University of South Carolina Libraries
WE L1XM6T0M DISPATCH. Wednesday, March 22, 1905. At Some aad Some. Farm work is progressing nicely. The summer girl will soon make her eppearance. Apparently the Japs have the Russian Bear on the trot. Patronize those who help to improve your town and county. The broken window in the Department Store has been replaced by a handsome plate glass pane. Lemael M. Sox, from the Emanuel settlement, was in town last week and added his name to our subscription list. The backbone of winter has not yet been broken. Blankets and overcoats will come in mighty handy bye and bye. Dr. Julian E Kaufmano is making arrangements to build a handsome and modern residence on his lot in rear of his drug store. Qrtmo /tnffnn in hflincr sold in this MUUiV WWWM ?w ? ? market. Bat the bales are like angels' visits in that that they are few and far betweeD. Mr. G. S. Bauch has had his handsome residence on Upper Main street repainted, which makes it one of the most desirable residences in town. Mr. J. A. Calk, who resides on B. F. D. No. 2, oat from this place, tailed in Friday and went on his way rejoicing after leaving his cart wheel. - Lexington needs a syBtem of waterwaterworks for domestic and sanitary purposes, as well as protection against fire, and an electric plant for light and power purposes. Mrs. Maggie Harman has returned to Lexington. She has been spending sometime in Batesburg with her grandson, Mr. Killian Harman. If oar people would only get together and work for Lexington there would besuch improvements in the old - t - _ t i i _ town, tnat tne people woma scarcely V recognize it. Friday was St. Patrick's Day "in the morning" and in commemoration of the occasion, the Charleston News and Conner of that day came to this office printed all over in green. Mr. Harry Roberts, lately clerking .for H. M. Wiogard, has given up his position here and accepted one with -the Angnsta Lumber Co. In other words he has hung the yardstick on the wall and is now feeding boards to the plainer. May luck follow him in &s new home. E. E Hook, who resides on R. F. D. No. 3, from Gilbert, was in town Thursday on business and called in to aee us. He informed us that be bad aonoluded that he bad just as well be oat of the world as to be without the Dispatch, and there are thousands of other people in Lexington county of the same opinion. "We are neither a prophet nor a son of a prophet, but mark this prediction: .Russia will finally triumph over Japan; but in that event the Government of Russia will undergo i* .i _s mt. i:t s radical cuuuge. xue iiueruet> ui. its subjects will be respected, protected and enlarged; freedom of thought and freedom of action will be vouchsafed them. Mr. Wash Hutto, who represents the Thomas & Barton Music House, of Augusta, Ga., was in town last week in the interest of his house. Wash is to the manner bom, a gifted musician and an. all round good fellow and has numerous friends in bis native county who are always glad to see him. An electric railway between Saluda C. H. and Columbia, via Lexington, i is one of the certainties of the future, j Already a company is being organized with money behind it to push this enterprise * through. One of the power stations will likely be located at or near where Twelve Mile Creek J crosses the "Leapbart public road." Watch and see. We said once before and take pleasure in repeating now that fu tare historians will write the name of John Lowndes Maclaurin high apon the scroll of fame as one of South Corolina's grandest statesmen. We have yet to see any reason why we should retract anything we have said commendatory of him as a patriot and a citizen. 5e has been faithful to his obligations in public as well as in his private life. T. C. Sturkie, Esq, and Karl F. Oswald, assistant Cashier of The Hom6 Bank, two enthusiastic disciples of Nimrod, enjoyed a several day's hunt in the Fork last week. Of course it goes without saying that they killed all game in sight, from a Tom Tit to a Charleston eagle, as well as that out of sight. There is no more game where they have been; no, not even a duck of a girl. The people of the Fork have lost ^tbeir law suit. The State Supreme | court has recently decided that the .'bonds issued by the three Fork ' townships to aid in the construction of , the Columbia, Newberry and LaurenB railroad is a valid indebted-Bess against those townships and they must be paid. We {anticipated this decision from the beginning of the suit and would have been surprised had it been otherwise. Later on we have a plan to suggest the adoption of which will so evenly di ??i?a??mmam?? Tboosands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect it How To Find Out. Fill a bottle or common glass with your water and let it stand twenty-four hours; # ^ a sediment or setJtawjj tlingindicatesan unlieahhy confrm dition of the kidiF A Iki r ae>"s ? ^ ^ stains your linen it is to pass it or pain ?? " jn the back is - ? -* < Vl/1 11#*TTC also convincing proor iuul .. and bladder are out of order. What To Do. There is comfo. in the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy, fulfills every wish in curing rheumatism, pain in the back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passage. It corrects inability to hold water and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to go often during the day, and to get up many times during the night. