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The chufa is a variety of grags-nat, hut not, by any means, nut-grass. It is properly known as the earth alm ond. When planted, one in a hill, it springs up just a sprig of grass, and spreads, growing longer and more bunchy very rapidly. The bunch grows steadily broader and thicker, while young nuts form at the root of each sprig. The plants grow all sum mer, until they are killed by the frost in the fall, by which time the nuts are mature, and hogs aud poul try may be turned in upon them. The cultivation is very simple. The land should be well plowed and laid off in rows about three feet apart, and the seed nuts dropped in the drills about one foot apart and covered with a half-shovel plow. When the plants are well up, they should be worked with a sweep, or cultivated iust like cotton, and kept clear of grass until they have spread and taken posses sion of the ground. The quantity that one acre of ground will produce is nnkuown, but it is very great, as it has been repeatedly proved that there may be enough nuts in one acre to keep twenty hogs fat for one month My experience has not led me to consider chufas a desirable food for fattening just before killing, as I have found that when hogs *have been fat tened upon them principally, their flesh is soft and quite inferior. But when they have been got into good order on chufas, they should be penned and fed only on corn 4br two or three weeks, when their flesh will harden, while the fat will be retained and improved. But I have found that the value of this crop conies in prin cipally late in the winter. Then, if the young hogs are put into the chufa patch between January and April, they will obtain an abundance of food and may be kept at an inappre ciable cost. All stock are fond of these nuts, and as soon as the turkeys and fowls find their: out they will spend all the day in the patch scratching them up. Turkeys, especially, must he kept out of the patch until the nuts mature, for if they discover them they will destroy them when barely formed. I have henid it charged that chufas are an exhausting crop, and difficult to eradicate from land in which they have once been planted ; but I have not observed any deterioration of the soil after a crop of the nuts has been grown, nor have I had any difticulty in getting rid of the volunteer plants whenever necessary. I consider this crop to be a valuable one for the South, and one of the most ecouom- i< > "L_lM&Jjflfe" r inter feeding of swine an easily find. lesonie Staple. ) lost troublesome sta- •d’s commerce. From :ing until the moment the loom as a fabric, >h changes, affects its value A bale of cotton is so t.* ; 'heat and moisture that paries every minute of the flud by actual experi- s account buyers and ■.presented by men who '• •weighers,” but whose something more than re weights or checking off re- . On their judgment the value ' shipment or consignment may be increased or diminished by several hundred dollars, hence factories are careful to place their clearest headed and most reliable men at the scales. A daub of mud at oue corner of a bale may justify rebates on package, waile on another the seller’s repre sentative would not consent to any deductions. The deleterious effects of exposure to weather can be estima ted at a glance by a skillful man, but, nevertheless, the process of weighing Is accompanied by more frequent con tention than any other part of the business. Then you must remember that if any crooked work has been done, a bale of cotton can be traced all the way from the mill through a hundred hands until you Anally reach the planter who sold it in the first place. Care of the Asparagus Bed. American Agriculturist. No matter how much care has been given to the proper planting of aspa ragus, it is easy to injure, if not to render worthless, the best bed by be ginning to cut too early, and by cut ting too late. In planting we have advised to set strong, vigorous roots, each with many strong buds. The future treatment of these plants should be to keep the roots