

Till-: CllNKSKK FARMER. 





l\i h Wool Depot. — The attention of wool 



I manufacturers i> directed to the :i 

 of H. Blancharo & Co.. The business! induct- 



ed by Mr. B. for several yean, and constantlj increased in 

 public fin or. 



Sum; r i [or» ( ' \ i .1 e. — It will be observed, bj r< IS rence 

 to an advertisement in this number, that Mr. Vail, of Troy, 

 will offer a portion of his excellont herd of Short Horns, at 

 public auction, on the L3thofthe present month. Nobetter 

 stock Hi' this breed can be found in the country. 



Pov* i i.-. Tin; isH i We would 



ishing machines of this kind, to the 

 several Advertisements of fiilmyra, Albany and Rochester 

 manufacturers. 



Agents entitled i<> the Premiums mentioned in our May 

 number, are requested to Belect the books or implements 

 desired, and advise us how and when' to forward. 



It arc Evergreen Trees. 

 I5I7E have one plants, from one to two feet high, of the fbllovf- 

 \ V ing in pots suitable for transmission to any part of the 

 country at any moment The plants are in a vigorous .■ 



t urned out into the open ground, without the 

 least check to their growth. 

 Cedar of Lebanon, [Cedrus Libani.] 

 Indian Cedar. [Cedrus Deodara.] 

 Japan Cedar, [Cryptomeria japonica.| 

 Chili Pine' [Auracaria imbrii ita .] 

 Rhotan or Lofty Pine, [Pinus exc 

 Cembran Pine. [Pinus cembra.] 

 "Long Leaved Indian Pine, [Pinus langifolia.] 

 Dwarf or Mountain Pine. [Pinus pumilio.j 

 Remarkable Pine, [Pinus insignia. J 



Himalayan Spruce Fir, [Abies morinda.] 

 Douglass' Spruce Kir. [Abies Douglassi.] 

 ( ephalonian Silver Fir, [Picea < cphalonica] 

 Webb's Silvr Fir. [Picea Webbiana.] Pinsapo Silver Fir, or 

 Mount Atlas Cedar, [Picea pinsapo.] ^Chinese Juniper, [Junipe- 

 rus siversis.] 'Evergreen Cypress, [Cnpressus sempervir 

 i reen Weeping ' 'u press, (Cypressus pendula.) 

 ( * These we presume will not endure our winters in the open 

 air. without protection.) 



CH5= Plants of the above will be forwarded to any part of the 

 country. Priced lists furnished. 



ELLWANGER & BARRY. 

 Rochester. June 1, 1849. 



Palmer's Wheat Dril!. 



THE subscribers have made an arrangement with Mr. Palmer 

 to manufacture for the coming season five hundred of his 

 new Wheat Drill, to be be sold in Western New-Yoik. They are 

 now receiving orders for them, and relying upon heavy sales, have 

 determined to sell them at a small profit— at least twenty-five 

 dollars less than any other drill capable of performing as much. 

 The Drills are constructed under the immediate direction of the 

 inventor, and Warranted. 



An agricultural implemont as important as this should be afford- 

 ed at a rate that places it within the reach of every farmer. To 

 accomplish this Mr. Palmer has spared no pains to become ac- 

 quainted with all the Drills in use by consulting both English and 

 American Agricultural works, and by procuring copies of invent- 

 or's claims, issued or pending in the Patent Office. He has used 

 different kinds of drills for the past years, and has learned by prac- 

 tice the wants of the farmer. After repeated efforts and expen- 

 sive experiments he has produced a simple, subsl antial Drill, which 

 by way of eminence he calls a " WHEAT DRILL." It is vastly 

 superior to the costly and complicated machines heretofore in use. 

 This is the third Drill he has invented, and he has now brought it 

 t'j that state of perfection beyond which it cannot be carried. It 

 is the Ne Plus Ultra of Drills, combining all the advantages of 

 every other, and free from their imperfections. 



We challenge the world to produce a Drill equal lo this In du- 

 rability, operation or price ! ! {flj=- All orders should be sent in or 

 delivered to one of our agents as early as July to secure atten- 

 tion. J. A. HOLMES & CO. 



Brockport, March 15. 1849. 



An Elegant Country Residence and Farm for Sale. 



M CONTAINING one hundred and seventy-five acres »y» 

 of first rate laud, situated on the west shore of Cay- l^ys* 

 uga Lake, two miles south of Cayuga bridge, in the -<a»- 

 town of Seneca Kails. Seneca county. There is a large brick man- 

 sion with a two story kitchen adjoining, with wash and wood 

 house attached ; out-buildings, barn, shed and carriage house ; a 

 lawn and garden in front, enclosed with a handsome fence ; apple 

 and peach orchards, with a number of cherry, plum and pear 

 trees. The stock, crops in ground, and farming utensils, Sec. will 

 be sold with the farm. Possession given immediately. For fur- 

 ther information, price and terms of payment, application can be 

 made to the subscriber, on the premises, or by letter addressed to 

 him. Oakwood Farm, near Cayuga Bridge; orto D. D. T. MOORE, 

 at the office of the Genesee Farmer. Rochester 



[Stfj JOHN OGDEN DAY - . 