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. If you need a medicine you should have the best. Sold by druggists in fifty-cent and one-dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle and a book that tells all , about it, both sent free Si by mail. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham ton, N. Y. When Eorae of Swansp-Root. writing mention this paper and don't make any mistake, but remember- the name, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, BLngbamton, N. Y. vide the burden of taxation that the '** ??? individual taxpayer wui scarcely iet-i the amount he pays toward the liqui dation of tbia debt. Notwithstanding the efforts o ante bellum politicians and moss back newspapers to crush the piiociple out, yetf it is a fact that cannot be successfully denied that John L. McL&urin'a (it should be spelt Mac laqrin, because he is of Scotch, not Irish decent) idea that as manufactured cotton goods are protected by the government against the paop< r labor of the Eastern Hemisphere, so the raw cotton, produced by the farmer by the sweat of his brow brtween the plough handles should b** poctected against the barbarian negroes of African by a protective tariff. If the products of capital are protected by a tariff, why should not the raw material of the producer be protected by a tariff also. If a protective tariff is sauce for the goose it is sauce for the gander. If n ?.MV | ufacturerof cotton it naturally follows that a protective tariff must benefit the producer of cotton. Look at tbe conditions as they exist today. The manufacturer of cotton goods is growing richer and richer while the producer of cotton is growing poorer and poorer each day. There certainly must be a cause for this; and we%ubmit that as a plain business propoei| tion that the solution of the problem ; is easy of when we consider that tbe manufacturer is protected by tariff | against tbe unfair competition of tbe pauper labor of Eurpoe, while the ; producer of cotton is left unprotected to compete with tbe naked savages of Africa. But the great and only trou-i ble with the farmer comes in just here. We have two many two for a nickle leaders,who have plaoed themselves at the head of tbe Southern Democracy for the "loaves and fishes" that is in it whether or not the farmer?he who toils for his daily bread from sun rise ts sun set-sinks or swim. To leave the beaten track of our forefathers whose necessities in those trying days incident to the settlement of America demanded the necessaries.of life be imported from tbe fatherland until the war paint of tha aboriginals was superceded by the "pipe of peace," is in tbeir opinion an unpardonable crime against the mouldering bones of Jefferson. What we of the South need most today 19 to clear away the mass of driftwood that has accumulated around our institutions and the burden of which retards us in the march cf progress and of civilization. Let us become freemen in deed and in truth by exercising the right of American citizenship in using the pricelees boon of the elective franchise as ! in our own judgment eeemetb best to ! our own individual interest as well as that of our neighbor and our country. ! Let us exercise the God given right of freedom of thought and freedom of action regardless of the cry of Republicanism of politicians who have their arms up to the elbow in the public treasury. We of the South are of the household of Democracy and in contending for the doctrine of a protective tariff we do no violence to the teachings of the fathers of Democracy. Catarrh Cannot he Cr.red with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you mnst take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is net a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one ot the best physicians in this country tor years and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination ? of the two ingredients is what produces | such wonderful results m curing Catarrh. ; Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. Sold bv Druggists, price 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation | n. a. young, | innc opjjimr | Wholesale soil Retail Merchant, { 1-JUll di l\lllL I 1603 Main St.. f f COLUMBIA, - - S. C. X 0UI Buyer iS **"*** in Se? isssssesesssesssesssssessi? su^ wants An one-fourth of a century in the Dry Goods trade, an ample cash