ry / Deafness Cannot r.e Cured by local application-, as they cinmi; reach the ' diseased poruon of the ear. There is only one ! way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. D afucss is caused by an uflanied condition of the mucous li nine of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube (jets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or i in per feet he*r!:g, and when it is e tirelv closed Deafness i the result, and unless the inflammation can bo taken out and this tub" restored to its norma! condition, hearing will be destroy d for ver. Niue cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing b 'tan inflamed oniUti.m of the mucous surfaces. ? will give One Hundied Hollar* for any ease of Deafnes (caused by catarrh?that cannot be cured by Hall's Latarrh ure, Send for circulars, free. F. J. Coenet & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold bv Druggists Family l'iils are the best. If It Only Helped a Little It would be worth 51 c nts. One hour's freedom fr m the terrible irritating itch of tett i ts worth nv re han a whole box of Tettorim costs. It will cure ure. and it's the onl> thing that will cure. 50 cents at drug stores, or by mail from J. T. Suuptrine, Savannah G*. ? Gladstone, It hi said, weighs only 117 pounds, and the Marquis of Salisbury, the present Premier of Great Britain, tips the gcales at 21*3 pounds. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxativo Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money i i it fails tocure. -VFormer President Clevelend has written the Texas Alumni Association that his son will be in the class of 1915 or 191<* at Princeton. Fitsperniane'itly cured. Xo tits or n*rrou* neas alter lirvtd ?y's use of Dr. Kliue's Great Nerve Restorer. $'1 trial bottle and treatise fret Dr. R. H. Kuan. LU..KJ1 Arch St., Phila., Px r / Lafeadlo Ilearn, who has lived many years in Japan, says that the grotosque } pictures made by Japanese artists now seam to him to bo true. Chew Star Tobacco The Be^t j Smoke Sledge Cigarettes. ' When Iffark Twain was recently given a dinner by the Vienna Journalists' Club he made a speech halt in German and half Id English and kept his hearers laughing Ail the time. Mrs. Wir.slow'9 Soothing Syrup forchi'drer tevtOinii. softens the gums, reducing inflamation,allays paiu,cures wind colic, Sue. a bottle I hare fo* nd Piso's Cure for Consumption an unfailing medicine. F. R. Lotz, 1JUG Scott 8t^ Covington, Ky Oct. 1,1891. Rheumatism \ Caused Great Suffering A Well Man Since Taking Hood's. "I was afflicted with rheumatism and have been a great sufferer with this disease and also with stomach and heart A VI V?s *k.nl.e Ua/vI's Caveenn. UVUV1C9, UUb buauiv^ aivvu o uin^urills I am sow a well man. My wife has been cured of kidney disease by Hood's Sareaparilla." Aco. Schheixeb, 317 West 69th Street. New York, N. Y. Hood's Sarsaparilla lathe best?infuct the One True Blood Purifle: Hood's PiUs cure all liver ills. 23 cents. I A Unique Pipe. novel plpt for transmitting hydrnuQc pressure Is In use at the Victoria bridge, near the mouth of the River Dee, England. As described in the Engineering News, It consists of a solid drawn lead pipe, covered with close eolls of copper wire, and is used for conveying water at 750 pounds per square Inch pressure from one side of the river to the other to operate the machinery of a span of the swing bridge. At first a copper pipe one and a half Inches In diameter, jointed with screwed onions, was used, but the scouring action of the tide washed out the bed of the river, left the pipe unsvpported in two places and caused it I to leak. The new pipe made of lead, wrapped with copper wire, is more \ flexible than the old one, and It is expected It will work more satisfactorily. IS?? u*i IT^ F1ALLJ 'I |[ Vegetable Sicilian L ^HAIRRENEWERj f$V\ Qeanses the scalp and I/aS? tNy) puts new life into the |Q0 Mf7 hair. It restores the \JRj lost color to gray jJ?x' hair. It means ynffi&j youth and beauty. __ < gwvAvavvwOTia^^ Jj THE CHARLOTTE g ituihiiiiiu | PRIVATE HOSPITAL S fcHARLOTTE.X.O.. X?.!0 X. Tryoa S ^ I COLD-BREAKERSW In 8 to IS hours. 250. II BOX at Druggists or THE COLD-BREAKER CO., AIKEN, - - SOUTH CAROLINA. nPtUM, MORPHINE^ WHISKEY. CO11 rt'nr. Tobacco and stnuF. Dipping Habit* f W permanently cured by HARMLEM HOMK PRHATME.Vf. My book. c->ntalnl ft full inforvitwn. mailed five. f)B. J. C. HOFFMAN, ^goom 4 Isabella Bull dog. Chicago. III. ST. JOSEPH'S LIVER BE6ULAT0R THE BEST ON THE MARKET. ttB& All Drug?i!?ts and Merchant*. Mnfd by f GEKvixE dfc CO- Chattanooga, Trim. DR. BAKERS FEHiLE EEEILM CURES SUFFERING WOMEN. Absolutely Vegetable and Guaranteed. Manufactured by Lookout Mountain Medicine Couipany, UreeneTllle. Trnti. HY PAY MORE. IW) tjuiulne Pillmguarau toed to contain 2 grains of pure quinine each, to eta. by mall or 3U) for $1. Put up 11)0 in a package. Send atmapsor P.O.order. J.F.Powell.Waukcgau, 111 anrrt w INTER in aU rriuciral cttlea and RKild VfHH I kW towns: grand opportunity for Insurance men and collector* to ir.ake bip money United State* Kegistry Co., 1U iiltn Ave.. N.V. w.?!3?