MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YO RKER: AN AGRICULTURAL AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER. 
^odicnl. 
A THOUGHT AT NIAGARA. 
BY WILLIAM H. BURLEIGH. 
Here where great thoughts the spirit must oppress, 
And man should feel his utter nothingness, 
Awed by the voice that thunders from thy flood, 
Sublimest Cataract! to tell of God, 
Hushing our passion’s turbulence, until 
Adoring silence all the soul doth fill— 
Even here— sad marvel!— man can still be mean, 
And with the ribald oath, the jest, obscene, 
Hate's scowl, and Envy’s leer, and Pride’s grimace, 
Profane thy sanctities, oh awful Place 1 
Yet wherefore wonder ? If where Ocean pours 
His solemn anthem to the listening shores; 
Where mountains, cloud-crowned, climb to heaven, 
and throw 
An early twilight over vales below; 
When the strong sun floods all the day with light, 
Or, in her queenly pomp, the holy Night 
Looks down, serene, with myriad starry eyes 
Or, clothed with storms, shakes terror from the skies, 
Man can be vile, the slave of low desires, 
Consuming life in passion’s liell-lit fires, 
And, all forgetful of the soul's high birth, 
Starve, and debase, and chain it to the earth,— 
Hope not that here where from the precipice 
Niagara plunges to the dread abyss, 
With thunder anthem upward and afar 
Sent, till the firm hills tremble to the jar, 
While o'er the wild turmoil the vapory air 
Gleams glorious with the rainbow quivering there— 
Hope not that here, his heart will, reverent, see 
In the dread scene, God's might and majesty: 
Still mean and groveling, passion’s willing thrall, 
His sottish sense dims and belittles all. 
Not thus, oh God! not thus would I behold 
This vision of thy glories manifold 1 
1 would be better, nobler, baling stood 
Thus face to face with Thy majestic Flood— 
I would be purer, holier, from to-day, 
That I have known the baptism of its spray— 
And bear away, transfusing soul and sense, 
Its awful beauty aud magnificence; 
And hear, at morn and night, on land or sea, 
Its everlasting voice proclaiming Thee, 
Till all my being shall become divine, 
Aud all my thoughts shall brightly mirror Thine 1 
[Independent. 
3CaMts ! lijmrtmrat. 
Written for Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
“AFARMER'S WIFE” IN THE CITY, 
TO HER FRIEND AT HOME. 
Mr Dear Friend : —In compliance with 
your request, 1 will endeavor to give you 
some of my impressions of city life, or 
some of its peculiarities that I have ob¬ 
served. 
Of “ Upper-ten-dom” I scarcely expect 
to obtain a glimpse at this season, (August,) 
as almost every body belonging to that class 
are “ out of the city,” or at least the female 
portion of it, and as many more of other 
grades as can induce their husbands and 
fathers, to supply the needful. I believe a 
periodical mania seizes the people of all 
cities to breathe a purer atmosphere than 
they are contented to inhale all the rest of 
tho year. This is perfectly right in numer¬ 
ous instances ; but when a trip to Saratoga 
or any other fashionable resort, is taken for 
the mere purpose of giving tho individuals 
a little importance, in the eyes of those 
who can see nothing that is not reflected in 
tho glass of fashion, while the husband and 
father is condemned to the daily toils of 
business and the cold comfort of a boarding 
house for four or six weeks, to enable the 
wife and daughters to drink at the spring 
of “ high ton,” seems to [me to be decidedly 
wrong. Porhaps an only son, who must of 
necessity squire tho ladies, and wear white 
kids, is at this very time imbibing habits of 
dissipation that will ultimately reduce his 
mother and sisters to poverty, and scatter 
to the four winds, the property that father 
is striving so hard to accumulate, in the 
fond hope of finding himself in a few years 
resting from toil. 
