Southern recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1820-1872, July 16, 1872, Image 4

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Ilgriroltorat Department, Farm Work for the Month. It is now almost too late for ad vice on those subjects which pertain to crop making. The time for lav*, ing by is speedily approaching, and 'while it will certainly be found that those who have most carefully pre- pared the soil, planted the seed and cultivated the crop, will be rewar- ded by the largest measure of suc cess, man’s labor will soon have done all it can do for the crops, and we must place our trust in Him who sends the seed-time and the harvest, to do the rest. CORN. Befote this number of the Farm and Home will reach our readers, the greater portion of the corn crop of the Southern States will have been laid by; but, where this is not the case, there is nothing to be done but to keep the soil frequently stir red with sweeps. COTTON. The work in the cotton crop is now light, but not on that account less important. The hoes should be plied industriously to remove every blade of grass and every weed from the rows, and the sweeps should be run repeatedly over the middles, destroying all foreign vegetation and keeping the soil clean and loose. We are decidedly in favor of late work in cotton. Much injury is done by laying by too soon. Apart from the neat appearance of the crop, and the advantages when the picking season commences, we are satisfied from close observation that continued working as long as the sweeps can pass through without in jury to the limbs, adds materially to the production. The largest yield we ever made was in a field which we had worked until the first bolls were almost ready to open. Where the rows are perfectly clean when picking begins, there is no “trashy” cotton, and thus the value of the staple is increased fully a cent a a pound as compared with that which is mixed with grass seeds and other kinds of trash. FODDER PULLING. During this month, in many parts of the South where the crop is for ward, fodder pulling will begin, A few hints on this subject may be of benefit: First, let not a blade be pulled before the ear is fully matur ed and the grain has commenced to shrink and harden. Many person in their anxiety to save green tod* der do so at a sacrifice of the corn. They regard the fodder crop as of first importance, whereas the injury to the corn from premature pulling is frequently twice as great as the value of all the fodder saved. Sec ond, in curing fodder it is of the last importance that it is never wet by rain after it is pulled. It is bet ter to bunch and stack it after a few hours’ exposure to the sun than to allow it to get wet. Third, where fodder, to save it from rain, has been put up before it has been sufficient ly cured, it will heat slightly in the stack, and when it does so, it should be opened and aired lor a few hours, after which it can be put away per manently with entire safety. Fourth when thoroughly cured fodder should be packed away in the lofts or shel ters as soon as possible, but where it is necessary to stack it in the field, let the stacks be large, as it is much less liable to damage from the weather when put up in double or treble stacks than when tn the ordi nary single stacks. We are persuaded that, at the best, fodder pulling is an injury to the corn, and that it is by far the most expensive forage crop that we can raise. We hope to live to see the time when, as in Maryland and Kentucky, clover and grasses will do away with the necessity of fod der pulling before the corn is per fectly matured. SAVING HAY. Any deficiency that may be found in the fodder crop from following the foregoing suggestions, may easi ly be made up by a little expendi ture of time and trouble in saving hay from the crab and crowfoot grasses in our fields. When the grass is in bloom is the right time to mow it. If left too long exposed to the sun and until it becomes too old, it loses most of its nutritious qualities. After it has been cut and has become wilted from exposure to the sun, let it be raked