Newspaper Page Text
A ail ICU LTU EAL.
From the Southern Farm and Home.
Exiierience Teaelietli.
Mr. Editor: 1 am an old man,
upward of threescore sears, during
tjvo suoro of which l havo been a
tiller of the soil. I cannot sav that
I am rich nosv, but 1 have heen rich,
and have now all I need, do not owe
a dollar, have given my children a
good education, and when 1 am called
a wav svill leave them enough to keep
the wolf from the door. My expe
rience has taught me that:
1. One acre of land well prepared
and manured and well cultivated,
will produce more than two acies
which receive only the same amount
of mauure and labor expended on
the one.
2. One cow, horse, mule, sheep, or
hog, well fed, is more profitable than
two kept on the amount of food nec
essary to keep one well.
3 One acre of clover or grass is
worth mote than two acres of eotton
where no grass or clover is raised.
4. No faymer why buys oats, corn,
wheat, potatoes* peas, fodder ami
hay, as a rule for ten years, can keep
the sheriff from his door in the end.
5. The farmer who mever reads an
agi icultura! paper, and sneers at
book farming and improvement*, »l
ways has leaky roofs, poor stock,
broken down fences, and complains
of ‘ibad seasons ’’
G. The farmer who is above Ins
business and intrusts it to another
to manage, soon has no business to
attend to. £
f. The farmer whose habitual buv
erage is cold water, is healthier,
wealthier and wiser than ho who
“does not refuse a drink.”
If you think this advice worth a
comer, I may give you tome more
Jots from my experience. Sen’ex
—
Plant Corn.
vVe insist upon singing tide old
tunc again. It is pcH'ectly dis
gusting, no doubt, to onr friends,
the planters, who know their own
business so much better than we
do, but we like to be a nuisance
occasionally,and so we sing,“Plant
corn,” by way of variety. What
ve know about farming can be
p.it in one short chapter, but it is
long enough to teach us that he
who buys corn to make cotton
finds himself in the vocative when
settling day comes. Brethren, we
have been there and know whereof
we affirm. We can tell a man who
has corn enough to last him till
fall from one who hasn’t, half a
mile off. Tlie corn man cocks his
hat on one side ami swings along
with a free and easy stride—there
is courage in his steps and hope
in his eye. The no corn man has
his hat pulled o er his eyes aud
shambles along with a slouching
gate and a sidelong look, as if he
expected every minute somebody
would sing out: “I know what
ails you. Von haven’t corn enough
to last till May.” He takes the
bray of any casual hungry or
lonesome mule as a personal reflec
tion and can’t look the critter in
the face, thinking lie is saying to
hitnself, There goes a cotton luna
tic—may the devil fly away with
him. Of such is the purgatory of
my tribe.
We don’t know any man who
has gone to pot si ce the war
through planting too much corn,
but we do know who have traveled
that road through an overdose of
cotton. If there is any stronger
argument on the corn side of the
subject, we haven't been intro
duced to it, as yet.— Tel. & McS.
House Woke —There is not a
girl on earth, the .daughter
of 1 prince or pauper, who, if made a
perfect mistress of all household
duties, and were thrown into a com
munity wholly unknown, would not
ej*e from one statiou te another, and
eventnaß* liwciue the mistress of
her own while multitudes of
young placed in positions of
ease, eleg:m«e iinj affluence, but
being unfitted to fill them, will as
certainly ascend from one round es
the ladder to. another, until at the
.'•rose of life/ they are found where
the really competent Started from.—
Mother* of .dinerica, if you wish to
,id your own add your children's
xiseholds of the destroying locusts
IW-I» infest your houses and eat up
..nr substance, take a pride in edu
'ing your dangler* to be perfect
Stresses of every hooie duty; then
you leave them .without a dollar,
« assured tbej’ lack a
• arm garment, a Inruriteous meal, or
l cosy roof, nor faTT of the res|>ect of
my ou r who knows them.'
