BUFFALO, June 3.—Ft.ouR— Market quiet and steady; sales 
since Saturday noon, S3.t2 l 2 for rve flour: 34.87 !j(<66,00 for ex¬ 
tra Illinois and Wisconsin; ?.\i)fo:'5,37‘, for fair to choice extra 
Indiana and Ohio, for double extras, and $6,37's'Lu6,- 
50 for favorite bakers' brands lu re fa; I lots 
Wukat The market is Ihit. ami with the exception of Mil 
wanin'" club at 87c. not a single sale has been reported this 
morning. t’ofii- Market dull and tendency downward, stales 
Saturdav afternoon af 3)c. This morning, 17,000 tiu. yellow at 
same. Oats—The market is quiet and nominal at 2<e (tar- 
ley dull at Mfrfilc. Rye. last, sa|@ was at 60c for Western. Peas 
nominal at/HXiwGe. 
Sutcns Timothy dull at 32.23, and Clover at $4.S7 l ;C5>3,fl2,t^. 
Bwx.s Market quiet and nominal at iil,t." J '..t't,37 l J ;e to 
quality 
Provisions—D ull and nothing doing. 
TORONTO, June 1,— Front — The market for Hour has been 
without any special feature of cha lure 'luring the week. The 
demand for the lower grades has been dull, and to chert sales a 
slight reduction has been submitted to. For the higher quali¬ 
ties there has been a moderately active inquiry, and prices 
remain firm at last week's li'rures For superdue very favorite 
brands have beeu placed lu small lots at <t HO. but equally good 
flour, with hardly so good a reputation, has been .sold at 34.66, 
while to .sell any quantity 34,50 could not now he hud. Fancy 
is only in moderate slock, and is pretty ftrtnlv held at ' 5 25. 
Extra is inquired for. ami quoted nt $5.*ft/i6 Double extra of 
ordinary brands is held stculily at $ 6 . 2 ftu 6.60, though favorite 
brands are still bringing3675and even J7 tier barrel 
GRA'v—Fall wheat lots been in very active request, especially 
for the whites! samples for immediate shipment to New Eng¬ 
land States. For ordinary to good loads $J.2ft>i 1.2? is freely 
paid, and for good to prime St 1.28, and In one or two cases 
$1 9) for extra prime lots ban been paid. The average for the 
week's purchases would not Tall fir short of #1.26 per bushel.— 
Spring wheat is in fair request, without much buoyancy in the 
demand. From farmers the deliver!"- art* limited, aud wagon 
loads are sold atusetw#] ft bushel, with an occasional purchase 
atn shade higher. Bariev I* in demand for the local breweries 
alone nt a eou-idernhlo reduction In price. The current rate is 
now 40>iM3c pi bushel, with very small offerings. Rye is scarce 
and nominal »t flOCulWo- » bnsfiel Oats remain steady at the 
improvement noted last week. The current quotation being 28 
(ii30o ¥> bushel, and even higher for small lots of the best vari¬ 
ety. Fens are in active request for shipment, with only moder¬ 
ate supplies; from !.“Co) 60 c y) bushel are the prevalent rates, at 
which the market is firm Globe 
Special Notices 
glje Neroo Conimtser 
^EW YORK COMBINED SELF-RAKING 
Reaper anil Mower, 
IMPORTANT TO FARMERS 
JlunuIucturrtl under the Joint I»utenia of Seymour A- Mor- 
tmn and Palmer its Williams, by 
SEYMOUR, MOKUAN & ALLEN, 
Uroclcporfc, NT. V. 
Farmkr* of New York, look to your interests and bnv the 
NF.W YORK SEI.F-KAKtNU REAPER fo; tLflumvest o/t86I 
THE CHAMPION REAPER OP THE WORLD. 
The principle upon which our Self Raker work*, is simple, 
gt'iu and perfect, being aa certain to perform its work ,i* the 
sickle m to cue the grain By successful operation iu the har¬ 
vest held, In com petition with hand inking reapers. It has 
shown thn Utility and superiority nt its claim*. Disarming 
prejudice nt its power, tt lias been gradually and surely work¬ 
ing itself into public tayor The quality of its work lias never 
_June 1st was the 76th birth day of Gen. Scott. 
— The population of France D thirty-six million. 
— There are 10,000 soldiers at Camp Dennison, Ohio. 
_Vermont offers ten regiments to the Federal Government. 
— The tax on a house dog in England is three dollars a 
year. 
— England and France have had an unusually cold spring 
since March. 
— The small pox is raging in the confederate rabble at 
Harper’s Ferry. 
— Martin F. Conway is the Republican candidate for Con¬ 
gress in Kansas. 
— The Michigan First Regiment are said to be the best 
shots in the army. 
— Two million dollars in gold arrived in New York, from 
Europe, last week. 
— Tbe mad-dng season has arrived, and several have ap¬ 
peared in New York. 
— John G. Stephenson, of Indiana, has been appointed 
Librarian to Congress. 
— Aurelius Conkling, Clerk of the U. S. Court, died at 
Buffalo, Monday week. 
— A Spanish squadron, with three thousand troops, has 
sailed for St. Domingo. 
— The amount of gold mined in New South Wales is largely 
increasing every month. 
— The Louisville Journal says J. C. Breckinridge will take 
bis seat as U. S. Senator. 
— The ITicksite Friends are now holding their anniversary 
in the city of New York, 
— Tbe steam frigate Minnesota is ordered to join the block¬ 
ading fleet off Charleston. 
— That fifteen million loan, so often taken in the Confed¬ 
erate States, is still offered. 
— Ira Gould k Son, of Montreal, offer to take, at par, 
#1,000.000 of the U. S. loan. 
— The Capo May (N. J.) Wave represents the prospects of 
the frnlt crop as remarkably good. 
— An injunction bas been issued against the Sandford Bank 
of Maine, and receivers appointed. 
— Many of the rivers in Siberia are lined at the sides and 
bottom with a constant crust of ice. 
