MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YORKER: AN AGRICULTURAL AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER. 
(Stcjmrfr anft (barton. 
SEASONABLE HINTS, * ~~^y7 //,// f / 
Salt for Plum Treks.— The application /^V/ / / / /// / Jf /s' 
of salt around plum trees, has been found very / 1 // 
beneficial by Dr. Shurtleff, a correspondent ^ // 
of the JY. E. Farmer. He says:—“For many ~ // 11 l 
years I have salted my plum trees and had / f J( ii ll 
large crops of fruit, but last winter I omitted X wf /> K YA —x 
to salt the trees, excepting three, and the con- / /A/l/ \ t\ 
sequence was, I had no plums excepting on the / // Y 11 \ 1 \ 
trees that I salted.” He thinks the only sure j / J j vT" "N. \ \V\ 
■way to get a crop of plums, is to put about j \/X N V \ 
four quarts of salt to each tree, in a circle one \ 7. \ 
foot from the trunk, any time in January or \ X \ y/7lNX n. 
February, without regard to snow being on ^_ X \ \ / \ 
the ground. Xj,X\ / \ \ 
“Quinces love Salt.”— It should not be 7 /\ 
forgotten at this season, that “ Quinces love I . j / /Y'YT"' ' J 
Salt.” Two quarts is the proper quantity to \ / J \ / / / 
apply to each tree, and all who wish for large, \ J S 7. ! /\7X'\ / 
fair quinces, should attend to it. It will not \ NX f \ \ / 
do away with the necessity for other manures, Ns - \JV I 
but it will do what other manures will n6t ' V * s *s7\) 
without it—it will insure productiveness.— HAMPTON’S CLUSTER PEAR 
Such, at least, has heretofore been its uniform __ 
- Til-, above outline is taken from a very ex- scientific communications want close watching. 
Pruning Grape Vines.—A present of fine cel,ent seedling Pear, raised by Wm. C. Hamp- The most hideous blunders, colored with suc- 
grapes from a valued friend, reminds us fhat r< 77 Haidin Go., Ohio, from seed sent by cess, often assume the honor of a new discov- 
we omitted to state, that the earlier in winter hls father , residing in New Jersey. ery, and the horn of plenty is sometimes emp- 
vine-pruning is attended to, the less the liability * orm > f l uite variable, mostly obovate tur- tied in the farmer’s barn in spite of his officious 
TM PffnniT 91 fie ! APPABATUS F0E CONDENSING SMOKE. 
(Q!qV,V-v- tUuill-t .1 .]a i lvt.7 
77-,,-,L „ „ A PATENT was issued on the 29th of No- 
77 ^^ ^ vember last, to J. Bloom, of Woburn, Masa, 
LIST OP PATENT CLAIMS for an improved mode of condensing smoke 
Issued from the United States Patent Office, and g ases > rendering them innoxious. The 
For the week ending January 24, 1854. nature of this invention consists in passing the 
- smoke and other products of combustion 
Calvin Adams, of Pittsburgh, Pa., for improv- through water, it being conducted in pipes to 
ed copying press. I the hollow of a suitable reservoir made air 
ltomeo <fc Albert F. Andrews, of Avon, Conn., . tight and nearly filled with water, which is kept 
for improvement in wood saws. I constantly exhausted by air pumns. The 
provement in dumping cars. , ‘ : u c wau;i exnaustea, me 
Enoch Burt, of Manchester, Conn., for im- Wl1 evident 7 P a ss through the water, 
provement in fancy check looms. a ? cl thus be ?omes purified from its soot and 
Silas Constant, of Brooklyn, NT. Y., for im- i CEK ^ ers - It is evident that the draught from 
provement in rosin oil lamps. j the furnace will be increased by the exhausting 
ovement in rosin oil lamps. the furnace wall be increased by the exhausting 
Wm. Cunningham, oi Holliday’s Cove, Va., force of the air pump, and the ordinary draught 
r improvement in washing machines. cannot act in opposition to the action of the 
J. U. Dennis, of Boston, Mass., for improve- pump, so that no great amount of force will be 
Chas. R. Harvey, of New York, for improve- P f" Wer . e ado P tccl We recom¬ 
mit in air-hpaiino - fnmnn.oe fficncl this to the consideration of all concerned 
for improvement in washing machines. 
J. H. Dennis, of Boston, Mass., for improve 
ment in bee-hives. 
