Newspaper Page Text
.vims ’
, an nr
j^sri^lr
Kro« the Times and Planter.
Editob Timbs and Planter:—
1 enclose a I cite/ from my old friend,
Wm. Barnes, of Milledgeville. Ii
has some valuable facts, and is Bug.
gestive in several directions. Please
publish. Yours,
DAVID W. LEWIS.
~ i, - -
Milledgeville, Ga. (
March 9,1872.
D.W, Lewis: Dear Sir: Your
favor of 23d ult., came duly to hand.
Carrington bad spoken to me in re
gard to the Millctt seed. I did not
raise but little last season. I gave
him some of two kinds to send to you.
which I trust you have received ere
this. I gave him about half that 1
had. I should have been pleased if
I could have supplied you with a
peck or more. Last year wag a bad
season for the Millet, it did not ina<
ture we.ll, or yield well of seeds.
The laud upon which I grew ,50
gallons, I could have made a bale
of cotton. As bo other person mis
t;d the Millet, th* - loose negroes
g.-iliered heavily of ilie larger stalks.
'1 *iis reason, 1 shall only plant for
lotMgf and seed. The German
Millet is about equal to the Chinee
f i te,d, both grow rapidly upon
very lich land,arid can be cut about
tin lOlh ol June, lor green forage.
A. you are connected with lit.-
Agricultural Society of our State, I
will presume upon your patience
with a lew remarks. 1 partially
entered the tilling of the soil in 1562.
I bad s bam built, something alter
the order of such buildings in the
Northern Stales. This building is
50 leel long, by thirty wide, hav.
mg a cellar under it. Being
built upon a side hill, excavation
was easy. The top soil was taken
out, thrown aside for to be used
with the manure, &c. There being
twelve brick pillows six feet in the
ground, which gives ample room lor
a large cellar, which will hold two
hundred loads of manure, all secur
ed from bad weather.
The first floor is divided oft into
stalls for mules, cattle, feed room,
buggy and gear room &c„ as fol
lows: Upon the West end, there is
four stalls forstock, giving each five
feet in width, by nine in length. In
the centre 1 have a drive way °f I
eleven leet, with large doors opening
the lull wedth, admitting a loaded
wagon. Upon the East end. in front,
1 have my buggy room, for gear
&c., which is 18 by 18 feet, back ol
this room is sitealed my cow stalls,
18 by 12 feet, the stanchions are of
old fashion, and the cows are put up
by their neckt, standing side by side,
each having a space of three feet for
their feed trough; the 18 feel gives
me room for six cows.
They are bedded every day with
eaves and top soil, snd every morn
ing all the manure is droped through
a trap door, into the cellar below
and a few grains of corn is also
thrown down and the hogs compost
the manure daily.
The mules are facing the drive
way, and are fed from the open
space giving them free air.
The 2nd story contains a large a>
mount of room; over the buggy and
now rooms, there are two rooms IS
by 15 fed, seven feet joist tor corn,
<■ 1,... or giam of anv kind, into
M. d!i a. wagon can In* unloaded ,
from <be barn-floor or drive way. ;
O. ,pules there being a scaf-
I lid or room fir iiay, which reaches
to tin top of the barn, and is whom
iilt- er; tei t, and will hold about eight
Kino ol hay. Over the drive way,
ai:d the corn and cotton rooms as
tin ilium* and, there is* a sprfee for foil
d» r. which is 30 by 30 feel, and u
height ol ten leet in centre, runing
tjiiwn to the eves. This space will
hold 8,000 bundles of fodder.
