University of South Carolina Libraries
Eeanty Is Blood Ore?. Ciean Mood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar* I tic clean your Mood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all iiaEurities from the body. Begin to-day to anish pitnplcs, boils, blotches, blackhead^ and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets.?beauty for ten cents. All drug- 1 gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 2oc, cOc. In Russia the proportionate number of births is nearly double that of France. To Cure \ Cold In One Day. T.W/v r A..;n;n? Tnkin>a All u4.\?u*r oiuiuuyunuiiv , | w Ofruggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. In the hotels built iu China for the use of foreigners, the highest stories are the most expensive because the breezie-t. Boat Tobacco Spit and Smoke Yoar f ife Away. To quit tobacoo e?3ily and forever, be magnetic. tuil ot life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac. the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or ?1. Cure guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Kemedy Co., Chicago or New York. Only 37 per e-*nt. of the inhabitants of Berlin are Germans r>y birth. For Whoopiusi Cough Piso'< Cure is a successful remedy. >1. P. Pif.teii. 07, Troop Ave., Brooklyn. X. Y?. Nov. it ls:<t. Eerlin has an ambulauee cycle. So. 41 Fail Medicine Is Fully as Important and Beneficial as Spring Medicine. Hood's Sarsapnrilla is just the medicine to keep the blood rich and pure, create an appetite, give good digestion and tone and strengthen the great vital organs. It wards off malaria, fevers and other forms of illness which so readily overcome a i trua L- onH iloKili t oto/^ cvut.iTi Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. Hood's Pills cure indigestion. Scents. Friendly Att-ention. True friendship has a broadening in- , fluence. and takes small account of , things which might servo to weaken i the charms of mere acquaintance. "Are you habitually lame, or is your limp caused by some temporary trou ble?" inquired the lawyer In a ease of 1 assault and battery, addressing a witness for the defendant. The man bore t ^ every indication on his face and perton of having been in some recent ea- 1 tastrophe which the lawyer hoped to , prove was the particular affray then i before the court. "Oh, Oi'l! be all right in a day or j tno." said the witness, cheerfully. "It i was Jist a friend of mine kicked me the i other evening, and Oi'm a bit stiff in J the i'ints. that's all!" I Unmoved. j Supplicant?Remember, sir. that it Is , as easy for a camel to pass through the I eye of a needle as for a rich man to 1 enter the kingdom of heaven. Miserly Millionaire? I know it, but I i don't expect to have a cent with me 1 I present myself at the gate. M AV ADrP ATTAY A YTlTTYim j E&t IX.l! V'l a. i vii/ui/i |?; Mrs. Rosa Gaum Writes to Mrs. 1 Pinkham About it. Sho Says: ! i ! Dear Mrs. Pixkham:?I take pleasure in writing1 you a few lines to in- , form you of the good your Vegetable Compound has done me. I cannot thank you enough for what 3-our int di- 1 cine has done for me; it has, indeed, helped me wonderfully. cJOZL For years I was troubled with an ovarian tumor, each yeargrow- 9 V. ,\ ing worse, un- U ijx | til at last I > f 1 was compelled / J&Vgm JLT to consult with mil a physician. y jMB be done for me but to go under an operation In speaking with a friend of mine , abcut it, she recommended Lydia E. : Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, say- 1 ing she knew it would cure ine. I the? 1 sent for your medicine, and after tak- j ing three bottles of it, the tumor disappeared. Oh! you do not know how ' much good your medicine has done , me. I shall recommend it to all suffer- i ing women.?Mrs.