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WIT H "PALM OIL-* Some Inside Points on How _Chines Concesslons Are Secured.' The usual procedure in securing Chi nese concessions is somewhat as fol lows: There first comes to Peking the ,dvance agent, the typical concession hunter, to look over the ground and A out what China has to give away that can be taken up by a public com pany and secure the support of the share-buying public abroad. Some- U times he is sent as the representative of a group of capitalists who have a P definite idea of what they wish to se cure, and in such cases he is furnished with formidable letters of credit, to supply the very necessary sinews of this finarcial war. Sometimes he comes unsupported. and, ha. -ag "hooked" some conditional grant, posts hot-footed to London or New York to see what can be done with it. Occasionally promoters are of a dif ferent class enLirely; namely, the igents of foreign governments, trying, under the cloak of private enterprise, t to advance a political degign in some -f the empire in which these govern- t nts seek a predominating influence, 1 says Charics Denby in the Forum. Ex- t perience has proved that these advance t -agents need not be gentlemen of the i highest education or refinement, but I they do need to be endowed with a cer tain instinct for diplom"acy in its lower .orms, and they must be, above all, shrewd and persistent, of indomitable -perseverance, and with a faculty for making friends. Scruples as to meth ods are with them superfluous, but a willingness and an ability in the ap plication of "palm oil" are indispens able. They must, also, be men of their word toward those who work with them. What they promise to those who aid in the negotiation of their contracts they must faithfully fulfill; because while Chinese business integ rity does not rise in the Quixotia height of refusing to enter into cor rupt contracts, it expects scrupulous actitude in their execution. The pr mise o-the promoter to his-Chin ese alders and ibdttors i:'social cir cles becomes a debt of honor, pay ment of which is. or should be, abso lutely sure. On such terms as these have off?ces in China been secured, promotions obtained, enterprises au thorized, for hundreds of years; and the foreign promoter must, as his initial step, 'give his adherence thereto. The method of procedure of the ad vance agent is to make the acquaint ance of the mandarins of Pekin; secur ing here and there an ally and a friend. Then, at some favorable mo ment, he lays his project before the proper department of the government; relying on the support of his friends to secure it favorable consideration. One of the greatest concessions re cently signed in China enriched in its negotiations numberless officials. The writer himself saw a promissory note for $35,000 payable to a small of~cIal upon formation of a certain company. - ~ .~- This was but one palm "greased," and his head by the conces ave amounted to hus - ~, - cosolaomoters it -mstob t .methods are now e ~being no longer necessrY~ DISHES TIAT GOW o - ?ae iit CarIOUdS - -or no. less than $1,000, aD [.tp od-.fasnibned china plate of the ex ~reriely rare kind which Is known to - he collectors as "growing crockery," d though no explanation of this strangeGt phenomenon was given in the news-o paper reports. From the plate itself all had sprung, to a height of more than a thi4of an inch, a sort of eruption of mc beautinttl crystals, that seemed to take. .he form of elegant trees and minia- w ture pagodas. The growing crystals an were gradually rising higher and high, fia er, and they had brought up with~ he V them the enamel surface of the plate ag at every point where they had sprung 'be from the body of the latter. Such : -olates are a chemical manifestation of :of the rarest possible kind, and only a isi v-ery few years ago a tea pot, the prop- yo erty of a lady in London, that had be- th come covered with beautiful crystals tr4 SIn this way, was sold to a collector for wi $5,000. The clay of which such china, At is made contains alumina and mag- re nesia, and in certain cases these a-e th so acted