— Susan Durant, an ewineot English sculptoress, is just 
now attracting much attention in Enrope. 
— Butter is selling in tbe streets of Auburn at 10 cents per 
pound Norfolk (Va.) papers please copy. 
— The Montgomery government estimates the force, armed 
and equipped, which it can control, at 175,000. 
— Capfc Derby, of the U. S. Army, widely known as “John 
Photuix,” died a few days since, near New York. 
— They have a white whale, weighing two thousand five 
hundred pounds, nt the Aqnnrial Garden, Boston. 
— Galnsha A. Grow and Frank P. Blair, Jr , aru named for 
the Speakership of the House of Representatives. 
— Victoria's “ Sailor Prince ” is to visit this country as a 
midshipman—attending no public balU or festivals. 
— The taxes of New York city now amount to twelve mil¬ 
lion dollars, equal to two per, cent of its real value. 
— The foreign ministers at Washington expresa great 
satisfaction at the loyalty of the Federal troops there. 
— The financial reporter of the Nashville Advocate, May 
18, says gold sells in that city at 15 per cent, premium. 
— A home for inebriates, which recently wont into opera 
tion in California, has been attended with the best results. 
— A negro insurrection at Des Arc, Ark., has just been 
suppressed. One white man and three negroes were hung. 
— The next term of the Court of Appeals, for the hearing 
of arguments, will he held at Albany, on Tuesday, June 11. 
— One hundred and fifty thousand pounds were given in 
private charity to the poor of London, during the past year. 
— The foreign consuls who fled from the capital of Japau 
have returned to their posts, under assurances of protection. 
— Rev. Honea Ballou, President of Tuft’s College, at Sow- 
mervillc, Mass., and a leading I'uiversalist clergyman, is dead. 
— A Baltimore builder has contracted to ship five hundred 
houses to Cuba—parts all marked and numbered for putting 
To those who wish to purchase a perfect “ Comih.xkd 
Reapkr and Mowkr, ! ’ we would say that “BALL’S OHIO 
MOWER AND REAPER ” is manufactured at the Auburn 
Prison by Messrs. Ross, Dodor k Pomrot, sole proprietors 
for the State of New York, for the use of these valuable 
patents. The machine is made of the best materials, and 
warranted hi be a perfect Mower or Reaper, and to cut easily, 
without clogging, any kind of grain or grass, either wet or dry. 
The Mower has a Cast Steel Cutter Bar, 4 feet fi inches cut, 
with polished wrought Iron guards, plated in the Slot with 
Cast Steel, and tempered. 
The Reaping attachment has a Finger Bar and polished 
wrought iron guards attached to it, with a SicaiS-edged 
Knife, which, for cutting grain, is far better than the smooth 
edge mowing knives generally used. By means of the 
separate Finger Bar and Sickle, they are enabled to make 
the Reaper cut either 5 or 6 foot swath, and dispense with 
the heavy Mowing Bar when reaping. 
The Combined Reaper and Mower is delivered to the pur¬ 
chaser for the sum of ?150, for a six months’ note without 
interest, or 5145 cash. T|ie Mower is 530 less. 
The agents for Monroe County are [586-6te 
J. W. HANNAH, of Clifton, Monroe Co., N. Y. 
DANIEL KINGSLEY, of Pittsford, Monroe C.),, N Y. 
ADVANTAGES OF 
SELF-RAKING OVER A HAND-RAKING REAPER. 
It saves the labor of one man bis wages, board, and the draw¬ 
ing of him oyer the lleld.rlay after day, merely to do with great 
exertions, what iho Self-Raker can do In a better manner. 
*• ^'"Pb'cirr ok Construction.—I n this respect it cannot 
bo emialltMl 
of 2 or<ler AmUTY U i ’' V<,ry Btron K' an, > " ot to get out 
3 Kamr or Draft,— The main wheel is about three feet in di- 
aineter which enaMes it to pass freely over obstrnettons, and 
through dead IWw, The time nr tread of this wheel is half a 
loot wide, which prevents its cutting into the ground. The 
irra-in yidt^wbool ir* h\hi> vpfy in (Humidor 
\ AiMHKTAiiiUTr.—TJ mj cut cun Ik* rulnod or lowered by the 
driver, from hi* While i.hc tejuu In In motion, and the nrn* 
rhino to oporntion. Tin* i* riii*od or lowered iufmlfa 
*5“ rhaiiffnl from ft. Reaper to a Mowrr in Ulree min- 
wjYn, nod ii r»m u Mow or to a Jteuper in the rianm tlmo. 
r>. Rfkicticnoy. It rut* n Mvath l\v«* feet wide, nnrfontly c.lean, 
hi heavy or light, lodjreu or Untied grain, whether driven mIow 
or irtul; laying it oil lfi Luind.iomr gavel#, out of the way of the 
team m re pmwimr J 
B Fiimemiw i-nost SlDR Draw -It can bo drawn, turned 
round, or bucked, as easily as a cart 
7 It im PbrkkctLy Bai'.anokh - So that it, does not chafe the 
horses ueeks. 
8 Thb Ovkrhoni.' IticKi, enables ttii t Machine to cut, take ur> 
Mid rake off lodged and tangled grain, better than any other 
Reaper. 7 
!). Position ok titic Dmivrr.- The driver's seat is over the 
main wheel, and no part of his weight is added to the side-draft. 
He is much more elevated than on other Reapers, audeau over¬ 
look Ins work and team. 
10 It is Kabii.v Manaiocd. — Any good driver, who can man¬ 
age a team, can use Mils Reaper Tim take is entirely tinder 
HOWARD’S NEW MOWER. 
* PRICE REDUCED TOR 1861. 
Thk Cheapest, most Mumble, and Lightest Draft Mower offered 
for sale. Four sizes-370,385 and 3100 each. All are warranted. 
