352 
Jtlijrdlaiu] 
A CLEVER PARODY. 
I no remember nn old Bachelor, 
An<l hereabout he dwells; whom late I noted 
In suit of sables, with a care-worn brow, 
Conning his books; and meagre were his looks ; 
Celibacy had worn him to the bone; 
And in his silent chamber hung a coat, 
The which the moths bad used not less than lie. 
Four chairs, one table, and an old hair trunk, 
Made up the furiture, and on his shelves 
A greasy candlestick, a broken mug, 
Two tables, and a box of old cigars; 
Remnants of volumes, once in some repute, 
Were thinly scattered round, to tell the eye 
Of prying strangers, ‘ 1 This man has no wife. !’ 
Ilis tattered elbow gaped most piteously; 
And ever as he turned him round, his skin 
• Did through his stockings peep upon the day. 
Noting his gloom, unto myself 1 said : 
“ And if a man did covet single life, 
Reckless of joys that matrimony gives, 
Here lives a gloomy wretch would show it him 
In such most dismal colors, that the shrew. 
Or slut, or idiot, or the gossip spouse, 
Were each an heaven, compared to such a life 1” 
| _ _ 
THE HUSKING: 
AN AUTUMNAL COUNTRY SKETCH. 
Good old days of the pioneer life, — when 
the habits of tho people were yet homespun 
I and honest, and tho wayfarer, dreaming not 
| of deception, was sure of a hearty welcome 
j from tho inhabitants ! 
The amusements of tho city and of the 
country are totally adverse to each other.— 
The former are constantly fluctuating, the 
latter never. They were stereotyped at the 
| settlement of tho country, rough, joyous, 
innocent pastimes, and so they are kept by 
tho border life, and will bo, till the last log- 
hut is built, and the last fallow cleared. 
Logging-bees, apple-cuts, hustings, shoot- 
! ing-matches and hunts, are tho pride of the 
backwoodsman, and all theso occur in the 
i glorious season of mild days, long nights 
| and moon-light evenings, when the harvest 
is gathered, and tho fruit waits, in storo, tho 
i occasion. All these amusements have their 
I attractions ; but the most prized is that en¬ 
joyed by tho buskers. Thanks to tho early 
! settler; tho bulk of tho people were cra¬ 
dled in tho honest simplicity of these times, 
and we are yet a ‘"part and parcel” of tho 
good old days. Here, in this oarly rustic 
life, is nurtured the liberty of the country, 
and tho influence of the early yeomanry is 
not limited by tho oceans that bound tho 
! continent—freedom’s legitimate—the braw¬ 
ny arm of tho American wilderness is raised; 
tho tomahawk lias vanished boforoit; the 
I sword of the foreign invader has been bro¬ 
ken by it; and the Old World's dynasties 
tremble with ill ease at tho sight of the phe¬ 
nomenon. * * _ . * _ * * 
But tho reader is waiting for tho husking. 
I Ah, what reminiscences come crowding up 
| at thoughts of this old pastime ! If the 
I reader has kept alivo the spark caught by 
j actual participation in these gatherings, as 
[ thoy wore formerly understood, ho will 
know how to lament, with one of tho same 
i experience, the disappearance of what soom- 
! od a sine qua non in tho Autumn merry¬ 
makings. We have huskings, but what af¬ 
fairs are they ? A libel on tho name. 
If one wishes to engage in an old-fashion- 
| ed gathering, as our forefathers and moth- 
I ers, then lads and lassos, enjoyed it, ho may, 
thanks to good old habits, still engage in it. 
But he must go to a now country. Tho 
| genuine is here alono to ho found, where 
both sexes, young and old, participate. 
*■ The husking takes place on those long, 
! mild evenings in October, when tho moon is 
shining bright; or, (if tho Indian summer 
| comes early,) looks from tho southern hem- 
i isphero with a soft, red beam, that makes so 
j delightful the Autumn night. The moon ! 
j who ever forgets the profile of her old fam¬ 
iliar disc ? Her light is not too bright or 
J , too dim ; it is the night’s twilight. 
