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AGRICULTURAL
Let Idle Am lotion her bauble pm sue,
Wh le V\ isd< tr looks down with disdain,
The home ol the rainier has charms ever
new,
Where health, peace and eompetenee'rcigii.
Table of Heijflits anti Pleas
ures.
Huthih. Lht. |
Wheat, 00 |
Shelled corn 50
t'ornji n*tlie ear 70
Peas, 00
Rye, 50
Oats, 32
Barley, 47
Irish Potatoes, 00
Sweet Potatoes, 55
White IJeans, 00
• lastor Beans, 45
(Hover Seed, 00-
Timothy Seed, 45
Flax Seed. 50 I
Hemp Seed 45 |
Blue Grass seed. 14
Deep Cultivation.
The advocates of deep cultiva
tion will read with satisfaction the
following remarks made at a recent
meeting of the Maidstonc(England)
Farmers’ Club :
Mr. Barling said lie would con
fine his remarks chiefly to the prin
ciple of plowing. Plowing was a
mechanic! ] action, which was to
bringabout another action—a chem
ical action. A remark had been
made that evening to Which be at j
tached much weight. It wa3 pos
sible to cultivate well without plow
ing—that was, that by moving the
soil sufficiently, they could bring
about fertility w ithout plowing. It
was thus brought about. The or
ganic matter within the soil was ca
pable of being dissolved and hro’t
into a soluble condition, if it be suf
ficiently exposed to the oxygen in
the air; but if they kept that or
ganic matter sealed up by earth—
it might be kept as many genera
tions as they like—they could get
nothing from it. The more they
broke the soil and let in the oxygen
of the air, the quicker would the
organic matter which they or per
haps their grandfathers had placed
in the soil, become soluble and the
food of seeds which had been placed
in that soil. The question of steam
plowing as against horse plowing
seemed to come to this—it did not
matter how they plowed, whether
by animal force or the force of ma
chinery. They might plow by
turning over the sod or by break
ing it up, but whatever they did,
the object was to let in the air
In advocatiug deep cultivation, Mr.
Barling said that if they broke the
soil low down—he did not say turn
it over—they altered the condition
of thatjsoil; they rendered it warm
er upon the whole. If they laid
the thermometer on the land, it
would bo found that the better and
the deeper the soil was broken up
the warmer would he the land, and
temperature was one of tiio ele
ments favorable to the life of plants.
Mr Paine has remarked that
they could get rid of the water
by deep cultivation ; but it would
be better distributed, and land that
has been thoroughly and deeply
worked would, generally speaking,
be moist, but not surcharged with
water. Moisture was one of the
elements upon which vegetable life
so greatly depends; an excess, was
however, harmful, but a certain
quantity was needful. The land
being warmer and inoister, must,
oa principle, be greatly changed
by deep cultivation.
fiumio vs. Clover.
An intelligent correspondent of
the American Farmer says:
Denude the earth of its grass
herbage and plants, expose it to
the frosts of winter, and the burn
ing suns of summer, and a most de
structive experience will soon teach
us the consummate wisdom and be
nevolence in a provision whith
furnishes food for the philosopher,
and which should fill all minds and
hearts with gratitude to Him who
has dent all things well. Grass,
and not guano, then, is the means
we should use to improve our worn
out lands. Some plants, however,
are letter adapted to this than oth
ers, such as the clover plant and
the pea Just here I would bring
in a little guano to'iteip out the
cause, as in this case it would pay
more than compound interest.—
Now, if we wish to improve our
lands, this is the way to do it; one
of the ways, at least ; Plow up
your land, and get it in good con
dition, prepare it well and then
sow it down to clover, g-iving the
land a good strong dose of the fer
tilizer broadcast. By this moans
voa will secure the first year a
strong, rapid grow th of dense clo
ver. a stand that will completely
hide the land, keep it moist and
cool, and therefore improve it the
first year more than fifty per cent,
perilous. The second year you
need only plaster it, and the growth
will he greater than the first, so
much so that you can cut hay
enough to more than pay for your
guano. Ami the third year your
land will be in good heart and pay
for all your trouble, time and ex
pense. And so continue from year
to year, and I will warrant the
sheriff will never mend your coat
for you I call this the land-reno
vating systom. You enrich your
1 1 mis in order to make good crops,
and you make good cropj, and you
make them because you act thus
wisely. Any man can improve his
farm in this way if he will, since
it is cheap, economical, permanent.