strong, and keep them so well supplied with buds that a part of them or the shoots from them may be cut away without injury. If we draw water from a cis tern we provide means for refilling It. The asparagus root is like a cis tern ; we draw upon it by cutting the shoots, and we replentish it by allow ing the green tops to grow and to form buds to lie dormant. When a new bed has been planted, the advice is given to not cut it until the third or even the fourth year, in order that each root may get so strong that it will stand the annual cutting. The best and most productive bed ever made may be ruined by cutting it too late in the season. For family beds, the advice is given to stop cut ting when green peas come. The grower on the large scale for market judges by the character of his crops when to cease cutting. In no otiier garden crop do we make so permanent an investment as in asparagus; aside from the firsv cost, we invest three y«ars of time and care; but if we n^anage properly the returns continue through an iudeflnite number of years aud are paid each spring. No garden should be without an asparagus bed. Feeding Too Much Grain to Poultry. American Agriculturist for September. Coni has long held the lead as a special food for poultry, and on almost every farm, if the hens are fat at all, it is with corn. It has served an ex cellent purpose, however, as the hens uaually have free range and supply themselves with those elements which are lacking in the fat-producing corn, which really does more to keep them in good flesh and condition than as sisting in egg-production. If grain is fed—and once a day is often enough if the fowls have the use of the range —it should consist principally of wheat and oats, with only a small proportion of corn. Laying hens should be fed differently from those intended for market, as in the oue case eggs are desired, and in the other fat or'weight. A cow giving large quantities of milk does not readily fatten. A similar rule applies to the hen; a good layer dses not fatten quickly during the laying period, and a hen that‘takes on fat and eats large quantities ef grain in preference to bulky food is not usually a gc-od layer. What farmers should learn is that hens ought not to be fed exclusively on grain, else they will cease to lay. They will keep in better health, thrive better, and become more productive when fed some bulky food, as boiled roots, steamed cut clover, short grass, or even well-cured corn fodder, though a small proportion of grain, with a little meat aud milk, will, of course, complete the ration. By regulating the food so as to combine the ele ments necessary lor her purpose, the hen may be confined without detri ment, while the profits will b«-much larger than when she is fed wholly on grain, and especially on corn. Sweet Potatoes la the South. The following article on sweet pota toes from the Southern Live Stock Journal is worthy of careful perusal: Sweet potatoes in the South, like hay have never been properly appreciated. Those who raise fine milch cows should have hundreds rtf bushels of sweet potatoes hanked up in October for cows, hogs, horses and table use durjng the winter, and also fur fowls. Our lowls attack our potato banks and scratch their level best to get through to the potatoes. They eat them raw or cooked greedily. Mu'es and horses will attack potato hanks and dismantle them, and gorge them selves on sweet potatoes if permitted to do so; or, when they can. do it on the sly. Boiled and mixed, while hot, with pea meal,or corn meal, or bran, or oatmeal, it will fatten hogs faster than corn. For some reason Stewart and Arms- ley, both, in their excellent works on feeding animals, and feedstufls, whol ly ignore the sweet potato; and in none of the analyses given in these works is the sweet potato included, it would be hard, iudeed, to find in any standard work of northern au thorship any valuable facts connect ed with the sweet potato, its culture, importance as a farm crop, aud value as a food for man and beast. The nortiiern people cultivate the sweet potato but