Spencer D. Driggs, of Detroit, Mich., for im 
proved attachment to piano fortes. 
ery, and the horn of plenty is sometimes emp¬ 
tied in the farmer’s barn in spite of his officious fob‘ n g Goth 
ment in air-heating furnaces. x mend this to the consideration of all concerned, 
Dennis G. Littlefield, of Lowell, Mass., for im- and Po P e dia t some one will give it the atten- 
provement in stoves. tion it deserves .—Scientific American. 
Geo. Nelson, of Boston, Mass., for improve- _ t T ^ . t __ 
ment in ventilating railroad cars. 
I hos. Prosser, of New York, for improvement JliuiPTIAN IIOLSESi 
in the manufacture of hollow slabs and flanged - 
metallic plates. ' The ancient Egyptians built their houses 
Harvey Trumbull, of Central College, Ohio, j usually of crude brick. The ordinary way was 
for improvement in the feed apparatus of straw j a single story and a basement—with a terrace 
CU |>X S ,. wiv t o , T i tt ! , i 0Q the roof, open or carved, surrounded bv a 
Port Ito’yal Sffor ln "?<*•»** 
grinding sumac. S iea t objects in the arrangement of houses are, 
Jas. H. Jennings and Thos. Brierly, of Clay- at mp a)l " aQ d exclude heat. To attain the 
villei N. Y., for improvement in machinery for aP j er ’ die I-GTptians made their window's small 
and their apartments lofty; and for ventilation 
of their bleeding in spring from the cut sur- binate - Stalk one inch long, sometimes slightly onoosition Tntollinence must winnow the • Jos - irark8 ’ of Bos t° n . -bass., for improvement it is probable they had a contrivance in the 
laco. Wo should also Lo rem a,,e (1 that ^ Walsh sol, ,1th ^ 
young vines should be pruned but sparingly, brown russet and greenish yellow. Flesh very am(mnt of agricultural news. Experiments, ™me h'Y 0 "’ T” for to ' ™<=losed within a wall of their own, had 1 or- 
untll the roots are well established. The ^. ^ and molting, of line flavor, I deformed 1<ith faaure> be pr0 P Btable M P Te” < S‘aii; S’itySXoKlfSwe- ”ound them, and were still 
growth of the root is m proportion to that of fX ’ fc SUpenor to the best variet y g ro ' vn - li^ht-houses to point out the parts of the coast ment in piano-fortes: 1 more + ca P aciou s, comprehending a variety of 
the leaves, and to promote the one we should ^ eixson . middle of August. Tree, hardy and X Pf r ,V Daniel Haight, Jr., of Clinton, N. Y., for im- a P artEieilts > anb had frequently the appendage 
encourage the other. Give the vine a d v profusely productive ; the fruit growiL in WC appr0acL Bat errors resulting favorably, provement in attaching shafts to wagons. of a barn-yard. The walls of the principal 
• i , , ... . 1 }’ , , „ ,. , & a are deceptive lights that lead the thoughtless Wm. Overend, of Cincinnati, Ohio, for machine rooms were carved with stucco and with paint- 
rich, and low soil, when you set it out, and let cluste ^ oi lroni thrp e to six. . , c for wetting paper. | ings. 
rich, and low soil, when you set it out, and let ch f tere of fr0D1 thre e to six. into qua ; mires “ “ for wetting paper, 
it grow all the leaves it will for the first two Tbe tree is now about 12 years old, and has T l ° c ’ e x T u „ Aaron Palmer, of Brockport, N. Y. and Ste- 
years, and then you may begiu to prune and Med four yeara, bearing every year; growth , 1 Northern exposure, partly pheu G. Williamu, of Jauesville, Wia, for im- 
.. J J 1 nf tL-v + .rv ,i , ° ’ 6 lu level, partly side-hill. I design making it a provement in gram harvesters. 
Names of Scions. —Be careful to preserve 
the true names of scions when you cut them, 
and the same care should be exercised until 
they come into bearing.—u. 
