El’S Eimj lL 
rille. After that, she strolled down to the bank 
of the lake with Chau let, who was her last 
partner, and they eat down on the grass and 
held a pleasant chat, while Bex wandered off 
in the woods alone, to muse on the beauty of 
her smile and the music of her tone. 
“ Isn't she beautiful, Ben ?” t cried Charley in 
an enthueiactic tone, when the two friends were 
alone together that evening. “ Who would think 
she was only fourteen years old ? And so intel¬ 
ligent, too! She seems quite enraptured with 
the Harbor—says it’s the most delightful place 
she ever saw. She never wants to go back 
South, she says. Tell yon what, Be.v, you'd 
better marry her and take her home to keep 
your mother company. Wouldn’t it be fine to 
have her about yon all the time, eh? I wish 
I was rich, as you are. I’d marry her myself. I 
What makes you so sober?” 
“ Don’t joke, C'HAKLey,” said Ben, turning 
away. 
“ Oh, hut I’m half in earnest,” said Charley. 
“And by the way, we are all going to take a 
boat-ride on Friday evening—yon and I, and 
Miss Castlandt, and Nellie Burt, and half- 
a-dozen others. Yon'11 get acquainted with her 
then.” 
Ben’s eyes lighted np, but he was walking 
away, and Dbnnison did not see this sign. In*- 
deed, he more Ilian half thought his friend had 
taken some unaccountable dislike to the beau- 
new-comer—an opinion which grew on 
him, on the night of the boat-ride, when he 
noticed that Ben, who was usually the life of 
the party, was uncommonly taciturn on this 
occasion, and more than ordinarily so in his 
manner towurd Boars Capti.andt. But Bkn 
Manly felt in his heart a feeling too sacred to 
be exposed to the gaze of others, and though he 
silent us he sat by Susie’s side in the boat, 
he felt her contiguity throughout every fiber. 
How he thrilled with feeling as Susie leaned 
over him to whisper a word to Nellie Burt, 
aud her loug curia fell like a golden shower 
upon his knees! Ah, that night was one long 
to be remembered by Ben Manly— all music, 
and beauty, and the glimmer of moonlight on 
the smooth waters. 
HUMOROUS 8CRAPS. 
MOOEE'S RTJEAL NEW-YORKER, 
THU LABGEST-CIRCULATING 
AfiEICnmiAL, KTEB1EX HD FAMILY NEWSPAPER, 
IS PUBLISHER EVERY SATURDAY 
BY D, D. T. MOORE. ROCHESTER, N. Y. 
Office, Union Hoililins, Opposite the Conrt House, Buffalo St. 
ET ELIZABETH T, POP.TER BEACH, 
Winter, old Winter, hath just peeped in— 
Only a moment, ‘cn passant." called ;— 
But 1 saw hie ieiele-bearded chin,— 
And 1 thought of the Poor, by his visit appalled. 
Homeless and friendlese 1 shivering with cold! 
Is the picture they see in his advent near;— 
’Tie an oft-totd story, worn out and old, 
That cheerless tale, of the winter drear. 
But little the children of Fortune know, 
Of the biting blast, so cruelly keen 1- 
Of the chilling shroud of the winter enow; 
And the frozen ** crust," in the streets I ween! 
Such mu slugs the falling enow-flakes brought, 
And I felt how fraught with fear, 
To the poor and friendless must be the thought, 
-Of the cold, bitter hour- drawing near! 
Ah I how*changed the scene, to the wealthy and gay! 
Inspiring and jovooa their view. 
Of old Winter’s cards, saying—“I'm on my way, 
With my mantle of pent!” hue. • 
“And I’ll spread it fair, o'cnvaley and field. 
And your avenues far and wide, 
And boundless the Joy my presence shall yield, 
From snow-ball to merry slelgh-ride. 
“With silver-bells Jingling to pulses of love, 
Sweet eyes sparkling lovingly near, 
As bright at the starlets, pure beaming above. 
