New University Algebra is submitted to the public as dis¬ 
tinguished for fullness of matter; for scientific arrangement; 
for ample discussion and rigid demonstration; for clear state¬ 
ment and close definition; for rules brief and of easy applica¬ 
tion; for examples numerous, apt. and strictly practical; for 
the nicest adaptation to the purposes of teaching; for whatever 
care, skill, and science can accomplish; and we do not doubt 
that it will meet with the most favorable reception by both 
instructor and pupil. Sold by Steele & A VERY. 
jUmcvtiscmcnts 
Hi.? Hwietw 
property and character. He had heard that Mr. 
Walton was going to “manage” him, but had mis¬ 
taken the purport of the word. He was as vindic¬ 
tive towards Mr. Walton as if that gentleman had 
done him some irreparable, life-long injury; and 
proved himself worthy ol all the unflattering appel¬ 
latives the merchant had bestowed upon him. It 
was enough to make Mr. Walton give up in 
despair; but he bore with it all like the modem -Ton 
that he was. He invariably bad a pleasant smile 
and nod for Zell when he met him. and repaid 
evil with good after the nicest of Christian-like 
measurement. At last this course of conduct began 
to tell —for Zell was human after all, and had his 
sunny spot about him somewhere. 
“What did Mr. Walton send over for to-day?” 
asked Mrs. Zeli, of her husband, who had just 
come in from the barn, one hot day in July. She 
was standing in the doorway — a bustling little 
woman, plainly yet neatly attired, and evidently 
possessing considerable “will power.” Intercourse 
with her gruff, sullen husband bad not driven all 
the cheeriness out of her face. 
“What did he want? Well—to see whether I 
would come over to-morrow and help him through 
with the grain.” 
“ And are you going?” 
“Of course not.” 
“ But why not?” 
“ Catch me going over, that’s all.” 
“ I think you might oblige him, J oun.” 
“ You needn’t bother yourself, any how.” 
“But I do bother myself about it,” said the 
woman. “ And I will bother myself about it. Your 
conduct towards Mr. Walton is beyond endur¬ 
ance,— and he is every inch a gentleman, and more, 
a Christian still 
to speak out as I think, 
duct presents to yours. 
BY ALICE CAKEY 
C IDER PRESS SCREWS— Five Feet Loxg For V 
IxCHKS Diameter— These powerful Screws twins' out IA 
third more juice than Portable Prcwcs Send for a 
Made by I.. M. ARNOLD. Poughkeepsie IN. Y t Foundry & 
Sketches of tkk Risk. Progress, and Decline of Seces¬ 
sion; with a Narrative of Personal Adventures among the 
Rebels. Bv W. G. Brown-low . Editor of the Knoxville 
Whig. Philadelphia: G. W Childs. Cincinnati: Apple- 
gate & Co. 
This volume is now before the loyal portion of the Union, 
rehearsing the history of Secession in Eastern Tennessee, and, 
in fact, all that part of the country which concluded to sever 
the ties connecting it with the "North.' No man can be a 
more hearty hater of the doctrines promulgated by Calhoun'. 
and culminating under Jefferson Davis, than the Parson. 
The following brief extract from the preface is a lucid expo¬ 
sition of the platform upon which he stands: 
11 1 have prepared this work from the single stand point of 
uncompromising devotion to the American Union as estab¬ 
lished by our fathers, and unmitigated hostility to the armed 
rebels who are seeking its destruction. My ancestors fought 
in its defense; and while their blood Hows in my veins, I shall 
instinctively recoil from bartering away the glory of its past 
and the prophecy of its future for the stained record of that 
vile thing, begotten by fraud, crime, and bad ambition, 
christened a Southern Confederacy. I cannot exchange 
historic renown for disgrace, national honor for infamy, how 
splendid soever may be the bribe, or how violent soever may 
be the compulsion. This is my faith as an American citizen.” 
Entertaining such views, the Parson threw his whole soul 
into the struggle, and with tongue and pen battled manftllly 
for the “ Old Flag.” Every means that could be employed by 
the rebels to have him alter his course were brought into use, 
and when bribes and threats had botli failed, his office (the 
Knoxville Whig) was taken from him, and himself consigned 
to the cell of a felon. Suffering deeply in person and estate, 
be avoided no responsibility, endured evil treatment, and 
daily contemplated the prospect of death upon the gallows in 
behalf of tlie sacred cause which he had espoused The 
perusal of his relation of the action of secessionists in Eastern 
Tennessee, their wantonneas, rapacity, brutality, and blood- 
tliirstiness, curdles the blood, and throws a softeningvail even 
over the terrible deeds of tlie Sepoys. 
