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BReauty Is Blood Deeps Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. ts, Candy Cathar tic clean your bl; andkiee!t clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and ig all im urities from the bod Begin to-day to bansh pimples, boils, lotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,beauty for ten cents. All drug glsts, satsfction guaranteed 10oe.25c,50c. England Imports 325,.00,000 pounds of but ter annually. So. 49. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. AU Druggists refund money if it fails to care. 25c. At Cherry.I'lle, N. C., a new cotton yarn mill Is being built. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour Life Awary. To quit tobacco easily and forcver. be mag netic. full or lie, nerve and vigor, take No-To Ba.the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All drug,-is)s, 50c or !. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York Chihauhus, Mex., is to ha:ve a mitera! water works and a glass bottle faotory. Mrs. WInlow'sSoothing Sy rup for children teetiniz. softens the gums, reducing inilama. tionallayspain.cureswind colic. 25c. a bottlle Fits perrunently cured. No V.ts ornervour r ess after first day's use of Ur. Klino's Great Nerve Restorer. S2tri.l bottle %nd treatise free Ul)R..H. KLIr.Ltd.. 31ArchSt.Phila.Pa. Make It a Point To Cet the Best Every Time,When You Buy Medicine. 'Eealth is too valuable to be trifled with. Do not experiment. Get Hood's Sarsapa rilla and you will have the best medicine money can buy - the medicine that cures when all others fail. You have every reason to expect it will do for you what it has done for others. remember Hood's Sarsaparilla is America's Greatest Medicino. Price S1. Hood's Pills are the favorite cathartic. Pasture Grass in Porio Rico. Several well known varieties of pas ture grass grow well in Porto Rico, Guinea grass, Pars grass and gram ia among others. The first does not require a rich soil, but flourishes in sandy soil, high on the slopes of the hills, without much regard whether or not it is a well-watered region. Cut and chopped, it makes an excel lent green fodder. Para grass re quires better land and lower, and is consequently selected for those places where there is an alluvial soil to give richness. Such a pasture usually oc cupies meadow land along the streams. Gramma requires less rich ness than does the Para grass. and will do well in similar soil to that where the Guinea grass flourlsh-: Para grass makes fat rapidly, but the beef cattle fattened on it do not weigh as much, for the same apparent size, as do those fattened on the other Dasture. NERVOUS DEPRESSION. [A TALK WITH MRS. PINKHAM.] A woman with the blues is a very un comfortable person. She is illogical, unhappy anid frequently hysterical. The condition of the mind known as " the blues," nearly always, with wo men, results from diseased organs of generation. it is a source of wonder' that in this age of advanced medical science, any person should still believe that mere force of will and determination will overcome depressed spirits and nerv ousness in women. These troubles are indications of disease. Every woman who doesnt under stand her condition should. write to Lynn, Mass., to Mrs. Pinkhiam for her advice. Her advice is thorough com mon sense. and is the counsel of a learned woman of great experience. Read the story of Mrs. F. S. BENNETT, 'Westphalia, Kansas, as told irthe fol lowing letter: " DEAB This. PINKrLAM:-I have su! fered for aver two years with falling, enlargement and ulceration of the womb, and this spring, being in such a weakened condition, caused me to flow for nearly six mon ths. Some time ago, urged by friends, I wrote to you for advice. A fter using the treatment . which you advised for~ a short time, that terrible flow stopped. "I am now -gaining strength and flesh, and have better health than I have had for the past ten years. I wish to say to all distres.sed, suffer ing women, do not suffer l onger, when there is one so kind and willing to atid you." Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound is a woman's remedy for wo -man's ills. More than a million wo men have been benefited 1:. it. EVERY SUCCESSFUL farmer who raises fruits, vegetables, berries or grain, knows by experience the importance of' having a large percentage of Potash in his fertilizers. If the fer tilizer is too low in Potash the, harvest is sure to be small, andI of inferior quality. Our books tell about the proper fertiiizers~ for an~ crops, and wve will gladly send themt free to any fariner. GER.IAN KALI WORKS, 03 Nassau S$. New York. yohaeue your valuable CASC witoutthe. Ihav usd tem orsome time forindigestlon andbiliousncss and am now comn Dletely cured.mnttoevery one Onc tredyouwil neer e rth~lout them in tefamily." E1.A.Mn.Albany. N. Y. CANDY TRADe MARS nMorn-rru Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never $2cken. weaken, or Gripe,.2c.50se ..cuRE CO 'SsTWATioni... BD.TO.RAG Ed~aari~ Lab drg MOTHER HOOD. Oh, what so true, so pure, so good, As love and pride of motherhood? The tender watching and the care, That have no likeness anywhere? What men most bold would fear to do A mother's heart will carry through. Love Is too strong to think on death, A child is more than living breath. A mother's love is fond and wise, Her soui is in her baby' eyes; Q To her the laugh that shakes its throat Is sweeter than the thrush's note. Her life is in the child she bears, Nor withers with the waste of years; Though promise may in failure die, 'Tis love that makes her weep and sigh. Her love, indeed, outlives her days. Her children treasure up her praise; And, though no more they see her face, 11er name retains its native grace. -New York World. WINTER HATS IN FULL FEATHER. Strange Combinatiom of Plumage q Fea ture of New XMilunery. Winter hats are literally out in full feather, since feathers of every known, and of many' heretofere unknown, variety have come out at the top of the list in hat trimm' . There are the usual extremes and exaggerations of fashion, with many pretty modifica tions, altogether charming and becom ing. Toques are larger, and nearly all of them turn up in front with a glitter ing buckle or a bright rosette, with osprey feathers. The crowns are often in beefeater shape, or soft velvet or silk, embroidered all over with scrolls of narrow ribbon or worked with steel or jet on net or horsehair. Large hats with a brim, both medium and extreme in size, figure largely iA the variety, with some French bonnets very odd in shape; which vill hardly find favor. One is sort of scoop or poke shape, very short in the back, and suited only to the Madonna face. It is fully decorated with feathers, as is the case with all hats this season. There are many novelties in feathers, all sorts and kinds of made varieties, and what are called trimmed feathers. Ostrich plumes tipped with spots of chenille are one specimen, and spotted effects of all kinds are very much used. The plumage of the gninea fowl is a special feature of trimming, both dyed and in its natural color, be ing used sometimes as an edging for brightly colored wings. Quills of every kind and color, pheasants' plumage, and Mercury wings in all light and dark shades are employed. Large birds with four wings, real butterflies on bustard quills, and osprey breast feathers with butterfies are among the novelties. Feathers ai e not the whole millinery ;hw, however, varied as they are, for there are lovely velvet plumes in soft, rich. purple reds, pretty combinations of lace and fur and tulle and fur, whichI is decidedly new. Conflicting suggestions as to the kind of hat to buy and the special variety which will be most popular are as usual very freely given, but it is impossible to settle on any one shape. aexng so many. The hat that turns back from the face is both becoming~ and striking in effect, but there are quite as many hats that tilt down over. the eyes. The most becoming hat is the one to choose whatever the shape may be. You are told that all-blackj hats are not the thing, that bright colors are to be very much worn; but if you put a bright rosette or a showy rhinestone buckle on your black hat it will pass muster all the same. The. color used must be bright and decided to be effective, and not one of the neutral tints or soft dull reds which' are used) for the entire hat of velvet. Tulle is combined very prettily with velvet, being used in tiny gathered ruches