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Tii e Lexington Dispatch Wednesday. March 12, 1902. Senator Tillman Explains. Senator Tillman, writing to the Charleston News and Ccurier, eaye: "I have just seen your editorial in Monday's paper taking rne to task for a sentence in my speech of apology to the Senate on Saturday. It is strange that an intelligent man could so far miscoDBtrue my meaning. rne News and Courier once was unable to see any good in anything I ever said or did, and it must have had a relapse. Of course, the meaning you put on the language can be gotten out of the words by a gangrened and inflamed imagination, but I have not been noted for my humility cr lack of States rights, and no one but I a rtritin anxious to condemn would so interpret, them. Recollect that this speech was condensed, and purposely so, because it was no time for indulging in talk. Suppose you allow me to expand the thought and make the sentence read this waj: 4I had never had any legislative experience when I came here, and my previous service as Governor of South Carolina for four years had unfitted me in a meas ure to enter this august assembly with dignity and regard?proper regard I would say?for its traditions and habits and rules that is desirai ble.' In the Governor's office my I every day woik was to give orders ' and decide questions, many of them important, without consulting any one. This habit of mind and thought unfitted me for entry upon the arena I found here. Senatorial courtesy and dignity and everything connected with the routine work of the bcdy was altogether strange and different from my ideas, and I have never yet been able to adapt myself to the many customs and habits of the Senate. This was all. I cannot conceive how any one would imagine that I could assert or confess that a Governor of South Carolina cannot be dignified and behave himself, here or elsewhere. I am afraid that it was my ccndact while Governor that makes you 90 ready to seize upon this simple statement, that was thouroghly well understood by every one in the Senate, just as I meant it, and attempt to make a 'mountain out cf a 1- v:n ? LUUiH mil"I have doDe a good many things since I have been here with which the News and Courier seemed well pleased, notwithstanding my 'plantation manners,' and if it will do you any good I think I may say that my every utterance and action in Saturday's episode is heartily approved and applauded here by every Democratic member in the Senate except three or four, and by every Democratic member of the House with whom I have talked. I do not mean, of course, that they do not deplore the necessity I was under to strike my colleague. "If you will print the speech in full I am sure the people of the State will eDjoy it, and I am ready now as always to abide their judgment. To have acted otherwise than I did would have been to disgrace myself and the I State both." Could BTot Breathe. Coughs, colds, croup, grip, bronchitis, other throat and lung troubles are quickly cured by One Minute \ Cough Cure. One Minute Cough Cure is not a mere expectorant, which gives only temporary relief. It softens and liquifies the mucous, draws out the inflammation and removes the cause of the disease. Absolutely safe. Acts at once. "One Minute Cough Cure will do all that is claimed for it," says Justice of the "Poo/?o -T O TTonfl Aficu A. VWVV^ V AAWWW) V/fcVC iutou* "My wife could not get her breath and was relieved by the first dose. It has been a benefit to all my family." J. E. Kaufmann. The Sociable Candidate. A story, which is part of the flotsam and jetsam of a recent political campaign, is worth a more permanent place in the annals of human nature. A candidate found, to bis surprise, that a voter, somewhat ignorant, but of influence in his neighborhood, had suddenly decided to vote for him. This was the reason the man gave for his change of base: "I was against you at first, sir, and r when you stood by tbat pigsty and talked with me for half an hour you didn't budge me an inch: but after you had gene away I got to thinking bow you bad reached your hand over tbe rail and scratched the pig's back unt'l he lay down with tbe pleasure of it, and I made up my mind that when a man was eo sociable as tbat with a poor fellow creature I wasn't the one to vote against him.'' Undoubtedly, if tbe candidate had Fciatched the pig's back a? a mere electioneering c-xpedient, it would not have bad the same effect, for your thorough going farmer is quick to detect a thing which is done for show. The city man frequently gets the credit for such sharpness, but the fact is that he is so prone to consider all things frauds that he is sometimes inclined to reject an honest man in favor of a sharper, because the latter appears to b9 clever. It, is