356 
MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YO RKER: AN AGRICULTURAL AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER. 
THE THREE PREACHERS. 
BY CHARLES MACK AY. 
There are three preachers, ever preaching 
Fill'd vvith eloquence and power, 
One is old, with locks of white. 
Skinny as an anchorite ; 
And he preaches every hour 
With a shrill fanatic voice, 
And a bigot’s tiery scorn : 
“ Backward 1 yo presumptuous nations; 
Man to misery is born ! 
Born to drudge, and sweat, and suffer— 
Born to labor and to pray; 
Backward ! ye presumptuous nations, 
Back ’—be humble and obey 1” 
The second is a milder preacher ; 
Soft he talks, as if lie sung, 
Sleek and slothful is his look, 
And ids words, ns from a book, 
Issue glibly from his tongue. 
With an air of self-content, 
High he lifts his fair white hands : 
“Stand ye still 1 ye restless nations ; 
And be happy, ail ye lands! 
Fate is law, and law is perfect; 
If ye meddle, ye will mar; 
Change is rash, and ever was so 
We are happier as we are.” 
Mightier is the younger preacher, 
Genius dashes from his eye : 
And the crowds who hear his voice, 
Give him, while their souls rejoice, 
Throbbing bosoms for replies. 
Awed they listen, yet elated 
While his stirring accents fall;— 
“ Forward 1 ye deluded nations, 
Progress is the rule of all : 
Man was made for healthful effort; 
Tyranny has crush’d 1dm long; 
He shall march from good to better, 
And do battle with the wrong. 
“ Standing still is childish folly, 
Going backward is a crime; 
None should patiently endure 
Any ill that lie can cure : 
Onward ! keep the march of Time 
Onward 1 while a wrong remains 
To be conquer’d by the right; 
Wliiie oppression lifts a finger 
To affront us by Ids might: 
While an error clouds the reason 
Of the universal heart, 
Or a slave awaits his freedom, 
Action is the wise man’s part. 
“ Lo! the world is rich in blessings— 
Earth and Ocean, .Flame and Wind 
Havo unnumber’d secrets still, 
To be ransack’d when you will, 
For the service of mankind; 
Science is a child as yet, 
And her power and scope shall grow, 
And her triumphs in the future 
Shall diminish toil anil woe : 
Shall extend the bounds of pleasure 
With an ever-widening ken, 
And of woods and wilderness 
Make the homes of happy men. 
“ Onward ! —there are ills to conquer, 
Daily wickedness is wrought, 
Tyranny is swoll’u with Pride, 
Bigotry is deified, 
Error intertwined with Thought, 
Vice and Misery ramp and crawl. 
Root them out, their day has pass’d; 
Goodness is alone immortal: 
Evil was not,made to last:— 
Onward ! and all earth shall aid us 
Ere ott.i peaceful flag be furl’d.” 
And the preaching of this preacher 
Stirs the pulses of the world. 
jtral Jlkrttj) mL 
UNCLE BERNARD'S STORY. * 
“ On ! Uncle Bernard,” cried all together 
a group of little people, “ tell us a story.” 
Uncle Bernard, a white-haired old man, 
whoso easy-chair had been drawn to a warm 
cornel’—for the winter was howling against 
the windows—looked up from his large-print 
Bilbe and smiled fondly on their rosy faces : 
“ A story ! lot me read you ono out of this 
good book.” 
“Oh! no,” says bold little Bob, as he 
caught the old man round the neck, “ we 
know all the Bible stories; tell us a fairy 
tale !” 
“ Yes ! yes ! Uucle Bernard,” chirrupped 
the rest, “ a fairy tale, a fairy tale, a fairy 
tale; you have never told us a fairy tale.” 
“ No, deary, I have never told you a fairy 
tale. Fairy tales are lies, and young folks 
like you should not love to hear lies, nor 
old folks like mo should not toll lies.” 
“ Oh ! but Uncle Bernard, we know that 
fairy tales aint true, but it is such fun to 
hear them.” 
“ Well, my pets, I’ll try to tell you a story 
that sounds like a fairy tale, and yet is all 
true. Sit down and listen. 