on the edge of the brim and. forming some scroll design all over the ersyn. It matches the velvet in! color, or may be in a lighter or darker shade. One stylish hat in black vel vet has a twist of white silk fastened with a handsome rhinestone buckle around the crown, which is embroid ered with white baby ribbon, and two~ white ostrich feathers for a finish. Colored felt hats, with leathers and trimming to match are very stylish. Felt hats are considered especially smart this season for wear with tailor made gowns, and it is said that white felt hats are coming into favor. A shape in felt which is very odd has a low, soft crown and a bowl-shaped brim turning down to meet the hair directly in the back, where velvet rosettes fill in either side. High puffs of velvet and shot taffeta trim the front, with one feather in the middle turning toward the back.-New York Sun. Wvo:n~an's Part in the Spanish War. At every camp in the United States where troops were being mobilized women could be seen daily in their visits of ministration to the soldiers. Every hospital in the land has been the recipient of bounties, the resultof women's work. It is not too much to say that the women of the nation have farnished a large per cent. of the hos pital supplies, and that, too, after making a hard fight to be allowed to do so, after becoming impatient at the tardy and incomplete provision by the Government for the rapidly multiply ing patients. Days and weeks were spent in importuning the authorities for atdmission before the indispensable trained female nurses or saintly Sis ters of Mercy and Charity were al lowed in the hosnitals. The inade quate corps of nurses of the regular army of twenty-five thousand men were deemed sufficient in the face of the increase to two hundred thousand, including the volunteer regiments, not one of which brought a man titted or desiring to be detailed in the hos-. pital service, and this with a register: of thousands of names of efficient, eligible women impatient to enlis~t for the alarming fatalities and a threat ened epidemic of t-yphoid and other fevers, yielded and placed in the hands of the Executive Committee of the Daughters of the .rmerican Revo lation the power to appoint trained nurses in the various army hospitals. In the mean time, fortunately for the sailors and soldiers of the nation, through the Red Cross Society and in the private and public hospitals of the cities, many of our sick and wounded were receiving the best of care and the benefit of modern appliance3 and methods of treating medical and surgical patients. Women-God bless them! from the highest to the lowest walks of life-were everywhere busy with their labors of love and mercy. Hospital ships shared in the contribu tions of women and societies of womz en. Mrs. L. Z. Leiter's munificent gift of a hospital at Chickamauga has been the greatest boon to the army stationed on that historical ground. And not alone were the nation's de fenders the objects of their humanity and tenderness. Their families came in for a large share on the score of their dependence upon those who had gone in the service of their country. Mrs. John A. Logan, in Harper's Ba zar. One or Chicago's Cierer Women. One of the most widely known, most generally consulted and busiest wom en in Chicago is Dr. Sarah Hackett Stevenson. In 1870, at Philade!phia, Dr. Stevenson was admitted tv the American Medical Association, the first woman ever so honored. Since then she has steadily followed her profession with the exception of two years, which she gave up to work in the Chicago Woman's Club, of which she was President during the World's Fair. Dr. Stevenson is a widow, and took up her work after her husband's death. She had splendid opportunity for study. During a visit to Europe she met Professor Huxley, and studied with him for two years. She now holds the chair of obstetrics in the Woman's Medical College of the Northwertern University, ani is PreZident and founder of the Chicago Maternity Hospital, organized a little over a year ago. This hospital is one of the doctor's hobbies. It has two unique features: On is that patients are not permitted to leave until the doctor feels assured they are perfectly well and strong; the other feature