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Sreaking Roads in Winter. n many parts of the country in win. .) er time the roads are filled with snov 5 so deep that they must be broken out to before travel can be resutaed. If the land has few obstructions the snow may be mostly idown from the fieldn and drifted on the leeward or wind A v'ard. If th.- road bed is illed froim f, ace to fene. throwing out the snow so as to make a path between high w banks does little good: .the snow thrown out makes the canks)still high- 'U er on either side, and the next blow a drifts the snow deeper than Defore. The I better way is to drive cattle and horses -trough the roadway. tramping down the snow, first preceded by men who imake two paths in which the animals may walk abreast. A strong yoke of t oxen is best to follow the men. They should be d'i-en through several times with two wide planks joined together by a chain dragged after them. Then put on the road some sheep that are strong, and taking care not to include any that are with lanmb. The sheep s foot is small. but after the track is bi once made the larger number of sheep tracks will pack a path more solid L than can be done with any other an*- Ji If the snow is very deep, there will w: be trouble so soon as a thaws come, ni for the packed snow will begin to thaw af under the track and horses will break T - through. Jt is better in drivire through M deep snows to either take off 'he horse- cl shoes or remove the sharp calks, eN which, as the horse ilounders ihrough a the snow, will often lame him. Until the horse's foot reaches the groun4 ce he is better left unshod. mers g1 h o have av o rg erally leave bi ne or two to drive unshod through the s winter. But they cannot drive to the P1 titles, for there the streets are always d eleared of ice as soon as possible, and t c the sleigh has to be dragged In the city c on bare zrounds.-A merican Cultivator. Austria ts introducing a tsegraphie deuartment into her postal system. Tho message is written on a telTegram card and wired by the receiving post master to the ofiee addressed and then delivered by postman. This er system might, with profit, to the A people be adopted by the United ar A Stitch/in Time h Saves Nine." b A broken stitch, like the little rift within the late," c the beginning of trouble. Tim tired, not ill." 'it ni son pass away." " Idon't believ~e in mediei-.e." These are the brok4en a - stitches that lead to serious illness. Naiure ca is 'wise and in Hood's Sarsapar~la she has furnished the means to tak upsi broken stitches. Why ? 'Becauseit star s at the toot and cleanses the blood.~ t.: Blood -"F 'ars I it '~'~"'p, my ace . Three bottles of s saisiaparlI deme feel beiter me a healhyor." Miae Cross; 4'1., So3u~tt4J.eapoliS 31in11e'i - 5 , , * of ita eti Cre liver me.;-the non-irritating and. thartie to take with Hood's saararil so. s.'s sh Worst Day of the Wee~k. at n statistician has come to da of those persons who do not "I the widespread1-stperstition *.hat of is the most unlucky day cf the in A short time ago he deterniinmed ke- a scientific investigation of pc e estion, utilizing for the purpose, dr amo other things, the recpi-ds ot the S partment of compulsary insuranice.i e most fatal or unflitunate week ar ,according -to th~e investigator, is in~ Friday, but Mondayv. Sixteen and ty-four hundredths per cent of all ! ts, it-seems, occur'red on that in er *ent on Tuesday, 16.31 ti~ percent on Wednesday, 15S.47 per cent '~ en Thursday, 16.38 pmv cent on Friday, the sanme on Saturday .tnd 2.69 per centi on~ Sunday. It Is interesting, however, to know that the compiler attributes the large relative number of accidents! on Monday to "the excessive amount of it~ liquor consumed on Sunday."