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0 X VII E PEIiI)KFII1., THU VOL t.-NO. 48.4 PICKENS. S. C., THU SIAYD~ The World's Greatest Fever Medicine. For all forms of fever take JOHN4ON'd ILL and IVR 'IONIC. it ts 100 times better than quinine and doeit II a single day what slow qui nine cannot do in 10 days. It's splendid cures are in striking uontrast to the feeble cures made by quinine.4 COSTS 50 CENTS IF IT CURBS. IT WILL COST YOU ONLY ONE CENT TO Pi NI) OUT A B~OUT Ti P "REX MATTRESS;" T iLe qu11a itv, the Vpra flt 8, e o prleo". tad ti - . ) m n . ,, d 1 1. . 1 t]: Ts l y q yl i . "R E X , " a . ! r in f l l , p i v i l g d dil r e e Dexter Broom and Mattress Co PELZER. Seiling at Cost Every thinig. Owing to'.oune proposed canIug. in o hI sss, we will eil Carriages, Surreys, Buzgies, Phaetons and Wagow At an Absolute Sacrifice! Until oir stock is reduced. Dom't. tAlke. our wvordii fora it, hut coeia n.,1 saaee for* N a otu sI-If an] be e.,lvilled. Harness of till kinds 1t. cont. ve dwa he l1bo wk, C(orland, Tyo to Jones, and varions other makes of tiggis, &,., t4 strlit liigh Gant Wagonls, ih Studebaker ani Weber; am cleaper grade the 0, ven boro, 'Taylor 1ad Chattanloog: NOw is-the best seesoi for sellig vehuie0os of all kinds, 1nd we are gohing to Hell I) part profit; or no prollt. she Season for Mules aid Horses 1s pretty well over but, we have a few bargaul yet. Remember. we paat no house reit or vlerk hire, own our own reioltory ain do our own w-wk. We will eil anyt hinig we lmave for cash or Kood palper. Pollt aid kind treatment to all. When in (reevi'e come and see us. W. are alwau glad to Pee the people whether I hey wish to iany or not. CHARLES & McBRAYER, Corner Court, Rivrr and Jack,ona Streets. OREENViLLR, . (. WALTER W. WHITE. WILL E. WIllT W HIT E & C O., We handle all kiads of MARBLE AND GRANITI known to the tiaide iandi emloy none hut tirst,-class workmanii to ilnish bte work. If you need ainytinag in o ar liane a pontal clardt with our :address will brinag a mii with designs and prices to voor home, WVe huy In ear- lots iand cani give the lowe parices. 8WiRO N PE'N0IhG ANI) COP'iNO MPICCI ALTI CS. Yours for trade, WHIT E & 00., Anderson, S. C. A Few of the Many Money-Savers for Men. Lot White Hlandkerchines....................................... Lot extra flae White Handteoroaiefs...................... .......-.. Lot n'ee hemmed -sti6ched Hand kerchiefs.................... ... . Lot men's all linen floe hemmed stitchel Flandkerchilefs.................1 Lot men's heavy-fleeced Gloves...........................-... . Lot fine SkIn Gloves.........................,......................5 Lot men's $1 25 Castor Gloves......... ...... .....................81 Lot heavy leed Undershirte..............,................... .....2 Lot Sanitary wool-fleeced Shirts and Dr-awers Worth 81 00. one p~rjota por garment.......................................................9 Lot all wool White Drawers..................................... .. Here's Real Dress Goods Brvgainis Lot 2bn Plaid Dress Goods, double width, at . . Lot 64 inch 50c Heay Black Skirt Goodes at . . Lot Black Granite Cloth, aomotihing new for skirts and dosi Lit Double width black wool filled diress goods . Lot Black Dross Flannel . . . . . Lit 36 inch Henriottas, 25o value, at . . . . . . Great Clothing Values. For 289" --elt yuacywo--etd snalt I we sell you our up-to-date Cassimere Suits. F'or 87 50 we soll you as~ i1ood Dress Suit as you can find elsewhere for 810. For 810 we have a large line fne basiness and dress Suite for which otber people ask 815. Our Well Known Shoe Department Hardlynoods to ho mo'nth - ed. e havesold good th< to so many p pe that people recognize onars as the place for Shoes. Childre Shoe. at 19o., o, 350, 500, 73c, 98e, and 11 24. JLadies' Dresas Shoes, 75c, 98o SI 24, Si 48. 