University of South Carolina Libraries
J i. erST ADVERTISING MEDIUM ?IN? Western South Carolina. BATES REASONABLE. r- . 0 SUBSCRIPTION $1 PER ANNUM JOB PRINTING*A SPECIALTY, pnmaaHBMHmnan ? vol S !' :i ARE < li ' ' " ii The Lexington Dispatch. Jfc Beprcsentatiue newspaper. Betters Lexington and the Borders of the Surrounding Bounties Lihe a Blanhct. VOL. XXIX. LEXINGTON, S. G., WEDNESDAY, .NOVEMBER 1, 1899. NO. .",1 JMMtj GLOBE DRY GOODS COBPAIY, Jts#, W. 21. I?01TCKT01T, T23-, 2v?^.2T^.G-B23, r f lOGO MAIN STREET, - COIX'MBIA, S. C., ($2, 'In uf|j" Solicits a Share of Your Valued Patronage. Polite and Prompt Attention. fP m\& " October .3-t, 0 INVITED !L ' i to come in to see us when you come The State Fair I ' | and are requested to see aod examine ou'i i special 1^.50, $2.00 AND $?,i! i * ' * I *. lines of Men's and Ladies' Shoes. They are of exceptional value j Ask to see omr $1 00 Brogan, High cut with buckle. I " ij LEVEE. ; ! THE SHOE MAN, 1603 Main Street COLUMBIA, S. C. ! Hapten Yer '0 6ro ^at Grow and Bear Frnit. Write for our CO page ilmL: J?r 'ustrated Catalogue and 40 oage pamphlet. ''How to ^ Plant and Cultivate an Orhard " Gives you that inormation you have so long wanted; tells you all about hose big red apples, lucious peaches, acd Japan plums with theiror;en'al sweetness. A all of which you have often wondered whero the trees from that produced J EVERYTHING GOOD IN g; FKUIIS. ; Unusal fine stcek of SILVER MAPLES, you ng.t h rifty t? ees t smooth and etrai htNthekind S that live ahd grow off well % So old. rough trees. This is i X he most rapid growing mapie ?jid one o! the most beau- 1 pitiful shad* trees. S Write for prices and give I list of wants. U. Van Lindley Nursery Co., iliSiMli OF SOOTH CAROLINA State, City & County Depository . COLUMBIA, S. C. Capital Paid in Full $150,000 01 Surplus^ 3',000.0< Liabilittes of Stockholders.... 150,000.00' $335,000.00' I SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. ' Interest at the rate of 4 per centnm per an I nam paid on deposits in this department TRUST DEPAltlMENT. This Bank under special provision of it* charter exercises the office of Executor i Administrator, Trustee or Guardian of Es tates. SAFETY DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT. 1 Fire and Burglar pro..f safety deposi' for rent from $4 00 to $12 CO per year. EDWIN W. ROBEBTON. President, ' A ft TTaSTOET.Tj i Vice President J. CALDWELL ROBEK'ISON, I 2d Vice President i G. M. BERRY, Cashier. February 12?ly. 1 the 1 umu lifiisii mi; COLUMBIA, S. C. CAPITAL $100.000 00 SUEPLUS 30.000 00 1 ESTABLISHED 1871. 1 JAMES WOOD ROW, President. JULIUS WAI KER Vice President EROME H. SAWYER, Cashier. DIRECTORS- James Woodrow, John A. Crawlord, Julius H. Walker. C. Fitzsia raons, W C. Wright, W. H. Gibbes ^ John T. Sloan. T. T. Moore, J. L. Mim nangh. E. S Joynes. This bank solicits a share, if not all, of yonr business, and will giant every favor consistent with safe and sound banking. January 29. 1897?ly. CIN Repairs SAWS, RIBS, BKISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, &o, FOR ANY MAKE OF GIN". ENGINES. BOILERS UNO PRESSES And Rt-fairs for same. Shafting, Pulleys Belting, Injectors, Flpes, Valres and Fittings. LOMBARD IRON WORKS & SUPPLY 08, AUGUSTA, GA. January 27? GEORGE BRTOS MAIN ST., COLUMBIA, S. C., JEWELER "d REPAIRER Has a splendid stock of Jewelry, Watches, ! Clocks and Silverware. A fine line of Spectacles and Eyeglasses to fit every one, all for sale at lowest prices. Bepairs on Watches first class quickly done and guaranteed, at moderate prices fin?fcf. W. A RE( KLI\(i. ^.ZESTIST, COLUMBIA, S. C.. ' IS NOW MAKING THE BEST Pictures that can be bal in this country, j and all who have never had a real fine pic- : ture, should now try some of bis latest styles. Specimens can be seen at his Gallery, up stairs, next to the Hub. j At LEXINGTON OCT. 25-27. ? Home Made Flour. i i The Columbia State says editorially: "Id this day when we. have 1 roller mills near at hand, it would * seem needless to urge that the products of these flour mills be used by our own citizens. Local and State | pride and a desire to be mutually helpful should be enough to insure ( the roller mills a market at home/' and the success of these establish- , -- 1 ments is evidence that tney are