MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YO RKER: AN AGRICULTURAL AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER. 
Misntllany. 
JUDGE NOT IN HASTE. 
BY CHARLES SWAIN. 
Ne'er be hasty in your judgment,— 
Never foremost to extend 
Evil mention of a neighbor, 
Or of one you’ve called a friend! 
Of two reasons for an action 
Choose the better, not the worst; 
Oft—with some—the meaner motive 
Ever strikes the fancy first I 
Then be gentle with misfortune;— 
Never foremost to extend 
Evil mention of a neighbor, 
Or of one you've call'd a friend 1 
Judge not with detracting spirit. 
Speak not with disdainful tongue, 
Nor, with hard and hasty feeling, 
Do one human creature wrong! 
Words there are that, sharp as winter, 
Strip the little left to cheer;— 
Oh, be yours the kinder mission, 
Prone to soothe, not cause, a tear! 
Then be gentle with misfortune ; 
Never foremost to extend 
Evil mention of a neighbor. 
Or of one you've call'd a friend! 
WINDSOR CASTLE. 
Yesterday I went with some American 
friends to Windsor Castle and Virginia Wa¬ 
ter. It was a day to be marked with a 
white stone. It left on my heart only sun- 
bright thoughts, and hung my memory with 
grand and beautiful pictures. Windsor 
Castlo is nobler and finer every way, than I 
expected to find it—truly a most regal res¬ 
idence—the nursery, the stronghold, the 
temple of kingliness. While these high 
places of royalty, gorgeous with wealth, and 
vonerablo with the memories of ages, stand 
forth as the prido and glory of England, 
and the shrines of romance and poetry for 
all nations, it seems to mo that tho institu¬ 
tion of monarchy is safe and steadfast— 
pillared by the sacrodnoss of the past, the 
admiration and imagination of the present, 
the involuntary admiration of the world.— 
Tho question of what they would do with 
their palaces, never presented itself serious¬ 
ly to my mind at homo, in connection with 
tho thought of the possible republicaniza- 
tion of England ; yet hero it comes stag¬ 
gering force against any such political air- 
castle. 
We had an order which took us through 
both the state and private apartments, all of 
which are beautiful and goi'geous beyond 
my poor powor of description. The private 
rooms have tho most of a homo-look, if that 
dear familiar word can bo applied to any- j 
thing so magnificent. The long corridor is 
docoratod with some fine pictures, among 
which I was glad to seo that of Scott. Of 
the rest, tho most interesting were a series 
of paintings commemorative of tho princi¬ 
pal ovents in the life of Victoria—thus far 
sho has been pretty thoroughly painted.— 
Her Majesty’s breakfast parlor is hung with 
Winterhalter’s famous portraits of herself 
and Prince Albert, and with pictures ot the , 
royal children—taken altogether, a very ; 
handsome family. From this room, which 
looks out upon the terrace, thoro is a lovely 
view of the park. In short, whatever way 
tho eye glanced, it met only beauty, and 
luxury, and splendor; and I could but won¬ 
der how those favored ones, born to the 
grandeurs and pleasures of such high estate, 
could bring themselves to submit to the in¬ 
evitable decrees of nature, and die with de¬ 
cent resignation—come meekly down from 
the throne to tho cofiin—go humbly forth 
from the gay palace halls to the dark and 
narrow house of tho dead. Yet we must 
bolievo that tho kingly crown often presses 
too tightly around throbbing brows, till ev¬ 
ery gem seems to shoot a separato torture 
into the brain—that woman’s heart often 
aches sharply under tho queenly ermine— 
that the heirs to thrones are also heirs to 
all the ills of humanity—that the burden 
of morality weighs more and more hoavily 
upon them, till they, like tho poor wayfarers 
of life, stretch their tired arms yearningly 
towards God’s rest. In tho solemn old 
Chapel of Windsor, there is a beautifully 
sculptured cenotaph, to the memory of the 
Princess Charlotto, representing her in the 
attitude in which she died—the death strug¬ 
gle just arrested, and all its fearful agony 
stiffening into her limbs. Tho light sheet 
which wraps her body, covei'S her face, hut 
only to reveal it with more terrible distinct¬ 
ness to the eye of the imagination. I shud¬ 
dered and recoiled with horror, as though 
from the brink of an abyss, when I found 
myself standing over tho dust of Charles 
the First. 