And oh far more precious and dear 1 
“And the slamming of crystal mirrors clear, 
And the dance, and the Christmas yule bright, 
The cosy fire, with the loving and dear, 
Shut in from the stormy night. 
“ Will brighten your spirits with social glee, 
And render full welcome ray call! 
So merry aud Joyous, the wealthy will be, 
As my heralds of white softly fall” 
Ah, yes 1 I sighed, there are pictures tiro, 
For the children of earth here below; 
And the lens Fate giv'efh, doth tinge the view,— 
Either rosy,—or dark with woe, 
’Tis blessed, to think, the heavens above, 
Alike, to the wealthy and poor, 
Will beam with roseate hues of love. 
If only the “heart be pure 1” \ 
And the poor, wan hands, that toiled so heke 1 
That toever might cull a flower 1 i 
Shall gather whole garlands of roses dear, 
To form an Eternal Bower! 
a newspaper says« a child was rnn over by 
a wagon three years old and cross-eyed with 
pantalets on which never spoke afterwards.” 
Parasol—A protection against the snn, used by 
ladies made of cotton ar.d whalebone. 
Straps —Articles worn under the boots of gentle¬ 
men made of calfskin. 
An exchange, describing a celebration, says 
' The procession was very fine and nearly two 
miles in length tis was the prayer of Dr. Perry, 
the chaplain.” 
Puck.—T he Ban Francisco comic paper— cites 
the late earthquake in that city as a proof that 
“ the world wage.” The same paper comes out 
for the Fenians in this wise : 
riTT PAT. 
Puck wears the green upon his breast 
The Shamrock in hie hat.; 
And when he thinks of Ireland's woes 
His heart goes pity Pat! 
A countryman took hie seat at a hotel table 
opposite to a gentleman who was indulging in a 
bottle of wine. Supposing the wine to be com¬ 
mon property, our unsophisticated country 
friend helped himself to it with the other gentle¬ 
man’s glass. “ That’s cool!” exclaimed the 
owner of the wipe, indignantly. “ Yea,” replied 
the other, “I should think there was icc in it." 
The Rural New-Yorker is designed to be unsur¬ 
passed in ViIm, I'nrltj-, and Variety of Contents. Its 
Conductor earnestly labors to render the Rural a Reli¬ 
able Guide on all the important Practical, Scientific and 
other Subjects connected with the boslnea* of those 
whose Interests it zealously advocates. As a Family 
Journal it is eminently Instructive end Entertaining— 
being 80 conducted that it can be safely taken to the 
Home* of people of intelligence, taste and discrimination. 
It embraces more Agriculturrt.'Hortlr.ultural, Scientific, 
Educational, Literary and News Matter, interspersed 
•with appropriate engravings, than any other journal,— 
rendering it by far the inoet complete Agricultural, 
Literary and Family Newspaper in America. 
ous difficulties not long alter taking up his 
residence in Washington; aud, iu short, at the 
end of two or three yeai>e he had loRt the bulk of 
his wealth. Mrs. Castlandt, also, had become 
an invalid, fretful and unhappy, end only rendered 
more so by the loss of their former richc-e. 
They continued to reside there a few years 
longer, but Mr. Castlandt was unable to 
recover bis former position. 
When Susie was a child of fourteen years, her 
father bade adieu to Washington, and with such 
remnant of liU property a* he still possessed, 
removed his family to Rose Harbor, his North¬ 
ern birth-place—a quiet village on the banks of 
one of the most beautiful of our Northern lakes. 
If you were ever to visit Rose Harbor, you 
would think yon had fallen on an old, old village j tiful 
of some foreign country. That such a quiet, 
forsaken, forgotten village should sit dozing on 
the shores of an American lake, seems almost 
incredible. All day long it sleeps in the summer 
snn, and the soft lake breeze wanders np and 
down the empty streets, meeting no human 
being, and only the thick-leaved trees nod it 
welcome. Grass grows in the middle of St.’ 
