326 
TIIE CULTIVATOR 
Oct. 
W ILSON’S ALBANY SEEDLING.— 
The best and most prolific Market Strawberry! 
Yields 150 to 200 Bushels per Acre !—I am prepared to 
sell plants of this superior variety in large or small 
quantities. The fact that the Strawberries of this kind, 
marketed by me the present season, were the best and 
largest sold in Albany, is a sufficient guarantee of the 
thrift and quality of the plants. Price, delivered in Al¬ 
bany, $10 a thousand—$1.50 a hundred, or $1.00 for fifty. 
Orders accompanied by cash promptly attended to. 
Address WM. RICHARDSON, 
96 South Pearl Street, 
July 22—mfcwtf. Albany, N. Y. 
P ERUVIAN GUANO—Government Brand and 
Weight—for sale by A. LONGETT, 
Aug. 12—w4tm2t. 34 Cliff Street, New-York. 
D ried blood and wool manure.— 
Fully equal to the best Peruvian Guano, and at half 
the price. For many crops, especially wheat and roots, 
and also as a change in manures, it is better than guano. 
Potatoes raised with it have produced more abundantly 
than where Peruvian Guano was used, and they are now 
bringing one shilling more per basket in the New-York 
market. Price $30 per ton of 2000 lbs., in barrels of 200 
lbs. each. R. L ALLEN. 
Sep. 2—w2mlt.* 1S9 and 191 Water St., New-York. 
E LIDE ISLAND GUANO,—at $40 per ton of 
2,000 lbs. GRIFFING BROTHER & CO., 60 Cort- 
landt Street, New-York. Aug. 5—w8tm2t. 
C O R I A. — This New Fertilizer is manu¬ 
factured by the Lodi Manufacturing Company from 
leather scraps, dead animals, blood, hair and bones^ by a 
newly discovered process—is offered for sale at a price 
which will bring it into direct competition with Guano 
and super phosphates. The above mentioned articles are 
melted by chemicals and heat down to a jelly, all the am¬ 
monia in which they abound being retained. This jelly is 
then dried and ground to a fine powder, and barreled for 
sale. About fifty per cent of the “Coria” is soluble in 
water, and the rest is very easily decomposed by the action 
of the elements. Several new agents in this manure give 
it great prominence in the eyes of those chemists who have 
examined it—amongst others tannic acid , which gives 
the firmness and flavor to the fruit, making it of great 
value for fruit trees. As a top-dressing for grass and win¬ 
ter grain, it is beyond comparison. 
And we are ready to put it against Guano or any other 
fertilizer in the market for quickness of operation and 
above all its lasting qualities in the soil. It is packed in 
new barrels, and will be sold for $40 per ton of 2,000 lbs., 
tare off. For further information apply to 
GRIFFING, BROTHER & CO., 
Exclusive agents of the L. M. Co., 
Aug. 19—w6m3t. 60 Cortland St., New-York. 
T O PRACTICAL FARMERS AND DEALERS 
IN FERTILIZERS.—The NATIONAL FERTILI¬ 
ZER,, a modern compost, is prepared under the direct 
superintendence of L. Harper, L. L. D., formerly Profes¬ 
sor of Analytical Chemistry and Agriculture in the State 
University of Mississippi, as also State Geologist. Its 
basis is the Green Sand Marl of New-Jersey, which is 
chemically combined with fish and pure animal bone. Let¬ 
ters Patent for this and foreign countries have been gran¬ 
ted. It is unhesitatingly accredited superior to Peruvian 
Guano—strengthening the soil and beyond the possibility 
of exhausting land where applied. The increase in the 
yield of plants and all cereals is largely augmented; 
while it supplies a continuous source of Fertility. For 
sandy, barren and abandoned lands, and where other 
manures have failed, we ask but one trial, trusting solely 
upon the rare constituents which this fertilizer abundant¬ 
ly possesses, and which are so wholly and peculiarly es¬ 
sential in an article of fertility, such as is here reliably 
represented. We would beg the attention of Farmers to 
its use the coming autumn for winter grain, and to the 
fact that it has arrested the rot in potatoes after decay has 
commenced. Price ner ton of 2,000 lbs., $35. For all de¬ 
tailed particulars, analyses, directions and recommenda¬ 
tions, apply or send to the office of the National Fertiliz¬ 
ing Company, 37 Fulton St, New-York. 
JOS. C. CANNING. Agent. 
We would distinctly give notice, [as abortive imitations 
and attempted infringements upon our patents have al¬ 
ready been made,] that we have no connection w hatever 
with other Fertilizing Companies of nny character or 
name. Aug. 19—w&mSmos. 