little, comparitively, and the varieties they grow would not be tolerated on the tables of most Southern farmers, aud they cook this vegetable in such a way that it is dis tasteful to Southern people, who have been accustomed to the methods of Southern cooking. From an article in the Farmer’s Book of Grasses, by Dr. D. L. Phares, we glean the following facts, which we condense. Some varieties contain a large amount of sugar, others very little. Make the finest quality pork and lard, ‘‘finer, whiter, sweeter, less dis posed to become rancid.” Can be fed raw, but better cooked— sliced before feeding if given raw. He says: “For milk cows, potatoes are very profitable, in combination with hay, grass aud other foods. They improve the appetite, digestion and condition generally.” ^ He recomments them highly as uorse feed — preferable to corn. Improves the coat of hair, and ena bles the animal to endure more hard ships, etc. He says of tlie vines: “As fodder, nothing con be found richer, better, or more relished by live stock. Even when thickjy covered with mold, they are readily eaten by animals. They are full of rich, starchy, gum aud milk, and consequently very difficult to cure—cannot be dried at ordinary temperatures.” His preferences are for the Brazilian yam first, southern queen second, as a crop for slock, considering the yield and quality of both tubers and vines. Henry Stuart in his book, “The Culture of Farm Crops,” says: “Three hundred bushels to the acre may be grown with good culture; and for feeding all kinds of stock, these tubers are unsurpassed. Physicians Confess. All honest concientious yhyslcians who give B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm) a trial, frankly admit its su periority over all other blood medi cines. Dr. W. J. Adair, Rockmart, Ga., writes: “I regard B. B. B. as one of the best blood medicines.” Dr. A. H. Roscoe, Nashville, Tenn., writes: "All reports of B. B. B. are favorable, aud its speedy action is truly wonderful.” Dr. J. W. Rhodes, Crawfordsville, Ga., writes: “1 confess B. B. B. is the and best quickest medicine for rheumatism I have ever tried.” Dr. J. 8. Farmer, Crawfordsville, Ga., writes: "I cheerfully recom mend B. B. B. as a fine tonic altera tive. Its use cured an excressenee of the neck after other remedies effected no perceptible good.” Dr. C. H. Montgomery, Jackson ville, Ala., writes: “My mother in sisted on my getting B. B. B. for her rheumatism, as her case stubbornly resisted the usual remedies. .She ex perienced immediate relief, and her improvement lias been truly won derful.” A promiuen physician who wishes his name not given, says: “A patient of mine whose ease of tertiary syphi- alis was surely killing him, and which no treatment seemed to check, was entirely cured with about twelve bottles of B. B. B. He was fairly made up of skin and bones and terri ble ulcers.” Make No Mistake. If you have made up your mind to up yo buy Hood’s Sarsaparilla, do not be induced to take any other. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a peculiar medicine, possessing, by virtue of its peculiar combination, proportion and prepara tion, curative power superior to any other article of the kind before the people. For all affections arising trom impure blood or low state of the system it is unequalled. Be sure to get Hood’s. Is the source of health; therefore, to keep well, purify the blood by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla. This medicine is peculiarly designed to act upon the blood, and through that upon all the organs and tissues of the body. It has a specific action, also, upon the secretions and excretions, and assists nature to expel from the system scrof ula, humors, impure particles, and effete matter through the lungs, liver, bowels, kidneys, and skin. It effect ually aids weak, impaired, and debil itated organs. A trial will convince you that it does possess peculiar cura tive powers. No other remedy is so reliable as Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, for the cure of coughs, colds, aTid all derange ments of the