SOURAGING TIPS. Uanifh- Ra&iroad Ofilaus TrYin tW Break Up the Practice. Ois stated recently by several of clasof railway companies having ter -mini in the md.ropolis that the ques tion of the tipping of porters had been engaging the attention of the respect ive general managers, says the Lon don Times. The subject was one which bristled with difficulties, inasmuch as the traveling public encouraged, rather than discouraged, the practice. In the rules and regulations for the observ ance of the staff of each of the railway companies there was a clause specially *directed to the question of the accept ance of tips, which provided that any servant detected receiving gratuities of any kind was liable to instant dismis sal. Unfortunately, passengers were not aware of the existence of such a regulation..Or totally ignored it. If the public would only report cases of incivility on the part of porters on occasions when tips were not forth -c-ming, the railway companies would be in a position to deal more effective ly with the question. The companies desired it to be known that the direc tors did not. as had been suggested by the men, take into consideration the amount a porter was likely to receive In tips when fixing the wage of an em ploye. The wages paid to the men were commensurate with the services ren dered to the companies. The manag ers were, of course, well aware that at many of the larger stations a porter could easily earn, in 'the nature of tips, on an average at least i1 per week. ?to-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco babil cure, inakes Wea men strong, bood n1- 5c.M. All druggiStS Parisians eat :100,000 pounds of snails daily. - So. 10. 31 rs. Winslow'sooth ny -rup for children teething,sofiens the gums. reducing infima Fits perma nently cured. No flLs ornervou% Iess after first day's u- of Dr. Kline's (reat Nerve Restorer. S2trial bottle and treatise free DR. R. Ii. Kis. Ltd.. 9131 Arch St. Pnili. Pa "Only the First Step is Difficult." The first step in Spring should be to cleanse Nature's house from- Winter's accumu lations. Hood's Sarsaparilla does this work easily. It is merica's Greatest Spring Medidne. It purifles the blood, as milbns of people say. It makes the weak strong, as nervous imeni and women gladly testify. It cures all blood diseases, as thousands of cured voluntarily write. It is just the medicine for you, as you will gladly say -after you have given it a fair trial. Baci Bl00cd-" Although past 70 years o1 age I am thoroughly well. It was three bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla that made me so after spending over $60 In medics.] attendance. My trouble was a raw sore os ankl." ns.lous. MAsoh', Couri months I gave mty children Hood s barsa parilla and it cured them of running sores Hood's Pills cured me of dyspepsia and constipation." MRs. KATE E. THoMAs, 32 Governor St., Annapolis, Md. Consumptive Cough -"Five years ago I had a consumpuive cough which re duced me to a skeleton. Was advised tc take Hood's Sarsaparilla which I did and recovered normal health. I have been well ever since." MATmDA BRIDGEWATEa, Cot. Pearl and Chestnut Sts., Jeffersonville, Ind Hood's Pills cure liver ill., the non-irritating and - the only cathartic to take with Hood's sarsparilla - Angora's Silky Far. A recent writer on the Angora goal calls attention to the fact that the cli mate of Angora possesses some re markable peculiarity causing the de velopment of a silky coat on animak of various kinds. Not only the famous goats, which produce mohair, are thus fturnished, but a similar tendency is 'exhibited among such animals as cats and greyhounds living In Z.a same country. _________ The saaest Island in the World. Rockall is, perhaps, the smallest Island in the world. It is situated In the Atlantic over 300 miles west of Scotland. and IS a mere rock about CO feet high and 225 feet round, arising from a reef of sand. The rock Is basalt and granite, very magnetic. It is haunted by sea-birds, and the mackerel of the surrounding seas are very fine. Of course, it was never Inhabited, and is very seldom vis, . , owing to the *diffculty of landing'fl'it. OPEN LET-TERS FROM' JTennie E. GrH N s arry Hardy. JEssa E. GREEN, Denmark, Iowa, 'writes to Mrs. Pinkham: "I had been sick at my monthly periods for seven years, and tried almost everything I ever heard of, but without any benefit. Was troubled with backache, headache, pains in the shoulders and dizziness. Through my mother I was induccd to try Lydia E. Pinkhami's Vegetable Compound, and it has done me so much good. I am now sound and well" MJrs. HAarR HIAI'DT, Riverside, Iowa, writes