SOUTHERN PLANTER.— ADVERTISING SHEET. 



Lunenburg Female School. 



The Second Session of this School will com- 

 merici^ on the 1st of February, 1857. under the direc- 

 tion of my daughter, A. M. RAGSDALE, and con- 

 tinue teii months. The design of this School is to pre- 

 pare young ladies for entrance into the advanced class- 

 es of any female coUrge. JNo pains or expense will he 

 .^spared to make it equal in every respect to any school 

 designed for a similar purpose. 



Competent teachers are engaged for each department. 



Terms per Session and Board $85 00 



English Tuition 20 00 



French and Latin, each 10 00 



Drawing and Painting in Water Colois 10 00 



Painting in Oil Colors 40 00 



Music on Piano, witli use of instrumerU 40 00 



Ornamental Needle- Work 5 00 



Contingent Expenses 1 00 



One-half payable in advance, the balance at tlie close 

 of the session. Address 



JOEL M. RAGSDALE, Macfarland's P. O. 



Nov 1856.— tf Lunenburg, Va. 



GREAT REDUCTION IN THE PRICE OF 



HATS AND BOOTS. 



From 15 to 20 per cent, saved 

 by buying from .1. H. ANTHONY, Co- 

 lumbi;in Hotel Building. 



Moleskin Hats of best quality, $3^ ; 

 do. second quality, $3; Fashionable 

 Silk Hats, $2 50; Fine Calfskin Sew- 

 ed Boots, $3 50; Congress Gaiter 

 Boots, $3 25; Fine Calfskin Sewed 

 Shoes, $2 25. 



J. PL ANTHONY has made ar- 

 rangements with one of the best ma- 

 kers in the city of Philadelphia to supply him with a 

 handsome and substantia! Calfskin Sewed BOOT, 

 which he will sell at the unprecedented low price of 

 Three Dollars and a Half. Nov 1856. 



VALUABLE EAEM 



On James River, Seven Miles heloiu Richmond, 

 FOR SALE. 



The subscribers are athorized to sell a valua- 

 ble farm on James River, seven miles below Richmond- 

 The Old Osborne Turnpike runs through it. 



It contains 400 acres, of which 250 acres are cleared 

 and in a high state of improvement. It has all been 

 recently limed — a portion at the rate of 50 bushels, 

 and the rest 100 bushels per acre. The land will pro- 

 duce, as we are informed by the owner, from 8 to 12 

 barrels of corn per acre, from 15 to 25 bush'Is wheat, 

 and from 20 to 30 bushels of oats, according to the sea- 

 son. It will grow clover finely. The woodland is of 

 similar soil to the cleared, and on a portion there is a 

 fine parcel of heart pine tin)ber. 



The buildings consist of a dwelling with 9 rooms, 7 

 of which have fire places. There are 4 double negro 

 quarters, and a large stable in good order. The barn 

 is large and well-constructed, to which is added a ma- 

 chine shed and stationary horse-power for threshing 

 purposes. A most excellent ice-house, and all other 

 necessary out houses. There are two excellent Springs 

 of water near the house, and a well in the stable yard. 

 There are some good fruit trees on the estate, besides 

 a young orchard recently set out. 



The place is very healthy — as much so as any on the 

 river, 



Thero is a temporary wharf on the river, which an- 

 swers very well for the use of the place. 



TERMS. — One-third cash ; balance at one and two 

 years, bearing interest, secured bv a trust di-ed. 



Apply to GODDIN & APPERSON, 



Nov. 1856.— It 



Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, 



For the rapid Cure of Coughs, Colds, Hoarse- 

 ness, Bronchitis, Whooping- Cough, Croup, 

 Asthma and Consumption. 



This remedy has won for itself such notoriety for its 

 cures of every variety of Pulmonary disease, that it is 

 entirely unnecessary to recount the evidences of its 

 virtues to any c( mmunity where it has been employed. 

 So wide is the field of its usefulness, and so numerous 

 tljie cases of its cures that almost every section of the 

 country abounds in persons publicly known, who have 

 been restored from alarming and even desperate dis- 

 eases of the lungs by its me. When once tried its su- 

 periority over every oilier medicine of its kind is too 

 apparent to escape observation, and where its virtues 

 are known, the public no longer hesitate to what anti- 

 dote to employ for the distressing and dangerous affec- 

 tions of the pulmonary organs which are incident to 

 our climate. And not only in formidable att;icks upon 

 the lungs, but for the milder varieties of Colds, Coughs, 

 Hoarseness, Sfc, and lor Children it is the pleasantest 

 and the safest medicine that can be obtained. 



As it has long been in constant use tiiroughout this 

 section, we need not do more than assure the people its 

 quality is kept up to the best that it ever has been, and 

 that tiie genuine article is sold by PURCELL, LADD 

 & CO., Richmond, and by all Druggists. 



November 1856.— 3t 



Peach Trees for Sale. 



A choice selection of kinds, both for the Gar- 

 den and the Orchard, of the most beautiful growth, 

 worked from specimen beaiing trees at $60 per 1,000, — 

 Also a general assortment of other trees and plants 

 low. Planting done in the neatest manner by 



EDWIN ALLEN, Nurseries, 



Nov 1856. New Brunswick, New Jersev. 



FAL L TRAD E-IS 5 6 . 

 To Planters and Farmers. 

 THOMAS D. aUARLES, 



No. 229, Broad St., 



Would call attention to his large and varied 

 stock of heavy Woollen Goods, Blankets, Kerseys, 

 Satinets, Linseys, Oznaburgs, Bleached and Brown 

 Domestics. Also to his stock of house furnishing 

 goods generally. By the 15th of September, his as- 

 sortment of Staple i^nd Fan^-y Goods, will be com- 

 plete in all departments — to which will be added Car- 

 pets, Rues, &c. Sept. 1856. 



Coughs, Colds, Consumption, Astlima. 



LEONARD'S INSTANT RELIEF. 



This excellent preparation, very popular in 

 Richmond and neighborhood, is carefully made up from 

 a variety of medicinal substances, exerting a beneficial 

 influence over the organs most aftected by the above 

 complaints. 1^ 26 Cents per Bottle 



Purcell, Ladd & Co. and Bennett, Beers Fisher, 

 wholesale and retail agents. To be had of all Drug- 

 gists in Virginia and North Carolina. 



Sept 1856 — ly 



MITCHELL & TYLER, 



DEALERS IN 



Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silver and Plated 

 Ware, Military and Fancy Goods. 

 RICHMOND, VA. 

 Sept 1856— ly 