# Rosa Gaum, 7-0 i Wall St., Los Angeles, Cal. The great and unvarying success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in relieving every derangement ] of the female organs, demonstrate?! ' it to be the modern safeguard of wo- J man's happiness and bodily strength. ] Mor# than a million women have been benefited by it. Every woman who needs advice about her health is invited to write to J Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mas? j TAPE i in ^ ! YV^I\I?3^ , "A tape worm eighteen feel long a* least came on the scene after my taking two ! , CASCARETS. This I am sure has caused m? ' bad health for the past three years. I am sti!) 1 taking Cascarets. the only cathartic worthy of notice by sensible people ' f Geo. w. Bowles. Baircl. Mass Jf CATHARTIC ^ toidsrnm, TRADE MARK REOrSTERtD St, Pleasant. Palatable. Po'ent. Taste Good. T)o i Good. Never Sicken. Weaken <ir Gripe. 10c. Sic. 50c. j I ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... J 9trrCi{ Rnordj loap.:aT. Chieaco. Xonlml. Xrw York. St3 j HO TO BAP Sold and cnaranteed by all drug- J i Hlla 1 U'DjIw L'lstR to ('L'KC Tohaewi Huhli. ! 1 TheB?st M^WIBi~5snsjS I! Oonsly illustrated price $ .'.freeto anybody ?*n<!inq ' \ two annua! subscriptions a'41 each to the i >verlaml 1 , Monthly. SAN FKAN CISCO. Sample Overland, 6c, ! J UNITARIANS S|! i tarv Women's A'llance. .'!* Kay Sr.. Newport. K. I. j ' TRACHKR8 \V?\TED-A?ta Grade. Pub A ! , Private. Cnlou Teacher*' Axencies, Waskln.tOD. U. C I GOD'S MESSAGE TO MAX. PREGNANT THGUCHTS FROM THE WORLD'S CREATEST PROPHETS. [)Ufin Wilhchiiiiia Death lint an Ineldriit Wliriicver a Crisis < onic* The Divine < oin'ort Tin" (iriitlrnrsK of God God tVill ('airy the Harden. Poor little Queen! whose slender band Must ever rest upon the helm Of the gr at ship of state, though manned By noblest sailors of the realm. God speed thy keel, that it withstand All shoeks which might it overwhelm. Pour little Oneeii! whose irirllsh dreams Tby councilors may rudely wake: L'l'on whose spangled sky ail fleams May quick bo quenched for statecraft's sake. For queens must do what b-st beseems Their royal rank, though hearts should break. "Uneasy lies the head that wears A crown"?but yet. O fair young Queen, Ti- grand to wear a er>w:t: who bears Tue seejitre dreud with merev's mien, \nd ie-lj'S humanity. so shares God's power and blessedness. 1 ween. There sits beyond the German sea An aged Queen ouee young us you, 1 r whom ha? waked glad juoii To her has been vouchsafed, 'tis true, Sot only sovereign famed to be, Lut woman loved as are but Jew. Fair little Queen, may heaven's grace Grant that thy life be thus complete! May future ages gladly trace The golden pathway of thy feet; Thy reign bring blessings to the race,. Lowe crowns thee with his roses sweet. ? ..... /% ?.? ^ ... . .1 brave little ijuoen, tis unuerstoou Thou canst imperious will invoke; Oh. may a gracious womanhood The iron arm with sweetness cloak' " "lis only nohle to be good." Tor queens as well as humbler folk. ?S. J. Underwood. Death lint an Incident. Schiller said that death must be a blessing because it is universal; we may put it out of mind and ignore its presence, but no tnan escapes it. And when we remember how many men resent it as an interference with their plans, or dread it as the opening of a door into a room from which no voice I'omes back, it is surprising that men meet thin supreme experience so caimly. Tor the vast majority of men and women meet death not indeed with welcoming glances, but with quiet courage. Dr. Johnsou lived in terror of death, hut when the Qnal hour came he fell asleep like a tired :hild. In their last hour the vi.-ion broad ens to take in tne sweep01 meanu 10 ro-oKaize death. neither as the end nor even as the interruption of the natural order, but as a normal incident. This dilation of the Imagination, this nwift substitution of eteraal for time relations, is almost invariably accomplished in moments of peril. Whenever a crisis comes which makes us aware that many things are worth more than life to us, we suddenly see persons, events, and possessions in true perspective. There is uo hesitation or uncertainty in that moment of llear vision: we die for those wo love with the deep joy which a spiritual opportunity klways