STAMMERING 
.a.'*?' j i ■*?*• 
“My dear, I’ve made a dreadful mistake ! It’s 
Sir Harry who’s to— 
“Not to succeed to the property you said was 
Harold St. Vraie’s mamma?’’ said Lucy’s voice, 
hurriedly. 
“ Yes; I found it out only just now.” 
“Oh, mamma, how stupid! What an awful 
nuisance!” burst out Miss Harwich; “ and here, 
after he's proposed and accepted! And I might 
have had Collier so easily!” and the young lady 
stamped with passion. 
Agatha Clare turned her face away to avoid 
seeing St. Vraie’s. His features were ghastly 
pale, and his lips quivering, for the blow struck 
hard. But his resolution was soon taken, and 
hl6 face grew stern nud composed. Turning to 
Agatha, whose hazel eyes were full of soft com¬ 
passion, he said, with difficulty: 
“You’ll keep the secret, Miss Clare?” 
She bowed, and he passed out. As he entered 
the large room Lucy was saying, passionately, 
“Tied irrevocably!” 
“No, :Mi*s Harwich,” said St. Vraie, haugh¬ 
tily, while mother and daughter were overwhelm¬ 
ed with confusion. “ The secret of these rooms 
—the whispering-gallery—lias put me in possess¬ 
ion of your conversation; I therefore release 
you freely from your promise; and I trust,” he 
added, sarcastically, “ that your future conquest 
may be more satisfactorily ended.” 
lie bowed low and stood aside for them to 
pass. Lucy’s beautiful face crimsoned and paled 
alternately, but her accustomed spirit deserted 
her, and she and her crest-fallen mother descend¬ 
ed into the court-yard, whence, under the plea 
of fat igue, they soon drove off, the baronet being 
in attendance. 
Agatha Clare became conscious that llurold 
8t. Vraie looked on her to a certain extent., as a 
sharer in his secret, and she could not help ob¬ 
serving his subdued manner and humble defer¬ 
ence toward bcr. He rode borne by her side that 
evening, and seemed unwilling to waste words 
on any one else. Afterward he was a frequent 
visitor, and ultimately lie asked Mrs. Clare to 
give him “ her greatest treasure,” w'hich, with 
her treasure’s sanction, she promised to do. 
And as Harold passed the turquoise betrothed 
ring on Agatha’s slender finger, and lovingly 
pressed her hand, he whispered : 
“ 1 don’t think any whisper-room will part us, 
my own ?” 
Agatha’s reply is unrecorded. 
dropping her dark eyelashes over her violet eyes 
with a timid asjiect, “for my stupidity in pro¬ 
posing the visit I ought to have remembered 
all that you must .remember when Varyville is 
mentioned.” 
“The stupidity’s mine, Miss Harwich,” inter¬ 
rupted St Vraie, with a smile. “ My morbid 
recollections are ridiculous. Never mind them. 
We’ll go to Vrayville, and I can lead the explor¬ 
ers over every corner and tell all the legends—if 
Mr. Thorpe will allow me,” he added, with a 
slight sneer. 
He might have been excused for this; for this 
Mr. Thorpe, who had purchased Vrayville lor 
the sake more of itB ruins than of its farms, was 
a rich man, who bought the place for self-grati¬ 
fication, and was as chary of showing it os lie 
was of his picture-gallery and ills gardens. He 
had refused Harold permission to sketch the old 
ruins which had been his forefathers’ for seven 
centuries, and therefore there was mutual dis¬ 
like between Thorpe and St. Vraie. 
“ i admire violet-eyed blondes,” said Harold 
to himself, as he strolled down the lawn; but if 
I did not, I should eertuinly he enslaved by that 
hazel-eyed, brown-haired beauty. What a calm 
self-trust and stately quiet there is about her! 
But she rather repels.” 
Agatha’s accustomed demeanor deceived many. 
Accounted cold and slow of feeling, she was a 
girl capable of strong emotions. For him who 
her heart Agatha would be a very heroine 
THE MONK AND THE SHEPHERD 
From the German of Uhl and for tlie Rural New-\orker. 
by john b. duffby. 
MONK. 
Why stand’et tbou thus, in silent smart, 
O shepherd, tell to me ? 
Here, too, there throbs a wounded heart, 
That draws me unto thee. 
sekpbbhu. 