“ Once upon a time, and a great while 
ago, there lived in a wide wood a wild man, 
whose name was Sthenos. His father and 
mother had boen keepers of a lovoly garden, 
whore they dwelt in peace with our good 
God; but ho, very early in his childhood, 
had wandered far off and lost himself among 
the shadows of the forest, where ho soon 
forgot all the little that he knew. Not only 
his head and face, but also his wholo body, 
was covered with long shaggy hair ; his nails 
were like claws, and ho could climb the 
trees or swim in the water as easily as walk 
on the ground. Gigantic in height, his 
shoulders were broad and his limbs sturdy. 
He could outrun the swiftest deer, hit with 
a stone the flying bird, and kill with his 
knotty club the fiercest beasts. Ho ate only 
what he won in the chase, with some pleas¬ 
ant herbs or fruits, or honey which ho found 
in the hollow trunks and among the rocks; 
and ho drank only water from springs, or 
the deep river which flowod through the 
valley. He slept in caves, or in the crotch¬ 
es of trees, lest the prowling boasts should 
catch him unawares. Yet, savage as he was, 
ho had a certain nobleness and rough graco 
of mien which distinguished him as superior 
to the brutes around him, and made them 
acknowledge him as their lord. Thus he 
lived, lonely and unhappy, and, notwith¬ 
standing his strength, full ol fears. 
“ Ono day, as ho was pushing through 
tho thicket to reach the river, ho heard 
singing sweeter than any he had ever heard. 
He thought at first that it was a bird, but 
ho knew the songs of all birds, and that this 
was not. like any one of them. Ho dashed 
on, and saw reclining on tho bank of tho 
river a croature so lovely that ho stood still 
in wonder, trembling with a now feeling that 
shot like fire through his heart and joints. 
Her form (his woodman’s eye saw at once 
that tho delicate proportions wero those of 
a female) was something liko his own, but 
fair and elegant, while his was brown and 
shaggy. Around her was cast a loose white 
robe, and about her shoulders floated a 
scarf, bluo as the sky. While she sung, sho 
looked upward as if some ono was hoaring 
her, whom Sthenos could not see, and then 
she listened as if to a voico he could not 
hear. Soon turning her eyes upon him, sho 
smiled with ravishing sweetness, and beck¬ 
oned him nearer. Awe-struck, but drawn 
irresistibly on. he fell at her feet, gazing on 
her boautif’ul faco. Sho spoke in accents of 
his early speech, which now came back to 
his understanding, and said :—‘ Sthenos, 
our good God, whom you havo so long for¬ 
gotten, has not forgotten you ; but, pitying 
your loneliness and misery, has sent me to 
live with you and be your friend. Already 
I love you, and you must take mo to your 
heart and give meyour love.’ 
“ As she spoke, sho bent down and wiped 
his forehead, from which sho had parted his 
matted locks, looking with her clear bluo 
eyes into his, until his wholo being seemed 
drawn out to her, and he laid her head with 
its bright golden curls on his broad* breast, 
and felt an ecstacy of inexpressible happi¬ 
ness. 
“ ‘ And now that I am to dwell with you, 
dear Sthenos,.lead me to your homo.’ 
“ ‘ Homo !’ replied he, ‘ I know not what 
you mean !’ 
“ ‘ Whore do you rest after the chaso, or 
amid tho darkness ? Where do you eat 
your food, and where do you most delight 
to be ? That is homo.’ 
“ ‘ I have no homo. All places in tho for¬ 
est are alike to me. Where weariness or 
night comes upon me, there I lio down; 
when 1 havo killed tho deer, then I eat. I 
have never thought of a home.’ 
“ ‘ Como, then,’ said sho, sweetly, ‘ lot us 
seek a spot whore wo will make a homo for 
ourselves;’ and putting her slender hand in 
his, sho led him on until they came to a 
fountain gushing outfrom under a high rock, 
before which a sunny meadow spread itself 
towards tho southwest, blooming with hare¬ 
bells, and daisy-cups, and pansies, and many 
more wild flowers. ‘ Is it not charming ?’ 
said sho; ‘ the spring shall givo us water, 
and tho rock guard us from the fierco north 
wind, and we can look out upon tho sun¬ 
light and tho shadows as they float mingled 
together over tho green grass and tho flow- 
ors that spring up through tho verdure.’ 
“ Sthenos smiled, and, though he could 
not understand all her meaning, ho felt a 
charm of nature he had never before known. 