J have ample room for all the nia
nuie that can be made upon my
plat e, under my barn, but my ex-
perience has convinced me that sta
ble or horse manure should have a
quantity of moisture* consequently!
i put mine all out iu the lo; near the
door, and compost it with top soil,
chip dirt &c., heaping it up irt a
large heap to beat and decay as
fast as possible, I have it looked
over often until fully rotten, then
ptle n up TTra-targgqrttß and ter if
iiloneumd lb' use. I fiild
that tffkt llii, shucks, stiaw *r
any kind of rough material, can fe
perfecily rolled and decomposed ju
MulSi&Kaczg
and have attention paid to throwing
[the proper lime.
ll jf jhWny learned men,
recommend that coarse manures
pay best to pul them upon the land
And plow them under, my expen*
ence teaches me otherwise. In the
first place it takes as bog to haul
out half decayed material as
that which is fully rotten; when
the material is once in a sit
uation to take up a substance
which will fertilize the land, let it
have a chance to do all that it can.
If the matter lias been plowed often
(while in (helot) it will goon decay
ing and taking up the liquids from
the lot until it becomes fully decay
ed and full of rich plant food, then
carry it out, spread it and plow it
under, and instead of drinking up
all the moisture that comes in its
reach through the year to adjust it
in going on to decay, it will be ready
with the moisture it has within itself
to begin at once lo throw off a mois
ture to feed whatever may be plant
led over ib
My cow, hogs and sheep manure
is kopi all under cover, the urine
from all tho stock lodges upon the
manure under cover, and in case a
heavy rain should fall, that might
possibly leach through the stable
compo.-t heap, the liquid has no
chance of getting away, it is obliged
to go under the barn.
Now I will tell you about my mode
of raising hay. 1 have some bottom
land dial is rather wet for corn or
cotton; can’t be drained. I sow
these lands moansand rye; manure
them well. I have rye now twelve
inches high, which lain feeding (o
stock. When l cut off’the grain in
June, I lake my wagon and haul
and spread from fifteen to 25 loads
of well rolled manure, then lake a
heuvy iron tooth harrow and harrow
the land both ways—scratch it over
well—roll it over to make it level as
the floor. The crab-grass and crow
foot springs up as thick as grass can
grow, and when it is it: bloom, about
the middle of August or first ofSep
ternber, I cut it. 1 shave the ground ;
my scythe cuts within an inch of the
earth. 1 have been able to make
three tons of good hay to the acre,
and sometimes even four tons—and
its hay ! I cut of a morning until 10
o’clock, and at 2 o’clock rake up
and pul into cocks of about 100 lbs.
Next morning, as soon as the dew is
off, it is opened for two hours, then
put upon the wagon and put in the
barn ; a little salt is thrown over it,
and it looks green and keeps so all
the time until used. ( have now a
large quantity green as the day it
was cut. All kinds ot slock cat it
readily—keep fat upon if.
Grass cut after frost don't make hoy.
The Lepsedisa Clover glows on
rich land 12 or 15 inches high. 1
cut about a ton of it last season; it is
rather woody, but stock eat it readi
ly when moistened with a little salt
water.
Last year, I obtained corn from
seven States. I found the Penn corn
yielded best. Upon rich land, 3x3
feet, one stalk gave invariably two
good ears, often three.
The New Jersey suckering is ra
ther an all-rounder, and makes ma
ny ears upon suckers, but the wevil
takes to it.
I had the satisfaction of raising a
bale of cotton (496 lbs.) upon three
quarters of an acre of land, upon
which twelve loads of my t cell rotted
stable manure was drilled, hoping
to do better this year.
I presume if you have deciphered
mII the above, tlml you will come to
the wise conclusion that you have
been bored long enough.
I remain truly yours,
WM. BARNES.
To D. W. Lewis, Sparta, Ga.
German and American Panning.
A correspondent of the Spring
field Republican, writing from Dres
den. suggests some interesting com
parisons between German and Amer
ican farming:
.The Saxon farmers, however, nev
er ask whether farming pays. They
maintain a slow, but sure prosperity,
and during the last third of a centu
ry have advanced the rate of pro
duction proportionately with an in
crease of neatly fifty per cent, in
population. This advance has not
been through the American avenue
of introducing new methods, but,
probably, by a closer and more des
perate forcing of the old aDd settled
methods of farming.
