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CHICAO STREET FREAKS. teesque Advertising Novelies that have Been Banished. Here is a list of ad'ertising freaks that, according to the Chicago Chronl cle, have been banished from the streets of Chicago: A Scotch Highlander with bagpipe. Four country "Iubes," straw hats, linen dusters, huge carpetbags, lurst open valises, immense cotton umbrel- b las, wonderfnl shoes, flamboyant neck ties and all. They created excitement and also hindered traffic by stariug in to the shop windows, looking down the t cable slot until the car was almost upon them, pretending to go wild with 0 fear over the occasional automobiles. u Five peasant girls advertising cigars. . b One tall woman in scarlet. huge white hat' with silver plume and snowy, feathers, large, tloating yellow satin cape and purple parasol. In one N hand she swung lightly a box of ci- i gars, in the other flourished a vivid i fan. t Two Roman gladiators. A handsome man and woman riding I in a swell-looking carriage bearing the c flaming inscription: "We were mar- 1 ried by the So-and-So matrimonial a agency." Another man and woman in a car riage advertising a popular play and S with a quaint little Chinese infant percheO high at front and rear. This n carriage was followed by a mock pa- r trol wagon; driven by a man in shabby policeman's uniform, and hindered' i traffic almost as much as its baby oc cupants amused the crowd on the side- e walks. A couple of Indians in war paint. A man dressed as a clown and car rying a big boy attired as. S baby in lang] e-s -. A soap advertiser with his head and face all in a mist of lather and bear ing aloft a huge razor. A charilot drawn by a pair of small reindeer, and another dragged along bya a supposed ostrich. . One ragged Mexican vaquero, minus horse- and saddle, but fully equipped, with spurs, lariat and gay leather fringes. This man whooped villain onsly and groaned as he walked. A pair of "real English chimney t sweeps." tall and shabby silk hats 1 upon their heads, brown coats of an Is unusual pattern on their backs, and meeting the queer, corduroy knee- a breeches, and with trumpets, which t they noisily blew. 'WARE SNAKES!" A Reminder of the "Absent-Miudeq Borgar" Ordered South. . Unlike Iceland, there distinctly ar ;snakes In South Africa, and very dead. 3y ones, too. They Infest parts of Na' t tal, the Cape Colony and the Trans' . - vaal, and the mortality from snake- a ,bite, although not alarming, as in In- ti dia, is sufficiently appreciable to de' t serve notice. Travelers up-country s should never fall to take with temi f in their me' echest, a bottle of eau s 4e luceby no mean8|V have more'than one form of "m~uti" * - or medicine, which they allego will cure snake-bite. These nostrums are usually decoctions of various herbs, grepared with all sorts of mystic rites and. incantations. If they do no good, at any rate, as a rule, they do' no harm. One of the deadliest snake4 Is the mamba, a great kind of cobra. There are two varieties, the blaclt mamba and the green mamba. Bot4~ are poisonous, and there is a legend Ithat the former has been known to at-! ~tack defenceless people in the high grass. This is, of course, absurd. Nas tal,'prtcularly In the lowlands near ithe coast and on the banks of the Umn uimkulu river, is a favoidte hunting ground of the mamba,1*hich Is, truth to teni, one of the , nakiest kind of snakes. The bosIang, or tree. snake, is also f nsvaal. It -its up aloft in a tree, d, curlin$ ts tail round a branch, is ularlyhupposed to drop down and 'ers-by who may chance to be the branches. The ringhals 15 striped yellow and brown snake, * ound nearly all over South Africa. It Is a smaller kind than the two former and much less dangerous. Still, the f -Zulus do not love it, and they tell yout that when the ringhals is annoyed it has a clever trick of putting its taIlc fnto its mouth, stiffening Its body Into a rigid circle or hoop, and then rolling a.long a road after its victim at a tre mendous rate of speed. Needless toC say, this is the most ridiculous inven tion. Nearly the smallest South A! rican snake Is called the whipsnake. It jI Is only about 18 inches to 2 feet long,e a. nd it is saidtobe qute harmless. Itlt ' ~prettily marked, and owing to its I issom, lithe body It has earned Its t name, for in color and shapa it is by I no means unlike a whip.C There are fourteen Harvard graduates in the Fifty-sixth Congress, now nss sion, of whom four are Senators and ten I Representatives. 