“‘Now,’ she said, ‘the sun, though its 
light be pleasant, looks down too hotly upon 
us; and when the night comes, tho dews 
will fall and the winds chill us. Go, break 
off boughs from the trees, and strip tho 
broad bark from the decayed birches.’— 
This was an easy task for the vigorous man : 
and in the moan time sho had gathered 
heaps of dry hemlocks, and spread them 
deeply over the leaf-covered ground. Then 
leaning the thick boughs against each other, 
and laying, by her directions, tho curved 
bark, overlapping in successive and contin¬ 
uous layers, upon them, Sthenos saw as his 
work a rude but safe hut, and said ;— 4 This 
shall be our homo. I go for our evening 
meal;’ and dashing into the forest, ho soon 
returned with wood-pigeons and a young 
fawn which ho had killed, casting them at 
the feet of his gentle wife, who had already 
arranged in leafy cups the berries which sho 
had gathered from the meadow; and Stho- 
nos beheld wild flowers, mingled with long, 
trailing, delicate vines, adorning tho en¬ 
trance of their homo. 
“ Tho simple meal, soon prepared by her 
skilful hands, he thought more savory than 
he had ever had; but before she suffered 
him to partake, she pointed upward, and 
with clasped hands sang praise to our good 
God, tho Giver. An hour of delicious 
friendship stole away, as hand in hand they 
looked into each other’s eyes—thoughts he 
knew not how to speak, and she needed no 
words to ut.tor. Then another hymn to 
our good God, the sleepless Preserver, she 
warbled from her lips of gurgling melody, 
and tho pair sank to rest. 
“ Thus sped on day after day, and night 
after night. Gradually Sthenos lost his 
fierceness, save in tho struggles of tho chase. 
She had fashioned for him soft garments out 
of fawn-skins and feathers, which now he 
wore less for need than pride, and to please 
his skilful friend. His shaggy hair was 
smoothed into curling grace ; tho hut con¬ 
stantly received new conveniences and or¬ 
naments from his strong or her cunning 
hand ; and happy was ho after his toil in the 
forest to return bearing a rich honeycomb, 
or loading a goat with full udders to his 
home, dear because hors. 
“ On waking, one dewy morning, ho look¬ 
ed fondly in her loviug face, beaming with 
tendor, holy thoughts, and said :—‘ You call 
me Sthenos, but have nover told mo tho 
name by which I am to call you, my dearest.’ 
“‘You have just pronounced tho namo 
I love best, excopt whon you call mo your 
wife and your friend. I have had several 
names in the land whence I came to be near 
you ; but that by which our God wished you 
to know mo is Enthymia. And, dear Sthe¬ 
nos, whenever you are in trouble, in need, 
or in doubt, call Enthymia to your side, and 
whatevor love can do I will gladly perform. 
With your strength and my affectionate zeal, 
and tho blessing of our good God, wo shall 
bo happy as we may in this wild wood ; but 
tho good God has promised mo that when 
you shall have learned to sing and pray with 
me, that our two beings shall bo hlendod 
into ono, and we shall leave tho forest to go 
and dwell in a garden with our good God, 
far more beautiful than tho ono from which 
you strayed a long while ago.’ 
“ ‘ Oh, happy hopo !’ replied Sthenos ; ‘ I 
can think of no higher bliss than that your 
loveliness should be minglod with my 
strength, except that my strength shall be 
for ever united to your dear thoughts.’ 
“‘Say not so, Sthenos,’ answered sho, 
looking up with a holy smile, like morning 
light sparkling in the dow ; ‘ our highest joy 
will bo to dwell with our God.’ 
“ From that moment Sthenos earnestly 
endeavored to loarn tho hymns and prayers 
of Enthymia. They livod long in tho for¬ 
est, and children were born to thorn, three 
sons like their father, vigorous; threo daugh¬ 
ters like their mother, graceful. But one 
fair morning tho father and tho mother 
came not from their chamber (for tho little 
hut had given placo to a wide dwelling) : 
their children went anxiously in to seek 
them, but they found them not. Sthenos 
and Enthymia wore gono to tho garden of 
our good God. 
