naaramnTnnr grtaKTOanMaMttai 
i ■uirn Htmaanw. 
MOORE’S RURAL NIW-YO RKER: AN AGRICULTURAL AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER. 
ffiisrtUatn]. 
THE CLOSING SCENE. 
BY T. BUCHANAN BEAD. 
Within the sombre realm of leafless trees 
The russet year inhaled the dreamy air; 
Like some tanned reaper in his hour of ease, 
When all the fields are lying brown and bare. 
The gray barns, looking from their hazy hills 
O'er the dim waters, widening in the vales, 
Sent down the air a greeting to the mills, 
On the dull thunder of alternate flails. 
All sights were mellowed, and all sounds subdued, 
The hills seemed farther, and the streams sang low; 
As in a dream, the distant woodman hewed 
His winter log with many a muffled blow. 
The embattled forests, erewhile, armed in gold, 
Tlieir banners bright with every martial hue, 
Now stood, like some sad beaten host of old, 
Withdrawn afar in Time's 1 emotest blue. 
On slumberous wings the vulture tried his flight; 
The dovo scarce heard his sighing mate’s complaint; 
And like a star, slow drowning in the light, 
The village church vane seemed to pale and faint. 
The sentinel cock upon the hillside crew— 
Crew thrice, and all was stiller than before— 
Silent till some replying warder blew 
His alien horn, and then was heard no more. 
Where, erst, the jay within the elm's tall crest 
Wade garrulous trouble rouud her unfledged young; 
And where the oriole hung her swaying nest, 
By every light wind like a censor swung; 
Where sang the noisy masons of the eaves. 
The busy swallows circling ever near. 
Foreboding, as the rustic mind believes, 
An eariy harvest, and a plenteous year 
Where every bird which charmed the vernal feast, 
Shook the sweet slumber from its wings at morn, 
To warn the reapers of the rosy east 
All now was sougless, empty, and forlorn. 
Alone, from out the stubble, piped the quail, 
And croaked the crow, through ail the dreamy gloom; 
Alone the pheasant, drumming in the vale, 
Made echo to the distant cottage loom. 
Tnere was no bud, no bloom upon the bowers; 
The spiders wove tlieir thin shrouds night by night; 
The thistle-down, the only ghost of flowers. 
Sailed slowly by—passed noiseless out of sight. 
Amid all this—in this most cheerless air, 
And where the woodbine shed upon tho porch 
Its crimson leaves, as if the year stood there, 
Firing the floor with his inverted torch;— 
Amid all tills, the centre of the scene, 
The white-haired matron, with monotonous tread, 
Plied the swift wheel, and with her joyless mein, 
Sat liko a Fate aud watched the flying thread. 
She had known sorrow. lie had walked with her, 
Oft supped, and broke with her the ashen crust; 
And, in the dead leaves, still she heard the stir 
O f his black mantle trailing in the dust. 
While yet her cheek was bright with summer bloom, 
Her country summoned, and she gave her all. 
And twice, war bowed to her his sublo plume— 
Re-gave the sword*, to rust upon the wall; 
Re-gave the swords—but not the hand that drew, 
And struck for liberty the dying blow; 
Nor him, who to his sire and country true, 
Fell 'mid the ranks of the invading foe. 
Long, but not loud, the droning wheel went on, 
Like the low murmur of a hive at noon ; 
Long, but not loud, the memory of the gone 
Breathed through her lips, a sad and tremulous tune. 
At last, the thread was snapped—her head was bowed— 
Life dropped the distaff through his hands serene ; 
And loving neighbors smoothed her careful shroud, 
While Death and winter closed the autumn scene. 
Written for Moore's Rural New-Yorker. 
CLIPPINGS FROM MY NOTE BOOK. 
BY THE AUTHOR OF “ANYTHING BUT A FARMER.” 
Visit t' a Gypsey Camp. 
