1851. 



THE GENESEE FARMER. 



247 



FISHKILL. 1.ANDI1VG IVUIISERIES. 



2^2 MrLES NORTH FROM THK NKWBURGH FKRRY. 



FriUt and Oriianieiital Trees. 



THE subscriber respectfully solicits the attention of Frimt 

 Gkowfrs. and dealers in Fruit Trees, ^ his large stock offered 

 for sale the present fall, consisting of 



40.001) APPLE TREES, of the most approved varieties, 6 to 10 

 feethiu'h. at from $12 to f.14 per hundred. 



20,000 PEAR TRH;ES, embracing over one hundred of the best 

 varieties, 5 to 8 teet his^h. 30 cents each, $28 per hundred. 



30.000 CHERRY TREES, two to three years from the inocula- 

 tion. 6 to 12 feet, at $20 to $25 per hundred. 



10.000 APRICOT, of the best varieties, (2000 of which are the 

 " Early Golden." a very hardy and productive sort) one to three 

 years from bud, $8 to JtK on Peach, and $25 to $30 ou Plum stocks, 

 per hundn d. 



50,000 PEACH TREES.of the most valuable standardvaricties 

 entirely free from disease, one to two years from the inooulatioi., 

 7 cents each. $6 per hundred. 



10,000 ISABELLA AND CATAWB.A. GRAPE VINES, tw to 

 four years old, with fine roots, having been annually cat bnck ; 

 they are in excellent condition for vineyard planting — 20 .;euts 

 each. $10 to $15 per hundred. 



1,000 QUINCE TREES, mostly of the apple variety. Currant 

 and Raspberry bushes. Strawberry plants. Summer Hybrid perpet- 

 ual, and other roses, &c. See. 



40.000 DECIDUOUS AND EVERGREEN Ornamental Trees, 

 many of which are of large size and fine form. 10,000 Arbor Vita, 

 1)4 to 5 (eet high, $12 to .S25 per hundred. 



8,000 BALSAM FIR, l}i to 5 feet, $12 to $30 per hundred. 



The subscriber in consequence of the advantages he poesesses, 

 is enabled to sell at low prices ; having 300 acres of land, with a 

 variety of soil, the diff jreut kinds of plants are cultivated in that 

 best suited to their growth. His facilities for fbrwarding packa- 

 ges are all that he can desire. The Nursery is within two and a 

 half miles of the Hudson River Railroad Depot, at FishkiU Land- 

 ing. Steamboats run daily to New York and Albany from New- 

 burgh on the opposite side of the river. 



From 50 to 60 acres attached to the Nursery are closely set wi'h 

 Standard and Specimen trees, which greatly increase his facilities 

 for the attainment of correctness. The new and most valuable 

 varieties of the Apple, Peach, Pear, Plum. Apricot, Cherry, &.C., 

 which have recently originated in this country and Europe, have 

 been procured as early as practicable, and tested, or are in the 

 course of being tested, in the proprietor's own grounds. The new 

 and r.are Deciduous and Evergreen Ornamental Trees are annu 

 ally imported, of which fine plants can be furnished. 



Those who are planting Orchards, starting Nurseries, or engag- 

 ed in the sale of trees, &c., are invited to examine his stock. 



Trees, Shrubs, &c., when ordered, will be taken up carefully, 

 correctly l;i belled, packed in the best manner, forwarded agreeable 

 to order, and with the least possible delay. 



(P3= Catalogues seut to all who apply by post-paid letters. 



DANIEL BRINCKERHOOF. 



Fishkill Landing. Oct ,1851. [10-lt*J 



BulTalo Niirstry and Horticultural Garden. 



THE proprietor of this old established nursery would call the 

 attention of fruit-growers, nurserymen, and others, to the 

 very large stock of Fruit and Ornamental Trees, Flowering 

 Shrubs, sic., now offered for sale. 



The stock of apple trees is unusually large and fine, comprising 

 the most choice and valuable sorts ; by the thousand at very low 

 prices. 



Fear trees, both standards and dwarfs, of the very best sorts for 

 garden and orchard culture * 



Cherry trees — a very large stock of fine trees mostly trained 

 ■with low heads. The most choice sorts are propagated largely. 



Also, a very good assortment of the plum, pea.ch. apricot, necta- 

 rine, quince, gooseberry, raspberry, strawberry, currant, &.C., &c. 



The assortment of Ornamental Trees, Flowering Shrubs, Sec, 

 comprises almost every desirable article. 



Also, a large stock of Evergreen Trees by the hundred. 



Roses, Dahlias, bulbs, &.c.,Jii.c. 



Stocks of all sorts for nurserys. Large importations are made 

 from year to year. 



All orders and letters of inquiry will receive prompt attention. 

 Trees securely packed, carefully labelled, and forwarded with dis- 

 patch. B. HODGE. 



Buffalo, N. Y., Sept., 1851. [9-2t»] 



Extensive sale of Keal Estate In Virginia. 



ON the 10th day of ISfovember, 1851, will be sold to the highest 

 bidder, in Williamsburg, 2.787 acres of land belonging to the 

 estate of the late John VT. Maupin, lying between Slid City and 

 Jamestown. 350 acres of which are highly improved ; also, about 

 100 acres of richest meadow. The otber portion is abundantly 

 studded with valuable oak and pine timber, easily accessible by 

 ■water ; a part of which lies on a navigable creek, where is located 

 the brick work of a once valuable manufacturing ■water mill, to 

 ■which vessels may float, and which creek empties into James riv- 

 er, one mile distant therefrom. These lands will be sold in tracts 

 to suit purchasers : also, other real estate will then and there be 

 sold, embracing most desirable houses and lots in said city, inclu- 

 ding a new and commodious brick store house and lot. See Card 

 published. Also address R 11. ARMISTEAD, 



Williamsburg, July, 1851. [8-3t] Exor. & Comr. 



