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Agricultural jDqmrtmcnt,
From the Times and Planter.
Rockby, March 12th, 187*2.
Editor Times Planter:
on second best, to be followed by
peas attil ouls. Grass*seed, such as
will stand the cihnate, orchard clo
ver, red or alsike, as ilie character
of the soil in each case suggests,
shopfd follow oats. So that no field
si uultl be cultivated in the same
crop ofiener than once in four years,
aud to remain in grass at least two.
In so genial a clime as Geoigia, it
would seem great results might be
attained from the judicious raising ol
sheep. Certainly every planter
j should raise his pork and bacon, and
in a soil so well adapted to peas,
that product should be made to sup
plement corn as a feeding material.
this will be a radical refoim of the
Church. I am certain of it.’
1 herewith send you an
article I Nothing is better for hogs and sheep,
contributed by a Virginia Farmer,
under the impression that 1 was still j
editing your Agricultural depait-
rnent. Under the system which he
suggests for our adoption, he has
trehbled me product of his lands aud
made stock raising very profitable.
In ISOO he sold muttons at S16
p< r head—a short time since he was
(iff red $10 per head for his entire
flock ol ewes—a cross between the
Coi'\\ ohi and Leicester breeds. I fits
oiler was declined, and soon afier a
ue giibor’s clogs killed nine in one
niylit and so injured the flock by
running tbe.n while heavy with lamt).
that the majority of the lambs are
hoi n dead and many more of th<
ewes have died. Thus, in one night,
WM llilt ss dogs destroy hundreds of
dollars worth of propel tv, and yet
the law makers of the land refuse to
lax ltie worthless creatures. How
long is this foily to last i How long
is legislation to be in the hands oi
demagogues who are afraid to legis
late jor the good of the country lest they
offend a few voters ? Let the Agricul
tural interests assert tlicir rights at
. • O
the next election and dare maintain
them at the polls, by demanding or
their candidates such legislation as
for the latier, the hull aud pod as
fodder, is very superior, if well pre
sere ved.
If, ui addition to these economical
expedients, planters could realize
the importance ot the domestic man
ure heap as a means of independence,
and as auxiliary to the successful
grow th of the artificial grasses, there
would be a new era in Southern Ag
riculture.
Dollinger and Hyacinthe.
A Graphic Sketch and Contrast of
the tuo Great Papal Infallibility
Opponents.
“Dollinger is the head of the Cath
olic inform, Hyacinthe the heart.—
Iiow admirable are these men in
their dissemblance! In the reform
movement, as in the order of nature,
it was the heart which first sent its
efflux of life into the catholic world.
I refer to the memorable letter which
Father Hyacinthe two years ago
fished from his convent cell, in
which, prophet like, he predicted all
the troubles of the Vatican Council,
and protested against all its decis
ions, as though he had received the
order from God himself. As the
Key West, Florida.
Key West is a pretty city
very pleasant one. The
streets are open to the sea breezes,
and the latier almost constantly fan
the graceful town, which might
aptly be called the “Coca Tree
City,” so t umerous are those hand
some tropical trees. The cits* has
numerous hotels (Itusseii’s, Louvre’s
etc.,) eating houses, coffee stands,
fruit stores, c tc., very well patron
ized. There are several large to
bacco factories, as Steinberg &
Co.’s, and many mercantile houses,
among which I must name the firms
of Allen Brothers, Wall & Co., Cur
ry & Co.
Halt of the population are either
Spanish or colored people, and very
(juiet and industrious people they
are. But the main feature of Key
West is the auction marts. Every
day at half-past 9 a. m. arid 4 p. in.
you hear the hell of the auctioneers,
aud everything is sold at auction,
from vegetables to furniture. You
can buy either a bundle of four or
five turnips, a lot of three or four
cabbages, or arty larger quantity as
>ou may wish. These are prices
ofthe most usual articles; Oranges
(by the hundred) from SI -50 to $2
25, not very large, but sweet as su
gar; early York cabbages at 42 cts.
a piece; yellow sugar cane from 4J
to cents apiece; chickens 85
cents apiece; calico at 5 cents a
yard; bananas from $1 50 to $2 50 a
Air eotd Sunshine.
