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B||^: Bt,Tin?: ^!Mcmnfe t T w | ADVERTISING RATES. BEjT ADVERTISING nlEDIUm ^ f X/^ ? XTiTTV^XT f l ICfl A HP/~* p; South Carolina. | | J |H I ^ H< X I \l 1 I I 1 \ 8 ll^r A I Lj il ? JL ? I I ^ B. i ^ ^ JL 1 1 \J JL V-T 1 1 i-/ lijl 1 A 1 e Liberal contracts made with those wish. RATES REASONABLE. mg to advertise for throe, six and twelee , months. ^ 0 " ' ' " ~ ~ Notices m the local column 5 cents per ? line each insertion RTTR^fJRIPTION Si PER ANNUM Obituaries charged for at the rate of one . ? fig _o? VOL. XXVIII. LEXINGTON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1898. NO. 10. j JOB PRIMING A NPEClALTli * M- HARMAN, Editor and Publisher. . Jjj Oils mi SfOflll, ATTORNEY AT LAW, / BATESBURG, - - - - S. C. Practices in a 1 the State Courts, especially in Lexington, Edgefield and Aiken counties. Mar. 8?ly ANDREW CRAWFORD ATTORNEY AT LAW, COLUMBIA, - - - - S. C. PRACTICES IN THE STATE AND Federal Courts, and offers his profess onal services to the citizens ol Lexington County. t Octooer 18?ly. EDWARD L. ASBILL. Attorney at Law, LEESVILLE, S. C. Practices in all the Courts. f Business solicited. Sept. 30?6m C. M. Efird. ' F. E. Dkeher. EFIRD & DREHER, Attorneys at Law, LEXINGTON, C. H., S. C. TTTILL PRACTICE IN ALL THE VV Courts. Business solicited. One member of the firm will always be at office, Lexington, S. C. Jane 17?6m Albert M. Boozer, Attorney at Law, COLUMBIA, s. e. Especial attention given to business entrusted to him by his fellow citizens of Lexington couuty. Office: No. 5 Insurance Building, opposite City Hall, Corner Main and Washington Stree ts. February 28 -tf. DR. E. J. ET11EBEDGE, SUKGKON DENTIST, LEESYILLE, S. C. Office next do>r below p.ist office. Always on hand. Aug 12?6m DR. C. C. STANLEY, SURGEON DENTIST, COLU3IBIA, S. O. Dr. Stanley has move<l his Dental Offices from the Keuda 1 Building, to 1423 Alain Street, over Mess. Stauley Bros. China Store, Y. M C. A. Building. Railroad lare to and from Lexington, C. H., or any point of similar distance, will be deducted from dental bills amounting to or over $5.00. .Engagements can be made by mail, but at least two days notice should be given. January 16 -ly. PAY YOUR DOCTOR'S BILL. I HAVE RENDERED FAITHFUL services to the sick, have waited patiently for my fees and now desire all to come lorward and pay up#as I am needi .g money to meet urgent expenses. Do so within the next thirty da^s, please. C. E. LEAPHART, M. D. Sept. 29, 1897.- tt CAROLINA NATIONAL BANK, AT COLUMBIA, S. C. STATE, TOWN AND COUNTY DEPOSITORY. Paid np Capital - $100,000 Surplus Profits . - 100,000' SaYings Department. Deposits of $5.00 and upwards received. Interest allowed at the rate of 4 per ci nt per annum. W. A. CLARK, President. WmiE Jokes, Cashier. December 4?ly. BEESWAX WANTED" IN LARGE OR SMALL QUANTITIES. I will pay the highest mafket price lor clean ani pare Pees wax. Price governed by color aLd coudi ion. RICE B HARMAN, At the Bazaar, - Lexington, S. C. ~~ HARMAN & SON, CONTRACTORS, AND BUILDERS STEEL AND IRON ROOFING, lexington, s. c. Bids submitted for all kinds of carpenter work. Estimates furnished. None but First Class Workmen employed. House building a specialty. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Remembtr us when yon want work done. S. A. B. HARMAN, K1LLIAN HARMAN. September?11. tf Grand Centra! Hotel COLUMBIA, S. C. Carolina : Hotel. ROCK HILL, S. C. A. H. GREENE & SON, Managers. XE WL r RE SO TED. CUISINE UNSURPASSED. Especial'y adapted for those desiring Comtort, Ease, Home like mttnods. Commercial travellers receive every accommodation. $5TRATES, S2 and $2.50 PER DAY.