University of South Carolina Libraries
JdttleDocfo SAYS "Don't Physic!'''"Use *; Ramon's Liver Pills and ! - Tonic Pellets for all liver; troubles. Safe, sure,! permanent cures ana complete treatment for 25c. Easy, natural and ; certain?money back if they fail. Sold by all Druggists. fife p Batesbnrg received the first bale of jj new cotton on Thursday the 20th. It brought nine cents and was grown by Mr. W. E. Bodie of Saluda county. | J. H. Eleazer I < Will Save you Money in his > I Haberdasher y j P DEPARTMENT. | \ The Best and Latest Furnishings J ; can always be found here in > . J ; J Shirts, Collars, Cuffs, Gloves | j UNDERWEAR. | j WHITE AID FANCY VESTS, j \ ^P^Onr Spring Line of OKI | : SOFT and STIFF HATS | i are here, comprising Knox, Stet- > i ' son and other makes. Prices, ; $1.00 to $5.oo ; All the New Blocks in ! I ; STEAW HATS, ; ! At all prices. [ ; SUITS MADE TO ORDER. FIT [ ; GUARANTEED. I | 1514 Mala St.,M?mbla,S.C. j HILTON'S Lift for the Liver & Kidneys, bfK * g| THE BEST PREPARATION KNOWN FOR THE CURE OF Dyspasia, Livar Complaint and ? / * ' Ditardarsof tbo Kldntys IT IS PLEASANT TO TAKE. H It excites a pleasing sense of warmth in the stomach, diffusing itself through the system. It augments the appetite, im* provee digestion, wards off malarial an I tbns prevents chills and fever, and is a perfect regulator so the whole 8 > stem. 25 , 50c. and tl.00 bottle*. For sale at the Bazaar. Wholesale by the Murray Drug Co., Columbia, ly?JoJy 0. 05. 11. W. a QUICK. Lexington, - - - S. Cn DISTILLER and DEALER in TURPEITIRE. Will, at all times, pay highest market prices for Crude, based upon Savannah quotations. ' E&mRmRk /<^rrT. mSSmSmgSKF ycrnnrmHuiiinii Before. You Purchase Any Other Write ME NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE COMPANY ORANGE, MASS. Many Sewing Machines are made to sell regard- J less of quality, but the M New Home " is made to wear. Our guaranty never runs out We make Sewing Machines to suit all conditions of the trade. The "Sew Home" stands at the bead of all High-grade family sewing machines Sold by authorized dealers only* FOR 3AT.E 3V W. P. ROOF, LriiDgton, S. C. Hf' ... . . ." * ' ? - ' ettaexasasn ^efOKta&nsss^'iaeTsc. The Lexington- Dispatch. Wednesday, Septembers, 1806. WAY TO PPuOTSJOT OTJB WOMEN. The following editorial from the pen of John Temple Graves in the Atlanta Georgian is one of the strongest appeals for the protection of white women from negro fiendish lust that has ever been printed. The suggestions and the theories offered for the stamping out of these negro criminals are good and sufficient and should receive the serious attention of the Saxon race: Whether Hoke Smith had lost or won the battle of the ballots the race question will live on, and in its varying emergencies it must be met until it is finally answered in the only and inevitable way. We have learned the great truth that lynching does not stop the crime against our women. We have reached by elimination the conclusion that other experiments must be tried to intimidate the criminals 01 tne negro race. One of. the most hopeful of these experiments seems to be a statute authorizing the mutilation of the criminal and the branding him on the forehead with the letter "R" significant of his crime and making him an object of suspicion for the rest of time. But beyond these and above these and more potential than all others, is the stern and insistent demand of our white civilization that the leaders of the negro race shall give us from this time forth that co-operation which they have heretofore refused. The South is growing indignantly tired of negro tirades in central cities against j the lawlessness of lynching. We are tired of negro platitudes and resolutions against the injustice of the South toward the negro. And we' have utterly lost patience with those pacific preachments which cry out for law and order on the part of the white man, wilile they spend no time nor breath nor effort in thundering to their own people the earnest and passionate denunciation of these criminals who make the chief tension and deadly friction between the races. Now see here: The South has for i 25 years befriended the negroes in every practical way. We have helped to build their churches, we have help- i ed to sustain their schools, we have j buried their dead and helped to main- j tain their living some times in idleness and some times in want. But now as one unit in the mass of Southern sentiment, The Georgian lifts its voice and protests that henceforth it will give no dollar and lend no aid and no co-operation to no negro institution until its officers, its preachers, its teachers and its editors shall join with us in thundering into the ears of the j negro race the warning anddenuncia- j tion of this horrible crime. Without passion, or at least without passion which is not richly due and justified, we ask our brethren of the Southern press and our Caucasian friends and brethren everywhere to take this firm