George street, the main avenue of the place, and 
on a rainy afternoon you might stroll about the 
village by the hour, and feel about as much alone 
as yon would among the dusty ruins of Pompeii. 
Sometimes a forlorn schooner comes into the 
harbor and rounds to the crumbling wharf, and 
unloads a cargo of I know not what ; and then a 
rickety cart is busy all th,e next day in carrying 
loads away to I know not where. Once a week, 
the stage from Broad Valley hursts into the 
astonished village, and rattles down St. George 
street, and blows a lond horn that evokes unsus¬ 
pected dogs from dreamy door-yards, who bark 
furiously till the wonder passes, and then trot 
slowly hack to their hiding-places; whirls up to 
TERMS, IN ADVANCE: 
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free to Club Agent, for $19; Ten, and one. free, for $25, 
ar.d any greater number ut the umc rate — only $2.50 per 
copy. Clab paptn< directed to Individual* and sent to as 
many diflercct FoW-OfllCe* ns desired. As wc pre-pay 
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the Publisher, may be mailed at ui» risk. 
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specified price for a club or single copy, will be credited 
only ns per rates. Persons sending less than full price for 
this volnmc will find when thcJr subscription* expire by 
referring to figure* on address label—the figures Indica¬ 
ting the No. of paper to which they have paid being given. 
V For Publisher's Notice*, &e., eee preceding page. 
^OOD BOOKS FOR 
FARMERS AND OTHERS. 
ORANGE JUDD <fc CO., 
AGRICULTURAL BOOK PUBLISHERS, 
41 Park JUoe, .Vctc York. 
Publish and supply Wholesale and Retail, the 
following good Books: 
SPECIAL NO TICE.-•■Amj cf these Hooks will be 
sent, Post-Paid, to any part qf Uw country on receipt 
of the annexed price. 
American Agriculturist.per year $1 50 
Amerlkanlsrhcr Agrtcnltnriet (German)...per year 1 50 
Allen's (L. F.i Rural Architecture.each 1 50 
Allen's (R. L ) American Farm Book. 1 50 
Alien's Diseases of Domestic Animals. j 00 
American Bird-Fancier. 30 
American Rose Guitarist. 30 
American Weed* and Useful Plants. 1 T.5 
Jlarry'* Fruit Hardens..... 1 75 
Bethent's Poulterer'* Companion.. 2 00 
Bcment's Rabbit Fancier... . 30 
Bonsalnganlt's Rural Economy. 1 go 
Brldgetnan s Fruit Cultivator's Manual. 75 
Brldgeman's rounj: Gardener'* Assistant. 2 CO 
Brandt's Age of fl(iw » : English and German).. 50 
Breck's Book of Flower*..... 1 50 
BalstV Flower Garden Directory. 1 :o 
Bntet"* K..ml!y Kitchen Gardener . ! 00 
Btirr'e Vegetable* of America. 5 00 
Carpenters' and Joiners* Hand Book (Holly). 7.5 
Charlton's Grape-Grower's Guide. 75 
Cole’s <S. tv.) American Fruit Book. GO 
CopelandV Country I.ffe.■ 4 50 
Cotton Planter's Manual (Turner).. 1 50 
Dadd’s Modern Horse Doctor. 1 50 
DuiM's (Geo. II.! Ann dean Cattle Doctor.. 1 50 
DaraWnek Manual. 1 7 -, 
Dog and Glilt (Hooper's'l .... so 
Downing's Fruits and Fruit Tree* of America. 3 00 
E iM wood on Cranberry. 75 
BillOtt'* Western Fruit Grower's Guide. 1 50 
Flax Culture, very good ...... 50 
French'* Farm Drainage. 150 
Field's Thom ft* W .) Pear Culture... 1.. 1 25 
Fish Culture... 125 
Flint (Charles LJ on Grasse*. .. 2 00 