“ The children were mute in wonder and 
sadness, when suddenly tho chambor was 
filled with ravishing light and delicious 
odors, and threo radiant angels hovered over 
the bod ; and tho roof opened, and the chil¬ 
dren could seo far up into the sky, and saw 
a glorious being standing under tho Tree of 
Life, boforo tho throne of God ; and in the 
smiling countenance of the glorious being 
they recognized, strangely but sweetly min¬ 
gled, the love of both father and mother.— 
And one of tho angels said (ho was the tal¬ 
lest of tho three :) ‘ I pointed out the way 
to them, and encouraged them to strive to 
reach the garden.’ 
“ ‘ And 1,’ said tho second, on whoso bo¬ 
som shone a gem like a golden anchor, “ bore 
them up on my wings.’ 
“‘And I.’joyfully exclaimed tho third, 
who had eyes like the first spring violets 
washed with rain, ‘ havo made them both 
ono for ever.” 
“ Then turning to her sister angels, she 
said : ‘ Your tasks for them aro over; but I 
go to fill their united being with immortal 
happiness.’ ” 
“ Ah ! Uncle Bernard,” cried Gertrude, 
“ that is hotter than a fairy tale ; but what 
queer names, Sthenos and Enthymia; what 
do thoy mean ?” 
“ I made them out of the Greek,” an¬ 
swered tho old man; “ and by Sthonos, I 
mean man loft to himself, when ho would bo 
a mere savage; and by Enthymia, I mean 
wisdom sent to him by our good God, to 
teach him how to live on earth and prepare 
for heaven. Whon man is transformed to 
holy wisdom, and uses his strength for wiso 
ends, ho becomes all good, and God takes 
him up to tho second Paradise.” 
“ Yes,” says little Charley, “ and tho angel 
with the anchor is Hope.” 
“And the tallest angel is Faith,” adds 
Robert, “ for faith givos pious people cour- 
ago.” 
“ And tho gentle blue-eyed one must be 
Love, for love lives for over,” whispered 
Gertrude in Undo Bernard’s ear. 
“ Bless you, dear child ! you look like her,” 
whispors back Uncle Bernard.— Putnam’s 
Monthly. 
TWO ARMIES.-MTJSKETS AND SPADES. 
Tiie New York Economist in an article 
upon tho army of the United States, makes 
a startling contrast between the use of mus¬ 
kets and of spades; ono used by govorn- 
mont, and the other by a groat railroad 
company : 
The United States army numbers about 
10,000 men, and they cost tho country last 
year, $8,225,246 for pay, subsistence, cloth¬ 
ing, etc. That is to say, $820 per man, or 
if wo deduct the militia exponsos, $800 per 
man. It would puzzle any one to toll of 
what service were those men, living useless¬ 
ly in barracks and old forts, oating threo 
meals per day, and turning out occasionally 
to touch their caps to their officers. 
The Illinois Central Railroad army num¬ 
bers 10,000 men also, and they receive from 
the company $3,700,000 per annum, in re¬ 
turn for which they labor twelve hours per 
day upon a work which gradually stretches 
itself through tho most fertile plains, con¬ 
necting the great lakes with tho .Ohio and 
Mississippi rivers, and ultimately with tho 
Gulf of Mexico. 
Tho relative advantages of those two ar¬ 
mies to socio.ty present an interesting mat¬ 
ter for study, and are graphically sketched 
by the New York Post. Tho prospective 
building of tho great Central Railroad of 
Illinois alone, has added to tho wealth of 
that State, in the appropriation of wild 
lands, tho sum of forty millions, within a 
strip of but twelve miles in width, and tho 
actual construction of the road will bring to 
a ready market millions of acres of land 
now owned by tho General Government, 
which, wero tho road not constructed, 
would lay waste for years to come. The 
Federal government omploys ten thousand 
men at an expense of eight millions of dol¬ 
lars, to carry muskets. The Central Rail¬ 
road Company, employing ten thousand 
mon at less than four millions, confers a 
vast proporty on tho State, upon the Fed¬ 
eral Government, and upon thousands of 
farmers. Year after year the government 
spends millions of dollars, effecting nothing, 
producing nothing and resulting in nothing 
hut the turning loose of superanuated sol¬ 
diers, made paupers by a life of idleness, to 
prey upon the industrious the remainder of 
their existence. 
m sift Imitor, 
“NAKED TRUTH.” 
