Newspaper Page Text
A Terre Hautb Horror,—last
night a gentleman went into a mrl er-
shop, and being in a great hurry, took
a seat in tbe first chair that was vacant
without noticing who the • barter was.
The siouchy and uncertain wav in
which the lather was applied <aused
And House-Furuishing Emporium!
£Q8KIK6 AM SEATING STOVES IN ENDLESS VA8IETY
•Ithe its 9 Ga.
Broad and Thomas Sts
oe.iot f
on us, both to settle old accounts and to buy more God
|jor%ast Ar*k
jPi'idqy Morning, Dec. 20.
THE OUT-LOOK FOB HTFANCT.
BT 1. T. m\SLR.
A l»»t lay On the summer sea,
Tho light waves round it leap'ng.
While langhidg sunbeams, bright and
free
Play’d o’ er an infant sleeping.
And far away that hark In glee
Was o’er the bright deep straying,
WhilMJl araand the dimpling sea
Wnaocphyrs soft was playing.
And oh ! 'twas sweet around tha^child
To «9eth« ripples dancing;
And a’er its bratr. so soft and mild;
The sunbeams brightly glancing.
And eh ! I wished that naught might
break
The angel spell that bound it.
Or from its dreams the spirit wake.
That Splayed so soft around it,
Hut when lar off upon tbe sky,
I saw the tempest lower,
A mournful tear bedimm'd mine eye.
For that unconscious flower.
For still that bark, so frail and light,
Was o’er the billows sweeping,
And still williin, as fair and bright,
That infant form lay sleeping.
I turned away for who could see
That child awake to sorrow.
The brigtest sc.ile so swift to flee
“That earth from heaven may borrow.’
For well I know the angry wave
Would sons in wrath surround it,
And make iu wild and lonely grave
’Mid ocnan weeds Uist bound it
Ah ! thus, methought, on life's frail
We make our youthful pillow;
And gaily o’er its waters glide,
From billow on to billow;
But ah ! too soon the angry storm
Blots bnt each vision brightest,
And oft, alas ! It wraps tne form
la which the heart beats lightest.
tide
TO HY HEART.
further administration of it, till he was j
finally stretched powerless before them.
The operation require was thon made
upon the wound, and the proper resto
ratives applied.
Neither doctor nor showman spoke
word until they had decended the
steps.
“ Monsieur,” said- the showman,
" you have saved, by your wonderful
presence of mind, a life whose value
is incalculable to me. Permit me to
offer you my grateful thanks and to
give you your fee ” And he handed
the other a hundred franc note.
" Thank you, Monsieur Dompteur,”
replied tho physician, “ and when you
again have need of services for a sim
ilar, case, I pray you "
“ I will certainly call you in.”
“ No, no that is not what I intend
ed—pray summon some other doctor.”
Abyssinia.—The Kingdom of Abys
sinia was no contemptible nation when
the English conquered it. Theodore,
ImrbarMUi as he was, foughj in many
instances bravely. To conquer him
4ook both time and more money than
the English Chancellor of the Ex
chequer liked to face Parliament with
a statement of the expenditures of,
even though the English arms were
crowned with victory, and much of the
old prestige of the English people for
f lnck was restored. Now, under
Vince Kassai, or, as his Imperial title
runs, King Johannes, tho Kingdom of
Abyssinia has become stronger and
more prosperous than before. King
Johannes is, for his opportunities, an
enlightened sovereign. He practices
and encourages his people in the ob
servance of a rude form of Christianity.
To repel a Mohammedan invasion
such as has been so olten threatened,
he keeps his army in a state* of readi
ness. The King could, iu all proba
bility, bring into the field from 120,-
000 to 150,000 men on any ordinary
occasion ; but in case, of a war, to se
cure the integrity of the whole country
against Mohammedan rule, every man
capable of bearing arms would be ready
to join the force without any pressure
on the King’s part. Memelek, King
of Shoo; Warremah, Governor of the
Haas of Amharn, and Ali Berrou, the
ruler of Gcodjam, have each and nil
expressed their readiness to fight under
Johannes in case of any extensive Mo
hammedan invasion.
Beating, pulsiag, throbbing prisoner,
Never for one moment still,
Tell me, in confiding whisper,
Why-this wild and feverish thrill;
Restless captive, sever deeping.