to Mrs. P.tnkham the story of her struggle with serious ovarian trou ble, and the benefit she received from the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. This is her letter: " How thankful I am that I took your medicine. I was troubled for two years with infiammation of the womb and ovaries, womb was also very low. I was in constant misery. I had heart trouble, was short of breath and could not walk fire'blocks to save my life. Suffered very much with my back, had headache all the time, was nervous, menstruations were irregular and painful, had a bad dischargie and was troubled with bloating. I ivas a perfect wreck. Had doctored and - taken local treatnients; bht stM was no better. I was advisd big one of my neighbors to write to you. I have now finished the second bottle of Mrs. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. and am better in every waya 'I fidle 'to do allmy own work and c a narly' a mile without faticone; something I ha'd not been able t do for ~e'r two Heavy Vote For Good Roads. Complete returns of the Minnesota State election show that the State aid amendment to the constitution has been passed by the people by a vcto of 70,013 to 38,017. The returns only recently have been completed, owing to the unsettled condition of the northern and eastern portions of the State. This is the tirst time that a popular vote has been taken in any State upon the good roads question, and the result is a most emphatic in dorsement of State aid as its solution. The Farmers'National Congress,which met at Fort Worth, Texas, recentiy, passed strong resolutions in favor of State aid and commending the efforts of the League of American Wheelmen toward its introduction. The Min nesota vote is another notable indorse ment of the work of this organization. The constitutional amendment was introduced at the session of the Mia nesota Legislature by A. B. Choate, of Minneapolis, as the representative of the League of American Wheelmen, and its passage by that body was the result of his persistent and diplomatic work in behalf of the measure. This left it to be submitted to popular vote for its final passage. A strong educa tional campaign for good roads was carried on by the league throughout Minnesota last summer and fall, with the active assistance of the Bureau of Road Inquiry at Washington and the press of Minnesota. A large edition of pamphlets, explaining the State aid system of road-building and its advan tages to farmers, was distributed and numerous a-.icles and editorials upon the subject appeared in the papers in various parts of the State. The re sultin; vote for the amendment is al most two to one in its favor. The Minnesota Legislature now will take the necessary steps to put a system of State aid into operation, such as is in force in New Jersey and in idew York. Faraers especially will appreoiate this, as it will enable them to obtain durable highways without being obliged to bear the en Cre expense, as they do a& present. In Yew Jersey and New York the cost of r(-,ds built by State aid is divided be tween the State, the counties and the local taxpayers in the towns. Many towns availing themselves of the New York law are securing funds for road buildingpurposes from outside sources, equal to 1our or five times that which they raise themselves. Country tax payers have learned that State aid to roads provides a means by which the large city taxpayers and corporations owning valuable franchises from the State are made to share in the expense and that it remains optional with the farming districts to avail themselves of this assistance or not, as they may choose. This explains the popularity of State aid in Minnesota and the large vote in its favor. The Benefit of Good Roads. At the suggestion of General Roy Stone, Director of the office of road iaquiry of the Department of Agricul free delivery of mails upon good road&. The object was to prove that improved highways in country districts would enable the Postoffice Department to operate rural free deliveries at about half the present cost and time, thus permitting extension or -twice-a-day service at little additional expense. The postoffice of4icials selected four routes in Burlington County, N. J., for the test. These centre at the towns of Moorestown and Riverton, and lie over good stone roads. In most rural districts it has been found impracticable, on account of the high ways, to deliver more than twelve miles from the distributing centre. It was found that at the test places in New Jersey the mails could be deliv ered twenty-two to twenty-four miles away in the same time usually taken for twelve, or instead there could be two deliveries a day for little more than the usual cost of one.