brings with it. On the field of battle, jn the deck of the cruiser, men do not take ieath into account. In the supreme moment when love of country, of honor, of heroism, absorbs the whole energy of a nan's spirit, deafh is of no more account ban something on the highway or the iting of a bee in the fields. It is an incident in a great experience, not the end a career. There is a tonic quality in the indifference of men to death in great moments. For while civilization is to be measured bv its care for the human life, the ;reatuess of a man, an age, or a met* is to i>e measured bv indifference to death, Society must hold every man's life sacred iu >rder that he may give it freely : it is to l>o i'Tupulousiy protected because it is his oipreme possession, aud therefore the one supreme sacrifice which he can make,?The Jutlook. Tlie Divine Comfort. We cannot comfort one another fully. When trouble befalls us we usually can render help in more than one form, and the .juuiity ana tlegite of consolation which we ire able to supply to one another are helpful ind precious. We all should bo much the poorer and the sadder without them. But it their best they are imperfect. They ute onlv feeble substitutes for what our souls demand. The divine comfort if we will but illow it meets our needs completely. If we will but allow it. because so often we ire tempted to shut our hearts against it. [?od has caused, or at least allowed, our trials, we say. and comfort cannot come from the very source of our distress. If we permit bitterness to reign within us, then truly there is small comfort for us from any source. But if we bow submissively before our Father, trusting Him frankly, convinced that He has afflicted us uot in wrath or even caprice, but in the SXercise of a wise and tender love. He will pour comfort into our hearts and llood them with it. He made us and He understands us I.- uii.i ilirmiith He ordained the very trials which we have found so hard :o be borne. He is fell of sympathy lor us, b desirous to console u.-, waits b idapt His consolations to our precise exigencies, and will be to each one of us the very present and sufficient help in trouble whom we need. Open the heart, then, for His entrance. Remember that His comfort has been a matter of human experience throughout the ages. Thousands have welcomed it and have found it precious beyond words, and we too may have it for the seokJiK The fientleness of (?n<l. There is a text in the Psalms which uses the strange expression of "the gentleness" Ci.??1. We wonder sometimes when God is so are At, so terrible in majesty, that He Uses so little violence with us. who are sc mall. But it is not HJ- way. Ills way Is tc gentle. He seldom drives.but draws, lit seldom coin pels, hut leads. He remembers we are dust. We think it niitcht be quicke: work if God threatened antl compelled us :?t do rijrht. But God does not want ;juiek work, but good work. Got! tloes n.>t want slave work, hut free work. So Go i is Xeittl with Us all moulding us ami '..inning us many a time with no more than a silent look. Coarse treatment never wins souls. S > God did not drive the chariot oi Hi.-. oTuuipoteuee up to Peter and command Itira to repent. God did not threaten him with thunderbolts of punishment. God did not even speak to him. That ono look laid i spe;| upon his soul which was more than voice or lanirtiHi;)' through all his after life. Henry Drummoiid ir. 'i'he Ideal Lite. Gotl Will Carry tlxe Burden. When H" hi Is von cast vonr eiro on Him. it is added, "For He caretli fory?.u." i'he literal meaning 01 that tonic tex! .. n _ tt i tj; tkt is. x'ur ii>" nus ^ou "ii nir. ii' .111. mi inlinite God who rules the universe ha? poor little siuful voit and me on U tEieart! Our big loads are not a leather :o Him. He knowelh onr frame; He remembers that we are l>ut dust. Like as h rather pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth us poor weaklings. He says tc us, "Give Mo your burdens." He who guarded the infant Moses among the riverreeds, aud supplied the widow's waning [ ruse of oil, who watched over sleeping Peter in the dungeon, and piloted i'am through roaring tempests?He it is whosayt to us: "Roll your anxieties over on Me: 1 have you on My heart." What fools we are when we straj) the load more tightly aud determine that nobody shall carry it but our* selves !"