The human being is like a plant—
, neither will thrive in the dark. Nor
i v ill cither prosper in the twilight or
and a! in the shade. Show me a family
broad (that lives in a house heavily shaded
by oveihanging boughs ot trees, so
that the sunshine seldom or never
t ills upon any side of it, and 1 will
show you people who never enjoy
good health. It will be observed
that they are consumptive, or scrof
ulous, or have caried bones, or de
formed joints, or the children an*
rachitic, and are continually bleed
ing from the no.-e and look like wilt
ed cabbages. They are not exactly
wilted nor bleached, but they have
that bleached look presented by the
unfortunate inmates of prisons, and
the drooping appearance seen in
plants that make a poor show in
growing in dark, out of the way pla
ces.
Vigor is altogether impossible in
the absence o' sunshine, i know
manv people who think themselves
intelligent, arid who are filled with
wise saws and sage proverbs as to
the preservation of health, who live
in darken* d rooms. Sunshine fades
the carpets and warps the furniture,
they sav ; but faded carpets are bet
ter than crooked spines and bowed
legs and arms. Flies will get into
the house if it is light, is another ex
cuse for ample window curtains and
heavy, death dealing shade trees—
the latter, in many cases, the poi
sonous and too odorous Chinese Ai-
lanthus, than which a greater curse
was never brought into the country
H, & J. WEED,
importers and
IF II O L E S A L E D E A L E It S 1 N
Iron, Steel, Tin Plate and Hardware, Rub
ber Re I ting* and Carriage Material
YJS SL i t§ I^f'-aiiq/Ltan fft.
SAVANNAH, GA.
el
oct 10 H71. r & n *•
girne (cluster;) plantains half that But flies buzzing about in the air ot
f Pl I _ . : _ „l nno’e vi t! 111 rr mom ;irP t r\ Kp M TP Ip T ■»
, heart is enclosed within the body, so
the material prosperity ot the coun- j impulse ot life remained hidden,
try imperatively demands. ^ although present in the council. * *
Let the Agricultural interests wnich ; ^ parallel between these two emi-
support all otheis, become the ‘[tow-; nent mPn? drawn by one who knows
er of the laud, which their import- ; t b em well, will not be without inter-
ance demands. I am glad to know j esU The great theologian of Ger-
price.—The low price of the plan
tan makes it the principle food for
the poor people. Fish are also very
cheap and very abundant, kingfish
jackfish, snappers, pompano, trout,
turtle (from 12 to 220 pounds) are
every day landed at the market
wharf. A kingfish three feet long is
sold for 50 cents; a dozen snappers,
each a foot long, cost50 to 00 cents.
Near the.market wharf is the land
one’s sitting room are to be prefer
red to Spanish flies made up into
blistering plasters, and used upon
the chest as counter irritant to tu-
bercled lungs.
Too much sunshine cannot be ad
mitted to a residence, or basked in
by the sick or well. Sunshine is a
grand medicine for the invalid, and
will cure and reinvigorate a shatter
ed trame quicker and more perma
W. A. HOPSON & CO.,
Have received (his day a choice variety of
the Latest styles of
LADIES'. MISSES’ AND CHILDRENS SUITS.
ALSO
SWISS OVERSKIRTS. DRESSING SKIRTS,
CORSET COVERS, PIQUE WRAPPERS,
ALSO
* A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF
Ladies’ TJnders’arments.
VV- A- HOPSON’ & CO, 4l Second St., 20 Triangular
Block, Macon, Ga,
Re’c. 71 Feb. 14.18 if
Laurens Sheriff Sal*--
XXJ ai-be sold before the Cur, •
▼ ▼ of Damn, at public outcry, on tl
j *1 uesffoj in April ne.v. wi Liu if .
jot su e*, one l >t of Cor:, about -wo"
: ('200) bushel: levied on as the pr p er! ,
; .lames M. L imb, to giti-::y one ;j, u .; j-
| Laurens Superior Coau, ll .y ] jt ' .
■ James M Lamb. Properl, p
s.-.nl h In.
! Uublir, G*., March 8th 1-71.
, GEO. CURRELL.
i march 12 tris.
La11rens Silenti
n j ILL be sold b: for > the Conrt-I, 0 j. e , r
in the to'.vn of Dublin, on t
Tuesday in April next, wthin the legal i r
of sale, one tract of laud < n the east $•<].' • .°
Oconee River, containing one ht:n •
three (103) acres, more or les«, r ” , .
lands of Gto Kuu, and others, at ii ,
Cross R. ads, known as the land on
Lewis C. Beacham now lives Levied 0n “'.;
the property ot Lewis Bencham to $..•■< ■ ,
ti fa. from Laurens Superior Court; ri
Wilkes, administrator. t:id Jul : a A Gav j
iniuistratrix, vs. Lewis Bench . p r
pointed oct by John Rivers. pl»:nt:n‘.< «>’.
uey.