Srparatin'q ok Stock.—Hens
* 17111 neeer to be ke|>t in
, I.triers with* fowls of •certain oilier
ii<'ies, as the tmkey, "pea fowl, or
I. nines lien, became they worry
them, ami drive tbcinJßiout Ducks
onc-lil, also, to a seperate sit
ing place, because life/ get dirty
.viib tlie dripping*, if tiler sit on the
'round in the ordinary l.eu coop
Thf Poultry
Carefully preserve the fallen leaves
of trees, and piocure as man* as you
can; when rotted ini* mould liter
are invaluable.
Misery and vice travel in pairs;
Ind they always prefer to burrow
under ground as they go.
li i fli
This unrivaled Medicine is warranted
not to contain a single particle ot Mercury
nr any injurious mineral substunee, but is
P'uvely Vegetable,
For forty ykars it luis proved its great
value in all diseases of tbe Livkr, Bow
ki.s and Kid.veys. Thousands of the
I good and great in all parts of the coun
l try vouch for its wonderful and peculiar
i power in purifying the Blood, stimulating
I the torpid Livkr and Bowkls, aud im
parting new Life mid Vigor to the whole
! Hvstein. Simons’ Livkr Rkoulatqr is
acknowledged to have uo equal as a
Liver Meieine,
ft contains four medical elements, never
r.nitcd iu the same happy proportion in
any, other preparation, vis: a gentle Ca
thartic, a wonderful Tonic, an unexcep
tional Alterative and ascertain Corrective
of all impurities of tVo body. Such sig
nal success has attended its use, that k is
now regarded as the
Great Unfailing Specific,
for Liver Complaint and the painful
offspring thereof, to wit: Dyspepsia, Con
stipation, Jaundice, Bilious attacks,
Sick Hfaoachb, Colic, Depression of
Spirits, Sour Stomach,Heart Kurn,«fec. &c
lieguffite the Liver and prevent
Chills and Fever.
Simmons’ Elver Regulator
Is manufactured only by
J. 11. ZEILIN fi^CO.
7
Macon, Ga., and Philadelphia.
Price 51.00 per bottle; sent by mail,
postage„paid, $1.25. Prepared ready for
use in bottles, $1.50.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS,
CGs“Beware of all counterfeits and im
itatiohL"?J3® jmie26-ly
A. A’ It. Air-Line It. It.
On and after Monday, December 30,
1872, trains will run upon this road daily,
as follows, Sundays excepted:
PASSENGER TRAIN.
LEAVE ARRIVE
Atlanta 6:45 am 6:31 pm
Goodwin’s 7:2lam 7:lßpm
Doraville 7:4oam 7:3lam
Noreross (breakfast). ..8:16 a y 7:56 a m
Duluth 8:35 a m 8:32 a m
Suwannee 8:58 a m 8:55 a m
Buford 8:21 a m :18 a m
Flowery Branch 9:47 p m 9:44 a m
Gainesville 10:22 a m 10:16 a m
New* Holland
Sulphur Springs
Bellevue 11:11 am 11 :08 am
Mount Airy 11:53 a m 11:50 p m
End of Track I 00 pm 12:16 pm
FREIGHT TRAIN
Leaves Atlanta on Mondays, Wednes
days and Fridays at 8:00 a m, and ar
rives Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays
at 5:25 a m.
B. Y. SAGE, Eng. and Snpt.
Georgia Kail road.
DAY PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leaves Augusta..B:oo o’clock, a. no.
Leaves Atlanta. .7:10 “ a. ui.
Arrives Atlanta 0:20 “ p, ui.
Arrives Angusta.s:4o “ p. in
NIGHT PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leaves Augusta. .8:15 o’clock, p. in.
Leaves Atlanta. .5:15 “ p. si.
Arrives Atlanta. .6:40 “ a in.
Arrives Augusta.3:4o “ a. m.
ACCOMMODATION TRAIN.
Leaves Atlanta 6:45 p. m.