81 98 $2 50.l Special Lot Stacy Adams & U 's fine $5 Shooi at $2 50. Lit Williams I a .,ndl & Co's 15 Shoes at 82 50. 217 Upper Main Street, ~~, U IS AN OLD MAN ELOQUENT B/ Arp Says Senator Morgan, of Alabama, Is a Great Man An ta tConstitution. As I looked upon the likeness of General Morgan that griacoI the Nica nuga headlines in The Constitution I ciuld not help saying to mysell, "There is a great mai. I pray that he may live to see the canal completed atd be the honored guest of the boat that makes ihu Ilbst t i) across from ocan to ocean." It looks like .Provi dqace reared him up to champion that v a. gput work and has preserved him in health' and (ievoViitim until at last tihe bill has passed and all' t~labeles are re moved. I know that he is hta,1y and feels serenely triumphant. It. I w'I an Alabaian, I would feel proud of Morgan. It I was a Tennessean, I I Would feel proud, for he wVIs born there and there spent ten years of his youth. But I am proud of him anyhow, for he is a Southern man and all his long public life has been uust ldsh and true to his people. His good heal,h and I well preserved faculties encourage me I to live on and otn just as long as I can, for lie is just two years older than I am and is still vigorous and useful. Ile is the old man eloquent and like Nathaniel Macon neverisaid an idle or foolish thing. le is as solid as a rock, self-poised and self-prepared oin till great questions. Ii 1861 he volunteer ed as a private and soon rose to major and then to lieuten:it collm1; next hI raised and vquipped at Iu.-C.4netI. an1d became its colonel. In 18t;3 lie was nominated for brigadier general by I Robert E. Lee, but declined it. Later on lie was constrrained to accept the i honor and was with General ,Johnqton I to the close. In 1876 he was elected to the United States Senate and re elected in 1882, in 1888, in 1894 rind I again in 1900, making his lifth succes sive term. le well deserves a monu- i ment after he dies and a place in the I Hall of Fame. It is a comufort to us I all to be assured that no man ranks him in the United States Senate, for he is a treasure-house of knowledge, aid there is not a cloud over his can d1or, his truth or his integrity. When lie speaks lie has something to say and knows how to say it anid when to quit. S'lTom Benton said of Nathaniel Macon, Ie rarely spoke but a lew sentences, . but uttered more good sense in gettiog r Ui) out of his chair and sitting down again than was contained in the long and elaborate speeches of most Sena tori.'" s General Morgan's long career ro mindls me of Macon, for he, too, was a private in the Revolutionary war. lie held public oice for hifty-seven years and John Randolph said of him, "ie is the wisest, the purest and the best man I ever knew." Twice lie declined - a place in the cabinets of two presi dents, but after he had retired and was 72 years old lie accepted the office of justice of the peace in his home dis trict. lie never recommended any of his kindred for appointment to office. le refused pay for his service as a soldier and refused to receive a pension afterwar ds-and voted against all pen sions or iewards or gratuities. le (lied its calnly as Socrates, but with out the poison, and his grave is cnit a high, barren ridge marked with no marble, only a pitle of stones, which was accordmig to his will. Nathaniel Macon was my father's ideal of a great, and~ goodl man, He placed him above tall other statesmen, for lie dleclared that, he was as wvise as Solomon and purer than D)avid. When I was in Warren County some years ago I was t..Id' that. Mreon's father ' lived In an old-fashioned double log a house and that hie himself hewed the logs. F~or i-ome years it hado mud and stick chimneys above the fire-jams and was coveredl with boards of his own st make, In cou rse of time lie tore away the chimneys and rebuilt, them of stone and~ brick, and tore away the board(s andl covered with ehingles. Later on as