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LEGAL ADVERTISING.
All advertisemen tee minating from pablicofflcea
will be charged for in atrict accordance with an act
hr the General Assembly of Georgia—75 centsfor
hundred wordsfor eachof the flrstfour insertions,
and 35 centa per 100 words for each subsequent
insertion. The eash muat accompany copy of each
aivnrtiaoment.uulesadiffarentarrangements hare
been mads.
JOHN H. HODGES, Proprietor. Devoted to Home Interests and Culture. - JL‘ 4V O DOLliAUS A Yea** in Advance.
yol. xvn.
PERKY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24,1887.
NO. 8.
,ggbe:
Correnpotidencirtr'.italnlngltelnapfi
calnews.btieSy told, is eernoMy db‘
sections of Hobstoh O'odntj. Th
Hoas-JocnxaLwinbe alwai'shfc
cuwion o: any subjeittonbhlng th* general, wal
fareol our people or,country. In this sohnWlel
tbcedltorafcsertstbhUbfe viowfe of eorrhfepoatten t
muu be Uei<la»di4tiu\-i frota his o>n; ahlaaa h
axprcseljcoincideliVitL’th'em. ThS editorfmrUe
claims the right oi being the* upretn.J udge of M
worthiness of all ciuuiuuntciitiba.tb shtertha o#
umns of hie paper; lie will take issue With i
pond ent whenever tKeenbiSct cteHkfblwacl
Article, of a peWb!i»!chiirafcter%ni be i .
unlbS.eutirely unobjectionable. Any article aill
eating q rerBoi. Thrb'ileo iniinl bb paid for alt*
rattbl tsiiccn,, aline.
ACCOUNTS;
AllAcStihnts. tor fubscrlptien. A4r
Job Work. ars dua on demand, ablest efi
proiidedfor bjr apeeialcentrati.
Commercial Job Work eatiafghtarU j ---frit
ah&LtgalhlankihspteanttBntlfoa hand.
WHATAiLSTHEKftneW?
Tho Average length of life De
creasing—Not Pestilence—
Not Famine—All our
own Fault.
Modern Cooking and Mod
ern Living have brought it
on. It comes upon us una
wares. i. The patients have
pains about the chest and sides,
and sometimes in the back.
They feel dull and sleepy; the
mouth has a bad taste, especi
ally in the morning. A sort
of sticky slime collects about
the teeth. The appetite is poor*
There is a feeling like a heavy
load on the stomach; sometimes
a faint, all-gone sensation at
the pit of the stomach which
food does not satisfy. The
eyes are sunken, the hands
and feet become cold and feel
clammy. - After a while a
cough sets in, at first dry, but
after a few months it is at
tended'with a greenish colored
expectoration. The patient
feels tired all the while, and
sleep does not seem to afford
any rest After a time he be
comes nervous, irritable and
gloomy, and has evil forebod
ings. There is a giddiness, a
sort of whirling sensation in
the head when rising up sud
denly. The bowels become
costive; the skin is dry and
hot at times; the blood becomes
thick and stagnant; the whites
of the eyes become tinged with
yellow; the kidney secretions
becomes scanty and high col
ored, depositing a sediment
after standing. There is fre
quently a spitting up of the
food, sometimes with a sour
taste and Sometimes with a
sweetish taste; this is fre
quently attended with palpi
tation of the heart and Asth
matic symptoms; the vision be
comes impaired, with spots be
fore the eyes; there is a feel
ing of great prostration and
weakness. -> All of these symp
toms are in turn present It
is thought that nearly one-half
of our population has this dis
ease in some of its varied forms.
{Shaker Extract- of Roots (Sei-
gel’s Syrup) changes the fer
ments of the Digestive organs so
os to convert the food we eat into
a form that will give nourish
ment to the feeble body, and
rood health is the consequence.
The effect of this remedy is
simply marvelous. - Millions
upon millions of bottles have
been sold in this country, and
the testimonials in favor of its
curative powers 5 are over
whelming. Hundreds of so-
called diseases under various
names are “the result of indi
gestion, and when this one
trouble is removed the othei
diseases vanish, for they • are
but symptoms . of & the real
malady.
Testimonials from thousands
of people speaking highly of
its curative properties prove
this beyond a doubt.» Sold by
druggists.
TO ADVERTISERS!