In thy dungeon cell confined,
Frost What Eden wast thou taken.
What the jsys thou leit'st behind!
I, for years, mycterisns stranger,
L, thy jailai; have beheld
All thy sorrows, sll thy sadness,
All thy rising hopes nnqnelled.
Oft baa thou confided in me,
Often whispered hidden things,
But hast never told thy jailor
Where they chained those drooping
wing*.
Longing for thy glad departure.
I’d relieve thee, trembling heart,
But alas ! thy dungeon-keeper
May not bid thee to depart,
Peace. 1 thy great deliver cometh
Death will set thee free, to roam
Where thou may'st unfold thy pinions,
’Mid the cherished scenes of home.
. .. AT. W
THE SH0WHA.VS SICK CHILD.
Doctor Lemoni was one the most cahuah,
courtly and affable of Paris physicians, force.
He was once called upon by an athletic
ruddy personage sche .certainly seemed
iu so individual need -of the ffistm-
guised Doctors advice; the latter, too,
in lind:effort to reassure his embar
rassed viator, addressed him with his
usual politeness and condesceniion.
' ** Monsieur,-! am the proprietor of
« Menagerie,” said the square should
ered man, “ and one of ur children is
sick ”
Exactly, my friend. Of what na
ture is the disease V
He ran * splihter into his thigh;
it is very ugly, monsieur, but lam
rich enough to pay wetL.”
-w* Very well, my mau,” replied the
Doctor, enabled to suppress a smile at
the simplicity of his visitor, “ we will
talk, of .that after a while. Tell me
expl.icity wliat is the matter with your
*f*Monrieuv the splinter has festered
in,hfe thigh, and he will nutlet anv
one tough it; be Is headlong, for all
he is very gentle. It will he necessary
I know, to perform a slight operation
luit he is violent and headstrong about
An Arab legend gives the following
account of the discovering of coffee:
Toward the middle of the fifteenth cen
tury a poor Arab was traveling in
Abyssinia, and, finding himself weak
and weary from fatigue, ho stopped
near a grove. Then, being in want of
tuel to cook his rice, he cut down a
tree whieh happened to be covered with
dead berries. His meal being cooked
and eaten, the traveler discovered that
the hall-burned berries were very fra
grant He collected a number of
these, and on crushing them with a
stene, he found that their aroma in
creased to a great extent While won
dering at this, he accidentally let fall
the substance in a caa which contained
his scanty supply of water. Lo, what
a miracle! The almost putrid liquid
was instantly purified. He brought
it to his Ups; it was fresh, agreeable,
and in a moment after the traveler had
so recovered his strength and energy
as to he alfe to resume his journey.
The lucky Arab gathered as many
berries as he could, and, having ar-
r'ved at Alden, in Arabia, he inform
ed the muftriof his discovery. That
worthy di vine was an inveterate opium
smoker* who had been suffering for
years -from the influence of that poison
ous drug. He tried an infusion of the
roasted berries, and was so delighted
at the recovery- of his owa vigor that
m gnststnde tc the tree he calif d it
which an Arahie signifies
iff. ft*
nately.
“ Leave bis violence to me. How
dMtt'ffbfT’i
“ Four years only. But I am afraid
he «ril| bite or scratch you if y ou at
tempt to touch it. You must’ admiu-
“ Not at all, ray good man. Your
child ; cau no tbe) very dangerous in the
cXereweof bis temper if te is only four
^ u But he is large for his age
' “ No. Sb; I will go with you to see
ytjurbdy. It were' folly to administer
tMmwIiff is such a ease." .
ir. you do not know
’ continued the man,
pray, I beseech
»* take thfe fehioroYorm all the
same, in cate yoa should need it”
1,.To dispel the anxieties of the nervous
Lemoni carried with him
an aesthetic, and shortly
at tho house of the beast
■uPl have put him upstairs, Doctor,
wbme. the poor fellow would be ‘undis-
turlied. Ascend with me please.”
" Thfty mounted to a kind of loft.
The Doctor having entered, the show
man followed, and closing the door
behind him. quickly locked it. The
former turning in some surprise, <le-
scVibed a full-grown lion slowly ap
proaching them, with an unquestiou
nblv wicked and menacing snarl.
