198 
THE CULTIVATOR, 
May, 
Lewis G. Morris’s Third Annual Sale, 
BY AUCTION, OF 
IMPROVED BREEDS OF DOMESTC ANIMALS, 
W ILL take place at MOUNT FORDHAM, Westchester Co., 
(11 miles from City Hail, New-York,) on WEDNESDAY, 
JUNE 9, 1852. James M. Miller, Auctioneer. 
Application need not be made at private sale, as I decline in all ca¬ 
ses, so as to make it an object for persons at a distance to attend. Sale 
positive to the highest bidder, without reserve. 
Numbering about fifty head of Horned Stock, including a variety 
of ages and sex, consisting of Pure Bred Short-Horns, Devons, and 
Ayr shires, South Down Buck Lambs, and a very few Ewes; Suf¬ 
folk and Essex Swine. Catalogues, with full Pedigrees, &c , &c., 
will be ready for delivery on the first of May—to be obtained from 
the subscriber, or at the offices of any of the principal Agricultural 
Journals or Stores in the Union. This sale will offer the best oppor¬ 
tunity to obtain very fine animals I have ever given, as I shall reduce 
my herd lower than ever before, contemplating a trip to Europe to 
be absent a year, and shall not have another sale until 1854. 
It will be seen by reference to the proceedings of our State Agri¬ 
cultural Society, that I was the most successful exhibitor of Domestic 
Animals at the late State Fair. 
I will also offer a new feature to American Breeders —one which 
works well in Europe; that is, letting the services of male animals; 
and will solicit propositions from such as see fit to try it. Condi¬ 
tions. —The animal hired will be at the risk of the owner, unless by 
some positive neglect or carelessness of the hirer; the expense of 
transportation to and from, to be borne jointly; the term of letting to 
be one year or less, as parties agree; price to be adjusted by parties 
—to be paid in advance, when the Bull is taken away ; circumstan¬ 
ces would vary the price; animal to be kept in accordance with in¬ 
structions of owner, before taking him away. 
I offer on the foregoing conditions, three celebrated prize Bulls— 
“Major,” a Devon, nine years old; “Lamartine,” Short-horn, 
four years old; Lord Eryholme,” Short-horn, three years old. Pe¬ 
digrees will be given in Catalogues. 
At the time of my sale, (and I would not part with them before) I 
shall have secured two or three yearly setts of iheir progeny; and as 
I shall send out in August next, a new importation of male animals, 
I shall not want the services of either of these next year. I would 
not sell them, as I wish to keep control of their propagating qualities 
hereafter. 
I also have one imported Buck, the prize winner at Rochester last 
fall, imported direct from the celebrated Jonas Webb; and also five 
yearling Bucks, winners also, bred by me, from Bucks and Ewes im¬ 
ported direct from the above celebrated breeder; they will be let on 
the same conditions as the Bulls, excepting that I will keep them until 
the party hiring wishes them, and they must be returned to me on or 
about Christmas day. By this plan, the party hiring gets rid of the 
risk and trouble of keeping a Buck the year round. All communica¬ 
tions by mail must be prepaid, and I will prepay the answers. 
Mount Fordham, April, 1852—3t. L. G. MORRIS. 
FOWLS AND EGGS. 
T HE great desire manifested in New-England for procuring good 
Poultry, has induced H. B. COFFIN, Newton, Mass., to pay 
particular attention to breeding and importing first rate stock. All 
persons desirous of having the purest and best to breed from, may de¬ 
pend upon being faithfully served. Among many kinds of Fowls for 
sale by him, are the following, which he is very particular in breeding. 
Shanghae—Forbes stock. 
Imperial Chinese—Marsh stock. 
Chittagongs. 
Royal Cochin China. 
Black Shanghae. 
Burmah Pootras. 
White Shanghais. 
Dealers in Fowls or Eggs for hatching, supplied upon liberal terms. 
Orders addressed to No. 40 State Street, Boston, will be promptly ex¬ 
ecuted. 