The railway recently took me
Si(p-:Pvui.-uiih firußiicc it
SaxonjU4®re#9l»dl(!*&klS most pa t
that would delight n
an American lying as lev I
arid ratetlow'lo the plow as the ge i
tle rolling billows of Illinois. Olu i,
as far as the eye erftdd reach nn ei
ihet side of :kc railroad, stretcfied
one cultivated expanse, unfnarred
by fences, but checkered all over
with infinite interchange of crops,
scahely any one field of otic cion
being of more than one of two' a<;rcs
in extent. VeL in all these flitju
sands of ‘floors’ (certainly here a
field is a ‘floor’) not a mowing
or reaping machine or ItorseHke
was to be seen* .Every swath had
been haggled oft" and tumbled to
gether by U e old fashioned scythe,
every witir<Av of bay had been col
lected with a puttering hand rake,
sheaf of grain bound by a wo
man * dims, and when the crop had
finally gone off upon wheelbarrows
or drawn by harnessed cows, the
serried rows of stubble exposed the
antiquity of the mow* r’s tools, and
his or her unski!fulness iu using even
those. Imagine a scyilie only thtee
feet in lengih, tour inches broad at
the heel, fixed in a strait snath, and
« hand-rake with a young sapling
stripped of its bark for a handle,
and you have specimens of*(he out
fit of a German haymaker.
Power of the Soil to Retain Manures.
Few cultivators of the soil seem
to be fully aware of the wonderful
power of even a loose and light soil
to retain plant lood ts at has.been
artificially applied. I found a strik
ing instance of it a few years since.
The place on which I settled some
thirty years ago was new fresh land,
save some ten or twenty acres which
had been partially cleared and cul
tivated. This had been neatly ex
hausted by injudicious culture, bill
us the labor of charing new land
was great lo me then, I plained die
old field. The soil was a light saml
and hardly repaid fur die planting
and culture. I noticed iheie was
about half an acre on a sleep .hill
side Which produced well.
\ . I cultivated this land lor sever I
j years and dial hillside always pio
luced well. A stranger, passing
one day, stepped and inquired who
lived here, and remarked that he
settled this place twenty years ago,
but that losing his wife, he became
discouraged and sold out. As he
was about leaving, I asked him wliai
he had done to that hillside to make
it produce so much better than the
other land, when it looked poorei
and more barren. He. replied that
there he had his cowpen. It had
been years since his cattle trod the
land and yet, as poot as it looked, it
produced well.
It“i3 now thirty two years since
that piece of land was cow-penned,
and it shows a marked difference in
its products from the soil around it.
1 am often asked : ‘ls guano any
benefit the second year?’ 1 answer
unhesitatingly that it is. Two year
ago 1 planted n piece of land in su
gar cane and manured heavily with
guano in the drill. 1 made a fine
crop of cane, and in the full planted
the same piece of land in wheat
without manure. As the wheat
grew, the rows where the cane was
planted showed a marked difference
over the other portions of the field,
and the yield was double.
Two years ago I planted a field
in Norway oats, using guano and
bone dust; first year 1 planted the
same field in cotton, using two hun
dred pounds of Pacific guano and
bone dust. Last year the same field
was planted in cotton, using two
hundred pounds of Pacific guano to
the acre; but from some cause which
I cannot comprehend, the crop was
a short one. This season I planted
the same field in my prolific corn,
without manure of any kind, and
the yield lias been such* as to satis
fy me that the soil had tetained a
good portion of the plant food con
tained in the guano, and that the
corn got the benefit of it. This field
produced, on an average, thirty
bushels to the ace. There may be
something in the variety ofcorn, but
not all; on other fields that had not
been previously guanoed the yield
was not more than half.
Thus it is very plain to see that
manures, judiciously applied, are
not exhausted by the first crop, nor
do the rains wash them away or
leach them through. If the rain wash
the fertilizing properties of the soil
away, llie earth would have long ago
been a barren waste. It is bad cul
ture iliat wastes the soi l , not plants.