Dublin, Ga, March l. l-7l.
mar.li-tds Printer
GEORGE CURHELL
r’s fee $2 50 Sher*-
JN. A. MEGRATH,
M^VCOIST, GhA..
Hollingsworth Block,
CAN SUPPLY YOU ALL WITH
FORM,
BACON,
BARD,
FLOCK,
MEAL,
KIEL,
SLOAK
COFFEE,
SIRUP,
MOLASSES,
TOBACCO,
WHISKY,
itig place ofthe cattle from the main ^ enl Ly l J ian a U the drugs in the laud
land. The cattle are very small
lhat our immediate Representatives I many j s reserved, calm, even some-! " ear b’^ a11 !™ a,!er iban Hose we
appreciate the importance of these ; liine ' to a fl oml 0 f coldness, general- j see ‘l 1 0r,eai ‘** A S 00<1 ^
interests. J. S. Newman. ! ly seienc . always hopeful. The ' V01 ' 1 ' $20; . a 8°° J beef can be had
i ly serene. and always hopeful.
; great Frenchman is aflhble and lib-
A Virginia Farmer’s View of Southern e . ral lu ll . is 5 P ef ; cll » unusually senst-
° . i live, and carrying always with lmn
Agncultura. Policy. | an atmosphere of melancholy hope.
The changes which have been ef- Dollinger is never troubled by events,
i’ected in the Southern States by the I be they lucky or unlucky ; Hyacinthe
late revolution, render correspond- rejoices and suffers with everv one.
mg changes necessary in their gen
eral economy, or at least the adoption
of measutes suited to their altered
circumstances. The confiscation of
half their property—the overthrow
of all their established institutions—
the deprivation of a circulating me
dium, and of cherished political
(or SlOto $12.
Coupled with plenty of Iresh air, and
the restorative pr patations drawn
from air and sunshine, it is the grand
reformer of all morbid afflictions,
and the finest and safest of remedies.
Key West is the centre of a large i ^’ s f ^ so die best of preventives of
sponge business; and one can see sickness. Admit it, then, to every
The simple, solid features of Dol
linger denote art intellect at once el
evated and positive ; the ascetic vis
age of Hvat iuthe (he does not look
so in Rome) reveals the mystical
tendency ol his soul. Dollinger has
nothing ofthe priest in his exterior,
and very little of a religious charac-
rights, combined with military and j ter, but his manners are noble and
civil persecution, inflicted a shock j distinguished ; he presents the real
upon the people of these States, for ' type ol a professor of historical eci
which history affords no parallel. ence. Father Hyacinthe, on ihe
The thrift ofthe planters, even be-! contrary, is a priest by nature ; the
lore the war w*as more apparent than
real. Then they maintained a devo
tion and fealty to the sceptre of King
Cotton, wholly incompatible with
the just claims of other interests. If
their receipts were large, their dis
sacerdotal character shows itself as
clearly through his lay garments as
through his Carmelite robe aud
cloak ; he is not a devotee, hut he is
pious. In conversation Dollinger
talks hut little and with simplicity ;
bursements were equally so, and j his discourse is always forcible,
sometimes larger. If they sold j rarely eloquent, Hyacinthe is always
much, they also purchased largely ; ; eloquent, Dollinger is often absent,
forgetting the thrifty maxim lhat
“the tiller of the soil should buy
nothing he can raise at home.” If
less cotton, and more corn, peas,
pork, &c., &c., had been raised, and
a due regard paid to the pseserva-
tio i ofthe fertility of the generous soil
the profits would have been greater,
and in this hour of necessity and
trial, a greater reliance might be
placed on the productive capacities
ofthe land, and less recourse had to
commercial fertilizers (often worth-
and sometimes bruse/uc. Hyacinthe
is always attentive and always gen
tle Both have the simplicity of
youth, the greatness of Dollinger
consists in his learning and in his
uprightness ; the greatness of Hya
cinthe is in his charity and in his
conscience. Dollinger is passive in
his convictions, and is content with
resisting evil ; Hyacinthe is active
and teeis the necessity of protesting
against injustice. Dollinger would
correct error bv reason and logic;
every day, in the season, one ol the
wharves covered with tings of
sponges drying in the sun. They
are not very fine, but they are soft,
nook apd corner uf your dwellings,
that it may banish malaria, and im
plant life and vitality into your
minds and bodies.
