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I Wonderul Goerm.amller. R Skin diseases,such as tetter, eczema. ringworm, salt-rheum, or anything of the kind, are .cured by Tetterine. It C kills the germs, and the skin becomes! healthy. Its efficacy is well estab lished. Hundreds of testimonials can In be shown by J. T. Shuptrine, Savan nah, Ga. Send 50c. for a box post paid if your druggist doesn't keep it. Queen Wilhelmina a Fine Skater. The young queen of Holland is not bnly an excellent horseback rider but also a fne skater. Few ladies are her equal in the pastime. As soon as the co gentlemen of her entourage discover 10 a good skating place on the canals which connect the palace gardens with other spots the queen with a couple of te s: ladies and gentlemen skate for very 50 long distances. Young peasants with their girls and fishermen with theit on skates fastened to wooden shoes fly . past the royal party without the slight- it est knowledge of who they are, and m hearing her sweet "Goe morgen, sa- of tnen!" greet .the party. These skatinga tour sometimes last for several hours tit at a time. tw se To Cure a Cold in One Day. ca Take LAxATivE BRoMo QUININz TABLTs- At drr hts refund the inney it it fails to cure :T W. GaoTz's signature i cn each box. U0 Fob fe< It requires no experlnce to dye with Pur --x FADELEss Dyes. Simply boiiug yoU goods in the dye is all that-s necessary. SoIl , by all druggists. :ca Berlin has sixty-threc public monu ments. Pe The Best Prescription for Chills and Fever is a bottle of GRovs's TASTELFSS or Cai.L Toic. It is simply iron and quinine J4 tasteless form. No cure-no pay. Price 50c tl I could ho; get along without Piso's Care th for Consumption. it always eure--.-Mrs. E. ;er C. No L-ros, Nee-1ham, Mass., Oct 22, 1894. - ov sic Are Cured by ul; F Hood's Sarsaparilla "I was troubled with blotches on my faee, Itn It Purifies and began taking wC Hood's Sarsapar!!t. the loodAttr taking one bottle P the I was entirely cured. Miss ETHEL MIXER, it Clarksburg, Mass. n "My brother had a humor In his blood which broke out in N Cures frightful sores. He began taking Hood's in All Eriuptions. sarsaarrilia and it per. . ianently cured him." s H. L. ELLIS, Mount m Laurel, N. J. i "My little boy had] a large scrofula sore on . his ijeck. I purchased' Fr Eradicates a bottle or Hood's sar- p1< Scrt'ua. sapalla dit cured, of ~ spring tonic." Mdns. Missir. SPEAR, Parish, th' yUle, N. Y- fin Miniatures of their pet dogs is t vcry latest affection '6- or~ women. #'Dr nils : COUCH SYRUP Cures Croup and Whooping-Cough se Unexcelled for'Consumnptives. Gives th quick, sure results. Refue substitutes-.n Dr.DuiW*Pslscue~ili-usness. Trialroforsc. of So. 10. 'p TAMMERING CORRECTED th ly WG.LEE WOODN.on A ntonio.Texas. tr4 3W write him for pamphie t ar.d part uas- .Co Degraded Use of a Sarcophagus. q Professor Jacob Krall of Vienna, siI Egyptologist, in journeying across b * Austria on his way to the Oriental to * Congress in Rbome, came across, in -ut T'rleste, an ancient Egyptian sar- ? cophagus of rose granite. It was dis- .su covered in Egypt sixty years ago. The ' th ship which was to bring the find to so London had to stop at Trieste for re- wI pairs. As security for the cost of re- .W 7pairs, $250, the sarcophagus was left tli behind and placed in the courtyard of in Pamnfill's residence, where it was used w] occasionally a ai washing trough. sti In its originial home the sarcopha- ;c gus belonged to Sutissacht, one of the ;t foremost dignitaries of Pharaoh's s1( court. It is about 3.000 years old. Aus- ~ tria hopes to keep it. Out in the fronticr the word gun was an applied almost exclusively to pistols. to Ia r- . th are Invited to writo to Ti Mrse Pinkham for free & advice about their health. xp Mrs. Pinkham Is a we- 1 ar If you have painful t peiosbaokaches or cai any of the more serious C lls of women, write to t Mrs, Plnkhamn; she hase helped multltudees. Your to letter will be sacredly th oonffdentlal, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Oompond 'isA known wherever the Eng- D ish language is spoken. H Nothing else can poss1- jin bly be so sure to help suf - to feigwomen. No other medlinehas helped so many, Remember this when i something else is sug - eeted, . * Mrs. Pknkham's 3d dress is Lynn, Mass. Her "helping hand Ise always outstretched to r sufferIng waimen.