Newspaper Page Text
AGRICULTURAL
Let idle Ambition her bauble puisne,
Wh le VVisduc looks down with disdain,
The home of the Farmer has charms ever
now,
Whew health, peace ami voiitpctenceVcign.
ITible l Wflffhls nini Meas
l!!TS.
Pus\i!i. /hr Ihishrh. Ms.
Wheat, Oo Buckwheat, hi!
’'helled corn 50 I liieit.peaches, 30
fnrnjhrtho ear 7 1 * 1 tried apple •
Peas, * fill (Ittiim#, T i
Pre, 50 Salt, 50
dat. 32 Stone coal,
Harley, 11 Malt,
Irish Potatoes. 00 Wheat bran, 20
Sweet Potatoes, 55 T irnips, !>•>
White Beans, 60 Plastering hair, 8
' ’asUir Keans, 45 lln slacked lime, 80
Clover Seed, 60 I Corn Meal, 48
Timothy Seed, 45 | Fine Salt,
Flax Seed. 56 I Ground peas, 25
Hemp Seed 45 | Cotton Seed, 3d
Blue Grass seed. 14 |
The Accomplished Farmer.
The following extract furnishes
0 illustration of what is necessary
to constitute the 'most accomplish
ed farmer :
“The idea that perfect farming
consists only in aptness of labor
and strength of muscle, is at war
with true philosophy. The sailor
before the mast splices a rope,steers
the ship, or rows a boat with per
fccl skill. Hurled into the sea ho
rides the wave with composure, and
is saved in countless exigencies
where a landsman would surely
have perished. Tossed fearfully on
the yard-arm, amid the play of tho
lightning, and sleet and tempest,
he reefs tho sail with imperturba
ble coolness. Is he a perfect sail
or ? Oh, no. Silent, thoughtful
students are at work in the nation
al observatories at London and
Washington, preparing tho nauti
cal almanac. Maps and charts, in-
dicating tho shoals and reefs and
coasts, are prepared for him at
great expense and caro. Prof.
Maury has published his directions
for taking advantage of the wind
and currents. By all the aids
and appliances which science has
furnished, the mariner can indicate
updp the trackless ocean alrao t the
prsciser spot he occupies, and sleep
with composure and confidence.—
But is the profound scholar, from
whose deduction tho ship is work
ed, tho porfect sailor? Oh no!
But the man who unites tho high
est practical aptness and skill in
working the ship, with the scienti
fio comprehension that enables him
to use all tho deductions of nauti
cal science, he is tho most perfect
sailor. He may bo found among
the officers of the ship. The most
perfoct union of principle and prac
tice constitute a sailor. What is
tho moral? Why, that in agricul
ture, the most abundant knowledge
of all known natural laws, and all
applicable scientific principles,
must conspire with tho most per
fect ski'll, aided by energy, indus
try, economy, temperance and
health, to make the perfect farmer
—[Ex.
I'utalofs it: fiTi^luntl.
T'uo Horticulturist states that it
is not true, a3 popularly supposed
that the potato was first brought
into England by Sir Walter Ra
leigh. John Hawkins first intro
duced it m 1565; next Walter Ka-
Jcigh, in 1584; finally, Admiral
Drake, in 1586, in England, sent
some to a friend to plant, with the
remark that the fruit was excellent
and nutritious, so that it would be
>very useful in France ; his friend
planted the tubers, and they grew
nicely, but when the seed-balls
were ripe, he took these instead of
.the tubers, and fried them in but
ter, and, sprinkling sugar and cin
naEion over them, placed them be*
fore some company as a great rar
ity. Of course these balls tasted
disgustingly, and the assembly con
cluded that the fruit would not ri
pen in Europe. The gardener
pulled up the plants and burned
them; but a gentleman who chanced
to be present stopped on one of the
baked potatoos as it lay in the ashes
when it broke open, and he noticed
that it was white as snow, and
mealy, and had such an agreeable
smell that he tasted it and found
it very palatable. The new vege
table was thus rescued : but for a
century after it was only cultiva
ted in his garden, and in I£oo the
Queen of England made the remark
in her house-book that a pound of
potatoes cost two shillings.