being completely free of those min- s P eaki "g of lhe , benefits ot
*-■■■••■ 1 sunshine, we recommend a sunshine
bath. It costs nothing, but it yields
health, strength and elasticity of
spirits, aud is worth all other kinds
of bathing ever indulged in by health-
seekers.— Household.
le.-s) which now absorb so much of ( Hyacinthe would eflect the reform by
the planters hard earnings. demonstration and example. Dol-
If these views are just, as appli
cable to the past, they are more
worthy ot consideration in the pres
ent crippled and distressed condi
tion of planters. In this fast gener
ation no interest can be stationary—
it must either be progressive or ret
rograde—aud the time has passed
when the cultivator of the soil can
depend on one product alone for the
payment of his debts—his taxes, his
clothing, his meat and bread, and
every other necessary supply.
In what direction then is relief to
be sought in this hour of need?-—
Judging from all other agricultural
people who have been prosperous,
and at the same time improved their
soil, a mixed system of husbandry
seems best adapted to the present
arid probable future status of all the
►Southern States. If the production
of cotton were kept down to a rate
of produc , so as to increase the de
mand, and enhance its value toa re
munerating point, and the product
per acre correspondingly increased
(than which nothing is more easy) a
Jarger revenue at less cost would be
attained. And if the necessary sup-
linger is exclusively German ; he has
art entire faith in German ideas and
an absolute trust in the institutions of
his country. Hyacinthe is esst n ial-
ly French in his qualities, but cos
mopolite in his simpathy. He loves
France more than all other nations,
but he loves humanity even better
than his country. Dollinger has a
benevolent esteem for all mankind,
but it is Germany alone that he loves.
The life which Dollinger leads is that
of a sage ; his house that of a savant
Elegant simplicity and immaculate
cleanliness reign throughout his
apartments ; the only evidence of
wealth is in the books and paintings.
He is very hospitable and seldom
dines alone. PI is meal is good, but
not sumptuous. His habits are sim
ple, almost austero. He rises at
five iu the morning, and soon after
commences work; for his breakfast
he takes a cup of coffee, with a little
bread, and until one o’clock in the
day is continually employed. Then
comes the hour of dinner, at which
he drinks r.eilher wine, beer nor tea.
He is very fond of conversing with
his guests. After dinner he receives
plies of grain, forage, pork, beef, i his visitors, and notwithstanding
mutton, wool, poultry,^ fruit, &c.,
&e., were raised in sufficient quan
tities for home consumption and to
their great number and his immense
amount of occupation, lie finds time
to see all those who seek him. To-
meet all incidental demands, always j wards four or live o’clock he sets out
bearing in mind that the soil must for a walk, which sometimes lasts
likewise be fed with generous food three hours, and which often carries
and carefully sustained, there can j him far into the country, at the risk
be little doubt of increased prosper- of fatiguing bis companion. He
ity. A mixed husbandry involves j sups towards seven in the evening,
necessarily a rotation oferops, and to ■ He is seventy-three years of age,
avoid special exhaustion, and to give supple aud vigorous, and looks much
time for restoring vital principles.— I younger than he is. 4 I am old,’ said
It may not be presumptuous to sug-! he to me one day, ‘and I shall not
gest the following. Cotton on the live long enough to see all this, but
best land and well manured. Corn ! what hasbegun well myst ent) well
ute pieces of shell which ate so ttu
merous in the Mediterranean spong
es. Nearly all the sponges are sold
to New* York firms; one of them—
Moses & Co.—buys from $400,000
to $500,000 worth of sponges every
year.
It is strange lhat Key West, so
near to New Orleans, is more regu
larly in business communication
with New York. The letters and
newspapers from the North are re
ceived iu live or six days; those
from New Ot leans are sometimes
fifteen and twenty days old when
they reach Key West.
The city rests on the solid rock,
and a thin layer that w*as in the
streets has long been wmshed away;
mud is seldom teen, and it is pleas
ant fo walk on the hard ground.
Everywhere you behold handsome
buildings, shaded by the cocoa and
the cedar, the only trees that cau
grow here. Sometimes the little
gardens in front of the houses pres
ent a comic aspect; the flower beds
are edged, not with bricks or stones
but with inverted ale bottles altcr-
na ing with a while one. This is
evidence conclusive that the citi
zens like a little ale now and then.
