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AGRICULTURAL
.of' iilln Ambition lira* bauble pursue,
. i 1’ WUdo.n looks down with disdain,
, of the Fanner has charms ever
new,
VC ..ere health, peace ami oompoteaceVWgn.
Tattle ol WeilitXiMiyWea
furcN.
'‘■tthr.lt. TJis. |
U'.ioat, f'f; 1
sue!led corn 50 |
■m in'the ear 70 !
i "it', 00 1
1 ye, 50 I
i 'its. 32 I
Parley, 47 |
! rish Potatoes, 00 1
s-vecl Potatoes, 55 |
White Beans, 00 I
■ ‘ i st or Beans, 45
riover Seed, 00
Timothy Seed, 45
’"ax Seed, 50
Hemp Seed 45
Blue Brass seed. 14
TlutheU. Lbt.
Buckwheat, 52
Dried peaches, 58
Dried apples, 24
Onions, 57
Salt, 50
Stone coal, 80
Malt. 38
Wheat bran, 20
j Turnips, 55
Plastering hair, 8
[ TTngl&eked lime, 80
I Corn Meal, 48
i Fine Salt, 55
| Oround peas, 25
| Cotton Seed, 32
1
The Fanner's Creed.
We believe in small farms and
thorough cultivation.
We believe the soil loves to eat
-, s wc il as the owner, and therefore
ought to be well manured.
We believe in going to the bot
tom of things, and, therefore, in
deep plowing and enontrh of it.—
Ml the better if it be a subsoil plow.
We believe in large crops, which
leave the soil better than they
found it—making both the farm and
farmer rich at once.
We beliove that the best fertil
izer of any soil is the spirit of in
dustry, enterprise and intelligence
without this lime, gypsum and
will he of little use.
O
Hanure.
Keep the stalls of horses and
cattle well littered with some good
absorbent. Leaves are most con
venient. What the country needs
is a plenty of home-made manure,
which will enable tho farmer to
make heavier crops from less iand.
I'arming does not pay when it
takes all a man's labor to make his
bread. Eight bushels of corn to
the acre will not pay ; twen.y
for one makes money
Keep refuse tanbark, sawdust,
roods earth, or refuse of wood
piles, in hen houses three inches
deep all the wilder. Tu>> ftesb
ter in the spring and sow on weak
places in wheat field, or reserve to
plant in hills with corn or tobacco.
Enterprise.
——<mm • i—ii
Clean Farming.
We heartily indorse tho following
!>v a correspondent of Coleman's
Rural World: •
Nothing should he grown or suf~
fered to grow on a farm that can
not be converted into money.—
Weeds and briars, therefore, should
not be permitted to grow, for there
is no money value in them, there
fore they are a nuisance A crop
of weeds, permitted to go to seed,
will exhaust the soil as much as a
crop of grass or grain, which have
a money value. It is amusing to
hear men-—farmers—sav that they
let their fields go to weeds in order
to rest their land, and to be plowed
under the next saason for manure.
There can he no objection to the
plowing under of green crops as a
manure, but the refuse of defunct
‘weeds will add hut little to the fer
tility o! the soil. Why not grow
grass instead of weeds ? VY ith ve
ry little trouble land can be seeded
down to grass, and used for pasture
or hay ; this can be converted into
milk, beef, wool, mutton or pork,
out of which money can be made.
The droppings of the stock and the
-od full of roots, may tie plowed
under for another crop in rotation
Any system of farming that will
admit any part [say one field] of
the farm to remain unproductive
for one year, can not be considered
good farming. Every acre of tilla
ble land on a farm, if properly
managed, will produce something
that can be converted into money.
Here is where the great secret
of good farming lies. Talk about
giving land rest! Give it plenty
of food and change o’ occupation,
and it requires no rest. With a
system based on these principles, it
will grow stronger and better eve-”
ry year.
Raised Muffins. 1 pint 6weet
milk, 2 eggs, piece of butter size
of an egg, a little salt, 2 table
spoons yeast, and flour till thick as
pound eak#.
A Artv Forage Crop.
jow Hungarian or German mil
let. It will pay better than late
corn. Select good, dry, rich soil.
and prepare it as you would a tur
nip patch. Harrow it thoroughly.