Silouee is the fittest reply to f"R.
iStm in #!*• rn-aitlKg Pay.
If you do not find fanning profit -
■-able, the first thing to do is to as
certain why it is t it profitable.
There i- sonic cause for this state
of things- perhaps many causes.
It is probable that they arc avoid
able or removable. Farming docs
pay under favorable conditions.—
We must learn what these condi
tion "• are and try to secure thorn.
11’ Mi. Smith makes money on his
farm, why should not Mr. Brown ?
Mr. Brown should carefully in
quire wherein Mr. Smith has the
advantage over him. Is it in the
kind of crops lie grows, in his sys
tem of cultivation, in the general
management of his business, or
what? If Mr. Smith can teach
Mr, Brown anything, Mr. Brown
should not be ashamed to learn.—
The great trouble with iflost farm
ers is that they do not know what
pays or what docs not, or if they
kno v what a particular crop is un.
profitable with them, they do not
know why. They do not farm on
business principles. They do not
use tho slato and pencil enough.—
A little ciphering and book-keeping
—addition, subtraction, multipli
cation and division, and the sim
plest form of accounts will do—
would help them more than an ex
tra hand and tons of fertilizers.—
When wo have found out why
farming does not pay, wo shall be
on the right road to make it pay.
Get a “Rural Accountant,” or
some other form of accounts, and
try book-keeping and arithmetic as
branches of practical farm educa
tion, and one remedy for unprofita
ble farming will bo found.
Pradicnl Hints for Wii , !’i.
Somebody gives tho following nd
■vice to girl3. It i3 worth volumes
of fiction and sentimentalism ;
“Men who are worth having,
want women for wives. A bundle
of gewgaws, bound with a string of
flats and quavers, sprinkled with
cologne, and set in a carmine sou
cor—this is no help for a man who
expects to raise a family of boys on
bread and meat. The piano and
lace frames arc good in their places,
and so aro the ribbons, frills and
tassels; but you can not make a
dinner of the former, nor a bed
jlanket of the latter—and, awful
as such on idea may scorn to you,
roth dinner and bed-blankets arc
necessary to domestic happiness.—
Life has its relations as well as fan
ncs; but you make all its decora
tions, remembering the tassels and
curtains, but forgetting tho bed
stead. Supposo a man of good
sense, and of course good prospects,
to be looking for a wife, what
chanco havo you to be chosen ?
You may cap him, or you may trap
aim, but how much better to make
it an object for him to catch you !
If you should trap and many an
industrious young man, aud deceive
him, he would ho unhappy as long
as ho livos. So render yourself
worth catching, and you need no
shrewd mother or brother to recom
mend you, and help you to find a
market.”
Livingstone's tombstone in \\ cst-
O ,
minster Abbey is black marble, in
scribed with golden characters—as may
be the heroes in the book of life. The
incription reads : Drought by faithful
'nanus over land and sea, litre rests
David Livingstone, missionary, trav
eler, philanthropist. Horn, March ID,
1813, at Rlantyre, Lanarkshire. Died,
May 1, 1 jj73, at Cbittambo’s Village,
Ulala. For thirty years his life was
-pent in unwearied efforts to evangelize
the native race, to explore the undis
covered secrets, aud abolish the iniqui
tous slave trade of Central Africa.
Where, with his last words, he wrote:
“ All 1 can do in my solitude is fo pray,
uiay heaven*- rich blessings come upon
every one— American, English or
Turk, who will help to heal this open
sore of the world.”
The Rev. Dr. Augustine T. Smythe,
a distinguish.. l l Dresbyltrian divine ol
Charleston, S. C , in a pamphlet issued
in IF 17, ave an interesting disserta
tion to prove that both the Mecklen
burg Declaration of Independence and
Jefferson's were suggested by or taken
from “A General Confession or Gener
al Bond, for the maintenance of True
Religion and the King s Person and
Estate,” put forth to be signed by the
members of the Presbyterian Church
of Scotland, more than a century be
fore American Independence was re*
I solved upon.