The volume is a plain, honest recital of the sufferings of 
Unionists, and the plundering, savage proclivities of Seces¬ 
sionists. Those -who look for fine phrases, glossing over 
cruelty and sensuality will nnt find them. The Parson says: 
"Extreme fastidiousness of taste may. perhaps, shrink with 
over-sensitiveness from some Of the language I have employed. 
But it was no time for dalliance with polished sentences or 
enticing words; for an imminent necessity—like the * burden ’ 
of the old Hebrew prophets—was upon us, and the cause of 
our Lord and Land could be bestservedby the sturdy rhetoric 
of defiance and the unanswerable logic of facts. The traitors 
merited a Bword-thrust style, and deserved tlie strogest epithet 
1 have applied.” 
The typography of this book is excellent, as are all the 
other essentials to book-making. A life like steel portrait of 
the author adorns (although the Parson admits his beauty to 
be of the “ hard-favored ” sort,) the volume, and several well 
executed wood engravings illustrate its pages. We acknowl¬ 
edge our indebtedness to both author and publisher for copies. 
Ukt.oop the tents from the tent-poles, 
Hands that are knotty and strong! 
And yoke the teams to the gun-wains, 
And drag the guns along! 
And form into line, good fellows of mine, 
To right our country's wrong. 
Let rebels beat into plow-shares 
Their swords, as vre'rc marching on, 
Or well count them as altar-horns, the which 
Our victims shall bleed upon! 
Step quick into line, good fellows of mine, 
For tlie time of rest is goue. 
By God's good grace our Eagle 
Shall keep bis place in the sky; 
The world would swing a century back 
If he lu the dust should He, 
His great proud heart all cloven apart, 
And the film of death in his eye. 
The precious blood of the fathers 
Maketh our ilag so bright; 
Then bear it aloft with every star 
And every stripe in sight' 
And each gunner tread, with his hand on the 
Of his gun, to the field of fight. 
Careless of ribbons or roses 
To stick in our bosoms are we; 
Young lshrnaeL, sprung from the bushes 
And nursed in the wild, we agree 
That never a band of spangles can stand 
For the manhood of men, soul-free. 
Unloop, then, the tents from the tent-poles, 
Take cross-beams, and side-props, and all; 
The wind is trampling before us, 
And piping like Abner to Saul; 
So step into line, good fellows of mine, 
In honor to stand, or fall. 
M oney to l, < > a. jv. — The 51 
Cocntv Savings Institution ha- money to loan 
proved farms in Monroe and adjoining counties. 
.1 E. PIER PONT, Seere 
Rochester, June 13, 1882. 843-4 
Abel Drake's Wife. By John Sackders, author of the 
■ Shadow in the House,Lore's Martyrdom. " etc. New 
York: Harper & Bros. 
Here rve have a Factory” story,—a relation of the joys, 
sorrows, and toils of the Lancashire Cotton Spinners. The 
author, judging from his powers of delineation, is eminently 
qualified for the task of describing the lives of this class of 
operatives, both male and female, and is thoroughly con¬ 
versant with their habits ftnd conversation. The broad 
Lancashire dialect abounds through the volume, and seems 
true to the life. The work is paper-covered, belongs to 
“ Harper's Library of Select Novels." and the reader will find 
its perusal very agreeable. For sole by Steelr & Avery. 
O O 3D ’ S M O W I 1ST 
AND REAPING MACHINES, 
MANUFACTURED BY 
WALTER Am WOOD, Iloosic Falls, N 
The Machine is too well known to need description, to havj n? 
been awarded tlie Highest Prlie* throughout this country 1 
from the three last united States Fairs down to State ami 
County fairs without, number also at the great. French and 
Era'll mi Exhibitions, where it has borne away the highlit 
prizes ever ottered for Harvesting Machines. 
There were 5,060 of tbgnc Mowers manufactured and gold bv 
Mr WOOD last >,enson, which Is the be-t eviuence that the heavy 
complicated Mowers are beinv succeeded by lighter, cheaper 
and more practical machines. This machine lias no side draft 
nnd will do more work with the same power than any otW 
Machine In the market. 
