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\ FARM AND HOUSEHOLD. rSKFl I. I.NFOH3IATIOX FOIt THE FAKMElt AXD HOt'SEKEEPEK. Commercial FeitilizerH Corre»f>ondence Journal and Review. I have just seen iu the Aiken Re corder an article copied from the Charleston Weekly News, by Capt. Peterkin, upon the subject of Com mercial fertilizers, which is so perti nent, so sensible, so filled with sound advice to farmers, that I feel con strained to give it my hearty endorse ment. There is no gainsaying the fact that there are thousands of dol lars lost to the farmers every year by the indiscriminate purchase and ap plication of fertilizers. It is not deniei that when a good article is used and judiciously applied, that the crops are increased, but the question is, and it is a very grave question, does the farmer make more money by their use, than he M-ould without them. Your writer is of the opinion that the country would have been better ofF, if there had never been a ton of them made, and this opinion is based upon an experience of forty years trial of them. As ad juncts they sometimes do good, but no permanent improvement of the soil can be obtained by their exclu sive use. Where our lands have been improved it is due mainly to home made manures, rotation of crops, rest, and protection from washing. If these are truths, is it not well for us to call a halt in our wild rush after commer cial fertilizers, and endeavor to util ize home resources. Under the pres ent system of farming the hard earned fruits of our labor goes to enrich the agents and manufacturers, leaving the farmer poor and dependent. At the present prices of fertilizers it is folly and madness for the farmers to buy them. If the manufacturers can not make and sell them at lower rates, in the name of reason and com mon sense let us cease to buy them, and if we make less, we will have less to pay out, and we may learn to live at home. T. W. Whatley. Florida .Flower Farms. N. Y. Tribune, Fort Meade Fla) Letter. Raising flowers for the manufacture of perfumery is an industry that is just getting a foothold in the South. Yankee brains and capital have opened up new fields of labor and profit in this state in a wonderful way since the war; and it is claimed that attar of roses can he made in Florida with as much success as in the gardens of Bulgaria. The two varieties of roses grown ate the musk and damask, and all attempts to raise them in parts of Europe other than on the southern slope! of Balkan mountains—a tract of land not over thirty miles wide and 300 long—have failed. Yet on the southern slopes of the Blue Ridge mountains and in parts of Florida, these same varieties of loses flourish abundantly, and it is claimed that eighteen acres well man aged will yield $40,000 per annum. The other flowers that are used for distillation, such as jassamine, violets. IflliesantT]ouquils, areal 1 hardy here and yield rich harvests of flowers to a generous cultivation. The only ques tion of making the perfumer’s art a leading industay down nere is the capital needed and the yankee go- aheaditiveness. Both of these seem about to he furnished in the near future. A representative of a large northern house has been prospecting around and experimenting with the flowers. He expressed himself as being well pleased with the success of his work, and a factory for the distillation of the flowers will shortly be erected somewhere iu the South as a result of his visit. This will give employment to hundreds of people, and make flower farming a paying as well as a pleasant industry. The method of making perfumery is a mysterj to many people, and interesting to all who use the sweet scented extracts on their handkerchiefs or clothes. There are two chief processes by which odors are extracted and retained. One is by distillation; the other, and by far the more delicate and interest ing, is by absorption, or enfluerage. This is resorted to in case of such flowers as the rose, jasamine, tuberose and cassia, where the essence is so flue that it has by practice been found to be injured by heat. The principle of odor absorption from flowers is based simply on the established law of