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MOORE’S RUSAL NEW-YO RKER: AN AGRICULTURAL AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER. 
puttied. 
For the Rural New-Yorker. 
TO EMMA. 
I would not wish thy path might lie, 
O’er flowers of every varying hue 
That ever bloomed 'until] summer sky, 
Or smiled through drops of crystal dew. 
’Twere vain to wish that friends who meet, 
With thee about the social hearth, 
Might linger with their converse sweet, 
Forever on this changeful earth. 
But when like Autumn’s withering, 
They whom thou lovest droop and die, 
May Hope unfold her shining wing, 
And point thy spirit to the sky. 
When dark and stormy seems thy way, 
And rocks and wayside thorns are near, 
And thou art tempted sore to stray, 
Where Pleasure’s glittering gems appear. 
May Duty lead thee by the hand, 
And Faith glide lightly on before, 
Till thou hast reached the golden srrand 
Where skies aye smiling evermore. 
Carlton, N. Y., 1852. Kate Woodland. 
Saltings of Ctnnrf. 
F’or the Rural New-Yorker. 
A TRIP TO MEMPHIS.-NO. 5. 
The muddy yard, without a blade of grass, 
was full of young chickens. Several Indian 
clogs lay in the stoop, and I asked the wo¬ 
man what they did with so many dogs. 
“ Oh,” said she, “ we could not raise a chick 
but for the dogs, the woods are so mighty 
full of varmints.” I saw no garden; cotton 
wood was the main crop, and this required 
no culture. The man said that when the 
Yankees came down the river in the winter, 
he could get his chopping done for five bits 
a cord, but now he had to pay six; that 
choppers now were “ mighty scarce,” that 
they would only put up a cord and a half 
of soft wood a day. A smart Yankee, he 
said, often put up five or six cords a day, in 
winter, but that with the first warm weath¬ 
er in April, they were off. 
Along tho banks of the Mississippi, are 
extensive swamps, everywhere except in 
the rear of tho blufis. Cottonwood is the 
principal timber, interspersed with poplar, 
gum, sycamore, &c. On tho back grounds, 
after we get below New Madrid, cypress 
abounds; on tho ridges, oak, hickory and 
walnut are common. Tho white oak here, 
is~of a very superior toughness; it is much 
less brash than the northern white oak.— 
Cypress is the principal lumber used here. 
It grows very large, and resembles our 
hemlock, but is tougher, and less shaky.— 
Steam saw-mills abound along tho river. 
After leaving Ashport in Tennessee, we 
stopped at Fulton, a landing at tho first 
Chickasaw bluff, thirty miles below Need¬ 
ham’s cut off. These four bluffs are all on 
tho Tennessee side of the river; they seem 
to be the termination of a more rolling, 
elevated country in the rear, which is, per¬ 
haps, no higher in any one place than at 
the bluffs themselves. Ten miles below, we 
came to the second Chickasaw bluff, just 
below the mouth of tho Big Hatchee, at 
Randolph landing, where wo had to put off 
about fifteen tons of groceries, provisions 
and dry goods, at a most wretched landing- 
place. There was nothing to be seen here 
of note, but open woodland richly adorned 
with wild flowers of exquisite beauty. 
On a small knoll near the graded landing, 
stood a tall man in shabby genteel attiro, 
entertaining two or three still more shab¬ 
bily dressed resident loafers ; as I approach¬ 
ed him he bowed, greeting me in the best 
set terms, and richest brogue of tho Eme¬ 
rald Isle. From him I learned that the 
village of Randolph was two miles in tho 
interior, that it was once a place of much 
trade, but that now the cotton and the 
trade all went to Memphis, forty miles be¬ 
low. He was a jewel of a man to meet with, 
barring a little verbosity, for he very polite¬ 
ly gave himself up to reply to my questions 
without once exhibiting the inquisitive Yan¬ 
kee peculiarity of asking two questions for 
each reply he gave. We now passed the 
first coidon plantation on the river, with its 
row of white washod negro cabins. The 
low, fiat surface of these cotton fields gave 
no distinguishing mark to the landscape, 
save tho rank foliage of the swamps beyond. 
The overseer’s or planter’s house, was little 
better than the negro log cabins. I could 
see little to admire but tho vegetable lux¬ 
uriance. 