1 "Never Do Things by Halves." Sometimes thze condition of your health could be de scribed as half-sick and half well. You may not be ill enough to goto bed but too il to bpe happyi or efficient in your' home or your business. Why not becwhot!y vel!? Your dragged out, tired feeling is due to poor blood and a nothing else. Make you.r blood rich by us~ a ing Hood's Sarsaparilla. Ii cwork~s to , perfection; there i:nothing like it, Tired Feeling - "My husband c would come home from 'rork so tired he ii maid~ hardly more~. He began taking r Ho's Sarsaparila and it cured him. Il cur'ed my g-rl's headachzes." -s. A. J.r Sprague, 57 Oak St., Fall River, Mass. Hood's Pi snre liver j1 a the non-frritatin# and only catha.'i to tk Ih Hoods arapartila. so. gr_____ Best Soil For Limna Beans. It is a fact that-all I mna beans do est upon land moderattely rich, as pon a strong muck soil they grow >o rank. have too much foliage, and :e not inclined to set the pods until ie growth of vine ha~e been checked Ssome way, either by dry season or y having completed their growth. 'his is even more noticeable in the ush Lima than in the pole Lima, and hould serve as a caution in regard to lie soil they should be planted in and gainst the use of strongly nitrogene us mganures. Moderately well- man red clay or 'elay loam seems to be est adapted to their growth. An Example or Forest P':eservation. In his annual address before the isconsin Fo'restry Association, Pres lent B. S. Hoxie said that we are not 1 thc dark concerining the preserva on of forestis, because in the old orld it is ne longer ani experiment. ~ohemia is one of the most populous ountries on the globe. Its climate cool with rather severe winters. As consequence large quantities of fuel re used, most of which is taken from ae forests that cover the mountaiu ides. For many centuries these for sts have furnished fuel and building at-rial for a dense population and stained nearly their primeval area. his is due to ths forethcught of the overnment in ordaining that as trees 'ere cut dowvn others should be plant. Ito fill the vacancies. Now vast ~retches of dense trests cover thet ~ountain slcpes. -warm Water For Catle. Those who warm the water for their >ws, or some who do so, say that the ews need to drink but once a day. pith the water at a temperature of ixty degrees they will fill themselves -ith enough for twenty-four hours, ad as there is no chilling of the sys. 3m or the digestive organs, the di estion goes along steadily, and the tilk product is much greater than -hen they are watered twice a day -ith cold water. We have no doubt dat cows could become accustomed >taking enough water at one time to ist all -the day and night, but we hould prefer that they had it twice a ay if they were ours. We never had cow that was a good one for milk~ dat would not drink, and drink eartily, twice every day in winter, if xe water was not colder than fifty de. rees, and when we have had one that ould not do so we always found her either a rrolific milker, a persistent iilker, or an easy fattener. Some imes giving such a cow a little extra ut in her feed will stimulate her iirst so that she will drink more -eely and regularly. While it was ar custom to salt regularly we found tat some cows seemed to want more ian others, and we tried to make ire that each one had enough, tough sometimes after baying a cow e found it best to limit her on salt Importance of Pruning and Soil. Excessive pruning is to be creditet or a share of the work of destroying he vigor of trees. Cutting away reat portion of the branches, somi i them often large ones, causes deca. t the point of severing and is eceptacle for insect pests, and the estruaction of corresponding quanti ty ,f roots, which decay and give rise