W hat a (ulasa oi Wine ISitl.
The Duke of Orleans was the
eldest son of King Louis Fhillippe,
and was the inheritor of whatever
rights his father could transmit..—
He was a very noble young man—
physically noble. llis generous
qualities bad rendered him univer
sal] v popular. One morning he in
vited a few of his friends to break
fa; t a ;ho wan about to take hi3 do
p.u tur: from I’aris, to join bis reg
iment. In the conviviality of the
hour, lie drank a little too much
wine, lie had not . become intoxi
cated—lie was not in any respect a
dissipated man ; bis character was
too lofty and noble.—but in that
joyous hour he drank just one glass
too much. In taking the parting
glass, lie slightly lost tho balanco
cf his mind and body. Bidding
adieu to his companions, ne enter
ed his carriage. Presently the
horses ran away. But for that one
extra glass he would have his
seat. lie leaped from his carriage ;
but for that one extra glass of wine,
he would have alighted on his feet.
Senseless and bleeding, he was ta
ken into a beer shop near by and
died. The extra glass of wine
overthrow the Orleans dynasty,
confiscated their property of one
hundred millions of dollars, sent
the family into exile, and changed
the history of Franco fbr the next
quarter of a century, and perhaps
for all tho time.
The SZighcsl Ihniiitaiii iu the
World.
A genuine surprise awaited the
best informed geographers—the
discovery of Mount Hercules, iu
the Island of New Guinea, off the
coast of Australia, where the In
dian ocean and Pacific meet. The
newly discovered mountaia is 32,-
?8G feet high, over six miles, while
Mount Everest in the Himalayan
range, heretofore credited with the
sovereign altitude, is only 29,002
feet high. Mount Hercules stands
near the centre of tho island, and
the discoverer, Captain J. A. Law
son, gives a thrilling account of his
ascent to the height of 25,314 feet,
till tho blood flowed from tho nose
and ears of himself and attendant,
and gasping took the place of
breathing.
A promise should bo given with
caution, and kept with care- A
promise should be made with the
heart, and remembered by the head.
A promise is tho offspring of the
intention, and should be nurtured
by recollection. A promise and its
performance should, like a true bal
ance, always present a mutual ad
justment. A promise delayed is
justice deferred. A promise ne
glected is an untruth told. A
promise attended to is a debt set
tled.
—“ There is no sunset in heaven,”
says a noted divine. “We go farther
than that,’’says an exchange; “there
is no gettiug up of nights to draw the
baby’s legs under the cover.”
Ltms Relating to Newspaper
J4utst*ris>lions and Ar
rearages.
1. Subscribers who do not give express
notice to the contrary, are considered
wishing to continue their subscription.
2. If subscribers order tiie discontinuance
of their periodicals, the publishers may
continue to send them until all arrear
ages are paid.
3. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take
their periodicals from the oliiee to which
they are directed, they arc held respon
sible until they have settled their bills
aud ordered them discontinued.
4. If subscribers move to other places
without notifying publishers, and the
papers are sent to former direction,
tliey 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.”
0. Any jjerson who receives a newspaper
and makes use of it,whether he has or
dered it or not, is held iu 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 tliey do no?
wish to continue taking it; other
wise the publisher is authorized to send
• it on, and the subscriber will be respon
; iii'.o Until an express notice, w ith pay
ment of all arrearages, is scut to the
publisher.
Hay, Hay!
Native ras* Hay!!
I STILL have about Two Hundred
Halos of very superior Bermuda Crass Hay
for sale. Parties desiring to purchase will
confer with my Agent, Chas. M. Ki^ig.
WAlilHltlAK ’IOOBV.
April 8,1975—1 m __
(f eorgin—Greene County.