affinity which hydrocarbons have for perfumes. When these have been highly purified they catch, and in catching concentrate and intensify, the odors communicated to them. Strawberries for the S«mt h. Mr. Mason, the excellent horticul turist of Crystal Springs, in the Texas Journal of Agiiculture gives the fol- fowing valuable facts and advice on strawberry culture: The most import ant item is the preparation of the soil previous to planting. Any well drained laud will produce this excel lent fruit, if properly prepared. Of course different varieties are adapted to different soils; some kinds are adapted to any soil. If possible strawberries should be planted on land which has been kept clean of grass and weeds the year before. Plow broadcast with a good turn plow and follow in each furrow with a subsoil plow. Wheh this is done, harrow thoroughly, then lay off rows and throw up beds, then harrow- down till the heils are about two inch es above the level of the ground. Straw ben ies are grown either in the hill or matted row. The hill system will give the finest berries, but the matted rowe the lar gest yield. If to be cultivated in hills the rows should he three feet apart and the plants one to two feet apart in the row'. If in matted rows, four feet apart, and from two to three feet apart in the row', according to variety. Mistress tu> cook)—“Your name, Mary, and my daughters being the same, makes matters somewhat con fusing. Now* how do you like, say, the name of Bridget?” Cook— “Share, mum, an’ it’s not mesilf that’s particular. Oim willun to call the young lady onythin’ yez loike.” Warming Food lor Milch Cows. It is not accidental that the best dairy regions in the world have been located in moist warm climates, where extremes of heat end cold do not prevail, says the American Culti vator. Holland and the adjacent re gions along the North Sea are in Eu rope the centers where the best milkers have been bred. It is much easier to overcome severe cold than heat or drouth. We pro vide for this much better than for merly. Basement barns well protect ed from the ingress of cold, can, with a good supply of cattle, sheep and horses, be made as comfortable for them as houses are for men and wo men. But shelter alone is not enough. When the temperature goes down to zero or below the large amount of chilled food and drink which even the best sheltered animals must take will reduce its temperature and make it less thrifty than it should be. The advantage of cooked food and boiled drinks for people lies in the fact that they are generally lukewarm. This is always the case while the ex periment is new. After awhile the ardor of the experiment cools. The farmer does not find time to fuss every day in cooking up something fresh. Preparing food several days in ad vance it gets chilled by exposure, and if it contains much moisture, sometimes freezes. In the end the animal may be injured by the alter nate plan of coddling and expo sure. The effects of warm food and drink are probably more quickly perceptible in cow*s than other farm animals. The yield of milk is largely affected by the condition of the milk glands, w’hich are expanded by warmth and contracted by cold. When a cow slaud* shivering in the winds or storm, with every muscle and nerve rigid anil strained, the effect of this discomfort is sooner shown in the milk section than in anything else. Cold weather dries up the cow, no matter how well she is fed, unless she is sheltered from its effects. »She may and will fatten by high feeding, hut tier milk is lessiu quantity and poor er in quality as the carbon that should make the cream is used up iu (lie ani mal ecomomy to create warmth. Enough of the food is thus diverted from any profitable use under the most favorable conditions, and the amount wasted may he indefiuately increased by neglect. Warming drink for cows to make them give more milk requires some precautions to prevent injury. The animal drinks much more and is more susceptible to sudden changes of temperature. The warm drink must be accompanied by extra good and nutricious food, or a good cow will rapidly loose flesh under the un natural stimulation of milk