Tiie late eccentric John Holmes used fre¬ 
quently, in his addresses to different juries, 
to explain the meaning of tho phrase “ na¬ 
ked truth” by relating the following fablo : 
Truth and Falsehood traveling ono warm 
day mot at a river, and both wont in to bathe 
at tho samo place. Falsehood coming first 
out of tho water took his companion’s 
clothes and left his own vile raiment, and 
thon went on his way. Truth coming out 
of the water sought in vain for his own 
pi’oper dress—disdaining to wear tho garb 
of Falsehood. Truth started, all naked, in 
pursuit of tho thief, but not being so swift 
of foot, has nover overtaken the fugitive.— 
Ever since ho has been known as “ naked 
Truth.” 
Fisher Ames onco said in a speech at 
Washington, that a lio would travel from 
Maino to Georgia while truth was gotting 
up and pulling on its boots. 
“ That is a sad affair in these days of ca¬ 
lamity,” observed Peter to bis wife, looking 
up mournfully from tho paper he was read¬ 
ing. 
“ What is it Poter doar,” inquired the bet¬ 
ter half, suspending operations with tho 
broom. 
“ Tho poor man who was overwhelmed 
with consternation has not been dug out 
yet, although two stoam shovels have been 
kept at work night and day removing tho 
superincumbent mass,” Peter answered, at 
the samo time avoiding tho broomstick by a 
dextrous and timely retreat. 
“Col. W. is a fine looking man, ain’t he?” 
observed an individual to his companion, as 
a certain consequential person with a mili¬ 
tary air strode by. 
“ Yes,” replied tho othor, “ I was taken 
for him once.” 
“ You ! why you’re as ugly as sin !” 
“ I don’t caro for that, I was taken for 
him; I endorsed his note and was taken for 
him —by the sheriff. 
A Sharp Hit. —Tho wator from the Con¬ 
gress Spring, at Saratoga, has been import¬ 
ed into France. Tho question has been 
raised why it was called Congress water ? 
Tho obvious answer, of course, did not es¬ 
cape the wits: because it contained so much 
gas! 
Tiie pimples on a toper’s faco, aro an old 
fashioned sort of “ spiritual manifestations.” 
They cannot bo said to como exactly from 
beyond tho gravo, but they show clearly 
that tho “ modiutn ” is hurrying himself 
toward tho grave. 
The Cleveland Herald addresses this to 
old bachelors':—“If our Maker thought it 
wrong for Adam to live single whon there 
was not a woman on earth, how criminally 
guilty are old bachelors, with tho world full 
of pretty girls !” 
An eminent psychologist of London has 
decided that spirit rappings aro produced 
by phantom postmen engaged in the deliv¬ 
ery of dead letters. 
The man who “ couldn’t contain himsolf,” 
was found, upon inquiry, to contain about a 
quart of tho fluid oxtract of corn ! 
A Toast.—Woman, —Tho last and host 
of tho series ; if we may havo hor for a 
toast, wo won’t ask for any but-her. 
A young lawyer in Chambers street, yes¬ 
terday put his spinal column out of joint, 
trying to “ draw a conclusion.” 
Comer. 
“Attempt the end, and never stand to doubt; 
Nothing’s so hard, but search will find it out.” 
For tho Rural New-Yorker. 
CHEMICAL ENIGMA. 
I am composed of 26 letters. 
My 1, 14, 25, 15 is a metal which occurs in 
boundless profusion in this country’. 
My 2, 23, 18, 2, 21, 20 is an important coloring 
substance. 
My 3, 1, 10, 13, 22, 23 is a sticky and tenacious 
substance. 
My 4, 17, 15, 8, 20, 3, 12, 23 is an inflammable 
gas. 
My 6, 16, 25, 11, 6, 20, 7, 1 has the property of 
absorbing gases. 
My 6, 25, 8, 9, 20, 23 is a solid usually of a 
black color. 
My 24, 20, 1, 15 is a valuable metal found only 
in the metalic state. 
My 26, 5, 7, 19, 6, 4 is a substance which exists 
in a great variety of vegetables. 
My whole is a gas which occurs abundantly in 
nature. s - D - 
Ovid, Seneca Co., N. Y. 
Answer next week. 
CHARADE. 
My first reversed doth oft appear. 
On fields and flowers both bright and clear ; 
My second’s binding power is great, 
My whole is a united state. 
jJ3^"Answer next week. 
ANSWER TO ENIGMA, &c„ IN NO. 43. 