receiving liberal patronage, yet many hotels and bouses are still using bread made from Western flour. But 1 if nothing else will do it, self interest should impel all to use home c made flour, of the purity of which 1 we can assure ourselves. The adul- c teration of much of the Western flour is a matter of common knowledge, { but we quote as follows from the ed- * itorial columns of the New York com- J mercial: The habitual adulteration of flour ' in this country is becoming a very * serious matter and one which should c r be regulated, or rather annihiliated by Act of Congress. There is no c article so extensively used as a food- * stuff. It is on every table in the land ( three times a day. The man who 1 adulterates it with white clay is a 1 criminal at heart-. It is said that the average chemist cannot detect the adulteration. What theD, are grocery store keeperp, from whom the ^ vast majority of people get their g flour to do? The clay with which f flour is said to be adulterated is e found in South Carolina. It is claimd c that by judiciously using it as an in- f gredient $400 can be saved in one q car load of flour. Of course it has * V no nutritious properties, and, there- g fore, in addition to endangering health E it affects the quanttiy of bread. An- c other adulterant is a white rock c which is ground and mixed in. This I is not so popular, because in long 0 shipments it shifts to the bottom. 0 Then theres is a by-product of glo- c cose which is very popular with some ( of the mill men. It contains sul- ? phuric acid, and there is so little j Dutriment in it that 50 pounds would g not be any more sustaining than one good hot biscuit like our mothers ^ used to make. A less injurious mixture is corn flour; that is, Indian corn meal ground until it is as fine as the wheaten flour. Government experts v at Washington have failed to detect 15 per cent, of this adulterant in y samples set before them. The Louisville Courier Journal calls attention v to a sinister feature of this adulterizing habit into which the millers f have fallen. The domestic consumption of wheat is about 300,000,000 g bushels a year. Five per cent, adulteration would displace 15,000,000 | li bushels and 15 per cent, adulteration, which is commoD, would tripple the * quantity. Now, when we consider that the e South, as proved before a committee in Congress, is the dumping ground s for a large portion of this adulterated flour, the proposition should he J plain that it is to our interests to en- = courage our home mills, as consumers can compel, by inspection and iLfluence, their products to be kept pure. There is, however, little reason for the mills in this section to attempt adulteration, as they are, for i the most part, small ones, depending upon the local trade and doing an exchange business. Moreover, they are interested in the ecour&gement of wheat cultivation, and, as is intimated in the above quoted article, adulteration is inimical to the interest of the wheat growers, since it brings into use a substitute for that grain. The war against adulterated fljur, therefore, can well be cariied on alone with the campaign for a I more general cultivation of wheat and m both all of us in this part cf the country can readily and heartily join. For success we must depend on personal pressure. The consumers ?the people who eat bread?should demand of the hotel, the bikers and the housekeepers that their bread be made from home grown and home ground flour. Then in turn let the hotels, the bakers and the house keepers refuse to buy of the grocers and wholesalers anything but pure flour j from home mills, the honesty of whose managers is unquestioned. Legislative action is all very well in its place, aDd it may be expedient to make a adulteration punishable, is it is no doubt a daDgerous prac:ice, but the surest and speedest results are to be had by local methods, it least so far as our section is concerned. We would be glad to see Columbia hotels and houses set the exam ole in this matter, especially as there 8 reason to believe that impure flour ias been sent here and used. The South Carolina flour mills are conveniently near,, the flour can be >ought of them as cheaply as ebeitViq'tq it ?q a hoffpr flrfiflp. pr> If UC1 V U/4U IV iW M wvvv* *- ?