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A _ . .h .. = 1 AKISS4-TTHE DOOR We were standing in the doorway, My little wjfte and I? .\ * ' The golden son upon her hair F6lfdown so silently; A small.white hand upon my anft, . What could I ask for more, She kindly glance of lqriug eyes, - >As she kissed me at the door. I kntfwshe lores with all her heart fhe ono who stands beside! And the years have been so joyous Since first I called her bride! WeSre "hail so macfa of happiness Since wc met in years before, Buf'lhe happiest of all wes ? WfL .H -l> n l.liu./l mA A t tkfl .IAAA Tf auu DUC AlOOCU 1UV f?w fcUV MVV4Who care^for wealth of land or gold^ j. Of:fame or matchless power ? It doeaVol give The happiness Of just one little hour With one who lovesmE as her life? .'a : She says she "lovermo more"? * And I thought she did this looming. When she kissed me at the door. . At timer it seems that all the world ' With all its weslth of gold, Is yerf small and poor indeed, Compared with what I hold ! And,' when the clouds hang grim and dark, , .L'ohly think the more , Of . /one" who waits the coming step To kiss me at the door. i If she lives till age shall scatter iV * Th? frost npon head, < licsow she'll love me just the same ?- As 4 he morning we were wed; (OButilthe angels call her, And if she goes to Heaven before, I shall know her when I meet her? For she'll kiss me at the door. v Fodder Pulling. EXPERIMENTS SHOWING THE INJURY DONE. Tff e referred in a Jate issue to the questionable jpolipy of fodder-pulling, and of depending for supplies 01 forage on the blades saved-from the corn crop. It has been frequently stated that the injury done* to the corn by pulling the blades off at the usual season, is greater than the worth of the fodder. The matter has never been accurately determined by any general system oftf experiment,- winch, owever, it is well worth while to do, and while every planter who would 'learn the truth should test the question for himself. ; ; An infolliorAnt flffantp'r nf ViroininL D. R. HarrissoD, of fhince George County, i some years since instituted careful tests to ascertain the loss in weight of clean corn by stripping the blades at the usual time of fodder-pulling, -and also by the practice of topping corn above the ear, as the usual Virginia custom after the' ear is well-filled. ' * '* Rows of equal length, twelve rows making an acre, the average weight per Tow of clean corn is given -as fojlows": i lbs. per row. Four rowB, blades polled to top t...* 121 Four rows, stripped?jd topped at same time ......134 Four rows, topped, blades left below the ear .7. .............139 Four rows, blades on whole stalk 161 Six rows, blades pulled to the top 88 Six rows, bin des-left. 125 On. ?rtr otnnned f/vrta cnf. tnn ilmrc VU^ iVff J UV*?|/J/VUkj ?v? ?J" later ......90 One row, blades all left...r 142 One row, stripped, tops left ten"day?...,..114 One row, blades all left...-. 122 The vMs in^thiff experiment being long and the whole covering several acres of land, producing over twenty bushels per acre, the test is a valuable one. It indicates a considerable^less in every instance of comparison, by folder-pulling. lWe": have also the report of another experiment of the same nature made a good many years ago by Mr. George Seaborn, of Pendleton, S and published in the Greenville Mountaineer at that time. . Mr. Seaborn tested on twelve -short rows of corn as uniform in every respect as possible,-as follows > I Rows 1,,4, T, and 10 were left with all r <18# blades* on, when mature *nd dry, shelled out 7J lbs., measuring 4 pecks, 1 gallon 2 quarts and 2? pints. ?_Ro?r?$j 5,.8-and 11, were stripped of Vrf l : -J e r_.i uieir uiouco at uic uautu pvriuu iur iuu'^der-piilling, and shelled out 55 lbs. only, and measured 4 pecks and $ pint. The fodder from these two rows, when cured, weighed 18 lbs. which added to the 55 makes only $ lb. more, than the clean corn from the rows on which the blades were left. The remaining rows, 8, 6, 9, 12, Mr. Seaborn left until the blades were dry up to the earj .and on some stalks even to thn top, then eat up at the roots and shocked in, the field till the other corn vrttsi /gathered. It was then hauled in and ,&hucked, and shelled out 701 lbs. measured 4 pecks, 1 gallon, 2 quarts and 1 pi^h . 