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4 An Apt Comparison. The following Is an Interesting eom- Iperison: ‘-Suppose that a fanner raises iOOO bushels of wheat In a year, and elso sells this to 1.000 persons In all jjarts of the country, a great portion of (hem saying, ‘1 will hand you a dollar In a short time.’ The fanner does not want to be small and says ‘all right.’ Soon the 1,000 bushels are gone and he lhas nothing to show for It, and he then realizes that he has fooled away his whole crop, and its value is due In a thousand little driblets. Subsequently be is seriously embarrassed iu business because his debtors, each owing him loue dollar, treat It as a small matter, and think it would not help much. Con tinue this business year in and year out as the publisher of a newspaper bow long would be stand it?” Very Unnatnrat. Mrs. Easy—Only to think of such a thing happening to dear John, when he’s always prayed that he might die a natural death. Doctor—Why, madam, what do you mean? Mrs. Easy—Didn’t you tell me. doctor, that John was passing away very fast? Doctor—I certainly did, madam, and so he is. Mrs. Easy—And I'm sure, doctor, there’s nothing natural about that to John.—Boston Courier. Hi. Specialty, “Who is that man who calls on you so frequently?” asked the impertinent friend. “He’s an inventor.” “indeed! What has he invented?” “Oh, ever so many things.” “Any of them practical ?” “Yes," was the answer, with some hesitation, ‘‘he has had a good deal of success In Inventing reasons why I should lend him anything from 50 cents to $5.”—Washington Star A Beautiful Mn ga/.ine Free. The General Passenger Department of tin Seaboard Air Line have just issued the firs number of their new monthly publication “Star of the South,” a beautifully decorates and illustrated book of forty-eight pages. The book, besides being a work of art, con tains each mouth popular and higb-cins fiction by standard authors, tales of love adventure and heroism, anecdotes of tin humorous, pathetic and dramatic, many il lustrated articles on the South, and an a.-. sortment of descriptive and Interesting ite:u>. A copy will bo mailed to any address on re coipt of three cents i i stamps to pay postage, or will be mailed a whole year for tblrty-il\< cents in stamps. Address C Ironmonger Advertising Agent Seaboard Air Line, 37l Broadway, New York. How’s This T Weoffer One Hundred Debars Reward for way c*«o of Catarrh tuat cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. w> F. J. CHENKY A Co., Props., Toledo. O. We, tee under* gnol. bnv« known t'. .1. Che. ney for t he I as 113 y ears, and believe Win per- fectly honorable in ill* biiMne-s transactions and financially able to carryout any obliga tion made by their firm. Wist A Thuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. Ohio. Winoixo, Rinyaw & Martin, Wholesale Dru;gists, Toledo, Ohio. Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, act- Ing directly upon the blood and mucous snr. faces of the system. Price, 7Sc. per bottlo. bold •>y all Drnggfsts. Testimonial* frees Hall’s Family Pills are the beak RAM’S HORN BLASTS. FJTSstopped ft re hum permanently cured. Jfo fits after first day's use of Du. Koine's Gh.at NKUT.UESTOuttit. Free$2lriai hotCeaud treat- tee. bend to Dr. Kline. Kit Arch St.. Phila.,Pd. When bilious or costive, eat a Cascaret, candy cathartic; cure guarauteu l; U)c., 3jc. Plso’s Cure for Consumption relieves flu most obstinate coughs.—Rev. 1). HuoiijiutL- UUi, Lexington, Mo., February 24, l td. Warning Notes Calling the Wicked to Repentance. O eyes can ae« a a % , XI * ike lt ose of the X N soul If /"—} Clod’s merry can 7 SvL'ii©' 110 ,l iore wear out than hia love. If our belief la wrong, our eternity will be wrong. Everj* successful Christian life must be a life of faith. Growth in grace is often helped by having the grace to say no. As soon as thought finds a body it be gins trying to more the world. If some people would laugh more, their doctor bills would be less. When a young lion is hungry, how much bettor off is he than a wolf? Persecuting a good man is the devil’s way of showing that he hates God. The wages of sin is death, no