Then sow at the rate of one bushel
per acre, if you sow it broadcast,
or proportionately less if you sow
it in the drill. It will mature in
ninety days, and " ill yield on high
ly manured land and naturally
rich soil upwards of two tons per
acre. The best manure for it would
probably be cotton seed, previous
ly killed before applying to the
surface ; then harrow both millet
and cotton seed in at the same time.
Do not put millet on poor land ; it
is like throwing vour money away
It will probably pay better than
any grass, in this climate. Once
make it successful and it will hard
ly be necessary to pull fodder for
forage. Tho seed is not good for
horses, but neat stock are fond of
it. Cut it, therefore, before it ma
tures its seel. A good mowing
machine will cut at least six acres
in ten hours.
What is one man's labor worth
per day when it returns him twelve
tons of good hay ? You can cut
this crop after the other crops are
laid by. Try it.
mm
The Housewife’® Table.
The following is a very valuable
housewife’s table, by which persons
not having scales and weights at
hand may readily measure the ar
ticle wanted to form any recipe
without the trouble of weighing, al
lowance to be made for an extraor
dinary dryness or moistuie of the
article weighed or measured :
\\ heat flour, 1 pound is 1 quart.
Indian meal, 1 pound 2 ounces
are 1 quart.
Butter, when soft, 1 pound is I
quart.
Loaf sugar, broken, 1 pound is 1
quart.
White sugar, powdered, 1 pound
1 ounce are 1 quart.
tßest brown sugar, 1 pound 2 ozs.
are 1 quart
Ten eggs are 1 pound.
1 pint.
Eight largo tablespoonful are h
pint.
Four large tablespoonfuls are I
gill.
Two gills are a half pint
A common-sized tumbler holds
half a pint.
An ordinary teacup is 1 gill.
A largo wine glass is 1 gill.
A large tablespoonful is half an
ounce.
Forty drops are equal to 1 tea
spoonful.
Four teaspoonfuls are equal to 1
tables poonful.
Be Independent.
Heaven help the man who imag
ines he can dodge enemies by try
ing to please everybody ! If s ich
an individual ever succeeded, we
should he glad of it—not that one
should be going throrgh the world
trying to find beams to knock and
thump bis head against, disputing
man's opinion, fighting and elbow
ing, and crowding all who differ
from him. That, again, is anoth
er extreme. Other people have
their opinion—so have you ; don't
lal! into the error of supposing that
they will respect you more for turn
in your coat every day to match
the color of theirs. Wear your
own colors in spite of wind, weath
er, storm and sunshine. It costs
the vacillating and irresolute ten
times the trouble to wind and shuf
fle and twist that it does honest,
manly independence to stand its
ground.
]£s=*Salt should be fumishodto
all animals regularly. A cow, or
an ox, or a horse needs two to four
ounces daily. Salt increases the
butter in milk, helps the digestive
and nutritive processes, and gives
a good appetite. The people of in
terior Europe have a saying that
a pound of salt makes ten pounds
of flesh. Of course, salt only as
sists in assimilating the food, it
does not make flesh or muscle.
Mary had a little lamb,
’Twas always on its muscle,
She jerked the wool out of its back
And stuffed it in ber bustle.
The lenders ol' an Atom.
All tiling* visible nround ns are
aggregations of atoms. From par
ticl.sof dust, which under the mi
croscope could scarcely he distin
guished one from the other, are all
the varied forms of nature created.
This grain of dust, this particle of
sand, has strange properties and
powers. Science has discovered
some, but still more truths are hid
den within this irregular malecnle
of matter which we now survey,
than even philosophy dares dream
of.
ITow strangely it obeys the im
pulses of heat—mysterious are the
influences of light upon it—electri
city wonderfully excites it—and
still more curious is the manner in
which it obeys the tnagic of chemi
cal force. These are phenomena
which we have seen ; we know
them and we can reproduce them
at our pleasure. We hay^ndrafted
a little way into the rj r -'ts of na
ture, and from the spot we have
gained we look forward with a vis
ion somewhat brightened by our
task ; but we discover so much yet
unknown; that we learn another
truth our vast ignorance of many
things relating to thi -* grain of dust.
It gathers around it other parti
cles ; they cling together, and eaeh.
acting upon every other one, and
all of them arranging themselves
around the little centre, accordin'!
to some law. a beautiful crystal re
sults, the geometric perfection of
its form being a source of admira
tion .
