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The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, Jnly 10.1907. Beply From "Justice." To the Editor of The Dispatch: It is the desire of the writer to make ft few remarks to one who styles himself, "One Who Favors Whatever is Eight," the profound logical reasoner in search of truth. ^ . He makes a big ado about the heading, "The Board Justified," ridiculing its writer and claiming to see no justifiable reason why such a heading should be placed over such a meanInmlooa avfinlfl fllA IWIlO.lllSion iS UOt ?4 warranted by the premises. Now the ! troth is this:v We wrote no heading to the article; we left this matter to ( the discretion and judgment of the editor. We gave, as we thought, a few valid reasons for the establishment of a i dispensary here, and left the conclusion to be drawn by the honest, unbiased people of the county. The editor ?a prohibitionist?drew this conclusion and we are satisfied. As to your logic, we must confess that you could prove anything with H the unlimited latitude and twisting ' yon give your premises and it is uselees for us to consider them, their invalidity being too plainly seen to need pointing out, e. g. People drink whiskey?all people drink whiskey, etc.; laws are unjust?SOME laws are ungfe just; or should we yet, this time, as ' in the first instance, all laws are unjust? But it is useless to take up more space with this. Now, we have great respect for constituted authority and believe it becomes us as citizens to enforce and obey the law. The board of control are officers of the law find are appointed to execute the law, if they fail to do this they are not just nor honest. Now, in regard to a dispensary here, as we said before, whiskey is already sold in a few hundred yards oigoor town; Columbia gets the money, Brookland the drunks. Now if we most have one, and under present conditions we certainly must, why not have the other; why not let those who cause the trouble thus pay for the protection and safety of us who respect ourselves and the law? Is the money worse than the drunks? As to petitions, they, as we said before, are not counted under the CareyHrI Cothran law, but "He that is not |pp:~ with me is against me," and if the anti's have not a majority on their petitions, it is safe to say that the !'|p majority is in favor of a dispensary here, > JNo one denies that drunkenness is an evil, but there are some people who would make us believe that drunkenness is the only and paramount evil of our country and never open thpir months about. anything else; when the ten commandments? the greatest of all laws?never mentions it; bat it does forbid one thing which we consider the most henioas curse of our country?adultery and fornication. Now, I wonder what Mr. "Searcher After I'ruth" would do with the material that produces these crimes? Every since Noah came out of the ark, planted a vineyard and got drunk on the wine, drunkenness has been prevalent in the world, and all the laws that have been enacted Votta nnt Tii*aTrAntx>r! if,, and T am one U?*TV UVV |#*vt ? of those who believe that nothing bnt moral suasion and proper raising will ever reduce this evil, therefore, we believe to sell whiskey nnder the strictest police control is much better than to have a law we know people will violate, and will never be enforced by the people like one who believes in whatever is right, and thus to throw an influence on the rising generation of disregard for all law. A friend of mine, and a man who does not drink either, told me the other day that he had traveled in the prohibition State of Maine where they have had so-called prohibition for fifty years, and in some towns a worse state of drunkenness prevails than in any town he had ever seen where whiskey is sold under legal j restrictions. | Now, Mr. Editor, we desire no 1 * newspaper notoriety and did not write at first for any such purpose, but to give a few facte and reasons for the action of the board, (though we took no part in getting