MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YO RKER: AN AGRICULTURAL AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER. 
3^ 1} f 11 T ll l hundred tons, tho greater part of which was 
to be delivered at way landings day and 
—■— night; this gave constant employment to 
For the Rural New-Yorker. ,, , f \ \ i 
tho mates and crew m breaking out and ar- 
“OH, THERE ARE MOMENTS.” . 
’ ___ ranging the particular lots for each landing. 
by rams e. m ack. The captain and clerk were also constantly 
O.I there are moments, employed at the desk, or in checking oft' ar- 
Swcet moments of bliss, tides now landed and now taken on board. 
When the bright world above us c , , r , , T 
D . . ... Sunday afternoon we eamo to Leavens- 
Seems opening to this. •> 
worth, a growing village of 700 inhabitants. 
When the angel of hope . ’ ° ° a . . ’ 
Hovers light o'er the head, 111 Urawforu county, Indiana, sixty miles be- 
And scatters her flowers low Louisville; here, the day before, a tor- 
in the path that we tread. nado passed through tho place, unroofing 
When the young heart of youth or blowing down some forty houses and 
And love warms the check, stores,—one substantial brick store, opposite 
And brightens the eye. the landing was now l'oolless. It was said 
And when we may meet that several persons were killed and many 
With the loved of our hearts, wounded. Wo here took on hoard aflat 
. Ami gaze on the. forms load of cotton wood, and left some passengers 
Till the vision departs. ’ 1 ° 
and freight. The place is well located on 
Then, then there are momenta , , , . . , , 
Sweet moments Of bliss, tolerably elevated ground, the country in 
When the bright world above us, the vicinity appeared to he a rich alluvium, 
Seems opening to this. with good improvements. 
- Before sunset wo passed the mouth of 
Minis ot Crntifl. Sinking creek, in Breckenridge county, 
^ __Kentucky, a considerable stream which six 
———- ——- or seven miles from its source sinks into 
For the Rural New-Yorker. 
A TRIP TO MEMPHIS.-NO. 4. the ground, probably passing through a 
_ limestone ledge for six miles, when it re-ap- 
At Louisville a resident pilot came on pears and flows into the Ohio. Ten miles 
board to take us over tho Falls of tho Ohio; below we pass Clover Port, in the same 
not a dangerous experiment in such high county, a village of 700 inhabitants, a great 
water. We saw no rocks, but there were point for the shipment of tobacco, which is 
plenty of whirlpools in our tortuous course, now successfully cultivated on these fertile 
bringing to mind tho appearance of Hell- alluviums. In this vicinity are extensive 
gato at early ebb tide. In a few minutes beds of bituminous coal; four miles in the 
we rounded to, below the falls, near the interior are the white sulphur, Breckenridge 
mouth of the canal, two miles from Louis- and tar springs. 
villc, where our pilot left us. AY e next pas- About 2 o'clock the next morning, May 
sed tho thriving town ot New Albany, in 3 , we camo to Evansville, a largo growing 
Indiana, three miles below Louisville, con- town of 7,000 inhabitants, the county seat 
taining a population of over 9,000. Here of Vanderburgh county, Indiana; here are 
are very extensive ship-yards, tho beautiful long ranges of fine stores near the landing, 
steamer Eelipso was built here. Her last Th e pi aeG j s built on tolerably elevated 
trip from New Orleans to Louisville was ground; tho interior country is said to be 
made in less than tour and a half days. I 11 V ery fertile, the heavy oaks denoting a 
1816 the first steamer on the Mississippi wheat bearing soil. After leaving many 
made the first voyage by steam to N. Orleans tons of freight, which was speedily discharg- 
and back to Louisville. Tho spring follow- 0 ( j ; we took on several passengers leaving 
ing the same steamer, under the command p Cr haps as many. Early in the morning 
of Captain Shreve, made another voyage wc p aS g G( i tho mouth of the Wabash, the 
to New Orleans and back in forty-one days, country around being completely submerg- 
and at a public dinner givon to the Captain e( q a t this time; at 8 o’clock we landed 
he predicted that in less than twenty years freight and passengers at Shawneetown, in 
tho passage between Louisville and New (j a l] a tjn county, Illinois, eleven miles be- 
Orleans would be made in less than ten j ow the mouth of tho Wabash, a very con- 
days,—the downward trip is now made in siderable businoss place, with a banking- 
four. house and 2,000 inhabitants. Tho country 
Below the Falls, tho country on either ; s 0 f surpassing richness, but too low and 
sido, bears in its contour, and in its dense flat to bo healthy; the town itself had but a 
tall sylvicc, tho unmistakable evidence ot a trifling elevation above the present level of 
rich alluvial formation. I he little villages the river. Here we took on some corn in 
along tho route, and tho occasional small gunny bags; gourd-seed corn was here so 
clearings, all bear marks ot an indolent, per- plenty, and of so little account, that tho 
haps a climate-debilitated people, living eas- j ar g e unshelled ears wore scattered around 
ily and cheaply, on a soil requiring little the store-house, where it lay sprouting in 
cultui'G to enable it to yield enormous crops the damp atmosphere. The country for 
of that prince of cereals, Indian corn. As many miles below the Wabash on both sides 
I looked upon tho rich alluvial bottoms, the Ohio is a dense forest of cotton wood, 
many of which were still elevated several poplar, sycamore, ash, walnut, &c. Near 
teet above the present high water, the dis- Caseyville, in Union county, Kentucky, we 
For the Rural New-Yorker. 
