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Chinese Supmuutans. Religious superemition asserts itself In Chinese architecture, and the univer sal sacredness of the numerals 3 znd ' is shown in the arrangement of temu ple doors. There is a tiple gate way to each of the halls of the imperial palace and the same order prevails in' the Ming tombs, and the sacred pcrsoz of the Emperor, when he was in hi.7 Pekin home, could only te approached by three times three prostrations Best For the Bowels. No matter what ails you, headache to a eancer, you will neiver get well until your vowels are put right. CASCAR-TS help nature, cure ycu witnout a gripe or pai:, produce easy natural' movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your bealtb act. CAsARETS Candy Uatbartic, the genuine,. put up in metal boxes, every tab let has U.C.C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. Senator Hoar told the Smith college girls the otheT day that the angels of glory couldn't compete with tnem in a beauty show. And the dear creatures no doubt nudged and whispered: "Isn't he a sweet eld caramel?"-Den ver Post. Indigestion is a bad companion. Get rid of It by chewing a bar of Adams' Pepsin Tutti Frutti alter each meal. The men of most means are the meanest of most men, sometimes. FITS permanentiy cured. No fits or nervous -iessi af ter first day's use of i)r. Kline's Greot Nerve Restorer.S2trial bottle and treatisefree Dr. R. H. Kus'.I. Ltd., 931 Arch St. Phila. Pa. Tse bald-headed man may console himself t' the-fac; that ho was born that way. Hest Prescription For Chills an r is a bottle of Gnovz's TAsTELEss Ca c. It is simple iron and quinine -in , form. No cure,no pay. Price25c. Pe hey call them department stores becau's hoppers never want to depart. Ho mith, of Atlanta, has present ed tra 'ng libraries to fourteen coun ties in. Ge&gia. The books are intended for the schbol children and are to make the circuit of the schools. Wanted. A traveling salesman in each southern state; $50 to $60 per month and traveling expenses; experienc-, not absolutely necessary. Address Penicks Tobacco Works Co.. Penicks, Va. Lieut. Arthur A. Becket, who was re cently tried in Dover, England, for pil fering half-crowns from his regimental canteen and honorably discharged, is a direct descendant of the famous Car dinal, Thomas A. Becket. He has been connected with Punch for a quarter of a century and is now assistant editor. Good Position. Trustworthy men wanted to travel. Expert enco not absolutely necessary. For particulars, address Peerless Tob. Wks., Bedford City, Va. The mistakes of our life may be many but we sincerely hope that we may never arrive at the condition that de serves the attention of the acrostic fiend. 'l goods are alike to PUTNAr FADELZSs Dtzs, as they color all fibers at one boiling Sold by all druggists. Watt's Official Railway Guide of the R cutl Is an indispensable companion to the traveling man and an acknowledged need of the man of business. The price Is 25 cents. Issued~ by Watts Publishing Qompany, Atlanta, Ga. so's eure for C~nsumption Is an infallie medicine 'or coughs and colds.-N'. W.' EL, ocean Grove. N. J.. Feb. 17. lim. ow'sSoothing Syrup forebhildre: tens the gums, reducesinftamss n. cures wind colic, 25c.a bottle r . -stroy the sense ' ge thewhole system1 he mucous surfaces. r be used except on le physicians, as the fold to the good you them. Hall's Uttarrh .J. Cheney &~ Co., orcury, and Is taken y upon the blood and system. In buying re to get the genuine. nd is made in Toledo, . . - co. Testimonials free. ggists; price, 75c. per bottle. SyU Pls are the best. ople apparently talk so that they e to listen to other people. To Cure a Cold in One Day. ie LAXATIVE Bioxo QUnINa TABLEs. 11 druggIsts refund the money if it faisto re. E. W. Gnovz's signature on each box. 5c. The average politician is addicted to bolts and bars. so. 47. Look at your tongue. Is it coated ? Then -you have a bad taste in your mouth every4 morning. Your appetite is poor, and food die tresses you. You have frequent headaches and are often dizzy. Your stomach is weak and your bowels are alwaysy constipated. There's an old and re liable cure: Don't take a cathartic dose and then stop. Bet-4 ter take a laxative dose each night, just enough to cause one good free move ment the day following. -You feel better the very next day. Your appetite returns, your dyspepsia is cured, your headaches pass away, your tongue clears up,y - your liver acts well, and your bowels no longer give you- trouble. 