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FV ' Killed on Their Wedding Trio. The bodies of two victims of the recent wreck on the Colorado Midland, Denver and Ilio GrandeRailroad at Newcastle. Col., have been identified as those of Elmer E. Black, for many years an engineer on the Pennsylvania Railroad, and his wife, formerly Miss Wilson, of I)?rrv. l'-nu.. to whom he was married on August -j. The two were on their wedding tour. Three Killed on h Hand ear. During a heavy fog a handcar was struck about three miles front Zntiesviile, Ohio, by an inspection train and three men were killed and two injured. Taey were section men coming ?uio tut- ?. ?.> ? The Tiger Snake. There is no known antidote for the bite of the tiger snake of Australia. Persons bitt* ti die almost instantly, and the Government nas a standing offer of ?1,000 for any one who will discover a remedy. Some few years ago a man actually discovered an efficacious antidote. To prove its value ho allowed himself to be bitten repeatedly by flgakes in full possession of the power to kill. One day he gave an exhibition "before some Government officials, but. being much under ibe influence of Bquor. ho did not recollect what he had done with his antidote, and he died abortly after the snake bite, his secret perishing with him. A poor miner in Pennsylvania is said to have fallen heir to $75,000 by the death of an uncle who came to him In the disguise of a tramp and was kindly received. This story reads as though it had been written by some William Whiskers with a fancy for tates of imagination ami a ausire w have his kind treated well by those whom they would in the future solicit for handouts." The Widows Might. "Dawson declares that if he marries at all he will wed a widow. "Yes, that is like him: he Is too lazy to do any of the courting himself."? Tit-Bits. , Baby's Sore Head and chafed skin are quickly cured by Tetter* ine. Don't let the poor little thins: scream itself into spisms when relief is so easy. Every skin trouble from a simple chafe or chap to tbe wor^t case of Tetter or Kin.worm is cured quickly and surelv by Tetterine. At Druggists, or oy mail for 50c. in stamps by J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, tia. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an nflamed condition of the mucous liningoftlie Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness I* the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing wiil he destroyi d forever. Nine cases out of ten ai. v.i* wwV? wKioK lonnthincr hntan in. flamed ondition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hund>cd Dollars for an., case of Deafnesi (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Latarrh v.ure. Senn I for circulars, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold b?* Druggists 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervousness atter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $- trial bottle and treatise free Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd..831 Ar.-hSt., Phila., Pa. 1 am entirely cured of hemorrhage of lungs by Piso'a Cure for Consumption.?Louisa I Lindaman, Bethany, Mo., January S, 1581. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forchi dren teething, softens the gums, reducing inflamation,allays pain.cures wind colic, 25c.a bottle. If afflicted with sore eyes ns&Dr. I. ThomrI tens Eye Water. Prni"ri<t.s sell at 25c. a bottle I - At Home. > - A Frenchwoman has invented a home bicycle exerciser consist ins of a base resting on the floor with two upright posts, one for the handle bars and the other for the pedals, the latter being connected to a shaft carrying a sprocket wheel, which is geared to a brake mechanism to make the work hard or easy, as desired, a speed indicator being attached to the handle bar. The Use of Fertilizers in Georgia. The Atlanta Constitution calls attention to the largely increased use of fertilizers in Georgia. It shows that there has been a steady increase, from 48,000 tons in 1875. to 410,000 tons in 1897. The Constitution quotes interviews with a large number