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/ l&'.l Almanac* Tor tlie Week. r : KEBBUAKY | I ! SL'X i 8UX iRi«KSj si-rrs Ik 20 Tue*«Jay ... 21 Wednesday 22 Thursday.. 23:Friday.. 24|Satur<iay .. 2.)j8iinday* 20; Monday 6:37j 6:35| 6:34! 6:3:1! 6:32! 5 :*50 d:»l 5:51 5:52i 5:53 5:54i 5:5'»i MOON A 8 5:31 rises 6:43 7:36 8:20 9:23 10:10 Thoughts for the Month. Tl.e following extracts from the 1 *ad- ing article of the February numiter of the Southern Cultivator are of practi cal interest to all farmers: COMPOST. One of the first things to l>e looked after now is the compost heap. Where acids, phosphates ami other chemicals are composted with cotton seed and stable nianue, it is often recommended to put them in alternating layers; this does pretty well, but sometimes the phosphate will cake and become diffi cult to pulverize and mix with the other ingredients when the hill is cut down—a better plan is to mix all the send in contributions u> our agricultural! ingredients thoiouchlj at the . , iiartinent. Manvof 6ur most intelligent no caking will then take place, and, ‘ ‘ " **"*■"’ moreover, the acid iMiosphate being in close contact with the cotton seed and Those interested in farmiep an«l the subjects gerniain to it. are cordially invited dej . _. and successful farmers arc unskilled with the pen; but a« the results of their expe rience are valuaMe, we particularly desire to hear from them, and it shall lie our duty and pleasure to see that their arti>*les make a rcs|>eetable appearance.] | It is thus evident that the pig should have a high place in our agriculture; should be fostered ill everyway; his capabilities studied and pushed; his diseases carefully noted and prevented for he is the most profitable meat-pro ducing anitual on the farm. The pig is an excellent adjunct to the dairy, turning all refuse milk mid even whey, into cash. As he is king of our meat exports, so let us treat him with great consideration. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1883. Milo Maize. This valuable forage plant was in troduced from South America by the Rev. Mr. Pratt of Winnsboro, in 1878, who fir?»t distributed the seed gratuit- ously among his friends; since then however as much as two dollars per pound has been asked for the seed.— It can now he bought of Mr. J. H. Al exander of Augusta, Ga., at twenty- five cents per pound, and probably from citizens of Aiken County, such as Mr. K. C. Satterthwait and Mr. Daniel Orosland for even less. It is really not only a very valuable forage plant, but when the grain is properly prepared makes a most palatable bread—a sample of which was sent to Tiik RncOHDKKoffice some time since from seed grown in the lower portion of this county. The bread is far su perior to corn bread but not near so good as wheat bread, but we judge it to be a very w'holsome article of diet. Mr. Alexander, of Augusta, in an ar ticle to the Sotithem Cultivator states that it will make one hundred bushels to the acre, and from what we have seen and heard of the plant we be lieve him to bo within bounds. The name, “Milo Maize,” is evidently an awkward and misleading misnomer, as the term “maize” belongs exclu sively to Indian corn. Whereas, the plant undoubtedly belongs to the mi me ous family of sorghum:—which lor the sake of convenience may be divided into two groups—thesacharine and nou-sacharine varieties. The “Milo Maize” may safely lie classed with- the doura, broom ami guinea corn, as non-sacharine types of the sorghum family. Its greatest recom mendations arc its ability to withstand drought and its value as a forage plant , for all kinds of stock, especially milch cows. If our mills were prepared to grind the grain and bolt it as they do wheat would be invaluable for human food awl furnish a wholesome compromise between the unpalatable orthodox corn pwic and the wheaten loaf. cultivation is very simple, being planted like the sorghums in drills, but rajuiring no thinning out ipr suc- contfs* If planted for forag^ can ff nit, WhfiB