'This last result corroborates that of the first four rows, and the whole testimony, of the experiments is strongly to letitel effect/that by pullingithe blade fodder we lps>e iq weight of the corn almost Tf[ 'T-.v . i_ _ p i.i From the Carolina Farmer. Grafting?Manures?Grain Crops. Mews. Editors: For the benefit of those, who intend starting orchard^ J will give you my experience in grafting apple and pear trees. I sow seed occasionally, but not enough for the demand. I do not, however, lack for roots upon which to graft. These I obtain as follows: in digging up trees to be transplanted, there are a great many roots that get bruised. These should be trimmed off with care and cut in pieces four or five inches in length. When the buds begin to swell, say the latter part of March, I cut off my sprouts of last year's growth about three or four-joints in length!? Graft these upon the roots above mentioned and set out with. the joint one inch TKam tPA??lr 4-r\ UI Ull'iU ill LI1C giuunu. JLUCU n via IV keep down the weeds and grass, earthing up lightly every week.# I never lose more than ten per cent, of my grafts treated in tliis way. If the weather should be dry, water the grafts and lay a plank on either side of the row so as to keep the ground moist, cool and mellow. If more than one sprout should come on a single graft, it should be trimmed or pinched off carefully. Peaches, I always plant, never grafting. I transplant them when small, which causes them to grow more thriftily. November or February is the best tinje to transplant. So much for grafting. Let me add a word about manure as it is a matter of the greatest importance to the successful farmer. There is no farmer who may not by judiciously employing his fspare time, add largely to his manure heap, and also to his corn pile and cotton bales. Keep your stables well littered with muck, leaves, 6traw, fence scrapings and ditch banks. This will make your fences last longer, and your ditches perform their functions better. * Keep your cattle yard well littered with leaves and mud. By this means a large quantity of excellent mannre may be made. This is a matter much neglected by fanners generally.? One would think from the careless manner in which cow manure in our country is permitted to go to waste, that it is .worthless. To think so would be to make a very great mistake. "" Further, each family should have a pen or sink" into wliioh the refuse of the yard, viz; chips, leaves,.soad suds,slacked ashes, and sweeping should be thrown to mix and decompose, thus forming an excellent fertilizer. " I advocate the raising of abundant supplies of provisions for home consumption ,pn each plantation. I believe in sowing wheat, rye and oats on lying out lands. Labor is too uncertain to admit of our depending on cultivated crops exclusively. In this way we can raise more and better stock, enable ua to make more manure, which in turn will enable us to raise better crops of corn and cotton, and to improve our lands and live more.at our ease. The practice of hiring a large number of laborers to cultivate barren fields in cotton, neglecting the production of grain, and purchasing provisions, will luring us to bankruptcy unless discontinued. I will close by. sayings that you can make any use of these remarks hastily'thrown together you may see fit, or. send them to the waste basket. Yours, respectfully,1 . John B. Garris. - i Tlie Crop Prospectr Throughout our entire trip, June 8, 9, There is no. work on the farm or plantation "khore troublesome than fodder. puIUjigv- and none in which there are more ^i^^nd. anxiety. and losses from bad Wfea^ef*^tb&rrJ fodder-pulling. If in -_\ "iWditipn itis n - losing business, however successfully done, planters ought to kno^v it. It is to be hoped, some who are careful and competent will make tests during th? coming summer and give others the benefit of the result. * A few acres in drilled corn sown af thick as three bushels por acre on good landj Jtad* grass on wet bottoms, ample oat crops, with pea vines, millet, cral grass, and -a-few %creu