THK WILMINGTON POST. ...rl yiLnnxurox, a. a, . i'niay Morning, Oct. 2, 187l. TIIK ilirAT IIEOIllA. A vicKflroin thetjeor 1980 Grand fnlheAinrh of Ulndcnvrites a letter to hi jtiitonfclfo him how whites andbfack deserted North Carolina the eoihitry rown up to forests town in uht, dc , dc., &'c. I Finch's Hlvvf, yV i Pi, aken County, , v -j' 7 -Nov. 2.1, I MO. My I'f.ar (tUASHHOS: A I IfH tlie .uncling at Wilmington near where the old , wliaryes I'mhI lobe, you akel me to give you a description of thing as ihey were hen my father was alive, and when I was a .by, and to lell something as to how ,lhe present state of things came about. We were time 1mvh getting here and had hard rowing, as the rirrr was full of deft 1 ir'Ts, logs and brush, and our pro viniLMis nearly gave out. We'ale1 the last on i he bUilf where the village of Kl;7.abethtown u.ird to stand, under the shadow of the luins of the old Court House, and reached here this nioruing at about daylight.. You kiow I itm nesr the end of my eighty-first ycarJ It was before I was boru that North' Carolina and nearly all the southern Mates began to decline. When I was ten years jld there were several steamers 'running on the Cape Fear, and I Lave nee-i nearly a hundred sail in the river at Wilmington. Now scarcely one a 'nmiiili, and no steamers because !.therc H nothing for luetrrto do. There were jil-o threo railroads running out of .the own, which haye long since been dia coiiliiiued becauso there was no busi nrw for them, and the iron was taken up." Then the country was quite thickly willed where it is now grown up to forest", ami Ihero were1 roads and little villages where there is now not much lint desolation and wilderness. WU miiigton then was quite a flourishing town, as were Charlotte, FaycttevilleJ ltaldjh, Newberne, and -other places.! There were in all of them churches and' kuuuI and haudsomo private rcsj demies, where there are now only a few small and poor houses and crumbling hriik walls. Then; it was perfectly .safe to travel alone anywhere, and ycu Keuld not set a stockade around any liimje, and there were no highwaymen nor wandering and marauding bands of thieves as now, excepting in a few in Uncrs, and such a thing as a bear, or rwoUe, or iludber was hardly known, v litre now iliey are prowling all rhjut. Vim, my boy,- who have read how Mj.iirnt tiliiM like Tyre, , 4?rrdon and .Niiieveli were iestroyed, how great and populous and opulent countries' like ("krthnge and Macedonia were depopu lated, and how great and" powerful ua- lions hfco. Uomo were obliterated, or j how -islands like Sicily or Cyprus or jVvlontl wind feil, need not be surprised t this great change in bur part of the o'tinlry.' It is true that most populous 'ouiitrii-8 hate fallen in consequence of irs, but not all. Oriur causes tiich j.n ficcvdvo luxury which produced jifleniinacy and vice aud iudoleuce have pruken down peoples and depopulated territories. fcome whole nations have dwindled without any Tery ftppnrtnt '.iuas hf instance Spain, which has firmtly .'diminished from its fornnr "fthli nnd population and splendor, Mby war but by not keeping up with 'V preuress of (ither peoples, i As near as I can judge the present i"U(liii(.ii of this part of Ihe country 'me about nearly as follows: About 'he jear"lS;j ul0re broke out a war tMch wa called a rebellion or civil "sr. iSime sjiid it wss caused by one ilnng and sonic by another, but my Uihrr always thought, and 1 too think, ht it was causcli mainly by slavery, "nichi lifn fxidted all around in the ''ustirrt. ,.,te. The result of the war iluuUe slaves were all set free and P'n U. ni to TO,e ho, j office til ,'7j'riand ,Jrroi,,e al the privilege .icuu,,. elljiHsTerymuchexas. Iwr tt .. its- . i. . , ( vt nnne people, who were most tilled- lVin.orat it. thoeo'daj", and '7 resorted lo all aorta of means' to 1'ttirit iliem Irom They at "first onraniaed y-eites, r many' f them did, into '. and nrni in ,tV night lo cabins, ford t hi-m, wliipjied th. occunants. 