the dispensary here, not even having been ap- < rwwar.hed with a netition for its estab- 1 lishment,) therefore, this shall be our last in this controversy and we shall i make no further reply to anything else here, but if "one who is searching after truth" will come to us, w*e ! ? wilTdiscuss the matter with him, and, j I think, to his entire satisfaction. ! JUSTICE. I NewfBrookland, July 2. , . , j Prevents Headache. Force them! No?aids them. Ramon's treatment of Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets sCTengthens the liver and digestive organs so that they do their own work and fortifies your constitution against future trouble. Entire treatment 25c. Derrick's Drug Store and C. E. Corley. , . .'J Bill Arp Oa Newspapers. I I never took a paper that didn't pay me more than I paid for it. One time an old friend of mine started a paper < way down South and sent a copy to j me and I subscribed just to encourage j it and after a while it published an ? order to sell a lot at public auction. : So I enquired about the lot and told a j friend to run it up to $56. He bid off the lot at $38 and sold it in less than ( a month for $100, so I made $29 clear, , by taking that paper. My father told { me that when he was a young man he saw a notice in a paper that a ? school teacher was wanted away off , - * nnnnfw and he went and 211 Ot UXOVOJL1U J ?mm -got the situation. A little girl was sent to him, and after a while she \ grew np sweet and beautiful and he married her. Now, if he had not taken that paper what do you suppose would have become of me? I would have been some other fellow, or maybe I would not have been at all. Do you take a paper? If not you'd better hustle and get one at once. G. B. Bur hams Testifies After Tour Tears. G. B. Burhams, of CarlisieOenter, N. . Y., writes: /'About four years ago I wrote you stating that I had been entirely cured of a severe kidney trouble ; by taking less than two bottles of j Foley's Kidney Cure. It entirely stopped the brick dust sediment, and pain and symptoms of kidney disease disap- < peared. I am glad to say that I have < never had a return of any of those symptoms during the four years that have elapsed and I am evidently cured to st*y cured, and heartily recommend j Foley's Kidney Cure to any one suffer- ( ing from kidney or bladder trouble." 4 Sold by The Kaufmann Drug Co. _ 1 Poor John. , ; In order that the young man may 1 know what is coming to him when he ^ asks a girl to marry, him, we quote ] the following acceptance from a pop- f Tl1o i? TlrtUpl } "She put her flower-like face to i mine." ] u 4My first thought of you and my I last are the same, beloved,' she answered, 'and the thought is this?that ! you have a heart for whose belated waking queens might keep vigil.' " Does a man, in addition to the con- ^ tract to buy a woman's clothes and groceries for the rest of her life, have J to stand for something like this?? ^ Atchison Globe. j The Charming Woman ] is not necessarily one o? perfect form , and features. Many a plain woman who could never serve as an artist's model, d possesses those rare qualities that alt ] the world admires: neatness, clear eyes. , clean smooth skin and that sprightli ness of step and action that accompany ( good health. A physically weak woman j is never attractive, not even to herself. Electric Bitters restore weak women, give strong nerves, bright eyes, smooth, velvety skin, beautiful complexion. Guaranteed at Kaufmann Drug Go. and Derrick's Drug Store. s , < , < ITegro Sills Wife sad Brother. Wilson, ,N. C., July 4.?Rexford Bow, a negro living near here, today shot and killed - his young wife, to whom he had been married only ' a short time, and his brother, who he ] alleged had been paying attention t:> 1 his wife. Bow surrendered. Ee makes no denial of the double killing. Pineules are for the Kidneys and Blad j der. They bring quick relief to backache, rheumatism, lumbago, tired worn out feeling. They produce natural ac- 1 tionof the kidneys in filtering waste matter out of