secretion. The feeding of ensilage, unless it is enriched by adding meal to it, is open to the same objection. It is one of the ways to keep in cold weather the conditions of a laxative food stimula ting to milk secretion, under which the best cows usually lose flesh during the summer. But a careful feeder who watches the effects of different k. : nds-»f treatment-wtilTeadily g.rcml against these dangers. Keep the Stable Light. Dark stables, says the Western World, are an abomination, and should not be tolerated. There is no necessity to sacrifice comfort, either in winter, to secure enough light. A horse’s eye is enlarged—the pupil of the eye is— by being kept in a dark stable: be has a Imruess put on him and suddenly brought out into a bright glaring sunlight, which con tracts the pupil so suddenly as to cause extreme pain. By persevering in this very foolish and injudicious as well as cruel practice, the nerve of the eye becomes impaired, and if contin ued long enough loss of sight will ensue. To see how very painful it is to face a bright light after having been in the dark, take a walk some dark night for a short time till the eye becomes ac customed to the darkness, then drop suddenly Into some well-lighted room and you will scarcely be able to see for a few moments in the sudden light. You know how painful it is to yourself, then why have your horse repeatedly hear such unnecessary pain? A dark stable is invariably a damp one, and such a stable we are not j’et willing to put either a valuable work ing or driving horse in. Give good ventilation, let the sunlight and air have a chance to effect ah entrance, and your stables will be purer and healthier than if you take sach pains to exclude them and the good influ ence they invariably bring. Health’s Alphabet. The Ladies’ Sanitary Association of London gives the following simple rules for keeping health: As soon as you are up shake blanket and sheet; Better be without shoes than set with wet feet; Children, if healthy, are active, not still; Damp beds and damp clothes will both make you ill; Eat slowly, and always chew your food well; Freshen the air of the house where you dwell; Garments must never be made too tight; Houses should be healthy, airy and bright; If you wish to be well—as you do I’ve no doubt— Just open the window’ before you go out; Keep the room always tidy and clean; Let dust on the furniture never he seen; Much illness is caused by want of pure air; Now to open the windows be ever your care; Old rags and old rubbish should never be kept; People should see that their floors are well swept; Quick movements in children are healthy and right; Remember the young cannot thrive without light; See the cistern is clean to the brim; Take care that your dress is all tidy and trim; Use your nose to find if there be a bad drain; Very sad are the fevers that come in its train; Walk as much as you can without feeling fatigue; Xerxes could walk full many a league; Your health is your wealth, which your wisdom must keep; Zeal will help a good cause and the good you will reap. A delicious eponge cake, which made with due care never fails, is worth knowing how’ to make. If these directions are followed the result will be as near perfection as is possible for anything in a lerrestial state of exislance to he. Four eggs, with the whites of two reserved for frosting, are beaten until light: then two cups of puverlzed sugar, which has been twice sifted, is added, and is oeaten will', the eggs; two small tea- spoonfuls of baking-powder with two cups of flour are sifted twice, and ad ded, a little at a time, to the eggs and sugar; stirring well; lastly, add a cup of hot water, but a little below the boiling point—for exauple: let the water boil, F..en set the kettle back on the tank for two or three minutes; do not put all the hot water into the dough at once, but a third at a time; beat well; flavor with lemon. Bake in a sheet-iron dripping pan, carefully lined with paper. The oven should be what is known to cooks as a mod erate oven. Tile cake will bake in from twenty to thirty minutes. Why You Feel So weak and exhausted is because your blood is impure. As well expect the