7".mc. snot them, aud id aom in- bung ihfm. unU! finatU in k'lo Carolina j other state swuth 1 n. Vte h ik. e . ..vi mr luimer stare;, ine ti l thirty or forty thousand ihe whites tiH.'k iHesioo of r'verrfiur uli ntt their heads. l4 o things went on until ther RsH -A( it, whole south and the na rorrttwnent north ami south, and '"ed tht negror in ooe way or an nearly al! their rrttilegr 41 woi exactly do it by dittl r ai by a aort of rouml aKHtt way. r at fold read and write, or ,:-m .i.vv virr jnir id IQt wtj, aod; ) htr made alt hul miadeneanors fcloaifsv, 4 la proded that persona cW ( frlooir cwild nver after that Ad walk my fcw ,nt whiu jW b convkied, it oon caw tail ravrt than (otv thouaaJ North Carolia bad ba w ub a - -'e.ra ana wer coae.teatly 4b Towards the year 1900 things began to change in th nor the ra. part of the country, and those people got control of the whole country strain. When the new party took possession of the gov; eminent from the President down, they began to pass all sorts of new laws. Among these new laws Congress passed an act selliegVpart io the Jaegroes the whofe'of the Indian Territory, and parts of Texas, New Mexico and Ari zona, and a part of the Territories of Sinaloa, Senora, Duraogo, Chihuahua and Tarn a dp pas, then recently acquired frowi Mexico, and also z tery large ter-i rilory in British Columbia, which with all Canada, and what was called the i)omiuion,had joined the United Stales. The law provided that they could have land free, and ten dollars ip money for each member of their families, and some other aids lor moving and settling. And now began a mat remarkable movement of the negroes. First, from the state of Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland,' Noitheru - Virginia, Ohio, Northern Kentucky , and some other places, where the negroes had become comparatively wealthy and intelligent, they be,jan to migrate. They built up settlement, iu these new places, and largo towns, until in 1920 a new state was admitted to the Cnion, nearly all the officers of which were colored. Some of Iheir statesmen were very able and far "sighted, aud they increased very rapidly in wealth and power. In an incredibly short time all the old border states were completely depopa lated of their negroj population, and they began ' to disappear from North Carolina, slowly at first, then in large bodies, until finally they fairly swarmed along all tho high-ways, in carts, on mules, aud ou foot, towards the new black empires. AlTmt Ihe whUes were pleased at the idea of gfttinj rid of the negroes, and some of their leading stiitesmcn advocated j and ' even voted for the , measures of which I have spokeni jo Congress. But Boon colored labor began to be scarcer and scarcer, until at last Ihero waa Absolutely none except .a few old men kndwomen Who could not get away. Then there spread a great terror, and even distrjrs among the whites There was almoek'ho'pop' illation iu what had been the old alave states out whites. And they didn't get on very well performing all the labor, except - a few In" the hJgKIaSdsr " A good many of the smartest of the whites began to leave, then, more and joore They tried to get wnite emlgraatairom Italy and other parts of Europe, and eveu Mongolians and Chinese, but did not get many who staid loogv At last there was a very large exodus of the whiles to the West and other places un til the stato only contained about two hundred thousand people. Towns went to ruins, plantations grew up to forests, the people fell into a kind of. a lethar gic aud nomadic life. I The -wholo "Of this eastern country became a dreary wa- le,.with a few scattered settlements, and infested with roving bands of pil ferers and robbers, as perfect a picture of misery aud discomfort and wretch edness as can, be seen anywhere in Norlh or South America, j . - ' 1 had graduated from rrincetou Col lege, and from Da ue Law School at Cambridge, and