upon by the presence of sul- PC phuric acid as to produce fibrous crys-;y tals, that are in reality very much of y -the character of Epsom salts or crys-in tals of alum. The plate sold the other dry had belonged to a poor person, who had never' attached miuch value Sc to it--Stray Stories. s m The CaLbauI census snows a surpris-p ingly smnall population, only about t 1,200,00 J, being only three-fourths oft what it was. or was said to be, in E 1894. This is in nart due to the i sufikrings of the 1list (decade, when 3 thousarnds of the poor- died. but hardlyh four~ hundred husn Ta " Never Do Things by Halves." l I>-'., Sometimes the condition of s your health could be de scribed as half-sick and half well. Teu may not be ill enog to go to bed but? too iii to be ha ppy or effici~ent in your h~ome or your- business. Wihy not be'whoffy 'well? Your dragged- f out, ir-ed feeting is due to poor blood and b nothiung eLs:. Maike your blood rich by us- at ing Hood's Sarsaparilta. It 'works to b .perfection; there is nothing like it. Tired Feeling - " y husband ecutd come home from 'work so tired he~ could hardy mo-re. Hc began taking Hood's Sarsaparils and it cured him. It cured m~y gir!'s headaches." N-s. A. I. t Sprague, 57 Oak St., Fat !'iver, Mass. cl od- P P , .etr e -er i th e oirri atati ' an d I -only atharti to take wit Hood dabrsapar - delib rrrnf~fl g of w IIJII{I.Il whitE andI the 1) HINTS FOR NEEDLEWORK, tons tistl Possibilities in Every-Day Ne'ti- g sjties-Oitlning on Net. 1 1, Ionq Do you know what to make for your end who pours tea, and who has to! the se her own dainty handkerchief often enla protect her fingers from the hot tea t or kettlehandles? It's one of the I ther ew little holders, so pretty to look at this ad no end useful. If you ask for em ready-made you will find the rice quite high, seemingly, but be-, es the embroidered cover, there iust be the lining thick enough and u ei not clumsy, so it is quite a bit of amb ork to finish one neatly. The cover' good made of linen, and pink, gray, nue or green are all pretty. The Plan sual shape is followed, and the em- fourl oidery is simple; a pretty design on amb: lue is of white carnations, the stems knoN trning toward the center and the fittel etals buttonholed and cut out to form a1pl he edge. For pink the same design av be used, a deeper in the silks m hat the linen giving enough of a con rast; and the stems of green. On fulh reen, pink or white either will look can Yell. The linen cover should extend her >omewhat beyond the holder proper, o Ld be tacked to it. Such little gifts Thi LS these will be used and enjoyed for dic nonths. Every morning through the yeari real xcept when the people were out of spir :own in the summer, the cozy had the oeen used and added comfort to the som reafast, for while before now for thiei pouring a second cup the handle of life the silver pot keeps so hot under the nes ozy that a holder is necessary in touching it, which is not at all needed v when the cups are filled the first time. iod Some new work for embroiderers is skil outlining the centerpieces which come doi, made of net with the pattern delicate- dcc y painted on; the shading carefallyI this lone. Silks to. match perfectly are acti sold with the pieae, and only outlining atti irnecessary to finish it. The linen whi tray and carving cloths, mats and rea doilies of all sizes, with edges scal- as i loped only, or with tiny sprig in each scallop, are very attractive. The work the is done with white cotton floss, and, wh' of course, they wash perfectly, and are pii very durable. In some places a de- l sign of cross-stitching in colored cot- in tons is added, of blue or blue andred, gre in Russian style. These in plate and 3s finger-bowl size make very good and serviceable articles- for every day use on the luncheon table. Some charming little pincushions t are made with tops in blue cross-stitch :it on linen, the shape a very small , square. the edge finished with a frill rat of lace and the top worked in silks in stead of cottons. I think a prettier idea would be to have a Swiss muslin ca top worked in the same way, with