is the training of nursery maids. Young women, preferably between the ages of eighteen and twenty-five, are thor oughly taught to care for babies. The. course is for six months, during which time instructic a is given in the proper dressing and feeding of infants and small children; and the hygiene neces sary to properly nurse the babies. Thus has been opened a new profes sion for young women, and Dr. Stevenson says that there are fifty ap plications for these trained children nurses to one that can be filled. Dr. Stevenson is a tall, stately wom n, with almost white hair. She is gentle and courteons to strangers, though never effusive. She was in strumental in founding the Illinois Training School, the first of its kind in the West, and, altogether, is a womn an that women delight to honor s and one (whomn men would be proud to know.-New York Mail and Express. Theo Styie in Embroidery. The newest embroidery is done with the narrowest and lightest of ribbons. his style is exceedingly fine and ainty, and demands most minute work. Empire designs are used, and are very efrcctive on a centre of heavy silk or~ satig. Spangles may be used in connection with the ribbon and give most brilliant effects. Fashion and Fan~cy. Rlepped silks of brilliant lustre are meeting with great success this sea soD. A curious novelty originating in Paris is a striped cloth gown with hecked sleeves. The covert coats in fashion are very plain, the revers small, the sleeves cat-sh aped, and the buttons on an in. risible fly. Beautiful materials are found for bonnet crowns, spangled and set with mock jewels and worked in gold and silver cord. Handsome figated taffetas are to be found now wvith the small figures woven in the taffeta in black and larger colored figures. The newest toques are considerably larger in contour, and velvet is the favorite material for the popular head coverings in two distinctshades of one olor. Some of the crystal buttons to be seen are cut like diamonds, set into a deep gold framework, and are very briiant. Other pretty buttons of this style arc ball shaped. A pretty sleeve, which is tucked, nearly half way down the elbow, has the tucks turned up instead of down. t has that much-desired qnality of be ing "som'ething different." Matalasses in black and colors, vel et with fancy stripes, tucked,braided, orded and shirred materials, with an endless variety in serges and home spans,are am'ong the lezading materials for costumes. One of the best skirts of the season has the peluim overdress cut circular and shaped in deep points at the bot tom. It fits the hips closely without so much as a plait or fulness of any sort at any point around the waist. One of the most ceeant costumes of the season consists of a skirt and coati f rich black satin, worni with a vest made oi ivory-white broadcloth, elaborately braided and embroided in' white. The vest has a high, straight c)llar and a satin tie i-: worn outside ?R~CAuT1ONS 0ff ISB *MWmU14 Captain Sigsbee Says that Every Care Was Taken of the Vessel at favana. Captain Slgsbee, in his "Personal Narrative of the Maine," in the Ceu tury, says of his efforts to guard the vessel when she lay in Havana-har bor: Every precaution that could be taken against Injury orF treachery Was taken on board the Maine, so far as could be permitted under the re strictions of my orders requiring me to make a friendly visit. If one, when dining with a friend at his home were to test the dishes for poison, he would not be making a friendly vis it. The harbor could 'not be dragged without giving offense; it could not be patrolled by our own picket-boats at night, nor could the search-lights be kept going; but every internal pre caution was exercised that the situa tion suggested. There were sentries on the forecastle aind poop, quarter master and signal-boy on the bridge, and a second signal-boy on the poop, all of whom were charged with tho necessity for a- careful lookout. The corporal of the guard was specially Instructed as to the port gangway, and the officer of the deck and the quartermaster as to the starboard gangway. Instead of the usual anchor-watch, a quarter-watch was kept .on deck at nighf. The sentries were supplied with ammunition; a number of rounds in the