Reference to Mr. J. Van Dusen, of Cincinnati, Ohio, who wil 
take orders for Fowls, as advertised above. 
Boston, Aug. 1, 1851—12t. 
TO FARMERS.—POUDRETTE. 
T HE LODI MANUFACTURING COMPANY having enlarged 
their works, are prepared now to receive and fill orders for Pou- 
drette with dispatch, and in all cases with a freshly manufactured ar¬ 
ticle, at their usual prices, $>1.50 per barrel for any quantity over six 
barrels, .3 barrels for $5.—<$2 for a single barrel, delivered free of 
cartage on board of vessel or elsewhere, in the city of New-York. 
The Company refer to their pamphlet (furnished gratis) for hun¬ 
dreds of certificates as to the efficacy, cheapness, and superiority in 
all respects of their Poudrette over any other known manure for 
raising a crop of corn—also to A. J. Downing, Esq., B. M. Watson, 
Esq., Hon. .1. P. Cushing, J. M. Thorburn & Co., and many others 
as to excellency as a manure for flowers and trees, and the following 
from Hon. Daniel AVebster, Secretary of State: 
Washington, March 19, 1850. 
“ If I neglect the annual purchase of some of this article, my gar- 
denerer is sure to remind me of it. He thinks it almost indispensa¬ 
ble, within his garden fence; but there are uses, outside the garden, 
for which it is highly valuable, and cheaper, I think, than any other 
manure at your prices. A principal one, is the enrichment of lawns 
and pleasure grounds, in grass, where the object is to produce a fresh 
and vigorous growth in the Spring. Our practice is to apply it, when 
we go to town in the Autumn, and we have never failed to see its 
effects in the Spring.” 
All communications addressed to the “LODI MANUFACTUR¬ 
ING COMPANY, 74 Cortlandt street, New-York,” will meet with 
prompt attention. Jan. 1, 1852—6t. 
I. T. GRANT & CO.’S 
Agricultural Warehouse and Manufactory, 
Junction , Rensselaer co., N. Y. 
T HEY have received the greatest number of Premiums that have 
ever been awarded to any Fan Mills and Cradles in the United 
States. Eight first premiums of Silver Medals at the great Fair of 
the State of New-York. Four silver medais at the great Fair of the 
American Institute, New-York. Also, Premiums at the Pennsylvania 
State Fair, Maryland State Fair, Michigan State Fair, and Ohio 
State Fair. Seven first Premiums at the Rensselaer County Fair, 
and twenty-five at other county Fairs. They have always taken 
first Premiums, and stand before the Public pre-en inent. 
This is the Oldest Establishment known to the subscribers in this 
country. Believing that we have kept up to the day of improve¬ 
ments, that Farmers and Planters can rely upon getting the best when 
they purchase 
GRANT’S PATENT FAN MILLS AND CRADLES 
of us, at the lowest price, (and warranted) that we hope still, as here¬ 
tofore, to receive a liberal share of their patronage. 
Also, a general assortment of the most approved kinds of Agricul¬ 
tural Implements, in all their variety, such as Straw Cutters, Churns, 
Corn Shelters, Ox Yokes, Eddy & Co.’s Wrought Iron Beam Plow; 
Horse Hay Rakes, and all kinds of Harvesting and Haying Tools. 
At Junction P. O., 8 miles north of Troy, N. Y., on the Troy and 
Boston Railroad. I. T. GRANT. 
April 1—2t. D. H. VIAL. 
Great Sale of Short-horn Cattle in 1852. 
npHE subscriber, contemplating some important changes and im- 
JL provements upon his farm, will sell, without reserve, his en¬ 
tire herd of thorough bred, and high grade Short-horn cattle, con¬ 
sisting of upwards of ONE HUNDRED head of Cows, Heifers, 
Bulls, and Bull and Heifer calves. 