The drive through tho G reat Park to Vir¬ 
ginia Water, and the long delicious rambles 
through those enchanting grounds, are they 
not written in tho pleasantest chronicles of 
memory ? This sweet summer place, was 
the darling work of that princely ploasurist, 
Goorge the Fourth. Ho was a spendthrift, 
a voluptuary, an unfilial son, a bad husband, 
an indifferent father—a bad follow in many 
respects : but ho had exquisite taste, there’s 
no denying it.— Grace Grecnivood. 
Capital Illustration. — Senator Rusk, 
referring to the fact, that any proposition 
brought before Congress now is sure to pro¬ 
duce a vast number of political speeches 
and a large amount of political capital, said 
that tho fact callod to his mind an incident. 
He was present on one occasion at an Indian 
“ talk,” when a man drovo up with a barrel 
of whiskey: an old Indian who was sitting 
by, fixed his eye on tho barrel, and after 
looking earnestly for some time, askod Mr. 
Rusk if he knew what was in that barrel.— 
Ho said it was whiskey, ho presumod. “ No,” 
said the Indian, “ there are about a thousand 
songs and fifty fights in that barrel.” 
Poetry is to philosophy what tho sabbath 
is to the rest of the week. 
RICH FOLKS. 
We suppose there are peoplo in all parts 
of the United States that think they are 
pretty well off-—even rich. Wo know a few 
unfortunate individuals that labor under this 
hallucination, and that look with a mixture 
of pity and contempt upon their fellow- 
worms of the dust, whom they suppose to 
I possess less of “the dust” than themselves. 
But heaven help these poor witlings, they 
have not the slightest conception of what 
wealth is. They rich, forsooth ! They are 
beggars, comparatively. Many a rich man’s 
upper servants live in better style. Mr. 
Croesus, who flourished before our time, and 
whom tho reader has doubtless heard of, 
used to say that a citizen who had not for- 
KENTUCKY IN THE OLDEN TIME. 
The Now Orleans Dolta relates tho fol¬ 
lowing anecdote, on the authority of ono of 
Kentucky’s most accomplished and traveled 
daughters, the wife of a late Ex-Governor : 
In the early settlement of that territory, 
her present aged, queenly matrons were 
without many ot those things now esteemed 
by their sex so indispensable, and amongst 
them the looking-glass, which had never 
made its appearance across the mountains. 
In its stead, the eye and hand ot a compan¬ 
ion, or the smooth, reflective surface of the 
glassy brook, were made to subserve the pur¬ 
pose of tho toilette; and a wooden trough, 
or hollow stump, filled with water, not un- 
frequently daguorreotyped the flowing curls 
tune to support an army, or a legion, did • and tallowed headsot the backwood beauties, 
not deserve the title of a rich man; and he ^ happened, on a time, that there 
is good authority. His landed property came along the Indian trails a Yankee pod- 
alone was worth the snug little sum of $8.- lar, who, amongst his precious store ol goods, 
500,000. Then ho possessed slaves, furni- which he was exchanging tor furs and skins, 
turo, horses, cattle and cash to an equal had a small looking-glass, such as fits the 
amount; making the comfortable sum of *°P °* an old-fashioned, round shaving-box. 
$17,000 000. As soon as seen by them, all bid for the rare 
Mr. Croesus was a rich man, but many of and desirable thing; but, with nativeshrewd- 
the old gentlemen who departed this life ness > onc er the pretence that he could not 
centuries ago. were l'icher than he. There spare it—well knowing it would prejudice 
was Seneca, tho philosopher, who uttered *' s . trading, did ho prefer a buyer then ho 
and wrote some tolerably good things, con- refused all ofiers, intending, in the end, to 
sidering the age in which he lived, who was accept tho highest. 
worth $17,500,000 ! Many modern authors At last, however, ready to pack and leave, 
would doubtless have been glad to have been , ? called upon the best bidder, and received 
remembered in the old fellow’s will. And his offer. 1 he purchaser was a young beau, 
so they were, all of them. He has left them j who at once presented it to a family ot beau 
an invaluable legacy, and this it is : “ When¬ 
ever you have written a book, lay it aside 
for nine years; at the expiration of that 
time, peruse it carefully, and then, if your 
judgment approve, publish it, but not be¬ 
fore.” 