into small cocks, and as it becomes more cured increase the size of the cocks, until being perfectly cured it is ready to haul to the barn. It may seem difficult to spare time from the cotton crop to make hay, but those who will make the effort will find it will pay both in the in creased quantity and in the improv ed quality of the forage for the stock. Many a horse’s wind is bro ken by eating dusty half-cured fod der, which would have remained sound if fed upon well-saved hay. Those who cannot think of “fooling with hay” will strip their fodder now and “make out” with Northern hay at $2 per hundred. We think, however, that our plan is better and less expensive. SMALL GRAIN. Wheat and oats and other small grain should be threshed as soon as possible, thoroughly dried in the sun and aired, and put away during the heat of the day. We have found that wheat well cured by sunning was perfectly secure from ! weevils. TURNIPS. This is the month to sow the ruta- ! abaga or Swedish turnip. We hope ! that the advice given in former num- j bers as to the preparation of the ground for the turnip crop has been wisely heeded, and that there are bur few of our readers who have not a large, well prepared and rich piece of ground for this most valua ble of the root crops. Be sure that the seed is fresh and genuine. Sow in drills from two feet and a half to three feet apart. Much time and labor are saved by the use of the seed drill in sowing this crop. SWEET POTATOES. This crop should be well worked, kept free from all weeds and grass, and soft earth thrown upon the rows. When the vines are about a foot long run round them as deeply as possible with a turn-plow, taking care not to injure the vines, then plow out the middles. ‘CLEANLINESS. In our warm climate and long summers there is no better preserver of health than cleanliness, not only of person but of houses and sur roundings. A few bushels of lime used in whitewashing and sprink ling under the houses and in cellars, a thorough cleaning of the yards, and other places where filthy things most do congregate, and the removal of all decayed vegetable matter from under or around the house, will preserve the health of the family during the year, and save many a long doctor’s bill. Very trifling causes produce fever. A malarial atmosphere, poisonous in its effects, is frequently caused by a foul cellar, an unclean sink near the kitchen window, or an accumulation of de composing vegetable matter under the house. Remove the cause and the effects is obviated. More than half the sickness of our country is directly attributable to a failure to take these precautions. The Value of Manure- Writers for the agricultural press cannot impress too much or too of ten upon the minds of the people of the South, the importance of col lecting and applying to their land more manure than they have been in the habit of doing. Those who plant bottom land in Mississippi, Louisiana or Arkansas, may des pise manure, because, as they say, they make now larger crops than they can gather; but I am satisfied that even the owners of these rich lands would vastly improve the quality and quantity of their crops, and save from a third to a half of the labor they now employ, were they to pay attention to manure, and besides this, to be able to devote a portion of their farms toother pur poses besides the everlasting cotton and corn. But, however this may be, for upland farmers, manure is a necessity, without which in some shape or another our best lands will soon become as barrren as the thous ands of exhausted, washed and gul lied acres which we see in every State of the South, living monu ments of the reckless improvidence of our system of farming. We cannot afford, and if we could it would be bad economy, to sup ply this want by the purchase and application of artificial fertilizers. As an auxiliary and to a certain ex tent, these are useful and may be found profitable, but our main re liance must be on home-made ma nures. With a little trouble and at tention any farmer can gather in the course of a 3 r ear a large pile of fer tilizing material