University of South Carolina Libraries
r V > Couldn't Tell. ] Stepfather is counted for two word, aud grandmother as one by the liritish |K?stal telegraph authorities. Wi-e . asked why. in Parliaiueut. the postmaster general was unable to reply. Japan's latest man-of-war is railed the "Hivie." It seems to he a sort of floating college yell. London has an area of ?ss s.piarc miles, tireater New York v.id h.iveai area of oof) square milts. >lu,t < oine South. Commenting editorially on the subject of lmmiara'iuu. the .laeksonville Times-I"nion says: "The rt -ource> <>f the South are far more car:".' thr.u those of any other part of the country. Its climate i- the best. !t ha> haruiy a natural disadvantage when c<a. mured with other sections ami had the socne 1 - -1 tl v aim I'Uiiir. .44 i'vau ?.?* all over ti e oouutry fro::: the tir-t. it would now. we have uo doubt. he the seat of the grt.atos: population am! wealth. The presence of a lar:;e neuro population iu the South will s.;.i imve a tendency to keep out the immigrant who is a mere laborer. and we are inclined to think this fortunate for the South, whose supply of rude, lowprieed labor is ample for her needs. But it will no longer keep away men of some means seeking opportnrnites to use their capital uud labor to the best effect. These are the kiud of immigrants the South needs, ami we e\i>eot her to get them, mainly not from Europe, but from the North and West." Life Isn't Worth Living to one who suffers the maddening agony of Rczrma. Totter and situ irritating, itching skin %. diseases. Every roughness of the skin from ?t / fitnple chap to Tetter aud Itingworm evon o! Wng standing Is completely, quickly aud surely cured by Tetterine. fs cvtufort worth .? cents to you? That's the price ?f Tetterlne at drug toros. or Oy maii :'< price tn stamps liota J.T. Shuj trine. Savannah, Oa. How "s Tlii* ? Scoffer One D'?!l r Kcw?r.l f. r any o.i , tV s-rii that cannot i> cured l*y Hall's Catarrh I'a-r. ? - -- - ?? --. T.o -1 ^ n K. .1. I IIKNKV iV H'., I We. the iindersinn; d. have know n K..I. < 'hency o. tli la I li years. ar.-l believe li m pe- fet'tlv honor ble 'n :i!l business t an i' nand tinancidly able to carry out any obliftatiou m lie by their firm. Wkst & l'Ki'AX.Whol -.-a!e Drucids s, Toledo. * Oil <>. r Waldinc. Kinsvx .1- Mauvis. Wholesale Drvcttists. Toledo. Ohio. Hall s Catarrh Cote is taken in email v. ctJnjt dir etljr upon the WihkI :m<t niti'*nds sur'nces of th ?y#te:n. l'i i<* , iv bottle. Mold by ail I> nuui-t-. Testimonial' 'rvc. Hall's Family Pills ate tiie best. Fits permanently cured. No fit*-or nervousness alter first tliv's of l>r. Kline's Great Nerve K. si'.u ". S'liriai I "til- :in?lt-. r?tise free rf Dk. it. H. K.'.t.vf, Ltd.. Arch St.,l'hiia.,Pa. e _ For AVhoopi,isr Consh. Piso's Cure ?< a ?ueressfu) rer.ic-i\|.1\ 111 e; t >k, t>7 Throoji Ave.. Brooklyn. N. V.. Nov. 11. ISM. ATTENTION. FA KM MRS! kFIFTl per rent, i n > paiiUlt Ilri-il J:ick?. including in > Inmini* j?i,<MHt Jack "I. X. I. " Jacks U I I*, h.ill is Itiiell t t * WtidWr jKf-jN year- "'I to $ - Heavy i w.nht .la-'i-s. to : handc Apia < t > ,\!1 s i;n<l. tested M 4"5 and n'ltibl'. Price Mitijnt ! > j M i chance after September. Wille iwSalc-- for particular* ale-i.r c <sl Jack* only I'lKllMl^l>TU( k KtllM. W Green Hush, Walker County. Georgia, fflflrlL OlnUi SITCSEK ST07S CV ? a f, w minutes which fit A it It its.'awM costs als ut U A Cts. and sells for (<1 per gallon. Also Maple.Vi.ar made from same. "I w?ii( to thank \o'i for the Maple Syri.i> recipe which I hud Is excellent. I eau r?-eom:iiehd It hls'h-y in ?:ii nod every one. '-Itsv. sum 1". Jones. Ca' tersville. <ia. Send $1 i?-stai oriler and net recipe or and I wt't and ryriopetu:; ?>i n i i|n-s ?.