Julius Csesar, like Wilkins Micawber, Esq., 
was “ continually incurring pecuniary liabil¬ 
ities that he found it difficult to discharge.” 
Ho set a high value upon friendship, having 
purchased that of Lucius Palus for $1,500 - 
000, and that of Cuiro for $2,500,000. Ho 
was a torriblo spendthrift. Before lie suc¬ 
ceeded in obtaining any office, he had amass¬ 
ed debts to the amount of $14,975,000.— 
But office holders had good pickings in 
those days, as well as in our own; and as 
soon as Julius got his hand into tho public 
treasury, his debts began to diminish. lie 
soon became rich. He gave Servilla, the 
mother of Brutus, a pearl of the value of 
$200,000. He would doubtless have been 
guilty of many other extravagances had not 
the “ well-beloved Brutus ’’given him that 
cruel stab under the fifth rib. On the day 
of the assassination. Caesar’s friend, Mark 
Antony, owed $1,500,000, which was all paid 
thirty days afterward. This same Antony 
subsequently swallowed a pearl dissolved in 
vinegar (which Cleopatra administered to 
him,) worth $400,000. He also squandered 
$735,000,000 of the public treasury. He 
would havo been a splendid fellow to have 
held a fiscal agency under our federal gov¬ 
ernment. 
Tiberius, at his death, left $118,125,000 
which Caligula spent in less than twelve 
months. He lived at the rato of about 
$35,000 a day; ono supper cost $400,000. 
Esopus, tho comedian, even transcended i 
Caligula in extravagance; having given j 
$400,000 for one single dish. He had a j 
son, Clodius, who was a chip of the old ! 
block. Among other costly gastronomic j 
feats, he swallowed a pearl, (a la Antony,) ; 
valued at $4,000. 
Appius, another Roman millionaro. squan- 1 
derod in debauchery some $2,500,000 ; after | 
which, finding himself sober one day, he in- ! 
vestigated his pecuniary affairs, and finding j 
that ho had only half a million dollars left, j 
ho poisoned himself, because he considered 
that sum insufficient for his maintenance. 
A Mr. Ileligobalus, who lived in those 
times, and was one of tho upper ten, used 
occasionally to get up nico suppers that cost 
$ 100 , 000 . 
Another gentlemen, named Lucullus. sel¬ 
dom sat down to a repast that costless than 
$100,000. His private table eclipsed the • 
“ladies’ ordinaries” of any twenty of the 
best hotels in the world. The fish from his j 
ponds were sold for $175,000. 
TOWN vs. COUNTRY. ; 
tiful sisters, the rival belles of the country. 
It was near the time of a large ball, to which 
they were invited, and where they proudly 
appeared, with pieces of the looking-glass 
framed in lead, suspended by yellow bark 
strings from their beautiful brown necks.— 
They were at once the observed of all—the 
main attraction of the evening—much to 
the slight of others equally handsome and 
“quite as respectablo,” who were,after that 
night, with bitterness and wounded pride 
heard to reproach their late attending beaux 
with—“ Yes, oh yes, you could’nt seo us 
this evening; we’re too common. You 
chose first to dance up to the girls with the 
looking-glasses.” “ And,” said the lady nar¬ 
rator, “ that night were first sowed seeds of 
envy and hatred that show themselves to 
this day between many of the leading fami- 
liesof old Kentucky—and all because of the 
looking-glasses.” 
THE DECENCIES OF LIFE. 
There aro persons in the world who, in 
order to screen themselves from the charge 
of extravagance and folly, try to do it under 
the ploa of decency. Those persons will 
commit many acts which, if they had true 
ideas of decency, they would hesitate to 
perpetrate. Wo think the following aro a 
few of the many practices that come under 
the cognomen of not decent. 
It is not docent for a person to make a 
show above his or her means. 
It is not decent for a person to run in 
debt when he does not intend to pay. 
It is not decent fora person to bo always 
talking ill of his neighbors. 
It is not decent to ascribe improper mo¬ 
tives to every one we may come in contact 
with. 