enables us to gr and everything kept in a First Class Store t 1603 Main Street ^|( II Cabbage Plants and Sea Island Cotton Seed. Cabbage Plants for sale, and now ready for delivery. "Early Jersey Wakefield,*1 Charleston Large Type Wakefield," two earliest sharphead varieties and head in rotation as named. "Succession," "Augusta Trucker" and "Short Stem Flat Dutch," the 3 best fiat head varieties and head in rotation as named. Prices: single thousand. $1.50; 5,000 and over $1.25 per 1,000; 10,000 and over, $1,00. Terms, cash with order; or, plauts sent C. O. D., purchaser paying return charges on money. Our plant bed occupy 35 acres on South Carolina Sea Coast, and we understand growing them in the open air; tough and hardy, they will stand severe cold without injury. Plants crated for shipment weigh 20 pounds, per 1000 and we have special low rates for prompt transportation by Southern Express Co. I know of other plants you can buy cheaper than mine. I sell good plants. No cheap "cut rate" plants shinned from my farm. I guarantee those I shin to be true totvneand name, and grown from high grade seed purchased from two of the most reliable houses in the United States. I will refund purchase price to any dissatisfied customer at end of season. Our Cotton Seed. Lint of our Long Staple variety of Sea Island Cotton sold this year in Charleston on December 2 at 32c. per pound. Seed $1.25 per bushel; lots of 10 bushels and over $1 per bushel. My specialty: Prompt shipment, True Varieties and satisfind customers. I have been in the plant business for thirty-five vears. Win. C. GERflTY, Post and Telegraph Office. "Youngs island, S. C. ~~~ i ~ ~~???^ Many a man who is too honest to Overworked steal some times borrows and forgets KIDNEYS i to pay back. Murray's Euchu, Gin and Jnni- Hunter Sharpe, of N irth Carolina, per is prescribed and endorsed b> heen nominated to be consul fit eminent physicians. It cures when irnu0 Ta^r, ah else fails. Prevents Kidney Kobe> JaParjDisease. Dropsy, Bright *s Disease, etc. At all drug stores. To Cure Constipation InO Q 'RfvH'lp take just a mite of Liver Food before retiring .VrV/ fit nuL UC. each night. Ramon's Tonic Regulator supplies Or Direct from it in a palatable form of powder, tea or tonic. 25c, and money back if r.ot satisfied. The Murray Drug Co., ForSale at Harman's Bazaar. COLUMBIA, S. C ? ~ Of course you are all right, but The Value of Birds. J your next door neighbor needs a lot An ornithologist recently asserted reforming, that except for the destruction of Tho work of life is a Jot more than bird life io Texas, there would have worde. been no cotton boll weevil plague. ^fae smooth man has a hard road This may or may not be correct; yet ahead of him. it is coming to be generally recog- . ? nizedI that the farmer has no better Startling Mortality, friends than the birds flying about ^ . . , . bis acres destroying insects and the DfiPna nf nnxmiiK WfiPfls. And thfirfi l __j * j: ~ - - ? - prevent nuucuru intJht; a.wj.ui uiscivses>, is to be Doted a movement in several there is just one reliable remedy, Dr. of the States to the end of protecting King's New Life Pills. M. Flaimery, the birde?game and non game?be- ?f ^ Custom House Place, Chicago, cause of their good offices to the sa?s: ''They have no equal for constia Tf tif l c l- j a. pataon and biliousness. 2oc., at The farmer. It is the Dature of birds to Kaufmami Drug Co.. druggist. feed on insects and seeds. - The investigation of the stomachB The man whose wife takes in of doves, partridges, sparrows and washing pays no attention to laundry larks has shown that their food strikes. consists almost wholly of bugs, A woman dosen't be joy good health worms and seeds of weeds. In th6 unless she has a few ailments to stomach of one dove, examined by a complain of. scientist, there were found approxi maiely 2,5000 seeds of weeds; and To Cure a Cough this was one day's feeding. In the take Ramon's English Cough Syrup ia small stomach of several partridges mote than 90 per cent, of the food was For Sale at Harman's Bazaar, found to be bugs and worms de- ? ?. * ?-hl- 1?*- CM IJ . , 1 A1 ?_ I J scruccive io vegecaoie aie. ououiu Most women wouia raiuer oe loyeu not tbese facts be sufficient to com- than be trusted. mend doves and partridges to the . most distinguished consideration of Jf Bahy is Cutting T?8t3l, the farmers and law makers * One Be sore and use that old and welll.tt e sparrow that was killed in a tried remed Mrs. Winaiow>8 Soothcotton field had forty army worms m j g {or cbiIdrea teething. It its stomach. Waen t that enough B0^thee t?e cbild 8ofteD8 tbe Bms> to make the cotton farmer the friend a? alI ai oure9 wind and of tbe sparrow. Savannah News. is tbe b/gt remedy for diarrboea. Cm, M Poison, Cam**, Warn. If you have offensive pimples or eruptions, ulcers an any part of the ???????????? body, aching bones or