-Stray st Stories. FOR MIDDLE-AGED WOMEN. Two Letters from Women Helped Through t th'"Chang. of Life " by Lydia E..Pink bamn's Vegetable Compound. b " Dz~a Mais. PnmIHAM :-When I firstn wrote to you I was in a very bad con dAition. I was passing through the e tbange of life, and the doctors said I m had bladder and liver trouble. I had co suffered for nine years. Doctors failed c t.o do me any good. Since Ihbave taken lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-' pound, my health has improved very bI will gladly recommend your im medicme +o others and am sure that it o will prove as great a blessing to them as it has to me."-Mas. Gxo. HI. Jr3E,:a 9O1 D~eKalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. t Relief Came Promptly -Dz~n Mus. PIYxH.uI :-I had beenD . nuder treatment with the doctor.s for -four years. and seemned4o get no better,d I thought I would try your medicine. My trouble was change of life, and I must say that I never had anything help me so much as Lydia E. Pimnk ham's Vegetable Compound. Rel' ief c'ame almost imimediately. I have t better health now-than I ever had. I t .feel like a new woman. perft'ily strong. I give- Lydia E&. P'inkham' - . ~ Compounid all the credit, andi wvould~ not do without-her medicine for ant thing. I have. -recommended it to P several of my friends. There is no n7eed of women suffering so much for Mr.Pinkham's; remedies are a sureh .- MAHat A BUTTER. Bridge-h 'mn.Hen. F!LIPINO HOUSEKEEPING. Brooklyn Woman Tens HOw thae Na tives Do Their Work. "Housekeeping in the Philippines," rites a Brooklyu woman to her other, "is simply a joy. I have ver lived so well or so cheaply in my life. I have learned a lot since started housekeeping, but it cost mething before I got the hang of ings. I first rid myself of the horde worthless Filipino servants, who b newcomers right and left, and en installed a Chinese cook for 2.50 a month, and the house runs self. "There is not much work in a tropi I household, no stuffed furniture or rpets, no lace or other kind of cur ins, but painted, flexible screens at ched to the windows. Everything on one floor, the furniture is rattan Lmboo. and the kitchen utensils are plicity itself. The clir:. te is althful, although the sanitary con tions are extremely bad. We are falling into the lethargic condition ich seems the chronic state of the Ltives. I take long naps all the ternoon. At 7 o'clock we dine. ere is not much calling in the even g, as the curfew is still in force, aring the streets at 8.30 p. m. The enings are prfec get-steePy d ar y in bed by 9 o'clock. .hen I see the india rubber trees, enty-five feet or more in height, owilng in the yards here, their stiff, illiant green leaves glistening in the 'n, I laugh to think of the little box ants we used to keep in our win ws at home in the winter, because ey were the only growirg thing that uld stand the united attack of dust, lect and coal gas. "I never get tired watching the nple primitive methods of Filipino sekeeping, for their processes are tried on before the eyes of all men. tese men themselves do the largest rt of the hard work, while the wom perch on the ladder like steps that id into their houses aud look on. I the cooking is done out of doors ad usually on the ground. Their tle stoves of red clay are hardly as 'ge as the iron pots we have at me. One side is bent down like a imitive hearth, and the fire is kept ing ',y long tubes which the men >w through instead of uEing bel vs. On this' funny little apology - a stove they cook their rice or ocolate, stirring the latter with rved sticks, wbich they twirl be 'een their palms to keep the beverage m 'sticking. Often they do not e the stove at all, but make a fire ht on the grona, between two mes, over which they set the red then bowls in which they cook. "When the men chop kindling they down on their heels just as the panese do, and, in fact, nearly all eir work is done in this same hon. When their simple c' ~ot of rice, and,da ~n~ brown fingers, help tthe formality of kmv orro, oons or chop-sticks, Dinner con ded, hands and dishes are washed the shallow tub which stands at ery door-soap, dishcloth and dish wel being all made of gogo, the bark a species of vine