

THE GENESEE FAEMEE. 



Great Sale of Superior Thorougli-brcd Sluort- 

 Horn Cattle. 



THE subscriber will offer for sale his entire herd of choice 

 Short-IIorns, comprising 50 head, young and old, at public 

 auction, on Wednesday, the loth of October, 1852, at 1 

 o'cloclc P. M., at his farm, 2>rf' miles from the city of Troy ; 

 reserving to himself one bid on 5 cows and heifers and one 

 bull, say six head in all, and these to be pointed out previ- 

 ous to the commencement of the sale. This bid will be 

 made public when the six animals are brought to the stand 

 for sale. IShould any gentlemen advance on the single bid 

 made by the proprietor, the highest bidder will be entitled 

 to the animal. It is proper to say, the severe drouth in this 

 vicinity reducing the hay crop one half, has decided the 

 proprietor to make this sale at the time named, instead of 

 next June, which he had purposed to do. 



The well established reputation of this herd in this Union, 

 and in Canada, and the splendid herd it has measurably 

 sprung from, viz : the famed herd of that eminent Knglish 

 breeder, the late Thomas Bates, Esq., renders it hardly 

 necessary to comment upon its superior merits. It may not 

 however be inappropriate to remark, that the establish- 

 ment of this herd was commenced in 18.'W, and that the 

 most careful attention has since been paid to its breeding, 

 and that it now contains mostly all the reserved stock of 

 two former public sales. Since 1840, the proprietor has 

 Imported from the late Mr. Bates, and his friends and late 

 tenants the Messrs. Bell's, 7 head of Short-IIorns. And be- 

 sides these, he has now on the passage across the Atlantic, 

 shipped 21st June, on board the packet ship Kossuth, Capt. 

 Jas. B. Bell, a superior yearling roan bull, having many 

 crosses of the famed Duchess bulls of Mr. Bates. Including 

 this latter animal and the two beautiful red roan 3 year old 

 heifers which came out from England last September, 

 " Yarm Lass" and " Yorkshire Countess" and the beautiful 

 heifer calf of the latter animal, got in England by the 

 Duchess bull "5th Duke of York,"lhere will be 14 head of 

 this imported stock, and its immediate descendents. There 

 has been sold from this herd but 3 heifers from these impor- 

 tations, and these cows were sold at $300 each. All the 

 young bulls bred from these cows, except those now offered 

 for sale, have also been sold at private sale, at $300 each, 

 most of them while quite young. 



Besides these 14 head of high bred animals, the noble 

 premium cow "EsterviUe 3d," bred by E. P. Prentice, Esq., 

 of Albany, and her equally flne 2 year old, red and white 

 heifer bred by me, got by the Bates bull " Meteor," and 3 

 of the famed milking Willey tribe, the same tribe of cows 

 as the heifer " Kuby," sold by me to Mr. 8. P. Chapman, of 

 Madison county, and which cow was awarded the first pre- 

 mium by the N. Y. State Ag. Society, for producing the 

 largest quantity of butter in ten days in June and ten days 

 in August, on grass pasture only, being a fraction over 40 

 lbs. in those 20 days. There are other valuable tribes in 

 the herd, as the printed catalogue will show. 



The catalogue will be ready for distribution about the 1st 

 of August, and will exhibit richness of pedigrees rarely to 

 bo met with, showing the descent of the most of the ani- 

 mals from the best animals on record in the English herd 

 book. Having received an invitation from 11. Strafford, 

 last winter, to forward a list of the pedigrees of my herd, to 

 be inserted in the forthcoming volumes of the English herd 

 book of which Mr. Strafford is now the editor, several pedi- 

 grees were sent to him of the animals here offered for sale, 

 and will appear in said book. Gentlemen arc invited to 

 examine the herd at any time. 



A credit of 9 months will be given on all sums up to $300, 

 and 9 and 18 months on all sums over $300, for approved 

 paper, with interest, payable at some bank in this State. 



Troy, N. Y., August, 1852.— S-3t. GEO. VAIL. 



Albany Tile Works, 



2^0. 60 Lancaster St., West of Medical College. 

 THE subscriber has now on hand, and is prepared to fur- 

 nish to Agriculturists, Horse-Shoe and Sole Tile, for land 

 drainage, of the most approved patterns. They are over 

 1 foot in length, 2^ to 4>^ inched calibre, from $12 to $18 

 per 1000 pieces— being the cheapest and most durable arti- 

 cle used. Orders from a distance will receive prompt atten- 

 tion. [4-6t] JOHN GOTT, Jb. 