-t5^ June 2, 1897?tf. WANTED AGENTST "The Ccafederate Soldier in the Ci\ii War." jnst published, contains 500 japes 12 x i6 inches, and i vtr 1,1(0 large Rattle 8?cei cs Portraits, Maps, etc. The greatest and largest War Bitk ever pubnsbed, and the only one that does justice to the Confe 1< rate soldier and t ?o cause be fought for. Complete in one volume Agents wanted everywhere to sell this book on or.r new aDd easy plan. Many ol tLe lady and gentlemen agents who are at work are making from $100 to $200 pc mouth. VeUraus Sons and Daughters of Veterans, and others interested are requested to send for a beautiful illustrated descriptive circn'ar (free) and terms to agents. Address, CocriebJoprnal Job Printing Co., Louisville. Ky. Nov. 24, 3m 15 * QLG l(ta<) MAIN 8TE1 * JW-'iaj?jj-L -iiw naMiwwimi ? School Management. Billy Felix on Training of Boys anil Girls in the Common Schools. To the Editor of the Dispatch: *" One of the first essentials of success in any enterprise or business is a right beginning. "All's well that ends well.'' If we start right, continue right we will end light. A child should begin the first year oi its school life right in order that he make a success of the succeeding years and get the be^t possible results. TheD one of the first things that should be impressed upon his mind is the great importance of making use of the time he has of gaining knowledge and not waste the precious moments in idleness. Today we find all over this beloved Southland of ours, a great number of school houses with an innumerable number of bright boys and intelligent gi.'ls seeking wisdom. They go to school to obtain the knowledge which in a few years is to give them power to fight the battle of life snc cessfully. They should be impressed with the thought that soon they are to enter out on the active duties of life and make use of the time they have*in the school room iu storing their minds with such knowledge that will enable them to discharge that duty to the good of man and the glory of God. We find in all our schools, yea, even in the same family, children of different temperaments, hence they require different methods to produce the same results. We find in all schools the so called "dunce," the genius and those of average powers, aDd no one exactly like any one else, hence the teacher to make it a success and bring about the best possible results, must study the pupils individually. Education comes from the Latin words "e" out of, "duco" to draw or lead, hence as an educator, the teacher is to draw out the latent powf t_MJ _ J ers 01 eacn cnuu in oruer ili?o lucj may be fully developed, aud the teacher wbo knows best bow to stimulate and direct tbese powers is tbe one wbo will be most successful. In our schools we bave children with all kinds of mental inclinations. There is tbe artistic student wbo displays a talent for drawing all kinds of strange and mysterious hieroglyphics which be takes a great delight to display before the other stu| dents, especially if it be the portrait of his present preceptor. Many a teacher chide and scold instead of encouraging and aiding the little fellow to develop the art. By so doing you not only keep the little fellow busy and interested in his work but you may be the means of making an artist of whom the world might be proud. Another shows a fondness for mathematics, and another for history, geography, etc. Let them pursue their favorite studies, but not, however, to the exclusion ot an others, and the one may become a great financier while the other may become an other Livingstone or Stanley, 01 perhaps President of these United States. But the difficult part of my sub ject has not yet been reached and that is, those who seemingly care foi nothing. They will neither studj what is assigned them and not rnuct of anything else. Here comes the try ing part of the teachers work. He is to exhaust all his skill to awaken ii: the seemingly dull student an aDX ious desire for study and knowledge They shculd be commended and en couraged when they make an efibri and should not be scolded and dis coured. There are times when scold iDg do more harm than good. -He is a wise teacher and likely to be tin most success who can exercise pa [WOOD'S! seEDS I Tested i < AND * [true. w. IE3 3T, Soliots a Share o< tience and forbearance under such nirg timfs. Peihaps tbey Lave j done (heir best, and if so, how could they have done bettei? A kind word costs but little, yet its influence may last a life time. "We can make a school room cheerful, If with kind words we begin, We can make the children happy, Aud