For a check for $20 we will print a ton-line ad
vertisement in One Million issues of leading Amer
ican Newspapers- TliiB is at the rate of only one-
fifth of a cent a line, for 1,000 circulation! The ad
vertisement will be placed before One Million dif
ferent newspaper purchasers;—or Five Million
Headers. Ten lines will accommodate about 75
Words. Address with copy of adv. and chock, or
send 30 cents for Book of 175 pages. GEOEGE P.
HOWELL AGO., 10 Spruce Street, New Tork.
W. C. DAVIS.
ATTORNEY at LAW
PERRY, GEORGIA.
Loans on farms made on
reasonable terms.
repair work.
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Sewing Ma
chines, Guns, Pistols; Locks, and Fnmi-
ture of aUkmds repaired inbeststyle and
■promptly. Gold Rings made to order.
Price and quality of work guaranteed to
give satisfaction. Respectfully,
„ , u F. A. Jobson,
Sept. oO tf. Perry, Ga. .
Pay now what you owe The
IIojtE Journal.
How our -Teas Are Made. I drying, and to the action of the ox-
* i gen of the air upon the juices of
^ ... ; the leaf, and especially upon the
The great tea growing districts) astringent principle during this
in China are chiefly confined to J exposure.
the regions between twenty-four- For the purpose of giving special
degrees and thirty-five degrees flavors to the different varieties of
north latitude, and 115 degrees and
122 degrees east longitude. The
great commercial mart of Haukaw,
therefore, is near the geographi
cal centre of-this vast area; and it
was during my visit there, in 1881,
that I had the most favorable op
portunities for observing the cul
ture of the tea plant, and the pro
cess by which its leaves are pre
pared for foriegn markets.
The plant is cultivated on the
southern slopes of hills, in well
watered soil. A new plantation is
made by sowing the seed in small
boles at convenient distances apart,
say from four to five feet, two and
four seeds being placed in each
hole to secure a certainty of “a
stand.” The first crop is usually
obtained in the third year, when
the shrub is yet very small.
When it is seven or eight years
old, its leaves become hard and
woody and is cut down. New
shoots will then spring up from
the roots, and bear fine leaves in
great abundance. This process is
repeated from time to time, until
the plant dies out, which takes
place at about the age of thirty
years.
Although the plant is an ever
green, its leaves can be gathered
only at certain seasons. The first
picking takes place early in April
when the new leaves begin to
burst from their buds. This is
the best tea, the veritable “Young
Huysen” of the finest quality; so
fine in fact that is it very rarely ex
ported, because it is more liable
to lose its, flavor by the sea voy
age than the older leaves. The
ordinary picking, therefore, begins
about the second week in May,
just after the spring rains. Later
on, a third picking takes place, the
produce of which is, however, very
inferior and is usually sold at a
very low price. When freshly
picked from the shrub, at any of
the seasons named, the leaves pos
sess nothing of the odor or flavor
so peculiar to them when dried,
these properties being afterwards
developed by the roasting which
the leaves undergo in the process
of drying*
It is a popular belief in the
United States, that the “green’
and “black” varieties of tea are
the product of different species of
plants, whereas, both varieties are-
prepared from the same leaves,
which may be made to yield
“green” or “black” at will. In the
process of drying, the leaves are
roasted and scorched in such t
manner as to induce many chemi
cal changes in them, the result of
vhich is the production of all the
varieties of flavor, taste and color
by which the different kinds of
teas are distinguished.
Thus, to produce “green” tea,
the leaves are roasted in pans al
most immediately after they are
gathered from the shrub. After
being about five minutes over the
fire, the leaves become moist and
flaccid, and give out a good deal
of vapor. While in tins state,
they are placed on the “rolling ta
ble” and carefully rolled with the
palm of the hands. Then they
are returned to the pans, and kept
in motion by stirring with the
hands. In about an hour or so
they become dried, and their color,
at first a dull green, soon bright
ens and remans as we see it in the
newly opened chest at the grocers.
For “black” teas, the leaves are
spread out in the open air for
sometime after they are gathered,
and farther tossed about until they
become limp and flaecid. They
are then roasted for a few minutes
only, after which they are taken
out of the pan and rolled. After
this, they are again exposed to the
air for several hours while in a
soft, moist-state. Lastly, they are
dried slowly over charcoal fires
the teas of commerce, odoriferous
plants and flowers are very free
ly used, the cowslip and the sweet
scented olive being the most com
mon. Bat none of the fine teas
intended for the domestic markets
in China, are ever thus tampered
with. If they were there would
be no sale for them. The native
must have his tea pure and sim
ple. He even objects to having
the leaves rolled. So that, the
wasting and rolling process as well
as the perfuming were inventions
of a shrewd people who thus cater
to what they consider a depraved
taste of “the barbarian.”
