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A
rm and Garden.
Ickson on Immigration.
mf Sparta, Ga., June 10th, 1869.
^Kzditors Southern Cultivator :—I wish
■o draw the attention of the cotton plan-,
tors of the South to the subject of immi¬
gration. It is one of great interest, and if
successful, I think will prove destructive
to the cotton, interest. I do not wish my
views to prevail unless they arc right. I
wish both sides to be beard, and hoi 6
those who can wield tbc pen, and who
agree with me will be heard; the other
side has been heard already and we have
been taxed to promote this cause. The
State of Georgia is moving for our de¬
struction.
The negro we have with u| and we can¬
not get rid of him if we would. They
will not die out as most of our Northern
friends and many of our people think. The
next census will show a large increase.—
The only way to make it tolerable for
them to live amongst us, is to give them
employment. With full employment, they
will steal less, be more law abiding, and a
less nuisance] in every way. The agri¬
cultural interest at the South is chiefly
valuable for its production of cotton, to¬
bacco and rice. Can we make more mon¬
ey by doubling the quantity of labor, than
we can out of what we now have ? Do
numbers increase the quauty of labor
pro rata, or will the dividends be greater
for all concerned ? Can the first million
of people in Georgia, having the first
choice of lands to cultivate and the bal¬
ance for pasture, make more or less than
the second million, having the poorest
half to cultivate and no waste land for
stock to graze on ? Is the second million
likely to be more skillful, industrious,
law-abiding and enterprising, &c., &c. ? I
think history teaches us that a population,
with a plenty of room and land, are more
oheaply governed than a dense population
—oan live better and oan have more labor
to spare for improvements. What
built the same amount of Railroads
and Factories as the United States ? The
United States having plenty 0 f lands to
cultivate, by selecting the best, can, with
one half of its laborers make a plenty of
all the products of the soil, whilst the oth¬
er half can build Railroads and machinery
of all kinds, and work them. The Cotton
States, with its present labor, can build
more Railroads, erect more Factories, de¬
velop more mines, carry education and re¬
finement to a higher point than if the pop¬
ulation was increased four-fold. With
cotton at twenty-five cents per pound, you
have money to do whatever you wish col¬
lectively. In 1848 and ’49, with 900,000
to 1000,000 bales of cotton in Liver¬
pool, cotton sold in Augusta at from 4$ to
5$ cents. With 350,000 to 400,000 at
present in Liverppool, cotton is selling in
Augusta from 25 to 29 cents per pound.
Why do you wish to make the change ?—
Our Northern friends say, if we do not
produce oottou cheaper we will loose the
trade. 1 am willing to lose it, if it can
only be held by making cheap cotton. If
they would take a little more interest in
preventing the loss of our liberty, instead
of the loss of the cotton trade, it would in¬
ure to the benefit of both sections. Give
us our liberties and constitutional rights;
with our best men to represent us in all
departments, and we can make as much
cotton as the world wants, at fuir prices, if
it bo ten millions of bales, without an out¬
side man or dollar. Good government
would do more to develop this country
than all the men and money in the world.
Cotton planters, it is not to your interest
to sell your laud at a mere nominal price.
How can you iuvest your money to any
better advantage. Land must advance iu
price. In thirty yearly without a single
imigrant, Georgia will have a population
of two millions of people—the sous and
daughters of the present population. Be
patient—wait for the uaturui iue.case, and
what may voluntary come. Do not spend
your money to hasten an over populated
country. It will come soon enough, and
when it docs come, you will have no out
lot. Some are willing to cut their lands
up into .10811 lots, and give every alter¬
nate lot to immigrants, thinking it will
more than double the prioa of the balauce.
What do you care what you* Uatls are
worth, if you have none to sell—baaidta
it would reduce the price ol cotton morn
than one-half, aud the land you have left
would not pay per acre one half of the
dividends they do now—reducing your
profits three fourths. You have a pleuty
of native poor people to sell land to, if you
wish to part with any.