This I am satisfied of by many
years of practical experiment. I
have been thirty-two years cultivat
ing the piny woods land 1 live on,
and it produces better this year than
the first year t planted it.
Cor. Rural Carolinian.
Remedy for Sore Shoclders.—
Wash them well every night and
morning with a strong solution oloak
burk, made by boiling the bark m
water, then rub them well with lin
seed oil. Annoinl them every night
and morning with a salve; made of
three parts of linseed oil and one
part quicklime. To make horses’
shoulders lough, wash the shoulders
well twice a day, for a week before
working, with the oak bark solution.
— Exchange. [The best we have
tried is a saturated solution of alum
jn whisky. Farmer,
ioi j-HO'fartl* vu«-t'nny/ionosi*rt»i«|vi niit .
AEE notor opening a li-Mrtrfol assortment of the following Goods for BPBJNO Tiaife, a’
of which will he u >ld off quick at a tawl advance ;
Hnt**«llft, Three-Ply. Ingrain, and low priced Carpets, Rugs,
Floor and Tabic Oil Cloth*, best goods, cut any
Dnigg ta. Matiing*, Cornice* and Band*, Cbr«»mos,
Wind <>w Shades .ill Curtain Goods. Lace Curtains,
Wa*l Papers ad Borders', flafr Cloths and U/diolsterers’ Goods.
We also keep on our first door,.jUa-ge a ojk of CHOICL FAMILY GROCERIES, W- «
and Willow Wart*. We solicit, orders from our Jefferson County friends, for th-» aboct
Goods, which will be sold LOW FOR CASH.
JAS. G. BAILIE & BROTHER,
V ia BROAD .street,
WAN D O
FERTILIZER!
FOR
Cotton, Corn, Wheat, Tobacco.
•in, x«i•»<(!•><.• » t#A j-‘>> r.v.-i. -’X diiw ■wsidmq.ti/f
PRICE :
CASH, SSO per 2000 lbs., at Factarv
riMvflTH«fT ICTBHBSt! fiirt0 "'’ Wfl' k M PV - K ,1«>
Factory East end Basel St,; Hines on Ashley River
WANDO
%
Acid Phosphate of Lime !
F O It
COMPOSTING WITH COTTON SEED.
i’ i; t c i;.
CASH, *3O |>cr 2(100 lbs., al Faclorv.
TIME, S;JS per 2000 lbs., at Faclorv’, payable
Nov- hi, 1872, Without liiUTftt.*
WM. C. DUKES & CO.,
G ENK !l A L A GI2N TS,
No. 1 South Atlantic Wharf. Cliariesloa, S. C-
T. T. "WINRSOR.
JanlG- rp«£u -3m Agent at Milledgeville. Gal
- • ■*»*'»*»- • -'^R4SEy3Ke?vWSC2SWSaKSR>--i - ■ *--y '“yMUKr' l t» ■•- •-y ■. . **•*■ ■, rt*Bffffffiir' y
New Cotton and Produce Warehouse.
THE PLANT EDS*
LOAN AND SAVINGS BANK.
SUBSCRIBES CAPITAL,
OWE MILLION BOEEABS.
The Warehouse of this Bank,
CORNER OF CAMPBELL AND REYNOLDS STREETS,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA,
rS NOW READY TO RECEIVE COTTON. Liberal CASH ADVANCES
will be made upon Cotton in Warehouse, or upou Railroad Receipts.
CP Parties Storing Cotton with tbo Bank will be furnished with lcceipta for
game that will bo available in this city or any other for borrowing money
GT The Rank ia prepared at any time to make LOANS on PRODUCE or
PROVISIONS on the most roasonublo terms.
I - ®*' Parties would do well to applj’ at the Watehotise, or communicate with the
ffioe* - **- CHAS. J. JENKINS. President.