And cans’t thou ask J O look around! 
My darling valley see! 
On the wide fields no flower is found, 
And f8ded is each tree! 
MONK. 
Grieve not! Grieve not! What is thy woe? 
What but a heavy dream ? 
The meadows soon with flowers shall glow 
The trees with blossoms gleam, 
Then shall the cross I kneel before 
Stand on the green lawn there: 
Yet it shall bloom, alas! no more, 
But e’er death’s image bear. 
M THUMB. 
Artioii ViT.t, originated on our grounds n few years ago: remark 
„ i of murti Tnlue In the class of small hardy ever- 
nos, w here, large trees may not. be admissible, 
old, IS inches in height, and 18 Inches broad, drawn from 
now tiifer it for sale. Cor the first lime, at the following 
the same in breadth, Si each. Smaller Plants, say « to 8 
A lit}W uwan V»n«’S> .. - - 
able for its slow growth and compact svmmetrlcal habit. 
We have no hesitation in recommer.dluv It 9? 
grecnp, lor the decoration of Gardena. Lawn* or Cimctcrics. v r 
The above cut It a portrait of a specimen live years 
nature by Mr. Geo. I' KnUE.vnr.iu.rr.. of this city, w e 
pricesLarge plants, 12 to IS Inches high, and rbont 
Inches, strong and well rooted, $2 CftCl 1 »jj? j*j 1 *var sMU j 
THE WHISPER ROOM 
won 
of story in her lofty love. 
The next day the picnic party started on horse¬ 
back. On his black mare, thorough-bred and 
glossy-coatcd us satin, Harold looked like the 
knightly descendant of the Nurman, as he gal 
loped along. Arriving at. the ruins called the 
abbey cloisters, and which formed an ancient 
burial-ground, most of the party cantered care¬ 
lessly across. St. Vraie, with a bitter smile, 
turned off by the roud, and Miss Harwich, on 
her bay pony, accompanied him. 
“ You sec,” she said, “ there is some one else 
who thiuks as you do, and avoids desecration.” 
“ I thank you,” he said, warmly. “Of course, 
none feci as I do.” 
Miss Harwich replied by a winning smile, and 
.the two rode on. Now, she was, to a certain 
extent, fond ol' llaroid, and of ills long dcsccut; 
but she was a good deal fonder of herself, and 
she had heard her mother posdtlvely assert that 
morning the fact of Harold’s heirship to an 
“Aunt Clinton’s” property of (presumed) five 
thousand a year. Otherwise, Sir Harry Collier, 
who was merely a poor baronet, would have 
stood higher in the youug lady's estimate, for 
she admired Ids face nearly as much as, and his 
conversation was Jar more congenial than, 
Harold’s. 
She exerted herself to talk on the subjects he 
liked. Her blue eyes wore very brilliant, her 
voice very low, her sympathy very marked, 
Harold’s admiration of her beauty great and his 
emotions of ancestral pride very potent. In an 
impulsive moment he proposed and was ac¬ 
cepted. 
They reached the picnic party, and Miss Har¬ 
wich ran off to tell her mamma. At this mo¬ 
ment. Agatha rode in. 
“ What, Miss Clare,” said St. Vraie, “ did you 
not go with the rest.?” 
11 No,” ehe said, quietly. 
“Why not?” 
“Because I never like to cause pain,” she 
answered, kindly; “and I knew your family 
tombs were in the cloisters. Will you help me 
down ?” 
“You are an angel,” thought Harold; and 
then blushed guiltily, remembering he was an 
engaged man. 
Thepicnle proceeded. Mrs. Harwich, indeed, 
embraced Harold when he was apart from the 
others, and sobbed out her congratulations on 
his having “ her treasure.” 
“What old tower’s that?” said Sir Ilarry, 
flinging a Champagne cork toward it. 
“ Har—Mr. 8t. Vraie can tell you,” said Mrs. 
Harwich. 
“Oh,” said the baronet, blundering, as was 
his wont, “I suppose ail the old legends were 
drilled into you till you believe ’em, St. Vraie.” 
Thu other's haughty face flushed red with an¬ 
ger, and his gray-blue eyes flashed fiercely. 
“ The story about that tower is merely one of 
family interest,” he replied, with forced calm¬ 
ness. 