Do those who have no land, wish eom
petitors in labor, and in tbe land market—
reducing Dtk wish your wages one halt or morel
you a great increase of money
capital, reducing the rate of interest to the*
standard of Europe, causing all property to
rise, in proportion to the tall of interest.—
Your wages are fixed by the surplus of
cotton you have to export, and the price
it will bring in Liverpool. Yonr prosper*,
ity depends upon the scarcity of labor and
ittgh rate of interest. You have nothing
SAUCtCK VllEif JO
value of your being fixed by the value of
cotton iu Liverpool, where interests is low,
you can by residing where it is high, ac
quire proportionally, much more laud in a
given time.
To those who have land to sell, or more
than can be worked, let me say the very
S'arc'ty of labor will make one half of
your lands bring annually more money
than if all was plauted—the other is worth
five per cent, to grow broom sedge for gra*
zing, and will advance more than five per
cent, annually. For the safety of the
manufacturing interests, especially in cot¬
ton, it is not prudeut to push it too fast—
not faster than markets can be found for
the products manufactured. Just as sure
as the winds return the water, to be coa*
densed and fall again above the shoals,
the people here will possess the money
and energy and skill to put the water to
work ; and to effect this most speedily, we
want a scarcity of labor, that there may be
a scarcity of cotton, and correspondingly
good prices.
With cotton at 20 to 26 cts. per lb., we
can in Georgia appropriate ten dollars ten
wards increasing our manufacturing inter>
ests with more ease than one dollar, with
double the labor, and cotton 8 to 12 cent?:
Where are the laborers best fed and cloths
ed? where labor is scarce. Where does land
pay the best profits ? where labor is scarce \
and the reason is, the propucts of the
farm bring the best prices, under these
circumstances.
I am equally opposed to begging for
money to be brought to the South, to be
invested. If capitalists come of their own
accord, let them come, but it is not to our
interest that they should. You dow own
the property of Georgia—if you sell one
half of it you will own but the other half.
It is very difficult to transfer real property
from one country to another. The most
you would get, would be the means to live
and dress fine for a few
What we want is a system of saving
and properly investing, each year. We
could and ought to save annualy fifteen
million of dollars, to be invested. I am
for more labor top, but I want such as we
may never regret acquiring. Accumulate
all sorts of labor-saving machines; im«
!>rove your laud to a capacity double its
present rates; improve your systems fully
double of what they bow are. Learn to
do fully fifty per cent, more work, with
the same labor that is now done, and with
more ease ease ; : learn learn to to apply nrmi» y 0ur t„i___ labor to
greater advantage than is row done—do
all this, and more too which can be done,
and you will find your products ample,
without any increase of population. I am
for non-action by Georgia—non-actios
our people. Leave the subject of
tion to time, and the free will of those
wish to come among us, and be of us.
We owe our prosperity at this time
tirely to the scarcity of labor—many ne¬
groes having refused to work; others be¬
ing employed in repairing torn up
and building new roads. If all the negroes
had - gone to / work ,7 on the farms, U a> and “" U done UUUC
lull work, it would have taken ,
years to reach our present situation. Tbc
scarcity of labor is the only blessing we
new enjoy as a result of the war.
The scarcity * of labor ia the South. *
gives us the proceeds of the very labor
Sjine people wish to transfer here. The
profits of one hand in the cotton field, give
us the labor of two in Europe. Transfer
hiui bare, and he will compete with the
labor we now have, or he will labor with
those we now have to lessen their profits,
and bring about a state of things, which
will get up strikes. You must recollect,
a strike in the cotton or harvest field, is
not like one in a cotton mill or on a railroad
If the mill stops, what has been done is
not lost—if the hands refuse to move any
more dirt, what has been, remains. Not
so with wheat and cotton—all is lost, un.
less you continue to advance. The guano
must bo pumped up into the cotton bolls,
and they must be gathered by uninter¬
rupted labor.