2 cents All drnggists. Y ~t''e &nA'-r's Pills for 35 years, and' sidei :nem the best ~l does me mnoregoodi Sof any other kind i veoover tr" ' RM AND GfARDI, Weighing the Milk. Weighing the milk. If done only once a week, will enable the farmer to know what each cow is (loing, and if a profit is being made. It will then be possible to make a careful comparison of the yields of the cows and permit of getting rid of the poor milkers and replace them with better animals. Renedles For Lice. Unsalted lard or butter will kill lice on *hickcns, but must be used with care. A very small portion under the wings is all that Is necesary. More may be u:;ed around the head, for the head lice are more hurtful. Coal oil is also sure death to every louse, but if used too freely will blister and take the feathers off. Equal parts of to bacco, raisins and lard %teeped to gether and strained make an excellent ointment for killing lice. Frost-s Action Upon the Soil. The frost is one of the agents of the farmer for pulverizing the soil. Every clod or lump in a field Is a detriment according to its size, as the finer the soil the greater ihn* feeding capacity of the plants and the easier the roots can penetrate. As heat expands and cold contracts all lumps. It is for the frost to break down ail the coarse por tions, which work cannot be (lone with any implement. When a piece of land is well drained the frost goes deeper, apd when the land is plowed in the fall and subsoiled the frost prepares It for the spring plowing by going down deep and tearing all coarse por tions apart by expansion. H1ave Your Bogs of Gooi Shape. The shape and style of your hogs regulates, to a certain extent, the price that you will receive for them in the mar!.et. so the hog raiser should not overlook this matter, but breed his hogs, as far as he can, so that they will be shaped in a manner that suits the buyer and consumer, and it is only the farmer who does this that can look for "top-notch" prices. There is one class of hogs that have rather good hind quarters, but they are low in front and generally have a poor heart. Such hogs get off their feed very easily, cannot stand heavy feeding, and are generally found with a weak constitution which makes them liable to disease. Another unprofitable class of hogs is a fine-boned animal, or what we some times call a "short, blocky chunk." Some feeders like this type, as they are easily fattened, but as a rule they will not eat sufficient food to make profitable gains. Generally speaking, the hogs that make the largest gains and do the best are those that are well-boned, well developed fore and hind quarters. large through the heart, and with legs of fair length. Such a hog Is the one the farmer should breed, for they always find a good market even at tImes when there Is practically no market at all for hogs of a poorer grade. gr as fr alonc. vantago has been taken edge, except by gardening folk ally, Awhat the advanced garden know. he latter shades his green house when he finds the plants frozen, and he plants rhododendrons and sim ilar plants (*here the sun does not strike them in frosty weather, If lie should hr ye any choice in the selection of a site. In the extra cold region of the Northwest the advanced gardener shades the trunks of his trees by plac ing boards fastened together lIke tree boxes, up against them. And thus the trees escape sunseald arising from being under the sunlight, and sImilar troubles. Surely orange growers in Florida might pr-ofit by this experience of their Nqrthern brethren. It would not be a 'very expensive thing to make an ar bor or lath over an orange grove, the lath being an inch or so apart. With such a partial shade the plants would probably endure ten or twelve spas mfodic degrees of frost without injury, and the shade in summer would doubt less b~e all the better for the trees, at least the trunks of the trees might be boxed, and even filled with earth, if the weight could be supported. If the tops should suffer from frost, the strong trunks weuld sooner recover than when the whole tree was kIlled to the ground.