University of South Carolina Libraries
Paradise of Athletes. Greece Is the paradise of aesthetle lovers. To such minute detail has the language of flowers in that kingdom been reduced, that sweethearts may bold extensive correspondence by the Interchange of loose clusters of blos soms. This custom is frequently re sorted to, and is recommended to young folk laboring under the han of strict parental discipline. Beauty Is Blood Deep. C'ean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cattar tic clean your blood and keep it clean. by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all i purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,-beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, lc, 25c, 50c. A brewinz comnany owns and controls 24C saloons in Milwaukee. So. 52. - To Cure A Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo quinine Tablets. All Druggists ref and money if it fails to cure. z5fc. The new glass works at Zoquiapan. Me% ico. will soon begin operations. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Lfe Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. lul of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac, the wonder-worker. that ma1;es weak men &trong. All druggists, 50c or Fl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co.. Chicago or New York Germany now has four steamshio lines teeping up regular connection witai Ea'stern Asia. Pizo's Cure for Consumptioi has no equal ts a Cou th medicins.-F. .1. Amnor?, :Z :Cn eca St., Buffalo, N. Y.. May 1., 1SX. More than 4,600 men are occupied in 3rand Rapids ia the manufacture of furni lure. Zducate Your Dowel: With Cascarsts Candy Cathartic, cure constipaiMon forev6r. !!0,25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Next to France the United States will have :he largest space at the Paris Exposition. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Gu-a'Meed tobacco bab!t core. makes weak men stroAg. bloou pure. 69%.8. All druggissa. At present Barnesville, Ga.,s the principal !entre of the kuitting business in the South. Mrs. Wln-low'sSoothing'-yra p for children eeting. softens the gums, reducing inflams ion. alla;-- p tia.c aes windl colic :1z a bottle. The imports of coal Into Germany in the Irst eight months of this year were 3,655.45 :ons. To Curo Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c cr 2e. I C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund mony. Before the war Cuba contributed about Me-twelfth of all the tobacco used in the :'orld. low's This! We offer One Handred Dcllars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO.., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, have known F. .T. Che ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per fectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga tions made by their firm. WEsT & 'TRLAX, NAholesale Druggists, Tole do. Ohio. WALDISo. KINNAN & MARTIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally. act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur Faces of the system. Testimoni als s.nt free. .ce 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Hall's Family pills are the best. Rheumatism [s caused by acid in the blood. Hood's 3arsaparilia neutralizes this acid and cures the aches and pains. Do not suffer any longer when a remedy is at hand. Take the great medicine which has cured so many others, and you may confident'ly es poet it will give you the relie! you so much desire. 00 SU pariria r& An er:ca's Greatest Medicine. Price $1. Pr- red byC. I.Hood &Co., Lowel, Mass. Hood's P1! s cure sick headache. Z5c. vnecen liating Squirrels. "What are you shooting?" said- a man at the old Meeker tavern in Union to a couple of Newark gunners a few days ago. "We are out for gray squirrels," said one of the Newarkers. "I wish you would kil! themi all," said the hotel nian. "They' killed twenty-four of my young chickens this season." "Are you sure of that," saisi one of the Newarkers, to whom the fact thai squirrels are omniverous w'a a sur prise. "Sure as shooting," the Union man replied. "We climbed the trees and round parts of the young chickens in the squirrels' nest." It is an undisputed and indisputable fact that red squirrels cat flesh, and gray squirrels have frequently been accused of the cat-like habuit of killing and eating nestling birds. but this was a case where proof was found. Newark Sunday Call. COULD NOT SLEEP. M!rs. Pinkham Relieved Her of AE Her