^h 1 Thompson's Eye Water f ortune Told. Test ICe. Ak'nmp envelop*. Correct aaswer KU*r*ntee . . i THE NATIONAL FINANCES. * Statements of Treasury Operations For' the Month of November. PUBLIC DEBT SHOWS A DECREASE. The I?eeob>tome?tie. Benson Cross, of Detroit, Me., while hunting, mistook DanaGray, of Plymouth, for a deer and fataliy shot him. Tiie Maine hunting season has closed. A total of 27) deer, thirty mooso and six caribou heads passed through Kineo during the open time. The number of dear killed exceeds that of previous years. A light earthquake shock startled tho citizens of Kansas. Thursday. Messages from Wellington and Hunnewell, Kan., describes the earthquake as quite severe in those cities. It reached south into Oklahoma. Washington Remington, the last or tno famous Remington triplets, (lied at his home in North Smithfield. R. I., of acute bronchitis. He was eighty-one years old, and hail been ill but a few days. Mrs. Jacob Rupp. of Fresh Ponds, N. J., committed suicide by banging herself to a bedpost. She had been suffering from nervous prostration for a long time, and her act was probably prompted by her .sufferings. She was the wife of a clarinet player in Sousa's band and the mother of seven children. The grain receipts at the port of Buffalo, N. Y.. for the season of 1837 to December 1, including 11,000,030 barrels of flour estimated as wheat, reached the unprecedented aggregate of 210,000,000 bushels. A Pennsylvania Railroad train made the eastward run from Chicago to Pittsburg in 563 minutes. It is expected to reduce the time of the limited between Chicago and New York to twenty hours. The Yale crew has challenged Cornell to a race at New London, Conn., next June, and arrangements have been made for a nnfoF.il/in frt cottln fhn details Tlnrrard has been invited to send representatives to the conference, with a view to arranging for a triangular race. The Poughkeepsie (X. Y.) Board of Education lias refused to reeogDize the opinion of State Superintendent of Public Instruction Skinner against employing Sisters of Charity to teach if they wear their religious garb in the schoolroom. The Yukon Cariboo Company, organized by J. Edward Addicks. and the Northwest Company, tho products of the Klondike boom, are retiring from business, it is said, and will refund subscriptions to its stock. Alexander Owens, a marble dealer, was placing a monument over a grave at Terre Haute, Ind., when Alexander Lawrence, an employe of the cemetery, suggested that the base was not in good condition. Owens resented the criticism, and seizing a hsavy oaken roller, struck Lawrence on jfe;- srC\* % SV'OP THE WASTACE. An Expert Te\i* How Agricultural Itc" ourcrs Mar I5? Increased. The wonderful loss to farmers brought about by the neglect to properly utilize the resources and to employ knowledge that is considered indispensable in other kinds of business is one of the causes of depression in agriculture. This is more particn larly the case in the South than elsewhere, although much lias beea done within the past few yearn to check this loss. The Southern people are just beginning to appreciate the advantages of employing their other resources than those of cotton production. In the past the South has been too largely dependent upon the colored man and the mule. The result has been, and will continue to be, so long as they practice a one-crop system, that they will be subject to periods of discouraging depression. In other words, where the farmer put all of his eggs in one basket and meeis with some accident he is confronted by the loss of his entire source of support until nature has time to produce an n i ? otlier crop. onouiu it mn U OCVUUU and third time the poor farmer is left in a desperate war. In the South tho wonderful resources for feeding the North upon early vegetables have nos been utilized as they can be. There has been and will continue to be a large wastage of products upon the farm, most particularly in the failure to properly utilize cotton seed and its products. Where favorable terms with the cotton seed oil mills can be made it is well enough to sell the excess of cotton seed and either exchange it or buy cotton seed meal. The intelligent farmer, with the aid of the experiment station or the officers of the agricultural college of his State, can readily figure out whether it '.8 more profitable to fell and buy or to keep and feed