares on the surface by meaus of cross-strings. At the places where the lines meet, press in an onion, one third of the onion being placed in the ground, so tbt the bulb will remain firm and erect. After this is done, you will have a bed with the onions in squares, five or six inches apart. Now, the onion naturally forms its bulb the first year of its growth, and forms Sower and seed in the second year. Of course, there- fore, these small onions, being in their second year, will attempt to form flower and seed, and this must be prevented by plucking off the flower-head as soon as it makes its appearance. A second attempt will be made, which must also be prevented in the same way. Thus, the sap, which would otherwise have " run to seed," will be kept in the bulb, and by degrees two, three, or four medium-sized onions will be developed. These are to be taken in July or August, and dried tinder a shed, as before directed. A great amount of nonsense, in the shape of " ex- periments," has been given to the world on the subject of the onion : but as I have already remarked, give me a soil rich light, deep, and well exposed to the gun, and in addition. fow bushe'is of leached ashes, and a reasonable quantity ut common salt, and I will show you a crop of onions equal tr viv ever produced by c,y other mode The onion is a plant whose roots feod apon nourish ment on or very near the surface Lence deep sowing and planting, as well as hoeing the earth around the plants, are to be avoided. In very hot weatner in summer, it may be necessary to water them but do not carry this to extremes. The onion is a very hardy plant, and I have frequently left bulbs in the ground throughout the winter for the purpose of obtaining an early mess on the dinner-table in spring. These is another mode of raising the onion which I like very well, although requiring a greater length d time to develop. This is by sowing the seed, thickly in drills from three to five inches apart, having prepared the ground in the same manner as above described, and reserving the leached ashes and salt for the second year. By this method, you procure a number ol bushels of small onions, which are to be kept over winter in a place dry, not too warm, and yet where they will not freeze. These must be planted as earlj as the spring weather will admit, in the second year, and the flower-shouts must be plucked off, as I have said in speaking of the early summer variety. They must be planted in the same way, in squares of five or six inches apart. Tne onion has been too slightly cultivated. This if owing to the vulgar notion of its unpleasant smell It is true, it is apt to affect the breath, so that one who has eaten of this really wholesome vegetable, will smell of it for many hours afterwards. But this should bo no reason for abandoning its use, as we can always so arrange our meal that it can be eaten when there \a no risk of this sort. The onion has been successfully used as a medicine^ particularly in croupy affections of children both the expressed juice mixed with sugar, and in the form of a poultice to the chest and extremities It is stimu- lant, acts upon the kidneys, upon the bronchial tubes ai.d air-passages, and will excite irritation on the skin, If eaten hi moderati< >n, it increases the appetite and promotes digestion, and may be used as a condiment ; but in large quantities it is apt to cause flatulence, gastric uneasiness, and febrile excitement. It may be given with advantage in dropsy and gravel If it l>e boiled, it loses its essential oil, and becomes a whole- some and harmless esculent. It may also be roasted and split, and applied with benefit to suppurating tumors. In fact, it is one of the most useful vegetables we possess, and deserves better treatment at the baud* of man. 10 HOW TO RAISE, ONIONS. NO. V. BY STEPHEN HOYT & SON, FAIRFIELD CO, CT. is the first consideration in the culture of onions. To raise them successfully, it is important that this be right. Tbe soil best adapted to them is a *avy, moist, (not wet,) rich loam, free from stone. Fair crops of onions may be raised upon a light dry soil in favorable seasons, but the tops are very liable to turn yellow just as they begin to bottom, and to die down before they are of much size, thus very materi- ally diminishing the crop. The soil should be culti- vated with some hoed crop, and no weeds allowed to ripen seed upon it for one or two years before plant- ing with onions. After having decided upon the soil, the next thing is the MANURE. Onions draw very heavily upon the soil, and to insure a large crop, manure should be applied li- berally. No definite quantity can be recommended, as the condition of the land varies so much ; but, as a gen- eral thing, there is more danger of not applying enough than too much. Stable or barn-yard manure when tho- roughly decomposed, may be considered a very proper manure for onions. We have found ashes very beneficial, and have raised fine crops with no other manure. They should be composted with swamp-muck, using one load of ashes to ten or twelve of muck. Apply twenty-five or thirty loads to the acre more would oe better. Fish composted with muck, makes a very superior manure for onions, not excelled if equalled by any other manure. Eight to ten thousand fish, (moss bunkers,) properly composted, make a good dressing for an acre. We have used guano, and it makes onions, like almost every thing else, grow, yet we are not in favor of its use, only when composted with muck, or mixed with good soil. If nothing else can be had, guano may be used with success, but should lay composted a few months before using. It is un- necessary to particularize the kinds of manure further. Any well-rotted manure may be used with advantage if applied in sufficient quantity. PLOUGHING, HARROWING, ETC. This we would re- commend to be done as early in the spring as the ground will admit First, plough deep, and harrow down. Then spread on tho manure and plough in shallow, say four inches. If ashes are used, spread them upon the surface and harrow in. After the second ploughing, harrow again, and pick off the stones, if there are any ; then roll, (this is very important,) harrow once more and rake off, so as to remove all stones, grass, roots, etc. It is very important to have the ground fine and clean before sowing, as much of the after-cultivation depends upon this. SEED. There is nothing, perhaps, in raising onions if more importance than the seed, which should be *ht to start with If the seed is poor and fails to come, or a part comes, it not only lessens the crop, but is a source of much vexation. We have found it the most reliable course to raise our own seed. The best onions should be selected and put out as early as possible in the spring ; in rows three feet apart, and six inches distant in the row. Hoe often to keep clean, and when the hulls begin to open, remove the heads to some place under cover, where they may re- main to be cleaned out at leisure. The seed may be loosened from the heads by threshing them with a flail, or by rubbing in the hands, and then run through a fanning-mill. If it is then put into a tub of water, the poor seed will float and may be removed from the sur face, leaving the good at the bottom, in a clean state, after which it should be taken out and dried. We have frequently bought seed, as those just com mencing the business have to do. In this case it should be tried before sowing. This may be done by placing some cotton thoroughly wet in a tumbler, sprinkling a few seeds over the surface of the cotton, and placing the tumbler in a warm place. In a few days the seed will germinate if it is good. It is im portant to have new seed, as old is very liable to fait or if it does not, the sprout is more feeble and puny. We prefer the red globe variety for general cultiva- tion, as they are hardy and yield better than any other. White onions sell for a large price, but they are more tender, and we have condemned them for general cul- tivation. We have had several trials with them, and found them to yield well ; but they are very liable tc decay or become spotted ; so as to injure their sale. SOWING may be done with almost any seed-drill, but we generally use one made expressly for the purpose, sowing two rows at once, twelve inches apart. A boy follows behind, covering the seed with the nead of a rake. With this kind of machine, a man and boy will sow two acres per day. We have found four pounds of seed to the acre the proper quantity. The seed should be sowed as early as the ground will admit. HOEING AND WEEDING. As soon as the onions are up so as to distinguish the rows, they should be hoed by a careful hand, using a hoe with a blade eight inches in length and two in width. These hoes may be obtained at most agricultural stores, and are prefer- red because they cover the onions much less than a common hoe. Repeat the hoeing again in a few days, and follow by weeding, using the greatest care to re- move all the weeds, as the after-expense will depend much upon the first dressing-out. Never allow onions to suffer for the want of weeding, but clean as the weeds are coming up. If weeds are allowed to attain much size, they are very apt to take wot again, eraa KXPKKLENCE OF PRACTICAL GROWERS. 11 when pulled out, and the patch will soon be overrun. I Oar rule is, to stir the ground often, and never let the onions suffer for want of weeding. By so doing they are dressed out quickly and at little expense. Con- tinue to hoe and stir the ground until the bulbs are too large to work among without injuring them. Thinning is unnecessary when only the above quantity of seed is used. PULUXO AND CURING. As soon as the tops have died down, or nearly so, pull them. When onions do well, their tops will lop over just at the top of the onion, and gradually die away. The grower will mainly have to be his own judge when to pull. There are seasons, however, when a large proportion of the onions are inclined to run to scallions or large-necked bulbs, and a beginner may be at a loss what to do. Many remedies have been recommended to make onions bottom, but we have found them of but little rise. Watch them closely, and after being satisfied that they are making no more bottoms, pull them not- withstanding the tops may be green, keeping the seal- 'ions (or unbottomed onions) by themselves, as they will never cure sufficiently to be housed with the other onions. We would here mention that it is our opinion that green or unfermented manures on ground that has never raised onions, are very apt to produce the above results. ~ Having decided that the onions are fit to gather, first pull six or eight rows, throwing them upon the unpulled ones to get a start. Then hoe over and rake off the strip pulled, to remove all weeds or grass, if any are growing. If there are no weeds, this will be unnecessary. After having cleaned off a strip, pull six or eight rows more, throwing the onions together with those first pulled upon the strip hoed and raked off. Hoe and rake off as before, and so continue to pull and hoe until the piece is finished, leaving the onions spread broadcast over the surface of the field. The scallions, if any, may be left to go out with the weeds or refuse. Let the onions remain in this situa- tion for two weeks or more, until well cured, that is, nntil the tops have become thoroughly dry. They should then be turned over with a rake, as many of them will be imbedded into the ground more or less, gathering moisture. In a few hours after stirring, with a good sun, they will be fit for housing. It mat- ters not, however, if they remain in the field for a mcrth after pulling, or at least until freezing weather In fact, we prefer to have them remain out as long as r ?