Wood's Helf-Ralting Reaper nnd Reaper and 
Mower Combined. 
I have during the past year reconstructed my Self-Raking 
Reaper and Mower, and otter it to grain growing farmers, either 
as a Reaper alone, ot as a Self-Raking Reaper and Mower Com¬ 
bined. In a form which I am sure will give entire satisfaction to 
any grain grower who desires to cut his grain in the most expo, 
ditto ns and economical manner. 
The capacity of this Reaper, combined with its perfectly 
draft. fDe it as well for the inert extensive grain grower'in the 
eonntry. as for the small farmer of eighty acres 
I made and xold thi- Machine last year, as now constructed,to 
an extent that warrants me in recommending it fully. 
The Reaper I warrant capable of cutting and delivering 20 
acres of grass per dav, doing the work better than is usually 
done by bund rakers', and with less draft to the team. The 
Mower cuts a filly-four inch swath, anil is warranted equal to 
anv in the market. I continue, as heretofore, to manufacture 
the Manny Comiiini.T' Machine, with my latest improvement, 
to which I attach the Self-Raker if desired. 
full description* nf Machines will be found in pamphlet,which 
will be furnished on application to myself or any agent. 
Price of Wood's Self-Uniting Reaper, delivered on the 
cars at floosie Falls. $128.00 
" Selt-Rakiue Reaper and Mower Combined.Jfti.OO 
Single Mower. sum 
“ Manny- Combined. 125 . 1 m 
“ " " Self-Reaper attached.150 (m 
WALTER A. WOOD, Hoosick Falls, N. y. 
PERI NIC k STEWART. Agents, 
651-2t Mumtnrd Street, Rochester, N. Y 
The fact that the fish in the streams of the 
Mammoth Cave have no eyes, is explained by the 
hypothesis that the organ has become extinct from 
disuse through successive generations. We wonder 
whether, if this rebellion goes on. the next genera¬ 
tion of rebels won’t be born without stomachs. 
A prize of twenty thousand francs has been 
offered in France for the best essay on the “ Regen¬ 
eration of Bone.” The rebel Confederacy should 
try to get a recipe for the regeneration of bone and 
muscle. 
A London medical journal states the case of a 
man who lived a whole year after his hack-bone 
was broken. We mention this as an encouragement 
and consolation to the Southern Confederacy. 
It is said that fear has been known to turn a 
man’s hair from black to white in a single night. 
Buckner’s flag at Fort Donelson underwent that 
change within a similar period of time. 
It is said that in some parts of Mississippi the 
poor rebels have to subsist on bran. Let them be 
sure to get it fresh, and then every meal will be 
“ bran new.” 
A speaker at one of the anniversary meetings in 
Boston, in referring to his Satanic Majesty, styled 
him “the original Jefferson Davis.” 
The rebels, fearing that the battle may be to the 
strong, console themselves with the thought that 
the race is to the swift. 
According to the best calculation we can make, 
Memphis was last ditch No. 101. 
The rebels drew Porter on to New Orleans, but 
they didn’t draw him mild. 
The most suitable currency for skedaddlers —Shin 
plaster. 
You need not frown so; I intend 
What a contrast his con- 
In the spring, when our 
cattle got into his field, he quietly turned them out 
and repaired the fence. Had you anything to do 
with their getting in? When his cattle got into our 
field what did he do? Why he came over to see 
you, paid the $20 damages you were dishonorable 
enough to ask, and said nothing about the manner 
in which you had abused that fine, imported heifer. 
Did not his wife send over, almost every day, 
preserves and other delicacies when Eddie was 
sick? Does not his boy do many an errand for me 
at the village, making sunshine with that fair face 
of his wherever he goes? How often — ” 
“ That will do, wile. I am not going to help him,” 
“You have a hard heart and a hard head, John 
Zell. Kindness will not touch the one, nor the 
heaping coals of fire burn the other. You are 
getting more ‘crinkey’ than ever you were—and 
no wonder the neighbors call you what they do. I 
think it is a crying shame. And then that you 
should have no reason whatever for acting in the 
manner you do! That is the worst of it! The 
matter is worrying me, and it ought to worry you, 
Jons Zell. 1 do not profess to be a Christian 
woman, but I know what is right and what isn’t. 
Mr. Walton has been unwell this week, hands are 
scarce, he has much to do, and you might as well 
help him on as not. There—that is just what I 
think about it.” 
