THE CULTIVATOR 
March, 
124 
SYRACUSE NURSERY. 
AMERICAN HOLLIES, DEODAR CEDARS, &c. 
T HORP, SMITH, HANCHETT A CO. } of the Syracuse Nurse¬ 
ries, offer for sale this spring, 
American Hailey, grown from seeds, from one to three feet high; 
fine plants. 
Virginia Fringe Trees , from 2 to 0 feet high. 
Deodar Cedars , from 4 to 5 feet high ; $2. 
Cedar of Lebanons , from 4 to 6 feet high; ©2. 
Norway Firs, very handsome—by 100 or 1000. 
Balsam Firs, from 1 to 5 feet—stocky and well furnished, very 
handsome. 
Swedish Junipers, very fine—3 feet high. 
Cryptometia Japonica, and Auricaria Imbricaia, from 1 to 5 feet. 
Taxodiwm Sempervirens , a beautiful weeping Evergreen Tree 
from California, 3 to 5 feet high. 
Dwarf Apples, very stocky and fine, 3 to 5 feet high—50 cts. each. 
Cherry and Victoria Currants , a very large stock on hand. 
Strawberries of all the best leading sorts. 
Dahlias —all the leading new sorts, comprising 100 select varieties; 
price in pots 25 cents—$2 per dozen—of whole roots, 25 cents each. 
$20 per 100. 
Roses. —We have no hesitation in saying we have one of the very 
best stocks in the U. States, consisting of 8000 plants, of the choicest 
Perpetuals, Teas, Bourbons and Noisettes, including all the novelties of 
the day, with 100 choice varieties imported from England, Franee, and 
Belgium. There is no good Rose that our collection does not contain. 
Fortune’s China, 50 cents—Green Tea, 50 cents. Good, older sorts, 
$3 per dozen. We also have Tree Roses, from 3 to 5 feel high, some 
marked with two distinct colors, as well as Weeping Roses, from 5 
to 7 feet high. 
Ornamental Shrubs. —Wegelia Rosea, Forsythia Viridissima, Ribes 
Beatoni, Sanguineum and Albidum. 
Spireas. —Prunifolia, Lindleyana, Douglassii, Reevesii, Sec. 
Hardy Climbers. —Chinese Bignonias and Glycines, very strong— 
Grecian Periplocas, Sweet Scented Clematis, Honeysuckles, 16 va¬ 
rieties Double Michigan Roses. 
New Verbenas. —Heroine, Madam Clovet, Adile, Morpheus, Clo- 
tilde, Lady of the Lake, Striped Eclipse, Phaeton-, Ariadne, Madam 
Gourney, Beauty of Rye, Royal Purple, White Perfection, with the 
good older sorts, Defiance, Reine de Jour, St. Margaret, Iphegene, 
Ac., $2 per dozen—$12 per hundred. 
New Fuchsias. —Spectabilis, Serratifolia, Acteon. The Rajah, Pu¬ 
rity, Eliza Mielliez, President Porchier, Elegantissima, Sir H. Pot- 
tinger, Ckeateaubriand, Prince of Orange,Ac., Ac., $3 per dozen 
New Petitnias. —Eclipse, Prince of Wales, McMinii, Enchantress, 
North London, Madonna, Hebe. Ac., Ac., $2 per dozen. 
Neiv Cinerarias —Jetles Treffez, Climax, Cerito, Nymph, Scottii, 
Adile Villars, Ac., Ac., at $2 to $3 per dozen 
Herbaceous Plants. —Splendid Carnations. Picotees, Phloxes, Na- 
politan Violets, Forget-me-nots, Double While Lilies, Ac., at the 
lowest rates—with a full collection of all the rarest Green-house 
plants 
Remember that no worthless article is sent from this establishment. 
The Editor of the Horticultural Review, published at Cincinnati, 
says, in the November number, that the handsomest bundles of the 
prettiest trees imported into Cincinnati last fall, came from our Nur¬ 
series. 
Our Descriptive Catalogue sent to post-paid applicants enclosing 
postage stamps. THORP, SMITH, HANCHETT A CO. 
Syracuse, March 1, 1852—It. 
N. YORK AGRICULTURAL WAREHOUSE. 
A. B. ALLEN &, CO., 
189 and. 191 Water Street, New-York. 
T>LOWS of a great variety of patterns and different sizes, calcula- 
JL ted for sward and stubble land, wet meadows, and recently drain¬ 
ed swamps where roots abound. Among these plows, also are the 
deep-breaking-up, fiat-furrow, lap-furrow, self-sharpening, side-hill, 
double-mould-board, corn, cotton, cane, rice, and subsoil with single 
or double wings. 
HARROWS, triangular, square, Geddes, and Scotch. 
ROLLERS , with iron sections one foot long, and of different 
diameters. These can be arranged on an iron shaft for any required 
width. 
CULTIVATORS of upwards of twenty different kinds, steel tooth 
and cast iron. 
SEED SOWERS of six different kinds and prices. 