t( ungus growth. Merely rubbing ofi uperfuous buds as soon as they ap iear, or cutting cut diseased or de ayed branches, usually will be all lat is necessary in the line of prun ag. The other important point in Lie process of building up a tree is roper soil. Perhaps from no cause o trees suffer more than from jack of upport from the soil. Orchards are >o often planted on indifferent cound, because it is not so good for nitivation; and for this very reason is not so good for fruit-growing. oil in which corn will grow well will roduce fruit trees. But they must ot be left to grow and bear fruit from ear to year, depending on the na ral strength of the soil. The corn eld is not so left, but is replenished ach year with more or less fertilizing aterial; and so must the orchard be, healthy fruit-bearing trees are ob tined. For a situation for an orchard, up und, with rich loam soil, is best. If must be on wet or heavy clay soil, should be drained and supplied ith plenty of sand or loam, worked eli and deep into the soil. Loam or iuvium, composted with manure om the cattle stalls, is, in general, good fertilizer for the orchard, and aould be supplied every two or iree years, or oftener if needed.. The mpos'; should be worked down deep ito the soil at the extremities of the otsz, and as deep nearer the tree as in he done without damage to the >ots. Such management will insure igorous, healthy trees, that will not >readily succumb to disease.-The pitomist. _____ A Go-ad 5iarp Rack:. Perhaps no other. thing connected ithi the fceding of sheep has been iscrussed more than the rack to feed 2. Mir. L. W. Oviatt, of Mlichigan, !ter vyears' experience cou rive kshown i' the illustra tion, which, he thinks, prevents waste of feed and damage to fleece more completely than any other yet - 8B C ~j D FIC. 1-AN IMPnPOVED 'iEfl RACK. devised. This rack combines thq wings of the folding rack with the manger-room of the old rack, and is deseribed as follows: The wings (A) in Fig. 1 hang oi hinges (B), and may be tipped up and stand perpendicular on the side ci the rack. These wings are made of two wide boards, the wider the better. The posts (C) of 2x4 stuff, on the out, side of the rack, but they can be used either out or in. D, base board 9 inehes wide: E, top board six inches wide; F, slats, about 3 inches wide; space between E and D, 12 to 14 inches; space between slats 8 to 10 inches as to size of sheep kept. A 12-foot rack will accommodate about. 12 sheep on a side. I, bottom boards placed entirely under and nailed securely to the bottom of the rack; J, center bottom board placed on top and lapping onto the other two (1. I). This leaves a shoulder of one inch, CB FIG. 2-THE RACE DIFFEnE.NTLY An RANGED. against which the sheep can gnaw ear corn or roots of any kind. The body of the rack should be two feet inside. The wings should meet within about six inches. Mr. Oviatt thinks that the arrange ment in Fig. 2 will be an improve ment on that shown in Fig. 1. The cut is not properly made, however. The slat (A) should be under the boards (B), and nailed firmly to posts (C). These remain firm and rigid. The hinges should be on top, so that the wide boards (D) can turn up and rest on B, B, outofthe way when one wants to clean out the rack. Other wise the wings are the same as in Fig. 1.-Ohio Farmer. -Diseases of Poultry. Feather Pulling-The meanest vice that effects poultry, as they strip each other until naked, and as the body must be always renewing the feathers, .he hens cannot lay. It is caused by Udleness, nspecialy a e ' st preventive 1 usy at work scratching. If one hen egins it she will soon teach it to thers; therefore remove the first uiprit at once. If it becomes a habit t is not easily cared. It may some imes be necessary to sell off the flock nd begin anew. We have testimony rom parties who cured the habit by utting off the upper or lower mandi le, which, of course, makes one onger than the other. After cutting ff one of them the edges are scrtiyed lown. This makes it difficult to atch a hold en the feathers, but we re not sure the remedy is infallible. he first fowl caught in the act should be