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LIGHT AT PORT CEDEIRA.

Also, that on and after the 15th day of July, 1862, a light will be exhibited from a light-house recently erected at Port Cedeira, in the province of Coruña, on the northwest coast of Spain.

The light will be a fixed white light, placed at an elevation of 88 feet above the mean level of the sea, and should be seen in clear weather from a distance of 9 miles.

The illuminating apparatus is dioptric, or by lenses of the sixth order.

The tower is hexagonal, 26 feet high, surmounted with a white lantern, and adjoins the keeper's dwelling. It stands on the point of Robaleria promontory, within the entrance to the port, southwest of the town, in latitude 43° 39' north, longitude 8° 5' 26" west of Greenwich.

By command of their lordships.

JOHN WASHINGTON, Hydrographer. HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE, Admiralty, London, May 20, 1862.

This notice affects the following admiralty charts: North Atlantic, eastern part, No. 2059; River Thames to Mediterranean, No. 1; Spain, north and west coast, No. 2728; Ferrol to Cape Finisterre, No. 1755; plan of Ferrol harbor, No. 80; inlets of Ferrol, Coruña, and Betanzos, No. 79; and Port Cedeira, No. 78.

East Indies-Malabar coast.

REVOLVING LIGHT AT ALIPEY.

Information has been received at the admiralty that on and after the 28th day of March, 1862, a light would be exhibited from a light-house recently erected by the Rajah of Travancore, at Alipey, 29 miles southward of Cochin, on the Malabar coast, East Indies.

The light is a revolving white light, attaining its greatest brilliancy every minute. It is placed at an elevation of 100 feet above the mean level of the sea, and should be seen in clear weather from a distance of 15 miles.

The illuminating apparatus is dioptric, or by lenses of the second order. The tower is 85 feet high, of red brick color, and said to stand in latitude 9° 30 north, longitude 76° 20′ east of Greenwich.

By command of their lordships.

JOHN WASHINGTON, Hydrographer.

HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE, Admiralty, London, June 9, 1862.

This notice affects the following admiralty charts: Indian ocean, Nos. 748a, 7456, 2483, and India, west coast, No. 2738.

Australia-East coast.

REVOLVING LIGHT AT PORT STEPHENS.

The government of New South Wales has given notice that on and after the 1st day of May, 1862, a light will be exhibited from a light-house recently erected on Stephens's Point, at the south side of entrance to Port Stephens, east coast of Australia.

The light is a revolving light, showing a bright face every minute, alternately white and red. It is placed at an elevation of 126 feet above the mean level of the sea, and, with the exception of being slightly intercepted by the islands on the north side of the entrance to the port, should be seen in all directions from seaward at a distance of 17 miles.

N.; Little

The illuminating apparatus is catoptric, or by reflectors of the second order. The tower is circular, colored white, and 60 feet high from base to the centre of the lantern. It stands on a knoll 66 feet above the sea, with Morna Point bearing SW. W.; eastern extremity of Broughton isles, NE. islet, N.NE. E.; South Head Peak, or Toomeree, N.NW. § W.; in latitude 32° 44′ 37′′ S., longitude 152° 13' east of Greenwich. When rounding the light it should not be approached within the distance of one mile.

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(All bearings are magnetic. Variation 10° 10' east in 1862.) By command of their lordships.

JOHN WASHINGTON, Hydrographer. HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE, Admiralty, London, June 11, 1862.

This notice affects the following admiralty charts: Port Stephens, No. 1070; Australia, general, No. 1042; southern portion, sheet 2, No. 27596; east coast, sheet 4, No. 2144; Indian ocean, Nos. 748c and 2483; Pacific ocean, sheet 9, Nos. 2467 and 2683; also, Australia lights list, No. 152.

FORT WILLIAM, March 28, 1832.

Notice is hereby given that a patch of detached sunken rocks, one of which has only seven feet of water over it at low spring tides, has been discovered off the entrance to Beitkul Cove, on the Malabar coast, about one hundred to one hundred and fifty yards off shore, and in the direct line that a vessel might take when rounding into the cove from west or northwest.

The bearings from it are as follows: Fisherman's Rock, off Carwar Head, in a line with the Southern Oyster Rock to the west, and the centre of Deoghur island, in a line with Loliem Point to the north.