-u> erlng a I department-. Bonanza for Age-ids. J. .V I.OT^PEM'H. - - - Morrikionn. Tenn. ji SMITH NIG (IT'S An iniQ AND HAY FEVER no m REMEDY' lAVJIUiUU Sold umk.r a positive ( ( )( >) > K'uaraufy. Samples Fre?L. SMIIIIMGHT, Cleveland, O. % If ARPS ran be saved wi'b01 I"1 | I 11 P# out their knowledge by a II fl 2 3 pH 55 Anti-Jag the marvelous I I r* I I OlT Mb rure fortheJruik habi*. 1J I 0 3J 2 a 1% SYite llenova Chemical mm ^ Co..So Broadway, s. V. Fall information (in plain wrapper) mailed fre?. tumedd^aMae Aw K u?'n i'a. Armal bu?in??? ^ Notes' V book- Short time. Cheap board Stoi lor ca(s!n|ea - BOYS-YOUNG MEN i>ad in fliis ] aver the advert :-e!neUt oj DAVIS HI LIT AIM SCHOOL. Men a;iu men wanted to cst-cltsli Viaioh ageo. ie? to sell guaranteed Colorado (Sold Mine aall I mate block. Keasotutie commissions. For inturma ILLIurib a-!dress. BEN A. BLOCK. Member AyriC Colorado Mining stock Ea-litnge. 305-507 1 -00 Sym-s Building. Denver. Colorado. > 5 A I 'cere t'liri-d. I u:>>. trratiin'tit aUak?k js?. A. HoMKItTS. XewJieri:i\N.? . s. x. I'.?No. jjvt ?' Ekg?B3gi?BE13 MESSSpk 1 "IS UUBtS AIL LLSE FAILS. ??f kJ G?s: < ' mnU ru . Tastes Gom!. Use J3 I'ri iii t imp. S.ilil hv ilrucsists. 1*11 ^p?sn<icni.Yjzj.j:0T?^is $ The Blue ar Both men and wom< /*?r\ blue, when the gray ha a very natural feeling. |pm of things gray hairs bi They have no business K?gy man or woman, who l||| down the slope of life. the hair turns gray r< \^?/ life's seasons ; someti sickness, but more ofi When the hair fades c ||P need to resort to hair c of tho hair is restored a @ Ayer's H j Ayer's Careboofc, "a s'.ory c ioo pa^es, free. J. C. \ \ - J X^j, * ill IP'S IDIT [[111 i I ETHNOLOGICAL FACTS KKIiAHDlNK j INDIANS AND WHITES. t i - , INTERMARRIAGES MORE FREQUENT; i I ~ i The Red Man. Though lleing Rnp.dlj j Deri2x13ifed. 1^ NW11 I ixrd ami Ha|?l?.V Withal. Not long ago some writer fr.ee the west tol.l its that white people were marrying Indian gil ls more treipicntly than ever before. "Indeed." he said. "the dusky maid, ns : eei.t to j refer the j'ule faces to their own race and color." This provokes me to write a letter about Indians for the special pleasure , and benetit of onr voting j eople. Hoys ( and girls like to read about them. 1 i know, but most of the stories that appear are more romantic than true ; During the war our brigade camped j one night on the Chiekah.uatny river. 1 about thirty miles below Richmond, j and we were shown the very stone on ' which Captain John Smith laid his | head for Powhattan's club when , the beautiful I'ooaUontas rnsueu wildly in the circle and threw herself upon his bosom and saved his life. About the stone I have my doubts, but it is historically true that Powhattau lived there, and that his daughter, a 1 lovely lass of fourteen, d d save John j Smith's life, as he in his letter to the | queen of England says, "at the minute j of my execution she hazarded tho j | beating out of her own brains to save i ! mine." She afterwards married John j liolfe, with her father's consent, and i j from that union came the Kundolphs { I of Virginia, and a little strain of that j same Pocahontas blood flows in my ' wife's veins, and she is proud of it. and loves to tell the story to her nu- ! morons and lovely offspring. That ; little strain isn't bigger than a eam; brie needle, but it has never lost its | strength. She would make a right 1 good Pocahontas now if anybody that ' she loved was in danger. In fact, she has some Indian traits still lingering i 1 in her bosom, and should have been | ! named Indiana when she was chris j i toned. But it seems that ever since I'ooalioutas married a white man the In iliau maidens of all the civilized tribes have been willing to do the fame i thing. It is well known that the daughters of the Creeks and Cherokees in Georgia always said ves when a good-looking white man proposed marriage; but such unions were not hasty nor deceitful; they had to be in earnest and from honorable motives. If an