The good woman having “said her say,” went 
into the house, while her husband returned to the 
barn. 
Early the next morning, however, Zell was at 
work sharpening his scythe. 
“I am going to help Walton after all, wife,” he 
said. 
“So! and what has changed your mind? The 
manner in which I presented the matter yesterday?” 
“W-e-1-1, in part. I thought it all over. And 
another thing: you remember that I was to meet 
Jones at Beadk's store last night to pay the last 
Installment on that upper tract. I had not the 
money and asked an extension of time. Jones was 
pettish and inexorable, and stood out for the orig¬ 
inal stipulations. I had either to pay the money 
then and there, or forfeit the title, and the previous 
payments along with it. The money I could not 
pay, because 1 hadn’t it —and I had no friends of 
whom I could borrow. Just then Mr. Walton 
came in, became apprised of the facts, and advanced 
me the $500, not even asking my note as security. 
Now that is why i am going over to help him.” 
“While I am pleased at your going, I despise the 
motive. It is so entirely selfish. It would — ” 
“Now wife—don’t Bcold” — said Zell, in a tone 
so unusual to him, so kind and forbearing, that 
she opened wide her eyes. “Don’t scold just as 1 
am about to do better. I intend to go over to 
Locust Grove Farm, see Mr. Walton, acknowledge 
my errors like a man, morally, and walk into his 
grain like a man, physically.” 
Mrs. Zell’s brown eyes warmed up beautifully. 
She went and took the rough hands of her husband 
in her own. 
“Spoken like a man, John. I like that. Why 
this Btidden flood of good nature breaking over the 
barriers of—” 
“That will do. wife. I guess it wouldn't turn a 
saw-mill. Yon may look for me at dusk.” 
The bustling little woman gazed after her hus¬ 
band as he walked across the fields with his cradle 
on his back. She sang at her work that day, and 
the old house cat nibbed against her in appreciation 
of the singing—something she had not heard in her 
lease of lives, and of the latter she had enjoyed the 
full number usually allotted to all well behaved 
cats! 
That week the folks passing along the road were 
astonished to see “Crinkey” Zell cradling for 
James Walton. So were the town-people, a few 
evenings afterwards, to see Mr. Walton driving his 
span ot grays through the streets, with Zell sitting 
cosily by his side. 
“ Walton said he would manage Zell,” said the 
merchant, “and he has managed him —how, I 
cannot tell.” 
“ Both rhyme and truth in what you say,” echoed 
his friend. 
“Crinkey” Zell had indeed been “managed.” 
ne grew clever and sociable, made his home happy, 
gave freely to charitable institutions, connected him¬ 
self with everything promising social and intel¬ 
lectual advancement, and made hosts of friends 
wherever he went. 
Have you any “ crinkey” neighbors? Try Wal¬ 
ton’s plan of managing them. 
Mount Joy, Pa., 1.862. 
[Written for Moore’s Rural New-Yorker ] 
MANAGING A NEIGHBOR 
BY F. II. STAUFFER. 
Locust Grove Farm was in a bad condition 
when James Walton first became proprietor. It 
comprised seventy-five acres of originally excellent 
soil, but was almost ruined by mismanagement. 
The place derived its name from the locust trees 
with which it abounded, and which had grown up 
here, there, and everywhere, without any pretense 
to regularity. These trees gave the farm a stark, 
neglected appearance in winter; but when in blos¬ 
som, wrapped the whole place in their lavish 
adornments. 
Mr. Walton was a practical man. He was 
remarkably intelligent, and accepted information, 
no matter how humble and trifling the source from 
which it was derived. So far as books were con¬ 
cerned, bis well-stocked library betrayed his inclina¬ 
tions in that respect. They were of the most sub¬ 
stantial character, with here and there a volume of 
standard poems, such as belong to a love of rural 
things. Magazines devoted to field, farm, garden, 
and stock-raising, lay upon his table: and theso 
were not glanced over, but carefully read, and 
every new fact, and idea ticketed for actual experi¬ 
ment at a proper time. He was a man well-to-do, a 
good conversationalist, and in no wise pedantic; in 
Bbort, a real, glorious type of the farmer, who could 
lustily wield a flail, bold the plow lines like a 
prince, or deliver a sound, comprehensive address 
at a county fair. 
He had purchased Locust Grove Farm because 
he liked the location of it; it was a romantic spot, 
and while his quick eye took in its defects, his 
judgment as quickly told how they could be 
removed and remedied. So for a few weeks after 
liis arrival the saw and hammer were heard in every 
direction, and a strong force of men were at work. 