, The boast tamer grew pale; and
S when lie addressed some soothing brute
' tat to tho animal, his voice
led.' The Doctor was not only
ghastly nale, out covered with a cold
sake, Doctor, be
:-tamcr,
General Lee’s Room.—The Nash
i-illo Union and American says: A
gentleman residing in this city, and
who returned from the Washington
and Lee University, of Virginia, re
lates some pleasant facta connected
with the last days -of General Lee.
He says that ibe private room in the
University whieh tbe General occupied
has been reft Just as it was when he
went out ef it on tbe morning he took
to his bed, and from which he never
arose. The Geueral went into his
room at the usual hour that morning,
put on his slippers, took a. seat near a
window, fir*in which he drew the cur
tain partially lack, and began reading
a copy of the Nashville Union and
American. He had been complaining
of feeling unwell, and alter reading a
short time, he laid the paper on the
table and left the room, never more to
return. To-day the visitor to the Uni
versity is shown the room, which he is
allowed to enter, but is prohibited from
touching anything. On the dust-oov-
ered table he secs the j taper as it drop
ped from the hand of the great chief
tain, and near the chair, which is
partly turned around, his slippers.
The curtain is in the same position in
which the General had placed it, and
in fhe inkstand is the deeply-corroded
pen, just as it had been left when last
used. A guard is mounted at the door
every day to see tliat nothing about the
room is disturbed by any one visit
ing it.
and uncertain wav
was applied mused
him to take a more careful look at the
aerator. The look was not assuring,
here was a wildness about his eves
and a heaviness in his breathing that
was nqt pleasant to contemplate. The
lathering process occupied an unreason
ably long time. Then the barber
sharpened his razor nervously and in
winding up cut his hand.' drawing
blood, which he endeavored to conceal
Then he took one swipe at the anxious
face before him. The gentleman in the
cha'r cast bis eyes upward when the
razor was raised again. The barber
held the razor in his clinched hand;
about a foot above his head; his eyes
w.re fixed and glassy, and there was a
sickening kind of foam on his blue lips.
One leap, and the gentleman was ten
feet from that chair, and at the very
instant he moved the glittering razor
came down savagely on the very spot
where his head had been, and the bar
ber fell down In a fit. The frightened
gentleman will indulge in no more
shaving at a barber shop after this..
Bound to Worry Him.—One
morning daring the late war, an officer
riding through the woods of North
Alabama, was attracted hv a tall, lank
countryman, who seemed to be using
his best endeavors to reach the top of
a large hickory tree. .Scarcely had he
reached the summit, wheu, rapidly de
scending, lie started up another tree a
few yards further off. This strange
proceeding was continued at least
dozen times, the countryman climbing
and descending one tree after another
for nearly a quarter of a mile. The
officer at length overtaking him, in
quired the cause of his eccentric gyrn
lions. “ Wal, stranger,” lie answered,
“ I was lyin’ asleep under yon hickory,
when a darned squirrel dropped a shell-
bark into my eye. I’m goin’ to worry
him till he leaves the settlement, if
die in the attempt.”
A long red worm, resembling in ap
pearance what is termed “ thousand
legged worm,” is formed in corn rai-ed
in wet lands in Northern Kansas, and
if eaten by horses or cattle, proves
very fatel. A farmer by tne name of
Woodson, living near Netawaka, came
near losing his entire stock of five
horses a short time since. He had fed
them as usual at noon, with corn, aud
they had all eaten as hearty as ever;
but in a few momenta after, all five
were taken suddenly ill, and began
swelling up like so many balloons. One
of the horses died in a few momenta,
and the others were only saved by the
most diligent rubbing and kind treat
ment. At first the cause was unknown,
but it was afterward discovered that it
was caused by these worms.
A pony, the property of Mr. W. H.
Wilson Todd, of Halnaby Hall, near
Darlington, England, recently died at
the ripe old age of thirty-nine years
and six months. It was the Last sur
vivor of three, whose united ages
amounted to ninety-eight years aud one
month, the respective ages of the other
two being twenty-four years and five
months, and thirty-feur years and two
months. Their sire was Brown Shales
and their dam a Welsh pony; they
were under fourteen hands, and were
noted for their trotting abilities. They
were bred near Hull by the late Mr.
John Todd, and were never out of the
possession of the family.
Joan Billiags’ Good Rezolu-
shuns FOR 1873.—That i wont smoke
enny more cigars, only at somebody
else’s expense.