-Meehans' Monthly. A Convenient Rail Fence. When a farmer has a lot of ord rail fences going to rack he will find the fence showvn in the illustration the cheapest one he can build. Set posts six inches closer together fian the raIls are long; take two pieces of or-) linary fencing wire, each about six feet long, and place on sides of fir-st two posts, having wire on second post How THE FENCE Is 3IADE. on opposite side to wire on1 first post: fasten these wires to the post at or neat- the ground. Now place a rail be tweeu wires and post. drawving wirei lii tigl.ily over rail andl stapling just ibove rail with long staple, doing same at both ends: put on another rail as before. and contInue till top of posts is reached, which completes the I first panel. The other ptanels are muadle il the same way, taking care not to inrve both ends of panet on .same sidei of posts, but r-un alternately as st arted. : The illustration shows 1lie way rails tre YtapIedI to posts and the manner of running panels. As the rails when >)uC on pos5ts in this way (10 not touch ach other they will last longer thtan when put on in any other way, and I ike' this method of making use of old rils very, well, for by setting postst aid using a little wire a good fencei c-n be madeafrom a very naor ne, . Build six to eight rails high. Should a post rot off any time set another near it and fasten rails as before.-J, G. Allshouse, in Farm and Fireside. Dairy Evolution. The latest development in the dairy industry. and one that has attracted the most attention, probably, is dairy bacteriology. It is only a few years since that the study of bacteriology has been sufficiently scientific to reach milk and its production. To-day we find that the man who is up in his business is the dairyman who fully understands bacteria, where they come from, how they go and how to determine the good from the bad. The man who has the best knowledge along that line is the man who is best fitted to carry on dairying scientifl cally and exactly, and to guarantee that his product will be always uni form, providing his milk, or the raw product, has been delivered to him in the proper shape. Marketing dairy products has been almost entirely revolutionized within the last twenty-five years. The meth ods of transportation have improved, methods of packing, packages and handling in every way have been so radically changed that the hand]6r of butter of twenty-five years ago would hardly be able to understand or appre ciate what has bcen accomplished un less he had grown up, as it were, with the improved methods. We must have the dairy type. con formation of the cow to the business for which she is designed. We look upon the cow now as simply a machine through which the products of the farm are passed, and from which we receive the milk in its perfect condi tion. The cow that would produce 100 or 200 pounds of butier per year fifty years ago was considered a fairly good cow, but the cow that does not pro duce 300 pounds of butter per year now Is hardly considered up to date. This has been brought about by organ ization, by breeding, by studying the problem and finding out how the milk ing ability of the machine could be de veloped.-D. W. Willson. in ANmewricam Agriculturist. Value of Experimenting.' We have often urged on our readers to experiment on a small scale In the various lines of their work. That many of them have followed this sug gestion we have not the slightest doubt. Some of them have been test ing varieties of fruits and vegetables for several successive years. Others have only recently begun such experi ments. And many who have not chosen these specialties have been testing dif ferent kinds of fertilizing material, different breeds of live stock, various methods of feeding, or have been working experimentally In some of the other divisions or subdivisions of farm business. Efforts of thiskind, whether immediately successful or not, are al ways useful to the man by who -they are made. To the young far r they are especially valuable. Te ot only on account of what is le directly from their results, b *because the tendency of such to make the worker more and care ful than he otherw be. any o Jities will o ough indi y they sIgnificance.1 uch is the e me of the ex eriments un y the writer of hs paragraph. gh disappointing, he failures of kind should not ad to discou ement. There are ther seasons coming, and it Is prob ble that more satisfactory results ay then be obtained. It is certain hat the persistent and faithlful inves igator will not wholly fail of his re rard for the time spent.