MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YO RKER: AN AGRICULTURAL AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER, 
For the Rural New-Yorker. 
THREE SCORE AND TEN. 
“ Three score and ten,” said a lisping child, 
As it read by its mother’s knee; 
It laid down its book, and asked as it smiled, 
“ Its meaning — what can it be r" 
“ Three score and ten!” said a maiden fair, 
And laughed as light and free, 
As if no grass waved over a grave, 
’ Neath a sombre cypress tree. 
“ Three score and ton!” said a manly youth 
As he pored o’er a tome of yore — 
In a grave was laid the champion of truth, 
And liis years—were but a score. 
“ Three score and ten 1” sighed a stricken one, 
As he wept o’er the grave of his love; 
lie waited not long — a new harp was strung 
To join with the loved one above. 
“ Three score and ten,” gasped an aged man, 
As he pressed the bed of death; 
“ Three score and ton—'tis but a span, 
And life — it is but a breath.” 
LIFE AT BLITHEDALE. 
Medina, N. Y., 1S52. 
Lettif,. 
For the Rural New-Yorker. 
LIFE,-ITS LESSONS FOR THE STUDENT. 
Life is called a state of probation, or tri- 
)| J al, which implies that it needs improving; 
Jjp and if so, inducements and means for mak- 
(| ing such improvement are necessary.— 
is; These we find in every period of our exist 
cnee,—not a single object meets the eye but 
<|j furnishes us with a theme for intelligent in¬ 
vestigation ; the earth, the sea, the air, teem 
with subjects the study of which serves to 
develop the reasoning powers. 
An infant, when it first gazes out upon 
the world, is amused, and delighted with 
the objects that surround it while as yet it 
knows little of their magnitude and distan¬ 
ces, and less of their Author; the but as 
childadvances in years, mental culture con 
ducts him through the vestibule of scienco, 
and unfolds tlie beauties which lie conceal 
ed ; the clouds of ignorance are driven aside 
by the winds of perseverance—and the sun¬ 
beams of hope aid him in his laudable re¬ 
searches. While he lingers at the portal, 
Mathematics unlocks the passages that are 
bolted by the bars of computation and cal¬ 
culation, leads him through their circuitous 
windings with apparent ease and security, 
constantly unfolding the beautiful arrange¬ 
ments of ratios and proportions, and in¬ 
spiring his mind with a desire to “ascend 
the magnificent stairway that leads up to 
the structure of the universe.” 
While he is thus employed another friend 
whispers in his ear,—“Come with me to t.h© 
flowery lawns, the leafy forest, the moun¬ 
tain-top, the hill-side and the sea-girt isle_ 
and revel amid tho luxuriant productions of 
nature. Fresh objects of beauty shall meet 
thee at every step to cheer and gladden thy 
heart. lie lollows, and while his compan¬ 
ion tells him of the habits, uses, structure, 
properties, names and classification of each 
plant and flower, his eye sparkles with de¬ 
light, his mind glows with admiration, and 
he enthusiastically exclaims.—“Ever let me 
tread the flowery paths of naturo and bow 
at the shrine of the Goddess of flowers !”_ 
All nature smiles with approbation upon 
him in his botanical researches, which af- 
! ford him lessons that, if rightly improved, 
will serve to develop his mental and moral 
' powers to a higher decree of excellence. 
But see! While the flowers are courting 
his attention, an Astronomical friend ap¬ 
pears and bids him look aloft and read a 
lesson in the sky. What a picture is now 
presented to his mind. With what delight 
he grasps the giant thought that those gems 
which bestowed tho mantle of night are 
worlds,—yes, distant, unnumbered worlds, 
“riding in solemn procession through tho 
halls of the sky,” each in his own respective 
orbit observing tho same unvarying coui’se 
from year to year, and that each is sur¬ 
rounded with an atmosphere such as envel¬ 
ops our own—and peopled with beings cap¬ 
able of thinking, reasoning, and progress¬ 
ing like himself. Here ho finds an ample 
field in which his imagination, though ever 
active and luxuriant, may range at large 
and yet never go beyond the boundaries of 
the universe. Ho can go on, adding scene 
to scene, magnitude to magnitude, until he 
finds himself surrounded with suns and sys¬ 
tems of worlds, extending far beyond the 
range of mortal comprehension,— and all 
moving in uninterrupted harmony “ around 
one grand centre, that the Throne of God.” 