That i wontborry nor lend—espesli-
ily lend.
That i will live within mi inkum, if
i hav tew git trusted tew do it.
That i wont advise enny body, un
til i kno the kind of advise they arc
anxious tew follow.
That i wont wear enny more titc
boots, if i have to go barfoot tew
do it.
That i wont swop dogs with no man,
unless i kau swop too for one.
_ I gave her a rose and gave her a
ring and asked her to marry me then ;
but she sent them all back—the insen
sible thing—and said she’d no notion
of men. I told her I had oceans of
money and goods—tried to frighten
her with a growl; but she answered,
she wasn’t brought up in the woods, to
be scared by the screech of an owl. I
called her a baggage, and everything
bad; I slightedher features and form;
till, at length, I succeeded in getting
her mad, and she raged like the sea in
a storm. And then, in a moment, I
turned and smiled, ar,d called her my
angel and all; she fell in my arms, like
a wearisome child, and exclaimed:
“ We will marry this fall.”
IS COMING
And to those friends and patrons who have not jet paid th»'
accounts we want to speak a few kind words privately
We beg that they will remember the trying days of
Summer, when we did all iu our power to aid
them. Friends, come forward and pay us
between this and Christmas. Don’t
pass the threshold of a New Year
with an old debt hanging
over yotir heads.
OUR BOORS. MUST BE SQUARED
By the First Day of January.
THIS IS NO JOKE—WE MUST HAVE OUR MONEY.I
The Elevated Oven Cook Stove, with all Utensils,
Operation Guaruolml or no Pair.
NO ADVANCE IN PRICES
-OF
AND
SHOES
A MEMBER OF THE FIRM BEING IN BOSTON AND OTHER
leading Shoe Markets ten days before the Boston Fire, and having
purchased largely for our Winter Trade, we now offer to
our Customers and the Public generally
A T THE LOW PRICES
At which ire hare been selling daring tho past three month*.
Our Stock comprises everytninff found in a FIRST-CLASS SHOE STORE.
All Goods warranted to be as represented.
A sour uiotto is “Quick Sales ana Small Profits,** dealers aud all others wanting Goods in our lino will
Cud it to their interest to gire us a call.
G ALL AUER &MULBER1N
289 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
MANHOOD:
How Lost, How Restored.
JUST PUB-
t) LIS1IED, a bow
editleuof Or. CULVElt-
WELL’S CELEBRATED
ESSAY on the radical
cure (without medicine)
ofSperwatorrhceaorSem- , .
tnaf weakness, Involuntary Seminal Losses, Im
potency,Menial aud Physical Incapacity, Imped
Iments to Martin v, etc.; also, Consumption, Epi
lepsy aud lit*, induced by sell-indulgence or sexu
al extravagance.
BW Price. in a seale 1 envelope, only 6 cents.
The celebrated author, in this admirable essay,
clearly demonstrates, from a thirty years success
ful practice, that the alarming consequences of
seJf-abuso may bo radically cured without the dan
gerous use of internal medicine or the application
oi" the knllb; pointing out a mode of cure at nee
simple, certain and effectual, by means of which
every sufferer, no matter what bis condition may
be, may cure himself cheaply, privately and radi
cally.
wrTh'9 Lecture should be in tho hands of
everv youth and every man iu the land.
Sent, under seal, in n plain envelope, to any
address, postpaid, on receipt of six cents, or two
post stamps.
Also, Dr. Culverwell's “Marriage Guide," price
50 cents. Address the Publishers.
CHAR. 3. C., KLINE A CO.,
127 Bowery, New fork, Pust-Otllco box, 4,580.
oct23-ly
A. K CHILDS, R. NICKERSON, Y. H. W#N,
CHILDS,NICKERSON & CO
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
Cheap Farms, Free Homes,
On the line of the UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD
18.000.000 acres of the best Farming and Mineral
Lands in America.
3,000,000 Acres in Nebraska, in the Platte Val
ley, now for rale.
MILD CLIMATE, FERTILE SOIL.
For Grain Growing and Stock Raisin- unsurpassed
by any in the United States. „
Cheaper in Price, more favorable terms given
and more convenient to market than can be found
elsewhere.
Free Homesteads for Actual Settlers.
The best location for Colonics—Soldiers entitled
to a Homestead of 180 Acres.