frill lv' of the same, edgef with a tiny blue scallop. Another eimenmely pretty i small cushion is :iade of pink and be green. A rourd foundation, almost n like a large ball, is covered with a deep sde rse pink India silk. encircling it like a ty rosettes of her and 0 ar the topa ath is a row ksilk, part a sha - darker than the cushion slf. a en hen silk put on b hions displayed which hav ome acep my notice. -Washington Star. Bicti The Girl of To-Day. habit, )ne of the most~ remarkable social shape ~elpments of these latter days is a parc evolution of the mature heroine of ance. Formerly this post was* tied to the young girl or the young The ,ried woman. In those times, a "ma eever, the adjective of youth would societ; have been applied to the maiden in the Chad passed her twenty-fifth year, doubt l only in the spirit of the grossest woui(l ttery to the matron who had seen and I i'three decades. It is typical of the i a Sthat this explanatory note should: whiat necessary. Now the expression opens ung" ispurelyrelative. Theperiod parti middle age has been entirely abol Led. Where almost everybody is anger than somebody else, it is only Th Sfew who are proud of their ex- tifult me antiquity who can be regarded jwalks th any degree of certainty as old. about thirty the girl of to-day no longer ;and eC ires on the shell as a failure to pass: with Srest of her life in the humiliating to str: sition of the maiden aunt, who de- stead tes herself to the children or re- l uges herself on th~e poor. She is n trely preparing to start on a new ase of life with a more definite plan teial d a clearer vision. Very often she over nries and begins afresh at forty. Lof bet netimes she has been known to beshu greatly daring as to enter on matri- partu< y for the first time when she haslat ssed her fiftieth year. For the matron a trar erange is even more extended. A t the g rty she is quite a young thing , frivolous, skittish, to whom so. ty and flirtation are the chief ob-y ts in-life. Ten years more bring brow1 r to her prime. It is the period of sar. cination, or adventure, of impulse. .E ee woman of forty is capable of any- latest nr. She is the object of the wildest . ur in, the center of the most daring fri man. At fifty she is probably WI rrying for the second time. Three- orate] re will find her* approaching the depai Lar for her third wedding, and if' WI e lives long enough, she may even ostric .ppear at a later date to bring her mens cord up to four. --London World. j le Novel nraclets. of sti 'he arm of the fashionable woman smar l undoutedly twinkle with one of: All .e very new butterfly bracelets this train, aon. .Tust a perfectly plain tight- are v :ting band of nlexible gold it must Th , clasping the arms above the elbow the 1: dd set with a gold, jewel-besprinkled ly su ttertly. The long, lovely and large Lo ings cf the glorious insect are so back ised that at every movement of the fasie: 'orthe gleaming pinions tremble, butic enn and shut. abou A nother equally curious and beanui- ~ ily armlet has a mer e gold threau to ah se en above the elbow. Across it ibsh :d a thin enamelled lizard, which, O a short distane, appears to have cloth mibed so high on the white roud red 1 eber that gives it support. Not o0 s1 ec of these new bracelets is clasped A1r the wrist or below the elbow. built e fondness for bangles numbers >men have the wrists of their I calling gloves studded with S in circles, while little brilliants :urquoise heads are sewed into - ack stitchings. Gold glove but- bi ire used with such hand cover and it is no longer uncommon to I0 plendid rings at stately recep weddings. etc., worn outside Is loved fingers. ilings are being 10( ed and made up on larger set- I VE for this special purpose, butn is, nevertheless, a cianger that ashion may be vulgarized and so n from polite usage. b N ti The Girl's Ambitions. s& [any girls will have noticed, I aa that as our lives advance our a tions are apt to become more C y.'' writes Helen Spencer in the 9 es' Home Journal. "The great we had as girls of thirteen or een settle gradually into simpler C tions. We learn gradually to - that