But without extending farther, a descrip¬ 
tion of the numerous lessons to which our 
student’s attention will be called during the 
“ The Blithedale Romance ” is tho title of 
Hawthorne’s new volume, which has been 
received with much favor in England. It 
is supposed to show up life at Brook Farm, 
a Communitarian establishment started by 
several Boston Literati, and gives some cu¬ 
rious pictures of their experiences of coun¬ 
try life: 
Arcadians though -we were, our costume 
bore no resemblance to the be-ribboned 
doublets, silk breeches and stockings and 
slippers fastenened with artificial roses, that 
distinguish the pastoral people of poetry 
and the stage. In outward show, I humbly 
conceive, we looked rather like a gang of 
beggars, or banditti, than either a company 
of honest laboring men, or a conclave of 
philosophers. Whatover might be our 
points of difference, we all of us seemed to 
have come to Blithedale with the one thrifty 
and laudable idea of wearing out our old 
clothes. Such garments as had an airing 
whenever we strodo a field! Coats with 
high collars and with no collars, broad- 
skirted or swallow-tailed, and with the waist 
at every point between the hip and armpit; 
pantaloons of a dozen successive epochs, 
and greatly defaced at the knees by the hu¬ 
miliations of the wearer before his lady 
love; in short, we were a living epitome of 
defunct fashions, and the very raggedest 
presentment of men who had seen better 
days. It was gentility in tatters. Often 
retaining a scholar-like or clerical air. you 
might have taken us for the denizens of 
Grub-street, intent on getting a comfort¬ 
able livelihood by agricultural labor; or. 
Coleridge’s projected Pantisocracy in full 
experiment; or Candide and his motley 
associates, at work in their cabbage garden; 
or anything else that was miserably out at 
elbows, and most clumsily patched in the 
rear. We might have been sworn comrades 
to Falstaff’s ragged regiment. Little skill 
as wo boasted in other points of husbandry, 
every mother’s son of us would have served 
admirably to stick up for a scarecrow. And 
tho worst of the matter was, that the first 
energetic movement essential to one down¬ 
right stroke of real labor was sure to put a 
finish to these poor habiliments. So we 
gradually flung them all aside, and took to 
honest homespun and linsey-woolsey, so 
preferable, on the whole, to the plan recom¬ 
mended, I think, by Virgil,—“ Ara nudus ; 
sere nvdus,” —which as Silas Foster remark¬ 
ed, when 1 translated the maxim, would be 
apt to astonish the women-folks. 
After a reasonable training, the yeoman 
life throve well with us. Our faces took the 
sunburn kindly; our chests gained in com¬ 
pass, and our shoulders in breadth and 
squareness; our great brown fists looked 
as if they had never been capable of kid 
gloves. The plow, the hoe, the scythe and 
the hay fork, grew familiar to our grasp.— 
The ox responded to our voices. Wo could 
do almost as fair a day’s work as Silas Fos 
toi Iiitncelf, sleep dreamlessly after it, and 
awake at daybreak with only a little stiff¬ 
ness of the joints, which was usually quite 
gone by breakfast time. 