“OH, THERE ARE MOMENTS.” 
BY ELLEN E. MACK. 
Oh there are moments, 
Sweet moments of bliss, 
When the bright world above us 
Seems opening to this. 
When the angel of hope 
Hovers light o'er the head, 
And scatters her flowers 
In the path that we tread. 
When the young heart of youth 
With pleasure beats high, 
And love warms the cheek, 
And brightens the eye. 
And when we may meet 
With the loved of our hearts, 
And gaze on their forms 
Till the vision departs. 
Then, then there are moments 
Sweet moments of bliss, 
When the bright world above us, 
Seems opening to this. 
Mings of Ctntjfl. 
For the Rural New-Yorker. 
A TRIP TO MEMPHIS.-NO. 4. 
position to find fault with the great lack of 
rural industry, was modified, if not entirely 
neutralized, by the conviction that no Yan¬ 
kee could work here with impunity to his 
stopped along side of a wharf boat to leave 
freight and passengers and take on coal; 
here was a railroad built on piles through 
the swamp, leading to a coal mine a short 
health, when tho thermometer was much distauco from tho river. The whole coun- 
above tho freezing point. 
try along tho river was now in places com- 
Twenty-two miles below Louisville we pletely submerged. The wharf boat con- 
pass the mouth of Salt river, in Kentucky, tained a store of goods which was recruited 
so named from the number of salt-licks on by our arrival, two poor log houses, sur- 
its banks,—eighteen miles below is Bran- rounded by frog ponds were the only build- 
denburgh, the county seat of Mead county, ings ; even the railroad terminus had a flat 
Kentucky, containing about 700 inhabitants, or a scow for a depot. When I looked in up- 
It is built on a bluff of the river and has a on tho forlorn inmates of these two cabins, 
considerable trade in corn and tobacco.— idle, desolate, but contented,—I coulyl but 
After passing this place wo see much low, feel that Pope was right in saying, “ Some 
but rich alluvial country : I had been told strange comfort every state attends.” 
that tho improvements on tho Kentucky Near this place a Kentucky planter left 
side of the rher were much fewer and more USj w ho h a j sold his crop of tobacco at Oin- 
slovenly than on the Ohio and Indiana side; c innati for the same money I 10 was offered 
miles below, on tho same side is tho cele- ‘'^fTttflur' TTf TMITTt 
brated cave in the rock, tho rendezvous of c UlUy A jAlrllAl UlU* 
tho outlaw Mason and his comrades. -—- 
. “ Attempt the end, and never stand to doubt; 
rills bluff'has tho usual accompaniment Nothing’s so hard, but search will find it out.” 
of small red cedars (Juniperous Virginiana ) - ~ 
growing from tho calcareous outcrop. AVe * or the New ' Yorker - 
now passed Hurricane Island, a low wooded ILLUSTRATE D RE BUS—No. 33, 
island half covered with tho high water. 
Twenty-three miles farther we passed the ^ y 
small village of Golconda, in Pope county, ^ ^ 
Illinois, situated on a level plain which may jjPif|f O) f IfiaSllKl? lfiSiil ** 
be called elevated, on tho principle that in ] J/]f 
tho kingdom of the blind the one eyed are 
hhlgS. Rose, Wayne Co., N. Y. C. 