at once killed, as she will teach all th6 others. The cause is idleness. Wh. n the neck of the cock is naked or ahe breast bare of feathers, the hens are then picking him. After while they begin to pick each other. ome have smea:ed the birds with tar, ut smearing is unsightly. The diffi ulty is to handle the birds. If sep rated they soon forget it. A flock that pulls feathers will not lay, as the hens cannot continually prodnee new jeathers and eggs during such times. He 3Eating Their Eggs-T wo difi culties-egg eating and feather pull ing-are met with, and, being the re !salt of habit which is acquired, cnn not easily be remedied. As soon as a hen learns to eat eggs she teaches the vice to the others. To prevent the vice is difficult, unless especially con trived nests are arranged. or unless the hen is so situated that she cannot well reach the eggs. To prevent the vice make the nests dark or put them in a dark place. The uest should have a top so as to compel the hen te walk in instead of jumping on it. It should be high enough off of the fioor to prevent the hen from standing on the flooF and eating out of the box. Nests to Prevent Egg Eating-And the opening of the box should face the~ wail intstead of the light so as to have the nest dark. To make such a nest take aso ap box and knock off the front, leaving the boards on the top, bottom, sides and back end. At the opening of the nest nail on a strip (at the bottom) three inches high to pre vent the hens from rolling the eggs out. The floor of the box should be seven inches off the floor, which (with ihe strip in front) will bring the open ing to the neat ten inches from the floor of the room. The hen will fly up to the opening, lay her egg and come off, as she will not have room to eat the egg while she is on the nest, 'and must come off, in which case she cannot reach it from the floor. The Inest box should be only large enough to accommcdate the hen. -Farm, Field and Fireside. EnIghtening Iher. Mrs. Flighty-"Well, what the lat est war news, dear?" Mr. Flighty (behind his paper) "Oh! Aguinaldo has warned Genera. Buller to keep his forces. within the limits of Ladysmith, or he will re lease all the prisoners at Prdtoria. Otis and his brigade moved on Sulu and gave battle to Oom Paul. The losses were enormous-over six hun dredi and flifty Tagals and nine hun dred and two Kaffir-Boers wer~e slaughte' Mrs. Fl)-"Is'nt war~ per do(1 take * nuh alr_ A Flair Cohiction of Birds. Major Wingate, the traveller, has just sent an extraordinary collection of 13 birds to the British Museum. This is si >ne of the results of a remarkable 8 lourney in China. He started from lianghai, followed the Yangtse-Kiang is far as Lake Tung-Ting, whence he a] iook a southwesterly course along the Vuen Kiang. through Tunan, Kweichau ' and Yunnan to Bhamo. d Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clea-, by ai stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- tr purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads. and that sickly bilious complexton by taking Cascarcts,-beauty for ten cents. All drug- V1 gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. TwentY-five women have been hang- ir e( in England during Queen \ ictoria's 1k reign. The Best Prescription for Chills and Fever is a bottle of rnovE'S TASTELESS CHILL ToNIc. It is simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No cure-no pay. Price 50c. Half a million clerks are employed in T London. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. IC tt C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. At least 20,000 men purchased outfits p for the Klondike at Seattle during the k past year. oman's t Kidney d Why trifle with health when the easiest and c surest help is the best known medicine In the world? b Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound t is known everywhere and thousands of woaen have been curedof serious kidw ney derangements by it. Mrs, Pinkham's meth ods have the endorse ment of the mayor, the postmaster and others of her own oity, Her imicine has the endorsement of an iun numbered multitude of grateful wonmen whose letters are constantly printed In this paper. Every woman should read these letters, advises adresI Lynn, Massa Siamese people have so superstitious -a dislike for odd numbers that they strive always to have an even number of rooms, doors, windows, closets, etc., in their houses. cures an Throat and Lung Aff'ections. COUGH SYRUP ~IS SUREI Dr. Bui.