One more point I will mention, and
then leave the subject to be discussed ful¬
ly, I hope, by abler pens. The pres|jaf
the South lias labored earnest! et tbe
cotton planter to make s supplies at
hotuc, urgingjL>»'U*i n g the cheapest pol¬
icy. .JNwifevery cotton planter knows
that nothing pays as well as cotton, and
the presses in the world cannot change
his opWKo. But if the press wijl strike
at tho root oi the evil, they may do incal¬
culable good. I w> iU state whatitVt; I
have always practiced it; both the true V
terest ofthe^otton plantar and patriotism,
should make all a^opt it. Apply one half
of all labor andlhnd to ihe making of full
supplies of all kindB that arc needed on
the plantation, and enough to spare for
those engaged in other pursuit*. Do this,
and you will get more money, (take ten
years together,) for the other half of la¬
bor and land engaged in cotton culture,
than if the whole was employed to produce
cotton. If this is true immigration i* ceD ,
tainly not to our interest, as well as other
people, Very respectfully,
DAVID DICKSON.
W.H.WARREN, A.J LANE, J.W.WALLACE
Augusta, Hancock Co, Augusta,
Warren, Lane & Co.
(Successors to W Henry Warren &Co.)
©otton F actors
WARAHOUSE AND
om mission Merchants,
185 and 177 Broad Street ,
AUGUSTA, GECr.GIA.
CASH ADVANCES made on shipments of
Cotton to New York and Liverpool’
We are agents for Georgia and South Caro
ina for the celebrated
Kettlewell’s Manipulated
GUANOS^ Ober’s Phosphate
and the ARROW TIE and Patent Iron Band
for Bailing Cotton.
J8SF" The interests of the firm will be repre¬
sented in Hancock county by J. CLARENCE
SIMMONS, Esq., of Sparta. W. t L. &(7
aug 16 3m
THE SECOND VOLUME.
NOW 18 THE TIME TO
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Eclectic Medical College
OF THE CITY OF NEW YOCK.
Chartered April 22, 1865,
The Sixth Session of this College will begin
its preliminary course the 4th day of October,
and the regular course on VVeduesday the 13th
dav of October, 1669, and continue 18 weeks.
FACULTY.
JOSEPH R. BUCHANAN, M. L>,
Emeritus Professor And Lecturer on the Institutes
of Medicine.
Robert S. Newton, M D., Professor of Opera
tive Surgery and Surgical Diseases
Paul W. Allen. M. J>., Profea.or of Theory &
Practice of Medicine
Win. H. Hadley, M. D. Professor of Materia
M*>dica and Therapeutics
J. M. Comins, M D , Professor of Obstetrics
and diseases of Women and Children.
Edwin Freemen. M. D., Professor of Descrip¬
tive J. and Surgical Anatomy M. LL,
M F- Urowne, D. D., Professor of
Physiology and Pathol ogy.
J. v iltou Sanders, M. D., LL. D.. Professor
of Chemistry. M. D., Professor
H Frank D. Garrison, Tabor, A. M., Professor of of Pharmacy Medical
J u J' 8 P rn d* nc ®; Demon,tratoTTTd
John H. F»ch, M. D.,
Adjunct Profeosor of Anatomy
FEES
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For certificate of Schollan-hip, for which the
holder may attend two or ntor*- courses of
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Student iu the Cuil-ge for ten years 500
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Board may be had for six or seven dollars «
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the office of Professor Comins No. 100 Eat-l26ih
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221 Ea t 26ihstr -et, where they will bo assisted
in procuring board.
Any fuither information mav be obtained by
addressing ROBERTS. NEWTON, M D,
aug 13 Faculty, Pres’t 30 East 19th st.
WM. A. POND & Co.,
Piano Forte and Music Dealers ,
No. 647 Broadway, New York.
Established nearlh fifty years ago.
PIANO FORTES,
of our own make equal to any and prices much
lower than those of other first-class houses.
The Parlor Gem 7 Octave Piano.
fa handsome rosewood cases, medium size, is
the handsomest and best Piano ever mode, and
the price exceedingly low; every instrument
tulty warranted five years—send for price list.
We have always on hand all kinds of Musical
Instruments in great variety.
Band Instruments
of Brass and German Silver, warranted correct
in tone, at prices much below other manufac¬
turers.
Violin Strings.