their truest blessings win." So it u Liadness and love that , make friends everywhere. They not . only aid in winning the children, but by continual practice they will gain a patience never to be obtained in any other way and if there is any ! one who should exercise patience it is the teacher. True, the teacher should not be trifling and too lenient neither domineering and tyranical, but mild, firm and commanding. Show the child that you care for him, that you love him, that you take an active interest in all that he does: that his success gladdens while his i fftilm-p rrrir-ves. and III assure you that the child will love, honor and respect you, and do his best to learn. The barefoot bqys and school girls of today are to be the men and wo, men of the morrow. The future destiny of our conntry depends on them What manner of men and women j will they be? Fellow teacher, we have it in our power to a certain ex- I tent, to say what manner of men >. and women they are to be. Education is a better safeguard for , the perpetuity of a nation than a standing army. W'hat power hid den in the common schools of our country if the teachers will only direct it into the proper channels. 1 I oil fV?n tonrhers of our schools I iUi+J ui* vuv ___ and colleges direct the minds of those under their care so as to be able to prove a benefit to their fellow j man, a blessing to their country, an ! honor to their State and glorify their j God. Billy Felix. Gaston, S. C, January 8, 1808. I I Tin Greatest Discovery Yetv W. M. Repine, editor Tiskilwa, 111., j "Chief," says: "We won't keep house without Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and j Colds. Experimented with many j others, but never got the true remedy until we used Dr. King's New Dis- j covery. No other remedy can- take its place in our home, as in it we have a certain and sure cure for Coughs, j f Colds, Whooping Cougb, etc." It is j idle to experiment with other reme- i dies, even if they are urged on you I as just as good as Dr. King's New; Discovery. They are not as good, \ | because this remedy has a record of i cures and besides is guaranteed. It , i never fails to satisfy. Trial bottles I at J. E. Kaufmanu's. | Did You Ever Think? I That a kind word put out at interest brings back an enormons per centage of love and appreciation? That, though a loving thought . may hot seem to be appreciated, it has yet made you better and braver [ because of it? That the little acts of kindness and thoughtfulness, day by day, are really greater than one immense act of goodness once a yeai? That to be always polite to the peot pie at home is not only more lady like, but more refined, than having 5 "company manners?'' i That to judge anybody by his _ person appearance stamps yuu as n-^t only ignorant, but vulgar? That to talk and talk and talk t about yourself and your belongings - is very tiresome for the people wbo - listen? > ? Japanese children are taught to - write wiih both hands. FOOD'S SEFDS are specially grown and S lected to meet the needs and requirements of / Southern Growers. / rood's Descriptive Catalogue is most valu- / >le and helpful in giving cultural directions / id valuable information about all seeds ) ecially adapted to the South. r EGETABLE and FLOWER SEEDS, 5 Grass and Clover Seeds, Seed S Potatoes, Seed Oats v and all ? Garden and Farm Seeds. \ 7rite for Descriptive Catalogue. Mailed free. ( T. W. WOOD & SONS, K EEDSMEN, - - RICHMOND, VA. f THE LARGEST SEED HOUSE IN THE SOUTH. i ^ ; *Y GO * f Your Valued Patron Tito Cans: of Dyspepsia. From the Republican, S:rauton, Penna. The most common of all human j ailments is deranged digestion: the | most aggravating disease, inheiited j by man, dyspepsia. The primary cause of dyspepsia is j lack of vitality; the absence of nerve force; the loss of the life-sustaining elements of the blood, i No organ can properly perform its j function when the source of nutri- | ment fails. "When the stomach is J robbed of the nourishment demanded by nature, assimilation ceases, unnatural gases are generated; the j entire system responds to the discord, j A practical