had made my way lowfy home when these things were in progress. If it had not been lor my lather I should have joined in the gen eral hegira. Rut I staid all through it aud to Ibis day am spending a wasted life. If it had not been that my father had preserved some considerable amount of funds in foreign securities which have payed well, I would have1 beeu badly oil". There have occurred many things lo which I have not alluded in the period - mi m since i can rememoer. mere nave been a great many inventions, such as the discovery that people can talk with each other at a distance without a wire as well as with a telephone, as was formerly used j the application Of elec tricity ns a iuotive pofcf, so tbai sieatn and water power have gone entirely out of use, and all the great manufac tories and railroads and steamboats are propelled by means of a motive power derived from electricity; and the in vention of air, carriages w hick were made feasible by the elimination of a new gase-.nis fluid in which the specific gravity of a new gas was 89 mnrh in crcasrd that four cubro' feet would lift into ihe air a carriage carry iog four persons, which ls?ing propelled bv elrrtrical forcra cAild b giktetf through any correal of .air a well as ou the surface of water. And there have Dern many other in veativns which I do but mention. Then there has been a good deal of change in the national laws and in the Constitution of lb United Ktatea. The adottaion of the Dominion of Oaaada made this uecewary, for they let those provincTs In with all their laws and privileges aa thiey were, and f et they have Senator and members of Oon greu jul aa the old states do, bat tbey have their Iarliaaieat atill foe certain purjxwcs, and their courts wsroarats from the United But, courts, aiatlar as thsy do in lluecary iaaide of Aus tria, and in Traasy Waaia laud of Hungary, as I have been tohL Thera U bo talk now about stale rigfeu bo cauM everybswiy eavepUasi la tneoe aU dewfted aiatesv. aeeaa lo b perfectly tatified, toaMBttch aa they have all the rights they waaU The platioa of j wo hundred million, and tti3 pyjple foe the moat part very proa porous and rich and contented, and proud of their great nation. They elect a President now, you- know, for eight years-and then be canmever be'elecfcd ajfain. Buppose this part of the country will, long after I am dead, beconTe populous and rich again. However it will prob ably be a new people that will come here, for the descendants of those who moved away and established themselves elsewhere, will not bo likely to come back here, because they are well satis fied where , they are The old people who were' here in my young days, would have been jis likely to return to England or Scotland or Ireland or Germany, where their ancestors came from, as our descendants, who are scat tered all over the country, woufd te to come back here. They are now all identified with the people where they live, go to Congress, -fill the highest offices, and four whose father Jived here, have- already been Presidents, aud such names as were prominent and eminent over the south are how among the famous and wealthy where they live. Bight now a lineal descendant of General Lee au t apother of Stone wall Jackson :irj Senators from the state of Catawba, and one of tho Ktietts from the state of Washington is on the bench of tho Supreme Court, and one of the Toombaes, from the state of Sierra is in ihe Cabi net of Tfesident Hoar, the son of one of the old Massachusetts Hoars, and lots are millionaires in the creat pros perous empires of the north aud west. On of the Ltmnrs i Governor of the new and great state of Hudson Buy, away up ir Canada. A descendant of Frederick Douglass is Governor of Sin aloa, and one of the Langstou-j is Sen ator from ; Arizona,? and ouo of the Elliott's from Chihuahua, aud so there seems to be hardly any of the old dif ferences between the north and south. When I think how things used to be in my