March 8 . This morning I loft Canter¬ 
bury, and proceeded on my pedestrian tour 
toward Stroud. A little before sundown, as 
I was passing the odge of a wood, I noticed 
a company of strange looking beings en¬ 
camping for the night. The party consisted 
of some half dozen men, as many women, 
and perhaps twice that number of girls and 
boys. Tho men were engaged in erecting 
a tent, while the women and children were 
unpacking a drove of donkeys which were 
feeding upon tho grass that grew by the 
road side. As I tarried a few moments to 
notice the movements of these semi-barba¬ 
rians, a good looking young girl with black 
eyes and black hair, camo towards me, and 
holding out her hand, said: 
“Plo’e, sir, gi’e me a tanner T 
“ A tanner,” said I. 
“ Aweo, sir, gi’e mo a sickpenny,” she con¬ 
tinued, advancing toward mo, aud looking 
at me with most bewitching importunity, 
out of a pair of large black eyes. 
I gave her the sixpence, and passed on 
toward tho next village. I had not pro¬ 
ceeded far, however, before I noticed a neat 
little inn, which I entered, and made ar¬ 
rangements to tarry for the night. 1 was 
soon engaged in conversation with the son 
of the innkeeper, whom I found to be a 
young man of good information, and par¬ 
ticularly “fond of a lark,” as ho expressed 
himself. From him I learned that the per¬ 
sons I had just met were a company of 
Gypsies; and, upon being informed that I 
was from America, where none of this sin¬ 
gular race were to be found, ho offered to 
accompany me to the camp, provided I was 
willing (to use his expression,) to “ stand 
the racket.” To this proposition, I cheer¬ 
fully consented, and we soon donned a suit 
of old clothes, so much the worse for woar, 
that they would have done credit to a com¬ 
mon poacher. We then directed our course 
to a poulterer’s establishment, purchased a 
couple of good fat capons, wrung their 
necks, and having stuffed them into our 
overcoat pockets, set out for tho gvpsey 
camp. 
It was a beautiful evening in Spring. The 
full moon shone clear in the heavens and j 
the stars twinkled with unusual brilliancy. j 
Having passed the wood, wo discovered the | 
camp, towards which we now hastened. Ar¬ 
riving at the tent at about nine o’clock in 
tho evening, we entered, and my companion 
claimed on our behalf, the hospitality ot the 
inmates. An old man turned to the rest 
of the group, and said a few words to them 
in a dialect that I did not comprehend.— 
They then made signs of welcome, and we 
drew the chickens from our pockets and 
handed them to a middle aged woman, who 
received them with evident satisfaction, as 
she discovered tho good condition they 
were in. 
Wo had a couple of stools presented to 
us, and wero invited to soatourselves by the 
fire. My companion represented himself as 
! a poacher of hares and rabbits, and an oc- 
| easional visitant of farmers’ heneries. Tho 
evening was not cold, yet it was sufficiently 
chilly to make a fire agreeable. At about 
eleven o’clock two men entered tho camp 
with a largo bag, and opening it, they took 
therefrom the carcass of a largo sheep.— 
This they soon divested of its covering, and 
cut into quarters, one of which was put in¬ 
to a kettle, and hung over the fire. A young- 
woman took the fowls, stripped them of 
their feathers, and placed them on a spit.— 
The company now busied themselves in dif¬ 
ferent ways while tho supper was in pre¬ 
paration. A party of the moil played a 
gaino of cards, a boy and a girl sat in one 
curner engaged in a game of draughts, an 
old woman was patching some blankets, and 
a young man was busy in mending some 
iron implements at the fire. 