ilone it manure all the time, will rot and dis integrate them more thoroughly than when the several substances ure in separate layers. Ot course the mass must be well wetted and tramped to insure proper fermentation andesca]>e lire-fanging. Touching proportions it may be safely said, that where phos phates are freely used, (as they should be) there is little danger of a farmer having too much manure or cotton seed to mix with them. For cotton, we have found six bushels each of cotton seed and stable manure to one hundred pounds of acid phosphate a very good mixture; but half those quantities of the first two, would he very much better than none at all. If the materials are well mixed when the heap is put up, it is not necessary to tear it down till ready to be hauled t > the field; then it should be cut down vertically, to correct any defect in the first mixing. The heap should not ex ceed four feet in height; if made with perpendicular sides, it is not necessary to roof it; rains will only keep it moist enough, the constant tendency of a heap being to get dry. A layer of rich earth, three or four inches thick, on the top is all the covering that is nec essary. PLOUGHING STPBBIjE LAND. It is customary to break stubble land early in the winter; the practice is a good ope—it saves time in the spring, and such lands are less liable than others- to run together and become in jured by heavy spring rains. There is an additional reason for the practice— vegetable matter, especially the hard, woody stems of weeds, take time to rot and yield up carbonic acid (gastric acid of plants) and plant food. Plough ed in early, then, weeds have time to rot and their products to act upon the unavailable substances in the soil and change them into available food for the comii.r crop. This they could not do, if ploughed jn just as the crop is planted. As very heavy rains arc liable to fall within the next two months, have an eye to them, and see that the old ditches are well opened and new ones made where needed. Bear in mind that a ditch should be cut, not with reference to ordinary or moderate, hut to excessive rains; the latter do nine- tenths of the injury. Old hillside ditches may he quickly and inexpen sively opened by a V shaped imple ment made of 2x12 inch timber, and pulled by a horse, the driver standing on the implement. The same imple ment, with a hillside plough prece ding, will finish up a hillside dithand leave little or nothing for the hoe to do. As a rule it does not pay to sow oats after the middle of this month, except on bottom land; but all the grasses and clover may be seeded down to ad vantage from the middle of February to the middle of March. If the land is already set in grain, run a harrow over it, sow seed an<l then roll thg land. Seed heavily ifjtou desire to save, money. Bran or ground feed is best fed to cows upon moistened hay, it being mixed with the hay all will he eaten together and raised and masticated. But if it is not fed with cut hay it should be fed dry and in small quan tity each time, for if fed alone it is not raised and re-masticated, but goes on to the third and fourth stomachs. If fed in slop it is swallowed without any mastication, and mixed with lit tle or no saliva; but if fed dry it can not be swallowed until it is mixed with saliva, and the saliva assists in digestion- When food is masticated the act of rumination causes the saliva to flow and mix with food. We have experimented, and find that when fed alone dry ground feed is better digest ed than when fed wet.