It quickens with yet undiscover
ed energies ; it moves with life ;
dust and vital force combine; blood
and bone, nerve and muscle result
from the combination. Forces
which we cannot, by the utmost re
finements of our philosophy object,
direct the whole,and from the same
dust which formed tho rock and
grew in the tree, is produced a liv
ing and a breathing thing, capable
of receiving a divine illumination,
of hearing in its new state the glad
ness and the glory of a soul.
m 1
He Hi<3s|’t Fare.
somewhere Jowti the Linsir.g road,
says tho Detroit Free Press, were
ruling in a Grand River jcnr yes
terday, and the groom insisted on
holding tho bride’s hand in his big
red paw.
“Oh! no don’t!” she said, as
she jerked her hand away.
“Oh ! luv, let me hold yerhnnd,
jest for ten ininuts!” he pleaded.
“Shoo ! Don t you see they are
looking at. us I” she whispered.
“They are, eh !” he replied,
looking up and down the ear.—
“Wail, now, I’m going to put niv
arm right around ye, and if any
fellow in this car dares to spit
crooked, 111 git up and mop the
floor with him until I wear him up
lo his shoulder blades !”
Ilis arm encircled her, and the
other passengers looked as solemn
as if they were on their way home
from a funeral.
A man about thirty years old.
having a shot gun on his shoulder
and two pigeons in his hand, was
standing < n a street corner'telling
a crowd that he had been out and
killed five hundred pigeons since
sunrise.
‘You're a liar!'’ shouted a man
in the crowd.
The stranger looked avhim long
and earnestly, and then
‘Where did you get acquainted
with me ?'
I*us Itclutiiiu to Arvt s|>]>rr
Subscriptions aiul Ar
rearages.
1. Subscribers who to not give express
notice to the contrary, are considered
wishing to continue ilieir subscript inn.
2. If subscribers order the discontinuance
of their periodicals, the publishers may
continue to send them until all arrear
ages aie paid.
3. If subscribers neglect nr refuse to take
their periodicals from the office to which
they are directed, they are held respon
sible until they have settled their bills
and ordered them discontinued.
4. If subscribers move to other places
without notifying publishers, and the
papers are sent to former direction,
they are held responsible.
5. The Courts have decided that “refusing
to take periodicals from the office, or
removing and leaving them uncalled
for, is prim a facie evidence of inten
tional fraud.”
6. Any person who receives a newspaper
and makes use of it,whether he has or
dered it or not, is held in law to he a
subscriber.
7. If subscribers pay in advance, they are
bound to give notice to the publisher,
at the end of their time, if they do noj
wish to continue taking it; other
wise the publisher is authorized to sei and
it on. and the subscriber wiil be respon
sible until an express notice, w ith pay
ment of all arrearages, is sent to the
publisher.
15 MONTHS in a YEAR,
M-m ‘T "L, n
: ■
' ~“~r>. u kpitq*.
The above isareduced copy ol llie 11TLE
PAGE of ihe RURAL CAROLINIAN.
15 nov;nis sa a yeah.
The Publishers having determined to
change of the Vol
'V umes of the
Rural Carulinian
FROM OCTOBER TO JANUARY,
Volume VI. will contain Fifteen Numbers,
Octobe , 1874, to December, 1875, inclu
sive, so that all persons subscribing or re
newing their subscriptions during the last
three months of 1874 w ill have
Fifteen Miths in a Year’s Sub-
S jRIPTIOH, FDR WHICH THEY PAY ONLY TWO
OltllAßS. ONLY A FEW HUNDRED OF OCTO
BER A!) NOVEMBER REMAI4 OR HAND, SO
THAU TO SECURE THE FULL BENEFIT OF THIS
OFFER, SUBSCRIPTIONS SHOULD COME IN AT
ONCE.
The RURAL CAROLINIAN is the lead
ing Agricultural Journal of the South. Pub
lishers and Editors are all Southern men,
arid it is devoted exclusively to the inter
ests of SoutherhAgriculture. V bite it is
not the paid organ of the Patrons of Hus
bandry, or of any Society or set of men, it
has been the most powerful advocate (or
the establishment of Granges in the South
and its ‘influence has contributed greatly
to the present prosperity of the Order.
D. IT. JACQUES, Esq., of Charleston,
S. 0., F.ditor-in-Chief
CHARLES R, DODGE, Esq , of the De
partment of Agriculture, Washington, D.
C., Entomological Editor.