which he now suf fers to go to waste. How few, for instance, pay any attention to saving the manure of their stock, and here is the basis of the best of all ma nures. It has been well ascertained by experiment that an ordinary cow, properly kept, furnishes 60 pounds of solid manure per day, amounting in a year to upward of ten tons, which, if mixed with three times the weight of muck'or any other good absorbent, will make a compost quite as good as the cow manure by itself, and thus afford forty tons of the best Kind ot tertdizer for the land. It has also been ascertained that the liquid manure is quite equal to the solid, and if this were taken up by absorbents, one cow would be made to yield eighty tons of ma nure for the farm! How much ma nure does .one cow, according to our ordinary management, contribute to the improvement of the land f These figures look like exageration, but we have the highest agricultural author ity for their accuracy. But even if we divide them by 2, and estimate the amount of manure, solid and liquid, from one cow, collected and saved as above described, at forty tons, we can see, how by care and with no expense, we may increase our supply of manures and perma nently restore the fertility of our lands. The best authorities recommend keeping up and soiling cows all the year. The apparatus for gathering the solid and liquid manure need cost but little. Hauling the muck or whatever absorbent is used, is the chief expense. Compare the total, however, with the cost of the commercial fertilizers with which we now tickle a small portion of our farms, and it will be easy to find that attention to the manure pile will pay.—-Homespun, in the Farm and Home. The Possible Future Lady of the White House.—In view of the possi bility of her becoming next year “the lady of the White House,” the New York Herald gives the follow ing sketch of Miss Ida Greeley, the daughter of the sage of Chappa* qua. Miss Greeley’s mother has for many years been an invalid, and is now so unwell that Mr. Greeley hes itates about removing her from the St. Cloud Hotel, where she is stay ing in this city, to the homestead at Chappaqua, and in the event of bis election the most arduous duties of hostess of the Executive Mansion would devolve upon his eldest daughter. Miss Ida Greeley is a young lady of about eighteen, of medium height, handsome, with the soft dark eye, shapely features and fine complexion of her father. A mass of dark brown hair is done up in becoming folds about her head. Her manners are affable and cordial, her conversation ready and spright ly, and from the success with which assisted by Mrs. Stuart, she presi ded at the first state dinner of the coming administration under the evergreen shades on the farm at Chappaqua Saturday, it was made evident that her domestic accom plishments are thorough. She may be epigrammatically described as the philosopher refined out of his angularities and eccentricities and feminized. She heard of her father’s i nomination first in London. Mr. Smalley, of the Tribune, having tel egraphed her mother at once on re ceiving notice of it, and, as she ad mits naively, “was glad to hear it, She endorses his proposed nomina tion at the Baltimore Convention, and, in the event of it, believes be will be elected. She does not ad vocate woman suffrage, but if she could vote would vote for Mr. Gree ley, which she thinks the woman suffragists as a parly would not be iikely to do. BERND BROS., 4L4s 'mb-i mn ST , MACON, GEORGIA- MANUFACTURERS OF AND WHOLESALE ANDZ RETAIL DEALERS IN LADIES MEN’S AND BOYS’ SADDLES OF ALL KINDS. CARRIAGE, BAROUCHE, PHAETON and SINGLE and DOUBLE BUGGY HARNESS, WAGON HARNESS, SINGLE & DOUBLE, for four, six, and so on, STAGE AND CART HARNESS, WOOL FACED COLLARS. We manufacture the above extensively, and are therefore prepared to fill orders at short notice Also keep constantly on hand a complete stock of Saddlers’, Harness, Shoemaker’s Hardware & Tools. Harness Leather, Shirting, Oak and Hemlock Sole Leather. KIP, CALF AND LINING SKINS, LACE AND PATENT LEATHER OF ALL '.KINDS ENAMELFD MUSLIN, DRILL