Leaves Stone Mountain . 6:30 a. m.
Arrives Atlanta 8:05 a. m.
Arrives Stone Mountain. .8:15 p. m.
Western & Atlantic Railroad.
Office of the President,
Atlanta, Nov, 10, 1872.
On and after this date,
Western Express,
Leaves Atlanta 0:30" p. m.
Arrives at Dalton 9:< ! 2 a. hi.
Arrives at Chattanooga. .5:23 a. in.
Day Passe Ayer Train,
Leaves Atlanta 8 - ')0 a. m.
Arrives at Da1t0n....3:01. p. tu.
Arrives at Chattanooga. .4:28 p. in.
Lightning Express,
Leaves Atlama 4:15 p. m.
Arrives at Dalton 950 p. m.
Southern Express,
Leaves Cbaltatflfci /a. .. 5:25 p. m.
Arrives at Atlanta/ 1 ‘2:20 a. in.
Day Passenger Train,
Leave* Chattanooga. ... a. in.
Arrives at Atlanta 9:15 a. m.
*
Aectofanbdutinn Train.
Leaves Dalton 6:00 a. in
Arrives at Atlanta. .... .1:32 p. m
To Kveeutorsami Administra
tors with the Will annexed.
(twixnrtt Court of Ordinary.
The original wills on .file, in this office,
and the record thereof, required by law to
be kept, having been destroyed by the
Imrniug of the Court House, nil execu
tors and administrators, haviDg in their
. posssession certified-copies of destroyed
wills, are hereby notified to return them
to this office so that that they iflky be
recorded again, for the benefit of all per
sons interested therein. In cases where
wills have bmi fully executed, it may be
to the interest of evecutors to have the
wills on record, as they constitute fre
quently the title ©f the heirs. April IC,
1832. J WEST. LAMKIX,
aflriT-tf Ordinary.
iIMI»KOVKI>~ GltlST >1 ILL.
Having renovated and repaired my old
Mill, I am now prepared to grind for the
jiublic. liy close attention to business
and a large experience, I hope to merit a
fair share of public patronage.
W. W. PARKS.
1 August 14,1872. ts
A MODEL NEWSPAPER.
THE SAV.vNNAH DAILY NEWS
The Savannah Daily Morning News is
acknowledg' d by the press'and people to
Im: the best daily paper south of Louis,
rifle and east of New Orleans. Carry
ing with it the prestige and reliability of
age, it lias all the vigor and vitalily of
youth, and its enterprise as a gatherer of
the latest and freshest news has astonished
its contemporaries and met the warm ap
probation of the public. ,
During the year 1873 no expense of
time, labor, and money will Ik 1 spent to
kiep the Morning News ahead of all
competitors in Georgia journalism, and
to deserve the flattering encomiums
leiped npon it from all quarters. There
lias, as yet, been notorious attempt made
to rival the special telegrams which the
News inaugurated some years ago, and
the consequence, is, that the reader in
search ol the latest intelligence always
looks to the Morning News. The tele
graphic arrangements of the paper are
such that the omissions made by the
general press reports ure promptly and
reliably supplied by its special corres
pondents.
The Morning News has lately heen en
larged to a thirty-six column paper, and
this broad scope of type embraces, daily,
everything of interest that transpires in
the domain of literature, art, science,
politics, religion, and general intelligence;
giving to the reader more and belter
digested matter than any other paper in
the .State.
It is, perhaps, needless to speak of the
politics ol the Morning News. For
years and years—indeed, since its estab
lishment — it has been a representative
Southern paper, and from that time to
the present,in all conjunctures, it has con
sistently and persistently maintained
Democratic States Rights principles, and
labored, with an ardor and devotion that
know no abatement, to promote and pre
serve the interests and honor of the
South.
The special features of the Morning
News will be retained and improved
during the ensuing year, and several
new attractions will he added.