of farmers in regard to this great increase in the the use of fertilizers. Some see in it a # sign of extravagance, while others trace the increase to better work and enlarged acreage, while corresponding benefits are pointed out. How to Laundry Fancy Linen. f To wash embroidered linons so as not to fade the colors. fill a tub half full of warm water, to which aid a little Ivory Soap. Wash each piece through the suds careWily, rinse in blue water, to which a little thin starch is added. Hang in the shade to dry. Iron on the wrong side, pressing down heavily to bring out the stitches, thus restoring their original beauty. Eliza R. Pabkkk. A GRAND WORK Helping Tired Mothers and Giving Rosy Cheeks to Children. Thousands of tired, nervous, worried women have found strength, health aud happiness in Hood's Sarsap&rilla, which purifies their blood, strengthens their nerves and gives them good appetites. "Pale and puny children are given rosy eheeks and vigorous appetites by the great, blood enriching qualities of Hood's Sarsaparilla. It is indeed the mother's friend and it may we'l have a place in thousands of families. Bo sure to got Hood's. 11***19* Dill* are the only pills to take II60CI S 1 lllS with Hood's sarsaparilla. si. Joseph s uva mum, The Best on the Market. All Drugcists and Merchants. vMnf'd by L. GERsTLK & CO., Chattanooga, Tenn 8. N. U.-No. 41?'97. na a a M ARDS can he eared with 1 II | 3 mg out their knowledge by 1 I I I Ha Hf Anti-Jag the marrelouY I I I IH Iw cure for the drink habit. U II U 111% Write Eenova Chemical ^ "WW " Co-> ^ Broadway. N. Y. wwu <? fowatton /is nJain ueant^r> D>eila.l j L V IB 101 Mi . . i ! He Tells That Knowledge of Everything is Essential. HE ALSO ADVISES OBSERVATION ' Informs Them \Yhi.t Trees Are IJest for Uses to Which They Are Put. Other Good Advice. ' i Here is a letter for the boys. I believe that even an imperfect knowledge of man}- callings renders a man happier than perfection in any one and comparative ignorance of all the j. si i. ?/IicAA^orioQ nnrl resi. ureal sneuu^io, .? inventors seem to be necessary for the world's progress and the good of man kind, but their work is generally at the j expense of their health and happiness, i Sir Isaac Newton in Ins last days exclaimed with a sigh, "I have made a slave of myself." His great mind was always on a strain in one direction. It j is said of hiiu that he had a hole cut in j tne lower part of the door for his favor- j i<e cat to enter and exit, and when she ; had a pair of kitteu he had two smaller j holes cut for them. The mind is like the body. It must have a variety of j food. It is like the nfuscles in the arms j or legs. If only one set are used the 1 * ' i --J ?ii J.. ~ii.. ! omers oecome weaa anu win gruuuaiij j perish away. I was talking not long ago to a learn- J ed judge, a man of fine judicial mind and literary attainments, but who ac- j knowledged his very limited knowledge j of nature aud nature's laws. "I hardly | know one tree from another," said he, "excepting, of course, the chestnut, hickory nut and walnut. Yes, of course, I know the pine and the oak. Indeed 1 have never had auy occasion to know more for I was raised in 'own and books have absorbed me." I was ruminating about this because our little girl's mother is teaching her to draw and to paint, and I asked her to draw me a chestnut tree, an oak tree and a maple tree. She is working on them now and has to go out and look at them and examine the bark on the trunk, and the shape of the limbs and the leaves. I wonder how many boys and girls can draw a hickory leaf without looking at one. I should like to see their specimens. Thousands of boys, especially country boys, know all the common trees of their neighborhood but it requires close and careful obser vation to describe them and point out the difference. Now there aie ten different kinds of oaks in this country, but very few town raised people can name half of them. Then there are different kinds of hickories and pines and ash and elm trees, besides the hackberry, box elder, poplar, beeob, locust and Cottonwood. Eugene