sanitary a oiidilion oi a city to be per- feaO with allUiied water anal defective sewerage, us lo expect such a coiupli- eateal piece of mechanism as the human frame ta> be in guoal order with impure biasid cinmlating even to its minutest veins. Daj yam know that every drop aif your two air three galloii.4 of blood pa.ssavs through tha: heart and lungs in about two anal a half minutes, and that, on its way, it makes bone and muscle, b:atn ami nerve, and all other solids and ilnials a>f tha; body? The blood is the great nourishcr, or, as the Bible terms it, “The Life of the Body.” Is it any womler, then, that if the blood Ik; not pure anal perfect in its consti tuents, you sufTer so many indescribable symptoms? Ayer's Sarsaparilla stands “head and shoulalers ” above every other Alter ative and Blood Medicine. As proof, reaal these reliable testimonies: G. C. Brock, of Lowell, Mass., says: “ For the past 25 years I have sold Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. In my opinion, the ha;st remedial agencies for the cure of all the diseases arising from impuri ties <>f the blood are contained in this iniMiicine.” F’i ;••:!<* I. Hill, M. D., 381 Sixth Ave., New York, says: “As a blood-purifier a:i.i g uieral builder-up of the system, I have never found anything to equal Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It gives perfect satisfaction.” Ayer’s Sarsaparilla proves equally efficacious in all forms of Scrofula, Boils, Carbuncles, Eczema, Humors, Lumbago, Catarrh, &c.; ami is, there fore, the very best Spring and Family Medicine in use. “ It lieats all,” says Mr. Cutler, of Cutler Brothers & Co., Boston, “how Ayer’s Sarsaparilla does sell.” Prepared by Or. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Price $1; sir bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. FRED VOGT, AIKEN. H. C., —Manufacturer and Dealer iu— TiitareJonse-FmisMni Goods, Stoves and ^ Harness, Faints, Oils, Varnishes, Brushes, Etc. |®“Roofing, Guttering and Repairing a Specialty. LADIES % Pdy» Do Tour Own Dyeing, at Home. They will dye sverythipff. They ere sold every where. Price lOe. a package. They have no equal for Strength, Brightness, Amougt in Packages or for Fastness of Color, or non-fading Qualitk s. They do not crock or smut; 40 colors. For sale hr Dr. W. H. Harbers. Druggist, AIKEN, s. c. STOVES AND CUTLERY. --EVERYTHING— Necessary and Convenient for the Kitchen, Dining-Room, Dairy and Laundry, at Jessup Bros.’ STOVE EMPORIUM! 832 Broad Street, AUGUSTA, GA J. C. LADEVEZE, Headquarters for Picture Frames, Mirrors, Mouldings, & c . 713 Broad St. - - AUGUSTA, GA. Picture Frames Made to Order AT SHORT NOTICE. , SYMPTOMS—Mots% ure; Intense itchlnc and utlnfflnr: moat at to I? It t; worse hr (scratchIrsffs If al lowed to continue tumors form and DUES! sr ITCHING • l>Ieed and uIterate, H beromlnff very «ore. 8WAYXiE*8 ©I.NT- pl MENT atop* the Itehlnff and hlcctllnff, heaU ulceration, and In mont ea«e* remoYe* the tu mor*. 3w ayki's Ointment is sold bj druggists, or mailed lo anj addrew on receipt of price, 50 cu. a box ; 3 boxes, fl/JSb Address letter*. DR. SWAYNE 4 SON. Philadelphia, Pa. Eczema, Itchy, Scaly, Skin Tortnrea. SWAYNE’S OINTMENT The simple application of “Swayns’s Oixtmbmt" without anj internal medicine, will cure any ease of Totter, Salt SWAYNE’S OINTMENT mattL—T ~. ~ no muter bow obatiuu or luof «loading, gold by <1 •r test b/ mail for 50 cu. 3 Bon., (1.1S. AddroM, Dm •—Atm * S*i>, PUUdolDbU. P*. Aik your druum hr » Breakfast all Ready! AND THE BicMeat Cates are Beady! PREPARED BUCKWHEAT —AXD— FLOUR Of the First Qualities, at TURNBULLS. It Makes You Hungry <1 bare used Paine’s Celery compound baa had a effect. It in; •d the system afcd I feel like a yew man. It Unpmea the appetite find tacOltatea dices- J.T.Cem- la>td, Primus, AC. Paine’s Celery Compound is a unique tonic and appetizer. Pleasant to the taste, quick in Its action, and without any Injurious effect, it gives that rugged health which makes everything taste good. It cares dyspepsia and kindred disorders. Physicians prescribe It. $1.00. six lor $s.oe. Druggists. Wells. Bichabmom A Co., Burlington. Yt Spring medicine means more