The time selected for tho occasion is, if 
j possible, when the moon is full. Tho sum- 
j mer heat having ilod, tho evenings, at this 
| season, arc cool and pleasant. The news 
j of a gathering is not communicated by a 
‘•card.” It is only necessary that tho host 
I secure tho corn and conclude upon the 
tiino. Tho word goes forth, as if by secret 
telegraph, from clearing to clearing, till it 
I has spread through the whole fraternity of 
I homespun hearts within tho prescribed cir- 
j cuit. 
The boys, who have all day toiled hard 
among tho blackened log-piles, have re- 
j turned and thore is a stripping of dark 
I clothes, and washing of dusky faces.— 
j “ What’s in the wind ?” comes anxiously 
j from tho girls. “A husking.” Brighter 
becomo tho bright eyes, and away for tho 
j wardrobe. It is not inquired where tho 
gathering is to bo, or how far off. A few 
minutes suffice, and all are ready. There 
are no coaches, no horses ; or, if the latter, 
the girl, without saddle, is a match for her 
swain; and away, at deer speed, they go. 
If tho company is largo, the distance is 
footed. From all directions they come.— 
At first, a few younkers snoak in and seloct 
thoir places—not to bo kept. A huge pile 
extonds on one sido of the floor; along the 
othor are arranged tho lights — pumpkins 
for candlesticks, which are held by pitch- 
forks thrust into the hay-bulk. Tho older 
members of the settlement arrive one after 
another, and tho falling of oars begins. A 
titter outside tells of tho arrival of tho girls; 
and now tho flocking-in becomes general, 
till no more space can bo found. All is ac¬ 
tivity. Tho noise of tho labor is incessant. 
Tongues, as woll as hands, are busy; some¬ 
times whispers are exchanged, with peeping 
under bonnets, and a close proximity of fa¬ 
ces. 
A staunch, gray-hoadod settler, tho host’s 
ancostor, is seated in a chair in a cornor, 
busily braiding corn into “ rists.” A lad 
hands him tho ears, who teazos to bo off 
where his little comrades are boisterously 
MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YO 
engaged in another placo. Grandfather 
will notconsont. The lad importunes; dad¬ 
dy is not to bo moved. Urchin coaxes — 
threatens to cry. All ot a sudden, ho is 
missing. 
Busy are they all—and right merrily and 
faithfully progresses tho work. Whack ! 
goes a caudle; out, another; lighted again. 
Tho company becomes animated ; tho ears, 
longer than a donkey’s, fly thick and fast;— 
and woo to him who attempts carelessly to 
walk along tho pile; but, if a coward, iho 
worse for him. Who over ran tho gauntlet 
of a busy husking without gutting hit. ? 
The pile husked out, the company repair 
to the house; not a luxurious one — this 
would bo out of place with the time—but a 
log-building, all scoured and trimmed, with 
a big wood fire on tho rude, wide hearth, 
and, of course, lots of pumpkin pies, yellow 
as gold, and piled upon tiio table. Those 
are passed round—and round—and round 
again. Nut cako is not wanting ; or. luckier, 
sometimes a table-meal is spread; after¬ 
wards tho play ; then the dispersing, diff< r- 
ont, however, front the gathering in. Thoy 
came in knots ; they leave in pairs, hat and 
hood strangely attracting one another. In 
all directions are couples seen diverging— 
through orchards, where heaps of apples in¬ 
vite a snatch for lips to touch, (redder than 
the apples themselves,) to say nothing of 
those othor lip snatches; through stumpy 
fields and blackened fallows and woods, 
where, somehow or other, the path would 
get lost, and then — the girl is privileged to 
cling closer to her support, for tho forest 
is shadowy, and beasts of prey will prowl 
about. 
Tho husking-beos necessarily tako place 
in log-barns; but when a frame building, 
usually larger than tho former, is to ho tho 
rendezvous, tho thing becomo a grand af 
fair. The tidings go out far and near, till 
every clearing within reach, for many miles 
around, has word. On such an occasion, a 
fiddler is engaged; and a spree, to ho bro¬ 
ken up by daylight, is tho result, It is on 
such occasions that tho cynosures of some 
particular localities—tho belles of those days 
—are to be met, and tho best homespun is 
worn, and oyes speak brighter, and bosoms 
boat more tumultuously. 