“ Let’s have it—let’s have it t” said Mr. Haw¬ 
kins, loudly, the 6uu and Champagne having 
acted unusually on him. 
Harold made no answer, till Lucy Harwich 
said, “Won’t you tell me, Harold?” 
IILs proud face softened, and he answered, 
quietly: 
“ It’s only the tower where Hugh St. Vraie 
shut up his guilty wife, Lucy, till she died, three 
hundred years ago. You see it’s not a picnic 
story.” 
Miss Harwich looked very grave, and a silence 
fell on the group, till Harold proposed visiting 
tho “whisper-room.” 
Up a cork-screw flight of stairs, the ladies 
blushing and laughingly making the gentlemen 
go first, the whole party trooped, till they found 
themselves in a large room, leading out to an 
ancient terrace of stone, and connected by a 
passage with a smaller room. 
“What is the secret of this place?” said 
Lucy. 
“ I shall leave yon all to find out,” he laughed; 
“ at least, I’ll tell you, Lucy, presently. I must 
go and see if any one’s in the smaller room.” 
The “ secret” was that by its acoustic proper¬ 
ties the passage reflected back the lowest whis¬ 
per uttered in the large room into the small one. 
Harold St. Vraie passed hastily in with a smile 
on his lips, for he thought Lucy more charming 
each moment. He started back, for his eye fell 
on Agatha Clare, who was gaizing out on the 
rich landscape, and whose fair face was sad. He 
advanced to speak, when wafted along the pass¬ 
age he heard Mrs. Harwich’s voice. 
It was a paragon lawn, that of Hounclcy Cot¬ 
tage-emerald in color, closely shaven, and 
veivet-llke in smoothness. It was a fitting 
inclosure for the red and white roses which, in 
regular succession, girdled it round. The labur¬ 
nums, that waved their golden blossoms above 
it, the great sycamore, whose broad leaves 
bravely faced the sun’s fiercest rays, and the 
trim flower-beds that ended it, all added their 
attractions to Housclcy Lawn. 
Seated In a low chair, under a waving cluster 
of laburnums, was a girl, apparently eighteen 
years old. Her hand held listlessly an open 
book; but her eyes were fixed on the blue ex¬ 
panse of sea that stretched far away, and over 
which Houseley Lawn commanded a glorious 
view. She was very fair; the rich masses of 
light-brown hair glinting gold in the sun, the 
hazel eyes, which were radiant in their truth, 
and the rich complexion, all asserted her claim 
to beauty. 
Tho French windows of the drawing-room 
were thrown noisily open, and a tall girl, rather 
older than she whom we have described, came 
hurriedly down the lawn. 
“Ob, Agatha!” she said, “do come in and 
persuade your mamma to join the Daltons’ pic¬ 
nic. It will be capital. Fred Hawkins and Har¬ 
ry Collier are coming." 
The other’s fair face wore an expression of 
hauteur. 
“Lucy,” she said, “I do wish you wouldn’t 
talk in this off-hand manner. I don't see that 
any attraction lies in the fact of Mr. Hawkins or 
Sir Horry Collier coming—certainly not enough 
to make yon call them by their names.” 
“Ob, bother!” said the other, who was a 
dashing beauty—blue-eyed, fair-haired, and gift¬ 
ed with superb self-possession. “ You’re such a 
priiq creature!” 
The two girls strolled down the garden to¬ 
gether, and while gone we will, in a few words, 
describe their history. 
Agatha Clare was the only child of Mrs. Clare, 
widow of a physician in large practice, and left 
by him In affluent circumstances. She was a 
woman of rare talent, tact, und generosity, and 
very popular for her kindness and charming 
manners. Her house of Houseley was a favor¬ 
ite resort of till the younger members of the 
population, for her dances and croquet parties 
were perfection. 
Lucy Harwich was the daughter of the officer 
in command of the coast-guard, a retired com¬ 
mander, with more private property than usually 
falls to his brethren’s share. His wife, too, had 
money. His daughter was what is termed a 
“ fast young lady.” She was a beauty, very dar¬ 
ing and very willful, very ambitious, and very 
selfish. Truth must he regarded by a veracious 
chronicler. 