now-a-days than it did ten years ago. The winter of ms-si haaieft the nerves mil /kggtd out. The nerves must he strengthened, the blood purtfled, liver and bowels regulated. Paine’s Celery Compound— the Spring modirtno of to dag does all this, as nothing else can. Pnoeribod by Pkgoiciano, Bocommtudod by DruggitU, Bndorotd by Minittoro, Gnarantoed by the Manufacturer* to b* The Best Spring Medicine. “In the spring of U871 was all run down. I would get up in the morning with so tired a feeling, and was so weak that I could hardly get around. I bought a bottle ot Paine’* Celery Com pound, and before I had taken It a week 1 felt very much better. I can cheefully recommend It to all who need a building up and strengthen ing medicine.” Mrs. B. A. Dow, Burlington, vt. JESSE THOMPSON & CO DiAaoK ores SZr TSKJZ.’Si I lactated food H. P. Cook. Jas. L. Quinby. The Largest Store in Graniteville. QUINBY & COOK, DEALERS IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE, GRANITEVILLE. SO. CA. We take pleasure in informing our friends and customers both in Aiken and Edgefield counties that we ha-ve now on hand the choicest and largest stock of Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoes and Notions ever brought to Gran iteville, which we are selling at very low prices for Cash. Our Stock of Groceries Embraces an immense supply of both heavy and fancy groceries we will sell as wb ark accustomed, at prices that defy competition. |=lSf~Our wagon yard is free to all our customers and provided with stalls and other conveniences £5ri QUINBY & COOK, ; GRANITEVILLE, S. C Jas. G. Bailie 4 Son NEWEST DESIGNS AND LATEST COLORINGS IN FLOOR COVERINGS! Largest and Best Stock and Lowest Prices of O-AwIEtlPIETIIISra-S, MATS, RUGS, MATTINGS, DRUGGETS, Etc. Window Shades, Window Cornices, Lace Curtains. Wall Papers, Dadoes and Borders. SSTPicture and Art Gallery on cur Second Floor.^ffl Oil Paintings, Steel Engravings and Chromos. Rubber Strips for Doora and Windows. Chronicle Building, 714 Broad Street, Augusta, Georgia. THE FOUNTAIN CITY FURNITURE HOUSE! 941 Broad Street, - - - AUGUSTA, GA. H. SKALOWSKI, Proprietor. A LL styles and Grades of Furniture, including Bed-room and Parlor Suits, Lounges, Chairs, Desks, Safes, Book-Cases, Mattresses, Ac., Ac.,—in fact Everything usually kept in a First-Class Furniture Store. Machinist Work. ' t Either in or out of Shop, with good tools and Men. Boiler, Tank, Stack and Tube and Sheet Iron Work, Blacksmith Work, Iron and Brass Foundry Work, Gin Work, Material and Repairs for above. All Orders promptly attended to. GEO. R. LOMBARD & CO., New Shops Above Passenger Depot. -MANUFACTURERS OF- YELLOW PUVE LUMBER! , SASH, BLINDS AND MOULDINGS. -DEALERS IN- Window Class Sc Builders’ Hardware COR. HALE A CENTRE ST AUGUSTA, H. IF 1 . "W-A-IRasriEIKIIE:, | BAKER AND CONFECTIONER, | ANl* DEALER It! DRY GOODS, SHOES AND NOTIONS, A Large Stock of Groceries kept Constantly on hand and sold at ROCK BOTTOM PRICES. Tobacco and Cigars in Great Variety, Toys, Fire Works, etc., always in Stock. H. F. WARNEKE. Laurens St. and Park Are. . _ - . AI^EN. S C GIN RIBS! GIN RIBS! I H AVE secured Patterns and propose to mrnish RIBS for all makes e Gins at reasonable prices. CASTINGS of all kinds in Iroa and Brass at short notice. Special attention given to Repairs. Satisfaction guaranteed 1 Tiigf PENDLETOHl FOUHPBYfllNPfl iBOHIHEXWQRiS Nos. 615, 617 and 619. Kollock St., - - AUGUSTA, GA. CHA8. F. LOMBARD, Proprietor., M. W. PENDLETON, Sup’t. SAMUEL H. WILSON, PROPRIETOR OF THE CHARLESTON TEA POT, CHARLESTON, S. C. The Largest and Best Equipped Family Grocery in the South, NO CHARGE FOR SAMPLES. DRAY AGE FREE SEND FOR PRICE LIST. C. WULBERN & CO., Wholesale Grocers FLOUR AND CAROLINA RICE A SPECIALTY. 171 AND 173 EAST BAY. CHARLESTON, 8. C. C. F. KOHLRUSS, Manufacturer and Dealer in Foreign and Domestic Marble and Granite Monuments, Headstones, Statues. Copings, (fee. Cemetery and Building Work of all Descrij >tiono Made to Onler. All Orders promptly attended to aad executed lii the neatest manner possi ble. Original Designs Executed. tk - THE PALACE LIVERY, FEED e SALE STABLES! T. J. OATES* Proprietor. 