pilot-house and in the spare captain's pantry . - inside the af ter-superstructure. An additional sup ply of shells wag kept at hand for the six-inch guns. In orler to be pre pared more completely to work the hydraulic mechanism of the turrets, steam was kept up on tvo boilers In stead of one; special instructions were given to watch all the details of th3 hydraulic gear and tp report defects. The officer ofeh6 eewas charged by me to-iake detailed r-fris, even in minor matters, acting on the sus picion that we might be in an un friendly harbor. I_ personally in structed the master-at-arms and the orderly sergeant to keep a carefid eye on every visitor that came *on board, and to charge their'6wn sonb ordinates to the same purpose. I in structed them to follow visitors about at a proper distance whenever the ship was visited below; they were carefully to watch for any packages that might be laid :-cown or left by visitors, on the -supposition that dy namite or other high explosives mig'2t be used. They were also required to inspect the routes over which visitors had passed. The officer In charge of the marine guard was required to make at least two visits during the night to the various poqts of tee ves sel. The purport of my own orders and Instructions was that we should consider the Maine -in a position de manding extreme vigilanch, and re quiring a well-sustained routine both by aay and night liow to Waik. In the Literary Digest appears a translation of a review of "Comment on Marche" ("How We Walk"), the latest book on the subject by Messrs. Regnault and Raouli. In this work It is claimed that we have been wrongly educated in walking, and that the erect posture and firm step that we have been led to tbelieve were evi dences of health and strength arc con ventional a f vicious. M. Marcy, who wrote the introduction to the volume, says that there is a style of .walking that enable's one, without excessive fatigue, to go distances of from twen ty to twenty-five miles in a third of the time usually reuired. This may be accomplished 'by walking with thle knees' bent and thc body inclined for ward, z method which has been oh sred in professional pedestrians, montaineers, peasants, hunters, and soldiers fatigued by long marches. In not adopting this methd, It is claimed that, as with all the other acts of life, we remain slaves of conventIonal esthetics. aldi-Cold Ea sig? Are you. frequently hoarse? Do you have -that annoying tickling in your throat? Would you feel relieved if you could rise~something ~Jhoes your cough shap.;16'u t night, and do you raise more mucus in the morning? Then you should always keep on hand a bottle of If you have a' weak throat you cannot be too careful. You cannot begin Streatment too early. Each t cold makes you more liable .to another, and the last Sone is always I'arder to cure than the one before it. p refec!$s e log~s from~ coIlds S Help at Hand. If you have any complaint - whatever and desire the best m4jredical advice you can pos sibly, obtain, write the doctor freely. You will receive a prmpt reply. AcrsDR. J. C. AVER, A Towell, Mass. Rame of our War. No offiela designatlon has, so fat as I know, been given to the recent and present and possibly future dis turbance between the United States and Spain on account of Cuba. It is generally spoken of as "The War with Spain." Our wars have been the "War of the Revolution." "The War of 812,1" the "Mexican War" and the "Civil War." The last named has also been designated as the "War of Secession," "War of the Rebelion," "War between the States." The War of the Revolution Is variously called the "Revolutionary War" and the "War of the American Revolu. tion."-New York Press. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. loc or 256. If t. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. It Is said that a bed of anthracite has been found In China. Zducate Your Bowels With Cascarnto. Candy Cathartic, cure conistipation forever. lo,25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Pocahontaz (ia.) farmers will erect a co operative creamery plant. No-To-Bao for Fifty Cents. Gu&a.nteed tobacco habit cure. makes weah men strog, blood pure. ec, $L All druggiss. The Northrop Loom Company (Valley field, Que.) is erecting a factory. Af ter six years' suffering I was cured by Pso's Cure.