William L. Scruggs.
Atlanta, Ga.
A Danger and a Duty.
Savannah News.
The remarkable exhibition of
industrial spirit and manufacturing
enterprise in Alabama and Tennes
see suggest a danger and a duty
which ought to receive the earnest
consideration of those who have
at
Why We Have Tender Beef.
Charleston News and Courier.
“Talking about beef and the
stock law,? said Mr. George I.
Cunningham, who has been in the
beef and cattle business nearly all
his life, “the News and Courier
hit the nail on the head when it
stated that the passage of the
stock law has done more to pro
mote stock raising in this State
than anything that has been done
for the last half century. Since
that law was passed there has been
a gradual improvement in the
quality of cattle in this State, and
1 see no reason why the raising of
stock should not become a very
important and remunerative busi
ness in South Carolina.
“Now, see here! About ten or
twelve years ago you couldn’t get
a tolerably respectable piece of
beef in theCharleston market. Now
tough beef is the exception. Ten
years ago we had to go to Tennes
see and Western North Carolina
for beef that was at all edible.
Now we get it from South Caroli
na. And why? Simply because
the stock law compels people to
take care of their cattle. If there
is any additional expense in pen
ning up cattle, it is abundantly
met in the increased price paid
for it when they bring it to mar
ket.
“South Carolina can crowd the
Tennessee and North Carolina cat
tle out of the market. She can do
more. She can equal the Western
beef, not perhaps for export, but
certainly for home consumption.
In this State a drove of cattle
properly pastured will have to be
fed two or possibly three months
out of each year. In Tennessee
they have to feed them five months,
and in States father west and
north from six to eight months
out of the year. In the rich pas
ture lands of lower Carolina as
fine cattle can be raised as in the
blue-grass country, and all it needs
is a little care and atttention. I
think the stock law secured this,
and I know that it has been the
means of bringing good beef to
the Charleston market.”
A scientist has been making a
careful estimate of the many mill
ions of birds in America, and says
that if even 5,000,000 were des
troyed annually for the purpose of
obtaining ornaments for ladies’
bonnets, the loss would not be per
ceptibly noticed.
The people of Pennsylvania will
soon hate an opportunity of vot
ing on the prohibition question.
A bill has passed both branches
of the legislature submitting the
question to the people.
Both Alabama And Tennessee
are preparing to submit the ques*
tien constitutional amendments
prohibiting the manufacture or
sale of intoxicating liquors within
their limits to a vote of the peo
ple.
Stronger After Than Before
Confine'ment, Jabor shorter and
less painful than on two former
til the black color is well brought jonB . |S§| Hg|SJ x
oat Hence the cobroad toto- for HofteA ^
gmshrng flavor of the Hack tea, L,; ta a Ia<Sy in South Carolina,
is merely due to long exposure to g AddreBS |jg Bradfield
the atmosphere in the process of}Ga,
'
the welfare of the South
heart.
Alabama and Tennessee are deal
ing with great figures. It is
uncommon thing to be told that this
iron property in Alabama, or that
coal property in Tennessee, is val
ued at ten thousand oi ten million
dollars. This, together with the
rush of people to these two states
bent upon speculation, is likely to
cause an exaggeration of values.
Wherever a similar exaggeration
has occurred in other sections
the country, an injurious collapse
has invariably resulted. The
trouble with speculation is that
whenever it takes firm hold upon
people it seems impossible
shake it off until, in the expressive,
slang of the day, the bottom drops
out.
There is another view of the
matter. It is easy to mark up the
price of lots in Birmingham or
Chattanooga, or to hold iron and
coal properties in the mountains
of Alabama, and Tennessee at
many times their actual value, but
to do so will rooner or later deter
investors from investing and delay
development. The result is easily
seen. There will be an end to
booms, and genuine industrial and
manufacturing progress will re
ceive a depressing check. Nobody
who wishes the South well would
like to see such a check. To pre
vent it, wildcat schemes should be
discouraged, and investors should
be fairly treated.