Flint’* Milch Coivs und Dairy f arming.. 2 00 
Fuller'* Grape < ultnrUt... 1 50 
Fuller'* Strawberry Cnltnriet... 20 
Good air > Principles of Breeding..’ 1 25 
Gray’*How Plante Grow... l 2o 
Guenon on MUch Cow*. 75 
Haraszthy Grape Culture, Ac. 5 00 
Harris' Iujurlou- Insects, pUio $8,i0; colored. 4 50 
Herbert'* Hint* to Horsekeepera. 1 75 
Hint* to Itltlcmen, hv Cleveland. 1 so 
Hop Culture, very good...] 40 
Johnston's Agricultural Chemistry ... 1 75 
Kemp’s Landscape Gardening. 2 00 
Latlgstroth on Hie Honey Bee,. 2 00 
LeucharV How to Build'Hot-housee. 1 50 
Linsleyy (D. C.J Morgan Horses.... 1 50 
Majrbewv nweuateil Howe Doctor... 3 50 
Mayhew's Illustrated Horse Mange meat. 3 50 
McMahon'S American Gardener... 2 50 
Mile* on the Home’*foot.... 75 
My Farm ut Edgewotid.. 2 00 
Norton's Scientific. Agriculture. 75 
Onion Culture, verv good. 20 
Onr Farm of Four 'Acres (bound) 60c; paper.” 30 
Pardee on Strawberry Culture.. 75 
Poddcs's Land Measurer........ . , . 00 
Qulnby's My*u*.rie« of Bec-Keepine. 1 75 
Rabbit Fancier.. 30 
RamlullV Sheep Husbandry..’ 1 50 
Randall's Fine Wool Sheep Husbandry. 1 00 
Rand's Flowers for Parlor and Garden. 3 00 - 
River's Orchard Howe*. 50 
Scheuck's Gardener’s Text-Book. 75 
Shepherd'* own Book. 2 25 
Skinful Housewife . 75 
Smith's Landscape Gardening. 1 50 
Spenccr'e Education of Children. l 50 
Stewart's (John) Stable Book. 1 50 
Ten Acre* Enough . 150 
Thaer - * (A. I)./ Principles ol Agriculture. 2 50 
Thomas’ Fruit C’UltUrtel. 1 50 
Thompson’e Food for Animate . ,, . 1 00 
Tobacco Culture, very good. 25 
Todd's (3. K.) Young Farmer's Mauual. 1 50 
Yauxv Villa* and Cottage*. 3 00 
Warder's Hedge* and Evergreens. 1 50 
Watson'* American Home Garden . 2 00 
Wax Flowers (Art of Making)..... 2 00 
Woodward'* Conntrv Homes....... 1 50 
YouuU and Spooner'on the Horse. 1 50 
Youatt and MartlD on Cattle... 1 50 
Yonanon IbeHog... 1 00 
Youait od Sheep. 1 00 
You mans’ Houshold Science. 2 00 
A Fact Heretofore Unadvertised. —The 
daily sales of Phalon’s “ Night-Blooming Ci rcus’’ 
exceed by more than one hundred percent, those 
of any ten other perfumes for the hankerchicfs 
that figure in the list of choice extracts, whether 
original or imitations of French or English 
articles. Sold everywhere. 
Written Expressly for Moore's Rural New-Yorker. 
SUSIE CASTLANDT: 
Jt is well to get clear of a cold the first week, 
but it is much bettor and safer to rid yourself of 
it the fir6t forty-eigpt hours, the proper remedy 
for the purpose being Dr. Jayne’s Expectorant. 
BY WILLIAM WIRT SIKES, 
Chapter I. —Rose Harbor. 
One of those perplexing questions which 
seefn destined never to reach a settlement sat¬ 
isfactory to all parties, is that which relates 
to the capacity of the human heart to entertain 
more than one perfect love during a life-time. 
On one side it is contended, by those learned in 
the love of the heart, that a love which has oucc 
enfolded its object with the strength of a perfect 
passion, reaching the soul’s depths, and sweep¬ 
ing its arches with its sublime flight, exhausts 
itself in that manifestation, and can never know 
a second object. There may be an echo of the 
one love, but there cannot be again perfect love. 