Le Hardy was a very learned and scientific Frenchman, but thought that American cotton grew on the Cottonwood trees and that we gathered it by using ladders. It is said that a Mr. Jackson, of Atlenta, is trying to introduce the latter kind now and has got the trees up to fourteen feet high. The study of the trees and shrubs of this Southern country is a delightful and instructive recreation for young people, and I wish they would pay more attention to it. Of course this study requires some knowledge of botany. but that it easily acquired. This kind of knowledge is more useful and more comforting than a college smuttering of calculus and conic sections and rhetoric and logic. I do not believe there are ten men in Bartow county who would know ginseng if they were to see it. Not many more know what is father graybeard or white ash, the medicinal shrub from which old A. Q. Simmons first made the original Simmons' liver medicine in Gwinnett county. I know about that, for when I was a young merchant I sold the first, he ever jnade and continued to sell it for him for several years and he told me what it was made of. I tliiak, j though, that the father graybeard gave out about the time the old man died. j I wish that our young people would j I acquire habits of observing things more , closely as they journey along throusrh life. Scuie people see everything and i: some see nothing hardly. When should ( trees be cut down that are wanted for i .? . , i j. J _ ,L. I W00Q7 ? nai K1D(1 OI WUUU me ! strongest and will bear the greatest J1 burden? What kind is the most elastic? 1 What kind the hardest to split? What I kind will last the longed in the ground? ; What kind most suitable for pianos. | chairs, furniture or wainscoting? What'1 kind for mauls or wedges or canes? Dr. Oliver Holmes must have studied all about these when he wrote the "One Hoss Shay." *'So the deacon inquired of tho village folk ' Where he could lind the strongest oak That couldn't be split nor bent nor broke; That was for spokes and floor and sills; He sent for lance wood to make the tbills: The crossbars were ash from straightest trees; The *.nn?ls were white wood that cuts like j cheese, And - uubs of logs from tho settler's elm." But perhaps Dr. Holmes got it all j from some old houest wagon maker, , for thev know. I'll bet that Mr. .Brad- J lev, of our town, can answer every ' question. The boys onght to find out that black locust and chestnut and > osage orange make the best posts, and 1 black cum the best hubs, and persim-! mon the best wedges or gluts, and sas- j safras the best bows, and white oak the best baskets. In Enkland it is \ claimed that a yew tree post will last j longer than an iron one. The boys ought to know that the barks of all > trees are nonconductors of heat and cold and keep them cool in summer and warm in winter, and the green , leaves are the lungs that inhale the car- j bon from the air and not only make wood for the tree, but purify the at- i mosphere that we breathe. And hence ! j every habitation ought to have some I trees about it. The boys ought to j j know about those beautiful islands in the sea that are of coral formation and , kept growing until they got above' the water and then some co-! coanuts came floating along and ' lodged there ai.d sprouted and i grew and the leaves of tho trees fell j down and rotted and made a soil for I more coeoanuts. and in course of time ' the island became a paradise. That is the testimony of the rocks. The boys should watch the little irassoraer ball tliat floats away in the air from the sweet little dandelion plant. So li?ht and so feathery that it would take a thousand of them to weigrh an ounce and vet the seed are there for more plants and they are wrapped, as it were, in a blanket to protGct them from' the winter's cold. So it is with the need of the Scotch thistle that is blown j about by a breath of air like it was nothing:, but it 1ms tlie jrerin. the' embryo of life in it, and will find a Iodgrinjr place somewhere and ?leep until sprinar. and then make no mis-, take. Tt will not come up a dandelion.! but will surely make a thistle. In the horticultural ?