University of South Carolina Libraries
Catarrh In the head, with its ringing noises In the ears, buzzing, snapping sounds, severe beadaches :in disa-,eeable discharges, is permanently cured by Hood's Szsaparlla. Do not dally with local applications. Take Hood's Sareaparilla and make a thorough and completa cure 1y eradicating from the blood tbe scofulous taints that cause eatrhlj. Remember Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. SI; six forS3. Hood's Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25cents. BA D 4C~ASCA~RES do all claimed for them and are a truly wenderful medicine. I have often wisbcd for a medicine pleasant to take and at last baVO f~zd It In Cascret$. Lince taking tbem. my blood has been puri~ed and my complexion has ha proed wooaer dl and Ice mr.ch better in every way.* MRS. SA LLiS E. SELLAas. L:ttrell. Tenn. CAN DY CATHARTIC 'r~earant. Palatable. Poent, ~~ Good Never Sicken. Weaken. - ... CU R The-nn rtio always does as iie pleases is often displeased with what bze does Do not think for a single moment that consumption will ever strike you a sudden blow. GIt coes not come that way. It creeps its way along. First, you think it is a little * cold; nothing but a little back i~co-.ih ; then a little loss in * weight; then a harder cough; * then the fever and the night . sweats. The suddenness comes when you have a hemorrhag'e. iBetter stop the disease while iis yet creeping. You can do it With You first notice that you cough less. The pressure on the chest is lifted. That feeling -of suffocation is removed. A cure is hastened by placing one of -Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Plaster over the Chest. A Bok Fr'ee, It is on the Diseases of the Throat and Lungs. Wi'ko us Freely. itee and ilslre he best medcal advie yo freely yYo fwillire'iveaprompteiy cII.j. C AEfioweli, Mass. aEllW ns a dsi z, f o drilling wells for house, ater Works. Facto ries, Ice Plants. Brew ineral ProspetingOl C an Gas. etc. Latest and Best. 30 yeAs exence. WRITE US LOOMIS & NYMAN, Tiffmn,Oh's $1 L5f0.--SPE't1AL.0FFER.--S1.5O. * arvl ' i t) si . ua r a~-)] it yon are no, lo-t-- ( mi'nerci-t Coeier :AR:.OTTE. N. C. T~tT mKTT? WA DO THacE &s p Set, reo.I-on. Met6n as Kiteen Workerb. It Is an interesting development of the woman suffrage agitation that Miss Alice Stone Blackwell, editor of the Woman's Journal, at Boston, is devo. ting a good deal of her time and atten tion to finding situations for zn as kitchen workers. She says that the chief difficulty she meets in the way of getting housework for her' proteges to do is the conservatism of women. In her experience there are always more young men willIng to take domestic service than there are Yankee house. wives willing to give them a trial. She affirms that it Is as hard to convince some womentbat men man do housework as it is to convince some men that a woman can be a principal of a public school. But, she continues, the women who venture upon the new departure are sometimes rewarded by finding in it a perfect solution of the vexed 'do mestic prblem." Mrs. Isabel C. Bar rows, whio Is one of the innovators, pro claims that the young man now doing her housework is the best help she has had in thirty years. The man giving such distinguished satisfaction is a c lege graduate, who finus his education most useful in the kitchen.--New York Tribune. An indorsee of a negotiable note waz has made a written assignment there f which is not indorsed on the note, order to transfer it as collateral ecurity, is held, in Taug vs. Riley sa.), 40 L. R. A. 244, entitled to g an action upon it when the note -rendered to him, although it is for the pmopose of collection. WANT TO TELL teful Women Who Have ped by Mrs. Pinkham. Dave suffered severely i of their ills by Mrs. ' and medicine are ublication of their nefit of other wo such letters: aY, 256 Merrimac 'rites: .at pleasure to tell I thebenefitlhavo g Lydia E. Pink apound. Icanhard ssmygratitude for orme. My trouble i womb. I was un . Upon examina en very large ulcers, good. I took sev E. Pinkham'sVege used the Sanative Mrs. Pinkham's e, and I would ering women." , Ellenburgh he time my baby me to have milk in bed for eight me no good. I umld die. I was al !ling of the womb. ad faint spells as a day. One day a eand told me of the derived from taking ns medicine, and ad t. I did so, and had a bottle beforelIwas ib -.. - - chair. After taking three bottles I could do my own work. I am now in uerfpot h'ealth." 