Southern recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1820-1872, May 14, 1872, Image 4

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I Agricultural Department, [Farm t)' Hume, that no fattiier can be really prosp.-rous who does not produce upon his place everything necessary for the support of his fam ily and his stock, groceries alone ex cepted. But which of us—how many farmers in a hundred, take all the Southern States—raises more than a scanty supply of corn and a few bundles of poor oats ? It is bey ond ali question true that corn is the most expensive stock feed that can be grown, and we raise no other.— Corn and fodder art almost the sole food of our work animals the year round, and if we make an effort to raise a few hogs tor meat, corn is the only food we give them after we lake them up to fatten. Every re flecting man must see that this is the New Advertisements' Labor, Mode of Managing, &o. Editors Southern Cultivator: Con fined to the house by sickness, I have concluded to write an article for yoar valuable paper- Although unaccustomed to write for periodi cals, I am encouraged to make the j poorest kind of economy, and those at empt, by the kind invitation in j who have tried them know that oats your last number, for ail to write, on j are a b* tier and n cheaper feed for the ground that what is interesting j working stock than corn, and that to one’s self, will, in all probability, | they can be rais< <1 for one-third of be interesting to others. i ihe cost of corn. For fattening hogs, The war left me an old but valu- j sweet potatoes are very nutritious, able plantation, a large stock of hors-; and cost less than half the price of es, mules, mares and colts; also,' cattle, sheep and hogs, and about forty freed negroes—lat, sleek and corn, and consequently the meat would cost halt the price of corn- fattened meat. I do not give my well cared for, but who unfortunate- hogs one grain of corn beyond what ly look it into their wolly pates that I had committed an unpardonable sin in ever having held them in slave- is necessary to harden die meat just before killing time, and 1 have as good meal and more of ii, than most ry, and consequently considered it; of my neighbors. Sweet potatoes, their religious duty to lake every- after taking up, goubers, and the thing they could lay their hands on run of the pea-fic Ids j ist before, are fro.n me, as properly belonging 10 ^ all I give to my hogs, them. By stealing, slander, &.c., Ij A swpet potato crop’ can be made was reduced in five years to running | with very little labor. After the a two-horse farm, with very limited j ground is prepared and the slips means to do it with. During all j planted, one scraping dowojvith the MONEY iiAPiDur ] CHEAP ADVERTISING, Stencil and Ivey Check j Advertiaemeni* occupying one Inch oFspfteg partiou- ; will be inserted iu 2GU Newspapers, including RLL. h. M. SPbMJLR, Brattieboro, Vt. 23 Dailies in 'FREE TO”BOOK AGENTC j Southern States, We will send a handsome Prospectus of our 1 a Ncur Illustrated Family Bible, containing over ; covering thoroughly the States of Maryland, Outfits tars F 450 tine Scripture Illustrations to any Hook Agent free of charge Address National Pub lishing Co., Philadelphia, Pa. ” GREAT CHANCE FOR AGENTS - D" you want an agency, local or travel. ing, w.’th an opportunity to make §5 io $20 per day selling o ir new 7 strand White Wire Clothes Lines.? They las forever; sample f.ee. S nd for circular. Address at once Hudson River Wire W01 ks cor. Water street & Maiden Lane, New York or 315 W Randolph street. Chicago ft STANDARD AMERICAN BILLIARD TABLES! Everything pertaining to Billiards at. lowest prices. Illustrated Catalogues sent bv mail. H. W. COL LENDER, New York, Successor to Piielai* & Cullender. 