At length supper was ready, and we were 
called upon to participate. The piece ot 
mutton was spoiled to my taste — boing 
strongly scented with tho garlics, onions, 
and other ingredients with which it had 
been boiled. I however made a good sup¬ 
per from tho piece of a chicken, and ono or 
two boiled potatoes. Most of tho party sat 
upon tho ground, and took their food in 
their fingers. Among the company were a 
couple of dogs that seemed to fare as well 
as their masters. Tho boys wero somewhat 
rude, tho girls frolicksomo, and neither of 
them appeared very choice in tho use ot 
their language. There was one girl that 
I considered quite a beauty. Her skin was 
of a mild olive color; her hair of a jet black, 
glossy, and hung down her shouleers in a 
profusion of ringlets; her eyes wero also 
black and expressive, and her teeth of a 
pearly whiteness. I do not know but I 
might have been captivated by her fascina¬ 
ting beauty, had I not chanced to see her 
devouring her meal. Tho way sho “stowed 
away” onions, garlics, and potatoes, would 
have made some of our fashionable city 
ladies stare with wonder. Sho took a large 
piece of mutton in her hand, and toro off 
the meat with her teeth, exhibiting a dex¬ 
terity that would have put a catamount out 
of conceit of his own powers. This called 
to my mind the maxim of Byron, who rec- 
ommends as a cure for love-sickness, that a 
person sec his fair one while engaged in 
eating. 
After supper it was announced that a 
couple were to unite themselves in the cer¬ 
emony of marriage. The bridegroom ap¬ 
peared to be about sixteen and the bride a 
year or two younger. Tho company formed 
a ring outside the tent, into which the bride¬ 
groom entered, leading tho brido by the 
hand. They both looked up toward the 
moon, and repeated two or three verses of 
a song, which I cannot now recollect. Tho 
import of the ditty was a vow of eternal 
constancy, and contained several allusions 
to the moon. At the close of each verse, 
the whole company joined in a chorus; after 
which a musical instrument was produced, 
and tho party prepared for a dance. 
My companion and myself remained un¬ 
til about four o’clock in the morning, and 
then returned to our room at the inn.— 
Thus ended my visit to tho Gypsey Camp. 
Medicine. —Brother Brown, of the New 
England Farmer, is entitled to a diploma for 
the following orthodox advice : 
Tho best medicine in tho world for most 
complaints is abstinence. Upon the lirst 
symptoms of disease, stop eating and drink¬ 
ing, kiss your wife and children, take a 
pleasant book and remain quiet. If you 
have no wife and children, put your feet in¬ 
to a pair of soft slippers, make a good fire 
and take an easy chair by it and dream of 
them in prospective. You have no idea how 
like a charm this prescription will work till 
you try it—and it isn't all in tho “ doctor 
books,” either, good as it is ! For this little 
piece of “ medical advice,” wo make no 
extra charge to our agricultural readers, 
seeing that we are seeking their good in 
every thing! 
Wisdom is the talent of buying virtuous 
pleasure at the cheapest rates. 
LOVE AND MONEY. 
The reader may remember the little mi¬ 
croscope man, who used to show beneath a 
many hued magnified mandarin’s parasol in 
Commercial Alley, last spring. There was 
a brass thing which any unmeasured puffer 
might blow into,and thereby guage his wind. 
Then there wero five miniature microscopes 
with bugs in them, to tickle,the eye withal; 
meanwhile tho ear was soothed with a mixed 
lecture on pneumonology and natural histo¬ 
ry in general and exhortation in particular 
to the crowd to come up, and for a dime 
only, secure an immense amount of knowl¬ 
edge and pleasure. To those who subscrib¬ 
ed ten cents for the peripatetic professor’s 
course of instruction, he was wont to pre¬ 
sent a fifty dollar bill, very like one of the 
Louisiana Bank, but drawn, in truth, on the 
Bank of Matrimony, having a blank space 
for a lady’s name, another for the holder's, 
and being signed by Hymen as President 
and Cupid as Secretary. 
An acquaintance and friend of tho read¬ 
er’s, a young, sentimental dry goods clerk, 
became a mat riculate of the college parasol, 
and, having graduated, received the usual 
amatory diploma. Being over head and ears 
in love with a country cousin, but afraid to 
let her father know it, what does he do but 
fill up tho blank spaces with the names of 
himself and sweetheart, and secretly for¬ 
warded the bill, equivalent to the declaration 
of the tender passion, to Miss Matilda in the 
country. She, of course, valued the ingen¬ 
ious draft highly ; and, being on the eve of 
attending some watering place in the vicin¬ 
ity. she deposited the affectionate counter¬ 
feit fifty in her purse along with other more 
genuine and more sordid notes. 