?Theodore L. Cuyler. D. 1). BLIND BUT A GOOD FARMER, R^-aarkable Skill by a Vermont Man of Three Score and Ten. Lafayette Stearns, of Rutland. Vt.. Is a man who has mastered one of the most trying of physical infirmities, and made his life useful when others would have given way iu despair. Mr. Steams is a farmer, seventy years old. who, though blind for eighteen years. has. during all hut two of those years, carried on the cultivation of ten acres of hind. For two years after he hecame Mind Mr. StearnS was obliged to lay aside all labor, though brawny, and physically as able and anxious to work as ever. During this period he tried many times to ]tlant portions of his garden by kneeling and trying to perfect measurements with his Implements. One morning the idea came to him that he would take two stakes and a string, and suspending the latter from the stakes could construct a satisfactory guide. Mrs. Siearns set the stakes for the first row to be planted across the garden. With this assistance he planted his first acre, setting the stakes over for each new row. obtaining measurements with the short hoe handle which he enrried, while on his bended knees he opened the hill, planted the seed, and covered it over. Before he could do much gardening he earned money churning for neighbors. In this way he earned enough to purchase covering for the addition to his house, and afterward built the staging himself and laid half the covering. Mr. Stearns mows, rakes, and pre 1. bAAn Aau-i pares eiiuuxii uu,? iu mcc v?.. and a horse. For mowing the stakes are set at the outer edge of the field by Mrs. Stearns, with the string suspended at such a height that with each swing of the scythe the blind man's forearm just touches it. When he has mowed a swath across the field he sets the stake o#er the width of a swath, which lie measures with his scythe; then, guided by the string, he makes his way back across the field. In this way. when once started, he mows an entire meadow, and neighbors allege that even at seventy years of age he is a brisk man to follow with a scythe. Working entirely on this principle, the blind farmer plants, hoes, weeds, aud harvests all kinds of farm products. and with the aid of a faithful wife the crops are gathered in the barn. Great Russian Forests. There are many people who fear that the world's supply of timber is beeoming exhausted just as thirty years ago it was feared that our coal supply was coming to an end. Our I Consul-General at St. Petersburg has I sent a report to the Foreign Office con- ' taiuing some information of a reassur- j Ing character on this subject. Accord- j ing to his account, in the province of J Archangel, where the Crown forests j cover 88.079,400 acres, the felling of the ' trees has not much more than begun, j He states that the hitherto virgin for- j ests of the Pctcliora basin are at last ' opened up for trade, and new mills have been built, one at Archangel, one at Pushlakta. and one, too. at Kola, on the Lapland eoast. thus opening out another virgin forest track.?London j Globe. A Domestic rnHdent. From t\f O'js'-rcer, rlus'iing, .WcV "Early ia November, 13 >1," says Frank Long, woo lives near Leun>n, >Iieh., "on starting to get up from the dinner table, I was taken with a pain in my back. The pain increased and I was obliged to take to mybed. The physician who was summoned pronounced my case muscular rheumatism j accompanied by lumbago. He gave me remedies and injecied morphine into my I arm to ease the pain. , " My disease gradually became worse until I thought that death would be welcome release from my sufTerimrs. Besides my regular physician I also consulted another, but