--Washing ton Star. ____ Tests or Road Metal. IIn order to discover the source of 'he constant accumulation of mud on tone roads, Professor Elliott, of the Engineering Department of Cardiff University College, Cardiff, Wales, recently undertook some interesting experiments. He secured samples of about twenty kinds of stone used in road-building, and subjected them to tests by percussive attrition and ab sorption. For the former test, each sort of stone was "subjected to rapid motion against the ribbed sides of an iron cylinder in a manner calculated," says Stone, "to reproduce the action - aulting from vehicular and other traffic." In a four hours' test, Three samples produced less than seven per cent. of dust; five gave between seven and ten per cent.; six between ten and t.hirty per cent. and three between thirty and eighty-nine per cent. In the absorption test most of the stones showed but a mere trace after seventy two hours of soaking, only two varie ties actually absorbing any amount of water. Broad Tires and Good Roads. In France, when they set about making good roads, wide tires were insisted on in the case of all country wagons, and some of them are so con structed that the outer mark of the six-inch front wheel just meets the inner mark of the six-inch hind wheel, thus making a twelve-inch track of both, and turning the wagon as it moves into a sort of road roller on a small scale. With this hint, we leave the matter to the further considera tion of all concerned.* Paragrapha About the Crusade. Good roads are profitable. Hard and smooth roads, formed of white coral, are found in Barbados. The- farmers of Missouri have or ganized improved roads committees in every county in the State. There is a growing sentiment ini favor of adding a department of road study to our college and university co urs es. Highways v.'hich are rendered imn passable by ormueiry ra:ns-ana there are mnaiy of them-are not it o be call roadh. 3foney spat e~n constry roads i wae2; it is only that which goe~s in PERSONALS. More than 100 laudatory poems have been sent to Lord Kitchener since his return to England. H. K. Baker, cashier of the Hallow ell. Me., Savings institution, who cele brated his 92d birthday last week, at tends to his official duties daily. Mrs. William C. Whitney, who was injured while horseback riding some time ago, shows no sign of further Im provement. She h confined to bed, from whic It Is feared she can never rise. Governer-elect Roosevelt of New York, driven to desperation by the army of office seekers by *whom he is besieged, has issued this notice: "No person, no matter who he may be, need come to see me hereafter unless he has an appointment." Princess Theresa of BavarI, is a scientific writer of considerable merit. She has already published one book on South America, and is now at work on another, to get materials for which she made a journey of exploration in the wildest parts of Bra;il. The bazaar In London in aid of wounded Spanish soldiers and of the widows and orphans of the Spanish war was opened by the Princess Bea trice, and a Spanish dance was given by Otero. The pope sent a cameo like ness of himself and there is a collec tion of paintings by Spanish artists. The prince of Wales Is unable to ap preciate the solemnity of the ancient game of golf. One of the caddies at St. Andrew, asked of the respective merits of the prince, Mr. Asquith and Mr. Balfour, gravely replied: "Aye, I mind the names. They'll hae muckle to learn. I telled the prince so, but he only laughed. A light heart is very well for crlcket, but it's a solemn business Is gowf." Mrs. Sarah Josepha Hale, a Boston woman and editor of the first woman's magazine published in this country, worked for twenty years to have a definite day set apart for Thanksgiv ing. Time did not daunt her courage, but rather increased her insistance. She wrote to governors of states and to presidents of the United States. At last President Lincoln adopted her sug gestion in 1864, when there was reason to rejoice over the success of the north in rstoring the union. P Ehiladelphia man named Lubin says he has succeeded in almost''eu tirely doing away with the "squeaky" tone of the phonograph. Before his death he expressed a wish to have his body taken to Montreal for burial, pronouncing a fearful curse upon those who neglected to obey his last request. Among other catastro phes that were to follow a denial of his wish were the sudden death of the camp foreman, the loss of the year's cut of logs, and the burning of the