>v>i! 3 be provided, and the sides lined with saw-dust, tan- bark, turning-shavings, or something of the kind, to a thickness of six or eight inches. A door should be made at each end, so that there may be a circulation of air, until compelled to close them by the severity of the weather. A place of this description wll hold several hundred bushels, and should contain one or two temporary partitions, running lengthwise, and as high as the onions. This prevents them from lying so compact, and tends to keep them from heating, sweating, etc. Sticks, boards, or any thing of the kind, placed in through them, answers a good purpose. As soon as freezing weather sets in, close the doors, and cover with straw. Those designed to be market- ed before the severe cold weather comes on, may be put in any place under cover. Those designed fo: wintering should be put in with tops on, as they sprout much less. In fact it is better to top them as they are marketed, in all cases. Topping makes good wet-weather employment MARKETING. The producer will have to exercise his own judgment as to the proper season for market- ing. For a number of years past they have brought the best price in the spring, yet there have been springs when we have thrown away hundreds of bushels. This, however, seldom occurs. Where a person raises largely, it is necessary to commence marketing as soon as the onions are ripe enough to pull, in order to get them off in time. We have found it advisable to sell whenever they bricg a good paying price. They should never be moved while frozen. If kept covered and undisturbed while frozen, the frost will leave them uninjured, unless it is too severe, and often repeated. YIELD. Much depends upon the soil and season foi a large yield. The average crop is about five hundred bushels per acre, A large yield can not be expected in this section without having the soil of the proper texture and a heavy manuring. The more manure, the more onions. There is no difficulty in raising eight or nine hundred bushels per acre. The same ground may be used for many years in succession if well manured, and with better success than by changing every year, or every few years. Pains should be taken to destroy all weeds, so that none shall go to seed upon tb 12 HOW TO EA1SE ONIONS. ground. tnd also iu making manure, lhat no seed may oe preseut in that. By so doing for a few years, onions may be raised with but little expense. Experience is necessary to raise onions successfully. Ife would not advise any person unacquainted with growing onions, to euter into it very largely at first, for it would very likely prove a failure. We have observed several instances where individuals have eommenced with a small patch, who have increased gradually until t 1 ey have reacLod BIX, eight, or leii acres, while others commencing with one acre 01 more, were unsuccessful, and have abandoned th business. It can not be expected that from three to four hundred dollars per acre should be realized with- out considerable expense ; and although we may read the various methods of others in regard to it, we are ill-prepared to go into the business of raising onions on a large scale without experience No. VI. BY AETHUR C. TAYLOR, FAIRFIELD CO., CT. THB first thing to look after is the seed. In select- jig the onions to plant for seed, choose those of u oright red color, of a medium size, with a small top, v well dried down to where it joins the bulb,) in shape AS near round as you can find. Round onions yield nure per acre than flat ones. ' If your seed-onions are deeper than they are broad, your onions will be in- clined to run to scallions, (unsaldble onions with thick green tops,) a result much to be dreaded by the onion- raiser. Plant your seed-onions in drills, three feet apart, the onions four inches apart in the drills. Plant deep iu the ground, and hoe the dirt up to the plants as they grow. In weeding, be careful not to rub the seed-stalks, as it will sometimes cause the seed to blast. When the stalks have nearly all turned yellow, cut off the seed-balls, and dry them on a roof or garret floor. When dry, clean the seed, ready for sowing in the spring. In choosing the ground, a level piece is preferable to side-hill, on account of its being less liable to be washed by spring rains. The soil should be deep and rich, nej'ner too wet nor too dry, (of the two rather moist.) Onlike most other crops, onions may be plant- ed on t' e same ground for a great number of years, and etill r -ing good crops. V .inure very highly, stable-manure, ground bones, v' as, and guano are all very good. Stable-manure jould be ploughed in ; be careful to turn it all under. 8ones or ashes may bo harrowed in after the ground Ji ploughed. Guano should he raked in after the har- rowing is done. Guano does well with other manure. It gives the young plants a good start early in the rea- son. The ground should be ploughed deep. It may be done either in the fall or in the spring. Pall ploughing La preferred by many, as it helps on the spring work, and gives a chance to get the seed in the ground early. which is a great advantage. As soon as the ground is free from frost, and dry enough to pulverize the lumps, harrow it well, first with the tooth, then with a nice even brush-harrow. After the harrowing has been thoroughly done, use he hand rake until vour ground is free from lumps and stones. Be careful to pick tip all the stones. The ground is nov ready for the seed. Sow in drills one foot apart; gauge your machine tc sow about four pounds per acre. If the ground is in good order, and you are sure your seed is all good, a little less than four pounds will do per acre. Cover the seed by pushing the head of a rake or the back of a corn-hoe along the drills. If the rows are made very straight, it will save time in cultivating. Nothing more is to be done until the onions are up enough to see the rows. Then go through with a light onion-hoe, stirring the ground between the rows. As soon as the onions are all up, put in tho boys with weeders, to take out the weeds whir^h the hoes have left. The weeders are little hoes, two inches wide bj one inch deep, with a short handle. Boys soon be come very handy at this work, and are better than mec at the business. All we have to do now, ia to keep free from weeds by hoeing and weeding until pulling-time. which is generally in September. When tho tops have nearly all fallen down, and about half of them are dry, they are fit to pull. Leave them on the ground after they are pulled until the tops are all dry, then store them in a dry place. Onions will look brighter il heaped up soon after pulling, and left in heaps to cure. Much care should be used in curing white onions, aa the sale of them is injured by having the skins mil- dewed. They should be pulled earlier thau red onions. A good plan is to carry them 'c, soon after pulling, and dry them by spreading out urn in lofts. An important item after the onion crop is raised, is to have it well housed. Onions will keep best on a floor where the air can circulate over and under them. They should be kept cool, but must not be allowed to freeze much. Onions for seed should be put in the cellar when the weather becomes cold, as the yield ot seed .will be small if the onions have been touched with frost. On a good pie^e of ground, six hundred bushels of onions can be raised to the acre, which at 50 cents per bushel, will bring $300 from one -v-re of ground. EXPERIENCE OF PRACTICAL GROWERS 13 If the planting of onions for seed has been neglect- ad, great care should be taken in procuring seed. It IB better to give a large price for seed from selected onions, than to get a supply from seed stoiea whew you know nothing about the quality of the oniou planted. No. VII. BY DAVID H. SHERWOOD, FAIRFIELD CO., CT. RAISING SEED. Most people are aware that the great onion crop of the country is raised from the black seed. There has been a great change in the shape of the onion within a few years. They were formerly quite flut, but now the best are as far through from the top to the root as the other way. Therefore select the very best for seed, those that are as near round as possible, solid and smooth. These should be kept through the winter in a dry place, where the thermo meter will not fall below 20. As soon as the frost is out of the ground in the spring, it should be well manured and ploughed deep. Dig trenches time feet apart and five inches deep. Set your oaions in the bottom of these drills about six inches apart As they grow up, fill the trenches with dirt, and the stalks will not fall down, which is apt to blast the seed. Keep clear from weeds until they blossom, after which do not disturb them. When the stalk below the seed-ball turns yellowish, and the seed-husks begin to open, cut off the seed- balls and spread them thinly on a tight floor, stirring them once in three days ; or, what is better, spread them on a lattice over a tight floor, as they will then have the air around them, which is very essential, as they are apt to mildew. They should remain in this way for several weeks, until they will shell easy. After the chaff is blown out, pour the seed into water ; throw away that which floats, and dry the remainder in the sun for three or four days ; after which put in coarse bags, and hang where it will have plenty of air, as I know of no seed that is more likely to chit than onion -seed. PREPARATION OF THE GROUND for the reception of the seed, is the next thing of importance. I have seen good onions on reclaimed bog swamp, also on re- claimed swamp with a clay sub-soil, but I think the best ground for the purpose is a dry loam. It should first be in hoed crops three or four years, and all weeds kept from going to seed. Clear your ground Jora all rubbish, stones, etc., in the fall, and, if pos- sible, put on twenty loads, of fifty bushel each, of fine, well-rotted manure to the acre, and plough it in before winter. If thus treated in the fall, you can sow the seed in the spring much earlier and easier than if ploughed in the spring. But as many are apt to put off until to-morrow what should be done to-day, I will say, manure your ground in the spring as soon as it is drv enough to work, ploughing it in at once, as fast as it can be harrowed, raked, and sowed, as it ia apt to become lumpy if allowed to lay in the sun after ploughing. Never use a tooth-harrow, as it will draw out the manure. I smooth the ground as follows: Take a plank eight feet long, one foot wide, and three inches thick. Through this, bore four holes, and insert four sticks, four feet long and three inches square. On the under-side of these sticks, fasten boards. The front plank standing edgewise as it moves along, will level the furrows, while the boards behind will smooth them. "Wood ashes, at the rate of from one to two hundred bushels to the acre, harrowed in, will pay double their cost ir most cases. After you have leveled and smoothe i your ground as much as con- venient with your team and leveler, use the hand- rake, leaving the surface as fine and even as possible. In order to have your rows straight, draw a line across the field. Draw the planting-machine by the line. These machines for planting, which cost about five dollars, plant two drills at a time, one foot apart, and about half an inch deep. I use four pounds of seed to the acre, and cover by drawing a hand-rake length- wise over the drills. The usual time of sowing here in the southern part of Connecticut, is from the first to the fifteenth of April A hand-roller drawn over the ground after planting, will help the seed to germinate. About two weeks is required to bring up the seed, and they should be hoed as soon as the rows can be seen, which will generally be the latter part of May. The most convenient hoe which I have seen for this purpose, is eight inches long and one and a half wide, inserted in a handle six feet long. Much depends upon how the hoe stands, about its working easy. If made right, the dirt will slide over it. After the weeds that are cut up by the hoe, have had time to die, they should begone over carefully one row at a time, cutting and pulling every weed from the row. The most con venient way for doing this, is to crawl on your knees with a small hoe in one hand, to cut where there is room, and pull with the other hand. The hoe for this purpose should be about three inches long, three fourths of an inch wide, inserted in a handle eight inches long. From this time they should be kept perfectly free from weeds; to do this, they will require going over from three to five times, or once in two weeks ; but as to this, there can be no rule given, as much dependt upon the soil, the kind of manure weather, etc 14 Itfc much easier to keep them clean by going over them often, than to put it off too long; besides, weeds ahado the ground and impoverish the soiL There should be no trees to shade the onions, as they will hardly grow in sight of one. If the onions grow well, the tops will fall down before they are done growing; at other times they will stand stiff and never fall If they fall down, they are fit to pull when about three fourths of the tops are dead, which is generally the last of August or the fore part of September. The sooner they are pulled after they are fit, the better they will keep, and the brighter they will look. Commence, by pulling a few rows, and lay them one side. Hoe up the weeds and rake them off, then pull the next rows, and hoe off the weeds as before. Continue thus through the field. Pull with your hands, and lay them over carefully. If the weather is good, after they have lain spread for three or four days, pile them up, putting about three bushels in a pile in the form of a pyramid. Let them stand in this way from two to four weeks, or until the tops are all dead, and if there should be heavy rains during the time, the piles should be opened on a fair day, and piled again. Piling them up causes them to sweat, and they are then less likely to sweat after carrying in. After they are properly cured, open the piles on a drying day, and they will generally be fit to put in the day following. Never cart them until they are perfectly dry and dusty, and it should be done between 11 A.M. and 4 P.M. One half the secret of their keeping well, is in carting them when perfectly dry. If they are to be disposed of before cold weather, they can be kept in any dry place where they will have air. The best place is on a loose floor, where the air will draw under them. If they are to be kept through the winter, have a tight floor, which the frost can not get under. On this lay scantling, upon which lay narrow boards, with cracks between them. Boarc up around the outside, leaving a space of one foot be- tween them and the outside partition. Arranged in this way, you have a free circulation of air all around them When the thermometer sinks to 20*, fill the space around the outside with sea-weed, onion-tops, or some thing of the kind, which easily stops the