Indian maid was betrayed by a designing white man, he could hardly escape for the whole tribe became avengers of blood. Her virtue was her dearest ornament, and if she lost it the third tinger of her left hand was dismembered at the second joint, aud that left her shame always visible. Now it seems to be settled by the men of science that the Indian belongs to the Caueassian or white race, or I else he is aboriginal and is a race of I bis own. He is neither Mongolian, ! Malay nor negro. He was lirst found here on this continent, just as the negro was first found in Africa. As the elephant was found in Asia, the kangaroo in Australia aud the llama in PMII CA ftia movlia o nofi,'a of the manor born, for geologists say that this continent is the oldest by several thousand years. But where he came from or how he got here is a question too deep for me. The existence of Aztecs in Mexico is still an unsolved problem, and who were the mound builders is a matter of doubt and speculation. One thing, however, seeins certain, that the race is doomed , to extinction. The command "be , fruitful and multiply" does not belong to them. According to the United States census reports, in 1853 there were in the United States and territories 400,704; in 1800. 330,421.; in 1870. 313.712: in 1880, 306,543; in 1800. 248,253. Of these 58,806 are classed as civilized. TheCherokees and Creeks were sent from Georgia to the Indian Territory about sixty years ago. The i former then numbered near 15,000: ' they number less than that now. What is the matter with them? They have i fine lands, both for pasturage and culi tivatiou, and the bounty of the government would nearly support them. They have good framed houses to live id the Gray. ? m are apt to feel a little (^pj) irs begin to show. It's In the normal condition slong to advanced age. whitening the head of has not begun to go \?J As a matter of fact, ^gardless of age, or of mes it is whitened by ten from lack of care. >r turns gray there's no lyes. The normal color w nd retained by the use of air Vigor. ? >( cures to!d hv the cured." Vycr Co., Lowell, M-ss. /T,\ in :iu i have as good schoolhouses and ! < hurehes av our country people have [ it: 5ieorgia. I'hey are classed as civil- ' ize.l. ami dress ju-t like whitt fo'ks, | ami cook im<! eat a* nourishing food ! in we do. What is the natter? I { 8.-ke 1 ?>Ue ?>; 'lit it' educated in 11: -ti i s. | knows." .-ai l lie. 1 mingled < \. ith their penpie and talkeil w ith them, i iiey diil unt seem to he sad <u* ?1 is- j tii -s?"l ahout anything. It was not t'oat the i hi 1 dreti died before maturity, hut that tic mature died faster than i eliildreti were horn to take their 1?]:i. The exception to 111id<- lino . of the race seemed to he 111 th" fa ..iI i? w here u liito moii !ia< 1 intcrninrrit-1 -a ith Indian maidens. TIi-'m- unions were j I :ad i tie of children who wen1 healthv and h andsomc. and always hrod after | the Muthor. having her cinnamon color, her straight hlaek hair an?l hi_rh cheek l>oin s. There is no apparent mixture < l' 1?!.? >?1 as that wliieh app? nrs in the mulatto who is the half hrecd of white* and Macks. i>M these Indian types weaken in site-1 eding genera- i tions of otta Iroitus ami octoroons, and if ever the tri!>< s are saved from ex- , tinctiou. it will he l>y this increasing J amalgamation with the white raee. | These unions do not seem to -hock j the sentiment of mankind as do the : union* of w hites w ith necroes. liven > ? assur eonege wouni not oe norror stricken at the discovery of an oeto- i roon aim ng her pupils. Indian students may he found in many of onr colleges and are not rejected at hotels or hoarding houses or theaters or churches or on railroads. In some of the trihes. as in the Creeks mid Chorokees. their features, their beauty and Iv.nto ?