in smaller duties better I to our hands lies the greatest iess, and the possibility for st and richest development. Al every girl, when she first begin alize that she will probably never A all her girlish ambitions be e they are many of them beyond >ossibilities, will have the inelina to 'give up,' as the children say. .is apt to be the beginning of real tent, and it ought to be battlel Let a airl once try to fully I ze what it means to be the in- I ition of some one person's life, sunshine in the darkened lives of one or two people, and she will understand how it may fill her almost to the brim with happi "Toolna," or Book Cover Work. omen have for a considerable per enjoyed the reputation of being l bookbinders, and rgw they are i excellent work in the delicate )ration known as "tooling." As is a comparatively new field of vity for women, it will probably act many who are now debating ch of the many occupations al ly overcrowded they will choose heir vocation. Tooling" is the work of maing line decorations on book covers,tc ch that style of decoration is ap . and is done in the form of 3 un impression, or the lines marked ;oldor silver. As the art requires. at skill and delicacy of toruch, it is cially adapted to women. "After Long Years." t is often said that i you put a g away for seven years and bring ut again at the end of that time will find ii in fashion. At any , if it is not in fashion then put it gain and bring it out in another e'n years. This is certainly the .e with fringe, which is undoubted-. one of our most popular ,.nimmings the present time, and those who put way seven years or more -ago will glad to bring it out again for use . Fashionable overskirts edged Il fringe are exceedingly graceful. it has become discolored b' beings. t away, have it dyed, when it will y Feaike ewe th -d-tpe. g the lips is not only a bad but it will in time impair the of the mouth and give the lips hed, cracked lodk. A "Manilcure 'rea." latest advices from Paris tell of nicure tea" given by a popular r woman. For something new ine of teas society should, no be grateful, as almost anything be a relief after pink, yellow due teas, and a "manicure tea" her a radical departure. But a vista of entertainments this np-shampoo suppers, pedicure s and massage luncheons. Women Who Walk Well. te re is nothing more rare or beau > behold than the woman who well. One very simple rule sanding:. .a elevate the chest r ry it just over the toes. Then, 4 ead erect and by remembering k the ball of the foot first, in of the heel, a gracefal carriage e accomplished. lamole Gown For Evening Wear. retty evening gown of thin ma with bead trimmings has straps he shoulders formed of strands G dd held together on top of thes. Ts with a clasp. The upperN f the arm is exposed beClow this 'band, and below to the wrist is -- sparent sleeve of the material of w, shirred. Uit of Femininity. vettrimmed paplins in blues, ss and beige tones are very ine and dark mink is the ombination affected by the ite sili waists, tucked and elab y stitched in colors, are a new it felt hats, trimmed with black :h lumes, are considered im ely swagger. ck satin frocks with trimmings ell and jet are considered very for evening.C house gowns have a decided ann the trains of evening frocksr ry, very long.1 ebtterfly motif, enters into allD teet creations and has complete ppnted the bow knot. n fur box coats are creepmng ito fashion. They are of mink, aed with cut gold. bronze or steel - nns.I dal ions worn on a heavy chain R the nek and suspended about cheCSbelow the colilar are an old on revived in Paris. g own made with a bright rose inderskirt, showing at least five incc es around the feet. r. Eton jacket,withlong stole fronts,L of white astrakhan, and lined n Don A Fine Coliccilon of Birds. To [ajor Wingate, the traveller, has netic t sent an extraordinary collection of s3ac. js to the British Museum. This is teed. of the results of a remarkable ter -ney in China. He started from ngai, followed the Yangtse-Kiang 0 far as Lake Tung-Ting, whence he app k a southwesterly course along the en K-iang. through Tunan, Kwelchau Ta Yunnan to Bhano. drug Beauty Is Blood Deep. lean blood means a clean skin. No auty without i.t. Cascarets, Candy Cathar- A clean your blood ard keen it clean, by agai irrig np the lazy liver and arivimg all im- trial rities from the odly. Btoe -bay ed *-As pI ple, boils, blotches, blackheads, id i i bilious complexion by takin' Dr aarets.