~ F11.E UNDER THE SEA. EAT BRITAIN PRACTICALLY CON ROLS THE CABLES OF THE WORLD. Case of a Naval War Fosseselon of the Submarine Telegraph Lines Makes Every British Eattleship Worth Five Ships of an Enemy Destitute of Cables. HE Transvaal war," said a naval officer the other even ing, "is presenting one rtling object lesson which our antry would do well not to over-!. )k. It is, perhaps, rather a side ht lesson, but it is none the less pressive. Put in broad general ms, the proposition which the les a demonstrates is that in case of x between two naval powers the e which controls a system of sub xrine cables with which to inform fleets of the strength and move nts of the enemy, will be mistress the seas. There is nothing espec ly new in this. "Writers on naval matters have e and again pointed out that in the entieth century a nation, to be a i power, would have to control bles as well a' fleets. But the ausvaal war is making this truth as vious to the lay mind as to the pro sional. It has opened the eyes of a people generally in all civilized tions that England has got practi ly a monopoly of all the cables of a world. As I said, this fact ap ars in a sort of side light reflect from the very glaring fact that not e word of telegraphic news gets to t from South Africa which English thorities do not choose to let I ough. That has set people to uking a little and theyhave discov d that what England is doing in : th Africa she could do nearly all er the entire globe if she felt so 5posed. "There is already a lively discus n of the matter in Europe, partie trly in France, and it ought to me our own people and Govern mt to lose not a moment in getting r own distant dependencies from ( .eo Rico to Hawaii and thc Phil >ines strung together on electric res all our own, which we alone uld control. The French arc gen- I iely alarmed on the subject. The pres -ion prevails among them tha:: t ,r with England is rather more than: e of the remote possibilities of the :ure. They know, of course, that; wouid be very largely a naval war f d thr.t it would he fought all over I world, from the French posses ins in China, Siam and Africa to j French possessions in the West 3 lies. And from all these posses- I ns, save from the insignificant ones t the West Indies, Eugland could tantly cut off all telegraphic con iniation with the outside world. anc's fleets would move as com tely in the dark as though the age electric cables had not come. gland's would know just where ey were going and what they would d when they got there. Our own r iith Spain and our efforts to cut om commnnic..tion with a o s the French thinking d writing o subject. The rtling Transvaal objes -sn has ived the discussion andz-given it~i le of earnestness which ought to oduce results. "Only a few days ago, M. Depel , an authority on the'sabject, pre-!' ated France's helpless position in Es respect so clearly and convine ly that his article, published in one the leading French periodicals, has aduced a profound impression.4 "If you will study a cable map of I a world a little, you will see what a 1 imendous power- for control of mmunication is power and a very' gh order of power-England has ietly built in the forty -two years tce the first cable message wvas sent the President of the United States Queen Victoria. From that day til this, silen~tly and ceaselessly, gland has built up a system of bmarine cables which to-day covers entire world and holds it fast in a -t of immense spider's web, of Lich London is the centre. You notica in studying the map that is marvelous system divides itself ;o three great branches, each of ich has its subdivisions. For in hue, a trunk of no less than ten blea conne ts Great Britain with is country and the British posses ml on the north. From this diverge rious wires, as to Bermuda and the est Indies.. "From London, by way of Spain d Portugal, three more lines stretch! Brazil anid spread out through the est Indies and to Central America! the northi, and down the coast to< >ntevideo on the south. From.' >atevideo,'across the South Ameri continent, there is an English id line to Valparaiso. From Val-i raiso northward there is a double e, touching at all the principal ints on the South American Pacific ast up to Tehuantepee, from which!, ere is a land line to Vera Cruz and mpico, whence cables go across the ilf of Mexico to Galveston. "So in that vast mesh of the ider's web all North and South; nerica with their adjacenf' islands. e held. 