The two girls re-entered the drawing-room, 
where there was a group of visitors eagerly dis¬ 
cussing the picnic. Among them was a man of 
some note. Harold St. Vraie was a scion of old 
Norman stock. Unassuming English gentle¬ 
man as he was, listening calmly to the pLcuic 
suggestions, and sitting dressed in gray tweed, 
with a hunting-whip In hla hand he bore the feat¬ 
ures and the name of a line of steel-clad war¬ 
riors, whose swords bad been foremost in every 
field of English battle from that of Hastings. 
The manors of his bouse had stretched through 
half a county, and the holders of them had been 
repeatedly offered a peerage-. 
But with him fortune had dealt hardly. But. 
one old manor-house and a hundred acres of 
land remained to him of all his ancestors’ terri¬ 
tory. His 6mall income sufficed for his wants, 
and his Interest with the Government would 
procure him a diplomatic poet whenever he mar¬ 
ried, which event was not unexpected by the 
young ladies of the locality. 
“Let ns go to Vrayville Towers,” said Lucy, 
impetuously; “the ruius are splendid, and the 
legend wonderful." 
“ Lucy,” said Agatha, softly, “rememberMr. 
St. Vraie’s family. Look at him.” 
Lucy did look at him, and saw that his face 
flushed, and that he looked annoyed. 
“ Poor fellow!” said her mother to her near¬ 
est neighbor, “considering how long the prop¬ 
erty’s been in his lamily, and the ghosts in the 
place, I don’t wonder at hi6 annoyance.” 
“I’ll console him,” laughed Lucy, and swept 
across the room to Harold St. Vraie’s side. 
“I’ll show Miss Agatha my winning colors,” she 
said to herself, mentally. 
“ Pray forgive me, Mr. St. Vraie,” she began, 
in a subdued tone, very unlike the usual rapid 
and autocratic key in which she 6poke, and 
riHUORY SEF.D.-T1 h> Grout 8»tfttUafc for 
l J O-FFKR —A supply Of the srrnutue article bust re¬ 
ceived Uv the subscriber, anil will bn mailed. post-paid, 
to all applicant# npnn receipt of price iifllxed. rackets 
containing 1 "Once, 20 eta.; ft ounces, » cents; 1 found. 
$1,50. Direction- for c.ultnre nDd curing accompany 
tact, package. Address 15. X BLI SS, Springfield. Mass. 
/ <ONNl.< TICl!T SEED LEAF TOBACCO 
L Shall—BK SI U* WU Get thk h*st.-A superior 
lot rutactl exprp^ly tor tin; *ut»Fcribvr t>>* one of tij^mort 
gncccWul cultivator* In the Valiev of the Connecticut, 
rackets with full flirection* for cultv rv, curing, packing, 
,<-r, will be in idled, post-paid, to all applicant* nt the 
following ratr* :—t ounce. SO rent*: 1 ounce*. 51.50; X 
pound. $2,50; i pound, f 1,00. Frier* t" dealers In larger 
Sia ateo 15. K. ULlsb, Springfield, Mass. 
I f HE BEST BER-HIVK IN TUB 
World.—I take Hit* opportunity of Inlcrnun* uiy 
numerous friends that I uni still engaged In the Bee Hiv e 
business, and can furnish Bee-Keeper* with any llilug in 
my line. On the receipt of * 8 cent stamp 1 will forward 
my new Bee-Keepers Almanac ol 40 pages, which con¬ 
tain* my Brice. List lor 1066, beside..* much valuable infor¬ 
mation to Bee Keepers. „„ ,, . ... 
B45.tr K. r. KIDDER, Burlington, Vt. 
r ll«K ITALIAN <IUEEN BEES FOB 
Na».k. it in now well known that the color «.t Queens 
to a great extent has much to do with their purity. The 
black or brown Queens, now to extensively tout by 
others, vay be pure. But the ff»fa or light colored one* 
are uhctii/tt pure. Having been to » great expense to ob¬ 
tain tlie most pure (jnttruHM lute Importation* and made 
extensive arrangements, and secured one ot the best 
I tall in Bee cultivators In this rountry to rue that 
1 am now prepared La furnish the CH'i.b or LIGHT COLOM¬ 
BO Queens at reasonable rates, and will warrant all 
Queens sent, to have, paired with the pure Italian Drone, 
and I will further warrant tlie majority ol worker Bees 
to bear three distinct band* niter they are two weeks old 
and lire dIntel.fled with honey. When tlielr progeny Is 
proved otherwise, I will forward another Queen tree. 