Troubles. Mrs. M~mn BAncoeg, 17% Second St., Grand Rapids, Mich., had ovarian trouble with its attendant aches and pains, now she is well. Hero are her own words: "Your Vegeta S ble Compound has Smade me feel like a new person. gn taking it down, fclttired and sleepytnost of the time, had pains in my back and sidc, and such terrible -rheadaches N all the time, , nculdnot nights. I al so had ovarian couble. Through the advice of a friend I began the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound, and since taking it all troubleshave gone. My monthly sickness used to be so painful. but have not had the slightest pain since taking your medicine. I cannot praise your Vegetable Compound too much. My husband and friends see such a change in me. I look so much better and have some color in my face." Mrs. Pinkham invites women who art ill to write to her at Lynn, Mass., foi advice, which is freeiy offered ~Best Congh Syrup. Tates Good. DeO din tinAe Srcl dn.d-it& Protection of Fruit Trees From Mice. Farmersicare very little for the dep -edations of field mice upon their 5rains, but these small rodents some limes do great injury to young fruit ,rees in winter. They seldom gnaw :he thick bark of older trees, but cases are on record in which a young orchard ins been entirely destroyed when planted near a meadow or level field frequented by these little marauders. Coarse wrapping paper or a few layers of newspaper, dipped in kerosene and tied about the base of a tree, also al few pieces laid over the nearest roots, will repel the mice, and at the same time prevent the ravages of boring beetles. Field mice, like their cousins, the house mice, are easily trapped. A box rat-trap set near their nests and baited with corn will often catch half a dozen at once. Feed Cookers. Every farm on which stock is kep; should have an appliance of some kind for cooking the food given cattle and poultry. Not only is the warm morn ing mash good for poultry, but cows will be much benefited by a daily warm mash. Hogs and lambs that are be ing "finished off" for market will take on :esh less expensively if a warm mash is part of the ration. There are several feed cookers on the market, all of them good and profitable to use where many cows or hens are kept. For a few cows, hens or hogs a small mason's stove of cast iron and an iron kettle will answer the purpose. The stove may be set up in a shed or out building and be operated at small ex pense, including its cost. There is no doubt but that the use of the cooker will save food, besides adding much to the comfort and health of stock. The Farmers' Wood Pile. Many farmers do not seem to realize the economy of having their fire wood in readiness for the busy season. Where wood is used, it is not only a convenience, but an actual necessity to have a year's supply of stovewood prepared each winter, when the work on the farm is less pressing. Drags may be drawn from the woods. Two men, or a man and a boy, with a cross cut saw can soon convert them into stove-wood lengths, which when split and thrown into a pile, or what is still better, be corded away under shelter, will give you plenty of excellent, well seasoned firewood, a good return spent for your time in preparing it. It is a pretty sure indication that a man is a wide-awake, energetic farmer when you see him hustling around in the winter to get his supply of firewtod. ready for the more busy times. It isir exevagance, a waste of valuable time, when the andI summer work is hurrying, to be un -~ the necessity of getting nrewood. Perhaps the teams must wait for you to do so, or maybe after a long, hard day's work, you must finish up by cutting a few armfuls of firewood. New England Homestead.. Propagating Roses. Almost every one who cares for fiowers at all loves roses. But per haps every one ~di~5--F easily they may be propagated. Let1 us plan for a bed of ever-blooming roses next summer. Begin by dig ging the soil to a depth of fifteen or eighteen inches in a sunny, well drained spot. Work in a quantity of well-rotted manure-that from the cow stable preferable. Cut or break a branch five or six inches .g from the rose, choosing wood grown in the early part of the season, which is now ripened. Plant three or four inches deep, pressing the soil firmly about the cutting. Invert a glass fruit jar over each one, burying the top of the jar deeply enough to keep it steady. Thc cracked jars which every house-: keeper bas left over from