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The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, Jnly 17,1907. 4 Saloons Will Go. "Men who are no longer young will live to see saloons outlawed in every state in the union," is the expressed opinion of former Senator Oarmack in an address delivered last Sunday in Nashville. Only a very few years ago such a ofoiiimf, wrvnlri havft been regarded as idle talk, but in the light of today with the wonderful, growth and the strength of the temperance sentiment, it will be accepted as the truth by any man who understands the feeling of the people with reference to the open barroom. We do not believe it will be five yea-s before every Southern state has outlawed "the saloons and when once gone they will be gone forever. Take for instance the condition in South Carolina. Can we imagine any circumstances under which the old time barroom could be reinstated in this State? The idea is not to be given thought. In the fact that there are hundreds and thousands of boys . . in this State nearly twenty years of age who have never seen a saloon or / the inside of xa barroom lies South Carolina's richest blessing. The dis- j pensary is bad, but as compared with I *- " sj. * ~i Tine saloon 1L IS a tiling Ui amucuv icgpectabiMty. Indeed the saloon will never return to South Carolina and as Mr. Carmack says it will be driven out of every State in the union.? Spartanburg Herald. i;. \ 6. B. Burhams Testifies After Pour Tears. G. B. Burhams, of Carlisle Center, N. Y., writes: "About four years ago I wrote you stating that I had been enp tirely cured of a severe kidney trouble by taking less than two bottles of Poley'-s Kidney Cure. It entirely stopped the brick dust sediment, and pain and symptoms of kidney disease disappeared. I am glad to say that I have never had a return of any of those symptoms during the four years that nave elapsed and I am evidently cured to st?y cured, and heartily recommend Foley's Kidney Cure to any one suffering from kidney or bladder trouble." Sold by The Kaufmann Drug Co. * v In Keaoriaa. Julian E. Monts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wade A. Monts, died July 1, 1907, making his short stay here on earth not qnite fifteen years. His death was unexpected to the community. He is survived by his father, mother, two brothers and a host of rel&tiyes and friends to mourn his untimely departure. -o In his sufferingand death he manifested the beautiful Christian spirit of patience aid resignation. In his last hours of life he spoke of heaven and ^afcfshe was going there and asked all there. We now have his'seat vacant in our Sunday school, which we feel sad to behiolcC but while that seat is Meant on earth there is one more filled in heaven, which we will rejoice over if we can but meet him there. May God bless and comfort the family in tifis their hour of sore afflction. .Dearest*Mian, thou hast left us, And oui loss we deeply feel; But 'tis Ad that has bereft us, He cauRll our sorrows heal. - Yet agawwe hope to meet thee Whemfte day of life is fled; When ififieaven with joy to greet thee, Wherefio farewell tears are shed. So fare-thee-well, dear Julian, You have only gone before; And if we are but as faithful, We shall reach the golden shore. A Friend. Prevents Headache. Force them! No?aids them. Ramon's treatment of Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets strengthens 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. XTegro Desperado Hilled. Gibson, Ga., July 7.?Two weeks ago Hargraves and Maje Ruff killed Richard Jone9 at a Sunday camp meeting and made their escape. They were located toci^y by Sheriff Kitch' ens and Marshal Charles Smith and a posse organized to effect their cap- J tore. The two negroes were in a secluded cabin and when the posse approached the hiding place they surrounded the four sides. Raff was not found, but Hargraves was cornered and showed fight. He was fired on and killed by the posse. All of the parties concerned were desperate negro characters of the moonshine and blind tiger section of the State. A Bank at Little fountain. little Mountain, S. C., July 11.?The stockholders of the Fanners' and Mechanics' Bank met this afternoon at the school building and organized with Dr. J. M. Sease chairman and W. A. Counts secretary of the meeting. The stockholders then elected the following board of directors: Dr. : X M. Sease, W. A. Counts, J. B. Derrick, M. G. Shealy, W. P. Counts, J. H. Wise and D. E. Farr. Immediately after