The Georgia news items, with their
quaint and pleasant humor, and the epi
tome of Florida affaire, will bo oontin
ued during the year. The local depart
ment will be, as it lias been for the past
year, the most complete and reliable to
be found in any Savannah paper, and
the commercial columns will be full and
accurate.
The price of the Daily is SI 0.00 per
annum; 55.00 for six months; 52.50 for
three months; SI 00 lor one month.
THE TRI-WEEKLY '.NEWS-
This edit! in of the Morning News is
especially recommended to those who
have not the facilities of a daily mail.—
Everything that has been said in the
foregoing in regard to the daily edition
may be repeated of the Tri Weekly. It
is made up with great care, and contains
the latent dc patches andmarket reports.
The price of this edition is 56.00 per
annum and SI :50 for three months.
THE WEEKLY NEWS.
The Weekly Morning News particularly
recommends itself to the farmer and plan
ter. and to those who live off the lines of
railroad. It is one of the best family
papers in the country, and its cheapness
brings it within the reach of all. It
contains thirty-six solid columns of
reading matter, and is mailed so a 9 to
reach subscribers with the utmost
promptness. It is a carefully and labo
riously edited compendium of the news
of the week, and contains, in addition,
an infinite variety of other choice read
ing matter. Editorials on all topics,
sketches of ni“n. manners, and fashions,
tales, poetry, biography, pungent par
agraphs ami condensed telegrams enter
into its make-up. It contains the latest
telegraphic despatches and market re
ports np to the hour of going to press,
and is, in all respects, an indispensable
adjunct to every home.
Price—One year, § ’ 00; six months,
§100; three mouths, 50 cents.
Subscriptions for either edition of the
Morning News may he sent by express
at the risk and expense of the proprietor
Address J. U. ESTILL,
Savannah, Ga.
MANHOOD: HOW LOST HOW
RESTORED. ’
.Just published, a new edition of
Dr. Culverwell’g
Celebrated Essay
on the radical cure (without medicine) o f
Sperm atormkka or Seminal Weakr.es->
Involuntary Seminal Losses, Impotency,
Mental and Physical incapacity, Imped
iments to Marriage, etc.; also, Consump
tion, Epilepsy and Fits, induced by self
indulgence or sexual extravagance.
Price, in a sealed ouvtlope, only
6 cents.
The celebrated author, in this admirable
essay, clearly demonstrates lrom>a thirty
years’successful practice, :h».t the alarm
ing consequences of selfabuse may be
radically cured without the daugerous
use oi Internal medicine or the applica
tion of the knife; pointing out a mode of
cure at oneesimple, certain, and effectual,
by means of which every sufferer, no
matter his (condition may be, may cure
himself cheaply, privately, and radically
Th is Lecture should be in the
hands of every youth and every man in
the land.
Sent, under seal, in a plain envelope,
to any address, post-paid, on reeeipt'of
six cents, or two postage stamps.
Also, Dr. Culverwell’s “Marriage
Guide,” price 50 cents.
Address the Publishers, 1
CD AS. J. 0. KUNE k CO.,
127 Bowery, New York,
ocu23-ly| Post-Office Box 4,586.
Georgia, Gwinnett County.
Whereas, John Anderson applies to
me for letkrs of administration on the
estate of John R. Anderson, late of said
county, deceased: This is therefore to
cite all persons concerned to be and ap
pear at my office on or before the first
Monday it) February next, and show
cause, if any they ean, why said letters
should net be granted to applicant.
Dec. 12, 2872.
J.T. LAM KIN, Ordinary
GUANO!
jp
The undersigned is now prepared to sell for Cash,
ob Tume, or in exchange for Cotton, on the best
terras, the following standard Fertilizers :
WHICH I GUARANTEE PURE AND FRESH;
Equal, if Not Superior,
TO ANYTHING IN THE MARKET.