73S Broadway. Thea-Nectar A PURE CHINESE TEA. Ths Bed Tea Imported. Warranted to suit all tastes Put up in our trade inaik Half pound and pound pack ages ttn'y, Bo and 60 pound boxes. For sale at wholesale only by The Great Atlantic (f Pa cific Tea Co , Po. O. Box 5506. N. Y. City. D0N0TFAIL“r/.r n - North to secure one of the celebrated improved Stewart Cook Stoves, With its special attachments. Roaster, Balter & Broiler. Tire Stove and Furniture carefully packed for shipment. Books sent on applica tion. FULLER WARREN k CO., 236 WATER St, N. I these years, I ha<l tried hiring in all the usual ways, of wages anil part of ihe ciop. If I gave wages, my loe, then, soou after, a plowing, a second plowing when the vines be gin to run, and then a hilling up employees,thinking I suppose, that I j with the hoc, are all the work, did not give enough, would do as | Unless the soil he naturally rich, little as possible, and that little very j let it be made so by free-handed ap badly. If I gave them a part of the j plication of manure, if a good crop crop, they would consider them-1 of sweet potatoes are expected. The selves as much interested as 1 was, i best land for them is what is called and would work when they pleased j a sandy loam. Let this be well and as they pleased; and being influenced by the slanders of my former slaves, that I would defraud them in the final settlement, would take time by the forelock, and steal the crop while gathering it, leaving me the year’s expenses lo pa} r . So at the commencement of last year, 1 saw that, unless a change took place, I would be a ruined man. I determined, therefore, to hire no hands that year, but lo do the best I could by my own labor and that of my son, a youth nineteen years ot age. As I soon found out that I was too old and too little accustomed to manual labor to do much, 1 adopted the plan of hiring by the day. 1 was pleased with it, for I discover ed that the laziest negro will work for one day, if he can see fitly cenis at the end of it. As the result of the last year’s op erations, I made 14 bales of cotton, weighing 400 lbs. each, 1000 bush els of red oats, anJ 2-50 bushels of corn. This crop was made by the work of my son and one faithful freedmari, whom 1 had engaged at the commencement of the year, to plough for me, whenever needed, at fifty cents a day, together with such hands as I could pick up at the lime, to do the hoeing. Most of the mon ey paid out (or labor, was obtained from the rent of cabins, which 1 had formerly furnished my hired hands for nothing. Messrs. Editors, I know that this is not much to your rich Georgia farmers, but it is decidedly encour aging to one who has been in the constant habit, since the war, ol em ploying from ten to filteen hands, and losing from $500 to $1000 an nually. My crop consisted of 27 acres of cotton, 25 of corn, and 30 of oats. About half the cotton land was ma nured with acid phosphate, com posted with cotton seed (400 lbs. mixture to the acre) and Carolina fertilizer (200 lbs.) i gathered 3036 lbs. of Peeier cotton from three acres manured with the latter. My experience last year proves the reverse of the received theory, that it is best to plant cotton on a level surface, for my best cotton grew on land thrown up in very high beds with an Ames turning plow.— I did not do this through choice, but from necessity, having no other plow convenient at the time. The season, however, may have had something to do with it, for although we had a dry summer, the spring was very wet. I have hired the same freed- man for this year, giving him $150 and rations. Hoe hands to be hired by the day. I feel encouraged to commence farming again, and expect to he as sisted by the regular perusal of the Southern Cultivator, which 1 used lo read with pleasure and profit in years past and gone, and which 1 am glad to see is still “ head and shoulders” above all its competitors. AN OLD BEGINNER. Ninety-Six, S. C., Feb 22, 1872. From the Farm and Home.- i Word for Sweet Potatoes. Among the provision crops which we can, and all of us ought to raise upon our farms, there is not one which we can grow at less expense and is more profitable than the sweet potato; and yet so absorbed are we by the almighty cotton, we pay lit tle attention to it, and few of us do more than raise a few bushels in aome spare corner, enough to carry us barely to Christmas. I am entirely of the opinion so of ten expressed in the columns of the manured, broad cast, if practicable; if not in the hill or drill, and let it be well pulverized by frequent deep plowing*. The idea that sweet potatoes can not be kept over winter is not true. They can be kept if we only know how and will lake the trouble. I will tell my way of keeping them in another piece, perhaps for the next number of the Farm and Home.