--\Alty 'Tnoxn'ssN, 29 1- Ohio Ave, Alleguany, Pa., March 19th. 189t. AN AFFAIR It has been said are "a natior oF dysp that Few &re entirely oF the digestive tract Stomach and Boviel t The tre&tment with catharti. med gravates the trouble. THE LOGICAI is the use OF a reme the system, thereby organs to a-t &S N&ttU Such a remedy is Loun Pills for Pode Peopl In Detroit thct are few soldiers: R. Davies, first sergcant of Co. B. H four years he was a bookkeeper with Williams & Clark, and he says: orders for Dr. williams' Pink Pills f worth until I used them for the cure I suffered and doctored for that ag helped temporarily. "I think dyspepsia is one ofthe z is scarcely a clerk or office mnu but 1 days I could eat anything, while I Those distressed pains would force I trcatments and remedies but they w4 Induced me to try Dr. Williams' Pin1 ing a few doses I found much relisf cured. I know these pills will cure d peased to recommend them."-Detes The enu ne ptae At all druggist5. of sent 90 An English physician relates that of 500 dogs to whom he administered chloroform only one died, and that was "an aged fat pug." Deafness Cannot Bo Cured by local applications as they cannot reach tbe diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness. and thatis by constita tionn remedies. D)eafneas is caused by an in flaed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachan Tube. XM hen this tube gets in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fNct hearinr. and when It Is cntirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can nes taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an infamed condition ot the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catrrh) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send fo ircul . frHeENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Bold by Druggi-ts, 75c. ll's Family Pilis are the best. A TEA ROLLING MACHINE. Invention of a Japanese Genius That Will Do the Work of 100 Women. The Japanese newspapers are rejoic ing over the invention by a native genius of a machiinig for rolling tea. The great cost of the production of tea lies in the labor. Each individual leaf -must be plucked from the plant and handled with the fingers several times before it can be sent to market. Therefore the industry of tea raising is unprofitable without cheap labor. and the deft fingers of women. At Summerville, S. C., a high quality of tea has been grown with great suc cess, cultivated and harvested by col ored girls at a small expense, judged from an American standard, but the women in China and Japan are paid from four to eight cents a day for twelve hours' labor and board them selves. If they should receive the wages of women factory hands in this country tea would cost four or five times as much as it does now. In Japan wages are rapidly advanc ing with the development of civiliza tion. In China and Ceylon they re main about the same, but the women of those countries will certainly follow the example of their sisters in Japan ns their intzlligence is cultivated. Therefore the invention of a tea nr:. chine Is as important to the great in ustry of those countries as the inven tion of the cotton gin was to. the outh. Inventive genius has been en gaged upon the problem for many years without being able to contrive any substitute for huinan fingers, but now it is claimed that thvy new ma chine is a success, and can manufac ture nearly a ton of tea In twenty Eour hours, with the labor of one man and a boy or a girl. This is equiva Lent to the work of a hundred women. A Chinese Permutation. A story which, if not true, is not badly told, appeaurs in The Boston Transript, to the effect that while the bark Cape City was at Hong Kong a Chinaman was engaged to paint the necessary name on each bow. He produced on one bow the legend "Capecity," without a space between the two words. Then he noted that the "y" was nearest to the ship's stern and remembering this fact, he afforded an excellent example of how severely logical his race can be, for in a ittle while he had painted on the other bow the striking permutaton. "Yticepac" to his own delight, and the crew's amwemet Christmas Gifts for Sensib;e People. - Mh Solid Oak or Wal1 nut Commodae Moneaet~t when dose, Is1W i I& comes comp1Ite wit ina Pn. 