We keep the very choicest and best strings
Sheet Music, Musical Works
Our catalogue embraces over six thousand
NnSisr 3 g * paid> wben th * markcd price is
. \ Published
BMgSRfcr iano Method ’ by Jeon
K The simplest and
work ever published
The New School^ 8rK^j^f^ * n 8 ^ Horning. ^
Public discount bW in * H the
Splendid Sot* Jrlx IWh rk: P ", Ce 50 cent *
introduce the T & ,“ d 0,i,er8
Aug 14—ly *275*® 64 < Broadway, & c N. °- T.
Mackenzie Brothers,
[Late Thomas Mackenzie St Sons]
Importers and IVIanullictiirers of
COACH k SADDLEY HARDWARE,
No 222 Baltimore street,
BALTIMORE, Md
Felloes, Saddle Trees. Hubs and Spokes.
Ax S ' Clirria 9 e ond Tire Bolts, Knobs, Enamelled Canvass
Mde^Skin Dash and Bnckram, Collar Leather Lac* Fringes, * Dash Frames, Patent Elastic Spokes, Button Felloes, Holes Hubs, and Shafts, Eyelets, Enameled
Trees, Carriage Poles, whip sockets. Laces, Shaft shackles, Castings, Swingle
Damasks, Mackenzie’s Patent Panel Seats, &c.,
SaddleTrecs. Bridle-Bits, Stirrups,
C * 8 ’ a ^ kinds—second-hand McClellan Saddles,
Fron *®» Ornaments, r. Bosetts. Buokles, Harness Leather.
Leather, t Patent Leather, Martingale Rings, Sheep Skins, Skirting
Colon-makers Saddlers, Shoe Thread, Varnishes for
or Bridle Threads, Harness Mountings, *c.
Enamelled Leather, Bag Leather, Harness Leather, Skirting. Stirrups. Bits, Carriage
Bolts, Tire B Us, \ armsh, Moss, Wheels, &c- «fc. Also, all other articles appertain
TTy E . to . ing to the business.
VV are anxious increaso our trade with Georgians and would say we are direct iroport
ers from German and English Factories; strictly honorable merchants, and cun promise to
serve them as well as any House in the United States. We give personal attention to our
customers personally or by orders. Try us. ‘ • 0(Jt jg_jy
OR. O. S. PROP HITT’S
LIVER MEDICINES.
CONSISTING OF HIS CELEBRATED
Liver Medicine, Anodyne Paiu Kill It, Anti
Biliious P its, Ague Pills, Dysentery
Cordial, Female Tonic and
Purifying Pills.
npflE | PHITT. excellent M. D,, Remedies need no recommendation— of O. S- PRO.
their well known power in removing the diseases
peculiar to our Southern climate having already
established for them an enviable reputation in
Georgia and adjoining States. As the majority
of persons living South are predisposed to dis¬
ease of the Liver, it is gtanted by all iuteJigeut
physicians that most of he pains end aches of our
people are due to organic or functional derauge
i .entofthat important organ. Prophitt’s Liver
Medicine and anli Biliious Pills strike directly at
the root of the evil. They cure the liver, which,
in mne cases out cf ten, is at the bottom of
caughs, dyspepsia, colic, sick headache, Rhetna
ti-rn, consumption, meustrou*! obstructions, dec..
so rheumatism, common among our people. Earache, acute
flee neuralgia and bodily pains of every
kiud, before PROPHITT’S PAIN KILL,
IT like chati'before a wind.
PROPHITT’S LIVER MEDICINE.
Dr Prophitt: Having used this medicine sirf
ficieutly long to test its virtue, and to satisfy my
own mind that it is an invaluable remedy for
dyspepsia—a disease from which the writer has
guttered much for six years and being pursuad
ed that hundreds now suiter from this annoying
complaint would be singularly benefit ted, as he
has been, by its u?e, we deem it a duty we owe
to the unfortunate, class to recommend lo them
the u»e of this remedy ; which has given not on¬
ly hmiMif but several members ol his family the
greatest relief.
W. M. ARNOLD,
Of _ the Georgiy
Confetence.