Can give the testimonials of those who have used them, if de¬ 
sired Send for Circular giving lull description 
Ketchum’s Combined Machine, 
Improved, price, as usual,$130. Improvements of guards, shoe 
with roller, lever with roller, and extras for the KKronen 
Machine, furnished at moderate prices, by giving the number 
of the Machine for which they are wanted. 6tWi-. r >t 
Address 
Fruit Growkrs' Sociktv ok Wkstkrn Nkw York. — Pur¬ 
suant to adjournment of the Annual Meeting for 1S61, the 
Spring Meeting of this Society will be held at the Court 
House in Syracuse, June 25th, 1861, at 10 o'clock A. M. 
By order of the Council. C. P. Biaskl, Secretary. 
THE CATTLE MARKETS- 
NEW YORK, 'lay 20 — The current prices for the week at 
all the markets are as follows: 
bkkk catti.k 
First quality,,....-.$8,7.X£9.25 
Ordinary quality,.8.lX)@li.50 
Common quality,.- 7,BO©8,00 
Inferior quality.7,00ro7,60 
oowa A.vr> calvks. 
First quality,.. .3W.not'd >50,00 
Ordinary quality. 40 , 00 ( 160,00 
Com men quality,.-.. 91,00(0)36,00 
Inferior quality,.,.... 22,00^28,00 
VKAL 0AI.V.K8. 
First, quality, 111 lb... 5 (a)fii^c 
Orilinarj' quality,.,. 4J4@5 c 
Common quality. 4 (a ; 4'.iC 
Inferior quality. 3 tiSSVic 
8 HBKP AND l,AWUS- 
Prime quality..35.0(X'6fi,60 
Ordinary quality. 4,0tt<£4,60 
Commriu quality,.3.50fa)l.00 
Inferior quality,.3,OOC<i)3.25 
8 WINK. 
First qualitv... 4 * 4 ®4"jo 
Other qualibes. . 3 , i@4 c 
ALBANY, June 8 . —Bkxvkm — There is very little change to 
note this week beyond tbe fact that there Is, perhaps, more in¬ 
quiry for extra, and the best of this grade commands ,’jjc %') tb. 
live weight, better than last week For other grades prices are 
unchanged. The average quality is vet v fair, there being a 
large number of prime still-fed in the yards. 
Rkckiptn—T he following is our comparative statement o 
receipts at this market over the Central Railroad, estimating 16 
to the car: 
Cor. week 
This week. Last week. last vear. 
Cattle...3,789 3.885 4,219 
Sheep,__2,365 3,720 3,863 
Hogs. , 1H 
Pricks—W e have simply to make a slight alteration in our 
quotations for extra and second quality; 
This week. Last week. 
Premium.,.... 0 fio c 0 Oil c 
Extra.....4 Vii 4 ’.ic 
First qualitv.I @ 4*40 4 («'4'a 
Second quality. 8 t£®lyje SM'fii'iSJi'c 
Third quality. 2 , . l (ii:.'t 0 2Ai®5 c 
Siikkp— 1 There Is less on the market this week, but no im¬ 
provement in prices. Demand light, One lot of Ilk) Ohios, 
averaging over 98 tbs. was sold to an Eastern huyei at Ic yl lb, 
A drove (One car lusdl of strictly extrn, for which fc. oil' the 
cars, was refused. This, however, is an extreme figure 
lions -Supply large for the sonsqn, and market dull at BOefi'a 
for heavy stock hogs; SJ4((h6c for light do; 3Jie for fat still-fed; 
4 , 1 fa)4!jC for heavy corn-fed -Atlas and Arffux. 
CAMBRIDGE, May 29 At market 460 cattle, about 400 beeves 
and 60stores, consisting ot working oxen, cows, and one, two 
and three yeais old. 
Bhkk Catti.k Piiees. extra. M.2A.H6.62; first quality, ?. 6 ,()(riil 
0 , 1 X 1 ; second quality, MtJw.oio.tX); third quality, $ 0,00 ; ordinary 
quality, SOtOO. 
WOftKDKI OXBN-SlMXe'IHO. 
Cows AND 0AI.VKB — $;il) $40C«)6O 
Stokkm Yearlings, $iX»0; two years old, $OOMO; three 
yeais old. Jrtirii O). 
Siikkp ANti Law us—1,680 at market. Prices —In lots 31,60. 
®2,IX): extra srnl selections. $2,78(ip6,00 each. Spring Lambs 
from S5.60t i 4.t0 each. 
Pki-ts- 20ca'3l,iK) each. 
Tai.i.ow nki/ 60 JJ lb. 
Hmica — iKbiAc. tb Cai.k ISkins — 8®9c IP tb. 
Vkai. CAt.'.'gti ,f„'!,ikXu, 6 . ' 
BRIGHTON, May 80.—At market-- 1,100 Beef Cattle, 96 storeH, 
1,600 Sheep aud Lamlm, aud 1,600 8wlne. 
Bbkk Catti.t.-P rices, extra, S«.7fifa)l),00; 1st quality, $6,50® 
0,1X1; 2d do. W,tXJ®0,00: 3d do, 3.1,7 Vn O.iX), 
WOKKlNU Oxkw $PK), 313tr'a 1 11). 
Mll.cn t-lijws - SSiX'iriO ; common, $18(j£:19. 
Vkai. Oai.vkn S,'t,iXX«'5,00. 
Storks Yearlings. $0®0; two-years old, $16®17; three years 
old. 318®10, 
Hipbh — 414(;u5e >4 tb 
Cai.k SKIN8 — A'i'9i3 4P lb. 
Tat.i.ow 6 , 16 c. ip tb. 
Pki.tn — $i;Si31,26 each ■ 
Shkk.i* and Lamtis— $1,26(a) 1.50, extra, 32,(XVn’6.60. 
Swine —Store, wholesale. Op'8c; retail, 6®9o. Fat Hogs, 
still fed. 4.1407 corn fed, 8'-c. Spring Pigs, life 1 lie. 