'From England toward t'ne.Medi eranean, Africa and the Orient four bles are stretched. They touch at braltar, Malta and Egypt, and1 ence pass down the R~ed Sea to K len. Aden is a great electric ner ve ntre and distributing point which day is of much interest, for through e ofice there filters all the news igland allows to be known about t~e Eitary operations in So:nth Africa. e African filament throwni out from en touches Zanzibar. Mozamnbique, alagoa Bay, Natal and Cape of Goojd c~pe. p the west Africau coast seps another line-not iu service st now - touchiug twlv coast wns, the last one being St. Louis, ttil it lands at last at Cadiz, Spain. is you see the entitc~ African con ient, with alb adjacent islands of cy consequence, is c:aught and held st in Englaua's electrie Iassj. :Three cables reach fro~m Aden to mbay, and thence the mnesbes read in all directions to China, pa. our Philippines. Australia and aw Zealand. And over all this vast gion England has no oppitio~n that: 7 he called sneh. A c.oaple of rench lines to this counitry and down trough the West Indies by way ef ,oast-that is all. Here and th re ire short Freneh lines-as, for in tance, from New Caledonia to Aus ralia-but these are mere little feed rs to the English lines, and are en Irely without international conse luence. "But even thi system, enormous as .t is, does not satisfy Great Britain. t number of her cables land on for ign soil. That will not do. In ad, lition to all this earth-grabbing com nercial spider's web, there must be .n imperial web which will reach .round the globe hung from English and alone. That system is actually n course of construction. An impor ant link of it is to reach from British ,olumbia to Australia. Still another ink will reach from Gibraltar to the slands of Bathurst, St. Helena and tscension-all English-to the Cape )f Good Hope. Thence another lino rill be run to the island of St. Maurice, rhich will be a great imperial tele -raphic distributing station with lines *eaching to India, China and Austral sia. Oi this system, one block is ready completed-from the Cape of rood Hope to Bathurst Island. The otal cost of the entire imperial sys em will be about $25,000,000, and he Government will bear all the bar len. ";It is an expensive job,' say the .glish. 'It will cost enough to uild five battleships. But when it is one it will make each and every bat eship we have five times as effective s now.' "Certain laws control English ables which make them absolately at he control of the Government. They re all subsidized, as you know, and n return for the subsidy John Bull akes his own rules. Every employe, r instance, must be a British sub ect and the lines can never be vnder e control of any foreign Government. n addition to that, English Govern nent dispatches have precedence over 1l others at all times, even those of ther Governments no matter how ur ent the latter may be. In case of -ar England can seize all the cable ines and operate them entirely with Iovernment employes. "In other wcrds, John Bull has uilt for himself an empire under the ea where he rules with undisputed way. Whether Britannia rules over e waves has yet to be determined; hat she rules under them is beyond nustion. Other nations are getting estless under the sway, and it is time re were making a strike for relief rom it. Germany has already a plan nder way for a cable system to this ountry. As I have said, Frauce is att now greatly agitated on the sub ect. Surely, Uncle Sam onght to et a move on and put that wire down o the Philippines by way of Hawaii bud Guam."