Now, at the watering place, there were 
not a few young gentlemen to whom Miss 
Matilda was by no means an indifferent ob¬ 
ject, and who, could they bo satisfied that 
Michael had not secured her heart, as they 
suspected, would, without doubt, “ propose.” 
When was there ever a lady, betrothed, or 
vowed vestal, who could resist a chance of a 
speech from an y decently dressed, and well 
behaved male creature ? Miss Matilda in¬ 
sinuated her freedom from all obligations 
of the kind suspected, upon every occasion, 
though on retiring at night, she invariably 
re-perused poor Michaels Bank note, and, 
being a careful, loving sort of a girl, slept 
with it under her pillow. 
At length, a sudden summons calling her 
home, she hastily gave her purse to one of 
her adorers, requesting him to settle her ac¬ 
count with tho host of the watering place. 
He, good, easy, honest man, accepted the 
first ono which the lady’s treasurer took 
from her purse, which happened to be a 
fifty dollar one, and gave the treasurer a re¬ 
ceipt in full, and thirty dollars, State cur¬ 
rency. in change. 
The young lady roachod home safely, and 
there her father, after saluting either cheek, 
inquired, as country fathers will, into the 
state of his daughter’s exchequer. She, at 
once, handed him her little silken purse, 
voluminous with the receipt and surplus 
dimes. The wary father adjusted his spec¬ 
tacles, with some difficulty found and in¬ 
serted a plowman’s finger into the opening, 
extracted the contents, and smoothing the 
paper on his knee, began to count. 
“ Twenty dollars at the springs, eh, Mat¬ 
ty ?” said he looking up. 
* “ Yes, papa,” replied Miss Matilda, negli¬ 
gently. 
“ Oh ! yes, yes. Here's tho recoipt. Kro- 
zier’s a squeeze, Matty. Never mind. I 
hope you enjoyed yourself; lots of beaux, 
eh, Matty ? asked the farmer, surveying 
his handsome daughter proudly. 
“ Why, papa ! How you talk. I did have 
•<omc pleasure, and I hope I received some at¬ 
tention,” replied the young lady very like a 
coquette. 
“Well I’m sure I hope so too, Matty,” 
said her father, laughing at her pretty aiis. 
“ Mat. I gave you thirty dollars, didn’t I 
when you left!” 
“Yes, papa.” 
“ How's this ? Here’s thirty, and thirty’s 
sixty, and the receipt for twenty, too ! Mat, 
you’ve been playing cards, I know !” said the 
old man. 
“No, papa; you haven’t countod right — 
Oh! ” and her face turned scarlet—“ there’s 
a fifty dollar bill there”— 
“ No there isn't—nothing higher than a 
ten,” said tho farmer, staring at Miss Matil¬ 
da’s blushing. 
“Then it's spent—it’s spent—yes, there’s 
the change. What will Mr. Krozior think 
—how they will all laugh—O, my dear papa!” 
and Miss Matilda fainted in her fathers 
arms. 
Hero there was a matter of alarm. Becky, 
Tib, Dilah, and all the negro maids at the 
house, were summoned to their young mis¬ 
tress, and Harry set olf on the race colt for 
Dr. Jones. 
But, before the physician arrived, Miss 
Matilda “ came to,” and explained as a duti¬ 
ful daughter ought, tho whole affair. The 
farmer stormed a little, more at the awk¬ 
wardness of tho changing business than Mi¬ 
chael’s part in the transaction, wrote to 
Krozier for the bill, sending him another in 
its place, and threatening if ho said a word 
about change. In tho next place, this 
model of an “ old gent ” wrote down here to 
Michael telling him to corao to Sugar-treo 
Forest, and that Matilda would pay him for 
that fifty dollar bill sho had borrowed of 
him. Michael was off in no time you inay 
be sure. 