To be sure, our next neighbors pretend¬ 
ed to be incredulous as to our real proficien 
cy in tho business which wo had taken in 
hand. They told slanderous fables about 
our inability to yoke our own oxen, or to 
drive them a-field when yoked, or to release 
the poor brutes from their conjugal bond at 
nightfall. They had the face to say. too, 
that the cows laughed at our awkwardness 
at milking time, and invariably kicked over 
the paiis; partly in consequence of our put¬ 
ting the stool on the wrong side, and partly 
because, taking offence at the whisking of 
their tails, we were in the habit of holding 
those natural fly-flappers with one hand, 
and milking with the other. They further 
averred that we hoed up whole acres of In¬ 
dian corn and other crops, and drew tho 
earth carefully about the weeds; and that 
we raised five hundred tufts of burdock, 
mistaking them for cabbages; and that by 
dint of unskillful planting few of our seeds 
ever came up at all. or, if they did come up, 
it was stern-foremost; and that we spent 
the better part of the month of June in re¬ 
versing a field of beans, which had thrust 
themselves out of the ground in this un¬ 
seemly way. They quoted it as nothing 
more than an ordinary occurrence for one 
or other of us to crop off two or three fin¬ 
gers, of a morning, by our clumsy use of 
the hay-cutter. Finally, and as an ultimate 
catastrophe, these mendacious rogues circu¬ 
lated a report that we Communitarians were 
exterminated, to the last man, by severing 
ourselves asunder with the sweep* of out- 
own scythes !—and that tho world lost noth¬ 
ing by this little accident. 
ON GOOD TERMS WITH DEATH, 
In the southern part of Tonquin, tho 
highest compliment you can pay to a dis¬ 
tinguished personage, and the dearest token 
of esteem for a revered friend, is the pres¬ 
ent of a coffin. A number of Catholic 
priests, of native origin, joined in giving a 
coffin, as a Now Year’s prosent, to the Bish¬ 
op of Laranda, who had instructed thorn in 
theology, saying that ho was growing old, 
and they could never have a more suitable 
opportunity to offer him that necessary 
piece of furniture. At the same time they 
called his attention to tho excellence of the 
wood and the beauty of the work. 
Such is tho custom of tho country; no 
person who has reached tho age of fifty is 
without his coffin, which not only stands 
ready for its prospective use, but servos 
even now. as a table by day and a bed by 
night. The children of a family in good 
circumstances, will combine to offer hand¬ 
some coffins to their father and mother, and 
pupils make the same present to a venera¬ 
ted teacher. Death there, lias no terrors. 
A poor widower, with young children, fell 
dcingerously sick, and the first care of his 
friends was to borrow a coffin for him.— 
When this was announced to the sufferer, 
he trembled with joy, and asked to see the 
borrowed article: “Now,” said he, “let me 
die, for if I live I shall havo to return it. 
and who knows if 1 can ever procure an¬ 
other r” In the same spirit the friends of a 
dying person speak of his approaching end. 
and of the preparations for his funeral. 
The Bishop, above referred to, says that 
ono day ho visited a chateebumen, whoso 
malady, though likely to he prolonged, was 
sure to end fatally, and found a woman sit¬ 
ting by his bed-side, making the mourning 
clothes for the family. At tho door was the 
carpenter, engaged in making the coffin in 
sight of the patient, who directed tho work 
with the utmost particularity. 
—These particulars were gathered from 
a letter of the good Bishop’s, to a friend in 
France, published in the Journal des Debats. 
— JY. F. Tribune. 
Congress is like a first class ship, having, 
of course, a very deep hold. It is a good 
deal like work to get anything into it; and 
when in. it is still harder to get it out. Pity 
that some patent elevator could not come 
alongside and pump into it from the lowly 
common people, some of their business habits, 
and common sense. If the people only feed 
its buckets, the Press may prove an eleva¬ 
tor.— JY. Y. Times. 
AN ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY JOURNAL, 
DEVOTED CHIEFLY TO WOOL AMD STOCK 
GROWING-. 
Tins Journal is the only one published in America, pri¬ 
marily devoted to the interests of Wool Growers, Stock 
Breeders, Graziers, Dairymen, &e., and should be iu the 
hands of every 
OWNER OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS. 
The Fourth Volume, commencing July, 1852, Mill em¬ 
brace a vast nmounc of useful and reliable information 
iu 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 
FROM 50 TO 100 ENGRAVINGS 
Embracing Portraits from Life, of Sheep, Cattle, Horses, I 
Swine, Poultry, etc.—Designs of Farm Buildings, &c., &e., j 
with proper descriptions. Each No. contains a careful ' 
Review of the Wool and Cattle Markets. 