father's time, as compared with now, I can hardly believe my own eyes. Land is now worth next to nothing here. Iu fact most of it now belongs to the state, having escheated to it, the government "of which is only about half kept up. I have heard it reported that the United Status is going to seize all this waste laud ami put it in mar ket. I5ut the t rouble is that very many of the aucicut titles arc in the hands of the desccudauts of those who onoe lived here, nojv scattered, :. are still kept up. - I wish I had time to tell you more of things as they wer.vand will if my bid fingers do not liecomo too Irjinu lous. This will bo delivered to you by Mr. James Acklin, who hxi a stockade five or sir miles above me, and who is going down the rivir. I am, my 'dear Grandson, Yours truly, A I.KXAN UKIl Ft sc h . Master Kuwaku Klwki.i., Wilmington Lauding. p MrSCEJsLANEQ US. JOHN WERNER, 1'ERWXAI.I.Y IX AITSNn.lNCE.Ar Hair Dressing Saloon, No. 1 1 North Front Street. South of Purcell House, WILMINGTON, IM. C. None but Uie ui'ihl experienced workmen Cinnlojitl In llils ost ihlishiufiii. Muriufucliiicr of Tonics. Hntr .1)11. Col OKU. Henovaturs. I'yrs, lieaUlilUTs, Ac, Oct. , 1S7.I. PAHKK1C A: TAILOR, Kerosene Oil, Stoics, Metals, Guns, Lanterns., Fairbank's Scales, - I' U M 1, I'. liAbS AND I KON KOi I N STUAINKIW. pin-KJiS AH XKlMMLliS. itatuiCturtT9 nd wholesale dealers in TIN AMD SHEET IRON WARE. No. ll n Illy FKONT STREET, WILMtNiJTON. N. C. ONSUMl'TiOIS All anTr rrxm lht Ule tht r fvn xloua to b c urtM tihoulU try lr. Klfwner CVIeOmlol iViisumplU IVwilcm. The rowUert mnt tlieoiuy prrrrtlon known. thta triik -ar .oiurttota mxni tiidtoixw aX thr rhrvml ik n J Luntn-liulwl. n lrf Ul our (Alt h In lucui. uU io lo caoTlsc VMtl lo Try ullrr, by mU. vt pl4. i rrTrtl tkx. t W Km I Mil ymnr mooer anui jou rt pcrtwclix MUnd oi inur cur, powrn. HiwrlViiivn vtBtr. iioa't tMr in KlTlSC DIjkikltvi, UiM, mm . Umry Till tirvly cur Tu rvcrirH of pn. WwW BkoikLTJi X. T UM, 4I V V M -- -1 V" J WHMI Ats trrKrpT tamilt jtrrurA PKK. Uvoivi oity. UUtav. Il, 4TK 11 A BY FAR Til K UAKUfT CIU.X"IJL 1 TtO rA"T ttHkR r,.irj i PStK 1HNTR; ! TKKas IJ lVACei. tWe vy mr yr.,I ... .. j: . for tkr tauuttt ... m .". . U.M. TSktaHV : tl 16iu a4 rrvrmtr. NEW AD VER7 CEMENTS. WOLFE'S Schiedam Aromatic PHE following are a few! of the testimoni als fATor of the Schnapps: I Mr. TJootPHO "WorrB, 2? Beaver street. New York: - . ': ' ' Dear Sir I feel bound to say that I regard yoar Brhnappa as being la sverf mpect pre eminently pdite, and deertlHc of med ical patronage.; At all eventa, 1 Is ths par est possible article of Holland Gin, hereto fore unobtainable, and as sacb may be safe ly prescribed by physicians. DAVID L. MOTT, M. D., Pbaimacentlcal Chemist, New York. ) 23 Tise Stkbet, New York, Not. ? ? Udo- pho Wolfe, Esq. Present: 1 Dear Sir I have made a chemical exami nation of a sample of yonr Schlednm Schnapps, with the latent of determining - i any foreign or Injurious substance had been J !, , I added to the simple distilled spirit. i The examination has resulted in tbe con- i . elusion that the sample contained no puis onous or harmful admCxture. I have been unable to discover any trace of tbe delete ' ' - rious substances which are emplcr ed In the adulteration of liquors I would not hesi tate lo use myself, o"r recommend lo others, fur medicinal purposes, the Schiedam Schuapps as an excellent and nnobjectlon ble variety of din. i Very respectfully, yours, Signed CIIAS. A. SHERLY. Chemist New Yok, Cf.iiar. Rtkeet, November Mth, l!7. f L'doki'uo Wolfb, Esq., Tresent: Dear 81 r I submitted to chemical analysts two bottles of Schiedam Schnaps, which I took from a fresh package in you bonded warehouse, aud ftndas before, that thesplr ttuous liquor la free from Injurious Ing.edl- ents or falsification: that It baa thenarks of b I aged aa't not recently prepared by mechanical admixture of alcohol and aro matlcs. Respectfully, FRED. K. MAYER, ChemliL (1ULJC3 CHrtlKlL ASPTaCUSK'J.L U0JLTOT, is Exrhaag Ptea. Kew York. I , Jlevesaber 1 1SST. J t'WtTBO WoLFi, Eoc . ' TVar Mr Tbe aHlrtfl(ted ba carefully aad vbcrooghly aMlyeed si eatnpto mi ywv Arematie avtiledasa rVbMfpa, clS fnoea all txrguta cwlaorgMM itK les tanHis t beejta. Treau lbs man f tmr xantmadou we eosdrT the artHie osie ft mmmmtfr -aatrty, fcemrHtral aa a barvrag. ewctmal ta tt smuUHsmJ sjaTI IWaa i rtfwUy, jvmrm. - ' ALTJX, TBATTU isste. TkA?i"tS . E.EU!A1U It IX Wy all iisasiiaiis i vv&tjrno wvutt wan m SS VMvtve sSvwaa, 3tv TsSi Mxy -4y RAIL ROADS. WUniDgton & We lden R. R ' : Coopafij. ' - I ! w Or Elf K OKIKRAr.SUPERHrTETDfcMT, Wilmington, N. C., June 13, IWJ. f gQANQE OF SCHEDULE. On and after Sunday Jnoe 15th 1S.9. Passenger Trains on the W. & W. Railroad will run asioliows; DAY MAIL AND EXPRESS TRAIN Daily. Leave Wilmington, Front Street Depot, at ...7:19 A. M AniTe at Weldoa at . . ..1:10 P. M, Leave Wei don a 3:32 V. M Arrive at Wilmington, Front St. Depot at .9:53 F. M f NIGHT MAIL AND EXPRESS TRAIN, Daily , Leave Wilmirgtct Frant Stre.t Depot at 8:43 P. k Arrive at Weldonau. 3.53 AM Leave Weldon daily, at 2 13 A M Arrive at Wilmington Front St Depot at 8 45AM "Trains on Tarb jro Rrani:U Hoad leave Kocay Mount for Tarbo.ro at 5,00 P. M. Tlnilv 111. 1 r-law.l V I'll iiwila v anil Matup- day at 4.UU A. M. Hetumlnit. leave Tarborc at 1(1.00 A. M.?dallv.and Monday. Wednes day and Friday at 8,30 P, M. Tbe Day Train makes clotte connection at Weldon lor ail points North via Bay Line, daily except Sunday, and daily via Rich mond and all-rail route". Night Train ra ikis eloei connection at Weldon for all points north via Richmond, Sleeping Cars attqehel lo all NIkIiI Trains. ' JOHN D1VINK, ueml Snp't.i Je 15-tf QKN. SUk'KRINTENDF.NT'H UKFICK WIIhIuIod. ColiiiiibiH cV U- Kasta R. R. Companj. Wilmiwotom. N. C, June 13, 189. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE', ON and after-aundiiy, Jump l li.tlie tol lowlng schedule will Ue run ontbi' read: DAY EXPRESS AND MAIL TliAlN- - (Daily.) Leave Wilmington 9.1CA. M Arrive Florence 1 2 f. M Leave Florence S..VJ P M Arrlveat WUminton S SO V V NIGUrEXPRESS TRAIN, (dally) Leave Wllmiugton Leave Florence Arrive at Colambia... ... .10.1.5 P M ... StSOAM ... 'JOOA.M .... 0 00 A M . . 2.55 A M ... 6.50 AM Leave Columbia Leave Florence at..... Arrive at Wilmington . . This Train Moi- onlv at Fleminctor. Whlteville, Fair Bluff. Marloa. Pasaeiurers for Auenstaivla d-lumb aL sbould take Night Kx press Train from Wil mington. ' Through Sleeping Carson niiht trains (or Charleston aid Aagvitat JOHN F. DIVINE, Geo. Snp't. Je 13-tf. Carolina Central liail- way Company OFFICE GEN L HUPERINTENDK.NT. I WH.li!HJTO J, . i,m Murru j IKS. caiNCK or SCHEDULE ON aod a.tr Monday. !ih Instaat. Ui fnilowlog Hrbedale will be rperated oa this Hallway : FX GIR. HAIL AND KXTRIUv TRA1N 1 LtKe 'llmitnlo at iJM A. M Nw U . Am at IUniii at p. M J Cbarioiteai .H A. M I Imii Cbai-Vott l. Kx X ArrlT a KuiM at ) Viiantagioa at. .- A. M . i r. M HMwp.M SnEXBT rtVtsvlON UMK F!tt30UT riciuEa and txrEs a I Larr itMrkxi. raA. al. 1 AnimiM. A. M. v. Lav Kb y 'U iir.N " 1 Arma Cw r. M TW sbaw Tralat fcaw f " f a natal rwa.a. aa4 r t Bta.'y Btaf J X.1 JOHXaaiji. Okt-kf aUtaVrcr bAV4 tTTT'TS lnal. MISCELLANEOUS. Dnierialer. Carpenter jri Wiiiel ON PnilVCEHS STREET In ths basement of th! old Journal ' Building. I Wi TT.T. FiTRTtfrai mrriNa tABcmo M adhee. jt the very lajaorteat AlnieriXrobi tie ciuitry pranlpUy aV- Orders for Carpenter and Cabinet Work solicited, and work guaranteed. Work as low aa any In the city. Jan 18-tf PWNor$r4oito,i40o- All new, and strictly first-elans, and sold uttt centeaklal Kihiblrfon. and were unanimously recommended for the High est Honors over 12,000 In use. Regularly incoroorated Mnn fas-t.n rntr On (Vuttnr established over 87 vearsL The Sou re Grands contain Malbuahek'a new Mtent DllDlez fv nrKtrii n a Hiialn lh. " -" iiDDroTemrnt in trm h iinrv nr p