Fifteen miles below, we camo to Smith- ^ “Answer next week, 
land, a town at tho lower side of tho Cum- ~ ~ 
’ For the New-Yorker. 
berland river, in Livingston county,[Ken- PHONOGRAPHIC ENIGMA, 
tucky. Here the confluence of the two riv- - 
ers makes a beautiful sheet of water, about I am composed of 29 sounds. 
one and a half miles wide. This is a pleas- 3, 10 is much used in warm weather. 
antly situated village, with a population of 21 , L 19 is a number. 
1,500; it has considerable trade with Ton- ?Y 18, 27, 15 is necessary to vegetation. 
, ,. n , . m 1 My 11 , 26 is a part of the body, 
nesee by way of Cumberland river. Iwelve . ,, , , 
, , , , ^ , , , My 25, 22, 7 is an animal both wild and domi 
miles below we stopped at Paducah, below u take8 a vast amount of my 8> 17> 12> 6 to n 
the mouth of tho Tennesee river; it is the tain my 34 , i 8 , 8 , 6 and 23, 27, 20 29. 
county seat of McCracken county, Ken- My 2, 27, 10, 11 is a^vild animal. 
“ Attempt the end, and never stand to doubt; 
Nothing’s so hard, but search will find it out.” 
For the New-Yorker. 
ILLUSTRATED REBUS.-No. 33. 
but I confess I saw little difference. 
Rose, Wayne Co., N. Y. 
jgp”Answer next week. 
For the New-Yorker. 
PHONOGRAPHIC ENIGMA. 
I am composed of 29 sounds. 
My 18, 27, 15 is necessary to vegetation. 
My 11, 26 is a part of the body. 
My 25, 22, 7 is an animal both wild and domestic- 
It takes a vast amount of my 8 , 17,12, 6 to main¬ 
tain my 24, 18, 8 , 6 and 23, 27, 20 29. 
My 2, 27, 10, 11 is a^tvild animal. 
tucky. Its population is about 3,000; a fine My 28, 27, 8 never rendered its possessor happy 
range of stores front on the river; it has an My 4, 9, 16 is a domestic animal, 
increasing trade with the Tennesee river.— My 5, 14, 10 possesses great power. 
A\ r e now passed many small liamlots in the 
evening, entering the Mississippi at mid 
night, without landing at Cairo. Towards 
morning we landed at Hickman, the county 
seat of Fulton county, Kentucky, thirty- 
eight miles below the mouth of the Ohio.— 
This is the depot for a large section of very 
productive country, rich in corn, cotton, 
and tobacco; it is a growing place with a 
population of about GOO. After sunrise we 
landed at New Madrid, forty miles below 
Hickman; a wharf boat was hero loaded 
with corn in bags and merchandise ; but wo 
had to adopt the toilsome mode of landing 
on tho slopo of tho precipitous sandy bluff. 
This is the county scat of New Madrid coun¬ 
ty, Missouri,—a poor dilapidated villago of 
idle people, situated on a lino continuous 
alluvial bluff of moderate elevation. The 
country back is said to bo very productive, 
sending large quantities of corn to market 
My 21, 17, 18 is an article of commerce. 
My 21, 19, 5 imagines himself to be “some.” 
My whole is a person who has conferred a great 
benefit on mankind. d. t. t. 
Lima, N. Y., 1852. 
Answer next week. 
ANSWERS TO ENIGMA, &c., IN No. 32. 
Answer to Illustrated Rebus No. 32.- 
Ballimore, you pass the head of JElk. 
Answer to Enigma.— Charm. 
-To reach 
Hallock’s Agricultural Warehouse, 
No, 50 State St., Rochester, N. Y. 