HORSE POWERS, endless chain and circular, of wood and cast 
iron. 
THRESHERS, with or without Separators. 
GRAIN MILLS of cast iron, and burr stone, to work either by 
hand, horse or water power. 
CORN SHELTERS, single and double”, large and small cylindrical 
to work by hand or otherwise. 
SIMM IF CUTTERS , spiral, straight, or circular knives. 
VEGETABLE CUTTERS for turneps and other roots. 
Together with a great variety of all other Agricultural and Horti¬ 
cultural Implements kept in the United States, such as Hoes, Shovels, 
Spades, Rakes, Manure and Hay Forks, Grain Cradles, Scythes, 
Snaths, Ac. Ac. 
CASTINGS of all kinds for Plows, Cotton Gins, and Sugar Rollers. 
WAGONS and CARTS, for horse, ox, or hand. 
STEAM ENGINES for farm and other purposes. 
Our implements occupy three large stores, and we believe they 
make up the largest and most complete assortment in America. In 
addition, we have a machine shop employing upwards of one hun¬ 
dred men, where any articles in our line cun be made to order. 
A. B. ALLEN A CO., 
Jan. 1,1852—tf. 189 and 191 Water st., New-York. 
Farmers’, Gardeners’, and Planters’ Store. 
A. G. Munn.] A. G. MIJIfN & CO. [Wm. Garnett. 
Main Street, Four doors below Third, Louisville, Ky. All 
A?kinds of Garden, Flower, Field and Grass Seeds, and every 
variety of Agricultural and Horticultural Implements constantly on 
hand, wholesale and retail. Also. Agents for the different Nurseries 
in the vicinity. Orders from abroad promptly attended to. Cash paid 
for F.ax Seed, Mustard Seed, Ac. Fresh Osage Orange Seed. Also, 
Osage Orange Plants. 
2000 bushels Kentucky Blue Grass, 500 bushels Kentucky Orchard 
Grass. 100 bushels Kentucky Red Top, 500 bushels Millet, 1000 bush¬ 
els Kentucky Hemp Seed, 100 bushels Osage Orange Seed, 50,000 
Osage Orange plants. 
N. B. We send men every fall to Texas, 1o get our supply of Osage 
Orange Seed, and can therefore recommend it. 
March 1—It. 
ALBANY AGRICULTURAL WORKS, 
Hamilton, Liberty, and Union-streets. 
T HE subscribers are the originators and sole proprietors of the above 
works, which embrace a very large collection of labor-saving 
Machinery,, not excelled in this country for facilitating the manufactur¬ 
ing of Agricultural Machinery to any desired extent, and with uni¬ 
form accuracy and despatch. 
WAREHOUSE AND SEED STORE, 
369 and 371 Broadway. 
Our Warerooms are among the most spacious in the city, and col¬ 
lection of articles on hand large and new—most of the Implements 
being of our own manufacture, and the Seeds grown for our own 
trade. 
Field and Garden Seeds. 
The subscribers are receiving, and have on hand, a choice lot of 
Field Seeds, composed in part of 
Black Sea Spring Wheat, both red and white chaff. 
Italian and Hedge Row Spring Wheat. 
Spring Rye and Barley. 
Black Tartarian and Poland Oats, very superior for weight and 
quality. 
Broom Corn Seed, superior quality. 
Clover, large, small, and white Dutch. 
Red Top, northern and southern. 
Timothy and Orchard Grass. 
Flax and Hemp seeds. 
Tobacco Seed, Broad and Long leaf. 
Peas —a choice assortment of Garden Peas. 
Field and Garden Peas. 
Also a choice assortment of fresh GARDEN SEEDS, warranted 
true to their name. The attention of Gardeners is particularly called 
to the assortment. 
EMERY & CO.’S 
New-York State Agricultural Society’s 
FIRST PREMIUM 
RAILROAD HORSE POWER, 
AND 
OVERSHOT THRESHER AND SEPARATOR. 
r |YHE above Horse Powers have been awarded the highest Pre- 
JL miums at the Fairs of the New-York State Agricultural Society 
in 1850, and again in 1851; also, the highest Premium of the Michi¬ 
gan State Fair, at Detroit, Mich., in September, 1851, where a ma¬ 
jority of the Committee owned and were using Wheelers’ Powers 
on their farms, having purchased them previous to seeing our own; 
also a Gold Medal at the American Institute in 1851. It was also ex¬ 
hibited at the State Fairs of Ohio, Maryland, and Pennsylvania, and 
received the highest awards which could be given by the rules of 
their Societies. In every case, it has been in competition with all 
endless chain Powers of any note in this country—among which were 
Wheeler’s Rack and Pinion. All of our Powers have the name, 
EMERY A CO., cast upon every link of the chain and hub of band- 
wheel. None others are genuine. 
All the above are offered on liberal terms, at wholesale or retail, at 
the Albany Agricultural Warehouse and Seed Store, 369 and 371 
Broadway, Albany, N. Y. 
Catalogues gratis, on application. EMERY A CO. 
March" 1, 1852. 