In fact, nearly every store has a
sign offering to sell ale on draught.
One of the most pleasant views
of Key West is at the wharves.
There are the landing places ot' the
many steamship lines plying from
Galveston and New Orleans to Ha
vana, Charleston, Baltimore and
New York. The sea on a quiet day
is of a light green color, and so
transparent that the eye can dis
tinctly see the fishes playing on the
bottom around the vessels. But
when rough, the sea is whitish, on
account of the sand, and seems to
roll in milky waves. At the
wharves you see also the ugly hulls
of wrecked vessels, which were
formerly the main objects ot trade
in Key West. But this gloomy
hussiness is falling off every
day. 'I’he few years of ocean steam
navigation is curtailing that of sail
ing vessels, and the wreckers com
plain of the dull times.
New Orleans Picayune.
Beware of the First Glass!—The
secret of being sober is to avoid the
first glass.
If you do not lake the first glass,
nobody can make you take the se
cond.
It is the first glass lhat conciences
grapples with; this taken, con
science grows weaker with every
succeeding glass.
Before you take the first glass,
you tire sober, but nut quite after
ward ; the second and the third are
fmther removes Irnm perfect sobri
ety-
To the first glass may be traced
the greatest portion of poverty, cr i me,
lunacy, bankruptcy and premature
deaths.
Ilow many acts of folly have you
committed this week ?
The Pi?, Ihe Donkey, Ihe Dog.
A dispute once arose between a
pig, a donkey and a dog, which ol
the three was the happiest.
‘I certainly atn,’ said the pig, ‘for
I do nothing. My mistress gives me
food regularly. I have a large com
mon to wonder over at mv will. ]
grub up plenty of earlhtiuts when I
want them. Many a cabbage, pota
to, aud turnip 1 pick up by lounging
around people’s gardens. When the
weather is warm, I lie in the sun,
and sleep. When the cold and the
snow comes, I get into my sty and
my mistress is forced in find me fo id
and shelter. Nobody, 1 believe, can
be as happy as a pig-’
‘Stop,’ said the donkey ; ‘not so
fast, friend pig. How about your
bacon ? People dotril mind you be
ing lazy, provided you die soon.—
The falter and iazier you get, the
sootier the butcher comes. No one
cm he so happy as a donkey. 1 can
work it I like, and if I don’t like, I
can kick. 1 am very fond of thistles,
nettles, and prickly plants, which
nobody else seems to care for. This
shows my good taste. Nobody can
drive, when I want to stand still.—
Nobody can make me gallop, when
I mean lo'walk. I can bear pain if
they beat me, for my hide is a thick
one. Per pie often lake my part,
and say ‘What a shame to iiltreal a
poor donkey !’ Sometimes our two
legged masters pul donkeys into the
papers, and make a good deal of fuss
about them ; but .nobody bothers
much about pigs. Tin re is nothing
like being a donke\ for happiness.’
“Y'ou are both, wrong, friends,”
said the dog. “I only ofthe three
can be called reallv happv. I take
care of my master’s imus ■, and try
and make my self useful to oJiers. I
often have to warn you, friend pig,
off the premises, for I don’t approve
o! your greedy ways. I atn often
at work, and therefore feel happy
and contented. As to you, friend
donkey, who do every thing in fils
aud starts, you are always poor and
grumbling. Nobody likes you, and
few trust you. I have a good roof
over me, and plenty of food, for my
mistress knows my value, and treats
me kindly.”
“Thank you, that will do,” said
both pig and donkey together. “You
know very well how to trumpet
your own praises, hut you don’t
know perhaps that you arc only a
dog and a servant after all. Your
friends pig end donkey are inde
pendent.
S-. saying, pig aud donkey de
parted, the lorrner munching a de
cayed cabbage, and the latter eat
ing a fine prickly thistle.
How very hard it is to make pigs
and donkeys understand things, and
how silly of dogs to speak of princi
ples to animals who have not first
been taught to comprehend them.
My Terms are Cash, or such Paper as can be used to raise Cash and
I will Sell you as li w as anybody.
N. A. MEGRATH, Macon, Gn.
r June 6, J87I. - 2*2 ly
FALL GOODS.
OUR STOCK OF
Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods,
NOTIONS. X2TC-, ETC
ever exhibit
Lotc.