I do not ignore guano altogether.
It is good in its place; but, used to
excess, while it pays the manure
merchant it ruins the farmer.
loni and Cotton IMsmting in
(lie Mouth.
Riuheh- l,b.
Buckwheat, 52
Pried peaches, 38
Dried apples, 24
Onions, f>7
Salt, 50
Stone coal, SO
Malt, 38
Wheat hran, 20
Turnips, 55
Plastering hair, 8
Unslaekcd lime, 80
Corn Meal, ‘ 48
Fine Salt, 55
Ground peas, 25
Cotton Seed, 32
The St. Louis Democrat, which
is especially painstaking in collec
ting information for its commercial
columns, lias been searching its
Southern exchanges, and feels pre
pared to state that not only are
planting operations in the South
quite as forward as could he ex
pected, but a greatly increased
area will he devoted to corn this
year, without diminishing the area
devoted to cotton. Accounts from
Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, Ar
kansas and Texas, all agree in the
statement that the acreage of cot
ton will he fully up to that of last
year, while the acreage of corn,
wheat and oats will be increased
from fifty to seventy-five per cent.
Especially will there ho an increase
in corn planting. .The price of
corn lias been so high during the
past season that Southern people
have been compelled to part with
all the money they could get from
their cotton crop in the purchase
of corn and meat. Unless the
“Venusian equinox” of June in
flicts an extended frost upon the
country, titers will be harvested in
1875, the largest corn crop ever
raised on earth. Already corn is
well up in Texas and Southern
Arkansas. Emigration to both
these localities has been largo dur
ing the last winter and fall, and the
emigrants are mainly agricultur
ists, and will either work farms of
their own or hire to other planters
and fanners. Beyond a doubt the
South, the Southwest, and in fact,
the entire country, will experience
better times from this year for
ward until the next great panic oc
curs, for which untoward event the
prudent will always he upon the
watch. Manufacturing industries
are resuming full operations ; fur
naces are going into blast; work is
resuming in mines, and the coun
try begins to exhibit in every de
partment of activity a renewal of
its wonted life and vivacity.
ll •
Itmnixrani*.
Col. Dennett, writing to Our
“Home Journal” about immigra
tion, says:
In spite of the predictions of po
liticians, bad State governments,
high taxes, negro rule, “ku-klux
and “bandits” the immigrants are
preparing to enter the South.
# * The 700,000 square miles
of Southern territory yet unculti
vated will be in a great measure
settled up by industrious farmers
from other lands.
The vast mineral resources of
the South will be turned to valua
ble account. Our beautiful South
is not doomed to be either African
ised, or utterly destroyed by dema
gogues, or allowed to go back into
a wilderness state.
Its future will bs more glorious
than its past. It will yet be the
garden spot, the glory and pride of
this continent. It will be prosper
ous and rich in due time, or the
writer does not truly understand
the “signs of the times.”
————
Job Work soli
cited.
Tlie olouhite Sttmc.
Avery singular and strikin';
•/ir “
eonfii uintion o’ the truth of certain
ancient Bible lately
been brought to light. The land
of Moah, lying east, of the Jordan
and Dead Sea, being under Turk
ish rule, and the authorities being
jealous of all the movements of trav
elers, has been a land of mystery,
arid few and far between have been
explorations of it. In 18G6, Rev.
F. A. Klein, a Prussian missiona
ry at Jerusalem, treveling in Moah
under the protection of an Arab
Skcikh, discovered a remarkable
stone among the ruins of the an
cient city of Dibon. The stone was
originally three feet and five inches
in bight, and one foot nine inches
in width and thicknes-, with an in
scription of thirty four lines.