1 .Solomon Fields, (colored) applies for
Exemption of Personalty, and 1 will pass
upon the same at my office at 10 o’clock,
a ri.. . n Saturday, Mav Bth, 1875.
’i iFL - Ttli MINT' 'V Ord'y.
15 MONTHS in a YEAR.
The above is a reduced copy of the TITLE
PAGE of the KURAL CAROLINIAN.
15 MO.VTHS I\ A AT ISA. It,
The Publishers having determined to
change the commencement of the Vol
umes of the
Rural Carolinian
FROM OCTOBER TO JANUARY,
Volume VI. will contain Fifteen Numbers,
October, 1871, 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 M
SCRI?TIOH, FOR WHICH THEY PAY ONLY TWO
DOLLARS, ONLY A FEW HUNDRED OF OCTO
BER AHD KOVEM3ER REM Alii ON HARD. SO
THAU TO SECURE THE FULL BENEFIT OF THIS
OFFER, SUSSCRIPTI3KS SHOULD COME IS AT
OSCE.
The RURAL CAROLINIAN is the lead
ing Agricultural Journal of the South. Pub
lishers and Editors are all Southern men,
and it is devoted exclusively to the inter
ests of Southern Agriculture. While it is
not the paid organ of the Patrons of Hus
bandry, or of any Society or set of men, it
has been tlie 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. IT. JACQUES, Esq., of Charleston,
S. C., Editor-in-Chief.
CHARLES It. DODGE, Esq , of the De
partment of Agriculture, Washington, D.
C., Entomological Editor.
ItKG 5 LAR COATRIBUTOUS
Col. D. WYATT AIKEN, Washington, D.C.
HENRY W- RAVENEL, Esq.. Aiken, S. C.
Rev. C. W. HOWARD, Kingston, Ga.
Col. N. IT. DAVIS, Greenvill, S. C.
RURAL CAROLINIAN—S 2 Fer Annum.
Address
WALKER, EVANS & COGSWELL,
Publishers, Charleston, S. C.
Publishers of tho Hurat, n will
furnish their paper and the “Rural Caro
linian” for $3 35 per annum.
December 17, 1874—tf
Wonderful Medicine!.
THE FAMOUS
Globe Flower Syrup!
Cures, as II by Slagle,
COLDS, COUGHS. HOARSENESS,
OBSTINATE LUNG AFFECTIONS, ASTHMA,’
CROUP, BLEEDIRS Or THE LOROS. PLEURISY,
DIFFICULTY OF BREATHING, LOSS CF VOISE,
AND WILL CURE
CONSUMPTION,
As 50,000 grave-robbed witnesses testify.
No opium Nothing poisonous. Delicious
to take. The earthly Savior to all nfiiicted
with affections of the Throat and Lungs.
Bequeaths tc posterity one of the] greatest
blessings, sound lungs and immunity from
CONSUMPTION.
BS?“Over one hundred thousand bottles
have been used, and not a single failure
known. Thousands of teslimonials of won
derful cures, such as the flolowing, can be
seen at the office of the Proprietors, No. 60
Broad Street, Atlanta, Ga., or will be sent,
on application, to any who doubt.
For sale by all druggists,
DR. J. 8. PEMBERTON & CO.,
Proprietors, Atlanta, Ga.
READ! READ!!
Consumption Cured!
Offf.ce, 0. Sackett, Drugs & Medicines,
New Aluasy, Ind., April 10, 1874.
Dr. J. J. Pemberton, Atlanta, Ga.: —Sir
—1 have received your circulars, and in
consequence of the distribution, I 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 cases of consumption. One case was
bod fast ; had not laid on but one side for
two years hemorrages almost every day;
much emaciated, and expected to die. He
has tnkm six bottles of Globe Flower Syr
ud; his troubles are all gone, except pros
tration, which is rapidly improving. lie
will certairly get well. The other case is
similar, with same good results. 1 can send
you many testimonials if you want them.
Yours truly, etc.,
0. SACKETT.
EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT.
Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 26, 1874.