-Practica) 'farmer. Early Economizi'g With Feed. Early in the fall it becomes neces ~ary to take stock of the food for the attle, dairy cows, swine or sheep. o man can go ahead and feed reck essly even thus early in the season. well remember one farmer who fed ' berally and recklessly right through * he fall months, who gave as his ex ~use that he wanted to keep his stock ~rowing just tile same as In summer. ell, that was all right If he had foodI nough on hand to carry him along, t ut by the time winter arrived he wast ~aced by a problem of selling off his tock or buying food at high prices. here was no other altern'ative. lHe ad far more stock to begin with than ' e should have had for the amount of red on hand, and then his reckless raste In feeding had made matters 'orse. That sort of mismanagement is of- ' n carried on in a lesser degree, and s nimals are forced on the market at a 8 ss in order to save the food or the t ecessity of buying more. It Is not t uch a difficult mhtter for a man to s gure out early in the fall how much t ock lie can winter on a given amount i' f food. If he has sufficient of the 'J lter to carry his stock along lie is la stified in going ahegl and feeding berally, but if he cannot winter them r an what he has it is better to weed out a e flocks now.. Let this he the first I onomy practiced. Before the stock S taken from the pastures sell the 12 oorest, o- those the least likely to # ake profitable returns. Beyond this woulid advise no one to sell at all. ~ imply reduce the stock to the limits i ecessary for wintering them on the ~ od at hland. The amount of food ould be sufficient for good liberal edin,. and varied enough to satisfy e appetites of the animals. They do much better on a varied diet lys to have this ready for th I times. Especially do we wa ok out for the winter food o rm stock because we are co ore to realize that it is winter f g that pays thme best. Only in ct, progressive and active far n engage successfully in wvi airying, poultry raising and tile action of winter lambs. The gr mass of farmers will stick to sum rming at the season of the y hen difliculties are the greatest. by overcoming these greater difLe o cs that he makes his Larger profits. 'l Viliamn Conway. in American Cul 1b ator 1 FUR FACTS. Wonderful Pelts That Will Soon Be Ad mired by Femininity. As usual, all the bewildering rich and beautiful wonders of peltry are being brought forth for the admiring and the tdcring of femininity. A peep at some of the riches shortly to be shown makes one acquainted with many of the details which distin guish the new garments. Most favored are those well-known skins, sable, broadtail, Persian lamb, cal. ermine, chinchilla, fox, minx and marten. Except for evening wraps the ermine and chinchilla figure either in the smaller pieces or as trimmings or facings. Coat shapes embrace everything from the long half fitting paletots tc the lit tle Etons, or even the sleeveless Figaro (Mhich would be a lovely way of re juvenating a jacket with old-fashioned or worn-out sleeves). Then there's the stunning English box coat in the three-quarter length. Deep dips at the front are the distin guishipg features of the Etons. Russian blouses are belted, and the Petersburg has tiny basques, making two points back and front. Very'short basques, indeed, distinguish all the jackets, though there's the dip at the front. Most peculiar of all the small jackets is a queer affair with circular sleeves (very flaring) reaching to the elbow. Finishing touches are as varied as they are rich. Some coats actually have double rev ers. one set being of a contrasting fur. Inlaid revers are another novel fea ture, fPar of another sort figuring in the inlaying. Following In L'Aiglon craze we find gold braid and inlaying, both in the belts- and stock collars, the latter be ing finished off with little flaring pieces of fur. Gilt buckles serve to catch up both lace and tails on the more elaborate garments. Though some wide, old-time collar ettes figure, the majority of them run mostly to standing collars. The very latest shape consists of a double cape with a dip at the front, aaid a flaring shawl collar; the graceful collar re tains its shawl shape whether it is left broadly apart o~ hooked cozily to gether. There's tie turn-over collar, too. It is built ' last like a deeply turned-over linen collar, though of course it Is so -.6ef bulkier as to scarcely resemble Animal heads, as well as tails, figure, though not to any such extent. Fur muffs are quite small, plain and round. And boas, well there's so much about bons that we'd better make them "an other story."