-v-w, here can be no matter of excuse for sending money to enrich Western niller3, aDd our own farmers can re:eive the benefit with advantage lone the less to the buyers. Id this ;ampaign for more South Carolina wheat, many merchants have shown i commendable interest, and one Dharleston baker has declared his in:ention to use only home made flour. 5Ve believe it would be of advantage o any dealer in Columbia to adver;ise the fact that he handles the proJucts of South Carolina wheat mills. This is a matter in which numbers :ount, and while we are urging the armers to sow more wheat and are mcouraging the erection of roller nills, let us not overlook the upbuildng of a market for their product. A Thousand Tongues Could not express the rapture of koDie E. Springer, of 1125 Howard t, Philadelphia, Pa., when she ound that Dr. King's New Discovry for Consumption had completely :ured her of a hacking cough tbat or many years had made life a burlen. All other remedies and docr\"ro M oripo Vi/">? r\r\ liolrv Knf oV>a WLO V.VUIU uu uuu ouv ays of this Royal Cure?"it soon reQoved the pain in my chest and I an now sleep soundly, something I an scarcely remember doing before. feel like sending its praises throughout the Universe." So will every ne who tries Dr. King's New Disovery for any trouble of the Throat, yhest aDd Lungs. Piice 50c. and >1.(;0. Trial bottles free at J. E. Laufmann's drag store; every bottle ;uaranteed. ? Thomas Jefferson's Ten Rules of Life. 1 Never put off till to-morrow ?bat you c^n do today. 2. Never trouble others for what ou can do yourself. 3. Never bay what you do not fant because it is cheap. 4. Never spend your money beore you have it. 5. Pride costs us more than huner, thirst and cold. G. We never repent eating too me. 7. Nothing is troublesome that re do willingly. 8. How much pain have those vils cost us that never happened. 9. Take things always by their moothe handle. 10. "When angry, count ten before ou speak; if very angry, a hundred. ! 5 Rheun | A slight indefinite pai sign of Rheumatism. \A ing sign take Dr. Willia I People and the progres arrested. This remedy a and nerves and has cur rheumatism that have b< j physicians. | See that the full nan Dr. Wi Dlnlf Dill/* f/xftft r K11I\ F1H3 IUI Mrs. Mary Rixton, of Barryvllle, Si "About two years uco I had a 6e fered acute pain and much incouv to check the disease, and i was diri cured by Dr. Williams' I'ink Pills me some of the pills and the llrst procured another box and those Pills for Pale People cured me." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale all the elements necessary to give ne restore shattered nerves. Tbey are ? as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis rheumatism, nervous headache, the of the heart, pale and sallow compl< in male or female. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pal will be sent, postpaid, on receipt of j (they are never sold in hulk or bv 1 Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Obedience to Order. The following dialogue current at the time, between one of Stonewall Jackson's soldiers and the provost guard, illustrates Jackson's tact at eluding the enemy, and also the obedience rendered and the confidence reposed in him by his troops: The orders read on dress parade the evening before Jackson left the Valley to take part in the Seven Day's Fight around Richmond were, that in case the army moved before fur * ii . 1 tner oraers, me answer irom every soldier to any and all questions from those not connected with the army shall be "I don't know." On the march the provost guard found a soldier in a, cherry tree helping himself, when the following took place: "Who are you?'' demanded the guard. "I don't know," replied the soldier. "Where are you going?" "I don't know," which was no ! doubt correct. "Where have you been?" "I don't know." "To what command do you belong?" "I don't know." j "What are you doing in that cherry | tree?" j "I don't know." "Are those good cherries you are eating?" "I don't know?" "Is there anything you do know?" "Yes." "What is ii?" "Well, the last order I had from HI*! Sfnnanroll troa tViof T n?oa nnf f/-i Viu UkVUV ?? Ull U ao DUUU JL ft UO UUU k-W know anything until further orders, and gentlemen I would see you all dead before I will know anything until