he gave uiu no encburairement. Mh On Oelfinj Up From the Table. "I was finally induced through reading some accounts in the newspapers regarding the wonderful cures wrought by Dr. Williams' l'luk Pills for Pale People, to try them. I took the pills according to directions and soon began to notice an improvement In mv condition. Before the first box was use I 1 could get about the house, and after using live boxes was entirely cured. "Since that time I have felt no return of the rheumatic pains. lam confident that Dr. Williams' I'iuk Pills saved my iife .and I trv to induce my frieuds who are sick *o try the same remedy. I will gladly answer inquiries concerning my sickness and wonderful cure, provided stamp is enclosed for reply. Frank Long." Sworn to before me at Venice, Mich., this 13th day of April, 18DS. G. i'. Goldsmith, Justice ofttu Peace. At Holycoke. Mass.. Conner Bro?. are running both their shoddy mills night and day. Bdaoate Tour Bowels With Cascmrete. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 1&/.:15c. If C. C C fall, druggists refund money. The British empire embraces 10,000 islands. Fits rK'rm-'inent!}' cured, .no nrs or ncrvou?. i f <'v* r.fter first day's um? of Dr. Kline's flreat Serve Kestorer. S- trial bottle and treatise free Du. K. H. Kline. Ltd.,'j31 vrch^t. 1'hiia. l'a No rnediciue ever introduced to th- Profession aiid lublic has Kiveu such u-'ivcrsal satisfaction or preserved so many lives as l>U. MOFFETI S TEKTHINA [Teething Powders]. Druggists tell us that the rapid increase in its saie is marvelous. Tkkthina Aids Digestion, Regulates the Bowels, and makes teething easy, . I CUBA AND THE SPORTSMAN. It is a Parai.se for Hunters of Wild Game. While Cuba offers such a haven to the invalid, it is a paradise for the sportsman, wild game and lish of all kinds being abundant. Parties of gentlemen on horseback, with their pack of hounds, hunt the fleet footed deer. It is a common thing for a small party to kill eight or ten deer in a day. The wild boar is plentiful, and sometimes. if cornered, dangerous, especially the old master of the herd, called "un solitario," which will tear a dog to pieces or make a green hunter eliinh .1 tree, but a Cuban easily kills him with a machete. The island boar sometimes weighs 200 or 300 pounds, and has huge tusks, often five or six inches in length. The meat of the female is much relished by the natives. Wild dogs and cats, wild cattic. horses, and jackasses abound. But the jutia, peculiar only to Cuba, which looks like a cross between a squirrel with a rat's tail and a rabbit, and which lives in the trees and feeds on nuts and leaves, is the great delight of the Cuban. Fowls are in great numbers. Wild guinea bens and turkeys are found in llooks of from 25 to 1<>0. The whistle of the quail and the flutter of the pheasant and perdiz are heard on all sides in the rural and mountain legions. Ducks in abundance coine over from Florida in the winter and return with the spring. Wild pigeons, with their white tops and bodies of blue, larger somewhat than the domestic bird, offer, in hunting, the greatest sport to gentlemen who will be restrained within reason. In the early mornings the pigeons generally go to feed on the mangle berries when ripe, and which grow by the sea or near some swampy place. T have known a nnrtv nf flippy ncrsnns to kill 1.500 of the pigeons within .1 few hours. Itoblches, tojosas and guanaros are found in the thiols woods. Mocking and blue birds, orioles, turpials, negritos, parrots, and a thousand kinds of songsters and birds of brilliant pluiftage tlit from tree to tree. The naturalist Pooy says there ure 641 distinct species of iish in the Cuban waters. Among those that delight tha sportsman are the red snapper, lista. manta. gallego. cubera, surela, and gartish. The sierra, which weighs from forty to sixty pounds, is extremely game, as is the roneo. so called because it snores when brought out of the water. For heavy sport, fishing for sharks, which are good for nothing. or