Wh aim’s It aw Bone Superphosphate,
Sea Fowl Guano
DUGDALE’S SUPERPOSPHATE,
ORIGINAL ;COE’S SUPERPHOSPHATE,
BAUGH 9 S HAW BONE PHOSPHATE ,
'«iii '‘Di# Wrn ‘‘ti'.lillH 'uiaHil* 'Mil 9 >41111111) 'll® 'Mill 'iilllililili '‘liliiiilii ®Jll *Hliiuil) W 3
Ground Bone, Land Plaster, Lime, Salt, &c.
fl® 3 Dealers, also, in Bacon, Grain. Flour and Pro
duce Generally, and Agent of Factory for sale of
Cotton Goods.
\ %
'... .ifi'lUl Siiiiiillt m YU ; iiiiwil Y .ibilili|| „ Lll „l
WAREII USE AND COMMISSION MERCHANT,
No. 25, Alabama Street, ----- Atlanta, Ga.
MARK W. JOHNSON,
Southern Central Seed Store and Agricultural Warehouse,
- •«.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
ALL the*late|improvcd and standard Seeds, Agricultural tilizers.
Live Stok, etc., furnished on favorable terms. i
Turnip Seed, Grass, Clover, Bed Rust Proof Oats,
Rye, Barley, Wheat, etc.^etc.,
%
I,
in immense asssortmont; and a large stock of improved
ONE, TWO k THREE HORSE'PLOWS; SULKEY PLOWS,
different grades and prices, frem §60.00 to §IOO.OO.
»• -' * . ... »lri * ' I y.* \ •
Farmers should not fail to turn under their stubble
lands this fall.
Come and examine my stock. MARK W. JOHNSON,
aug2B-tf Broad Street, Atlanta, Ga.
(STOiSSS-
The best Established and most Successful Business School
in the Central Southern States.
AND THE ONLY ONE IN THE SOUTH CONDUCTED BY
PRACTICAL BUSINESS MIEN.
THE COURSE OP INSTRUCTION IS
THOROUGH, PRACTICAL, AND SYSTEMATIC,
PREPARING
Young and Middle Aged Men,
TO BECOME
Thorough Practical Accoutants,
roa
Successful Business Men.
.. l,us INSTITUTION ore now filling Responsible and Lucra
tive I ositions 111 Banks and Business Houses in this and other States
1 HERE ARE NO VACATIONS. Students can enter at any time as no
Instruction is given in Classes. Send for Circulars and Specimens ot Penmanship.
W- 1 * Addiess B. J\ MOORE, PresideuL
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
Ham 11 ™*' 8 Buchu
DANDELION’,
Removes from the blood, the cause of
Rheumatism, by increasing the action of
the Kidneys and Liver. Thc-se are the
Scavengers of the system, and carry out
its waste particles, which, if not carried
out, become fruitful sources of disease and
death. W. C. Hamilton & Co.,
Cincinnati, Ohio.
IVTrvn axr Kasi| y made w *th onr
i.V-LUjJ.Ojf Stencil and Key Check
Outfit. Circulars free. Stafford
MTg Co., 66 Fulton-st, N. Y.
TO BOOK CANVASSERS.
ANEW WAY of running a book.
Can sell thousands per week. Ad
dress Murray Hill Publishing Co., 129
East 28th-st„ New-York City.
11/ontod If y° n wish t 0 bu - va
W dllbCLl* Sewing Machine for fam
ily use, or act as agent, address Washing
ton Sewing Machine Co., Boston, Mass.
TO THE WORKING CLASS, male
or female, S6O a week guaranteed.
Resp(ctable employment at home, day or
evening; no capital required; full instruc
tions and valuable package of goods to
start with sent free by mail. Address,
with 6 cent return stamp, M. Young &
Co., 16 Courtland st., New York.
UPSYCHOMANCY, or Soul Charm-
JT ing.” How either sex may fascinate
and gain the love at d affections of any
person they choose instantly. This sim
ple mental acquirement ail can possess,
free, by mail, for 25c., together with a
marriage guide, Egyptian Oracle, Dreams.