It is not decent for one to appropriate 
another’s pecuniary means for his own grat¬ 
ification. 
It is not decent for young people to show 
no respect to tho aged. 
It is not decent to bo praising yourself 
always. 
It is not decent to keep yourself as a show 
for others to look at. 
It is not decent in persons going to places 
of amusement to incommodo others in vari¬ 
ous ways. 
It is not decent to spend your money in 
foolishness, when you have debts that ought 
to bo paid. 
It is not decont to starve your family by 
spending your money for liquor. 
It is not decent to say one thing and mean 
another. 
It is not decent to cheat your neighbor bo- 
cause you havo a little more knowledge than 
he is possessed of. 
It is not decent to bo borrowing papers 
when you can got the Rural for $2 a year. 
Herman Melville has just written a new 
book, wherein he commits many improprie-1 FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE, 
oties of style, plot, and morals; butthefbl-l rr t> 
lowing quaint paragraph b worthy of any j . T “ f. os M “ s0 "™' supplies tho follow- 
Elizabethoan writer” in the old days when "f. 1 ’'f 1 ' v ,m P. ort “ n > whelhOT ««»'- 
Shakspeare and the fathers of on? oldest “'„ t Alvi'ed ’- 1 ' °'' b “ csl>r0ss “* 
families, sat together in the theatres, or jos- P j r.. n . 
* ,il’ • J For the benefit of that port 
tied elbows in the streets: , , , ,, . J , 
. ... readers who, under the iron rule 
, °?.°U cn ^ 10 American, that himself have been obliged to pass foot 
makes his fortune, builds him a groat house mouth with a silver fork in tho : 
in the most metropolitan street in the most a iid a crust of bread in the left, w 
metropolitan town. Whereas, an European that the English nobility have late 
ot the same sort would thereupon migrate that knives may be used for that 
into tho country. That herein tho Europe- the knives aro silver. Now this 
an hath the better ol it, no poet, no philos- important item, especially to thof 
ophor, and no aristocrat will den v. I or tho pot so eroedv as to bo afraid i 
For tho benefit of that portion of our 
readers who, under the iron rule of fashion, 
have been obliged to pass food to their 
mouth with a silver fork in tho right hand 
and a crust of bread in the left, we will state 
that the English nobility have lately decided 
that knives may be used for that purpose, if 
the knives aro silver. Now this is a very 
important item, especially to those who are 
not so greedy as to bo afraid of cutting 
country is not only the most poetical and i their mouths if they use knives instead ol' 
philosophical, but it is the most aristocratic | f 01 -R s . 
part of earth, for it is the most venerable: 
and numerous bards have ennobled it by 
many fine titles. Whereas the town is the 
more plebeian portion; which, besides many 
other things, is plainly evinced by the dirty, 
unwashed face perpetually worn by the 
town; but the country, like any queen, is 
over attended by scrupulous lady’s maids in 
the guise of tho seasons, and the town hath 
but one dress of brick, turned up with stone; 
but tho country hath a brave dress for every 
week in tho year; some times she changeth 
her dress twenty-four times in twenty-four 
hours, and tho country weareth her sun by 
day as a diamond on a queen’s brow and the 
stars by night as necklaces of gold beads ; 
whereas tho town’s sun is smoky paste and 
no diamond, and tho town’s stars are pinch¬ 
beck and not gold.” 
He pays dear for his bread who lives by 
another’s bounty. 
This nows will undoubtedly prove as¬ 
tounding to tho upper fen-dona, and per¬ 
haps so shatter tho foundation of fashiona¬ 
ble society as to split it into two middle five- 
doms, or perhaps even four lower tieo-and-a- 
half-doms. 
Wo hope that some reform will now be 
effected that will enable poor peoplo, who 
are unable to own silver ware, to pass food 
to their mouths with somo other article than 
a fork, especially while eating bean soup or 
chowder. 
Conclusive. —“ Did you say, sir, that you 
considered Mr. Smith insane ?” askod a law¬ 
yer of a witness in a criminal caso. “Yes, 
sir, I did.” “ Upon what grounds did you 
base that inferenco T “ Why, I lent him 
• a silk umbrella and five dollars in monoy, 
j. and he returned them both.” 
I It is good mannors to lot others speak first. 