That there are many such instances in ev¬ 
ery city is the fact. Could one-tenth part of 
the cool and gushing waters of the medicinal 
springs that are daily poured down the 
throats of pleasure-seekers, for fashion’s 
sake merely, find their way to the parched 
and feverish sutferers who bend over their 
toil in the heated tenements of “eight by 
ten ” in the city, they would call forth ema¬ 
nations of thanksgiving to the Great Author 
of these life-giving fountains, such as sol- 
dom escape tho lips of a votary of fashion. 
But such are tho inequalities of life! and 
perhaps it is our wisest plan to contemplate 
tho subject philosophically as possible, hut 
never to lose sight of the fact, that each 
individual has his appropriate duties in life, 
and that the neglect of their performance, 
involves appropriate penalties. Since com¬ 
ing to the city, I have taken some shopping 
excursions with my friends, and have found 
them both amusing and profitable. Profit¬ 
able, as they give me an opportunity of ob¬ 
serving the “ tricks of trade,” and amusing, 
to perceive tho obsequiousness of many 
merchants and clerks, to a particular class 
of customers, known by their “ air and 
dress,” and the supercilious pertness assum¬ 
ed toward another class, particularly coun¬ 
try people whom they appear to think as 
verdant as the green fields of our own Wil¬ 
low-dell. I have seen clerks admit to a city 
lady that certain articles were out of fash¬ 
ion, and within ten minutes persuade a 
country woman that those very articles 
were “ positively the most fashionable goods 
in tho market,” and perhaps induce her to 
pay a higher price than lie would have dared 
to ask a city lady. I think the only remedy 
for such impositions, is for country females 
to maintain a dignified demeanor and not 
attempt to purchase any article of which 
she does not know something near the value, 
and which sho is sure she needs. It is a 
very good way for country people to find, 
and make the acquaintance of an upright, 
honorable dealor, (and I am happy to say 
tliero are such.) and as far as possible give 
him the benofit of their patronage. They 
will thus esc.apo all annoyances from imper¬ 
tinent clerks, who aro always on tho look¬ 
out for victims wherewith to amuse them¬ 
selves and each other. 
I am fully aware that people in cities en¬ 
joy many advantages for acquiring useful 
information that country people cannot in 
the nature of things obtain. “ True polite 
ness lias its seat in the heart;” and may 
therefore flourish in as high perfection in 
the country as in tho city, though it may 
not be accompanied with so great a degree 
of artificial polish. Tho benefits of city 
and country life are every year becoming 
more equalized, while tho moral and physi¬ 
cal superiority will always remain with the 
latter. 
The great disparity in juvenile crime, in 
a like amount of population, is truly a sub¬ 
ject of profound interest, and as far as it 
extends to females, both adults and juve¬ 
niles, seems to demand for its suppression, j 
the zealous efforts of philanthropy- I had 
read of the gin-shops of London, but I was 
wholly unprepared to seo in any of our 
own cities, little girls of the ages of ten and 
eleven years go into a grog shop within fifty 
feet of a fashionablo hotel, call for and 
drink off their gin, with the air of veterans 
of the “still.” I knew this city was pro¬ 
verbial for its beer-drinking, and intemper¬ 
ance in general, hut I was so horror-struck 
when such a sight met my eye in passing, 
I stood for a moment riveted to tho pave¬ 
ment ; and the horror of the scene was in 
no measure relieved by the sound of a 
piano, directly over this den of iniquity, as 
the proprietor’s daughter called forth the 
dulcet sounds, which to mo at that moment, 
sounded more like the shrieks of outraged 
humanity. Upon subsequent inquiry, I 
found that a large number of girls from 
eight to sixteon years of age, aro in the 
habit of going about tho streets with bags 
and baskets, gathering up rags and hones, 
subsisting on hits of food bogged at base¬ 
ment doors, and at night selling the avails 
of the days efforts for a few pennies, with 
which they resort to soino den of iniquity, 
where they are prepared for such “ reports ” 
as the following, taken from ono of tho city 
daily papers. 