the adjournment of the stockholders the board of directors met and elected the following officers: Dr. J. M. Sease, president; J. H. t Wise, vice-president; W. A. Counts, cashier. Dr. Geo. B. Cromer was present as temporary attorney and was elected reguler attorney for the j bank. Almost the entire stock of this bank was taken by home people and will be run by home men. The board of directors were very fortunate in securing the services of Dr. J. M. Sease, J. H. Wise and W. A. Counts as officers of this bank. All three of these men are well known, ~ititarnntir on/1 VinQinMS AhllitV LUC11 VI iUL'OgliUJ uuu w and have the confidence of the entire community. From the interest taken by the community and surrounding country we predict a bright future for this bank. J. K. D. Jumped From Car "Wiadour. Denver, Colo., July 11.?John T. Thompson, a prisoner in the custody of Detective Joseph Jay of the Portland, Oregon, police department, leaped from a car window while the train was running 40 miles an hour, and escaped. Thompson is wanted at Portland, Ore., to answer a charge of stealing $3,000, and was captured in London, Eng., after a chase around the world. f Bob Graham Arrested. Bob Graham, colored, who killed the two Lowman negroes at Ridge Spring some eight or ten years ago and for whom Gov. Ellerbe offered a reward of $100, was captured near Leesville Friday by Constable George W. Asbill. The negro admitted that he was Graham, although he had changed his name to Luther Johnson. The sheriff of Saluda county came to Leesville for Graham and carried him to Saluda, where he will be tried for murder. Long Live The King! is the popular cry throughout European countries; while in America, the cry of the preeent day is4'Long live Dr. King's New Discovery, King of Throat and Lung Romedies!" of which Mrs. Julia Ryder Paine, Truro, Mass.. says: 44It never fails to give immediate relief and to quickly cure a cough or cold." Mrs. Paine's opinion is shared by a majority of the inhabitants of this country. New Discovery cures weak lungs and sore throats after all other remedies have failed; and for coughs and colds it's the only sure cure. Guaranteed by Kaufmann Drug Co. and Derrick's Drug Store. 50c and $1.00 Trial bottle free. Train Held Up by Farmer. Fort Scott, Kansas, July 11.?Robert Walton, a Vernon county, Missouri, farmer, held up a Missouri Pacific passenger train on the track crossing his farm for half an hour last Feed your hair; nourish it; I give it something to live on. I Then it will stop falling, and will grow long and heavy, j Ayer's Hair Vigor is the only (genuine hair-food you can buy. It gives new life to the hair-bulbs. You. save what | hair you have, and get more, i too. And it keeps the scalp clean and healthy. The best kind of a testimonial? "Sold for over sixty years." A Kade by J. C. Iyer Co., Xiowell. Hsm. ym Also asnafbotarers of JjA f SARSAPAE1LLA. filters ERRY PECTORAL. I Fiisimii ui i m\ imiwnnw?i I " < a night by refusing to get off the rails. Walton took this novel method of attempting to collect a claim against the company. Sometime ago the same train, with the same crew, killed three mules and ahorse belonging to Walton. He mounted a horse last night and stood on the track. When the traih stopped he demanded |700. No persuasion would induce him to relent. Finally the passengers rushed him and forced him off the track. The train then passed. > , Take the Eostmaster's Word for It. , Mr. E. M. Hamilton, postmaster at Cherryvale, Ind., keeps also a stock of general merchandise and patent medicines. He says: ' Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is standard here in its line. It never fails to give satisfaction and we could, hardly afford to be without it." For sale by Kaufmann Drug Co. New Faint Factory. Longman & Martinez, Paint Makers of New York City, who commenced business 55 years ago (in 1852), one of the largest paint makers in the trade, have filed plans for an additional Paint Factory in Brooklyn, which will be about 100 by 200 feet in area, five floors in all making 100.000 square feet more of working surface. Three men were drowned by the upsetting of a boat on the Hudson river near New York city on Tuesday. One of the occupants rocked the boat. Mu Ha is Extra Long f TIRED AND SICK YET MUST WORK "Man may work from sun to sun but woman's work is never done," In order to keep the home neat and pretty, the children well dressed and tidy, women overdo and often suffer in silence, drifting along from 'bad to worse, knowing well that they ought to have help to overcome the pains and aches which daily make life a burden. It is to these women that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs, I comes as a blessing. When the spirits are depressed, the head and back aches, there are dragging-down pa: reluctance to go anywhere, these heeded, are soon followed by the wc Lydia E. Pinkham's ^ lr<?