circulation o air. They can be put in such a place three feet deep with hay, cornstalks, or something of the kind, two fee HOW TO RAISE O-PTIONS. hick over them, and they will comt out good in tht pring. Before sending to market, cut the top one nch from the onion. If they get frozen, let them remain still and covered until thawed. Always handle hem as carefully as you would apples, as a slight bruise will cause them to mould and rot The expense of an acre of onions with me is about as follows : 20 loads of manure at $1.50 $30.00 Carting, tnrnfng, spreading, etc. 6.00 100 bushels ashes, at 17 cts 17.00 Ploughing and harrowing, . . , 4.00 Raking and sowing, 4.00 4 Ibs. of seed, at $1, 4 00 Hoeing four times, 6 days, 6.00 "Weeding four times, 24 days, 20.00 Pulling and piling, 12 days, 10.00 Drawing in with team, two days, 6.00 Topping 500 bushels, at 2 cts., 10.00 Marketing, , 8.00 Interest on land 12.00 Total, $137.00 A crop of onions will vary from 200 to 800 bushels to the acre, according to the state of the soil, manure, the care taken of them, etc. The price also varies from 10 cts. to $1 per bushel. The red globe onion is the variety generally raised for market, as it yields more than other varieties, and keeps better. The silver-skin onion brings the highest price, but is very apt to mould and rot before winter. Some may think, 1 have been very particular in the above description, but after they have had ten years' experience, they will find there is yet something to be learned. If you are too proud to go on your knees, or have not the patience to spend much time on a small place, or have not enough perseverance to do the same thing over and over again, you had better sell your seed, and sow your ground to buckwheat. Onions are a crop which generally pay a large pro- fit, but sometimes the neglect of a few days will spoil it. The same piece may be planted year after year with success. The weeding, pulling, and topping can be done by faithful boys as well as by men. It is estimated that from the towns of Fairfield and "Westport there were sent to market last year, not far from 200,000 (two hundred thousand) bushela KXPEBLEXCE OF PRACTICE GEOWKBft 1ft No. VIII. BY G. I. MILLER, NIAGARA, CANADA WEST, Ir 19 o! the greatest importance in growing onions to aave the right kind of soil, and that in the highest state of cultivation. In my opinion, a light sandy soil, well drained for all seasons, is preferable. Onions also can be raised to great advantage on black loam or j light clay soil, providing the seasons are not too dry. To prepare the ground, I would recommend a piece that has been planted with potatoes, manured with rotten horse-stable manure, at the rate of about fifty loads per acre. As soon as the potatoes have been taken from the ground, plough about seven inches deep, letting it lie until the first of April, or as soon as the ground will admit of being worked, then adding about ten loads of hog-manure, well spread over the surface, and plough under from fivo to six inches deep, after which spread a few bushels of hen-manure, and then harrow the ground until it is well pulverized. The land is now ready to sow, for the earlier the seed is sown, the better the onions will be. Testing the seed can bo done by cutting two sods from the ground, and pouring boiling water over them, letting the water drain well off, then placing the seed between the sods, and laying them under the stove for about two days, when the seed, if good, will sprout. I would recommend the large red globe onion as being the best variety for market The seed should be sown by a seed-drill, eighteen inches apart, in rows lengthwise of the land, at the rate of about three to three and a half pounds of seed per acre, leaving a space of three feet hi the dead fur- rows for weeds, etc. It is necessary, as soon at thi rows can be plainly seen, to go through them with S* hoe, leaving the ground as level as possible, and at the expiration of eight or ten days, go through them again, weeding, and thinning them from one to two inches apart ; after which it will be necessary to apply the hoe every two weeks, always bearing in mind, that the oftener the ground is stirred, the greater will be th produce. After the tops are dropped down and withered, then pull them at once, fur if left in the above condition, they will take the second growth, which will injure the quality materially. After they are pulled up, let them lay on the ground for a few days to dry, then top them with a sharp knife, taking care before doing this, that the onions are perfectly dry ; after which, spread them thin, in a dry, cool place, and then you have them ready for the market It is advantageous to grow them on the same piece of ground for five or six years, adding a little manure every spring before ploughing. Onions raised by this method will produce from seven to nine hundred bushels per acre, on a light) sandy soil. Onions raised on the aforesaid plan have taken the first prizes for the last six years at our count) and township shows, and the first prize at the Provin cial Agriculture Show, held at Toronto, Canada West No. IX. BY U. E. DODGE, CHATAUdUE CO., N, Y. SEED. To cultivate onions successfully, and with- out failures, care is necessary in selecting and raising seed. Seed should never be sown when over two years old. Onions, intended for seed, should be care- fully selected, choosing the thickest and the most per- fectly round, of medium size, and the brightest colors of the kind. These should be stored through the win- ter, or from December until the opening of spring. At the earliest possible moment, they should be set in furrows opened with the plough, three feet apart, and four inches in the rows. None but fine, well-pulver- ized land, should b : used for raising onion-seed. Cover two inches deep. Avoid putting on any lumps or tones, as these, whenever they fall upon the onions, retard their coming up, and consequently make an on even harvest All weeds must be kept down wh the cultivator and hand-hoe, until th<* seed matin ea, which will be about the last of Au^ast, or the urst of September never later than the cuxlii of Septrm- ber in this latitude. Then* matun*y faay be easily known by the cracking of the ball!* As soon as the balls commence cracking, the head?. &nould be clipped, leaving six or eight inches of the s'aifc adhering to the head. The juice or sap which the stalk contains, ma- tures more perfect seed than when clipped short The mode of cutting, is to take a common wooden pail ic the left hand, and a sharp knife in the other, holding the blade parallel with the thumb. Slio the utalk be HOW TO RAISE ONIONS. tween the thumb and knife, at the same time swing up the pail to the standing stalk, and a slight draw with the right hand severs the head from the stalk, which fells into the pail, with all loose seed which would otherwise be lost The pails, as they become full, are emptied into bags, and taken to the drying-barn. It is ot an extraordinary day's work for a man to cut ten bushels seed per day. Drying the seed requires some care, and neglect in .his branch is the cause of great loss by failures in the germination of the seed. Onion-seed, to be cured pro- perly, wid insure entire success in germination, should be dried in the shade, spread upon a smooth level 5oor, and not more than three inches thick. It should be turned twice every day, until perfectly dry. The first quality of seed is obtained from that which shells while turning; that which remains, and has to be threshed from the balls, being light, and of inferior quality. SOIL. That best adapted to the growth of onions is * deep mellow loam, resting on a dry, porous sub-soil. Although a vegetable of very shallow root, yet the onion delights in a deep, finely-pulverized soil. Cold, wet clay-sand seldom produces good crops, unless thoroughly underdrained, and otherwise mechanically prepared. PREPARATION OP THE GROUND. Soil, containing the natural requisites, namely, dry, mellow, and fertile, should be ploughed in the fall, previous to sowing the crop. Twenty loads, of ane cord each, of well-rotted muiure, prepared by shoveling over two or three times the summer previous, should be spread upon each acre. At each turning, put the outside of the heap into the middle of the pile, thus destroying thousands of weed- seeds that would otherwise grow, causing much extra labor to eradicate them. The manure thus prepared is spread evenly upon the ground, and turned under with the plough from five to six inches deep, and thus re- mains till spring, leaving the frost to pulverize the sur- face, and destroy all insects whose winter-quarters have been made beneath the surface, and whose eggs and larvae can not stand the severity of our winters, when exposed to the weather from November till April. As soon hi the spring as the weather and the soil jvill permit, the bed should be cross-ploughed, leaving the furrows upon edge as much as possible, so that a harrowing will mix the manure with the soil. It should be harrowed across the furrows, and raked lengthwise of them by hand. PLANTING. Draw a line at one side of the bed, and prepare a marker by taking a piece of scantling four by four, or any other convenient size, and bore four inch- holes, twelve inches apart In these insert four pins for teeth, a^d make a hole in the middle of the piece, at right angles to the teeth, for a handle. "With this, draw marks parallel with the line, and the ground is ready for sowing. Sow at the rate of four pounds seed to tfra acre, with a seed-drill, being careful to gauge the drill not to sow over that quantity All over IDM. increases the labor of thinning. If the weather has the appearance of being dry, it would be well to roll, after sowing, with a hand-roller, but this is seldom required, as the roller upon the drill usually presses the ground sufficiently for the germina- tion of the seed. CULTURE. As soon as the onions make their &r. pearance above the ground, sufficient to distinguish the rows, they should be carefully dressed through with the scuffle-hoe, to destroy all young weeds that may be starting, and greatly facilitate the first hoeing and weeding, which should be done when the plants are about four inches high. Procrastination here pays heavy interest on the wrong side. Thin to three 3 in Great inches in the row diagonally thus : 3 . results are frequently obtained by sowing broadcast at the weeding, when the ground is in a fresh state, three parts wood ashes, two parts fine dry pulverized hen-manure, and one part plaster, at the rate of three bushels to the acre. The only sure road to success with this crop is clean cultivation, annual manuring, and careful attention during their growth. With these requisites, onions can be grown on land year after year. The writer of this, last year (1858) raised over five hundred bushels to the acre on land that had had no other crop upon it for over a quarter of a century, and by actual experi- ments finds that it produces better onions, and is easier tilled, in consequence of its being kept free from weeds year after year, and the onions are less liable to run to scallions. In this particular they are an excep- tion to any other crop, as all other crops are benefited by rotation. As a market vegetable, the onion is one of the easiest grown ; its plump, firm flesh is not liable to injury from bruises, as many other vegetables ; its keeping qualities and hardiness to frost, render it a vegetable of the first importance for distant markets. The onion is hardy in its nature, standing well thb late frosts of spring and the early frosts of autumn, and the best results are obtained from the earliest sow- ing ; in fact, this is almost indispensable to obtain a large crop, although there may be certain seasons in which a late crop may do well ; but it is net safe tc defer sowing later than the twentieth of April. The last of March, or the first of April would be preferred, if the ground was in the proper condition. No time should be lost upon the opening of spring until the seed is in. A little snow, or a few frosty, nights, will not injure it With proper attention, and large drafts upon the bank of muck and manure, a few acrea of onions will increase the deposits at the Bank of Exchange a large per cenUge in a few years, as I shall attempt to show in the following calculation, taking low market prices, and a high estimate on labor, and hardly an average per acre, sav four hundred bushels EXPERIENCE OF PRACTICAL GROWERS. S days' ploughing and dragging, $4.00 10 " raking and sowing, 10.00 20 " weeding and thinning, first time, 20.00 15 " " " secondHime, 15.00 8 " hoeing, last time, 8.00 20 " harvesting and housing, 20.00 4 pounds seed, 4.00 20 loads of manure, 20.00 3 bushels top-dressing, .75 Interest on land, 10.50 Total, $112.25 400 bushels, at 50 cents, 200 00 Net profit per acre, $87.75 HARVESTING onions is not so laborious as many other kinds of vegetables ; their maturity being earlier in the season, those engaged in their culture are not pxposed to the late cold autumn winds, as they would be with a crop of beets, carrots, or turnips. The most expeditious mode of harvesting is to dig them with the common hand-hoe, running one corner of the hoe under the row, giving it a long draw, taking about four ro",'s at a time, digging over some ten or twelve feet ; then, with the