in clover, will b( fonidioipay infinitely better in the enc 0 . lhan .confining our forage crfip to the on( ' %em ^fcorn .blades, at the expense of the corn itseff.?Banner of the South. i-t.v-Tff , , Plant largely of Ruta Ba^as. Fron the middle to the last of this month h the proper time. w 10, from Columbia via Augusta, Atlanta, Chattanooga, Huntsville, Tuscumbia to Memphis and thence 20 miles.below on the great river into the State of Mississippi, a distance of 720$ the crops were very promising. Returning from 8 to 12 days after, a wonderful rapid growth could be marked as having taken place. Not a single field appeared to be suffering for rain. In some sections there had been too much rain, and it was probably on this account that several fields or sections appeared, in danger of being choked with weeds, and grass. Should the rain continue to fall a while longer as it had for some days previous, some of the fields wo saw will have to be given up. But, taking.it all in all, the crops through these sections of those States may be pronounced clean as well as vigorous.? The farmers are in good heart, and all considerate people are surely thankful for this great goodness to the Father of mercies. The best remains to be told, via: The general and manifest increase of the number of broad acres appropriated to corn. It is hoped that this good sense, which has cost so much and has so long time coming, will not hereafter be choked out by those false figures and facts which generally rule, ana as often "deceive those who attempt to raise cotton to buy, at high prices *and in stinted measure, those provisions which they arc obliged to have or suffer. Who evei saw everything fat on a place where cob ton is king??Christian Neighbor. Brighter Prospects. At no time since the termination of the war between the States have the prosprospects of the future appeared more promising for our people than at thk time. Tho feverish excitement consequent of the overthrow'ofo'urlaborsysteii and the destruction of property values which bred a rashness of risking every tiling to*retrieve, have given place t( calm and calculating plans. Many mei who left their plantations for cities, t< embark in commercial ventitros, have re turned to their first love. Many , plant ers, who have been overcropping for- th< past years, depending upon luck for sue cess, have this season wisely Jaid thei: plapa according to their means. -Fron every portion 01 bur State the gratifying information reaches us that an abundan corn and provision crop will be made!? The fruit crop is a bountiful one, and wil bring a large sum of money into th * f 1 < >; '>. ? X/>* " ; * , .?+ State. Cotton, it is. true, is backward and looks poor, and area planted in Georgia fully fifteen .per cent, less than of last year. But it is too early to predict a failure to any extent of that crop. The prices ruling^iow have given planters renewed hope and energy, and the prospect is very good for the next spring season opening at eighteen to twenty, cents.? The smaller crop will then bring .a larger total sum than the large ' .crop of last season. In addition to the reasons given above, as the prospects ahead <?us, is the fact as we learn from the cotton factors in our citv,that planters, as a class,, have not asked for half the amount of advances this season that they required last year, they have managed with less than half they bought in 1870, and that half has been purchased at fully a third less rate than paid last year. With an abundance of homeraised provisions, comparatively small advances to liquidate, and the prospects of getting a fair price for their cotton, they have cause to look forward with the hope of better days.?Augusta Constitur. tioiialist. ' J Throughout the largest part of the line of the two Pacific Railroads, the banks of the roads are lined with unending rows of sunflowers; likewise the old stage routes, unused, are covered over with millions of the stalks of this curious wild weed. Where they have come from none can tell. One sage philosopher goes so far to say that this portion of our Western Continent was once inhabited by a savage race, who kept immense flocks of