AND DUCK, PLAIN AND FIGURED. Buggy, Carriage, Wagon, Riding and Drovers’ Whips. Linen and Woolen Covers for horses, Fly Nets, Linen and Woolen Buggy Robes, etc (^Merchants, Planters and all, will find it is their interest to purchase our goods. Do not fail to call or order from us. We pay cash for all kinds of Furs and Skins, Hides, Leather in the rough, Tallow, Wax and Wool. Macon, Ga., May 28, 1871. r n 6m e. j. LdziEEr"’ -- NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. BOOK AGENTS Now at work, or looking for some new book will miss it if they do not at once write for circulars of the best selling book published. Extraordinary inducements offered. Profits more than double the money. Outfit free. Ad dress,F. M REED. 139 Eighth St, NewYork. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. C OLLEGEGIATE AND COMMERCIAL INSTITUTE, New Haven, Conn. Pre paratory to College, Business, Scientific Schools, U. S. Military and Naval Academies Fall session, 3Gth year, begins Sept. 13. For Catalogue, address Gan. Win. H. RUSSELL, Principal. Virginia Female Institute, STAUNTON, VA. Buildings contain over 80 rooms. Grounds, nine acres. Pupils from 37 States. The Course is comprised iu eight Schools, under twenty Professors and Officers. Location beautiful and salubrious. Terms moderate. Apply for Circulars to R. H. PHIL T TPS, Principal, or W. H. TAMS, Sec’y, Stauntaa, Va. A. Wellington Hart A Co. For Insolvent aud Bankrupts 110 LEONARD SI'., NEW YORK. fcg^Refereuces of highest character bene for Circular. KENTUCKY Military Institute SIX MILES FROM FRANKFORT, KY., Besides working Faculty and course of study not excelled, presents peculiar advantages not to be found together elsewhere. 1. Entire exemption from the manifold temp tations attending college life in the city. 2. Division of classes into small sections, so that every student recites daily in all his class es. 3. All at the Institute constitute one family, under strict military government. F5pSend for Catalogue, containing full in formation, to Col. R. T. P. ALLEN, IFarmdale, Franklin Co., Ky. "Fraud! Fraud! Fraud! Dontbay BOGUS Fertilizers! Fertilizers! Fertilizers! Liberal inducements to AGENTS for the popular and useful book. AMERICAN MANURES, And Farmers"' and Planters’ Guide. (Second edition.) The book has already saved Thousands of dollars. For terms, circulars and copy of book. Price $1.50. Address WILLIAM H. BRUCKNER, Monroe, Mich- agents wanted For GOODSPEED S Presidential Campaign Book. The great work of the year. Prospectus, post paid, 75 cts Immense sale gunranteed. Also for my Campaign Charts and Haps, J WGoodspeed N."Orleans, Cincinnati, St Louis CURE that COLD. Do not suffer your Lungs to become diseas ed by allowing a COLD to become seated. Thousands have died Premature Deaths—The Victims ot Consumption, by neglecting a Cold. Dr. Win. HalPs BALSAM forlhe LUNGS Will Cure Coughs, Colds and Consumption surer and quicker than any other remedy. It acts like magic. For sale by all Draggists and Medicine Dealers everywhere. Reject all Violent Purgatives. They ruin the tone of the bowels and weaken the diges tion. “Tarrant’s Effervescent Seltzer Ape rient” is used by rational people as a means of relieving all derangements of the stomach, liver and intestines; because it removes ob structions without pain and imparts vigor to the organs which it purifies and regulates. Sold by all Druggists. $300 TO $500 iZttz Address ERIE Sewing Machine Co., Buffalo, N. Y., or Chicago, 111. A GENTS WANTED.—Agents make more money at work for us than at anything else. Business light and permanent. Par ticulars free. G. Stinsox &. Co., Fine Art Publishers. Portland, Maine. U O Piano Co., N. Y* Price, (DOQA • No Agents, Circulars free. O RGANIC LAW OF THE SEXES—Co n - ditions which impair vitality—positive and negative electricity—proof that life eveloped without union—effect of tobacco- influence of fish and phosphoric diet—modem treatment of pelvic diseases, stricture and varicocele; and arrest of development; ten lectures to his private su-gical clans, bv Fa ward H. Dixon, M. D.