It is believed that originally
thero were eleven hundred letters
on the stone, but only six hundred
and sixty-nine have been restored,
as it was partially broken in pieces
after curiosity concerning it had
led tho Arabs to suppose it valua
ble, and that money could be ob
tained for the separate pieces. The
inscription was in the ancient char
acters used by tho inhabitants of
Moah, and having been deciphered
by adepts in this species of lore, it
is satisfactorily ascertained that the
inscription is older than most of the
Old Testament, and was beyond
doubt made in the year that Elijah,
the prophet, was translated to hea
ven. It reads like a chapter in the
Bible, and gives strong confirma
tion to the facts related in the in
spired volume.
It lias an ago of at least twenty
seven Jiundred years, being the
work of a people who dwelt in im
mediate contact with the people of
Israel during the whole period of
their marvelous history. The in
scription narrates the achievements
of King Mesha, the Moabite mon
arch who fought against Jehoran
and Jehosaphat, and speaks of the
vessels of Jehovah taken from the
captured Nebo and dedicated to
Chemorb, the national deity of the
conqueror. This inscription not
only "depicts the wars between Is
rael and Moab, so vividly p : cturcd
in the Old Testament, lint striking
ly illustrates the historical, geo
praphical and religious relations of
these kingdoms. There tire few
occurrences more remarkable, even
in this age of surprise, than the
manner in which the Moabite stone
has been awakened from the sl.een
of nearly three thousand years, to
unfold the secrets of language and
of history, and to confirm, by its
emphatic testimony, tho essential
accuracy of the Book of Books.
—A youngster, while perusing a
chapter in Genesis, turning to his
mother, inquired if people in those
days used to ’do sums upon the
ground. It was discovered that he had
been reading the passage, “And the
sons of men multiplied upon the face of
the earth.”
Laws IColatnigjo t \ews|m|ier
Siihseriittioiis anti Ar
rearages.
1. Subscribers wlio do not give express
notice lo the contrary, are considered
wishing to continue their subscription.
2. If subscribers order tne discontinuance
of their periodicals, the publishers may
continue to send them until all arrear
ages are paid.
3. If subscribers neglect dr 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 prima facie evidence of inten
tional fraud.”
6. Any person who receives a newspaper
and makes use of it,whether lie lias or
dered it or not, is held in law to be 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 send
it on, and the subscriber will be respon
sible until an express notice, with pay
ment of all arrearages,' is sent to the
publisher.
Hay, Hay!
Native - Gras* Hay!!'
X STILL have about Two Hundred
Bales of very superior Bermuda. Grass Hay
for sale. Parties desiring to purchase will
confer with my Agent, Chas. M. King.
IVU lHillAlt JvOOIH.
April 8,1975 —1 m
(1 eorsin— Krmip Comity.
,Solomon Fields, (colored) applies for
Exemption of Personalty, and l will pass
upon the same at my office at 10 o’clock,
a in., on Saturday, May Bth. 1875.
JOEL F. THORNTON, Ord y.
April 26th. 1875—2ts*
a YEMI
D. B JACQUES, ftm,*.
The above is a reduced copy of the TiTI.I
PAGE of the BUBAL CAROLINIAN.
is noxTiis i.\ i visits.
The Publishers having determined to
change the commencement of the Vol
umes of the
Rural Carolinian
FROM OCTOBER TO JANUARY,
Volume VI. will co-ntain Fifteen Numbers,
.October, 1874, to December, 1875, inclu
sive, so that all persons subscribing or re
newing their subscriptions during the last
three months of 1874 will have
Fifteen Months in a Year’s Sub-
SBRIPTiCK, FOR WHICH THEY PAY ONLY TWO
DOLLARS. ONLY A FEW HUNDRED OF OCTO
BER AND NOVEMBER REMAIN OS NAND, 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 theFtouth. Pub
lishers and Editors are all Southern men,
and it is devoted exclusively to tlie inter
ests of South' rnAgriculture. While it is
not the paid organ of the Patrons ol Bus
bandry, or of any Society or set of men, it
has been the most powerful advocate for
the establishment of Granges in the South
and its ’influence has contributed greatly
to the present prosperity of the Order.
D. If. JACQUES, Esq., of Charleston,
S. C., Editor-in-Chief
CHARLES li. DODGE, Esq , of the De
partment of Agriculture, Washington, D.
C., Entomological Editor.
RKGIXiH COVTRIBUTOHS
Col. 1). WYATT AIKEIL Washington, D.C
HENRY W- RAVEN EL, Esq.. Aiken, p. C.