--beauty for ten cents- All drug ts, satisfaction guaranteed 5c, c. B Txntv-fiv-e wome-n have been hang- ing in England during Queen Victoria'S 'ihe Best Prescription for Chills dru lit Fever is a bottle of GlovE's TASTELESS HILL Toxic. It is simply iron and quinine in tasteless form. No cure-no pay. Price 50c. C ---l ~e i Tli Half a million clerks are employed inh odon. Ed To curo Constipation ForevOre r Talce Cascarets C:Llidv Cathartic. 100 or 25a. T c. C. C. ai to cure druggists refnd money. At least 20.ooo men purchased outfits pr r the Klondike at Scattle during the - ,ast year. we LIE WfOman'~s. ti fi i ZW Troubes su CA. Why trifle with health * when the easiest andU surest help is the best known mediciin the world ? Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta6Ie Capound n is known everywhere and thousands of women have t been curedefseriousidd- - ney derangements by it. Mrs, Pinkham's meth ods have th endorse ment of the mayor, the postmaster and others of her own city. Hter medicine has the endorsement of an un numbered multitude of grateful wonmen whose letters are ons tantly rinted in Ahis paper, Every womnan should read theseI Mrs. P1 Isofl Is 01. DrBuWsN cures anl Throat and IjgAffections. F DUG H SRUP yetegenuine. Rfuksusitts r. Bags Plls cure DysjePsia; Thal ,efors. RE TH tdandefecive laatvet bey r rsil won fl y daghter ad I were botherd wt r ndrIuNy. Ter a ocara holein the r 1137 Rittenhone St. Cncinnati Ohio. CAN DY CATHARTIC TRADE MARNt RE0151YiitO d d, ever Sicen ,Weaken. or Gripe. 10.,25c.50cc .CURE CONSTIPATION. ... rnngisedy copany. cueago, Hantres, Se York. 315 I O-BAC usolndar'anaTea' dua- e " TTON~ is the name~-0 of a valu- I able illustrat-I g ed pamphlet i .which should i be inthe hanast i - to fevery planter whp ises Cotton. Thj ook is sent FREE. j 4 aend n ame ad address toj GERMAN KALI WORKS, Lt 9 Nassau St., New York. a ost *akd ptaoo earth! c: -.r's E arliest Six weeks' Potato. SC Larges t farm and vegetable seed in sttmp fo Big caog.grwrt ..Ptte.l2 al JHNA.ALIE SEE~@LAROSSEwis s.. Book of tinona!.s and 10 da ra' tratne'.t e.s . 3. N 3'SSONSB, Be: 5. Atlanta, Gs e0 -1ITo uni~~~ Worthless Stuf! What a lot of trash .s sold as cough :ures. The hollow Irum 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. "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, but 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, and I enjoy myself in every way at the age of seventy-four.'-R. N. MANN, Fall Mills, Tenn., Feb. 7, 1899. It's the do-As-you-Would-be one-by cough medicine. , Try a 25-cent bottle. 4th \\A A ,4& Burning 7@ ~nds. = = eatment ig in a strong, hot, RA SOAP. Dry, ICURA, the great ents. Wear, during yes, with the finger in the palms. For ry, fissured, itching, ss nails anid painful s simply wonderful, |C f the rmost distress- hoi id all else fail. ars3 Cured. i igers From Sockets. Hands an a Through Bandages to - Until Would Fall-e i Like an Onion. - Cure. cing with a burning sensation 'hen I rubbed them, you could my fingers out of their sockets. ae,~and so I kept it going until e floor until I feil asleep. My ails got loose, and the water )le there the burning fire was ing a blacksmith shop, horse for anybody, but it was hard. . hen I drove horse nails, the lage, on to the floor. My cus- E friend take me to the doctor; my hands. I went to another advertisement in a Utica news- F s soon as I used them I began them I was entirely cured. I BI ICTA SOAP if I could not get i did for the wh~ole country. or, Pembroke, Genesee Co., N. Y. *g fernal Treatmiient for Every lhumor, cto enec nse heskin of ern and r (5., to ool and elene te blood. os of ar, when a i else fails. 