Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. N beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, b: stirring up the lazy liver and driving all in purities from the body. lBegin to-day t< vanish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads and that sickly bilious complexion by takinj Cascarets,-beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 2c. 50c. The Utica Knitting Company has decide< to increase its capital stock from r,60.000 ti t200,000. So. 2. To Cure A Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Qninine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it Nails to cure. 23c Some 7,000.0.10 tons of coal are annualli used in the United Kingdom in the mauufae ture of gas. P 2't Tobacco spit and Smoke Tour i.re Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag betic. full of Lfe. nerve and vigor, tati No-T& Bac. the wondcr-worier, that naizc real: men strong. All druggists, 50c or NI. Cure guaran weed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co.. Chicago or New York The Penman Manufacturing- Company, Paris. Ont.. will make a large addition to itt underwear factory. Educate Teetr B1owels With Cascar o'-, Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forr..er E, 5c. If C. C. C. fail. druggists refund mone!. The new cotton yarn mill at lI.nrietta. K U., will start work soon with 25,1 0i spindles. Pains and Aches 0' aheumatisrn Mike Countless 'I housands Suffr. But this disease is cured by Hofods Snr sa;,arilla, which neutralizes the acil in the bood. If you havo any sym:ptoms Of rhtwumatisn take Hood's Sarsapairiiia at once and do rot waste time ani.t money on unknown preparations. Tihe merit of Hood's Sirsaparilla is unqnestivn"d and its record of cures unequalled. Hood's Sarsaparlla Is kmerica'sGreatest Medicine for rheumatism Hood's PII:s care ati iver ills. :' cents. Trees in New Zea!and. The kauri is the monarch of the New Zealand fores:, an indigenous pine, lun growing to enormous height, frequent ly eighty feet. before it sends out bough, while its average dianeter Is from eight to nine feet. It is said to be 800 years in reaching maturity. rThere is no underbrush in a l-uri for est. the prince of trees permm:'ng no rival within its domain. The totara is .nother species of pine, which. how ever, has none of the characteristics of the coniferne of other countries, either in habit or in appearance. The most singular of all is the rata. a pe. *uliar tree, with somewhat the nature of a parasite. If it springs up near a riinu pine it winds- about it like a huge vine, its tightening coils gradually crushing the life out of the unfortu nate pine. When It reaches the top it sends out branches and staids a 1ol low shell, its coils knit closely together by a dense network of libers, which appear in the last stages of its growth. It has a like affinity for its own spe c~es, and a second rata springing up beside one of earlier growth will ab sorb and destroy it as it destroys the rimu. Ir, however, neither rinmu nor rata is within reach it grow s up) a re spectable an' well behaved tree, -at taining a height of from fifty to sixty feet, and is used for masts in ship building.-Chautauquau. Different View. .d o-unuk yo.u have always bee! with your love affair-s," said MvcBride pityingly to his friend Tenterhook "On the contrary," replied Tenterhook, "every girl X ever fe-ll in love with has married some one else."--Judge. CONSULTING A WOMA N. Mfrs. Pinkham's Advice Inspires Confidence and Hope. Examination by a male physician is a hard trial to a delicately organized woman. 'She puts it off as long a-s she dare, nd is only driven to it by fear of can eer, polypus, or some dreadfd1l ill. Most frequently such a woman leaves a physician's oifice where she has un S dergone a critical Sexaminationl with - a an impressionlmore or less, of discour agement -This condi tion of the mind destroys - the effect of advice; and she grows worse rather than better. In consulting Mrs. Pink ham no hesitation need be felt, the story is told to a woman and is wholly confidential. Mrs. Pinkham's address is Lynn, Mass., she offers s'e: women her advice without charge. Her intimate knowledge of women's troubles makes her letter of advice a wellspring of hope, and her wide experi ence and skill point the way t->health. "I suffered with ovarian trouable for -'-...seven years, and no doctor 1:::: w what was the matter with me. 1 hiad spells which would last for two dia --:, or more. I thought I would try Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compo-und. I have taken seven bottles of it. a:r1? am en tirely cured."