camp. He also said that If he were auried in the wcods a living cross would grow up from his grave which should serve as a perpetual warning tc, all unbelievers. Beaupre died in November, 1894. His body was sewed up in new blankets under tlie roots of a great yellow birch tree which had lately been overturned in a galc. When thj-remains had been duly disposed i.ttle stony opening one of the men chopped off the fallen tree trunk with an axe, allowing the stump to fiy back, thus filling the hole and burying the body under tons of erath. IS THis "Every morning I have a bad taste in my mouth; my tongue is coated; my head aches and I often feel dizzy. I have no appetite for breakfast and what food I eat distresses me. I have a heavy feeling in my stomach. I am getting so weak that sometimes I tremble snd ray nerves are all unstrung. I am getting pale and thin. I am as tired in the morning as at night." What does your doctor say? "You are suffering from i pure blood." What is his remedy? You must not have consti pated bowels if you expect the Sarsaparilia to do its best work. But Ayer's Pills cure constipa tion. We have a book on Paleness and Weakness which you may have for the asking. .. WarIte to our Doctops. Perimpa you would ilko to cntt t r.nt usvkC'2 etou po ndars in your case. You will receive o prompS Tratning the Otter. It is said that Indian fishermen have in ingenious way of training the otter. They catch the small cub and put a colar' round the throat. The littlJ ereaure, linding Itself unable for day.; geter to swallow anything It catch s. gives up trying to do so, and firmly believes for the rest of its life that as otter can only swallow such food as it receives direct frcm 1ts master's he.d and, accordingly, It faithfully br.ngS to the hank all the fish it may A FORTUNE TEL Says a dispatch from to the New York S n: liry Canadian resident of He bell that a miracle has beei performed over the grave of Paul hupre. who died and was buried in thoods above Grindstone Falls, fourears ago. Beaupre, or Bo Peep, as *was called by his acquaintances, wt fortune teller and peddler of snak(in charms, I who traveled from camp) camp in winter selling his amuletid preying upon the credulity of hilountrymen by pretending to reveal fire events. Four years ago he was thn ill with pneumonia while staying a camp On the East Branch and dieinside of a week. Beauty Is Blood eep. Clean blood means a cla skin. No beauty without it. Casearets ndy Cathar tic clean your blood and ke.it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and-iving all im purities from the body. B6 to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotch blackheads, and that sickly bilious compien by taking Cascarets,-beauty for ten cet. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed,ie, 25c, 50c. L- don boasts of a 6500-..und sewing machine. To Cure A Col< in ox Day. Take Laxatlve Hromo Qtinin;'ablets. All ')ru;;,isth refund money i it ta to cure. 25c, In India sheep are used as 6sts of bur den. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tr .ife AMy. To quit tobacco easily ard fiver. be mag -netic. iull of li.1c, nerve and vig take No-To 3ac. the wrnder-worcr. that m:e, weak men itrong. All druggists, 50c or $i.iure guaran -eed. Booklet and sampie re. Address Starling Remedy Co., Chicago - New Yorr. W. T. rarbam & ons, of 1-yville, have .et the coiftract for their new vulen miiW at South Kuoxvilie, Tenn. To Cure Constipation brever. s.ke Cascarets Caudy Catbart. 10c or 21c. . C. C. C. fail to cure. drugists fund money la South America a 1 art costs 15 oents. Educate Your nowels wvit.ascareMt Candy Catiar ic, cure constip;ion forever. :0c.25c. if C. C C. fail. druggistsifund moneY The world's navies enip.y 1,696.000 iieu. isn's Cu.e cured me of a 'frat and Lung roual - of thre ears' s a li,i.-E. CADY, .iun ingtoni, Ind., N.ov. 1.0, 1894. I here is more Cat-irra in th:s, ction of tne -o :.ry thani all other .ilsoesut io.gether.' d until the la t f-v years w.ASupposedt to I .e incurahile For a great many ears doctirs >r ced it a ocal dise s aul pr.scriod zmedies, aid by const-nty lai ing to ui th local treatmcnt. ptiunced i in e. -cience has prove.v ctarra to be a | t tonal disease ndtheriore reqmires nnr-ttutional tro- .me,,t 'H :-'s Catarrh ure manufactured by F. J. CAeney & Co.. oledo, Ohio, is the only constittaional cure in t e market. t is taken -nternaly in doses rom iddropstoatemspoonfi-l its tsdirectly .n the blood and mi.c-us surracei of the sys .m. They offer one nundr.-d dot-irs for any *atse itfailsto cure. Send iorcirct arsana ;:es monia S. Address F. J. CBESIY a Co., To edo, 0. -o' by DrugiLsts. 