Answer to Poekical Euigma— Herbs, Mint, Rue, 
Balm, Sage, Thyme. 
SAMUEL MOUUSON, 
AT THE OLD ROCHESTER NURSERY. 
Office, No. 36 Front St., Rochester, N. Y. 
I S prepared to furnish inventories, to post-paid appli¬ 
cants, of the present very extensive stock of Nursery 
items, consisting in part of 
120,000 Dwarf and standard Pear Trees. 
90,000 Apple Trees. 
50,000 Peach Trees. 
30,000 Plum, Cherry and Apricot Trees. 
Over 100,000 Hardy Evergreens. 
Also, extra large Northern Spy Apple Trees, Dwarf and 
Standard Pear, Cherry, &c., &c. 
Also, for immediate effect, a large quantity of extra 
sized Ornamental Trees, among which are fine specimens 
of Norway Spruce, Silver Maple, Pawlonins, Catalpas, 
Mountain Ash, Horse Chestnut, &c. 
And a fine selection of Weeping Deciduous Trec3, Or¬ 
namental Shrubs, Hybrid Perpetual Roses together with 
such novelties as may be classed strictly lmrdy. Also a 
very limited assortment of half hardy plants of small size, 
such as Cryptomeria Japonica, Cedrus Deodara, &c., <Stc. 
The amateur wishing prime fruits of well established 
repute, or the agriculturist needing tine cropping, tho¬ 
roughly tested varieties, may rely upon the most careful 
execution of their orders. 
The Ornamental items are entirely grown in tho Nur¬ 
sery, consequently none of the heavy losses are sustained 
that usually occur to recent imported subjects. 
The Evergreens are very robust and admirably furnish¬ 
ed to the surface of the ground, none presenting the naked 
stems usual to imported plants. 
Dealers are invited to give a call before making their 
purchases. 
Peach and Plum pits wanted. 
September 1, 1853. 196-tf. 
0* F> PEOPIjE’S COLLEGE OI<’ THE STaTK 
of New York, Incorporated April 12, 1853.—This insti¬ 
tution lias been chartered by the Legislature of this State, 
for the purpose of reducing the expenses of Academic and 
Collegiate Education, and thereby open the Halls of Sci¬ 
ence to all classes of society by reducing the cost of tuition, 
board and clothing, and enabling the student to defray the 
greater part of the expense in labor. 
Provision will be made to educate young men corpo¬ 
really and mentally for specific purposes, by pursuing full 
and definite courses of study for each of the pursuits re¬ 
presented in the College—either Agricultural, Mechanical 
or Professional—and thus graduates will he qualified for 
entering at once upon the business of their choice. 
At a regular meeting of the Trustees mimed in the Char¬ 
ter, held at Owego, on the 25th day of May, the following 
appointments were made: 
D. C. McCallum, of Owego, President of the Board of 
Trustees. 
A. I. VVyxkoop, of Chemung, Vice President. 
Tracy Morgan, of Binghamton, Treasurer. 
Harrison Howard, of Loekport, Secretary and General 
Agent. 
Agents are being commissioned in each county of the 
State, that (he people may have an opportunity to' contri¬ 
bute to the capital stock, which is distributed in shares so 
small that every individual may become interested in an 
institution which commends itself to the favorable consid¬ 
eration o( ever} intelligent person. 
For further information upon the subject, application 
may be made, pbSt-paid, to the Secretary, who will send a 
pamphlet containing the act of incorporation and ol jects 
uf the Institution, and ether needful information. 
188-tf II HOWARD, Secretary. 
The undersigned, having been appointed Agent for 
Rochester and Monroe county, will be most happy to fur¬ 
nish any new information desired, in reference to the Col¬ 
lege, to'rc'ceivo stock subscriptions, (the slinres are one 
dollar each,) or to address audiences, on invitation, ex¬ 
plaining at length the plans and objects of the People's 
College, and also as lie views the idea of a true educ ation. 
Respectfully, G. F. NEEDHAM. 
NEW YORK STATE A G HZC Ij'L'f UK A L 
' COLLEGE. 