Though still found in tho now districts, 
tho old-fashioned husking has long since 
and forever disappeared among us; yet a 
recurrence in this place, to what was once 
an idol of tho people, some of whoso eyes 
lightened up at its mention, will, 1 hope, ho 
pardoned by thoso who were never tho hap¬ 
py participants of this pastime. 
A WHALE WITH THE TOOTH-ACHE. 
Among the ailments to which tho sperm 
whales are subject, is tho jumping tooth¬ 
ache. It operates on tho nervous system as 
it does upon those of mankind, rendering 
them crabbed and fractious. Just at day 
break one morning, while we wore cruising 
on the “ off shoro” ground, a violent com¬ 
motion in tho water about two miles ahead, 
resembling breakers, attracted attention.— 
it continued unabated till within fifty rods 
of it, when a sperm whale (for such it proved 
to be ) throw ills entire body into tho air 
and fell back into his native eloment-with a 
tremendous report. Of course the yards 
wore hauled aback, and the boats lowered, 
but several minutos elapsed before it was 
doomed prudent to approach the monster. 
Finding, however, that ho had no idea of be¬ 
coming quiot, we advanced with caution, 
and succeeded in securing one iron firmly 
in his back, which rendered him more rest¬ 
less. Giving him plenty of slack lino, we 
removed to a respectful distance, hoping he 
would sound or retreat, but he was not dis¬ 
posed to do either. Bo taking our oars wo 
pulled sufficiently near to give tho boat 
header an opportunity to lance him. lie 
seemed to bo aware of our intention, for ho 
turned and rushed towards us with the de¬ 
sign of giving us a /owing, which we nar¬ 
rowly escaped. During the next half hour 
ho chased us, and it was with much difficul¬ 
ty that we avoided him. When near us ho 
turned on his back and raised his jaw, bring¬ 
ing to view two handsome rows of ivory.— 
Among terrific objects an enraged whale 
holds a prominent place. 
An hour passed in unavailing attempts to 
accomplish tho desired object, tho whale be¬ 
coming more furious, and tho hope of con¬ 
quering him growing fainter. At length 
while tho attention of tho monster was di¬ 
rected towards us. the mate came upon him 
in an opposite direction and dealt him a 
doatli wound, relieving us of a burden of 
anxiety, which indicated itself in the pallid 
countenances and nervous agitation of the 
boat’s crow. He was very reluctant to yield, 
and the death struggle was long and violent. 
If a cat has nine lives, as is sometimes re¬ 
marked, that follow had nineteen. 
Before night his blubber was in the try- 
pots, and his jaw was stripped of its covering. 
On extracting tho tooth the cause of his sin¬ 
gular movement was revealed. The cavities 
in several contained a large number of 
worms, an eighth of an inch in length. The 
tooth were perfectly sound, but tho marrow 
or norvo of the tooth, which was an inch in 
diamotor at tho lower extremity, was in 
many of them entirely consumed by the in¬ 
sects that seemed to have bred there.— Hal- 
lowell Gazelle. 
A Genial. Nature.— Really it is disgrace¬ 
ful that men are so ill taught and unprepar¬ 
ed for social life as they aro; often turning 
thoir best energies, thoir acquisitions ami 
thoir special advantages into means of an¬ 
noyance to thoso with whom thoy live.— 
Some day it will ho found out, that to bring 
up a man with a gonial nature, a good tem¬ 
per, and a happy frame of mind, is a greater 
effort than to perfect him in much knowl¬ 
edge and many accomplishments. 
The intoxication of anger, like that of tho 
grape, shows us to others, but hides us from 
ourselves. 
rker: an agricultural and family newspaper. 
ANALYSIS OF THE AMERICAN CHARACTER. 