>f aiiviimvimatn I the Anglo-Saxon. Schoolcraft, who is the highest authority, says their features are regular, their expression no l?le; they are taciturn ami stoical to the last degree, cunning ami watchful, persevering in the pursuit an 1 reveugetui in the destruction ot their enemies, hospitable ami grateful for favors, a close observer of liatura' phe- | nouiena. his temperament poetic ami J imagination, ami his simple eloquence of great dignity ami beauty >f expression. Many of the women u-"e real';, handsome, and their skin is thinner, softer ami smoother than is the white ! race's. Bomlinot was a very handsome, impressive man even in his old age. I met him at Fort Smith some years ago. He was educated at Princeton. He was a Cherokee and was horn in Vanu's valley, near Home. His mother was buried on a hill that overlooks Cave Spring. When but a lad he was taken west" with the tribe in 1837. Not long after that lie was sent to Phila ? i l . i.l t delphia to school aim was auopieu uj Elias Boudinot, a wealthy philanthropist, ami took his name. While ho lived he stood high as a learned and eloquent advocate, and was the agent and ambassador of the tribe in all matters connected with the United States government. But now these tribes do not have to send their children so far away to get an educution. What our government does is always well done, and handsome school houses are found all over the territories. In 1877 the policy of educating them was organized and $20,000 appropriated. In 1S80 it was increased to $75,000; in 1885 to $902,000, and in 1890 to $1,304,568. I reckon it is two or three millions by this time. And besides this iarge amount, the different religions societies of the United States give largely to the cause, the Roman Catholic church giving near half a million annually and having charge of more schools than all the other denominations put together. Then, again, just think of the land they have got 100 acres to each head of a family, 80 acres to each child 18 rears old and 40 to those younger. Just think of all the old and decrepit ones being supported by the government and all the young ones educated free. Why, it would seem that with all this fraternalism and private benefactions a child is fortunate to he born an Indian. The wards of the nation, whether rod or bla.-k, are having a good time. There was an old song that was sung by a lazy vagabond, and it said: Oh. I wish I was n go-so All forlorn, all forlorn; Oh. I wish I was a goose, Kntirti? iu?rn 1 But now the song for our thousands of trauips to sing is: "Oh. I wish I was an Indian." It used to be that in our college text-books that population increased in proportion to the comforts of life that tL common people enjoyed. This theory tits the southern negro pretty well, for they continue to multiply like rabbits, in spite of all the harbari- j ty that the Boston Transcript accuses us of, but it does not tit the Indian, nor does it tit the average Boston fumily, that never has more than two children and wouldn't have any, but for somebody to inherit the estate. But the Hartford, Conn., Times knocks the blackout, and goes further in defense of the south than our own papers and and preachers. Verily there are many men of many minds.?BiijL Ann iu j Atlanta Constitution. "Martha, listen; there's a now machine Invented that records the action of the brain." "Well, you needn't fool any money away on one; It wouldn't earn its salt."?Detroit Free Dress. . Ella Wheeler Wilcox preliably is right when she says: "There are some women whom one l'eels it would be wrong to kiss." The presence of a nervous, muscular husband very often accentuates this feeling. She?It's too bad your wife has been sick so long. He?Yes; I suppose that the doctor's bill amounts to three times as much now as the undertaker's charges would have amounted to.? I Cleveland Leader. fiCURABLE DISEASES. "i P~ , 1ST DECREASES AS THE KNOWLcDCf OF SCIENCE INCREASES. i(on <? .