’ears, bearing every year; growth lo T 7, , ^ 1 * V r VU1,ami '’ f • Janesvdle ’ Wis ” ' M. Parratt has invented a tubular life-raft 
of the tree rather slow, loaves on lono S f P Gu \ X" ,T “ * for improvement ™ »» «» Serpentine, Loudon, ll 
~ footstalks, of the size of those in the outline f 1™' 1 ^ p6aCh aDC pGar d ° Wel1 thus in rolling axles and-shafts. ’ P | “ TP 0£ed of vulcanized Iad ia-rubber tubes, 
Be careful to preserve the f it t , • , , , ’ far > therefore I run upon them. My peach Chas. it. Soule, of Fail-field, Yt, for improve- I inclose . d in canvas cases and nettings, so ar- 
is when you cut them, 0 textia buds have not been killed in the last ten years ment in threshers and sepai-ators of grain. I ranged and lashed to cross-bars as to form, 
” ’ • ' cultivation. and in that time trees within n half frX Mos es C. Stiles and Tristram S. Lewis, of Hoi- I when extended, an excellent contrivance, not 
- - and ‘ n tbat f me ; tiees ’ Wlthin a half mde b 'om lis, Maine, for improved machine for making | only for floating on the water, but being rowed 
HORTICULTURAL GLEANINGS. 
__ % I 
Is the Fruit Market Overstocked? —Not 
by a long shot, we should say, after reading 
Mr. B . P. Morrison’s statement in the JY. E. 
Farmer. For one barrel and twenty-eight 
apples, of the Hubbardston variety, he received 
$ 10,08. These apples were sold by the retailer 
at four to six cents each. For twenty-six 
bushels of apples he received $60. For one 
hundred and thirty-six barrels, he received $408.1 
His fruit crop from eight acres of land brought j 
him, this barren year, eight hundred and fifty j 
dollars, $750 of which was for apples. Good j 
fruit still brings good prices. 
onf i • iL.i A* _ , ui • ^ 1 in -IP auvoco auu xrjusiraiu o. Juewis, OI HOI- 
- - - and in that time, trees, within a half mile from lis, Maine, for improved machine for making 
GOOD TimiT.im FPOlT 1 iijittop me, four inches in diameter, have been frozen window blinds. 
HlULWll^MlHl A LETTER. to deatk G vines J never cover inwiater Carl E Werner Of Newcastle, Ill., for im- 
m n „ „ , , , , v , v r, , provement in distilling apparatus. 
I he following extracts from a letter, not and never hav e had them killed, bo I pro- Jacob E. Brown and Stephen S. Bortlett, of 
long since received, in acknowledgment of cured a pair of self-marking thermometers and Woonsocket, K. I., for improvedmortisingma- 
seeds sent, contain such sound sense, with prac- have found the cold during a still night to va- cbbie- he issues 
tical hints, that it is hardly well they should '7 five degrees with a difference of elevation j no . a. Tallin, of Fishkill' N Y for inmm™. 
ndow bhnds. ; like a boat, and capable of being conveyed 
Carl E Werner of Newcastle, Ill., for im- with safety through a surf or heavy sea. 
ovemfillt, in H 1 ll nor a trio ! ° . * 
provement in distilling apparatus. I & 4 j • 
Jacob E. Brown and Stephen S. Bortlett, of j -p. 7 ” ’ ‘ * 
5Y oonsocket. It. I., for improved mortising ma- , 00R ’ 5TKIP -—D. A. & A. J. Haviland, of 
chine. j Princeton, III, have invented a new method of 
re-issues. j applying weather strips to doors, which consists 
Jno. A. Taplin, of Fishkill, N. Y.. for improve- I bl tbe P ec uliar mode of hanging the strip and 
ment in portable horse powers. Patented Dec. i arranging the saddle, whereby "when the door 
30,1841. .Re-issued Jan. 24, 1854. j is closed, the strip is caused ’ to drop and lap 
-. --| over the outside of the saddle, and is held up 
The force of Cohesion.— The force with diereb y wbde tbe door remains open. 
through the Rural. t. e. w. that they mature later, which suits our market the particles ol matter cohere, is entirely i — 
Speaking of the use of a cold frame he adds bpsfc - These currents and c.or.urer-cuireuts of f e P endent u P oa beat > tbe existing cohesive, J 
—“From observation, I am led to prefer the air are veiy interesting, and I mean to look torce decreasm & proportionate to the increase C 
simple frame, placed upon good garden soil, to lllore fu % into the subject, for I deem it an °/ temperatu re. The arrangement of the par-1_ 
estit folium 
dollars, $750 of which was for apples. Good the hot ' bed - Plant s so raised, excel, for me, important one. 
fruit still brings good prices. those matured in the more delicate climate of 
artificial heat. I am not a gardener. Re- SUCCESSFUL M 
Upland Cranberries. — Cranberry vines, duced to ill health in a professional employ- 
producing fruit of the best quality, sometimes ment, I took refuge on a farm, in rather a se- T ° succes?b 
tides, likewise, exerts its influence over the 
force of cohesion. AYood is known to be more 
How TO TREAT YOUR BOOTS OR SHOES WEEN 
SUCCESSFUL MODE OF GRAFTING THE PEACH. 