the gusa, which weighs from 400 to GOO pounds and is excellent eating. offers abundant exercise. It is a daily occurrence to see schools of fish, numbering from hundreds to many thousands, each fish weighing from one to four pounds, swimming around the bays and harbors waiting for a bait. Any American who enjoys good Ashing can find his fondest dreams more than satisfied in Cuba. Delicious shrimps, crabs and lobsters. oysters and clams abound. The lobsters have no claws and weigh from two to eight pounds. They are caught at night in shallow places along the sandy beach, a torch, harpoon and net being the necessary outfit. Some of the rivers abound in alligators, but few hunt them. Five Arab >Javirns. Never tell all you know; for he who tells everything he knows often tells more than he knows. Never attempt all you can do; for he who attempts everything he can do often attempts more than he can do. Never believe all you hear; for he who believes all that he hears often believes more than he hears. Never lay out all you can afford; for he who lays out everything he can ufford lays out more than he can afford. Never decide upon all you may see; for he who decides upon all that he sees often decides on more than he sees. " ir\i m vs.^* THE EXCELLENCE OF SYBUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes Known to the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing- the true and origiual remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Fig - is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless f imitations manufactured by other parties. The high standing of the California Fio Syrup Co. with the medical profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence cf its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weakening them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO, SAN FIt A.V CISCO. CaL LOUISVILLE, Kj. NKW YOKE. K. T. < # PCHOOSE FOVYOURSETF!^! j1 a We usually advertiseaspeciraen bargain from ZlJ one of our catalogues, but we don't do so in this I A advertisement because we're perplexed. Our A i q a furniture catalogue consists of 160 pages, every X page filled with bargains. Now, how are we to y r. A select one? We say to you, if there's anything A ft a on earth in the furniture or carpet line that X 1] you want, you'll find it in our catalogues at y A feast 40 per cent, cheaper than you can buy it ^ " X anywhere else. a N Would we spend our money advertising our V A furniture and carpet catalogues (they're abso- A <J X lutely free, not even a stamp necessary) if they X w weren't worth having? Sot much. If you y _ A get these cataiogues you'll see for yourself A X what an enormous amount you can save by X ^ buying from mill owners ana furniture raanu A facturers lilto we are. ^ X That carpet catalogue that we are so anxious ^ I v you should have, is the finest thing ati artist * 1 . !es-er designed, and you can select carpet from , > it just as though you were in the sample rocm 1 ' ofone of our mills, iecause it's lithographed in ten colors from hand painted plates. ? q We couldn't exaggerate the value of our fur- * niture cataloge it we tried. Just think of 160 large pages devoted to furniture, and every A C A page filled with bargains. Will you be a friend a ? Will ma write for those CHta ^ iogucs at once? Address (exactly as below.) A JULIUS HIKES & SON, f ^ Dept. 310 Baltimore, Ittd, $ b T Muzzling for Babies. ^ The muzzling farce is nearly played t out: when n department is reduced to * publishing statistics so worthless and inconclusive as those presented to Parliament bv Mr. Long, the cause it advocates must be in a bad way. lie m claims by his muzzling order to have I reduced raoies, taking the lirst half V year, from 413 cases in 1S93. to 12 In . 