The barn was torn down and rebuilt; the dwell¬ 
ing proper remodeled without and within; new 
fences put up; useless trees cut down and others 
planted with an eye. to system; while by but a trifle 
of labor the approach to the farm was made alone 
to add fifty per cent, to the beauty of the same. 
After Mr. Walton had been tolerably well set¬ 
tled, he dropped one evening into a store in the 
adjoining village. The merchant grasped him cor¬ 
dially by the band, for they had been old acquaint¬ 
ances in a former locality. 
“Well, Walton, how do you like your new 
neighbor?” asked the merchant, among other ques¬ 
tions. 
“Mr. Zell do you mean?” 
“Yes, 1 Crinkey ’ Zell, as they call him.” 
“ I have, not seen anything of him as yet” 
“ He’ll make you aware of his proximity before 
long, I warrant you,” replied the merchant. “ And 
in the most unmistakable manner. I tell you, Wal¬ 
ton, it will be the only thing you will have to 
regret in your purchase. Others before you have 
bought, rented, and left, on his account; they could 
not stand out against him. He is the most unsocia¬ 
ble, quarrelsome, vindictive fellow, in these parts.” 
“I do not think he is very sociable,” said Mr. 
Walton. “He has not called on me yet—and I 
am a new comer, you know.” 
“Why, Walton,” said the merchant, excitedly — 
“the Lord knows I never speak ill of any one— 
but this ‘ Crinkey ’ Zell is an exceptionable case. 
He is a mean, contemptible, ungrateful fellow- You 
will find it to be so ia good time.” 
“I will buy him out,” said Mr, Walton. 
“He won’t sell,” replied the merchant. “That 
plan has been tried by others. It is more than 
likely that you will be wanting to sell to him. or to 
anybody, within a year.” * 
“I guess not,” said Mr. Walton, quietly. “I 
think I can manage him. I knoio I can.” 
“ It you do, you will have done more than any 
body else ever could do.” 
“ Time will show. Don't you think that I have 
improved uiy farm considerably?” 
“Very much — very much, Mr. Walton. It 
hardly looks like the same place.” 
“In tho same manner will I improve ‘Crinkey’ 
Zell, as you call him. He will hardly be like the 
same man." 
“You will not make a secret of the process, eh?” 
asked the merchant, laughing. 
“ Not at all. I'll find the approach to his heart, 
analyze the soil of his disposition, and remove the 
old stumps and gnarled trees. I am sure that I can 
manage him.” 
“You are confident, Mr. Walton. But I wish 
you good speed.” 
Time passed on, and Mr. Walton, to use a com¬ 
mon expression, found “ Crinkey ” Zell a “ hard 
nut to crack.” He sj urned all advances: he tried 
to injure his neighbor in every quarter, both in 
PREMIUM 
HAY ELEVATOR, 
All Cast Steel. Price *15.00. 
Cad be sent by Express every¬ 
where. 
WARRANTED. 
Address 
L. A. BEARDSLEY, 
South Edmrsttm. Otsego Co., 
N. r. 
AGRICULTURAL WORKS. 
C^CHENECTADY 
G. WESTING HOUSE Sc CO., Proprietors, 
MANUFACTURE THEIR PATENT 
ENDLESS CHAIN HORSE POWERS, 
COMBINED THRASHERS AND CLEANERS, 
T II It A S II E ItS AND SEPARATORS, 
CLOVER MACHINES, 
Wood-Saws, (Circular and Cross Cut,) «Jkc. 
Also an improved pattern ol LEVER or SWEEP HORSE 
POWERS and LARGE THRASHERS AND CLEANERS 
TOE FIRST P It E M I U BI 
was awarded our Thrasher and Cleaner, at the late New-York 
State Fair, which, with the many favorable reports from per¬ 
sons using them, prove them to he a superior machine, and an 
such are recommended to the. notice of the public. 
Also our Improved Clover Machines arc offered to the public 
as possessing all the necessary requirements for hulling and 
cleaning clover at nno operation in the most perfect manner. 
Prices and description of the above named machines will be 
found in our Illustrated Circular, which will he sent free to all 
applicants. Address G. WKST1NGI10USE & CO., 
643-6teo Schenectady, N. Y. 