RUWILAR COAT Rim TOIIS
Col. 1). WYATT AIKEN. Washington, D.O
HENRY W- It CV ENEL, Esq . Aiken, S. C
itev. C. W. HOWARD, Kingston, Ga.
Col. N. H. DAVIS. Grecnrill, S. 0.
RURAL CAROLINIAN—Per Abdm.
Address
WALKER, EVANS & COGSWELL,
Publishers, Charleston, S. C.
Ir-VrTI r Publishers of the Ilr.mi.p will
furnish their paper and the “Iturai Caro
linian 1 ’ for S3 35 per annum.
December 17, 187-I—tf
WTTrrtfrt frt) tj cAit-mo !
THE FAMOUS
Globe Flower Syrup!
Cure®, as ii Sy lYlajgic,
COLD?, COUGHS, BRCNCHITIS, HOARSENESS,
OBSTINATE LUNG AFFECTIONS, ASTHMA.’
GROUP. BLEEDIKG OF THE LUNSS. PLEURISY,
DIFFICULTY OF BREATHING, LOSS OF VOICE,
AND WILL CURE
CONSUMPTION,
As 50,000 grave-robbed witnesses testify.
No opium Nothing poisonous. Delicious
to lake. The en It lily Savior to all afflicted
with affections of the Throat and Lungs.
Bequeaths to posterity one of the greatest
Messing*, sound lungs and immunity from
CONSUMPTION.
if*Over one hundred thousand bottles
have been used, and not a single failure
known. Thousands of testimonials of won
derful cures, such as lie flolowing. can be
seen at the office of the Proprietors, No. (iO
flroad Street, Atlanta, Qa., or will be sent,
on application, to any who doubt.
For sale by ail druggists.
DR. j. s. I’IIMBF.IiTON k CO.,
Proprietors, Atlanta, Ga.
READ!' READ!!
€onsiiiii[M iosi Cuml ?
Ofkeck, O. Sackett, Drugs & Medicines,
New Albany, Ind., April 10, 1874.
Dr. ./. J. Pemberton, Atlanta, (la.: — Sir
—I have received your circulars, and in
consequence of the distribution, 1 have sold
about six dozen Globe Flower Syrup in the
las . two weeks. The Globe Flower Syrup
is gaining great celebrity.l recommended it
in two case# of consumption. One case was
bed fast ; had not laid on but one side for
two years hemorrages almost every day ;
much emaciated, and expected to die. .die
has taken six bottles of Globe Flower Syr
itd : his troubles are all gone, except pros
tration, which is rapidly improving. He
will certainly get well. The other case is
similar, with same good results. 1 can send
you many testimonials if you want them.
Yours truly, etc.,
'O. SACKETT.
EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT.
Atlanta. Ga., dan. 26, 1874.
Dr J. S. Pnnberton: Dear Sir —l have
used your Globe Flower Cough Sprtip my
self. and in my family, with benefits so
marked as to leave unquestioned the merits
of a remedy, which, in my experience, lias
proved one that excels everything for colds,
coughs and obstinate lung affections. I
shall always use it with perfect confidence,
and* recommend it to the public as a reme
rv which will afford that satisfaction expe
'iienced by me and mine.
Very respectfully vonrs.
JAMFJS Si. SMITH.
Governor State of Georgia
May 14 ‘74—ly.
notice.
rpilK Stone Mountain t’ornot
1 Brass Ilnilll. are now rely to
furnish music suitable to all occasions, on
reasonable terms.
Address all orders to
BENJ. F. GREENE, Jr.,
Sec'y Shone Mountain Cot net Brass Band.
Stone Mountain, Ga.
April 1, 1875—tf
BARGAINS! BARGAINS!!
X AM Selling STOVES
Cheaper than ever, nnd warrant them to give satisfaction*
I am prepared to fill all Orders for
Tl ia are
at low rates. Also all kinds of .Job Work in Tin and Sheet Iron done at short notice.
J e wlieraud country Hollow ware, cheap. Country Produce, Hides, Tallow, Beea
elc-,aken iu exchftnge for goods - w a. m iui AM
Greenqsborongh, Ga., Feb. 11, lS?o—3iu9
WM. L. BRADLEY’S
STAN OAK I) FKIITIMZGUS.
PBINTUP, bro 7& pollard,
I Oil MERRY POLLARD & CO.,
Cotton Factors, General Agents, Augusta Ga.
33- 30.
Sea Fowl Guano
Sea Fowl Guano, in _o-. il>. each.
