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6
THE
{Jural plantation,
PUBLISHED MONTHLY BY
THE SOUTHERN PUBLISHING CO.,
Comer Mitchell and Pryor Streets,
ATLANTA, - - - - GEORGIA.
V7M. _A__ IR, IM: S .A. 3T ,
Editor and Proprietor.
Corresponding Editors:
.JOHN 11. DENT, A. C. VAN EPPS,
.1. VAN BUREN, RICHARD PETERS,
WM. JENNINGS, J. F. RID AY,
G. C. PLAYER, B. W. VAN DYKE,
E. VAN GOIDTSNOVEN, J. J. TOON.
J. C. GOODRICH, MARK W. JOHNSON.
MRS. B. A. HARPER. JOHN R. WALLACE.
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TERMS.
Single Copies, 1 year, postage paid, - SI 00
Single Copies, 6 months, “ “ - 50
Single Copies, 3 months, “ “ - 25
CLUB RATHS.
Six Copies, 1 year, postage paid, - -$5 00
Fifteen Copies, 1 year, postage paid, - 10 00
Twenty-five Copies. I year, postage paid, 15 00
MONEY.
In sending small amounts, send either a Mon
ey Order or Registered Letter. Large amounts
should be sent by Express, or by Draft payable
to our order.
<"orreapoiMience Solicited.
We call upon our readers to write down their
experience in every branch of agriculture, hor
ticulture, stock and poultry raising, fruit cul
ture. domestic recipes, etc., and give it to u<
from time to time, so that we may publish it for
the benefit of others. We want all to feel as
friends, aiding in the good cau*e of Progress and
Industry. Be brief, practical, and to the point.
If you have made any new discoveries, give
us the facts and we will publish them, aud thus
benefit all who are seeking knowledge.
WHERE WAS THE ADVEKTKEME.XT!
Purchasers who read the advertisements in
our columns, and make their purchases there
by. will do us a kindness by stating to th<>«e of
whom they purchase, that they saw the sdver
’isement in the Rural Southerner.
Ocr agricultural friends are respectfully in
vited to write for the Rural Southerner and
Plantation upon all practical questions inter
esting to farmers. Their communications upon
any branch of hrm pur-uits will be gladly wel
c ’med to onr 1 itmn-
the ®kal warn & w®*
TO ADVERTISERS.
TOE RURAL SOUTHERNER and PLANTATION.
We guarantee that this Journal reaches over
30,000 families every twelve months.
The Rural Southerner and Plantation is a
combination of three journals, and the only illus
trated Agricultural Journal published at the
Capital of the State, in a city of 35,000 inhab
itants, and has the largest circulation of any pub
lication in the South.
We have greatly increased its circulation du
ring the past year, and having recently made
several important changes, and reduced the
price of subscription to $1 00 per year, we feel
confident of a still further increase.
Our facilities for- extending its circulation are
far greater than any other paper published, for
the reason that it is in the hands of over one
thousand book agents, who are canvassing for it
in connection with our popular and fast-selling
subscription books. Hence, it is shown and
“talked up” to thousands monthly, and speci
men numbers left with all who desire.
All advertisements will receive liberal edito
rial notices. Copy of the journal mailed free
to advertisers.
JI
Ladies and Gentlemen
who will devote their leisure or entire time to
soliciting subscribers for the Rural Southerner
and Plantation, will be allowed special terms. ,
Pictorial Home Bible.
The Southern Publishing Company want
agents for the Pictorial Home Bible, with Patent
Adjustable Album, the cheapest and best in
America.
OPIUM HABIT CURED.
We call attention to the card of Mr. B. M.
Woolley, agent of Dr. S. B. Collins’ Painless
Opium Antidote. Mr. Woolley is a gentleman
of standing and intelligence, strictly reliable
and respectable and wort by of the confidence
of any who are afflicted or may have friends
afflicted with the opium habit, ami desire privacy
and fair dealing. The remedy is having a most
remarkable run, and the cures effected by it are
becoming the wonder of the day. We feel that
too much cannot be said in its fuvor. Let every
one interested write to Mr. Woolley for full par
ticulars. The valuable magazine and othr.
printed matter he sends free to applicants will
certainly amply pay yon for writing, stamp, etc ,
should you never order the remedy.