75c. Halls Family Pills are the best ;e e This SOL.D B RUGASSIN ______ -. NAD._____ Qa Ia yssin!a. The few rs o have taken the time ar' 2 tronb e , tG look into Menelek's queer kingddm of Abys sinia tell strange tales of it. Besides the Marie Theresa, 1,7S0 dollars, the people of Abyssinla, for small change, use a bar of hard crystalized salt. about ten Inches long and two incihes and a half broad, and thick, slightly tapering toward the end, five of which go to the dollar at the capital. Peo :le are very particular about th2 standard of fineness of the currency. If it does not ring like~ metal, or if it is at all chipped, nothing will induce them to take it. Then, it Is a token of affection among the natives, when friends meet, to give eacfl other a lick of their respective amolis, and in this way the maternal value of the bar is also decreased. For still smaller change cartridges are used, of whicht three go to one salt. It does not mat ter what sort they are. Some sharpers use their cartridges in the ordinary way, and then put in some dust and a dummy bullet to make up the dii ference, or else they tas:e out the pow der and put the bullet in again, so that possibly in the next action tile unhappy seller will find that he has only -miss-fires in his b'elt; but thlis Is such a common fraud that no one takes any notice of it, and a bad car tridae seems to serve They are having trouble in Australia with feathers. The custom department to prevent the slaughter of birds made it compulsory to have all feathers passed through the customs house eissified, but when action came to be taken, it was found that with the arti deiial feathers and so-called feathers >f one bird made from those of an entirely different one, not much could ue done unless ti customs house was turned into a department of nat ,ral history with a p)rofeso'r of orni thology in charge. It wioulid also be necessary to open all packages of feathers and examnine aill kinds of muil inery, and the gentlemen in charge of the department found themselves in something of a dilemma. It was stat ed then that the egret and osprey were seldom used on account of their price, > an ounce. Heron feathers are fr ulently made of whalebone, so the nakers claimed, and porcupine bris les make beautiful eg:ets. "Winas >leked from liv-e birds to preserve heir colors"' are mnade from the wings ~f the damestie duck. That is what tihey say in Australia. There are cor tainv many milliners in tis country who now assert that tne~y have only te feathers of domestic 1'owls, Tnenn-o J* d ] Riding in the wind and d often causes painful chapping Those who are so affecte Ivory Soap is made of vegetaI their nature; it can be used f , for there is nothing in it to irri IVORY SOAP IS 994 AWORD OF WARNING.-Therearemar as good as the'Ivo y';" they ARE NOT, bu remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask fo: Cvprrkh0.mbyThPP Spalding's T rade-Mark Means "Standard of Quality" on Athletic Coods Insist upon Spalding's Randsome Catalogue Fro). New York. Chicago. ' Denv6r. ATED--ae of had health that R-1-PA*'s w:l not .enetit Send A 3re. to Ripan.: 4beinjal Co.. ewY>rk. fur lo Faimples and lu u tesirnoinals. kic. ET- F'. CTre gnar-ateed. FBYW-Uiil,30c. FlRO$IDlTE CU..Rultue'e,.J. TAI is on every box of L.axative Bromo Qui ~CRIP CURE t C'OTTON is and will con ~tinue to be the money crop of the South. The planter who gets the most cot on fro:n a given area at the east cost, is the one who makes he most money. Good culti ation, suitable rotation and iberal use of fertilizers con aing at least 3% actual Iwill insure the largest yield. We will send Free, upon application, aphlets that wvill interest every cottou >anter in the South. GE~RflAN KAUI WORKS, os Nassau St.. New York. A Beauty of the Arctic. There is a beautiful bird called the rosy gull, very few specimens of which exist in any museum, and whose entire life is spent in the immediate neigh borhood of the eternal ice that sur rounds the north pole. A paper de I .cribing these curious birds was read at the recent meeting of the American Assocation in Bloston by M\r. John Murdoch. They follow the advance of the ice towards the south as winter comes on. keeping near the loose edge of the floating pack ice, and then re treat with it toward the north when the summer sun begins to I'ise high upon the Arctic circle. The bird is Ismall and of a deep rose color, whereas all other gulls are white. In the boardi scLhools of Great Yarfoth. En:igland, there has been for several years a children's HvIa inth Mission, its idea being to sup ply- the children for tile nominal pay