peculiar to the nds." Advent of the 1900 WVaist-. The young woman who will wear irt waists next season looked at the p windows yesterday, went home r hid her cuff hnas. Even the intiest pair of these links will be iad form" if the present prediction the dealers holds good when sum r comes. A lace rufile, a frill or a hemnstiteched it runs arournd the wrist and ops almost to the knuckles. The eve, too, is different from the old ne sort. It is of the close-to-the in type, and looks as if it had been deled from a jersey. n faci, there is but little about this tist to make dne think of the orig al. Some fasten in the back with y pearl buttons, and all are adorned .th tucks, embroidery and lace. They bad perches of honor, and got "ohs" and "ahs" of the promen ers. They appeared in muslin, ten, cambric, madras, gingham - st as they used to do-but each had 1900 mark, the absence of the trehy cuff. "Each year we hear much of the ssing of the waist," said a man who ls them, "and each year we get a ger call for thenm. Now, perhaps, ey are not shirt waists-they -are t waists-and we will sell more of em than ever." The old polka dot seems to have en forgotten so far. A stripe comes and explains why it happened. The collar alone remains. That 11 be just as high as ever, and, no tter where the waist fastens, this l~ar will hold its own below the in.-Chicago Record. Clubhouses For Wotnen. Clubhouses for women are becoming re and more a matter of fact instead fancy. Boston is building one in sacon street that will cost $75,000 eve the land. The handsome struc re will be amply equipped with every ing that various clubs can desire. In is one particular the Boston club nse will differ from all others of its nd, for it is intended to accommno Lte all the clubs in the city, if they desire. The women of Birmingham, Ala., ve organized an Alabama Woman's ailding Association. The object of e organization is the erectiou as ,rly as practicable of a commodious aiiding to serve as a meeting place r all the women's organizations in Le city and suburbs. The building an will include apartments for the )mfort of out of town women. Los Angeles, Cal., will soon have a andsome clubhouse, built under the asnices of the Friday Morning Club. hs building will have an auditorium the rear with a sentinig capacity of out nyve hundred. :s Are Fashioniabi e. -never been so fashion .ate, mere fashionable present. Formerly, of tliem, resting the neck, were im request; Put1no nothing Will do but Ion- chains oF them falling below the waist or fes tooned over the bodice. The demand or them is so great that jewe!ers are hard pressed to obtain a sn~:eient supply. The fortunate possessors of one or more than ou of these long string devise all sorts of diVerent ways o. displaying then. So:uetiracs they are worn plainly round the neck and allowed to fall naturally; agam. they are caught up at tile front or side of the bodice with a jeweled orna ment; still again. they are fastened to the back of the low cut bodice and are draped around the decolletage. The most novel application of them was adopted recently by a fashionable Parisian woman, who fastened the chaius in her hair, allowing them to drop at the sides and fall to the shoulders, where they were attached Ito the gown. Something: Fresher Than Fipin;Z. The satin, velvet and cloth pipings of last season have given-place to a wee fold of material let in like a pip ing between seams or raised from a flat surface something after the manner of a tack. A three-quarter length redingote of pigeon-gray cloth, alost metallic in quality, has bauds of gray cloth covered with crimson folds straight down the centre of the back and in waved lines at the edges. It is belted, as are so many of the new est wraps, with gray. and the collar is a" ] g affair with ~iin- of the little -a to soften it. It is hard to tell how the tailors manage to cat and sew the new collars so as to make them keep their shape so well. Sometimes loosely falling lapels hang