respiratory organs. It relieves the asthmatic and consump tive, even in advanced stages of dis ease. The Atlanta Constitution sums up the matter thusly: “It is now known that the Austrian prince died of apo plexy; that he shot himself in a fit of mental aberration; that he deliber ately committed suicide, and that be was murdered. It will thus be seen that his taking off was quite royal in its multifariousness. THE SPRING MEDICINE YOU WANT Paine’s Celery Compound JESSE THOMPSON&CO -MANUFACTURERS OF- Hon. G. Edwards Lester, * Late U. S. Consul to Italy, author of “The Glory and Shame of England," “America’s Advancement," etc., etc., etc., writes as follows: — New York, August 1,1886. 122 E. 5 122 E. 27th st. | Dr. J. O. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass., Gentlemen: — A sense of gratitude and the desire to render a service to the public impel me to make the following statements: My college career, at New Haven, was interrupted by a severe cold which so enfeebled me that, for ten years, I had a hard struggle for life. Hemorrhage from the bronchial passages was the result of almost every fresh exposure. For years I was under treatment of the ablest practitioners without avail. At last I learned of ( Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, which I used (moderately and in small doses) at the first recurrence of a cold or any chest difficulty, and from which I invariably found relief. This was over 25 years ago. With all sorts of exposure, in all sorts of climates, I have never, to this day, had any cold nor any affection of the throat or lungs which did not yield to Ayeb’s Chebrt Pectoral within 24 hours. Of course I have never allowed my self to be without this remedy in all my voyages and travels. Under my own observation, it has given relief to vast numbers of persons; while in acute cases of pulmonary inflammation., such as croup and diphtheria in children, life has been preserved through its effects. I recommend its use in light but fre quent doses. Properly administered, in accordance with your directions, it is A Priceless Blessing in any house. I speak earnestly because I feel earnestly. I have known many cases of apparently confirmed bronchitis and cough, with loss of voice, particu larly among clergymen and other public speakers, perfectly cured by this medi cine. Faithfully yours, C. EDWARDS LESTER. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, Prepared by T>r. J.O. Ayer & Co.,Lowell, Mass. Bold by all Druggists and Dealer* in Medicine. FRED VOGT, AIKEN. H. C., —Manufacturer and Dealer in— Tinware, Eoise-fariisliiiij Goods, Stoves and Hardware. Harness, Paints, Oils, Yarnishes, Brushes, Etc. JgrRoofing, Guttering aud Repairing a Specialty. LADIES % P EERLESS DYES Do Tour Own Dyeing, at Home. They will dye everything. They are sold every. Where. Priee 10«. a package. They have no equal for Strength, Brightness, Amougt in Packages or for Fastness of Color, or non-fading Qualities. s. For sale by They do not crock or smut; 40 colors. Dr. W. H. Harbers. Druggist, AIKEN, 8. C. STOVES AND CUTLERY. —EVERYTHING— Neceseirry 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 10 Order AT SHORT NOTICE. , RYMPTOM*—Mots* ‘ Bret Intense Itching andstlnalnas mn.tal night; worse hr .crnUhtug. If al lowed to continue tumor, form and ITCHING PILES - , ?> , leed U< »n<l'V.lei -leemte, BWAYME’8 0INT- DUES IlTC M becoming very »ore- _ m ME NT atop* the Itchlrur and bleed In ff.h emit ulceration, and In mont came* remove** the to- mom. Swaynb’s OnrTMENT is »old by druggist*, or m&iled to aoT address on receipt of price, 50 cu. a box; 3 boxes, f Address letters, DR. SWAYNE t SON. Philadelphia, Pa. Eczema, Itchy, Scaly, Skin Torture®* SWAYNE’S OINTMENT The simple application of “Swayk« » Ournsarr” without anr internal medicine, will cure anr case of Tetter, Salt SWAYNE’S OINTMENT RhfUDi. Ringworm. PilM. Itch. Sore., Ptmplw. E17.ip.Uu. oil SKIN DISEASES no matter how obstinate or long standing. Sold by druggists. fl- * 3 Boxes. Si 25. Address. Dm Bum. Philadelphia. Pa. Aik roar druggist fcr lb *v gvnt