A young woodman, where we stopped, 
said that there were “ mighty good ” settle¬ 
ments and a “smart chanco” of crops back 
in Arkansas; that he lived on coni bread 
and bacon, and such wild game as he could 
trap and shoot, or buy from the hunters, 
with now and then a cat fish. Like every 
other resident among these swamps, this 
man averred that it was healthy, and there 
is no doubt that the country is much loss 
liable to congestive fevers before it is clear¬ 
ed than afterwards. “ Chills,” he said, 
“ never kill any body, and the cholera did 
not come there; it stopped at tho planta¬ 
tions and big towns.” 
From this wood yard, we ran to Memphis 
in less than two hours. The next morning, 
tho 5th of May, found us lying ahead of 
tho great wharf boat—an old, dismantled 
steamer, of large dimensions. Ilicso wharf 
boats are sometimes ambulatory, but tins 
is a stationary concern, always here under 
the high bluff, “convenient,” as tho Irish 
sav, with the graded ascent, and steamboat 
landing. She unites the character of a 
storo house, wholesale and retail store, a 
restaurant and lodging house, bulletin office, 
fee., fee. On the top of the perpendicular 
bluff beyond, was a broad plateau in front 
of a long, continuous range of handsome, 
lofty, brick stores; some twenty rods in 
front of these stores, on the bluff, there was 
a number of large Canistoga wagons, which 
had come in from tho country, cotton loaded, 
the day before. On the opposito side of 
the river, one mile and a quarter distant, 
were the swamps and low ridges of Arkan¬ 
sas. Along under tho bluff, for half a mile 
above the two graded landings, lay sundry 
covered flat boats from up tho rivers, some 
of which had lain there since winter, selling 
off their loads of corn and bacon, Yankee 
notions, fee. As hot weather had now com¬ 
menced, they were fast selling off at re¬ 
duced prices, preparatory to returning home 
again to the North. 
Memphis is a depot for tho great cotton 
crop of Tennessee, and a part of Mississippi, 
and Arkansas; there are several small steam¬ 
ers employed to bring cotton from St. Fran¬ 
cis river, Arkansas, the Big Hatchee, and 
other rivers in Tennessee; all of which is 
sold and resliipped at Memphis to New 
Orleans, or up tho river to St. Louis, Louis¬ 
ville, Cincinnati, Pittsburg, &c. This town 
receives and exports more cotton than any 
other town on tho Mississippi, Natchez and 
New Orleans excepted. As there is no oth¬ 
er bluff of like extent and magnitude on tho 
lower Mississippi above tho Walnut hills of 
Vicksburg, three hundred miles below, 
Memphis is inevitably destined to be a great 
city. It is a beautiful, modern built town 
of 12.000 inhabitants, finely situated on the 
fourth Chickasaw bluff, which extonds along 
the Mississippi from the banks of Wolf river 
at the north, to Fort Pickering at the south, 
a distance of four miles, with an average 
height of one hundred feet abovo the me¬ 
dium level of tho river. The public build¬ 
ings and churches ai*o numerous and hand¬ 
somely built: the stores of brick, large and 
regular, the houses tasty, and often elegant, 
with strict attention to room, air and com¬ 
fort. Most of them have fine shade trees, 
and ornamenal shrubbery, of which the 
Chinese arbor vitae is the most distinguish¬ 
ing decoi’ation. Nice, gardens, fino bordei’s 
with flowers, shell and gravelled walks, dis¬ 
tinguish many l’esidences, particularly in 
the south part of tho town. These shells 
are brought from the coast near New Or¬ 
leans, and tho gi'avel is taken from tho river 
bars at low water. The inhabitants are 
Tennesseans, and northern men of Yankee 
stock—a very intelligent, enterprising, mer¬ 
cantile community. 
I arrived at the house of my friend, Mr. 
Cf., before breakfast—a beautiful suburban 
cottage at the south part of tho town, on 
the highest part of the bluff. His man, who 
was white-washing tho garden fence, called 
him up ; ho came half (lressod to the parlor, 
said he had a touch of the ague which must 
cxcuso his late rising. His wife soon came, 
and a better specimen of a true, self-pos¬ 
sessed southern woman, need ixot be looked 
for ; there was in her manner none of that 
fidgety, ill-at-ease expression, so often seen 
in a young house-keeper in tho prosenco of 
a stranger. Breakfast was ready, as if by 
magic; here were corn cakes, hot l-aised bis¬ 
cuit, chicken, ham, and soft eggs, with such 
creamed coffee as I never hoped to find at 
the south. There was not more help about 
the house than is found in many families at 
the north; a black woman cook in the kitch¬ 
en in the yard, and a chambermaid in the 
house to wait on table, tend children, &c., 
with a man to make and tend tho garden, 
do the chores, &c. These servants are 
slaves, and all married ; the man had a wife 
in a neighboring family, and the women had 
husbands near by in other families, but 
neither had children. Tho gentleman who 
owned the chambermaid’s husband, offered 
my friend $1,500 for her—about twice her 
value—in order that he might have husband 
and wife both in his family, but the cham¬ 
bermaid was attached to her mistress and 
her mistress’ children, whom she had reared, 
and would not consent to leave thorn, for 
the privilege of living under the same roof 
with her husband. 
