NEW ENGLAND FARMER. 



19 



For Sale, 



Four pleasantly situated dwellings in ELIOT 

 Sg/fs. STREET, JAMAICA PLAIN. 

 ^Iji Also, two farms on WELD STREET, WEST 

 '|jjjij| ROXBURY; — the one containing about forty 

 L— &K acres, with house and harn; the oilier containing 

 about twenty-three acres, with house and two barns. 



But a small portion of cash is wanted for any of this pro- 

 perty. Apply to J. C. GORE, Jamaica Plain. 

 Feb. 21, 1852. 2m— *2 



Iyer's Cherry Pectoral, 



FOR THE CURE OF 



COUGHS, COLDS, HOARSENESS, CROUP, WHOOPING 



COUGH, BRONCHITIS, ASTHMA AND 



CONSUMPTION. 



THIS invaluable remedy for all diseases of the Throat and 

 Lungs has attained a celebrity, from its remarkable cures, 

 never equalled b> any other medicine before. Other prepara- 

 tions hive shown themselves palliatives, and sometimes ef- 

 fected notable cures, but none has ever so fully won the confi- 

 dence ol every community where it is known. Alter years ol 

 trial in every climate, the results have indisputably shown it 

 to possess a mastery over this dangerous class of diseases 

 which could not fail to attract the attention of physicians, pa- 

 tients and the public generally. 



See the statements, not of obscure individuals, and from far 

 distant places, but of men who are known and respected 

 throughout the country. 



The widely-celebrated surgeon, Dr. VALENTINE MOTT, 

 of New York city, says : — "It gives me pleasure to certify the 

 value and ellicacy o(" Ayer's Cherry Pectoral,'''' which I con- 

 sider peculiarly adapted to cure diseases of the throat and 

 lungs." 



Dr. PERKINS, the venerable President of the Vermont Me- 

 dical College, one of the eminently learned physicians of this 

 country, writes, the Cherry Pectoral is extensively used in 

 this section, where it has shown unmistakable evidence of its 

 happy effects upon pulmonary diseasas. 



Rev. J NO. D. COCHRANE, a distinguished clergyman of 

 the English Church, writes to the proprietor from Montreal 

 that "he has been cured of a severe asthmatic affection, by 

 Cherry Pectoral.'''' His letter, at full let gth, may be found in 

 our Circular, to be had of the Agent, and is worth the atten- 

 tion of asthmatic patients 



This letter is from the well-known Druggist at Hillsdale, 

 Michigan, one of the largest dealers in the State; and this case 

 is from his own observation : 



Hillsdale, Mich., Dec. 10, 1849. 



Dear Sir: — Immediately on receipt of your Cherry Pectoral 

 I carried a bottle to an acquaintance of mine who was thought 

 to be near his end with quick consumption. He was then un 

 able to rise from his bed, and was extremely feeble. His friends 

 believed he must soon die, unless relief could be obtained for 

 him, and I induced them to give him your excellent medicine 

 a trial. I immediately left town for three weeks, and you 

 may judge of my surprise on my return, to meet him in the 

 street on my way home from the cars, and find he had entire 

 ly recovered. Four weeks from the day he commenced taking 

 your medicine, he was at work at his arduous trade of a black 

 smith. 



There are other cases within my knowledge, where the 

 Cherry Pectoral has been singularly successful, but none so 

 marked as this. Very truly yours, 



G. W. UNDERWOOD. 



PREPARED AND SOLD BY JAMES C. AYER, 

 Practical Ckemist, Lowell, 31ass. 

 Feb. 14, 1852. 3m 



American Veterinary Journal, 



DEVOTED to the Diffusion of Veterinary Knowledge, and 

 its collateral sciences. Published monthly, octavo form, 

 containing thirty. two pages, making at the end of the year a 

 handsome volume of three hundred and eighty-four pages, to 

 which an index will be furnished. 



Price §1,00 per year in advance. Six copies for $5,00. 

 Edited by GEORGE H. DADD, Veterinary Practitioner, to 

 whom all communications, post-paid, must be directed. 

 Boston, Feb. 14. 2w *2W 



Spring Seed Grain. 



OAA BUSHELS WHEAT, {Black, Sea, Scotch Fife, Bald 

 OUU Club and Java. 



200 bushels Buckwheat. 



8(0 do. Barley. 



200 do. Spring Rye,— (True.) 



800 do. Bedford Oats. 



100 do. Millett. 

 10 do. African Millett,— (Extra.) 

 For sale by RUGGLES, NOURSE, MASON & CO., 



M trch 20, 1852. tf Over Quincy Market, Boston. 