JNO. P. KING, Vice-President.
T. P. BRANCH. Cashier.
Sep. 30. DO Cm p n
H. & J. WEED,
IMPORTERS AND
wHOLE S ALE DEALERS IN
Iron, Steel, Tin Plate and Hardware, Rub
ber Belting and Carriage Material
IJS SI 115 t.
SAVANNAH, GA.
oct 10 I*7l r * ntim. 1
J————B—Bgan—miL ■ i —B BWMB HB B '“i 1 !' 1 itaMMOMIIL
Kean, Laiitlraiii, Sc Cos.,
BEG leave to inform the citizens of Augusta ami vicinity that they are non- in posses
sion of the Store No. 200 BKOAD STREET, lately occupied by Moasrs. 11. F, Russell A
Cos., and have ready for sale a general assortment of seasonable
DRY GOODS.
We will enumerate a few articles in tho different departments. In onr
. DO M E STIC DEPAIIT MEN T ,
may he found full lines of Bleached and Brown Sheetings and Shillings. Osnaburgs, Plaid and
Striped, Heavy Cotton Plaids, Dome,tic Ginghams. T iF' imi“'s See.
VV OGLE N DEPAIiT MEN T .
A splendid assortment of Bed Blankets , a splendid assortment of I) own ni Gray Blan
kets ; Georgia Plains, Kerseys, Kentucky .Jeaus, Colored an I Black Satinets, Fancy Ca.s.si
tners, English Tweeds, Black Doeskins, Linseys, &c.
Dii 12 SIS G O OPS
ol every description, from tho lowest to the finest. Our stock of Shawls, Cloaks, Opera Jack
ets and Fnrs cannot he surpassed. In tho
NOT IO N D E P A If. T ME N T
we intend to keep everything called for.
We cordially invite our old friends (wit'iwhom we have had sneli pleasant intercourse for
the last fifteen years ; also those we have never had tho pleasure of serving before) to an ex
amination of our stock. We will do all in our power to render “shopping" both plea< ant and
profitable to our customers. We open regularly next Monday Morning. Come and sen ns,
one and all. Agents for R. J. Roberts’ celebrated Parabola Needles and Scissors.
Jri.H, 9m
SRgflrr mmi FW’toPTtY' 1
[9 Dt* tied vda ’tUfoiftlattulfW a| nt!' lid a! I
Sa^nM^Uw,'^^ 1 H*y% jl 3 **»J»
aa sailing o r new *.s;r«rid
. I ltf| wi«hj wu,
■ WtUttr-r feV*ip'*> t'*V/s" *bf*H*»v*irt-k
h*r Mli JWt Rxjiilii2f.il .iUk t: .> s 11;> 11
Hoiti Kslistc LVdiors uiiil Owners
ar.tj all \;.t ; ilk UN EX! ERPRISIiS
Di-.vir«H> »f Aliraniii”
\ORTH B I! H CAPITAL
HlionW wrife, pivlufr iuH particulars toCHI IF
*'i*i & UOFWIASS, 3U 4 S« oli st.. Bffr
n r*, M«1 Ktf :• -..H0:,. le.lVr. n Pav:*,
h. sfi feoiif'*K?[<(jov. M 1 * Bonham.
.i t's (i 'u. t* $$ U Yo*np< Caters
> i|c. Cia; Mr Heiry A >rhryedr , P,rcsi<Mnt
IVaiiK. Mobile, A a: an'«¥ \Y B SoHey
& Cos. Bankers, Galveston, Tex*»K
Burnham’s m ■
Kew Tnrbjne is fn g**ner 4 ' l 9KS
al im; throughout the H. jKj ; %if \
S. A inch, is \\g< tl
the Governm-’nt in
Parent Office, VVnslnn^
too* DC. Its »iu> |*l:i'-i
of construction and
WATEHj
oowpr It transmits rcndei's it (lie be.Yt water
wheel ever invented. Pamphlet iree: N ]•’.