3EOLOGY OF THE KLONDlKE. ow the Rivers Are Changing the Country. A recent explorer in a part of Alaska s far removed from the newly discov ered Kiondike region as Washington is rom Boston has said: "That country s one-half made; the glaciers are slow y doing their work, the mountains are moking and the rivers are vomiting ut quantities of quicksand." What is true of the Cook's Inlet country of Southern Alaska is also true, in a measure, of the valley of the Yukon. T-e'e are, however, some differences. u the region of the gold fields there a en glaciers. Actiie volcanoes, too, neso far away that it is only by the oeeasional reports of Indians or pros pectors who have made a longer trip than usual that their existence is known. And yet one can see, through ll the valley of that great river of the north, abundant evidences of the un formed character of the ,country. The one thing which strikes the trav eler, be he layman or geologist, is the mmense amount of work which the streams are performing. The- Lewea River, down which he takes his way to the diggings, rises, as is known, in a series of lakes, the largest of w-hich is over thirty milies long. The country in the upper lake region is mountainous, with torrents plunging down through rough valleys from the eternal snowm The contrast -between this water of the lakes, whIch is clear, and that of the stream emerging from them is re muarkable. The latter soon becomes turbid, being full of sediment, so that one cannot see more than a quarter of an inch belowv the surface. A basinful taken out and allowed to stand clears itself in time, and a thick deposit of mud is found in the bottom of the re 2eptnele. The current boils and flows very rap idy and as the boat nloats along a sound is heard like thrt of frying fat Upon searching for the cause of this soud it is found to lie in the grating; ainst the bottom of the boat of the very fine particles of sand carried in suspension. From the moment of en tering the Lewes River until the end ofj the trip ti is sounel is never absent. truly eneC. nouis amount of material is thus borne along by the Yukon and finaly emptied into the immense delta at its mouth in Norton's sound.-Les lie's Weekly. *f4w% Thompson's Eye Water' .4 BEST LINE CINCINNATI TO TOLEDO, DETROIT, I ! NJiANAPOLIS, CHICAGO lAd The i Nrth and Nothwest NEW CURE FOR DIPSOMANIA." IHow Tom Did His Friend John a Good Turn Without the Latter's Knowledge. "John" and "Tom" are room-mates and chums. They are employed in a, office in LaSalle street. If John passes round the corner it is probable that Tom, if not keeping step along side, will surely follow in a few min utes. The former is tall, white-fated and abstemious. Tom is low, stout, phlegmatic and inclined to be ruddy. Until very recently he was one of those who delighted in having a "good time." A day or two before Christmas Tom was presented by a friend in a whole sale whisky establishment with a two gallon jug of the best brand of rye. Tom took a "nip" on Christmas morn ing and invited a choice coterie of friends to sample it in the evening. They sang "Here's to good old whisky, drink it down," and pro nounced it the best that ever hap pened. By and by Tom took kindly to the jug and drank it at all hours o. the day. John realized that his friend's position was in peril and determined on prompt action. One afternoon while Tom's rubi cund nose was chasing up and down d column of flgures John hastened td the room. About half the contents ol the jug had been consumed. He added about a pint of water. That eiening the old circle of "good feb lows" assembled, but they did not sing the same old song. The former eulogy of the chief article of enter tainment was lacking. Tom did not detect the dilation and could not un derstand the strange apathy of his guests. Next morning and. the next after that he took his customary drinks before eating, John always surrepti tiously pouring in a modicum of water immediately afterward. Tom's visits to the bar during work ing hours began to grow less frequent and his collars and cuffs