and unalterable standthat thfiv will heli) no necrro church. newspaper or school until they know that its preachers, its teachers and its editors in those institutions are thundering the doctrine of hell and damnation to the assailants of white women. Now this is fair. It is just and it is right. The South is living under a shadow which no man can estimate. Men whose public duties call them to public meetings are held at home because they are actually afr&i^l to leave their families alone even in the shelter and sanctity of their own homes after nightfall. Men cannot go to church for the same reason. And this, please God, is the South. We are a free people and a great country. Are we to live forever under this shadow and under this terror? Are we to sit still and help to build up these negro institutions when they are silent and apathetic toward the peril in which ineir criminals pur me Desr element of our race? Are we to co-operate with these people to build up institutions in which they do not preach the enormity of these offienses? Are we to be forever held in a state of seige with our women trembling in fear and terror when they are alone? Is the liberty which our fathers bought with their blood to be surrendered to the foul terror of an alien and subordinate race? We tell these teachers, these preachers and these editors that they have the most vital interest in the affair. If the boundaries of restraint are ever broken by the Caucasian race in the wild spirit of relation for a condition which imprisons ana terrmes tne noblest women of the world, they themselves will be whelmed in the tidal wave which follows. And we say here and now to Booker Washington, to Gaines and to Turner, to Proctor and to Stinson and to the rest of those who are so eager to rush into print to plead for law and order, that if they have any regard for the future vOf theirrace and for them selves, ii. / VA ! they will take the hint which is not unkindly sent from this aroused and indignant race of Caucasians, and will stand shoulder to shoulder with us in demanding that every preacher in the country pulpit and every editor of every little 2x4 sheet and that ever}- teacher in the city and country cohnnls shall devote some "nart of his ? * ? X sermon or some portion of his editorial, or some segment of his scholastic hours to preaching hell and damnation to all who are guilty of this fiendish crime. We assure these men that the Caucasian sentiment of this country is now being aroused as it never was before. We need not, and we will not continue to have our women to live under the shadow of this fiendish negro lust. We are going to free our women no matter what the cost may be to another race. There is no wildness of passion and radicalism in this announcement. If these men know anything they know that we demand it, and they know that this demand is firmly stern and earnest. When they have done their best UQey WUU t'ummanu uur uuuumciiuo.tion and the confidence of our race. But a9 long as they continue to howl resolutions against lynching and rate against lawlessness while they are shamefully silent toward the crimes which produce the mob, then the back of our hand is against them | and all that they represent. This is the position which the present tragic environment sternly demands of the Saxon race, and we call upon Saxons who respect themselves to assume it everywhere. WAS A VERY SICK BOY But Cured by Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. "When my boy was two years old he had a very severe attack of bowel complaint, but by the use of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy we brought him out all right," says Maggie Hickox, of Midland, Mich. This remedy can be depended upon in the most severe cases. Even cholera infantum is cured by it. Follow the plain printed directions and a cure is certain. For sale by Kaufmami Drug Co. Little Mountain's First Sale. Little Mountain, S. C., August 31, 1906. To the Editor of the Dispatch: Mr. Joseph A. Counts ginned and sold the first bale of new cotton today, in this community. It was sold to Messrs. Huffman & Derrick for 8% cents per pound, and was ginned by the Little Mountain Oil Mill and Feri tilizer Co. Last year the first bale I was ginned for Mr. W. C. Shealy by the Oil Mill Co., on August 18th, and np to the 31st day of August last year they had ginned ninety-one bales. This shows the crop in this locality to be twelve days behind last year. The cotton is very much damaged in some sections of this locality by I the continued rains. ! We learned from reliable authority that a worm is in the cotton doing considerable damage. On Mr. John D. Shealy's farm near Pomaria, the worms in the cotton bolls have ruined in places one-third of the bolls. E. Starring to Death. Because her stomach was so weakened by useless drugging that she could not eat, Mrs. Mary H. Walters, of St. Clair street, Columbus, O., was literally starving to death. She writes: "My stomach was so weak from useless drugs that I could not eat, and my nerves so wrecked that I could not sleep; and not before I was given up to die was I induced to try Electric Bitters; with the wonderful result that improvement began at once, and a complete cure followed." Best health tonic on earth. 