1 I1IE Subscriber, late from the Agricultural Works, 
. Warehouse and Seed Store of Emery & Oo., Albany, 
on the lower Mississippi. In 1811 Now Mad- (."here he has been engagd for the past six years,) lias 
. , . . . , . * . been induced to establish an Agency for the sale of their 
rid was sunk and destroyed by an earth- iustly celebrated Premium Horse Powers, Threshers, Sep- 
m-noonf fnwn ic Kirill anma rile waters, &c., in Rochester. Particular attention will bo 
quake, toe piesent town IS built some UlS- paid to selling and putting up the Horse Powers, and other 
tanco back from the bank of tho river, its futures for Threshing, &c. A thorough knowledge of 
. 9 these machines, enables him to put them up in the most 
population IS about 500. correct ami satisfactory manner. Price and terftis same 
c Mil xt -\* i • 1 1 as at Albany, transportation added. 
feCV On miles bolow iNow JMacillcl, WO stop- He will keep for sale, Emery’s Seed Planters, the best 
ped at Point Pleasant. Such was the pro- 
cipitous state of the now wasting bluff, that &c., adapted to the Power. 
- , 111 1 . . Also, Reapers, Mowing Machines, Grain Drills, Plows, 
we could not land a largo box containing a Harrows, Cultivators, Corn Shelters, Hay Cutters, Fan 
hndc+norl hfilnruYinn- o mnmr wl/lmr Mills, and Agricultural and Horticultural Implements gen- 
u / 0 bedstead, belonging to a jrOUng widow erally He will be prepared to furnish dealers with Dunn 
near by. Hero I saw a beautiful field of an d Taylor’s weU known Scythes; also, Manure, Straw 
- , ^ and Hay forks, Snaths, Rifles, and other haying tools, at 
red clover in blossom. The cottonwood manufaeurers’ prices, wholesale and retail. 
. , . . j, . , , . Particular attention is called to A NEW PLOIV, which 
Sprouts bid tail* soon to supplant the clover, is believed to be the best rast-iron Plow ever offered, and 
Knf tupK Vmd lieon ife rnrriri o t-AwfK in Uric wl *ich is warranted to do better work, with less expense 
DUt SUCH iiau been Its lapiu growtn in tins of team, than any plow heretofore sold in Rochester, while 
generous soil, that a large drove of VOUllg price is less than for any other equally well finished. . 
. 0 J ° I he uniform one-price, cash system” will be adopted, 
cattle and pigs seemed to make no impres- with prices as low as the cost of articles, and just compen- 
• _.. riii • .1 11 , i 1 i sation for labor and time will allow. Farmers and others 
SlOll Upon it. IlllS was tho first and last are invited to call and examine the stock of Machines and 
patch of clover I saw in the region of tho S^} C wnmniT?fii 7 wc U ^ od n- oe * OI ^ 8 l J“ Ube '»’^“i tiu st° 
1 *3 meet promptly the wants of a discriminating public. 
Mississippi. As easily as clover hay may be E - hallock, 50 state street, Rochester. 
11 J — — June 15, 1852. [129-tf] 
made bore, it seemed strange to mo to see -—_ 
the people receiving from our steamer bun- OLD ROCIIESTJSB NURSERY. 
1,0 1,0 n . . .. TWENTY THOUSAND OSAGE ORANGE 
dies of piOSSOd liay from Cincinnati. j£%W 2 &Plnnts at $10 per thousand. This plant proves 
We stopped at a landing in Needham’s ^^^^^nce'kimwn^ hore and makes the b e8t Orchard 
Cut-off' or shute, to take in cottonwood. — 30,000 Northern Spy Apple trees. 
7 3,000 Ime Dwarf Pears, of large size. 
As tins woodman was one Ot tile most thrif- 5,000 Giant Rhubard, very low by the 1,000. Must be 
1 ^ 1 1 ,, 1 • 1 sold to clear the ground, 
ty WO had seen, With a bcttoi dealing and 0 ne dozen very large Maple trees, root pruned last 
more comfortable dwellings, than generally spr j ! l? ’ 1 doz. Scotch Larch; l doz. Laburnum; andsev- 
0 ’ o J era! fine Norway Spruce, Scotch Fir, &c., 
comes to bo tho lot of a woodman, let me Together with a large general assortment of hardy Or- 
, ,. TT chard Fruits and Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, Dahlias, and 
describe him. Ho was a tall. thin, bilious a general collection of bulbs, box edgings, &c. 
looking Tennoseean, who said he had lived 
there five years without sickness. “ Why do full y ‘'fled, packed, &c., for any distance. 
■ , Nursery, corner of Norton and North Clinton Streets.— 
you look SO pale and your cyossodull; do Office 36 Front-st., Rochester, N. Y. Catalogues gratis. 