by mail for 60 cu. •waybb A Breakfast all Ready! AND THE BncMeat Gales are Ready! PREPARED BUCKWHEAT —AND— FLOUR Of the First Qualities, at TURNBULLS. Purifies the Bloc Strengthens the Stimulates the Regulates the K Gives Life and There 9 t nothing like it. " Last spring, being very much ran down i debUliatea, I procured some of Paine's Cel Compound. The use of two bottles made feel like a new man. As a general tonic swing medicine, I do not Know Its « W. L. GaKBHLKAK. Brigadier General V. N. G , Burlington, $1.00. Six for $5.00. At Druggists. D lAMO HD DYES d, ! Serves, ver, dneys and Bowels, ''figor to every organ. Use H Now! "Having used your Paine’s Celery Compound this spring, I can safely recommend Kasthe meet powerful and at the same time most gentle regulator. It Is a splendid nerve tonic, and slnrataking It I have felta newman. r. bT Knobs, Watertown, Dakota. Wills. Kicbakmok A Oa. Props. Burlington, vt. | LACTATED FOOD '”12 £%£? Phosphate Co., -MANUFACTURERS OF- HIGH GRADE GOODS Of All Kinds! -0- ADDRESS: FRANCIS B. HACKER, President and General Agent, 5 Exchange Street, Rear of Post Office, CHARLESTON, 8. C. GEORGIA CHEMICAL WORKS! MANUFACTURERS OF- HIGH GRADE FERTILIZERS -AND ACID PHOSPHATES! Office 735 & 737 Reynolds St., Augusta, Ga. c APACITY of Factory in 1876, 6,000 to 7,000 Tons. First Ton was manu factured December 22, 1876. Capacity of Factory in 1889, 40,000 Tons! YELLOW PINE LEOTBEK! DEALERS IN- Window Class Sc Builders’ Hardware COR. HALE A CENTRE ST H. IF- ^T-A-ZR-ZDsTIEIKIIE, | BAKER AND CONFECTIONER, | ANW DEALER ItX 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. LanronsSt. and Park kve. * * - AIYEN, S 0 AND. MOULDINGS. AUGUSTA, THE PALACE LIVERY, FEED £ SALE STABLES! T. J. 0 A T E S» Proprietor. 624 ELLIS STREET, AUGUSTA, GA. Horses and Mules for Sale! fWPersonal attention given to Consignments and Orders for Stock. A Salrator for Invalid* and tha Afd. Incomparable Aliment for the Oreteth and Protection ef Infante and Children- -d Superior \utrUivo in Continued JPeveret and a Jtellable Remedial Agent in all Vieeaaee of the i Intestines. W. C. Wn-S, M.D., “Thb Nxw RwatOJrp Medical Monthly."—“In the delicetucondl- ' na of the stomach, when everyth lug else ms __3n rejected I have saved many lives by giving Imperial Granum. I consider It one of the very best foods the phyriclan oan flnd to assist him in carrying through his P*t£“**£ recovery; and I nave found it of InratimalMe value In the later stages of Phthisis, Gastritis. Gastric Catarrh, Dyspepsia, and Dysentery." We speak from experience whenwe say that the Imperial Cranch to both safe and nutri tious. It baa been on the market for many years, and the largely increasingaaleaahpWtM* many ot hers have found like resultt attending Its use. The Christian Union," 2V. ST. As a Medicinal Food Imperial GRAmnf, which is simply a solid extract from very supe rior growths of wheat, to unexcelled, and J* to-day the Standard Dietetic preparation for invalids, for the aged, and for the Tenf young.—"if. Am. Joumtuof HomafopaOiv," IcT. Imperial G ranum has beenbefore thepubao for many years, and is now regtrded •• • standard preparation. There can ra no doubt that this to due to its uniformly superiOTcpisAttj^ and the successful results obtained witn it In “ cases where a prepared food to required.— Popular Science News” Boston, Moan • , . J\ Varnum Mott, M.D., Boston, Maas^ "Tn Microcosm ” New York.-"There are nume rous Foods that arc much vauntod.and all have their adherents. The ‘ I mpemal GrajiijiIj’ in my hands, seems to be all that to claimed for It, and experience has brought me to rely on to use where its special properties an indicated. In infantile diseases ft has proved very eOoa- clous, and I always direct Its use when a child to being weaned." , ^ _ _. . . , The fires of untold thousands of infants have been sa ved by Imferial Granum, and careful mothers are loud in their praises of this well known food, and pharmacists can safely recom mend It.