illustration of the symp- j i toms and torture of dyspepsia is j furnished by the case of Joseph T. ! j Vandyke, 410 Hickory St., Scranton, ! Pa. In telling his story, Mr. Vandyke says: "Five years ago I was afflicted with a trouble of the stomach, which | was very aggravating. I had no J ! appetite, could not eDjoy myself at any time, and especially was the I trouble severe when I awoke in the i morning. I did not know what the [ ailment was, but it became steadily worse and I was in constant misery. "I called in my family physician, and he diagnosed the case as catarrh of the stomach. He prescribed for me and I had his prescription filled. I took nearly all of the medicine, but still the trouble became worse, and I felt that my condition was hopeless. I tried several remedies recommended by my friends but without benefit. After I had been suffering several months, Thomas Campbell, also a resident of this city, urged me to try Dr. "Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. "He finally persuaded me to buy a box and I began to use the pills according to directions. Before I had taken the second box I began to ( feel relieved, and after taking a few more boxes I considered myself re- . stored to health. The pills gave me new life strength, ambition and happiness." Dr. "Williams' rink Pills cure dyspepsia by restoring to the blood the requisite constituents of life, by renewing the Derve force and enabling the stomach to promptly and properly assimilate the food. These pills are a specific for all diseases having their origination in impoverished blood or disordered nerves. They contain every element requisite to general nutrition, to restore strength to the weak, good health to the ailing. Face the Facta. Greenville News. What will it cost you to live and support your family during the year 1808? How much money can you make and how much will you have to I i spend? How much do you expect to j save? If you are a farmer and must : borrow, how much will you borrow? How much can you afford to spend i and still be able to pay your debts i next November, supposing that the i price of cotton is five cents a pound j and you make the same crop that ! you made last year? Are these quesi tious that you have asked yoursell? ! There are two ways "of doing busi! ness." One is to take no thought of the morrow. If your little boy wishes a shot gun and you have teu dollars j in your pocket, you can buy it. Then I you can buy a barrel of flour on a j credit. If your daughter asks for a ' new dress, and ycu can borrow the ! money, you can give it to her though i she could perhaps get along without ; it. If you see a buggy in town that "takes your eye" you can buy it and, ' comforting yourself wiih the vague i thought, '*The money will come from somewhere," you may go your way faintly rejoicing. Meanwhile you dj not know how much money you are actually spending. If the pur- I chases were itemized and added up ! the aggregate would astonish you i and you would hesitate to believe j what the figures told. You have j drifted along, indulging jour wants i as they rose and have shut your eyes j to settlement day?fancying that by j some surpreme effort or by some j good luck the nature of which you D * c nnot and dare not attempt to foreJ tell, you will ''come out all right.*' | This is the way of doing business ODS ( r, Tie., ji&j&jxTA ago. Prompt and 1 that forces a man to mortgage his j property at the end of the year, that j makes him morose and sour and un- J happy and dissatisfied and that brings him to ruin and poverty. The other way of doing business is to take pencil and paper and write | down what you can at the very least ! calculation hope to make. Figure j that you will make half a crop, our observation being that the average man ifieans by a full crop a very big crop indeed. Figure .that the crop will be sold at low prices?the cotton at five cents a pound. Figure what it will cost you to make the crop? how many dollars and how many cents you will have to pay out for fertilizers and labor and for mending plows and wagons and . harness. When you have written down every item