un making. The DprighU are tho Finest in America. , pianos sent on trial. - Don't Tall lo wrltn for.. TllimlratA.1 nn TWoMm,tA ' 21 ast loth Street, N?Y, apr. is em. PROF. HARRIS RADICAL .CURE FOB SPlSKgTOKH(lU;ri "SEM INAL PASTI LLE Vlukl iMaooverr Nrw Drpirtunin Mrd Ci pewtif . an ontlrrlr r and pualtinly aflkrU Kamady for lha apaadr panuanant Lurtt of fnai amlaalens 4k otaner br lha onlr a ' !. ,MTlt iB W. V wim. TMHmt rlpal srat of lha Dttraar. a tpllcatlen to Ihr priu- Imr -it, anecitle inAotfl-a m oaorpiien. ana asrr lnal VaalolM Ila- ulatory DurU, Prostrata 01 Itm llrmtx la allanil.U 1 aiHt tTrrlhra. Tha m H II quickly dinl'a aal la or Inroovaataaca, rWI, prosudnfaa SSTalr itrwiflt lha aaai w immediata aoolhin( aad uttl and lirrrous organiMtiAvvcksMl from lf-b anU vtrfma, Sloaninf tha dra inrtha mind lo lira 1 1 li and aaa arnssrM mrinory, rrnwTini; IDahlUly, Conruaton m lha ar.trin. rrrtor- mo uimnaaa orHi(ht, ITenj ' laeaa, ATnratan to B eaiaaj anca of pramatur eld an lliy anvmpanjiiia thii .ana. ana tha apuaar- bran dnrni.nl toryaan. Thi. naaBr traamiaijl ha atooH lli.lf.hn mf aaaara aaan, a4 I, w . pmrmnrxva ,u7"- ara too ninth Maaatihad in thrM truublra. and. a juany saa baar wiln ta. i,h birt linia II air parai.iOTtcooA tTaara I. i.o tMH .boul th., r-rrpara-liiiiylaofralnlMaraatlnii anikiaaajitu po.itin. .uaxpn- ImWh . U RiTaaaUafaoara. -D.,rii In. .1. ht .TranTrTal II K a. bran in miataa, ana. . h... T , ol irximonl.l, a to iu .HV Sad It I, now aaaaaZ! ed brli 'Madica, I'rofaaaK a aa lb. ZZZtl mrana .liw-ararad ol raarktia4 avHni .HI, mr, arar. alrnt In.ul.i.. that la trail know aa ba lha rauaa ot uurald mtrrrtnio laana, and tinoev Sauaj anaaka UN thairMwIaw miatrwma aad bit.Oaaa.Th RatnadaUaat ."'. r a - i . a na iwnnji, pin as 'aat a -wairt. and aanl in a plain ilt .r Sfe-To h-u.,, (,mrl.nl to nl' 'Wj rata i f S Tbraa vfTtt-l a Darnianant rara wrannar bv mall aoal nox MMmf Ihrra aioma. tl atop acuiin,. ami rn'iira Tiaw, In 111. wor.t c.ra f Tu 1 1 DIKaCTIOMB lor iisinr will aooompany iSMJII BOX. V S.nd I Clllualrailoat, which will cotiaaaaa tha moil tcaplical It 't1'iT ran i aa raMorr ft Mariart tuanlMKHf. and B flrWforthadaaaaafllla.CawMa.UamrarlwHad. f "III Awaad ftaPfltainin feel inl aTawaatL I..U rWT a. . lW - Sr a DaarrlptlT. PaFaaaaal rlrlnr Anarnanlm-'V HARRIS REMEDY CO. MPQ.CHEMISTS. Market sad Sta. tta. T.LOUIS, MO. - " a-wtu una. BIT nar TDec 8 t -. f BOOKSStfJULLION A larfa. S an (oatpiats Quids te Wadlook, aBelalnwii, wltk many oUar. inVfcllnwiai chanrmi A aoiapataot W aahoad. arVcaion of Wlfa, ZvlaaraaM at Tlnrlritfy. Tan. patajnaalajSaSkpalibla an4 incompaii- Irraiiiiaiit, AdTica a arljilitawa. Adiea a kaabaad. AdTiea to wiraa, PraaHiatioa Ja aaaxa. Calrbaar ani WalrimonT camaarad. rmniiaal aalii Tin r Snrmrnt. Xora and Caoruiiia. laapaaiBMnl. to M.rriarr. ronidmlt Law of Marrlaf a,la ft aiarrlad aom.a. ata Inalaaaal inm.ia and laatala, kaiaaaa af aWrodwetloa, 8inrla lifa ptaorra, Lraaij-ii Woman, tbatr aaaaaa and ti Ma h I. A book frr prirata and rsntiderataraadlna. ofaaw Baaaa, witk Sail flat Eli- KraTuia.. vj idih, aaajaa tot w i Thfriata M4M AtWaar.' " PwmtorhaB kaal Dabllity. and Ira ni Sjrphl Kx. or anhappT, riin trciliiaaa, and a crrat many vahi.l.l. rwalpl. ftr IVkj rura of M ariTttC dTaraart ; Mui.t mo, tTot 60 P' BO ranta. ' s Iwnra Ml KanK'oli2Sood. 10 ranta, r all thrra In nna alcrlr bound aaaaana. tl. Thr roaimia 00 pairra and eaar lUB nita1SwttOTisrmnrarin( arrry Ihing or, tba aanrratW, ryataot Cbat fa worth knowing, and r,u5 ,h? " "P PuhU"r n Mh4W work. Tlunm. binrd Toluma It potiriwly tha bant Popular Mrdical Book pnbli.had. a4idthoaaditaatitflf4 Jaaar awlttac H ran hara thnr monay ratoaded. ThaAwwaarll an aniartaaewd 1 hy.ioan of many yran praraa.