-Philadelp in Record. PeeI untain climb has j turned from iys that tiel stories of lives mountains, never cause her test feair in r'egard to her owxn afety. Twelve lives had been lost up o ,July, when she idis in the Tyrol1 e last summer, a long list for so1 arly in the season, 'and there is anI verage of twenty-fie lost each year. it they are almost with~out exception' aused, she believes, by carelessness .nd foolhardiness. An occasion where life is lost by a falling stone, as hap-I ened this y-ear, Is a rare occurrence. r I am exceedingly careful and eatious yself," says Miss Peck. "I have ken observations frequently, and I o not think my feet slip more often, if s often, as those of the guides. I lace them each time with the greatest are." Miss Peek climbed this year the 'unfingerspitze and tile Zugspitze, ach about 10,000 feet high, and the ungfrau, between 13,000 and 14,000 1 eet. The first was the most interest g climb, she says, taking a compara vely short time, while It was exceed- 1 gly difficult and gave exercise to I ery muscle ofsthe body, one of the hilarating features of the work in 'hich every mountain climber do ghts. The pohit of view of the moun-.i tan climber Is different from that of e ordinary i:2dividual. Miss Peck oks at New York's high buildings ith admiration, and says, "How I ould like to climb them'"-New. York 'imes. TIhe Shopping Gowni.I The now shopping costume resembles lie rainy--day dress, but is made of re ersibie cloth of a lighter weight. At art costume recently shown has a ide pleat laid at each side of the con-t 'e box pleat, at the back of the skirt,( e box folding under. Beside each ide pleat is a hip pocket, with a but ned flap. The jacket is tightly fitted, d closes diagonally with buttons. he sleeve is smooth and plain and col r high and straight. A rainy-day costume is of checked ~versible cloth and has a double reasted jacket~tight fitting and slight pointed front and back. Stitched traps of peau do sole furnish the sim e decoration. The skirt has a front ore and two side gores fitted by darts. 'atch pockets, with button-trimmed 1 aps andl silk-bordered edges, are on S me front of the skirt, which also has at iched band of silk about six inches om the edlge. A costume equally suitable for rainy ay wear or shopping is a light weigl~t C hrough and through" check, with r ght jacket, buttoned straight fromn hroat to the waist line, where it sharply away in a ~/<utline. i: lar is a high band, turn down The sleeve flares slightly at t ist and is slashed. The skirt is ~ ,and has a diagonal pocket at de of the front gore, covered by ned flap.-Philadelphia Call. Ref'orm Carried Too Far. fashion of the broad, heavy walking boot for women made 1 "m'-an's last" has, like many n: er reforms, been carried to a ruin s extreme in the other direction . f he foot of the fashionably sho:1 girl' if not only as big as her brother's to 1 tk aw butnt i a penrfect burden to I carry about and makes the ..it la bored, awkward and unaraceful. More than that, it is positively inlurious jo a delicate woman to drag abouc two of these weighty, harshly built shoes. which eften injure the foot seriously during the breaking-in process. Wlhen one is broken in to ts dreadful boot it is almost impossible to walk i: i:e ordinary shoe, the wearer h:avin::- - conie accustomed to this secure anehor of foothold. A girl wh) had just reached the properly broken-in sta ge essayed to step from a cab in a party shoe the other night an(l turned her ankle on touching the pavement fur the reason that she had become a customed to the too solid foundation of the "man's last" shoe. This is an other item of woman's dress which is going to increase tie an:iun ot : women's doctors' bi this wInter tl an alarmire extent.