Aside from the labor done on cotton 
and sugar plantations, and the pestiferous 
rice fields, there can be no doubt that slave 
labor is tho dearest of all labor. The cost 
of fire wood and cook stoves, was the great¬ 
est item in tho menage of my friend; every 
night in cold weather, his negroes must 
have a fire to sleep by, and one forty dollar 
* cooking range was destroyed in his kitchen 
every year. Doctors bills, and other ex¬ 
penses incidental to sickness, is another 
great item in the expenses of tho slave 
holder. If there is any glimmer of redeem¬ 
ing light in the dark relation of master aixd 
slave, it is when a compassionate and con¬ 
scientious mistress is found watching over 
and administering to the comfort and neces¬ 
sities of her pool', sick and helpless slaves. 
I took a rido with my friend G. about six 
miles in the country. The livery stable 
that furnished the conveyance, was one of 
the neatest, and on a grand scale; tho whole 
floor was covered half leg deep with cy¬ 
press saw dust, which was constantly being 
cleaned and renewed. We went over a 
plank road through a fine, moderately roll¬ 
ing country, tho soil alluvial sand ; thei'o is 
no limestone on the lower Mississippi, with 
the exception of gravelly ridgesf; there is 
neither stone or outcrop, savo the sandy 
bluff. A great deal of cypress board fence, 
was making by the negroes along the line 
of the road; the posts were of red cedar, 
brought fm „ne Tennessee river, they cost 
but th/eu cents a foot, running measure; 
tk^v are large, and clear of sap. Wo saw 
somo vegetables growing in the vicinity of 
Memphis, now and then a patch of Indian 
corn, and farther on some large cotton fields; 
the cotton was only a few inches high, owing 
to tho backwardness of the season, it had 
not been thinned out or hoed. On our rc- 
turn by another road farther south, we 
passed many handsome, rolling fields, of a 
dark, sandy loam, from which tho fences 
had been removed after tho surface soil had 
been exhausted by cotton. They were now 
overgrown with May weed, hero called dog 
wort. It seemed to mo passing strange, 
that the intelligent southern planter should 
so entirely neglect the growing of rod clover 
as a manuring crop. It has been found to 
succeed well wherever the experiment of 
growing it has been tried in tho region of 
tho Mississippi—its long tap root enables it 
to draw moisture from far below tho sur¬ 
face, which never fails to sustain the plant 
in those trying drouths so common at tho 
South. 
We now stopped at tho great Indian 
mound at Fort Crittenden, which is about 
150 feet above tho level of the Mississippi, 
and tho highest spot on the Chickasaw bluffs; 
on this mound are thirteen large trees, ono 
for each letter in the name of Andrew Jack- 
son, to whoso memory it is proposed to 
erect a monument. YVo saw but few barns 
and out houses ; tho farm houses generally 
were invisible from the main road. I could 
not but feel that in building near the road, 
our farmers evince a little better taste, as 
houses and orchards add much to the beau¬ 
ty and variety of tho landscape. The farm 
houses here are plainly built, with the dis¬ 
tinguishing peculiarity of having tho chim¬ 
ney built entirely outside of the house. 
The Wool and Sto;k Parmer’s Own Paper! —Useful, Cheap and Beautiful! 
a e a ta •• * 2 ?— 
I mW 
AN ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY JOURNAL, 
DEVOTED CHIEFLY TO WOOL AND STOCK GROWING. 
Industry, well directed, will give a maix a 
competency in a few years. The greatest 
industry, misapplied, is useless. 
^outij’is Mmm. 
“ 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. 35. 
Answer next week. 
For the New-Yorker. 
MISCELLANEOUS ENIGMA. 
I am composed of 20 letters. 
My 12, 5, 14, 15, 2, 4, 18, is one of the U. S. 
With my 1, 3, 12, 13, 15, it is easy to procure 
friends. 
My 14, 10, 7, 9, 19, 12, is a county in N. York' 
My 15, 16, 20, 18, is a town in Pennsylvania. 