pretty safe to conclude that when a man is immensely popular with the plain people of the country there is something genuine in him which they instinctively feel; and in this case the candidate's impulse to make the pig happy appears to have been half unconscious, and all the more impressive on that account. It would hardly be safe to conclude that any candidate may go to Congress by the simple process of pig scratching, but honest friendliness toward "fellow creatures" Dever comes amiss in politics or in life. Practically Starving. "After using a few bottles of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure my wife received perfect and permanent relief from a severe and chronic care of stomach trouble," says J. K. Holly, real estate, 1. msurhliut! auu iuttu af.'1-ui, ui jiouuuju, 1 111. ''Before using Kcdol Dyspesia i Cure she could not eat an ordinary meal without intense suffering. She is now entirely cured. Several physicians and many remedies had failed to give relief." You don't have to diet. Eat any good food you want, but don't overload the stomach. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure will always d'gest it for you. J. E. Kaufmann. ? ? Jasper Talbert's Story. Representative Talbert, of South Carolina, who wants to be the Governor of bis State, says the Washington Post, has a fund of stories with which he enlivens up his stump speeches, so that his campaign never lacKS in interest, lie gave one 01 his stories a practical application the other night, when he was a guest at a dinner. Several courses had been served and there were yet more to follow, when Mr. Talbert turned to the guest next to him. "Down in South Carolina," he said, "there was a negro preacher who delivered a sermon on 'Miracles.' 'My beloved friends and bredden," he said, 'de greatest of all miracles was about de loaves and fishes. Dey was five thousand loaves and two thousand fishes, and de apos'les bad to eat dem all. Now, de miracle was dat dey didn't bust.' "If this dinner doesn't end soon," said Mr. Talbert, laughing, "nothing but a miracle will save me." Thousands Sent Into Exile. t Every year a large number of poor sufferers whose lungs are sore and racked with coughs are urged to go to another climate. But this is costlv and rot always sure. Don't be an exile when Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption will cure you at home. It's the most infallible mediciie for Coughs, Colds, and all Throat and Lung diseases on earth. The first doee brings relief. Astounding cures result from persistent use. Trial bottles free at J. E. Kaufmann's. Price 50c and $1.00 Every bottle guaranteed. The Jenkins Sword. That a sword will be presented to Major Jenkins seems highly probable now. In different sections of the State a movement has been started with that end in view. Camp Micah Jenkins I*. C. V., has adopted resolutions appointing a committee to get nn snh<sf?ririfiri?-!ci anr? pnllmor nnnn other camps and organizations to join them. It may be that th? President will present the sword on the occasion of his visit to Charleston, but this has not been decided upon. Facts fron the Fork. i To the Editor of the Dispatch: TTbite Rock, March 5.?The Dutch ! Fork is cow to come into closer ! contact with the world. It seems : we are to enjoy the advantage of a long-distance telephone. Poles are now beiDg unloaded along the Columbia, Newberry and Laurens railroad for that purpose. Last Sunday was a red letter day for the Lutherans of Little Moun i "TV T r : tam. meir pssror, ivsv. o. i\ x^uru, who came from Wardenville, W. Yd , was installed. The charge to the pastor was delivered by Rev. C. P. Boozer, and the one of the people by Rev. S. C. Ballentine. Mr. H. C. Bailey took charge of Tie Carolina Newp, published at Chapin, last Monday. This is five times it has changed hands in less than twelve months. Mr. E. L. Eleazer, of Spring Hill, until recently with Mr. M\ S Pope, of Columbia, left here last Saturday to accept a position with Swift & Co. ^ J* 1 1.1 .1 ? 1 uontmuea coia ana rams nave materially retarded gardening and farming operations. Oats sown late in the season are about all killed. Many of our country schools are already closing. Something should and must be done for the common schools. He Kept His I,eg. Twelve years ago J. W. Sullivan, of Hartford, Conn., ecratched his leg with a ru9ty wire. Inflammation and blood poisoning set in. For two years he suffered intensely. Then the best doctors urged amputation, "but," he writes, "I used one bottle of Riectiic Bitters and 112 boxes of Bucklen's Arnica Salve and ray leg was sound and well as ever.,; For Eruptionp, Eczema, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Sores and all blood disorders Electric Bitters has no rival on earth. Try them J. E. Kaufmann