R. I, HOWARD, Buffalo, N. Y. 
Bark JYutnber* of this f'olum* free! __^]] 
To all who subscribe for the Rural Nkw-Yorkrr from 
May 1st to end of the Year and Volume — eight months — we 
will, if desired, send the back numbers (from Jan'y 1st) Free. 
This offer (to be continued for a month, and perhapB until 
July 1st,) will enable many who were nnable to subscribe at 
the beginning of the year, or Inter, to secure the entire 
volume at less than cost of publication. 
MAXnEACTliRKP UT 
ROSS, DODGE & POMROY, 
AUBURN, N. Y. 
Ipj7~ Wkstkrn ano SnuruxuN MoNitr.— In the present de¬ 
ranged state of the currency, we are unable to use Western and 
Southern money, ns our bankers will not purchase it at any 
rate of discount. Agents and Subscribers who cannot obtain 
New York, New England, Pennsylvania, or Canada Money, will 
please send us U. .S’, Postage Stamps, as they are far preferable 
to any uocurrent bank bills 
liyTuK Rural is published strictly upon the cash ststuw 
— copies are never mailed to individual subscribers until paid 
for, and always discontinued when the subscription expires. 
Hence, we force the paper upon none, and keep no credltbooks, 
experience having demonstrated that the Cash System ia alto¬ 
gether the bent for both Subscriber and Publisher 
tnr No Traveling Agents are employed by os, as we wish 
to give the whole field to local agents and those who form clubs. 
And beside, we wish it distinctly understood that, all persons 
traveling through the country, professing to hold certificates 
from us, ark mrosTOua. 
Any person so disposed can act as local agent for the 
Rural New-Yorker, and those who volunteer in the good 
cause will receive gratuities, aud their kindness be appreciated 
1'^“ Change ok Addhksh. —Subscribers wishing the address 
of their papers changed from one Post-Office to another, must 
specify the OM> address us well as the nkw to secure compliance 
with their requests. 
N E W Y < > U K 
Sell-liakei* us ;i Mower. 
Wk particularly commend eur Combined Machine, as ,1 Mow¬ 
er. to the attention or formers. We have adopted a», Improved 
iron bar, which from its peculiar form will not spring or bend 
m use. It 1,1 light, narrow and thin We also use a light and 
polished malleable guard. The Cutter.Bar is raised amf lower¬ 
ed by means M a levee, always at the drivsr's command, foe tho 
purpose ot passing over the cut grass or tearing tile field Our 
Machine Is narrow Bud will puss through anv barx without sub- 
jacting the driver to the necessity 1 f gelling oil from the Ma- 
chine to iHino it, in ?iny way, m order to clear. 
Submitting these considerations )» the farming community 
we resperttnlIy solicit their patronage, suggesting that tliuy 
send in their orders early, as we have hut 11 limited number of 
Machines to sell 
I <T" Extras on hand at all times, by onr Agents. 
694-tf BEYM4IIJIt, YIOUUAN A. AT.LKN. 
QH PAPEHW FLOWElt 
FOR *t.-I will send by mail, post-paid, tliirtv papers 
of Choice Flower Seeds to any peiHon fending mo Otjr Hollar 
current lunds. 
My Seeds are Just as good as those advertised nt tlmu-s tho 
Price I ask My Heeds are Imported from one of tho best -rod 
houses in Europe, and can bo relied on as good. 
J, KAPALJE, at Genesee Heed Store, Rochester. N Y 
‘'■attittry , ■ t -tv, 1 re t "iT/m'ifififliBXAv 
I The carriage of the machine is mounted on two driving 
wheels. In cun miction with each of these is a spur wheel ami 
pinion, making tlie machine stronger and more durable than 
any single-geared machine can be, 
2. Tbe relation between these two driving wheels is such that 
they operate jointly or. separately, ns circumstances may re¬ 
quire, The result of this ir, that when the machine Is moviug 
on 11 curve, either to the right or left, the usual speed of the 
knife is retained and clogging avoided, and in turning and back¬ 
ing, the mnehlna throws itsidfoot td gear 
3. The weight. i>r the carriage and gearing attached to it, as 
Well aa that of both raker and driver, is thrown directly upon 
the two driving wheels, by which the following advantages are 
gained: -bit. The wheels are prevented from gUpping on the 
ground, and thus prevent, tlm machine clogging 2d. A power- 
nil and afilcient stroke to the knife is proilttceil, enabling the 
machine t p cm any kind of grass or grain without difliculty. 
3d. No weight being thrown on 'either the platform or cutter- 
bar but that of its own. side draft is obviated, and the mncliino 
made to run lighter. 
4 The machine, both us tt Reaper and Mower, lms a flexible 
cut tor-liar, which Invariably adapts Itself to tbe 11 u even -urfacn 
of the ground. This Is the first successful machine that ever 
combined this principle, aud It is now an almost universally 
admitted fact, aiming intelligent farmer-, and mechanics that it 
is impossible to coustructa good Mowing Machine without, hav¬ 
ing a flexible cutter-bar and two driving wheels. 
49AH.DSLEY ’ 6 
HAY ELEVATOR 
Jtlarkets, Commerce, &c. 
HORSE POWER PORK. 
Turn Fork can bo used with cither 
ONE or two UOIUIKN. Price, full 
rigged (with ropn and three pul- 
levs,) $12. 
See iloflorintioii in Rural Nbw- 
Yokkkk of March 23. 1861 . 
Send for a Circular. 
Address 
I.EVI A. BRAIUtNMCY, 
South F,<imesU/n, Otsego Go., N. T. 
Rural New-Yorker Oeejce, > 
Rochester. Juua 4, 1861. | 
Flour.— We note an advance on best grades, from winter 
wheat, equal to 26, cents per barrel. That made from spring 
wheat is unchanged. 
Grain.— Genesee Wheat is in better demand and has put on 
8 cents per bushel, In other kinds of grain there is hut little 
activity, 
Meats —Pork, both mess and clear, has fallen Off $1,00 per 
barrel Hams have declined 60 cents per 100 pounds. 
f)am y.—B utter Is coming in very freely and as the demand 
decreases a decline follows. 