—Stock Journal. The Pickens Sentinel mentions that Mr. J. C. Stribling, of Pendleton, has recently sold his Jersey cow, “Lily of Glenmore,” to Mr. J. B. Turner, of Fairfield, forf 1,100. This is the cow that had a calf on the Fair grounds in Columbia last November, and for which, with the calf, Mr. Stribling, during Fair week, received an offer of $1,200. He still has the calf, and holds it at $350. Mr. Turner lias shown us a specimen of the butter made from this cow’s milk, and it is decidedly a fine article. He made 2}^ pounds from 10 quarts of milk. The farmers of the South need to wake up more fully to the great value and importance of the fruit crop. Jn the little town of Fayetteville, Ark., one firm has paid out over $75,000 for green apples, and another firm nearly $25,000 for dried fruit. And in addi tion to this the latter firm paid out over $53,000 in casli for wheat, eggs, butter, and other farm produce. There is no reason why such traffic as this should not supply our farmers with plenty of pocket money. [nee rout again with the r of the horse or cM^P mil- s we earnestly desire tosee the pply for both man and lieast ly on the increase we hope all our farmers will plant a good patch of Mi lo Maize. ] Home Made Fertilizer. I live on the St. Mary’s River writes Mr. W* P. Horne, of Darbyville, Fla., to the Florida Agriculturist, and in the summer, after my crop is made, and not having much to do on the farm, I take my hoys and rake up two or three hundred loads of top soil in the river swamp and haul it in my cow pens and let the cattle trample it for six or eight weeks during August and September. In October I rake it up in large piles, say five or six ox cart loads in a pile; let it remain in piles until January or February.— About n month before I want to use it, I haul in a lot of rails and make my pens; I then get cotton seed, oyster shell lime and salt. I put in the pens a thin layer of the trampled soil or muck, n thin layer of cotton seed, then some salt, then lime. I continue these layers until I get say twenty-five loads of the muck in a pen. To a pen of this size I put 1,000 pounds of cotton seed, two bushels of salt aud one bar rel of lime and let it remain a month ; in that time the cotton seed is all kill ed aud ready to use. Haul it out on the l?nd at the rate of fifteen or twen ty loads to the acre and put it in drills on any kind of crop, and 1 find it bet ter than the best stable manure, as this does not fire any crop in dry weather, as the stable manure is most apt to do. I have used the river muck without penning the cattle on it, by composting with cotton seed, lime and salt, and find it is splendid manure.— In using this I also use Stockbridgc fertilizer with it and put about two hundred pounds of the fertilizers to the acre with the compost. I find one acre well manured is worth and will make more than two acres half fertil ized. This is the reason 1 am -so suc cessful in farming, 1 feed my land well. The idea is to make the land rich andj keep it so. A great many people visit my farm and ask me “how is it you make so many crops on your land every year while others only make one crop?” This is the very reason 1 keep tin* land rich by manur ing. It is just as easy to make three or four hundred dollars to the acre as it . is one hundred. We must use a little brain as well as muscle, aud keep loikugahead and trv to do a little more than Daddy did in his lifetime. Now, Mr. Editor, if these few lines will only i Largest Yield of CottonNKver Gather ed From One Acre, [From the Southern Cultivator.] By request we have gone through our files and re-publish for the benefit of our readers the particulars of the experiment of Mr. Warthen in nuk ing five bales of cotton on one aero.— This large yield was obtained in Washington County, Ga., in the year 1874; ’The lot was planted with a view to a premium offered by the Georgia State Agricultural Society.