We received a letter from him yesterday, 
communicating the foregoing circumstan¬ 
ces, and enclosing some linos by a villago 
poet on his marriage with his fair country 
cousin. Miss Matilda. He added in a post¬ 
script that ho had seen our notice of profes¬ 
sor Smith’s microscope, and that we must 
get him one for lovo or money. He also 
wanted a Chinese parasol, if ono could bo 
possibly obtained, for the use of his wife 
who had conceived a longing for tho same. 
And he enjoined it upon us to telegraph 
him when the peripatetic professor re-ap- 
pqared with his apparatus in Commercial 
Alley, as ho desired him to visit his neigh¬ 
borhood. 
Our reader’s acquaintance and friend, the 
quondam dry goods clerk. Michael, is now 
engaged in agricultural pursuits.—JY’. O' 
Delta. 
A LOGICAL DECISION. 
A writer in the Knickerbocker says :—I 
entered a log school-house once, where a 
“ debatin’ society ’ was holding forth upon 
the question,—"If a man saw his wife and 
mother in the water drowning, which should 
lie help out first?” The question was con¬ 
sidered with animation upon both sides for 
a while, when a “backwardness” began to 
manifest itself. Tho president desired de¬ 
baters, " if they had any thing to say. to con¬ 
tinue on.” After a pause, a peaked-looking 
man in tho back part of tho house got up 
and said, with considerable diffidence aud 
embarrassment: 
“ Mr. President, I think if a man saw his 
mother and wife in the water drowning, ho 
ought to help his mother out first: because, 
you see. if his wife did get drowned, he could 
get another one, but he couldn’t get another 
mother—not easy !” 
This settled the question, and the verdict 
“ accordingly.” 
Thomas Fuller, who was a very lively 
writer, but rather addicted to punning, was 
occasionally repaid his puns with interest. 
Ho was exceedingly corpulent, and as ho 
was out riding with a friend, named Spar- 
rowhawk. ho could not resist tho opportu¬ 
nity of cracking a joke upon him. “Pray 
what is the difference,” said ho, “ between 
an owl and a sparrowhawk ?" “ An owl,” 
I replied his friend, “is fuller in tho head, 
fuller in the body, and fuller all over.” 
A Plain Answer. —Not king since ono of 
the learned counsel in a small suit deemed 
it necessary to shako tho testimony of a Mr. 
Samuel Butterworth, by impugning his ver¬ 
acity. A witnoss was called to the stand, 
“ Do you know Samuel Butterworth ?”— 
“Yes.” “What is Butterworth?” “Two 
and tcnpcnce a pound, though somo folks 
have paid as high as three shillings.” 
Rapid Building. — “How rapidly they 
build houses now,” said Cornelius to an avid 
acquaintance, as lie pointed to a neat two- 
story house; “ they commenced that build¬ 
ing only last week, and they are already 
putting in tho lights.” “Yes.” rejoined his 
friend, “ next week they will put in the 
liver.” 
The Toledo Blado tells tho story of a 
chap on a railroad, who, apprehending a 
collision of tho cars, put his life preserver 
on, blew it up, and leaning his back against 
the side of the car, resigned himself to his 
fate. 
^otiflj’s Masmm. 
“ 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. 43. 
agasgur 
Answer next week. 
For the New-Yorker. 
GEOGRAPHICAL ENIGMA. 
I am composed of 22 letters. 
My 1, 6, 20, 7, 14 is a county in New York. 
My 2,19, 11, 21, 3, 5 is a town in Connecticut 
My 3, 21, 16, 5, 10 is a county in Pennsylvania. 
My 4, 2, 16, 18, 14, 10 is a liver in Great Britain. 
My 5,16, 13 is an island in the north of Europe. 
My 6,17, 13 is a cape in New England. 
My 7,-14, 1,4, 12, 17 is a town in Connecticut. 
My 8, 6, 20, 1, 22, 12, 21 is a county in North 
Carolina. 
My 9, 13, 21, 14, 10 is a range of mountains in 
America. 
My 10, 6, 17, 4, 14, 14 is a river in South Caro¬ 
lina. 
My 11, 22, 7 is a river in Scotland. 