1K9S, but he neglects to state that the method of diagnosing rabies has been 11 radically changed in the interval. A a. 111 a. ^ m n rAtnelnnrr cnrtMAl) ceniuiaic nuui u. Tciuiuut.i oui^wu on the basis of an examination of the dead body was held to be sufficient f in the former group of cases; later on this was found to be worthless, and Drafnem fcunot lie Cured > by local applications, as they cannot reach the ^ dtseasvd portion of the ear. There is only oDe way to cure deafness. and t'"atis bv constitutional remedies. Denfnesa is caused by an in flamed condition of tbe mucous lining of the Hg Eustachian Tube. When this tube get* in- J * flamed you have a rambling Bound or imporfeet bearing, and when it is t-nt rely closed 1 Deafness Is the result, and unless ttie intlaru- ! mationcante taken out and this tube re- j stored to its normal condition, hearing will be , destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are ^ caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the raucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any T ca?o of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot becured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send fdr circulars, free. . ~ K. J. CHENEY & CO., 14 edo, O. C Sold by Druggi - ts, 75c. V Hall's Family Pills are the best German universities have 2.353 foreign 1 students. To Coro Constipation Forever. Q( Trke Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or So, If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. Many f'ubaus ure talcing up the cultivation and curing of tobacco in Mexico. Mrs. WinslowVSoothing.-yrup for children tcct.intr softens the gurn*. reducing inflima tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. a bottllo, Portugal married women retain their ^2 nmaiden ames. Ho-To-Bac for Fifty Cent*. " Guaranteed tobacco babit cure, makes weak i men strung, blood pore. toe. fh AH druggist* Jj About 65,000,000 pound? of beet sugar was raised in California last year, ^ Lyon 4 Co'? "Pick Leaf" Rooking Tob.reo is the best for Pipe and hand-m:uie Cigarette smoking Rich, r.pe, mellow, fragrant. Beats ?y the world. Try it. Some Abyssinia elephants are trunkUss. I.mm www n , JJ.4 iiifCiliilifc . j IS JUST ASCOOD FOR ADULTS. Ii WARRANTED. PRICE 50cts. J Galatia. Ills., Not. 16, 1853. > Parts Medicine Co., St. Louis, ila gn Gentlemen: We sold lust yeur. 600 bottles of GROVE'S TASTELESS CIIILL TONIC anil havo bought Uireo cross already this year. In all our ex- J perlence of 14 years. In the drug business, bare Ir' never sold an nrtiule that gave such universal satis* 8UI taction us your Tonic. Yours trulr, wi AJJSEV.CAUXt ACo- sir vw\nfllPI I drilling machines of j v\ Iffl kMSS R all Sinus and sizes, for , P"1 R j( 6^7? Ba f M drilling wells for house, i P?1 l' I B | 8 farm. City and Villasre y? El hG fiflSnfes Water Works, Facto"II rice, lee Piar.llrew- ?-1< y cries. Irrigation. Coal and ?u Mineral Pros pectin?. Oil and Gas, etc. Latest anil Host. 30 years experience. WRITE US . or WHAT YOU WANT. i LOGMIS & NYHAN, Tiffin, Ohio. ' FREE WATCH! S?nd your a<l?lre<s and we will exprp?sSOflne.Io>.(r- | bller Nickel cigars. When s >IU. remit us ?J..V) ami ; ohoniisi.nipsifmivliid sud i We Will IIIHI juu.nn.f" _ I set watch, which retails for Si.5". 44 IsSTOS i | CIOAli CO., N<>. Jj .Ututi ?l, Winston, Ik.C. | { Thompson's Eye Water ! pi GI DC VNF.WDISCOVERY; itiTf. T,( ILV BV r O H Quick relief and cure, wont c*re, S?nd ior buck of testimonials and 10 ilHyi* tieatnn-ut Free. Dr.H.B.GREEK'S SORB. Atlanta. Oa. I.\ ordering gooda or making enquiries "f od? rti-er? It will be to your advantage lo men- * tton thla pape*. 80. 41 Pre TTTANTED?Case of bad health that R I ? VN'S BC ?? will not benefit Send 5 eta. to Itlpans Chemical ? Co., XewYork, for lo nam pie, and looo testimonials. 1 CHARLOTTE COMMERCIAL m. 1 OLLEfiE, nwnaU J >0 Vocations? roeitlons Guaranteed?Catalogue Free 9 Send a cent* In .tamp* for pocket calculator. ' | V* t ' \ The City by the Sea. [he KEELEY INSTITUTE,' X. E. Cor. Vanderhorst t Smith Sts., HAHLHSTON SOl'TH CAROLINA. Atlantic Ocean >u ! Bath inc. Yat-hing, loating and Fishing. Trolley and' Forry Jdes 7. 