— It embraced one and one fourth acres, and the yield of seed eotU>n was 6,891 pounds ;*of lint, 2,332 pounds. The land, according to the journal referred to, had been planted continu ously in cotton from the close of the war to the date of experiment, (1873.) The soil was sandy, with clay subsoil, in cultivation sixty or more years, about half of it an old dung-hill, the other half very poor. The manure applied was 1,400 pounds of Peruvian pnosphate, 60 ox-cartloads of raw pine straw from the woods, 60 bushels of greeh cotton seed and 400 bushels of well rotted stable manure—the last three hauled out in January and strewn broadcast and turned under with a two horse plough ruimingeight inches deep, followed by a sixteen inch scooter in same furrow, breaking in all from thirteen to fifteen inches deep. Put the guano in the furrow behind the scooter, which was therefore cov ered by the next furrow. In February repeated the breaking in same man ner, but not applying any manure. In March repeatetl* ploughing in same manner, crossing the iast ploughing each time. In April harrowed the land twice. On 13th of May checked land three feet each way with small bull-tonge and dropped six or eight seed in each check and covered with foot; variety, Dickson’s cluster cot ton. It was" thinned to one stalk to the hill in June—two to the hill being left in the outside rows. Then plough ed very shallow, just enough to kill weeds, with twenty-two inch Dickson sweep, one furrow to the- row. Did not use the hoe; hacl no need for it. the cotton growing so rapidly as to prevent all undergrowth. THE NEWSPAPER! A BLE, newsy, crood and cheap.— WEEKLY COURIER JOUR NAL. The Courier Journal, (Henry Wntterson, editor), is by circulation and reputation the acknowledged rep resentative newspaper of the .(oath.— As a reliable and valuable newspaper, it has no superior in this country or in the world. It makes earnest, vigor ous war on Protective Tariff Robbery and Morman Polygamy, two evils that blight the prosperity and morality of the United States. It is able, bright and newsy, contains the strongest ed itorials, the most complete summary of the news of the world, the best tel egraphic and general correspondence, full turf and stock reports, market re ports, fashion reports, Talmage’s ser mons, splendid original serial stories and novelettes, poetry department for children, answers to correspondents, etc., etc.; in a word, everything to make it a delight to the family circle, and invaluable to the man of business, the farmer, the mechanic and the laborer. Specimen copies and full descript ive premium circulars will be sent free of charge to any one on applica tion. Subscription terms, postage free, are—for daily, $12; Sunday, $2; weekly, $1.50. Anv oneVuirUnBufoiiw unnrin 5 doll ' “ German Kainit, [Direct Importation.] Peruvian Cuano ! Fresh from the Agent of the Peru vian Government. FISH GUANO ! j i Six to Eight per cent. Ammonia. Nova Scotia LJftsD PLASTER, South Carolina .GROUND PHOS PHATE. tine ground and high grade. For sale by HERMAN BULWINKLE, l KERRS’ WHARF, CHARLESTON, - - 8. C. A. J. Heath, Baker and Confectioner! —and dealer in— GROCERIES, FRUITS, &c. Main Street, - - - Aiken, S. C. H AVING purchased from Mr. S. P. T. Fields his Bakery and stock of goods, the undersigned re spectfully solicits a share of the pa tronage of the citizens of Aiken. A. J. HEATH. I Jan. 30, 1883. ( THORNE, DEVENEY & CO.. HHRDWARE, CARRIAGE MATERIAL, MILL SUPPLIES. Agents for Champion Mower and Reaper, Roland Chilled Plows, Oriole Chilled Plows, Barb Wire Fencing, Howe Scales, Diamond Cotton Plows, Cone Cotton Press, Rubber Belting, Farm and Church Bells. Oor. Broad and Washington sts., Augusta, - - - Ha. FOR SALE. S trawberry Plants in any qu«n- tity desired and of twenty varie ties, at 25cents per dozen, $2p'er hun dred, and $8 per thousand. Address, * R. M. SIMS, Columbia, S. O, NEW SOOT ANO SHOE STORE!! -:o:- JOHN D. HALL No. <>02 Broad Street, (1st Door above R. R. Crossing) AUGUSTA, GA. /)KALFK FV Roots X shoes XahpYhatS :o: A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF CLADIES’,1 [GENT'S,| [WlSSSESl jAliDl jCHILDREN’S) BOOTS -A-IND ALWAYS ON HAND! Flrstclass Goods a Specialty!! C. ZLATTE B egs leave to remind the people of aiken county that he is still the same invincible old Democrat that he ever was, and that the termination of the Egyptian war does not prevent him from paying ;x FOR COITON! He also invites attention to his extensive and well selected stock of DHL" GOODS Roots,jtSHOES^CROOKERYqFAHCYjtOOODS Cigars and