“ A man from tho West, name unknown, 
was completely ‘ taken in/ on Thursday 
night at 11 o’clock, by a girl named Rachel 
Bradt, about fourteen years of age. They 
were in a carriage together, and while riding, 
the man was relieved of $255, and did not 
discover his loss until half an hour after lie 
had loft his cher amie. The girl was subse¬ 
quently arrested by Capt. Sayles of the 1st 
District, and tho money all recovered.” 
Every morning's Police Report shows 
numbers of arrests and imprisonments of 
females for drunkenness. It is true, they 
have a model Penitentiary to receive such 
characters, but that does not meet the want 
of a reformatory institution, where the in¬ 
mates should be kept long enough to form 
such habits as would do away the necessity 
for tho Penitentiary as far as females are 
concerned. 
Here where woman enjoys a nearer 
equality with man, than in any other coun¬ 
try under tho sun, before she calls Conven¬ 
tions to extend her “ rights,” let her see to 
it that she wiolds the influence sho already 
possesses over man, and over her children, 
to eradicate tho last vestige of intemperance 
that stalks abroad like tho ” pestilence at. 
noon-day,” desolating the hearts and homes 
of thousands in our midst. 
But I havo dwelt long enough on this un¬ 
pleasant subject, to answer the purposo of 
presenting tho facts to a mind which has 
ever shown its sympathy with suffering hu¬ 
manity. That the amplo possessions en¬ 
trusted to your stewardship, may bo the 
means in your hands of accomplishing great 
good to your kind, is the wish of 
Yours truly, A Farmer’s Wife. 
Affection, like spring flowers, breaks 
through tho most frozen ground at last; and 
the heart which seeks another’s heart nev¬ 
er seeks in vain. 
Learning, it is said, may be an instru¬ 
ment of fraud; so may bread, if discharged 
from the mouth of a cannon, be an instru¬ 
ment of death. 
If the clock of tongue be not set by the 
dial of the heart, it will not go right. 
ffliscdlmn]. 
For the Rural New-Yorker. 
THE LITTLE WORD, “NO.” 
Who can recount the evils that have be¬ 
fallen mankind in consequence of being un¬ 
able to use this negative on all occasions 
where it is proper to do so. 
Eve when approached by the tempter, 
stopped to parley with him. The sequel 
need not bo related, for all know it well; 
and have shared deeply in tho results con¬ 
sequent upon her want of decision. 
Had sho met the tempter with a decided 
no, when he hold up tho motivo for disobe¬ 
dience, ho would doubtless have been re¬ 
pulsed. 
Who that has been ruined, male or female 
by whatever influence, did not in the first 
place refuse to say no, or to say it in such 
a way as to give tho tempter to understand 
without a doubt that it did not mean no. — 
The ruined one is always obliged to enter¬ 
tain the sad reflection that ho in the first 
place consented to entertain the tempter, 
either in his presence or in his mind—until 
tho deed is consummated—tho ruin com¬ 
pleted—and then, it is oftentimes too late 
to repent and be restored to the confidence 
of friends and society. 
YVhenever, therefore, you entertain a 
doubt as it regards the propriety of an act 
when solicited, answer decidedly, no, and 
thereby banish from your mind all lingering 
desires, prompted by the love of evil grati¬ 
fications—for, rely upon it, ruin lies in the 
train and will bo your sad fate, unless you 
take this course.—w. 
NOT A “MODEL MINISTER” 
What a pity it is people won’t fulfill their 
destiny and stay in their own proper niche 
in this world’s gallery ! Why will they mis¬ 
take their vocation ? Now don’t think this 
is a great portico before a little building, for 
the matter I'm about to speak of is a “ cry¬ 
ing evil.” 