This valuable herd of cattle has been nearly all bred by the sub¬ 
scriber, on his farm, and under his own eye, with a particular view 
to their milking quality, which he believes he has been successful in 
developing to a degree not excelled in any herd of cows in the United 
States. Ever since the year 1834 he has been engaged in breeding 
Short-horns, in the belief that no cattle kept by the farmers of this 
country, were equal to ihem in all their qualities, as dairy and feeding 
animals, and this belief has been fully confirmed by seventeen years 
experience. 
Commencing with animals selected from the best thorough bred 
stocks, then to be found in this country, this herd has been continual¬ 
ly added to, and improved by selections from the best imported stock, 
and their immediate descendants. During the years 1845, ’46 and ’47, 
the Short-horn blood of the late celebrated Thomas Bates, of Kirk- 
leavington, England, was resorted to in the use of the imported bull, 
Duke of Wellington, and of Symmetry, (by Dnke of Wellington, 
out of the imported Bates Cow, Duchess,) belonging to Mr. George 
Vail, of Troy, N. Y., which bulls were hired of Mr. Vail for three 
years. The animals of this herd, since grown up, inherit, more or 
less, of that blood, which is believed by those having opportunity to 
judge, both in its milking and feeding qualities, to be equal to any 
other previously imported; and that belief is confirmed by the prices 
obtained during several years past, for animals descended from that 
stock. 
For the quality of the stock bred by the subscriber, he can, with¬ 
out vanity, refer to the recent Short-horn sales of Messrs. J. F. Sheafe 
and Lewis G. Morris, in which some of the highest priced animals 
were immediately descended, or purchased from this herd. The un¬ 
rivalled cow, “ Grace,” owned by Messrs. Sherwood and Stevens, 
and probably the best fat cow ever bred in America, described in 
pages 183 and 184, vol. x., of the American Agriculturist, was bred 
by the subscriber; and numerous animals in various parts of the 
United States, the West Indies, and the Canadas, which have sprung 
from his herd in years past, may be referred to. 
In 1850, the imported bull, Duke of Exeter, of the Princess tribe 
of Short-horns, (for pedigree of which see (10, 152,) vol. ix., of the 
English Herd Book,) sent out from England for Mr. Sheafe of New- 
York, by Mr. Stevens, from the distinguished herd of Mr. John 
Stephenson of Wolviston, England, was purchased and introduced 
into this herd; and about forty of the cows and heifers are nowin 
calf to him, all of which will be catalogued for the coming sale. In 
the quality of his flesh, and in the milking excellence of his ancestry, 
no bull imported in the into the United States can surpass the Duke 
of Exeter. His own stock, in the hands of several gentlemen in the 
State of N. York, are confidently referred to as evidence of his value. 
The herd now offered for sale for sale will consist of about FIFTY, 
thorough breds, including cows, heifers, and heifer calves; and pro¬ 
bably ten or twelve young bulls, and bull calves. The remainder, 
about fifty in number, will comprise young cows—good, proved, 
milkers—heifers and heifer calves, together with a few superior bull 
calves, from the best milking cows, of high grade, Shorthorns, with 
an occasional dash of Devon blood intermixed—the best of useful, 
family cows. 
All the calves, or nearly all, both thorough-bred and grade, will be 
the get of the Duke of Exeter; and all the cows, and two-year-old 
heifers will be bulled by him, (if he lives,) previous to the sale; thus 
will be combined the blood of the Bates, and the Stephenson stocks, 
comprising as much excellence, both in milk and flesh, as can be 
found in any animals whatever. 
The sale will be made early in the month of August next, at or 
near Albany, New-York, for the greater convenience of purchasers 
generally. 
Due notice of the day and p’ace of sale will be given in the several 
Agricultural Journals; and catalogues describing each animal of the 
herd, will be published in the month of June, preceding. 
For further particulars, inquiries may be made by letter, directed 
to the subscriber, or to A. B. ALLEN & CO., New-York. 
March 1 LEWIS F. ALLEN, Black Rock, N. Y. 