chickens, and the sunflower seed formed their universal food. Be it true qj only a theory, the fact still remains tnat the sunflower, though neglected by all cultivators of the soil, is still one of the most useful of. all plants. Its leaves soon grow to a very large size?large enough to be used as a coverincr for vounsr cab bage and tomato plants "when tender.? The stems afford a very good hop or bean pole;.and when dead in the fall, if cut up and kept in-doors, answer very well for kindling wood. Its seeds make a very fine oil, ana superior chicken food. A southern correspondent says the leaves can be plucked on through the summer without injury to the plant, and dried for fodder or fed to milch cows or horses. He al so recommends it as an absorbent for malaria, and as a preventative of fevers near dwellings that occupy low places. Married Without Knowing It.? A Mr. Thomas Cooper, an Englishman, has published an account of his travels in Thibet, which he visited disguised as a Chinaman. Among his stories is the following : He was inst halting for breakfast, after leaving the Thibetan town of Bathangi when a group of young girls, gayly dressed and decked with garlands of flowers, came out of a grove and surrounded himr someoF them holding his mule, while others assisted him to alight. He was then led into a grove, where he found a feast being prepared, and after he had eaten and smoked his pipe, the girls came up to him again, "pulling along in their midst a pretty girl of sixteen, attired in in a silk dress, and adorned with garlands of flowers." "I had already noticed, " Mr. Cooper- continues, "this girl sitting apart from the others during the meal, and was very much astonished when she was reluctantly dragged up to me and made to scat herself by my side; and my. astonishment was considerably heightened when the rest of the girls began to dance around in a circle, singing and throwing their garlands over myself and my companion." The meaning of this performance was, however, soon made - clear to Mr. Cooper. He had been married without knowing it. At first he tried to escape the liability entailed upon him, but such an outcry was made by all the people around that he was forced to carry off his bride. He managed to get rid of her before very long, by transferring her to one of her relations, but even that was not treated as* a dissolution of the marriage. On his way back he was joined by a Thibetan dame, of about thirty year3 old, who announced herself as his wife's mother, and said she had come with the consent of her hus band, to supply hor daughter's placo.? We can well imagine Mr. Cooper's surprise at meeting with this novel proposal on the part of his mother-in-law. 1 No Bait?A superintendent once asked us to take charge of a Sunday school 1 class. " You'll find 'cm rather a bad lot," said he. " They all went fishing last Sunday but little Johnny Rand. He is really a good boy, and I hope his examples may yet redeem the others. I wish you would talk to 'em a little." 1 I told him I would. They were rather a hard looking set.- I don't think I ever witnessed a more elegant assortment of black eyes in my lite. Little Johnny Rand, the good boy was in his place, and f Vmiled on Him approvingly. As soon ? as the lessons wero over I said: . . "Boys, your superintendent tells me f 'you went fishing last Sunday. All. but i little Johnny here. "You didn't go, did - you Johnny:' i "No Sir." , " That was right. Though this hoy is - the youngest among you," I continued, > you will learn from his own lips words of i good counsel which I hope you will all ) profit by." I lifted him on the seat beside me, and - smoothed hist auburn ringlets. 