-New York Sun. CURIOUS FACTS. ~Until 1776 cotton spinning was per >rmed by the hand spinning wheel. Redlands, Cal., has a giant mowing ahine which cuts a strip of wheat f ty feet wide. One quart of milk and three-quar r of a pound of beef contain about he same nourishment. In India the native barber will 2g yo ,so dght is his toreh. The men-of-war of the Romans had crew of about 225 men, of which 174 rer oarsmen working on three decks. he speed of these vessels was about ix miles an hour in fair weather. The finest fars in all Russia are laid side as tribute, and become the prop rty of the crown. So highly are hese farsl esteemed that no person elow a certain rank is allowed to ear them. A trained rat is a pet in'the family f Forbes Baker, of Steuben, Me. A Ualtese cat caught it last winter, and rought it up with a litter of kittens. [a time it learned to catch mice, and s a capital mouser. In Germany potato breadl is used y the natives of Thuringia to feed heir horses, especially when they are rorked hard in very cold weather. he animals thrive on it, and their Lealth and strength are excellent. In Milwaukee, Wis., recently nine een aspirants for the- position of eeper of a city natatorium were re juired to plunge into the tank in heir street clothing and swim. It as part of a civil service examina The hurricane that wrcught such lestrution in the West Indies in ugust proves to have been the long st on record. It can be traced over ie North Atlantic for thirty-six days. n seems finally to have disappeared i the coast of Provence, where it ased a rough sea and northwest eles on September 9 to 1I. A mystery with which every sailor s fsiliar is the formation of dust at ea. Those who are familiar with ailing ships know that, no matter o carefuilly the decks may be vashed down in the morning, and iow little work of any kind may be lone during the day, nevertheless,,.if e decks are swept at nightfall, an naormous quantity of dust will be oollected. Rex Wanted a Tie Badly. Children get queer associations of eas in their heads at times. A little ad on Capitol IHill has a playmate of is own age in the son of a poor, eighbcr. The son of toil visited his icher friend the other day wearing a orgeos red tie. The son of wealth yed the tie enviously for a while and he asked Benny where he got it. "My mamima dyed it for me for a rthday present." lisped Benny. After Benny went home Rex played itlesiv about for a time and then eaned on his mother's knee, though~t ully studying the pictures in the fire. 'amima,' he said finally, "Benny's ie ws awfrui pretty, wasn't it?" *Ys, dear.' "Mmma, wou't you kill m' a iie Like Beny's when I get a birthday?" -Waintou Star. "~t ick"' as a Term of E, 'eatment, A coresponldeut talks to us seri ,slv of coar etymiologica' error in de iiI the term of endearment .bik :':A heC '"well red under-raduhate. lii real origin of the'.n ca. it seems, is the prond reply of a king to an in :iii enemy who m->ked at hik au wai~ed te~Wns. "'My tru.ps are my wis," he antswered. "an every sel1 leer is a brick."--London Glob~e, OUR BUDGET GF 1UMOR, LAUGHTER-PROVOKING STORIES FOR' LOVERS OF FUN. An Ulterior Object-She Stayed I, It -Unsiness is Quiet-An Unfortunate Member of the ramily--An Incentive to Patience, Etc., Etc. A youth I latyly met upon the street. A youth to me well knowr.-I love hinm not iNot overmuch, at least; yet I, full sweet And courtly, smiled on him. He satl he'd got A story-something new, which he'd re late "A gleesome jest, I' faith! A merry jare? So said he, smirking idiot-lik-. (I bate His sappy, witless leer.) Ere I co.uld 'scape He told his tale-a very senseless yarn, A sorry, antiquate I anecdote That e'en in childhood was not worth a darn From senso and wit and worth alike re mote. But I, with hollow laughter. roared amaia And heldl my straining sides and smote my thigh And wiped my eyes and whooped and laughed again. Chuckled and sniggere:, tittered Joy ously, Protesting, cachinnating, 'twas a ;em. The best one I had heard for many moons, A pure lalanaloosa and a stem Winder, b'gosh, and other things. Et soons I left him. Would you ask the reason why I counter'eited this excessive glep? His father views me with a balorul eye, His sister,she is all the world to me. -Chicago Record. lMus'iIIe~s is Quiet. Smith-"What business are you ee gaged in now?' Brown-"I'm a silent partner in a private deaf and dumb institute. Chicago Record. She Stayed in It. He-"I believe you only married me for a home, anyway?" She-"Well, I didn't marry you for a club!"-New York Press. An Unfortunate Meuamber of the Famlly. The Giraffe-"Isn't the horse a re lation of yours?" The Zebra-"Yes; a sort of poor re lation. He has to work for a living, poor fellow!"