Yesterday was a beautiful Sunday—just 
such a day as makes one feel devotional, 
whether or no; quiet and still, soft and 
balmy; little children, (the flowers and po¬ 
etry of life’s wayside.) looking fresh and 
sweet as if the Saviour’s hands had just 
blessed them; fathers and mothers forget¬ 
ting life’s cares and turmoil to look heaven¬ 
ward together; tho dim, subdued light of 
the time-honored chapel, tho grand solemn 
voluntary on the organ—all were suggestive 
and impressive. Tho clergyman rose and 
read that beautiful hymn— 
“ There Is a land of pure delight.” 
Shade of If atts! how it was murdered ! 
commas, semi-colons and periods of no ac¬ 
count at all: the perspiration stood in drops 
on my forehead; I could have rushed thr’o 
the eye of a needle, had I as many humps 
on my hack as a cantel! Why need he have 
selected the beautiful story of the little ewe 
lamb 5 Such a sledge hammer, wooden de¬ 
livery ! his voice and right hand went up 
and down together, as if they wore keeping 
time on a wager. I took up the hymn book 
to read till I remembered that I should re¬ 
spect “ the master,” though I might dislike 
the messenger. “Oh, your heart wasn’t 
right,”—I beg your pardon ; I started fair, 
never felt so good in my life till he knocked 
it all in the head. O, I do so love beauty 
and harmony in everything! A very good, 
careful merchant was spoiled when that 
black coat was put on ; somebody ought to 
tell him of it—I daresn’t! Ho was as much 
out of place in that pulpit as I should be 
commanding a ship of war ! O-o-h ! that 
hymn is ringing in my ears yet!— Olive 
Branch. 
BERMUDA. THE NEGRO PARADISE. 
In a recent letter from Bermuda, Mr. 
Willis says that, nature has so endowed that 
fertile island that lazy people can live there 
without work. It is therefore the paradise 
of negroes—the usages, standards of con¬ 
duct, habits and easy means of subsistence, 
combining, with tho respect which John 
Bull pays to the dark skin, to make life in 
Bermuda very much to Cuffee’s mind.— 
Few who leave it stay long away. They 
are certainly the most happy, saucy, care¬ 
less and good for nothing, lazy population 
1 ever saw. 
Arrow root is here at home. Seeing some 
negroes at work digging it in a field, I stop¬ 
ped to look at it—owing the compliment of 
a call to the long-tried and nutritious friend 
of our children and invalids. It is a long 
root, and grows wrong end upward with 
ready prodigality. In this genial clime 
thrives also coffee, indigo, tobacco, and eve- 
ry fruit and vegetable of the tropics, and I 
saw plants and foliage rare to me at every 
turn—tho walls edged with prickly pear, 
and by the road-side, geraniums flowering 
wild, cactuses and palmettos, orange, lem¬ 
on and fig trees. Bermuda has no fresh 
water, except what comes from the clouds ; 
and quite a feature of the island is the white¬ 
washed slope of the tank, which everywhere 
supplies the house. Perhaps it is owing to 
this want that thero are no wild animals, 
and very few birds upon the island. 
Persons in love generally resolve first, 
and reason afterwards. 
Poverty vulgarises, so does w r ealth ; both 
are equally absurd. 
No one can pursue solid learning and 
frivolous pleasure at once. 
No plant so much as man noeds tho light 
and air. 
COVERDALE’S FAREWELL TO THE PIGS. 
I cannot explain what sort of a whim, 
prank, or perversity it was that, after all 
these leave-takings, induced me to go to 
the pig-sty and take leave of the swine ! 
Thero they lay, buried as deeply among 
the straw as they could burrow’, four large 
grunters, tho very symbols of slothful ease 
and sensual comfort. They wero asleep, 
drawing short and heavy breaths, which 
heaved their big sides up and down- Un¬ 
closing their eyes, however, at my approach, 
they looked dimly forth at the outer world, 
and simultaneously uttered a gentle grunt; 
not putting thomslves to the trouble of an 
additional breath for that particular pur¬ 
poso, but grunting with their ordinary exha¬ 
lation. They were involved and almost 
buried alive in their own corporeal sub¬ 
stance. The very unreadiness and oppres¬ 
sion wherewith these greasy citizens gained 
breath enough to keep their life-machinery 
in sluggish movement, appeared to make 
them only the more sensible of the ponder¬ 
ous and fat satisfaction of their existence. 