< M.wi Who Wan Given Vp to Ui?- > >? ?.-n I"h.ri?iciiin??He Follow-. ih<- Advice of a Friend 4Dt* Now a Well Man _ * M". txlerfiil Store. TV Ftac'tr, Morrifril>*, X. Y. r i- a man," said the farmer to a r-[ Hf wli is the talk of this eomruuU'ty." Ji Mr VV.lliam Woodman, of South it a.liri : Malison Co.. N. V.," a well-to<1 i ?r -r who is well known ami stand* h k! f 'f -i-v-tv ami thrift in this neighborhood. On foil >wing'lav the newspaper man 1 i>i Mr W >i.Jman in his comfortable, i 1 id- !i : ; arm house. 1 ha . - !ia<l -erious thoughts of writing a*i aro i * tire newspajvers myself." s. ,1 M' w Irian, "hut as I am not ae I'.ni'.l t - li work. I have never at tempted it >! - down and I will tell v?.u i?l; it'iout it I nn '.ft;, .rre years old. I contracted . . 'tiniMtr-ii: when only fourteen years of a ti.i a seyi-re eolil fr"tn over exertion ami fr. !) un ngover heated. My father r v ' '.irrne* ,i nl insisted that 1 iieonly way t m.ah r.ie str-'iig was to do plenty of hard v. >rk When, however. Ire saw me helpless iii bed for ,-ix 1? it ; months without being a hit to m \? ex. cot with helj>, he changed b<c mind and t'oiwer after helieved that child-.n should not he made to do men's w >r? V> growth was stopped hy suffering aud ' !" r. t think I am an inch taller than that day forty-live years ago. J>ur i: u 'h" ' ' * \<-?.rs ensuing after uiy mis- I ' rt.n 1 attended by seven o??ctors. I I re. eived temporary relief at times, from new foru > of treatment. but always related Into a worse and more aggravated < tradition. Tl- conclusion of ail these gentlemen was that I was incurable, arc. ail they could do was to case my condition. , ftcr i grew to manhood I married and Lav. been tile.-scd with a family. My dear wife has had all the drudgery of nursing and wailing upon me. and the burden has been ndeed hard to hear. "Without hope from physicians I began to t-ke Hr Wiibams' I'ink Pills, which was highly ree<> amended by my friends. I took them ari l witbia one week begun to fee; better than 1 lia i since I was llrst afflicted I to.. - the-- ;>j||< according to directions and w!e-n the i was nearly gone I w nt ov?t to 1 to an old friend wIk was in the drug business, nam'd Dr. Aur> liu e , v*-!i likewise was a great sufferer ebeiimar isai. The doctor and I ori : nil in \-s of Pink Pill- in pnrt r.jm that time keeping them ? ( e.iminued to take them a ; j, 'elioiis for the next three \ r- improved, gaining llesli . i , . j| two years ngo I was a t t hem, and now am n? ? r .f mv venrs as von will And. I ^ >1 y?>u that after I ordered the first box f pills the physician who was thi: itieidi ? in< conn in and J told liiin what i w.k? d :ii?. 1 i sail 1 was vt*ry foolish, t at th y xouM mip-U injure ir.e. and it was 1 -iut\ t-> t?-ll no- s-?. J told the doctor that I might a? W"!l di- u.to drag out a iniserabh x;*:- a <>, and -> cot withstanding his warnings, . ontinued to take the pills. Thank C?<.<1 the doetoi was not aid" to dissuade u;e, f?>r to thorn I now ascribe all the comfort aud happiness I have in this world. I have recvininendei them to hundreds of people since I wacured, and in every ease they have been effective, not only in rheumatism but in .numerous other disorders, especially im povorishmcnt of ihc blood, heart trouble and kidney disease. "I certify the above statement to be true, and if necessary w 11 swear to the same before a Notary Public." William Woodman*. When Mr. Woodman had signed and delivered the above paper to the reporter, he sa'dr "If I were you I would go and call on Mr. Amos Juquays, at Columbus Centre, to wNm I recommended Dr. Williams' Pink I .lis for aggravated kidney disease. He is now in ^erfeet hea th. I have no doubt he will do glad to testify to the efficacy of the remedy that cured him." D~. Williams' Pink Pills contain all the elements necessary to give new life and -v --? ?