were not changed at midday with their former regularity. One morning he ate. the eggs and drank the- coffee minus the customary "bowl." He took toreading in his room o' nights, interviewing the jug at very rare intervals. The amount drunk was always replaced by water in a nowise mysterious manner. -It was not long before his eyes, became clear, his hand steady and nerve as firm as that of a lion tamer. "John," said he one night when they met in the room, "I have de termined to quit -bothering with that stuff," pointing to the closet. "Some how whisky doesn't taste to me as it used to. I have no more desire for the stuff." "I haven't much use for it, myself," said John. "I haven't a bit of use for it at all," said Tom. John and Tom's friends in the office have decided that a trip to a dipso mania care institution is a needless expense, and the same results can be obtamned under ordinary conditions right here in Chicago and without a '-shot" in the forearm. "--Chicago Times-Herald. POPULAR SCIENCE. By the electric hemostat of Lawson Tait bleeding is arrested without the use of a litagure. Human beings have six muscles to each eye, that they may move it on either side. The place of the old magnesium fashlight, which has done good service to the photographer, is about to be taken by a flash wand of great brilli ancy and ease of adjustment. Heretofore it has been possible to dissolve gold only ipn a mixture of strong acids. In Liebig's Annalen der Chemnie, Professor Zsigmondy now describes a way he has discovered of dissolving gold in distilled water. The fact that skeleton remains of elephants are so rarely found in mny part of Africa is explained by an ex plorer, who states that as soon as the bones become brittle from climate in fuence they are eaten in lieu of salt by various ruminant animals. ,It is now practically demonstrated by scientists that light is capable of producing sound, an.! that according to the color or texture of the material upon which it falls, the sound is greater or less. Green silk givess sound best in a red light, a green light also thrown upon red worsted will produce an audible sound. Owls iu Chicago. Chicago has a novel trade in owls, the supply coming to the commission merchants from the farmers' boys in the rearby Sutdes. The first owl which came to Chicago in this manner was sent as a venture by a farmer boy, who had somehow managed to entrap it alive. It proved so unexpectedly successful in 'ridding the warehouse of rats and mice-hav ing been freed at night with the idea of making an experiment in this di rection-that it was purchased by the man in whose care it was resting. The freedom from rodents which it brought induced other commission men to look out for owls, and from the commission firms the idea gradu ally spread to the grocers, butchers and market keepers generally of the city. Now a large percentage of theses men keep an owl down in the cellar during the daylight and bring it up to the store when darkness falls. It is said that the expense and care of maintaining owls are more than re paid by their services in vanquishing the rats and mice. The owners d janitors of the large apartment houses in the city are also beginning to realize the value of possessing an owl when rats, mice, cockroaches and vermin generally are to be exterminated. Chicago Times-Herald. Horrors of the Guillotine. The Medical Journal, of London, publishes the report of Dr. Cinel, of Paris, asserting that gaillotining does not immediately affct the brain. The French doctor says the blood first comes fromn the lzeger vessels of the uek, and taat thecre i3 hardly any lrain upon the circulation in the craniun. The brain, he adds, finds nourismennt for an hour after decapi tation, during which time the person decaitated retains his or her senses of hearing, smelling and seeing. Ab solute death, Dr. Cinel claims, does not ensue for three hours. Thus, it js pointed out, guillotining, instead of big speedy, id one of the most pro, longed and horrible forms of capital punishment.