Janet Carlson Giardina handed a large flower pot to Angie Furno, pointed her toward some mums, and crossed once again through the Medford farmhouse she is turning into an education center about James Still, the "black doctor of the Pines." On Sunday, the Medford Historical Society will inaugurate the center at 211 Church Rd., and on Friday volunteers were planting fence posts, mulching a children's garden, hanging drapes, and setting up chairs for opening day. Still, Carlson was not prepared for the sight of two contractors jacking a pair of stately white columns into place under the front-door eaves. "I love it," she said. "This is like a barn-raising." But even as guides escort visitors Sunday around the century-old farmhouse, teaching about the 19th-century African American whose herbal remedies made him wealthy and famous across South Jersey, some of Still's descendants will be fretting about the dilapidated bungalow next door.
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