Peeping at me an instant out of their small, 
red, and hardly perceptible eyes, they drop¬ 
ped asleep again ; yet not so fast asleep but 
that their unctuous bliss w r as still present to 
them, betwixt dreams and reality. 
“ You must come back in time to eat a 
part of a spare-rib,” said Silas Foster, giving 
my hand a mighty squeeze. “ I shall have 
these fat fellows hanging by the heels, head 
downward, pretty soon, I tell you.” 
“ Oh cruel Silas ! What a horrid idea ! ” 
I cried, “ the rest of us, man woman and 
live stock, save only these four porkers, aro 
bedeviled with one grief or another; they 
alone are happy : and you mean to cut their 
throats and eat them! It would he far more 
for tho general comfort to let them eat us.and 
bitter and sour morsels we should bo ! ”— 
Hawthorne's Blithedale Romance. 
Every Word True. —It is a great and 
prevalent error, that children may bo left 
to run wild in every sort of company and 
temptations for several years and that it 
will then be time enough to break them in. 
This mistako makes half our spendthrifts, 
gamblers, thieves, and drunkards. No man 
would deal so with his garden or lot; no 
man would raise a colt or puppy on such a 
principle. Take notice, parents — unless 
you till tho new soil and throw in tho good 
seed, tho devil will have a crop of poison 
weeds before you know what is taking place. 
Look at your dear children, and think 
whether you will leave their safety or ruin 
at hazard, or whether you should not train 
them up in the way they should go. 
Distance Overcome. —In a public speech, 
illustrative of railroad facility, Rev. J. Mont¬ 
gomery told of a traveler who inquired of a 
negro tho distance to a certain point. “ Rat 
pen's on circumstances,” replied the darkey. 
“ If you gwino afoot, it’ll take you ’bout a 
day. if you gwino in de stage, or do homney- 
bus, you make it in half a day, but if you 
get in one of dcse smoke wagons, you he dar 
rtnin 
^outfrs Mmmvn. 
“ 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. S8. 
VALUED 
RATED 
p Answer next week. 
For the New-Yorker. 
I am a word of five letters. 
My whole represents a useful, but poor portion of 
the human family. 
My first two letters compose what is found in 
Italy. 
Omit my third and fifth letters, and I am com¬ 
posed of all metals, as well as of earth. 
Transpose my second, third and fourth, aud I am 
part of the human frame. 
Transpose my first, second and fourth, and every 
little boy would want me. 
Transpose my second, fourth and fifth, and I am 
a detestable member of society. 
Transpose my first, third, fourth and fifth, and I 
am an indispensable appendage to all dwel¬ 
ling houses. 
Transpose my first, second, fourth and fifth, and 
1 am a part of a piece of mechanism. 
Transpose my third and fourth, and 1 am a Latin 
conjunction. s. o. 
Hanover, Pa., Sept., 1852. 
fSp Answer next week. 
C§> C f ©§”♦ 
ANSWERS TO ENIGMA, &c., IN No. 38, 
Answer to Illustrated Rebus No. 38 .—Glass is 
made of sand, salt and lime. 
Answer to Miscellaneous Enigma.— Bonaparte's 
March. 
Answer to Arithmetical Question. — Latitude 
52 degrees, 12 minutes. 
Answer to Charade.— Pillow. 
ELECTION NOTICE. 
M ONROE COUNTY, SS.—Sheriff’s Office. —A Gen¬ 
eral Election is to be held in the County of Mon¬ 
roe, on the Tuesday succeeding the first Monday of Novem¬ 
ber next, at which will be chosen the officers mentioned in 
the notice from the Secretary of State, of which a cop 
thereof is hereto annexed. 
OCTAVIUS P. CHAMBERLAIN, Sheriff. 
Dated at Rochester, August 18th, 1852. 