Dooly County, Ga„ April, 1867,
This is to certify that I was co* lined (o the
house, and most ot the time to my bod, and suf¬
fering the greate.l agony imaginable, with rheu¬
matism, for five moo lis and after trying ev*<ry
available remedy with no relief, I was cured wilh
two bottles of Dr. O. S. Prophitt’s Anodyne
Pain Kill It, each costing me fifty cents only; it
relieved me almost instantly. 1 therefore recom
meud it iu the highest degree to others suffering
from similar di-eace. I can say that it is one of
the best family ntedicies now out. certain.
Yours, truly, w. A. FOREHAND.
Dr. Pn Covington, Oa.. July 9, 1867.
phitt—haring used your liver Medi¬
cine lor more thau a year iu my family I chet-r
fully recommend it to all |>ersons suffering from
liver attecliou iu any form. I also recommend
your disease. Dysentery Cordial as the bes’ remedy for
that O, T DOGERS.
Stan/ordville, Putnam Co., Oct■ 1, 1667
Dr. O. S. Prophitt—Dear Sir: This is to certi¬
fy that I have used your Ague Pills for the last
ten years, and bave never lulled to cure the Ague
in a single instance with them. They always
breofc the chills the first day that they are given.
I can recommend them as being the best ague
medicine that I have fouud, and they leave no
bad effects following them, as quinine. &c.
Yours, reepediulty, \ WESTBROOK.
Putnam County, Ga., Sept. 22, 18t»8
Dr O. S. Prophitt —Sir : I have used for the
last two years iu my family your L. V er M- dte ne.
your Pain Kill It, aud your Ft-tnale Tonic aud I
have no fears iu saying that they are the best
medicines I have ever used lor the hver aud-tom
ach. Neuralgic aud rheumatic afflictions, head¬
ache, colic, aud pains of all kinds are subdued by
them. After using the medicine *o loug, 1
cheerfully recommend them to all that ar« afflict¬
ed, as ihe best and safest remedies for ail the di«
eases for which they are recommended, &c.
Yours reap’y, JAMES WRIGHT.
I>R. PROPHITT’S FEMALE TONIC.
This medicine, with its associates, is a safe and
certain remedy for all curable diseases to which
females alone are liable It is also an excHInit
preventative of nervous bliudnes?, or nervous
disease in either male or female It is a power,
ful nervine tonic, setting up a fail aud free circu¬
lation throughout the system.
All of the abt ve medicines sold by druggi.-o*
and raetchauta generally throughout the south¬
west.
Prepared only by
DR. O. S. PROPHITT,
A. W. Covington, Ga
BERRY. Ageut,
Sparta, Ga.
July 30, 6m.
Premium Wood Type.
J. G. COOLEY’S
PKIilTERs WAREHOUSE
76 Fulton street, New Y’ork.
Wood Type of Every Dei cription *^t
Specimen Book and Price List on applica
on as above, or to Geo P Rowell & Co, Ad¬
vertising Agents, 40 Park Row, New York.
Edwards House
S2PA1&VA,
E. F. COTHERN, | Proprietor..
GEO. W. WATKINS,
TTJTT’S
VEGETABLE LIVER PILLS
Cures Liver Diseases, Dyspepsia, &c.
Tim EXPECTORANT
Cures Coughs, Asthma, &c. •
Tutt’s Sarsaparilla and Queen’s Delight
Ihe great Alterative and Blood Purifier.
Tutt’s Improved Hair Bye,
Warranted the best in use.
For sale by A. W. BERRY,
Dec 25—ly SPARTA.
DR. J- BRAOFIELD’S
Female Regulator!
WOMAN’S BEST FRIEND!
—o—
nnHIS VALUABLE MEDICINE is prepared
X !<> r women exclusively, and to be used by
women only. It is adapted especially to those
cases where the womb is disordered, and will
cure in such any irregularity in the “ menses,”"except
As these cases last as require a surgical operation.
are very rare, the FEMALE
REGULATOR is of almost universal applica.