POLITICAL SPECULATITNS. 
The Carpet Bag rebukes the vaunting 
tone of the Whig and Democratic papers in 
relation to tho Presidency. It indicates its 
preference for Ensign Jehiol Stebbings, who, 
it says, is immensely popular, though like 
some other Presidential candidates, many 
people may have never heard of him be¬ 
fore. It takes tho calculations of the Eve¬ 
ning Post and the Tribune, and ciphers 
thus: the Post’s figures give 57 as doubtful, 
and the Tribune sets down 8*) as doubtful. 
“ Adding these together, wo have 137 doubt¬ 
ful, or certain for Stebbings ; for who should 
tho doubtful States go for but tho doubtful 
candidate ? Stebbings, then, having 137 
conceded to him. lot us add the 214 claimed 
for Pierce, and we have 351 !” This vote, 
it says, cannot be overcome. It claims Tex¬ 
as for Stebbings, for “ Did not Stebbings 
shed his blood at the Alamo ?” The charge 
that Stebbings is a Disunionist “is believed 
nowhere but in South Carolina, and there it 
rather helps him.” Stebbings writes to the 
Mayor of Sacarap, that “ ho is in favor of 
the Maine Liquor Law, and opposed to its 
being put in force. This has made him very 
popular in Maine, and his election is con¬ 
sidered certain. 
A Frenchman Fart —A Frenchman up¬ 
on the road on “ Fast Day,” told a boy to 
hold his horse swift.” 
“ Fast, you mean, don’t you, sir ?” inter¬ 
rogated the lad. 
“ Vel ,fast, den ; I no understand dis.” 
“ There goes a fast horse!” exclaimed a 
bystander, us a lively trotting nag streaked 
by. 
“ How is zat ?” nervously inquired the as¬ 
tonished Frenchman; “zare is von horse 
fast, and he goes like zundor all zo time;— 
zare is my horse—he is f ust, too, and he no 
move.” 
“This is Fast Day in reality, by tho ap¬ 
pearance of tho road,” said another. 
“Oh. I zee den,” said monsieur, “vy dis 
is fast day ; everything is fast—zo horse zat 
goes is fast, zo horse dat is tied is fast, and 
ze folks zat eat nothing and eat it slow is fast. 
Vot a countrie I” 
Why will a geologist put no faith in the 
fable of the iox that lost his tail? 
Because he knows that no animal remains 
have ever been found in trai\ 
i%itjrs Jtiuscuni. 
“ A ttempt the end, find never stand to doubt; 
Nothing’s so hard, but search will find it out.’ 
For the New-Yorker. 
ILLUSTRATED REBUS.-No. 42. 
Answer next week. 
For the New-Yorker. 
HISTORICAL ENIGMA 
I am composed of 32 letters. 
My 7, 22, 7, 5, 2, 6 was son of the beautiful rind 
highly gifted queen Semiramis. 
My 1, 10, 13 supposed to be the father of Sar- 
damapalus. 
My 1,8, 11,22, 26 stole away the beautiful Helen. 
My 9, 21, 28, 31 a city taken afler a seige of thir¬ 
teen years. 
My 1, 12, 6, 29, 28, 20, 2, 32, 31 was the most 
noble of the twelve tribes that once inhabited 
Persia. 
My 32, 4, 28, 22, 25, 6 passed the Danube on a 
bridge of boats of his own construction. 
My 32, 16, 24, 1, 25, 22 an oracle the Athenians 
consulted in great terror. 
My 7, 22. 3, 16 is an ancient river of much ce- 
lebi ity. 
My 20, 31, 23, 17, 7 was termed tho tyrant of 
Syracuse. 
My 1, 5, 18, 13, 6 where the Athenians took a 
number of Spartan prisoners. 
My 2, 27, 15, 31, 7, 6 where the Romans sent for 
copies of the Grecian laws. 
My 6, 17, 14, 4, 28 succeeded bis father Seloucus. 
My 29, 11,2, 30,25, 6 renewed the Achean league. 
My whole is a work whose excellence can not 
he fully discovered, nor its advantages realized, 
without diligent attention and study. 
jggT”Answer next week. Mattik. 