Old Stonewall takes that order off." Used ley British Soldiers in Africa. Capt. C. G. Dennison is well known all over Africa as commander of the forces that captured the famous rebel Galishe. Under date of Nov. 4, 1897, from Yryburg, Bechuanaland, he writes: "Before starting on the last campaign I bought a quantity of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, which I used myself when troubled with bowel complaint, and had given to my men, and in every case it proved most beneficial." For sale by J. E Kaufmann. The Abbeville cotton mill has increased its capital etock'to ?500,000. The Flashing Eye, Buoyant Footstep and Rusy Complexion result from the use of Dr. M A. Simmons Liver Medicine. Small pox is reported in Hampton and Laurens counties. Admiral Dewey has promised to visit uaarieston next spring. By a vote of 175 to 61 Greenwood has decided to have no dispensary. latism n in the joints is the first /hen you feel this warnims' Pink Pills for Pale : s of the disease will be icts directly on the blood ed hundreds of cases of sen declared hopeless by le is on every package: iliams' Pale People lillvan Co.,N.Y. She says: vere attack of rheumatism. I snfenience. Physicians were una hie ected to a similar case, which was for Pale People. My son bought * box did me so much good that I two boxes of Dr. >,'llllaias' Pink ; | People contain, in a condensed form, j w life and richness to the blood, and i in unfailing specific for such diseases ! , St. Vitus'Dance, sciatica, neuralgia, , after-effects of the grip, palpitation j :xions, all forms of weakness either e People are sold by all dealers, or irice, 50c. a box or six boxes for 52.50 the 100) bv addressing Dr. Williams i Y , Use for Empty Cans. George C. Boniface has an old colored man who does odd jobs * around his summer home. The 1 aged son of Ham is generally followed by a mangy yellow dog. Boni1 face one day offered to pay a dollar for the animal, just for the fun of the 1 thing. "Dollah! No, sah!" replied 1 the old fellow. "Why, dat dog saved my life i'om drowin'. I never could sell him fo' er dollah. You kin have him for er dollah an' er qua'tah, thongh4 Mist' Boniface. Boniface comes from Pittsburg, n* nrn crnrT'KA/ItT l/nr> tt? V> i m on/3 rr ljtic c j j auut'o iiiui uuu speaks to him on the street. Not loDg ago he came across a boy who was wheeling home a load of oyster cans and wine bottles. Boniface knew the child to be a poor street car conductor's son. \ Curious to, know to what use he could possibly put them, he inquired. "GoiDg to throw them about the j back yard," answered the lad. "This ! is the second load. I took one of them home lasi night." "But what do you use them foi?" insisted Boniface. "It's a trick of the family," grinned I the lad. "Trick? How?" "I'd just as lief tell," continued he as his hands closed over the handles | of the barrow. "We are going to j have some relashuns come in from j the country. There won't be much j to eat, but if they see these cans and bottles and sardine boxes they'll think we've had all these good things till we got tired of 'em and are livin' cn bread and tatters for a change." Bobbed tbe Grave. A startling incident, of which Mr. John Oliver of Philadelphia, was the subject, is narrated by him as fol lows: "I was in a most dreadful condition. My skin wa9 almost yellow, eyes sunken, tongue coated, pain continually in back and sides, no appetite?gradually growing weaker day by day. Three physicians had given me up. Fortunately, a friend advised trying 'Electric Bitters;' and to my great joy and surprise, the first bottle made a decided improvement. I continued their use for three weeks, and am now a well man. I know they saved my life, and robbed the grave of another victim." No one should fail to try them. Only 50 cts., guaranteed, at J. E Ivaufmann's drug store. * ?. A negro boy was accidentally shot and killed at Waterloo. The deceased and another negro were snapping what they thought empty pistols at each other and one went off. Eat plenty, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure will digest what you eat. It cures all forms of dyspepsia and stomach troubles. E. R. Gamble, Yernor, Tex , says, "It relieved me from the start and cured me. It is now my everlasting friend.'' J. E. Kaufmann. A