matter how promptly we pay our pew rent. When praise Is going up, showers of blessing are sure to be coming down. Considering what God has done will soon lead us to rejoice in what Be will do. There is only here and there a man who praises God half as much as he should. When we have a keen eye for the faults of others, we are apt to be blind to our own. A right state of heart cannot be main tained without keeping a close watch on the tongue. Open the door of your heart for Christ and he will open the door of heaven for you. The devil can meet eloquence without trouble, but he has never been able to stand before love. Many a church member makes too much noise in his politics and keeps too still in his religion. Bread from God’s table can be cotint- ed on in superabundance by those who faithfully do his work. The Christian should never let his heart stop singing of the day when his sins were washed away. It ought to be n matter of principle with the Christian to praise the Lord, whether he feels like It or not. Hoarding up money iu a miserly way can never be done without making a beggar of the man who does it. Freedom from want is not for the strongest lion, but it may be enjoyed by the weakest of the lord’s sheep. Don’t spend a minute in trying to count the hypocrites In the church. Bet ter try to count the mercies of God. “Lest I should be exalted above measure,” Is the explanation of why some unaccountable things happen to many of us. u IBWV Eteancr Crry T -J'E'a Mr dead ler mOD,v «rday VRj*r ornwy kind «■*- lad - Nothin in nn nrlul had. Jes' ta tired — that wuz rII • Ter do »r thmjr. cept creep on « yAlnerwoy ter Muile Idi lag ^ An* go like tr onail Jnsr try a 10c. box of CHscaret*. can ty ca tkariic, fiuu.it liver and bowel regulator ma le Mr*. Window's Soothing Syrup for cMIUre- teething, softens the gums, reduce* tnflantm* tton.xllayepain, cures wind colic. 21c. a botth In London n depot ha* been ostablbhoJ for tho repairing of mTor vehicles. No.To.ISac for Fifty Cent*. Over 400.OJ0 cured. Why not let N i-To-Ric regulate or remove your d' sire for tob« < Saves money, nuke* health nod manbooi. i Cure guarautced. 30 cents and $1.U), at all i drugg.sts. _ Gear eases aro meeting with a small but growing demand. CASCturts stimulate liver, kidneys and Vowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe; 10c. And trim is the verdict of the people regarding Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Catarrh, scrofula, rheu matism. dyspepsia, nervous trouble.s yield to Hood’s Sarsaparilla The l est—in fact ihc One True Blood Pnrifier. Hood’s Pills cure nausea, indigestion, biliousness. 2a cents. I&icon—I saw Bloomer to-flay. Hfi had his arm in a sling, and was walking with crutches. Egbert-Riding a bike, I suppose? “No; not yet He’d been down to buy one, though, at a dry goods store.”—Yonkers Statesman. HER MBANryo. ‘•What do you mean by bsing cngas«J m three men at onco ?" “Jiolhing.” Sweetness and Light. Put a pill in the pulpit if you want practical preaching for the physical man ; then put tho pill in the pillory if it does not practise what it preaches. There’s a whole gospel ja Ayer’s Sugar Coated Pills; a “ gospel of sweetness and light.” People used to valuo their physic, as they did their religionV-by its bitterness. The more bitter the dose the better the doctor. We’ve got over that. We take “sugar in ours”— gospel or physic—now-a-days. It’s possible to please and to purge at the same time. There may be power in a pleasant pill. That is the gospel of Ayer’s Cathartic Pills. Hove pill p«rticul»r* iu Ayer’s Curebook, too pages. Sent free. j. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. RAPID SCENE SHIFTING. fbe Latest Mechanical Effects in a European Theater. It la a remarkable fact that when an audience has become interested In the plot and progress of a play the inter ruptions necessary for the change of i tcenery yeem to be much longer than they really are. A wait of five minute* is amply sufUcleut to send the Impa tient male American out “to-see a man" and set the ladies’ funs In active mo tion. In France the scenes are chang ed almost Instantly. The French system is distinguished by the use of masts upon carriages run ning in grooves or slots In the stage, tho scenery being adjusted to the movable mast so as to be rolled on to its evact position. One scene is attached to Its masts while another Is being played. At the elosi* of the scene ihe udeau de nouages, or cloud curtain, is used. This consists of two curtains painted as clouds, one descending, .be other as cending from a slot In the stage, alter the ancient Roman method. The mo ment the bottom curtain has risen suf ficiently to hide the audience the em ployes beneath the stage run off the carriages of the past scene and on the new. This is so quick that it is done by the time the ascending and descend ing curtains have mot, and their course Is immediately reversed, disclosing tho new scene, in the space of a few sec onds. The English and American meth od of quick changes Ls clumsy com pared to it. The most recent, and In more than one sense revolutionary, is the inven tion of Karl Lautensehlage, the master machinist of the Resideu/.-Hof Theater. Munich. The entire stag'* is a turnta ble, such, indeed, as we may see at any locomotive shed on the railway. The proscenium opening, about 35 feet, dominates one-fourth of the periphery, and the stage can be arranged to hold from one to four scenes according to ditlons is only another example to show that there Is some foundation for tha Darwinian theory. Mr*. Alexuulcr Hamilton. A writer in the Atlantic Monthly says that when she was a child of twelve she knew Mrs. Alexander Hamilton, then a charming old lady of Liucty-flve, overflowing with reminiscences, one was of a great gathering of the Indians of eastern New York, at Saratoga, which was then only a log fort. The chiefs and greatest warriors of the Six Nations, dressed In barbaric pomp, but with peace on their faces, stood waiting the approach of a small group of whites —one or two officers in full uniform and & tall, commanding man, in the prime of life, leading by the hand a slim girl of thirteen. The tallmun was Gen. Philip Schuy ler, whom the Indians honored as they did no other white man; and they had met to offer him a tribute of devotion. At ft sign from the great chief, their ranks parted to admit Gen. Schuyler, who advanced Into the open space still leading his little daughter. There, with many ceremonies, the child was formal ly adopted by the Six Nations, the chiefs ending the sacred rite by laying their hands upon her head, and giving her an Indian name, meaning “One of us." And Mrs. Hamilton was the llttb maid. One day the old lady was talking about men of bodily strength, and she told an Incident which must have hap pened soon after her marriage, for she was at the time In headquarters with her husband. Gen. Washington was writing in his office, n room on the sec ond floor of a farm house. The farm er’s wife, who was washing clothes, suddenly discovered that the shed roof was on tire. She rushed screaming into the house, ami Washington came bounding down the stairs, picked up one of the large wash tubs full of suds, ran upstairs with it, got out on the roof REVOLTING STAGE AT THE KING’S THEATER, MUNICH. desire. The motive power used is elec tricity. The stage was used for the first time last May in a production of Mo zart’s “Don Giovanni.” The accom panying illustration shows the entire arrangement, one side of the prosce nium being supposed to be cut away, showing the garden seem* ready to swing round int<*-H»sition as soon as the ballroom scene is finished. Another method is that In use in the theater at Budapest and some others In Europe, where scenes can be set to come up through slots in the stage, while the previous scene is sink'ag through similar openings. QUEER KIND OF BUNNIES. Tfaer Inhabit the Lonely Farallonc Islands. A peculiar rabbit Inhabits tho Faral- lone islands. The material difference is that the bunnies of the islands eat raw fish and crabs, and have no spe cial desire for green things. However, they do eat greens when they happen to find some. When tin* rabbits are eat ing the fish they look very much as they do when they aro eating cabbage, and nibble it in the same way. They do not seem