Send for the new Descriptive Pamphlet, with
new maps, publish,si in English, German, Swed
ish and Danish, mailed free everywhere.
Address O. F. IM VIS,
Land Com’r U. P. P. R. Co., Omaha, Neb.
r 2 o
g »
W>e«
®.2 £
s 8
teS Y
uj rj
tti I
os r
3 J3
«■ M x o
§ 3
£ S #i
205 BROAD STREET. AUGUSTA, GEORGIA,
Beapeetfnlly Ask Year Attention to a Pnll X,|ne of tfce Following Cm*
which will be Hold nn I.ow no any other donee:
CARPET DEPARTMENT.
English Velvet Carpets,
English Brussels Carpets,
Three Ply and Ingrain Carpets,
Venetian Carpels,
CheapCarpota,
Floor Oil Clothes,
Table Oilcloths.
Stair Carnets and Rods,
Mattings, Druggets A Door Mats.
Carpets, Oil Cloths
CURTAIN DEPARTMENT.
Curtain Materials,
Cornices and Bands,
Lace Curtains,
Muslin Curtains,
Window Shades, all sires,
Hair Cloths, all widths,
Wall Papera
and Borders,
Beautiful Chronics.
and Curtains
short iwtice.
GROCERY DKPARTIOT.
Choice Family
Grocerief,
received weeklr,
DufficM Hams,
English Crackers,
Dyspeptics’ Food,
Broom* and Brushes,
Baskets, of ail kinds, Wotd IbI
Pl&utation Supplies.
made and laid fll
DUTY OFF TEAS-
The Great American Tea Company
have business connection with «li tbe principal
l*orts of China ami Japan, and import tneir Teas
direct from place of crowth, thus saving the con
sumer from o to 8 profits. It is now alxmt 12 years
since the Company was organized—ami it htshccn
si splendid success from the very first. This was
due lo the fact that we imported and cold only
Rest and Purest Hoods,
and distribnted then: tn our customers in all part*
of the 1! tilted States for one small profit only, be
tween the tea-griwer and the tea-consuntcr. W«
originated the system of supplying consumer* in
distant parts of the country with Teas, at New
York cargo Prices, on the club plan. And sincA
we adapted this plan we hare saved the people of
tlio Country millions of dollars annually, in the
cost of this article of every day necessity. Send
for club circular, which contains full directions,
premiums, Ac.
The Great American Tea Company,
31 trad 33 VESBV STREET,
1>. O. Boq 5713. New York City.
A School Composition.—A friend
of education handed us the following
composition written by one of Air.
Bate’s scholars. Who dares to say
that we teven't a coming genius
among us?
Fees.-—The bee most resembles a
yellow jacket. Bees live in hollow
faUin trees, and some live iu holes in
tho ground. The bee 1 think is more
of a wild, than domestic animal, be
cause they will not let a pemmeome
near them. I do not know whether
there are different classes of bees in
the same hive or not; as I am no bee
manager I do not know much about
them. The working bees, in pleasant
weather, occupy their time ingather
ing honey. The beea in building their
cells get sweet-gum off the trees to
build them. They obtain their honey
Tie '
A Curious Freak of Nature.—
A monstrosity was born in this county
on Friday morning, the 22d inst. A
lady of Heard county gave birth to a
child having two heads, four legs, four
arms and a double stroke of gender.
If any one doubts the correctness of
the above let them call on Dr. W. S.
Morgan, who has the same in a charge.
When will wonders cease ? The child
being dead evinced premature birth.
Hence we may truthfully say it roust
have been the legitimate offspring of a
radical movement on the first part, ac-
from flowers.
substance taken
a
from flowers is not like that in the
comb for they take the honey of flow
ers and manufacture it. I do not
know how they make bee-bread. The
bees build cola to look up their eggs
and honey in, and instead of finding
their babies in hollow stumps, they
alwnysfind them in their cells. I once
heard a song about n bee, and its
commenced this way:
' ‘ bee."
as&»
dashed
in the
Theodore Hook was
once punning
on names and a gentleman named
Dunlop defied him to pun on Ins name.
•‘ ■TV’. —:.l TT^nl- “ Inn nfT half tlir
companied
the other.—1
liberal acquiesence on
iGrange Reporter.