For Moore's Rural New-Yorker 
MISCELLANEOUS ENIGMA. 
I am composed of 27 letters. 
My 24, 23. 22, 21, 11, 25, 7, 26 is the name of a distinguished 
general in our army. 
My 18, 16.17, 3, 2, 22 is what the Yankees are to Southern 
rebels. 
My 15. 10, 9, 13 is what we should improve. 
My 4. 6, 6, 7, 8, 9 is what we should possess. 
My 14. 17, 23, 20, 21, 18 is what some school boys love to play. 
My 11, 19, 20, 7 is a fish. 
My 12, 8. 15,19, 26, 3 is what we should not do. 
My 1. 2, 23, 22 is a number. 
My whole was uttered by a wise man, and may be found in 
the book of Proverbs. 
Ruby, St. Clair Co., Midi., 1862. Annie. 
5^" Answer in two weeks. 
UUSSELL’S 
V SCKEW POWER, 
COMBINED MOWER AND REAPER. 
Not a Cog in the Machine ! 
Friction Rollers upon the inner face of the drive wheel pass 
up the liange of a revolving Screw, which gives the. desired 
amount of motion to the pitman-crank, with least possible fric¬ 
tion. Perfect in its Work, and most simple and durable ui 
it* construction. 
Tlie Lightest Omit 
Mower and Reaper in the World. Send for circulars. 
Manufactured by RUSSELL k TREMAIN. 
ui.iSt Manlius, N. Y. 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
CHARADE. 
We are airy little creatures, 
All of different form and features 
One of us you’ll find in fat, 
And a second is in jet; 
But a third is set in tin, 
And a fourth a box is in; 
And the fifth, if you’ll pursue, 
It will never fiy from you. 
Villa Nova, Norfolk Co., C. W., 1862. 
23?” Answer in two weeks. 
1 < > It SALE. 
ONE OF THE BEST FARMS 
IJY WE STJSJtJX' .VA W VO 111 if. 
The Subscribers, assignees of GEO. BROWN, offer for sale 
_A_ FZAHtJVT OF SOS ACRES. 
All the buildings on said farm are of modern style, and in tip¬ 
top order—the barn alone costing over $8,000. Said Farm lies 
IN THE TOWN OF PHELPS, ONTARIO CO., 
Two and a half miles south-west of Oaks'Corners; has been 
under a well-directed system .of improvement for several y ears, 
arid is thoroughly under drained. The desir&blenewi of loca¬ 
tion, convenience and durability of buildings^ quality of eon, 
high state of cultivation, all combine to make it 
ONE OF THE MOST DESIRABLE FARMS 
Ever offered for sale. Said Farm will be gold at a baTguin. 
Possession given at any time. A part of the purchase money- 
can remain on the Farm. Also, with or without the Farm, 
i 350 Well-bred Spanish Merino Sheep and Lambs, 
Which, for quality, quantity and evenness of fleece, can't be 
beat—together with all of the Stock, Teams, Farming Utensils 
and Tools. For further particulars inquire of 
WM. JOHNSON or GEORGE C. MOORE. 
642 -lSt of Geneva, N x • 
For Moore's Rural New-Yorker. 
A QUESTION FOR SURVEYORS. 
Suppose it be required to run a line, of which, some years 
since, the. bearing was N. 45% E. 20 chains, and in running 
this line by the given bearing, the corner is found 20 links to 
the left, what is the present bearing of the line? 
Watertown, N. Y., 1862. J- J- Townsend. 
23P Answer in two weeks. 
Answer to Acrostieal Enigma:—All is not gold that glitt 
Answer to Geographical Enigma:—Harriet Beecher Stov 
Answer to Poetical Enigma:—Tlie father gave them $< 
One share was $200, the other $400. 
Answer to Mathematical Problem:—15. 70795 + inches. 
PROVISIONS, SEEDS, FRUITS, &c, 
Yl R0CERIES, 
JVC. J- JVEOTvTHtOE, 
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL 
GROCEIt AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, 
90 BufUsilo Street, Rochester, IN'. Y- 
Also, Dealer iu Clover and Timothy Seed, Seed Potatoes, 
Green and Dried Finite, &o I'it- Pure Wines and Lquors, 
and Rectified Whisky, for Medicinal purposes I*'" 
rpHE Ti E S T ADVERTISUNC4 
J- MEDIUM of its Class, in MOORE'S RURAL NEW-YORK¬ 
ER. the leading and largest circulated Agricultural, Business 
and Family Newspaper in America Business Men who wish to 
reach, at once, tens ok thousands of the most enterprising 
Farmers, Horticulturists, Ac., and thousands Of Merchants. 