— When I sat down to write. I intend ed only lo say a word for sweet po tatoes, and encourage the Southern farmers to give them more attention, to plant more of them and to plant them better, because, though I do not claim to be much of a prophet, I see that provision crops are going to get the go by this year, and I want to do what 1 can l-> check this folly if I can. I am as sure as I am of my existence that if we do as we did in ]S70, and obtain the same results we are going to be a bankrupt peo ple. AH-SIN. Columbia Co., Tenn., March 19, 1S72. A young mother was in the habit of airing the baby’s clothes at the window. Her husband didn’t like it, and believing that if she saw her practice as others saw it, she would desist, he so directed their afternoon walk as to bring the nursery window into full view from the central part of the town. Stopping abruptly, he pointed to the offending linen flap ping unconsciously in the breeze, and asked sarcastically, ‘My dear, what is that displayed in our win dow?’ ‘Why,’she replied, ‘that is the flag of our union.’ Conquered by this pungent retort, he saluted the flag by a swing of his hat, and pressing his wife’s arm closer within his own, said as they walked home ward, ‘And long may it wave.’ The Real End of the World.—A correspondent writing from Henry Lake, in Montana, describes the locality as a scene of wonderful grandeur. The lake is situated in the Rocky Mountains, at an altitude of 5,000 feel above the level of the sea- Looking from a high peak near 1 his body of water, lie saw the pan orama of the most wonderful region known to man. For within the scope of the eye from that point—having their origin in Lake Henry—are the souices of five of the grandest rivers on the face of the globe, born, as it were in the same small spring. Here the Yellowstone, Snake and Green livers, as well as Clark’s Fork, Wind River, Madison and Gallitan. start logeiber, leaping and bound ing in great cataracts and rushing in every direction to empty them selves into the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Beyond amountain lo the southeast the eye falls upon the spectacle of ihe steam escaping from the scape pipes of nurgatory, some times called geysers, to mingle with the clouds. “ This,” exclaimed the correspondent, in a burst of enthusi astic wonder, “ is the real end of the world.” tTdT AGENTS WANTED FOR Delaware, Virginia, West Virginia, North Car olina. South Carolina, Georgia. Alabama. Mis sissippi. Louisi ,11a, Arkansas, Tennessee. Ken tucky ami Missouri One Month for SU8. More Papers. More Dailies, Larger Circula tion, Lower Price, than any other list. Spee- al rates given for more or less space than one inch, amt fora longer period Ihau one month. Equally favoratde quotations made for any single State. Copies of Lists, Circulars. Esti mates, and full information furnished ou np- plication. GEO. P. ROWELL & CO., Newspaper Advertising Agents, 41 Paik Row, New York. Plainlers* Stead This BURDICK BROTHERS’ IS THE IIEADQOAKTLttS FO« Grain & Provisions 6:3 THIRD STREET. MACON, GA-. SIGN OF THE GOLDEN HOG. What is this Gtand Specific for dyspr-pda this bubling, sparkling, coo ing, purifying, reg ulating draught they call Tarrant’s Efferves cent Seltzer Aperient ? Well, it is simply the Chemical fac simile of the Seltzer Spring Wa ter, which, for HO years Das been accounted the finest Cathartic and Alterative in ail Eu rope. Sold by all Druggists. Z. KING. JAS. A. KING. WE HAVE NOW IN STORE AND TO ARRIVE, 50.000 pounds BACON C.-R. SIDES and SHOULDERS, 30.000 pounds BULK.O. R. SIDES and SHOULDERS, For sale at Lowest Market Price bv buhmok. brothers. 5.000 bushels prime WHITE CORN. 2.000 bushels prime MIXED CORN, Which we will sell as low as nnybodv. bujeidiob: brothers. RECEIVING THIS DAY 100 BARRELS Helie of Georgia Flour* This is our favorite brand, anil cannot be excelled in ibis market. One car load “Kenesaw” Mills EXTRA FAMILY FLOUR. One car load “Marietta” Mill* FAMILY FLOUR, One car load GOOD SUPERFINE, in barrels and sacks. For sale low by BURDICK BROTHERS CHICAGO. Herrings Safe 2 O NE hundred and forty firm* have f, «t (' to the preservation - f th-.-ir Books. Pa D »r and Valuables in the terrible 'is CHICAGO FUSES. Herrins’sPutpnt Chimoion FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF EAFSS Awarded the Prize Medals at the World’s Fair in London. At the Exhibition Universelle i 1 Paris, a u j The World’s Fair in New York. z. 22 KING & SON. Manufacturers of Z KING’S P ATENT Wrought .Iron Bridges. Office, corner St, Clair *& Wason Sts., CLEVELAND, O. * '*~By"CHARI,’SS~F~DK^I/rBT J Tr D. RD^Tiitlcaaliaia routetL"*'!