A-Paris letter says.: “Once upon a
time, the De Courcy was one of the
noblest and most powerful families of
France. The motto of their coat-of-
arms was: “I am no King; I disdain
being a Duke; I am De Courcy. The
last descendant died a few days ago
here; he was one of the municipal
street sweepers. Among bis rags were
fuund his certificate of bi:
STEEL, NAILS,
HORSE & MULE SHOES
HORSE SHOE NAILS,AGRIC ll.'JH AL IMPLE
MENTS, CARRIAGE and SADDLERY HARDWARE,
FELLOWS, HUBS, SPOKES, AXLES, SPRINGS.
Sic., RUBBER AND LEATHER BELTING,
BUGGY WHEELS,MILL SAWS, MILL
FINDINGS, ANVILS, BELLOWS,
VICES, HOLLOW-WARE, &c.
•
VSc Manufacturer’s Agents for I7ie Sale of
Brinley’s Steel Plows, Peacock Steel Plows,
Fairbanks’ Standard Scales,
Sawyer’s Celebrated Cotton Gin,
Water Elevators and Pumps,
Circular Saws, &c., &c„ &c.
t&~ Any article in our line not in dock will be ordered tchen desired, with tho
east possible delay. ftaP* Call aiid examine our stock and prices. nov8-tf
Important l Horse Owners
BROMOCIILOIULM
The New Odorless, Non-Poisonous
DEODISKR AND DISINFECTANT,
Has been used with grent effect in Canada, Detroit
Bulfa’o, Rochester * other places in the prevailing
HORSE EPIDEMIC.
For sprinkling un tho floor* of the stables, wash
ing the mangers, and for decomposing the poison
ous exhalations fYom the manure and urine when
sprinkled with it.
For decomposing end destroying all had odors
and gases, os well as genus of disease and septic
particles In the sin—thrown off by the sick animal
For purifying the air the animal broathes by
hanging clothes wet with it near his head, so that
he will not breathe over and over again the foul
air.
To sponge and syringe the nostrils and mouth,
check the acrid poisonous discharges, heat all ul
cers and sores.
It prevents the spread of the disease by com-
itetely cleansing the mouth and purifying tho
they turn away from the
J, which 1* poisonous and irri
tating toinflamed mucous surfaces.
Put up in Pint Bottles. Prepared only by
TILDEN & CO.,
178 William Street, New York.
OR* Sold by ail Druggists, norZMw
The Chicago Farm Ftimp
—ANI>—
Patent Parcelim-Lintd Iron CyMw Pnji
For Cisterns and Wells of any Deptk)
TONS OF
Dicksons
proving
Courcy.
him to have been Robert de
Aa families begin, so they end, too, in
obscurity 1”
On the night of the Bostou fire, a
dealer in boots and shoes, finding that
the fire had reached his rear store, said
to a few strangers who had assisted
him: “ You might as well help your
selves to boots.” One fellow took a
pair the merchant handed him, and,
after glancing at them said: “ You
haven’t got a pair of slim sevens have
you ?” An explosion next door pre
vented a response. .
The Missouri Democrat thus un
kindly exposes Col. Meshy’s incentives
to loyalty;Gen. Mosby of Virginia
owns a stone quarry, and is reported
to be fishing for a contract to furnish
headstones for the National cemeteries.
Having materially assisted in iurnish-
itur the eorpses, Mosby now wants to
LONGS & BILLUPS,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
PAINTS, OILS, DYE-STOFfS, &c.
EST’ we have ojr jiaed a large assortment of
Perfumery, Fancy Goods, Sfe.
It is not a physic which may give temporary
ef to the sufferer (or the first few doses, 1
hich, from continued use, brings pile* andh
red diseases to dM in weakening the invaUd, i
it a doctored liquor, which, under tbe popular
>mo of “Hitter*,, is *o extensively palmed off on
le public as sovereign remedies, but it 1* a most
iwurful tonic and a terative, pronounced so by
io leading medical authorities of London and
Paris, and ha* long been used by tbe regular phy-
riciunsof other countries with wonderful remedial
results.
Dr. WVlls’ Extract of Jornbeba
retains aU tho medicinal virtues peculiar to tho
plant, and must be taken a* a permanent cun,tlvc
agent.
la there want of action in your Liver and Spleen?
