SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR. 
229 
j, AT TEN CENTS A PAPER, 
Double Stock Gilliflowers, 
FLOWER SEEDS FOR THE SOUTH. 
H aving experienced the great difficulty in obtaining reliable 
Flower Seed.s suitaHe to the South, 1 have raised a small 
quantity, wffiich I am now offering to the public. I would particu- 
larly draw the attention of the Ladies to the unsurpas -ed collec- 
tions of DOUBLE STOCK GILLIFLOWERS, TEN WEEKS 
STOCKS, CARNATIONS, GERMAN ASTERS, WALLFLOW- 
ER, HOLLYHOCKS, and many others : 
Delphiniiim Ajacis. 
Dianthus chinensis. 
Double Balsams, 
Elicrysium lucidum, 
Papaver somniferum. 
“ mackanthuio, 
Emilea flammea, 
Gompherena globosa, 
Heris speciosa, 
Ipomea Quamoclit, 
Lovatera trimestris, 
“ Murselli, 
Phlox Dmmraondi, 
Portulacca Thellusoni, 
Poterium Long visorba, 
Reseda odorata, 
Salpiglosis variabilis, 
Scabiosa atropuuxjunea. 
Ten Weeks Stocks, 
Imperial Stocks, 
Autumnal Stock, 
Caraations, 
Wailllower, 
Dianthus imperialis plenissima 
Rhodonthe Mauglesii, 
Heliotropium peruviamim, 
Pharbitis limbata, 
Polyganum lenetifolium. 
AT FIVE CENTS PER PAPER. 
Adonis oestivalis, 
Ageratum coeruleiun, 
Amaranthus tricolor, 
Althea rosea, 
“ chinensis, 
Ammobium alatum. 
Antirrhinum majus. 
Aster ch'ueiisis, 
Calendula crista galli, 
Calliopsis bicolor, 
Catanouche bicolor, 
Ce osea cristata, 
Celosia indica, 
Centourea cyanus. 
Gilia tricolor, 
Senecia elegans, 
Tagetes erecta, 
“ patula, 
Verbena Melindris, 
Viola odorata, 
Zinnea elegans, 
Xeranthemums annuum 
Gnaphalium foetidum. 
I^^^Orders; enclosing the money and athr e cent postage stamp 
for every dollars worth of seed sent to PLU3IB & LEITNER, 
Augusta, Ga., or to the subscriber, will meet with prompt atten- 
tion, ROBERT NELSON. 
Feb5 7— tf 
EVERGREENS AND ORNAMENTAL TREES 
for the South. 
A FEW rare andbeautiful EVERGREENS Trees and Shrubs 
of the proper size for transplanting may now be obtained 
from the sn‘'>scriber. The collections embraces the Deodar Cedar, 
Cryptomeria Japonica, Oriental Cypress, Norway Spruce, Silver 
Fir, White Pine, Balsam Fir, Silver Cedar, Irish, English and 
Pyramidal Yew, Swedish Juniper, American and Chinese Arbor 
Vitas; Cedar of Lebanon, MagnoPa Grandifiora, “Mock Orange,” 
Pittospomm, <fcc., &c . ; in short all the most desirable Eve’-green 
Trees and Shrubs that fl utrish in this latitude, DECIDUOUS 
SHRUBS and TREES, of many varities can also be supplied in 
quan ity. (See Dps Tiptive Catalogue sent per mail.) Ad- 
di’tss [Dec56 — tf] D. REDMOND, Augusta, Ga. 
YOUNG AMERICA CORN AND COB MILL. 
The Cheapest and Best. 
T’TUE offer for sale the above MILL, which surpasses aM others 
T? in speed and durability, simplicity and strength as well as 
economy. That part of the Mill mos- liable to wear being separ- 
ate from the main body, can at any time be removed at a small ex 
pense. 
The above 3Iill has received the first premium at the State Fairs 
of New Pork, Ohio, Michigan, North Carolina and Tennessee, as 
also at a large number of County Fairs in various .States. 
The YOUNG AMERICA MILT, performs its work better and 
nearly twice as fast as any other Coun or Com and Cob Mill yet 
offered to the public. 
Planters are invited to examine the Mill and compare its ad- 
vantages. JOHN & THOS. A. BONES. 
March — tf 
SOUTH DOWN SHEEP. 
I AM willing tp> dispose of a few very fine yearling SOUTH 
DOWN EWES, in lamb; also, four fine yearling BUCKS, 
not related to the Ewes. 
Persons wishing to make trial of this celebrated variety of North- 
ern Sheep would do well to avail themselves of this opportunity 
to obtain a small flock of undoubted purity. 