Sheki' Pelts have lost 12(0,25 cents during the week 
Wool —We mark down rates materially, Buyers feel sore 
on account of last year's purchases, und urn unwilling to give 
more than 20(0.30 cents per pound as to quality. They main¬ 
tain that these will be opening rates, but In another week or 
two they may conclude to do something bettor. The rates cun 
not well be lower, and we would advise those who can wait, to 
hold the clip until the prospects brighten. 
ROUHEBTER WHOLESALE PRICES. 
Flour and Grain Eggs, dozen.8fi(;9o 
Flour, winter wheal, $5 ,51 in 7.00 Honey, box. 12t>iil 
Flour, spring do,..,. 6.00(38,26 Candles, box.1 Ko412 
Flour, buckwheat,.. 0,003)2,00 Candies, extra.i;vnd3 
Meal,Indian.. ,. l,O0.oil,l'2 Fruit and Roots.“ 
Wheat. Genesee, ... 1,16®I,HO Apples, bushul..6 iYii,62o 
Best whiD.‘Canada, O.Odqd. tA Apples, dried. If tb .. .26(55)4 
Corn, old. U0lj!46c Peaches, dried.ft,. JliSi'ia 
A gents wanted to sei.e eh hit tr ees. 
Wk wish to employ a number of experienced ami trust¬ 
worthy uien to sell trees, Ac., from our Nurseries at liberal 
wages. 
W HOLDS ALU Dkalkrm rurnished with Nursery, .Stisik of all 
descriptions at the lowest wholesale, rates. 
HOOKER, EAltl,RY k 00„ 
684tf Rochester Wholesale Nurseries, Rochester, N. Y. 
( COUNTRY AGENTS WANTED.— 
t3 a Day. Mrs. Hankins wants Agents at home or to 
travel for her Pictorial FAMILY NEWSPAPER." also for her 
Curious New Bonk of FEMALE CHARACTERS in tiik. CITY. 
For Specimens and Terms inaloiie red stamp to HANKINS k 
CO., New York. 678 
— There is at present a snow bank in Buckland, Mass., 
eight or ten feet deep, and covering nearly a quarter of an 
acre. 
— A company of Union soldiers will be immediately organ¬ 
ized in Alexandria, Ya,, composed entirely of citizens of that 
place. , 
— Colonel Anderson, though an honored member of the 
Masonic fraternity, waa not recognized by a single Southern 
Mason. 
— St. Paul, Minn., displays about fifty flags, nearly all 
made out of flannei, the people being too' patriotic to use 
cotton. 
— The New York Bible Society have already aupplied 
Testaments to members of twenty-one of the volunteer 
regiment*. 
— Major General Sandford has made his head-quarters at 
Fairfax C. H., a town in Virginia, some twenty miles from 
Alexandria. 
— Garibaldi has a strong affection for the United States. 
“ That is a spot,” said he, “ in which man forgets his own 
native land.” 
— Rev. Nathan Ward, M, D., missionary of tho American 
Board to Ceylon, died on October 30, of disease of the heart, 
on his way out. 
— At a recent sale in London, eighty manuscript poems of 
Bums, in his own hand-writing, mauy of them unpublished, 
were disposed of. 
— The whole embodied militia of Creat Britain ia but 149,- 
052 in number, a little more thau one-third of that of the 
State of New York. 
— Parson Brownlow floats a Union flag on his domicil in 
Knoxville, in the face of 2,500 secession troops, and his 
daughter defends it. 
— George Ashmun, who has just returned from Canada, 
say* that the feeling there is strong and unanimous in favor 
of the United States. 
— Only four of the so-called slave States—Delaware, Mary¬ 
land, Kentucky, and Missouri — can now be regarded as ad¬ 
hering to the Union. 
— A ship from Charleston, bearing the Palmetto flag, was 
lately refused entrance into Havre. She ran up the American 
flag, and then ran in. 
— An old fanner in Southern Illinois, seeing the cannon at 
Cairo, remarked “ that them brass missionaries had con¬ 
verted a heap of folks." 
The Southern rebels are trying to rob Gen. Taylor of his 
laurels. They have the impudence to call Davis “ the glori¬ 
ous hero of Buena Vista!” 
— The Southern papers are publishing a biographical 
sketch of Gen. Butler, representing that he is a negro, and 
that his troops are negroes. 
The Union defence committee of New York city*have 
expended, in equipping and provisioning the various regi¬ 
ments of that city, $425,000. 
— The Montgomery junto has adjoured to meet in Rich¬ 
mond on the 20th of June—wonder if the resolution specified 
wham they were to meet there? 
— Major J. L. Doty, aged 62 years, and Col. Lyman Hin- 
mau, aged 63 years, two of t.be most prominent citizens of 
Auburn, N. Y., died on Friday week. 
Immense quantities of rain have recently fallen In the 
H' ly Land. The cisterns at Jerusalem have been filled as 
they have not been before in 200 years. 
Rev. Iiaac Rosser, of the Methodist Protestant Church, 
^.'cars of age. and Miss Sarah Childs, aged ninety, were 
united in wedlock at Atlanta, Ga., a few weeks ago. 
— The number of soldiers at Cairo, or in its immediate 
Vicinity. IB 8 , 000 . The place is well fortified, and both the 
Mississippi and the Ohio are commanded by cannon. 
TIIK WOOL MARKETS. 