mnt of a penny with a choice hya inth bulb, a good plant, which thlei are to cultivate at home and brinie back later to be exhibited at a flowei show organized for the purpose. Ths East London Horticultural society has adopted a simUilar~ plan and is organizi Ing the children's Chlrysanthemun:l Mission, being aided in the work by the assistance of the schlool teachers Such efforts must tend to brlghteu: Imany a home. some in much need of brihtning, and it would seem ais it they might advantageously be adpoted In other countries, this included. nnnQav refunded "o w c K 'W! ft fit, ast roughens the face and ind cracking of the skin. 1 should use a pure soap. tie oils that are soothing in reely even on tender faces, tate or injure. , PER CENT. PURE. Y white soaps, each represented to be "just like all counterfeits. lack the peculiar and Ivory " Soap and insist upon getting It. .... G.....C..tl FOR 14 CENTS We wish to gain tbe year2.003 new curtulnerd, sajj!jne offer I pkir. is bay li.adiah. 10Ca Iphg. Earif RiV ab'898r 00. 1 L..,ni Li,7ht1, Cuctimberv9 i;aizer't RiestLett-ice, 15 4 C..irnizLa Figwe T~um, 2GO 1x Worts $10,for '14 eenta,%L0 - A r.v Din nes.w rn $1.00. Ic0 n ee dwCll nowI he aogthcer wit h o r 0 grp.r, l,jiL%t and 6eud CtnlooauO 0 u pon~ rece'ivt of t his notice &4C 0 puptage. %Ve ivitey4iurtrAdeand ) kno en Va.t! t .% L zr2 sh~.tit and Whiskey Habits vaireO' at home witIL - p out pain. Book of par ticulars sent FREE. B.ALWOOLLFY, M.D. .a19nt. a Office 104 N. Pryor St. OWEE, ine Tablets. Accept nto substitute re hat DOES CUI 816.95 GERTS' ..OR.. L.ADIES' res, hig re equiyment thruhou, finest i: A WEE' K Address, SEA enes. Bok of sonanta and ie ad cur' treatn Fre. Dr. E. I. GREE5'S So:MS. Box D, Atlanta, StL IGA Fns Tricks and Novei'ies. Ill. Cat.}'ree. ..g.ate.C..anu.-LIr .LWkort.N.Y USWHiEALL ELSE FAILS, -- Bes CoghSyrp.Tastes Good. Use . 'ABAGE PL.aITS FOR SALE' !NO for hlipmni: . Wak -n Id ..d uce .go the ha rd iesr.la .r stt and 'est kno -'n vn:'i eti".. i.r cs's i' o. b~. here 1.0011 t 5,000. $10.5. 5 0)0 to 10.0100. il1.25. or r 10.(000. $1.00. T1h- :t ro grown in tile o en ir ant wi I tand seve e .ld.Adld ess Nonr A N H{.BLurCI Mlegest.S.C, 'e TIRUIE. & aches and pains, rheumatism. nenralgin. prains. biruises and burns. Ittosalso warrant. u to cute coids. croup.coughs and la grippe qnicker than anly known remedy. No cure no pay. Solnd by all drn:rgists and cener-al stores. MaIde only by 600OSE GREASE [.,1M i.NT CO.. GgHEENSeoRo. N. C.___ CONSTIPATIDR "I have gone 14 days at a time without a noeent ot" tite boweis. not oeing able to noe thema except by using hot water injections. Chrnice constipa: ion for seven years placed me in tis terrible condi!.Jou; during that time I did ev--I srytig I heard of butt never found any relief: such as my case until 1 began using CA&SCARtETH. I w have frI'n cite to three passages a day, and if I as rih 11 1would giee t100.00l for each movement; it' s uch a relief.-' Ar1MiEItL. HUtiT. I lIWJ Russell st.. Detroit, Mich. *CAN DY CATHARTIC 'rRAOE MAR15 PEOis'TKEDt Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Tast@ Good. Do od, Never Sicken. WVeaken. or G ripe.10c.20ce.50e. ..CURE CONSTIPATION. ... taig Rlemedy Company, Chieago, Montreal, Jew lark. 32 hut. sn whoy nQt f.ry i4 QUOR, MORPHINE, TOBACCO VSING PRODUCE ADIUBAS* CoN1DrroN OF TEE BIAIN bloh Is Easily Cured a,' ELEY INSTITUTE, aiesrra sr hq Remrdy builds up the system I ol Ly. removi ng perm-1 no -tlY any desreor do md for LIquor .r Drng. All rtent An er the cae of kiled institu e Phye fan 10 is it voter in ir;vluate of theoure Aud 421 is eac ively In REELY work. Write fo erature. Large ma team ted. MrgP PiAZz"' le Only KEELEY INSTITUTE, In the Wae. We are State Agents for and Make a )ecialty of Equ pping Modern Ginning Out s with the Improved le simplestantd beizt. Wealso con r . the 31PPOVEN IURRAY 'EFI)EF., the s niest and most efficient Gi e der in existct--L Nf.achl-ry aad 31 upPlies of all kinds tow is th- ti: to pla e an ord r for a hre;hinc Nr-tchioc. Get the best from us. he Ar-&Qc1y;%L tat. Lcnts L,odel Co.,Eagle Cotton G:nC. V. H. GEDDES & CO., COLUMBIA, S. C. FRO1 $35*00 Upward. Write me for Catao lo.-ues. Terms EAsY. Address M . MALOnE Columbia, S.0 Contraets Taken to Furnish Complete Eqipments for ROLLER FLOUR MILLS, -REPRESENT'ING THE RICHMOND CITY M['L WORKS, One of the la gest manufacturers of Flour i1 'Xacbine - in the - ountry, and having xLerienced m.lwrig ,t-, I am prep-red to bui.d mil s on tb mo t improved plans and at prices to com:,le-e wi nb any on in tne :tade. We guar .itee the preots of our m"Ils to equalhe urades o the best We