X858. 
THE CULTIVATOR. 
384 
"VT AY HER & MC NALL Y 
J-iJL Agricultural Implement Manufacturers, 
AND DEALERS IN 
FIELD AND GARDEN SEEDS, 
Nos. 195 and 197 Water-st., (near Fulton ,) 
JVE W-YOltK. 
N. B.—An Illustrated Catalogue and Price List furnish¬ 
ed on application. Nov. 18—w&mtf. 
Jl PHANT WHEREVER IT GOES. The abovema¬ 
chine has just been awarded the FIRST PREMIUM AT 
THE NEW-YORK STATE FAIR at Syracuse, where 
it came into competition with all other Horse Towers in the 
country. The Proprietor has constantly on hand a sup¬ 
ply of these machines, together with THRESHERS and 
SEPARATORS, CIDER MILLS, SAWMILLS, CLO¬ 
VER IIULLERS, and all other machines adapted to the 
power. All orders addressed to the subscriber promptly 
attended to. RICH. H. PEASE, 
Oct. 14—w4tm2t. Albany, N. Y. 
H 
l 0R SALE—Two thorough bred Suffolk Boars 
old enough for service ; also two thorough bred Lei¬ 
cester Bucks, and five good Spanish Bucks. All will be 
sold cheap. Address N. H. NOYES, 
Oct. 28—wStmlt.* Otisco, Onondaga Co., N. Y. 
r jPHE HORSE AND HORSEMANSHIP 
JL OF THE 
UNITED STATES AND BRITISH PROVINCES, 
jdy Henry William Herbert, 
Author of “ Frank Forrester’s Field Sports,' 7 Fish and 
Fishing,” The Complete Manual for Young Sports¬ 
men,” etc. 
Third Edition. 
HERBERT’S GREAT NATIONAL WORK 
ON 
THE HORSE OF AMERICA 
Is the most comprehensive and reliable work ever publish¬ 
ed on this most important and interesting subject. It af¬ 
fords a complete history of the horse from the earliest ages; 
contains essays on Breeding, Feeding, Clothing and gene- 
eral management; a history and anecdotes of the most 
celebrated Race Horses ; the pedigrees of imported Mares 
and Stallions ; a survey of all the various breeds of Hor¬ 
ses ; descriptions, performances, etc., of celebrated Trot¬ 
ters ; in brief, it is a perfect vade mecum upon the subject, 
and whether for the breeder, the student, the farmer, or 
the general reader, an invaluable authority and guide. 
It is issued in two superb imperial octavo volumes of 
1,200 pages, illustrated with steel-engraved Original Por¬ 
traits. from paintings and drawings by the most distin¬ 
guished artiste, of the following celebrated Horses, care¬ 
fully printed on India Paper : 
SIR ARCIIY, AMERICAN ECLIPSE. 
BLACK MARIA, BOSTON, 
LEXINGTON, PRYOR, 
LA NTERN, POC A H ONT AS, 
GLENCOE, LADY SUFFOLK, 
STELLA, WHALEBONE, 
FASH ION, \ F LO R A T E M PLE, 
BLACK HAWK, ALICE GRAY, 
ETHAN ALLEN, &c. 
Embellished with Vignette Title Pages, from original de¬ 
signs, by F. O. C. Da ri.e y, finely engraved on steel by 
the most eminent Engravers, including numerous 
FINE WOOD ENGRAVINGS. 
Published by subscription. Price, in embossed cloth 
and gilt, $10. Mailed or sent by Express free of charge, 
upon receipt of the price. 
This Magnificent Work should be in the possession of 
every gentleman interested in the breeding or management 
of the Horse. No work in any way its equal has ever here¬ 
tofore appeared from the press! 
1 A valuable, and interesting work. No time or money 
has been spared to make it complete in all its depart¬ 
ments.”—[Spirit of the Times. 
u This splendid work is everything that could be desired. 
It must become at once a standard authority on the sub¬ 
ject.”— [New-England Farmer. 
“ In point of elaborated and general thoroughness, it is 
said to .surpass anything of«a similar kind ever produced 
in Europe.”—[Boston Post. 
Agents wanted in every State. 
W. A. TOWNSEND & CO., Publishers, 
Nov. 18—w2tm2t. No. 377 Broadway, New-York. 