3 . "Now, Johnny, I want you to tell your - teacher and thepe wicked boys, why you r did not go a fishing*with themdast'Sunj ,daySpeakr up loud; now. It was beJ r cause it was very 'wicked, and you. had t rather come to the Sunday school, wasn't - W - ' 1 "No, sir; it was 'cos I couldn't find a no worms for bait I" ^ ^ ^ HENRY T? H ELM BOND'S COMPOUND FLUID Extract Catawba GRAPE PILLS. Component Parts?Fluid Extract Bhubarb and Fluid Extract Catawba Grape Jaicc. For Liver Complaints, Jaundice, Billions Affections, 8ick or Nervous Headache, CostiTenes, etc., Purely Vegetable, containing no Mercury, Minerals or Deleterious Drugs. - M These Pills are the most delightfully pleasant purgative, superseding castor oil, salts, magnesia, etc. There is nothing more acceptible to the stomach. They give tone, and cause neither nausea nor griping pains. They are'composed of the finest ingredients. After a few days' use of them, such an invigoration of the entire system takes place as to appear miraculous to the weak a/T *x*L n1 h or eviainn foam ijUXU llivi f otcu niiviuui c?a ao?aa? 11 vui iui|;i uucuwc or disease. H. T. Ilclnibold's Compound Extract Catawba Grape Pills are not sugar-coated, from the fact that sugar-coated Pills do not dissolve, but pass through the stomach without dissolving, consequently do not produce the desired effect. The Catawba Grape Pills, being pleasant in taste and Odor, do not necessitate their being sugarcoated. Price Fifty Cents per box. IE Henry T. Helmbold's HIGHLY CONCENTRATED COMPOUND Fluid Extract Sarsaparila WiB radically exterminate from the system Scrofula, Syphilis, Fever Sores, Ulcers, Sore-Eyes, Sore Legs, Sore Mouth, Sore Head, Bronchitis, 8kin Diseases, Salt Rheum, Cankers, Runnings from the Ear, White Swellings, Tumors, Cancerous Affections, Nodes, Riokets, Glandular Swellings, Night Sweats, Rash, Tetter, Humors of all kinds, Chronic Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, and all diseases that have befen established in the system for years. Xi Rein* nretmrcd einrpsslv for the nhove com plaints its Blood-purifying properties are greater than any other preparation of Sarsaparilla. It gives the the complexion a clear and healthy color, and restores the paficnt to a state of health and purity. For purifying the blood, removing all chronic constitutional diseases arising from an impure state of the blood and the only reliable and effectual known remedy for the cure of pains and the swelling of the bones, ulcerations of the Throat and Legs, Blotches, Pimples on the Face, Erysipelas and all scaly Eruptions of the skin and beautifying the Cdmplexiou. Price $150 per bottle. IMC HENRY T. HELMBOLD'S CO.VCSNTXATL'D * Fluid Extract Buchu TII? t)EKAT DinUKTIC, Has cured every case of Diabetes in which it has been given, Irritation of the Neck of the Bladder* and Inflamation of the Kidneys, Ulceration of the Kidneys and Bladder, Retention of Urine, Diseases of the Prostrate Gland, Sto&o in the Bladder, Calculus, Gravel, Brickdust Deposit, and Mucus or Milky Discharges, and for Enfeebled and Delitcnded with the following symptoms: Indisposition to exertion, loss of power, loss of Memory, Difficvlty of Breathing, weak.Nerves, Trembling, Horror of Disease, Wakefulness, Dimness of Vision, Pain in the Back, Hot Hands, Flushing of the Body, Dryness of tlje Skin" Eruption on the Face, Pallid Countenance, Universal Lassitude of the Muscular System, etc. Used by persons from the ages of eighteen to 'twenty-five, and from thirty-fire to fifty-five or in the decline or change os life; after the confinement or labor pains; bed-wetting in children. IB. Ilclmbold's Extract Buchu is Diuretio and blood-purifying, and cures nil diseuses arising from habits of dissipation, and excesses and imprudences in life, impurities of the blood, etc., superseding Copaiba in affections for which it is used, and syphilitic affections?in these diseases used in connection with Ilclmbold's Rose Wash. LADIES. In many affections peculiar to ladies, the Extract Buchu is unequalled by any oilier Remedy?as in Clorosis or Retention, Irregularity, painfulnesa or suppression of customary evacuations, ulcerated or Scliirrus state of the uterus, Leucorrhoea or whites, Sterility and all complaints incident to the sox, whether arising from indiscretion or dissipation. It is prescribed exten-. sively by the most eminent physicians anil midwives for enfeebled and delicate constitutions, of both sexes and all ages (attended with any of the aooyc u1bcusc9 ur ujj'iisujo* j p H. T. HELMBOLD'8 EXTRACT BCCHU cure, diseased arising from imprudences, babits of dissipation, etc., in all their stages, at litflc expense, little or no change in diet, no