the canning time will answer for this purpose. This planting may be done any time in November or even in December, if the earth is not frozen. When the first warm days come in spring lift the jars off and begin to harden the plants, being careful to replace them: at night if there is danger of frost. Very probably there will be, even in April, times when it will be best to keep them covered both day and night. The uncovering may be de ferred until settled warm weather. In this case it will be necessary to shade the plants from the midday sun for a time. Plants thus started are on their own roots, and do not need to be dis turbed by transplanting. It is sur prising how much bloom they will give, even the first summer. By ex changing cuttings with friends one may soon have a good collection of roses without expense. Endeavor to obtain varieties which, while hardy, will flower at intervals during the summer and fall. There are many such. I hope in the future to give a ist of the best of this class. I have suggested placing the cut tings in a bed rather than scattering them on the lawn, because with this arrangement they can more easily be given the cultivation which is essen-. tial to the best success.-New York Tribune. The New Cattle Dip. The efficacy of the new cattle dip, one of the most important discoveries of the Agricultural Department, lies in its certain destruction of the ticks. Experts havc. been working on this line for years without producing washes that would kill the ticks and not injure ca'ttle. Several solutions have been tried that exterminated the tick, but in each instance the cattle were rendered unmarketable or suf fered injury from which they did not recover. Dr. Norgaard, of the Bureau of Animal Industry, an espert of about eight years' standing in the Depart partment of Agriculture, who was assigned to the study of cattle dips. has discovered one composed of eighty-six pounds of sulphur dissolved by heat in1000 gallons of extra dyna m oiwhich has proved efficacious and romsesto revolutionize the cat te business. Two careful experi ments have been made, 500 cattle be ing shipped in each instance to Rock ford, Ill. On the first trial some of the animals died from overcrowding ini th cars, and in the second several wra lnst through fever- but in both shipments the cattle were delivered free of ticks. In preparing them for shipment they are driven through a vat containing a sufficient quantity of the.dip to immerse them, being kept in the wash about a minute. The female tick is as large as a dime, and is the cause of the Texas fever. When it is removed the Southern cattle may be introduced with impunity into the grazing lands of the North. Infected cattle breed disease by the tick fall ing to the ground and multiplying. The young ticks cling to the blades of grass and weeds and burrow into the Northern cattle as they pass, cansiug an irritation that produces the fatal Texas fever. PractIcal Sheep Hasbandr. See to the sheep's feet and clip the overgrown hoofs. The sole is to be! trimmed smoothly to avoid the irritat ing effect of sand or gravel on it. Be on the lookout for the first indi cations of the parasites which worry the flock. The first sign of failins condition is the warning to be heeded. Foot rot in a flock immediately con victs the shepherd of neglect and in flicts the fine for this delinquency. We cannot escape this penalty for this neglect. The short supply of Western lambs for feeding is due to two causes, viz.: an unusually short lamb crop in most of the range States and Territories, and a disposition among ranchmen to hold the ewe lambs to increase their flocks. We hear much of the profit of poul try, but while a lien is making a do! lar, a sheep will maxke two on the same allowance of feed. The fleece will pay all the cost of the sheep, leaving the lamb clear profit, and 100 per cent. of it. A surplus of feed and fodder should be secured for the flock on the range. Due provision should be made for shelter probably to be needed. It is better to be sure of this than sorry for neglecting it. No man more than a shepherd needs to keep his head level. He must not get too elated by present good fortune, or become de pressed by-aad-by by a possible change. It is estimated that there are fifty per cent. more ewe lambs in the range country this year than male lambs, a fact that may be traceable to the larger use of yohng rams and ram lambs than were formerly used on range