<?rkc til#* fAminine organism ina sti Inflammation, Ulceration, displace preparing* for child-birth and to car of Life it is most efficient. Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East E ham:?"For a long time I suffered f of aches and pains in the lower pai sleep and had no appetite. Since ts Compound and following the advice new woman and I cannot praise yc Mrs. Pinkham's In Women suffering from any form write Mrs Pinkham, at Lynn, Mas: perience she probably has the ve: case. Her advice is free and always HOMnnnnBi The Weekly Editor. Shrewd, with a natural gift for homely philosophy, intensified by his close contact with men and things, essentially an optimist, with a kindly viewpoint toward all things human, only caustic when he is girding at sham or wrong, the weekly editor is a citizen eminently worth your cultivation. Vear in and year out he preaches his inspiring propaganda, hammering into his constituents the duty of developing the talents Providence has placed in their keeping. He it is, too, who buttonholes the prospective investor or immigrant, bearing such eloquent and convincing testimony touching the attractions of his town and county as constitutes each one of his kind an active soldier in the army pnliflfced frvr thfi development of Georgia. It is difficult for the man whose sentiment and judgment are influenced by daily journalism to realize tfce role played by these men in the history annually making in this State, whether industrial or political. ?Atlanta Constitution. Was in Poor Health for Years Ira W. Kelley, of Mansfield, Pa., writes: "I was in poor health for two year?, suffering from kidney and bladder trouble, and spent considerable money consulting physicians without obtaining any marked benefit, but was cured by Foley's Kidney Cure, and I y desire to add my testimoney that it may be the cause of restoring the health of others." Refuse substitutes. Sold by The Kaufmann Drug Co. t ^ , CoL Jas. E. Tillman's Foot Crushed. Col. James H. Tillman, of Edgefield, met*with a painful accident on Tuesday night of last week. He was on the train going from Clark's Hill to Augusta when he steped forward into the baggage car to see if his parcels had been checked. While there the car lurched around a curve, and a heavy trunk fell on his right foot, crushing several of the small bones. He was driven ?o the Augusta hospital and will probably be confined to his ward for several days, while the bones in his foot are knitting together again.?Augusta Chronicle, July 10th. Printers Refuse to Fight Prohibition Sill. Savannah, Ga.?Savannah Typographical Union, the highest class labor organization in Savannah, has refused to enter the fight against prohibition. The Savannah Trades and Labor assembly asked the printers to pass resolutions against prohibition but they refused to do so. Quick Belief 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 Kaufmami Drug Co. p I 1 The Shrewd Newsboy. "Gimme a dime for the newsboy's dinner," a boy asked as he shoved a dirty hand in front of a man at Tenth and Main streets. "I haven't seen anything in the papers about a newsboys' dinner," the man said. 44When does it take place?'' 4 4 Just as soon as you give me the dime and I can get to a lunch counter," the boy said. He got the dime. ?Kansas City Star. Six Silled in Explosion. Hazelton, Pa., July 11.?A report from Audenreid, three miles west of here, says six miners were killed in an explosion of fire damp. MRS. AU^ LY^N | ins, nervousness, sleeplessness, and I are only symptoms which unless I >rst forms of Female Complaints. ' m Vegetable Compound I rong and healthy condition. It cures 1 iments, and organic trouoies. in ry women safely through the Change arl, Pa., writes:? Dear Mrs. Pinkrom female troubles and had all kinds rt of back and sides, I could not iking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable which you gave me I feel like a >ur medicine too highly." ivitation to Women of female weakness are invited to s. Out of her vast volume of expy knowledge that will help your helpful. How They Stand in Orangeburg A number of