Groceries! Which he is prepared to sell a: ROCK BOTTOM PRICES. The."idea is “Quick Sales and Small Profits.” C. KLATTE, corner Main and Curve Sts., Aiken, S. C. BITTB SHO -A1 M (OKI) & DILL’S. : AIM IS TO KEEP THE BEST! A full line of Zeigler Bros.’s Shoes always on hand for : Ladies, Misses and Children. ALL STYLES AT THE LOWEST CASH BRICES! ■ Also Edwin C. Burt’s New York Celebrated Kid and : Burt Kid Button for Ladies, Misses and Children, i All . widths aud spring heels—9 to 13. • ^ ' Both of above go xls we will warrant in every particu- 1 * • : lar. Remember us when In Augusta and call to see our ; stock. ROBERTSON, TAYLOR & CO, COTTON FACTORS AND WHOLES ALE -AND- H. F. Warneke, Baker and Confectioner AND DEALER IN groceries) TOBACCO and CIGARS, ■' TOYS, FIRE-WORKS, Etc. AIKEN, S. C. Commission Merchants! I 1 and 3 Hayne St., - - Charleston, S. C. E. W. Fercival, -Manufacturer of- SASH, DOORS, BLINDS :m: .A. nxr t :e I. s, senbere and' five dollars and a half, will be entitjdd to an extra copy of the Weekly Courier Journal one year, free to any address. Address W. N. Haldeman, Pres’t. Courier Journal Co., Louis ville, Ky. (adv.j D. F. McEwen, WATCHMAKER, JEWELLER AND OPTICIAN! ~:o:- Defonse of the Hog. The Rural New Yorker comes to the defense of the porker, and declares that the pig has been recently spoken of in contempt, when compared with our domesri** animals. But if we ex amine his good qualities at all criti cally we must award him a high place in our agriculture. He is found to produce a pound of product from less food than either cattle or sheep, atid >oo*r fanuer l shaii feel rYch'lv j is > therefore, the most economical ma- ' | chine to manufacture our great corn | crop into marketable meat. Our peo- i pie are becoming wiser every year, jaud exporting less, proportionately, i of the raw material and more of eon- product. If it take seven pounds of corn on the average to make a pound of pork, as is no doubt the case, the farmer begins to see the econ omy of exporting one pound of pork, bacon or lard, instead of seven pounds of corn. The difference in cost of freight makes a fine profit of itself; besides the pound of meat is usually worth more than seven pounds of corn I INVITO the citizens of Aiken and the surrounding country to call and inspect my stock of Jewelry, Watches and Spectacles, which arc of finest quality and sold at rea sonable prices. I am the sole author ized agent for King's Combination Spectacles! which are composed of a combination' frame, set with the finest French pol ished Lens. They dofcnot rust, and are the most desirable in use. • D. F. McEWEN, Main Street, Aiken, S. C. HENRY BUSCH proprietor of the BUSCH HOUSE! Cor. Richland Ave. and York St. -AKI> DEAI.r.K IX— GENERAL MERCHANDISE. Laurens street, Aiken, S. C. $50,000, TO LEND ON “'GILT ED(lE" SECURITY. P ARTIES HAVING MONEY TO invest will do well to correspond with the undersigned. CLAUIIE E. SAWYER, ^ Aiken, S. OPERA HOUSE GARDEN BEN NIESZ, Proprietor. CHOICE WINES, Buss k Stothart, GRAN 1TEVILLE, - - S. C. -DEALERS in- help one i paid for thetimibie of writing it. The Midland Farmer insists that there is a world’s demand for the fat tened healthy porker aud there always ! doused will he. Where the climate isadapted to the, growth of Indian corn, the most pm>fitab!e use it can he put to is in fattening steers and hogs for mar ket. If the farmer cultivating from eighty acres upward, would study these meat problems carefully as to profits in a scries of years, taking into DRUGS, MEDICINES, CHEMICALS, VARNISHES, I’A I NTS, Oils, Glass, Putty, Fine Soaps, Per fumery, Dye Woods and Dye Stuffs generally, Spunges, Brushes, and all articles kept by druggists generally. Ugr Physicians’ Prescriptions care fully compounded. Chas. W. Henson Saloon and Bestaurant. £55" Choice wines, liquors and cigars. Philadelphia ami Cincinnatti Beer. 825 Broad street, Augusta, Ga. Over P. G. Burum «fc Co. LIQUORS, and CIGARS Philadelphia and Cincinnati Beer!! Philadelphia and Cincinnati Beer!! Broad and Ellis Streets, Augusta - - Georgia. PRICES R E I> U C E 1>. ROBT. D. WHITE M A R B L E GRANITE WORKS! PLANS FVRNISHED. ALSO * IRON RAILINGS. 