(at ta wall known.) and !i'a BBlr raTwtariwtwl laid do a a. will rt frmntl of rm valna m lSaaau a imnrMwr of lb. .vrt.m, rarly arrrrn.lr Ttfa, , or a.T of Irraaamrr. f" troublra tominff undrr taaVkaad of "Prirata- or in ona. for Prira ta l - Sant n, akajl. mlamn, or rotnplata 6taaiaa. strata or Currrary . CorriU , and latter ata proaipHy and traakly an.wrrtsjwitlioal rharrr.) Addraai Dr. Bwttt' Ortl runnu.iuiai. ana l.ltrrt Baa proanpn airy. 13 N Bth St, fx Louit, laa. CEatabUaned 1SI7.1 narrr. i Aaaraa. : I jr MMtta' tirw.-. ( PR- nTTTS InrHra all HI IT! HE lo trnd him I auaWiac fiwai and hereby aaaarra thrm aantra and .Liim utaaUung lg thrir adTaj)' tawt -iinry win irara i Hot a Ttui aa. !decembei 8 If l'rt.ta Hn.iml, 7a ! ! S..Ctitraas Kt. C 7(prrtally. all -rt.at,Ckraatr aaa f.a.l. DHraara. 0Blataiiaf f raa. I. kite, aaa Oraila. ara. "raft .w oUilar tar aatatr. at br.1 r a b b r t.ata. aat A w wart. prt M rral. by atall. K,tr. rtra af Xaiara. rt. Wl of HirmrvVr. aaaa af Oaaara (1 aa, VawiS aai Maabooa : a a -alia af rk4i. aad ,aaata bnwlto., af laamat a batk an. Katblaa CO LaJ CD ax ktt raataia PUia.M ptr aaa. PH.aaa baata aad waraa tar rlla. tra la taed tana aaakl bawlt C7A4aa. I'l IV aw i terft a. flPIIII.P'aSSaS lee I f r ft. EH ' e S! 0 bS &3 O CO ad 0 Ca3 CVO f r aa 2 a jk fia (iOIji) ffBTeaTcwd rataX gwt crwabata-ka. W staaal m I iii a la rtrrr W W tavAa aitawrlixiaai a '!" aa lUatraa4 aaAaUly yatatUrait. im waa wwm. Jtay eaara. arU Tat aoa 1 1 Hat t yatrB aa rt Jwww. rrww ha tnawu i ;ti at a. TTfc atrbr W uiomk Tta a wtnt aa Wa mf a'(kt. t a raa Um traal a tN.il M.urObr tTJwrt aat c4 aarsj EatfatH aand fljattt CaaaaH Catna. U ataat IX aaa KtatH w Vy U" aaaas a ma TSmmom wta e-r tm a at me lowest mi casn wnoiesaM xactory prlcea.1 direct, to- th pnrchai i i fbese a. a. i:""v m iwnwn. cauaintx srmiiial I.miMioiia, rWroinn,. Aaai.i ta SorUrr.Cunra.ion ol I.lM., Phr.iral daray, Ulmsaaaafaiclil, IrlWttTc Mnaorr. "i" r wiim rowrr, ate. lllliit rnamaaa no mrw ual avtn irwt tamiacy awaaarwam. tie atrial rtinwia saaaaan stsw S-as ta a ww. A .a-ty BBTwat Iwnarvt ttbAlatg rar atataawTtsaata mmm a am. AU wv aaar MISCELLANEOUS. VlIFE IN A BOTTLE. The Most Valuable Medical Discovery Known to the World No More Use t : For Quinine. Calomel or Mineral liroua life for the Blood, Strength For the Nerves, and Health for All. AN OPEN LETT EH TO THE I'lltLIC. Believing that by cleansing the blood and building np the constitution was the only, true war of banishing tlUease and l.eiuir trouble! wlLl, wmkriAsji of tha 1 1 it etarrb, Tery much broken down in con stitution, ac and after trying .he best pby tteiaas and paying out ray money tor wuuy klnda of modlclnea advertised w i thou t ilml ing a permanent cure, 1 began dtx-loriug Dsyseu, using medicines made from roota and herlw. 1 lurtunatcly discovered a woadertal Bitters or Blood Cleanser, tho Drat bottle of which gave ma new lL'e and rigor, and In tlmo etl'ected a pt-rmauent cure. 1 waa free from catarrh, uiy luns became strong aud bound, beiug 'able to stand tbe most severe cold aud e.M.ure. aad I have gained over tulrtv ioauds lu weight. FeeUnx confident Unit I had madtj a wonderful discovery in meUU-lue; l i rv pared a quantity of the Hoot Itinera, jind il?.11 habit of giving theui tlway to sick friends and neighbors, 1 found tha medicine effected the most wondoritil cures of all diseases caused from liumors or M-ro-fula In the blood. Imprudence, lid Btomach. "Weakness, Kidney Llseae. Tor- Sia urver, c, e. 1 ne news 01 my discovery tavlaway spread from one person to an other until I round myseli culled uh.ui t--apply patients with medicine far and wld ana 1 was Induced to establish a laboratorv for compounding and bottliug tho Kovt Bitters in large quantities, and I uow de vote h11 my time U) this busluoss. ' I was at first backward-in presenting either myself or discovery in this way t the public, not being a patent modicino man and with small capital, nut 1 mhi get ting bravely over that, tsiuce 1 lir.