from them in front. In other instances they seem to be cut so that they are prolonged into sleeves, one long seamless piece going from the neck to the wriat, with un derarm pieces to be accounted for otherwise, of course. The Detalis of the Tollette. A very interesting characteristic of the fashions of to-day is the extraor dinary amount of care which is given to the smaller details of the toilette those little accessories and after thoughts of which no one took the slightest heel some five or six seasons ago. The innumerable lace ties, cravats, and jabots, which play so im portant a part in the toilettes of the moment, offer a case in point, for with out some dozen or so of these dainty little things, no one's wardrobe can nowadays be co'nsidered complete. Now is the chance for those who pos sess beautiful little pieces of old lace to make a pleasant use of them, for they can easily be arranged, either as frills upon ties of glace silk, or in the safer form of an applique, on scarfs of panne or mirror velvet. Assistina the Growth or flair. Beautiful hair is the gift of nature, but many more could possess it if nature were assisted. The hair should'be combed thoroughly every night before retiring, with a coarse bhed comb. Do not use vigor albutrather bristled .ush, dividing several parts, that all t roots may be reached. Brush gently but firmly, carrying the stroke to the ends of the hair. Then braid the hair loosely, or, beter still, leave entirely free un til morning. After shampooing, do not dry by artificial heat, but by towels, friction and fan aing. M1aterlai For Goihapes. Tucked or corded taffeta silk in cream, turquoise blue, lilac, pink or crimson may be worn with cashmere or other winter dresses. The em broidered or hemstitched taffeta is effective, and as only a small quantity is required such a guimpe is not ex pensive. China silk tucked all over 'in crinkled tucks is cheaper and has a more childlike effect for young chil dren. White taffeta embroidered all over in a pretty pattern with black looks well for older children. The Japanese silks, either white or col ored are inexpensive and durable, and may be gathered, shirred or smocked to advantage and used for guimpes. Ladies' Home Journal. An Income From Butierflies. Catching butterflies is the pleasant work by which a clever English girl makes a good living. Miss Mary Yeomans, before going to California, had collected butterflies for pleasure at home, and after coming to America realized that many of the rarest varie ties are to be found in California. The first butterflies she captured were of a Ispecies seldom found except in the higher Alps. and on sending them to England she was paid $25 each. From Ithat time on she has been steadily in creasing her stock, and now makes a large income by the sale of the in sects. Frills of Fashiton. Tnlle hats trimmed with crepe roses are one of the latest novelties. Genache satins, trimmed with chiffon and lace make charming even ing dresses. White cloth cut out in diamond shaped openings filled in with guipure lace and made over pale blue silk Iforms one of the princess gowns. A hair net which fastens at the back of the head with a fancy pin the size of a small button is a novelty which is supposed to keep the short locks in place. A pretty evening waist is -made of lattice design in jet over white mous seline die soie, finished around the neck with a drapery of white iuille and a bunch of pink roses. All sorts of finger rings put on re ardless of harmony in color and hape are considered vulger by those who study effect and good taste in the use of jewels as weil as gems and hats. An embroidery of flne jet beads on bands of cloth is one of the vagaries f dress trimming. The bauds are arranged in various ways around the plain skirts, for some of the skirts arec cut plain without a plait any where. Tulle evening gowns are made with box plaited skirts, the plaits begin nig at either side of the front and extending around t eak