to be In the least particu lar as to the condition of the fish they are eating, and will make a meal off one that has lain on the rocks a week just as soon as from one that has just been washed ashore. It is Interesting to know that the rabbits that live on the Farallones have contracted their pres and emptied it on the blaze; then ho ran for another tub and still another before he succeeded in putting out the fire. One night Mrs. Hamilton seemed sad and absent-minded, and would not go into the parlor where there were visit ors, but sat near tho lire and played backgammon for a while. When the game was done, she leaned back in her chair a long time with closed eyes, as If lost to all around her. Presently the silence was broken by the murmured words: “I am so tired; it is so long. I want to see Hamilton!” What thoughts must have come t» hot from the past! For she had grief).’ be- ! yond the usual lot of women. Her old- | est son. Philip, fell in a duel before his ! father met a similar fate; and the old est daughter, a lovely young creature, was so shocked by her brother’s cruel death that she became insane. Though she lived to be an old woman, it was as an inmate of a private asylum. ent mode of living within the last thir ty years, as they are the descendants of tame rabbits that were brought there by the first lighthouse-keepers. They are not as pretty as their ances tors. In fact, they have become very lean and haggard looking, and have much the appearance of a half-starved coyote. But the fact that they have adapted themselves to their new eon- A Fatal Omelette. Ignorance of cooking is not often direct cause of a man’s death, but si an Instance is related by Miss E<] Llchel, In a recent volume entltl “The Story of Two Salons.” In time of the French Revolution, i Monsieur Condorcet, upon whose he as an aristocrat, a price was set, sou; refuge with a friend, Monsieur Sua who bade him return at nightfall, wl means of escape would Ik? provided. Unhappily Condorcet, lK*ing unable exist without tobacco, went into a t ern to buy some. Still prostrate fr fatigue, he thought he would take vantage of this opportunity to get so dinner, and ordered an omelette. “How many eggs do you wish to used?” Inquired the landlord, who 1 been eying him suspiciously. The Docent Condorcet was at his wits’ en he reflected on the size of the ordint omelette. “Twelve,” he boldly replied. His fate was sealed; none but an a tocrat could he so ignorant or so travagant. He was arrested aud away to prison, from which he ne emerged. Bacon—That lawyer you recommend ed is not a man of his word. Egbert— Why not? “He told me I could talk freely to him, aud look at the bill he’s sent me!"—Yonkers Statesman. We Can’t Do a Thing to Her. To one who has visited n telephone 1 exchange and noticed how central works. It Is amusing to watch the be- ! havior of the man who cannot get rec ognition. In nine cases out of ten, if ; the hour is late and central is sleepy, he goes through this performance: He turns the handle sharply, jabs the receiver at ids ear, and shouts “llel lo!” through the transmitter. After waiting a moment or so, he repeats the action. Still no answer. Then, un less he Is a church member, he uses language that he would not wish his wife to hear, and twists the handle of the calling bell until bis wrist aches. It does not disturb central. No bells ring iu the telephone exchange. When the subscriber rings a lozenge shaped disk drops, and the number of the cull ing ’phone is exposed. That is all. It remains exposed until central answers the call and puts the disk back. If central's head is turned the other way, all the ringing In the world won’t at tract her attention. When she looks around she ll see the exposed number and answer the call. If she never looks around she'll never learn of the call.