My 11, 15, 12, 12, is a town in Massachusetts- 
My 6, 8, 6, 10, 12, is a female name. 
My whole is an instructive and entertaining 
paper for farmers and their families. “ Clara.” 
Answer next week. 
ANSWERS TO ENIGMA, &c., IN No. 34 
Answer to Illustrated Rebus No. 34 .—Envy and 
Arrogance stands foremost on the tower of Vice. 
Answer to Historical Enigma.— Jenny Lind 
Goldschmidt. 
Answer to Misec 11 met us Enigma .—A Subsoil 
Ploic. 
Tins Journal is tiie only one published in America, pri¬ 
marily devoted to the interests of Wool Growers, Stock 
Breeders, Graziers, Dairymen, &c., and should be in the 
hands of every 
OWNER OP DOMESTIC ANIMALS. 
The Fourth Volume, commencing July, 1852, will em¬ 
brace a vast amount of useful and reliable information 
in regard to Wool and Stock, which can be obtained from 
no other source. It is published in the best style, and 
will be illustrated with 
PROM 59 TO 100 ENGRAVINGS 
Embracing Portraits from Life, of Sheep, Cattle, Horses, 
Swine, Poultry, etc.—Designs of Farm Buildings, &c., &c., 
with proper descriptions. Each No. contains a careful 
Review of the Wool and Cattle Markets. 
T. C. Peters, Esq., a gentleman of superior ability, and 
every way qualified for the station, will continue editor of 
the Wool Department, — while tho other departments are 
under the supervision of the undersigned. The pages of 
the work will be enhanced in value and interest by the con¬ 
tributions of a large number of Wool Growers, Stock 
Breeders, and others practically familiar with kindred 
subjects. 
FORM, STYLE, TERMS, &c. 
The Wool Grower is published monthly, in a form 
suitable for binding,— each number containing Sixteen 
Large Octavo Pages,—with Title Page, Index, Ac., at the 
close of each volume. It is printed in the best style, 
on new type, and superior paper, —and furnished upon 
the following exceedingly low 
TERMS, IN ADVANCE: 
Fifty Cents a Year. To Clubs and Agents, — Five 
Copies for $2; Eight Copies for ©3; Eleven Copies for $ 1; 
Twenty Copies for ©7, and any additional number at the 
same rate—35 cents per copy. The three back volumes, 
bound, will be furnished at -41) cents each,—iu sheets at 35 
cents, or the three for $1. 
For a remittance of ©2. previous to the first of January, 
1852, we will send the Worn, Grower and Rural New- 
Yorker for one year ; and for ©3, the Rural New-Yorker 
one year, and the three past and present volume of the 
Wool Grower. Specimen numbers sent free. 
Now is (lie time to subscribe and form clubs. Bills 
of all specie-paying banks, and postage stamps, received at 
par mi subscription. Money, properly enclosed, may be 
mailed at our risk. Please remember the place of pub¬ 
lication, and address to D. D. T. MOORE, 
August, 1852. Rochester, N. Y. 
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. 
Annexed are a few of the many voluntary 
notices, received from various sections, during 
the past few weeks : 
The Wool Grower.— This Journal lias been removed 
from Buffalo to Rochester, and will be published hereafter 
by D. D. T. Moore, Esq., who has become its proprietor. 
T. C. Peters, Esq., will continue as Editor of the Wool 
Department, while tlic other departments will be under 
the supervision of Mr. Moore. The leading object of the 
paper is to discuss subjects of most immediate interest to 
Wool Growers and Stuck Breeders. It is needless to say 
that iu such hands the Wool Grower will become to its 
subscribers all that labor, expense, time and talent can 
well make it.— Michigan Christian Herald. 
The Wool Grower, by Moore of the Rural New-York¬ 
er, is one of the neatest printed, as it is one of the most 
valuable, of publications. We dip into its pages with in¬ 
terest. The New-Yorker, is also one of the best A gricul¬ 
tural publications in the world, and-deserving the wide and 
increasing patronage it receives.— Cayuga Chief. 
We believe it will be a valuable auxiliary to tho other 
publications designed for tlic farmer—taking as it does com¬ 
paratively unoccupied but important ground.— Bost on Cult. 
We heartily and cheerfully recommend it to every person 
interested in sheep husbandry, or the production or manu¬ 
facture of w-ool.— Valley Farmer. 
The Wool Grower for July comes tons in a most charm¬ 
ing new dress—white and clean ns a well washed sheep.— 
Prairie Farmer. 