State of New York, Secretary’s Office.— Albany, Aug. 
14th, 1852.—To the Sheriff of the County of Mon roe—Sir : 
Notice is hereby given that at the 'General Election to he 
held in this State, on the Tuesday succeeding the first 
Monday of November next, the following officers are to be 
elected, to-wit: 
A Governor, in the place of Washington Hunt; 
A Lieutenant, Governor in the Place of Sanford E. 
Church; 
A Canal Commissioner, in the place of Frederick Fol- 
let; and 
An luspector of State Prisons, in the place of Darius 
Clark; 
All whose terms of office will expire 'on the last day of 
December next. 
Thirty-five Electors of President and Vico President of 
the United States; 
A Representative in the Thirty-third Congress of the 
United Slates, for the Twenty-ninth Congressional District, 
composed of tlio Couuty of Mouroc; 
County Officers also to be elected for said County; 
Three Members of Assembly; 
A Sheriff in the place of Octavius P. Chamberlain ; 
A County Clerk in the place of John T. Lacy; 
A Superintendent of the Poor, in the place of Cyrus 
Philips; 
Two Justices of Sessions in the place of Wm. B. Alex¬ 
ander and Lyman B. Langworthy; and 
Three Coroners, in the place of Tunis V. P. Pullis, Jolrn- 
son M. South-wick and Cullen Loud; 
All whose terms of office will expire on the last day of 
December next. Yours, Respectfully, 
HENRY S. RANDALL, 
140-10w Secretary ofState. 
Important to Farmers! 
PORTABLE MI LL. 
Oakland, near Geneva, N. Y., 28 Aug., 1852. 
Mr. Charles Ross, —Dear Sir :—In reply to your letter 
of che 25tli inst., it is a pleasure to speak in commendation 
of your Patent Conical Mill. To me it lias proved valuable 
for grinding food for my stock, as a few hours labor with 
this machine prepares food sufficient for fifteen head of 
eo\ys for several days. The Mill used by me prepares food 
for horses, slieep and swine, grinding and mixing corn, 
oafs and other grains satisfactorily. It lias also produced 
for my use, our Indian meal, buckwheat meal, aud occa¬ 
sionally wheat flour, thus saving the time of teams and 
men, which otherwise must have been occupied, going sev¬ 
eral miles to a distant mill, at. much expense; it is therefore 
a source of economy as well as an inducement to better 
care of all stock, it affords also one among other rcsout- 
ees of convenient and useful labor during stormy weather. 
My belief is that, your Mill will work its way into general 
use upon farms where stock is raised, and where grist mills 
are not within a short distance. In my esiima.ion this 
mill is among the most important machines offered to the 
farmer. Resp’y yours, i. Dklafield. 
N B.—Mr. Delafield has had the Conical Mill in use on 
his farm for nearly four years. ♦ 
Any further information respecting this Mill, may be ob¬ 
tained hv letter (post-paid) addressed to 
CHARLES ROSS, Manufacturer, 
2d story Phenix Building, Aqueduct-st., opposite the Ar¬ 
cade, Rochester, N. Y.: or Joseph Sedgebecr, General 
Agent for the west. 141 —tf 
FKCIT TISEES, SEEDLINGS, Arc., &t*. 
T. C. MAXWELL & Co., Geneva, N. Y. 
1 ENCOURAGED by the generous patronage heretofore 
’j received, and by a soil, climate and position peculiarly 
favorable to the growth of healthy trees, we have so enlar¬ 
ged our stock of Nursery articles that we are now enabled 
to offer great inducements to all who may wish to purchase, 
either at wholesale or retail. We have between Jive and 
eight hundred thousand trees in the different stages of 
growth, which liave been propagated with the strictest care 
as to merit and genuineness of varieties. 
Orders by mail or otherwise promptly attended to, and 
trees securely packed mid delivered at the Railroad depot 
or Steamboat. 