of expense, add twenty five per cent, to cover expenses that you can not think of but which, you may be sure, will bring themselves to your attention later on. Add up these figures and compare them with the amount of money that you will have available for the year. Then you will know precisely how much you j can afford to spend and come out j even at the end of the year. Make a : firm resolve that you will not live j beyond that sum. Watch yourself ! and your family day by day and see I that you and they are keeping themselves within the limit. To do this may mean and wiil mean for hundreds of families that they must make a quick, sudden and painful change in living. Luxuries that they have always been accustomed to , must be cut off, coarser clothes perhaps must be worn, each member of the family perhaps must work harder , and possibly do work of a more un- i pleasant character; but at the end of ( the year this way of living will have resulted in paving debts and in placing the man and his family on a good business footing. ( In business, the hardest thing to do is to look facts in the face. To realize that notes must be paid. To recognize that "you can not eat your , cake." It is so easy to take for granted that cotton will go to nine cents and it is so easy to spend money with that expectation as a basis. The man who looks at the future and calculating closely what he can do and must do and then tries hard to do it is almost sure to get along. Royal makes the food pure, wholesome and delicious. pOYto ^kiH^ POWDER i Absolute!/ Pure How to Break An Ox. Somebody once wrote to an editor to ask him "how to break an ox." The editor replied: "If only one ox, a good way would be to hoist him by means of a log chain attached to his tail, to the top of a pole forty feet from the ground, then hoist him ' by a rope tied to his bo/ns to another pole. Then let descend on his back a live ton pile driver, and if that don't break him let him start a newspaper and trust people for subscriptions. i It breaks every one that tries it, 1 ' ' - ? A f/\ ^wax'A on I and me ox is uul hhuij ?.u ma exception to the rule. One of the two ways will do it sure.*' Warning:?Persons whosuffer from coughs and colds should heed the warnings of danger and save themselves suffering and fatal results by using One Minute Cough Cure. It is an infallible remedy for coughs, c >lds, croup and all throat aud lung troubles. J. E. Kaufmann. | An Ohio mau was kicked to death i by a goat. This firmly establishes J the fact that the goat is dangerous-! at both ends. I DOMP/ lG-EI3, ( >olito Attention. Human Stomach is Removed. Woman Lives After Operation Has Been Performed. ! oi . n rii ii ci I one is uaining otrengm?surgeons Now Assert That the Organs Are Not Necessary in Life. New York Medical Eecord. "The feat itself is the most brilliant and daring ever attempted in recent surgical history, but the attendant discovery that the stomach is not a vital organ is even more important. Hitherto it has been considered utterly impossible for a person to live without a stomach. With the fall of this long recognized axiom the old theories of medicine *^nd surgery may be entirely changed and the field of possibilities which the discovery opens up is practically .. ... limitless. ''The operation which has so startled the medical world was performed in Zurich, Switzerland, by Dr. Cirl Schlatter on September Gth last. The subject was Anna Landis, fifty-six years old and a silk weaver. This woman had complained for years of stomach trouble. Dr. Schlatter diagnosed the case and found she was suffering from an exceptionally large oval tumor in her stomach. ' The operation lasted nearly two hours and a haif. The loss of blood was slight. "The operation was wonderfully performed. The patient, although old and feeble, exhibited but few of the serious symptoms that usually ! follow a vital operation. Minute quantities of liquid food were given to her at short intervals. With the exception of occasional vomiting, this food seemed to be assimilated, despite the absence of a food receptacle. In the second week after the operation