On the, receipt of u stamp to pay return postage.! wilt 
forward my Bee-Keepers Alumnae ot 40 pages, and Italian 
circulars, giving lull particulars. 
845-tf K. 1*. KIDDER, Burlington, VI. 
I 1LIUM A U H A T U M . - NOW Golden 
I J sruti-KD LU.YFOBM .1 a CAN.—Thu* described by Dr. 
LSudlav, In the London Gardeners’ Chronicle. If ever 
a flower merited tlie name of glorious. It la this, which 
stundsfarabove.au other Lilies, whether we regard Its 
sire. It* sweetness, or It* exquisite arrangement or color. 
From till* delicious (lower there arts. * the perfume of 
Orange blossom* suite lent to fill ft large, room, but so 
delicate ** to respect, the weakest nerve*.•’ It I* quite 
hnrdv and deserves a [dace in e.very collection, r lower- 
A LSIKK OK SWEDISH WHITE CLOVER. 
which Is considered one ol the best Hooey produc¬ 
ing Plant* known. 1 can now supply a limited amount 
of ir applied lor aoon. on the receipt of SO cent*, I vrUI 
send, post paid, enough to sow 12 rod* of ground. 
845 -lj K. P. K1DOF.U, Burlington, Vt- 
A KOTHF.II SPLENDID NOVELTY 
FROM JAPAN. Strived Lkavjcd Jajcankse 
Maize.— This beautiful and valuable addition to our or¬ 
namental foliage plant* wo* obtained in Japan, by Mr. 
Thomas Hogg, tlie well-known Nurseryman and Horti¬ 
culturist., at New York, who *ept seed* ol it to lit* broth¬ 
er, Mr. James Hogg, in tlie spring of 1864. It appears to 
he a varletv of Zen Curagua, or the Peruvian Maize, as 
it In tunny rc c pc<i* fliiJur* from the Z» ;t *r Indian 
Com, riN It U called In the United Slate*, ft jjrowg to a 
hclpnt of from five to t*ix tcct, and ban It* loJia^c alter¬ 
nately oppo<‘t:*: tlitf foil jure \s from two to three Incuts 
wldo and about four feet In length. It is brauillully and 
evenly Btl'Ipcd, or ribboned with altenmws atripea ol 
green and while, and In It# earlier stagr* of growth la 
also striped with rose, color. It resembles ttm Arnnda 
donux varietal a in appearance, but la Of a much more 
elegant and imposing habit. Nothing In thu way of a 
foliage plant eun exceed in graceful net- and beauty, a 
group of three to five plants of this variety of Zea. The 
subscriber 1* happy to uuuouuce that, he lots secured the 
entire »t-'Ck of thl# splendid novelty, and now oilers the 
seeds In packets conjoining Tws.m Sued* at >25 errs, 
pvu l-AirKET, 5 PADKItTS Mill (1. Tlie Trade supplied 
oprm the moat liberal terms. „ ,, 
$4825100 H K . BLISS, Springfield, Mass. 
HUMOROUS SCRAPS. 
Makkying a woman for lior beauty is like eat¬ 
ing a bird for its singing. 
Blessed is the bald-headed man, for liis wife 
cannot pull his hair. 
We look for woman to be tender, although, 
according to the Scripture, she was made out of 
a bone. 
Every plain girl lilts one consolation; though 
not a pretty young lady, she will, if she lives, he 
a pretty old one. 
Wuat is the difference between an accepted 
and a rejected lover? One kisses his miss, and 
the other misses his kiss. 
What Is the difference between a school¬ 
master and a railroad conductor? One trains 
the mind, and the other minds the train. 
What is the difference between a bad boy and 
a postage, stamp? Give it. up? One you lick 
with a slick, and the other you slick with a lick. 
When a Baltimore lady Is kissed, 6he say6 she 
feels as though sue was taking chloroform, and 
remains insensible as long as the operation lasts, 
A lady, speaking of the gathering of lawyers 
to dedicate a new court house, said she supposed 
they had gone “ to view the grounds where they 
must shortly lie!" 