G RAPE S.—I can furnish a few of each 
_of the following varieties:— 
CONCORD—strong plants, 2 years old, each $1.00, 
Do. do. 1 year old, two for $1,00. 
HARTFORD PROLIFIC—Do., 2 years old, $1 00. 
DIAN A— Do., 1 year old, 2 for $1.00. 
CHILD’S SUPERB—excellent quality, 2 yrs. old, $2.00. 
No charge for packages. D. S. HEFFRON, 
Nov. 4—w3tmlt Utica, N. Y. 
One vol., 12 mo.—Price $1.00, post-paid. 
R URAL AFFAIRS—A Practical and copiously 
Illustrated Register of Rural Economy and Rural 
Taste, including Country Dwellings, Fruits, Flowers, Do¬ 
mestic Animals, Implements, and all Farm and Garden 
Processes—440 Engravings, L. TUCKER & SON, Pub¬ 
lishers. Albany. 
T he letter bo x,— 
An earnest, wide-awake Monthly Health Journal; 
published in Dansville, Livingston county, N. Y., by 
SIMMONS & MEKEEL, at $1 a year. Its mission is to 
teach th c people how to regain and maintain good health, 
without the use of drugs or medicines of any kind. To 
give new readers a chance to judge of the value of its 
teachings, the last half of the present volume, from July, 
will be sent for six letter stamps. Please give it a trial. 
Nov. 11—wSmlt 
GOOD MEDIOI3STES. 
I T IS estimated the Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral and Ca¬ 
thartic Pills have done more to promote the public 
health than any other one cause. There can be no ques¬ 
tion that the Cherry Pectoral has by its thousands on 
thousands cures of Colds, Coughs, Asthma, Croup, Influ¬ 
enza, Bronchitis, &c., very much reduced the proportion 
of deaths from consumptive diseases in this country. The 
Pills are as good as the Pectoral and will cure more com¬ 
plaints. 
Everybody needs more or less purging. Purge the blood 
from its impurities. Purge the bowels, liver and the whole 
visceral system from obstructions. Purge out the diseases 
which fasten on the body, to work its decay. But for dis¬ 
ease we should die only of old age. Take antidotes early 
and thrust it from the system, before it is yet too strong to 
yield. 
Ayer’s Pills do thrust out disease, not only while it is 
weak but when it has taken a strong hold. Read the as¬ 
tounding statements of those who have been cured by 
them from dreadful Scrofula, Dropsy, Ulcers, Skin Dis¬ 
eases, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Dyspepsia, Internal pains, 
Billions Complaints, Heart-burn, Headache, Gout, and 
many less dangerous but still threatening ailments, such 
as Pimples on the face, Worms, Nervous irritability, Loss 
of Appetite, Irregularities, Dizziness in the Head, Colds, 
Fevers, Dysentery, and indeed every variety of complaints 
for which a Purgative remedy is required. 
These are no random statements, but are authenticated 
hi' your own neighbors and your own Physicians. 
Try them once, and you never will be without them. 
Price 25 cents per Box—5 boxes for $1.00. 
Prepared by Dr. J. C. AYER, Chemist, Lowell, Mass., 
and sold by all respectable Druggists everywhere. 
March 11—wlam—mtf. 
B 
FRUIT BOOKS. 
Y THOMAS, BARRY, DOWNING, and others, for 
sale at the office of the Country Gent, and Cultivator 
Published by Luther Tucker & Son, 
EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS. 
Associate Ed., J. J. THOMAS, Union Springs, N. Y. 
PRICE FIFTY CENTS A YEAR. 
The Cultivator has been published twenty-four years. 
A New Series was commenced in 1853, and the live vo¬ 
lumes for 1853, 4, 5, 6, 7, can be furnished, bound and post¬ 
paid, at $1.00 each. 
The same publishers issue “The Country Gentleman,’ 
a weekly Agricultural Journal of 16 quarto pages, making 
two vols. yearly of 416 pages, at $2.00 a year. They also 
publish 
The Illustrated Annual Register of Rurai. Affairs 
—144 pp. 12 mo. — price 25 cents — $2.00 per dozen. This 
work was commenced in 1855, and the nos. for 1855, ’56 
and ’57, have been issued in a beautiful volume, under the 
title of “ Rural Affairs,”— containing 440 engravings of 
Houses, Barns, Out-IIouses, Animals, implements, Fruits, 
&c.—price $1.00—sent by mail post-paid. 