624 ELLIS STREET, AUGUSTA, GA. Horses and Mules for Sale! ty Personal attention given to Consignments and Orders for Stock. T ZEE IE3 Xj -A. IR, <3- IE S T and Most Complete Establishment South. ESTABLISHED 1843. GEO. S. HACKER & SON, Office and Warerooms, King, opposite Cannon Street, CHARLESTON, S. C. Manufacturers of DOORS, SASH, BLINDS Mouldings and Building Materials. R. N. Richbourg, Importer and Dealer In Fine Watches, Clocks, Diamonds, FANCY GOODS, ETC. Musical Instruments, Strings and Trimmings, .SHEET MUSIC, Etc. _ superior^) irm mo n REGIS? A. Salvator for Invalids and the Aged* An Incomparable Aliment f^or the Urourth and Protection of In _ tfants and Children. A Superior b'ntritive in Continued I’evero, and a JleHable Remedial Agent in all IHoeaoeo of the Stomach and Intestines. W. C. Wrr.z, M.D.. **Th® New EMLAirp Medic An Monthet."—“In the delicate condi tions of the stomach, when every thiiqr elae baa been rejected I have saved many live* by giving Impehiad Ghancji.. 1 consider Jt one recovery; and I havefound itof inestimable value in the later stages of Phthisis, Gastritis. Gastric Catarrh, Dyspepsia, and Dysentery. We speak from experience when we say tha* the Impekiae, GranUm is both safe and nutri tious. It has been on the market for many years, and the largely increasing sales show that many others have found like results attending its use.—” The Christian Vnion," N. Y. As a Medicinal Food Imperial GiUirtnf, which is simply a solid extract from very stree- rlor growths of wheat, is unexcelled, and w to-day the Standard Dietetic preparation for invalids, for the aged, and for the very young.—“JV. A m. Joumalof Homceopathy,” l». x. Imperial. G ranum has been before the publio for many years, and is now regarded as a standard preparation. There can oe no doubt that this is due to its uniformly superior qualitr, and the successful results obtained with it In *1 cases where a prepared food to required.— Popular Science A’eir*’’ Boston, Mass. . „ _ P. varnom Mott, M.D., Boston, Maas^ The Microcosm.” New York.—“There are nume rous Foods that are much vaunted, and all have their adherents. The ’ I mpkuiai, G'ranum,’ In my hands, seems to be all that to claimed for it. i proved very'—— clous, and I always direct its use when a child to being weaned.” The fivesof untold thousands of Infants have —* *— y ^ —• * ——&nd careful of this well &uuwu iwu.auu luauioto uan safely recom mend It.—Proceedings Illinois Pharmaceutical Association. Imperial Granttm is highly recommended by our best physicians, and many families here bear testimony to its reliability for the purposes tor which it is prescribed. John Carle A Sons, New York, are the agents for this country. It to Sold by all Druggists,—AfobGc, Ala., Register. W. W. WILLIAMS, Real Estate Ag’t. For Sale. COLUMBIA, - - S. C. Cor. Washington and Ellis Street AUGUSTA, OA. W. EDWARD PLATT, -:DEALER IN:- Furniture and ITovelties! 70 BROAD STREET, ::::::: AUGUSTA, GEORGIA (o) Undertaking Department. j Udg^Orders by Telegraph 711 Ellis Street. | Promptly attended to Tk Only Concern CnaranteeinE Goods Apiost SMilap! GEO. E. TOAEE & CO., -Manufacturers and Wholesale Deales in— MATERHl tyOffice and Salesrooms, 10 & 12 Hayne-St,, CHARLESTON, S, C ..^3 Send for Estimates. . F ARM 125 ACRES 1-2 mile of Mont- raoreuci Station. A nice Cottage and four new tenant houses on tract. 1500 of tlie celebrated Niagara grape, orchardof Young LeContePears and Apples. —ALSO- 1034 3-4 acres one mile of station. Both very choice. —ALSO— Building lots on Boulevard Coles and Colleton avenue, destined to be the popular portion of our city for pri vate residences. —ALSO— Several houses with large lots loca ted centrally. Tutfs Pills FOR TORPID LIVER. A torpid liver derange* the wlioleaye. tem, and produce* Sick Headache, Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheu matism, Sallow Skin and Piles. There le no better remedy forth*** common disease* them Taft** Liver n t n ii rn — - - 1 Sold Everywhere* J. A. WRIGHT, Rooffl^SHlE^R RICHLAND AVENUE. Journal and Reveiw’s old Office, one door from Laurens Street. BEST MATERIAL USED- •Hri MqlM Oold Watch.1 Sold for to 1OO. until Ut.ljr. | Beat t&S watch in thn world. I railed timckc.