-Pack. An Incentive to Patience. Tailor-"Look here! I have wor ried myself sick over that bill of yours." Casket (the undertaker) -"That's all right, old mau. If worst comes to worst, you can take it out in trade.." l'it-Bits. A Needed Reforu. A The Fly-"Great scott! I believe my arm is broken. Why the mischief don't they cut cows' tails the same as they -do horses' ?"-Lif .>. Jimmy's Idea of Econgmy. -"No,.Jimmy, you can't have suga r~ou bread and btte" o says'we must e omize now.". "Well, ma, l's quit blackin' our shoes."-Indian polis Journal. Would Ee~ .Waeto of Ifoney.. Biggs-'"I'd have you to know, sir, hat I'm a self-mate man." Diggs-"Oh, that% all right; but if I were you I wouldiit waste any money in taking out a patent."-Chi cago Nen s. One Man's Theory. "Scientists say the automobile is still in its infancy." "Ah, then that explains why it sometimes makes a dash across the utreet and tries to climb a tree." Indianapolis Journal. The Longest Word. Wife -"Here's the longest word in the language. There's twenty sylla bles in it." Husband-"Just the same it isn't. The longest word is the comparative degree of long." Wife-'"How do you make that out?" Husband-"Easy enough. I don't care how long your word is, that is longer!"-Detroit Free Press. The Cannibal and His Captive. The cannibal's captive now had re course to argument. "In a hot country," he urged, "strictly vegetable diet is conductive to longevity." "Whose longevity?" demanded the cannibal, with a loud, insulting laugh. In the native state, man's sense of humor is often stronger than his sense of propriety.-Detroit Journal.. F A Slip of the Tongue. An irascible old judge, being au noyed by a young lawyer speaking to him about a legal point in the street, threatened to fine him for contempt of court. "Why, Judge," said the young at torney, "you are not in session." "I'd have you know," angrily re sponded the Judge, "that this court is always a subject of contempt."-Ohio State Journal. Afraid of the Burglafa Bevenge. IRobertson-"Do yen know, I'm all the time worried almost to death for fear some burglar will break into my house." Richardson-'"Got so much money as all that?" Rlobertson-"Got no money at all. That's just the trouble. I'm afraid a burglar would be so disappointed at fin ding nothing that be might get his revenge by knocking me out."-Bos on Transcript; H.. Choice of Evil. "Jud1ge, your Honor," said the pris oner, "before I enter my plea I'd like to ask a few questions." "You have the Conrt's permission." "If I go to trial, will I have to sit here and listen while the lawyers ask hypothetical questions of the jurors?" "And theni hear all the hanudwriting experts?" "Of course." "And follow the reasoning of the chemistry and insanity expert:>?" "Very probably." "Well, .Jud ge, your Honor, I'm ready to enter my plea." "What if; it?" "G uilty.?'-Washington Star. .LUCKY COUNTRY EDITORS1 - Why They Are the IHappiest People In, All 'Newspaperdom. If I were to be asked who ought to be the happiest man in newspaper dom, I would answer, without hesita tion, the man who runs a good coun try paper in a live town. In the first place the man who runs a country paper is a power where it is published. All connected with it are :known and their work is appreciated by the community among whom they move. Unlike the man who writes editorials on the big city dailies the editorial writer on the country jour nal can stamp his individuality on his page. Even though he does not sign it every subscriber knows that it is his. He is a power in local politics and no mean factor in State politics either. If there be a hot campaign who is so welcome on the stump as the editor of the country paper? To him comes all the plums of advertis ing. To him comes also the grand sense of individuality. He is not lost in the paper for he is the paper. Every day is brought to him the truth of the saying that it is better to be first in the poorest Iberian village than to be second in Rome. I How different his lot from the news. paper worker in the big cities. The editor of the city paper walks around the streets and hears his work praised -and blamed in public places, yet he cannot claim it when praised or dis avow it when discredited. In these days he is simply nobody. The paper is everything. His profession to the city journalist has but little of a future to promise. He is in his decline at the time when men in every other walk of life are at