To successfully graft the peach tree, has steel. • The force of cohesion of various sub- 
been universally considered next to an impos- stances is pretty accurately known. 120 ibs. 
cleavable lengthwise than across the fibres, ! 1 AETIALLY Burned. —On one of the coldest 
and cast-steel is more brittle than wrought daVS ot tPe P resent month, I pulled off my 
producing fruit of the best quality, sometimes i ment, I took refuge on a farm, in rather a se- T ° saccesafull y g raft tbe peach tree, has steel. -The force of cohesion of various sub- boots and s r et them cIose to a stove wbic b was 
grow without culture on upland in New En-! eluded neighborhood, and seeking amusement ba ®|I umpe f all y C0Q sidered next to an impos- stances is pretty accurately known. 120 ibs. v ® ry hot ‘ . The room was fllled wit h a smell as 
gland. Dr. Shurtleff, of Carver, says that to mix in with employment, I have habitually cci,f buddi‘777777"XXXXion ' hcdXf ar0 recplired to tear asunder au iron w ire 1-25 ° so “ e *“g hm-ning Turning around, I saw 
while crossing a field where corn and rye grew l read the agricultural and horticultural period- ba t little practical importance. Yet every one! ° f aU mch iu diameter > while the same thick- } ° ot ^ s m °,.iug at a great rate. I seized 
five yeai;s ago, he found cranberries growing icals for a number of years, and now, through of the least experience in this matter, knows ness of bar-iron requires 90 ibs., steel, 60 to 80 iera ana immediately besmeared them with 
quite thick; more than a quarter of au acre the influence of Buel Downing and others on i that many trees ’ where buddin g bad been neg- ibs., cast-iron 28 ibs., brass, 60 to 120 ibs., cop- , soap ’ much of which ’ owin g to their high- 
ivas covered with the vines, and they were the brink of fifty years, my horticultural e- is pe . r P for “ ed ’ luigh ,7 be per 42 lead 2i ibs. and glass 5 ibs. y beated condition ’ disappeared in the 
4^ « of M. i„ ma „v places of the best just c,.acting thl U ^** f ' 
kinds. It was on high, sandy land—the fruit j or a Bantam is to appear remains to be seen. 1 am aware that Dr. Page, of Washington, Elasticity.— If an ivory, ball be placed on and phabIe ’ and now * a . fter 
was perfectly sound and uninjured by frost, and ! Be this as it may, I am delimited with the ef- P ubbsbed and copyrighted about a year ago, a a marble slab, coated with lamp-black, it will 01 a ( ays ot subsequent wear, they exhibit 
much better than on very low meadows. ! forts making- to discover the w a that “ ie . tilod ot ‘ grafting the peach, for which he only receive a’small black SDeck on the noint X° marks ot liaym g beeQ burned.—S. G. AY., 
was perfectly sound and uninjured by frost, and | Be this as it may, I am delighted with the ef- Published and copyrighted about a year ago, a a marble slab, c 
much better than on very low meadows. i forts making to discover the laws that g-overn ll , ie . tJlod ot gating the peach, for which he only receive a s: 
- I vegetable <°rowth. ° ! claimed access, equal to that attending ordi- on whlVll rp , t . 