-, 42 Fifth Avenue w" Y,; 64 pages. 25 cents. “Every line from the pen of Dr. Dixon is of great value to the whole hnman race.”—HORACE GREELFV July 16th 4w. W. K. 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 stock kept on hand constantly. Purchasers visiting Augusta will please call and examine, april 23 3m n r DOZIER A’ 4V ALTON Planters, Read This! BURDICK BROTHERS’ IS THE HEADQUARTERS FOR Grain & Provisions 63 THIRD STREET, MACON, GA., SIGN OF THE GOLDEN HOG. WE HAVE NOW IN STORE AND TO ARRIVE, 50.000 pounds BACON C. R. SIDES and SHOULDERS, 30.000 pounds BULK C. R. SIDES and SHOULDERS, For sale at Lowest Market Price by J~SU JEU3TOZEKL BR( o 5.000 bushels prime WHITE CORN. 2.000 bushels prime MIXED CORN, Which we will sell as low as anybody. SUJEUDIOK. 33IL< RECEIVING THIS DAY 100 BARRELS Belle of Georgia Flour This is our favorite brand, and cannot be excelled in this market^ 'One car load “Kenesaw” Mills EXTRA FAMILY FLOUR. One car load “Marietta” Mills FAMILY FLOUR, One car load GOOD SUPERFINE, in barrels and sacks. For sale low by BURDICK: BROTHERS Three car loads PRIME WESTERN HAY. One car load CHOICE FEED OATS. Just received by BURDICK BROTHERS. AGENTS WANTED—for the Lives of Grant! Greeley! WILSON! BROWN! And the leading men of all parties. Over 40 Steel Portraits. Just the book wanted by the masses everywhere. Agents meet with won derful suecess. Send for Circular and secure territory at once. Address, ZIEGLER & McCUKDY, 503 North Sixth Street, St. Louis’ Mo. Rockbridge Alum Springs, Va. OPEN JUNE loth, 1872. The proprietor offers additional attractions this season. New, elegant and spacious Draw ing and Ball Rooms, beautiful lawns, exquisite air and scenery, while, the waters of these spe cial springs invariably relieve Consumption, Scrofula, Bronchitis, Dyspeptia, & Diarrhoea and are for sale by leading Druggist every where, Readily accessible via Chesapeake and Ohio R. R. Stop at Goshen Depot, where coaches will be in waiting. Pamphlets on ap plication, JAMES A. FRAZIER, Prop. July2 1m. D0N0TFAIL^'V“ c y “ North to secure one of the celebrated improved Stewart Cook Stoyes, With its special attachments. Roaster, Baker & Broiler. The Stove and Furniture carefully packed for shipment. Books sent on applica tion, FULLER WARREN k CO., 236 WATER St., N. Y. £ &■! Burnham’s New Turbine is in gener al use throughout the U. — . S. A six inch, is used by the Government in the Yj Patent Office, Washing-i ton, D.C. Its simplicity 'T of construction and the power it transmits renders it the best water wheel ever invented. Pamphlet free. N. F. BURNHAM, York, Pa. BLOOD PURIFIER MAGNOLIA HAMS, FRESITMEAL, WHEAT BRAN, SHORTS, PREPARED COW FOOD, * LIVERPOOL and VIRGINIA SALT, SUGAR, COFFEE, etc., now in Store. CHOICE LEAF LAUD IN TIERCES AND CANS. We offer the above on as reasonable terms as any bouse in this market, for Cash or approved City Acceptance. Give us your orders, and we will try to please you. 1BURDICK BROTHERS. april 6th 1872 rpn 3m. A. M. JACKSON, COTTON FACTOR AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, 19 McIntosh street, augusta. Georgia. april 20-3m LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON CONSIGNMENTS. m. D. QUINN, 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 Books, Copy, Cyphering and Exercise Books, for school use, &c., &c. The Writing Papers include Cap, Letter and Note, American, English and French Ruled and Plain, Stamped and Unstamped. The stock of Envelopes embraces Letter, Note and Offi cial sues, of all colors and qualities, 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 Stationery. 