*? l.lisvA nnH rootr.rp chAttArHfi norves. They are for sale by all druggists, c may be had by mail from Dr. Williams'Medicine Company, Schenectady. N. Y., fo: S??e. per hex, or six boxes for t2.50. \'ew Question of Orthodoxy. '\Shnll the cow observe the Sabbath '! mi rest from being milked on Sunday?" This is not nn Irreverent fling at the Sabbatarians, not a sarcastic query, as might be imagined, but a question under serious consideration by the Scottish Sabbath Alliance. That such a question should be seriously considered by a zealous body of Sabbatarians is essentially Scotch. In no other time nor country would such a thing have bt en possible. Not even our own Puritans, who forbade the kissing of one's wife on Sunday, would ever have evolved such an idea as this. Leaving out of the question the fact that mankind from babyhood to old age stands in p*hv! of fresh milk on Sunday .as much :is on other days, every dairyman I nows that nothing will ruin a cow for milking purpes- s more quickly and surely than irregular milking. This objection was urged, bnt the fanatical promoters of the scheme met it by a pnqtosition to dock the cow Its feod 011 that day. so that it would not produce milk, and hence would not suffer from r.or being milked. The pangs of hunger to In- endured by ihe unfortunate cow were not considered. The Idea was suggested by an old habit of the Welsh herders of nesting their cattle on Sunday when driving them to market. Begun by pious herders and drovers, it was soon discoverod that the scheme was profitable. The cattle reached their destination in l?etter condition for the rest and brought better prices. Then the ungodly adopted the practice and It became universal. But this does not apply to the non-mllking scheme, the only p.easing feature of which is that the level-headed were in the majority r.nd voted down the further agitation of it. "I heard you fought a duel with Parker?" "I did." "Weren't you afraid to stand up before a loaded pistol?" "Not with Parker holding it. I'm insured in his company."?Tit-Bits. MONEY IN CHICKENS For 25c, in stamps we send a 100 r AGE BOOK giving the experience of a praeinl Toultn Kaiser?not an amature, but a man work in; for dollars and cents during 10 years. I: teaches how to Detect and Cure Disease . Feed for Eggs also for Fattening, whit Fowls to Save for breeding; everything rquisile for profitable Poultry rai ting. BOOK PUBLISHING CO, 134 Leonard ^Street N"? w York. THE FRAUD ENJOINED. (leport of Decree? Tbe Famoni 950,* 000 Trade-mark < a?o Decided-C'. Jr. Simmons Medicine Company, fit. l.onis, Defeats J. 1L Zeilln 4c Co., Fit II arid phi a. [From St. Louis Repub'.le. July 4.18^3.] M Tho Supreme Court of Tennesre* oa Juno 30 decided the m >st iapor.aat trade-mark case that l as rer te*n tried ia that State ar.d on* of th* largc-t rer tried in the I'nion. afflrininj; and enlarging the 1 Opinion of the court below. The court he.d; 1. That Dr. K. A. Simmons, tb* predecessor of oompiaiaant. by eztensire advertising of hia cele- ! brated remedy known aa " Simmons Liter KeJifine," made it a standard remedy for livsr diseases Ions pri r to the acquisition by J. II. Zeilin & Co. of stny rights. J. That the assignor of .T. II. Z< i!!n & Co., through whom they cltimed the right to Disco the fraudulent packages enjoined, never derived any tiiiofrom A. Q. Simmons to uiaxo the medicine nor to u.e fa:< name or picture, and that auehu.se by Zei n & Co. it a fraud upou tho public, cud is thereto:, -njolr.ed. 3. Thit Zeiliu oh Co. purposely, fr du'.rntly labeled tneir nedi.