Rev. 0. W. HOWARD, Kingston. Ga.
Col. N. 11. DAVIS. Greenvill, S. (’.
RURAL CAROLINIAN—S 2 Per Annum.
Address
WALKER, EVANS A COGSWELL,
Publishers, Charleston, S. 0.
Asap Tho Publishers of the TFkhat.p will
furnish their paper arid the “Rural Caro
linian” for Sd 35 per annum.
December 17. l s 7
Wd&ferftil Medicinal
THE FAMOUS
Globe Flower Syrup!
<'ires. ley Kngic,
UQL9S, COUGHS. ’'BRONCHITIS, HOARSENESS,
OBSTINATE LUNG AFFECTIONS, ASTHMA,’
CROUP, BLEEDING OF THE LUNSS. PLEURISY,
DIFFICULTY OF BREATHING, LOSS CF VOiGE,
AND WILL CURE
CONSUMPTION,
As 50,0 0 grave-robbed witnesses testify.
No opium Nothing poisonous. Delicious
to take. The earthly Savior to all afflicted
with affections of the Throat and Lungs.
Bequeaths to posterity one of the greatest
blessings, sound lungs and immunity from
CON9T7MITION.
jfg“over one hundred thousand bottles
have been used, and not a single failure
known. Thousands of testimonials of won
derful cures, such as the flolowing. can be
seen at the office of the Proprietors, No. (10
Broad Street, Atlanta, Go., or will be sent,
on application, to any who doubt.
For sale by all druggists.
DR. J. S. PEMBERTON & CO.,
I’roprietors, Atlanta, Ga.
READ! READ!!
Consumption Cured ?
Offece, O. Sackett, Drugs & Medicines,
New Albany, Ind.. April 10, 1874.
Dr. J. J. Pemberton, Atlanta, Ga.: — Sib
—I have received your circulars, and in
consequence of tlie distribution, 1 have sold
about six dozen Globe Flower Syrup in the
las , two weeks. The Globe Flower Syrup
is gaining great celebrity-1 recommended it
in two cases of consumption. One case was
bed fast : had not laid on but one side for
two years liemorrages almost every day ;
much emaciated, and expected to die. He
lias taken six bottles of Globe Flower Syr
ud ; bis troubles are all gone, except pros
tration, which is rapifflv improving, lie
will certainly get well. The other case is
similar, with same good results. I can send
you many testimonials if you want them.
Yours truly, etc.,
"o. SACKETT.
EXECUTIVE DEFARTM ENT.
Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 26, 1874.
Dr J. S. Pemberton: Dear Sib—l have
used your td*'he Flower Cough Sprup 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,
conghs and obstinate lung affections. I
slthll always use it with perfect confidence,
and recommend it to the public as a reme
ry which will afford that satisfaction expe
diencetl by me and mine.
Very respectfully vours.
JAMES M. SMITH.
Governor State of Georgia
May 14 ’74 —ly.
NOTICE.
rpillC Stone fountain Cornet
I liras* Band..are now ready to
furnish music suitable to all occasions, on
reasonable terms.
Address all orders to
BEXJ. F. GREENE, Jr..
Sec’y Stone Mountain Cornet Brass Band,
Stone Mountain, Ga.
April 1, 1575—1f
BARGAINS! BARGAINS'!!
F AM Selling STOVES
Cheaper than ever, and warrant them to give aatiifaetioa.
lain prepared to fill all Orders for
at low rates. Also all kinds of Job Work in Tin ffiid Sheet Iron done at short notice.
Leather and country Hallow ware, cheap. Country l’roduce, Hides, Tallow, lieet
wax, etc., taken in exchange for goods.
w. G DI RHAM
Greenesborough, G a ., Feb. !!, 1875— 3i03
"WIMI- I__ BRADLEY 3
STAN DA KD FERTILIZERS.
PEINTUP, BRO. & POLLARD,
FORMERLY POLLARD & 00.,
Cotton Factors, General Agents, Augusta Ga.
33. X3’_
Sea Fowl Guano
S‘Jl FnHl f*iIII9IO, ill lings, -On lbs. each.