don. In a sudden check ef the “ monthly
courses” from cold, trouble of mind or like
cause, it acts like a charm, by restobino the
discharge in evert INSTANCE, thus relieving
the fever, headache, pain in the small of the
back and “lower stomach,” flushes of heat
about the face, chilly sensations, burning of
the eyelids, and general restleness. Taken in
time, all these Byn-ptoms pass away immedi¬
ately, without injury to the constitution.—
Frequently, however, if the pfoper remedyis
not applied in time, the disease becomes chro¬
nic, and the foundation laid for numberless
evils to the constitution of the woman. The
next “ turn” comes around and there is no
“ show,” or perhaps the “ whites” will np.
pear. There will be some uneasiness about
the Womb, but very little or none of the natu
ral tiuid escaping. The complexion becomes
sallow, bowels swollen, a sort of greenish caste
about the face, constant dull, aching pain iu
the head, weight in the lower stomach and
back, wi/h or without whites, palpitation of
the heart, pallor, exhaustion, indigestion,
weariness, langor, aching across the loins, loss
of appetite, pain in left breast, tightness
across the chest, cough and giddiness. If still
allowed to go on, “green sickness” will be
fully developed; the headache becomes se¬
vere, with loss of memory, diminished sensi.
bility, sick stomach, dyspepsia, no relish
for food, loss of .flesh, increased fluttering of
"»e hem!, swelling or the feet, legs and
body, uud occasional spitting of blood The
slightest almost effort causes hurried breathing,
to suffocation. The skin is flabby and
has a “doughy feel.” This is,a sad picture,
but it is the condition of thousands of
between the ages of fifteen and forty-*ve, who
gleet are brought to the grave by is norance ar ne
to take the proper remedy.
To all who aro afflicted with any of the
'.jymptonM above mentioned, in connection with
earnestly mi irregularity of the “monthly sickness,” we
say, TAKE DR. J. BRADFIELD’S
FEMALE REGULATOR. A few ounces ta¬
ken, you will at once experience its benefit,
and with a little patience you will be fully re¬
stored to health.
This remedy has U«**m extensively used for
upward of twenty years by many ef the most
experienced and successful physicians in
Georgia. three bottles. No family should be without two or
We repeat, that DR. J. BRADFIELD’S 1
FEMALE REGULATOR is prepared for wo¬
men, and to be used by wonmn only.
A trial is all we ask.
Prepared and sold fn any quantity, by
BRADFIELO * CO.,
Atlanta, Ua.
TESTIMONIALS.
STATE OF GEORGIA—Troup County :
This is to certify that I have examined the
recipe of Dr. Josiah Brad field, of this county,
and, as a medical man, pronounce it to be a
combination of medicines of great merit in the
treatment of all the diseases of females for
which he recommends it.
WM. P. BEASLEY, M. D.
This December 21, 1868.
Atlanta, Ga., December 29, 1868.
Dr. J. Dradfitld —Dear Sir ; I take pleasure
m stating I that, sometime previous to the late
war, used with the most success, on a servant
gtrl, your FEMALE REGULATOR, prepared
then at Bradfield's Drugstore. West Point, Go.
She had been Buffering severely from suppres¬
sed menstruation, and this medicine restored
her to health. 8heis to-day living in Atlanta,
sound and well.
I will state further, that I know of its being
used, with equal success, in other cases. I do
not hesitate to indorse your preparation for
ihe purpose for which you recommend it.
Yours, truly,
JOHN C. WIIITNER.
Cartbrsvill* Ga., April 26, 1869.
. certify that
* two members of my
# immediate j, frmily, after
many years from nenstrual having irregularity, suffered for
having been treated without and
medical doctors, benefit by various
cured by bottle were of Dr at J. length completely
one Bradfield’s “FE¬
MALE REGULATOR ” I therefore deem it
my duty to furnish this certificate, witfi the
hope uf drawing the attention of suffering
womankind to the merits of a medicine whop
power in curing irregular and suppressed men¬
struation has been proven under my own per¬
sonal observation. Its effect on such cases is
truly wonuerful, and well may the remedy k«
called “ Womau’s Best Friend.”
Yours respectfully,
JAS. W. STRANGE
At wholesale by
J. H. ZE1LIN & CO.. Macon.
W. H. TUTT & LAND, Augufta.
For sale in dparta, by
A. W. BERET.
Sept 2, 1869
POLLAtD, C0X & CO ,
GENERAL GROCERY AND
Commission Merchants.