W INEGAR’S CAPSTAN GATE.- 
I will put up my Gate, upon my traveling expen¬ 
ses being paid, and not exceeding four dollars for actual 
cost of the attachment; and unless it is a perfect success 
iu every respect, I am to have nothing. 
CALEB WINEGAR, 
Sept. 9—w&mlt. Union Springs, Cayuga Co., N. Y. 
REAT AGRICULTURAL IMPROVEMENT! 
Important to Every Farmer. 
R. Nutting’s Fanning and Assorting Machine. 
This machine is the invention of Rufus Nutting of Ran¬ 
dolph. Vermont, was patented in August, 1858. and is re¬ 
garded by those who have seen it, as the paragon of its 
kind. It possesses many advantages as a winnowing ma¬ 
chine over the ordinary mill, among which are the follow- 
lowing. It chaffs faster than the ordinary mill of the 
same size; it requires less power to operate it; it runs 
much stiller ; it is smaller and more portable , and more com¬ 
pact and symmetrical in form; it does its work better , not 
only taking out the chaff and dirt, but all weed heads, 
sticks, short pieces of straw, &c., which depreciate the 
market value of grain, and obstruct smut mills and mill 
stones. The drive wheel is so situated with regard to the 
hopper, that the operator can regulate the feeding on to 
the sieves with his left hand, while turning with his right, 
thereby preventing the clogging of the sieves with straw, 
&c., (to which all mills are liable,) and allowing the grain 
to pass through faster. The wind strikes the grain in an 
ascending direction of about 45 degrees, which is much 
more favorable for separating light impurities, than the 
common nearly horizontal direction. The ichole or any 
part of the wind may be shut off at any instant by the ope¬ 
rator, without stopping or altering the velocity of the fan, 
or the shakes—different grain and seeds requiring a diffe¬ 
rent ratio of wind to the shake. The distance or velocity 
of the shakes may be increased or diminished without al¬ 
tering the wind. The machine will not move about on 
the floor when in use, being kept in its place by the “ hold¬ 
fast upon which the operator stands. It winnows not 
only all kinds of grain, beans and peas, but every kind of 
clover, grass, garden and flower seeds, and does it so per¬ 
fectly that they cannot be improved by being sifted over 
by hand, as is usually practiced and necessary after the 
common mills. And it has no large or wide pieces of 
boards in its construction, (as in other mills,) to shrink and 
swell with the condition of the atmosphere, and thereby 
impede its free and easy operation. 
But the great distinguishing merit of the machine is 
this—IT IS AN ASSORTING MACHINE-and as such 
it stands unequalled and unrivalled , challenging the admi¬ 
ration of all who see it operate—performing the operation 
on an entirely new principle , separating everything accord¬ 
ing to its size, weight and shape, and making as many va¬ 
rieties and grades of seed and grain as may be required, 
even as many as twenty if necessary, and depositing each 
by itself. It will take oats, cockle, grass and all foul 
seeds, from wheat, barley, &c., and assort the grain itself 
into grades, placing the large and plump, and the shrivel¬ 
led and imperfect kernels, in separate apartments. Thus 
the farmer is enabled to separate the choicest and plumpest 
grain for seed, and at the same time purify it from all foul¬ 
ness whatever. What a desideratum is this ! By the use 
of this machine, advantages of almost infinite value to 
individuals, communities, and countries, must follow—in 
the increase and improvement in the quality and quantity 
of crops, from sowing only the largest, earliest, ripened, 
and most perfect seed—in the ridding of farms of the great 
variety of weeds now engendered by seeds sown with the 
grain, by sowing only that prepared by this machine, which 
is perfectly free from all foul seeds, and also thus save a 
vast amount of expensive labor in the subduing of weeds 
—in saving to the farmer for his poultry and stock, the 
shrivelled and broken grains which the millers now re¬ 
move with their screens and smut machines—and in ena¬ 
bling agriculturists to raise all their seed-grain, grass, gar¬ 
den seeds, &c., for their own use. 
Besides all these considerations, this machine, which, 
although then in an incomplete and unfinished state, was 
exhibited at five New-England Fairs, (three state and two 
county,) last autumn, and received the first and highest 
award and premium at each, and the universal commen¬ 
dation of the numbers who saw it; is very simple and du¬ 
rable in construction and operation, and at the same time 
can be afforded at a price within the reach of every far¬ 
mer. 
Rights to manufacture and use this machine are now for 
sale, and applications for them for the United States, (the 
New-England States excepted, (must be made to WAL¬ 
LACE WARREN, Utica, N. Y, who has the sole dispo¬ 
sal of the same in territory to suit purchasers. 
Sept. 9—w2t. 