Lured by the promise of rapid
ly acquiring fortunes, a by no
means inconsiderable number of
Georgians have gone to Alabama
and Tennessee and invested their
money. They, of course, have the
right to do as they please, but it is
none the less true that they, and
all other Georgions, owe a duty to
the State of their birth. In no
respect have Alabama and Tennes
see the advantage over Georgia.
Daring the short time that the
Geological Bureau was in opera
tion it was demonstrated that
Georgia has a wonderful wealth of
iron and coal, not to flientidn other
minerals. The mountains of North
Georgia hold within their rugged
bosoms untold riches, while the
fertile farm lands of Middle Geor
gia and the almost inexhaustible
forests of South Georgia contain
riches fully as great. It is the
duty of Georgians to stay at home
and develop the resources of their
state. Patriotism metas some
thing moie than the mere defense
of life and home. It means the
up-building of the land of one’s
nativity, and to this task Geor
gians should not hesitate to ad
dress themselves. Why follow
the will-o’-the-wisp promise of
fortunes in Alabama and Tennes
see, when fortunes may be had in
Georgia for the asking? The
same amount of labor expended
upon the mountains and the farm
lands and forests of Georgia that
is expended in Alabama and Ten
nessee, will bring fortunes just as
readily here as there. Moreover
these fortunes will be acquired
without the necessity of sundering
home ties, and while they enrich
their possessors, they will add to
the greatness of the State.
Novelties in Legislation,
Excitement in Texas-
Great excitement has been
caused in the vicinity of Paris,
Tex., by the remarkable recovery
of Mr. J. E. Corley, who was so
helpless be Could not turn in bed,
or raise bis head; everybody said
he was dying of Consufcption. A
tried bottle of Dr. King’s Ne.w Dis
covery was sent him. Finding re
lief, he bought a large bottle rind
a box of Dr. King’s New Life
Pills ; by the time he had taken
two boxes of Pills said two bottles
of the Discovery, he was well and
had gained In flesh
pounds.-_
Trial Bottles of this Great Dis
DembresVs Monthly Migailne for March.
Switzerland has recently enacted
two laws, the operation of which
will be watched with the keenest
interest all over the world. One
is graduated taxation. This ap
plies to incomes. Mefe laborers,
and those who make a bare living,
are hot taxed at all; but the larger
the income, the heavier the tax.
Thus, a man ih Receipt of §10,000
per annum pays relatively more
than one whose earnings are $5,000
or less. The object of the law is
to discourage large accumulations
of property. Indeed, it is a pun
ishment to a man for being richer
than his leilows. In otir Country,
the rich who do not own real es
tate are practically exempt from
taxation. Personal property es
capes nearly all exactions. The
average working man, through the
operations of the tariff, pays al
most as much to the government
as does Jay Gotild or any of the
Yanderbilts. This same Mr.
Gonldis supposed to be worth
$150,000,000, of which, perhaps,
$500,000 is in real estate* Rut the
latter is taxed far more heavily
than all the rest of his vast person
al property, which is in bonds and
stocks. In Switzerland Jay Gould
would be forced to pay an enor
mous sum annually, because of
this vast mass of personal proper
ty, which is entirely untaxed in
the United States. But it is yet
doubtful if the graduated income
tax will work Yell in Switzerland.
Every rich, enterprising man, and
large employers of labor pronounce
it unjust. They say they cannot,
or will not, conduct large enter
prises, if they are to be punished
for their public spirit or business
ambition, this graduated tax is a
very favorite one with the so-call
ed labor reformers, rind it has been
indorsed by very high authorities.
Joseph Ghfiinberlain, the Radical
member of the English Parlia
ment, who, his friends claim, may
yet be Prime Minister, favors
graduated income tax in Great
Britain. Prince Bismarck has
given a qualified assent to the
theory that the rich should give
relatively more than the poor -to
the support of the State.
In Hasth to he Rich;
Henry Ward Boecheri
Mteh ht first begin to make a
little; they find out how easy it is;
they enlarge their ambition, and
the conception dawns upon them:
Why am not I one of those who are
appointed to be millionaires?” In
the beginning of life a few thou
sands would have satisfied their
ambition. Now hundreds of thou
sands seem to them bnt a morsel.
They grow more and more intense.
Temptations begin .to fall upon
them. They begin to be tempted
to make a fortune quickly. A
man who is in haste to be rich
does not reflect that he shall inev
itably fall into harm and destruc
tion.