<’. G <’o*'s HiiiiK'rphottplitile of SJosr, in Hags, 200 lbs.
ISrall‘.v"fl Ainsi)49iiat‘(S Dissolved ISones, in Bag?, 200 lbs.
SSoyill <>110990 Compuilllti, in Bags, 200 lbs.
K7”Tke above Standard Fertilizers bavin" been in use for the past seven years in
the South, with unequalled sueeess. are a rain nfiered at prices that cannot fail to give
satisfaction, while the standard is guaranteed to be equal, if not sujterior, to any ever
sold. For Prices and Terms, apply to
E. C WILLIAMS, Union Point, Georgia;
JOSEPH DAVISON, Woodville. Georgia ;
W. JOHNSON, Sfloam, Georgia;
TAPPAN, MAPP & CO., White Plains, Ga
NORTON & WEAVER, Greeneslioro’, Ga.
March li, 187o.—Jin
EXCLUSIVELY.
PETE MM,
AUGUSTA, - OBOR.GIA,
IyYITISS the people of GREENF.SBOROUGH. and the country at large, when
t ey cbme to AUGUSTA, to call at his FIRST-CLASS
BOOT ANB SHOE HOUSE,
Where they can find everything they require in the way of prime every de
scription ; not from the Cheap Factories of New England, but made to order by the
best makers in Raltimore and Philadelphia.
Every article sold, warranted in the strictest sense of the word, and reclamation
made when work docs not give full satisfaction.
One Price, and STRICTLY Fair Dealing, the Rule of the Rouse.
No “Drummers” employed.—the character of the goods he sells, and the extremely low
and uniform prices at which he sells, is his best recommendation.
Come to where you may have a positive certainty of being honorably and fairly
dealt with.
OYK PRICE—YO l>R( IPIURS EMPLOYED—FAIR
DEALVYO OR YOYE.
PETER KEENAN,
January 21, 1875—tf Central Hotel Block, AUGUSTA, Ga.
• Important to FI liters !
STANDARD FERTILIZERS!
w E call the especial attention of the planting public, to the following Standard
high grade Fertilizers:
SARDYS SOLUBLE PACIFIC GUANO.
SARDY'S PHO3PHO-PERUVIAN GUANO. -
RUSSELL COES 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 tot
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. OREENESBOROL Ga. mr4.lß7fc-tf
Im
t | 200 lbs. a
/W/w
PRE!O;f .. vAu
Grateful Thousands proclaim
Vinegar Bitters the most wonderful
Invigoraut that ever sustained the sink
ing system.
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, and In
termittent Fevers, which are io
prevalent in the valleys of our great
rivers throughout the United State*,
especially those of the Mississippi,
Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee,
Cumberland. Arkansas, Red. Colorado,
Brazos, Rio Grande. Pearl, Alabama,
Mobile, Savannah. Roanoke, James',
and many other , with their vast trib
utaries, throughout our entire country
during the Surryoer.and Autumn, and
remarkably so during seasons of un
usual heat and dryness, are invariably
accompanied by. extensive derange
ments of the stomach and liver, and
other abdominal vise. ra. In thoir
treatment, a purgative, exerting a
powerful influence upon these va'iou*
organs, i.t essential. There is no
cathartic for the purpose equal to
J.'R. J. W.VtKV.lt’s VI.VKG-.Ti Bittees, as
they will speedily r.-mov*- the dark
colored vir -id matter with which tlie
bowels are. loaded. at the same time
stimulating the -een lioes of the liver,
and generally restoring the healthy
(unctions of tin digestive organs.
Fortify I'm- body against
diswibo by pi. .if. ing all its fluids
with ill Bitt•■•.as. N-> epidemic cau
take hold of a sr. -tom riots tore-armed
Dyspepsia or S tt-liiresfion,
Headacho. I'r.in in the Bhoulders,
( ou ,lis, Tightness of tim Chest, Dlz
7im-ir Sev.r .Ere. -i ■ ion . of the Sto
.Bud Taste lit tin Aiput'i, Bili
o.ts .t .r 1 P.ik i-at'on of the Heart,
]'iflamin-.ti..n ot'd, Lungs. Pain in the
region oi t e K. ; . -y--, aaft a hundred
o'iht painful symptom;, i-.re the oif
r.jtri;:g- of Dye; i .. ■ V. Oi.r bottle will
prove belt rgu irint eof its rnuriw
than r. In; , iiy i.d - >rt kcTiicut.