--New York Su2. Music For the Child. Children naturally love to strum on the piano from curiosity: some easily learn to pick out a tune with one fin ger; beyond that, only a few really love music well enough to boar its d-tidgery cheerfully. Yet all boys, as well as girls, should he able to reai noces both for the voice and for tie fingers; and so much, doubtless, they will learn in school. If possible, they should learn to play more or less, enough eventually to accompany a sing er or read a hymn at sight. Uut it sh1ould be dade as easy as possible; practice time should be short, never over half an hour a day whei the child is under twelve. anid this divided into two periods. The real foundations of a musical education on any instru ment, the endless routine of scales and exercises, should not be insisted upon where there is a genuine hatred for them, for in the end it will be found that there is nothing gained by the trouble taken. By all means cultivate a talent, only be sure there is a talent to be cultivated.-IIa rper's Bazar. The Strapped Slipper. A new device has been invented for relieving that flatness noted in a strapped slipper. It is now possible to relieve the plainness without using the outworn iea of a rosette or bow. If your slipper is of black or bronzed kid procure some narrow ruching of black lace-Chantilly is suitable, but any other make of good lace will do as well if it is the proper width. An inch or one inch and a half is desirable. A quarter of a yard of ruching will probably be sufficient for both' slip pers, but it is best to measure the width of the strap over the instep, as some girls have a wider foot than others; and the high Instep (mark of Andalusian ancestry or patrician blood) will probably take up more ruching over the arch than would be required for a flat foot. Tack the edge of the ruching beneath the lining of the instep strap, and let the lace ray out like a fan. A Pretty Coiffure. When you survey the coifftie of a pretty young girl you wiltrotice she wears a rather high "top-knot" of rib b .een if her hair Is braided and 'Ings down the back between her shoulders. The top'-knot Is important. lue or black ribbon. For some irer. on, unknown, ribbon of what would', seem to be theproper width Is not nIow ised. The bow is made emphatic by louble bows and double loops of rather arrow ribbon. An inch'and a half is :he preferred width. The same width ibbon Is used to tie the end of the iraid between the shoulders. This same narrow width of black vel ret ribbon is used by older girls and natrons for the,bow, which is seldom tbsent from the evening coiffure, un ess one substittutes the aigrette. The arrow ribbon is easily wired invisibly. ** F~sWMST Loug chains are fashionable, but in lae of the jewels being strung they re attached as pendants. A particularly good finish for the ottom of a skirt consists of deep folds, ike tucks, edged with gold lace. Lacings of gold cord are used in vel -et and taffeta boleros, and are also ntroduced in the side panels of many mew skirts. Russian ribbon and galloon, both in told and silver, is very popular. It is inely woven and firm. It is much used for belts and to trim blouses. Many of the laces this year are made ffective by having no groundwork, the attern of flowers or of conventional esigns being cut out all over the lace.. Ulack hats will accompany all cos umes, and their popularity is second d by a broad-brimmed, soft hat, rimmed with black velvet .and black lrooping plumes. One of the prettiest forms in which he gold is to be found is in the gold aze which forms patterns in white aces. All laces are beautiftul this 'ear, and colors ab~ound in them. The very. latest blouse is built of lace nriched by gold thread. New as well the blouse with trimming running bout the figure. This is often of lace, wo kinds of lace with gold braid in be ween. Delicate organdies that are crushed lut not soiled may be freshened by prinkling with water in which a lit le gum arabic ha~s been dissolved nd ironing carefully. They will look s well as new if prop~erly done. Cloth cepes are to be used again for rdinary street wear, and are imadie of ough or smooth cloth, as preferred. nd lined with plaid1 or plain silk. The ppropriate trimming is rows of stitch ag or stitched straps of cloth or satin Red promises to be much worn in en ire costumes. As a rule these arc not laborately' trimmed, generally with lack braid and occasionally touches white. Tue newest shade is "pos ilien" red, and others in various gra ations are termed 'rouge."' A collarette which shows on ol com-* imation of furs has the cape portion tade of moire baby lamb. It is edged 'ith stone marten atnd the collarette astens with frogs made of ermine. It