back of the hoe, shove them up three or four feet, and hoe the ground level, and spread the onions upon this hoed space. "When treated in this way, they should lie from three to four weeks, or until perfectly dry. They should then be picked from the bed, and carted to the barn, or some building where they will not be exposed to storms and kept upon a floor, as they will soon Injure if piled in large heaps upon the ground, in con- sequence of the dampness which they draw from the earth. If properly dried, and secured from damp, they will keep for months in this condition, without any further trouble. They are liable to grow when damp, so that it is important that the cultivator see that this part of the work be conducted thoroughly and carefully. MARKETING. Onions are principally sold by the bushel, and by the string. If intended to market by the bushel, the tope should be cut close and smooth, and all loose skin removed, to give them a bright, plump appearance. If for home market, they may be pat in bags, or hauled by the \vagon-load, avoiding rough handling as far as may be. If for a distant market, barrels are the most convenient mode of pack- ing. Fill them with the onions, pacKing tight, that that there be no shaking, and head strongly. Packed in this way, and perfectly dry, they will go thousands of miles by railroad or ship, and open fresh and sound. Those intended for strings should have two inches of the top left upon the onion. The strings are made by taking a few straws, (rye straw is best.) and with a piece of wrapping twine, commence at the butt end of the straw to wind, and at every two or three turns add an onion, ending at the top. This secures it firmly, wid brings its broad, flat base upoi, U - outside of tho string. The largest should be tied upon the bottom c the string, gradually diminishing in size, until th smallest are tied upon the top. This gives the strinj a conical form, and a neat and tidy appearance, whoi arranged for sale. PRESERVATION. Keeping through the winter, with out injury from frosts, or loss from heating and gro\v ing, requires care and experience, and various method are adopted to avoid these results. They are buried i large ricks upon the ground, and covered with a heav coat of straw and a light coat of earth. They are als tied upon strings, and hung upon the beams in th cellar or warm garret, or spread thinly upon shelves i the cellar Some pack in boxes or barrels, encase with several thicknesses of paper, and leave them i an out-building. All these have been practised wit varied success. The most popular mode, and the ca which has given the most satisfactory results, is t spread straw, threshed with a flail, to the depth < twelve to eighteen inches upon the barn-floor, scaffolc or garret ; upon this, spread the onions from six to te inches thick, and cover with straw eighteen inches t two feet, laying on old pieces of boards or rails to con press the straw. Treated in this way, if at a sufficiei depth from frost, they are not affected by the change of temperature, and keep in fine condition till the fin of May. Onions are propagated from seed, sets, and mult pliers, or potatoe-onions. The universal mode of pn pagation at the South and West is from sets, wide are obtained by sowing the seed very thickly, broa< cast or in drills, and when they obtain the size of filbert, pull them, and dry upon the ground in the sut These are kept till the following spring, and set b hand. They make a quick, strong growth, and produc fine onions. Multipliers are a variety that produc large and small bulbs alternately, the large producin several small ones the first year, and there small gi\ ing large the next year. These may be recommende as a small early crop for family use, and early horn market, but not as a main crop, the increase of markei able onions over the seed being too small. Of all th various modes of propagation, sowing the seed for main crop deserves first rank ; its cheapness, comparoi with other modes, and the facility with which it i sowed, the early season when it may be gathered ir and the superior fine bulbs which it produces, reconi mend it to general use. But whatever the mode c propagation, the cultivator can not expect remunerativ crops, unless he bestows careful attention to the sele< tion of seed, the eradication of weeds during th period of their growth, annual application of well-corn posted manure, and in large quantities, and the harvest ing, securing, and marketing at the proper time. Wit! careful attention to these, and a naturally dry, tertil soil, onions may be grown, with large profits upon th capital invested. 46 HOW TO RAISE ONIONS. NO. X. BY W. R. BUNNELL, BRIDGEPORT, FAIRFIELD CO., CT KINDS. The thick or globular deep-red onion, known as the Wethersfield Large Red, is the kind generally grown in Fairneld county, Ct It grows to a good size when thinly sown on good ground, yields well, is of a beautiful color and shape, tender in cooking, keeps well, and is very salable in New-York market, for use or shipping. Also a yellow onion, (generally called and sold for white,) of nearly the same shape and qualities as the red, supposed to be the Danvers, which sells in the same market for one to two shillings a barrel more than the Reds, but does not generally yield so welL SEED. All seed should be raised from good-shaped if not large bulbs, to avoid scallions, (thick-necks or green onions;) should be water-cleaned and kept very dry, and though generally preferred only one year old, will succeed nearly as well after the second, or even third year, if it has 'been kept in a dry place, but seed more than one year old sells at only half-price. Bought seed should alv/ays be put into water and stirred for a short time, and that which does not sink in fifteen minutes, may be considered worthless or unreliable. SOIL. Any good garden soil, from a clay-loam to even quite a gravelly loam, say of one half mixture, is suitable. In a dry season the first will yield best, and ai a wet one the last a medium may be best. EXPOSURE. The best is a dry level, or a slight in- clination to any point of the compass but the north. It should never incline over four inches to the rod, to prevent the rains from washing away the soil with the seeds or young plants. An inclination of one to two feet to the rod is sometimes seen. The plants on side- hills, after they get well rooted, do not suffer from the washing away of the soil, but those buried by the washed soil are injured ; therefore if possible avoid steep side-hills and hollows, especially the latter, where water can stand after rains, which is most inju- rious of all MANURE. Xo fresh yard-manure should be used, as it is apt to be full of seeds, which will greatly increase the labor of tending, and the straw will be in the way of ploughing, raking, and hoeing. Night-soil or hog- manure is preferred. If barnyard manure is used, it should be thrown into heaps before the first of March, to kill the seeds and ripen for use by heating, or it may be carried out to the field and each load be heaped by itself, and the earth around thrown upon them as soon as it thaws, to the depth of three or more inches, to keep off the cold winds, and preserve their moisture, and raise the heat high enough to vegetate the seeds. Turning, or well shaking up, putting the outside to the adddle a week or two before using, will still further un- wove it. As to the quantitv. the cron will h in nm. 1 portion to that and the quality; it should be from fortj to sixty or more ox-cart loads to the acre, and twelva to fifty bushels of leached ashes harrowed or raked in, or sowed on the rows after weeding. PLOUGHING. So soon as the ground is dry, have the manure on the field. First hoe it over, to cut up all grass, weeds, and roots, and rake them off; for if ploughed under, they will be a great plague. Then if the heaps 1 of manure were covered with earth, hoe it off as they are wanted, and return it to the hollows to level the ground, and spread it just fast enough to feed the plough, breaking it fine ; then rake or scrape it with a dung-fork, into the furrow, to be covered in the next bout. Once ploughing is sufficient, if well done. A' second would throw out the manure. Im- mediately after ploughing, if your quantity of manure was not sufficient, strew any special manures, as pou- drette, guano, superphosphate, bone-dust probably the best of all, etc., to make up the deficiency. If the ground is lumpy, harrow lengthwise first, and finish off by going over with the back of the harrow down, of with a brush harrow, (see Agriculturist, 1858, page 108.) Then proceed to rake off all the stones and rubbish, and to even the surface. If the soil is mellov after ploughing, harrowing may be omitted. Many simply scatter short fresh manure, plough once, and rake down, drill and sow ; but it is a miserable way, making extra work in weeding, and producing a light- er crop. SOWING. This is cheapest and quickest done with a machine, called an onion-sower, which sows two rows at once, one foot apart, and costs about $5, and is to be found at the agricultural stores. It must be regulated on a floor or board, to sow the seed to average J to f of an inch apart, which will be about 4 Ibs. to the acre 3 to 4 is the usual quantity for a crop which is not to be thinned out. The machine does not cover the seed. This is done by drawing the back of a hay-rake lengthwise over one or two rows at a time. Any special manures may be scattered with great advantage upon the seed in the drills before covering. Make the drills about of an inch deep when open. But many prefer the old way of sowing by hand, and make a drill-rake with a head three feet four inches long, of three or four inches scantling, with three teeth fifteen inches long, pointed, and one foot apart, with a short curved handle four to five feet long Starting with a line for a guide, (which must also be used with the machine,) and afterwards following the last drill with one tooth, and sow by hand, from a small cup, distributing the seed with the thumb and fingers nt the same distances as stated for the macLine, EXPERIENCE OP PRACTICAL GROWERS. 19 process. In either case it should be most carefully and raff olarty done, and on a still day, or the wind will scatter It teyond the drills. The straighter and nar- rower the peed is sown in the drills, the narrower will be the pp*ce left to weed after hoeing. Radishes or some quick-growiog seed may be sowed thinly, one or two a^eds to a fo^t s to direct in hoeing the first time, da the onion tope are so fine they can scarcely be seen, fer, however, a deep loamy soil. I would plant the ground with corn or potatoes I prefer corn one or two years. It should be highly manured, and not a single weed allowed to go to seed. When the. corn- crop is gathered, prepare the ground in the fall for the next year's crop of onions, by putting on twenty cart- loads of well-rotted manure, fifty bushels to the load, pel acre. It should be free from weed-seed, and ploughed in deep, and not harrowed in the fall I have ploughed my ground both spring and fall, manuring at the same time. It is not more than half the work to prepare ground for the seed, that was ploughed in the fall, and the yield is as good, if not better Hog- manure is the best, but any kind of strong manure will do. All manure should be free from seed. Manure, either fine or coarse, should be ploughed in deep. If ashes are to be had, put on one to two hundred bushels to the acre. The crop of onions will pay for them the first year, and they will last from five to eight years. Bone dust Is a fine manure. The ground in the spring should be prepared for the seed as soon as it is dry, by harrowing with tooth and brush, until the ground ia level. It will not do to have the ground too mellow. It should be rather hard to have the onions bottom well It needs to be very mellow, about an inch deep, and raked off level It requires from three to four pounds of seed to the acre. I sow them by a machine made very simple, and costing from two to four dollars. It sows two rows at once, twelve inches apart, the wheels being six inches from the hoppers that drop the seed. The first row must be perfectly straight, which will be a guide to the second, and so on. To cover them up, I take a hoe that stands in weli and push it along over the line where the seed is. When they get up so that I can see the rows, I commence hoeing them, and as soon as there are any weeds to be seen, weed them ; and continue to hoe and weed as long as there is a weed to be seen. It will not pay to sow a piece of onions if they are not taken care of, aud no crop pays better if well tended. There are some farmers that lose one third or more of their crop by not taking proper care of them, and le* 22 now ro KAISE ONIONS. ting lie weeds grow after the onions have attained some size. If one intends to raise them year after year on the same piece of ground, (and they will grow as well by heavy manuring as they did the first year,) he must ot let a single weed go to seed. If the right kind of seed and plenty of manure are used, and the ground cultivated as it ought to be, we may expect from five to eight hundred bushels to the acre. If the ground is free from weeds as it should be, when the crop is gathered in, so much the better for the next year's crop. When most of the onions get ripe, I