|icr. War-J r.ot.d- He.T7 Hunting Cue.. Both 1 and genu* W.M.wIth works and cue. of aqunl rmluo. One Person In onek lo. caltijr can .ecuro ons flroa, tbor with onr lu*c and val- lo Una of llonsehold Maniples. Thru umpUa, U wall u th. watch, w. atnd Free, sad nftar pm bar. kapt them In pour horn, for S month, and atanwn than to thou who may have called, thev become your own pro party. Thou who write at ones can be aura of recelvtas too Wets* and Samples, Wo pay all sspreaa, flrelcfat.ete. Addma Stinson toe Co.. JBox SIS. JPortln**, Main*. CATARRH & CANCER Treated by lAitter. Sc-nd 2 cent stomp at once for valuable information regarding these dreadful diseases. They who puffer ache and pain. Need puffer never more sgmia. 1 MEW INVENTION, PLEASANT, CONVENIENT and EFFICACIOUS. The Pall Mall Electric Aseociation of London and New York sow I introducep to the American public a new invention in Plasters. For I three years this remarkable Plaster has been used largely in private | practice. Its cures have been so wonderful and so quick I that, yielding to the urgent solicitations of prominent phy sicians, it is now made public. it combines Electro- Magnetism with all the best qualities of stand- , ard porous and other Plasters, and is a really wonderful remedy. I*r. Nirrrow Haims that ('atakkii is a i.ivi.vu <;krm. f The above cut tdiowd these germs under the microscope) and he can and does remove them in a living state— thus effecting it permanent cure. The Doctaar treats all curable diseases. Send at once for full particulars of New Methods, to DR. J. (.. MERROW, 1(8 Franklin Street Lynn, Mass. WtSeUimrrtoFAUiLrcs By avoiding Ascent* you pat* thetr lenonnouH expenhen und pjol'.ts I which double the co#t» on (every r flint daft* i*taiiO theywll. ^ PIANOS „ ORCAP8 *iho t<> eT.-.so fsa to *&«.«>. Kent f-r trial In jruur ov a home hr Tort >au bus. C I A »:• AXTERDSIX YKAKM. Catnf.-t-ue, fi re. Marthul A Kmlth 1’luno to., ‘Ztiu K. 21at Kt., A. k , Oold*. Coughs and Chest Pain*, Itervous, > 'Muscular and Neuralgic Paint, Stomach, 'Kidney and liver Pain*, Dyspeptic, Ma~^ 'larial and other Paint, Rheumatism, Gout^ 'and Inflammation, IN ONE to THREE HOURS We unhesitatingly guarantee that it will produce most as- I tonishing results, effecting rapid cures where medicine and | allothertreatmentstaU. TDV flUC Til HIV and if it not entirely I ill UllL 111‘UAT, DR. SCOTT s;: ELECTRIC PLASTER : satisfactory, the price will cheerfully be refunded. | There is no shock, but a pleasant, genial glow. It cannot injure, but will always do good. Pt _ promptly at your druggist’s, remit price, 25cts. to I GEO. A. SCOTT, 842 BROADWAY. NEW YORK, [ and it will be mailed, post-paid. 5 sent for f Lo*. For Family Use. Mention this paper. I IT CAUSES NO SOKES LIKE CE1 I TAIN OTHER PLASTERS. I For Sale by H. H. HALL, Aiken. S. C. -THE- MUTUAL CARPET COMPANY, 266 King Street, CHARLESTON, S. C\, Dealers Iu CARPETS, MATHM, KHiS AND OILCLOTHS, SHADES, CURTAINS, CORNICE POLES and UPHOLSTERING GOODS OF ALL KINDS. Samples sent on application. W. H. WALKER, Manager, (formerly with Kohn, Furchgott A Co.) PgmonaXhhiXnursebies. pomoxa, x. c. Two and a half miles west of Greensboro, N. C. The main line of the R. <fc D. It. R. passe* t’.rough the l grounds and within 100 feet of the office. Salem 1 ruins make regular stops twice daily each way. Those interested iu Fruit and Fruit Grow ing are cordially invited to inspect ihis, the largest nursery in the Slate, and one of the largest in the South. Stock consists of APPLES, PEACH. PEAR, CHERRY, PLUMS. J A PANE8E PERSIM MON8, APRICOTS, NECTRINE, MULBERRIES, QUINCE, GRAPE, FIGS. RASPBERRIES, GOOSEBERRIES. CURRANTS, PIE PLANTS, ENGLISH WALNUTS, PECANS. CHESTNUTS, STRAWBERRIES, ROSES, EVERGREENS, SHADE TREES, Ac. All the new and rare varieties os well as the old ones, which my new catalogue for 1888 will show. Give j'our ord°r to my authorized agent, or order direct from the nursery. J^fCorrcspondence solicited Discriptive Catalogue free to all ap plicants. Address, J. Van Lindsley, POMONA, Guilford County, N- C- Reliable Salesmen Wanted in every County. A good paying commission will Im» given.