-Mas. JOfl:-: FOiEMAx, 2( N. Woodberry Ave., Baltimocre, Md. The above letter from Mrs. Fo-emaz is only one of t~ousands. "My wire had pimples on her race, but she has been taking CASCAROETS and they Ikavo all disappeared. I had becn troubled with constipation for some time, but, after tak ing the flrst Cascaret I have had ::o trouble with this ailment. We cannot speakt too high ly of Cascarets." FRaa ED w- H~!MA N. 5708 Germantown Ave.. rhiadu. 'hia, Pa. CANDOY VRADE MARK RColT~r Pleasant. Palatabce. ctent. Taste Good. D< Iood. .ever Sicken. weaken. or Grg c. 1c. 2ic,50~c ..CURE CONSTIPATION... ter!ing Remedy Company, Chiengo. Montreal. New York. $1i UNJ-TO-BAC sftsoTbzca Hait I OM WORLD 7z SOMETHING ABOUT SILKS. They Wero Never So Cheap and Ther< Were Never So Many of Them. "It is a fanny thing about silks thi season," said the silk man. "At on( time you could say that such and suel: a silk was in fashion because all th< women were buying that kind, but il isn't that way now. Women are buy ing everything under the sun in thi way of silks. There are brocades sm all-patterned silks, stripes-every thing; we can't say that we are sellius more of one kind than another, be cause we sell them all. "Women like 'something different i Well, I guess you are about righ there. I had a woman come i% th: other day and say that her sister has bonaht such and such a kind of sill at another shop, and she wanted i silk, but that it must be entirely dif ferent. Well, I showed her everythin; there was in the shop, but the troub!h was she didn't know what she di want, except that it niust be differeni from anything she had ever seen. That is the way it is. At one time man had his regular customers, whi .would always come to him for wha they wanted, and he could always sup ply them. But it is not so no. . woman comes in and looks everythin all over, and then-takes a sample. I is hard on a man who is judgei by th sales he makes, and the fIrm thinks h( is no good if he can't sell. "Why, I can rememler the time when I went into the business as t boy, that women were perfectly wel satisfied if they had only a few kind of silk to select from, say a brown anc a green and a blue and a few color: like that. Now you can't get up nen things fast enough for them and' they are not satisfied at that. With the competition, it means a great deal. You can't have a few pieces of a cer tain kind of silk on hand, and where there is a greater variety and a larget stick there is more danger of loss. "Take light silks. At one time silks that were used for house wear in the winter would do for outdoor spring and summer wear. But there is nothing of that kind now. We hatve a special variety of silk for the spring trade. Silks never were so cheap Last year they were cheaper than they ever had been in the history of the trade. If a woman doesn't have a silk gown nowadays, it is because she is too particular to find anything that suits her. Women are doing less of their own shopping now than they used to. They leave more of that to their dressmakers now. Think of a girl letting any one buy her wedding gown a few years ago! She and all the members of her family woul d make a business of shopping for it, but there is nothing of that kind now: Perhaps there is just as much senti ment, but the bride simply tells her dressmaker what she wants, and she gets the goods, possibly a sample first, if the girl has a great deal to sa~ about her gowns, but more likely she will not see it until the material is in the house. Things are different, and we all feel it. The compei-ition is so great that the salaries of the clerks are not half what they were, and now, where a man would a number of years ago have had a small shop of his own and make enough to support his fam ily comfortably, he has to take hall the money in the employ sof some one else. Oh, yes, women spend more money than they did, but they have more things for which to spend it." New