Chicago paper, having kept a record of crime for ten days, declares that the saloon business in the United States is directly chargable with a total of 53,436 murders during that time. ' It did me more good than anything I ever used. My dyspepsia was of months' standing; after eating it was terrible. Now I am well," | writes S. B. Keener, HoisingtoD, I Kas , of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. It ! digests what you eat. J. E. Kaufmann. An expedition consisting entirely j of women, has been formed in Aus- [ tralia to explore the Solomon islands, ! the home of the fiercest cannibals i known. Hitherto white men have j been able tn nenetrat.e milv a few | miles in the island. The'Tlow Boy Preacher," Rev. J. ! Kirkman, Belle Rive, 111., says, i "After suffering from Bronchial or | lung trouble for ten years, I was I cured by One Minute Cbugb Cure. ; i It is all that is claimed for it and ! | more." It cures coughs, colds, | grippe and all throat and lung troubles. J. E. Kaufinaun. BiDg?"Yes, that's old Sprigginr. Half a dozen doctors have given him up at various times during his life."' ! "\ViDg? "What was the trouble J with him?" Ring?' He wculd't pay his doctor j ; biiis." ' i Iroya t ^Bsounnrt ! Makes the food more de j BOVAL BAKING PC* Premiums to "Wheat Growers. I Some merchants of Greenville are j offering some handsome premiums to i the faimerswho make the most wheat to the acre, and the Roller Mills at j Anderson, S. C., offers five dollars to ; the person that makes the most ! wheat on one acre; three dollars to | the second best, and two dollars to | the third best. No person will be' ! entitled to more than one premium. I The offer is to those who bring wheat j to the Roller Mills. Five dollars I worth of manure properly put on I one acre make lots of wheat. Now is | the time to plant it, so it will have a j good start before cold weather. Chamberlain's Pain Palm Cures Others, Why Not You? ! i My wife has been using ChamberIain's Pain Balm, with good results, I for a lame shoulder that has pained | her continually for nine years. We ; have tried all kinds of medicines and doctors without receiving any benej fit from any of them. One day wo : saw an adversisement of this medicine and thought of trying it, which i we did with the best of satisfaction. She has used only one bottle and her shoulder is almost well.?Adolph L. Millett, Manchester, N. H. For sale : by J. E. Kaufmann. An attempt was made to assassinate W. H. Amaker of Orangeburg a few days ago. ' He was shot by a party with a rifle from an ambush on | the side of the road as he was returning home. It is thought that the would-be assassin was some enemy in his neighborhood. I I W. P. Tajlor, of Greers, is the j owner of a bedspread brought from j England in 1793 by his grandfather | GibsoD; also a piece of marble said | to have been taken from the stone j used by the Jews to secure the body 1 of our Savior on the night after his I n j burial. It will not be a surprise to any i who are at all familar with the good | qualities of Chamberlains Cough j Remedy, to know that people everyJ where take pleasure in relating their j experience in the use of that spleni did medicine and in telling of the . benefit they have received from it, of j bad colds it has cured, of threatened I 7 i attacks of pneumonia it has averted and of the children it has saved from I attacks of croup and whoopiDg cough. It is a grand, good medicine. , For sale by J. E Kaufmann. Mr. D. H. Magill, member of the ! Legislature from Greenwood county, ; | is a musical genius and the author of > several songs and other musical com- , | positions which have been well received by the public. His latest effort is the "McSweeney March," named in honor of the governor. Mr. j Magill has not yet had it published, | but it will be given to the publishers j soon. ! rlccf on ia nrran rrin rr tr> lmTP 51 I . ? - ? J gala week, beginning November 20. j ^ Another big phosphate plant in j ^ Charleston has been purchased by I \ the trust. | c Weary women need an occasional j s dose of Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver j Medicine to Strengthen their Nerves j and Invigorate their Systems. The farmers in every section of the I c J I ^ State are sowing large crops of small i j