*ei-.Vns at London are raspberry plants that came Irom seect * i ? 1,0,1 iUUUU 111 Ck 1UUU O niuiiiavu r. ?1V uuu been buried 1,700 years. Study nature a little as you go along, boys, and it will make you wiser and better and happier men. Find ont why it is that a dead bird weighs more han a live one and by what force or power a buzzard can sail round androundin the air above you and never bat a wing nor wave a feather. It isn't every boy who can be a Fen Franklin, but overy boy can learn something every day, and even one fact a day will in course of time make him a ' wise man. What a boy was Franklin ! What a man ! The youngest of aeventeen cnuaren, apprenticed to a candle maker, next to a printer; ran away from Boston to l'hila- j . delphia when seventeen years old and i hired to a Mr. Head, and fell in love t with Deborah, his daughter; was never j j idle; read and studied in every leisure , j moment; mastered French, Italian, 1 j Spanish aud Latin; became postmaster j of Philadelphia, then postmaster gen- | eral of all the colonies; established the I Philadelphia library, the Philosophical j Society and the University of Pennsvl- j . vanin and not Ion?? after he drew lisrnt- i ning down from Leaven with a kite and a string and a key. What a man he was! What a boy! ? j Bill Arp, in Atlanta. (Ga. )Constitution. CYCLINC NOTES. There arc 1000 bicycles in th? city of Jo hannesburg, South Africa. The Long Island Railroad carried this season more than 100,000 bicycles. A fiend has invented an automatic bicycle whistle which can bo heard three blocks. Occasionally try the bearings of a cycles no as to ascertain whether they have worked ' loose or not. If any undue slackness is observed they should be immediately adjusted, but not too tightly. The Rev. G. Woolsey Hodge, of Philadelphia, comes out flat-footed and four square in defence of Sunday cycling for recrsation ! after "the moral duty of churct^ attendance"' has been fulfilled. There is a fine art in modern high speed racing, which enables speed and knackness to out-weigh pure speed. Judicious "headwork," as it is called, more than compensates for a slight lack of sprinting or staying powers. ?dany experts are not at all certain as regards "tho future of middle and long-distance match races, as now conducted. The growing opinion that the race usually goes to the man having the best pacing outfit holes no cood. Lady Rosslyn is a fashionable English cy ilist, and has expressed unqualified approval of the bicycle. She is of opinion that if her sex will only have the sense not ' to overdo the amount of exertion they can derive good from the exercise. In applying graphite to the chain don't smear it on like sauce. Too much is as bad us not enough. A little of it applied to the inside joints of the chain will suffice to lubricate the chain for at least 100 miles of ordinary riding, very often much more. J The outside of the chain should be wiped j clean after each ride. With eleven of the leading firms of biey- | clo manufacturers determined to put chainless wheels on the market next season, there is a prospect of n largo turn out of this type of wheel in 1808, and a corresponding decrease in the price of the chaindriven machiie. It is asserted that the prico of the < hainless bicycle is to range from $100 to $125. Baltimcro cyclists, who number in all about thirty-lhreo thousand riders, have determined to take an active part in politics during t ie coming municipal campaign. A committee has been appointed which will issue a prospoctu3 in which is set forth the reasons for their entering Into the political field, and each candidate for office will ee asked to express his sentiments on the questions of improved streets and roads. English cyclists are riding in fine formi and new recoids are being made daily. The! latest performance of note is that of J. W. Stocks, at the Crystal Palace, by which the world's record for all distances "from six to thirty-three miles were lowered. Stocks rode the thirty-three miles in sixty-one minutes, 