•"' 5, but had been rcducoil tn 4. [Ilamp. Gaz.] 



Ni:w i:n(.laiM) i akmek. 



127 



ork. The third or youngest brood, were only jjntp, the asylum of moml and phyeiral cornip- 

 wo or three weeks old, their^ number at first was ^ tion, to go and work in liis lands, or ciijoy tlieni 



(I in (li. 



MODE OF BREAKING STEEKS TO THE 

 DRAUGHT IN A FEW DAYS. 



Let the farmer carefully volte his steers in a 

 lose yard or stnble, and not move them till they 

 et sutficicntly accuslouie.! to the yoke, so that 

 iiey will eat their food, when yoked ; which will 



his heart rejoices at tlie sight of nature, and ex- 

 periences the same sensation as his lunirs, on re- 

 ceiving; the pure air that refreshes them?" 



[Priiii-e de l^rrne.] 



/or Sate. 

 SIX superior Saxon Rfims, imported in tlie Brig Oc- 



, - -. via, Capt. Russell— alfo, seven fine Merino Rams^ 



c in the co-.irse ofadav. Let them be yoked ' ^"'^ '*" '"^''" U'tmrn Geese; aJso, three New Milch 



■ ., , , ," • ,- .1 I .l-oals, with their K" 



gain the second day, and a pair ol gentle horses , jj^^^y ^nfiji \ i^i 



, . ,. il;i<liiic- of Ink I'ciwdrr, and has 



Mliiniigthat pencHl .kvul< ,1 his aUenlion (o (he im- 

 provement ol the composiiion. The article now ol- 

 Icred the pnbhc, is warranted ( qual lo any in the 

 country Us peculiarities are, a permanent black, 

 without the usual glutinous properties which prevent 

 I the easy flow of the Ink from the p^n. 

 I It is deemed unnecessary to assert any thing further 

 jinlavour of the above named arlicle, but respectfully 

 refer to the annexed certificate. 



r oxen be fastened h.eforc thein, in wliioh station 

 t thcin stand, until they bcnonie familiar with ! 

 lid horses or oxen, which v.ill generally be et'- 



Apply to THOMAS VVIL- 



The Ink mad 

 we consider unc 

 any which we hav 



by Messrs. Samdei. Kidder & Co. 

 nuionly good, and at least equal to 

 ver used. 



Dutch Cole. 



The subscriber has lor sale, at his farm in Roxbury, 

 , ,,, ■^qoaul'ty of Dutch Cole, raised on one acre and r 

 in one day, excepting tlie .steers should be , rods. It makes excellent feed for slieep, cows, or oxen 

 ncomnionly wjid, v.hich v.ill occasion a second , ll may be considered equal to about 'J tons of hav Ifl 

 practice, after the same manner; and the ! P''!''^^'''^'^'.""' '^''"'c may be turned into (lie field where 

 e.xt day, the steers may be yoked, the horses or 

 xen put before as usual, and let them he fastened 



) a waL'gon or any other carriage ; they fearing 

 10 carriage behind tliem, and being accustomed 

 > the eld oxen before, will proceed forward with- 

 ut being whipped or bruised. By the above pro- 

 ess the farmer will never fail of success in hav- 

 ig good working oxen. 



A CHEAC AND EXCELLENT WINE. 



To six gallons of new cider, add two gallons of 

 randy, or in that proportion. Let the brandy be 

 ,-ell mixed with the cider, and the cask be kept 



11 by filling up, during the fermentation. At the 

 nd of six or eight weeks, you will have a liquor, 



hich will not cost more than about twenty-five 

 ents by the gallon, possessing much the taste and 

 ensible qualities of wine, and infeiior hardly to 

 one. 



VINEGAR. 



Vinegar is cooling, opening, excites the appetite, 

 3sists digestion, is good for hot stomachs, resists 

 utrefaction, and therefore very good against pes 

 lential diseases. Too much use of it injures the 

 erves, emaciates some constitutions, is hurtful to 

 le breast and makes people look old and wither- 

 d, with pale lips. 



The best vinegar is that which is made of the 

 est wines. Lemon-juice and and verjuice have 

 luch the same qualities and cfiects as vinegar. 



The commonest vinegar is least adulterated. 



MUSTARD. 

 Mustard quickens the appetite, warms the stom- 

 ch assists in digesting hard meats, and dries up 

 uperfluous moisture. It seldom agrees with weak 

 tomachs. 



GARDENING. 



I should wish to inspire all the world" with ray 

 iste for gardens. It seems to riie impossible that 



bad man should possess it : he, indeed, is inca- 

 able of any taste : but ifl, for that reason, es- 



em the searchei of wild plants ; the active con- 

 ueror of butterflies ; the minute examiner of 

 liells ; the sombre lover of minerals ; the frozen 

 eometrician ; the three lunaticks of poetry and I tors expi 



ainting, the absent author ; the abstract thinker ; Catalogues may be obtained gratis of the subsiriber, 

 nd the discreet chymist, — there is no virtue '*"'^ 0'''^<°''s '^ff ^i'h him, (if from a distance post paid) 



hich I do not .attribute to him who loves to talk ] '^'L"^t''^^'"^^]\trt"^T' . r ,k p • . ^^ 

 . , j.r .1 .uL,-.i-' JOSEPH BRDIGE, Agent for the Proprietor, No- 

 f gardens, and to torm them. Absorbed in this gj (-.^y^jl^pgj Roston. Sep "g 



assion, which is the only one that increases with 

 ge, he daily overcomes those which derange the ' 

 alraness of the soul or the order of society , 



lit is growing, which is well fenced and watered. 