On the other side, J know some people, (who, 
judged by the experience they have hud, ought 
to know whereof they speak,) who hold that the 
“one love and one only” doctrine, is all fallacy, 
and that a heart of wide and generous capacity 
knows no such shackling law as this. 
Which is right ? I do not propose to decide. 
I only mean to tell a story, which involves this 
question curiously enough; a story which I think 
I should hardly have undertaken to invent; but 
which, in view ot its close adherence to a real 
history 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
ILLUSTRATED REBUS. 
three rival stage lines are a memory. If all 
others have forgotten those days of bustle and 
life, there is one man living who has not. His 
name is Ben Manly. He still lives at the Har¬ 
bor, and he remembers as if it were yesterday, 
the day when he first beheld Susie Castlandt 
and loved her. ’Susie was very beautiful then. 
She had something of the Southern precocity, 
ami her form was so luxuriantly rounded that 
she seemed older by two or three years than she 
really was. Her long curls hung quite down to 
her waist, and her eyes were of the most en¬ 
trancing softness. Ben Manly— then a lad of 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker, 
GEOGRAPHICAL ENIGMA. 
I am composed of 49 letters. 
My 18, 1, 28. 38. T, 13 is a county in New York. 
My 4.19, 6. 36, 9. 46 is a county in Maryland. 
My 19. 2, 36.19, 25, 37 is a county in New York. 
My 47.17, 10. 28. 9.12 ie a county in Virginia. 
My 8. 8. 21. 2^3.1. 49. 19 is a county in Pennsylvania. 
My 41. 17. 80. 36, 9 is a county in Maine. 
My 23, 42, 2, fi. is a county in Texas. . 
My 14. 5,17.16, 40 js a county in Missouri 
My 11, 33, 1, 27, 22,19 is a county in California. 
My IS, 3J, 32,1516 a eocnty in Kansas, 
My 48, 88, 24. 29, 2. 34 is a county in Minne 60 tA 
My 39. 44. 20, 35, 4S, 28, 45, 9, 49 is a county in Illinois. 
My whole is an old but true saying. 
Darien, N. Y. c. s. b. 
£ST" Answer in two weeks. 
I have no hesitation in penning, 
Mr. George Castlandt was a Northerner by 
birth. He had married a Virginian heiress, and 
thus became the owner of a plantation well 
stocked with slaves. Their daughter Susie was 
the only child Mr, and Mrs, Castlandt ever 
had; she was born on the plantation, and her 
childhood, until she was eight or nine years old, 
was passed in the luxurious case belonging to a 
wealthy planter’s only daughter, —petted and 
caressed, waited on by a retinue of colored ser¬ 
vants, never crossed iu any of ber wishes —except 
by her mother. Mrs. Castlandt, who was not 
u woman oi the sweetest and finest impulse*, 
worshipped her handsome husband after the 
manner of her kind, and led him n weary life 
with ber unreasoning Jealousies. She even grew 
jealous of her own child; and there arose, there¬ 
fore, a lamentable absence of affection between 
the mother and daughter, which lasted through 
the yearsVtf maturer life. 
‘‘George, you make a fool of that child!” 
Mrs. Castlandt would exclaim, with flashing 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
MISCELLANEOUS ENIGMA. 
«. JD. JAYNE’S EXPECTORANT, 
A Safe and Standard Remedy 
I am composed of 23 letters. 
My 6, 21, 4 is a kind ef wood. 
My 7, 9,16 is a number. 
My 18, 22, 17 is an article of clothing. 
My l, 19,10. 6 is a'mlneral. 
My 12, 2,11 is a boy's name. 
My 23,14, 3 ie what young folkB are. 
My 8,13, 30,15 are letters of the alphabet. 
My whole were the dying words of a hero, 
Trenton, Ill. - 1 
J3F” Answer in two weeks. 
course, they occupied the same room. Regard¬ 
ing Susie Castlandt, they had long ceased to 
hold conversation. Perhaps neither of them 
could have explained exactly why this was so, 
though no, doubt the sagacious reader will 
undereiand it. It had grown upon them al¬ 
most insensibly. 