grain. | v Kange cattle iu the southwest are j j selling for 810 a head more than they | \ brought two years ago. j j To Purify and Enrich the Blood, ! ( Strengthen the Nerves and Invigor- j t ate the System, use Dr. M. A. Sim- j I mons Liver Medicine. Furman University is perhaps the I only institution in the State in which Spanish is taught thoroughly. I I 5 Let disease cotne as they will, L Take Life of the Liver and be healthy still; j . Pleasant to take, unlike a pill, Regulates the system and cures I ^ every ill. j o Baking ^ Powder Hire licious and wholesome Q B CO., HEW YORK. Cjlonel Coward is pleased with the opening of the Citadel Academy. The attendance this year is 130 to 140. Temporary Derangement ofDiges tion, through overwork, worry or emotional excitement, are quickly rpp.Hfird hv Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine. Only three of Spanish vessels sunk by Admiral Dewey in Manila bay and subsequently raised will be of any use. President King, Farmer's Bank, Brooklyn, Mich., has used DeWitt's Little Early Risers in his family for years. Says they are the best. These famous little pills cure constipation, biliousness and all liver and bowel troubles. J. E. Kaufmann. Many negroes in Beaufort county would like to go to the Philipines but they cannot stand the physical exexamination. William Riley a respectable white man of Charleston could not get any work to do and he therefore commited suicide. "When our boys were almost dead from whooping cough, our doctor gave one Minute Cough Cure. They recovered rapidly,'" writes P. B. Belief, Argyle, Pa. It cures coughs, colds, grippe and all throat and lung troubles." J. E. Kaufmann. It is now stated that the dead n i_ rr T> 11 VA>uui?y xreaburtJi ui jumiuweu is short about $11,000. The bondsmen will have to pay it. 'J. H. Lunsford & Son, Craft, Tex, say that Ramon's Pepsin Chill Tonic is certainly the best on the market. They have never known it to fail to cure. Have just ordered more and must have it. Tasteless and guaranteed. 50c. For sale by G. M. Harman. When a man proposes to a girl and she aeks time to consider, it means that she wants to consider her chances of getting some other fellow. "If you scour the world you will never find a remedy equal to One Minute Cough Cure,*' eays Editor Fackler, of the Micancny, Fla., "Hustler." It cured his family cf LaGrippe and saves thousands from pneumonia, bronchitis, croup and all throat and lung troubles. J. E. Kaufmann. The Southern Cotton Oil Company of Barnwell, on the 9lh instant, shipped from Barnwell to Liverpoo', England, via Charleston, 112 tons export cotton seed meal. Mrs. F. J. Dickson, "Westminister, S. C., writes: Eleven years ago I was for C months unable to do my work, and Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine restored me to good health. Think one package of it wcrlh a lozen of Zeilin's. Norweigan legislators propose that girls who do not know how to knit, 36w, wash and cook, should be refused permission to marry. Daughters of wealthy men are not to be excepted. Millions of dollars, is the value alaced by Mrs. Mary Bird, Harris:>urg, l\i., on the life of her child, vhich she saved from croup by the ise of One Minute Cough Cure. It >nrciR all pnnolic r>nlil<a and fhroaf ind luug troubles. J. E. Kaufmanii. JL Frightful Blunder Will often cause a horrible Burn, scald, Cut or Btuisc. Buckluu's Arnica Salve, the best in the World vill kill the pain aud promptly heal t. Cures Old Sores, Fevc-r Sores, ."leers, Boils. Felons, Corns, all Skin Eruptions. Best File cure ou earth. )nly 25 cts. a box. Cure guaraneed. Sold bv J. E. Kaufmann. )rugg'st. Medical Advic:. Patient?Well, doctor, what do on think about the swelling on the >ack of my neck' Doctor?I don't like the looks of t, as it is in a very dangerous place, dy advice to you is to keep your eye >n it. ADVERTISING RATES. Advertisements will be inserted at the rate oi 7.3 cents per square of one inch s;-ace for first insertion, and 50 cents per inch for each subsequent insertion. Liberal contracts made with those wishing to Advertise for three, six and twelve months. Notices in the local column 5 oents per line each insertion. Obituaries charged for at the rote of one cent a word, wten they exceed 100 words. Marriage notices inserted free. A 1 dress G. M. HARMAN, Editor and Publisher. \ He Had Enough. of Zt. A farmer who was possessed of some means entered the office of his county paper and asked for the editor. The farmer was accompanied by his son, a youth of 17 years, and as soon as the editor, who was in his sanctum, was informed that his visitors were not bill collectors he came forward and shock hands. 