or all aroudo, as you - n to the knee. is worn undern Obstinate Eczema. "Enclosed please find $1.00 for twoT more boxes of Tetterine. The box yon sent me has alhnost cured the most obstinate ease of Eczema vou ever sanX. I am. very grateful for snch a blessing as your Tetterine has been to mq. James L. Jones, Jellico, Tenn.." 50c. box by mail, if your druggist don't have it, by J. T. Sbruptrine, Savannah, Ga. Will the Pope Livo Long. How long will the Pope live? A well-infcrmed writer of an article in the new number of QuartErly attempts to answer the question. He says: "The Polpe may, perhaps, ind strength, not only to greet his ninetieth birthday, which fails in Mareh. but even to sur vive this century, to which he is pre paring a farewell address. When this work is accomplished he will, perhaps. himself lie down to die. The Pope's medical attendant, Dr. Lapponi, proph esied in the Roman Review, written in Latin, that the Pope will live one hun dred years. "Thy wish was father to that thought." may very well .be sai of Dr. Lappon'. Of the Pope's present appearance and condition a striking picture is drawn: "For a long time His Holiness has been more spirit than body. In the thin. almost transparent frame of Leo XIII. the nerves trem ble; upon his pale face every emotion of the soul is evident. His senses still remain acute; his hearing, as those who have seen him within the last month say. Is good; and the eye, which the German painter, Lenbach, depicted in so life-like a manner,shines yet with all the old fire." To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take LAXATIvE BRoxo QUIxINE TABLETS. All dr:ttg is refund the money if it fails to cure. . W. Gaovz's signature is on each box. 25. The bank of Spain has outstanding $19,700,000 less in loans than it report ed a year ago. Each package of PrsN-Ax FADELESS DIE colors either bilk, Woo; , - Cotton perfeetly at one boiling. Sold by ad druggists. 8 The Italian Parliament House has been pronounced unsafe for occupancy. The Best Prescription for Chills and Fever is a bo-Lie of -Wrs's TASTELss CnII.L ToNic. It is simply ind quinine in a tas:eloss form. No cure Ay. Price 50o. Bound to Depart. San Francisco Wave: A youthful Stockton man rushed to catch a river boat for San Francisco, but was about two minutes late. The steamer was six feet out as he reached the dock. He swung his grip aboard and, jump ing, caught a rope and a post and held fast. Every one imagined he had fallen in. Tne captain, peering over the side, saw his intrepid passenger. "Here, vou," he shouted, "by jiminy crickets, don't you ever do that, again!" The passenger had hauled himself aboard by this time, and, turning a look of scorn at the captain, said. "What do you think I'm going to do-jump bacV ->r1 try it over?" Coming "About a year ago yhair was coming out very 'fst. I bought a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor to stop this. It not only stopped the falling, but- also made my hair grow very rapidly, until now it 1s 45 inches in length and very thiCk."-Mrs. A. Boydston, Atchison, Kans., July 25-1899 It Feeds the Hair Have you ever thought why your hair is falling out ? It is beCause you are starving your hair, If this starvation continues your hair will Continue to fall. There is one good hair food. It is Ayer's Hair Vigor. It goes right to the roots of 'the hair and gives them just the food that they need. The h'ir stops faling, becomes healthy, and grows 'thick and long. Ayer's Hair Vigor will do anothcr 'thing, also: it always restores color to faded or gray Iair. s1.00 a botie. All drag:lsis. Write the Doctor If vou do not obtain all the benits you desi ,. from the use of the 'Y"gor, write the 4 ctor about it. He will tell you Just the r ht thing to do, and will send you his b~ok on the Hair and Scalp if you reqest it. Address, Dr. J. C. ATER, Lowell, Mass. POTATOESMO$ JOH A.go Se'eZ R EEDT Cow RE. IS A- u'c M lae Hopitao for theIn anels ycar was 33. hC The betremedy for S