SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR. 
296 
M 
TOBIN’S GARDEN. 
RS. J ANE TOBIN would inform the public that her Garden is 
UD and that no pains or expense will be spared to 
^ stnck of PLANTS and BULBS in the South. 
the servicesof Mr. Sanders, an experienced 
Nurseryman, she hopes, by moderate prices and stnct 
to obtain a share of pubHc patronage. 
^*w^^^r^DOW°weU stocked, and offer for sale a vanety of LVER- 
tSs and SHRUBS, 0. namentalFlowering SHRUBS. A full 
of Everblooming ROSES, including the newest ; Double 
aswrtme . jjyaCINTHS, BULBS. Ac. Also, a col ection of GREEN 
house P^N fS, desirable for this latitude, and BORDER PLANTS, 
- APPLES, PEARS, CHERRIES, PLUMS, PEACH- 
I.'/ APRIC^S,” QUINCES, POMEGRANATES, GRAPES and 
OTRA WBERRY PLANTS, of all the best varieties. 
Naming, packing, shipping and transporting carefully at- 
*^We*^earnestly impress upon purchasers that a small plant es- 
tabUshed in a pot is mnch better for transporting than a plant from 
the ST und, whatever may be its size. 
The public are respectfully invited to visit our Rose grounds, par- 
‘icularly in May and October, where we will be happy to show that 
we pos^ and have for sale every article we publish, and more in 
reserve not fully proven. 
When selections are left to us by purchasers, they may rely upon 
liberal treatment in choice of sorts wiUi distinctive charac- 
A^ress rJan56-tf] JANE TOBIN, . ugusta, Ga. 
SOUTH^N CULTIVATOR FOR 1854. 
B ound volumes of the SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR for 1854 
may now be obtained at this office. Price, $1.50. Or ive 
win send it by mail, post-paid at $1 . 80. Address 
wmoeii j JONES. Augusta, Ga. 
GARDENING FOR THE SOUTH. 
T he work, securely enveloped, will be sent by mail (prepaid) to 
any person remitting at the rate of one dollar and twenty-five 
cents per copy in postage stamps, or in the b'lls of any specie pay. 
Ing Banks. Address M. N. W HITE, 
May56 — tf Athens, Ga. 
THE BEST WORK ON THE HORSE. 
PRICE ONE DOLLAR. 
C M. SAXTON & CO., Ne'wl^ork. have just published, and wiB 
• send it free of postage, THE STABLE BOOK ; a Treatise on the 
Management of Horses, in relation to Stabling, Grooming. Feeding, 
Watering, and Working, by John ^ewart. Veterinary Surgeon, and 
Professor of Veterinary Medicines in the Andersonian University, 
Glasgow, with Notes and Additions adapting it to American Food 
and climate, by A. B. Allen, Editor of the Amet'iiian AgricuUurist, 
illustrated with numerous engravings. 
CONTENTS. 
Chap. I. — Stabling, Construction of Stables, Ventilation of Stables, 
Appendages of Stables. 
Chap. II. — Stable Operations, Stable Men, Grooming Operations 
of Decoration. Management of the Feet, Operations in the Stable. 
Chap. HI.— Stable Restraints, Accidents, Habits, Vices. 
Chap. IV.— Warmth. 
Chap. V. — Food — Articles of, Composition of, Preparafion of, As* 
slmilation of. Indigestion of- Principles of Feeding, Practice of Feed- 
ing, Pasturing, Soiling, Feeding at Straw Yard. 
Chap. AT. — AA'ater. 
Chap. ATI. — Service, General Preparation for Work, Physiology oJ’ 
Muscular Exertion, Preparation for Fast Work, Treatment after 
AVork, Accidents of AVork, Repose. 
Chap. ATU. -Management of Diseased and Defective Horses, Medi- 
cal Attendance. 
“I have aimed in this work to make Practice the Master of Theory, 
and have endeavored to arrange the whole subject into divisions 
which will render every part of it easily understood, and easily re- 
ferred to by every one.” — Author's Preface 
THE HORSE’S FOOT, AND HOW TO KEEP IT SOUND, with 
illustrations, by William Miles. Price— paper — Twenty-Five Cents, 
and sent free of postage. C. M. SAXTON & CO., 
Jan56 — tf Agricultural Book Publishers, New York. 
SHEEP FOR SALE. 
O NE very five half French and half Spanish MERINO BUCK, 
one vear old Also, two superior pure breed yearling SOUTH 
DOAVN BUCKS, of the AVebb stock. 
Juue56— tf RICHARD PETERS, Atlanta, Ga. 
TO FARMERS, MECHANH^S AND OTHERS, 
McCORD’S PATENT PORTABLE ANTI-FRICTION HORSE POWER, 
PATENTED, JULY 11th, 1854. 
T his is an Invention by which a larger proportion of the power of the hor.se Is rendered available than by any other arrangement 
knowiL Its parts are few and simple, not liable to derangement, retlily adjusted for working, with ordinary care very durable and 
efficient. 
The Machines are manufactured with great exactness and all precisely alike, .so that in case a piece should be brokenwc can always 
furnish a pieefe t^ replace it. 
It is designed for one or two horses, and can be used for a great variety of work, thereby saving a largo amount of labor, expense and 
valuable time to the Farmer, Mechanic and others. 
By rea.son of its portability the owner can read'dy locate it wherever it may .«uit his business. It can be used to good advantage for 
driving cotton gins, threshing machines, circular, or other saws, planing and other machines for working wood, driving mills, of various 
kinds, for grinding, paint, &c., straw-cutters, com-sheller.s, lathes, grindstones, <fcc., and for churning, washing, pumping -u ater for cattle . 
irrigation, or draining, and all other purposes to which a Horse Power is adapted. 
AVe also keep the most approved Spike and Beater THRESHERS, which can be driven by the above Powers. 
FAN MILES, for Hand or Horse Power. 
SMUT MAGHTNES, GRAIN CRADLES, BELTING, Ac. 
Scott’s LITTLE GIANT CORN AND COB MILLS. CARMICHAEL & BEAN, 
MarchSfi — tf Dealers in Hardware, Cutlery and Agricultural Implements, Augusta,Ga . 