_" °^- ">• GF.ORGK FiKW SON. 



.lUum, 



Superior allum from the Salem Lnboratory in bbl.. of 

 -00 lbs. net, for sale on the most favourable terms^ 



Refined Saltpetre, 

 inkegsonoa lbs. net.-from the same Laboratory. 



Du Po7iVs Gunpowder, 

 by the cask or smaller qu?ntityt 



Shot 4- Balls, 

 at wholesale and retail, at the lowest prices 

 E. COPELANH. Jun. 65 Broad Strelt. "nd. 13. tf. 



W I LLI A M ~PRI.\CE,propri- 

 elorofthis establishment, offer' 

 to the public the most exten" 

 .-ive collection of Fruits. Orna- 

 mental Trees, and Plants in 

 America. The Fruits have 

 been selected by actual inves- 

 tigation of their merits, and 

 n.arly all of which are engraft- 

 ed froa-. bearing trees 



In the selection, which has 

 been the particular pursuit of 

 bis father and himself, for more than half a century, he 

 has spared neither pains nor expense, and such as 'did 

 not possess particular merit have been reiected and 

 their accuracy has been tested by the best authors of 

 the age. 



In the present catalogue he offers above 500 new va- 

 rieties of Fruits not to be found in any other collection 

 In Ameiica, and which include the most celebrated 

 kinds that have within a fc ■/ years past been brought 

 into notice and recommended by those clistin^uished 

 HorticuKuralists, Van .Vlons & Duquesene, and bv Mr 

 Knight, President of the Horticultural Society of Lon- 

 don. 



In regard to the character and accuracy of the Fruits 

 sent from this establishment, the proprietor refers to 

 the Hon Jonathan Hunnewell, pnd other genilenien in 

 Boston and its vicinity, who have patronized bis estab- 

 lishment for the Inst fifty years, and particularly to the 

 fruit of the various kinds with which the Bnston mar- 

 ket is now supplied from the extensive collection of 

 trees furnished the late Dr Oliver Smith, Secretary of 

 the Massachusetts Agricultural Society, who, more 

 than thirty years since, had several thousand trees an- 

 nually, which were distributed among the members of 

 that Association. It may perhaps be deemed worthy 

 of notice that near 100 varieties of the fruits offered for 

 sa'e, by the proprietor, are different from those culti 

 vated by other establishments under the same names 

 and the identity of every fruit sent by him, iheproprie 

 ly sfuarantees. 



Samuel Payson, Cashier Mass. Bank 



Chester Adams, ' Union ' 



Charles Hood, ' Com'wealth ' 



Geo. Homer, ' State ' 



M. S. Parker, ' Suffolk ' 



Ph. Mart (I, ' N.England ' 



.fohn S. Wright, ' American ' 



Chas. Sprague, ' Globe ' 



D. A. Sigourney, ' Washington' 



Gurdon Steele, ' North ' 



Henry Jaques, ' Bunker Hill ' 



Martin Lane, ' Cambridge ' 



Boston, Jul I/, 1826. 

 O^For sale, wholesale and retail, by the Proprietors, 

 under Washington Flail, Charlestown, Mass. and by 

 appointment, by JOSW'H KIDDER, 



70, Court-street, Boston. oct 27. 



prFces ofUountry produce! 



Improved Bliirk Ink Powder and Liquid Ink. 



SAMUEL KIDDER k CO. 

 Manufacture Flack Ink Powder and l^iquid Black 

 Vhen he has passed the drawbridge of the city . Ink, of an improved quality. 



For more than twenty years, S. Kidder has been 



APPLES, best, 



ASHES, pot, 1st sort, - - - 



pearl do. - - - . 



BEANS, white, 



BEEF, mess, 2(10 lbs. new, - 

 cargo, No 1, new, - - 



" iNo 2, new, - - 

 butter, inspect. No. 1. nev 

 CHEESE, new milk, - - . . 



skimmed milk, - - 



FLAX 



FLAX SEED 



FLOUR, Baltimore, Howard St 



Genesee, _ - . 



Rye, best, - - - 

 GRAIN, Rye 



Corn - - ... 



Barley - ... 



Oats - - . - - 

 HOGS' LARD, 1st sort, new, - 

 HOPS, No 1, Inspection - - 



LIME, 



OIL, Linseed, Phil, and Northern 

 PLAISTER PARIS retails at 

 PORK, Bone Middlings, new, 

 navy, mess, do. 

 Cargo, No 1, do. - - 

 SEEDS, Herd's Grass, - 



Clover . - . . . 

 WOOL, Merino, full blood,wash 



do do unwashed 



do 3-4 washed 



do 1-2 do 



Native - - - do 



Pulled, Lamb's, 1st sort 



do Spinning, 1st sort 



PROVISION MARKET. 

 BEE!', best pieces - . . . 

 PORK, fresh, best pieces, - . 



" whole hog 

 VEAL 

 MUTTO.N 

 POULTRY, 

 butter, keg & tub, 

 lump, best, 

 EGGS, 



MEAL, Rye, retail, - 

 ludian, do. - 

 POTATOES, 

 CIDER, liquor, (new) 



bush 

 bbl 



lb. 



cask 

 gal. 

 ton. 

 bbl. 



bush 

 lb. 