the blood, 30 days treat- i ment fl.OO. Money refunded if Pineules are not satisfactory. Sold by Kaufmann Drug Co. Sank at Little Mountain. The secretary of state on Wednesday of last week issued a commission to the Farmers and Merchants' Bank of Little Mountain. The capital is placed at $10,000 and J. H. Wise and W. A. Counts are the corporators. , A Daily Thought. < The company of just and righteous mon ia Koffor* f.Vian raoolf/h anrl Q rn0V1 *? ib/wvw& UUWJLi vrvwAVM UAAU W AAVM estate.?Euripides. < =====r==========rrr==r===rr i \HeIp!Helpll, \Ym Falling I J Thus cried the hair. And a | kind neighbor came to the res- < jcuc with a bottle of Ayer's < i Hair Vigor. The hair was * I saved! This was because * fAyer's Hair Vigor is a regular hair medicine. Falling hair is i caused by a germ, and this medicine completely destroys these germs. Then the healthy scalp gives rich, healthy hair. The best kind of a testimonial ? j "Sold lor over sixty years." x 3 A Madrf by J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, SUM. ( VB Alio zaanuCeotarer* of ^ A\ ? , ^ ^ SARSAPAB11LA. ( State Pays Interest on Bonded Debt. All day yesterday the force in the State treasurer's office was busy sending out money for the semi-annual interest on the South Carolina bonds md coupons and a large amount of money changed hands through the banks of this city, Charleston and New York. Over $5S,000 was sent out on the brown and blue stock, upon which the interest is 4 1-2 per cent., Clemson college and the colored college at Orangeburg each received $2,877, which is 6 per cent, on the agricultural scrip, and Clemson also received $1,737.18, which was 6 per cent, from the permanent bequest to that college. In addition, there was paid on the bonds recently posted by the State treasurer as stolen from the treasury. In the meantime the decision of the supreme court on this case, which is now being tested, will be awaited with interest as there are a number of the bonds in question.? The State, July 2nd. !' Negro Bobs White Nan. Rockvillee, Md., July 4.?Charles Souder, aged 21, of Dovesville, Va., was held up, robbed and fatally shot yesterday afternoon by an unidentified negro on the public highway, near Redland. Posses ar^ in pursuit 5f the negro and lynching is threatened. Long Live The King! 5 the popular cry throughout European jountries; while in America, the cry of the preeent day is "Long live Dr. Bang's New Discovery, King of Throat and Lung Romedies!" of which Mrs. Julia Ryder Paine, Truro, Mass., says: "It never fails to give immediate relief and x> quickly cure a cough or cold." Mrs. Paine's opinion is shared by a majority )f the inhabitants of this country. New Discovery cures weak lungs and ?1 j-- -AL? -17 -..I I jore tnroars aiter tux urnex icmcuics lave failed; and for coughs and colds t's the only sure cure. Guaranteed by Kaufmann Drug Co. and Derrick's Drug Store. 50c and $1.00 Trial bottle free. Ifrs. Vandorfcilt Wears Homespun. In order to encourage and revive ihe almost lost art of hand weaving imong the mountain women of the Blue Ridge mountains, Mrs. George W. Vanderbilt has taken to wearing ldmespun. Mrs. Vanderbilt appeared n Asheville a few days ago in a yelow homespun gown. It started a fad :or homespun among the women ot ;he town and has resulted in just what Mrs. Vanderbilt has wished it to remit in?good business for the women >f the mountains. Mrs. Vanderbilt's jown cost her $25.?Ex. To Hang for Wife Murder. Ja?. Malloy, white, was convicted it Bennettsville on Friday of murdering his own wife a few weeks ago by cutting her throat with a razor and sentenced to hang on July 26. Sauce for the Gander. A young man, who had not been married long, remarked at the dinner table the other day: "My dear, I wish you oould make bread such as mother used to make." The bride smiled, -and answered in a, voice that did not tremble: "Well, dear, I wish you could make the dough that father used to make." rake the Postmaster's "Word for It. Mr. E. M. Hamilton, postmaster at 3herryvale, Ind., keeps