< C. Coe’s Suiei*(lios|thiile of I,ime, in Bags, 200 lbs.
Bradley’s Anmioiiiaietl fi>issolvel Hones, in Bags, 2W lbs.
ISoyal Guasso Composiiul, in Bags, 200 lbs.
3f7”Tke above Standard Fertilizers having been in use for the past seven years in
the Sontli, with unequalled success, are again offered a* prices that cannot fail to give
satisfaction, while the standard is guaranteed to be equa., if not superior, to any ever
sold. For Prices and Terms, apply to
E. C WILLIAMS. Luton tHint, Georgia;
JOSEPH DAVISON, WomUille. Georgia ;
W. JOHNSON. Siloam. Georgia;
T.UTAN. M APP & CO., White Tlains, O*
HORTON & WEAVER, Greenesboro’ Ga.
March 11, 1875.—3 m
EXCLUSIVELY.
peter 'mm,
ATJGtUSTA, - GEORGIA.
Im 'ITUS the people of GBEENFST'OTOUGH, and the country at large, when
t ey come to AUGUSTA, to call at his FIRST-CLASS
BOOT AND SHOE HOUSE,
Where they can find everything they require in the way of prime Shoes of every de
scription; not ftom the Cheap Factories of New England, but made to order by the
best makers in Baltimore and 1' ihulelj bin.
Every article sold, warranted in the strictest sense of the word, and reclamation
made when work does not give full satisfaction.
One Price, and STRICTLY Fair Dealing, the Rule of the House.
No “Drummers” employed—the character of the goods he sells, and the extremely low
and uniform pri'es at which he sells, is his best recommendation.
Come to where you may have a positive certainty of being honorably and fairly
dealt with.
OXU PRICE—AO DROIIIERS EMPLOYER—FAIR
i>u\i.i\f* or aoae.
PETER KEENAN,
January 21, 1875—tf Central Hotel Block, AUGUSTA, Ga.
Important to I*2 liters !
W E call the especial attention of the planting public, to the following Standard
high grade Fertilizers:
SARDY'S SOLUBLE PACIFIC GUANO.
SARDY’S rHOSriIO-PERUVIAN GUANO.
RUSSELL COE'S SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME,
And
CAT ISLAND GUANO,
Which have been generally used throughout the South with most satisfactory results,
and have established a reputation and proved equal to any Fertilizers in use for Cot
ton, Corn and Southern products generally.
These Fertilizers are offered to the farmers of the country with full confidence in
their merits and at reasonable rates. Information furnished on application to our
Agents. Send for Circulars and Trice Lists.
BRANCH & SMITH,
General Agents, AUGUSTA, Ga.
Norton & Weaver,
Local Agents. GREKNESBORO' Ga TEar4,l*76—tf
ImjßMDlEvl
|B 200 lbs. 1 ~
Grateful Tliousands proclaim
Vinegar Bitters the most wonderful
Invigorant that ever sustained the sink
ing system.
GUARANTEED
Equal to Any Ever Sold
WANTED!
Hides and Tanbark,
IN EXCHANGE FOR
UE ATHER -A UNTID
In this exchange we allow 16 cts per lb.
for hides, and SO,OO per cord for hark, and
put our Leather and Shoes at cash prices.
We shall keep o • hand a choice variety of
but-oak-tanned sole, harness, upper, kip
anil calfskin leather, also, a slock of hand
made and home-mode shoes for men, women
anil boys. If encouraged by our friends
and the community, we intend to furnish
the best anil cheapest articles in our line.
We trust that a home enterprise like this will
not be permitted to die out for the want of
patronage, as has been too often the esse in
the South. We will pay 13 cts. for hides
and $5 tor bark. cosh, at the yard
BROWN & MONCRIEF.
Nov.2fi’74—tf.
Consumption Cured.
To the Edito* of the Herald , —
Esteemed Friend :
Will yon please inform your readers
that I have a positive
Cure Tor Consumption
and all disorders of the Throat and Lungs,
and that, by its use in my practice, 1 havs
cured hundreds of cases, and will give
tor a case it will not benefit Indeed.se
strong is myefaith, 1 will send a Snill
lle tree, to any sufferer addressing me.
Please show this letter to any one you
may know who is suffering from these dis
eases, and oblige.
Faithfully yours.