BUP.NHAM, York, Pn. ..
■A9f«TB,W*wTEP r P tt
if **
y &Psi
PacmninrrElcJroorSt. Louis.
AGENTS WANTED. .The oiTy complete
life of
JAMES FISK.
/ontyjiuiff a fuU account of nil iiiji schemes,
•nturpri.scs Siml assamrittion. of
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Kinanoial G-kkat of the
IAM MANY RING. Brilliant narj ptciareg
t n the t. I(t HTS ft n*i S'H 5D O IVS M* New Yoi k
<ife
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litftq i»aa• .*• ii A»r .’.u'l the
Great Conflagrati ni by OolHert CnVhibcr
lin, Editor?; Chicaffb Ti ibnne.fciS octavonages.
Eully i iustvated. 3U,UUO s«jld. Addregs as
•l).>ve, or J. ia Goodman, Cliifago. or Edward
E Hovev, Boston,’or Fred M Smith; Auburn,
N Y, or vVabon Indianapolis, lud.
WELLS’ CARBOLIC TABLETS,
h\*v Cu.trgit#, Cuida ami IJoarsL/icsa.
lire ho TaldeH pi; vjut tiio Avt<l . Upnibi
•inti n with other efu font remeilit a popu .
ar form, for Ik‘ cute “of nil 'Throat*and Lung
i)isen.se-s. JIo trgon«\s* and uluerntiou of the
Throat are imut'di Uely relieved, and. state
ixianta are cond.infly bt»in. sent to the propri
etor, of relief in cases of Throat difficulties of
years ata ding.
C/VU LMON. Don’t be‘deceived by
wor-hlois iniitatidns. (4et < nlv Well’s Car*
bolic. Tab ets. cts per Box JOHN
Q KELLOGG, Id Fiat! street. Now York,
sole Agent for U,£. b«"r.d lor Circular.
Oh, Would I were a Child !
sighs the weary and exhausted one, as the lan
guor and lassitude of spring comes upon him
Come and receive vigor and strength from the
wonderful tiouth American TUNIC
JURDB E B A.
Long and successfully used in its tmtivn coun
try as a Powerful Tonic, and Potent Punfin
of the Blood, it is found even to exceed t he an
ticipations founded on its great, reputation.
According to the medical and ecientiiic period
icalof London and Paris, it possesses the most
Powerful Tonic properties known to Materia
Medica.
Dr. Wells' Extract ij Jurubeba,
Is a perfect remedy for all Diseases of the
Blood ; is a sure end perfect remedy for all dis
eases of the Liver and. Spleen, Enlargements
or Ob.tl ruction of Intestines, Urinary, Uterine,
or Abdominal Organs.
It is strengthening uud nourishing. Like
nutricious fond taken iuto the stomach, it as
rsiinilates and diffuses itself through the circu- 1
( lation, giving vigor and health. !
It regulates the Bowels, quiets the Nerves,!
acts directly on the secretive organs, and, by (
its powerful Tonic and restoring effects, pro
duces healtliy and vigorous actiou to whole
system.
JOHN Q. KELLOGG, Platt St.. New York
Solo Agent for tticUntted Slates.
Price One Dollar per bottle. Send for Circu
hr 5 1
THE
Golden. Hill SHIRT
* If you want tho best tilting and
lieesl made shirts to he had ask
J /our clothier for the Golden Hill.
If he has not got it, he can get it
or you, if he will not. we will
s send C O. D. to any address free
of charge.
—l—l—l [_J Bend for Circular g.virg full par-
HENBY C. BLACKMAK,
(if'7 Broadway, New York,
Importer & Mannfr.ctnrer of Men’s Furnish
ing Goods for tko Trade.
march!! r u p 4w.