18 and -J miles. Sullivan Island and tie Isle of Palms, all 2t> "fco enjoyed while nder treatmeut tor Whiskey or Morphine Addiction. ipena Oct. 3rd and will be the only Keeley Institute In the State. [HE BAILEY LEBBY CO. S? 1 ********* ,'"ES Engines and Boilers. VLTMAX & TAYLOR Threshers. MONI i OR" Dustlcss Grain Separators, ins. Presses, Corn and Cane Mills, NGLEBURG Pice Huller and Polisher, >E LOACH Saw Mills, Leather & Rubber Pelting, Lacing. Packings, Pipe, Iron Fittings, InJectom, Pulleys, Shafting. Hand Pumps and General r-applies. > CHARLESTON, - - S, C. ry our B-L Co. Anti-Friction Babbitt Metal sAW MILLS, II you need a saw mill, any size, writ# me before buying elsewhere. 1 have lbe most complete line of mills of any dealer or manufacturer in the Soutk !0RN MILLS. Very highest grade Stones, at unusual lv low prices. YGOD-WORKINS MACHINERY, Planers, Moulders, Edger-s Re-Saw?, Rand Saws, Laths, eta MINES AND BOILERS, Tnlbolt and Liddell. Englefcerg Bice fuller .in stock, quick delivery, low prices. /. C. BADHAM, No. 132P> Main St.. Columbia, S. C. R. GILDER'S LIVER PILLS. u?"*?i ' nre no ejmblned that ihey do four thing.*' lit The v not on the L'.ver. t Ind. They net on the I pp r how el*. Ird They act on the Lower liowcl*. llh. They act upon the Kidney*. <otk -They do not sicken or tcrtjx?. Other rsl'ls Co e-fou. th; ionje one-ha f of this. tiii.ler's do It all. 25 Cent-? ilox by Mail, he Howard ?V W illel U.u.; Comvaor AI'Ul'KTA. OA. MAKE l HEM. ONE AND SEE !T. . i We will exhibit at the state Fair, to be held here Nov. 13th to lihb, in operation. a jmplete Murray Ginning Systim, Rui;t bv Liddell Co.. Charlotte N. C. . This will affotd all interested an opportunity of seeing the mo-t mod?rn and simplest of Ginning Machinery. You can't afford to miss it. W. H GIBBES & CO., ichinery and Mill Supply Headquarters, COLUMBIA. S. C. J FACTORY PRICES. IS Pianos & Organs Can be obtained direct from the factory id freight paid. I represent the builders of io most reputable makes of both Pianos and rtfane. hence will save you money. For rms. prices, etc., address I. A. MALOHE, Columbia, S. C. PIANOS and ORGANS. BI ask comparison in quality, prisea and terns. M, A. MALONE, Dnt'to l i < i 'i s?. At a recent lecture <le!.\e;<ru i;i \ulil auson. CtM-many. a ii<:.-<?n.i:'y named lcliler rend extracts from a Chinese Dok of the eleventh century which , resents some striking joints of reiirhlaiice io Dante's "Inferno." gnromni::niunu,JunwnfiifitT:i::i.ti..iiuu.u)U SI WAW TTJiyaot i?o( Labest machinery and tare time an I riasth.The Electric" <2>>SiV* ALLEY SAWS enable one mm to do the work -on could do in he old way. Oar "lilectrie" Circular snwi IN. ^ andKel:-Feci lira*Sawa flattie I ^N_f? *r? t>t tho bet,: general X'reck 1 /ftjv* parpo?o Fwm Saws erer Urn* fflC, V-irV t* r,li":',-S'-:idforDc?cn> Saw . oaiidorios No. J^C-vaZjJJs^'!/ list of 'Smalley* b:iKe!nniiFodI shellerS ilootCattcrynii Ilereo Powers. . IMALLEY MFC. CO., Manitowoc, Wis. |EED WHEAT FOR SALE! a* 'rom the greatest crop ever grown in the uth. 'I hree varieties: Fulras'er, a hoarded icatt I ted May and White Clausen, both ooth or beardless. Wheat is now very free un cockle seed and broken grain. being far perior to tho usual run of seed vvhei', We ll. however, reclean the wheat when deed. taking out almost eve rv cockle seed and res of broken grain as well as any interior tin there nrvy be in it. Who it as it now is co Sl.W per bushel, recleane<l wneat ?1.15 r bushel. The-e prices are l>ot!i ou cars at arlotfe. including sacks. Ea<-h sack conns two bushels, send in your orders at -eif you wish to secure tho Ivestseed wheat the market. Terms: Cash v.Ith order. Charlotte Oil & Fertilizer Co., ... if? Fred Oliver, C1IARLO J' I'M, .N. O. h e tc e^CED[_ B?1LER F?EDt|rYETp v?-; W fl~Tery I.OW PRICES. Large stock. Also PE, VAI.VKS and FITTINGS. ENNES, BOII.EKS. MILLS and REPAIRS. >mbar'd IronWorks & Supply Co,. AUGUSTA, UA. ' -PATENTS->oure<l on cash, or easy ln*talmcnts.YO\VLES h BSB, Patent Attorneya, 81 Broadway, N. Y. Q Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use N H In time. Sold hr drtcflats. si