-s Pills cure Dyspepsia. 7h-a!, sofor %~ and B RhaEbennigCARTH nda a mild eecie lxative they are sipl won dfl. 'M enagohra a 1 were botlce with taoneg a fe decs of eCascaretse are improved WILnELSI IANAGE. 1137 Rittenhouse St.. Cincinnat. Ohio. CAN DY CATHARTIC TRADE MdARM RWoST5RE Go Nevr rsicken Wabeaken. o G 10 5c.0 ..CURE CONSTIPATION... Sterling Remedy company, Chiceago, Nontral,. New York. 315 N . ".A OT bTN Culture" - ' is the namer of a valu able illustrat ed pamphlet which, should~ be in the hands of every planter who! raises Cotton. The book is sent FREE. Sed name and address to GERMAN KALI WORKS, c3 Nassau St., New York.. zers Earliest Six Weeks' Potato. abbL Sed thi noticeanldsc. owrsin.Sl.ZPttERS Du [r D R O S"RO .wr cree.. B. H OLteNstia5_03 day'3 elatntaO Doa't Tobacto Spit and Smoke Tour Life Away. To quit tobacoe easily and forever, be ma itic. full of life, nerve and vigor, tAke No-To ac, the wonder-worker, tat makes weak men rong. All druggists, 50c or I. Cure guaran- 1 ed. Booklet and sample free. Address :erling &emedy Co., Chicago or New York. Out in the frontier the word gun was >plied almost exclusively to pistols. To Cure a Cold in One Day. ike LAxATIvS Baoxo QeNNE TABLETs. An , *ugzists refund the money If it falls to cure. W. GROVs's signature is on each box. 25. A system of preventive inoculation rainst typhoid fev.tr is under extensive tal in India and South Africa. How Are Your Xidneys t )r. Hobbs' Sarn's Plicureall kidney ills. Sam f2ree. Add. Sterling Remedy Co.. Chicago or N. Y. Business failures in Great Britain dur g :899 were 8,6oo. against 8,893 in 198. PCrAX FADELESS ELrs are fast to nlight, washing and rubbitg. Sold by all uggists. Utah gives its convict murderers the ioice of how they will be cxecuted. he latest one chose to be shot. ducate Your Bowels with Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Spiral armlets of copper form gocd rotection for the arm in battle, and the ng of Dahoney uses his as defensive capons. I believe Piso's Cure for Comsutnption ved my boy's life last summer.-Mrs. AL E DoCGLAss, Le Roy. Mich., Oct. 20, 1894. Deafness Cannot Be Ctred F local application as they cannot reach the seased portion of e ear. There is only one ay to care deafnees, and that is by constita. onalremedies. Dzafness is caused by an n amed couditlon of the mucous liningof the ustachian Tubo. When this tube gets in .med you have a rumbling sound or imper sot hearing and when It is ei.tirely closed eatness 14 the result, and unless the inflam alton oan be taken out and this tube re ored to its normal condition, hearing will be mstroytd for..ver. Nine cases out of ten are tused by catarrh, which is nothing butan In amed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hund, ed Dollars for any uae of Deafnes., (caused by catarrh) that can o be cured by Hall's Catarrh Lure. Send yr oirculars, free. F. J. Cmrzy & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druqgists, 75c. J1AWl V'araly Pills are the best . tIALITY low. clebilitatei or exhausted cured , Dr Kline's Invgorating lIonic. FR E $1 lal bottle for 2 u eeks' treatment. Dr. K line, d., 981 Arch St., Phi adoiphia. Founded 1871. Mrs. Winslow'Soothting Syrup for child ron e tbing softens the gums. reducing inflams on. allays pain.cures wind colic 250 a bottle Owr HaH Red, Rough Hands, Itchin: Palms, and Painful Finger One NighT Soak the hands on retia creamy lather of CUTICi and anoint freely with CL skin cure and purest of emol the night, old, loose kid gI ends cut off and air holes ei red, rough, chapped hands, feverish palms, with shapel finger ends, this treatment and points to a speedy cure ing cases when physicians Sore Hands B Y Pain So Intense Would Nearly Twist F Puffed Up Like a Toad. Water R Floor. Had to Walk the Flo Asleep. Fingers