'he entire Commiode is stror&i eon etrnct do ad well finishsd. irta 1 pic.0. Ordero filled p:onptir. - This Commode is but one of thorsands of bargains to l found in our z6o-page cata logue of Christmas suggestions. Our col lection of sensible presntsinclude Fancy Furniturc, Silverware, Clocks. Pictures and Larn;s, but these are but five of the 32 lines PRICE, $1.57. we ma ufcture. We are careful, reliableX and prompt in filling Holiday orders. Our so ycari'of valuable experience is at your disposal. 'Perhaps you thought of giving a Carpct, some Rugs, Lace Curtains or Portieres for a present. We publish a lithozraphed catalogue which shows the actual patterns of those goods in hand-painted colors, and we also pay freight on Carpets. Rugs - and Curtains. Sew Carpets and furn ish lining FREE. M $3.05 tugjs thi- D-pk i. nis of Qrered Olkor finished in pol. ishrd lisoxany. 53 to save 6o per cent - on c res? ou ca alog will tell you. Address this way. Price, $3.93. JULIUS HINES & SON, Dept. '10 BALTM5OME, M[D. TNATION of Americans that they .ptiCb" and it is true free from disorders Ind gestion, Dyspepsi&, rouble, or Constipation. oF these diseases iunes .-too. often ag - TREATMENT dy thst will build up entbling the v&nious re intended they should. d in Dr Vi1Eb.ms' Pink e a here is the proop, nore popular and efficient than Max s home is at 416 Third Avenue. For the wholesale drughouse of Farrand, I have charged up many thousand r Pale People, but never knew their af chronic dyspepsia. For two years gravating trouble but could only be iost stubborn of ailments, and there hat is more or less a victim. Some t other times I would be starving. .e to quit work. I have tried many ild help only for a time. A friend Pills for Pale People, and after tak and after using several boxes I was yspepsia of its worst form and I am it{MicA.)Jou'rual. Aways bers the Sun namre. tpaid on1 receipt of pne..50t Snowshoes for Walking en .Mud. A Gardiner sportsman has a novel way of hunting snipe at Mud Pond. At this season of the year the snipC are as plentiful in that vicinity as mosquitoes in trout time. The only drawback is that it is almost impo.s, sible to get out to the little pools where the snipe can always be found!, and gather them in after they have been shot. The Gardiner young man thought of the idea of taking a lair of snow-, shoes. He was laughed at by his companions, but when the i.unting grounds were reached the other gen tlemen had to be content with st.wd ing near the shore in the mud to their knees, while the fellow with the snow shoes was skipping over the treace erous mud shooting snipe right and left. He gathered them in with the same ease, an'd when the party were ready to come homs lhe was the fellow to laugh.-Daily Kennebec Journal. , A Chicago Boy's Wit. A North Side teacher attemnpted to explain to hecr children the u.se of the hyphen. The children were dull and the more the teacher talked the less they seemed to understand. At last she bethought herself of an Illustration. Upon the blackboard she wrote the compound word '4bird's-nest." Then. pointing to the hyphen, she asked the school: "What Is that for?" There was5 a long silence before a quick witted! son of Ireland spoke: "Plaze, ma'anm, it's fer the bird to rooshit on' ~f&UP OF't% 1ilE EXCLLENC OF SYRUP 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 known to the CALIFOBNIA FIe STEUP 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 by other par ties. The high standing~ of the CALI FORNIA FIG SYRUP 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 aots on the kidneys, liver ar.. bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its -beneficial effects, please rememsber the name of the Company - CALFOR~iA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FnANolso, CaL rarrXaVryLL er. w wW YOne= X. The KEELEY INSTITE N. E. Cor. Vanderborst a Sm CHARLESTON SOUTU7 CAROJ.I Atlantic Ocean Surf Bathinr Yatrb1ng Boating and FIiingt. TroulW ad Yorw,--' ide%,a8 and 23 miles sudlivan Iaud I. the I.e of Palm-. all to be emdoyed till tnder treatment tor Whiskey or Morphine dldotion Opens Oct. 3rd and will