joints, falling MURRAY'S hair, mucous patches, swollen glands, ekm itches and burns, sore lips or IRON gums, eating, festering sores, sharp MIXTURE gnaging pains then you suffer from ? sertous blood poison or the beginning By fL'Thc'test thi^to of deadly cancer. You may be per- take is Murray's Iron Mixture. It manently cured by takiDg Botanic makes pure blood and gets rid of Blood Balm (B. B. B.) made espec- that tired feeling. At all druggists ially to cure the worst blood and skin -^ ,,, diseases. Heals every sore or ulcer, nan acv ofnrte o 11 anVl co ! i Trrr> mttdtj a V TYPTTa rn I j GVOU UCaUJT tOUVli? alufu "" "v"vw iliVillVU JL 4/uvu ww , I and pains and reduces all swelliugB. | Botanic Blood Balm cures all aalig- u 1 i nant blood troubles, such as eczema, scab* and scales, pimples, running w f ITT IV PIT TP f| sores, carbuncles,scrofula. Druggist, I I ml I HI 1 II I \ $100. To prove it cures, samples of I 1 I w I wl g \ i | Blood Balm sent free and prepaid by |.|ll 11111, 1 I | ? writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical TLIAT W/18 I PI I DC ! advice sent in sealed letter. I HA I WILL UUnt _ I After paying out $870,000 to the Rheumatism, Neuralgia, HeadI Confederate pensioners of Georgia ache, Toothache, Sprains, i for the vear 1905. it has been an- Qn I nounced by the Commissioner cf ! JJA Ui8ca ; Pensions, J. W. Lindsey, that the j and Fains: funds laet $18,139 of being sufficient | Dri Boyd,s W(,jf8 Liniment, to meet the vouchers properly cerfci- | ' fied to and presented to him for pay- j Ramon S Relief meDt- Dr. Hilton's Iodoform Liniment. To Cure A Cold la One Day. T. X. L. Liniment. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab- Spirittine Balsam, lets. All druggists refund the money ? - ... - R .. . if it fails to cure. E W. Grove's Big- ? ?Ure neiiei. nature is on each a box. Price, 25c. Planter's Cuban Belief and ! The Marguis of Anglesy, of Ban- Cuban Oil. I gor, Wales, died at Monte Carlo on ALL FOR 5^ALIO AT j Tuesday. He was a young maD, | remarkable chieflv for having spent fXi |TIf 11 1 y I AO j a fortune of $2 500,000, in addition X lllj Dll/iiliAll1* i to 8n annual income of $50,000, in j the course of six years. Lexington, S. C. <ronnn gsaesssssssssssMessswes? . [ill IS 1 1 1 ^ 1 ! II I are UP to <lar'-' aULd all round f> (lUULltJ IjlllJ | Dry Goods Merchants. | % We Solicit Your Trade. J Lrch of such values as will ^ N. A. YOTJNG. \ up-to-date wants of the :ington County. re you bariums ill Dry (foods. Dress Goods, Trimn;inprs. Ibices. Embroideries. !Nori<*ns :hat cannot obtained anywhere else but at v/niuin I UUNUE COLUMBIA. S. C. I SEABOARD I Alii LIINE RAILWAY. | X OBTH-SO CTH-E AST- WEST. Two Daily Pullman Vestibule Limited Trains Between SOUTH AND NEW YORK. ?? ????????????????_____ First C1*"s Dining Car Service. The best rates and route to all Eastern cities via Richmond and Washington, or via Norfolk and | steamers to Atlanta, Nashville, Memphis, Louisville, St. Louis, Chicago, Kpw Orland all noints South and Southwest to Savannah and | | and Jacksonville and all points in Florida and Cuba. Positively the shortest line North and South. :| | jp^PFor detailed information, rates, schedules, Pullman reservations. &c., apply to any agent of the Seaboard Air Line Railway or to W. L. | BURROUGHS, Traveling Passenger Agent, Columbia,. S. C. CHARLES F. STEWART, Assistant General Passenger Agent I SAVANNAH, GA. f/VVVVVVVVVVVVVWVVVVVJI I SAVE YOUR MONEY f ^ Don't trust to what you might have left to you. Save 0 ^ your own money. You will feel better knowing you ^ ^ have a bank account. We pay 4 per cent, on all Savings ^ ^ Accounts; so you really make money by saving money. f > ALL BANKING BUSINESS SOLICITED. * Palmetto Bank and Trust Co., $ \ COLUMBIA, s. c. J 5 CAPITAL, 8250,000.00. - SURPLUS, 835,000.00. J T Wm. H. LYLRS. Pres. JULIUS B WALKER, V. Pres. $ ^ J. P. MATTHEWS, Secretary. ^ <^vvvvvwvvvvwvvvvv^5 Me* $ H. F. Hendrix, J. L. Matthews, H. A. Meetze, 2 President. Vice Pres. Cashier. ? I The Bank of Leesville, { { J.EESYIEEE, S. C. Capital, - - $30,000.00 Interest Allowed in Savings Department. * We Solicit a Share of Your Business. ? ft***** THE PRICES TELL IKE QUALITY SELLSJ. B. FRIDAY & CO., Wholesale and Retail GROCERS, FLOUR, FEED AND GRAIN, SEED RUST PROOF OATS. We Want the Merchants, Planters and Farmers of Lexington County to Call and See Us Before They Make Their I TH .7. ~ T117V* m 157/77 I Vi in> //jj/7 Sifll'fi "Vvii/ JtrU'i VflllciVv* rrv vw/t x in- xvin r? w<?i- 'l,^v wwvv Money. 1823 and 1825 Main Street COLUMBIA, S. C. FURNITURE. MAXWELL & TAYLOR, COLUMBIA, 5. C. ! We especially invite you to come to see | us for your Furniture, Stoves, Mattings. \ Rugs, Lace Curtains, Chairs, Rockers, Cra| dies, and in fact everything to J j | Furnish Your - House. We have the best 50c. Chair you ever saw. ! I MAXWELL & TAYLOR. 1 NEAR POST OFFICE, COLUMBIA, S. C.