41 came ter git some information,' explained the farmer. "C.-rtainly," said the editor, "and you came to the right place. Be seated." The farmer sat on one end of the table, while his son sat on the floor. "This boy o' mine," he said, "wants ter go into the literary business, an' I thought yeu'd now ef thar wuz aDy money in it or not. It's a g jod business, ain't it?" "Why?yes," said the editor, after some hesitation. "I've been in it myself for 15 years, and you, see where I've got to." The farmer eyed him from head to foot, glanced around the poorly furnished office, surveyed the editor once more, then, turning to hia son* who wa3 still on the floor, said: "Git up, John, an' go home, an' go back ter ploughin'!" That Throbbing Headache. Would quickly leave you, if you used Dr. King's New Life Pills. Thousands of sufferers have proved their matchless merit for Sick and Nervous Headaches. They make pure blood and strong nerves and build up your health. Easy to take. *Try them. Only 25 cents. Money back if not cured. Sold by J. E. KaufmanD, Druggist. ? Here is the Place to Find Them. Tho Bazaar bas just received one of the largest and best line of stationery ever brought to this place, such as weekly and monthly time books,* pocket memorandum books au tjegant line of substantially bound ledgers, journals and record books, fine box paper, plain and gifc edge note paper, fools cap, legal cap and other varieties of wiiting papers, tablets for pen and pencil in large variety, envelopes of all sizes and shapes, pens, pencils, black, blue, purple, green and red inks. School children and others are invited to ihspect this stock. ? An Unsought Pardon. % AmoDg the stories of that former governor of Texas familiarly known as Sam Houston is more than one amusing tale. There was a financial agent of the penitentiary who had warmly opposed the election of Governor Houston; but was particularly anxions to retain his -own pleasantly lucrative . /N ii ii position, uonsequenuy me governor was soon in receipt of a petition in which the man's, years of faithful service and special qualifications for the place were set forth in glowing terms by himself. The governor sent for him and Siid gravely, "It appears from this petition that you have been in\ the penitentiary eight years." "I have," was the reply. "And during that time you have performed faithfully every duty that has come in your way to the best of your ability "I have," answered the agent, his courage swiftly rieing. "Then, sir," said the governor, -M. il. . . ? ? 1 Willi me air 01 one comernug a priceless favor, "I pardon you out!" Crippled by ^ Rheumatism. Those who have Rheumatism find themselves growing steadily worse all the while. One reason of this is thai the remedies prescribed by the doctors contain mercury and potash, which ultimately intensify the disease by causing the joints to sweli and stiffen, producing a severe aching of the bones. B. S. S. has been curing Rheumatism for twenty years?even the worst cases which seeded almost incurable. Capf. O. E. TTujrhes. the popular railroad* eoimwtor, of Columbia. S. C.. had an cxpo?i. enee v.iTh Rhf>umati?m which convinced hint that there is only one cure -r that painful dis- ens. . lie says: "I was a preat sufferer from mus- / cular Rheumatism for HI no permanent relief foribed by my physician. V recommend if to snvon? suffering from any blood disease." Everybody knows that Rheumatism is a diseased state of the blood, an:I only a blood remedy is the only proper treatment, but a remedy eontaimntl potash nr.d mercury only aggravate! the trouble. S.S.S.Trh? Blood being Purely Vegetable, goes direct to the very cause of the disease and a permanent cure always results. It is the only blood remedy guaranteed to contain no potash, mercury or other dangerous minerals. ' Books mailed free by Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Georgia. . . TZ-.'-u^J0 TJ