A T a meeting of the Trustees of the State Agricultural 
College, ou the 21st Sept., 1853, it was resolved, to 
arrange and prepare the Veterinary department of the 
College, simultaneously with tin* earliest courses of in¬ 
struction ; and that every subscriber to the funds of the 
College be and hereby is declared to be entitled lo the use 
of the Hospitals of the said department, f**r all Medical or 
Surgical treatment, necessary and proper for such discuses 
or accidents as may afflict any animal belonging to the said 
subscriber : to be subject to such rules and regulations as 
the Trustees may from time to lime appoint and direct. 
No cost or charge shall be made for Medical or Surgical 
advice or treatment. The necessary expense for the sus¬ 
tenance of animals received into the Hospitals under this 
resolution, shall be paid by the proprietors of the animals 
respectively. By Order. 
197-4t J. Mb BACON, See’}. 
FUME FOVTJLS. 
H AVING raised from select stock, a few broods of buff 
Cochins and Shanghais, in order to obtain for pri¬ 
vate use, a small flock known to be pure and genuine, I 
have for sale about twenty pairs, and at prices that any 
one can pay, who is able to own half a dozen common 
fowls. They are broods of April, May. and June- genu¬ 
ine as imported;—being of stock received from the im¬ 
porter, bred immediately from fowls brought from China. 
193tf D. ELY, 09 So. Fitzhugh St., 
Sept. 1, 1853. Roeliester, N Y. 
TO BOOllBiNDERfi.—FOR SALE 
—The Tools, Stoek and Fixtures in a well 
established BINDERY, now doing a good 
business. The owner has been in it for 
the last twelve years, and only wishes to leave to do other 
business that will be better tor his health. 
For particulars concerning the business,address Demo¬ 
crat Office, Rochester, N. Y., or to the subscriber, 
F. H. MARSHALL. 
Rochester, July 21, 1853. 187-tf 
SUFFOLK FIGS FOR SAFE. 
T WENTY FAIRS of pure bred Suffolk Pigs for sale 
by the subscriber. Also Breeding Sows. They can 
be safely forwarded by Railroad, Express, &c., to almost 
aiiy part of the country. 0. J. HOLDEN, 
June, 1853. [186m3] Walopole, N. II. 
MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YORKER: 
A WEEKLY HOME JOURNAL, 
For both Country and Town Residents. 
PUBLICATION OFFICE, 
Burns’ Block, corner State and Buffalo Sts., 
Rochester, N. Y. 
TERMS, IN ADVANCE s 
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Agents as follows:— Three Copies one year, for 85; Six 
Copies (and one to Agent or getter up of club,) for §10; 
Ten Copies (and one to Agent,) for $15; Twenty Copies 
for $25, and any additional number, directed to individuals 
at the same rate. Six months subscriptions in proportion- 
Subscription money, pi-vperly enclosed, may be 
sent by mail at the risk of the Publisher. 
Terms of Advertising 
One Dollar per square (ten lines—100 words, or less,) for 
each insertion ,—in advance. The circulation of the 
New-Yorker is much larger than that of any other news¬ 
paper published in the State, out of New York city- Only 
a limited space, however, is devoted to advertisements, and 
hence preference is given to those most appropriate—such 
as the cards and notices of dealers in Agricultural Imple¬ 
ments and Machinery,—Horticulturists and Seedsmen,— 
Booksellers and Publishers,—Inventors, etc. All orders 
by mall should be accompanied with the cash. 
To enable us to accommodate as many as possible, briet 
advertisements are preferred. Patent medicines, &c., will 
not be advertised in this paper on any terms. 
All communications, and business letters, should 
be addressed to D. D. T. Moore, Rochester, N. Y. 
THE WOOL GROWER AND STOCK REGISTER. 
This is the only American Journal primarily devoted to 
the interest of Wool and Stock Growers, and should be in 
the hands of every owner of Domestic Animals. It is ably 
conducted, published in the best style, and finely illustra¬ 
ted. Each number contains a careful Review of the Wool 
and Cattle Markets, and much other useful and reliable 
information which can be obtained from no other source. 
The Fifth Volume commences with July, 1853. 
Terms s— Fifty Cents a Year ; Five Copies for 82 : 
Eight for $3; Eleven for $4. Back volumes, bound in 
paper, at 40 cts. each,—unbound at 35 cts., or three for 81. 
Published monthly, iu octavo form. Specimen numbers 
sent free. Money, properly enclosed, at our risk. 
Address D. D. T. MOORE, Rochester, N. Y. 