flacks. It this be true, the theory of French experimenters, that young sires get more ewe lambs than ram lambs, is pretty well attested by American experience on a broader scale. The tendency of ranchmen to feed their own lambs and wethers at home on the produce of irrigated farms sheds a new light on the feed ing situation. So strong, indeed, is the present tendency in this direc tion that within two or three years the bulk of the male lamb crop will be fed where raised, and Eastern feeders 'be compelled to look elsewhere for ti B'illion of lambs they are ac customed tokeannually east of the Missouri River. Esr is no else where from which to obtaitthese lambs in large supply, there is but solution of this most serious problem. and that is for the feeders and their farmer neighbors to raise the lambs themselves. --American SheepBreeder. Turkeys and Ducks on the Farm Turkeys can be made quite profit. able on the farm in connection with chicken raising. I have found the Bronze to be the best variety; they are of a large size and very hardy. I keep one gobbler and four hens, set the first clutch of eggs under chicken hens and two turkey hens; when they hatch give all to the turkey hens. For the first few weeks I feed four or five times a day on hard boiled eggs, milk curds, light bread crumbs, lettuce jeaves and onion tops cut up fine. 1 put the turkeys in a large coop with a yard made of wire netting, keep them shut up in wet weather and of mornings until the dcw is off, and see that they are free from lice. After they are six weeks old they will become more hardy and do not re quire such close attention. I always give them a generous feed in the even ing to insuve their returning home at night. They should average at least $1 each when marketed in the fall. A mistake many make is to hold their fowls for the 'Thanksgiving and Christ mas markets; these are always over stocked and it is much betier to send between times in order to obtain bet ter prices. Money can also be made by raising ducks for the early markets. We like the Pekin best. While not absolutely necessary to have running water ,they do much better for me with a brook, creek or pond to swim in. Five ducks to a drake are enough. The ducks will lay over 200 eggs in a season. It is best to set the eggs un der chicken hens as ducks make the poorest of mothers. We feed them all kinds of scraps from the table and garden, besides-wheat bran, corn meal, cooked vegetables and a little corn once a day a few weeks before market. The best time to market is at ten weeks old. The feathers are also quite an iten of profit. I give my fowls a feed of chopped onions once a week, also every week or two feed Vemitian red; this will prevent cholera and other diseases and greatly increase the egg produc tion. I have cured fowls with the cholera, with this remedy, when everything else failed. I keep my yong chickens and tur keys in yards made of wire netting, until several weeks old; in this way they keep healthier and grow faster than when aliowed free range and to mingle with the older fowis. Young ducks and geese must be ket away from wvater o swim until they se'cat least a iaouth old; give them an abundance of drinking water in vessels that they cannot get into with their bodies. I hope my experience will be a help to other farmers' wives who are trying to raise poultry by tbs old slipshod methods I once follo ved. I have found that to be successful we must first have good stock, then give them the care and attention farmers give their other stock, and we will b~e re paid many fold ior our extra work and attenton.-A Tirginian, in larm, Field and Fireside. THE ELECTIONS@ Twenty-five States will elect gover nors this autumn, most of them in November. Most of these States will also choose legislatures and other State officers, and in several instances States which do not elect governors will elect minor State officers and legislatures. All the States with the exception of Oregon, where the election has already taken place, will elect delegations tc the house of representatives. The State and congressional district ccnventions which have already been held afford some idea of the issues on which the several political parties will appeal to the people. The financial question, which was uppermost two years ago, is still prominent, and in a number of Instances Democratic or Republican conventions have "reaf firmed" the declarations made by the national conventions