107 Meeting St., cor. Horlbeck’s Alley, Charleston, S. C. NEW ATTRACTIONS AT piEYiusic^ housP OF THE SOUTH! PIANOS, ORGANS. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. I, VIKI1WI1R.IV, Meeting st., near Line st., Charleston, S. C. GREAT BARGAINS -AT THE- Augusta Store! ; 500 cloaks from $1.25 up. 500 doz. Towels from : ; 5c. up; double and single shawls "at panic prices; all : . wool flannels from hi'^c. up; 10,000 yards Kentucky : ; jeans, from 10c. up; Virginia cassimere and jeans just . : received; sheeting and shirting at factory prices; 5,000 : : yards alpaca from 10c. up; 300 doz. ladies’ and gents’ ; : hose, 5c., ^0c., 123-e., 15c.; carpets and window shades : greatly reduced; 9 aiufl0 l 4 sheeting at a bargain; willow : . ware and trunks just received; clothing that must be : : sold; shoes that shall be sold; 9 pounds good coffee for : $1.00; 14 pounds good rice for $1.00. We most respectfully invite an inspection of our stock, with a comparison of prices with other markets. Don’t forget the Augus'ta Store, by the New Court House. J. P. WEATHERSBEE, For J. d. STEEDMAN. WAN DO PHOSPHATE coikcp^isrx'i CHARLESTON, S. C. Office 7 Exchange Street, (in rear of Post Office,; M ANUFACTURE Fertilizers, Acid Phosphate, Dissolved Bone, Ash Mixture, Ground Phosphate (splendidly prepared) and deal in Kainit and all Fertilizer Supplies. Wando Acid Phosphate, the highest grade containing Potash sold in North Carolina last season. Splendid standing in Georgia. Unsurpassed in Soutii Carolina. Col. J. T. Hendeksc.v, the Commissioner of Agriculture for the State of Georgia, who has the Mlb-ial Analyses of the different K inds constantly before him, bought the WANDO ACID PHOSPHATE for use on his farm this year. Wando Fertilizer, the first Fertilizer that was ever made from the South Carolina Phosphate. Its excellence for all field crops is unsurpassed. Official Analyses show our goods to be above their guarantee. Full slip ping facilities by rail and water. Special brands and formulas made to order. FRANCIS B. HACKER, Pres, and Gen. Ag’t. JOSIAH S. BROWN, Treasurer. ALFRED HOLMES, Agent, Aiken, South Carolina. foreign market. The produc- consideration the increased value of; in the his farm over that where the coarse i tiou of pork should be encouraged on grains were sold, he would not l>e long the further consideration that it ear- in recognizing the fact that his true ries off less of the valuable constitu- interests lay in carrying us much live cuts of the soil than beef. The fat pig stock as his land would feed. j contains only three-fourths as much mineral matter per hundred weight as Good Ay endures have been known to give five gallons daily for three months after calving, three gallons a day for the next three months, and for the next three months a half a day. How wou from such a cow compare with that from tsune of the $25 animals which find so fjqnrcMm? . BAZAR ! GLOVE-FITTING! -PA TTERNS!- For sale by Mrs. FORD, Park Avenue. u welgl the fat steer, and only two-fifths as much nitrogen per hundred weight, and therefore the production of a ton of pork on the farm will carry off only a little more than half the fertility Besides, nearly fifty | Noithside Park Avenue, Aiken, S. C. per vent, more to produce it. This i gives in round nundiers the compara-j The best of material used, ami any live effect of producing pork and beef, style of boor or shoe made to order. a gallon amH carried oft' by a ton of beef. Id the profit a ton of beef will require “ J. A. Wright, -BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,- G.H.U.--E.I.O.M.