inconvenience and exposure. Itcauses & frequent desire to Urinate, thereby removing Obstructions, preventing and curing Striotures of the Uretha, allaying pain an<f inflammation, so frequent in'this class of diseases and expelling all Poisnous matter. Tjs ' H. T. IIELMBOLD'S Improved Rose 'Wash cannot be surpassed as a Face Wash, and will bo found the only specific remedy in every species of Cutaneous Affection. It speedily eradicates pimples, spots, scorbutic dryness, indurations of the cutaneous membrane, etc., dispels redness and incipient inflammation, hives, rash, moth patches, dryness of the scalp or skin, frostbites, and all purposes for which salves or ointments are used; restores the skin to a state of purity and softness, and insures continued healthy action to the tissue of its vessels, on which depends the agreeable clearness hnd vivacity of complexion so much sought and admired. But however valuable as a remedy for existing defects of the skin, H. T. Hclmbold's Rose Wash has long sustained its principle claim to unbounded patronage, by possessing qualities which render it a Toilet Appcndugc of the most Superlative and Congenial character, combining in an elegant formula those prominent requisites, Safety and Efficacy?the invariable accompaniments of its use?as a Preservative and Refresher of the Complexion. It is an excellent Lotion for Syphilitia Nature, and as an injection for diseases of the Urinary Organs, arising from dissipation, used in connection with the Extract Buchu, Sarsapajilla and Catawba Grape Pills, in such diseases as recommended, cannot be surpassed.? Price $1 00 per bottle. ID Full and fxplicit directions ao'company the .medicines. Evidence of the most responsible and reliable character furnished on application, with hundreds of thousands living witnesses, and upward of 30,000 unsolicited certificates and rccommendary letters, many of which arc from the highest sources, including eminent physicians, Clergyman, Statesmen, fete. The proprietor has never resorted to their publication in the newspapers; he does not do this from the tact tnat ms amcies rank as Standard Preparations, and do not need to be propped up by certificates. Henry T. Helmbold's Genuine Preparation, Delivered to any address. Secure from obser, vation. ESTABLISHED UPWARDS Of TWENTY YEARS. Sold by Druggists everywhere. Ad dress letters for information, in confidence to H. T. HELMBOLD, Druggist and Chemist. Onlj Depots: H. T. Helmbold's Drug and Chemical Warehouse, No. 694 Broadway, New I York, or II. T. Helmbold's Medical Depot, 104 South Tenth Street, Philadelphia. Beware of COUNTERFEITS! Ask for HENRI 1 T. HELMBOLD'S. Take no other. Feb. 2Q.~ 3m. * ' i* , -? f .? ?- . jvup ''T-TT!0~?T*???2!*^ !'* 11 .? '* PtEDMONT & ARLINGTON .* -4m i ida5aa- .w .T Life Insurance Company,* ' .;< ' . * li .1? - :W. i .t^.'.r? ,.Q^" : :=" r - ^ '- J*'""/ !** ' i-'tyrfwiJ BICHMOim, VIRGINIA, - uj&* . -'! 1 "v . . .- f, ? ASSETS, over #2,OO0,O?C 3SBT SEBPEUS, ?ver 7CM!? ^ . POLICIES ISSUED, over - . ^ - E?OU - : 'w"h fiARRtlirflTOy. pRKitMM^ ' - .v J. E, EbWARDS, Tic.-PBMn.Ma V. J. HAETSOOK, Secretary. i, . J.-jr. HOPKINS, T'miimi - y J..B. WOLF, Seprbinxe^RT Aawcu* Z^X"Li " * % < . SOUTH CASOM BMCE OfflCS, AT COLflTIA iC,,, '" Jj* South Carolina National Bank Building. " '* J. P. THOMAS, President. 8. L.- LEAPH ART, Secretary. ^ * Dr. ISAAC BRANCH, Superintendent op Afliaclik^ ''' ~ ~ ^4f-7Ti',& if __ > . Board of Directors.?John McKEnzie, John S. Preston F. W. WaMaa ter, W. B. Cnlick, John T. Sloan, Sr., Dr. R. W. Gibbex, R. C.'Shir?? Tht?jaon Earle. State at Large.?Ex-Governor M. L. Bonham, General M. C. Batltt " * v** General J. D. Kennedy, Colonel T. C. Perrin, Dr. Inme Breath Dr. M. ^ r '** Cook. ' fiil/.sXJ .U .X WE OFFER IN THE PIEDMONT AND ARLINGTON, A SOLID, RELUBUP " LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, thoroughly Southern, in the band* of moo of the bighy eat integrity, with abundant assets, recent risks, the most secure, of aU iimatwauis, " pledged to retain within the State of South Carolina all fcoiaMWH therein, and, indeed, presenting every advantage thnt can be desired. " ,, .. 