-l ad vertised this medicine I have tcen ciowde l with ordera from druggists and country dealers, and the hundreds of letters I nnvo received from persons cured, prove tbe fact that no remedy ever did so much pood iu so short a time and had so much t-m ot ss as the Boot Bitten. In fact. I am convinced that they will soon take the lead ol all other utwiuucB iu uvtt. enrijr ono iittiiiireit retail drugglsta. right here at home in Cleveland, now sell Root lUtterv, Mme f whom havo already sold over oue UiouVami bolUea. ltoot Bitters are strictly aminlicluul pre paration, such as was used in the ko-kI old days of our forefathers, when people weri cured by some simple rout or plant, "and When calomel and other poisons of thvt mineral kingdom were unknown. They act strongly ou the liver und kid neys, keep the bowels regular aud l.ull.l up the nervous saystem. They penetratu every part of tbe iKKly, searchlug out every nerve, oono and tissue front tho head to 1 1 hi feet cleansing and btreugthctilnt; tlm (On tain springs of Lite, henc they must reach all dlseasts by puritlcatiou una nourishment. Mo matter what your feeling or symp tom are, what the disease or uiliin iiu .Is, aaa Root Hitters. iKm't wait until you are sick, but If you only let-l hud or miser able, use tha Bitters at oucv. it may .i your life. Thousands of persons tu all parts of tl.o country are already using koot hittkj;. They have saved many lives of consump tive who had been given up ly friends ami physicians to die. and havo pcrmauent it cured many old chronio cases of I'atarn'i Hcrofula, Ulieumatlsm, iysH-pla, ami skin Diseases. Where all other treatments hal failed.. Are you troubled with sick head ache, costlveness, dir.zlness, weakness, bad taste in tlte mouth, nervousness, imt oroaen uown down In const it ut ion? tiu will be cured If you take itor iiittk.us. Have you humors rnd pintpUs on jour nice or ak In T Nothing will Kive oti mu-Ii good health, -strength, und beamy" a i;nr niTTEIW. know that Jealous physician wU! cry humbug because my disco, cry cure muny of their patleiits, but I care i.iot. It I now my desire and determination to pl.to my Hoot niTrnw as fast as possible within the reach of all those siiircriiit; throughout the world. Hold by wholesale ainK retail druggists and country mt rchiitits , or pi M by express on receipt ol price, ii.no t.--bottle, or six bottles S." t. For cert I ileal t . of wonderful curi, bee my lai -.-e riri-nl., armind each bottle r inedi. inc. Head n ..l Judge for yourself, j TW- Ask your druggist ,,r t,n ri-liaul l..r FKAZIBK'H KlXlT 1UIT(K, tl.H real 1U(.1 Cleanser, and lake no Mil.Miluio he -it-a recomniud because ho ni'-kiN a lur r prottt. U. W. KK..li:i. Iusc.im i, r Itls Superior JM., 1 lev eland, O. Kor anlA liv T -t ti,,.-1. .i.i. mi 1 1 . - -. rf -, iiii, iiiiitii ttui, i . 1 OLD TRIED. AJCD TRUE. TrN-if4 : r a-tttri: MtUdini-l .H'I ti-- U fa B oofht lo t with llvr .- lc-rT jl o ill. t i ta (Twat Am. t aa lu-nw-lf . I ha MEXICAN Ilnstang Liniment. 70S HAS AND BEAST. Taa. Ualan a awry r torl'T ortr!'l la An fa,na Kaivrw la hr-r labnrsi-irT sprtalRf aatUoUa tat ih aaalxlict er Ltt it-, 4waw Ila fajna aa aa-v-a wprrdixt f r X. yrr, a all! boa ft rfx-lnrkrt taw aaU(atO rV T alrTtlraa SwatAaf tJstrt U a, raairi -a n r iy for an ritmul ,Qiua1 . i4 nut a I t- T atora awtm a4 faratrr U 1 ta aisw' . A aiacta awtlte vtlrm Mm a ktntt IJ -arwra ftba Staff si i iB aa rwtiinit lajrar. ra,arajtra. K rasra f sue,, awnf a. Wva b-a, r--arrrar aitarav t aiaihtawro. atitar. lb, lAim sa.t f tlaiatarja rryarw fca-1 lMaru,t4m,r 1 atoak trahix al ttuji US'. tt taatB ni; eataravU ixiaU tv - arrwSt&ra. t alur, i;rLM lvta. TW HarVaa alii Uataawt'l. la tbtnl a ItaB stasia fw aoei4ra.it vrn4 la l SaaalSw. aai 11m a taa m . a . . . - rkftvajr.a - t-a.'U- Vy j;nqA. h I tat Tawia It tat y t HlM if ixma A' 1 19 aw alAiS bvk. t-f a.- rBaa afOat Btt.a, t t attw aawaav Fmmi 4 saaa t t. baraa, ttraJaa, attract. tt ta aWraaafnaS taani 4y tat ta want f-' at aaawaaaaa aawtarw t flat taawa-. ao.4 a wata twarw tt taaSUra. Ot 4 aVi iiatt rm aaa . t aaaaa. a awrn aii a t tai mt;&a Wata-a. mmtO-Utm. ... af