she was given solid food. It was retained and digested with- ! out discomfort. And even Dr. | Schlatter himself marveled at the j almost unexpected success of his | bold work. He was handicapped in | _ _ _ _ I giving the patient solid food, because she had only one tooth left in her head. "On October lltb, a month and five days after the stomach had been removed, Anna Landis left her bed. By November 25th she was feeling perfectly well and was walking about. Her weight increased and apparently i she was in for better health than j before the operation. "Dr. Edmund Charles "SVendt, of j New York city, the correspondent of j The Medical Record, who obtained ! Dr. Schlatter's personal account of j the feat, states that on the 9th of ' this month he saw Anna Landis, and | that to all intents and purposes she j is a well woman. She is still under j observation at the Zurich county j hospital, but is able to do her full share of work in the wards. She has j had many medical visitors from all J quarters of the globe, and by this j time has grown quite proud of her depleted body." wnar ?ive?yDoay &nows. Or ought to know, is that health and even life itself depends upon the condition of the blood. Feeding, as it j does, all the organs of the body, it j must be rich and pure in order to j give proper nourishment. Hood's Sarsaparilla makes the blood pure, rich, nourishing, and in this way strengthens the nerves, creates an appetite, tones the stomach and : builds up the health. Hood's Sarsaparilla wards off colds, pneumonia j and fevers, which are prevalent at j this time. 12 i . Those Hugging Parties. A Charleston paper, several years [ ago, published the following: "An ex- | change says that hugging parties for j flip benefit nf (!hnrehps are a recent ! ) importation into the South, but they j are becoming very popular in some | sections, especially in Virginia. The : prices are as follows: For girls under j 15, 35 cents for a hug of 2 minutes: | from 15 to 20 years of age, from 55 ! to 75: another man's wife, Si: widows, ; according to looks, from 10 cents to j $2; old maids, 3 cents apiece, or two j for a nickel, and no limit as to time.' j To which a lady very properly objected and replied as follows: In your last issue there appeared a ! paragraph entitled "A Hugging | \NY, COLUMBIA, H. CM October 13?tf. Match," which was intended to be funny, but which proved to be mean. It embodied the fossilized slur on old maids, and averred that in the hugging matches now in vogue in divers places, while young girls and widows were hugged at a dollar or two each, and a very few seconds allowed at that for the thrilling performance, old maids were hugged at 3 cents each or two for a nickel, with no limit as to time. I'll vouch that the author of that paragraph is a 1 1_ _1 _ __ 1. 1 1_ 1.1 . _1_! Dacueior wuo Keeps ms oiacKing brush op the mantle piece, and his clean shirts in the coal box, and who is a good enough judge of whisky to pull the stopper out of a bottle of corn whisky and smell the negro that hoed the corn. And if the truth were only known, he has been rejected by a dozen girls, perhaps some old maids, any one of whom would have to have supported him had she been fool enough to have had him, and all of whom render thanks night and morning now that they had sense enough to kick him. I am an old maid, and I am happy. I don't know how it feels to uncork a bottle of paregoric at 2 a. m. to quiet a squall that was caused by a colic instead of a cloud: and I am ignorant of the process of pulling off a pair of muddy boots at midnight and swathing with wet towels the burning, aching fore head of a "lord of creation,'' who promised with a lie upon his lips at the holy altar, to love, honor and protect me as long as he lived. I repeat it, I don't know anything about these delights of matrimony. I suppose I ought to be pitied. But I had rattier be Jaugbed at because i am not married, than not to be able to laugh because I am married. If you will excuse me for being confidential, I'll say in closing, that during a career of 30 years I've only been hugged one time. On that occasion, strange