--New York Times. FAMOUS GOLD RUSHES; Pathetic Stories of the Sufterings of the Deluded Miners. Montana's history as a Territory is full of pathetic stories of rushes of gold-hungry men to ne diggings. The annals of the mining camps of Bannock, Last Chance, Silver Bow, Confederate, Pioneer and Lincoln are full of the sufferings of miners. One of the most pitiful rushes amid the snow and ice of an intensely cold winter in Montana was that to Billings Ledge in March, 1873. The mercury ranged from fifteen degrees above to three degrees below zero that spring for weeks. No one in the camps about Helena and Butte knew what ore had really been discovered at Billingsi Ledgo, but the story grew fast as it passed from mouth to mouth. In four or five days every man who could rustle a small grub stake and cayuse started for the supposed new gold fields. At that day the country to the north was not inhabited and the suf ferinji endured by the stampeders were terrible. Many were frozen in the pitiless storm. It turned out, also, that there had been no discovery of gold made, which added disappoint ment to the sufferings of the stam peders, and if the man who started the story of rich gold discoveries had been found then his days would. havo been short. But no one seemed to know then nor does any one now know exactly how the stampede started. It is sup posed to have been- caased by a letter written by a man who had gone north from Butte in the fall. This man, no doubt, believed he had met with flat tering success. He had fallen in with some friendly Blackfoot Indians and secured a squaw who had some horses and a tepee in a land filled with wild game of all kinds. He thought it was the next thing to paradise. He wrote to a friend in Helena that he bad struck it rich; intended to stay all winter and was well fixed and was well satisfied with his find. To the miners who saw it there was but one meaning to his letter. They never stooped to consider that the letter writer meant anything else than that he had a paradise in gold mining. Some ten years later came the re ports of rich gold mines in the Cccur d'Alene Mountains, and the name of Pritchard, the discoverer, became known from the Atlantic to the Pacific. A great stampede set in and many hardships were endured.- Every one wanfed to be first'on the ground, and. the result was that the country was soon overrun, notwithstanding that the snow was still deep and it wasex ceerlingly difficult to reach Pritchard Creek. From Thompson Falls to the diggings was forty miles over a rough and heavily timbered mountain coun try. The snow was too deep for ani mals to be taken in at that time, so the forty miles were made on snow shoes. And many men made the trip who knew less about snowshoes than they did about trigonometry. All rovisions were taken in on toboggans, anled bf hand; at the rate of twenty five'cents a pound. - Some Uses of Water.. A strip of flannel~or. a soft napkin, tolded lengthw~ise, dipped in hot water und .wrung out, and: then applied round the neck of t*'child--that has ~he croup will~surely bring relief ina ew minutes. A linen towel folded several times and dipped in hot water, quickly wrung and applied over the site of toothache or'neuralgia will generally afford prompt relief. This treatment for colic has been found to worlk like magic. Nothing so promptly cuts short a congestion of the lungs,'sore throat or rheumatism as hot water, when ap plied early in the caseyand thoroughly. Hot~ water taken freely half an hour before bed time is an excellent cathar tic in the case of constipation, while it has a soothing effect upon the stomach and bowels. This treatment, continued a few months, with the addition of -a cupful of hot water slowly sipped half an hour before each meal, with proper attention to diet, wifll cure most cases of dyspepsia. Ordinary headaches almost always yield to the simultaneous application of hot water to the' feet and back of the neck.