1 r , v i 1 117-tf. SAM’L MOULSON. 
you never have fever and ague r I asked.—-_ 
OLD ROCHESTER NURSERY. 
® TWENTY THOUSAND OSAGE ORANGE 
Plants at §10 per thousand. This plant proves 
perfectly hardy here and makes the best Orchard 
fence known. 
30,000 Northern Spy Apple trees. 
3,000 K ine Dwarf Pears, of large size. 
5,000 Giant Rhubard, very low by the 1,000. Must be 
sold to clear the ground. 
One dozen very large Maple trees, root pruned last 
spring; 1 doz. Scotch Larch; 1 doz. Laburnum; and sev¬ 
eral fine Norway Spruce, Scotch Fir, &c\, 
Together with a large general assortment of hardy Or¬ 
chard Fruits and Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, Dahlias, and 
a general collection of bulbs, box edgings, ike. 
Office 30 Front-st., Rochester, N. Y. Catalogues gratis. 
117-tf. SAM’L MOULSON. 
TT . , , i- 1 ru 1 u-ii ” EAGLE PLOW MANUFACTORY. 
He quickly replied, Oh, wo have chills. — AL1EN BELDINOj 
He came on board for goods, while the crew corner State and Platt Streets,’ Rochester, N. Y, 
was taking on his wood ; he said that ho let 
OU1' captain have woou one bit a cord less PLOWS and other Agricultural Implements. 
than lie charged the Mississippi steamers, ^""h'O'em are the follow-mg Plows Massachusetts- 
o 1 1 . . Eagle, Wisconsin, Improved Cayuga Co. and Strouso, 
because he brought cheap goods for him North American, (for deep plowing,) John Rich’s Iron 
. . , • i 1 1 Beam Plmv, Shovel Plows, ike. 
from Cincinnati ; he said that goods were Mould-boards, Landsides, Points, devices, Coulters, 
mighty cheap out yoi. Among tho goods He would request particular notice of his Improved 
he had ordered were some fine pink cotton Rouble-Pointed Steel Tooth Cultivator, a superior 
1 . article. 
lace for mosquito bars; “oh captain ” said He solicits the patronage of the farming community, 
. . , n _Lii-.il believing that they will be well paid for calling at his limn* 
ho, * thats too lino, you must take it back ufactory, before buying elsewhere. 
and change it.” Then came the coarse ]]8 t all^n beldln’G, Corner staicMmd piatt-sts.^ 
W OULD call the attention of Farmers to his largo and 
excellent assortment of 
for it at Louisville; this man was a fine 
One of our mates was a State of Maine specimen, I take it, of a west Kentucky far- 
Yankee, who had seen some service in the mer; he had but few slaves, said he worked 
Pacific and Indian Oceans. No one would harder than any one of them. He appear- 
know when his watch was on deck from the ed like a modest, truthful man; apparently 
sound of his voice, still every thing wont on ho had no conscientious scruples about 
like clock work ; the other mate was a 11 a- holding slaves,—perhaps ho never dreamed 
tive Buckeye, and a very efficient, active sec- that it was wrong; he said that they were 
ond mate, who seemed to bo stimulated by as much plague as profit, that he believed 
a pride in his pi'ofession; his uncouth, Kentucky would have been better off had 
rough voice of command might be heard at she never had a negro slave. lie had no 
short intervals throughout the watch, lie spleen against even professed abolitionists; 
seemed to feel a sort of official pleasure in when I read to him certain passages in Un¬ 
ordering and directing tho motley crew, clo Tom’s Cabin, describing the high, moral 
even when they were tho most active in and religious character of Uncle Tom and 
their duty. But the first mato was one of some of the other dramatis personae, he 
those masterly officers who suit tho action stared at me and said that tho book must 
to the word, whenever the emergency re- bo a romance, as he had never seen or heard 
quiros it. I have more than onco seen him of tho living counterpart of such charac- 
steady a deck hand by the shouklors when ters ; but when he found that the book 
he was carrying a box up a steep and slip- claimed to be nothing but a romanco, he 
from Cincinnati; be said that goods were 
“ mighty cheap out yor.” Among the goods 
lace for mosquito bars; “oh captain” said He solicits the patronage of the farming community, 
. i , n , , i 1 i believing that they will be well paid for calling at his man- 
no, ’thats too 11110 , you must take it back ufactory, before buying elsewhere* 
and change it.” Then came the coarse n 8 -tf ALLEN BE ‘ LDING ’ Corner 
hoots and tnstian, calico, &£c., &e., all of ^-^iREED THE ET OW ^ 
which ho said was mighty cheap. This man Genesee Seed Store and Ag’l. Warehouse, 
had a Yoke of good oxen, some YOunn cat- LpHE subscribers beg leave most earnestly to call the at- 
*' 0 J 0 1 tention of the farming community to the fact that they 
tlo, two 01’ three cows, and a corn field of have just received a supply of the most popular and mod- 
. , , ,, .... ern improved implements used in Agricultural and llorti- 
about ten acres ; the young corn about six in- cultural pursuits. 