^™ most and rmpMlr-wjlllnjf religions work over tasoed.*' I or Circular*, xlirew IT%T X. tV Burnham’s New Turbine is in gener al use throughout the U, S. A six inch, is used by the Government in the Patent Office, Washing 'ft? ton.D.C. Its simplicity 'r of construction and the power it transmits renders it the best water wheel ever invented. Pamphlet fiej N. F. BURNHAM, York. Pa you "ill AGENTS! QUICKS ch >ice of territory (there is a rush for it) on DIO LEWIS’ last and greatest work, OUR DIGESTION; o t flfT 'OLLY FRIEND'S SECRET. It Is by odds the most taking and salable book in the field. 1. It is on a vitally important subject 2. It is by America's most popular writer on health. 3. It is, for the price, the largest and handsomest book ever sold by sub- scription. Agents, the people are eager for such a book. & will urge yi u to bring it to them. Write for terms, &e. GEO. MCLEAN, Pubri-lier, 733 Sarsom St., Phila Communications Solicited and Prompt- Itj attended lo CHEAP FARMS! FREE HOME.? ON TilF. LISE OF THE UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD. Three car loads PRIME WESTERN HAY. One car load CHOICE FEED OATS. Just received by BURDICK BROTHERS. Also, winner of the wager of o&odffiWcs MAGNOLIA HAMS, FRESH MEAL, WHEAT BRAN, SHORTS, PREPARED COW FOOD, LIVERPOOL and VIRGINIA SALT, SUGAR, COFFEE, etc., now in Store. CHOICE LEAF LARD IN TIERCES AND CANS. TFIE Golden Hill SHIRT If you want the best fitting and ricest made shirts to be had ask /our clothier for the Golden Ilill. If he has not got it, he can get it br you, if lie will not, we will send C. O. D. to any address free >f charge. Send for Circular giving full par- HENRY C. BLACKMAR, 607 Broadway, New York, Importer &■ Manufacturer of Men's Furnish ing Goods for the Trade. The Best Paper! Try It!! The SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN is the cheapest and best illustrated weekly paper published. Every number contains from 10 to J5 original engravings of new machinery, novel inventions, Bridges, Engineering works. Architecture, improved Farm Implements, and every new discovery in Chemistry. A years’* numbers contain 632 pages and sever al hundred engravings. Thousands of volumes are preserved for binding and reference. The practical receipts are well worth ten times the subscription price Terms, $3 a year by mail Specimens sent free. Maybe had of alt News Dealers, PATENTS obtained on the best terms. Models of new inventions and sketches exam ined,and advice free. All patents are publish* ediu the Scientific American the week they/ A LAND GRANT ()»' 12,000,000 ACHES IS THE Best Farming and Mineral Land in'Anterica. 3,000,000 Acres in Nebraska in the GREAT PLATTE VALLEY, [the GAlt DEN OF THE WES T, NOW FOR SALE! These lands are in the central portion of the United States, on the 41st degree of North Latitude, the central line of the great Tem perate Zone of tho American Continent, and for grain growing and stock rais ng unsur passed by any in the United S ates. CHEAPER IN TRICE, more favorable terms given, and more convenient to market than can be found elsewhere. Free Homesteads lor Actual Settlers. The Best Locations tor Colonies. Soldiers Entitled to a Homestead of 160 Acres. Free Passes to Purchasers of Land. Send for the new Descriptive Pamphlet, with new maps, published iu English, German, Swedish and Danish mailed free everywhere. Address O. F. DAVIS, Laud Commissioner, U. P. R. K. Co , Omaha, Neb. EXTRAOKDIN'ABY IMPROVEMENT6 cabinet" organs The Mason & Hamlin Organ Co respect fully announce the introduction of improve ments of much more than ordiuary interest.— These are Reed and Pipe Cabinet Organs. being the only successful combination of REAL PIPES with r. e.!s ever tuadi; Ray's Transposing hcij Board, which can be instantly moved to the right or left, changing the pitch, or transp iring tlia key. For drawings and descriptions, see Cir- cul. New and. Elegant Styles of double Reed Cabinet Organs. at $140, $132 and $125 each. Considering Capacity, Elegance, and Thorough Excellence of Workmanship, these are cheaper than any before offered. The MASON & HAMLIN Organs are ac knowledged BEST and from extraordinary facilities for manufacture this Company can afford, and now undertake to sell at prices which render them lJnqueslionably Cheapest. issue. Send for Pamphlet, 110 pages, contain-’ Four Octave Organs $50 each; five Octave ing laws and full directions for obtaining • Oignns $101). $125 and upwards. Withthiee Patents. / sets reeds $150 and upwards, Forty styles, up Address for Paper, or concerning Patenc, | to $1500 each. New illustrated Catalogue, UNN & CO. 37 Park Row; N. Y. Bransli and Testimonial Circular, with opinions of MUNN office, cor, F. and 7th Sts., Washington, D. C. •BLOOD PURIFIER Life is made up not of great sac rifices or duties, but of little things, in which smiles and kindness, and small obligations, given habitually, are what win and preserve the heart, and secure comfort. No person can be so lecble or so poor that he has not a duty to per- loim, which performed, makes him one of the highest and greatest. He is happy whose circumstances suit his temper; but he is more ex cellent who cart suit Ins temper to any circumstances. Is a Powerful Toole, specially adapted for use in Spring, w heu the languid ; n 1 debilita ted system needs strength and vitality, it will give vigor to the feeble, strength to the weak, animation to the dejected, activity to the slug gish, rest to the weary, quiet to the nervous, and health to the infirm. It is a South A merican plant, which accord ing to the medical and scientific periodicals of London and Paris, possesses the most powerful tonic properties known io tlie Materia Medica, and is well know n in its native country as hav ing wonderful curative qualities, and has been long used as a specific in all cases of Impurities of the Blood, Derangement of the Liver and Spleen, Tumors, Dropsy, Poveity of the Blood, Debility, Weakness of the Intestines, Uuterine or Urinary Organs. DR. WELL'S EXTRACT OF JUKUBEIU Is strengthening and nourishing; like nutri- cior.s food, taken into the stomach, it assimi lates and diffuses itself through the circulation, giving vigor and health. It regulates the Bowels, quiets the Nerves, acts directly on the secretive organs, and, by its powerful Tonic and restoring effec s, pro duces healthy and vigorous action of the whole system. JOHN Q. KELLOGG, Platt St., New York Sole Agent for the United States. Puce One Dollar per bottle. Send for Circu lar may 7 rp d Im Montvale Springs, BI011 lit Coiinly. East Tennessee. T his favorite summer resort will be opened for tho reception of Visi tors on the 15th of May. Tickets to the Springs and return, can be obtained at all prominent points. Board, per month, for May and June, $45; for July, August and September, $60; for three months $150. Address for descriptive pamphlets, Ac. JOS. L. KING, Proprietor, April 20 rp tf Montvale Spring*. more than one thousand musicians, sent free. MASON & HAMLIN Organ Co., 154 Tremont St , Boston. 596 Broadway. N. Y FANNING’S PATENT KID FITTING SKELETON CORSET. Recommended by lead ing phy sicisns. Should be worn by ali ladies who value health and comfort. They aie paiticula.ly recommend* ed for summer wear and warm climates, although adapted to a’l seasons 01 the year, For sale by all first- _ class dealers. Worcester skirt co, S >te Manufacturers, Worcester, Vass. The Averiil Chemical Paint; IS THE BEST in the world. Beautiful White, Buffs, Drabs, French Greys or any other color sold, “mixed ready for use." Any one can apply it with out the aid of a ’professional painter. It is handsomer, costs less, and wears longer than any other paint- Sample cards, prices, and re commends from owners of the finest residences in the country, furnished free by the Aeerill Chemical Paint Co , 32 Burling Slip, N. Y., or Cleveland, Ohio. We ofler lire above on as reasonable terms as any inane in this market for ('ash or approved City Acceptance. Give ij3 your orders and we will try to please you. BURDICK BROTHERS. april Gth 1S72 rpn 3m. ». 411 N.y, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN BOOKS, STATIONERY, MUSIC and PERIODICALS, 183 BROAD STREET, Augusta, Ga, Manufacturers’ Agent and Wholesale Dealer in all kinds of Blank Books, for Mercantile use, including Ledgers, Journals, Day Books, Re cords. Pass Books, Memorandum Books, Time Books, Drawing and Scrap Books, Autograph Eooks, Copy, Cyphering and Exercise Books, lor school use, &c., &c. The Writing Papers include Cap, Letter arid Note, America's English and French Ruled and Plain, Stamped and Unstamped. The stock of Envelopes embraces Letter, Note anti Ofli cial sizes, of all colors and qualifies, beside a full line of General Station ery, including all the innumerable minor items for use in the Counting Room Also