-Philadelphia Press. Robin Roosts. For many years naturalists like Audubon and Wilson studied and wrote of this bird before it was known that there were "robin roosts" as well as pigeon roosts. Only within the last few years was the fact brought out that a bird more famiiarly known than' the passenger pigeon 'followed this mode of spending the night, al though it adopted spring instead of fall for massing by hundreds in ashigh sheltered wood for a night's protec tion from cold, or- because it is the period before pairing time, or for some other reason at present beyond man's ken. With what stealth must this well-known and much-observed b rd have found its- way in such num bers to the same patch of timber night after night in the early months of the year, according to locality, coming from all directions so swiftly that a secreted observer- could not count, keeping up a chatter that could be heard for a long distance, until the last bird, somiewhat belated, perhaps, found she'ltei 'in the darkening grove, when all became as silent as thou sands of wings' were folded to rest. Im'portance. of Earache. (1) Earache, however slight, may signify disease that, neglected, may terminate in loss of hearing, even of life itself. (2) Becurring earache in children is almost always associated with lymphoid hypetrophy of the pharynx, depend on it; and perma nent impairment of the function of the ear is prevenited only by early surgi al treatment of the "adenoids." (3) Acute inflammation of the middle ear may be frequently aborted ii proper treatment-mostly of a general seda tve character-be administered early and with precision. ('1) If relief be otained, by the second day, an ex pert examiination of the ear should be miade, and proper surgical 'treatmens apphxed to relie'.e intratympanic pres sgre and possil involvement of the :nastoid cells orintracranial structures. F ailure at this stage to obtain as exact kaowled-ge as poseible of the condi - 'ath ieldle ear is~ criminai neg hi-..i Bale~'lo 31 edical Jour MARIE TEMPEST'S HUSBAND. This is the young actor who has just married Marie Tempest, the well known actress. Cosmo Stuart is only his stage name, for in reality he is a son of Lord Henry Gordon Lennox. COSMO STUART. He is considered quite a stage success Iu England. How to 6et Strong A system which has become run down by the trying weather of the pastsum mer is not in a condition to meet the severe winter of thisc dimate and will easily fall a preyto disease unless (' a proper tonic is used. Dr.Will iams'Pink Pills for Pale People are th-e best medicine in the world for build ing up andstrengthen ing an enervated system. Do not conf use these pills with ord inary Purgative pills.They do further'Weakening the body.1 trengt hen the nerves. . Major A. C. Bishop, of/!5 Thir< civil en *meer. He says : wen]I -~ out ofthehospital I was a sorry si and could not walkc over a block fot ( hih co nne me tht tey wer I did not take them for my comple: I felt better, and know they did recommend them to invalids who constitution."-Detroit Free Press. A statistician' declares that the wheat supply will soon be insuffleient to supply tbe world with bread. This condition will probably occur at just about the same time that the coal sup ply is exhausted, as scientists predict, so that there would be no fuel with which to bake it, anyhow. -Beauty Is Blood Deeps. Clean'- blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Casearets. Candy Cattar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all' im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples. boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly'bil ious conmp!cmon by taking Cascaiets,-beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guarairteed, 10c, 25c,50c. An attempt is being made to start an agitation against the high rentals put upon hcuses by-London landlords. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxativo Biromo Quinine Tablets. All -Druggists refund mouey i f it ails to cure. 25c. Toledo is to havo the greatest plate glass factory in the world. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac. the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or I1. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York, Toled ' is the largest clover seed market in the world., So- 47. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes west: anen strong, blood pure- 60c, $l- All druggists. The manufacture of straw is one of the most important industries of Germany, giv ing thousands means of support. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take.Cascarets Candy Cathartic. Zoe or 25kb. I~ C, C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. The mines of Bavaria (coal and metals) yielded only C2.700,000 last year. Educato Your Dowels With Cascarote, Candy Cathartic, cure Constipation forever. l0c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. A New York department store has gone into the printing and hank business. Pi.