Hints to Ladies, Wedding Night Shirt,
&c. A queer book. Address T. Will
iam & Co., Pubs.. Philadelphia.
DON'T
Be deceived, but for coughs, colds, sore
throat, hoarseness and bronchial difficul
ties, use only
Wells’ Carbolic Tablets.
Worthless imitations are on the market,
but the only scientific preparation of Car.
bolic Acid for Lung diseases is when
chemically combined with other well
known remedies, as in these tablets, and
all parties are cautioned against using
any other.
In all cases of irritation of the mucous
membrane these tablets should be freely
used, their cleansing and healing proper
ties are astounding.
Be warned, never neglect a cold, it is
easily cured in its incipient state, when
it becomes chronic the cure is exceeding
ly difficult, use Well’s Carbolic Tablets
as a specific.
John Q. Kellogg, 18 Platt St., New
York, sole agent for the U. S. Send
for circular. Price 25 cen's per box.
The immense sale, 10,000 in one
MONTH, our
Livingstone 28 Years in
Africa
is having, proves it above all others the
book the Masses Want. It goes like
Wildfire. Over 600 page's, only $2 50.
More agents wanted.
NOTICE—Be not d-ccived hv mis
representations made to palm off high
priced inferior works, but send for circa
lars and see Proof of statements and
great success of our agents. Pocket
companion, worth SlO. mailed free.
Hubbard Bros., Pubs., 72J Sunsom st.,
Philadelphia.
AGENTS WANTED FOll
God’SclVL-W ork
Or, Science and the Bible.
This book gives the very cream of
Science, making its thrilling realities,
beauties, wonders, and sparkling gems a
hundredfold more interesting than fiction.
Every man. woman and child wants to
read it. It is indorsed by the Press, und
Ministers of all denominations. Sales
immense. Agents report 52-45-46-80-
87 and 96 copies per week Great in
ducements to agents. Employment for
Young Men, Ladies, Teachers and Cler
gymen in every county. Send for circular.
Also, agents wanted for the
People’s Standard Edition of
the Holy Bible.
Over 550 Illustrations. All our own
agents for other books, and many agents
for other Publishers, are selling this
Bible with wonderful success, because it
is the most valuable, beautiful and popu
lar edition now in the market, and is sold
at a very low price. Canvassing books
free to working agents. Address Ziegler
& M’Curdy, 518 Arch st„ Phila., Pa. *
A NEW CARPET.
The Great Wonder.—The Ncw-
England Carpet Co., essablished over a
cpiarter of a century ago, having expended
much time, talent and money, to produce
a stylish and durable carpet at a low price,
after years of experimenting with the best
artizans, have hi ought out a carpet which
they have named and will be known as
GERMAN TAPESTRY, being an ex
act immitation of Solid Brussels, the first
thousand pieces of which, in order to in
troduce them, will be sold for 37 }£ cents
per yard.—Sample sejit by mud on "receipt
of 10 cents, or 5 different patterns 50 cts-
New England Carpet Co.,
373 Washington st., Boston, .Mass.
Cheap Farms! Free Farmsl
On the line of the Union Paeafic
Railroad. 12.000,000 acres of the best
Farming and Minneral Lands in America.
3,000,000 aeres in Nebraska, in the
Platte Valley , now for sale.
Mild Climate,Fertile Soil,
for grain growing and stock raising un
surpassed by any in the Uuited 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 colonies—soldiers
entitled to a homestead of 160 acres.
Seud for the new descriptive Pamphlet,
with new maps, published in English,
Germen, Swedish and Banish, mailed free
everywhere,
Address, O. F. Davis,
Land Com’r U. P. R. R. Co.,Omaha,NtW
Biii
M|
is unequaled by any
will eradicate, extirpate ,«/!?**•
destroy all poisonous subjUaiS
Blood and will effectually if
disposition to bilious demnifl
Is there want of action if
and Spleen ? Unless li
blood becomes impure by delet '
cretions, producing scrofnV„ I **
diseases, Blotches, FeEt" -
ker, Pimples, &c, &c.