also a stock of general merchandise and patent medicines. He says: ' Chamberlain's Colic, Dholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is standard here in its line. It never fails to *ive satisfaction and we could hardly ifford to be without it." For sale by Saufmann Drug. Co. Xrmo News. We are having beautiful weather :or the last few days. Cotton is looking fine. Miss Jessie Daniels, daughter of Mr. Gr. T. Daniels, of Calumbia, is visiting Miss Eula Koon, of Irmo, S. C. We are sorry to say Mr. Henry Amuck is very ill. Miss Nettie Amick and brother is at home. Miss Jessie" Daniels and Mr. Brook's Koon and sister visited Mr. Henry A.mick Monday. Birdie. Probably Correct. The teacher had asked the meaning cf the word orphan, but none of the children had replied. "Well," she jaid finally, "I am an orphan. Now, can anyone tell me?" "Please, ma'am," said a little fellow, "an orphan is a lady that want's :o get married, but can't." Was in Poor Health for Years Ira W. Kelley, of Mansfield, Pa., writes: "I was in poor health for two fears, suffering from kidney and bladier trouble, and spent considerable money consulting physicians without )btaining any^ marked benefit, but was sured by Foley's Kidney Cure, and I lesire to add my testimoney that it may 3e the cause of restoring the health of others.'' Refuse substitutes. Sold by rhe Kaufmann Drug Co. * { Bile I Poison I m has a very bad effect on your sys- g a tern. It disorders your stomach 01 rj and digestive apparatus, taints your tg Ml blood and causes constipation, with M M A. ^ ^s- ,grTT,^ | rhedftrd's I iBIack-Drauehll $ is a bland tonic, liver regulator, and B to blood purifier. M kjj It gets rid of the poisons caused M n by over-supply of bile, and quickly n cures bilious headaches, dizziness, M B loss of appetite, nausea, indiges JE tion, constipation, malaria, chills fig and fever, jaundice, nervousness, f| irritability, melancholia, and all B& sickness due to disordered liver. TO It is not a cathartic, but a gentle, m j? herbal, liver medicine, which eases Bj without irritating. 1 Price 25c at all Druggists. B An Arkansas Bath. Henry James, the novelist, arrived at 10 o'clock one night at a Florida hotel and could get nothing to eat. The hotel was magnificent and expensive, but its rule was to serve no food after a certain hour, and in consequence Mr. James went hungry to bed. Discussing the hardship afterward, he said: "I felt, indeed, like the tenderfoot who visited an Arkansas hotel back in the '70s. "It was a primitive hotel, and the ompst,. on his arrival, said to the land lord tentatively: " 'Landlord, I'd like a bath.' " 'All right,' was the reply. "And the landlord went out, returning in ten minutes with a tin can of soft soap, a towel, a pick and shovel. "The eastern guest took up the can of soft soap and the towel, but at the pick and shovel he looked askance. " 'What are these for ? he said. " 'Wa'al, stranger,' said the landlord, the water's low an' ye'll hev to dam up the crqek.'"?Washington Star. Constipation. For constipation there is noting quite so nice as Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They always produce a pleasant movement of bowels without any disagreeble effect. Price, 25 cents. Samples free. Kaufmann Drug Co. Lad ICeets Untimely Death. Lige Kilgo, a Bishopville lad, wss shot to death at Darlington on the Fourth, by J. Wily Rhodes. The killing seems to have been accidental and the out come of a negro row in the store of Mr. Rhoders. The institute building is making a noof. annoaranpp 'Tto wnnrlprfnl tr> see how much paint adds to the attractiveness of any place. There are numbers of residences in Lexington that could be painted without distracting anything from their looks. The school house is a good example. A Memorable Day. One of the days we remember with pleasure, as well as with profit to our health, is the one on which we became acquainted with Dr. King's New Life Pills, the painless purifiers that- cure headache and biliousness, and keep the bowels right. 