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 and Toy Books, and a well selected stock in General Literature. In the Miscellaneous Stock, in which we deal, we can offer to buyers as favor able terms as any establishment in the trade. A new price list will soon be issued, which will enable purchasers to make selections and or der ty mail, if desired. Such orders will receive prompt and carefnl attention, since the most thorough system marks the mode of doine busU ces, m Ibis establishment. ap«jU6 rn g I* a Powerful Tonic, specially (adapted for use iu Spring, when the languid and 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 American plant, which acco ing to the medical and scientific periodicals London and Paris, possesses the most powerfu tonic properties known to the Materia Medica’ and is well known 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, Poverty of the Blood, Debilitv, Weakness of the Intestines, Unterine or Urinary Organs. DR. WELL S EXTRACT OF JURUBEBA Is strengthening and nourishing ; like nutri- ciens 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. Price One Dollar per bottle. Send for Circu lar jnne 4 r p n lm. HgmHHffllh W s of ORCESTER’ DICTIONARIES Have been a topted by the State Board Education of VIRGINIA, NORTH CAROLINA, ALABAMA, and ARKANSAS. In use in the cities of RICHMOND, VA., NORFOLK, VA. MOBILE, ALABAMA. SAVANNAH, GA ATLANTA, GA., tjfc. The Standard in Orthography and Pronunciation in Washington and Lee University, The University of Virginia, The College of William and Mary, The University of Georgia, The Wesleyan University, Alabama, Sfc., BREWER & TILEST0N. 1 *7 TVCill^i Street, BOSTON. may 7 1872 rp 3m. DARBY'S PROPHYLACTIC FLUip R R R7~~ RADWAY S READ! RELIEF CUKES THE M oi.*T WttgM SSfiS*° Kadw.f. Beady KeUef u » tor* ft * Terj It was the first and is THE ONUY PAIN BESEnv that instantly stops the most excrnH*: pains, allays Inflamation, and cures C * tions, whether of the Lungs, Stomach °k eeS * els, or other glands or organs, bv on.’ Uo 'Y cation. J * & Ppa : In from one to twenty minutes, no how violent or excruciating the B a;» Rheumatic, Bed-ridden, Infirm, Cri i Nervous, Neuralgic, or prostrated W i t E p * (1 * l, » ease may suffer. Cla ' The application of the Ready ‘Relief to ti, part or parts where the pain or difficult* ... ® will afford ease and comfort. ? Xl3ts Twenty drops in half a tumbler of will in a few moments cure Cramps, s na L" Sour Stomach Heartburn, Sick Head Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Wind in* Bowels, and a Internal Pains. ‘ ut Travelers should always carry a hot*] Radway’s Ready Relief with them. drops in water will prevent sickness or tJ* from change of water It is betater th French Brandy or Bitters as a stimulem- FEVER AND AGUE, Fever and Ague cured for fifty cents: p . is not a remedial agent ir, this world that, care Fever and Ague, and all other MpA; Bilious, Scarlet, Typhoid, Yellow, and Fevers (aided by Rad way’s Pills) so aui,* Radway’s Ready Relief. Fifty cents • w HEALTH! BEAUTY n Strong and pure rich blood—increase of-’.; and weight—clear skin and beautiful* 21 complexion secured to ail DR. RADWAY'S SABSAPARILLIAN RESOLVER Has made the most astonishing cures so q j v so rapid are the changes the body un dergoes, under the influence'of this truly wonderful Medicine, that Every day an Increase in Flesh and Weight is Seen and Felt. TMM.E HHH.tr BLOOD Pl RU llR Every drop of the Sarsaparilian Besoivr* communicates through the Blood, Sweat Urine, and other fluids and juices of the sys tem the vigor of life, for it repairs the wastes of the body with new and soud material. Scrof ula, Syphilis, Consumption, Giandularidis! ease, Ulcers in the^ throat. Month, Tumors Nodes in the Glands and other parts of die system, Sore Eyes, Strumorous discharges from the Ears, and the worst forms of Skin diseases, Eruptions, Fever Sores, Seaid Head Ring Worm, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas. Acne Black Spots. IForms in the Flesh, Tumors, Cancers iu the Womb, and ail weakening and painful discharges, Night Sweats, Loss of Sperm aud all wastes of the life principle are within the curative range of this wonder of Modern Chemistry, and a few days use will prove to any person using it for either of Lese forms of disease its potent power to cure them. Not only does the Sarsaparillian Resolvent excels all known remedial agents in the care of Chronic, Scrofulous, Constitutional, md Skin diseases; bat it is the only positive cure for Kidney and Bladder Complaints, Urinary Bad Womb diseases, Gravel. Diabetes, Dropsy Stoppage of W