31 2-5 seconds, and covered the fifty-two kilometers and 480 metres in one hour, beating the record made by Jimmy Michael on the Manhattan Beach track recently. Kentucky Candidates Shot. Jacob Howard, Republican nominee for Circuit Court Clerk of Hurian County, Kentucky, was killed in a political fight on Straight Creek. John Milton, Democratic candidate for jailor, was mortally wounded. Paul Dunbar, the Poet, Gets an Office. Congressional Librarian Young has completed his list of appointments. Paul Dun- ( bar, the young colored poet of Ohio, is j among the minor appointees. Thirty- * eight States are represented in the list. * New Minister to Denmark. ? The President appointed Laurits S. Swen * son Minister to Denmark and Dr. Edward ? iledloe. Consul at Canton. China. - __ .. 4 K$>UAI 11C Ve^ctable^B R^RMLL J Sicilian |hair renewerj ll/r^k Drives off old avc; restores lost color ^ HJ to the hair; gives it (jffl M the richness and gloss of jM JfiUp youth; prevents baldness. No dandruff. $M)\ IOTIIIII6BBE0ESSS2 H I nifUH pines* to sufferer*. A $l.iU IIV I 11 lllfl bottle anil valuable treatise wilt five, you pay the exnn'uwce. Address Dr. B. W. HAlft. Dept. 65. (inclunati. O. DR. BAKER'S FEMALE REGULATOR : Cure* Suffering Women. Absolutely Vegetable and Guaranteed. Manufactured by I.ookout Mountain Medicine t'ompsny. UREENEVILLE. .... TE.W. Best?7 i t t Kj i7; In tuba. Sold by drufgl?:?. W V- ... ? Good Ingram Carpet, 29c. per y.>r 1. Heavy lirm <els Carpet.48e. per yard. For the asking, wo mail you. free ofallchargs. our new Colored Carpet Catalog je, which shows all goods in lithograj h colors. You can make i vour select! Dns as well as If you were here at the mill, and save from 50 tD CO per com. profit you are paying your local coaler. If you wish quality sample; of carpet, send 8c. in stamps. JULIUS HINES & SON, BALTIMORE, MD. Pleaae mentl n this paper. I Mnnnnnnnnnnnnnncin #3Cicaciooc3ai acsuuucuuuLjcatiLJULJLJt-c i C TH: CHARLOTTE ft IM??Sltl!l Bit.! > PRIVATE HOSPITAL. 0 < II kKLOTI K. X.C.. Xo.SIO.V Tr>on M.jjj feH5S2I2Si2 25252S2S25JSHSa25HSH5ZS2S252S2Eifi i\ AfT'VfTfflW Fifty per cent.redactlon 1% Aiiiiil iiU?i <?n Spsnish Bred Jack*, ?L . ....I. , Including my famous jfrtlk. PASWPPS1 *? '?' Iatk x. L." i AilMMikv l Jack?lltnljhand?hlgh Heavi weight Jacks. 15 and reliable. I'ricc?ubfcM 1 jei t tuchungenlforSopt | I'v Vv I rit<' *or particulars I V VtM about good Jacks only. Pirlnm11!$lork laTm x5CHBF?* Green Hush. Walker "*s?ls County, Georgia. | * TIRTTiE- * Rica's Boose Urease Liniment I? always sold under a guarantee to cure all aches and pains, rheumatism, neuralgia, sprains, bruises and burns. It Is also warranted to cura colds, croup, coughs and la grippe Quicker than any known remedy. No cure do pay. Sold by all druggists and general stores. Made only by GOOSE GREASE LINIMENT CO., Greensboro, N. C. REWARD. A friend of mine had the misfortune to lose sereral of his Pigeons and asked me to advertise for their return. Each bird bad a metal band on leg marked as follows: L5073 S1742. 83771. C17&31, 017521. C17633,C*4344 C24S58. 01340, F1176, F5S87. ! F5298. FS290. F6841. F3?8?. KINS. Pigeon fanciers, kindly look through your lofts for above birds A liberal reward for each bird returned. J.FUEl'ND, (it .Morton Slrrrt, NewYork. I M PATENT CLUSTER SCARF PIN ' Heavy Gold Plate. Kuby Centre. I Surrounded by 8 Fine UrllMaiits. Sample 15c. I). M. Watkixs A Co, j Catalogie Free. Providence, It. 1. Sfefl WASHING.. ..MACHINE GREATEST IMPROVEMENT ^ in WASHERS in *t YEARS. PENDULUM ' *etw 1? f*r ? ' laker. . IK;?-1Can be operated Standl ? wV *>. inn orsittlne. No Iowa. GET THE GENU Walter Bat Breakfa JB&r^ Pure, De ' I wt lu^\ Costs Less than 02 i H r'-j'* A Be sure t 11 jp|g Walter B * (Established 1780.) | ^Trtdt-Marlc. | ? |_|? |_|? |j ^ | Mr. Oladttoae baa contributed an Importer year's volume of The Companion, ti in the New Year's Numb I; ART CALENDATT In Twelve Colors nnrn to new js nivnrl--' subscribers, j mobhHbhHhnhHh ..." . .-5. ?, TESSAS LAEXES SDKAK THH TRUTH. cA -02^ tUc Lecu, Te:c? writes: 14ffl a widow, r.ad can strongly recommend fir. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine, it having Saved my Life 6 years ago, when I was down with Liver Complaint and Kidney Disease. I think it a far bet ter medicine than that made by "Zcilin" and "Black Draught." Gestation; During the period of gestation ~ tanSiOB npon the muscles and lizar-.en; . of the womb is greatly increased . .d iuc blood vessels arc taxed to their titn. st. If th^re is any tendency to nneasinee or pain, we recommend freqnent warm injections of our Mexican Female Remci , &:.d two or three doses, every day, of I . Siojmons Squaw Vine Wine. This tr atment will strengthen the ligaments, WiM : seist in holding the uterus in place, lc: :n pain, make the uterus more pliable ai elastic, and prepare the organs for the final effort. It also lessens the danger of death to child and mother,and fortifies heragainotliability to convulsions, flooding and othc r dangerous symptoms, and with ordinary prudence guarantees a rapid recovery. Celeste. Tex., rays: Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine is the beat in the M world for Biliousness, W iBt /S Indigestion and Torpid fll "V Vr i ic, n?,-? nc.it W 10 jy years, aDd recommend It to \ niy friends, and they all* apraise It. I thluk there is X as much difference between it and "Zeilln's" and ffV ffrvS (Sm "Thed ford>" as between " ,*r V a day and night. Paleness. Anaemia is a condition often called "poverty of blood" from deficiency of tho red corpuscles which give to this finid its characteristic color. It arises from insufficiency of assimilation of the proper materials of food to replenish the blood, as in chlorotlo girls. It may occur in persons who have long suffered with hemorrhoids, or in women from repeated discharges of blood from the uterus. The lips and tongue lose their natural red color and become white and the face looks like wax. The most efficient remedy for this condition is Dr. .Simmons Squaw Vine Wine. The improvement produced by its use is frequently almost ipagical; an enfeebled heart becomes strong and equable in its action, digestion improves, the lips and cheeks lose their pallor, and the eye becomes bright and tho step elastic. CORRESPONDENCE INVITED. Old Dominion Iron & \'all \Vk? Richmond. Va ROBERT E. LEE. The soldier, ettiaen snd rhriHiian hero, A great new book Just reedy, giving life end ancestry. A money maker. Local end traveling agent* wanted. BOYAI, PUBLISHING CO., 11 and Main Sts., Rlchmond.Ve. KLONDYKfc IS ALL RIGHT. But why pay ft o. a shar. or stoci: with nothing but "talk" to back it, and 6.000 miles (rim lionet I will tell you dividend ^aylnf_Colcrado Cokl Mint Stock ,ot 15 cents a share. In <efiSc*tes fri>m too shares up. utner tux.*, in Aidreot, Broker BEN A. BLOCK. Der.rer. Colo. Member Stock: Exchange. Suite j-*-; Sjraea Building. ~S$turnedd O^eMae Auguata. (1r. Actual btnineas. Notex' u boot>. Short tune. Cheep board. Send for ea tali-go a. STRAYER'SC0LLE8E Bookkeeping. Best. Cheapest. Situation guaranteed. ixe article; j ter & Co.'s ( st COCOA f !icious, Nutritious. A fE CENT a cnp. 1 hat the package bears our Trade-Mark. , , aker & Co. Limited, , Dorchester, Mass. ' * ?a HAD? thin ' I 'u mi? luviui vu?u X The impan 1011. T Mi/iattractive tatter tor the \ jSjmM, include not only popular v Statesmen, Scientists, Ei FOR ALL FAMILY, /^v r \Mr'y K ^23pp> The following partial Disting Right Hon. W. E. Ola tjjggK^'--l \ The Duke of Argyll v Hon. Heary Cabot Lo H0D JUS"n ^CCflr,h 7 A Rudyard Kipling J S Octave Thanet if article for the next [l ^an5Wii!.,., , be published Mary E. Wilklos er. and mo ' NEW BTTBBCKIBEKS who will est out this slip and MSI Companion, will recelre tho papor free every WMk (Tom th year to January 1.1899. This offer Includes the THANK8G1 vinO. CHRIBTMAc THE COMPANION AIT C Ail NT) AX for 1S9S- la 1 superior production to any of the famous pieces of I ornament for the home and a costly gift ? Free to Now Illustrated Prospectus for the Volume for ; THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, t Sjs# hills. 