—Proceedings Illinois Pharmaceutical Association. .. _ ^ Imperial Granum to highly recommended by our best physicians, and many families here bear testimony to iu reliability for the purposes for which it to prescribed. John Carle St Bods, New York, are the agents for this country. It to Sold by all Druggists.—Mobile, Ala., Bcototor. iv. w. wmliT Real Estate Ag’t. For Sale. T H Xj -A. IR, <3- E S T and Most Complete Establishment South. F.STA BUSHED 1842. GEO. S. HACKER & SON, Office and Warerocms, King, opposite Cannon Street, CHARLESTON, S. C. Manufacturers of DOORS, SASH, BLINDS. Mouldings and Building Materials. PURITY, QUALITY AND ANALYSIS GUARANTEED! None but the Beet Material used I Splendid Mechanical Condition ! Every Bag Full Weight! STANDARD GUANOS: MASTODON ! DISSOLVED BONE PHOSPHATE and POTASH ! ACID PHOSPHATE, with or without POTASH ! LOWE’S GEORGIA FORMULA ! GRAIN FERTILIZER! The goods manufactured by ua have no auperior as to quality, and our ACID PHOSPHATE, either with or without potash, has never been equall ed, as shown by official reports of the Department of Agriculture of the State of Georgia ! We thank the public for their past liberal patronage, and shall in the future guarantee the same faithful service and fair dealing. These goods are sold by merchants and regular dealers everywhere. If you want reliable goods, apply to your merchant for our brands. GEOBGIA CHEMICAL W0BKS, Augusta, Ga. C. K. HENDERSON, Agent, AIKEN, S. C. Jas. G. Bailie & Bon NEWEST DESIGNS AND LATEST COLORINGS IN FLOOR COVERINGS! Largest and Best Stock and Lowest Prices of a^iR^iETiisra-s, MATS, RUGS, MATTINGS, DRUGGETS. Etc. Window Shades, Window Cornices, Lace Curtains, Wall Papers, Dadoes and Borders. Picture and Art Gallery on our Second Floor. JEI (Jil Paintings, Steel Engravings and Chromos. Rubber Strips for Doors and Windows. Chronicle Building, 714 Broad Street, Augusta, Georgia. R. IT. Richbourg, Importer and Dealer In Fine Watches, Clocks, Diamonds, FANCY GOODS, ETC. Musical Instruments, Strings and Trimmings, SHEET MUSIC, Etc. COLUMBIA, - - S. C. F ARM 125 ACRES 1-2 mile of Mont- morenci Station. A nice Cottage and four new tenant houses on traet. 1600 of the celebrated Niagara grape, j orchard of Young Le Conte Pears and Apples. —ALSO- 1034 3-4 acres one mile of station. Botli 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 loeJT tedceutralfy. Tutt’s Pills FOR TORPID LIVER. A torpid liver derange* the whole ay*• tern, and produces Sick Heada Dyspepsia, Costivenei matism, Sallow Skin There la if* common disease* than llitt’s XI, Tills, ns n trial will prove. Price, 30c. Sold Everywhere. ■W. EDWARD PLATT, -:DEALER IN:- Furniture .and Novelties! SO BROAD STREET, : : : : : (o)- AUGUSTA, GEORGIA SSF^Undertaking Department,_^gj! Orders by Telegraph _ s?7 711 Ellis Street. Promptly attended to The Only Concern Guarantees Goods Apinst Shrinkap CrEO. E. TOAEE & FO., —Manufacturers and Wholesale Deales in— noons,i BUILDING. THE FOUNTAIN CITY FURNITURE HOUSE! 941 Broad Street, AUGUSTA, GA. H. SKALOWSKI, Proprietor. LL style# anil Grades of Furniture, including Bed-room and Parlor Suits, Lounges, Chairs, Desks, Safes, Book-Cases, Mattresses, &c., &c.,—in fact Everything usually kept in a First-Class Furniture Store. GIN RIBS! GIN RIBS! I HAVE secured Patterns and propose to furnish RIBS for all makes o Gins at reasonable prices. HASTINGS of all kinds in Iron and Brass at short notice. Special attention given to Repairs. Satisfaction guaranteed! Tilgt PENDLETON^ FOUNPRYfllNtifl MMHINEXwOBkS Nos. 615, 617 and 619. Kollock St., - - AUGUSTA, GA. CHAS. F. LOMBARD, Proprietor., M. W. PENDLETON, Sup’t. C. F. KOHLRUSS, Manufacturer and Dealer in Foreign and Domestic Marble and Granite Monuments, Headstones, Statues. Copings, &c. Cemetery and Building Work of all Descriptions Made to Order. All Orders promptly attended to audiexecuted in the neatest manner possi ble. Original Designs Executed. Cor. Washington and Ellis Streets, { - - - AUGUSTA. GA. tWOffice and Salesrooms, 10 & 12 Hayne St., CHARLESTON, S, C Send for Estimates. They who suffer ache and pain. Need suffer never more again. PRICE 25 A NEW INVENTION, PLEASANT, CONVENIENT