mad black speck on the point of having _been bumed, 
» ™ ^ But if the ball Rochcster ’ Jan -> 18 ° 4 - 
„ T n .-7 . ; vegetable growth. i tuat ai entang orcu- on which it res ts on the slab. But if the ball 
Hie Didley Apple.—T his is a AAriscon- nary grartmg. His plan consisted in checking , ,, . P „ ,, . . , ---♦ __ 
STMrt ftc x rr- at r 1 ^ trssx*** X E F »r r 
Prairie Farner J 'follow: ,io " of - ***« elumeutx, raxp “f Wiliam roou^d tops'”" Mum 
The fruit is one nf oU " their ^ties, ami so tamo their disposi- successful ^ U m0re tie ,*•“ Wls - P rovm S that the b “ u attmei til the strength is extracted, adding boiling 
bright red running in stripes, and i’ometime^ 1 tions M to render tbem sub.#rvient to the It consists in grafting early, as for other atthe moraeut 11 touches the slab, but that, w ;d er as it decreases, then strain and put in 
scattered in flakes over the surface with a wauts aad pleasures of humanity, thus snatch- stone fruits > in the manner of the common cleft bein ° elastlc ’ 11 immediately regains its spheri- “g. ^“ ak V t sweet; boil 
gmenish yolioa- intervening. The skin is of: ing timeUron, vernal chills and autumnal “2,2 X* 7h“ d U,*£ Tf JfSIllSSSlfi 
little moie tluni averfljjc thickness f l'he 'si/e frn^fQ tA onahin tj i 1 a manner, the cleft mul the end of the stub -♦—» ♦ ■ -»-——_ , ±.^ _ i • ^ v ^ 1 1 , 
^‘XrtX rsiuo^s »$£ I ^.rrr 1 - 7* J 
It is a handsome 
glad to know more < 
in a shallow basin vLh ’ ° COmpass meir maturit D 1 have no vi- The whole is then to be wound with composi- n f f -7 77 T . X; 1 l lUIUC ’ uia pnoreuc mure ic, expectorant and 
u-isp, spiev and a brisk tart nery }' e 7 but everybody should have one. Since Bon cloth, to prevent curling of the bark. Alumuits, IOC ot winch must be placed side by j emmenagogue. Ohio Cultivator. 
-elationship to good English i tbe buth of Crystal Palaces, it is hinted that Tbat tld s plan will succeed, is a demonstrate Slde to occu py the space of a millimeter (about: ’ 1 1 "* " 
r is sharper than ours. The glass roofing would be cheaper than shin<des. ed ta 7 but in how great a proportion of cases, 1-25 of an inch.) But metals have been Preserving Grapes.— I first procure a 
f further attention; for tho' I with <dass at $1 75 ner fifty feet Tf Iw ® xp ®"f ce 1S /, 00 lu . ul 1 ted 7 determine. Suf- drawn out into wires of such fineness, that one 7 iaatlty , of dl 7 ^ ust > theu a tt ght, clean, 
flavor, it may prove an ex- 77 7 1 ' I , lt so ’ could bce to say, that eight scions set in different hundred and fortv of them _ ut t _7 w , „ dl T barrel. I pull the grapes in bunches when 
fruit. " n °t this oe made to answer the double purpose branches ot the same, tree, all lived and grew , , . . .. ‘ p ° a L dr y—put in the ban-el a layer of saw-dust, then 
le apple and we GinnL! h P 1 oi roof for out-building and a vinery in the wi . tb astonishing rapidity. AA’ill othei-s give 011 y the thickness ot. one sik filament, and a layer of grapes, and so on until the barrel is 
7. “ 1 ‘ j upper story? I am thinking I shall roof a this plan a trial and report the result. O" G. tbree hundred and fifty thousand of them luff I place the ban-el in a dry place, covered 
Y _ j wood house with glass and so" turn the upper ' Gibbs> M ‘ D Perr ^ Ohio.—Country Gent, placed together occupy the space of only one YI^IiiwXvo w. Sw 
iY Horticultural Society. ' par ^ b u° a light, warm place tor some purpose I bab ’ _ _ they left the vine. — Ger . Tel . ^ 
Genesee Valley Horticultural Society. 
—The Annual Meeting of this Society will be 
held at the Court House, in Rochester, on 
or other. 