York Times. Telvet Coats in Style. " A London costumer suggests this black velvet jacket, lined with Ameri can beauty satin and trimmed with jeweled buttons and two flat chin chilla reveres. The collar, faced with chinchilla, may be left open to show. the wide bow of the violet stock be neath. That the coat is cut with spoon-shaped tails and small sleeves it is hardly necessary to state. Another beautiful cutaway in plum colored velvet has the slight falness of the double-breasted front, s:rapped in by a band of black satin ornamentedl with genuine gold buckles set with precious stones. The fancy-shaped reveres are of white satin, covered with lisse and edged with a piping of chinchilla. A chinchilla piping also borders the rolhing velvet collar,which fastens with two little fnrred heads. The sleeves are half tight and half puffed. A coat of this kind is made snug and durable and practicable dur ing cold weather by an interlining of chamois skin concealed by ';he mauve taffeta lining. Young married wome'n who revel in their newly acquired dignity as ma trons lavishly admire the longer coats. They are at the same time demure and coquettish,and are not lacking in chic, with their fiat circular ru.nies quaintly applied, stitched bands and gorgeous linings. One is in green broadcloth, lined with heliotrope cord silk and trimmed at the long cutaway fronts with a circular flune,; cut wide at the back and tapering into points up the front. What appears to be a dress skirt in the same cloth shows beneath the open fronts. In reality it is a part of the coat, to whi~h the cir cular ruffle is applied in cutawvay form. The other long coat is a blending of princess and redingote in Havana brown cloth, dashed with oblong lighter spots. The skirt and flat collar piece are outlined with scallops. The coat is double-breasted and fast. ened toward one side under a loose, narrow front piece. The side and back are tight-fitting. A tailor stitched band trims the collar and front and heads the shaped runle. Little reveres of zibeline open over ai treked shield of rose velvet. The rol. ing collar and the piping of the beige hat are also of zibeline. Rlose velvet in as large loose bow is used on the hat without furrher trimming. The eos tme is lined with rose taffeta, and may be w orn either as a gown or as a wrap.-Philadelphia Times. A Womnan's Unique Diary. A youngt woman who revels in wos -ha's evolved, or* at least revived, an cx eeilent way of keeping herself in si ate of perpetual gloom. She has di-.ry with two pages for each day. On one page she writes what she ex pects to do, where she prpoe to go day. On the opposito page she write what she has done, where she ha I been and whom she has seen. Thi pages, says the young woman, neve agree and are usually flat contradic tions of each other. The silver linin of the cloud of pessimism -which suel a perverse state of affairs would other wise engender is that she has notice( that when she predicts and expects gloomy (lay, filled with disagreeabb duties or monotonous dullness, th opposite page is sure to glimmer witl pleasaut surprises-calls from pleasan people, letters from absent friends invitations of an especially temptm character and all sorts of urlooked for enjoyment. The writer of th 1 diarv says she finds it an exceilen antidote for undue elation of spirit and a check to despair. When sh feels "down" she can turn to her bli da-s and see how -vell they turned out and when she feels partienlary ex nberant a glance at the record of day I ,yonsiy anticipated but miserabl; spent has a wonderfully sobering ef *." TAhe book keeps her in a stat, of tranquil neutrality very restful fo the nerves. The absulrd young wom an has had the odd diary bound ii Pinlk and purple, typifying joy an woe, and Lalls it her book of faith. New York Commercial Advertiser. I;evutifyin;: the Necc. To beautify the neck the followin! dIrtections, if carefully and persistent ly cal ied out, will bring satisfactor: sults: Bathe the neck and shoul ders every night in warm water, the rub them with olive oil. Use th palm of the hand, making the stroke: from the neck downward, and then ih a circular direction. Keep this ui about five rainutes. Lay the chi! against the throat and turn the heat slowly to the right and around