!’. T. F. BERT,
69 William Street, NEW YORK-
Feb. 18, 1875—tins
' * -i
Job work done her#
No person can take these
Bitters according to directions, and
remain long unwell, provided their
bones are not destroyed by mineral
poison or other means, and vital or
gans wasted beyond repair.
Bilious, Remittent, aud In*
terniittent Fevers, which are *o
prevalent in the valleys of our great
rivers throughout the United Statoe,
especially those of the Mississippi,
Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee,
Cumberland, Arkansas, Red. Colorado,
Brazos, llio Grande. Pearl, Alabama,
Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James,
und many other-, with their vast trib
utaries, throughout our entire country
during The Summer and Autumn, and
remarkably so during seasons of un
usual neat and dryness, are invariably
accompanied by extensive derange
ments of the s’omach aud liver, aud
other abdominal vi-e-ra. in their
treatment, a purgative, exerting a
powerful influence upon these va loua
organs, is e seiittal. There is no
cathartic for th purpose equal to
Dl’.. J. WAX.KEK’:, VINEGAR BITTERS, a*
they will : p.ad.lv i\ move the dark
colored viscid m dt'.T with which the
bowels arc lo and al. the same time
stimulating the -eerctio! s of the liver,
and generally r> tori hr -lie healthy
functions of the digcsiive organa.
Ft.ri ify the hotly against
disease by pmif'ing all its fluids
with th • Bitters. No epidemic can
taka hold of a .system thus fore-armed.
iij v,>ej)s::i er Ijiiiiuestion,
Headache, Pain in the Shoulders,
Coughs, Tigiitn, is of the Chest, Dii
7,incss. Sour Eructations of the Sto
mach. Bad Taste in tin Month, Bili
ous Attacks, l’alpi'ation of the Heart,
Inflammation of the Bangs, l’ain in the
region of t e K 'le ys aud a hundred
other painful symptom*, ere the off
spring ofDy pepin. One bottle will
prove a bed. gnsrant' cof its merits
than aTngtl'y ncl rlmoment.
Scr>fiii:i, or Ring's Evil,
White Swelling'. Ulcers, Erysipelas,
Swelled Neck, (Soitr-, Scrofulous In
fl-i'iiniataui ;, Mercurial abortions. Old
Sores, Eruptions ct the Skin, Sore
E e.-a fta *la th s . a ;n all other
constitutional Di eases, Da. Walker*
Vinegar Bin its have shown tke : r
great curative pow rs in the most
obstinate and intractable ca: • a.
For Inflammatory or Chron
ic Rheumatism. (Tunt, Bilions,
Remittent and Intermittent Fever*,
Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys
and Bladder these Bitters hare no
equal. Such Diseases arc caruod by
Vitiated Blood.
Mcciltinrcitl Biscoscs.—Per
sons engaged ii Paints and Mineral*,
such as Plumbers, Type-setters, Gobi
beaters, a,id Miners, as they advane*
k: life, are i to paralysis of th®
llownD. To c: s.r l against this, taks
Da. 'VV j.sib's Vi' uo .r, Brmni*.
lor Skin Diseases, Eruptions
Totter, Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spot*,
Pimples. Pul.! ale:--, {'-ids. Carbuncles,
Ringworms, s 11-!:.Sore Eye*,
Erysipelas. Itch, Si u !., Discoloration*
of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of
the Skin of whatever name or nature,
arc lit rally dug up and carried out of
the system in a short time by the u*
of these Bi ters.
Pin, Tape, and other Worms,
lurking iu the system of so many thou
sands, are effectually de troyed and re
moved. No system of medicine, no ver
mifuges. noanthelrninitics will free the
system from werms like these Bitters.
For Female Complaints, in
young or old, m trried or sin le, at the
dawn oi womanhood, or the turn of
life, these Tonic Bitters display so de
cided an influence that improvement
is soon perceptible.
Cleanse Hie Vitiated Blood
wheueveryou fin i its impurities burst
ing through the skin in Pimples, Erup
tions. or Sores ; cleanse it when yon
find it obstructed and sluggish in the
veius ; cleanse it when it is foul ; you*
feelings wll tell you when. Keep the
blood pure and the health of the sys
tem will follow.
It. 11. itli UOIVtLD & CO.,
Druggists k Geii.Aut*.- San Francisco, Califor
nia. .V cor. of Wiiaaington k Charlton St,..N.T.
Hold by all JDruyi/isls and Veulsrs.
October 16, 1874 — ly