Hcroinlii, <r fiinc’s Evil,
White MwiiPng ;, I'lc- Rrv. ip-.-las.
Swelled Meek, Gi.itr Id.roOe us In
flaniuiations, Me; ;;;r. il nd’.vtlons, Old
fjor.s, Eruptio ts of Cm Skin, Se-ra
E.ls, <-t-. J.i lie s . a m all other
couvination..! id eases, Da. iVaiekr'*
Viveo a Brrxe.r.s b:-,v>- -yawn thv'r
great curative pow-r in the most
obstinate and intnictuhla cays.
For liilliimin:-tti\y or Chron
iC U'lOnmillisni. Go.H, Bilious,
Remit bnt and lntcTn,i-i.-i:t Fevers.
Disea es of the Di-'otl, T,i . ~ Kidney*
and Bladder, these Bias have no
equal. Such Dlsi-aocs are oaa.oil by
Vitiated Blood.
Herhaiiirn! -Pe*-
eor.a engaged iu Paints and Minerals,
such as Plumber-*, dy and;• w. G. 1.1-bealers,
bealers, au.l .Vb.er.*, as ;b.-y advance
i'l life, itftre tr.l j el to. perv-v 'a of tk*
Bowd- . To o- ~r.l again--., this, take
Dr. WAidin'.s ViNEGih Ditteus.
For Ski:. Diswqwos. Eruption*,
Tetter, t*ult-ltb< urn, B’etehev. Spot*,
Pimples. Pustule*. Boil.). Carbuncles,
Ringworms, Seal i-h .1, Bore Eyes,
Erysipelas. Itch, Scurfs, Discoloration*
of the Ski-i, Humors and IJireascs of
the Skin of whatever name “f nature,
are literally dug up t carried out of
the system iu a short tiino by the u*
of these Bitters.
Fin, Tapi 1 , anti other Worms,
lnrkiug in the system of so niany thou
sands, are effectually destroyed and re
moved. No system of medicine, no ver
mifuges, ifß antheiniinitics will free the
system from worms like these Bitter*.
For Female Complaints, in
young or old, married or single, at th*
dawn of womanhood, or tho turn of
life, these Tonic Bitters display so de
cided an influence that improvement
is soon perceptible.
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood
whenever you find iis impurities burst
ing through the skin iu Pimples, Erup
tions, or Sores; cleanse it when you
find it obstructed and sluggish in the
veins ; cleanse it when it is foul ; your
feelings will tell you when. Keep the
blood pure, and the health of the sys
tem will follow.
r. ii. McDonald a co„
Druggists k Geu.Atfts., San Francisco, Califor
nia. k cor. of Whasington k Charlton St.,N.Y.
SwUi by all Druyyi&ta and Dealari.
October 15, 1874 —1 y
GUARANTEE I>
Equal to Any Ever Sold'
WANTED!
Hides and Tanbark,
IN EXCHANGE FOR
LEATHER ATTD
® El
In this exchange we allow 15 cts per lb.
for hides, and $6,00 per cord for bark, 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
and calfskin leather, also, a stock of hand
made and home-made shoes for men, women
and boys. If encouraged by our friends
and the community, we intend to furnish
the best and 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 case in
the South. We will pay 13 cts. for hides
and $5 for bark, cash, at the yard
BROWN & MONCRIEF.
N0v.26’74 —tf.
Consumption Cured.
To the Editor of the Ilerald, —
Esteemed Friend :
Will you please inform your readers
that I have a positive
Cure for Consumption
and all disorders of the Throat and Lungs,
and that, by its use in my practice, I have
cured hundreds of cases, and will give
for a case it will not benefit Indeed, so
strong is my faith, I will'send a Slllis
ple tree, to any sufferer addressing me.
Please show this letter to any one yon
may know who is suffering from these dis
eases. and oblige.
Faithfully yours.
Dr. T. F. It CRT,
89 William Street, NEW YORK
Feb. 18, 1875—6 ms
J y’Job work done here.