Unless relieved at once the blood becomes Impure
vitiated
Have you n
tlon is promf
healthy
and restore the
Stomach? Unless dl.
the system la debilitated
loss of vital force, poverty of the blood, Drop-
sleal Tendency, general wcakno*s or lassitude.
with loss of
cel Tendeuo,, K cucnu or uuniuae.
Take it to assist digestion without reaction, It
will impart youthful vigor to the weary sufferer.
Have you Wcukncss of tho Intestines ? You ar
in danger of Chronic Diarrhoea or the droadful Iu-
flamiimtion'of tho Bowels.
Taka it to allay irritation and ward off tendency
to lull; nnu:i;i..ns.
Havo you weakness of the Uterine or Urinary
Organs? You must procure irntunt relief or you
arc liable to sufferihg worse than death.
Tako it to strengthen organic weakness or life be-
emu s a lnml«*n.
Finally, it should bo frequently taken to keep
tho system in perfect henlth, or you aro otherwise
SOLD THIS SEASON.
This Shows what the Plan
ters Think of it.
MORE OF IT USED THAN ANY
FERTILIZER IN MARKET.
. 1K&. Planters who used a few sacks
this season have already put in their
orders for a few TONS for next.
ns. Look to your own Interest, and buy a FER
TILIZER that is nude In your own State, and that
you know U good.
Every Sack is Warranted Genuine
We have now on haud, and will continue to,
keep a GOOD STOCK, so that farmers can haul It
away before the busy season.
:Payments on Time, ^Purchases
not due until Novem
ber 1st, 7S7S.
aar we can also supply -set
CHEMICALS
TO THOSE DESIRING TO
Make tlieirOwnEertilizers
Those Buying Now will yet on as Good
Terms as those who Buy in
* the Spring.
England <$• Orr
AG^fTS.
MORRIS & FRFEMAN,
• Agents, Carncsville.
Are Cheap, Durable and Didst. \ I
OVKB 100,000 sou:/
EVERY PUMP WARS ANTED
2a* pe«toa Csa Set Tbes*
CHILDS, NICKERSON Ct’
General Hardware fDtcln
novS-tf AGKMS.
S. D. wn.I.lAM.*:. 1 9. B
WILLIAMS & ROWUtt
WHOLESALE AND BETA ft
JET'BEJ JEi
Commission Hout
43 Jackson Street, Augusta, Cl
Grain, Hay . Fodder Corn and Cot
stantly on hand, in any quantity.
Consignments solicited. ^
NOTICE
XTAVING sold an interest in !
A A Book and Stationary btisin*** ««*“• ’
LIAM H. HODGSON', (to dsm from.X«*. l
will brtonducted hereafter under tho firm
Burk© &
in order that the books, may bo closed «r_
Thankful to mv friend* for their |
ronageduring the last two year*. 1
new firm
lodgson.
trader*!***
: m
cuntinuouca of the
T. A.
HP
MARKWAU
T.
m
&
Marble Wot
BUOAD ST., Arr.l'fiTA,
TV/TARBLE MONUMENTS
JNJL Stone*, etc., Marble Mantl^- j,
3^.S*,%K.!:u32s,
notice. AUwork for the countr) «* re
1 H. TAYLOR,
Tuner, Regulator & Repairer
—OF—
Pianos, Organs, Melodeons
And all kinds ofMtuIcal Instrument*.
° r Oidu^°l™ i with brl.ri/W!HalUm will receive
prompt attention. ;l i jftcA. decfi-ly.
Thea-Aedar.
CHINESE
The best Tea i
dlscacs. JOHN Q.
Prico One Dollar pc
i Platt at.,li. Y.
the United Stales,
send for circular.
[novti-iw]
—
Jlcalcrs in
• ru o s *
Put up in our
pound aud j
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE
to sell the best low-nriced Com-Sheller ever l*at-
only auniul
special attention given
: AWn*
ented
Let
and
For sale Rt w
• has corn
Y COHN
WTf
hell
-f.binlic
The Great
5000
T7A HAVE NOW A LARGE STOCK OF
qiiga whtf.h wr
MULES AND ^
FOR SALE
S. HOLMAN will W.
"W .durtagthe Winter ■samfiff*
RULES aud HORSES, for sale at
COOPERS LIVERY St
TO
A LL PERSONS
WWR*s3sr-
hovXMra Or, Mus- '•
E. T. BRUMBY
anil Pto®? 1