50c. Guaranteed by The Kaufmann Drug Co., druggists. Remarkable Freak of Nature. One of the most remarkable freaks of nature that one could see was being shown by Dr. R. H. Jenkins, Monday. It was a genuine rose, double and coned in the center, which was found blooming on an apple tree in his yard. The rose was pink in color, about an inch across and with ! a fine perfume. Just how this strange hybrid was produced would take a better naturalist than wre are to state, but the fact is the rose grew on an apple tree, j The tree is now full of nearly mature ! apples.?Hogansville, Ga., News, j * i A girl hardly ever gets old enough to remember what happened when she was a little girl if it was more than twenty years back. Different reports come in in regard to the cotton crop. There has been [ some improvement, on ciay sons, out I the crop is fully two weeks later than last year. The Piedmont counties will make about three-fourths of last year's crop.?Carolina Spartan. I < ;!S?^^jWflRj55*S?TOWW<S^^ ' CT! Dots Around Prioevillo. , I To the Editor of the Dispatch: There is some very good crops i around here. Some of the best known | in several year^. T1\? V T? i a rrof.f in cr '("0 I i.Ul? JLV XJ JL AO /. vwvj ?" ! gin our ten cents cotton. \ i Si Master Harvel Koon v;ho has had t, j fever at his grandfather's, Mr. Win. y j Snelgrove, is convalescent. | Mr. Jimmie Price is doing a nice c j business hauling fruit to Columbia. r j Mr. Samuel Price is one of the | proudest men in our section because | there is a new baby boy at his home. | Aug. 27. M. D. | The Bulgarian-Turkish Bis- | pute Settled. $ Constantinople, Aug. 30?A Bulga- gj rian-Turkish commission has been ap- 8 pointed to delimit the frontier from | Vilyat to Adrianople, which is in dis- K pute, and which led to the sharpe jj fight recently between Bulgarian and I Turkish soldiers. ? The troops have been confronting |j each other from their positions oc- M cupied after the fighting, but a sus- | pension of hostilities has now been ? agreed on pending the investigation. H Pain from a Burn Promptly Be- | lieved "bv Chamberlain's? 3 Pain Balm. | A little cliild of Michael Strauss, of j| Vernon, Conn., was recently in great S pain from a burn on the hand, and as y cold applications only increased the in- g flammation, Mr. Strauss came to Mr. > James N. Nichols, a local merchant, for ^ something to stop the pain. Mr. Nichols says: "I advised him to use Chamberlain's Pain Balm, and the first application drew out the inflammation and ? ai gave immediate relief. I have used this ^ liniment myself and recommend it very often for cuts, bums, strains and lame ^ back, and have never known it to disap- w point.'' For sale by Kaufmann Drug Co. cc Changes In Army. S Washington, Aug. 30.?A9 scon as gi the naval manoeuver9 are over at = Oyster Bay, it is expected that Presi- "1 dent Roosevelt will take up the mat- -s ter of filling important vacancies ot occurring in the army. i Lieut. Gen. Corbin will retire Sep| tember 26, and it is known that he "1 will be succeeded by Major Gen. Mc- J Arthur, now commanding the Pacific ? division. J The vacancy in the list of major generals will be filled by the promo- 1 tion of Brig. Gen. Jesse Lee. J Capt. John J. Pershing is among those mentioned for succession to the brigadier general vacancy. Tillman Refuses to Attend Review. t Washington, Aug. 31.?Senator Till- * man has declined the invitation to be the president's guest aboard his yacht, g the Mayflower, at Oyster Bay, next Monday on the occasion of the big I naval review. The senator's declination was ex- ^ pected, for he has said he would never meet Mr. Roosevelt unless he receiv- 3 ed from him an apology as the result ? of the withdrawal of the White House dinner invitation following the fight 1 ? j-i? A._ ?i I uu uue sciiauj uuur m wmuu uic incn South Carolina senators were the participants. Well Worth Trying. W. H. Brown, the popular pension attorney, of Pittsfield, Vt., says: "Next to a pension, the best thing to get is Dr. King's New Life Pills." He writes: ' "They keep my family in splendid f health." Quick cure for Headache, Constipation and Biliousness. 