HIGHI.A1VD NURSERIES, NEWBURGH, N. Y 



AS.iUL & CO. have the pleasure to announce to their patrons 

 . and the public in general, that their stock of Fruit and 

 Ornamental Trees, which they offer for sale the coming autumn, 

 is of the very best quality and embraces everything in their line 

 that can be procured in the trade. 



Dealers and Planters of Trees on a large scale, will be treated 

 •with on as liberal terms as can be done by any establishment of 

 rfj)!t/(i^(oii in the country. They flatter themselves that for cor- 

 rectness of nomenclature of fruits(which is a serious consideration 

 to planters) that their stock is as nearly perfect as it pos.^ibly can 

 be, h.iviug been all propagated ou their own grounds, from un- 

 doubted sources, under the personal supervision of Mr. Saul.— 

 They have propagated in large quantities all the leading standard 

 varieties, -which are proved to be best adapted for general cultiva- 

 lion, especially those recommended by the .American Pomologieal 

 Congress at its several sessions, as well as all novelties of recent 

 introduction, and kinds, particularly suited to certain localities, 

 and sections of the Union and Canadas. 



Their stock of Pear Trees is the largest they have ever had to 

 offer for sale, and among the largest in the country, and consists 

 of over 50.000 saleable trees. 



The stock of Apple Trees is also very large, as well as Pluma 

 Cherries. Apricots, Peaches. Quinces, arid Nectarines. Also, 

 Grape Vines, Gooseberries, Cui-rants, Raspberries, Strawberries, 

 &o. &o. &c. 



Pears on Quince, Cherry on Mahaleb, and Apple on Paradise 

 stocks, for pyramids and dwarfs for garden culture, and of which 

 there is a choice assortment of the Idnds that succeed best oa 

 those stocks. 



DECIDUOUS AND EVERGREEN ORNAMENTAL TREES 

 AND SHRUBS. 



Embracing all the known kinds suitable for street planting, of 

 extra size ; also, the more rare and select, aa -well as all the well 

 known kinds suitable for Arboretums, Lawn and Door-Yard 

 planting, Stc , including Weeping Trees, Vines, Garden and 

 Climbing Roses in great variety . Hybrid Perpetuals, Hybrid Chi- 

 na. Hybrid Bourbons, Hybrid Damasks, Hybrid Provence, and 

 Bourbon, Tea, China, and Noisette, and Prairie, and other Climb- 

 ing Roses. 



A large quantity of Arbor Vitse for Screens, Buckthorn, Osage, 

 Orange, and other hedge plants. 



The above will be sold on as liberal terms as similar «itock can 

 be purchased elsewhere. For further particulars see catalogues, 

 a new edition of which is just issued, and will be forwarded to all 

 p.^«Npa;d applicants by mail. A liberal discount will be made to 

 purchasers who buy to sell again, and extensive planters on their 

 own account. 



P. S.— Freight paid to New York. 



Newburgh . Sept. 1. 1851. [9-2t] 



Lands of Long Island, 



ADJOINING the villages of Lakeland and Hermanville, about 

 '^ 48 miles from the cities of New York and Brooklyn, by the Long 

 I.sland Railroad. The opportunity is now offered to all those who 

 ever wish to obtain land on Long Lsland, the Ancient "Garden of 

 America," that will probably never occur again, for these lands 

 are the only remaining new lands on the Island, and are equal in 

 qu.ality, when cultivated, to any other land. 



The results of cultivation on these Island lands have been so 

 great, so much beyond the expectations of any one, that they are 

 now considered of great value for farms and gardens, and will, in 

 all probability, be all taken up for settlement and occupation, or 

 be held at more than five times their present price. All kinds of 

 produce may row be seen growing there, such as wh-at. rye, corn, 

 potatoes, and garden vegetables, with fruits and flowers, in the 

 most luxurious growth, where but a short time since the land was 

 covered with trees .and bushes. 



The surface of the ground is perfectly beautiful, free from stone 

 or bogs or marshes, and the climate as healthy as can be found 

 in this latitude. The soil is a fine loam, admirably adapted to 

 high cultivation and great crops, and of easy tillage. 



Indeed, no New England or Northern New York man can form 

 any adequate idea of the great difference in the labor and strength 

 requisite to cultivate these Lsland lands, and that required to sub- 

 due their own rugged lands, until he has seen or made the trial ; 

 and I now offer for sale as handsome land, and intrinsically as 

 valuable, as can be found within fifty miles of the city of New 

 York, in any direction, in lots of five acres or more, for the sum 

 of $25 per acre. 



Any person wishing to purchase a five acre lot of good and 

 handsome land, without one foot of water or useless ground on it, 

 can do so by sending $5 as a first payment, and the further sum 

 of $5 a month, until one half is paid, when a warrantee deed and 

 good title willbegiven,and the remainder part of the purchase mo- 

 ney may be paid or secured on the land,to be paid within three or 

 five years, with 6 per cent, yearly interest. Larger lots will be 

 sold on the same terms. 



The title is perfectly good— I have a history or deduction of the 

 title comiilete, certified to by legal men of tlie highest character, 

 which I will send by mail with maps, pamphlets, and all informa- 

 tion, to all purchasers, or those who wish to be informed of these 

 Island lands, by applying to E. H. PEAS, of Albany, or CHAS. 

 WOOD, Stationer, 117 John street, N Y. [S-Sl] 



TIMOTHY SEED for sale at No. 68 State street, Rochester, 

 N. Y.. by BRIGGS 8c BROTHER. 



September, 1851. 