A young lady explained to a printer the other 
day the distinction between printing aud pub¬ 
lishing, and at. the conclusion of her remarks, 
by way of illustration, she said, “ You may print 
a kiss npon my cheek, hut yon must not pub¬ 
lish it.” 
A j-ovek wrote to a lady who rejected him, say¬ 
ing that he intended to retire “ to some secluded 
spot, and breathe away his life in sighs.” To 
which the lady replied, by inquiring whether they 
were to be medium or large size. The man has 
not since beeu heard from. 
-\Tcm\VE<iIAN SEED CORN-Early Eight- 
1.x rowed yellow Com lor sale, that will ripen in-iO 
days after planting, If season and ground are favorable. 
IMft-tf 11. B. MANN, Box MW, Burlington, Vt. 
ANNUA L UEGISTEIt OF 
RURAL AFFAIRS. 
Garden Work for Spring, 
And for every Season of the Year, 
A Vast Amount of Rural Information. 
One Hundred and Thirty Engravings. 
Price only Thirty Cent#, by luuil, post-paid. 
Ll TUEU TtJCKER A SON, 
CpvnyATptt Office, Albany, n. y. 
I860 
OOD A MANN STEAM ENGINE 
COlvI I 3 »S 
ARE aud BEAUTIFUL FLOWEBS 
tVaOO tMitilN UT,t ■ t.l 
Portable Steam Engines, 
AVM Fou r to T flirty - Five Horne Fower. 
We have the oldest, largest and most complete works 
in the country, engaged In manufacturing Portable Kn- 
f Lnea. Oar Engines are. “by experts, now conceded to 
t the beat appalatns ot this description ever presented 
to the public. Adapted to every purpose where power 
is required. Medium sizes constantly on band or furn¬ 
ished on short nonce. 
£y> De*erintlve Circular# with pricelist sent #n appli¬ 
cation. THE WOOD A MANN STEAM ENGINE CO., 
834] Utica, N- Y., and No. 1*6 Midden Lane. Now York. 
C HALLENGE WASHING MACHINE. 
waiituxtko to 
WASH EASIER, QUICKER AND BETTER, 
and with mss* wear to the clothes than any other ma¬ 
chine or proce.-s. Warranted to wash 
Six Skirt# In Seven Minute#, Four Sheet# In Four 
Mitt Hie#, 
And other clothe# in proportion. Wtlirlv* but 80 lbs. 
Costs hut to Hi*. Sample mactilDea emit on receipt of 
price, and money refunded If they fail to give 
ENTIRE SATISFACTION. 
Six machine# #«nt !t> one address for the price of five. 
Ohamksgi Wrinoku and Maxgl-k or Iho.ning Ma- 
ouinb in one. A J“crfect WViNgw—Self-adjnsnng. mal¬ 
leable Iron frame, white roll-, and a Fcr/tct Ironing 
Machine for Ironing w ithout heat and #s quickly us the 
article# would be run through a w ringer. 
garA gknts WanikI) everywhere. Send, Inclosing 
stamp, for Circular giving t.uoo relerence* and full de¬ 
scription. 6. W. PALMER & CO., Auburn, N. Y. 
Demand is the test of popularity, and never 
in this country has there been a filth part of the 
demand for any toilet article that there now is 
for Phtiloti's “Night-Blooming Cereus.” The 
sales for the current, year show an increase of 
one hundred per cent, over those of the same 
months in 1864. Sold everywhere. 
M bannon, attorney at law, 
• AND SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY, 
32 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Aid. 
PT- Agent for the Purchase and Sale of Beal Estate. 
Alter several weeks Intercourse with Mr. Bnnnon I 
freely recommend him n* a person in whom Implicit con¬ 
fidence can be placed by all who wish to pnrenase real 
estate Lu Maryland,De la ware or Virginia. J886-6teo. 
Baltimore, Juu. IS, 1860. T. C, PETERS. 
LIFE, GROWTH AND BEAUTY. 
Mrs . S. A . Allen 9 8 World 9 s 
Hair Restorer and Dress¬ 
ing invigorate , strengthen 
and lengthen the ha ir . They 
act directly upon the roots 
of the hair, supplying re¬ 
quired nourishment , and 
natural color and beauty 
returns. Grey hair disap¬ 
pears, bald spots are cov¬ 
ered, hair stops falling, and 
luxuriant growth is the re¬ 
sult. Ladies and Children 
will appreciate the delight¬ 
ful fragrance and rich, 
glossy appearance impart¬ 
ed to the hair, and no fear 
of soiling the skin, scalp, or 
most elegant head-dress. 