let them dry one or two days, and when dry rake them in windrows, and when little damp, either at night or morning, pile them up in small heaps, and let them stand till they have no moisture in the top. When it comes a drying day, spread them out, and when perfectly dry, cart them in. They can be kept from two to six feet thick if they are well cured, and put where the air can circulate around them, till very cold weather, and then they must be kept from being frozen too much. It senmed to me the hardest work that I had ever done, to weed the first piece I planted, and it cost more to cultivate my first two rods of giound, than it has an acre since, owing to the ground being full of foul seed. Onions are the most profitable crop that a farmer can raise, and the quantity has been increased from three hundred to nine hundred bushels per acre, and I think one thousand bushels or more can be grown by proper cultivation. Red onions are now wholesaling at three dollars per barrel, and white ones at four dol lars per barrel. One year I sold my onions at one dol- lar a bushel, and sent them to market in the fall be- fore housing. I have sold red onions as high as five dollars a barrel, and white ones at six dollars. There has been no time within twelve years, but that oniong would bring two dollars a barrel in the course of the year. There is ono thing that farmers have to com- plain of, and that is, it costs us so much before the onions get into the consumers' hands. It costs us about twenty cents a barrel to send them to New-York, and they are sold to wholesale dealers, who make from twenty-five to fifty cents a barrel, and so it costs us from sixty cents to one dollar per barrel before they get into the consumers' hands. JSf*. XIII. BY LOUIS STRADER, GREEN CO,, KY. POTATO ONIONS are the only variety much cultivat- ed in the Green river coantry. They are a very pro- lific, mild, arid well-flavored vegetable. The sots grow from the roots, numbering from four to fifteen from each ouion, and are much larger than the sets from the red onions; they are not quite so hardy, however. Select tho largest au- best-shaped sets to raise from. They attain their full size the first year after planting. To raise the bet*, select large, sound, and well-formed , CULTIVATION, ETC. I much prefer plant- ing in the r&ll ; they come much earlier, the yield is larger, and they are safer in the ground after planting than elsewhere through the winter. Plant about the middle of October for this latitude, earlier farther uortb, and later as you go south. Select a situation geutly sloping to the south, a rich, dry, loamy soil, nigh iy manured with well-rotted stable-manure. Plough or spade up the land some nine inches deep, when the ground is in good working condition. Avoid working Ifce land when too wet, as it causes it to bake, which IB a great drawback to the growth of onions. Pulver- ize the soil thoroughly with a hand-rake, by drawing it back and forth until all the clods are broken fine Out two sticks 18 inches long, and tie one to each end* of a line, which should be as long as the piece of ground intended for planting, and with it mark off the ground in rows 18 inches asunder, using the stioks at each end of the line as a measure, sticking them down to hold the line well stretched. Scrape out the drills by the side of the rope deep enough to hold the onions, so that the top may be even with the surfaco of the ground. Then place the large onions in the drills nine inches from each other, and the sets six inches from centre to centre, and fill up the drill with well-rotted stable-manure. Next, draw up the fine earth so as to make the drill in a ridge, in order to protect the onions from too much freezing. This ridge should be scraped off in the spring, when they begin to grow If the fall should be favorable, they will soon come up ; they should be covered up before hard weather sets in, with corn-stalks, hay, or something of the sort, to protect them during winrer. They should be uncovered in the spring after the ground ceases to freeze. After this, they should be well worked with a hoe once a week, until they are fully grown, taking care not to disturb the roots too much. About this time the earth should be scraped from them, to uncover the top of the oniona, that they may be exposed to the sun, which will ripen them. The earth should not be scraped from them until somo of the tops begin to fall over on the ground. Let them remain in this condition until the tops are dead and nearly dry. They should then be pulled up, and EXPERIENCE OF PRACTICAL QBOWEBS. tied in buncnes, and hung up in an open shed, until thoroughly seasoned ; or if the crop is large, they may be spread thin in au open left, until seasoned, when they may be barrelled up and sent to market The above mode of cultivation applies to sets as well as to the grown onions. The sets should be taken up aiwl treated iu the same manner as the large oniona If they are not planted in the fall, they should be planted in the spring as early as the ground will bear working, observing the same directions as in fall planting ; omitting the covering of them. In the northern and middle parts of the United States, sets, feud other onions designed for planting, should be kept io a A-nnu and dry cellar, boxed up and mixed with dry dirt that is, when they are act planted in the fall. RED ONIONS are not so prolific, are very strong and highly scented, but are hardy, ind keep well through the winter. The sets grow on the top, and have to be well propped up before they ripen, or they will fall down aud rot in wet weather. The same mode of cultivation is to be observed with these, as laid down for the potato onion. SHALLOTS are a small variety, which grow in large bunches. The roots resemble garlic, but are much larger. They have nearly gone out of use in this region. Their cultivation is about the same as already laid down for the other varieties. No. XIV. BY R. I, PLYMOUTH CO., MASS. Wrra the onion-gror er, soil and position are the first and by no means the least important. You can make them grow on almost any soil under favorable circum- stances, but to cultivate successfully, which is the great object, it is necessary that the soil should partake largely of vegetable deposit, be mellow, free from small stones, aud lie as near level as you can have it, so as to oreveut copious showers from washing out the seed wnich I have kuo*n occur on slightly-inclined grades. "When the spot has been selected, put in your plough a foot to sixteen inches deep, in the fall, giving the frost an opportunity to operate for you in pulverizing or fining up your soil, which is very necessary, as I have found in the course of many years' experience. As soon as the frost is out in the spring, don't lose a single day after the soil is sufficiently dry to work pui in the plough not over four or five inches deep, haul on your dressing, and harrow in until it is fully mixed with the soil. I will here insert a bit of my experience. At the outset of my onion-cultivation, I had a man in my employ whose father owned the farm previous to my coming into ?os8e8sion. He was positive I could not raise onicnf on that place, as all his ancestors had failed, after repeated trials iu most favored localities, and utmost care throughout. Deciding to try for myself, 1 directed him to plough a garden, part of it for onions, only a few inches deep. On examining the piece, and inquiring of him, I found the whole ploughed as deep as the plough would run, giving as reason that it could be spaded up easier. I bad two tons of stones loaded upon a wide-felloed cart, and driven over the piece until it was thoroughly packed down, put on the dressing, and worked it in with a horse-cultivator, planted eleven bv eleven inches apart, kept well stirred through the season, and for my labor had forty-seven bushels and three pecks of onions, from seven and a half rods of ground, or at the rate of a thou- sand bushels per acre. If you plough or work your soil deep, the roots will consequently strike deep, and hold on so as to afford you a bountiful crop of butt-necks, or scallions, as my boys call them. I think this the cause of the failure of most persons who are not suc- cessful I have found in cases of mildew that have come under my observation, that those portions of the field were the most affected where the soil was the most mellow. The quality of dressing used is quite important, and the experience of those who have been in the business is of some value. For the region round Naragansett Bay, R. I., the cultivators of onions prefer a compost of strong hog-pen manure to any other. It should be well pulverized in the field, where it is necessary to have it incorporated with the soil in as fine a state as possible, which will save much after-labor. Do the best you can, you will find enough refuse stuff to rake off. You need not fear doing this part of the job too well. Some apply good fine sea-weed in the fall, and plough in; others use fish, but these, as a general ihing, are not obtainable, however valuable. If your soil is rich, a yearly application of fifteen cords of hog- pen manure per acre will keep your piece producing indefinitely, as onions, unlike most other crops, im- prove or increase in product by replanting the same spot continuous years. There seems to be something valuable in the tops, leaves, roots, eta, left after a crop is taken off, that is of service to the growth of a suc- ceeding one. A few years since, I used frur hundred pounds of HOW TO ONIONS. Peruvian guano on one hundred rods of ground, where corn had been raised the previous season. Prom this piece I, or rather my boys, one ten, and the other not twelve, took four hundred bushels of onions. These were planted 11x51 inches. Whether like satisfactory results could have been obtained by repeating the ex- periment, I cau not say, as I have not had an oppor- tunity of testing the matter since. After your dress- ing is properly worked in, and ground well raked over, rou are ready for planting, which is done in various ways, according to the fancy or necessity of those who cultivate this crop. If you are purposing to bunch, you want more seed in the hills than if intended for oarreling or selling by the bushel The same is the case if you wish to obtain large-sized tubers, without so much regard for quantity. For a number of years, (thirteen I believe,) I planted a piece containing one hundred and sixty-six rods, 11x11 inches each way, calculating for six or eight seeds in a place, with satis- factory result* as to crop Unless the soil is very easily worked, and comparatively clear from weeds, I would not, for field-culture, recommend any thicker planting, as the fingers have to do the work of a hoe, which is fatiguing, and also requires much time. I have planted 11x5$ inches on clean land, but somehow did not find my interest in doing it, as more seed and more time was required in after cultivation, and not a satisfactory increase of crop. I have drilled with seed-drills in continuous rows ten inches asunder, plants within an inch or two. Time is saved in plant- ing, but I like the old method of putting down with the fingers, unless you have a very favorable piece for drilling in. I have dropped three fifths of an acre in a day, and have known those accustomed to it to drop an acre. Experiments will soon decide which method is best. If yonr soil is weedy, I would recommend covering seed with sand, unless the soil is already too Bandy. A table spoonful of white sand marks the bill, and you can work the earth sooner than if not landed, and again, the seed wili germinate quicker, getting start of the weeds. Quite a number of varieties of the onion present themselves from which to make a selection, only a few of which I can speak of from experience. For field culture r or distant markets, the R. L red or Weathersfield onion is con- sidered decidedly the best, as it yields as well as any, nd keeps decidedly the best, which is one great item of value, as all will testify who have dealt in the article. The Danvers onion, a yellow variety, is quite popular among growers in the vicinity of Boston, and they claim for it superior flavor as well as good keep- Itg qualities; yet I could never have them as sound In spring as the red onion. The white or silver-skin onion is a favorite with marketmen and consumers, from their being nice-looking, and of superior flavor hot so strong as the red. A serious objection to these W their liability to decav and the necessity, of course. for a ready market and quick consumption The threi varieties I have named are all sufficient for you to select from, according as your market may require. As soon as your onions show themselves above the surface, commence hoeing and weeding, as the weeds will surely give you great trouble if you do not Don't allow a weed in the hill if you wish for success The frequency of going over your fields will depend upon the rains and foulness of your soil you may fix it in your mind that you can not stir the soil too often. Leisure moments can be profitably spent on an onion- bed. The time of gathering the crop is important, and re- quires good judgment as well as experience. Portions of the hills as well as portions of the field will ripen earlier than others. 