NEW YORK, May 30. There is some little demand for low 
and medium grades, but (Inn qualities ar e very (lull; the present 
want of confidence in bilBlness circles aud the near approach of 
a new clip all lias a tendency to check Operations; the sales urn 
OO.tXX) ft* low medium to full blood domestic fleeces at .'k)f«i4l)c., 
25,909 ft,* washed Spanish and till) bale* East India on private 
terms, 
American Saxony Fleece, ^7 lb. . 6 (Y .«)66 
American full-blood Merino.46(0)48 
American half blood and three-fourths Merino, :W i 42 
Amerlean Native and one fourth Merino.32fo 35 
Extra Pulled.36fo)40 
Superfine, Pulled.30©36 
No. 1, Pulled,.22a)26 
Lamb's, Pulled.27®30 
California, extra,. .OOirtil 
California, fine, unwashed.240*38 
California, common do, .100)15 
Peruvian, washed,.26(034 
Valparaiso, uuwa*hed.12r<iil3 
South American Me*., unwashed.16^)23 
South American Merino, unwashed.lfim'33 
South American, common washed,.]Hpii|3 
South American Entre Rios, do.l.VUifo 
South American, unwashed,.9M10 
South American Cordova, washed,.20‘• 3 ( 0.22 
Cape Good Hope unwashed......26(5)28 
East India, washed,.I5foi25 
African, unwashed. 9(5)18 
African, washed. 165628 
Smyrna, unwashed. U(ml4 
Smyrna, washed,. 2 S.s 2 fi 
Mexican, unwashed. 11(5,24 
BOSTON, May 30-In fleece and pulled wool there is no 
change. The market is firm for all kinds of low and medium 
Krtule.e. with a reduced stock of this discrlption. The sales of 
the week havo been 269.01X1 tbs at 31et0c for fleece and 'M.n.ilki 
for No. 1, ami extra pulled. Fina grades of fleece are neglected. 
In foreign sales of 260 bales Mediterranean and South American, 
and a considerable lot of Unwashed African on private terms 
Saxonv and Merino, tine,47!'“AV Western mixed,.. .Ztf'rt.’ifl 
Full blood,. .41'a47 Smyrna, washed,.Iff3«8 
)4 and X 4 blood.. 3ttai43 llo. unwashed. 9tu 17 
Common. SriJiSS Syrian,. ItritilS 
J J FOE DIPPING SHEEP AND LAMBS, 
AND FOR DESTROYING AM, KINDS OF VERMIN ON OTHER AN1JIAL8. 
Tub Manufacturer* ot till* new and valuable preparation, beg 
leave to call the attention of Farmer* and Grazier* to thin ef- 
tectual remedy lor destroy imt Ticks, Lice, and all other insects 
injurious to animals and vegetation, and preventing the alarm¬ 
ing attacks of the Fly and Scud on Sheep. 
Its use not only remove* tho vermin 00 animals, but cleanse* 
and nuriflex the skin, thereby materially benefiting their gene¬ 
ral health, and greatly improving wool, both in quality and 
quantity. 
This article Completely supersedes that tabnrimxt and disar 
greeahle work of preparation In your own buildings far Sheep- 
washing, as it in ready at all times, in any climate, and for all 
doMcrfotloru of Sheep, e ve,, for Ewes in lamb, aud can be fur¬ 
nished at a much reduced cost. 
FISHER A. (!0., Sol© Agent*, 
683-13 88 Central W liirf, I ton ten, Msuw. 
WpMjwJ’ 
/Hf'Wu : AXV 
The advantage-' ,4' tin* m mhlnc a:- 11 Reaper are very obvious 
1. The gram Is delivered at the side of tho platform, entirely 
out of tlm wav of the next round, 
2. (t cuts a swath six feel wide, and will cut one ao.rn per hour 
with 01 ,e span of horses without injuring thorn. 
3. It can he changed trom a Mower to > Reaper iu fifteen min¬ 
utes, and vice varan. 
There are other genera! points of excellence, the simple 
mention of which will be at once understood by tlm practical 
former 
1 The ineohamoal execution of the work, as well a* the char¬ 
acter ol‘ the material* used in their construction, is superior to 
that of most machine* of the kind 
2. The driving wheels aru three feet high, thus improving the 
draft. 
3. tt has an adjustable tongue by which the side-draft can pos¬ 
itively lie controlled under all cirennudAnee*, Home machines 
have little or no shle-dmft while mowing, but have a grent. deal 
while reaping. Nothing bat au adjustable tongue can avoid this 
difficulty. 
•t. The height of the stubble can he changed from One to five 
inches in an instant, without stopping the machine. This is an 
important inprovement trom the fact that it enable* the ma¬ 
chine to cut lodged gras* as clone to the ground 11 * that which 
i* standing ; or to cut a high stubble where tlm ground is 
rough, boggy, or stony ; or (lie point* of the guards can he 
turned above the gras* whiln the iqimhlue may la) pn.viing over 
it after it i.i cut. 
5. in case the "Lifting' f’rinclplo" should he preferred to tho 
one Just described, the cutter-bar can tie confined to cut at an v 
given height, amt then by the use of the lever, the driver, while 
on bis seat, can raise the cutter Imi parallel with the ground 
from three to twelve Inches, Tin's arrangementfatfilltute.-i turn- 
W OMEN 0P NEW YORK.”— 
* • Mrs. Hankins' Curious New Book of FemAla Charac¬ 
ter* lu the City, is very interesting, and Htrictly moral Fancy 
binding; 380 Pages; 60 Engravings; 36 Portraits Mailed free for 
31. AGENTS Wanted— Ladies and Teacher*. For Description 
of Book and I'articulurs of Agency, inclose red stamp to 
678 HANKINS A CO.. New York. 
YATREELEB & WILSON MANUFACTUBING CO’S 
vv IMPROVED FiYMILI SBW1M MACHINES 
wrra new 
Glass Cloth Presser and Hemmers, 
AT REDUCED PRICES. 