Mansfield's Clover Seed Hulling and Cleaning 

 Macliine 



WAS awarded, at the Ohio State Fairs 1850 and 1851, the 

 first premiums, Diploma and Silver Medal. Warranted to 

 hull and clean from 20 to 40 bushels seed per day, or from 

 two to five bushels per hour. Cash price of machine $95. 

 ManuPactured and for sale by M. H. MANSFIELD, 

 August. 1852.— 8-2t* Ashland, Ohio. 



Tlie Water Cure Journal. 



A NEW VOLUME commences with the present July 

 number. Published monthly. Illustrated with engravings 

 exhibiting the structure, anatomy, and physiology of the 

 human body, with familiar instructions to learners. It is 

 emphatically a Journal of Health, designed to be a com- 

 plete Family Guide in all disea.sc3. 



Tekms. — Only One Dollar a Year, in advance. Please 

 address, post paid, FOWLEKS AND WELLS, No. 131 

 Nassau street, New York. 



A few brief Editorial Notices may be acceptable to those 

 unacquainted with the Journal. We copy : 

 Frmn tlie Ne\o York Tribune. 



"The Water Cure Journal holds a high rank in the 

 science of health ; alwayj ready, straight-forward, and 

 plain-spoken, it unfolds the law of our physical nature, 

 without any pretensions to the technicalities of science, but 

 in a form as attractive and refreshing as the sparkling ele- • 

 ment of which it treats." 



From the Fountain Jajirnal. 



"Every man, woman, and child, who loves health, who 

 desires happiness, its direct res\dt, who wants to ' live while 

 it does live,' 'live till he dies,' and really live, instead of be- 

 ing a mere walking corpse, should become at once a. reader 

 of this Journal, and practice its precepts." 



From the Neio i'ork Evening Post. 



" The Watek Cuke Journal. — -This is, nnquestionably, 

 the most popular health Journal in the world." 



This Htdeopathic Jouenal now enters upon its Four- 

 teenth Volume, with a circulation of Fifty Thousand 

 Copies. The ablest medical writers are among its contrib- 

 utors, and all subjects relating to the Laws of Life, Health, 

 and Happiness, may be found in its pages. Now is the 

 time to subscribe. [8-2t] 



Hallock's Agricultural Warehouse, 



No. 50. State St., Kochester, N. Y. 

 THE Subscriber, late from the Agricultural Works, Ware- 

 house, and Seed Store of Messrs. Emery & Co., Albany, 

 (where he has been engaged for the past six years,) has 

 been induced to establish an Agency for the sale of their 

 justly celebrated Premium Horse Powerg, Threshers, Sep- 

 arators, &c., in Kochester. Particular attention will be paid 

 to selling and putting up the Horse Powers, and other fix- 

 tures for threshing, &c. A thorough knowledge of these 

 machines enables him to put them np more satisfactorily 

 than has been done heretofore. Price and terms same as 

 at Albany, transportation added. 



He will keep for sale, Emery's Seed Planters, the best in 

 use; Circular and Cross Cut Saw Mills, Feed Mills, Com 

 Stalk and Hay Cutters, Corn Shellers, Churning fixtures, 

 &c., adapted to the Power. 



Also, Keapers, Mowing Machines, Grain Drills, Plows, 

 Harrows, Cultivators, Coru Shellers, Hay Cutters, Fan 

 Mills, and agricultural and horticultural implements gene- 

 rally. He will be prepared to furnish dealers with Dunn 

 and Taylor's well known Scythes ; also. Manure, Straw, and 

 Hay Forks, Snaths, Rifles, and other haying tools, at manu- 

 facturers' prices, wholesale and retail. 



Particular attention is called to A NEW PLOW, which 

 is believed to be the best cast-iron Plow ever offered, and 

 which is warranted to do better work, with less expense of 

 team than any plow heretofore sold in Rochester, while the 

 price is less than for any other equally well finished. 



The " uniform one-price, cash system" will be adopted, 

 with the prices as low as the cost of articles and just com- 

 pensation for labor and time will allow. Farmers and 

 others are invited to call and examine the stock of Ma- 

 chines and Implements, — and are assured no effort shall be 

 wanting to meet promptly the wants of a discriminating 

 public. E. D. HALLOCK. 



July, 1852. 



Emery & Co.'s Improved Horse Poivers, 

 ThresUers, and Seperators. 



THE undersigned have been appointed sole agents for the 

 sale of Emery's new Patent Improved Horse-Powers, 

 Threshers, and Separators, in the city of New York. The 

 State Agricultural Warehouse is the only depot where this 

 superior Power can be had. 



LONGETT & GEIPFING, 

 T-tt State Ag. Warehouse, 25 Cliff sL, New York. 