My 12, 4, 4, 16, 1,19 is a river in British America. 
My 13, 16, 7, 4. 14, 10 is a town in France. 
My 14, 4, 7, 16 is a mountain in Europe. 
My 15, 12, 22, 7 is a range of mountains in Af¬ 
rica. . 
My 16, 13, 10, 22, 17 is a town in Maine. 
My 17, 14, 1, 4, 22, 7 is a county in Missouri. 
My 18, 22, 12, 10, 14 is a river in North America. 
My 19, 4, 2,14, 7, 10 is a town in Arkansas. 
My 20, 9, 4,14, 10 is a county in New York. 
My 21, 14, 11,2, 6,15 is a town in Massachusetts. 
My 22, 1, 14, 7, is a county in Kentucky. 
My whole is a celebrated maxim. 
Gates, Monroe Co., N. Y. M.\ar. 
grgr" Answer next week. 
ANSWERS TO ENIGMA, &c., IN No. 42 
Answer to Illustrated Rebus No. 42 .—Dxith is 
a grave subject. 
Albany Drain Tile AVorlis, 
No. 60 LaxcasYer Street—West or Metrical College. 
1 1HE 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 amt $18 per V.ooo pieces 
These Tile are over one foot in length from 2% to \y 2 
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, 
fUl2m61 Albany. New York. 
Urcetlon of l.ightulng Rods. 
I P. BERTHRONG <t Co., offer their services to the 
J* public for this work. They assure tlieir patrons 
time the work shall be carefully ami faiJifuliy done The 
patronage already received demands their gi ati. ude, and 
shall he fully merited it! future. They will pot up rods 
both in city and country. Orders may be left at 55 South 
Fitzhugh St., or at J. B. Dewey's Store, 111 Buffalo St. 
L. P. BERTHRONG & Co. 
Rochester, July 13, 1852. 133-tf 
ISIITU.O PAPEIt WAIUIHOISE. 
Niagara Falls Paper Mills. 
rPHE undersigned having completed the repairs and en- 
JL largements of their Paper Mill at Niagara Kails are now 
ready to execute with despatch all orders for paper. Their 
news and book papers are of very hue qualiiy, scarcely 
equalled by any made in the State. A large stoeK of print¬ 
ing, writing, letter and wrapping papers constantly on 
hand or made to order. Rags warned for which the mar¬ 
ket price will always Ire paid. BRADLEY. BRO’S. 
121-tf. Warehouse, No. 3 West Seneca st. 
American Seed ami Implement Store, 
NO. t MAIN STREET, CURTIS' BLOCK. 
Garden and Nurseries at Monrue-sl. Plank Road Gate. 
(Over five Tons of Garden Seed3 grown in 1851 ) 
HE Proprietor of this establishment has been exten- 
. sively 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 hut such as will prove satisfactory to the 
purchaser. He therefore expects that his efforts will be 
appreciated and meet the approval of his customers.— 
Over Fifty First Premiums have been awarded at the State 
and County Fairs for Vegetables grown at his Garden. 
Garden, Field and Flower Seeds of nil 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 Belting, &c.— Wholesale and retail at 
Manufacturer’s prices, adding transportation. 
C. F. CROSMAN, 
April 1, 1852. 118-8w. Rochester, N. Y. 
EAGLE PLOW MANLFACTOltY. 
AI.I.EN BELDINO, 
Corner State and Platt Streets, Rochester, N, Y, 
\\T OULD call the attention of Farmers to his large and 
y Y excellent assortment of 
PLOWS AND OTHER AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. 
Among them are the following Plows Mnssacliusetts- 
Eagle, Wisconsin, Improved Cayuga Co. and Strouse, 
North American, (for dee]) 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 his Improved 
Double-Pointed Steel Tooth Cultivator, a superior 
article. 
He solicits the patronage of the farming community, 
believing that they will be well paid for calling at liis man¬ 
ufactory, before buying elsewhere. 