1 K y.iii need a saw mill, aoy size, writ? . in.' t ;?.r. luiyin^ elsewhere. I ha*? /A tlv* iq.'St complete line of mills of any ' dealer or manufacturer tu the South. ' GIN MILLS, I Very highest jjrade Stones, at unusnak lv low prices. WOOD-WORKING MACHINERY, 1 Planers. Moulders, Edxcr . Re-Saw% Land Saws, Laths, etc. ENGINES AND BOILERS, Talbott and T.iddell. Eugleberg Rice Huller, in stock, quick delivery, low prices. V. C. B A DM AM, -J Xo. 132(5 Main St., Columbia, S. 0, vj-9 ~THE BAILEY-LE8BY COT I ? NGE L BSRO. F If E_S UILER. The only mac him \ | _? r "Hi*" " "" ,|T* for cleaning rough rice in otie operation. & ' M!ikSUPPL[IS, BSSK ?aF CORN AND CANE MILLS. RUBBER AND LEATHER BELTINC, Hose. Packings, Pipe. Fittings and Braai ' Goods. Largest Stock of Supplies South, Lowest rnces. Prompt Shipments. Illua* 1? trated Catalogue Furnished upon Applies* ' tion. Try the B-L Co.'s Anti-Frlctios Babbitt Metal, the best for HIGH SPEEE > machinery. CHARLESTON, - - S. C. r#iy ! \i i rn wt vti\ cnvpi*\ mv\tks4 ' I adopted the Keeley Treatment in the Soldier'* Humes and in an Institution for ttu wttB exehi-ivo u-ip of the Ke$ular Army. ALCOHOL, OPIUM,' Produce each a disease .i'lj K bflCCO USING i having deiinite pathoh ory. The disease yields easily to tuo L'onbl? i ? hlorideof Hold Treatment as administered ,3| at The kceley Inst;tute, Oreeuville. S. C. I Detailed information mailed on application tc . SH THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, (OK BOX 37) J9 C~ EENVSLLE, * - 3. C. fl The OXLY Keeley ln*:l(nie In S. C. >.u| i S^OMEY IN CHICKENS. ;| Send 25 cents in stamps for Book. Jj BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, i34 Leonard Street, - - New York, j'.saj . ? ? | r j THE NEW WAY. I J P^F^Ek I :*? treated'afte/"lo- I ijjg c a 1 exarrtina- I clans. Drea/of I such treatment < ;? modest women * silent about their j fjM Wine of Cardui has now demon- I t|| strated that nine-tenths of all the I " cases of menstrual disorders do not require a physician's attention I at all. The simple, pure Win?41 taken in the privacy of a woman's I own home insures quick relief and V speedy qure. Women need not | j jSl hesitate now. Wine of Cardui re quires no humiliating dxaminations for its adoption. It cures any ' , ' jB disease that comes under the head j: of "female troubles"?disordered ' * menses, falling of the woihb, % "whites, "change of life, it makes women beautiful by making them 'J > well. It keeps them young by ' ' 1 j keeping them healthy. $1.00 at j2 the drug store. For advice In eases requiring special directions, address, firing symptoms. ! the "Ladies' Advisory Department," The Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Chatta- > i j nooga, Tenn. W. I. AODISOH, M.D., Cary, Miss., says: j "I use Wins of*Cardui extensively in i fa my praetlee and find it a most ex eel [eat B preparation for female troubles." j ENGINES BOILERS. kTank-. stark-, Stand f ipe-" and SheetIron Work; Shafting, Pulleys, Gearing, 'm I Boxes Hangers, etc. CBfC'ast every day; work 18?hands. : *~1o LOMBARD IRON WORK8 AND SUPPLY CO., >3 AUGUSTA. GEORGIA. ? S. N. U.-No. 41?'97. | ^ is promised has always been the practice of i '; he two hemispheres have been searched for 1 rolume for 1S98, and the contributors for the year j rriters of Action, but some of the most eminent 1 ^3 locators, Explorers and Leaders of Industry. Yo?lhs ?r? I npanion I list of contributors indicates the strength and ] -m? eness of next year's volume: ,*9 J uished Writers. j dstonc Hon. Thomas B. Reed 12[ Hon. Gcorpe F. Hoar dge Lillian Nordica (^i y, M. P. Prof. N. S. Siialer ?? )ry=Tel!ers. ffj W. D. Howclia | Frank R. Stockton <2* Mrs. Curton Harrison }^k Haydcn Ccrrutb r9 re than one hundred others. .. I It at one* with ll.TB for a pe&r'i icbtrrlptlon to Tit )^| 9 time rabtcrtpUon li received to January 1. iSt 3, aod a fall I and IfEW YTAX'S DOUBLE ?roi:3rn3 and (Jt . "j twelve colon, and etnboeeed la gold It or!!1, bo found a lompaaion color-wcrk of prtvlou peart. It It a nperb / JT Snbicrlbcn. .HO fjSj 1898 and Sample Coptei of the Paper Free. 201 Columbus Ave., BOSTON, MASS. 5^ 4 TfMMMMftitmftm J