7 the first ripe are suffered to remain until the others that are not ripe are dead, the first will have sent out new roots, which disfigure them much, and the interior of the onion will com- mence growing again, and send up sprouts if time enough is allowed ; if not, these are the first to sprout and rot, when gathered in. I keep a good watch of my crop, and as soon as the first indications of a second- growth are manifest, I pull all up and lay in rows for curing and topping. They should remain on the ground until the tops are all dead, (except the bull- necks,) before topping, as they are much more liable to sprout and rot, if cut while the tops have sap in them. It is found economical in pulling to lay three rows or drills together upon the middle row, roots up froia the ground as much as possible, with the alternate row reversed thus: 6 6 9 9 so that when you commence topping, you take the onion in your left hand, which will bring the top in place for the knife or sheep-shears, (which are often used,) and the onion dropped in the space between the two rows, thus bringing six rows or drills into one. If any weeds are on the ground previous to topping, hoe them up in spaces where your onions art to lay, rake all off clean, for you may have to stir up your onions several times previous to getting in, which can be quickly done with a rake, if no weeds are in the way. Cut the tops about three inches long for bunching, and one inch for barreling. Cutting any shorter than this, increases the chances of decay. Many shippers prefer having tops two inches long, and all the refuse leaves also, if perfectly dry, as on board of vessel and in confined places they sweat freely, and the tops and dry leaves absorb a large quantity o( moisture, and thus in a measure prevent heating and decay. If you have not a ready sale for your crop, and. find you must store them for a time, don't put them in the cellar, but into some dry room above ground, that will allow you to spread them, not ovei two and a half feet deep, and as much lews as you can EXPERIENCE OF PRACTICAL GROWERS. 2.-) During the cold winter of 1856-57, I kept two hundred bushels of onions in a wood-house, that was covered with matched boards. On the inside of stud- ding I tacked up some old boards, and filled the space between them and outside of building with salt hay, not to prevent freezing, but lo avoid sudden thawing. I covered the onions with old pieces of carpets, bags, etc. They remained until some time in April, when I took them to market as sound as when put in, not losing more than a bushel. Never allow them to be stirred until you are sure the frost is out, for it will surely ruin them. Neither uncover in the least, until they are entirely free from frost I may as well suggest here the propriety of every jnion-grower raising his own seed -as good seed is all important to success, and you can not be sure of getting it from seed men. In selecting onions for seed, take medium-sized, round, or deep ones, and by per- sisting in this practice, you will find that your onions will more and more partake of this character, weigh more and keep better than the flat or oval-shaped. Onions are required by law to weigh fifty-six pounds to the bushel, and flat saucer-shaped onea will not Tome up to tho standard. If you wish to have early onions for marketing, sow in September, cover the bed, when the frost first hard- ens the ground, with sea-weed, or any other non-con- ductor, to prevent thawing in winter, uncover in spring, as soon as you find the frost out, and you have onions with two months the start of those put in, in the spring. There is a variety called Potato Onion, that is early and much used by market-gardeners. They grow from planting the tuber, attaching themselves around the one planted. 1 have had marvelous increase from this variety. As it may not be uninteresting to a beginner, I will state the result of my experience in cultivating onions for successive years. In 1836, 1 took up a place for onions containing an acre and six rods. Soil good, some weeds, and some small stones to be worked out I planted this piece over a dozen years, drilling 11x11 inches all the time. My smallest crop was 357 bushels, and my largest 723 bushels, and no season under 500 bushels, except the one I have named aa the least, which was a very wet season, and the crop scalded or mildewed. The season I obtained the 723 bushels, a friend of mine had over 1700 bushels from two acres, which he planted in drills 11x5$ inches* These crops were uuusu<*lly large. I also kept an ac- count of expenses on crop up to time of sale. In thif account I charged the crops with every item of ex- pense, interest on land, dressing, labor, tools, etc, eta, and found that I could raise onions for about 17 cents per bushel Some seasons they cost me more, others less, according to yield of crop, or extra amount of lab >r to keep clean in wet seasons. They never cost me over twenty, nor under thirteen cents per bushel As to price obtained, I am not so well able to state, as I often sold in different places, and at different times, and account of sales going in with other arti- cles. I never sold a crop, however, under thirty-one cents, and have often sold for a dollar per bushel The papers report at this time onions in New-York at two dollars and a half per barrel. From the above statement, the conclusion is reached, that I have found the cultivation of onions profitable, and that any one may do the same under favorable circumstances. No. XV. BY SAMUEL BOUTON, FAIRFIELD CO., CT. VARIETIES. Onions wti grow on almost any soil that is not too dry. The kind of onions which can be raised with the most advantage will depend on the time when it is designed to market the crop. If in- tended for winter, the variety known as the black onion, will be found the best, aa they are very solid and firm, and their keeping qualities can cot be sur- passed. If for a fall market, that variety known as the Wethersfleld Red is better, as the yield will be some- what greater, and they will be ripe a few days earlier. if for an early market, potato onions should be rat ed. The advantages of the potato onion over the other cind, are, first, an early market and the use of the ground for some other crop, after they are off; and tecond, a high price, and one third less labor in their cultivation. The disadvantages are, first, a great out- lay is required for seed ; and second, it is difficult to keep the seed during the winter. I would not recom- mend them for field cultivation, unless on a small scale. Aa the mode of cultivation for these different kinds is essentially the same, one description will answer for the whole. SEED. The seed should be procured of some reliable seed-grower, if possible out of the immediate neighborhood, as seed brought from a distance will do better than that which is grown on tne ground, where the crop is to be raised. If this can not be done, the seed may be raised on Jie spot Sound, firm roots should be selected for seed. They should be put in the ground as soon as the frost is out They should bo set in rows, twelve inches apart one way, by about six tb^ other. Light poles or twine may be ror 50W TO RAISE ONIONS. through the rows to support the stalks, otherwise they will be liable to be blown down by high winds, which will injure the seed. The seed should be gathered when fully ripe. It may be separated from the husk by rubbing between a good pair of leather mittens, or, if the quantity is large, it may be threshed by the flail. The dust may now be separated by the fan. The seed should then be put into water sufficient to cover it, when the blasted, if any, will swim. These should be thrown away ; the remainder may be carefully dried and put up for use. Care should be taken in selecting seed, to procure a good article, as this is the rock on which the hopes of the cultivator are frequently shipwrecked. If the seed be shrunk, scallions may be the only product. Old seed is not so likely to grow as new, but if it must be planted, it should be soaked a few hours in water. They should be planted as soon as the ground is sufficiently dry. The middle or latter part of April is in this latitude about the time. A lato crop is more dependent on the weather than an early one. If the planting is delayed till the middle of May, a croc of scallions may be the only product. MANURE. The best manure for onions, is night-soil. Twenty loads, of twenty-five bushels each, will d for an acre of ground. If this can not be had, somethioq: from the hog-pen, at the rate of thirty loads to the acre, will be found an excellent manure. If the ground is heavy and clayey, a compost may be made of nnfennented horse-manure and muck. It may be put together ID about equal quantities, and should be placed in alternate layers, first a layer of manure, three or four inches thick, spread on the ground, then a coat of muck, about the same thickness, and proceed hi this way, till the whole is finished. The heat aris- ing from the manure will rapidly decompose the muck, while the muck will retain the ammonia arising from the manure, and thus both will be improved. In about six weeks it will be fit for use. Thirty loads to the acre will be a good dressing. If the ground is sandy and gravelly, a compost should be made of muck and unleashed wood-ashes, at the rate of about half a bushel of ashes for twenty- five bushels of muck ; it should be placed in alternate layers. In two or three months it will be fit for use. If it should be shoveled over once or twice, it will be improved : forty loads will be sufficient for an acre. If ] none of these can be had, fine well-rotted barnyard manure should be applied at the rate of not less than thirty loads to the acre. The manure should be spread evenly over the ground, and ploughed immediately in, six or eight inches deep. The subsoil plough should be run in every furrow, sixteen or eighteen inches deep The ground should now be ploughed with a surface-plough, ten or twelve inches deep. If two hundred pounds of the best Peruvian guano be now aowed on and harrowed in, it will c^ive the plants a fine start. The ground should be raked with a gardta rake, and made as level as possible. PLANTING AND CULTIVATION. The sc>-d may now be planted ; four pounds of seed will be sufficient for an acre. The rows should bo twelve inches apart, The drill should be so constructed as to plant the seed in hills, four inches apart in the rows, and three or four seeds in a place. This will be found more conve- nient for hoeing than a continuous drill, and the yield will be as good. The seed should be covered about half an inch deep, either by the drill, or by passing the hoe lightly over the rows. As soon as the plants can be seen, they should be hoed. This may be done if the ground is free from weeds, by drawing a small hand-cultivator between them ; or, if the ground is weedy, the hoe must be used. The ground should next be stirred around the roota of the plants. A small hoe, with four prongs on one side, and a narrow edge on the other, will be found very convenient. These are made of malleable iron, and are sold at six cents each. If the ground is free from weeds, four hoeings may be sufficient. If the crop appear sluggish in the early stages of its growth, a liquid manure may be prepared by dissolving one hundred pounds of Peruvian Guano in water, and sprinkling it on with a watering-pot. This will be sufficient for an acre of ground. At the second hoeing, carrots may be drilled between th<* ro ' before ploughing, will well pay. If your land is quite clayey, leave out the ashea I think the coal-dust and salt, besides very much quickening the growth of these vegetables, keep off the maggot-fly. Go into store-cellars, where they have sold fish and meat, and they will give you the salt and brine. An<7 when you are about it, get all they can spare. Then if you have any to spare, put it on your muck heap, fo/ other crops. If you are at a loss what kind of onions to cultivate, inquire for the greatest yieldere and the quickest to sell. Then the onions you wish to keep for your own use, trace them up and bang them in a dry place until well seasoned, then hang them in the cellar-way for all winter. If you have any to sell, take a fair specimen of them ; then go and show them where you wish to sell But by all means do not let * them remain long on your hands. If you keep them long in heaps, they will rot And then you had better have any thing else. Let them slide at the then present prices. You can well afford them for fifty cents a bushel, but you wUJ oftener get a dollar. For your seed potato-onions, you should have from two dollars to two and a hah pel bushel The seed of the top -onions I have usually sold for from four to five dollars per bushel I hav sent out barrels of this seed to distant States, though I have none now to sell Of the top-onions, I have raised at the rate of seven hundred bushels per acre. And one of my neighbors, who followed my directions, raised at the rate of eight kundred per acre. But I have never seen any kind that yields so well as the Wethersfleld reds. If you wish to get good onions in June, sot out any kind of an old onion, and when the top begins to form as if to go to seed, cut off the main stalk, and it will bottom. But these bottoms will never winter, but rot Eat them green, or supply the market. If you want good, new, fresh onions hi May, go to the woods, and search hi low places, and there gather leeks. Or if you prefer it, raise cives, which we the lowest species of the onion. 