ANSWERS TO ENIGMA, &c., IN No. 41 
as. m 
Answer to Illustrated Rebus No. 41.— To graft, 
inarch, inoculate, head down, prune, and train, are 
interesting operations to all cultivators. 
Answer to Miscellaneous Enigma.— He that 
would thrive must rise at five. 
Answer to Geographical Enigma.— The Erie. 
Canal Enlargement. 
Answer to Puzzle.— Dione, one of the fifty He¬ 
rricks. [See Mythology.] 
D is five hundred; I is one to divide by ; Oxk is 
one;- -hence, D one divided or seperated by I or 
one, becomes Djoxe, one of the Nereides or fifty 
children of Ncrcus and Doris. 
Albany Drain Tile Works, 
No. 60 Lancaster Street — Wkstoe Medical Colled®. 
rrUIE Subscriber has now on hand and will furnish to 
JL Agriculturists, Draining Tile of the most approved pat¬ 
terns. HorseShoe Tile at ©12, ©15, and ©18 per l,noO 
pieces; Sole Tile or Pipes at ©12 and ©IS per 1,00(1 pieces 
These Tile are over one foot in length from 2% to 4>* 
inches calibre, and are so formed as to admit the water at 
every joint, draining land from 12 to 20 feet each side of 
the drain. Orders from a distance will receive prompt at¬ 
tention. JOHN GOTT, 
(132m6'| Albany, New York. 
Erection of Liglilning Rods. 
I P. BERTHRONG & Co., offer their services to the 
j. public for this work. They assure their patrons 
that the work shall be carefully and faithfully done. The 
patronage already received demands tlieir gratitude, and 
shall be fully merited in future. They will put tip rods 
both in city and country. Orders may be left at 55 South 
Fitzliugh St., or at J. B. Dewey's Store, 61 Buffalo St. 
L. P. BERTHRONG & Co. 
Rochester, July 13, 1852. 133-tf 
BUFFALO PAPER WAREHOISE. 
Niagara Falls Paper mills. 
T HE undersigned having completed the repairs and en¬ 
largements of their Paper Mill at Niagara Falls are now 
ready to execute with despatch ail orders for paper. Their 
news and book papers are of very fine quality, scarcely 
equalled by any made in the State. A large stock of print¬ 
ing, writing, letter and wrapping papers constantly on 
hand or made to order. Rags wanted for which the mar¬ 
ket price will always be paid. BRADLEY, BRO'S. 
121-tf. Warehouse, No. 3 West Seneca st. 
American Seed and Implement Store, 
NO. 4 MAIN STREET, CURTIS' BLOCK. 
Garden and Wineries at Munrot-st. Plank Road Galt. 
(Over five Tons of Garden Seeds grown in 1851) 
rpHE Proprietor of this establishment has been exten- 
JL sivcly engaged in growing and selling Seeds for the 
last twenty-four years, with every facility for a successful 
business, and a determination that not an article shall 
leave his Store but such as will prove satisfactory to the 
purchaser. He therefore expects that his efforts will bo 
appreciated and meet the approval of liis customers.— 
Over Fifty First Premiums have l>cen awarded at the State 
and County Fairs for Vegetables grown at his Garden. 
Garden, Field and Flower Seeds of all kinds and 
of first quality. 
Fruit and’ Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, &c., Green 
House and Hot bed Plants in their season. 
Farm Tools Of every description. Emery’s Railroad 
Horse Powers, Thresher, and Separator, Seed Drills, Corn 
Planters, Machine Bolting, &c.— Wholesale and retail at 
Manufacturer's prices, adding transportation. 
C. F. CROSMAN, 
April 1, 1862. 118-Sw. Rochester, N. Y. 
EAGLE PLOW MAN IFACTOttY. 
ALLEN BKLDING, 
Corner State and Platt Streets, Rochester, N. Y, 
W OULD call the attention of Farmers to his large and 
excellent assortment of 
PLOWS AND OTHER AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. 
Among them are the following Plows Massachusetts- 
Eagle, Wisconsin, Improved Cayuga Co. and Strouse, 
North American, (for deep plowing,) John Rich’s Iron 
Beam Plow, Shovel Plows, &c. 
Mould-boards, Landsides, Points, devices, Coulters, 
Bands, etc., always on hand. 