lie got able lhe weather 4e Oc 05 BY 5c Oc W E are making great pre tion to meet your Chiri~ 5.wanats, and we earnest 'quest you not to miss seeing 0. great collection when in seart ~'Christmnas goods. We have i a great Christmas Present D~e niment, where you will find all a of useful Toys, Books, China r *' Claus to use on a of ouir lars. .come to see him., A Great Treat is in ~ Ce le iMianm Greenville. S. C., boarded the outsh ttb ; celled the inside 1) gin i h iI top of the VWl and ttinjt.p ait: lap up instead d n, so that niem wife could pourliot w ter in the crackbi and kill the bedbtgs. I reckWN that Tom Benton, who wro his hi6grap'y! got his antipension iniuoples fro)M Macon, for Benton iu great-upcedh in the Senate opposed petision %to General llarrisonti's wiO ' tnd oalIA it " a new departure tb t w1i111' to the bottom less anif of wsilsio ax).l gratuit lea." \V. .1 it, Is t fpieg gulf both to the t itati an,thie utioi In this enrection Yr r inlted I who were our g'eatest : i n I 4.orgily -who most deserve a it e- 1i the temple of fame. By Comm1111E n1 colip'iten D)glethorpe seems t ititled t thet Ilrat place, but t dozen or more I vaivo .otes for the seh'l plice. i reckon, iowevev-,. that Crawford Long will get t-not ats k .atesmuan or1. 011 dier or nventor fir pilaIt';'it, ht Ia1her LS at tlotiSifuil diisucovereVr ie or, Vio discovered the healing a L' oi, -vactu"F ination. The question is a very I*A lOexiti oite, for some ate greal in one ihase of character and some in anoth ir. My wife t hinks tthat 'Bishop Pearce vas the greatest man, becansQ. he had lie greatest, callin anid illed, it as no other mai has done, and sh'e quotes hat verse from Daniel ivhich says, 'They who have called many io ighteousness shall shino. as the stars orever and forever." My wife groew i) under his matchless ireaching, and s a pretty good Methodist yet. This reminds me of a delightful ketch I find in the proceedings of the ast Georgia Bar Association held at Varm Springs in July. The subject, s " The Georgia Lawyer ". viewed by woman. The woman is Mrs. A tender Terrell, of Greenville. T*he >apers generally road at these annual neetings are dry and prosy to every )ody save the lawyers, but this paper a charming, entertaining and instruc ive from beginning to cnd. The first. sntence attracted me, and I kept .u ,o the last, and my feeling at ita close Vas-well, that woman Is a trump, she s a historian, a philosopherand a first 'ate lawyer, even though Bile be a wo nan. I read it aloud to my female 'amily. She closes with a poetic apos ,rophe to the Georgia lawyer which miny an unfortunate detendaut will ippreciate: The parson points the way to heaven, And then with tender care rhe doctor consummates the work And sends the pationt there. But the Georgia lawycr would delay )eparture with such cries: Holdi Can this man read his title clear To mansions in the skies?' In doubt he files a brief and noeks To hold the ignoramus and stops his flight to heavenly iiss By injunction or mandamus." A3d so, while looking around for .he greatest man, we might vell pause ind hear what Mrs. Terrell says about John Fors% th. She says, " Forsyth was a champion for the establishment >f our supreme court, and earnestly idvised it in his message in 1828." He said, " It is an awful rellection that lite, liberty and reputation ire depen lent upon the decision of a single, judge uncontrolled and uncontiollable in his circuit." Thifn she continues, " Forsyth's matchless oratory and the pirity if hilis private anid lolitlcal life* won for 11im1 a r ame that wiii be hionoredl andi evered always. While in the United States Senate ho had no superi'or as anl orator, andi was called the equal of Lord Erskine." If I had a paperi of my own I would publas every line of Mrs. TIerrcll's delightful paper. And the next, Sunday I'would ptbli the paper read by J. H. Mer rill, of Thomuasville, on " Trho Bible .In the Lawyer's Library." Why, this paper ought to be read andl studied 1;ot only by t.he lawvy ers, but by every p~reacher in tile land. It is ILt for a text-book in thle colleges, andl it is so' mnterspersed with gems of good wit anid humor thant one dloes 1101 get tired. AndI there is an admiirable paper On IIISTM THE CAR. LO~ Diara yv re- - hI ot dded. part- T.. . \ kinds mi i Glass Ware. We have ni 'e sA iw win lows as i york sh ;tore For You if You Will ( Fine Display. Lfacture t'~t wbrl js pr nb n ap IFrO , FO te re P7 it h~jetbte i n to heq'cl t I nkp aby's a n p1 rac6M 11y " ,l d;s ronfttedthM beer ~ I 3-.-1 cesa jo t h tn~ the nursinq hWl -, X . )it who. UOIa o ltxtt~ A 01 Advsdr 'in - ofti th 91 e ip l a ; Dr.t~x I~ eMZdof f 4 Jf~ i '1"'t iU ' OR4 4 e~a , or I ese of mai 0 At ari R1 . .'r4 Ba Y P Mo AR is mt 1WaVp. Pcirefi ; Pit ott$1eot 11ek~fl~J4t~nac~I t11 's ,e4R1ep PYRWr6AC. A Jon ta sh d .i. m eUp o-Dt C ret oU11 1517 A trer t, Colubi aCoS.o ~ RO voo., @ot 01Ofreun Ot MU wtA APET Ii C, Wt fr Sie oything Dr k. l 1ecc V t~zoezd ,idc ourtn od T hippd anywhere h Statne of on.h. Weba ) Wi ' us ' ampdsod 'daythn u YhWemfin Cahitbita4'me. and see U Anybodly Can'shlow ypu4,the. place. IVY)'. M l LDIN 2 sco over Ear ru teera p 'ijlI~p nanovto eoufrani ttcov rAi biun fr to ev Mora eltlI traowsd.n ~ rot 7 *a~~j IIo1e 8 D0 aRIQ raak. 1.igi etow repaor L omte Uadis'Tolao rpetg ll LWrte usdieo' Saple ofnyti 0 uiue 6ds Whippe anyhr theStt~ofre oagh We a WayII uy. o k ds with A abilet 4 Tys 2. 011om ve Earle r'1i '6 ihoo Bpf esispa N peC ' ..p i~ri'o~ I I II 4IM t'VVE 1~ OTER ' yyda11~ e |olvl' sh.w A~ have ieitt o IiI'6I9 n~bati'doW.n na . I 0.h leard kaetaty ti e a d' a~ ril 41e c ithaL br j IJ M'~ O~I:il ltbr i) gt A-c4 I sII u i tvr 141 )1" fta O A. l'gj h Pertma . - iltn |AI, qosy Jaatl p n au ia hu~ hk ythe)yeterbly W Ia 16 t p gho cloM ipu 44 -ie bbi tIflde fai1bp11.d &i holO4"m Auditk wa . fii g L, i tit4 1 to sm un. . 'i16 A 'Tk-iv IiyP I inall at .Lhe nhicago . otephonkU hope l'haEal bi' y : it- 10 rurIr with' \'oru o t Ly hI drenaod Moihr r Lap --,14 ;rat do eep ng o qu it p It iien .niin glosel f stl A e 'mmuhi u LIk tp hoti an rein~e in"Pto WaN* NTOi laIs i he haold b a 0at wh.co rum ingi int av r," e % t arey be exheti -fior ahedpractic oo f i nt ~si Ar th ct l.,di elts The hti ti renat or keepin L totic ithi b'4.64e laknditiqn ,i df savng i ti*.' hi " the do e ad fin.nayoed a .c )ano 3inanagrt the Oheicao Telpn .11116 sayrs h e nflk by.'done' with frsio a deeis n need 1 - tit viny an otlc In iahli~ou. 4 .A hSTOcRI.- A eor JnfbutjL:d thicdoni. The KInd You tog Alwat og9 Bears the spathcI of Gen . George l. St , eauie u federate,, ep just had ruriwd It 0 liI by Abram Smith, of Long' IBdc .u~ it Bible which hie carried , UWRaI i civil war. Smith w~ok. 1ho -ible frei a Confederate wagon ae few lays vi fore Whe surreunder of Lo0%'suriy. In ti ele of Man road arc iali Laed by the revenue from t% u'ourcefi-a small tax upn every whe and. shiod hoof and a levy upon evei mAn inhabitatit, who must give ad(ay work on the road or its equivalentJ cash. The appointment of District A torney Capers has been conj hli'R1 the Senate. nthe oareat sorcs- sal taxh un every whao~ andnsh. Ahotof alaria uponievei work n c. rod ornenitsequivaent Thealappoimen ofe 'DiticA forn Caer ha beeni cO ONfire I t oSe t. - *ETher4M. WAdo s la reaotet Cur fo ra-.)a 'lria~'i =.=====. n*e"SnAS..; I farait i 40 wC 8tONC A . dd1 ar / a dcr lia ly4 /vtv nyCm to -see Nether' (Y. ar St.,~n ,now Nre4~r Wil I'flcgj a P 1ek Cits im, wil hertHA e 'theou Ptash.] for -fll brb~,Cmit ~ th Ilie~ t Ung am. tist orn hi 'e~v y f o r A t' te ' P i 5rs - 1 u1 1 . R . ' . b 'LOYV for lnm.&A4. ~An P. i Be l t q t.114P *tnw 11do 34 2 1 8 Il~. levyt rudFit 11p5 spo ild iwv3 forrtto0-d ~hiy1 ' J ills. ' pJ'Yra teree IIle&ie u~a~s L.' W.. I'A bou Greevile, a U. * B~$o Atlt~v oprn