The American Newspaper Advertising Agency
of Geo. P. Rowell & Co,, New York, is the only
establishment of the kind in the United States
winch keeps itself persistently before the people
by advertising in newspapers. They evidently re
ceive their reward, for wc have it from a reliable
source that advertising orders issued by them for
their customers have exceeded three thousand
dollars a day since the commencement of the
year—and this is not a very good year for ad
vertising either I
Wanted at Cnce!—ls,(MM) trial subscribers
for the RuralSoutkernkr—the farmers’ friend.
Only 25 cents for three months. Send in your
subscriptions.
Globe Flower.—We invite special attention
to the advertisement of Dr. J. S. Pemberton &
Co. W> endorse what is claimed for Globe
Flotclr Syrup. It cannot be too highly recom
mended, as we have used it in our family with
great benefit. We are personally acquainted
with Doctor Pemberton and Mr. Gay, the pro
prietors, who are men of high standing and in
tegrity. We cheerfully commend them to our
readers.
(■rangers.
Me do all kinds of book and job printing,
book binding, ruling, etc. You can save money
by h iving your work done at this office.
The Southern f*Hbli«hing Company.
It is the only house in the South that prints
books for Northern houses. Our subscription
book* are printed on our own presses and
shipped to Northern subscription book pub
lisher* and sold by them through agents, thu*
showing that we have the facilities for compe.
ting with Northern publishing and printing
hou*e«. and that it is to the interest of everv
Brother Patrons, Farmers, Planters,
Gardeners, Seedsmen, Florists, Nurserymen,
Stock and Poultry Raisers, and our readers in
general: we solicit you to correspond with us,
giving us your experience and views. We want
all to feel that they are just as much interested
in this paper as the proprietors are. It is
only by mutual exchange of thought and expe
rience that an agricultural paper can be made
of value to its fullest extent. All of you see or
practice something every day that would be of
great value to others ; let us have it, and help
us make our paper what we intend it shall
be —the best ever published.
The Home Guardian.
No magazine is more welcomed to our table.
It is devoted to a good and noble cause, and
should be in every household. It is devoted to
moral purity, holding out the light of divine
truth. Aiding in the right training of children
and youth, exposing the prevalence of vice, ex
tending the hand of sympathy and kindness to
the friendless and homeless, and reclaiming the
wanderer.
#2 to #lO Per Day
Can be made, by canvassing for the Rural
Southerner and Plantation. Send for special
terms.
St. Nicholas
Is decidedly the best Child’s Magazine pub
lished in the world. The typography, illustra
tions and general arrangement are uneqnaled.
The Editress deserves unlimited praise.
LADIES, READ.
Dr. A. Mh Ramsay, an eminent practitioner
of Medicine, in Philadelphia, Pa., of many years
experience in the treatment of diseases peculiar
to Females, (such as inflammation, ulceration,
falling of womb, whites, irregularity, etc.) has
found a certain cure for those diseases no matter
how long standing. Hundreds of cases have
been cured by his remedy. Sent to any address
on receipt of sl, the price per package. Cure
guaranteed. Correspondence strictly confiden
tial. Office, 327 Spruce street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Extend our Circulation.
We ask each subscriber ami friend of the
Rural Southerner and Plantation to try and
get us one new subscriber, as we want to double
our circulation.
The union of two journals makes this the
most useful and desirable monthly published.
We ask our numerous readers to aid us by show
the paper to their friends, aud by talking
about it as they mingle with them. Show them
a copy when opportunity otters, and induce them
to subscribe, and thus help on the good work.
Sugar Creek Paper Mills.—Nearly all the
book and all the newspaper used by us is furn
ished by these mills, and we take pleasure in
recommending all who wish anything in their
line to give them a trial. The proprietors are
shrewd business men, prompt, courteous and
liberal in their dealings.
Special Notice.
Poultry raisers, breeders, and importers,
should remember that a specialty is made of all
matters touching their interests in this journal,
and that not less than seventy leading poulterers
in the country have just sen' us their advertise
ments in view of the large and inci easing de
mand for the best breeds of fowls coming from
the South. Advertise without delay.
Now is the time to gel up clubs for the
RritAL Southerner and Plantation. Show the
paper to your neighbors and friends, and get
them to subscribe. Mp have the largest circula
tion in the South and are determined to double
it.
Act as Agent
If there is no agent for the Rural South
erner in your locality, please become one in
forming a club. You will l»e doing your neigh
■» «r a kindnp«s a« well a« benefiting yourself.
OPIUM HABIT CURED.