A work has just been published in Eng¬ 
land, entitled ‘ Two Years on the Farm of , 
Uncle Sam, with Sketches of his Location, 
Nephews and Prospects,” by Charles Casey, 
tho author of which seems to have some 
vigor and considerable power of analysis.— 
Wo find tho following passages from the 
work in one ot our English exchanges, and 
give them as indicating :it least a desire right¬ 
ly to appreciate tho American character: 
Vicing with the Persian in dress — the 
Enulisli in energy—cautious as a Dutchman 
— impulsive as an Irishman — patriotic as 
Toll—brave as Wallace—cool as Wellington 
—and royal as Alexander, there he goes— 
the American citizen ! In answering your 
questions, or speaking commonly, his style 
is that of tho ancient Spartan ; but put him 
on a stump, with an audience of Whigs, 
Democrats, Barnburners, and he becomes a 
compound of Tom Crib and Demosthenes, 
a fountain of eloquence, passion, sentiment, 
farcasin, logic and drollery, altogether dif¬ 
ferent from anything known or imagined in 
the Old World States. Say anything of 
anybody (as public men,) untied with con¬ 
ventional phraseology, he swings his rhet¬ 
orical mace with a vigorous arm crushing 
tho antagonistic principle or person into a 
most villainous compound See him at din¬ 
ner. he dispatches his meal with a speed 
which leads you to suppose him a rumina¬ 
ting animal, yet enjoying his cigarru for an 
hour afterwards, with tho gusto and ennui 
of a Spaniard. 
Walking right on, as if it were life against 
time, with the glass at fever heat, yet taking 
it cool in the most serious and pressing 
matter, a compound of tho red man, Bnun- 
mel and Franklin—statesman and laborer, 
on lie goes—dividod-and subdivided in poli¬ 
tics and religion — professionally opposed 
with a keenness of competition in vain 
looked for even in England, yet. let but the 
national rights of liberty bo threatened, and 
tho vast nation stands a pyramid of resolve, 
united as one man, with heart, head, hand 
and purse, burning with a Roman zeal to 
defend inviolate the cause of the common¬ 
wealth. 
To him who has lived among the Ameri¬ 
cans, and looked largely at tho theory and 
pr ictice of their Government and its Exe¬ 
cutive, there remains no doubt that tho 
greatest amount of personal security and 
freedom has been produced from tho least 
amount of cost of any nation in tho world. 
Culling its principles and wisdom from tho 
history of all empires, it stands tho nearest 
of all earthly systems to perfection, because 
it is built on and embodies those principles 
which God hath proclaimed in Ills attri¬ 
butes. * * * . * * * 
I notice that tho American sets less value 
on life than Europeans ; that is, lie does not 
think tho loss of life tho greatest loss, the 
ultimatum. When a man dies, you see none 
of that sentiment, (I use the best term I 
can think of,) which surrounds such an event 
in older countries. Tho American is silent 
in manner, embarrassingly so at first, ex¬ 
tremely accurate in his observations of hu¬ 
man nature, and any man that cannot bear 
to be scrutinized had better not corno here. 
The American judges much by the cyo and 
has a most enviable power of estimation; 
your temperament, speech, look, and act 
are all taken in by him ; and if you can get 
at the tables of his judgment, you will find 
a remarkable daguerreotype of your exact 
worth written thereon. They aro phrenol¬ 
ogists and physiognomists, not merely as 
philosophers, but as practical appliers of 
those inductive sciences, and beneath a show 
of positive laziness or languor, there is an 
amount of energy and action, mental and 
physical, perfectly surprising. They are 
not averse to tho higher branches of science 
and literature, but they bend all to utility, 
and are, as a nation, the best arithmeticians 
in the world ; and this science alono gives a 
terse, matter-of-fact tone to their mental 
working; in fact, when a man wants to re¬ 
flect on a proposition, lie says, “ Wait till I 
figure up.” 
THE FALLING LEAF. 
A writer in the New York Times thus 
beautifully exprossos thoughts Autumnal: 
It has boon a fancy, born of our day 
dreams, that for every leaf that falls, a hu¬ 
man soul ascends; for every leaf that un¬ 
folds, a spirit glides from the dim past into 
tho active present; and thickly as falls the 
decaying leaves, do forms of human mould 
drop into tho soil. 