I VI ill sell a Buck and three Ewes for -S LOO, if applied fo'- prior to 
the 1st of J tnuary next. RICHARD PKTERS, 
Deeofi — tf Atlanta, Ga. 
BLACK ESSEX HOGS. 
OR SALE, a few pair of three to four months old, at $20 per 
pair. For Lot Hogs, I consider this breed superior to any 
other — they cannot be made to take the mange, and are free from 
ctxtaneouserruptions and disease of the lunys, to which hogs are 
so liable when confined in dry pens in a Southern climate. Address 
XovS.'l — tf R- PETERS, Atlanta, Ga. 
F 
CHINESE PROLIFIC PEA! 
THE GREAT FORAGE PLANT AND RENOVATOR OF SOUTHERN LANDS ! ! 
T HIS very remarkable new Field Pea is by far the most valuable and productive variety ever introduced. It is well adapted to 
poor land, yielding at least three or four times as much as any of the common varieties, and producing a growth of vii e almost 
incredible. It grows in clusters of from 12 to 20 pods, each pod contai ting 10 to t2 peas, and is of course far more ea-s.’Zy gathered than 
anj^ other. The vine never becomes bard, but 's soft and nutriiiuu^ from the blossom to the I’oot. It is greadily eaten by stock, and 
the Peas are unsurpassed /ur tlte table in delicacy au-’ richness of flavor. 
We subjoin the following extracts— tke first from Ex Governor Drew, of Arkansas, and the remainder from several well known citi- 
zens of South Bend, in the same State ; 
Fort Smith, Ark., December 20, 1856. 
Dear Sir : — The evidences afforded me while at your bouse by an examination of the quantity ot ■> ine and peas gathered trom one 
and a half acres of giound, is beyond^anything in the way uf a great yield I have ever known. 
I think I am within boimds when I say theyield, in pea and vine, is at least live times greater than any other pea — clover, or grass for 
hay. And the waste peas were eq'ual to anj' oiher full pea crop ; and from the quantity of waste vines remaining on the ground, I think 
it will prove a tine manure and supporter of the soil. 
Your son, Mr Wm. F. Douglass, has done well in making arrangements for the extended eultnre of this invaluable Pea in the older 
States, wffierc it will doubtless do more in re-instating the old, wmrn-out lands than guano or any other application to the soil, while, at 
the same time, the yield is likely to be as great on such lands as on the rich bottoms of Arkansa.s. 
) Respectfully your ob’t. serv’t., THOS. S. DREW. 
To Robert H. Douglass, Esq. 
Dr. Goree, of Arkansas, estimated the yield in Peas or Hay at ^[jive times that of any other Field P’ a he had. ever seen planted f W. IL 
Lee, E.sq , say he “has never seen anything to eciual it,” and that it should “snpersede the use of every oth r,” and the following certifi- 
cate settles the question of its vahie for Hay ; 
“We, the undersigned, saw “that pea-vine,” and think, after the peas were gathered, that the vine won’d have made as mnch hay as 
g, stout man could carry ; it covered a space of ten or twelve feet in diameter, and lay from one foot to eighteen inches deep.” 
^ WJI. C. MEEKS, 
B. W. LEE. 
South Pend, Arh., Sept , 1856. 
Col. J. B. L. Marshall, As.sistant Engineer on the Little Rock and Napoleon Rail Road, says : j r ^ j- 
“If the Souih:^rn Farmers will give it a 'air tri.al, they will find it to be the greet, est Pen both for table use and for feeding stock, now 
know’ll. They fatten hog.s faster than anything I have ever tried O ' the IV acres Mr. Douglass had in cultivation last year, there was 
at least four times as much vitie as I ever saw o'> any piece of ground of the same size," &c., &c. 
For further particulars, see Circulars furnished grat s by the Afients. -n v. 
Wenre prepared to send out a limited qn am ity t.i thasePoas, put up in cloth packages to go by mad They will be forwarded, /rce of 
to any address on receipt of .$1.30, or otherwise at $1 eacli. CuiTent funds and postage stamps wi 1 be a satistact(/ry remit- 
tance. Onr names will be print'd on all packages of the seed. , . -tv 
Any one not perfectly satisfied with the Pea will hav'e liis money retunaed. Address (with plain dire ’tions for mailing) 
^ plumb & LEn XER, Augusta. Georgia. 
Dealers in Seeds and country merchants can be supplied, to a limited extent, at the usual discoimt, if their orders are forwarded 
mm ediaiely. ' 