T. C Peters, Escj., a gentleman of superior ability, and i 
every way qualified for the station, will continue editor of ■ 
j the Wool Department, — while the other departments are j 
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 j 
subjects. 
In the nature of man, the humblest or 
the hardest, there is a something that lives 
in all of the beautiful or fortunate, which 
hope and desire have appropriated even in a 
childish dream. 
continuance of his mortal life, lot us fol¬ 
low ln m in our imagination through the ves¬ 
tibule of science until ho lays aside his mor¬ 
tal casket and enters that state where lie 
can uninterruptedly prosecute Ins studies, 
through a period of infinite duration, and, 
in view of the hight to which an immortal 
mind is capable of ascending, he prompted 
to aspire to an elevated moral and intellec¬ 
tual culture as the best preparation for the 
life to come. F. t. g. 
Money in tho pocket makes luxuries look 
like necessaries, and conveniences to resem¬ 
ble essentials, while an empty purse scat¬ 
ters our really troublesome wants pretty 
nearly as fast as it does false friends. Time" 
and a few pinches from poverty clear our 
eyesight wonderfully, and almost any one, 
in looking over his old day-books, sees 
scores or hundreds of dollars "spent, which 
ho wishes back again, though they brought 
with them the old wants that they went out 
to bury, in all their former strength.— JY. 
Y. Times. 
We sometimes think we have no romance 
left, but some of us do still look at things 
and people as th.ey are. and that alonn pro¬ 
duces romance enough. 
Like flakes of snow that fall uuperceived 
upon the earth, the seemingly unimportant 
events of life succeed one another. 
Gratitude is the music- of tho heart when 
its shores are swept by the breeze of kind¬ 
ness. 
“ Attempt the end, and never stand to doubt; 
Nothing’s so bard, but search will find it out.” 
OPINIONS OP THE PRESS. 
Annexed are a few of the many voluntary 
notices, received from various sections, during 
the past few weeks ; 
Tiie Wool Grower.— This Journal has been removed 
from Buffalo to Rochester, and will be published hereafter 
by D. D. T. Moore, Esq., who has become its proprietor. 
C. Peters, Esq., will continue as Editor of tlie Wool 
T 
Department, while the other departments will be under 
he supervision of Mr. Moore. The leading object of the 
paper is to discuss subjects of most immediate interest to 
Woo) Growers and Stock Breeders. It is needless to say 
that in such hands the Wool Grower will become to its 
subscribers all that labor, expense, time and talent can 
w r ell 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 Agricul¬ 
tural publications in tlie world, and deserving tho wide and 
increasing patronage it receives.— Cayuga Chief. 
We believe it will lie a valuable auxiliary to the other 
publicat ions designed for (he farmer—taking as it does com¬ 
paratively unoccupied but important ground.— Hutton O* 
We heartily and cheerfully recommend it to every person 
interested in sheep husbandry, or he production or manu¬ 
facture of wool.— Valley Farmer. 
The Wool Grower for July comes to us iu amostehnrm- 
ing new dress—white and clean as a well washed sheep.— 
Prairie Farmer. 
We cordially recommend the Wool Grower and Stock 
Register to all our friends interested iu those departments. 
—Granite Farmer. 
It is a valuable work for tlie wool grower, and contains 
mueli that is interesting to the general agricultural reader. 
—A’. Y. Farmer. 
It is a journal for which we should suppose every one 
engaged in sheep husbandry or stock raising, would gludly 
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. 
For the New-Yorker. 
ILLUSTRATED REBUS.-No. 
Salmon Creek, N. Y. 
Answer next week. 
For the New-Yorker. 
MISCELLANEOUS ENIGMA. 
II. M. 
I am composed of 28 letters. 
My 1, 19, 11, 12, 8, 14 is a place, the inmates of 
which do not often escape. 
My 12, 26, 9, 13,19 is something sweet. 
My 9, 8, 7, 26, is a valuable metal. 
My 27, 6, 7, 7, 21, 19, 4 is what most men love 
to pocket. 