-ino in imitation of i mpluinanf* zr, vl.eiae to uuf-oriy appropriate th- '-ade of the S.mmons Medicine Company, and f! tecutioaof this fraudulent purpose and act iter .. ci, 4. K-j jir.c-J Zeil.n & Co. from u-i u tbe'.r eomprt.t-r e tra io-narr.e. trade-narks, ur symbols, or imitations thereof, :o deceivo tho public and unfairly cppr'pr.ate to therm-elves Uu> trade of the C. r. bir.nn >ns Medicine Co. fi. Enjoined Z-u.::i A Co., from deceWnf a-4 pn-ticin.; r. fr.nii 1 open the public by "abelicg their no .ir:i in in.: n of Lou svrmoe:., and tr*Ud znarkv oithecomtdaiufut. 6. Enjoined Ztilin .t Co. from tb"1 manufacture ar.d sa.e of tho ineb ine under thor. .m? of "Ritnn ns Lw Mod:, me.'* cr "Dr. E rsmorS Liver Mrdicine," or " Ltrer Medicinoby A. (j.Simmons,'* and fr,<a o :n? the picture of A. V. Simmone ia connection ther?wnb. o 1. Enjoined Zeilin & Co.. their ojtigcees. agents an 1 employes from decelri-.g and practicing a fra d up >n the public by the sale of pockag < thus falsely labeled, either upon orders or calls tor the genuice "Simmons Liver 31edici:;e " of ec aplaicant, or In anv packago thus falsely labekd. 6. lb a court stated that it wa . tlio ; '.irpojo of the court to entirely destroy the fraudulently labeled packages above described, and cause tin ir removal from tbo market, and ordered Zeilin & Co. to d liver to tne clerk to be destroyed, all cuts, dies, electrotypes, engravings and other paraphernalia used in impressing either of the above names or tho picture Of A. Simmors. 9. decreed that Zeilin 3c Co. pay all the damages Which have accrued to complainant by the sals Of these fraudulently labeled packages. The damages Claimed by complainant wers $."<0,0-0. 10. Decreed that Zeilin it Co. pay all the costs, which amount to several thousand dollars, tho record being one of the largest ever fiied in tho Supreme Court " , J Cheap Jfedloino. > As arnle,"cheap medicine" is inert, worthless, or dangerous. In Zeilin 4 Co. 's "intwer to our bill they said tns packagss enjoined were designed as "cheap negro medicine for the negroes of the Missus.ppil Valley." Now. as Zeilin A Co.1* advertisements say, and their manager swore, that all the liver mcdicics which they make is made by tbe same formula, is t .is not otiselUMvo evidence from their sworn testimony and advertisement*, that all (bo liver mediemeemanatinr irom then is"C:ieap Negro Medicine?" (Jure tion: Do me ti l: of America desire "Cheap Nefra Medicine?" Let tho afllictcd an?wer bt their forum purchase. Dr. M. A. S.mmons' Liter Medicine, established 10 1(40. is not "cheap tried** cine.'*' It is *no cure ail," I'd is onir recoaa? denied for those ulisposia oas cauaeU bj laacanty f tne liter. p/v MON'S n^PEPSIN^ Chill Tonic T ASTELESS A NO GUAR A N T E E O TO CURE CHILLS & FEVER. f)OJ> XOT IXJI HK THE ?TOM ACH. XV. A. McLarty & Son, Dime Box. Texas, a\. * We want eome more of Ramon'.* 1'ep in ' hill Tonic, as it is the best we ever han!li i. My ?ori prescribes it in his practice and it is the only Chill Tonic which even a h I.! can take without iniurv to the stoma h. Yo?' miiv ???nd me 1 gross of the Ramon's Ivpsin Chill Tonic ai.d 1 gross o: Ramon's Tonic Liver Pills." For Sale by All Dealers. PREPARED BY BROWN MF G. CO., GREENEVIILE, TENN. CORRESPONDENCE INVITED. Did noiiilnion Iron A >all H ln. Rlrhnifind. \a = 1 1 | I = PBFFKRRF.n PICS I. WF. , ? = FiMTB-rncl? Rufua. if yoo ? : t that wood 111 -I = ri?" 'Oil 0 nice turLey for yo.irSui day dinner. Vnclk Ki*rrs?1hank .r?.v J- t I ?1 ruUitr -iAD? E Pick Leaf; I kin git all u *oul I v. .at. IJ|g?pJ EXTRA ! I5MDKING TOBACCO} : Kade from thePnreit, RlMStand Sweef?rt l?f = = rrowa in the Golden Belt of No^;l?fro = : Cigarette Book goes with each J^or. pouch. = all for 10 cents. z : x Pleasant, Cool and Delightful Smoke. ; S LYON & CO. TOBACCO WORKS. DURHAM. N.C.I aiiiiirtimniiiii inaBiiiiiioiiiieiiiiiBtsniaimaaaaaaaeaeMe S. X. U.?No. 36?'97. ^^5. DAVIS MILITARY SCHOOL, I yjl, Winston, N. Carolina. Prepare for any j College < r t'ulvemlty.or gives complete gjs -By! bnglness cqUcko course. ><> boy pre- ' rSr~ '.