finished with a high direetoire col ir made of Persian lamb edged witU Every mother possesses inforr young daughlter. That daughter rr the responsibility for her future is mother. The mysterious chang less girl into the thoughtful woi on the w,, atch da,,y and night. As well-being of her daughter, so -w children also. When. the young girl's thoug she experiences headaches, dizzir an abnormal disposition to sleep, I limbs, eyes dim, desire for solit society of other girls, when she friends, then the mother should g, such a time the greatest aid to hiam'is Vegetable. Compouan< system for the coming .change, a this hour of trial. The following letters from M of Mrs. Pinkham's efficient advic< Miss Good asks Mrs. P "'DdR: Mrs. PLN:uAX:-I have be time with my monthly periods being irre it, and put myself in your care, for I hz month menstruation would become less, for six monthis, and now it has stopped vous and of a very bad color. I am a yo work very hard. you Would tell in Cor. 29th Avenut TI Ekam's Evermoterosese meiineri the esposibiityforherlture and mothr. Te myterould chaeyu less irl itot esughfulin ioh well-beng ofh ruer I o hav Whenthe ounggir's tege frinds thn t eoted shuld g such awimecthegreates paid t systm fr thecini~a snoget thiserhourpcifltrirl. upnThe follonsh ettiers fme besof thMri e Pinhe tiet advire seningthercisre tod Hasksl Mrs. -- sitt and specialf inyoraaeso.h monthmensraions GUlND bmyls voas and of .000 erbaolr. . am FaR y PCo.ri2t ck. GA.ALA Bs."oLEARs,. B. Pinkhine V oups mdce Libby' soup arwsgodaoudpse yor howto akesopslsegod sNorng sop oriocets-a dested ofth th tehtibootheissaoted! S ekn ofrte eom to cvg lization upnteIndikns Gtheo weiberne-D bAso th rgroes in ns reatory sat F R, serding-t hechld t oh'em.l w Chicagoquick. B aw .AM illBs.CLEB E gneBolesan, Gaheory M ATEN O AETSO TH U bs ouar fune anod a somahin >r hourel to make uas good. profeln cew makhe mngyu betrenons e sl * isupforloments-nd t ohnmke or :the or sataoad! Terms. A NDtil ERSONatw~, S.C.iks TTEN TuNe isfctateif menRo ti paer whcen winguam eties.So4 SLIDY, nL thoa LIBB h ang o ~Wite for o ro ble s. Ho Peol prake S law MiIL 'EL Bst Cipoveh Srpe and Beloo ed. Us2 SAWSm. LSodb adrugT I Stos. Engnes Boilesn' EMachanery '1 II I natio of vital value to her is a Irecious legacy, and largy in the hands of fihe that evelops the thought an s ould find the mot ier she ares for the physical 'ill th wo.man be, and her ome xduggish, w'heh Less, intness, and exh.bits pains n the ba k and lower ude, nd a dislike for the s a steyto htrself and o to I r aid rom tiv. At iature is Ly Ia E. JLak - .I prepares the y'VIrng nd is -e surest relianzce in iss G d are practical pro of - g women. inkha for Help. June 12th, 1899. en very uch bothered for some gl hear will tell you all about .ve er so much of you. Each lesuntil it entirely stopped again. have become very ner ung girl nd 'have alwsys had to .Iwoul be very much pleased if Le whst do."-Mrss PEAEL GoOD, and Y Way, Seattle, Wa. ,e Happ Result. February 10th, 1900M t C- I cannot praise L.d1s:ft d felh hang~e your medicine , Lensure to M ir pygiL7 ink if more wonnu anyhers h a htm h sion-Lv .~ Pn arMnactsC ~anyses o nshwdtth RO PSY".?""""~ 0. Dr. E. N. GRBN'S SONS. 3e.23, ?$kis heReason why [. we get- sonf many orders ngines, Boilers, Saw lulls, Ors# Is, Brick flhchinery,GinningMack ry, Machinery A ppurtenances aut" iples in General is ben in need, drop us a line and we wE be rest. car load of the celebrated "Sprinkle" >d Split Pulleys just in. .11. CIBBES & CO., COLUMIBIA, s. C. AW MILLS, CORN MILLS, CANE MILLS, RICE H ULLEAS, PEA AUL. LERS, ENGINES, BOL. S, PLANERS AND MATCH. S, SWING SAWS, RIP SAWSe all other kinds of wood working machin M1y Sergeant Log Beara Saw Mill e heaviest, strongest, anid most efficient for the money on the market, quick, rate. state Agent for H. B. Smit~h high grade engines, plain slide valve. >matic, and Corliss, write me: Atlas, ertown, and Struthers & Wells. V. C. BALDHALM, 5 Main Street, COLUMBIA, s. C. W ORLD Would b drar plae - Spiration--a tonic. You expect td buy an organ ow l-iano tom. tima Why not now? -An Instrumen entertainment it's investment - If you get one e the s t and ar; S-rmakes represen -ed by me age wf not afrect it. Swill be as aos livo yeara frt iy PricelsI j )RGANS $35.00 UP >IANOS $175.00 uP. '" Write for Catalogue and Test. Address, L A. MALONa Columbia~