their prime. The highest prize he can attain by hard and earnest work would ;be laughed at-,by any successful busi ness man in the community in which he works. He commences his career, if a clever fellow, by making so much money that he is envied of all his young friends, and he often ends it. with occupying one of the hospitalk beds of the Press Club and by being buried at its expense. If the city jour' nalist presumes to make himsel prominent in politics or in any other. sphere he will soon find out that he is not indispensable. How different it is with the man who has a good, sound country news paper. He is the center around which a little world revolves. He can run for office, if he wants to, and there isi one to say him nay. He has friends in the community, and with his paper% at his back he has a good show for, anything he may reach after. And there is money in the well-j conducted country journal. The men; who ran country papers at the closet of the centary are not advertising. their poverty, as was the custom at, its commencement and well into the seventies, for the simple reason thatl in these days it would be only an af-' fetation and a foolish one at that. The Journalist. *l Bow a Claim Pald. "There are morge ways of making money off of a claim than panning it out," said an Alaska miner who had som lu - wth his pick and shovel. -or instance(Vksa-man, of means in the Dawson district w'Eida claim which had failed to be as profit able as expected, and he didn't know just what to do with it to get his money back, until he had devoted considerable thought to it. And it was simple enough when he knew how. He quietly went to the gold commissioner and announced that he wished to pay his ten per cent. royalty on the product of his claim for a year, which was $60,000. The commissioner accepted the $6000 royalty and gave him the usual re ceipt, stating on its face what it was for, with the number of his claim, location, etc. Then he 'waited patiently about,' like Mary's little lamb, and one day, in the course of human events, an Englishman came along looking for a good thing for some people who had money to spend. He asked Mr. Blank, among others, what he had to sell, and the smooth gent told him he didn't know exactly, but he would show him his goods. They looked over several claims that were practically unworked, and then in a casual way Mr. Blank showed the Englishman his receipt for royalty on claim so and so. 'And, you know,'j he said, with a wink, 'that a man isn't paying royalty on any more than he can possibly help.' ''The Englishman was right on to that little game, of course, and he sized up the $6000 receipt, looked over the claim in a general way and ended by buying it for $150,000." Washington Star. Blue Jay Tree Planters. An old-time Arizona woodchopper ays the blue jays have planted thou* sands of the trees now growing all over Arizona. He says these birds~ have a'habit of buryiug small seed in the ground with their beaks and that they frequent pinyon trees and bury large numbers of the small pine nuts in the ground, many of which sprout and grow. He was walking through the pines with an Eastern gentleman a short time ago when one of these Ibirds flew from a tree to. the ground,I stuck his bill in the earth andi quickly flew away. When told what! ha apned the Eastern man was sketical, but the two went to the spot and with a knife blade dug out a sound pine nut from a depth of about an inch and a half. Thus itf will be seen that nature has plans of her own for forest perpetuation. College Butter. Some seven years ago the first State Icollege for women in the South was opened at .Greensboroaghi, N. 0., andi called the State Normal and Industrial College, It has been an original and progressive institution under the direc tion of Dr. Charles D. Miclver. He has just added a new feature of prac tical instruction by which it is hoped that a hundred girls may support themselves while pursuing their studies. It is a dairy farm. The col lege has attached to it about 160 acres! of fiue farming land. This has been stocked with fifty head of fine Jersey cows which are to be milked by the college girls. The dairy will not only be self-sustaining, but. it is hoped, will bring money to the institution from the butter the milkmaidens will. make. The butter is to have the college stamp on it and orders have already Oan wit t Cse 0 the bl aand * 9 Th of Eer one -6 Aa* "M Sold b.r .