i.Loa trirrli nn tKic Id ikv of M i v Tho rmwl They would particularly invite all interested, to the well 
cues high on tins rid day ot May. 1 no groat- egt<lbl fo lod Ma ‘ ss . Ea0IjE p LOWS; in a seri e S df 21 different 
er part of his land was now submerged, but sii!es manufactured by Ruggles, Nourse & Mason. Also 
1 (lie latest nud most improved kind of Seed Planter, in- 
cven high water, he turned to account by vented by the same firm. 
n ,. ., i nnUAnwA/sJ x- 1 ,1 » We have also on hand the well known Curtis or Albion 
n ,. ,1 1._ a j.: _1 ’ we nave also on nana tne wen mown uura 
floating tllO largo cottonwood timber thro Plow, of various sizes and extra manufacture. 
tho bayous to tho river bank, ready to be Wheeler’S Horse Power, Thresher aud Saw MilL 
J y J Hussey s Celebrated Grain Reaper, 
worked up into steamboat wood. IIo had a Pennock’s Wheat and Grain Drill. 
. Till i •,! 1 i •, i As also a complete assortment of Field and Garden 
largG double log house, with a log kitchen Seeds, both domestic and imported. 
in the yard, ono little black slave girl, three 72 JOUN KAPALJ rc Ruffido^i'Rnehester. 
Clark’s Excelsior Chum. 
C l.ARK’S EXCELSIOR CHURN is a rotary cylinder or 
barrel, self-venlilatiug, and working around a .station¬ 
ary cross-bar or dash, with a tempering apparatus for 
bringing the milk or cream to any required temperature. 
This valuable Churn, which is admitted to everything 
of its class hitherto offered to dairymen, will be furnished 
at prices from ®2,50 to §10. The small cheap Exeeisior, 
built entirely of wood, can not be supplied at present; it 
being the object of the proprietor to furnish large dairies, 
for which the churn is particularly designed, and to sell 
State and County Rights to those who may wish to supply 
the increasing demand for the Churn. 
The two sizes generally preferred, with iron axles, crank 
and gearing, complete and perfect, will he forwarded to 
order by Canal or Railroad from Utica, at ®7, and 810 
each. The latter price ivili purchase the largest size, 
worked by crank, producing 25 to 40 IDs. of butter. No 
extras will be charged for the tempering apparatus which 
goes with each churn. The small (tin) cylinder placed in 
the centre of ihe barrel, witli its connecting tubes through 
the hollow axles, can he kept, full of running water, before 
and during the process of churning—until the butter is 
worked in the Churn. 
Three or more thirty gallon chums in one frame, for 
horse power, with tempering apparatus in each, will lie 
furnished at §5 per barrel. Orders from distant places 
should enclose payment. 
The Proprietor will make provision, in his liberal terms 
to agents, for advertising the Exeeisior Churn in the coun¬ 
try papers of the different States—especially in such pa¬ 
pers as shall have given Editorial Notices designed to awa¬ 
ken inquiry in relation to the Churn. Circulars giving il¬ 
lustration, description, premiums, terms to agents, and 
prices of the Churn, will he promptly mailed to all who 
apply at any time, post-paid, to the proprietor. 
GEORGE B. CLARKE, Leonardsvilie, 
May 4, 1852. [124-eow] Madison Co. N. Y. 
FARMERS, PLEASE NOTICE! 