agaii slowly to the left. Repeat this latte: movement five times, then rub th' thinnest part of the neck or ches briskly with the palm of the hand using the downward stroke. Whe. you have done this for a few minutes stand with you shoulderblades an' head firmly placed against the wall, the tips of yoar fingers resting on you shoulder, and then take a long breath Gradually relax. This concludes the exercise. Retire immediately, an generally one's sleep will be good ani. sound the whole night long. A Qucen's Alliance. The Queen of the Belgians ha issued a rescript to her sister queenm and empresses asking them to form an aliianco for the purpose of helping thE lacemakers of Europe. She has ap pealed to them to forswear wearing imitation lace and to bind themselves to wear only hand-made lace, pointing out tha the machine-made fabric threatens the extinction of artistic, hand-worked lace. The number of lacemakers in Belgium and France has diminished since the advent of lace machinery by forty thousand per. sons. The Queen's appeal met with a ready response and the queenly Ialliance has already become a fact. Satin Cosrds For Trimmuing. Black satin cords made-not co rered -as atrimming to be used like braid are very effective in patterns or sewn on in straight rows quite close. to. g~eth er. White satin cords are especi. Ially pretty sewn on white tulle and net for yokes, collars and vests. A Novelly in Tuicks. . A pretty sleeve, which is tucked nearly half way down to the elbow, has the tucks turned up instead of down. It has that much-desired quality of being "something differ. ent." Fashion Notes. Among the novelties in winter waists is a Norfolk cutaway with a deep-yoke front. Round rosettes of black velvet baby ribbon are used as a trimming on lace evening gowns. White cloth, fine and silky in finish, is case of the fashionable materials for the bridesmaid's gown. Very pretty filigree bracelets are shown, and evidently are again in favor. Some arc set with genis. Cherry-red tayeta is the latest thing for petticoats, and if you would be quite up to date have corsets to match. 3Many handsome imported gowns are in cashmere of delicate shades. A coarse lace applique is seen on hand. some afternoon and evening gowns. Hoods for evening wear are ini vogna. They are built of flowered silk and lined with satin, turning back from the face after the manner of an Iold-fashioned sunbonnet. Pompadour combs are now studded with gems, some being of great value. The jew'eled side combs are still fashionable, the newest styles bein.: made entirely of gold or silver andi set with small diamonds and other precious stones. A black velvet stock, at which the women exclaim, "Ifsn't that sweet': has a little double rule of wvhite rib~ bon at the upper edge and a design in the same rusiled white ribbons ofn double~ bowed Empire knot, and curv ing ends joining. Something novel in a bride~smaid's costume is a white taiifeta silk coat with round tails and elbow sleeves, worn with awhite net skirt trimmed with chin'un ruches. The edges of the coat are finished with ro0ws 01 stitching, and the revers are covered with handsome lace. A Comiprehensive Wink. The other day a small boy, ouite a small hoy, too, being barely four years old, was having some pictures taken, and, as the day was dark, the plates had to be exposed longer than usual. IWhen the proofs arrived there came with them a notice that another sit ting woutld be rec'uired, because, as wats only too evideni, the boy hadi moved. lime wa"s precious, as the pictures w tere wainted to edehndie :randmia's buirtlv. anid thc ?othe: v.: a ltl put out. "Oh I Willie," she ailedT"h it?"' The boy looke-d wti elyfr hed idon't ku.i.'' h' .l ' I do knw.To:aewn'. uc IDonlo$h'P Where rYh Spend the Winter. James B. Church, of Tiverton, Rhode Island, a recognized authority on fish and their habits. thus writes: Fich are, except the birds, the best pilots in the world. Either the birds or fish know more when asleep about piloting than a man pilot does when awake. Now, as to the habits of fish. They ccme on the coast in the spring, when the migratory instinct starts them out o? their winter's sleep. In winter they are in a dormant state, like the bear, skunk and woodchuck. The old theory that fish migrated