My 2, 18, 17, 24 is used in making bread. 
My 17, 2, 3, 12, 11, 8, 7, 18, 9, 10 is a study that 
should be introduced into every school. 
My 18, 21, 23, 24 is a kind of grain. 
My 27, 13, 2, 7, 15, 13 is a beautiful flower. 
Mv 18, 22, 20, 21, 19, 5, 6 is (lie name of a large 
lake. 
My 27, 19, 13, 9 is an implement used by farmers. 
My whole you will all admit to be true. 
Mecklenburg, N. Y., 1852. W. K. 
(^“Answer next week. 
ANSWERS TO ENIGMA, &c„ IN No. 35 
FARMERS, PLEASE NOTICE! 
The Monioe Mutual Insurance Company. 
fTtHIS COMPANY lias now been in operation a little 
| over fifteen years, during which time they have made 
only Three Assessments, and are now entirely free from 
debt, wi h a capital of $150,000 in good Premium Notes.— 
They have never had a disputed loss, but every claim has 
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. Tlie amended Char¬ 
ter prohibits this Company from taking any risjis 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-Gmo. L. A. WARD, Secretary. 
In no way is a graceful and refined style 
of speech so naturally formed as by poetic 
language made thoroughly familiar to the 
young. “Ido not like poetry, I cannotun- 1 
derjtand,” often say half-taught children.— j 
Give them the poetry of good writers, with 
a little necessary comment, and you will re¬ 
move all obscurity from tlie most instruct¬ 
ive and effective poetry, and all distaste to it. 
In most cases it is not contempt, but con¬ 
ventionality, that induces us to pass by and 
ignore what it is not consistent with good 
tasto to know anything about. 
Answer to Illustrated Rebus No. 35. —Bear pov¬ 
erty with fortitude, for lucre docs oum sorrow' and 
care. 
Answer to Miscellaneous Enigma.— Moore’s 
Rural Nev:- Yorker. 
©100 TO ©200 i»EIt MONTH!! 
riMIE above sum can easily be made by an industrious 
1 man, of respectable address who possesses good busi¬ 
ness qualities, and who can command a small capital (to 
begin with,) of from Twenty-five to Fifty Dollars,—(no 
otiiers need apply.)—by engaging with the subscribers in 
(lie Book Agency Business, whose Publications arc 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. 
JejF” No books kept or sold by us of an immoral ten¬ 
dency. 
A yholesale price list, with full directions, for op¬ 
erations, will he forwarded on application, post paid, to 
GEO. H. DERBY & Co., Book Publishers. 
Buffalo, N. Y. (Not New York.) [127-3m] 
TENTS! TENTS! 
F OR 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 be needed, 
1 can make arrangements to supply all. 
E. C. WILLIAMS, Agent, 
Sail and Tent Maker, 12 Bufialo-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. 
1 H-IE Subscriber has now on hand and will furnish to 
Agriculturists, Draining Tile of the most approved pat¬ 
terns. Horse Shoo 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 414 
inches calibre, and are so formed as to admit tlie water at 
e very joint, draining land from 12 to 20 feet each side of 
the drain. Orders from a distance will receive prompt at¬ 
tention. JOHN GOTT, 
f I32m6] Albany, New York. 
SENECA US. SMITH, 
(Late of Wiiitnev's Dagukrrkan Gallery,) 
H AS fitted up a suite of rooms in Chappell’s Block for 
DAGUERREOTYP1NG, which for adaptation to 
that purpose are unsurpassed in the city. Those wanting 
good pictures, (warranted permanent,/will find it to tlieir 
OLD ROCHESTER NURSERY. 
TWENTY THOUSAND OSAGE ORANGE 
Plants lit $10 per thousand. This plant proves 
“perfectly hardy bore and makes the best Orchard 
fence known. 
30,000 Northern Spy Apple trees. 
3,000 Fine Dwarf Pears, of largo 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 tine Norway Spruce, Scotch Fir, &e., 
Together with a large general assortment of hardy Or¬ 
chard Fruits mid Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, Dahlias, and 
a general collection of bulbs, box edgings, &c. 