of 1896 in favor of free silver or of the maintenance of the gold standard. But new ques tions, arising from the war,.especially that4 of possible territorial expansion, are E.nding a place in political plat forms; but there is no definite agree ment upon them in the conventions of either political party. The alliances between Democrats and the People's party, which figured so prominently in the presidential election, are being renewed In some instances and dissolved in others, the policy varying with the differing de grees of intensity of feeling upon the financial question, and also with the ease or difficulty of distributing nom inations to the satisfaction of the al lies. In two or three States, as in Pennsylvania and to some extent in New York, the questions of local gov ernment seem likely to overshadow or confuse national issues. A novel feature of the New York election will be the means which are to be taken to collect the ballots of soldiers from that State who are in the service of the United States. This is required by a law recently enacted by the legislature, but the soldiers are so widely scattered that it will not be eazy to gather their votes. The elections will have an impor tant bearing upon the composition of the United States senate. The terms of thirty senators, cf whom fifteen are Democrats, three Populists or silver senators, and twelve Republicans, ex pire next March, and the places of most of them will be filled by the leg islatures which are to be chosen this year. The legislatures which elected the' retiring contingent of senators we.e themselves chosen six years ago, when the strong movement which car ried Mr. Cleveland into the office of president for a second term prevailed in several States which are usually Re publican. If these States return to their earlier political position in the choice of legislatures this year, the complexion of the senate may be ma terially changed. In Maryland a Re publican has been already chosen to succeed Senator Gorman. Can t you eep . in your lk? Lack energy? Appeti. poor? Digestion bad? -Boils or pimnples? . These, are sure signs of poisoning. -4 From what poisons? SFrom poisons that are al ways found in constipated bowels. If the contents of the 4 bowels are not removtd from the body each day, aenature+ 4intended, these poisonous substances are sure to be absorbed into the bleod, al + ways causing suffeing and fre~luently causing -severe Sdisease. S. There is a common sense < 4cure. PILL8 They daily insure an easy * and natural movement of the bowels. -You will find that the use of Agers - arsaparIa, with the pills will hasten~ recovery. Jt cleanses the 4blood from all imnpurities and is a great tonic to the nerves. Write the Doctor. Our M'edical Department has one oethe most emnn hscaSD iIreceive9 ee et meaadvice Lo'weli, Mass. A Cauterizing Instrument. A new cautfory, termed by its In. ventor the "aphiysocautery," has much to recommend it. There is a cautcry n which the platinum that sears the flesh is kept hot by a jet of hydrogen as, but this requires a small bellows and other appendages to work it. Iti he nphysocautery the platinum searer is maintained at the proper tempera ture by means of anesthetic ether. The instrument resembles a pcncil or stylographic pen, with the searing platintum at the point and the ethei Inside the stem. The ether is partl.i vaporized in a flame to begin witl: and afterward by the fient of thii rlatinum.-London Globe. " La Creole * I:I e -* - r- % A single shade is not an exp omust be fitted out with new ones the house-claning series' Have * Ivory Soap? Try it and make the Lay the shade on a smooth t wipe with a soft rag. Make a bas into chips and dissolved in hot watt Take some of the suds on a * part at a time and quickly wiping * dipped in clear water and squeezed Avoid using too much water. Ha do not roll up until dry. ( Don't start house-cleaning witd Copyri;bt. 1603. by The PM THE SALE OF THE BULL. Col. J. S. Carr to Remain President of 1t Company at a Good Salary. Col. J. S. Carr returned yesterda from New York, where he went Sunda night to complete the sale of the bus ness of the Blackwell's Durham Toba< co Company to the Union Tobacc Company. We learn from a gentlema who is close to Col. Carr and know what he is talking about that he ha sold his entre interest in the businea at r satisfactory spot cash figure an that he will remain president of t: company at a good salary. He wi conauct the