-o's Cure for Consumption relieves the most obstinate coughs.--Rev. D. l~crcEL. LER, LeXington. 31o., January 21, 1891. Mre. Winslow'sSoothiag syrup for children teeting, softens the gums, reducing inflama tion,alays pain,cures wind colic, 25c. a bottie Fits permanently cured. No tits or nervous ness after fArst day's use- of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer.S2tr-ial hottle and treatise free Dn. R. H. KLINE, Ltd.. 931 .rch St . Phila. Pa COLUEUrs. GA., Aug. S4, 1877. DR. C. J. MoFFETT.-Dear D)Octor:. We gave your "Teethina" (Teething Powders) to our little grandchild with tha happiest results. 'i he effects were a.lmost magical, and CERt TAILYMonESATISFAcTORY TIIAN FRIOM ANY T IYG wE EVER Us ED. Yours., very truly. JosEPH S. KEY, Pastor of St. Paul Church. (Now Bishop southern 3Methodist Church.) Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mlurcury. as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole sys tem when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used erGept on prescription from reputable physi cians, as the damage they will do is ten fold o the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure manufacturedby F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo. 0.. contains no mercury, and is taken internally. actingc dl. rctly upon the b!ood and mucous surfaces of the system. in buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine. It is taken inter nally, and is made in Toledo. Ohlc', by F. J-. Cheney a Co. Testimonials Free. W- Sold by Druggiste; price, 75o3 per bottle. Hall's Family Pi:is are the best. FREE WATOH~! S-nd your address and we will express 50 fine,long tier~lcelcisar-s. When seid, remit us -S we wvill mAll you,free, ahbandsomesemun Christmas Gifts, 50c. to S1000.00. covered wit lour. The bact #~)'t is tufted, o71T V V are used wak Thte Chair me Our general - catalogueY isg ull o suggestiosI for C -, - -mas Gylts at pleas ing prices PRICE, $14.25. in adton ture, Crockeryl, Sewing Machines, Sil verware, Clocks. M:rrors,.iterrigrators, $ Pictures, Bedding, Stove-, Upbolste:Y eto IdBbyC rt s Tin are, Laps, ejtc.. all t whiuch you tan buy from tte V manufacture at Ou to 60 per ent below . retail prices. Our~i~tt7raphe Ca~aoguc 6 of Carpets, Rugs, Portieres and Lace Cur- 4$ 1 tains shows the actual designs in hand V painted colors. We setyCarpets free, fur nish Carpet lining f r e e and prepay freight on Carpets. ]ijurs and Curtains. OI u goos ren inon or inV. e Il;am l. It 4 29 12i tiho c uy o W . lonr 2i. bh. 1 inches ed os a Frendch t ile Pt $10.01. C. do re Our gods are 4known 3.n e-,er corner of the civai ized World. and togues utell PRICE, $3.95. JULIUS HINES & SON, ( Dept,310 BALTIMORE, MD. NOT act on the bowels.thereby ey build up the blood and IAve., Detroit, Mich., is a well-known ad nmy last speln of sickness and came illiams' Pink Pills for Pale People, I orth trying and I bought two boxes. mio but for strength. After using tema neatonic rtoil psattera from the Dt. Willemsr M'ed. i.Y. Price sity cents per boa; An Anlinal Fiower. The inhabitants of St. Lucia have discove'red a wonderful plant. It grows in~ a cavern, in an immense ba sin of brackish water that has over* flowed from the sea. To the sight it is a perfect flower, but on the approach of a hand or a stick It retires quickly out of sight. Close examination shows that the middle of the flower-like disc Is pro vided with four filaments, which move round the petals with a brisk, spon tuneous motion. Each of these fila ments is provided with pinchers for receiving prey. This animal flower lives upon the spawn of fish and mar ine Insects. Whenever the pinchers on the filaments make a catch. the petlas close and there Is no escape for what ever has bacn so unfortunate as to fall into the creature's maw. To prevent locomfotive spark-s from1 atting fire to buildings a new spark arrester has been designed, consist ing of a pipe running from the boiler to the top of the smokestack to force water through the sprinkler against the sparks. iF 11E FECELECE OF SYRUJP OF HIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes lnown to the CALIFOI.A FIG SYRttP Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Co. only. a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured byv other par ties. The high standing of the CALI FOIA FIG SYruPu Co. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives', as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of - the Company- - CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. saN FRANolSCO. CaL LOUISVILLE, Ky. NEW TOREN.~.] TJA TEDCaeof bdheath that -I-At-8 Co., NewYork, for 10 samples and 10u teslonals. MEDICATOR CATREBEEDY L YSimple. Reli. ble. Efretve. Com plete treatmnent sen bymai :ostpaid ec.munujl.:A E IOiVTNC. The City by he Sea. The KEELEY INSTITUTE, N. E. Co. Vanderhorst a Smith Sts., CHARLESTON SOUTH CAROLINA. Atlantic Ocean Surf Bathing,'Yatrblcng. Boating and Fishing. Trolley and Ferzy Rides, 18 and 23 e Sullivan Island the Isle of Palms, a to be enjoyed while nnder treatment for Whiskey er Morphine Addition. Opens Oct. 3rd and will be the only Keeley Institute in the State. IN PIANOS N' BARGAINSAND ORGANs Organs from $15.00. 125.00. $35.M and up ward. Uuright Pianos from S175.0, $1M.0 $22. and upward. Address M. A. MALONE, Couimbia S. C. THE BAILEYMEBB1 COt Av E8 Engines and Boilers, AULTMA'N & TAYLOR Threshers, -MONI. OR" Dustless Grain Separators Gins, Presses, Corn and Cane Mills ENGLEBURG Rice Huller and Polisher, DE LQACH Saw Mills, 1ather & Rubbpr Belting, Laeing, Packings. Pipe. Iron Fittings, n* jectors, Pulleys, Shafting, Hand Pumps and General Supplies, CHARLESTON, - - , C.' Try our B-L Co. Anti-Frktiol Babbitt Meta 8AW iLL.. If you need a saw mill, any is wrft n. before buying elsewhere. I have ile most complete line of mims of any dealer or manufacturerin the outlb CORN MILLS. Teryhighesigrade Stones, at unusu ly low prices. WOOD-WORKING AACHIERY Planers. Moulders, EdgerV 10a436' Band Saws, Laths, etc. ENGINES AND BOILERS, Talbott and Liddell. Engleberg Rice Huller in stook, quic delivezy, low prices. V. C. BADHAM, No. 1826 Main St, Columbia, S. C. When in Need of IYTHING In the Naclihaery or hIll Supply Line, Consult Your Jnterest by caUlling on or Writing W4 U. GIBBES & CO., LARGE STOCK. C*kUMBIA, SOLE AGENTS FOR Liddenl Co., Charlotte, X.C- Engines, P40WM Saw itmproved Cotton Ginning Xschinet7. EAle Cotton Gin Co., Bridgewater: Mass. A. B. FarquharCo., York Pa.. ErginesandfTreth ar Machines. , Chandl~er :&ZyorCo., Ind'iapolis, la, EginSSl andi B-lenr. Salem n WorksSalemN. C.. Sawims J. A. Fay Egan Co., Cmulnna ., woodwomi Machinery XSrubhlnery Co Ci1nsAt 0. Grist =na Brennen & Co., iLVFiililo Ky., Maead SM& &V1 achliner -l., r Kills and Tanks. Deering Harrester Co., Chicago. Earvesing a. Goulds 'f e C"'. enaa P.11 .N.TY. -ups Peerless Rie rg Co., NwokRabbersi. COLUMBIA BUSINE8840ILI.EB E COL.UMBIA, SOOTH 'CAIOUNA. . Instructions Individual. C.enter ime. Railroad farensild. GautsslP. romt each-county. .'xb *dad b zautn anks and business men. Forl foiS e fos and catslogues,- address. W.II. N EWBERRY, PRESIDEN? B.DbR'SI.IYER Pil~Th? 2' EF re o cmbied hatthey dofourthtigs 1st. They sa on the Liver. 2nd. They set on the Upper Bowels. 3rd. They act on-the Lower Bowes. 4th. They act upon the Kidneys. NoTey do not siecken or~p other~~4 ~ 25 Cenet a Box ab rho Howard de Wallet~t ~ p AUGUISTA. GA. MAKE EM. - -4O+O SHEL.BY O'0O B. B. BABINGTON, Pnor., Shelby, N. 0 F ines, Boilers Pips Fltti~ Every~sn ithe Foundry Ln. ~ 5WE PHOTO PARLORSe nOWIE COLUMA jC. LEADiG PIIOTOGRAPIIERS. We enlarge from Pastel or CrynOLD* PICTURES. Country t-d oiis pr iculrly. Amateur';ameras Spple.eu or prices enlarging and tramning Old Photos. PSIANO TO PLEASE ALL Knabe, Chicker~ing, Sohmer, Fischer, anid uine other reliable makes to choose from. ~erms and prices in keeping with the times. Address -. A. IAWLNE, - Columnbla, 8. 0. PIANOS AND ORCANS. ENOVES <IDRE, TA5TELE55 . CHILL T NIC IS JUST AS COODFPOR ADULTS. NfARRANTED. PRICE 50cts. - Gme AAT& Ir, Nov.16,3805. BOVE'S TSES '1LI TNC ndhave ught three grosa already this year. In all our en erlene of 14 years. in th dru bnina hav erdan au~l that g~esuh unversalaaes S ~ Atsr.CAUa kCO, ~eatent Free. Dr.E.0sa's5 sons. Atlaasa.4s. ordering goods or making enquiries of ad. Lv rUbeers at will be to your advantage to uses.. on this paper. .So. 47