Sold by all Druggitu. 
Depot 198 & 200 Greenwich St. N. Y. 
MOORE S RURAL NEW-YORKER, 
Tint LAWOKST-CIRCULATING 
AGKIClitTtBAL, LITERARY A AD FAMILY OTSPATER, 
IS FUBLJ&HXD XYXBY SATURDAY 
BY D. D. T. MOORE, ROCHESTER, N. Y. 
Office, Union Buildings, Opposite the Court House, Buflalo St. 
rriUE BEST AND MOST IIAKDY HEDGE 
A PLANT. — Hunky Locust or Turk* 'Iuobned 
Aoaou..—F reeh Seed, with directions for ratting—mailed 
no#t-pald to any address, at the following prices :—1 oz. 
15 Cta; 4 OZ. $5 Cl#; 1 a ft. Price# for larger luls ttpou 
. ~ ■*-' 
application 
B. K. BLISS, Springfield 
P EACH TREES! ROSES! Etc.-We 
offer a limited supply ol very tine Peach Trees at. 
W41 * 100; ftiOo »■ 1,1X10 Also a fine assortment of Fruit 
Tree* or all kinds, Shad© aud Ornamental Trees, Hardy 
Ornamental Shrubs. 4c., 4e. 
01 ROSES we have a large aud flue assortment, largely 
of constant blooming varletie#. (and vnoatlv ou their own 
root#, | embracingHruRm PjtRPsru*L, IIochuun, Chi¬ 
na, Motsrttk, TK.v, Peajkib, &c., &u. A>w btHcriptim 
Catalogue mulled to all inclosing stamp, .md wholesale 
price# ou application, We also olfet a limited supply ol 
Van Bukkn s Goldkx Owabf Pkacb.u moat beautiful 
aud Interesting dwarf variety; very distinct in foliage 
Bnd growth, aud bearing prbtuaely ttuttat most excel¬ 
lent quality. Price f 1 each, *10 tier dozen. Address 
811-Steo EDW’D J. EVANS & CO., York, Pa. 
TERMS, IN ADVANCE: 
Three Dollar* a Tear— To Club# and Agents ae 
lollowa:—Five copies one year.for $14; Seven, and one 
free to Club Agent, lor $19; Ten, and one free, lor $'45, 
and any greater number at the same rate—only $2 JO per 
copy. Club paper# directed to Individuals and sent to as 
many dlflerent Post-0111 ees a# desired. As we pre-pay 
American postage on e#ples sent abroad, $2.70 is the 
lowest Club rate for Canada, and $8.50 to Europe. The 
best way to remit 1# by Draft on New York, (Icbe co6t ol 
exchange,) — and all drafts made payable to the order ol 
the Publisher, may bm mailed at ins risk. 
tJtr The above Terms and Rates must be strictly ad¬ 
hered to so long ns published. Those who remit less than 
specified price lor a club or slDgle copy, will be credited 
only as per rates. Persons scndtng less than full price lor 
this volnnte will find when their subscriptions expire by 
referring to figures on address label—the figures indica¬ 
ting the No. of paper to which they have paid belug given. 
QOLGATE’S AROMATIC VEGET¬ 
ABLE SO A I*.—A superior Toilet Soap, pre¬ 
pared from refined Vegetable Oils In combination 
with Glycerine, and especially designed for the use 
of LadieB and for the Nursery, Its perfume Is ex¬ 
quisite, and Its washing properties unrivalled. For sale 
by all Druggists. * 839-52t 
Direct to Rochester, N. Y.— Persons having occa¬ 
sion to address the Rural Nbw-Yobkkr will please 
direct to Jlorji enter , N. Y., and not as many do, to New 
York, Albany, Buffalo, Ac. Money letters Intended for 
us are almost dally mailed to the above places. 
For descriptive pamphlet 
n «#itir not o... at't- 
Cured by Batca’ Appliances. For descriptive pamphl 
4 c., address SIMPSON & cO„2*7W.23d Street, N. Y, 
i5i^ 
iia^llilirb’tMtUIUIll.avllliiwItftll 
Iil4 
■'jjt 