business of the compan at this end of the line as heretofore which will be gratifying news t< the people of Durham. The old Bull has joined no trust < combinejbut has large capital behin it and the personnel of the purchaset rank beyond any firm or company i the tobacco busineis of this countra They aro men of large affairs, havin vast connections in most of the larg centres, and they have not gone in+ the tobacco business for their healtl Leaf tobacco buyers of Blackwell Durham Tobacco Company will be d reted to open the leaf tobacco marke to honorable competition on grades tobacco that have for the past sever years been bought almost exclusivel by one concern at their own price. -The promise of competition in le tobacco means a great deal to the fa mors in the tobacco-growing section < North Carolina. Colonel Carr appr< 'ites the fact that for 25 years he hi interested, and we venture to say thi ii the future as in the past, "Biaci Well's Durham" will be so conducte that every North Carolinian will 1 proud that it is a North Carolina inst tution. The business will be run c no other than the fairest business prii eiples, fearing no competition, oppre sing no competitpr nor even strikin below the belt. -Durham, N. C. Hera: The "Song of the Shirt" does na fall upon deaf ears In New York Cil in this time of ours. The good wome whose lines are cast In pleasant place have come to the assistance of the u: fortunate tailors who make the gowns, in a way that exalts all w manhood and revives in every whol some mind that belief in human goo< ness without which this world woul certainly not be a world worth livir i. It Is not given to all women 1 aid in a movement like that whit aims to secure a fair wage and a d cent living to the operatives who mal their costly goerns, or to minister 1 sick soldiers at Helen Gould and Jul Chadwick and Clara Barton and host of others did; but every good w man in every home in the land is minister of humanity, doing her litt best, as she regards it-her great bes as the angels look straight at things to make life better and happier ar more fruitful of all possible good. TI traditional toast, "Woman-God ble her" is no idle compliment. observ the New York World. It echoes universal sentiment and reflects world-glorious truth. Little Queen Wilhelmilna, It Is sai has objected to her portrait whi adorns the new stamps issued in col memoratlon of her enthronement, a, the die is to be destroyed. says H2 per's Bazar. With her hair drawn1 on the top of her head and surmoui ed by a crown, she is made to look woman twice her years. And lit1 Queen Wilhelmina is right. It is a every day that one can be a queen eighteen, and beautiful and girli besides. To misinform posterity on Importarit a subject. and to be ma to appear before it as both old a: ngly, would he a sin for which: self-respecting sovereign would like hold herself responsible. A Faintless Twist fWhen the lodging house was afi one night Mike hurried his breech on wrong side before and threw hIl self out of the window. One of t first persons he encountered was I employer. "Are you hurt, Mike?" ,f'o pain, sor," was the reply, M took a puzzled front view of hil se, "but I must have received m ighty bad twist, sor."-Detri Free Press. 1 e.eastorer! is a Per ' S 0 e msv hng u f h nie hom 1 I .0 - * the bill will be one of the largest of you ever Cleaned, the shade with. : old ones look like new. Lble, brush off the dust lightly, then n of light sud3 with ivory Soap cut :r; cool until luke-warm. lamp sponge, washing only a small off with the sponge wi.h has been. Wipe dry with a soft clean cloth. mg the shade as soon as finished, but touit plenty of Ivory Soap. . - I - der a GambUe Co., cladannt. VlERY SUCCESSFUL * 1 farmer who raises fruits, vegetables, berries or grain, knows by experience the importance of having a nlarge Percentage of dS ePotash Y0 iri his fertilizers. If the fer tilizer is too low in Potash the ,harvest is sure to be small, and Iof inferior quality. n0 - Our books tell1 about the proper fertilizers, for- all crops, and we will gladly send them f% ire to any farmer. Pil ES Insietnbufre the tres ouste dane thlprlotrdnoftilesrgt ofycnsi yon eveh hcdh Iswas fitd r 0wet odown o Nee.,adnvroudnyhg to eqbualotheuTday menry *refo of-it h spongE MA1i R'ho!