*E e.e Mr,.wio.-.soomhia" *rfor children teetbln~~tD the gums. redubing InhianMa thi* uaso cu wind coloiios botd VITALITY loW, debilltatei orexhansted cured by Dr Kline's Invigorating *ronio. Fiaux $i trial hottlo for 2 v eeks' treatzment. Dlr. % line,1 14.. 9a Ach at., Phi adelphis. Founded UriL I Look 25 Years Younger -1 am now seventy-two years of age and my hair is as dark as it was twenty-fve years ago. People say I look at least that much younger than I am. I would be entirely bald or snow white if it were not for your Hair Vigor." - Mrs. Anna Lawrence, Chicago, l., Dec. 22, 1898. Is Yours Snow-white? There is no getting around such a testimonial as this. You can't read it over without being convinced. These persons do not misrepresent, for their testi monials are all unsolicited. Aver's Hair Vigor restores color to gray hair every time. And it is a wonderful food to the hair, making it grow ricd and heavy, and keeping it soft and glossy all the time. It b also an elegant dressing. $1.00 a bottle. An dragists Write the Doctor desire rom te e of tb Vigr rt the Doctor about it. Heawll tell yo ust nis book on 1 a ain ~d saply Dr .T a C.ar, LoWen- 3Iass. *you etasgo * - that way? .. See our Asent or writs direct C HO0ICE Vegetables will always find a ready market-but only that farmer an raise them who has studied the great secret how to ob tain both quality and quantity by thie judicious use of well balanced fertilizers. No fertil izer for Vegetables can produce a large yield unless it contains at least 8% Potash. Send for our books, which furnish full information. We send them free of charge. GERMAN KALI wORKS, 93 Nassau~ St.;New York. RICE'SlT GOOSE E GREAL. U B - -Moiizr BACK RUMtTI~i PAI II BACK. I F a oao? It's th est eicne aknwn. Sodh GOOSE E 1,!INENT CO.. Gnasano. N. MONEYV .for OLD SOLDIERS f bce (n matte ifabandonelor reinquished rights, should address, with full particulars , giv I~gdistrict, &c. EEN3r . CCOP, Washingtoa, D. 0, PoTAoESM*~~ Cousvo. sadE ED o. Id.A ~SSE, WhI. Aei. C.4 0 No-s M ie to U S allowl @1DYSEP$IA! ALCOIIOLIC LI nd NAICOTIC RN65 Make&M6EBIEL THE KEELEY CURE# CURES THEM. * Patients boardandlodgein th nstitb Addrx or call at THE KEELEY INSTITUE, Inog Plan street, COLW1BIA9 5 PIANOS and flRGANS DIRECT fROM THE V FACTORYI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 This Is wh I a supp. The BEST FOR TH LEAST MONEY. 0T NOT HOW;CIEAP MOT. BUT NOW G00D. WARRANTY: The Jnstruments I reresent are taB rarraned by reputable builer. a endorsed by me, makmg yeu Doubl Secnred. GOOD, RELIABLE ORGANS, $35 lup. 0001, RELIABLE PIANOS, $175 uP Write for, atalogue to, M. A. MA Ii, OICO ei FOR FACTORIES AND MiEES. Engines; Cortiss, Automatie, plata valves. Boilers, Heaters, Pumps. Saw Mills, from small Plantation IM . to the Hearviest Mills.ln,the market. All kinds ol Wood Working.Xachinr Fiour and Corn alilling Machincy. Complete Ginning. Systwem US Van Winkle and Thomas. Engines, Boilers, Saws. Ginsi StokOL quick delivery. V. C. BAMtAM &CO 1326 Mai St. C0LUBI,. .- . MACIIE E OF' EVERY DESR Write us ~wen inneed od the above line. ~ I The Equipmient f4 withtbelmprvedMr7iI32g Distributing ytmzpdaI. Engines, Boiler;Bw aie b * * loendFn.4 U as ca esad.sitUE ts not.Did tee t~4i 'e xm~am* ---.---- - . byrowing25 Fiba eisD aroOa:J.3rIiwr M MWis., 37 buAndEhf5.1erder EedWlag.Ninn.. bygrowing salsu1emr 10 DOLLARS WORTH FOR 0S. meh tFri an 'ee utlogtmgaR abone Sawser GretXMBlie Dellar Potato alnaa for 300. passge * tivelyworthR t assers. Please I~ lPbs i0nsin" * - send this - ~ 8Rg ad. with * eh%1 10s.to Salzer. s end your Diame and addreSS On a *postal, and we wi send-you our456 page illustrated catalogue free. - WUISHESTER UEPEATI ARM - 11 Winchester Avenue, liew Hia. es, W. L. DOUCLASN I3 3.SHES~m W Worth S4to6com d Indorsed by ever ~ - nme and on b t to m.ic a ke t *tefa fo arae.S a id of m. -ie and w ah pnor cantoe. Cat eeS. DARKNESS E DARLISBfl or IONS rsuad SH AD0IS0F NEWYORKUJFE ..-WIra nRronectror-- - : BY B5TW. LYMAN ABBOTT.S sa:''God.needt," Ioneagla i, and Agentsarso teiad mre Ar a wanted aD hog theSothg and women. 8300 to 520 aS.. for Terma to Ag'nts. Address: FUBL~SHING CD Ha~rfrdCeisse e. Bor. of te 3155US ')