witn only a moderate business uolog tor ex port and home con¬ 
sumption. Sale* at *4,uii:n;6,0O for superfine .State; 36,10Qi.fi,a) 
for extra do ; $4,ltt'u)4 1 95 for superfine Western ; $4,96fu.fi,25 for 
common to medium extra do, 35.11 >u6 1 .'jO for shipping brands 
extra round hoop Ohio, and 36,"0(u 7,25 for trade brands do, 
the market closing heavy. Canadian Ihitir dull and drooping, 
with only a moderate btislnoxs doing Sales at 36,hr* 7,0d for 
common to good extra, aud 37 .ZKiittjSh tor choice mid favorite 
braufl*. Rye flour continues steady, with small sales at 33, loop 
4,)X) for common to clioiea superfine. Corn meal steady, with 
small «ali.-» at $3,20 for Hrandy wine and $3,00 for Jenny. ’ 
Gr.vi.v Wheat market heavy and 1:42c lower for common 
aud Inferior grades, while good and sound parcels are scarce 
and rule steady with a moderate business doing for export and 
home consumption; sale* < Chicago spring atj.li 1 , 12 ; Northwost- 
ern club at Ji.I.YlI, 16, .Milwaukee club *r 8l.oAg 4 ,(8; winter red 
Western at Sl,3u.al,St; Racine spring at.81,12puLl7; amber jowa 
at 31 , 18 ( 0 , 1 , 20 ; Canada dub at 31,14(a 1.20, amber Kentucky al ii 
SDCidJC); while Western at *I.3 m,1 '1, 111 ; white Michigan at 81,fsid 
l,6i); white Kentucky at $1.70. Rye quiet, with aales at fifelftc. 
Barley I* heavy and dull, with -ale* at hkn 6«c Bariev qialt 
continues dull and nominal at. 80c. t'eaa remain quiet at70cfor 
Canadian. Corn market heavy, and may be again quoted Vw-’Jo 
lower, wall a very fair busincs doing tor home corisomptfon; 
Bale* at 66c. for old mixed Western tiVojtfe. for inferior to prime 
new mixed We-tern, rail 50fo;fi3c.for new Western yellow. Oats 
plenty and in limited roquetd. with sale- at 31;i> v ,2*iC. for West¬ 
ern and Canadian, aud 8Sh( .Wic, for .State, 
PltoVlftlox* Tlie Fork market dull and drooping, sale* at 
Sbi.sVl-j 17 for mo-*, $122AS, 12,60 for prime. Bet-f remains dull. 
sales at &);,■ 4,60 for country prime; 56,S7:iC,26 forcountry me**; 
SloQtdl for re-packed me*a) and 311,26! 12 60 for extra mors. 
Prime ni«t>* beef continuer dull and nominally unchanged at 
317, rite 18.10. Beef ham* quiet und steady; sale* at 313 for State 
aud 315 for Western Cut meat* dull ana without change, with 
sales at asSisC for Shoulder*, aud fiiMiJic for Hams, Smoked 
mean are nominal at 'HsQi lUsc for Hams, 7®8c for Shoulders, 
aud 9>,". for .vide*. Bacon dull and price* noniinally unchanged. 
Lard market, i* dull, and prices arc drooping; sales at 9Qu9?;<*. 
for No. 1 to prime Western. Butter is selling at Fir 14c for Ohio, 
and 85al«c for State. Cheese steady aud quiet, and selling at S 
(aglc for inferior to prime. 
Asrks —Steady and firm at $5.37.^ for Pot*, and $6,62>i for 
Pearls 
ALBANY, June 3. —Flocka.xd Mkal—T he storm tended to 
check out-door business, and but little was done in /four this, 
morning. 
Common to good State,. $ 1 . 90 (®fi,flS 
Fancy and extra State. 5 , Ifierfi 30 
Common to good Western. S. r JJX&6,76 
Extra Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana, &c.,.5.30., 7 : 7,25 
Extra Ohio.6,26^)7,28 
Common Canadiao. 5,iXx'!j5,66 
Extra Causeiian.S,76wi7,60 
Fancy Genesee,. 6 . 2 ft, 7 : 6,75 
Extra Genesee aud city brands,.6,39(3(7,80 
Extra Keutncky. 6.2fta7,fio 
Corn meal ia lower, and is selling at $1,00(0)1,12^ %'l foil tb*. 
Gtunv In wheat nothing transpUed. There Were further 
sales on Saturday of white Canadian at $1,45, and white Michi- 
gan at *1.57. Corn very quiet at 45!d)46c for round yidlow and 
mixed Western Bai ley quiet. Rye ktuadv, with sales at 64t.jc 
In Oat* there L* but little doing and tho market U if anything 
easier sale* State at 32fjc Canada East held at 30o. 
THE WHEELER * WILSON MANUFACTURING CO. beg 
to state that they have reduced tlie prices of their SEWING 
MACHINES, wliila they have added new and Important im¬ 
provement*. The reduction is made in tho hope that the Com¬ 
pany will have no more legal expenses defending their patents. 
Office SOS Broadway, New York. 
8. VV. DIBBLE, Axt-nt, 
679-tf ROCHESTER TV Y. 
If OH I .-Jf-vYltl TklOI-Cl To all who wish 
1 \ to try this line substitute for tho Turnip, which is *0 well 
adapted to our warm climate. I will send Seeds by mail at diets, 
per nance, pontage paid. J. RAlCU-JE, 
694-2t 1 7 South St. Paul Street, Rochester, N. Y 
u If AMILY NEWSPAPER.” — 
* Mr*. Hankins’ Mammoth Pictorial I* In It* Sixth Volume 
and ha* 800,000 readers. Full of Engraving* aud Fashion Plate*. 