betfaeon3 Keeley Lrstitute'In the State, TO PLEASE AL PIANOS.C4S 4" uitbe. Chickering. Sobcmer, an theflb ofh..r reliable makes to choose8 Term and prices in keeping wvitUh. me Addrs - M. A. ILLOiE, - C1ibia L H Uos AIWOCANS. When In eea' of AI 9NGIn the.ach aN e or Mill S1'Ply Line, Consult Year Interest by alling On Or lUg W. II. GBES & C4 COLUMB., LARGE STOCK. S.c. SOl AGENT- FOR Liddell Co., charlotte, N. C.. Er es. olers, Sam im's proved Cotton Ginning uinery. Eale Cotton Gin Co., Bridgewat, Nas. A. P. F-quhar Co., York Pa.. Erg Mand Thresb Ick Co.. Waynesboro. Pa.. Engine. "andSaw MNil. Chandler & Tayior.Co.. Indianapolis . Ind., Eng9ie anti B iliem. salem Iron Wrks.SalemVN. C..Saw' lLs. .. A. Fay Ega Co.. CiCIInati, Q.,1 voodwrking Eab ne ery Co.. Cinc'nnatl, 0.. Grist ils; Brennen & Co., lnuisville, Ky., Cane a. ad Saw EF 8tove;%anfecUring Co., Freeport. .,Mid MIlls and Tanks. Deering starveser Co., Chicago. Harvestin 39W Stuebsker Broq. .munfacturing Co., f loth Ee" Id, Swidebaker Wage i&. Gds Yz C.%. Senaca Falls. N.Y.. y' nnpq. Henry R. Worthingt.o X. Y., 5Eteam ?m. 1. D. WilfamsaSour, n over. K.L. LerAhr iting Peerless Ribber'Tg Co., NewYork, Rabber Belt Ing and Packing. OL GL.DER'S LIVER PiFLLS7 Li 1 ar wo e mbined tha= they'do tour ti l. They act on the Liver. 2nd. They act on the UPPiT Vew' l2. 3rd. ' hey act on the Lower e'.rels 4th. They act upon the Kid.ey. E*ER!odme**/in rYE"e Oer ce furth; oe owha, Tof thias. eIa les ol 2., Cents a Boas by Mat The Howard & Wilies DrU Company A ;U*T.A. GA. AKE Hr11EM. *+0+O SHELBY O0 #* B. I. BABINGTON, PnoP., Shelby, N. CG Engines, Boilers, Pipes, F2,tti Stve 3epairs, Brass Casti ag , .7 Everyth Ing in the Foundry LM . 110W IE, 0 Photographer T Fvryv size and style of: PbhflgTaPhs muerW a~ enlarr.meMR it Can o tel from TRF~iS. An~atter Camera,. and Supplies; assoam. ateu rlms and plat.6 felDV-1d and inIsbed Up. Write for prices. Yours I ?'Iy. I. HOWIE THE BAILEY-LEBBY COs A ES Engines and Boilers, AULTMAN & TAYLOR Threshers, "MtlONI OR" Dustless Grain Separ=a+ai,' Gins, Presses, Corn and Cane MX ENGLEBURG Rice Huller and PoIsfO DE LOALCH Saw Mills, Leather & Rubber Belting, T-M"ng SPacings, Pipe, Iron Fittnr. In* Sectos Puileys5. Shafting, Raud SPumps and GbUeral Supplies. Try our B-L Co. Antt-Frictfon Babbitb Mets? S~~SAW L~ the most comp-t line of o-A ~ dealer or scanu.'actU(ZUgre flh. ' CON MIS1 Very highest grade bhOmest~~Ui > 4 Wod-OKNB. AM neY Plas. Xoulders, Edgers -W W Band Saws, Laths, etc. ENGINES AND IIDI.ERS5 Talbott and LiddeU. Engleberg Rice Huller .in stock, qtd delivery, low prick V. C. BA DHA M No. 1820 Main St., Columnbia,$. C. BRAINASj NODSH6AI Organs from $l5.00, $2500, $115.00 cad up ward. Uuright Pianos from $175.00. 316 $;5.0 and upward. Addr'ess - Ml. A. MAL.ONE, Columbia S. C. _want alog ofrePe eroth a, exese. w . 15centsferain1keenlr. e oldl'ed ring, and we ritl send y'.n a ce ntraets work for uts; you work at ho'no or where yaj' - we a in earnecst and refer you trie P. .., or a..TY bank. Se-ad for ce i r .et to'ay as this adi mae- not 5Lt ar a.af. EclU:,se Je'welry Co., Winston. N. '. S I75,-SPEalAL.0FFE .SI7.50. I Until Dec.23 we are-'ferlng a threemnraths' sei rship for Srit.50 [regular rata 83'l f you are noa. rady to come now'. yu enu send [to3 ~- secure sh.e rafferj anal gay SheSlo0 when yoa conie c:, the ihar- - otte Commercial Collere. CHAt .0 rE. ii C~ IN ordering goods or maring enquiries - f aA V rti'ers at witt be to your ajsvaiage to men tron this papr. o. 49 E L dril~lnwells for house, farm, Cty and Village Water Works, Facto ries, Ice Plants, Brew eries, Irrigain CoaI and Mineral PopectIng 01Oi and Gas, etc. Latest adBest.. 30 Tnc e. WEITE US 1 1.001S & YMAN, Tiff, Ohim. LAYMEDICATOi cAT REEY SI mple. Re:I ble. Effective. com-. a et reeitm ofn rie for "n au'utimonIa~s CL AY ME0ICA TOR c@. 169 Jackson 8treet:.-hlcago. Ilhinois. " arfied".ih Thompson't Eye Water W ANTED-Cae of bad health thet E'Z-PAN wil otbeeftSend 5 ts. to E~heia Co. )lwYrk, for 10 samples and l0I testimonials. C - n = -A. . . 0. KY., BEsT LINE CINCINNATI TO ~TOLEDO,.DETROIT, SINDIANAPOLIS, CHICAG0 Ad T NNorth and Nothwest. bROPSYMWSCk E - :nes Send~ boo of teustlsand1 ds tetment Free. Drm ~aE' soeas. ?iaaa. atime.-ol by GrU .eitse