and EFFICACIOUS. The Pall Mall Electric Association of London and New York sow I introduces to the American public a new invention in Plasters. For | 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- I sictans, itis now made public, it combines Electro- Magnetism with ell the beat qualities of stand- . ard porous and other Plasters, and ia a really wonderful remedy, E », Coughs and Chest Pains, Perrons, dr and Neuralgic Pains, Stomach, ind Liver Pains, Dyspeptic, Ma-± other Pains, Rheumatism, GoutJ tation, IN ONE to THREE HOURS We unhesitatingly guarantee that it will produce most as-1 tonisbing results, effecting rapid curea where medicine and | ailother treatments fail. TDV flilC Tfl ITAV and if it not entirely I III UIlL IU"DAT. satisfactory, the price will cheerfully be refunded. There is no shock, but a pleasant, genial glow. | It cannot injure, but will always do good. Accept no substitute. If you cannot obtain it | promptly at yc -r druggist’s, remit price, 25cts. to GEO. A. SCOTT, 842 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, and it will be mailed, post-paid. 5 sent for $1.0$. For Family Use. Mention this paper. _ IT CAUSES NO SOHES LIKE CE 9 TAIN OTHER PLASTERS. J. A. WRIGHT, RICHLAND AVENUE. Journal and Reveiw’s old Office, ou« door from Laurens Street. BEST MATERIAL USED- »Hr. Solid Ool. Suit! for VIOO. until UKIy. Be.t 4^3 w.tcb In tb< I'.ti.ct tiaMkMpcr. ranted. Heavy Hunting Ce.ee. Both ladies' end gents' sizes, with works and cases of equal valns. One Person In sack lo- csltiy can seenrs ono Sea, together with our Urge aad val uable lino of Household Samples. The.'samples, as well ns ths watch, wn send free, and after yon hers kept them In your home for * months and shown them to thoee who may here called, they become your own property. Those who write st ones can be euro of receiving the Wutch and Samples. Wepey all «p«“. Weight.«e. Addreea , «fc Co.. Bom 81& Portlmad. Muiae. Stinson < CATARRH & CANCER Treated by Letter. Semi 2 cent stamp at once for valuable information regard! these dreadful diseases. ng Dr. ilerrow eliiims that C'atakrh is a i,ivi.vo obkm. ( The above cut shows these germs under the mieroscope) an«l he can ami does remove them in a living state— thus effecting a permanent cure. The Doetwr treats all curable diseases. Semi at once for full particulars of New Methods, to DU. J. <J. MEHROW, 104 Franklin Street Lynn. Mass. For Sale by H. H. HALL, Aiken, S. -THE- MUTUAL CARPET COMPANY, 266 King Street, CHARLESTON, S. C. Dealers In CARPETS, MAITIM, ROCS AND OILCLOTHS, SHADES, CURTAINS, CORNICE POLES and UPHOLSTERING GOODS OF ALL KINDS. Samples sent on application. H. M. WALKER, Manager, (formerly with Kohu, FurchgotlACo.) WeSsU DIRECT to Fah'HIES Tiy avoiciintr Agent* you i^vr thpir HiotmouM expetiNp* mri i»:« m* which double the cunt* on every fli>t claw* I'iaiio they ia.ll. .mm. .?ysisx. Sent for trlnl In your ««n holm- before yon bn. . 1.1 A |. • AN'TF.F.O bix YKAHs. !:• v. Murchal A: Smith JMnno Co.. 2Xo K. dint »t., K.%. | POMONA^HiLLXNURSERIES. POMONA, N. C. Two and a half miles west of j Greensboro, N. C. The inpin line of ! the K. «x D. R. R. passes trough the grounds and within 100 feet of the office. Salem trains make regular stops twice daily each way. Those interested in Fruit and Fruit Grow ing are cordially invited to inspect iliis, the hugest nursery in tin* State, and one of the largest in the South. Stock consists of — AIM’LKS, PEACH, PEAR, CHERRY, PLUMS. .JAPAN ESE PEItSIM MON8. APRICOTS, NECTRINE, MULBERRIES, QUINCE, GRAPE, FIGS. RASPBERRIES, GOOSEBERRIES. CURRANTS, PIE PLANTS, ENGLISH WALNUTS, PEC A N S. CH E8TN UTS, STRAWBERRIES, ROSES, EVERGREENS, SHADE TREES, &e. Ail the new and rare varieties as well as tlie old ones, which my new catalogue for 1888 will show. Give your ord Q r to my authorixed agent, or order direct from the nursery. dfCorrespondence solicited JEJ Discriptive Catalogue free to ail a|»- pl leant s. Address, J. Van Lindsley, POMONA, Guilford County, N G- Ifeliable Salesmen Wanted in every Cuulyy. A go^sl paying enmntiasi will l>c given.