Cultivating Orchards.—M r. H. B. Childs, ‘ --- 
, ,, , „ - , A o-n'n iim „ m ii_Grand Rapids, informs us that he has a. A New Clock.—A mong the late inventions m , 
lied at the Court House, in Rochester, on ! ‘7- ’ \cll constructed under drain that; young thrifty orchard, a part of which is in announced is a curious one by Mr-Robert M. Kentucky Corn Cake.— Take a quart of 
Saturday, Feb. 4, at 2 o’clock P. M. There wne runs awa y ' vitb the superabundant clover; and a part he plowed and planted to Kerrison, of Philadelphia. It is a clock, dif- Rorn mea1 ’ P ut in ifc a spoonful of salt, and wa- 
will be an exhibition of AYinter Fruit Fv- flood > sbould by its condensing powers, furnish corn > and plowed as close to the trees as he fereilt from any heretofore made, in being .f enou f h t0 make a still dough. Knead it 
hibitors should Ipivp (,.„d .d ,i "n the parching plants with moisture bv wriiurimr could without iujuring them on that part plant- without the slightest noise or any alteration in ” k0 a cake. Lhen rake open the ashes on the 
Ho T i \ • thC C ° Urt dews from the .-arifio i n t? , 8 f cd to eorn - the clover part he spaded un- it* motion, and, from this latter fact, proud*.! Attest part of the hearth; put m the cake and 
House, before 12 o clock, m order that it may \ °™ tlie ianted air > ^ lfc steaIs through der the trees as far around as the branches ex- es to be of the greatest use in the science of ( I ' over , lt mth hot ashes ^ aud then with coals.— 
be properly entered and arranged. them, adds another gem to the diadem of mod- tended. Now the result of this experiment is astronomy. In this clock Mr. Kerrison has ; 1 p Y <e tw ° b 011 ^ to bake it; when done, 
--- + ° _ cm science. Then the feeding of both plants that the trees in that part of the orchard succeeded in overcoming a difficulty which has , wasb off tbe witb a wet cloth. 
Transactions of the North Western Fruit mid animals the elements that compose them P lowed and planted, made a much more rapid been made the study of scientific mechanics for l-• ► - 
Growers’A ssociAxioN.-This is a neat pamphlet is another discovery that sparkles in the eon- F°^h th an tbe part in clover; the difference ^arly two centuries being attempted by Making Yinegar.-A correspondent of the 
of 78 i)a'>-es for wliifli om ;> > < . , , ! r T , n . , . is plainly discernible to the passer-by. From Huygens as early as 1668. Dollar JYcivspaper says: — “ The cheapest 
DvxLv 'llc°„S7r» 5”- n i a “° n0f m ° dCm '’^lopmeafa. Ami tho thfs experiment he has conoltided that ayo,mg -—_ „, m le of making vinegar is to mix five quarto 
livered befo.-o tl7 1 aan “'ame ad dress de- beauty ot the theory sparkles in the practical orchard should not be seeded down, and our New Locomotive.—T he Stuttgart journals of warm ram-water with two quarts of Orleans 
, . . e association by J. A. A\ ight, application. A neighbor excels in raising tur- °pmi°n corroborates his, judging from our give the following details of the locomotive mcdasses i and four quarts of yeast. In a few 
ana Discussions on Horticultural and pomological k He f d ^ m lirtfoboil ° W11 ex P erience in such operations— Mich. Far. which has just been constructed at Esslington I week3 . vou have the best vinegar you ever 
subjects. We will give extracts from the pro- > y * f n ° -- (AVurtemberg,) for the Mont Soemmering rail- j tasted. 
ccodmgs as opportunity presents. . "7 ‘ -. 1 " ‘ y UN The Hon. James Mathews, Coshocton, Ohio, ) va J Austria: — “This locomotive, which I *.<*.+ -- 
" * ’ * ’ -*--- Aouptieene, lones, nbitne and feathers in ev- states in the Horticulturist, that among the is called the Kappelen, hasten wheels; its boil-j For Hemorrhoids ok Piles.—AY hite or 
AYe are indebted to some kind friend for sev- ei 7 mess - A young colt fed wheat bran, in- pears he considers the best, and what he has cr is twice as large as that of the ordinary en- black oak bark, and alum, make a tea, wash 
eral of the “ ad interim Reports of the Philadel- creases rapidly in frame, because the provender fruited this year, were the Madelaine, Beurre gines; the tender is not separate, .but forms an the parts frequently. Never known to fail— ! 
phia Horticultural Society.” They contain much contains a large proportion of bone material Giffard, Ott, Doyenne de Etc, Bartlett, Urba- integral part of the engine. It is in the form often gives immediate relief, and when per- < 
interesting information on fruit The fhse5nition« r+i 7 7 niste, Heathcote, Beckel, and Louise Bonne de of a horse shoe, and advances on each side of severed in, has cured where other means have j 
, ° ‘ ^ uu-ciuauoiib, noivever, ot tne million ot Jei-sey. the boiler. failed. 
be properly entered and arranged. 
Transactions of the North Western Fruit 
Growers’ Association.— This is a neat pamphlet 
-IQ _ C _i • t . . ' - r 