or use as a fertilizer. If the farmer keeps his cotton seed be should at occe provide for feeding it to stock. Cheap sheds can be constructed to properly protect the cattle from the cold rains which are so trying on stock in the winter, and the manure carefully preserved iu a shed w'll give the farmer a double profit. In fact, I might say a treble profit. For in this way, by preserving his manure in the form of a compost heap and mixing with it from time to time some potash and a moderate supply of phosphate, he would save the profit charged by dealers in fertilizers and secure to himself the profit of the cotton seed as a fertilizer and as a feed stuff". Besides this he would be able to utilize the hay which is produced in great quantities npon the Southern farms and only needs to be harvested and fed in order to make it profitable. The use of kainit in a compost heap cannot be too highly recommended, as it preserves to tlie farmer his valuable ? J mirogen auu sei vca as a pcrcuniic va waste upon the farm. The addition of the acid phosphate makes a complete manure that is highly satisfactory for all kinds of crops and on almost all kinds of soil. We advise every farmer to do some close figuring and seo if he can afford to sell his cotton seed at ten dollars a ton or exchange it for 725 pounds of cotton seed meal. It will be one of the most profitable rainy days' work he ever did if he will calculate all of profits and losses and carefully study how he could save several dollars per ton by feeding stock and preparing his fertilizers at homo. He may find that he is selling his birthright for a mess of pottage when he parts with his cotton seed at prevailing rates. He may find that he can save largely by prodncingmore fertilizers upon the farm and by buying simply the potash salts and the aeid phosphate necessary to properly utilize his present wastes. Stop the wastes upon the farm. Utiliz? its nrodncts in an economic man ner. Prevent loss to live stock and fertilizers bj exposure to the weather and cold drenching rains. Avoid injudicious sales of valuable farm products and the purchase of fertilizer? that should be saved upon the farm. Where fertilizers are bought let thein be supplemented to those produced npon the farm, aud purchase those ingredients necessary to perfect the fertilizer products of the farm. Avoid wastage of labor by cultivating unprofitable lands and see that all cultivated land is well fertilized. Dp.. Joiix A. Myers, Ex-Director West Virginia Experiment Station. ^ THOUSANDS OF LIVES LOST. Property Worth Millions Destroyed in Typhoon-Swept Philippines. The typhoon which swept over the Philippine Islands on October 6 was the canse of one of the worst dLsasters reported from the Southern Ocean in many years. Thousands of lives were lost. among those who perished being many Europeans, and the damage to property was something appalling. _ rno auncnuy oi geuing now* iruiu mu Islands is great at any time, and owing to the remoteness of some of the provinces visited by the hurricanee full details of the storm did not rcaeh Ilong-kong until the llrst of November. Several towns were swept or blown away. Fully 400 Europeans were drowned, and it is estimated that 6000 natives perished. The hurricane struck the island at the Bay of Santa Paula, in the Province of Samar. It devastated tho entire southern portiok of tho island, and cut off communication with the rest of the world for two i?i ity BlM?ew4. - Rend for a FREE j I I tiackass Alet ItM-raliforlttelf. rostaaeL.-. lIB W DR. S. P1CIIKKV, Chicago, Ilia. j 8 N. U. No. 49.-97. 1 CRT THE GCXU flter Bat Breakfa Parc, De Costs Less than OA Be sure tl (Established 1780.) * \ ' j Q | ' j r ? ^ zrcm *v * "'i ^MAGNIFICENT ARRAY * of Imclfs." j Oe ? Chinchillas, Beaver-* aa with certain relief within reachT "r Wine of Cardni only ooets SI-00 per "jxH bottle at your drag store. JV>r advier, ' f <3* Cast every day; work 180 hand*. LOMBARD IRON WORKS AND SUPPLY COMPANY, AUGUSTA. GEORGIA. M * " r fWT Doable Breech-Loader 6nns and Rifles from $2 to 160. Re-CI|9^B ; ' volvers, 70 cts, up. Knives, Razors, ? Seines. Tents, Sporting Goods of til kinds. Send 3c stamps for 78 pan Catalogue and saw 26 per cent 490 W. Main St ALEX.L SEMPLE fc CO. imam P-W . >* *"teue. Rice'sGoose Grease Linimeat Is nhvsys sold under a guarantee. io eura (M aches and pains, rheumatism, neuralgia, -<. sprains, bruises and barns. It is also warranted to car* colds, croup.coughs and la grips** quicker than any known remedy. Noewa no pay. Sold by all druggists and ganwral stores. Made only by tiOOSE GEE ASK LLN'IMENT CO.. Grxkkbbouo, N. & efi IXE ARTICLE! 1 cer & Co.'s I st COCOA { | licious, Nutritious. J IE CENT a cup. f akcr & Co. Limited, f Dorchester, A*Ws. T >; V ^ ,