You can no more make money
suddenly and largely and be un
harmed by it than a main could
suddenly grow from a cbiTd’s stat
ure to a man’s stature Without
harm* There is not a gardener
who does not know that a plant
may grow faster than it can make
wood; that cellular tissue may
grow faster than the ligneous con
solidation, and then it cannot hold
itself up. And many men grow
faster in riches than they can con
solidate. This alone is a reason
why men should not make money
faster than they know how to or
ganize it, and themselves to it.
of Exeter,
at the
A Slight Hint.
The car was reasonably well
filled, but the Chicago drummer
had looked out for nulribdr one to
the extent of two seats, while di
rectly in front two ladies, one
with a baby in her arms, were
crowded into one.
Pretty soon the younger of the
ladies picked up a paper lying on
the floor and handed to the gentle
man ( ?) behind, with the query:
Perhaps this is youf newspa
per, sir?”
He took it, remarking: “I think,
it did drop from my seat,” at the
same time glancing at the page,
which was folded in such a man
ner that the heading stood out in
bold relief: “Hog CKdleifi Yery
Fatal This Year.”
The c. d. gave one brief glance
into the sly face of the polite
young lady,- arid wCnt forward to'
smoke.
A French physician Who holds
that groaning and crying are oper
ations by which nature allays an
guish; tells of a man who deduced
his pnlse from 126 to 60 in the
course of a few hours by giving
full vent to his emotions. If peo
ple are unhappy about aiijdbing
he advises them to go into their
rooms and comfort themselves
with a lortd boo-hot?.-
The cholera is prevailing in
Slavonia.
It Is a Curious Fact
That the body is now more sus
ceptible to benefit from medicine
than at any other season.- Hence
the importance of taking Hood’s
Sarsaparilla now, when it will do
you the most good. It is really
wonderful for purifying and en-
thirty-six nehing the blood, creating an ap
petite, and giving a: healthy tone
the whole system. Be sure to
get Hood’s Sarsaparilla; w]
” toiteelf.-
Dr. William Perry,
N. H, Who died recently
age of 98 years, was said to be the
last survivor of the party which
made the experimental trip with
Fulton on his first steamboat, but
it seems that one of the party is
still alive, Col. George L. Perkins,
of Norwich, Conn., who at 98, is
the Treasurer of the Worcester &
Norwich railroad. Col. Perkins
walked most of the distance from
Norwich to Poughkeepsie in his
eagerness to see the wonderful in
vention, and he made the passage
to New York on the boat The
Clermont, he says, was! as much
like a balloon as a modern steam
er.
Every nation, every city, every
town, every community is just
what the people make it A live,
progressive people Will build up a
prosperous town or city even where
the natural conditions are unfavor*
able; while s careless, indolent
population will accomplish little,
however great the natural advan
tages of their localities may be.
An intelligent traveller can form
a correct opinion of the character
of the people of a toWn by passing
through it—Exchane.
Gfenefal Grant was Sfi excellent
draughtsman, but the only oil
painting he put his name to is a
frontier landscape with Indian
figures, which he gave to ex-Sec-
retary Borie. Mr. Borie’s nephew*
who'had become owner 1 of the pic
ture, presented it to Mrs. Grdnt
It is fcfie drily specimen of he'r
husband’s art work iri her posses
sion.
The carrier pigeon service in
Paris is rioW most carefully organ
ized, and the latest census shows
that there are now 2,500 trained
birds, which can tabs' dispatches
in and out of the capital in the
roughest weather. Some are
taught to go to the neighboring
forts and towns, others to distant
parts of the provinces.
Household Hliittt;
To brighteH Carpets; iprikle
With salt before erwflfcjfihg:
When cooking oeaiis, add ones
half teaspbohful of soiaratus.
To poiish a stove, rub With ri
newspaper ilistead bf a bnisli;
If the oven is too hot wllhri bak
ing, place a small dish of Cold Wa
ter in it.
When spofigri oiike becomes dr*'
it is nice to but in thin slices' alia
toast:
A little phiroieiirh added id thS
water With wiiicli waxed of polish:
ed floors are waShfe'd iiriprovel
thier looks.
In nsii g Sldves for Rickies or
preserves the blossom end should
be removed, as this darkeriS th§
liquid with which it used:
To brighten or clean silver of
nickle-plated ware, rub with &
woolen Cloth and tfour.