will guarantee satisfaction or refund money. Only 50 cents. Shredding Corn. The mcdern method of harvesting corn has not been generally adopted yet in any portion of the South. Wasteful methods that have always rir-qtto Jlorl on/1 ora cfill tito ntinod I O V UUU UiU OIU1 ^lC?CWiVy(.'U< The blades are sometimes stripped from the stalks by hand and cared for fodder, but experience has shown that this fodder does not pay for the labor of gathering and curing. The ears are snatched from the stalky thrown in small heaps, and afterwards a wagon comes along and the ears picked up, thrown into the wagon and hauled away. The othei half of the crop is left to brave the weather aDd be consumed by wine and rait: and if any part of it remains when plowing time comes it is piled and burred to the detriment of the soil- The modern way is to reap the corn, as well as the wheat, and ir much the same manner, the machine cutting the stalks and tying in bun dies, ready to be set up in shocks The ears may be separated at an} time husked and shelled, or the husk : a ?u?n:? A iLig Huu vjau uc uuuc at needed. The stalks, entire, may be cured and stacked and makes excel lent fodder. Or the whole batch car be run through a shredder and made into hay, when it will be eaten up clean by the stock. One reason foj not saving the staks is that there is not live 3tock enough on the farm te consume it This is another piece ol bad management. There ought tc be stock enough on the farm to consume all of this product. There is where the farmer's profit shoulc come from. True to Name. Planter's Cuban Oil, s , wonaerrui nnimenc ior mt Nerv<?B and Bones. Thit celebrated oil cannot be excelled at an internal remedy where a quid and penetrating cure is needed foi rheumatism, neuralgia, burns, cuts, sore throat, stiff neck or pains in any part of the body or limbs. We also have Planter's Cuban Relief and Nubian Tea for sale. Call at the Bazaar and get a bottle. On their own merits most men should keep quiet. Idleness is the incubator of a great - 11 _? | many smau bide. ????wo?en?? ' '^J'W ^"1 Cckfr* j&'\\r.^i corn m4m , . *i * /$! rcmovcs from ^c ?oli '** ( y&\ ^ar"C cluant^^cs ?f | Potash. i The fertilizer ap- | (\\A^ plied, must furnish B 1 ] enough Potash, or the ?T X land will lose its proPjfffffl \ ^ ducing power. jsl Read carefully oar boots 8 cn crops-sent Jrce. GERMAN KALI WORKS, | Sruger Disappointed. Cologne, March G ?Krugers confidants reported today that he is so dis: appointed at the outcome of theinterj views of ths Boer envoys Mailer, } Wezels and Wolmaraus, with President Roosevelt and Secretary Hay that he will make no further efforts at intervention. The delegates are to go to South Africa from the United States to communicate with leaders in flip fiplrL Don't Lot Them Suffer. Often children are tortured with itching and burning ec2tma and other skin diseases but Bucklen's Arnica Salve heals the raw sorer, expels inflammation, leaves the skin without a scar. Clean, fragrant, cheap, there's no salve on earth as good. Try it. Cure guaranteed. Oaly 25c at J. E Kaufmann's. Good Advice. Booker Washington advises the negroes to let politics alone and give | more attention to the bread and meat question. "Good advice," says the Wilmington Star, and adds: "Now if Booker could prevail on the white Republican machine runners to let the negroes alone, he might get in some of bis advice to the negroes." A boy cau understand the argu1 meat of a switch every time, when reasoning with him is all Greek lo 1 him. 1 If you want to gain a woman's 1 everlasting fiiendship ask her advice i and follow it. ) Pyny-Balaam Stops the Tickling, and quickly allays inflammation In the throat. Before marriage a woman thinks | of a man. After marriage she frequently thinks for him. ! Thfi college football Dlaver who is 1 ? ? O A. ~ i quarterback on the field is likely to be away back in his class. f Take Life for the [ Liver and Kidneys. Bottles 25e. 50c end $1.00. SpeDd your pennies and some one } else will get your friends. Woman can stand an c-ffeminate man better than man can stand a masculine woman. r _ _ ^ Fresh Fish and Oysters. 3 I will have for sale fresh fish, such 3 as Large South Mullets, Sheephead, Bass, Trout, Croakers, all kind of 1 mixed fish and Standard Select Oys 5 ters regularly every Tuesday and > Saturday of each week. When you r want anything in my line, give me a 3 cill at E5rd & Dreker's Old Law } Office, on Court House square, back ^ of J. E. Kaufmann's New Drug ) Store. I guarantee my goods fresh ' and nice. Yours for Business. } tf JOHN A. WILLIAMS. Few women are interested in the study of prehistoric man. Their specialty is the man of today. t The hone3t man who pays his rent j has to hustle and the dishonest one , who doesn't has to keep moving. 