— ! New York Times. A Kind Neighbor. “I did not send for you to tune my piano," said Mrs. Sellly to the man who i called for that purpose. “No, madam, but your next door neighbor sent me." Detroit Free I’resa. A house is never In disorder to a man so long as his things are “handy." SENT FROM SEAKSPORT. Mii* S. MaIII* I’ercv. lb* Well*Ka*^* Srartpnrt DrrtRiuakrr, Give* He* Experlanre or liar Ions SnfTcrins and (’ur*. /Vein Pi* Cotnmrrcial, TJ.vnyor, Vain*. Tho foilowiug ooramuaiCAtlon ha* jnst beou received from Miss S. Mollie Percy, of S arsport, Maine, where ahe is welland tar romhly known: *1 was a sufferer from constant headnoh* all my life, frequently accompanied with nausea and sick stomach, especially befor* and during severe attacks. I am now thirty years old, and as fur back us I can remember ! tvas never free from thivoi depressing aud distressing attacks, and did not know what ll was to ffa'I well, until la-a winter, when, having seen so much written and heard so mich spoken about Dr. Williams’ Pink PHI* for Palo People, I made up my mind to se* tf they woul I do me any goo 1. I therefor* bought same of them an 1 began to take them according to directions. •'1 soon began to experience relief, and have Improved ever since. I am still taking them, and shall continue so to do until I am free of the slightest symptom of my old ene my. 1 «m a firm believer in the efficacy of Pink Pills, an I shall never be without them as they have done me so much good. “I tiuve recommended these pills to others, among them (’. G. Coburn, who Is 111 of heart trouble. (signed) "8. M. PEncv.” H’ii»ie.«« Mils. .1. F,. Ntcnoi-s. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Palo Peopl* are a specific for troub'os peculiar to fe- mo'os, Mi di as supiToisious, irregularlUo* and all forms of weakness, Phey bull I up ih" blood, and rrslote the glow of health to pale ami sallow cheeks. In men Ihoy offeot a radical cure in all cases arising from men tal worry, overwork or ex e.-ses of whatever nature. They are manufactured by ihe Dr. Williams’ M d cine Company. rtehenooUdy. N Y.,and an* s d I by a I druggists at 60 cents a box or six boxes for tlhO. ANDY CATHARTIC 10* 25* 50* DRUGGISTS SRQ0I TITST Y f.TTSPaNTPFn ,n , ;ir< ' HIT<■***of mnstlpatlnn. Caiftirrt* are tlir Mral I.ri*- nUuuuU 1 uli 1 UUnur. It 1 till J ins. newr crip or i-ripo. bnt mtivr Mix nntund results. SSm- pic amt booklet free. A.t. STI'Pl.lMi UPSIKPY <<l., Phlrnro, Xlnntmd. Osn.. or h>v» Vork. sit.ii 'Wool Growing in tho West. Montana loads all other States this year In the production of wool, with 81,530,013 pound*. The National Wool Growers’ Association cruimaies the crop this year to be, unwashed, aliotii 272,474,708 pounds. When scoured the total weight will lx* reduced about GO percent., or to 115,284,570 pounds. Ore gon eotm*s next to Montana, with 10,- 880,078: California third, with 10,170,- 7G0; Texas fourth, Ohio fifth. New Mex lea sixth, Utah seventh. Wyoming eighth, Michigan ninth, Colorado tenth, Washington fourteenth. FREE Business etmrso to one pe-soB In evury countx Please apply promptly to Uaorma Bust- nebs Lotleao, Macon. U*. Corn is a vigorous feeder and re sponds well to liberal fertiliza tion. On corn lands the yield increases and the soil improves if properly treated with fer tilizers containing not under 7% actual Potash. 8. V U.-l. ’D7. Reliable Charlolte Merchants t ull on ihem w In'ii you k<> toOiarlotti* N. r. Wr t0 (b<-mtr you do not jo’, and have your ortiorti 111i«Kt by nutll. In iiiiHWorliig udvt i ilscinYnUi klmlly u.«tu ttn|) t ItU pui>or. MtWflWI! F.ST WORK. I eii-mui' lc Prices • fiii'MrlJ Wr to News & Times Pt'g. House. PftflVJffWBpK. M. ANDH K.VVS, 10-18W. Trade * UiiiTit Uftfa.Mxo Pianos, O guo* A- liicycle* GKO. n. HISS, Treasurer. *■********'*** tHHHHk *** ★* GEM HISS OIL CO, Special Petroleum and Animal Lufaricanti. Offices and Warehouses: Nob. 47 ami ii) South > ollege 8t., CIIAKLOITK, If. C. *+++++++***★***+****** REVOLVER FREE. WATCH FREE 13dolher articles. Costnothing. Rcadcuroffcr L'rry imtm'H who ruin lh»* out uiid 8en<l« I" Hi I vUw/jJy IMItilWIM’*plena ortii-e. *111 ItoetilU I I tl« «l lo I ttiiiMiiMlIr, iIoiiIim) Mellon, N. 4i W. iif i <■ i . fa cal. $1 Kevoirar, i nnlhj M M ! $4 *irni wind nitd Mem not Wntch, eleKMiit ioiled *i"IU»i Vom Oinlu.eti’ipla •Uver i.iHipd Ten S|rfNitin worth Si, pMii tMild jilHlrd 11 < uft Kiittoiin.Kolu plated W no ft t'hartii vorth ;&f., t !m diamond nolWt sold f? hi art Tin, 1 lior (ollwr Button*, iw» Knvoloput, Hln* IiIrI) ut