south is all wrong. Fish simply leave the coast and go off shore on the northern edge of the gulf stream, get into water of the right temperature and go into winter quarters. Before the time comes for them to start on their ainual pilgrimage for their win ter quarters they have taken on a good coat of fat. It is under their skin, and their sto:nach is lined with it. and it is also all through their bodies when they arrive at the spot that they have selected for their win ter home. Then there grows over their eyes a white film, and their vent clces, and so they remain until the time comes for them to start for their summer home. Cotton Ia Still the American Eing. The annual report of Secretary Hes ter, of the New Orleans Cotton Ex change, for the cotton year, 1897-8, recently ended, indicates a greater ad vance in all branches-of the cotton in dusty than has'hitheito been reported. At 11,199,994 bales, the crop shows an increase of nearly 2,250,000 bales over that of the previous year. The total value, $320,553,000, Is over $1,300.00. less than that of a year ago, owing to a reduction of about $8 per bale. Newly MInted. "I've -got a new idea." "Hmh! It cught, then, to be a bright one."-Fx. - - - - - - We know of nothing better to tear the lining of your ;throat and lungs. It is better than wet feet to cause bronchitis and pneumonia. Only keep it up long enough and you will succeed in reducing your weight, losing your appetite, bringing on a slow fever and making everything exactly right for the germs or con sump tion. Stop coughing. and you will get well. Scures coughs ofi every kind. An ordinary cough disap pears in a single might. The racking coughs of bronchitis are soon completely mas tered. And, if not too far -along, the coughs of con sumption are completely cured. Ask your druggist for one of Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral .Plaster. It will aid the action of the Cherry Pectoral. If you h~re ay complaint what ever and desire the b.s medical adv~ce you can possibly obtain, write as freety. You will receive a prompt reply that may be of great tII y.C uTI Loweln, 3lnss. CLEVE-? MATCH MAKING. Uotit o the Amrican Girls Got Elit ioi of ble i sb ndts,f "An exceedingly clever bit of match making has just been executed by an American lady whose eldest daughter eft New York with some frietyls on a Europiean tour, and who, after doing he continent, returned to our gay cap :al for several months of rest and pleasuring," writes a resident of Paris to the New York Commercial Adver tiscr. "Attractive anci eiever, she had many suitors. She adlroitly reduced the number to two. Then she wrote home to her mother, explaining the exact situ:n'ionl of affairs, adding that hey were both so handsome, agreeable, well-concted and rich that .he could not dele between then. and closed with the question: 'What shali I do?' Ten days later she received a te'.cgram from her mother: -1 saIl totrrow; hold both until t come.' The next ransatlantic steamecr brought the mothet with her serond daughter, just turned IS. Onm 'Mr arrival she at ones 'okc the .helm ci a'fairs, and she at nded the wedding of her two daugh p sat rhe American cnpe] on the 3:mei-orniinz." BinaebeyArd. Fatima was much moved when she beheld all thcie beheaded women in the forbidden chamber. "Oh! the rcrve of that man Bluebeard!' she ex elaimed: "to tell me his formnr wives nad died of ptomaines in ice cream!" Naturally, when iher husband came home and saw the blood upon the keyv hs feelings vwere btter imaaied than described.--Puck.. Ilo Every farmer's wife kno the milk buckets, pans, cheu the dairy be perfectly clean : mon yellow soap that smells' for washing these. Such soa you would not use for any sticky and the soap vill get in stay there. Ivory Soap is pt b sweet, clean materials are use IVORY SOAP IS 9o% Copyright. 692. 