Coughs, Colds,Grippe, y [( r U Bronchitis, H oar se =ness. A&-v:2. whoopi:( c h, Crou~p. Smiai dose~ ;) gk. sure results. Dr.Buitsi'dl:cure Conzstipa!Jon'. Trial, ;oforc. :s'lRE BEST ink. UMolPhINE HADTS C'R E.: OPUM A T E01.PNEEL I jjjjEj RCjjCIA o )1d You !ee It' Yes e;unsunaijon can be cured by 'the pro scription we .;nve yo)u in tbie ,.pace la4 weec. Di, vou s.ee i If not. write posal Brx'.. r & Do Co..Chadotte,N.C It izm uppo-ed tha. the average depti of sand inl the dcscris oi :rca :s 30 to 40 iect. Ilu-v's This ? We ofter One Huna:'l llollars Reward fe any ca e of Catarrh th". en not be cured b; Hl' Catrrh Cure. F. J. CU5fEY & Co., Props.. Toledo. C. We. the undersigned. have Known F. J Cheney for tbe last 15 yearpe. and believe hir pereetly onoble In ala rusina truneac ttons and ZluanclalU aleI. to carry out an obligtilon made bir the'r rug s rat & TIAX, holeal Drggists. Tc ledo. Ohio. WA.DING. KINNAN & MARVIN. Vhole33a l)rnzg:-;tF.T 'I ldo. Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cre is ttken internall3 acting directly upon the blood ana mncou surfaces of the sT stem. Price. 7;v. per tott4 Sold by all Druggists TextImoriais free. Hall's Family Pilis are the best. .Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syruo for ch!ld rer Ieething.,oftens the gums, reducing iriama t!on; allays paln.cures wiud colic 35c a bo'ine We think Piso's Cure for Consumption i the only medicine for Coughs-J-sNE Prxcs ArD, SpringfIeld, Ills., Oct. 1. 1891. A TTENTION is facilitated If you mento this pa per when writins advertisers. So. KEEP AWAY in P abov a dollar or so them when th Soo our Agent or write diret. IN&h Factory Loaded "LEADER" loaded with S: RIVAL" loaded with Bla other brands for UNIFORMITY, RELIA STRONG, Winchester Shells are for having them when you buy Slee Skin *oflU laa Warn And a single anointii purest of emollients an This is the purest, sw manent, and economica disfiguring, itching, lb crusted, and pimply ski loss of hair, of .inf ants to succeed when all oth Millions of Women Exclusively for preserving, purifying, a scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, al ing, whitening, and soothing red, rough annoying irritations, inflammations, ar spiration, in the form of washes for ulci antiseptic purposes which readily sugg mothers, and for all the purposes of thi persuasion can induce those who have< preserving and purifying the skin, scall et~A SOAP combincs delicate emollient tkin cure, with the purest of cleansing ia odors. No other medicated or toilet soa it for preserving, purifying, and beautil other foreign or domestic toilet soap. ho for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, Soar at ONE PRICE, viz., TwENTtYFVE the BEST toilet soap and BEsT baby soap * ~s~aComplete Etr ~UIIU1Uconuisting of CirrIc1 -scale. and soften ti The St, ~ to instantly allay 114 The et$g25bea~~ n E ot an ~mia~lgginsalad lo gIau b~ ' 11. ong. Soe1rp. kln ~8 TO -crop can N grf ow with=. ut Potash. e7- blade of Gr. :Ss. every grain of Corn, all Fruits and Vegetables must have it., If enoigh is supplied you can count on a full crop-! - if too _ittic. the growth w,'ill be "scrurby. Send for sur bor ks :eliing al about composition t fertih,.crS best adr.pted for a.! crops. They cost yo.. nothing. -ERE. kA LI WORKS.oI Nassau St., New York. DROPSY 1 *ews I c es. -ook ol UntimonUs nd 10 darn' tnte meA _Free. Dr. IL.I GN. BON801. Box3, ASI~t4 G& RO- i I .SHOP HILL"*BUA3GIES are "A Little Higher 0 ice, Bat-" they stand up, look well, and a all, keep away from the shop Only higher than cheap work. Why not usea s is the case SROCK HILL BUGSCd IESTER., Shotgun Shells. -nokeless powder and "NEW ck powder. Superior to all BILITY AND SH1OOTING QUALITIES. sale by all dealers. Insist upon and you will get the best. p for red Ba bies iBath with Iur ig with CUTICURA, d greatest of skin cures, eetest, most speedy, per I treatment for torturing, rning, bleeding, scaly, a and :'calp humors with and children, and is sure er