01oI - , Sole Props., Boston, U. S. A. "?1A . Cuticura Soap g the sin, for clcansing the scalp of P ng hair, for sortcuing, whitening, and ithe for annoying irritations, inflam p~ratio, in the form of washes for ptic purposes wrhich readily suggest or all te purposes of the toilet, bath, - those who have once used it to usA e sidn, scalp, and hair of infants and nt propertics derived from Cc'TIcruA, redients and the most refreshing of unnded Is to bo compared with it for j p, hair, and honds. No other foreign 1t Tobacco Slit and Smoke Your Life kAw'y. quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag full of life, nervo and vigcor, take No-To the wonder-Worrer, that makes weah; men g. AU druggists, 50 or $1. Cure guaran Booklet and sample free. Address Ing Remedy Co., Chicago or New Yor-. at in the frontier the word gun was jed almost exclusively to pistols. To Cure a Cold in One Day. LAXTIrr' BOo QmNI E TABLETs. All :rets refund the mijney if it fails to cure. * GzoV's signature is on each box. 25a system of preventive inoculation nst typ!loid iever is under extensil.ve in India and South Africa. flow Are Your ]Kidneys t Hobbs' StaraguS Pills ccre &!' kidney ills. UaP cc. AddI.Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or X.Yl usinesS failures in Great Britain dur 1899 were 8,6oo, aganIyt 8,895 in -TrAM lADE ss DYES are famt to ght, washing and rubbing. sold by all gists. tah gives its convict murderers the ice of how they will be executed. latest one chose to be shot. ucate Your Bowels with Cascarets. kdy Cathartic, cure constilption forever. 25_ Ila C. C.3U$ duggists refunld ney. ipiral armlets of copper form good tection for the arm in battle, and the g of Dahoney uses his as dcfensivd apons. believe rio's Cure for Comsumption ed my boy's life last summner.-Mrs. AL DoroLAs3, Li Ioy. M3ich, Oct. 20, 1891. Dearness Cannot Be Cared loca applications, as they cannot reachi the ead portion of the ear. There 15 only one 6y to ct .e deafness, and that is by constita. nil remedies. D afness is caused by an n med condition of the mncous lining of the sgtasbhin Tube. When this tube gets in med you have a rumbling sound or Imper t hearing and when It is e. tirely closed aness I ; the result, and unless the infiam ktion can be taken out and this tube re )red to its normal condition, hearing will be stro ,d for ver. Nine cases cut of ten are use by catarrb, which Is nothing but-an in med ondition of the mucous surfacea We WFL give One Hund, ed Dolla for any se of eafnos (oausod by catarrh that can. it be cured by Hall's Qatarrh (ture. Siend r ircars. free. F. J. Cszzy & Co., Tolcdo, 0. old by Druggista, 75c. KAU., 'amily Pills are the best. LTALiTY oW. vebilitate'l or exhausted cured lDr Kline's IUnV;oratiDg I-onic. FRP.E $1 ai bottle for 2 ' eeka' treatment. Dr. i line, I., 931 Arch St., Phi adellphia. Founded 187L frs.Wjnslow'SoothiLg Syrup for children ttblg softens the gums, reducing infiaMA ion als gpn.crs wid colic 25 a bottle Sore 421 ted, Rough Hands, Itching, 'alms, and Painful Finger I )ne Night Ti Soak the hands on retiri 'eamy lather of CUTICU rd anoint freely with CU' in cure and purest of emolli e night, old, loose kid glo ds cut off and air holes cui d, rough, chapped hands, c ~verish palms, with shapele nger ends, this treatment i id points to a speedy cure< ig cases when physicians as sre Hands 8 Yi tin So Intense Would Nearly Twist Fir Puffed Up Like a Toad. Water Rai Floor. Had to Walk the Flool Asleep. Fingers Would Pee Doctors Could Noi Eight years ago I got sore hands, comme my fino-ers and on top of the hand. V e little w lIite pimples. I felt like twisting had high fever, and cold chills ran over x was tired out. Nights, I had to walk thi nds peeled like an onion, the finger i i out, and wherever there was a littlc pimn at happened at least ten times. I am run eing, and I would not shut up the shiop y hands puffed up worse than a toad. iter from my hands ran through the ban< ners refused to look at my hand. I had a gave a solution of something to bathe 'or, I think, for a year. I found your er, and I got the CUTOCcRA remedies. gain, and after using a small quantity o: ,uld not take fifty dollars for a cake of CU yy more. I would not suffer any more as.] Feb. 22 1898, CASPER