1y The Nact POPULAR SCIENCE. Some east-iron cannon balls were recently recovered from the sea near Brest. They had been under water for over a hundred years. They could be cut with a knife, a great part of the iron having disappeared. Exposed to the air, the interior became quite hot, of course losing the heat in a short time, after the oxygen of the air had ceased to act upon it. A scientific writer says that night Is the time which nature utilizes for the growth of plants and animals; children, too, grow more rapidly during the night. In the daytime the system iS kept busy disposing of the waste con sequent on activity, but while asleep the system is free to extend its op erations beyond the mere replacing 01 worn-out particles, hence the rapid growth. This is why invalids need so .uch rest and sleep. A very pretty line of experiments is carried out by floating bicycle balls in mercury and bringing a :;trong mag net near them. They arrange them selves symmetrically under the inlU ence of the stresses, and aSSrme very curius positions, varyina with tlheir number and the intensity of muagrnet ism. It is a variation of an old experi ment known as Meyer's necdies, in which meedles were floated in water by bits gf cork, and were subjecte1 to the influence of a magnet.. A strange instance of like curing like is fo'und in a memoir recently pre sented to the Paris Academy of Sci ences by M. J. Hauser, in which that gentleman urges the use of infusorial earth as a perfect means of filtering liquids and separating from them the most minute organisms of particles o? matter. The earth is first of all cai ined at a high temperature, after which It is powdered and mixed to a creamy consistence with water. The mixture Is then left to threw down a deposit on any suitable support, suci> as asbestos cloth or glass wool, and is then ready to act as a filter. If you lie to help a man Gut of a scrape he will always remember you as an accommodating liar. "What do they cail the mnl-rches that breed diseases. John?" "Please sir, germs." "Correctand what do they call the people who know how to han de germs 'n a scientinec way?" "Please sir, Germanls."-Ally Sloper. Newly 2STnted. "I've got a new idea." "Hmh! It ought, then, to be a bright one."-'-EI. To Cure Constpation Forever. Taike Cascairets Candy Cathartic. 10c o725e, i. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. In Hungary there are thou-ands of vil laces and hundreds of small towns without a doctor wIthin ten miles. MTr. win'low's oothinTar yruip for children 'eting, so.ftens the gume, reducing infi ms ion. allays paincures- win I colice:1c a bottle. The Edg.field (S. C.) Cotton Manufacturing Conpaniy has plaoed the order for the ad dition of 2.500 spinlles. I hve foun 1 Piso's Curo "or Consumption an unfaling medicin.-F. R. Lorz, 1305, -cott, St., Covington, Kr., Oct. 1 180J4. Lat year the United States e'xported sewing mnehines to the value' of $2,50J,000, and tyiewriters worth $1,5C0,000. No-To-Bae for Fifty Cents. 1 Gu.-'nteed tobacco habit core. makes week men srong, bloo4 pure. ("Jo,8'.. All druIst. The Talbot Woolen Mills Company, North Billerica. Mass., is building a new dye house and a large four-story addition. F t. permn'nently cured. No fits ornervous n~sfter first '-t"'s u1.1e of Dr. Kline's Great N'erve Restorer.S$2trial bottle and t'-eatise fro TATE OF OH IO, CTY OF IOLEDO, Lucas COUNTY, FaANK J. CH ENEY mnakesocith that he is tho e nior pa rterof tne firmnoJ. F.CEnzsY & jo.doin z ruisine-s in the City of '1 oledo.- -on ty an Stite at ores .id, and that said firm will :( 'av the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for ch :nd every case of CATAnnn that canno . e cred by thie use of HALL's CA'rAnitR 1 cc az.FnANK J. ('HENEY sworn to before me and a :bscribed in my presene.', this tith day of .ecember, SEAL A. D. 1886. A. VM. GiLEASoN, Nota'ry Pubhc. i H lalVs Catarrh G ure is taken internally, and .a directly on thie blood and mnucous sur es of the s' stemn. send for testimonmals re. F. J.-'as & Co.. Toledo. 0. -old bv Druggists, Z5c. Hairs Family iills are the best. AVA -Lj 71,1 t ws how necessary it is that 'ns, and other implements of tnd free from tvit. A com )f rosin should never be used ps are made of materials that urpose. Besides, they are to the cracks and corners and re, it is well made, and only J. Then it rinses readily. ,PER CENT. PURE. 1 k CadMIA Co.. ClnenM.i The Potash Question. A thorough study of the sub ject has proven that crop fail ures can be prevented by using I fertilizers containing a large percentage of Potash ; no plant can grow without Potash. We have a little book on the subject of Potash, written by authorities, that we would like tb send to every