30 HOW TO RAISE ONIONS. ONION GROWING IN THE SOUTHERN STATES. It is a common impression that onions can not be successfully raised from seeds, or " black seeds," as growers term it, much south of latitude 40. In localities south of this, it is asserted that a crop can only be grown with certainty by the use of sets. That a Southern climate is not unfavorable to the onion, is shown by the fine specimens sent from Spain and Portugal to the English markets, and of late the crop on the market at the earliest possible date. The conditions of success with the Southern onion crop are the same as at the North. The soil must be light and loamy, as free as possible from weeds, and be highly manured. As at the North, the same land is continued in onions for an indefinite number of years, making a change occasionally in the kind of manure applied. The cow pea, with its abundance years to our own large cities. The onions grown in of succulent foliage, allows the Southern grower to Bermuda are so fine as to be regarded in our cities as supply the soil with a large amount of vegetable a distinct variety, while New Mexico and Mexico matter. As soon as the onions are off, the soil is excel all the localities mentioned in the great size, sown to cow peas. The pea vines, usually killed by combined with tenderness and mild flavor of their I frost, are allowed to lie until the first part of Decem- onions. The assertion that onions can not be grown from seeds in the Southern States, is met by the fact that large quantities are annually sent from Georgia and other States to the Northern markets. Though a share of these are grown from sets, the larger por- tion are from the seed. Dr. A. Oemler, near Savan- nah, Ga., reports having raised the "Giant Rocca" ber, when they are turned under, burying them deeply. Not only do the pea vines enrich the soil, but they form such a dense mat that weeds can get no foothold. The time for sowing onion seed near Savannah is about the first of January, which gives the pea vines an opportunity to decay before the seeds are put in. By sowing at this time, the young onions onion at the rate of ten hundred and fifty bushels to j escape the heavy rains, and the severe cold which the acre, a yield from the seed that would be re- markably large in any locality. Probably the failures with onions from seed have been due more to late sowing than to any other cause. Early sowing is very necessary at the North, and is still more so at the South. The roots of the onion do not descend into the soil very far, and the crop is one of those most disastrously affected by drouth. In the vicinity of Norfolk, Va., and in Maryland, the "Potato Onion" is grown almost ex- clusively, and this variety can only be grown by planting the sets, or small bulbs. In Georgia, the " Red Wethersfield " and the " Yellow Danvers " are preferred. Some of the recent varieties from the south of Europe are productive, but are either too small or too large to suit our markets. Those who raise onions for the Northern markets, find that their product brings the best prices when it comes in just as the supply from Bermuda ceaees, and before that of Northern growth is ready. Hence the time of sowing is regulated with a view to this, and it is not desirable in this case, as with other vegetables, to place sometimes occurs, to which those sown two months or more earlier are exposed, while the time of growth, owing to more favorable weather, is made much shorter. The cultivation of the growing crop presents no' features peculiar to the Southern States. There, as elsewhere, success depends upon thorough and prompt weeding. The smaller the weeds, when hand weeding in the rows is done, the less the chance of injury to the onions by disturbing their roots in pulling up a large weed, the root of which has taken possession of the soil. The onions indicate that they have ceased to grow and are mature, by the falling over of the tops. Usu- ally the whole crop is not marketed at once, but suc- cessive shipments are made. For this reason, the field is gone over several times, at each time pulling those bulbs, the tops of which have fallen. They may be packed at once, or be left on the ground for a few days, in order to dry off The tops are cut off with a sharp knife, leaving an inch or so of neck, and packed in crates holding a bushel each. ONION SETS. An onion set is an onion raised from seed and | which has ripened while very small. This result is pro- duced by sowing the seed thickly. The young bulbs start as usual, but as a dozen or more are struggling for the nutriment usually given to a single bulb, they fail to increase in size, and come to maturity while yet very small. When these sets are planted out, they are under more favorable conditions, and at once increase in size, and complete the growth which was arrested in the first season. Onion sets should be as small as possible, as a greater number are contained in a given measure; not only this, but the smaller they are, the less risk is there that they will run up to seed. They vary from half an inch in diameter down to the size of a pea. i There are several methods of growing sets, but all have the same end in view, the crowded condition of the bulbs. One plan is to stretch a line, and drill in six rows of seed at an inch and a half or two inches apart. The drill is set to drop five or six seeds to each inch of row. This will give thirty to thirty-six seeds to each lineal inch of the bed of six rows. At a sufficient distance from this to allow of the use of the cultivator, usually thirty inches, another bed of six EXPERIENCE OF PRACTICAL GROWERS. 31 rows is sown, and so on. The land will thus be laid off in narrow beds of six crowded rows, each sepa- rated from the next by an alley, which can be kept clean by the use of the cultivator. The beds them- selves must be kept free from weeds by the use of a narrow weeding hoe, supplemented hy luml-weeding. Another plan is to mark the land in drills^ nine inches apart, by the use of a marker. Each seventh r<>\\ is not sown, which leaves an eighteeu-inch path !M t ween every two beds of six rows each. The seed is sown very thickly in the drills, using about thirty pounds to the acre. Unless the crop is kept clean while growing, it will be a total loss. As with large unions, the sets show that they are ripe by the wiiher- iiiir of the tops. They are usually dug by running a tn>wd under them and throwing them upon a sieve, of the proper size to free them from the soil and re- tain the bulbs. It is very difficult to keep sets in good condition during the winter. Before they are housed at all, they should be exposed to the sun and air for a few days, covering them at night. They must then be stored in an airy loft, in layers not over three or four inches thick. When freezing weather is at hand, the sets are brought together in heaps, and covered with straw or with mats. Owing to the difficulty in keep- ing the sets, it is better to plant them in the fall. Land for raising onions from sets is enriched and prepared in the same manner as for sowing the seed. The rows are marked at the desired distances apart, usually ten inches, and the sets are planted two or three inches apart in the row. The sets arc pressed into the fine, mellow soil by the use of the thumb and finger, always taking care to place them with the root end down. The work is finished by going over the rows with a wooden rake. RAISING ONION SEED. While onion seed, if properly kept, will often ger- minate nearly as well when two years old, it is not safe to depend upon seed that is over a year old. In either case, the seed should be tested, as all of that which is only a year old will not germinate, and sometimes a very large share will be abortive. Fifty or a hundred seeds should be counted out, and either planted in a pot or box of soil, or placed in a folded cloth or paper, between two plates, where they can be kept moist and warm. The percentage of good seed in a given lot being ascertained, the drill should be set to sow a sufficient number of seeds to make sure of a good stand. The freshness and vitality of the seed are of great importance, but it is equally important that the seed should come from a good stock. Seed raised from onions planted out promiscuously, or even from the ' l culls " left after selecting all the best bulbs for mar- ket, may look well and germinate freely, but the crop will be far from satisfactory, and will be likely to have an undue share of " scallions." For this no test can be applied, and we can only rely upon the reputation of the grower cf the seeds. While there are some growers of onion seed who have a reputation for the quality of their product, and endeavor to maintain it, there is much seed in the market which one runs a great risk in buyinir. Un- less the onion-grower can be sure of getting seeds true to their kind, and of a strain likely to produce few scallions, he had far better raise his own seed. Very few are aware how readily the onion may be modified by a few years of careful selection. It is well known that the more nearly globular an onion is in shape, other thini:* being equal, the greater tin- number of bu-hels that can be grown to the acre, [f we have a variety that is desirable in every other jv- xcept that the bulbs are too flat, we can in a fe.v years develop it into a globular onion. Eacb.suc- year. the bulbs which show the slightest <: parture from the general flat form are selected for seed. This, at first, may be almost imperceptible ; but there will be variations, however insignificant, and these must be encouraged. By selecting each year the least flat bulbs, we soon may be able to se- I lect those the most round, and ultimately have those ! that are quite globular. An onion, to keep well, should have a very short neck, and at maturity the bulb should be firm and solid around and at the base of the neck. A well- known Connecticut seed-grower of the writer's ac- quaintance worked for several years to reduce and improve the neck, and the results were most striking. In the first place, the grower of onion seed should have in view his ideal onion ; i. e., fix in his mind the kind of onion he would have, and, in selecting his bulbs for seed, choose only those which show the nearest approach to that ideal. Onions set out for seed do not need a rich soil, as i too much manure is said to diminish the fertility of the flowers, and cause many to blight. The bulbs selected for seed may be kept until spring, but it is much better to plant them out in the fall. They should be put out some weeks before really cold weather sets in, in order that they may form nmts and get well established before the ground freezes. Early in October is a good time in the Northern States. By planting at this time the job is out of the way ; there is no difficulty about keeping the seed onions through the winter, and there is no j danger that some one may take si fancy to carry such j onions to the kitchen. The onions for seed may be set out in rows far enough apart to work with a horse-cultivator, or, if to he kept clean by hand, the rows may be twelve to eighteen inches apart. Open a furrow about six inches deep, set in the onions six or eight inches apart in the f n rrow, and cover with the hoe. In spring, use the cultivator or hoe as soon as the soil is dry enough, and keep down the weeds until the crop is ripe. The cluster of seeds is quite heavy, and as the stalks are HOW TO RAISE ONIONS. from three to five feet high, according to the variety, they are apt to be prostrated by a wind, and many of the seeds wasted. To prevent this, drive stakes at each end of the row, and every eight or ten feet of its length. Pass some cheap twine along each side of the row, making it fast to the stakes. The twine should be within a few inches of the seed clusters. The seed is known to be mature when the capsules or pods lose their green color and turn yellowish ; when some of the pods break open, the heads in which this occurs may be cut. If the crop ripens unevenly, it may be necessary to go over it two or three times, and cut those that are ready. As some of the seed will shell out and be lost, it is well to receive the clusters in a bucket, or in a basket in which a cloth is laid. In cutting, leave six or eight inches" of the stalk at- I tached to the head ; the partly-matured seeds will i ripen up much better than if the stem were cut close. \ Spread the seed clusters upon a tight floor of an airy 1 loft. If the floor is not tight, spread a barn sheet or other cloth, to allow the scattered seeds to be saved. When the pods are quite dry, they are to be thrashed, and th% seeds winnowed by running them through a fanning-mill at least twice. After the mill will re- move nothing more, the seeds are placed, a few pounds at a time, in a bucket or tub of water, stirring I for a short time ; allow the good seed to settle, and | gently pour off the water with the chaff and imperfect | seeds which float upon the surface. The seeds are | then to be spread thinly on boards or on sieves, te ! dry, and only stored away when quite free from 1 dampness. "RARE-RIPES "-TOP OR TREE ONIONS-POTATO ONIONS. Many are fond of green or unripe onions, which are eaten raw, usually