I S NOW full and complete. We have the largest and most variedjstockwe have
ed to the_trade. Dress Goods Department Particularly Attractire, and Prices
Our Motto is,
“Short Profits and Quick Sales.”
And wa feel confident of giving satisfaction to all who may favor us with iheir patronage.
We respectfully invite the public to call and examine our stock
Banks &> Sons,
4-J Second Street, Triangular Block, MACON, GA.
r March 21, 1871 11 ly.
i\ T ONTUOMEKY SHLRIFF 8 .-a;,;
i\l_ Will be sold b-tore the Coun
door iu Mt. Vernon within the leg;,, j.,.
sale, on the first Tuesday in May i, oi -
land N«. (2t>0) two hundred and sixty, ;,
10th district of said county, s rid as
erty of James Yeomans to satisfy *
Court ti fa’s issued from the JtiriJ ]i.
M., in said county, in favor •■fC, H. [;■ .
vs. said James Yeoirans. P pet
out by defendant. Terms cash. 1. v ',,
aud returned to me by a constable
MARTIN COCKY, Sh.. a;. Jt.C
mar5-tds.
CORGI A Laurens Count v —
I" Court of Ordinary.
Wiliiam Dixon h iving ti'ed l i at •
for letters of Guardianship « f Waver J. N-.
and Gray, orphans of Jacob Grav
deceased.
These are to cite and admonish ail the
of kin and person concerned to 1 e an ■
at the regular term of this Coni! iu A
to show cause if an y they can why sa; I
shall not be granted.
Given under my band and official si,!: .:;
this February 17th, J-TJ.
J. B. WOLFE, Ortiuan
Feb. 27, 72.
G < KOliUiA Laurens County,
f Court of Ordinary.
Hardy Gray having fi d his.
j letters of administration on ti,- e>; • t J,
j Gray, late of said county decease!—
These are to cite and admonish, s
i gular, the next of kin aud cr tjrs, c- .
; deceased, to be and appear nt the t-, , , r
of this court in April next, toshy .,
I any they can, why said appheati sh
j be granted.
Given under my hand and official
1 this February 20th. 1-72.
J. It WOLFE. Ordinar
Feb. 27, 72.
jrjLOKGlA LAURENS CO! ,\lT,
, Whereas Edward Perry, ado. n':
Thomas Lock, represents to the t'ouit
petition duly filed and entered on t
he has fntiy administered Thom,: L< 7
tate. This is therefore to cite ail persot s ,
cerned, kindred and creditors, t show can
any they can why said adniinistiator i.
not be discharged from i.is aduriuistra:.
and receive letteis of dismission on tie !■
I Monday in July 1872. J B WOLFE.
Dec 13 Cm.
A D M1N18 T RATO IFSS ALT
J ILL be sold before the Court-hen
W
CLOT II I
1
door iu Dublin, Laurens County. outL
first Tuesday in April next, within tiieh ;
hours of sale, three lots of land in said cutr.tv
known as the late residence of Sarah H r
dec’d. The property of the estate of i-art
Burch, and sold for distribution by virtue
an order of the Conrt of Ordinary of 6aiJ cost,
tv. Terms of sale—Cash.
This February 9th. 1772.
WILLIAM BURCH.
feb!3-tds Adm’r Sftta'i B;irri
\Ye invite the Public along the NEW LINE ol RAILROAD through
BALDWIN and HANCOCK Counties, to call and examine our new
SPRING STOCK OF
Readymade Clothing,
AND
Gents 1 Furnishing Goods.
We keep the best o? every thing in our line, ar.d will be sure to please
you if you will give us a trial.
It March 1671.
MBMWi
WINSHIP & CALLAWAY. Macon. Ga
kl ly
Hickson Compound
Prepared by the Dickson Fertilizer Company,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA,
For Cotton and Corn, Small grain and Grasses.
ALSO,
PURE FINE BONE DUST.
BONE MEAL, tor CATTLE anti POULTRY.
SUPERPHOSPHATES ol the best grade.
SULPHATE AMMONIA, SULPHURIC ACID, and other Fertilizing
Elements ol prime quality.
JAMES T. GARDINER, President.
L. L. LAMAR, Agent., Sparta, Ga.
R. N. LAMAR, Agent., Millkdgeville, Ga.
Dec. 16th, 1871. p*r 3m.