He would request particular notice of bis Improved 
Double-Pointed Steel Tooth Cultivator, a superior 
article. 
He solicits tho patronage of the farming community, 
believing that they will bo well paid for calling at his man¬ 
ufactory, before buying elsewhere. 
ALLEN BELDING, Corner State and Platt-sts., 
* IS-tf. ___ Rochester, N. Y 
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 Fine Dwarf Pears, of large size. 
5,000 Giant Rbubard, very low by tlie 1,000. Must be 
sold to clear the ground. 
One dozen very large Maple trees, root pruned last 
spring; 1 doz. Scotch Larch; I doz. Laburnum; and sev¬ 
eral fine Norway Spruce, Scotch Fir, &e., 
Together with a large general assortment of liardv Or¬ 
chard Fruits and Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, Dahlias’, 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 tilled, 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. 
FOWLS AND EGGS. 
T HE great demand for the improved Fowls has induced 
me to purchase the choicest kinds, and the best speci¬ 
mens ol pure bred Fowls chat could be obtained in the 
New-England States, at a cost of from $10 to $15 per pair. 
I will furnish good fresh eggs, (for hatching,) safely pack¬ 
ed for transportation, of either of the following named va¬ 
rieties at. $1 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, largo and pure bred. 
D. P. NEWELL. 
Rochester, Monroe Co., N. Y., 1852. 115-tf. 
“SPEED THE PLOW.” 
Genesee Seed Store and Ag*l. Warehouse. 
rill IE subscribers beg leave most earnestly to call the nt- 
JL tention of the farming community to tlie fact that they 
have just received a supply of the most popular and mod¬ 
ern improved implements used in Agricultural and Horti¬ 
cultural pursuits. 
They would particularly invite all interested, to the well 
established Mass. Eaoi.k Plows, in a series of 24 different 
sizes manufactured by Rugglcs, Nourse & Mason. Also 
the latest and most improved kind of Seed Planter, in¬ 
vented by the same firm. 
We lmve also on hand the well known Curtis or Albion 
Plow, of various sizes and extra manufacture. 
Wheeler's Horse Power, Tlneslier and Saw Mill. 
Hussey's Celebrated Grain Reaper. 
Pennock's Wheat and Grain Drill. 
As also a complete assortment of Field and Garden 
Seeds, both domestic and imported. 
72 JOHN RAPALJE & Co., Irving Block, 
65 Buffalo-st., Rochester 
CARY’S ROTARY FIRE jENg!NL PUMP. 
fTlHE Inventor after thoroughly testing liis engine pump 
_| (for the past two years,) feels confident that it is not 
equalled by any thing now in market, in the way of rais¬ 
ing or forcing water—the motion being rotary, tlie 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 be used, viz., Factories, 
Steamboats, Tanneries, Breweries, Distilleries, Railroad 
Water Stations, Hotels, Mines, Garden Engines, &c. The 
highest testimonials will be given. 
No. 1 is a house or well pump and domestic Fire En- 
! gine, and will raise from 20 to 30 gallons per minute. 
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. Those machines are manufactured and sold 
bv tlie subscribers at Broekport, N. Y. 
’70-tf. CARY Hi BRAINAHD. 
MOORE’S RURAL MW-YORKER: 
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Designod for both Country and Town Residents. 
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Ten Copies (and one to Agent,) for $15; Twenty Copies 
for $25, and any additional number, directed to individuals 
at the same rate. Six months subscriptions in proportion. 
JfJ/" Subscription money, properly enclosed, may be 
sent by mail at the risk of the Publisher. 
Terms of Advertising: 
One 1>os,lar per square (ten lines — 100 words, or less,) for 
the first insertion, and 50 cents for each subsequent publi¬ 
cation ,—in adtance. t W 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 
ns the cards and notices of dealers in Agricultural Imple¬ 
ments and Machinery,—Horticulturists and Seedsmen,— 
Booksellers and Publishers,—Inventors, etc. AS orders 
by mail should be accompanied with the cash. 
’ To enable us to accommodate as many as possible, brie 
advertisements are preferred. Patent medicines, Ac., will 
not be advertised in this paper on any terms. 
All communications, and business letters, should 
be addressed to D. 1). T. Moore, Rochester, N. Y. 