One day when Charley was gone to the vil¬ 
lage on some c-rraud od' his own, Ben went into 
their mutual room, and seeing a daguerreotype 
case ying on the table: he took it up and opened 
it. His face tin shed and then paled, as he found 
himself gazing on the portrait of Susie Cast¬ 
landt, bis own love! 1 How did it come here? 
Was it Charley's? If so, where did he get 
it? Had Susie given kto him? What could it 
mean ? He was so occupied in gazing upon the 
features of the only nut l oil earth that he loved, 
that be did not hear Cl uilev enter the room— 
did not know that lie stood looking over his 
shoulder, 
Ben was awakened ffom his reverie by a burst 
of merry laughter. Hi turned about and con¬ 
fronted his life-long friend with a pale, stem 
face. [To be continued, 
CONSUMPTION 
PLEURISY, 
CROUP, 
HOARSENESS, 
ASTHMA. 
BRONCHITIS, 
WHOOPING COUGH, 
COUC-HS AND COLDS, 
AND ALL 
pnaoNARY 
AND 
BRONCHIAL COMPLAINTS 
For Moore'E Rural New-Yorker, 
AN ANAGRAM. 
accent Coughs and Colds. Pleurttir Pains, <tc., are 
quickly and effectually cured by its diaphoretic, -, 00 th- 
lag, and expectorant power. 
Asthma it always cures. It overcome* the spasmodic 
contraction or the air v<-**<*te. and by producing free ex¬ 
pectoration, at once remove* all difficulty or breathing. 
Bronchitis readily yielrte to the Expectorant. It sub¬ 
due* the Sritlanimation which extend* through the tvind- 
tnbee. promotes free expectoration, and euppresnua at 
once the cough aud pain. 
Con sump ton.—F or this Insidious and fatal disease no 
remedy has everbeen found so effectual. It subdues she 
inflammation, suppresses the cough and pain, and re¬ 
lieves the liltnetilty of breathing, and by causing an easy 
expectoration. «J1 Irritating and obstructing matters are 
removed from the lunge. 
Whooping Cough Is promptly relieved by this Expect¬ 
orant. Jt shortene the duration of the- disease one half, 
and greatly mitigate* the sufferings of the patient. 
In all Pulmonary Conplainte. In Croup, Plenrisr, Ac., 
it will be lotiqd to be prompt, safe, pleasant, aud reliable. 
The Expectorant and all Dr. D. Jayne & Sox'* Family 
Medicine* are sold Iu Rochester br Messrs. LANE & 
PAINE, and fOST & BRUFF, and by Druggest* every¬ 
where. S31-4r 
Laceuomi, aielbmuo, ot olryg Barie, 
Het nueqe fo hte lowdr dan het dilch fo het kajeg 
Hty seginn gamdmocn hem wtbi patrure hob^d, 
Liehw sage no gase hyt lendsorp dolfun. 
Laingsburgh, Mich. h. a. r. w. 
Answer in two weeks. 
the Biunc class. Rarely is 6een a friendship eo 
long-enduring, so faithful and true, as was that 
which existed between Ben Manly and Char¬ 
ley Dennison. 
Susie had been a week at the Harbor, when 
one day there was given a pic-nic in the Long 
Woods, which she was invited to attend. It was 
there that she first saw onr two friends. There 
was a dance in an open space of the woods, after 
ihe dinner on the grass, and Susie’s hand was so¬ 
licited by in ore than one of the admiring Rose Har¬ 
bor youth; but she danced, whether through pur¬ 
pose or chance, with no one but Ben and Char¬ 
ley, eacu of whom led her on for a single quad- 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
MATHEMATICAL PROBLEM. 
What length of rope must be attached to a halter 
four feet long so that a horse may feed over 2# acres 
of ground? P. C. Emigh, 
Wayne Co. N Y. 
23r“ Anew in two weeks. 