We watch the yellow leaf as it struggles 
with its downward tendency, essaying in vain 
to hang in mid-air. shrinking from the cold 
resting place, and buoyed up with a momen¬ 
tary hope as a stray breeze wafts it upward 
again only to descend more rapidly. It 
seems to wail, to shrink, as it settles nearer 
and nearer to tho soil. As it lies worn out 
and dead upon tho chill earth, the spirit 
whispers:—Another lias gone down to tho 
tomb! Nature drops a leaf for everyone 
who falls, as tho nun drops a bead for every 
sin she thinks. 
As wo stand beside tho spent leaf, so stand 
woeping ones around the new-made grave. 
Ah ! as they embalm thoir dead in tears and 
undying memories, so will we embalm thee, 
thou typifior of human frailty. Thus be¬ 
tween tho loaves of tho book of books tho 
sickly-liued leaf is laid as a memento rnori. — 
As I gaze on tho skeleton form, 1 follow the 
decay of tho one for whom it foil, and turn¬ 
ing thoughtfully away, gazo up to the my¬ 
riad of leaves, and ask, “Which one shall 
fall for me ?” 
Captain Peel, the traveler, says “ that 
the wator of tho Nile is of a doop brown 
color, and when poured into a glass is still 
more strongly discolored. Tho earth it 
contains is called in Arabic, ‘ abluz,’ signi¬ 
fying fat or groaso. When poured over the 
body, Nile wator runs like oil, and when 
filtered, it is deliciously light to drink.” 
AN ENGLISH INN. 
The following humorous picturo of an 
English inn is taken from •* Little Podling- 
ton and tho Pedlingtonians 
Arriving at Squashmire Gate, it was nat¬ 
ural that tho weary and hungry traveler 
should desire a little comfort for the inner 
man. and between him and the lady-keeper 
of the inn this discourse ensues : 
“ What would you like, sir ?” 
“ A boiled chicken.” 
“Wo have never a chicken, sir, but would I 
you like some eggs and bacon ?” 
“No; can I have a lamb chop ?” 
“No, sir, but our eggs and bacon is very 
nice.” 
“ Or a cutlet or a steak ?” 
“ No. sir, hut wo are remarkablo hero for 
our eggs and bacon.” 
“Then what have you got, ?” 
“ Why sir. wo have got nothing but eggs 
and bacon.” 
“ Oh—then have the goodness to give me 
some eggs and bacon.” 
“ I was sure you’d choose eggs and bacon 
sir; wo are so famous for it.” 
Having finished my dinner, I thought it 
proper, for the good of tho house, to inquire 
what wine I could have—of course not ex¬ 
pecting that my choico would be much por- 
plexed by tho variety offered. 
“ What would you like sir?” 
“ Some port.” 
Wo have no port sir ?” 
“ A little sherry then.” 
“We don’t keep sherry sir; in short, we. 
have so little eall for wine that we don’t keep 
any of no kind.” 
“Then pray give mo somo lemonade.” 
“ Yes sir. Do you prefer it with lemon, or 
without ?” 
“ How ?” 
“ Why. only wo happon just now to bo out 
of lemons.” 
“ Where’s tho boo. Sambo ?” 
“ Wid do rake Massa.” 
“ Well, where is the rako ?” 
“ Why. wid do hoe.” 
“Well, where are they both ?” 
“Why, both togedder. massa—you ’pears 
to bo berry ’ticular c is mornin’!” 
We hoard a young man remark, tho other 
day. that as soon as ho could get two hun¬ 
dred dollars together ho was going to ob¬ 
tain a house, a wife, and a few other articles 
of furniture, and commence living. That 
young man’s ambition should bo checked be¬ 
fore it runs into excesses. 
On observing Lord Brougham’s one horse 
carriage, Sydney Smith remarked to a 
friend, alluding to tho B surrounded by a 
coronet on tho panel, “ There goes a car¬ 
riage with a II outside and a wasp within.” 
^otrtjj's Uluiitum. 
“ Attempt the end, and never stand to doubt; 
Nothings so hard, but search will find it out.” 
For the New-Yorker. 
ILLUSTRATED REBUS.-No. 44. 
JggrAnswer next week. 
For the New-Yorker. 
MYTHOLOGICAL ENIGMA. 
I am composed of 49 letters. 