25c. Guaranteed at The Kaufman ti Drug Co.,drug store. Silled 26 Snakes. ? After being frightened almost out \ of his wits by a pilot snake, a negro who lives on E. C. Thomas' place at Glendale, assisted by Charlie Bagwell, trillpfl +.n7on+,v-Qiv analrpQ RnnHar morning. The negro went to the wood pile to get 9ome wood, when he J was frightened by a long, black snake <i\ crawling out from the wood pile. He j screamed like a wild Indian and Mr. Bagwell went to his rescue. The Jt snake made for a hollow log in the woods and when the log was cut open twenty-six snakes were killed. Some ? of the snakes were nearly three feet w in length.?Spartanburg Journal. F Bee's Laxative Honey and Tar the original laxative cough syrup acts as a ? cathartic 011 the bowels. It is made from the tar gathered from the pine er trees of our own country, therefore is b( the best for children. It is good for _ coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough, etc. Try our free otfer. Sold by The I Kaufmann Drug Co. | A woman likes to have her husband 0 a good man, but she is sorry it keeps ? them so poor. ? The way some women wear their complexions they must think every- ai J body else wears smoked glasses. ; vulx-<re?x>.tvck? ;-?a i : Jfoy y 1 YoilF 11 j Liver? ! | It will pay you to take good care of j | your liver, because, if you do, your g j | liver will take good care of you. v* Sick liver puts you all out of sorts, gj makes you pale, dizzy, sick at the ej stomach, gives you stomach ache, j headache, malaria, etc. Well iiver j keeps you well, by purifying your j blood and digesting your food. There is only one safe, certain and | reliable liver medicine, and that is ^ Bedford's Black-Draught , For over 60 years this wonderful g vegetable remedy has been the standby fl I in thousands of homes, and is today H the favorite liver medicine in the world. P It acts gently on the liver and kid- H \ neys, and does not irritate the bowels, fj It cures constipation, relieves con- | gestion, and purifies the system from 9 an overflow of bile, thereby keeping m ^ the body in perfect health. M Price 25c at all druggists and 9 ^ dealers. ?j Test it. fj Notice. 2 The Woman's Christian Temperance nion of South Carolina will hold its _ mual convention at Edgefield 15th ?18th September. The convention will open on Saturly evening, September 15th, with ^ elcome addresses and a gold medal >ntest by seven young ladies. ^ , 1 , . - . ti .ueiegates irom state unions piease ^ :nd names at once to Mrs. Beaureird Timmons, Edgefield, S. C. if's riME FOR YOU TC FURNISH Y< Kitchen with RANGE. You pay a little more 1 m ordinary Range, bi -V 1 M ! J tange lasxs a me xime. Our line gives you w: elect from. Our guara mrchasing. If you contemplate bi >f any size, our stock c: rou with prices from $? Steel Ranges made. Se LEE A. LOR] 1519 Main Street, THE PRICES TELL. J. B. FRID. Wholesale as IBOCEBS, FLOUR, F1 SEED RUST PI Ve Want the Merchants, Plan ngton County to Call and See Purchases. We Can Fill Yoi loney. 1823 and 1825 Main Stree [WARD'S HOTEC J. C. KINARD, Proprietor, eesville, - - - S. C The best attention given guest. Mod11 conveniences. Table supplied with ^ ;st the market affords. Y v. SBSHSSBT"" PARKER'S b hair balsam JEBHKfIs} ifli Cleanaea and beatztifiea the nalr. Proraotee a luxuriant growth. HMW JW?evcr Falls to Eestore Gray WfcvWi- Hair to its Mouthful Color. Curci ?calp^*es*e? hair tailing. ^ SMSflfS Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets, a perfect Treatraent for constipation id biliousness. $&T One pill a dose. " Sold by all Druggists. IV; fa* rvwv>ui.?? I FOR FALL SOWING. Every farmer should have a copy of our New Fall Catalogue It gives:best methods of seeding; and) full information about Crimson Clover Vetches, Alfalfa Seed Oats, Rye Barley, Seed Wheat Grasses and Clovers Descriptive Fall Catalogue mailed free, and prices quoted on request. T. W. Wood & Sons, Seedsmen, - Richmond,' Va. Our Trade Mark Brand 8eeds"are the ' 1 -? -? 1. I1U? AT )ERRICK'S DRUG STORE, LEXINGTON, S. C., Vill be found YAGER'S Cream Chlorofonn Liniment, the greatest of all liniments for Man or Beast, Rheumatism especially. rAGER'S Sarsaparilla, the best of Tonics and Blood Purifiers. rAGER'S Oleo-Vino, the System Builder and best of Cod Liver Oil Preparations?You can't taste the Oil. Ask For Yager's Remedies at >ERRICK'S DRUG STORE. (Hystoria?Woman's Friend) It is a well known medical fact that ine rosin is most effective in the treatlent of diseases of the bladder and idneys. Safferers from backache and ther troubles due to fault}* actios of lie kidneys find relief in the use of 'ineules. $1.00 buys oO days treatment, old by The Kaufmann Drug Co. -i - 'vfl > OUR a fine Steel 4 ,4 to start with than for it remember a Steel Ldest price range to ntee protects you in iiying a Steel Range annot fail to interest >0 to $65 for the Best ilect to-day. [CK & BRO., nolnmhift. S. S. THE QUALITY SELLS* AY & CO., id Be tail EED AND GRAIN, ?00F OATS. ters and Farmers of LexUs Before They Make Their ir Wants and Save You it, COLUMBIA, S. C. PARLOR RESTAURANT. 8. DAVID, Proprietor. 1336 MAIN St., COLUMBIA. S. C. The only up to date eating house of Its iud in the City of Columbia. It is well kept -clean linen, prompt and polite service, ou get what you order and pay only for -hat you get. Within easy reach of desirale sleeping apartments. OPEN ALL NIGET. DR. C. J. OLIVERQS, SPECIALIST ON ^^^^.EARJHROALNOSE AND LUNSS. ruarantee Fit of Office and Residenoe, Glasses. 1424 and 142$ Marion St. [arch 15?ly. COLUMBIA, S. C