T ater, Incontinence of Urine tright’8 Disease, Albuminuria, and in all ca ses where there are brick-dust deposits, or the water is thick, cloudy, mixed with substances like the white of an egg, or threads like whits silk, or there is a morbid, dark billions ap pearance, and white bone-dust deposits, and when there is a pricking, burning sensation when passing water, and pain in the Smah.! the Back and along the Loins. DR, RAD WAYS PERFECT PlKfiATIYE PILLS, perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated with s*e: gum, purge, regulate, purify, cleanse, ad strengthen. Radway’s Pills, for the cure :: all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bcre.s Kidneys, B!adder t Nervous Diseases, Bead ache, Constipation, Costiveness, Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Billionsness, Bilious Fever, In flammation of the Bowels, Piles, and all De rangements of the Internal Viscera. War ranted to effect a positive cure. Purely Teg- etable, containing no mercury, minerals, or deleterious drugs. Observes the following symptoms resalting from Disorders of the Digestive Organs: A few doses of Radway’s Pills will free the system from all the above named disorders. Price, 25 cents per Box. Sold by Druggists. Read “False and True.” Send one letter- stamp to Radway & Co., No 32 Warren St.. Cor. of Church Street, New York. Informa tion worth thousands will be sent you. r July 4 1871. 26 ly M. Neblett. Wm. M. Good:.:: ■A-U GI-USTA G-A. COTTON GINS- ■% !U r E the undersigned, respectfully infurE V t the planting community that we con tinue to manufacture COTTON GINS- Te were awarded the Premium, open to tie world, for the Gin at the Cotton States M? chanics’ and Agricultural Fair, held at L gusta last season. Also, received the Fin* Premium at the State Fair of Sonth Carcta- We feel warranted in saying that a tiii. oar Gins is all that is necessary to gumxtM satisfaction. Orders solicited early i-' M season to prevent delay. Old Gins repaired on reasonable terms- NEBLETT &. GOODRICH, rn april 236m. f|Uil6 iuvaiuable Family Medicine, tor - 1 -purifying, cleansing, removing bad odors in all kinds of sickness; for burns sores, wounds, stings; for Erysipelas, rheumatism, and all skin diseases; for catarrh, sore mouth, sore throat, diptheria; for colic, diarrhoea, cholera; as awash to soften and beautify the skin; to remove nk spots, mildew, fruit stains, taken in- ternally as well as applied externally; so highly recommended by all who have used it—is for sale by all Druggists and Coun- ry Merchants, and may be ordered di- rectly of the DARBY PROPHYLACTIC CO."" 161 William Street, N. Y. Grover aud Baker Sewio* Ma chine. For Simplicity, Ease of Operation, and Du rability, the GROVER & BAKER SEWING MACHINE is unrivalled. Responsible Agents wanted in every town in the State. Address. GROVER & BAKER S. M. CO.. 214 Bull St., Savannah, ba.- april 23 3m rn. m A LECTURE TO YOUNG MEN Just Published, in s Sealed Envelope. Price, six cents- A Lectors on tie Nature, Treatment ** Tt«Ajea1 Cure of Sperhatokrhoea- or • inal Weakness, Involuntary Emmission--. ual Debility; and Impediments to **•.“*' generally; Nervousness, Consumption, P sy, and Fits, Mental and Physical resulting from Self-Abuse, etc., By KO , J. CULVER WELL M. D-; author of -- “Green Book,” etc: . ,. The World renowned author, in this ^ able Lecture, clearly proves from - ^ experience that the awful consequences abuse may be effectually removed medicine, and without the dangerous operations, bougies, instruments, ^ cordials, pointing out a mode of cure simple, certain, and effectual, “T <05 which every sufferer, no matter wnat * dition may be, may cure himseli privately, and radically. to CF“ This Lectnrewill prove a Thousanps and Thousands. p . oS if Sent under seal, in a plain enveiOp*’ address, postpaid on receipt of six c« E ’ ‘ PO A t lso, ai DR. CULVERWELLS Gaide,” price 25 cents. Address the publishers, _ . r n CHAS.J. C. KLINE & 127 Bowery JI. Y„ Post Office Bex mayl p r 23 tf PLANTERS’ Augusta, tf* 1 — . ^ The only Hotel in the City where; Gas J* - throughout JO HU A. GOLDS**