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 Quinebau^ Scythe Slones. 
J OHN RAPALJE & Co. haring secured tlie exclusive 
sale of this superior article in tills section of tlie Slate, 
have just received from the quarry of Tyler & Co., Massa¬ 
chusetts, 100 boxes. For sale wholesale and retail at the 
Genesee Seed Store, 65 and 67 Buifalo-st., 
f 129—tf.] Rochester, N. Y. 
iOOKB’S” KUKAL 'KKlV-VOUKtii’:" 
A WEEKLY HOME NEWSPAPER, 
Designed for both Country and Town Residents. 
CONDUCTED BY D. D. T. MOORE, 
Assisted by Messrs. J. H. Bixby, L. Wether ell, 
and H. C. White — with a numerous corps o 
able Contributors and Correspondents. 
The Rural New-Yorker is designed to be unique and 
beautiful in appearance, and unsurpassed hi 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 business 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 Country. 
TERMS, IN ADVANCE: 
Two Dollars a Year — $1 for six months. To Clubs and 
Agents as follows :— Three Copies, one year, for $5; 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 tlie same rate. Six months subscriptions in proportion. 
t’sP 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 wor«fe>©j less,) for 
the first insertion, and 50 cents for each subsequent publi¬ 
cation ,—in advance. With 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 
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, &c., 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 $4; 
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 40 cents each,—in 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 Wool Grower ami 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. 
Z W” Now is the time to subscribe and form clubs. Bills 
of aii specie-paving banks, and postage stamps, received at 
par on 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, 1S52. Rochester, N. Y. 
The Wool. Grower and Stock Register will he devo¬ 
ted particularly to the subjects of raising wool and the 
breeding of stock; and as it will be conducted with un¬ 
doubted ability, should be in the hands of every farmer. 
It will no doubt at once command a very extensive circu¬ 
lation and enjoy a large influence.— Rock. Democrat. 
Mu. Moore lias abundant means at bis disposal to make 
the H oot Grower and Mock 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 aHonl them all possible informa¬ 
tion in regard to tlie subjects in which they are most in¬ 
terested. Wo commend the paper most heartily to the 
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 the paper dc- 
1 voted to wool.— Detroit I'rce Press. 
The Wool Grower.— This monthly, long and creditably 
conducted in this city, lias been removed to Rochester, 
and will hereafter he published in that city. The pro¬ 
prietorship lias 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. Ii must 
live mid prosper in his hands.— Buffalo Chris. Advocate. 
Jt instill under tho <-<lHorinl chorfta of it» first founder, 
T. t’. Peters, mend Moore has the editorial supervision 
of the Stock Department, and between them both, thev 
will make a very valuable and acceptable work.— Maine j 
1 drmer. 
In point of typography, quality of paper, execution of I 
engravings, and literary merit, this publication is of the 
liigliest excellence.— Ontario Repository. 
Wo predict for it an unprecedented circulation among ' 
the Farmers and Stock Growers throughout the Union._ 
Roch. Daily Don. 
It is a work of emphatic merit, and cannot fail of ho- j 
coining a favorite wherever known.— Rochester Daily Adv. j 
This journal should be in the hands of every wool grower i 
in tho land.— III. Time Dcm. 
To wool growers and breeders of stock, this is a work 
of great value.— Adrian (Mich., Watch Tower. 
This arrangent will add materially to the interest and j 
value of the work.— Albany Cultivator. 
advantage to give him a call. Pictures Copied equal, or j hence preference is given to those most apprep-riate_such 
Simermr to the original. I as the cards and noticos of dealers in Agricultural I mule- 
superior to the original. 
Entrance next to Grnnt’s Music Store, 82 State St., 
Chappell’s Block. 
Rochester, May, 1852. [!24-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. 
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, hrie 
advertisements are preferred. Patent medicines, Sic., w ill 
not he advertised in this paper on any terms. 
VW° All communications, and business letters, sho-ild 
be addressed to D. D. T. Moore, Rochester, N. Y. 