'Wo confidently appeal to every one interested in Southern prosperity to look to tbefrowa " '1 interest, by sustaining their own institutions, and thereby, ^atabliah that self oenidtoco . t- ( without which thero can be no permanent prosperity. Bear in mind that, already, ever- , $10,000,000 are annually sent North for "Life Iusuranee, taking so maeh e' our strength, and.thereby giving additional power to our competitors. - . - J b Rights of party to non-forfeituro in all its pulicies. Rights of party to reinstatement jeM up policy, and surrender value where "intervention of .arnties" or any other cause cuts tho **": insured off from homo office. This featnre, omitted in pulicies of Northern eoaapeaiee;eeal <' ' cd the Southern people very heavily in the late war, and should make them seek the only c?b- ., pany that provide against such contingency in future. From an official exhibit, it is shown that the Piedmont and. Arlington bads greater.c ' crease of business in I8ti9 over 1?6H tbnu iwy company on this continent. It shews thnt there were only three companies in tho United States that issued larger amountsf risks hsv *' 18b'9 than it did, and only nine companies that issued more policies; also, that, with thrift i; j. accumulated risks of fifteen or twenty years all combined, this company, though ysMg, in nonminf nf i-iwlca in BtOIIlia tncunciu IU imiwwi.* v. . "V. . This exhibit, nmong over n hundred companies, makes the Piedmont and ArGngtoa tto- ?wleading Life Insurance Company, at least of this country. It shows; not only progress, hot caution and economy?its losses being light, its expenses small. ? : PLAN MU TU AL. ' , Dividend paid on whole life policies, forty per cenj.' " ? ' '-l~ *'f Dividends given at end of first year, wbeu oil cash is paid. r-' ' - _*? 1 % All policies Don-forfcitable. , v - H tEAPHAKT, JEFFEBm A RAH80K, *' <3-E3STEiE/AXi .AQ-IEIsFT?,- ' ' .. . " fci "./< t * wm. OLTB UKN, Agent, For Kershaw and Lancaster Counties: - '. w ' . ? ? < '-y bii T. . Msy 12, 1870? \ If WE INVITE THE ATTENTION OF OUR CUSTOMERS AND THt* ,* PUBLIC GENERALLY, TO OUR NEW STOCK OF v"l Drugs, Medicines, Chemical, ~ AlVI> i . v v :rr>f;? ?tr <* VASC7#00l now being received fronbthe Northern Markets, where all have been <ar? iully [selected. Oar Stock is varied and complete, and will be found to contain every art* clo usually kept in our line of business, together with a great variety of FANCY GOODS, . and ARTICLES SUITABLE for Iho HOLXIDJLYS. . * % v * ? Vsr * We purchase for Cash, andean and will Sell u LOw unw Goods can be found in any Market in the State. *'* ?:We inrite an inspection, feeling assured we can give satisfaction. HODGSON & DUNLAP. ?? ? THE POLICY HOLDERS. . ,..., LIFE AND TONTINE ASSURANCE CO., or TM kl SOUTH So. 29 BKOAD ST., CHARIESTON, 3. C. ( ^ J p ?r S^vS?PV8^ent* GEO. E. BOGUS. Secretary. I V rTT 5 ? P- an<1 Acto??7- JOHN T. DARBY. M. D . Media*! Adviser ' E NYE HllTrHrZr v'- r?- In ^ AUGUSTINE T. SMYTHE, Solicitor. > . res. JAMES CONNER. Counsel. V * **eor8ia- n. A. KINLOCHJf. D. | Local Medical tFIFTY TnntTo * \m nnr ? li-LEBBY, Jh., M. D., } ? A miner*. ... ? of Policy deposited with Comptroller-General for protection * ' More thin ONE MILLION DOLLARS of Assurance applied for. 5? fu knving,|puiplied with nil the conditions of Cbnrter, is now prepared to J uo the usual forms of Life and Endowment Policies on the Cash system. " ^ * ott T>rvr Tr-Tpo f : CASH PREMIUMS! CASH DIVIDERS J taou All policies non-forfeitablc after the payment of ONE Annual Premium. Paid-up PolioieB issued on surrender- of the original for an equitable amount. ,0 Purely MUTUAL! No Stockoolders! All profits DIVIDED among the Policy-Held era. Dividends declared Annually. ^ Dividends once declared are non-forfeitablo, and may be used to n^Uce the'Premium to increase the amount of Assurance, or to make the Policy self-sustaining. Dividends Jeft with the Company, howeVer applied, may bo uied, ia case of need, to pay Premiums. Investments confined by Charter to the most solid and reliable Securities. . i.-, ? Putronize the only Life Assurance in.the State, and keep your MONEY AT HOME. WARREN R. MARSHALL, Agent, Dr. O. J. Shannon. Medical Examiner, Camden 8. O.