The iMonro<* Mutual Insurance Company. 
riMJIS COMPANY has now been in operation a little 
J over fifteen years, during which time they have made 
only Three Assessments, and are now entirely free from, 
. debt, with a capital of $150,000 in good Premium Notes.— 
They have never had a disputed loss, lmt every claim lias 
been promptly paid. We insure for one, two, three, four 
or five years, either on the cash or premium note princi¬ 
ple. On the cash plan, the party gives no note, and of 
course cannot be liable to assessment. The amended Char¬ 
ter prohibits this Company from taking any risks except 
upon Farm Houses and Barns and their Contents, and 
; Farm Property. We seek the patronage of Farmers and 
Farmers only. 
Applications may be made to any member or agent, or 
at the Secretary’s office, No. 3(5 State street, Rochester. 
119-6mo. L. A. WARD, Secretary. 
A VALUABLE FARM FOR SALE. 
S®PLEASANTLY situated in the town of ^ 
1. Hopewell, Ontario Co., 7 miles east of Can- 
andaigua, on an important thoroughfare,—2 miles west <>f 
the village of Orleans; 4 do. from Clifton Spa.,—3 miles 
from the Railroad running from Canandaigua to Jefferson, 
and the same distance from the Rochester and Syracuse 
Railroad. The farm contains 207 acres, and is extremely 
well watered; it is a good grazing farm, and equally adapt¬ 
ed to the raising of grain. About 40 acres of excellent 
timber, in great variety—a large number of fruit trees, 
mostly grafted. There are 011 the farm, a two story brick 
dwelling, 45 by 35,—a grain barn, M0 by 30, with sf aiding 
under the whole—horse barn, carriage house, and all other 
necessary out-buildings. Terms reasonable—part of the 
money can remain a series of years. Inquire of the sub¬ 
scriber on the premises, or by letter. 
1125—tf ] RICHAHD H. SIIECKELL. 
SEEDS AND IMPLEMENTS." 
Rochester Seed Store A Ag’l Warehouse, 
No. 29 Buffalo Street, opposite the Arcade Hall. 
1 1HE Subscriber offers to Farmers the largest and the 
most complete assortment of I mplements and Seeds in 
Western New York: consisting of Improved Eagle, Peeks- 
kill and Iron Beam Plows, Cultivators, Corn Shelters, Straw 
Cutters, Ox Yokes and Bows, Shovels, Spades, Rakes, Hoes, 
ike. Also Railroad Horse Powers and Threshers. 
Ot Field Seeds his stock is large and comprises the 
most approved varieties of Carrot, Turnip, Rut a Barra and 
Mangel Wurtzel, —all of which were either grown livhim- 
self, or imported from London. They can be depended 
upon as goad Seed and true to their kinds. 
Farmers and others are invited to call and examine the 
above Stock. Descriptive Catalogues of Seed, &c., can be 
had on application, or sent by mail. J. p. FOGG. 
Sign of the Plow, opposite the Arcade. 
121-4rri. Rochester, N. Y. 
SENECA B. SMITH, 
(Late or Whitney’s Daguerrean Gallery,) 
H ziS fitted up a suite of rooms in Chappell's Block for 
DAGUERREOTYPING, which for adaptation to 
that purpose are unsurpassed in the city. Those wanting 
good pictures, (warranted permanent,) will find it to tlieir 
advantage to give him a call. Pictures Copied equal, or 
superior to the original. 
Entrance next to Grant’s Music Store, 82 Slate St., 
Chappell's Block. 
Rochester, May, 1852. [ 124—tf [ 
FOWLS AND EGGS. 
1 1IIE great demand for the improved Fowls has induced 
. me to purchase the choicest kinds, and the best speci¬ 
mens of pure bred Fowls that could be obtained in the 
New-Eugland States, at a cost of from $10 to $15 per pair. 
1 will furnish good fresh eggs, (for hatching,) safely pack¬ 
ed for transportation, of either of (he following named va¬ 
rieties at $4 per dozen. Chickens, in the full, $5 per pair. 
White Surrey Dorking, of Dr. E. Wight’s importations. 
White Shangae, do. ' do. 
Royal Cochin China, Geo. P. Burnham’s do. 
Also, the Great Java, large and pure bred. 
D. P. NEWELL. 
Rochester, Monroe Co., N. Y., 1852. 115-lf. 