We cordially recommend the Wool Grower and Stock 
Register to all our friends interested in those departments. 
—Granite Farmer. 
It is a valuable work for tlic wool grower, and contains 
much that is interesting to the general agricultural reader. 
— N. Y. Farmer. 
It is a journal for which we should suppose every one 
engaged in sheep husbandry or stock raising, would gladly 
pay 50 cents a year.— Middlesex Farmer. 
A work of decided merit, and indispensable to the grow¬ 
ers of wool and stock.— Allegany Advocate. 
It is ably conducted.— Louisville Journal. 
FARMERS, PLEASE NOTICE! 
The Monroe Mutual Insurance Company. 
rSTIIIS COMPANY lias now been in operation a little 
JL 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, but every claim lias 
been promptly paid. We insure for one, two, throe, four 
or five years, either on tlie cash or premium noie princi¬ 
ple. On the cash plan, the party gives no note, and of 
course cannot be liable to assessment. The amended (.bar¬ 
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. 36 State street, Rochester. 
119-6mo. L> A. WARD, Secretary. 
®100 TO £200 PEII MONTH ! ! 
1 MIE above sum can easily bo made by an industrious 
man, of respectable address wlio possesses good busi¬ 
ness qualities, and who can command a small capital (to 
begin with,) of from Twenty-five to Fifty Dollars,—(no 
others need apply,)—by engaging with the subscribers in 
the Book Agexcv Business, whose Publications are very 
saleable, and which the people will buy! ... 
Funds can be forwarded at our risk, if mailed in 
presence of the Post Master and numbers and dates of tlie 
same retained. 
HT#” No books kept or sold by us of an immorm ten¬ 
dency. . 
A wholesale price fist, with full directions, fur op¬ 
erations, will be forwarded on application, post paid, to 
GEO. H. DERBY & Co., Book Publishers. 
Buffalo, N. Y. (Not New York.) [127-3m] 
TENTS! TENTS! 
I ~XOR SALE, to rent, or made to order, of any required 
^ dimensions. 
Agricultural Societies wishing to hire Tents the coming 
season, will please make application soon. By my know¬ 
ing early how many and at what time they will he needed, 
I can make arrangements to supply all. 
E. C. WILLIAMS, Agent, 
Sail and Tent Maker, 12 Buffalo-st., Rochester, N. Y. 
N. B.—Flags — National, Agricultural with devices, or 
any other kind, made to order at short notice. 116-tf. 
Albany Drain Tile Works, 
No. 60 Lancaster Street — West of Medical College. 
nnHE Subscriber has now on band and will furnish to 
1 Agriculturists, Draining Tile of tho most approved pat¬ 
terns. HorseShoe Tile at ©12, ©15, and ©18 per 1,000 
pieces; Sole Tile or Pipes at ©12 and ©18 per 1,000 pieces. 
These Tile are over one foot in length from 2% to 4K 
inches calibre, and are so formed as to admit the water at 
every joint, draining land from 12 to 20 ieet each side of 
the drain. Orders from a distance will receive prompt at¬ 
tention. JOHN GOTT, 
[132m6j Albany, New York. 
SENECA B. SMITH, 
(Late of Whitney's Daguekrean Gallery,) 
H AS 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 their 
advantage to give him a call. Pictures Copied equal, or 
superior to tlie original. 
Entrance next to Grant's Music Store, 82 State St., 
Chappell's Block. 
Rochester, May, 1852. [124-tf [ 
TO FARMERS. 
C ANVASS and Oil Cloth Stack Covers on hand or made 
to order, by E. O. WILLIAMS, Agent. 
Sail and Tent Maker, 12 Buffalo-st Rochester, N. Y. 
The Wool Grower and Stock Register will be devo¬ 
ted particularly to the subjects of raising wool and tlic 
breeding of stock; and as it will be conducted with un¬ 
doubted ability, should be in the bands of every farmer. 
It will no doubt at once command a very extensive circu¬ 
lation and enjoy a large influence.— Rack. Democrat. 
Mr. Moore lias abundant means at bis disposal to make 
tlie Wool Grower and Stock Register all that can be wished 
by its friends, and its readers will find him a zealous ad¬ 
vocate of tlieir class, and a jealous guardian of their rights 
and interests, anxious to afford them all possible informa¬ 
tion in regard to the subjects in which they are most in¬ 
terested. We commend, tlie paper most heartily to tlie 
patronage of farmers, stock growers, and all who are in¬ 
terested in its objects. We are happy to state that Mr. 
i Peters will continue to edit that portion of tlie paper de¬ 
voted to wool.— Detroit Free Press. 