Einderhoob Wool Depot. 



THE rprise, and the steady increase of bu- 



sdnc id the subscriber 

 iate with him Mr 1 houai M B . i the 



habits of thi 

 prominent n thi 



Ibany 



ill be en in in. -ted on the same p 

 ill be thi-owi, 



mination will 



ill ■■■■ I o de Ire it can ha .■ 



Dg and 

 i ..ill betwenl ■ 

 for a term of three months. 6, Liberal advam 



the usual terms. 



W< it and North should be marked 



11. B. & Co . Kinderhook, \. Y.. with I 



name on each sack, and Bhipped to East Mbany 



H. BLANCH ARD. 



Kinderhook, N. Y.. May IS. 1849. 



the 1st of June the business will be conducted under the 

 name and firm of H. Blanchabd & Co. Reference can be had to 



J. P. Beekman, Kinderhook. N.Y. 



1'.. !'. Johnson, Ubany, " 



L. \. Morrell. Lake Ridge. 



D. S. Curtis, Canaan. 



C. W. Hull. New Lebanon, 



J. Murdock, Wheatland, 



C. VV. Richmond. Aurora. N. V 

 Nath'l. Sawyi r, ' Cincinnati 0. 

 Wellman ^ Co. Vlassillon, < > 

 Freeland, Stuart -v I 



Fork City. 

 R. Carter. Chicago. Illinois. 



J. W. Sherman's Fir.st Premium Grain Drill and 

 Cultivator and Broadcast Seed Sower. 



COMBINING three of the most useful farm implements. Su- 

 perior to any othi i seed planter for all I 

 grain or seeds; also a su] erii it will sow I 

 cast, or in drills or hills, and over grain, and sow plaster, ashes 

 and all line m ! east— or will drill it in the rows in such 



quantH dCultivator it works well 



believed to be superior to any other, on all kinds of ground. It 

 •■ plants from the smallest to the largest grain and seeds, 

 accurately. It is the most easily manag can be 



raised or lowered, or either of them, without stopping the team. 

 Any person capable of managing a team can use this machine 

 and alter it from one quantity to another in one minute. It is 

 durable, permanently constructed, and not liable to get out of 

 order. We do not boast oi" inventing three drills VVe happened 

 to get a good machine the first time, which is more than can be 

 said (truthfully) of some that have invented more, who boast of 

 their worthless articl i .not tell of getting 500 ma I 



season for Weste n New York : it takes time to make a good arti- 

 cle. But we will try to fill all eiders from Wei ' 

 otlnr sections, anil warrant our drill the best in use. 



We do not tell of selling $25 cheaper than others, for we think 

 we can sell all we can make at a fair price, and we believe our far- 

 mers axe willing to pay such a price for a good article We proru- 

 ise to sell as cheap as any other that has a reliable machine, that 

 d<»s the work up right. All we ask of those wishing Planters is 

 to examine for themselves. We are also ready to meet any in- 

 ventor of i'rills on the soil Boasting on paper is one thing : 

 demonstration on the soil another. All we ask is a trial. 



To any one wishing further information we will tal 

 sending a descriptive sheet. We would conclude by just stating 

 that our machine received two first premiums last fall, at the 

 State Fair at Buffalo, on an imperfect machine, not finished. We 

 subjoin the certificate the Committee kindly gave us : 



■• We the Committee on Farming Implements. No. 1, having 

 J. W. Sherman's Field Drill and Cultivator under consideration. 

 consider it the best implement of the class that has been pr 

 ed, and have returned it as being entitled to the highest Premium 

 Buffalo, Sept. 7, 1848. A. OSBORN. CA'n. 



1 have received the Premium in three Diplomas 



All communications should be sent to me at this place and will 

 be promptly answered and attended to. 



We shall want a number of agents to sell machines and 

 to commence soon. .1. W. SHERMAN. 



Ontario. Wayne Co.,N. I*.. Jlpril 15. 1849. [5-tf] 



Agricultural Warehouse and Seed Store at Buffalo. 



AT the request of numerous friends, we have opened an Agri- 

 cultural Warehouse and Seed Store, and have made sueh 

 arrangements as will enable us to keep on hand a large and full 

 aents of any useful kind. 

 We have also arrangements for Trees an I Sei !- equal I 

 other establishment in the Union. Order and patronage solicited 

 Manufacturers are requested to send us samples of their imple 

 meats and machines. T. C. PETERS k BRO.. 



Corner Washington and Exchange-sts 

 Buffalo. Jan. 1, 1848. [l-5t] 



Nursery to L.ct or for Sale. 



THE Subscriber has a Nursery 1>£ miles from the Eric Rail 

 Road Depot, from the Chemung Canal on a Plank Road run- 

 ato Pennsylvania. I propose to lease it. for a term of years, 

 or sell it, or take a partner and carry it on. 



Elmyra, N. Y.. 1849. DYAR FOOTE. 