DIETSCIILER * ici Complete External and Ia .cales and saften the thicken 'he Set, $1.25 heal,and 'urreRAt sEtOLa A tINGLE; SET is ofteD suf~ciel d humIlIating skin, scalp, and blood humors, with roughont the world. PorrEa DaRU AND CH3X- Con: out the Skin, Scalp, and HaIr," free. lii~ions of Women Us, :lusively for preserving, purifying, and bra tifyl usts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopplrng .h fali ohing red, rough,and sore hands, In tL:. zn m of1 iirli, and chafings, or too free or offensiv pcr erativ weaknesses, and for many saruative auth einselves to women, and especially roothers, an d dd nursery. No amount of persuassion can induce yy other, especally for prescr 'g and puiyng tl liren. CUctnkSoQrcom~bines delicate eaoie a great skln cure, with the purcst of cleansing In. wwer odors. No other medicated soap ever comp< eserving purifying. tnd beautifying the skin, seal domestic foiil soap, however expensire, is to be tte tolet bath, and nugreery. Thus i; comublan EN~r.Flvs Cras, the SES #ali Snd g0m2u1e3 I760a soe tho wsgl . ~LOIULl LIQUORS and NARCOTIC DRIJS Make INEBRIATES THE KEELEY CURE, Also Cig11arette and ath".__ URES THEM. Tobacco bzbitd. Patients board and lodge in the InstitIOU dress or cll at THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, 09 Plain Street, COLUIBIA, S.-G )IANOS and RGANS DIRECT FROM THE U EACTORY I 0 00 0 00 0,0 0 This Is whyl I ca supply FOR TH LEAST mOTTn, NOT HOW CHEAP jsBUTU. OB6T0WGOOD. WAREAN~TY: - The IfnStruments I reeout arqftll warranted by reputable-builders and 1 ndo d by me. makinz'you Doubly Secured. - OOD, RELIABLE ORGANS, (1001, RELIABLE PIANOS, $175 Write for Catalogue to, M. A. MALONE, COLU419IA.A . POWE CompletePLANTS FOR FACTORIES AND MILLS. Engines; Lorliss, Automatic, plain Aide valves. Boilers, Ifeaters, Pumps; Saw Mills, from small Plantation Mills to the Hearviest Mills in the market. All kinds ot Wood Working Machinery. Flour and Corn Milling Machinery. Complete Ginning Systems-Luamus, Van Winkle and Thomas. Engines, Boilers, Saws. Gins in Stock tat -o quick, delivery. Ve C. BADiIAM & CO.0 4 1326 Mfain St., CCI.UIBIA. - - - . A Y Mill Supp OF EVERY DESCRITION. Write us when In need of AY(!Ti the above line. The Eqafpment of Modern Gin Distributing System a so.'4lty.. ~ Engines, .Boilers, aw dpdst Threhers, Blce flullers, ets. 5. C. AGEN~LDE C~ 1 aay RaD,, Re 5- isri'nt~lower seeds Iso Worth *L.0, for laents. ILR boel10 Pkgn.-worth$.0,wil crat atog an li about - s'amps. Weunst a know when yo oncete t{ a soH5 A. sLLzm saID to., LLcaossa~wI5. I. L. DOUGLAS% &35SHOESI|1*! Worth $4toS6compa-ed with other mks Indorsed by over no am e ndynce on retto m.c ake 5 *ir o caae. at ckind of lab' sie, and width, plain or caP toe. Cat. free. W. LDOUIS$Id SOE CO., Brockten, Mass. MONRY for estead entries before June 22,1374 of less that eres (no matter if abandoned or relinquished) ey have not sold their additional homestead s, should address, with full particulars, giv district, &c. EESTI C.O?, Washingtoc, 2. C. )NT STOPTeAcc SUDEY ujure nervous system to do co. BA 00e TR s the only cure that REAL.LY CURES notifi'i you when to stop. tSold with a rante that three boxes willecure any case. kiRfOCO U s vegetable and haginless. It - siqq3 en'red thousanu', Is will 7~Xa r ltl or byai preld tEK CHEM3ICAL CO.. LaCrosse. WI.. DYSPEPSIA! No Medicine to SwallowI E~ook free on applcad 8. *i.vd0fora PA btothe IAINIG GECCERY CO.. Maning. ' DOLE AGTS. 10B N. C.. . C. tOOFINC flAERIALS ak and Galvanized Corrugated Iron WarehouseS. Barns .c., &c.Galvanized Gutters D 3own Spouts. I in Plates of all kinlds. Nlinuno SSyle, %an ow 0ld Sty' 'I uxedo Heavy Coat xd Lillan ant camed. Guiaranteed. V. C. MM., & CO., 3:, S. Calv ert St., Baltimore. Md. MARTERf5INK S'I lhe best ink made, but no dearer toan the poorest. T aUGUARANTEED) MI~uIfree. Free ad. e as to antability. Send for "InventorsW m." ILO. B. ST EVENs & CO., Aun - Branes: Chcao.91 Ceean adDetroit ROIT APLE employmnt for' young ladies at liine. J. P. B~war a Co..,1681toadwayL . -, ''r3-ION lh zst-, amtt.ci you mention t'is paper wen writing advertsens. So. 9 - instma