My 27, 37, 23,18, 35,40 God of music, poetry, and 
painting 
My 42, 7, 15, 11, 39, 32 Goddess of wisdom. 
My 3, 5, 8, 47, 29 Goddess of hunting 
My 14, 26, 34 Goddess of youth. 
My 41,2, 12,22 God of war. 
My 30,18, 24, 14, 34 Goddess of marrago. 
My 37, 2, 32 God of the country. 
,..y2, .34, 13, 12,20,37 Goddess of justice. 
My 28, 19, 25, 42, 31,22 Goddess of law. 
My 10, 30, 27, 13,30, 3 presided over comody. 
My 10,14, 32, 47, 22 Goddess of beatify and love. 
My 37, 13,4, 0, 22, 45 God of tlie infernal regions. 
My 49, 25, 37, 44, 40,32, 20 God of the waters. 
My 48, 45, 28, 3, 11, 22, 34 a female divinity. 
My 33, 23, 28 a Supreme Being. 
My 43, 23, 35,46, 34 God of tho winds. , 
My 13,27, 34,24,—44, 1,12,14,14 spun the thread 
of human life. 
My 37, 27,22,44 held Ihe distaff, while 37, 12. 11 
22, 43, 47, 42 spun the thread, and the 38, 46, 
12, 14 cut it when it had reached its appointed 
time. 
My whole is a remark of the venerable Phocion 
when applauded during one of his sententious 
speeches. Mattik. 
mgy Answer next week. 
ANSWERS TO ENIGMA, &c., IN No. 43 
n 
o 
o 
o 
Answer to Illmt ated Itobus No. 43 .—Energy 
and discontent arc not good bed-fellows. 
Answer to Geographic d Enigma.— Whatman 
has done, man may do. 
Albany Drain Tile Works, 
No. 60 Lancaster Street—West of Medical College. 
r I'M IE Subscriber has now on hand mid will furnish to 
X Agriculturists, Draining Tile of tho most approved pat¬ 
terns. Horse Shoe Tile at #12,^ #15, and # 18 per 1,000 
pieces; Sole Tile or Pipes at. #12 and ® IS per 1,000 pieces 
These Tile are over one foot in length from 2% to 4>2 
inches calibre, and arc 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. 
Blrection of Lightning Hods. 
I P. BKRTIIRONG & Co., offer their services to the 
1 % public for this work. They assure their patrons 
that the work shall he carefully and faithfully done The 
patronage already received demands tlicir gratitude, and 
shall he fully merited in future. They will put up rods 
both in city and country. Orders may be left at 55 South 
Fitzhugli St., or at J. B. Dewey’s Store, 61 Buffalo St. 
L. P. BERTHRONG & Co. 
Rochester, July 13, 1852. 133-tf 
ISUFFAL.O PAPER WAREHOUSE. 
Niagara K alis Paper Mills. 
f'l'HIE undersigned having completed the repairs and en- 
1 Iurgemonts of their Paper Mill at Niagara Falls arc now- 
ready to execute with despatch all orders for paper. Their 
news and book papers arc of very hue quality, scarcely 
equalled by any made in the Slate. A large stock of print¬ 
ing, writing, letter arid Wrapping papers constantly on 
hand or made to order. Rags wanted for which the mar¬ 
ket price will always bo paid. BRADLEY, BRO’S. 
121-tf. Warehouse, No. 3 West Seneca st. 
American Sce<l and Implement .Store, 
NO. 4 MAIN STREET, CURTIS’ BLOCK. 
Garden and Nurseries at Monroe-st. Plank Road Gale. 
(.Over five Tons of Garden Seeds grown in 1851) 
r pHE Proprietor of this establishment has been exten- 
1 sively engaged in grow ing 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 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 all kinds and 
of lirst quality. 
Fruit and Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, &c., Green 
House ami 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, &e.— Wholesale and retail at 
Manufacturer's prices, adding transportation. 
C. F. CROSMAN, 
April 1, 1852. 118-8w. Rochester, N. Y. 
EAGLE mm dl AN l EACTDKV. 
ALLEN BELDING, 
Corner State and Platt Streets, Rochester, N. Y , 
T OULD call the attention of Farmers to his large and 
excellent assortment of 
PLOWS AND OTHER AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. 