5 It sometimes happens that after : gaining a foothold a man is unable . to make headway. , { Mental science is splendid to cure t | you of things you haven't got. ' j A millcn dollar bank has been or' j ganized in New Oileans. 1 j The army in the Philippines is to j be gradually rduced to about 32,000 t ; -men. It is stated that Colonel Bryan has i made $2,500 a week by his lectures this season. I " "" ] i To Our Friends asd Patrons P I OF LEXINGTON. We thank you very cordially for your patronage for tbe past year, and hope to grow more popular with you as time goes on. Our trade from your county was very satisfactory this season, but in order to increase our business we are offering values such as you have never had the opportunity to realize before. We will sell you a SG 50 Overcoat for S3 50 until closed out. A $5 bill buys a anftn-:. 1_ L - ,U- nrv.:i r\.i ? I ( ciu ww nuu rnaue uy lue .uesu muuto. vyiuci LSJguci ] grade goods in proportion UHDERY/EAi?, cheaper tbau the cheapest. Heaviest and ii-jbi F.,ectd Lined at 39c. See these, it will pay you. We do quite a nice JOBBING BUSINESS. This Department is growing every day. I will be glad to see any merchant io store, as I always have souie little jobs or bargains to offer. Call on me at Yjsrz?* JLlit? -OSStS Jlive Liii I'ric e Moling Store, I 554 MAIN STREET. COLUMBIA, S. C. Septemt*>r 9. 3m^ !| fjHARlEST0N]]09R,j!jASH AND^UMBER [Jo MANUFACTURERS OF DOORS. SASH, BUNDS, I0ULDIN8S, MILL WORK AND LUMBER. Writs for Estimate. ) CATALOGUE ( CYPBESS AND We Save Yon Money. [ Sent -I YELLOW PINE Our Crocds are the Best.) on Bequest. ( are Our Specialties. Factory Saw Mill and Ponds: Office and Yards: Ashley Rivrr and Cumming's Creek. 21 to 47 Ashley Ave., CHARLESTON, S. C. April 24?J y. [southern i railway j THE GREAT HIGHWAY OF TRADE AMD TRAVEL. Uniting the Principal Commercial I Centers and Health and i'leastire Resorts of the South with the & NORTH, EAST and WEST. I . High-Class Vestibule Trains* Through Sleepir.g?Cara I bottveen Now York and New Orleans, via Atlanta* I Cincinnati and Florida Points via Atlanta and via B Anhoville. , New York and Florida, either via Lrnchburg, Danville I and .Savannah, or via Richmond, Danville and I Savannah. .Superior Dining'-Car Service on all Through Trains. Excellent Service and Low Rates to Charleston ac- I I count iSouth Carolina xnter>9iai? ana ?* ?? inaiau & Exposition. Winter Tourist Tickets to ell Resorts now on sale at I reduced rates. For detailed information, literature, time tables, rates, etc., apply to nearest ticket'agent, or address S. H. HAKDWICK, W.H.TAYLOE, General Passenger Agent, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agen*? Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga. R. W. HUNT, J. C. BEAM, Div. Passenger Agent, District Pass. Agent, Charleston, J. C. Atlanta, Ga. ra I Parlor Restaurant. I nnviirr rrn mm I ,riTXT o-rurTT M mr i'mms j i ooLCMBn: """ s. c., WLYBt TU 4 n i p r *< rrHE 0NLY UP-TO-DATE EATING l"&t Grow and Bear Fruil. JL House ot its kind in the City of Colnnibia. It is well kept?clean linen, BpJi-v^ "Write for our 60 pane il- prompt and polite service and get it quickly. lustratod Catalogue and 40 Quiet and order always prevail. You get ffit SEcittiv?teIIHn'otr- 1 ^??ordtr and P*J for ?hat, >? c-hard."' Gives you that in- f?et- thin easy reach of desirable sleepformation you have so lonn --iaf? apartments. wanted: tells you all about a t t '\TTr^Tirr those big red apples, lucious -A-I-.L< iMGIll. peaches, and Japan plums t> nAT7TTl with theirorienral sweetness, ?. Vll^, iTOprietOI. a all of which you have often rebrnarv 20. wondered wnere me irt?e? came from that produced tmk .tVSRYTHim GOOD IN W. A. RECKLING, FRU,TS AETIST, 4L Unusal line stock of SILVER ? *** * ? 'VP JMAPL?5.youiur. thrifty trees rtr\r-r>\rT>T i o n SLA. Wg. ^smooth andstrai ht, the kind OUliuMiilA, o. G. Wa^^.*trA t?S. ' TbSl'.- TS NOW MAKING THE BEST PICaSp^ffifclthe most rapid growing ma- X tares that can be bad in this country, ^r'vf^ni''p^l)n,t brjau- and all who have never had a real fine picfWrfteUfortSricW and give should now try some of his latest 191*0?: list of wants. styles, bpeciraens can be seen at his Gal/Sf&fe-YA j lory. up stairs, next to the Hub. j. Vail Linillcy Nursery Ca.. | When writing mention the -Disoaten. ? ENGINES boilers. BEESWAX WANTED 1 Tanks. Buck*, Stand Pipes and Sheet-Iro* T*T oa _ TJ^n n^va* TOrjL, OBSiUUI, ^UUC/O, >r. -m, I ~ ~-r^ ?_T____ Hangera, eta. Mill Casting!. IN LARGE OR SMALL QUANTITIES a^~Caat ?very 4ay; work 200 band*. LOMBARD IRON WORKS A SUPPLY CO AUGUSTA. GEORGIA. I WILL PAY THE HIGHEST MAR- AtuwiA.^nwa. ket price for cl*an ami pure Beeswaz. ! Price governed by color and condition. , ? RICE E. HARK AN, _ ?? *? " | At the Bazaar. Lexir^ton. S. C. January 27?