many articles that would be appropriately desigraed as Fancy Stationer)'. In the Book Department, will be found the Stand ard Text Books for Schools and Colleges, Dictionaries, Bibles and Prayer Books, Music Books, and a large assortment of Juvenile anti Toy B< oks, and a well selected stock in General Literature. Iu the Miscellaneous Stock, in which we deal, we can offer to buyer* as favor able terms as any establishment in the trade. A new price list will soor. be issued, which will enable purchasers to make selections and or der by mail, if desired. Such orders will receive prompt and carefni attention, since the most thorough system marks the mode of doing busi ness in this establi-hment. april 16 rn 3m. A winded at the Pa is Exhibition to the Best Safe in the Worid!! Herring’s New Patent Champion Bankers’ Safes! Patent high ant. low steel-welded, combined with Patent Fr ink'finite, Pioof against the bb w-pipe, as well as tbs dri !. With patent binged tongre and grnved do«r and patent j rubber-packed fl mge. Proof against '’.edges, I nitro glycerine and gunpowder. Maniactured only by ilGKItnG, l AitKEL & 8iHF.U- ! MAM, 251 and 252 Broad wav, cor. Murray ! St. N. Y. PARREL. HERRING & CO., Philafi >!; !i a. HERRING *:CO.. Chicago. HERRING, FARREL SHERMAN.New Orleans. WRIGHT, SCHMIDT &. CO„ Agents, At lanta. Ga. JOHN S. WRIGHT, Ageut, Augnsta. Ga. PURSE & THOMAS, Agents. Savannah, Ga. rmay 7 tf. G EOKGIA LAURENS COUNTY, Whereas Edward Perry, administrator of Thomas Lock, represents to the Court in his petition duly tiled aud entered on record lliat he has fully administ.-red Thomas Lock’s es tate. This is therefore to cite all persons con cerned, kindred and debitors, to show cause if any they can why said administrator should not be discharged from his administration, and receive 1-Hers of dismission on the 1st Monday in July 1672. J B WOLFE, Dec 19 6m. O dinary A.- M. JACKSON, COTTON FACTOR ANI> COMMISSION MERCHANT, 19 McINTOSH STREET. AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. april 20-3m LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON CONSIGNMENTS. rn. E. J. DOZIER. W. R. WALTON DOZIER & WALTON, Wholesale Grocers, AND Dealers in "Wines, Liquors, Etc., 269 BROAD ST., AUGUSTA, GA. L IBERAL Terms to Wholesale buyers, and usual time rates allowed. A large atoek kept on hand constantly. Purchasers visiting Augusta will please call and examine april 23 3in AUSTIN MliLLARKY. DOZIER St WALTON JAMES H. MULLARKY. R ED RUST PROOF OA IS $2 a Bushel ; Orchard Grass $3 50 a bushel. Send 3 cent postage stamp and my complete Priced Lists of all kinds of Grass seeds, Field seeds, •jarden seeds. Flower and Tree seeds. Agricul tural Implements, Machinery, Guauos, Chem icals, Livestock, &c., will be forwarded you. These Priced Lists contain much valuable in formation as to time and quantity tj plant. &c. MARK W. JOHNSON, Seedsman, P O Box 230, Atlanta, Ga. Cash is Good; but Prompt Cash is Better ! And that is what those in want of DRY GOODS find out at the Dry Goods Store of MULLARKY BROS., 262 BROAD ST., AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. r v n x?l l ^RxT^ ent of I)r ® 39 G H,( fo ca » be fouud a full and completely new line DOL LY VARDENSm various qualities ; Grenadines, Alpaccas, Silk Poplins, Jaconets. Jananese Uoods, and many other Dress Goods t'jo numerous to name. Onr Hosiery and White Good* Stock, is selected with attention by a careful New York buy er, and our assortment of Prints, Plaids, Stripes, Osnaburgs, Ginghams, Sheetings and Shirt ings, is one of the best ever offered to the public 0 New York prices. April 20, 3m eow rn COME SEE AND JUDGE. heap MULLARKY BROS. The Brown Cotton Gin Co. J*. A. MEGRATH, NEW LONDON, CONN., Manufacturers of the “Brown Gin." Cotton Seed Hullers, Machinery and Castings. Man ufacturers of Harris’ Patent Rotary Steam Engine—the best and cheapest Steam Engine for plantation purposes. Cotton gin maker* and repairers furnished with all kinds of ma terials. Saws, Ribs, Pollies, Boxes, etc, of any pattern, to order at short notice. Have had long experience in the business, and guar antee satisfaction in every particular. Orders solicited. Address t» above. Hollingsworth Block, CAN SUPPLY M^COIsr, GA. YOU ALL WITH CORK, BACON, LARD, rLWtt, SUGAR, MOLASSES, COFFEE, TOBACCO, .. , n _ KICE, SYRUP, WHISKY. .V Terms are Cash, or such Paper as can be used to raise Cash and I will Sell you as U w as