Largest, uicest and beat in tlm world for To < i«- a vear .Aok.vth 
wanted. Ladies, Teacher*, Clergymen, or Po*t. Miuter* For 
Specimen Copies and Terms to Agents, inclose red stamp to 
678 HANKINS k CO.. New York. 
L 1 ARMERS, 1 ‘LIOASE MO’I’H 'BL— 
|5 BARTLUrr.S DITCHING PLOW, tho cheapest and best 
ever offered to the public. Price $20. Order* for Plow* promptly 
attended to Farm, Town, County, and State rights for *ale on 
reasonable terms. Address 
594-26t A. J. BARTLETT. Romulus, Seneca Co.. N. Y. 
r IMPORTANT TO EVERY MAN WHO KEEPS A 
HORSE. COW, SHEEP. OR HOG -Tiiomucv'.* Food tor 
Cattlk - For Horse* it i* indispensable in promoting am! kuh- 
taimng all the animal function* in health and vigor. For Miloh 
Cows it is invaluable, increasing the quantity and Impioving 
the quality of milk. For Beasts nothing run com par* with it 
for feeding quickly For Sheep aud Pig* tho effect* produced 
in one mouth will exceed all expectation 
A Pamphlet mailed free to any addle** 
•y DEPOT, 21 BROADWAY. NEW YORK 574-2«t 
QVtioertiscmcnts 
A LLMN’S IMBUOVKI) hau- 
KOtV WITH OSCILLATING MOTION. 
Tits object so long flc*ired hv farmer* ha* been found at last 
in ALLEN'S IMPKo V EDIU ARROW. By the peculiar shape of 
the lunge*. tfOluJiined with the mariner of attaching the power, 
an OSCILLATORY MOTION of 1 he Harr ow I* produced, there 
by avoiding all triudeing and dogging of t ie' teeth 
Grain or Gras* Seed can lie more effectually harrowed in with 
this implcinvut., than with a common Harrow with twice the 
labor. 
Those who have u*ed AIIcii'h lmprovcl Harrow on their forms 
will have no other. 
Agent* Wanted iu every section of the United State* to sell 
Right*. 
Address all communication* to the avignen of the inventor, 
CI1AK Kl.blorr, East Kemiall, Orleans Co., N. Y of whom 
also the Harrow can be obtained. 5OT 7tcow 
ADVERTISING TERMS, 
Thirty- 
Five Cents a Link, each insertion. A price and a half for 
extra display, or 82 fi cents per line of space. SPxcur. Notick*. 
(following reading matter, leaded,) Sixty Cents 8 Line 
IIP ft* immense circulation among the Piomcora and Deal¬ 
er* of the Free States, render* the P,i;n a I, Ni w Yorkku by far 
the Beat and Cheaiosst Advertising Medium ol! it* clan*. This 
fact should be borne in mind by all Wholesale Dealers, Manu¬ 
facturers, Ac., who must necessarily depend npob the People of 
the North for patronage. 
rpO VA R1HRR8, AIIil ll A SKS, & IHJ11.1)KRS. 
J Onr ’ Irrepressible Confifot" is iigarait high prices. We 
Offer you, at.74 Main St., Rochester, lion. Nail*. Hardware,Oik. 
Paints, Colnrs, Window*, Door*, Blinds, Hoe*, Spades, Shovels, 
Corn l'loea, Cultivators, and other article* too numerous to 
mention Also, the celebrated “Straight Draft Plow,” which 
we offer cheaper than the cheapest. 
689-tf MOORE. HEBING * CO. 
A MEBICAN G TT -A. 1ST O 
FROM 
JARVIS Ot BAKER’S ISLANDS, 
IN THS 
SOUTH PACIFIC OC’BiAN, 
lMI’ORTKD BT TIIK 
j .n p it / c*t j\~ ouJtJ\'o co.nptfjv-v. 
Office, 60 William Street, 
NEW YORK. 
0. 8. MARSHALL, Frrjt H. MATHER, Sec'g. 
J. K CHAPPELL, Agent, 59 Exchange St, Rochester, N. Y. 
A TTENTION! HKE-KEEP- 
.gjl. ERS.— Kidder's new system of Bee Management, where- 
\ / by a ,*warm of Bee* will collect from one to 
■< 'if three hundred pounil* ot hooey in one season. 
Vl VftQ i Bee, can be made to swarm uuv season, or 
"V joreveuted trom doing so. Can he prevented 
from flying to Die forests In nwarming-time. 
jGPfpanfc Ben'robbery 'wily prevented Moth millers 
prevented etfectually Never lone bees by the 
) Achlll of winter-or otherwise 
f V-J I will send my new Book Circular, cont.tining 
-F y 22 pages, free or postage, to any Bee-Keeper 
that will send me Ills Pnst-Dfllce address. It gives tho content* 
of Book Cu full, and give* general explanations, and cuts of the 
Patent Compound Hive. 
Or, I will send Kidder * Goado to Apiarian Science, on tho re¬ 
ceipt of fi7 cents, in postage stamps, which will give full partic¬ 
ular* in the Culture and Management of Die Honey Bee. 
All orders for Circulars, Books, Hive* Right*, kc... promptly 
attended to. Address K. I* KIDDER, Burlington, Vt.’ 
;<-rit>* Wanted — Both tsale and fe- 
to act as Local or Traveling Agent*. Liberal 
paid. For terms, kc.., apply or address I., L. 
12Merrimack St., Lowell, Mas* 695-4t, 
A Ij A.IJ'V' of the Episcopal Church wishes to en- 
AA gage a* Lady's Companion, or as Govenit** to young 
children in a pioua family. Would prefer the country -Satis¬ 
factory references can he given. Andress box 221, Woodstock, 
Canada Went. 596-3t 
I ersey ]<nll. Devon Hull and (Tiester 
*/ WHITE PIGS — Fer sale, a full blood Jersey Bull of Hen 
sliaw * herd—a verv superior animal The thorough-bred hull 
Thane of Devon, (Hurlburt's stock,) out of Lady Smith 1 1464) 
ljy Taurus, Also several litters of Chester Pigs, of The.- Wood's 
choice stock, at reduced prices. fi9ft2t 
Address D, CUTTH NYE, Lexington. Mas*. 
L IME.— Pago’s Prrpeiual Kiln, i'utnntod July, 
1867 —Superior to any in u*o for Wood Or CoaL 2>J cord* 
of wood, or IU tuns of coal tolOO bbla — coal not mixed with 
stone. Addrea* [434-tf J C. D. PAGE, Rochester. N Y 