AGl‘V v< W ANTED FO’.' THE T TFE OF
SEN.R.E. LEE
; file'hi jt\ .tii . !.■ 0.. .... 1 1in a. DUi
vi-pliv lit the GlthiAT t'HiKFI AIN
C.llJ"i\LPNi^es^'f£
Ln are being cin-ulated. See that the book
you buy is accompanied by superb iulmgrapliie
poi’rait iif (Jen. Las. on a sheet 19 by 94
iuclies, suitable for f.aming
Send for Circulars and sea eMr terms, nnd a
I lull description if the work Address, National
Publishing Cos., Philadelphia, Pa. Atlanta, (it.,
or St. Louis, Mo. ' iq.n mare 4w
VV. Di SCAN.. J. II J..HNsr,.a Al .\Ullsan
Duncan & johnsion,
Cotton l (, ac tons
A M>
Gene r a 1 Com m is si o n
Merchants,
92 Bay Street,
SAVANNAH GA,
We are propared to make the Usual
advaupe on Cotton. oct. 9 ricn 4tn.
• , tAy
CT7K2BB TBB ««&89.
in from
' sftoi rmtliTg Hn» *idv«tiwin*»* rr-c 1 a
' .«WI A e FZYOA Hi
Hfrdway'* Hud) Keliff Is a Curt foi every
| AAnd
oirriT fa in «hm »»v
! (host exYintaJHi g
pains, sllays IntlamAlion, «ni cur»H i'«4cvs
linris,-whrtlierirf'-'tha Lunga, »Stoioui'ji,'-f If w
vis. Oi- otbtr glaada or organs, by oik appli
cation. - .. '* * ■ ‘ [. f
In fronfMke to twenty minutas, ne matter
how violent or excruciating the psi. the
Hhenmatic, Bedridden, lutirm,
Nervous, Neuru
aat* may auffrf. * c < '■ ■ • i TA NARUS!„ .
The appitralion us the Keudy ivwli. r.w>; he
parlor parts*heretltat^asii-orditiieuityve* • u
will afford ease and euinfui t. -,,^0
Twenty drop* ta half a tuiablxf
will in a few moments cure Ciaiupa, Spasms
Sour Stomach Heartburn. Sick Utadatiie
Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Wind in the
BoweU, and a Internal Pains. 9H a:1
Travelers shoulA always carry a bottle of
Kadway’a- Beady Belief witM tbtfm. A few
drops in water will prevetw.;4ickii»s» Or pnins
from change, of Water if m- b*tn4** Allan
French Brandy or Bitters as a stilnulopij
FEVER AND AtilT . ad ,
’Fevaraud Ague.gured,lor.fifty W
is not a remedial aged iu this world was
cure Farei and Ague, and all other MaSicc,
Bilious, Scarlet, TypM^.^elfow, ai £ %her
Feyers(aided by Badway's fills) so i|iii?k as
Bad way’s Beady Relief. Fifty centra Ml lie-
HEALTH !' BEAUTY !!
Strong and pure rich bl'i"d— increase of tl. sb
atw weight—clear skin auA bfauTi/ul
cnmp'cxion seenfed to all.
DR. ..RAD WAY’S
SABSAI’AHILLIAV
Ha, made the most astonishing cures so .(nick
sarapidare (bo changes nn
, . dergocs, uuder the inffnence 'of
' • >
• ' aJMI i<> ,RHH 1 ■ ■
Every day ;hi Increase in Flesh
And Weight is SMi anirP'Ht.
ihi aHK.tr moan trir kilt tests
■ • .Every drop of fhetSarsaparitian Kcmilvi-i t
communicates through ike IJlcod, Sw.at,
Urine, uud other ffuids aud juiees ufiihe sts
tem the rigor of life, fur it rep.iiis t>■<- e a-t.-s
of the body with ni vr •ritf r *4Md'{n)t i 6ftM'. f
ula, Cousnmpiior., UiKßtlula,- tlis
VWeta in the .th.-oat, Mopib, Tumors.