anybody. ,jns.s, i87i. ^ MEGRATH, Maeon^Ga. VINECAR BITTERS pffuutr.n PrwHsw. ft M. Mrf>o^Ai.n * ro., Pmirp .rsac-I Xj't,, Sm fraBOl... CaL, a&.t 32 sn4 3 4 Coamenc 3t,3.T. MILLIONS Bear Testimony to their Wonderfal CuratiTe Effects. They srs not s vile Fancy Drink, made ot Poor Ram, Whlskoy, Proof Spirits and Itefu*» I.I- SH ors doctoral, spiced and sweetened to please the ta»te, celled “Tonics,” “Appetizers,” “Restorers,” £c., that lead the tippler on to drunkenness am! ruin, but are a true Medicine,m&dc from the Kxtive Roots and Herbs of Cali- forms, free from all Alcoholic Stimulants. They ar. th. GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER and A LIFE GIVING PRINCIPLE, a perfect Reno vator and Invigorator of the System, carrying off all poisonous matter and restoring the blood to a healthy con- dition. No person can take these Bitters according to directions and remain Ion* »mrelL,prov.ded their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means, and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of repair. Thay are a Gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic, possessing, also, the peculiar merit of acting as a powerful agent In relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver, and all the Visceral Organs. FOR FEMALE COMPLAINTS, in young or eld, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood or at the turn of life, these Tonic Bitten have no equal. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheuma tism aud Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Bil ious, Remittent and Intermittent iFevers. Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful. Bach Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood, which ii generally produced by derangement of the Di gestive Organs. DYSPEPSIA OR INDIGESTION, Headache, Pain in the Shoulders.Couahi. Tightness of the Chest Dluiaess, Sour Eructations of the Stomach. Bad Taste In the Mouth. Bilious Attacks. Pslpitstiou of the Heart, lnflsninuUon of ths Longs, Psin in the regions of the kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. They invigorate the Stomach and stimulate the torpid L!r»r and Bowels, which render them of unequalled effi cacy in cleansing the blood of all impurities, and impart ing aew life and vigor to ths whole system. FOR SKIN DISEASES, Eruptions. Tetter, Sal Rheum. Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Car buncles, King-Worms, Scald Head, Sore Eyes, Erysiprl* 5 - Iteh.Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin. Humors and Dis eases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literal! 5 dngup and carried out of the eystem in a short time by the net ol these Bitters. One bottle in such cases will convince the most incredulous of their curative effects. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you End its im purities bursting through tbe skin in Pimples, l" 7 ' tions or Sores; cleanse It when you And it obstructed an-1 sluggish in the veins; elesnss it when it is foul, and your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure and the health of the system will follow. Fin, Tap«, and other Worms, larking tbe system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removed, flays s distinguished physiologist, there is scarcely an individual upon the face of the earth whose body is sxesipt from $U« presence of worms. It is not upon the healthy elements of ths body that worms exist, but upon the diseased humors and slim? deposits that breed tbeee living monsters of dismse. - System of Medietas, so vermifuges, no an.hetennU ’ will free the system from worms like these J. WALKER. Proprietor. B. H. MCDONALD * CO. D—exists and Oen. Agents, San Pranciseo, California, jut J! and 34 Commerce Street. New York. B0TSO1.D BV ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALS 1 '- For Sale by JOHN M. CLiRK, Drnpist- Millefipeville Gx TRI! FT FOR $i. Swiss Magnetic 1 ILUlj TIME-KEEl’EK aud Indi- T Ilf U eator. Indespensable to eveiy 1 AJ1 Hi traveler, trader, b«>y. former and for everybody iu need of a leliab’e t.me keeper. Usual watch size, steal works, pj a ' s crystal, in neat OROIDE cafe, warranted to denete correet time for two years. No:hmg lik* it 1,000 sold weekly. This valuable ar ticle, in neat ease, will be sent, prepaid, any where, for fl; 3 for $9. Try one. Circulars free. Order only from the Sole Agants, F- $IKG A C0-, Bratt!*b*ro. Yt. April SO, rpn 4$