Dr. J. S, Pemberton: Dear Sir—l have
used your Globe 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, has
proved one that excels everything lor colds,
coughs and obstinate lung affections. I
shall always use it with perfect confidence,
and recommend it to the public as a reme
ry which will afford that satisfaction expe
dienced by me and mine.
Ye- y respectfully yours,
JAMES M. SMITH.
Governor State of Georgia
May 14 ’74—ly.
FOR SALE.
A Eight two-horse CARRIAGE and
J\_ Harness —all new.
T. X. PObLL VIX.
Grcenesboro’, Ga., June 18—1874, tf
C*K dJOA P er day at home.
to * frce . Ad
dress G. STINSON & Cos., Portland, Maine
Jan 21, 1875-1 y*
Job Work soli
cited.
BARGAINS! BARGAINS 1 !!
1 AM Selling STOVES
Cheaper than ever, and warrant them to givo aatisfaction.
I am prepared to fill all Orders for
jfeis
at low rates. Also all kinds of Job Work in Tin and Sheet Irtn done at slioft notict.
Leather and country llollow ware, cheap. Country Produce, Hides, Tallow, Bees
wax, etc., taken in exchango for goods.
W a. DOEIAM
Greenesborough, Ga., Feb. 11, IS7s—Sms
WM. IL. I.E?’
STANDARD FERTILIZERS.
PRINTUP, BR0r& POLLARD,
FORMERLY POLLARD & CO.,
Colton Factors, Genera! Agents, Augusta Ga.
IQ. 319.
Sea Fowl Guano
Sea FunLGtiauj), in Bags, 200 lbs. each.
€. <Coe’s S(!i(ci’iliosjliate of Lime, in Bags, 200 lbs.
Bradley’s Ammoniated Dissolved Bones, in Bags, 200 lbs.
Royal Guano Compound, in Bags, 200 lbs.
OyTke above Standard Fertilizers having been in use for the past seven years in
the South, with unequalled success, are again offered at prices that cannot fipl to give
satisfaction, while the standard is guaranteed to be equal, if not superior, to any ever
sold. For Prices and Terms, apply to
E. C. WILLIAMS, Union Point, Georgia;
JOSEPH DAVISON, Woodville, Georgia;
W. JOHNSON, Siloant, Georgia :
TAPPAN, MAPP & CO., White Plains, Ga
NORTON & WEAVER, Greenesboro’, Ga.
March 11, 1575.—8 m
Bools - Shoes
EXCLUSIVELY.
pew "mm,
Jk.TJGrTJ& B r > J&. 9 - OESOR-OIA^
IxVITISS the people of GREENESBOROUGH, and the country at large, when
they 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 every de
scription ; not from the Cheap Factories of New England, hut made to order by the
best makers in Baltimore and Philadelphia.
Every article sold, warranted in the strictest sense of the word, and reclamation
made when 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 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.
OXII PRICE—XO imi lOHIUS i:II'I„OYESI—PAIR
REAIiIX'Cir OR X'OX’E.
PETER KEENAN,
January 21, 1875—tf Central Hotel Block, AUGUSTA, Ga.
Sin porta ait to Planters !
STANDARD FERTILIZERS!
w E call the especial attention of the planting public, to the following Standard
high grade Fertilizers:
. SARDY’S SOLUBLE PACIFIC GUANO.
SARDY’S PIIOSPHO-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 Price Lists.
BRANCH & SMITH,
. General Agents, AUGUSTA, Ga.
Horton & Weaver,
V:nl Agents. OREENESBORO Ga marLlß7s— if
jl
6
J| 200 Iba. jfrgg
feagiiijn?