Would Pi Doctors Could N< Eight years ago I got sore hands, coma on my fingers and on top of the hand. see little white pimples. I felt like twistin I had high fever, and cold chills ran over I was tired out. Nights, I had to walk t hands peeled like amn onion, the finger ran out, and wherever there was a little phr that happened at least ten times. I am ru shoeing, and I would not shut up the sho My hands puffcd up worse than a toad. water from my hands ran thlrough the bal tomers refused to look at my hand. I had: he gave a solution of something to bathe doctor, I think, for a year. I found you> paper, and I got the CUTncUH remedies. to gain, and after using a small quantity < would not take fifty dollars for a cake of C any more. I would not suffecr any more as Feb. 22,189$. CASPER DIETSCHLE] * Comiplete External and I I tjCIRconasitig of CTcn o ~ scales and soften the thicke The Stto instantly allay itching, inj A SI1?oLE SET is ofiensufflci. and humiliating skin, scaip, and blood humors, witli throughout the world. Poyrrzzs Daco Asa Cnsir. Co about the Skin, Scalp, and Hair," free. Millions of Women Us HEclusively for preserving, purifying, and beautify crusts, scales, and dandruif, andI the stopping of fai soothing red, rough, and sore hands, in the form of mations, and chiafings, or too free or offcnsive pe nlcerative weaknesses, and for many sanatire arnti themselves to women, and especially molhers, and and nursery. No amount of persuasion can induc any other, especially for preser'dng and purifyingr children. CUTIcCRA Soiar combines delicate em olli the great skin cure, with th~e purest of cleansing it :lower odors. No other medicated soap ever comi preserving, purifying. and beautifying the skin, sec or domestic SoileS soap, however expensive, Is to hc of the toilet, -bath, and nurscry. Thus it combln TwENTr-Fn's CF.Ts, the iusTr skin and comple; baby aoap ia the world. ~-~) Worthless Stuff! What a lot of trash is sold as cough cures. The hollow drumi makes the loudest noise-the biggest advertise ment often covers worthlessness. Sixty years of cures and such testi mony as the follow ing have taught us what Ayer's Cherry Pectoral will do. G "I had a most stubborn cough for many years. It deprived me of sleep and made me lose flesh rapidly. I was treated by many eminent physicians, bat could get no permanent relief. I then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and I be gan to get better at once. I now sleep well, my old flesh is back, En and I enjoy myself in every way at the age of seventy-four."-R. N. MAxs, Fall Mills, Tenn., Feb. 7, B 1899. to IFk It's the do-as-you-would-be done-by cough medicine. Try I 25-cent bottle. qu CV t Ends. n -Ing ina strong, hot, JRA- SOAP. ~Dry, FTICURA, the great [ients. Wear, during oves, with the finger it in the palms. For 'S dry, fissured, itching, E [ess nails and painful is simply wonderful, C of the most distress- ho rnd all else fail. ingers From Sockets. H-ands and an- Through Bandages to B or Until Would Faillc el Like an, Onion. Si a >t Cure. - encing with a burning sensation When"I rubbed them, you could ;my fingers Out of their sockets. me, and so I kept it going until he floor until I fell asleep. My nails got loose, and the water aple there the burning fire was - .nning~ a blacksmith shojf, horse p for anybody, but it was hard._ When I drove horse nails, the idage, on to the floor. My cus friend take mue to the doctor; my hands. I went to another eadvertisement in a Utica news As soon as I used them I began >f them I[ was entirely cured. I Bia UTICCJMA SOAP if I could not get an I did, for the whole country, t t, Pembroke, Genesee Co., N. T. g oterual Treatmient for Every liumor, e (ec) t cleansce the skin of cest and en to aur then a torurng, d igurig tP., Sole Props., Boston, U. S. A. "& Ap e Outicura Soap s ing the skin, for cleansing the scaip of Prim ling hair, for softening, whitening, end Esta bjaths for annoying irritations, inflam-. rspiration, In the form of washes for septic purposcs which readily suggest ) for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, - a those who have once used it to use - :he skin, scalp, and hair of infants and 't ont properties derived from CU.TICL1nA,-. igredients and tho most refreshing of ounded Is to be compared with it for 'Jp, hair, and hands. No other foreign ecompared wth it for al the pupss I Lion sOap, he EST toilet and 3n37 LCOHOLIC LIQUORS and NARCOTIC DRUGS Make INEBRIATES THE KEELEY CURE, [RES THEM. Also Cigarette a o ?atients board and lodge In the Insitutton. dress or call at THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, 9 Plain Street, COLUlBIA, S. C. IANOS. and RGANS DIRECT FROM TilE FACTORY! o C ooo o 000 This Is why I can supply * The BEST FOR THE LEAST MO 0NE Y. 0 . NOT HOW EllEAP UOT IV BUT 110W GOOD. WABRANTY: he Instru ment, Irep resent are inily rranted by repatable-builders and lorsed by me. making yoU Doubly ured. OD, RELIABLE ORGANS, $35 up. 09, RELIABLE PIANOS, $175 Up, Vrite for Catalogue to, M. A. MALONE, COLU DBIA, S. C. POWER PLANTS FOR FACTORIES AND MILLS. gines; Corliss, Automatic, plain side valves. ilers, Heaters, Pumps. Saw 31111s, from small Plantation MiHs he Hearviest Hills In the market. All kinds of Wood Working Machinery. ur and Corn Milling Machinery. Complete Ginning Systems-Lummus, a Winkle and Thomas. Engines, Boilers, Saws, Gins in Stock to: ek delivery. -C. BADHAM & CO., 1326 Main St,. LURBIA, - - - - S. C. *AD Mill SuppRe OF EVERY DESCRITION. Trite us when In need of ANYTHING In above line. 'ho Equiprnent of Modern Ginneries bhthe Improved Blurray Gleaning and stribui.ting System a specialty. ngines, Boilers, Saw and Grist -mills, - ~eshers, Rice Hullers, ele-' S. C. AGENCY, LIDDELL CO. .II. GIBBES & C0. COLUMBIA, - S.C fORl14 E We wish to ga' ear5u new cUs' suden r g. at erald Cuennber15e 1 " LaGrosse MarketLettue.16@ 1 " Strawberry Melon, -15. 1 " 13 nyadish 30e . 1 "Early ipe Ceabage, 20 .0 , 1 Eaii Diner Onion; 10c 3 L Bi ant Flower Se.ds, 15e Worth $1.00, for 14ecent.. I'l Abovel Pkgu. worth $100, we will mail bufree, together with our great Cstalog~teu~ing all about SALTERS MILLUOX 00LLAR PO07 - upon receipt of this notice k c stamps. We inviteyourtrade, td --.Aknowiwhen you once try Mazes seeds yon will neter do without. 0200 Prizeson Salzer's 3500 eat earliest Tomato Giant on earth. . f. L DOUCLAS 3 & 3.50 SHOES 3J Worth $4 toS6 compared with other makes. ~ndorsed by over ~JThegenuine have WV. IL Douglas' name and price no siubstitute claimed to be A as good. Your dealer r .should keep thsm--if on receipt of price ant a5c. exrau for carrage. State kind of leather, size, and width, plain or cao toe. Cat. free. SW. L DOUGLAS SHOE C0.,.Brockton, Mass. MONFW~ tor LD SOLDIERS ion soldiers and widowsofsoldiers who madj estead entries before June 22.1874 of less thai res (no matter if abandoned or relinquished) ty have not sold their additional homestead --- s, should address, with full particulars, gisn istrict, &c. EENT N. CO2P, Washisgton, D. C. N'T STOP TOBACO SUlDDENLY dure, nervous system to do so. BACO. KLO is the only cure that REALLY CURES. notifita you when to stop. iSold with a rantee that three boxes will cure any case. 0CUR is vegetabl and harsless. I cyu Aalirurgist or by malprepaid, box: 3 boxes $2.50. Booklet free. Write IEKA CHE.MZCAL CO., LaCrosse, WiVs. OYSPEPSIA! No Medicine to Swallow! Cured by Absorption In dau !f not beneflcred mioneyrefudd Book free on application. Sa *l:L0 fo aPAU t.rthe ATNING GRGCERY CO.. Manning.S. C. 30OLE AGTS. 10E N. C ., C. AND - OOFINC ek and Galvanized Corrugated Ironi arehouses, Barns. kc., &c.Gavanized Gutters Down Spouts. Tini Plates of all kind. Nimnmo tyle, Sandow Old Style..Tuzedo Heavy Coat id Lillian; all stamped. Guaranteed. W1. C. [Mil & CO., L.:S. Calvert St., Baltimore. Ed. ARERSINK T he best Ink made, but no dearer thnthe poorest. with no fee aw A NTGUNED less successful. Patent adverth.sed free. Free ad. as to patentability. Send for "Inventors ' er" lU1 0 13. ST EVENS & CO., Attys - >1864. S17 1thl .a , Washington, D.(, Iranches: Chicago, Clev ehand and Detroit. FIT 4RLE employment for yugladies at me. J.P P.a.WLv.a & Co0., 1648 Eoadway. N. Y. rEN Ti110N is. :,acir.tted If you mention a paper when writing advertisers. So.9