^1 Mr Inrp<1 l'-v u*ev'r failed fo pas- exaimnatii ns fur West Point anilAnnaix lis.Fine climate.Low rati s. Witte for Catalogue {I ft H ft t? || CURED AT HOME; ??nd ?.mp i?Wr3u?n JV-8* Harris Fim Huiidtnir, L?ncUjnati HERE Want to learu all about a Ecrse? 1 imperfections and so guard agtinst frai vben same is possible? Tell (be age by . arts of the animal? How t? shoe a 1 iluable information can >e obtained i RATED HORSE ROOK which we i o jly 'Jo Cents in Stamps. Book Publis J :M Leonard Street, -a** : Ji [HE THOMAS 1 Is the mo?t complete system o' I'.ovat Ing, Handling Cleaning and Packing Cotton. Improves staple, saves labof, makes you money. Write for Catalogues; no other equals It. 1 HANDLE j 1 Th-mot Improved Cotton Gins, Tresses^ El-va: Engines and Boilers to hi ' umi op ih- market. My Sergeant Log I>am Saw Mill is, in simplicity and efflci-ney, a wonder. Corn Mills, Plnnec.au Gang E Igers and all Wood Working * t Ma.-hinery. Liddell nnd Talbott Enp!u< s are "the b?it. Write to mo befor# buying. V. c. 3ADHAM, General Agent, Columbia, 8. 0. THE BAILEY-LE8BY GO. ' f^OELBTKO RICE tilJLLSR. The only machlM fi>r clearing rough rice ia one o; eration. ^'Lt SUPPLIES, ISTleII; SAW. CCRN AMD CANE MILLS, RUBBER .-2 AND LEATHER BELTING, g IIo??\ Packing?, Pipo. Fitting? r.r.d Bras* Goods. I.urged Stoe?- of Supplies Soutbr L>iw?et Prices. Prompt Shipment?. Illustrated Catalogue Furnished upon Application. Trv the B-L Co.'s Anti-Friction Babbitt >letal, the beet for HIGH SPEED machinery. CHARLESTON, - - S, C, Tilk-: I'.MTED STATES COVEHTiUBMT ha? adopted the Kecley Treatment-In the Sol? di'-r'.- H< met and in ?n Institution for tte ixelusive nee or the Repular Army. dUCHOL, OPIUM, I Produce etc a disean# 2 TOBfiGCO USING (having den. ite pathofc ;.pv. ho disease yields easily to the l'oubl* * C lil'>ride of Gold Treatment as administered ? s.Jj at Tiie Keeley Institute Greenville. S. C. Detailed lnformnt ion mailed on application to THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, (OR BOX 37) CRELNVILLE, - fc. C. The O.XLV Keeley Institute la 8. C. TO EVERY ONE WHO WANT8 A I '..fi t K -?-% a', i Road Wapon. we with to yon make a mistake *n buying FiLCiV.ONT. ?ee your dealer and call for it. Heguily guarantee our wagons and you ran'i M>y a iietter Job on earth at the price. Writ# '.n if your tiler bant don t handle them. PIEDMONT WAGON CO., . J HICKORY, M. o * NORTH* FROM CHATTANOOGA OR HARRIMAN JUNCTION VIA THE } QUEEN AND CRESCENT ROUTE I /i Handsome Vestibuled ?.} Trains. ' M ' y Through Pullmans from Savannah, Co- j lumbia, Spartanburg, Asheville, Knoxvilla, l Atlanta and Chaitanooga to ? CINCINNATI. / SHORTEST LIVE. FINEST SERVICE, f 0. L. MITCHELL. W, C, RINEARSOH, J District Pass. Agent, Oen'l Pass. Agent, { Chattanooga, Tenn. # Cincinnati, Obif mm mm nt mmm uHUVta "7AST?LESS CHILL TONIC IS JUS'AS GOOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE 50 ots. Gai.atia, Ills., Nct. is, 1MB. ! Paris 5!e*eine Co., St. Louis, Mo. Gentian:?We sold last rear, 000 bottles of GROVES TASTELESS CHILL TONIC aad ha**1 bought oree gross already this year. In all ourejy peneor of 14 years. In tho drug business, bav? nevero'd an article that gave such universal sad*' lacUo1 as your Tonic. Tours truly, I abmev.care a Co. I T vJ> SKATER'S COLLEGE Krr,?i?S& Bokkeepmg. Best. Cheapest. Situation guarantee?. THE GEORGIA TELEGRAPH SCHOOL ^fcp- Teaches telegraphy thoroughly, and A, starts its graduates in the railwaj service. Only exclusive Tele^rapD I iUKifffl ^ct'?0' 'n tl,e South Established >ears. Sixteen hundred suel^S?7ces"r'!l Ktaduates Send foi iJlus| : t rated catalogue. Address GhOROiA TELEORaPU SCHOOL, Senoia, Georffa. IT IS! [low to pick out a good one? Know id? Detect disease and effect a cure the teeth? What to call the different dorse properly? All this and other l>y reading our 100-PAGE 1LLUS,Till forward, postpaid, on riceipt of hing House, - ? IVew Yoi k Cit^y,