When there is a Crack iri the
stove it can be nlerided by mixing
risbes and salt with writer:
Salt Rheum
salt rlieuu hte indescribable).- jhb cleansing;
healing, purifying influences of Hood’s Sara?
parilla are uneqiialled by any cihef medicine:
“I take pleasure iii Recommending Hood’S
Sarsaparilla, for it has done Wonders for me:
I had salt rheum very severely, affecting roe’
over nearly my entire body; Only those whe}
have suffered from ibis disease ill Its wont
form can imagine the extent of iny affliction:
Z tried many medicines, but failed io receive?
benefit until I took hood’d . Sarsaparilla;
Then the disease began to subside, tbtf
Agonizing Itch find Paiii .
disappeared, and now I am entirely free trod
the disease. My blood seems to bo thon*'
(Highly purified, and my general health U
greatly benefited.” Lyman All-ex, Sextod
N. £. Churbh, Nohtt Chicago; 111; .
“My son had salt rhetmi bn his hands and
the calves bf his legs, so bad tlqit they would
crack open and bleed. He took Hood’s Sar?
caparflla and is entirely cared.” 3: B; 8ffA&
TON, Mt. Vernon, Ohio.
From lOEi td 135
“I was seriously,troubled with salt rhetaii
lor three years; and receiving xfb benefit from
medical treaihient 1 decided,*) try Hood’d
Sarsaparifla. I am no w entirely fcured of salt
rheum; my weight has Increased from lOSlbt;
to 135.” Mns. Alice Smith, Stamford, Conn:
If you suffer from salt rheum; br any blood
disease, try flood’s Sarsaparilla. It has cured
many others, and will cure yon:
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Soldbyalldrngglsts. £1; sir for J5. Prepared onljf
bjC. 1. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell,
iOO Doses One Dolla#
J. B. McNIECE,
gr-r-WlTg ■■■—»
A. B. SMALL,
macoN, .... gA.7
——DEALER Iif -
Gswaldus NothingeronS is said
to have made 1,600 dishes of turn*
ed ivory, all perfect and complete
in every part, yet so thin and slen
der that all of them were included
at once in a cup turned Gut of a
pepper-corn of the common Bize.
They were so small as to be al-
inost invisible to the naked eye.
They were presented to Pope
Paul Y y
—Zi
All the leading newspapers 6f
the country have editorially com
mended President Clefeland’s
veto of tM pauper pension bill.-
It seems ter be admitted ori All sides
that he lias the courage of- bis con
victions.
To prevent flat-irons from scorch- p]
‘‘ ^ them on A ’ ” ■-”
and Provision!;
Respectfully solicits thenatrofl-'
age of his friends ini Mbasibri
county.
Dec. 30—-tf;
j. to ho.made. Cut tin* ont and re?
■tnrn to us. and we will send ynri
free soxnetbiDg of great vain* anq
_ _ tniKirtancetoyonfltnrill.UrtyMn
business which will bripi; yon in n: ?ro m *n *
cy right away, than anything dje It> this world.'
Any.onecan d-> the .wort anti lire atlipin..; Either
sex; all ages. Somethihg new tfisi jn*t coins zn»n-'
‘ >r all workers. ^We ,wHl stazt yon;, capital not
[ed: This iB one of the important, genuine
chances of a lifetime. These who are aDjhitlotf.i
and enterprising will not delay. Grand outfit free.'
Address THUS & CO., Augusts, Maind. Feb.17
Moral Stride
jpriiir 1887.
Now ready, contains I Colored
Plates, hundreds of Illonra-'
tions. and nearly 300 pages—3X
pertaining u> Gardening and
Flower Culture, and over lid
containing an Illustrated List
reckons how fit-row them, where, the best SEED*:
ij&ff.he procured, with:
PLANTS, ATID BCLIMi
prices of each. , This *
he procured, w
free on receipt of Iff
JBSffl!—| —Jhictcd from the first
order sent us.' Every or.e interestet in a cardan, or who[
desires good, fresh seeds, should hire this work. We.
refer to the millions of 7,ersons who have planted oor
feeds. But.oxi,y.Vick’s Skkds at HraDqcarters.
JAMES VICK, SEEDSMAN.
Rochester. N- T*
GARDEN SEEDS
Direct from the Far
: V/RANTEt 5
Fresh r Pare, and Sure ttf
Grow.-
CnoicE Fl6'>* eb Se£tw, iinpGrfed
from Europe,- a specialty.
Catalogue, with Directions for