Of large trees we offer this fall the following, viz : 
CO,000 Apple Trees—best varieties for market or family 
orchards. 
30,000 Cherry Trees—very thrifty and handsome. 
6,000 Pear “ Standards—healthy and large. 
20,000 “ “ Dwarfs on true Angers Quince; 
1 and 2 years old. 
10,000 Peach Trees—very nice. 
4,000 Plum “ 5 to 7 feet high—best sorts. 
2,000 Apricot “ mostly Dubois's Early Golden. 
2,000 Grape Vines—mostly Isabella. 
10,000 liver greens —Balsam Fir, Cedars, Norway Spruce, 
&c. 
5,000 Mountain Ash— large and fine. Very cheap. 
3,000 Horse Chestnut —large and stocky. 
40,000 Cherry Seedlings —very fine. 
20,000 Apple “ 2 years old. 
25,000 Buckthorn “ very nice for hedges. 
Also Hybrid Perpetual, Climbing and Moss Roses, Shrubs, 
Gooseberries, Currants, Raspberries, Strawberries, Sec. Sec. 
Particular attention is called to our large stock of the 
following fruits, viz: 
Apples. —Wagoner, Tompkins Co. King, Northern Spy, 
Primate. 
Pears. —Virgalieu, Bartlett, Louise Bonne de Jersey, 
Glout Morceau. 
Cherries. —Great Bigarreau, Belle Tartarian, Bauman's 
May, Early Purple Guigne. 
Apricots. —Dubois' Early Golden, Moorpark. 
Genevn, N. Y„ Aug . 12. 1852 138-St 
CAia’S RDIAKI TIKE ENGINE PL.UP. 
riAHE Inventor after thoroughly testing his engine pump 
X (for the past two years,) feels confident that it is not 
equalled by any tiling now in market, in the way of rais¬ 
ing or forcing water—the motion being rotary, the stream 
is constant without the aid of an air vessel. The packing 
is self-adjusting, very durable, and cannot well get out of 
order. 
These pumps are well calculated for all the purposes for 
which pumps or hydrants may he used, viz., Factories, 
Steamboats, Tanneries, Breweries, Distilleries, Railroad 
Water Stations, Hotels, Mines, Garden Engines, &e. The 
highest testimonials will be given. 
No. 1 is a house or well pump and domestic Fire En¬ 
gine. aud will raise from 20 to 30 gallons per ininuie. 
No. 2 will raise 100 gallons at 120 revolutions. 
No. 2% do 200 do 120 do. 
No. 3 do 300 do 120 do. 
The quantity raised can be doubled, by doubling the 
revolutions. These machines are manufactured and sold 
bv the subscribers at Brockport, N. Y. 
*76-tf. CARY & BRAINARD. 
MU8IC.—A Card. 
P ROF. ROBINS’S ACADEMY of MUSIC, in Gould's 
Block, State-st., Rochester, is open during the year 
tor the reception of pupils in all branches of music. 
MOORE’S KURAL NKW-Y0R&EK: 
A WEEKLY HOME NEWSPAPER, 
Designed for both Country and Town Residents. 
CONDUCTED BY D. D. T. MOORE, 
Assisted by Messrs. J. H. Bixby, L. Wetherell, 
and H. C. White — with a numerous corps o 
able Contributors and Correspondents. 
Thk Rural New- Yorker is designed to be unique and 
beautiful in appearance, and unsurpassed in Value, Purity 
anil 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—thun any other paper published in this Country. 
TERMS, IN ADVANCE: 
Two Dollars a Year — SI for six months. To Clubs and 
Agents as follows:—Three Conies, one year, for $5; Six 
Copies (and one to Agent or getter up of club,) for $10; 
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for $25, and any additional nun...er, directed to Bidhitluals 
at the same rate. Six months subscriptions in proportion. 
JTgr” Subscription money, properly 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 
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 
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 orthos 
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. 
All communications, and business letters, should 
be addressed to D. D. T. Moore, Rochester, N. Y. 