The Wool Grower. —This monthly, long and creditably 
conducted in this city, has been removed to Rochester, 
and will hereafter be published in that city. Tho pro¬ 
prietorship has also changed. It will hereafter bear the 
imprint of D. D T. Moore, Esq., which announcement is 
enough to guarantee it a wide and popular run. It must 
live and prosper in bis hands.— Buffalo Chris. Advocate. 
It is still under the editorial charge of its first founder, 
T. C. Peters. Friend Moore has the editorial supervision 
of tlie Stock Department, and between them both, they 
will make a very valuable and acceptable work.— Maine 
Farmer. 
In point of typography, quality of paper, execution of 
engravings, and literary merit, this publication is of the 
highest excellence.— Ontario Repository. 
We predict for it an unprecedented circulation among 
the Farmers and Stock Growers throughout the Union.— 
Rocli. Daily Dcm. 
It is a work of emphatic merit, and cannot fail of be¬ 
coming a favorite wherever known.— Rochester Daily Adv. 
This journal should be in tlic hands of every wool grower 
in the land.— 111. True Dem. 
To woo! growers and breeders of stock, this is a work 
of great value.— Adrian (Mich.; Watch Tower. 
This arrangent will add materially to tlie iuterest and 
value of tlie work.— Albany Cultivator. 
OLD ROCHESTER NURSERY. 
TWENTY THOUSAND OSAGE ORANGE 
#$$3. Plants at §10 per thousand. This plant proves 
m.^p ( . r fectly hardy here and makes the best Orchard 
fence known. • 
3 j, 00 Q Northern Spy Apple trees. 
3,000 F'ine Dwarf Pears, of large size. 
5,000 Giant Khubard, very low by tile 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 F’ir, &o., 
Together with a large general assortment of hardy Or¬ 
chard Fruits and Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, Dalifias, and 
a general collection of bulbs, box edgings, &e. 
The assortment is very complete, comprising the leading 
hardy items requisite for elegance or utility. Orders care¬ 
fully filled, packed, &e., for any distance. 
Nursery, corner of Norton and North Clinton Streets.— 
Office 36 Front-st., Rochester, N. Y. Catalogues gratis. 
117-tf. SAM’L MOULSON. 
Genuine tj.uiiiebaug' ScyIke Stones. 
T OIIN RAPALJE & Co. having secured the exclusive 
sale of this superior article in this section of the State, 
have just received from tlic quarry of Tyler & Co., Massa¬ 
chusetts, 100 boxes. For sale wholesale and retail at tho 
Genesee Seed Store, 65 and 67 Buffalo-st., 
[ 129—tf.] Rochester, N. Y. 
MOORE’S; KUKAL NEW-YORKER: 
A W'iiKLY HOME NliWSrAriCR, 
Designed for both Country and Town Residents. 
CCS DUCTED BY D. D. T. MOORE, 
Assisted by Messrs. J. H. Bixjxy, L. Wethekell, 
and H. C. White — with a numerous corps 0 
able Contributors and Correspondents. 
The Rural Np.w-Yobkku 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 tlie important Practical Sub¬ 
jects connected with the business of those whoso 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 Country. 
TERMS, IN ADVANCE: 
Two Dollars a Year — SI for six months. To Clubs and 
Agents ns follows:— Three Copies, one year, for -S5; Six 
Copies (and one to Agent or getter up of club,) for §10; 
Ten Copies (undone to Agent,) for $15; Twenty Copies 
for $25, and any additional number, directed to individuals 
at tlie same rate. Six months subscriptions in proportion. 
Subscription money, properly enclosed, may be 
sent by mail at the risk of the Publisher. 
Tenas of Advertising: 
One Dollar per square (ten lines — 100 words, or less,) for 
the first insertion, and 50 cents for each subsequent publi¬ 
cation ,—in advance. %~W" Witli a single exception, the 
circulation of the New-Yorker is much larger than that 
of any other newspaper in the State, west of Albany. 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 anil Machinery,—Horticulturists and Seedsmen,— 
Booksellers and Publishers,—Inventors, etc. All orders 
by mail should be accompanied with the cash. 
To enable us to accommodate as many as possible, brie 
advertisements are preferred. Patent medicines, &c., will 
not be advertised in this paper on any terms. 
tEE All communications, and business letters, should 
be addressed to D. D. T. Moore, Rochester, N. Y. 