W. F. MARRIOTT, Lieutenant Colonel, Secretary to Government.

The following extract from a report of a recent survey of the Cocos islands, by Lieutenant Jackson, I. N., commander of the Bengal government S. V. Krishna, is published for general information :

"On the morning of the 16th I hove to off Narcondam island, with the peak bearing north (true) by azimuth, and observed its longitude west of Fort Cornwallis flagstaff, Penang, 6° 2′ 48", and its latitude, deduced from observation at noon by means of two patent log distances, 13° 27′ north; the height above the level of the sea being 2,150 feet, and the variation 3° easterly.

"From the above observations I find that Narcondam is placed about fourteen miles too far north in the chart of the Bay of Bengal, published by Messrs. Allen & Co., in London, 8th September, 1857. This is obviously an oversight, as the latitude here given agrees with that of former observers."

By order.

JOHN G. REDDIE,

Officiating Sec'y to the Government of India, Marine Department.

PLUMB POINT LIGHT-HOUSE, May 28, 1862.

Notice is hereby given that from and after the 1st day of July proximo the rates of duty to be imposed upon ships and vessels shall be agreeably to the 11th section of the 15th Victoria, cap. 17, reduced as follow:

On every ship or vessel navigated wholly or in part by steam, the sum of one penny per ton, not to be demandable oftener than once within any period of three calendar months.

On any other ship or vessel, the sum of three pence per ton on the whole registered tonnage thereof, payable every voyage.

On ships, vessels, droggers, and other vessels (other than steam vessels) engaged in the coasting trade of this island, or trading within the Tropic of Cancer, the sum of three pence per ton, not to be demandable oftener than once within any period of twelve calendar months.

By order of the commissioners.

MAURICE LEVY, Clerk.

FRENCH DOMINIONS.

PARIS. JOHN BIGELOW, Consul.

MAY 17, 1862.

Mr. William Jay Brown, who has been, and still is, I believe, a special agent of the Department of the Interior, for the collection of statistics in Europe, has requested me to call the attention of the government to a plan which he would like to organize for procuring more reliable, prompt, and useful information than is now accessible in regard to the products of the soil on this side of the Atlantic, His views are set forth, so far as he seems, from my conversation with him, to have matured them, in the enclosed papers, and I transmit them at his request.

Table showing the mean annual prices of wheat per hectolitre in various countries, from 1827 to 1858, inclusive.

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Table showing the breadth of culture, yield per hectare, and amount, of wheat produced in France, from 1815 to 1858, inclusive.

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1 hectare is equal to about 2 acres, or, more accurately, 24 acres. 1 hectolitre is equal to about 25 Winchester bushels, or, more accurately. 2-33791 bushels. 1 hectolitre is also equal to about 2 imperial bushels, or, more accurately, 2,251 bushels

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By inspecting this table it will be seen that the breadth of culture of wheat in France increased within a period of forty-three years more than 2,000,000 of hectares, or 5,060,922 acres, and that the annual yield per hectare nearly doubled within that time, the increase of the amount harvested being 200,154,319 bushels. From 1815 the main yield was 105 hectolitres per hectare; from 1826 to 1836 it was 12,35 hectolitres; from 1836 to 1845 it was 13 hectolitres; and from 1846 to 1857 it was 13 hectolitres per hectare. In comparing the first of

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those periods with the last, we find that the mean increase of yield is about 3 hectolitres per hectare, or at the rate of 3,16 bushels per acre. The increase of yield per hectare from 1815 to 1858 was 7100 7 hectolitres, or 22,62 Winchester bushels per acre. This increase of yield may be attributed mainly to an improved system of culture, as the rotation of crops, selection of seed, under draining, and the perfect tilth.

Table showing the amount of wheat and flour (or its equivalent in wheat) imported into and exported from France from 1819 to 1858, inclusive.

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The results of the above table show that during the forty years, from 1819 to 1858, the imports of wheat into France exceeded the exports twenty-two times, and that the reverse occurred eighteen times. The excess of imports amounted to 34,206,712 hectolitres, or 96.804,995 bushels. The principal countries from which France imports her surplus wheats are Russia, Poland, Turkey, the United States, Moldavian Provinces, Spain. Tuscany, and the Two Sicilies. The chief exports are England, Switzerland, Belgium, and the low countries

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