LEWIS G. MORRIS' 



THIRD ANNUAL SALE, BY AUCTION, OF 



Improved Breeds of Domestic Animals 



WILL TAKE PLACE AT 



MOUNT FORDHAM, Westchester Co., (11 miles from City 

 Hall, New York,) on Wednesday, JUNE 9, 18o2. 



JAMES M. MILLER, Auctioneer. 



APPLICATION need not be made at private sale, as I de- 

 cline in all cases, so as to make it an object for persons at 

 a distance to attend. Sale positive to the highest bidder, with- 

 out reserve. 



Numbering about fifty head of Horned Stock, including a 

 variety of ages and sex, consisting of Pure Bred Short Horns, 

 Devons, and Ayrshires; Southdown Buck Lambs, and a very 

 few Ewes; Suffolk and Essex Swine. Catalogues, with full 

 Pedigrees, &c, «fcc, will be ready for delivery on the first of 

 May— to be obtained from the subscriber, or at the offices of 

 any of the principal Agricultural Journals or Stores in the 

 Union. This sale will offer the best opportunity to obtain 

 very fine animals I ever have given, as I shall reduce my herd 

 lower than ever before, contemplating a trip to Europe, to be 

 absent a year, and shall not have another sale until 1854. 



It will be seen by reference to the proceedings of our State 

 Agricultural Society that I was the most successful exhibitor 

 of Domestic Animals, at the late State Fair. 



/ will also offer a new feature, to American Breeders — one 

 which works well in Europe; that is, letting the services of 

 male animals; and will solicit propositions from such as see 

 fit to try it. Conditions— The animal hired, to be at the risk 

 of the owner, unless by some positive neglect or carelessness 

 of the hirer; the expense of transportation to and from, to be 

 borne jointly; the term of letting, to be one year or less, as 

 parties agree; price to be adjusted by parties — to be paid in 

 advance, when the Bull is taken away; circumstances would 

 vary the price; animal to be kept in accordance with instruc- 

 tions of owner, before taking him away. 



I offer on the foregoing conditions, three celebrated Prize 

 Bulls, "Major," a Devon, nine years old; "Lamartine," Short 

 Horn, four years old; "Lord Eryholme," Short Horn, three 

 years old. Pedigrees will be given in Catalogues. 



At the time of my sale, (and I would not part with them be- 

 fore) I shall have secured two or three yearly setts of their 

 progeny, and as I shall send out in August next a new impor- 

 tation of male animals, I shall not want the services of either 

 of these next year. I would not sell them, as I wish to keep 

 control of their propagating qualities hereafter. 



I also have one imported Buck, the prize winner at Roches- 

 ter last fall, imported direct from the celebrated Jonas Webb; 

 and also five yearling Bucks, winners also, bred by me, from 

 Bucks and Ewes imported direct from the above celebrated 

 breeder; they will be let en the same conditions as the Bulls, 

 excepting that I will keep them until the party hiring wishes 

 them, and they must be returned to me again on or about 

 Christmas Day. By this plan, the party hiring gets rid of the 

 risk and trouble of keeping a Buck the year round. All com- 

 munications by mail must be prepaid, and I will prepav the 

 answers. L G. MORRIS. 



Mount Fordham, March, 1852. lw*3m 



Walnut Grove Nursery. 



JAMES HYDE & SON. 



We have for sale at our Nursery a larger as- 

 sortment of trees than ever before offered by us, 

 consisting in part of Apple, Pear, Plum, Cherry 

 and Peach. 



Also, Quinces, Currants, Raspberries, Grape- 

 vines, &c. &c. 



Ornamental Trees and Shrubs, Buckthorn Plants, &c. &c. 

 A prime lot of Red Dutch Currants, good size, $5 per hun- 

 dred, or $40 per thousand. 



Fine Apple trees, three to five years' growth from bud, sev- 

 en to nine feet high, $25 per hundred, or $200 per thousand. 



We devote ourselves solely to the raising of trees; they re- 

 ceive our strict personal attention; we are therefore able to 

 warrant every article true to name. 



Those who intend purchasing latge quantities of Apple trees 

 are respectfully invited to call before purchasing, and examine 

 our stock, as it is large, and doubtless unsurpassed by any in 

 the vicinity. 

 A liberal discount on all articles by the hundred. 

 Orders for Scions, (if sent early,) faithfully attended to. 

 Trees delivered in Boston free of expense, packed if desired. 

 Catalogues sent to post-paid applicants. 

 inrAll orders thankfully received, and promptly executed. 



JAMES HYDE <fe SON. 

 Newton Centre, Feb. 21, 1852. 3m* 



Bound Volumes. 



BACK VOLUMES of the NEW ENGLAND FARMER, ele- 

 gantly bound in Muslin, Gilt and Embossed, are now for 

 sale at this office. 



Boston, March 20, 1852. tf* 