ALLEN BEL DING, Corner State and Flatt-sts., 
113-t.f. __R ochester . N. Y 
OLD KOCIiLSTLR NlIKShKYb 
gMSk TWENTY THOUSAND OSAGE ORANGE 
Plants at $10 per thousand. This plant proves 
^feyPd'Cifeetly hardy here aud makes the best Orchard 
jggSt fence known. 
3u,000 Northern Spy Apple trees. 
3,000 Pine Dwarf Pears, of large size. 
5,000 Giant Rliubard, very low by the 1,000. Must he 
sold to clear the ground. 
One dozen very largo Maple trees, root pruned bust 
spring; 1 doz. Scotch Larch; 1 doz. Laburnum; and sev¬ 
eral fine Norway Spruce, Scotch Fir, &e., 
Together with a large general assortment of hardy Or¬ 
chard Fruits and 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, &c., for any distance. 
Nursery, corner of Norton and North Clinton Streets.— 
Office 3(i Front-st., Rochester, N. Y. Catalogues gratis. 
117-tf. SAM'L MOULSON. 
FOWLS AND EGGS. 
rpHE great demand for the improved Fowls lias induced 
1 me to purchase the choicest kinds, and the best speci¬ 
mens of pure bred Fowls that could be obtained in (he 
New-England States, at a cost of from $10 to $15 per pair. 
1 will furnish good fresh eggs, (for hatching,) safely pack¬ 
ed for transportation, of either of ihe following named va¬ 
rieties at $4 per dozen. Chickens, in the fall, §5 per pair. 
White Surrey Dorking, of Dr. E. Wight’s importations. 
White Sliangae, do. do. 
Royal Cochin Cliiua, Geo. P. Burnham’s do. 
Also, the Great Java, large and pure bred. 
D. P. NEWELL. 
Rochester, Monroe Co., N. Y., 1852. 115-tf. 
“SPEED THE PLOW.” 
Genesee Seed Store and Ag’J. Warehouse, 
rpHE subscribers beg leave most earnestly to call the at- 
JL tention of the farming community to the 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. Eagle Plows, in a series of 21 different 
sizes manufactured by Ruggles, Nourse & Mason. Also 
the latest aud most improved kind of Seed Planter, in¬ 
vented by the same firm. 
Wo have also on hand the well known Curtis or Albion 
Plow, of various sizes and extra manufacture. 
Wheeler’s Horse Power, Thresher and Saw Mill. 
Hussey's Celebrated Grain Reaper. 
Peunock's Wheat and Grain Drill. 
As also a complete assortment of Field and Garden 
Seeds, both domestic and imported. 
72 JOHN ItAPALJE & Co., Irving Block, 
05 Bufihlo-st., Rochester 
C A HIT’S KOTAItY FiUE JEN DINE FFMJP. 
rpHE Inventor after thoroughly testing his engine pump 
JL (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, 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, Ac. The 
highest testimonials will he given. 
No. 1 is a house or well pump and domestic Firo En¬ 
gine, and will raise from 20 to 30 gallons per minute. 
No. 2 will raise 100 gallons at 120 revolutions. 
No. i)r» do 200 do 120 do. 
No. 3 do 300 do 120 do. 
The quantity raised can bo doubled, by doubling the 
revolutions. These machines are manufactured and sold 
bv the subscribers at Brockport, N. Y. 
‘76-tf. CARY A BRA1NARD. 
MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YORKER: 
A WEEKLY HOME NEWSPAPER, 
Designed for both Country and Town Besidents, 
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 the same rate. Six months subscriptions in proportion. 
JCgf" Subscription money, properly enclosed, may he 
sent by mail at the risk of the Publisher. 
Term3 of Advertising: 
One Dollar por square (ten lines—100 words, or less,) for 
the first insertion, and 50 cents for each subsequent publi¬ 
cation,— in advance. tTW" With a single exception, the 
circulation of the New-Yorker is much larger than that 
of any other newspaper in the State, west of Alhai y 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 ami 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. Potent medicines, &e., will 
not be advertised in this paper on any terms. 
("if All communications, and business letters, should 
be addressed to D. D. T. Mconx, Rochester, N. Y. 