AG’L WAREHOUSE AND SEED STORE, 
No. 11, West Seneca St., Buffalo, N. Y. 
rrtllE subscribers have for sale a large and carefully se- 
JL lected stock of Agricultural and Horticultural Im¬ 
plements and Machines of the most approved patterns. 
zVlso a full assortment of Field, Garden and Flower 
Seeds, Fertilizers, Fruit Trees, Shrubs, Fancy Poultry, 
Agricultural Works, See. 
Catalogues will be sent on application, post-paid. 
116-3m. MASON ik LOVERING. 
TO FARMERS. 
C ANVASS and Oil Cloth Slack Covers on hand or made 
to order, by E. O. WILLIAMS, Agent. 
Sail and Tent Maker, 12 Buffalo-st Rochester. N Y. 
MUSIC.—A Card. 
P ROF. ROBINS’S ACADEMY of MUSIC, in Gould’ 
Block, State-st., Rochester, is open during the year 
for tlie reception of pupils in all branches of music. 
MOOItE’S RURAL mW-YOlllvEH:’ 
A WEEKLY HOME NEWSPAPER, 
Designed for both Country and Town Residents. 
CONDUCTED BY D. D. T. M0CRE, 
Assisted by Messrs. J. H. Bixijy, L. W bthkukll, 
and H. C. White — with a numerous corps 0 
able Contributors and Correspondents. 
The Rural New-Yorker is designed to be unique and 
beautiful in appearance, and unsurpassed in Value, Purity 
and Variety of Contents. Its conductors earnestly labor 
to make it a Reliable Guide on the important Practical Sub¬ 
jects connected with the businoss of those whose interests 
it advocates. It embraces more Agricultural, Horticul¬ 
tural, Scientific. Mechanical, Literary and News Matter— 
interspersed with many appropriate and handsome engrav¬ 
ings—than any other paper published in this Cotmti j. 
TERMS, IN ADVANCE : 
Two Dollars a Year—$ 1 for six months. To Clubs and 
Agents as follows :—Three Copies, one year, for $5 ; Six 
in tho yard, ono little black slave girl,three ‘ 2 JUUN ' 65 Buffaio-st.Lic.imster. 
or four young children and two grown up Genuine Quinebaug Scytlie Stones~ 
boys ; tho woman was fleshy, bearing the TOHN RAPALJE & Co. having secured the exclusive 
.." . , , , it zr j sale of this superior article in this section of the State, 
climate bettor than the husband. 1 oftored have just received from the quarry'of Tyler & Co., Massa- 
ne was carrying a dox up a steep anti sup- claimed to be nothing but a romanco, iio buy tho little black girl for my wife, but chusetts, 100 boxes. For sale wholesale and retail at the 
perv bank. The landing of goods at the liked it, and praised the fine feelings, mas-' she said that she washer pet, never to be [ 129 -tf.] Genesee Seud store ’ G;> and Kochester°,'N.”Y 
Mississippi landings when there are no resi- terly and most plausible invention of the 
dent wharf boats to receive them, is an ar- author, &c. 
duous task, as the convonioncos in most ca- After passing Caseyville, we came to a long 
ses hardly amount to a graded bank. We range of limestone bluffs on the Illinois 
had a largo miscellaneous cargo of so.veral side of tho river, called battery rock; 12 
sold while she lived. Every thing looked ---- 
neat and comfortable, but the black unctu- sash, doors and blinds. 
ous soil, composed of vegetable and animal 
deposits, looked as though, it it was life to the b^oruon hand. Residents of city or country wanting 
vegetable kingdom, it was prostration, dis- 
ease and death to tho genus homo. ter. [ii5m«] Joseph miller. 
at tlie same rate. Six months subscriptions in proportion. 
C’eT Subscription money, properly enclosed, may be 
sent by mail at the risk of tlie Publisher. 
Terms of Advertising: 
One Dollar per square (ten lines—100 words, or less,) for 
tlie first insertion, and 50 cents for each subsequent publi¬ 
cation ,—in advance. %'W‘ Witli a single exception, the 
circulation of tlie New-Yorker is much larger than that 
of w ly other newspaper in tlie State, west of A lbany. Only 
a limited space, however, is devoted to advertisements, and 
lienee 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 mail should be accompanied With tlie cash. 
To enable us to accommodate as many as possible, brie 
advertisements are preferred. Patent medicines, ike., will 
not be advertised in this paper on any terms. 
AU communications, and business letters, should 
be addressed to D. D. T. Moore, Rochester, N. Y. 