25c. at Kaufmann Drug Co. and Derrick's Drug Store. The man who depends upon his "rabbit's foot" usually has a long hard luck story to tell. Raisuli, the noted Turkish bandit, has captured Sir Harry Maclean, commander of the sultan's bodyguard at Tangier, and is holding him for a $200,000 ransom. Quick Relief for Asthma Sufferers. Foley's Honey and Tar affords immediate relief to asthma sufferers in the worst stages and if taken in time will effect a cure. Sold by The Kaufmann Drug Co. On the average the coolest part of the day is at 5 o'clock in the morning. England has 30,000 persons with a single leg or arm. The wettiest hour of the day is at 3 o'clock in the morning. Summer coughs and colds yield at once to Bees Laxative Cough Syrup. Contains honey and tar but no opiates. Children like it. Pleasant to take. Its laxitive qualities recommend it to mothers. Hoarseness, coughs, croup yield quickly. Sold by Kaufmann Drug Co. > > WHOLESALE < > FITZMAURICE'S FITZMAURICE'S Three Arch Store. ] r \ Three Arch Store. < i COLUMBIA, S. C. > $ New Spring and Summer Goods Arriving by the carload every day and we are showing the strongest line of DRY GOODS, NOTIONS mill CLOTHING To be seen anywhere. We are offering 100 pieces Solid and Plaid Chambray afe 5c per yard. This is positively the grandest value ever shown here. > 5,000 yards of Good Sea Island at 4c per yard. 1,000 yards 4x4 Madras at 10c?the 15c kind. Our Black Goods Department is full up with the Best Black Mohairs and Sciscilans. Our 54 inch Mohairs at 50c is the nicest value you ever saw. If you want Black Goods see us. Our 36 inch Taffeta Silk at $1.00 per yard. Every yard warranted. No risk in buying a new dress from us. Money back if not satisfied. Grand Sale of 40 inch Lawn. 5,000 yards of 40 inch Shear White Lawn. The value for 15c, only 10c. 5,000 yards fine Cambric Percale at 10 and 12^c, 36 inch. NOTICE?Value for your money in any article we sell. McCall's Patterns in stock at all times. We prepay charges on $5.00 worth of goods bought and paid' for. ( C. D. BROWN & BRO., f 1 I74H II.UN CTRPCT ftftl IIMRIA 5 ft I ;; I I WW HIM III VIIKhhl) VVkVlliHin) VI VI) f |ji Is where you can find one of the best stocks of |j jf OF ALL KINDS. K DOORS, SASH, BLINDS & GLASS, LIME AND CEMENT. !| " | CABINET MANTLES. f j!j Call or write for Prices. I.I SOWQLFURNmiRE toT* COLUMBIA, S. C. We especially invite yon to come to see ns for your Furniture, Cheap Suites, IroC Beds, Lounges, Stoves, Lace Curtains, Side Boards, Hall Backs. 80 DAYS SALE-FURNISH YOUR HOUSE. W. H. SOWELL, FURNITURE CO., 1231 Main Screet * Opposite Y. M. C. A. Building. THE WHITE ROW SEWING MACHINE The design and finish of the stand is unexcelled. Nothing to equal it has yet appeared on the market. STEADY, SWIFT AND SURE. Has a very large Bobbin?Holds more thread than any other. BALL BEARING, A LIGHT RUNNER?STRONG and durable. It is something new. (White SHUTTLE Machine has been in use twenty-five years.) The NEW HOME stands at the top of SHUTTLE machines. I have the latest. Always on hand good Second Hand Machines. Needles for all machines and machine attachments, shuttles, belts and the best pure SPERM OIL. J. H. BERRY, 1802 Main Street, Columbia, S. C. a shoes: ' W n nan coirn xrrm mrmov HT1 VOllT1 c ^ciu oct t vy * uu jj.xvijivj va* 7 v ^ JWHWL\ ' Spring and Summer Shoes. ii l??ks, fit and wear they will give perfect satisfaction to every wearer. JISMjBpl Farmers medium and heavy weight work shoes a speciality, and the prices will please you. All fresh HARMAN'S SHOE STORE, "Where duality and Price Counts." Post Office Block, - - - COLUMBIA. S. C. * ^,3r*5r,5r $ SOUTHERN RAILWAY. |, Unexcelled Dining Car Service, ? ; *1* Thrnuo'h Pullman Sleenin? Cars on all Trains. /IV ?W-Q-- ? r--o ' ^ Convenient Schedules on Local Trains. ^ /i\ For full information as to rates, routes, etc. m consult nearest Southern Railway Ticket Agent, or R. W. HUNT, D. P. A., Charleston, S. C. * ^^BROOKS MORGAN, A. G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga. ?