-L.P.Q.S. ) An extended visit among the prin- j cipal piano and organ factories has i enabled us to make the finest selee- | tion of instruments ever brought to I Augusta. I Our stock, which will be replen ished weekly from the best manufact urers. will V»e the largest and most complete in the South. Our prices the lowest, and terms of payment the easiest ever ottered. Sheet Musk*and Music Books! Large Discount from Publishers’ Prices! Best Italian strings, and everything desired in the line of Music! Save money by visiting or correspon- —-—ding with G. 0. ROBINSON k CO. 831 Broad St, - - AyorsYa, Ga, Jas. G. Bailie; Sons -Dealers in CARPETS, Oil CLOTHS, O- WINDOW CURTAINS and SHADES! WINDOW CORNICES and CHROMOS! A FULL LINE OF WAIJ.PAPEHS £ BORDERS! I* c v .♦ - • ■' * CHOICE FAMILY GROCERIES and PLANTATION SUPPLIES! McCORD & DILL, - 914 Broad St. V ~ A. T. DENNING, wholesale and retail dealer in Confectionery, Fruits, Nuts, Etc- -ALSO- Manufacturer of Pure Candy. (Under the supervision of Gko. F. Lamback.) AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. D. W. SEIGLER. GEO. W. CURTIS. IIADB OF LOW FRO ON PARK AHWE. / ! i# H Seigler & Curtis, DEALERS IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE W OULD inform the public that they have a stock of goods unsurpassed for completeness and cheapness, consisting of Dry Goods, Groceries, Clothing, Boots and Shoes!! £5?" We arc adding daily New Goods to our already large ptock. Give us a new trial. Country produce purchased. Seigler | Cui , Next to Passenger Depot and opposite Park Avenue Hotel, n, S. C. | L. FLISCH, Near Lower Market, corner Broad Street, AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. . 44$ Manufacturer of Plain and Fancy S PECIAL attention paid to orders from the cohintry for Wl of any style, price and description. Country merchants bread aud cakes at reasonable prices. Cakes of aU kinds. * < fb C> lied ■M »! ' ’7T O' \ Hardware Dealf [ •• •■ . iers of ImproYel Agrf* Implements. -M L OOK OUT for thei^^^ rt,sen,en , t wIie n they get into their bunds', wo-story brick store! • C. B. CAPERS,) Aiken, S. C.f jC. W. MUNNERLYN, (Augusta, Georgia. CSPElS & MUNNERLYN, W JOBBERS OF j CUTfiB Y & TIN W AIKEN, - S. C. AGENTS for Packing Cd C. Aultnu? ing Stove,’! Sewing Mil All of .the aljj heavy hardwa Ware, Wagon The above gc South. We ill nk’s Scales, DuPont Gun Powder, Rubber Belting and ■■iver Chilled Plows, Thomas’ Smoothing ! larrow Co., I'O.’.s Mowers and Reapers, The celebrated “ r ’imes Cook- ler 50,000 In use in tne use); Farm Bells, New Home Jo Co., Efttey Sewing Machines. ■goods in stock, together with a complete line «o men auu fcutlery. breeching and muzzle loading shot-( 31ns and Tin l>d Work, axles, bar iroig <fec. [we will wholesale and retail as low as any ri mrket in the correspondence from buyers seeking bargain s in our line. & MUNNERLYN. H. H. JOI LUTHER DAN & HOLLEY, 'Livery Stable Keepers!! IOLLEY. W E ,^ Our drivel to eomplaj conduct 0/ body. Fi wagon fo [ways on hand VEHICLES which cannot be sur health resort in America. Our rule is the one , held responsible for impoliteness, and all that if It our office to have matters adjusted. Ourdetem 'usiness on equitable principles, and to try and *ery kind of Vehicle, from the finest carriage -nic parties, call on JORDAN & HOLLEY, Curve St., A p ussed in any jbrice system, necessary is ination is to jidcase every- earriage o r buggy to* a iken, S. C. Sam’ Marshall. Julius J. ^ 1 - [W escoat. PL R. MARSHALL & CO. -SUCCESSORS OF- J. E. ADGER & CO. -importers and dealers in- A. Cl !RY, GUNS. AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS!,. Meeting St. (Sign Golden Gun) - - - CHARLESTON, S. C. 0 DISPLAY OF FALL CLO' ’E surpassed all previous effort^! re! Magnificent assortment of— SUITS TIT ic largest stock ever brought T FIT! it out a hundred men 713 RROAD STREET ) Old stand of Jas. G. Bailie & Bro. j Augusta, Ga. Clothing is what I sell! Why, I leulers fit one. Think of the experi J of the assortment I am obliged to cai M4d assortment of Children’^.Clothl O. K. Clothing Houses, 614, 6f$ and 746 Broad St., those nee I cannot help rejceivlng, ahd (. Willing to work for small pay, f« Everythin? strictly Al. '& 746, Broad Street, G*. - AUGUSTA, dEORGIA. j rjsSrii?*! * ‘T-v/’ .