sliced in vinegar. The market- gardeners near cities commonly sell a large share, if not all of their crop in the partly grown, immature state. When bunched in this condition, the onions bring a larger price than if they were allowed to ripen. Green onions of this kind are usually very strong and often hard. Much milder and more suc- culent green onions are produced as follows : When an onion is set out for seed, several leaves are pro- duced, and finally a flower stalk pushes up among them. As this leaf-growth, which takes place at the expense of the old bulb, goes on, a new bulb is at the same time formed by the lower parts of the leaves, and in the centre of the old bulb, and it is this new one which bears the flowers and seeds. Sometimes there are two or three of these small bulbs formed within an onion. If these young bulbs are pulled when the flower stalk first shows itself, or ! even before, they will be found vastly preferable to any other form of green onion. In New England, [ where they are often found in tho markets, these are known as " Rare-ripes " or " Rare-ripe Onions ;" but in New York the Shallot, a different species, is the first green onion in the market. Any onions that have | sprouted, or those too small to be salable are set out | in very early spring to produce rare-ripes. THE TOP OR TREE ONION. A number of plants are known in which there are varieties that bear a cluster of green leaves in the place of flowers. In one of the wild garlics, a com- mon weed of our fields, flowers are rarely produced, | but in their place is a cluster of minute bulbs. In the top-onion the same thing takes place, and instead of flowers, the stem bears a dense cluster of little onions, j from the size of a boy's marble, downwards. When I these small bulbs are set out in the spring, they in- j crease in size and form a large handsome onion. This onion, when planted out the next year, will produce a crop of small bulbs and so on. It possesses no ad- vantage over ordinary onions, and is cultivated mainly as a curiosity. THE POTATO ONION. This is a variety of the onion which has completely I lost the habit of producing flowers and seeds ; it does not even push up a flower stem. Under the erroneous impression that it was intro- duced into England from Egypt it is sometimes called i the "Egyptian Onion;'' in this country it is often known as the "English Multiplier," and " Under- ground Onion " is still another name for it. It is a medium-sized, yellowish-brown onion, with a rather i stronger flavor than the common kinds. If a large Potato Onion be planted in spring, it will produce a cluster, sometimes as many as a dozen, of smaller | bulbs, varying in size, from a filbert, upwards. These small onions, when planted next year, will each in- crease in size to form a large bulb. The generations thus alternate. One-year offsets, or small bulbs, are produced, and the next year these grow to the full size. Ordinarily it would take two years to grow an onion of this kind, but in practice, some of the bulbs in a cluster of small ones, are often large enough for use, and when a small bulb is set out, it, besides growing to a large bulb, often produces several small ones also. So often does this occur, that, in cultiva- tion on a small scale, it is not necessary to grow a lot of offsets especially for "seed," as enough are usually produced, attached to the large bulbs. This onion is very hardy and may remain in the ground all winter, It is also early. In some localities, especially near Norfolk, Va., this variety is used as the market crop, to the exclusion of those from seeds. EXPERIENCE OF PRACTICAL GROWERS. RAISING ONIONS. BY A CONNECTICUT SEED-GROWER. The reason why many do not succeed in their first uttt nipt at raising onions is because they do not select ground which has been suitably prepared in the cul- tivation of the two or three previous crops. It is a mistake that onions do better, year after year, on the j same ground, simply because onions follow onions. It i- the higher manuring, more thorough pulveriza- tion and mixture of the soil and manures, and the cleaner and more careful cultivation required every year for onions, than is given to any other crop, that tit ir round better for them. Onions will undoubtedly succeed better many years on the same ground than most other vegetables, but there is a limit to this success. In Wetbersfield, Conn., formerly so famous for its onions, the cultiva- tion has greatly declined on account of the diminished product to the acre. The onions grown there now in many of the old gardens are small ; they start quickly and irrow vigorously the forepart of the season, but suddenly meet with a check when they should go on growing, even if there be no signs of smut or blast, and ripen too early to attain their former size and productiveness. Much larger crops are now grown in other towns. One great trouble among beginners on new ground is that the onions will not bottom and ripen at the usual time, but continue to grow all the season and produce too many " stiff necks " or scallions. There are several causes for this. One is, the land, which is too poor to commence cultivation upon, is heavily manured and plowed deep, bringing the poor subsoil to the surface. The seed in such soil comes up weak, if at all, and the onions grow very slowly until they get hold of the decomposed manure, when it is too late in the season for them to mature. Late sowing, a wet season, and foreign or bad seed, are other causes of scallions. If onions do not begin to bottom before September rains, they never will. The onion is not so particular about the character of the original soil as many suppose. Good crops are obtained on almost any soil, not too wet or too dry, except a stiff clay, light sand, or hungry gravel. It is essential, however, that the land should have been made rich by the thorough incorporation of manures and in clean tillage for at least two years from the sod. Corn, and then potatoes, carrots, or beets, are good preparatory crops. One or two heavily manured tobacco crops admirably fit the ground for onions ; old vegetable gardens are perhaps the best, except where cabbages have been grown, which are the worst of all crops to precede onions. Heavy or rather clayey, moist, not wet, loam, generally produces the largest onions. If coarse manure is to be used, spread on twenty to thirty loads to the acre late in the fall, say, about the middle of November, and plow it in not very deep ; or use one ton of fish guano, spread on after plowing and harrow it in. If raw fish is put on in the spring, the onions will continue to grow until too late to ripen. In the spring, as soon as the ground will work, plow four inches deep, and spread on a good dressing of fine compost, or three hundred pounds of Peruvian guano or superphosphate of lime, and harrow it in well ; back harrow and harrow again, and if not smooth enough, dress with rakes. When not manured in the fall, fine hog-pen or stable ma- nure, free from grass and weed seeds, should be plowed in in the spring and the guano or other fer- tilizers harrowed in. Every farmer and gardener should have a reel and line, and a marking rake. They will save a great many steps in laying out ; besides, the straight and uniform rows enable the workmen to accomplish a great deal more in cultivating and weeding with the modern hand-weeding implements. The Reel below may be made of wood, though iron (which may be bought) is preferable. When made of wood it consists of a square frame with projecting top and bottom pieces with holes through the centres to insert a stake. It is turned by one of the sides ex- REEL AND LINE. tending through the top piece for . handle. The other side should extend a couple of Inches through the bottom piece to hold the line when run off. In the figure the handle is shown as inserted separately, which is not necessary ; the projection above referred to is not shown. A shorter stake will do for the other end of the line. Common three-stranded cord, about a quarter of an inch thick, is the most suitable for the line. To construct a Marking Rake, make the head three feet ten inches long by two inches square. 34 HOW TO RAISE ONIONS. Bore four three-fourth-incb holes fourteen inches apart, commencing two inches from the ends ; one hole in the centre; and holes at twelve, fifteen, six- teen and a half and eighteen inches each side of it. Make four teeth six inches long, an inch thick, and round them at the points. Secure them with a pin or key by the tops so they can be easily changed and ad- justed to the different widths. The handle of the marker should be six feet long, split, and spread so as to form braces where it is fastened to the head. Another form of marker is shown below, in which the teeth are not movable ; they are fixed at the de- sired distances, on both sides of the head. The land being prepared for sowing, stick down the stake, run off the line, and lay it where it is desired to commence. Adjust the marking rake to fourteen inches, draw the outside tooth carefully by the line, and follow back and forth in the last mark until completed. After the ground is marked off, it should lie a little while for the surface to dry before commencing to sow the seed. It covers much better, and the soil will not stick to the wheel of the seed-sower. The best onion-growers now do not use seed-sowers with DRILL MA.BKEB. a roller attached. It packs the earth so hard that it bakes after a heavy rain and very much impedes the growth of the young plant, and it is not so easy in weeding to break the crust formed when rolled down flat as when the seed is covered by rakes or a light drag. It is of the utmost importance to get good seed not only good, strong-growing seed, but seed that has been raised from good-sized, well-ripened onions. Imported seed cannot be trusted. The Second Early Red Onion is the best for a general crop. Sow four to six pounds to the acre say about three seeds to an inch or five seeds to two inches ; cover half an inch. As soon as the onions are up so they can be seen the length of the rows, run an onion-weeder or hand- cultivator through them, with the rakes adjusted so as not to throw the earth upon the young plants, and repeat often enough to prevent the growth of weeds. This will keep the ground perfectly clean between the rows. When they are just out of "the double," or when the first weeds begin to show, after cultivating, the ground should be raked lightly, diagonally across the rows wiih a common wooden hay rake. This will break the crust, destroy the weeds in the rows, and give the young plants a good start. Early in June, when the onions are four or five inches high, sow about three bushels to the acre of not very coarse salt broadcast over them. After the second weeding, spread on a good dressing of wood ashes. They require three or four weedings in the rows ; but if pains were taken in marking to keep the rows straight and uniform, the onion-weeder will run so close to them that there will be but few weeds to remove by hand. When the tops have fallen and nearly died down, draw four rows together with a wooden rake, raking iwo rows at a time toward the other two rows. Pull- forks are sometimes used, but in careless hands they pierce a good many onions. They may remain as raked together several days, or until sufficiently cured to strip ; cut the tops about an inch from the onions. If they are stripped while the tops are partly green, they do not keep so well. After stripping, remove them to an outbuilding on a dry day, with a north- west wind, and spread over the floor, not more than a foot thick ; turn them occasionally. To keep onions in quantity through the winter; just before they are likely to freeze, and when per- fectly dry, spread them eighteen inches thick on a tight floor in a barn or outbuilding which is under- pinned so as to keep the cold air from freezing them too severely next the floor. Leave a space of two feet next the walls of the building on all sides ; spread a sheet entirely over them, fill the space with fine hay, (rowen is the best) and tread it firmly ; then cover the whole about two feet thick with the same, and the onions will ordinarily keep well. They should never be disturbed while frozen, but as soon as the frost is completely out in the spring, take off the covering and spread them all over the room, opening the doors and windows to give air in pleasant weather. If they are not well covered and the thermometer should fall to fifteen degrees below zero, some of them may freeze to death, and be soft when thawed. White onions are the worst to keep, on account of their gathering moisture so readily. They should be kept spread quite thinly on the floor in the light and where the air can circulate freely. Just before winter sets in, spread a few inches of straw on a floor, and place the onions on it four or five inches thick ; let them freeze a little, then cover them with straw and let them remain undisturbed until spring ; or put them into peach crates aud cover with hay in the barn, or pile the crates next the walls of a cool cellar. Onions are generally one of the most profitable crops, often yielding four hundred to six hundred, sometimes eight hundred, bushels to the acre. IOW TO RAISE OXION8. THE ONION FLY. Anthomyia Ceparom. Is travelling through the county of Essex, N. Y., a