OLIVER, DOUGLASS & CO.,
Wholesale Manufacturers of Tinwa e,
DEALERS IN
Stoves, Sheet Iron, Block Tin, Tin Plate, Ac.,
4-3 THIRD STREET, MACON, GA.
Stove Emporium.
TWENTY different patterns of Cooking Stoves. Stewart's Great Benefactor, Improved
ron Witch, Palmetto, and otheris patterns, all guaranteed. Box and office Stoves. Grates
om $5 to $30. Ilolloware, Sad Irons, Fire Dogs, and an assortment of Shovels and Tono-s,
Pocket and Table Cuttlery, Hardware. Full line of House Furnishing Goods, Wood and
Willow Ware, Looking Glasses, pressed and plain Tin Ware to the trade. All orders promptly
atteudedto. r Nor, 21 1871. tf.
J. Vum PreorfetftT. B H. * Co. Ores?'’;’''
G-n. Ag'ts, San Francisco Ca!., aniS-ini-H Cgeeicicss: > :
MILLIONS Bear Testimony to tbfir
Wonderful Curative Eflecis.
They are not a vile Fancy Drink, madeut Poor
Hum, Wliiakey, Proof Spirits and Refuse Li
quors doctored. spiced and sweetened to please
called “Tonics,*’“Appetizers. ’ “Restorers, .V'--
lead the tippler on to drunkenness and ruin, bat are r.:r
Medicine.made from the Native Roots and Herb, f ! --
fomia, free from all Alcoholic Jetinmlata.
They are the GREAT BI.OOD PI IlIiltR 1
A LIFE GIVING PRINCIPLE, a perfectIte •
vator and Invigorator of the System, carrying - —
poisonous matter aud restoring tire blood to a heahhj ■
dition. No person can take these Bitters accordr ■
directions and remain long tmwell,provided their:
arc not destroyed by mineral poison or other mean-,
and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of rr; ,
They are a Gentle Purgative as well as a
Tonic, possessing, also, the peculiar merit of acto r
a powerful agent in relieving Congestion or Iaianutano..
of the Liver, and all the Visceral Organs.
FOR FEMALE COMPLAINTS, in y a r
old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood - £■
the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters have no equal.
For Inflammatory and Chronic KhcuBin-
tism and Gout, Dyspepsia or Imligcstion, Bil
ious, Remittent and Intermittent Fever-
Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys sni
Bladder, these Bitters have been most saceessm
Such Diseases are caused by \ itinted B oo-
which is generally produced by derangement ot the Of
costive Organs. .
DYSPEPSIA OR INDIGESTION', ff -.
Pain in the Shoulders-Coughs. Tightness ofthe t a •
Dizziness, Soar Eructations ofthe Stomach, Bid
in the Mouth. Bilion* Attacks. Palpitation of the
Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in there? on? c
Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms- are -
ofleprinys of Dyspepsia.
They invigorate the Stomach and stimulate ,
Liver and Bowels, which render them of une^** - ^
cacy in cleansing the blood of all impurities, aud uu-
ing new life and vigor to the whole system.
FOR SKIN DISEASES, Eruptions. T t‘•
Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, '
buncles, Kins-Worms, Scald Head, Sore Byes, Err*';
Itch.Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin. Humor?
ease, of the Skin, of whatever nam e or nature, are ■■
dug up and carried ont of the system in a sh r. —• ^
the use of these Bitters. One bottle in snch - ^
convince the most incredulous of their curative?
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you fco _ '
purities bursting through the skin in Pir.?* 45 - -
tions or Sores; cleanse it when you find it obstr-'- '
sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it 1 .
your feelings will tell you when. Keep the rib
and the health of the system will follow.
Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurkm*' j-
system of so many thousands, are effectually . ...
and removed, bays a distinguished phystolct
is scarcely an individual upon the face ®* f
whose body is exempt from the presence of *7 ^
is not upon the healthy elements of the .
worms exist, but upon the diseased burners >
deposits that breed thuse living monsters oiu B r -
System of Medicine, no vermifuges, no an
will free the system from worms like “ _ s
J. WALKER, Proprietor. R. H. McD0N *
D-’ggists and Gen. Agents. San Francisco.
***and 32 and 34 Commerce Street. New
B»*bOLU BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND »-
For Sale by JOHN' M. CLARK. DrugW-
Milledpenile D*
CHARLESTON HOTEL
E. H. JACKSOS.
Proprietor*
( HAKLESTON, S. C,
■vni I . DROWN