Have you a Dyspeptic B, or w, .
less digestion is promptly ai,U 1
is debilitated with U of Jfft
poverty of the Blood, Dropsical T«J®
General Weakness and in!, rt ; a '
Have you weakness of Intestine,, v
are in danger of Chronic DinrrhU T
dreadful Inflmamation of the Bow?
Have you weakness of tW rn•
Urinary Ur-™-
suffering in its most aggravated C
Are you dejected, drowsy d„|p'
gish or depressed in spin,’ J*
ache, back ache, coated tonguej
tasting moutn? p
For a certain remedy for all of tfc
diseases, weaknesses and tr übW
cleansing and purifying the
and imparting vigor to all the vital
for building up and restoring the«
ened constitution use
JURUBEBi
which is pronounced by the leading n
ical authorities of London and P
“the most powerful tonic and alien!
known to the medical world," Hi
no nevv and untried discovery but
been long used by the leading physic
oft other countries with wonderful re
dial r< suits.
Don’t weaken and impair the diwd
organs by cathartics and physics
give only temporary telief-Indiarf
flatulency and, dyspepsia Jwith piC
kindred diseases arc sure tofolloiAi
use.
Keep the blood pure and health
assured.
JOHN Q. KELLOGG, 18 PlattS
New York, sole agent for the Hi
States. Price, One Dollar per Bottle
Send for circular. jn-tii
Briggs & Brother’
ILLUSTRATED
Floral Work
For January, 1873, Now On. la
as a Quarterly. The four numbers i
to any apdress, by mad, for 25 Mis,
The richest and most instructive Hint
ted an 1 descriptive Floral Guide?
published. Those of our putions»
ordere- seeds last year and were credit
with 25 cents, will" receive the four tji
ter lies for 1873. ’I hose who order m
this year will be credited withu.-übso
lion "for 1873. The January numberi
tains nearly 400 Engravings, Two Sop
Colored Plates, suitable for fruming.i
also ’l in ted Plates of our gorgeoa* J
ral Chromes; information relative
flowers, vegetables, Arc , and their ml
vation, and all such inaitersas
mcrly lonnd in our Animal I’ataloguc
Yon will miss it if yen older reedsbrl
seeing Briggs Air Rro.’s Quarterly. I
challenge eotnpaiison on quality of»
and prices and sizes of packt-is. (I
‘•Calendar Advance Sheet ami Price 1
for 1873,’’ sent free - Address
BRIGGS Ac BROTHER,
Seedsmen and Florists, Rocbesier, N.l
j«u29-4w
ROBB SHUTTM
Sewing Machim
ITI * , «
For s2*» ©nly! Mounted
plete, Table and Treadle
for $37 Only’.
This is a shuttle machine; has the®
feed, and makes the Lock Sti c
on both sides. This is a ® rs^ a '!
chine, and the only lowepri ol
Stitch Machine in the United
This machine is warranted f° r^Te '
It cannot be surpassed for low P r
good work; for evidence of this•
the testimony of the Hon-
Kellogg, ex-member of the
Legislature, and Dr. J-
Gumming, Ga.:
COPY OF CERTIFICATE-
Cumming, Forr.yth count T. 1 , 1 ' ,
September 9th, IW- >
We, the undersigned, have u ‘
Home Shuttle Sewing Mac j
families for several months-
it an excellent machine; doe* c^ (
work, as good as the best high
chines, in our judgment, anti b oo ®
much less price. We would not
our machines for any we know. ,
(Signed) H. C.
JAMES B.
Col. Thomas A. P*lfc ,rim * dJ
ClarK, Estj., and others, 0
county, have given like certifi
, Any person wishing olie °^ !
machines will be properly
addressing Rev. W.
nent Agent, Cumming, Ga.
Nov. 20,1872.