Nodes in the Gliiuds and otlo-r’-Vn'! the
system, Sore Eyes, Srrnniormi*' disc In. ... *
from the Ears, and the ,y.er.'t. iy tjue'J < Suiu
diseases, Krfipli.ins, Fever Sores, A'caV-i iirad,
lti>'g Worm. Salt Kheiniv, ErvsijK-li.V,'A 111c
! Black Spots, ».'orn*> m' liit bj, ,i,. .'iurneis,
; Cancers in the VVoipb, and aij 'V',(Uei ( u gai and
' painful discharges. Night "S.i Jilts, ‘i/L- of
Sperm and ail wastes of: tiue iife priiYeipl.
are within the cura ive, range of tbisi. u.ondi-r
]of Modern Chemistry,' aud 5 aKw davS uso
will prove to using 11 for cither of
! I.ese forms of disease."-its potent power to
I cure them.
! A r ot only does She Sarsapar Ilian Kosolvei.t
i excels all known renipdtiU ngejvs iu tie cure
of Chronic, Scrofulous, Constitutional, nnd
Skin diseases; but it is the only positive euro
for Kidney and Bladder ConipTainis, Urinary
Had Womb diseases. Gravel. Diabetes, Dropsy
I 'toppage of Water, Incontinence of Urine
trigbt’s Disease, Allmmini ria, and in all <a
[ ses,where iliero are I'rickdu,, nlcppsits,,qi ttie
water is thick', ch uly, nixed .with suhsta.iccs
ok.- thewhiteof an egg, or thWad., like.while
ilk, or there is a morbid, dark biilieiw an
pcaranco. end w pitc bone-dust deposits, and
when there is a pricking, .burning sensation
I when missing war. f, and pain In Hie J~,, :l of
1 he Back and along the Loins.
DR. RAD WAY’S
PERFECT IM .U,.Vi l\ I. PILES.
perfectly tasteless, e.cgantly coated with sweet
gum, purge, regulate, purify, ci«anse, and
strengthen. Bad way’s Fills, for the cure of
all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels,
Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Head
ache, Constipation, Ce»liyeness v lndigestion.
Dyspepsia, Billiousness. Bilious Fevyy, In
flammation of the Bowels, Riles, and" all Da
rangements of the Internal Viscera. War
ranted to eflect a positive cure. Furely Veg
etable, containing no mercury, minerals, or
deleterious drugs.
Observes the following symptoms resulting
from Disorders of the Digestive Organs:
A few doses of Radway's Pills win’ free tho
system from all the nbore naim and dMOders
Price, 2ocents per Box. Soipjy Druggists
Read “raise and True.” Send ope'T le
stamp to Rsdway & C.>, Nr 87 MhtffeH Lam*
New York. Information wo.rth thousands wil
besentyou.
r July 4 187 U ofljly
. ■ . Bksn
Wholesale Drug House
ALSO
Warranted Fresh and Gcnhihe
g-arden,
AND
GRASS SEERS,
nsHmo TAonat ac., &c.
PLUMB Sc LEITARIr,
Aagusta, • t
n oct. JO 1871. Si Pm
I• i.t/t if7l>- • .4-vtiTyy -•ntyj-L _ 1
.* • -< JL. jor
• '■ 1 ■ ‘
: "• a
5. ''■ : >’»• t iu“
- “ : 't ; pf A
W
*. . p-..vT'.d’.T .'fTuiti -
• .t •• 1 : ■ 1 'fi (ts.--. • *.
.
VKKY PERSON admits that a
" COOKING STOVE
is inilcsp.-hs.-ihle Inn well leguland nnd ico
nnmicpl fam rT v. TANARUS! er-for"it'o n,. .h-lny in
getting one ; I ut y.i cifr etly t
I?, Tv . F CL], E R T O N
and th«
«PH!LANTHROPrST,’
“CHIEF COOK,’*
o r
“COTTON PLANT.”
D- t ■ FTTTLERTO'Nr
itove and Tin Ware Dealer, osar Ja«. T| Both
well Oct. 6 3d/y. n