farmer, free of cost, if he will only write and ask for it. . GE~RI1AN KALI WORKS,C 93 Nassau st., New York. t$ L esson in EVERY ONE SHI It Shows the Only Method by Which Organs Can Be Reac Passaie of the (Co'structeri sn as :L eit and Dry SAir before en s sebes an ung de. s'-oyed here by .y :gLIquid Mied TONGUE. Sense of inste die Flroyed by strong drugs. EPIGLOTTTS. in .5prays. Douhes. A oi ze rheand Va ; a~stothren a swhc ao 3rhonp er botte eofcn yom e ufcentg to lasi iones for using Weltra aluns, wsere itREE "' ki >oxns of ha Hy oumei Balm, . theronderful. anti-ns cfrit ations. Sed ofc totn thee MicAIN e i.argest Growler f.1.. Co t tle aetl .ion bne oiof ou p rlan t.at osile adiidulA gO eRoto *in tep opr, btloeoe of oisfiint ola ionbst orin.te plnaosn FREE "Ti ountr yoTher Bis tin onderlo onti fhis pes, in, Msrissippda cmplet son atiod. deotd atocuie to the I ergies th erontation. epoe cares. Rieudhads on hies re- e enlonu fhs planewihaeletdon in s issippi, Aranas n oyisi ara. Somed met aso teae owne ooe 01 heoes andoied nce tioftns.n rit nounir 'feei nl opera P nere LIQUOR, MORPHINE, TOBACCO USING PRODUCE A DISEASF.D CONDITION OF TEE BRAIN Which is Easily Cured at KEELEY INSTITUTE, Et",.: The Remedy builds up the system ir. every way. removing permane .tly any desire or de. muand for Liquor or Drug. All patients are ander the care of skilled institute physieian who Is a veteran graduate of the cure and -ix rsexclusively in KEELY work. Write for rature. Large mansion. ::team Heated. Large Piazzas' The Only KEELY INSTITUTE in the State. IN PIANOS R BARGAINS AND OGANS Organs from $15.00. 25.00. $35.00 and ;p ward. Uuright Pianos from $175 00. Sl15.00 '.5.00 and upward. Address M. A. MALONE, Columbia S. C. FLOUR MII MACHINE. ,ontracts Taken to Furnish Completa Equi * ments For ROLLER FLOUR MILLS, -REPRESENTING THE 1ICHMOND CITY MILL WORKS@ One of the 11rgest nanufacturers of Flour di I.achintrv in the count- y. and having xperienced mill wrights. I am pr.-pared to ,uiid m Is on the moir improved plans and .t prices to comprwe withany one in the rade. We guarn the prodncts of on: 211sto eqa-t the grades of the best western als. Refore pacin. your o-ders write i 2e. I also htndle completelfime nf'Wood. "ForkIng Machinery, fatv MIlls. En :ne and Bollers, Corn 2..Js and .Ma hinery in General. Having been established In business here )r 16 year.. I have built un my trade by s,-1. ig the - erv highest class of m3chinery. and m in a better position to serve the interest of Ly cu'tomers than ever before. V. C. BADHANI, Columbia, S. C. 1ZZ %'.In S-tr-et. f. I. GIBBES & 00s, COLUMBIA, S. O VACHINERY & MILL SUPPLIES, )1 N S TO PLEASE ALL, Kna Chickering. Sohmer. Fischer. aind :n. other reliable ma-kes to ch(;o-e frtm. rms and prices n keeping with the tinice. Lddress - V. A. MALONE, - Columbia, S. C. PIANOS AND ORCANS. Roney in Chickens Tor2 Inst'I"Mp We mew a LJ) * AG. G l l ug the experieuce ca praeucal uktury kamer-uot an amateur. out a manl worm a for uollars nti rena-..urmj ra years. it teacrues now to ifeteve andt.cure btSue.: ' ee1 for e.; aiofor i.aLueut.4.- wbicii Fowls 0 ye for reemag: everytile r" qulshefor proaal rotuuy ris 1narJ Strc;.Sew ari. I ROPSYR .T taee.*8.-n or"so a Physiology OULD LEARN. Diseases of the Respiratory ~ bed and Cured. Euataa Cloedby iriit Atomizers and ra's. causing en t eBr uchlal roug italo can Diseases of t be s.e Organs be reachbed and caredl rga ery rtil o ir ibreathed, yet leav a the bacili which cause Caarrh, Catarrhal cuption. N.HALATION. rer endorsie by emmts pBofm sindef Sby mail. Pamphlets, consultation and advice ail to every person sending us 25c. or cash, mentioning this paper, ing of an Aluminum inhaler, Wire :two weeks, gauze and full direo te Story of Hyonmei " and a sample ieptic healer and enre for piles. ,ddle-sores, eczema and all surface EFICE AND LABORATORY of LNTED-Case of bad health that E-ZP-AN-8 ewX, rk. fu 1u smples and 1i te.~lmon s. az.d laior ut.. So. 2. .50.--SPECIAL OFFER.--S17.50. an a vthe8a. wbenyo ucometothe ;ar 'C.:mercial Colleue, k iAk:.orr? y* N. n..ekwear for u. at orne. vrk al ut e;sh an -istance. Sent l' . icr partlculira.Iem nTat f0.1 or n nsl rneet. . BAI Tli'. -1E Mand Whiskey habits cured at homno wtth, Out pain. Bok ofpar 'f l Offc . Pror .C e $1.00.