to say, I got three scents. I didn't want any more. The three scents I got were scents of disgusting hair oil, rum and tobacco. Disfigurement for life by burns or scalds may be avoided by using DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve, the great remedy for piles and for all kinds of sores and skin troubles. J. E. Kaufmann. Don't judge men by their looks. Fast looking men are often slow pay. Many a loud amen is nothing more than a brag by the man who makes it. mmmmi 1704 MAIN S (Near Fos C OLUME DRY GOODS A THE CHEAPEST AMI III O O O ' O 0 S2.50 PER PAIR ,1, li'nni niiVLTTC J-}!) PA Hi ALL uuul dlamus.i o o o o DRESS GOODS. 50 Peices 30 inch Suiting 15c for 10c 20 Ps 36 inch Henrietta 20c for 15c 20 ps 46. inch all wool 40 for 25c 25 Ps Silk End Suiting 40 inch for 25c ; 54-Inch LADIES' CLOTH, j 25 ps 54 in Ladies' Cloth, 4 yards I will mfilrp ft dress. 50c coods for 25c I ' ? BLACK COODS. 10 ps OG in all wool Henrietta 15c | 10 ps 40-inch ali wool Henrietta 20c j 10 ps 40 inch all wool Henrietta 25c j j SILKS. SILKS.! 20 ps Satin Brocade Silk Deduced from 1.25 to 75. 25 ps Fancy Silk only 25c 20 ps Satin Duchess 50c October 13?tf. I had the rheumatism so badly that I could not get my hand to my head. I ttied the doctors medicine without the least benefit. At last I thought of Chamberlain's Pain Balm; the first bottle relieved all of the pain, and one half of the second bottle effected a complete cure.?W. J. Holland, Va. Chamberlain's Pain Balm is equally good for sprains, swellings and lameness, as well as burns, cuts and bruises, for sale at J. E. Kaufmaun's drug store. His Motto. J 1 au euuor recently went 10 see u.a best girl. She had yawned six tire ef, looked at the clock four times, and pretended to be half asleep three times, but the young editor who was calling upon her was so much in love that he did not observe these manifescations of weariness. At length she said: "Most newspapers have mottos, havn't they!" "Some have." Has yours one!" "Yes." What is i it!" "We are here to stay." "I could have sworn it was something | of that kind," she said with a sigh and the silence was resumed. . You can't afford to risk your |ife '.'"l by allowing a cold to develop into pneumonia or consumption. Instant relief and a certain cure are afforded by One Minute Cough Cure. J. E. M Kaufmann. Missed Everything Except Vaccination. An old Georgia darkey, with his | arm in a sling, was talking to another on a West End car recently, says the Atlanta Constitution. "Yes, sub!" he said, with emphasis, "I gone up now, fer sho'! You see dis arm in de sling, don't you!" ''Yes." "Well, sub," the old man continued, by way of explanation, "I'll be 80 years old next harvest I done see lots er trouble in my day, but by de grace er God I miss de kuklux, I miss de viglance committee, I miss de whitecaps, en I miss de regulators, but now, in my ^ i 3. ; l old ege, please uoa, ae waxuiatora kotched en cut me." Small pill, safe pill, be9t pill- DeWitt's Little Early Risers cure biliousness, constipation, sick headache. J. E. Kaufmann. Old age is the discoverer/ of lost opportunities. Some people, like bricks, are always hard pressed for cash. | He who gives most receives most. Happiness is forever an export joy. With most men the growth of the . beard is stronger on one side of the face than on the other. It is usually the case that the hair grows more rapidly on the side on which we are stronger. Get your job work done at the Dispatch office. FITJIMAI I 1 * Jl% M'j MU m. JL. VA. >t Office.) JX.A., S. C., iNO NOTIONS, 1ST HOUSE IN THE CITK ^ __ ^ ^ $1.00 Per Pair. I ; 50 PAIR EXTRA HEAVY BLANKETS 0 0 0 0 0 I WOOL JEANS. -J 20 ps wool filling Jeans 15c 20 ps wool filling Jeans 20c 25 ps all wool (9 ozs) 25c SEA ISLAND. 3000 yds 30 inches Sea Island 8?c 3000 yds 36 inches Sea Island 4c 3000 yds 30 inches Sea Island 5c 3000 yds Ticking 4c 50 ps Ticking at 4?, 5, 0^, 8?c CHECK HOMESPUN. 3500 yds Plaid 3?c 4000 yds Plaid 4c 5000 yds Plaid -5c SOCKS. SOCKS. 50 doz Socks at 50c doz 50 doz Hose at 50c doz DRILLING25 ps Drilling for Drawers 5c 20 ps Drilling for Drawers 6?. '"?v25