Among them are the following Plows Massochusetts- 
Eagle, Wisconsin, Improved Cayuga Co. and Strousc, 
North American, (for deep plowing,) John Rich's Iron 
Beam Plow, Shovel Plows, &o. 
Mould-hoards, Landsides, • Points, devices, Coulters, 
Bands, eU:., always on hand. 
Ho would request particular notice of Iris Improved 
Double-Pointed Steel Tooth Cultivator, a superior 
article. 
He solicits tho patronage of the farming community, 
believing that they will he well paid for calling at his man¬ 
ufactory, before buying elsewhere. 
ALLEN BELLING, Corner State and Platt-sts., 
118-tf. Rochester, N. Y 
OLD KOCHESTEK NUKSEJKY. 
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 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 fine Norway Spruce, Scotch Fir, &c., 
Together with u 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 loading 
hardy items requisite for elegance or utility. Orders care¬ 
fully filled, packed, &e., for any distance. 
Nursery, corner of Norton and Norih Clinton Streets.— 
OflSce 36 Front-st., Rochester, N. Y. Catalogues gratis. 
117-tf. SAM'L MOULSON. 
FOULS AND EGGS. 
rjUIF, great demand for the improved Fowls ha= induced 
A mo to purchase the choicest kinds, and the best speci¬ 
mens oi pure bred Fowls that could he obtained in the 
New -England States, at a cost of from #10 to $15 pel-pair. 
I will furnish good fresh eggs, (for hatching,) safely pack¬ 
ed for transportation, of either of the following named va¬ 
rieties at Si per dozen. Chickens, in the fall, $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, tho Great Java, large and pure bred. 
1). P. NEWELL. 
Rochester, Monroe Co., N. Y., 1852. 115-tf. 
“SPEED T1IB FLOW.” 
Genesee Seed Store and AgM. Warehouse, 
rpiIE subscribers lieg leave most earnestly to call the at- 
tendon 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. 
Thcv would particularly invite all interested, to the well 
cs.'ablishod Mass. Eagle Plows, in a series of 21 dift’erent 
sizes manufactured by ltugglcs, Nourse Ik Mason. Also 
Ihe latest and most improved kind of Seed Planter, in¬ 
vented l>y the same firm. 
We 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. 
Pennock's Wheat and Grain Drill. 
As also a complete' assortment of Field and Garden 
Soeds, both domestic and imported. 
72 JOHN RAPALJE & Co., Irving Block, 
65 Bufi'alo-st., Rochester 
(AUV’S IIOTARV FIRE ENGINE Pl/IHP. 
rilHIi Inventor after thoroughly testing ins engine pump 
J (for the past two years,) feels confident that it is not 
equalled by any tiring now in market, in the way of rais- 
, ing or forcing water—the motion being rotary, the stream 
is constant, without tho aid of an air vessel. The packing 
is self-adjusting, very durable, and cannot well get out of 
order. 
These pumps arc 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, &c. The 
highest testimonials w ill 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. 2>1 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 & BRAINARD. 
MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YORKER: 
A WKKKLY HOME NEWSPAPER, 
Designed for both Country and Town Residents. 
TERMS, IN ADVANCE: 
Two Dollars a Year — .$1 for six months. To Clubs and 
Agents as follows :— Three Copies, one year, for $5; Si<x 
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 addit ional number, directed to India id mils 
at the same rate. Six months subscriptions in proportion. 
fits’" Subscription money, properly enclosed, umv be 
sent by mail at the risk of the Publisher. 
Terms of Advertising: 
One Dollar pot- square (ten lines—10(1 words, or less,) for 
the first insertion, and 50 cents for each subsequent, publi¬ 
cation ,—in advance. fCjT With a single exception, tiie 
circulation of the Nkw-Yorkkk 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 orders 
bv mail should be accompanied with the cash. 
To enable us to accommodate as many as possible, brio 
advertisements arc preferred. Patent medicines, Ac., will 
not he advertised in this paper on any terms. 
nr All communications, and business letters, should 
be addressed to D. D. T. Moore, Rochester, N. Y. 