No. 297 BR OA D STREE f,
Augusta, (A few door* below the Planters* HoteL)
T ~T EEP constantly hand Georgia large
l\ on a and well
selected stock of GROCERIES *f every
description, including a fine assortment of
Whiskies, Brandies, Wines, &o.
BgL. The interests of the firm wUi be repre¬
sented by Judge Henry H; Fit*patrick, of
Warren county. may2—6m
REAT
CHILL AND FEYE
EXPELLEE.
LIPPMAN'S PYRAFUGE
IT IS IN FACT A
MOST WONDERFUL
Ferer Cure,
ON ACCOUNT OF THIS
Instant MAKING Remedy *
A
LASTING AND PERMANFNT CURE.
MO (TAME
HOWEVER OBSTINATE,
Can Resist its Health-giving Properties*
Creates PYRAFUGE
Cheeks an i Appetite, the Brings Color to ti
of Emaciated and
Strength to the Feeble. a
EVERY BOTTLE SOLD IS At*
COMPANIED BY A GUARANTEE
OF ITS EFFICACY.
The Proprieton of the PYRAFUGE ehallengee
every case, no matter of how long standing
to try this GREAT CHILL AND FEVER
CURE, and then deny its wonderful enrativo
properties.
ASK FOR
- Lippman’s
PYRAFUGE, AND GET RID OF THAT 7
Miserable Disease,
CHILL AND FEVER.
For sale at Wholesale, by the Sole Manu¬
facturer for the Uo’.ted States, by
JACOB LIP MAN,
proprietor or
LIPPMAN’S WHOLESALE DRUG HOUSE,
Savannah, 6a.
KAYTON’S
OIL OF LIFE
CURES ALL
Pains arid Aches*
AND IS THE
Great Rheumatic Remedy.
KAYTON’S PILLS
Cures Sick Headache*
and at
BILIOUS DISORDERS.
For sale in *parU by
May 21—ly« A W BERRY
Plahtatioh Bitters.
Thi« wonderful vegetable
restorative is tho sheet
anchor of the feeble and
debilitated. As a tonic and
cordial for the aged and
languid it has no equal
among stomachics. As a
remedy for the nervous
weakness to which women
are especially subject, it is
superseding every other
stimnlant. In all climates,
tropical, temperate or
frigid, it acts as a specific
in every species of disorder
which undermines the
bodily strength and breaks
down the animal spirits.
Wherever it is intro
duced it becomes a stand¬
ard article — a medicinal
staple. It is to-day the
best and purest tonic, and
the most popular medicine
in the civilized world—he
sure and get the genuine.
Sold by all Druggists, Gro¬
cers and Country Stores.
FURNITURE
OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS, AT
PLATT BROTHERS,
(Formerly C. A. Platt & Co.,)
214 Broad St. Augusta, Ga.v
— .*o:—
T1TE have and are constantly receiving th#
ff best assortment of FURNITURE that
has ever been in this market, consisting, o(
Rosewood and Mahogany Parlor Suits,
Chamber Suits, Cottage Suita.
Bedsteads, Chairs, Sofas, Tete-Tete,
Centre Tables, Bureaus, Sideboards, Extension,
Tables, of all lengths.
We particularly oall the attention of purchase
ers to our SOLID WALNUT CHAMBER.
SUITS fer Beauty, Durability and Cheapness^
OUE MANUFACTURING DEPARTMENT
Is still in operation. Special orders will b*
promptly branches. attended to. Repair* done in aU hi
UPHOLSTERING DEPARTMENT.
HAIR CLOTH, ENAMELED CLOTH, REP8
ble TERRY for Manufhcturer*. and SPRINGS, which and all articles suitnl
Prices. we offer at Low
WINDOW SHADES
UNDERTAKER’S -itUll a. New BtjU »£!!£;.
Su permtended by DEPARTMENT,
a competent roan. COFFINS
of and Quality, METALIC
CARES and CASKETS of the most improved
styles, furnished at alt hour* during * the
Day or Night.
Undertaker* can be supplied with all kind*
Trimmers, m * v 2— Ijr