$benE WpeasantaatleP lot. seGo.D rouSTOPPEDof vorySoap c~w & GPermanentlyC COred Svgetblsnt bereste or e Unimpan.theane of having the aoth-co o larg iprc entarcgen of o e' in hisdertilioods. maIf ethire fead a' rtizeris :towb o or invantash t e Our bhks e.aou h prope fetlr t o rp, and whisledy sendithe ~outrpaito Boo far par "IiP cdth trured aftb homeh t!to ihwihIwsfictears setEnty ~.yarsIanta.rs you. ficS104 N. Prno Ste cowneof ewl3,and nev o eou nd a0ydainr a toreqatmr. Td.ay' Sca. entirlare.fr. Psant Paatablty mant.acte Goos not Gnuniigo d NvrScn.Wel toral Gre of2c,30 r- aren theutcan mpahianufaotres. Me ors3t t-tn; andI when anpolitiall trug-l a i exectd hakers sedot~ leret hog Pth e ntyCtoredh uselss cns tey anit Pintd o ak their bttons ith. Mo Es ftecam pign butos r Ve inREOr ad th mutpi ytemkr to th a fatreadrtiarthose~ 0 wcn e clvled wt nr oada. NoBlr is es interval.stw ad buys nal themotscrapt a ohei can fd ay nd sells yot to the btton ) eNmorertis sed for kin backinge of isorinr buttons.A y ai ts aslae ihsred. t andoe cans. n-TegetV prfti os of the a placewhere uttons tosn ew Pi as olfiaroUsekns re Ti de. PhiadeAong tRerd. r~tbyi tneminca nianuRactrer. M LIQUOR, MO HuETOBACCO VSING PROD A DISAMD bONDITION P TUE BRAIN Which is Easily Cu at KEELEY INSTI T E The Remedy builds aUd for Liquor8or All patients are under the care of skill Institute physieian who is a veteran grd aeof the cure and clx ears exclusively In D X LYwork. Write for literature. Large man 10tn- bte= Heaed Large Piazzas The Only KEELY IN UTE in the state. MOE PA EASL PINO THRi Knab.'. Chickering, S hmer, Fischer. and nine other reliable m kes to choose iron-. Terms and prices in kee lag th the tim ddress - I. A. IALO E, - Colmbia, S. C. FIANOS AND RCANS. FL1OR MIL OMINY Contracts Taken to Furn sh CoapltemE-r.o ments or ROLLER FLO wILLS -REPRESE'_NT1','G THE RICHMOND CITY MILL WORKS. One of the Largest manu.acturers of Flour Te1 Nly achiner in the COUttIy, and having ep sanabed, mill wrights. I am prpiced and buidr r ls on the m ks improved plans and Tra prices to compote with any one ti thes ade . We guarantee the products of our millst0 eqaal the grades of ihe tw'st we.tbtrn mills. Beftore p*laciur your orders write t4 me. C also handle tcomplete n et Wood' WorkinX Neillcanery, Saw 1)1111. En gines and 'Bolers, Corn 3111 and -U chinery in General. Having been established in business here for 16 years, 1 have built up my trade by sell ing the %erv i ghest class of mtchiner, and am In a better position to serve the interest,' my cutomers than ever before. V. C. BADHA , Colnmbia, S. C. - I=l main Street. W. H. GIBBES & CO, COLUMBIA, 8. C. MACHINERY& MILL SUPPLIES, THE BAILEY-IEBBY CO. AV ES Engines and Boilers, AULTMAN & TAYLOR Threshers, - "MONI. OR" Dustless Grain Separators Gins, Presses. Corn and Cane Mills. ENGLEBURG Rice Huller and Polisher, DE LOACH Saw Mills, Leather & Rubber Belting. Lacing, Packings. Pipe, Iron Fittings, In jectors, Pulleys, Shatin& Hand Pumps and General Sapplies. CHARLESTON, - - S; C, Try our B-L Co. Anti-Friction Babbitt Metal _ FOR ALLPAINS SU~-lRHEUMATISM *se UUUILUBURNS & ALL PAINS. Sold by Dealers in Medicine Everywhere, Sent by prepaid express on receipt of S.100. THE ALLIGATOR LINIMENT CO., P. O. Box 243., Charleston, S. C. BARGAINSAD RGNS Organs from $15.00, $25&O0, S35.00 and up wad ni gt iansf~rom $176.00, sle.OO .A.MAL.ONE, Columbia S. C. ONYIN OBICKENS. Send 25 cents in stamps for Book. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 184 Leonard Street - - New York. Gift. One that will bringsa pleasant monthlyfreinfder of th giver is a ubscption to the Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly Now tO cts.; $1 a-Year. IEdited by Mrs. FRANK LESLIE. EACH MONTH: j Scores ot Rich lalusratious. CONTRIBUTORS: WV D. Howela. Clara Bar ton, Bret H-arte, Walter Camp. Frank R. Stockton, Magret d. a e tJuli C. R. Dorr Joaquin Chandler Moulton, and other famous and popular rE EBeautiful Art Plate, "A Yard of ERPansies " or " A Yard of Pup pes"; also te Superb)Nv with a f:.oo year's subscritionh Eter arnt pis oIENFEE with a3mcnths trial subscription for 25 cernte. C0MPLETE Story of the SINKING OF TiIE "MERRIMAC" and the L a >ture ipionment ofthe Crew late helmsman' of th rrimnac, in the January N'umber. Fully Illustrated. Subscri&e ow. Editions Limited. FRANK LESLIE PUBLISHING HOUSE, DLr'r B. 145 FIfth Avenue, N.Y. Menfto* this pae wchen onter~ng. j o nTE ae of ad shealth that R'I'P AN. Co., NewYrk, for 10. saples and 10o0 res moials. AENSWANTED e-lA""*,is o . eeeatonce. HOWAR IJ BROS.. Buffalo,N3. COMMERCII. CGLLEE GKENTUCKY UNIVERSITY, ri e $1 ..ehg