/t7|M?Ti>iiK l KlTfa
iUuuu
Grateful Thousands proclaim
Vinegar Bittebs 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 so
prevalent in the valleys of our great
rivers throughout the United Slates,
especially those of the Mississippi,
Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee,
Cumberland, Arkansas. Ked,Colorado,
Brazos, liio Grande, Pearl, Alabama,
Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James,
and many others, with their vast trib
utaries, throughout our entire country
during the Sumnu r and Autumn, and
remarkably so during seasons of un
usual heat"and dryness, are invariably
accompanied by ext naive derange
ments of the stomach and liver, and
other abdominal viscera. In their
treatment, a purgative, exerting a
powerful influence upon theso various
organs, is essential. There is no
cathartic for the purpose equal to
Db. J. Waleeb’s Vinegar Bittebs, as
they will speedily remove the dark
colored viscid matter with which tho
bowels arc loaded, at the same time
stimulating the secretions of the liver,
and generally restoring tho healthy
functions of the digestive organs.
Fortify tho body against
disease by purifying .all its fluid*
with tho Bittebs. No epidemic can
take hold of a system, thus fore-armed.
Dyspq- ' > In.ligpstion,
Headache, P; in ' in the Khouldara,
Coughs, Tlghtno!.* of the Chest, Diz
ziness, Hour F.racfrtfons at tho Sto
mach, Bad Taste iu th( ; Mouth, Bill*,
one- Attacks, Pulpit a: ion of (he Hears,
Inflammation of the Lui gs, Pain in tho
region of tho Kidney :, and a hundred
other painful symptoms, are the off
(fpHdjfs of Dysplp iiai, One bottle will
piovo a better guarantee of its merits
than a lengthy advertise-rent.
Scrci'uh:, or Khcf’s Evil,
Whits SwellingUlcers, Ery:ipelas,
Swelled Neck, Gorire, Bcrofalous In-,
flammations, Mercurial affections, Old
Sores, liraiitions of tho Skirt, Sore
Eyes, etc. Iu (hes-;, as in all other,
constitutional Diseases, Da. Walkeb’s
Vineg.vb Bittebs have shown their
great curative powers in the most
obstinate and intractable cases.
For Inflammatory or Chron
ic ItheiimatfSin, Gout, Bilious,
Remittent and Intermittent Fevers,
Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys
and Bladder, these Bitters have no
equal. Buck Diseases arc caused by
Vitiated Blood.
Median ical I) l senses. —Per
sons engaged in Paints and Mineral*,
such as Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold
beaters, and Miners, as they advance
in life, aro subject to paralysis of the
Bowels. To guard against this, take
Dn. Wajjieb's Vinegab Bittebs.
For Skin Diseases, Eruptions,
Tetter, Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spot*,
Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles,
Ringworms, Scald-1 mad, Soto Eyes,
Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discolorations
of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of
the Skin of what ver caino or nature,
are literally dug up and carried out of
the system in a short time by the use
of these Bitters.
Pin, Tape, ami other Worms,
lurking in tlie system of so many thou
sands, are effectually destroyed and re
moved. No system of medicine, no ver
mifuges, no anthelminitios will free the
system from worms like these Bitters.
For Female Complaints, in
young or old, marrifed or single, at tho
dawn of womanhood, or the turn of
life, these Tonic Bitters display so de
cided an influence that improvement
is soon perceptible.
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood
whenever you find its impurities burst
ing through the skin in Pimples, Erup
tions. or Bores ; 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.
li. 11. MrBOHALS &. CO.,
Druggists A- (ion. Acts., San Francisco, Califor
nia, & cor. of Whasington & Charlton Sts.,N.Y.
Sold by all Dmygists and Dealers*
October 15, 1874—1 y
GUARANTEE!)
Equal to Any Ever Sold
WANTED!
Hides and Tanbark,
IN EXCHANGE FOR
LEATHER -A-ISriD
fSi-
In this exchange wo allow 15 cts per lb.
for hides, and $5,00 per cord for bark, and
put our Leather and Shoes at cash prices.
We shall keep o a 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 Herald, —
Esteemed Fiuend :
Will you please inform your readers
that I have a positive
Cure Cor Consiiiiiiilion
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 jSttlli
pie free, 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.
Jr. T. F. Itl’UT.
00 William .Street, NEW YORK-
Feb. 18, 1875—6 ms
Kf-Job work done bore