We call attention to the card of Dr. B. M.
Woolley, agent of Dr. S. B. Collins’ Painless
Opium Antidote.’ Dr. Woolley is a gentleman of
standing and intelligence, strictly reliable and
respectable and worthy of the confidence of any
who are afflicted or may have friends afflicted
with the opium habit, and desire privacy and
fair dealing. The remedy is having a most re
markable run, and the cures effected by it are be
coming the wonder of the day. We feel that too
much cannot be said in its favor. Let every one
interested write to Dr. Woolley for full particu
lars. The valuable magazine and other printed
matter he sends free to applicants will certainly
amply pay you for writing, stamp, etc, should
you never order the remedy.
If any yet remain in doubt after the many evi
dences presented to the public in the last few
months regarding the success of Dr.Collins’ Pain
less Opium Antidote let them read the letter be
low addressed to Dr. B. M. Woolley by Dr. J. Dill
worth of Stone Mountain, Georiga. It is only
necessary for us to add that Dr. Dillworth is an
old citizen, and a physician of many years ex
perience. He is a plfiin practical man, a sub
stantial, reliable gentleman of undoubted ver
acity, whose statements can be most implicitly
relied upon. Dr. Woolley tells us he could pre
sent to the public hundreds of similar letters
from cured patients and physicians, if the au
thors would permit him to do so. He says that j
not more than one out of fifty patients cured of
the opium habit will permit their names or the
history of their cases to be given to the public.
His patients now number 370, and new ones
continually coming in to fill the places of those
cured, and sent on their way rejoicing. Read
the letter. ,
HEAR WHAT DOCTORS SAY’.
• Stone Mountain, Ga., April 7, 1875.
Mr. B. M. Woolley, Atlanta. Ga.: In reply to
your inquiry as to how I succeeded with the
use of “ Dr. Collins’ Painless Opium Antidote,”
which 1 procured from you as his agent, for a
patient of mine, I have this to report: It was
for a lady about thirty-two (32) years old, who
had used opiates about seven years, and was
using at the time I commenced the use of the .
Antitode, about three grains of morphine in a
day of twenty-four hours. Her general health
was very bad. • She was extremely debilitated, ,
and in fact all the healthy actions of the system
were more or less deranged. She commenced
the use of the /Yutidote about the 15th of April,
1874 In three or four days she began to im
prove, and continued to do so until she became
a perfectly healthy woman, never using a particle
of opium from the first dose of the Antidote.
In spirits she is cheerful and hopeful. Ilerskiirw
ami eyes have cleared up, and truly, 1 might
say, it has brought hope and happiness where
despondency aud unhappiness had existed, and
returned health to body and mind. She left off
the use of the Antidote without trouble, after she
had used about six and a half bottles in about six
and a half months time. She has not used a
particle of opiate or Antidote since then; having '
no desire or necessity for either. By this, you
see she has been perfectly well more than six
months. If these facts will be of any service tHf
you or Dr. Collins, you are at liberty to use them.
It is certainly a most remarkable remedy forthe,-
cure of the opium habit.
J. Dillworth, M. D.
Positively the Last Notice.
The Concert and Grand Distribution of $250,-
0(X) in Gifts will positively take place Monday,
May 31st, 1875, or the
MONEY WILL BE REFUNDED.
The Texas Gift Concert Association, in aid of
public improvements in the city of Denison,
Texas, stands to-day the first and foremost of
such enterprises. Its managers are men of
characteristic energy and enterprise, and have
the unqualified endorsement of the best citizens,
of Denison ami Texas. Their list of gifts to lie*
distributed is unequalled. $200,000 in cosh,
and $.50,000 in valuable improved real estate,
will be distributed. Their capital prize is sso,*
OOt) in cash. This is most emphatically an en
terprise for the people. Tickets are put at the
low price of one dollar to allow all an opportu
nity to take a share in this Texas “ Bonanza."
The time is short. Send in your orders
tickets at once, so the numbers may be carefully
, registered. If you cannot buy of a local agent
send orders direct, or send for special raterfW
clubs. See advertisement in another column.
Dark Brahmas.
Atltnta, Ga., April Ist, 1875. -
}fr. Editor:— You a e authorized to say th* l
I will give, in the fall, a trio of full-blooded Da»k a
Brahmas to any one who will send you thin*
subscribers at SI.OO each, within the next nine
ty <lays, Atlanta Poultry r > J