tide J^nd J em'tl*, 1 l.rm! Ponril Sharponer, 1 Tork ct SionioiHndum Mini 1 l*er|>at- tul Hutton lima ft on*) tints All wo nuk, in ortlm to In ti oduro our etjoim. iMhot jou Hi low i-h to Htmi in eumo |>M<-kiiL« £0 <>( our fine*! loc. thjfarn, < m1uo«1 at St t>7. Full axattUDHiion allowed. Bomambar, you only pa) |4 ‘ji and •ipraaa tor i’il'mi*. nnd Hi* ho aitlrio* nitmod idMikr uru line. II you doti'l ntt dorr the lot wort It H timo* wliat wo u*k, don't pay Irani. Aiiilrexit WINnTON .Ul Vt lunion, N. C. A trial of this plan costs but little and is sure to lead to' profitable culture. Ali about Potash—the results of its use by actual e*- j perimem on the l> t tarmi in the United States—is told in a little l><»<»k which we publish and will gladly auul lice lo auy farmer in Amcma who wid write for it. CL KM AN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St. # New Vork. (RT.P.A.NSI Packed Without (ilasB. 1LN H)K I IVB CLMS. This «per!al form of RipAnsTnbulos!''prepared from the original prescription, but more econom ically put up for tho purpose of meeting the universal modern demand for a iow price. IM ItLO’l lOMH.-'iako ono at meal or bed time or whenever you feel poorly. Hwallow it whole, with or without a mouthful of water. They cure all atom 2 eh troubles; banish pain j induce sleep; prolong life. An Invaluable tonic. Best Spring M«-dicine. No matter what’s tho matter, one will do you pood. One (rive* relief— u cure will r<»«ult if directions aro followed. The flvo-cent fioekn^ea are not yet to bt^ had of all dealers,although it is probable that aimoFt any druptrist will obtain a supply when requited by a customer to do so t but in any case a sirifflo carton, containing ten ta»*ul< h, will la* sent, post age paid, to auy audr mh f<»r five cents In atirops. forwarded to the i i[«ins riiemical <’o„ No. 10 Rpruce st.. New York. Vntil the are thor oughly introduetd lo tho traAf r *, agents nnd i>ed- dlers will I*)supplied ntu price which will allow them a fair margin of profit, vis. 1 1 dozen car tons for49 cents—by nufl 4’» cents. 12 dozen (144 carton*) for $4 '"J- by mail for 1M «2. fi grows (720 cartons) for 25 grons (3/00 cartonfe) for ? U00. (’a*!! with the order in every case, and rtight or ejpn.88 charges at the buyer's cost ASTHMA POPHAM’S ASTHMA SPECIRC OlTetrrltrf In 1’ITI minntak. B< > nd fora ritF.K trial pxckMtfc Sold (17 lirucriMa. tin. Box a.nt postpaid on raoeipt of *1.M. Six b.iM*i.*0. Address TIIOS. t OPIUX, PHILA., PA. Dr. W. H WAKEFIELD —Gan be oonsultod in his oflleo in— CHAItLOTTK, N. V., No. 201 N. Tryon St. ,Hunt liiiildinar,) Ou auy week Gay except Wednesday. Hi* practice is fiaiited to diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose kThroit p PISO’S CURE FO _ tURES WHERE ALL USE FAILS. Best Comfb t*yrup. Tnatea Good. ^^tDllnie^Hol^>TdrngKiatA Cae No xnattep Iloxv long.sfnndlng Your ease, It will end at— TETTERINE. 1 box by mall for 50c- in cash or > tamp* J. T. suuerKiNK, * Savannah, Ga. It Care* all Mkln Diarnaea. mtnedd AND tSolxool of teila.oz’tla.nxx.ca AI'GCMTA. «A. Notoit books ua«d. Actual busmses from dvjr of vutoring. Baninaas papara, cubage curr^noy aa I f ioikdv u»«d. bend tor handNorneiy illoetratet oasa- ogue. Board cueaper than in aay Southeru city. MACHINERY and SUPPLIES. ENGINKS, HOILKItS, MAW MILLS, CORN MILLS, WHEAT MILLS, PLANERS, nitlGK MACH INKS, MOULDERS, GANG ROGERS. And all kind* of Wood Working Machinery. No one In the Houth can offer you higher grade goods, or at lower prtcca. Talbott, Liddell and Watertown Engine*. \Y« are only a few hours rido from you. Write for prices. Light, Variable Feed Plantation Saw Mills a Specialty. V. C. BADHAM, GENERAL AGENT, Columbia, - - S. o. MOT MISLEADING. No Dangip in Curing On* Habit, of Forming Anoiiur. HWflV JMorphlne Laudanami, etc.. C'ur.4 Ytoni four to six Meek*. wiuSKEY HABIT Cared in Four Weeks. 1 he cure endorsed by Nat. Gov't. In Soldiers Homes, in the Krg'ilar Army, by Mis* '* H- lard, the W. C. T. U., by Seal Dow. Franeis Murphy, by L O. G. T. and by 800,000 cured patients, JO.OUO of these being Physician*, wor Teri**s etc*.. Address THE KEKLKY 1N8TITUFK, Or Drawer 27. Columbia, S. G.