Mechanics, Manufacturers and Professional Men. throughout 
the loyal States, should give the Rcral a trial. As the business 
season is at hand. Now is the Time for all who wish to adver¬ 
tise widely and profitably, to select tbe best mediums —and that 
the above is first of its class, many prominent Manufacturers, 
Nurserymen, Seedsmen. Dealers in Agricultural Implements, 
Machinery, &c., Wholesale Merchants, Educational Institutions, 
Publishers, Laud and Insurance Companies, Agencies, &c., &c,, 
in various parts of the country, can attest. 
[From the JYt U) York Daily World, Feb. 15, 1862.] 
Moore's Rural Nkw-Yorker comes to tis freighted with 
ili usual amount c-f information, valuable, not to tanners Slone, 
but to all who Lite an interest In the improvements of the 
times. For years it has maintained an enviable position us a 
family newsiwper, and rrt ire gratified to leArn that lUpros. 
pects were never better than they are at the present tune. We 
commend it to !li» notice of those of ou , r readers who take an 
interest in R. rlc.ultiiraJ and horticultural matter*, and, wo may 
add, to advertisers who dtuirs to reach the farming column oi- 
ties' throughout the country. 
[From the New ttrk Daily lHt/ies.] 
Moore's Rphal Nkw-Yorkku, published at Rochester, has a 
verv large circulation, especially among the ngncullural popu¬ 
lation of the Northern, Western, and Middle States, and Offers a 
very excellent medium for advertising to business men of this 
city who de-ire to reach those sections. It is an able and 
well-managed paper, and deserven the success it has achieved. 
[From the New York Daily Tribune.\ 
WE don't care what a publisher charges, so that he gives us 
the worth of our money Mr Moore charges 35 cents a bne, 
and his circulation makeB it cheap advertising. We don't know 
the delation of tlie Rphal New-Yokkkk. but we know that 
it pai^Ks to advertise iu it. 
MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YORKER, 
the largest circulated 
AGRICULTURAL, LITERARY AND FAMILY WEEKLY, 
JS PUBLISHED EVERY 8ATURDAY, 
BY D. D. T. MOORE, ROCHESTER, N. Y. 
Office, Union Building, Oii|K>sit« tho Court Uouse, Buffalo Street, 
TERMS IN ADVANCE : 
Two Dollars a Year— To Clubs and Agents as follows:— 
Three Copies one year, for $5; Six, and one free to club agent, 
for $10 ; Ten, and one free, for $15 ; Fifteen, and one free, forfzi, 
Twenty, and one free, for $25; and any greater number at same 
rate-only 51.25 per copy. Club papers directed to individuals 
and sent to as many different Post-Offices as desired. As we pre¬ 
pay American postage on papers sent to the British 1 10 ' ‘’“' e ' 
our Canadian agents and friends must add 12 >i cents per 
to the club rates of the Rural. The lowest price of copies sen 
to Europe, &c.. is $ 2 . 50 -including postage. 
l-T The Legal Bate of Postage ox the RuRal New- 
Yorker is only 3>* cents per quarter to any part of this • ■ 
(except Monroe county, where it goes free,) and b,j cen » 
other State or Territory, if paid quarterly in advance 
post-office where received. 
NEW University AlGEPRa A Theoretical and Practical 
Treatise, containing many New and Original Methods and 
Applications. For Colleges and High Schools UyUoRATio 
N. Rouinson', LL. L>. late Professor of Mathematics in the 
United States Navy, and author of a Full Course of Mathe¬ 
matics. New York' ivisou, l’hinney & Co. 
This work is not a mere revision of the old University 
Algebra, but a new book. Such features of the original pub¬ 
lication as gave it uny claims to superiority, care has been 
taken to preserve, the aim of the author evidently being to 
make that which was pronounced good decidedly better. The 
Poetry from the Bible.— Milton. Y r oung, and 
Cowper—names dear to every one who has capacity 
to know genuine poetry, and to enjoy its ennobling 
influences—made the Hebrew bards their models, 
and to their supremacy among the lovers of the 
lyre, let the “Paradise Lost” of Milton, the “Night 
Thoughts” of Young, and the “Task” of Cowper 
bear witness. 