remedies fail. Use Cuticura Soap 2d beautifying the skin, for cleansing the id the stopping of falling hair, for soften ,and sore hands, in the form of baths for d chafings, or too free or offensive per rative weaknesses, and for many sanative t themselves to women, and especially toilet, bhth, andl nursery. N~o amount of uce used it to use any other, especially for , and hair of infants and children. CUrr rperties derived from CUrIcUA, the great ugredients and the most refreshing of flower p ever compounded is to be compared 'with ying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No ever expensive, is to be conpared with it and nursery. Thus it combines in Osa CxYS-, the na-r skin and complexion soap, in the world.I 1 anid Internal Treatment for Every HumorI rA Soar (25c.), to clease the skin of crusts and ng, Influmation, and iratIon, and o'then *~et~t hc) oco n cnctebod LC0110UGU1.4 ALCOHOLIC LIQUORS and NARCOTIC DRUGS Make INEBRIATES THE KEELEY CURE, CURES THEM. Also Cigarette and othes Patients board and lodge In the Institution. kddre3s or call at THI KEELEY INSTITUTE, xi'9 Plain Street, COLUrIBIA, S. C. P IANOS and RGANS DIRECT FROM THE V FACTORY I 0 0 0 0 - 0 0 ThN Is why I can supply The BEST FOR THE LEAST MONEY. NOT NW CHEAP TO:@ BUT HOW GOOD. WARRANTY: TmQEustrumente Irepresnt are 9nliy warranted by reputable builders an:t endorsed by me, making you Doubly Secured. GOOD, RELIABLE ORGANS, $35 tp 0000, RELIABLE PIANOS, $175 Up. Write for Catalogue to, M. A. MALONE, COLUMBIA, S. C, GINGM The Smith Pneumatic Suction Elevating, Ginning and Packing System is the Simplest and Most Efficient on the Market; Forty. eight Complete Outfits in S-'eth Carolina; Each One Giing absolute Satisfaction. BOILERS AND ENGINES: Slide Valve, Automatic and Corliss, My Light and Heavy Log Beam Saw Mllsa Cannot be equalled in Design, Efficiency or Price by any Dealer or Manufacturer in the South. Write for Prices and Catalogues. V. C. BADHAM & CO., 26 Main St. COLUMBIA. - -' - S. C. AN" Mill Supplies OF EVERY DESCRITION. Write us when In need of ANYTHING I the above line. The Equipment of Modern Glnneries 'wth the Inmproved Murray Oleaningasid Distributing System a specialty. - Engines. Boilers, Sawr and Grist iis Threshers, Rice Hullers, e'. S. C. AGEONCY, LIDDEJLL CO. W. HI. GllB~ES & - Sin EE' Sum Sm~leria ' alaher K ed ars~ Waraanato red 1icos , bas. a aSLovejq. HOstO~ne. custoerr, hence a.sena en btel 10 DOL.LARS WORTH FOR t0e. - per acre-aboeos etad baey .EremaaIneae -he gramaeaa en era eid . about Salzer's GreatXU~ hfa Potat., al maled for 16g. peaage - reeet.SolbhL*atep. end this ' **** CstaiE. uir. with - alnSr O.to Salser. At AGENTS! AGENTS! 'AGENTS! LhegrandestandfasestseingbookeverptbU~he DARKNESS5QDARIGHT BY R EV. LYMAN ABBOTT. SpendilIlustrated with 250 - my: -God .". Everyonelasnd easot it. and Agents ar.' sellngitb tJ.,wl.Wal -S nore AMen a wanted all thrsngh the 80u-se mad weinen. $100 to $20 asnonthrae nd fo em oAunts. Address AOD PUBLIHING00.,Hartford5 Cema. W. L. DOUCLAS 53 & 3.50 SHCES ~f5 Worth $4 toS6 compa with other makes. - Indorsed by over ne pensee have W.L. sapd ou boto.fak no substitute claimed to be as good. Your dealer ' should kthem -if ' notwe snd apair on r*itra pic .ad .kind of leather, E size, anid width plain or cap toe. Cat. free., Somn W. L OULSSlOE CO, Brockto, Mas. for DLD SOLDIERS Uinsoldiersand widows ofsoldiers who stade mestead entries before June 22,1874 of less tlttn Sacres (no matter if abandoned or rhgmh they have not sold their addli:iaa homestea ghts, should address, with lull particulars., grv 1g district, &c. EEN.IK COP?, Walbiagi:, 3. C. mnade from theba u? white Rtbberwihghu six reet of Tubiag, three brd Bubbrpineesad It und thea~ ftoo 'rour neigbos Astbis is lea. thantbe coat eats. SECOD-0 CHICAGO. . - fIL No Medicine to Swallow! g*LUO for a PAI the MANEE GRaCERY CO.. Manna ugS. C. SO0 AGTS. k0E N. C.. S. O. A31b A. r Pranny by ERERESTORER whenrecived &.e toPr.Klie.L. Indlie.5o~dg~5ss