gentlemen were in the f city this morning from near Cameron, who will be in the new county as proposed by the St. Matthews leaders. They were asked how they stood on the matter, and with what encouragement the proposition was meeting in that section. They replied that they were not in favor of cutting the old county at all, and that the majority of those who live in that section were cf 4-l^yv nn wi/\ Arvivii/wt TVi ATT will LUC W 1IX V SJ Iv against it, and do all they can to defeat the measure. When asked about how many of I those who are living in the proposed new county securing registration certificates, they stated that there were as many of them securing their certificates to vote against 'the scheme as to vote for it. The gentlemen are of the opinion that the new county will not go through, and that Orangeburg will remain as it is for sometime to come yet.?Orangeburg Evening News. I . A Memorable Day. One of the days we remember with pleasure, as well as with phofit 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. Military Feature of Cleasoa Likely to be Abolished. It is thought that the federal gov ernment will appoint a successor to Col. Clay, who has resigned as commandant at Clemson College. This will likely do away with the military feature of the institution. The resignation of Col. Clay, was handed in because the board refused to withold diplomas from insubordinate seniors. 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. Storm Silled Sparrows. The storm on Tuesday night killed hundreds of sparrows all over the city. It is not known whether the sparrows were all killed by the rain, but at any rate they were dead. Ninety-five dead sparrows were found in the city next morning.?Anderson Mail. For Sale, Hand power turning lathe outfit, ^cheap; consisting of one stand with large iron wheel and a band wheel. ? 1 ? .i. ? mi Appiy uj xnt; a^iapituuii uiucc. Marshall Jenkins shot and killed his father-in-law, Newton Marshell, at Nashville, Tenn., last week. When a man growls over his breakfast he wouldn't dare to if the cook could hear him. The comforting thing about going visiting is maybe you won't have to do it again for a long time. Piuenles are for the Kidneys and Blad der. They bring quick relief to backache, rheumatism, lumbago, tired worn out feeling. They produce natural action of the kidneys in filtering waste matter out of the blood, 30 days treatment $1.00. Money refunded if Pineules are not satisfactory. Sold by Kauf mann Drug Co. Some married people go on being in love from force of habit. When a girl has pretty hair it's a sign she thinks it makes her pretty all over. When a woman is afraid somebody will flirt with her she wishes he would. When a girl will admit she's in love with a fellow she isn't. One pair in the front parlor beats three of a kind. A woman always likes to have the telephone ring when she has company. The troubles we never meet are the ones that worry us most. 5 > WHOLE! FITZMAURICE'S ?ANI .j Three ?rch Store, New Spring and Arriving by the carload every day an< DRV GOODS, NDTIt To be seen anywhere. We are offering 1C no tvpt vard. This is rxisitivflv tha srand 5,000 yards of Good Sea Island at 4c pei 1,000 yards 4x4 Madras at 10c?the 15c ] Onr Black Goods Department is full up cilans. Our 54 inch Mohairs at 50c is the want Black Goods see us. Our 36 inch Taffeta Silk at $1.00 per ya buying a new dress from us. Money bad Grand Sale of1 5,000 yards of 40 inch Shear White Lav 5,000 yards fine Cambric Percale at 10 a NOTICE?Value for your money in anj McCall's Patterns in stock at all times. We prepay charges on $5.00 worth of gc ( G O. BROW I 1730 MAIN STREET, Si Is where you can find o i am a a | OF ALL DOORS, SA BLINDS LIME AND | CABINET ] ;li Call or write for Prices. THE WHITE The design and finish of the +a aaiioI if Vioa Trof onnooror) ati tu bl^UCU 1U JUMO J VW WJf JfVUA VU vu STEADY SWII Has a very large Bobbin?Ho BALL BI A LIGHT RUNNER?STRONG and d (White SHUTTLE Machine has been ii The NEW HOME stands at the top of S Always on hand good Second Hand 3M machine attachments, shuttles, belts and J. H. BERRY, 1802 Main HARMAN'S S p "Where Quality a: Post Office Block, mtmmammMmmmmttmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmam ^FAMAN^MOR^ 3 AXE \ FITZMAURICE'S 1i5l? f, \ Three Arch Store, \ LA, S. C. > ? Summer Goods I we are showing the strongest line of INS and CLOTHING. )0 pieces Solid and Plaid Chambray at est value ever shown here. : yard. r iind. with the Best Black Mohairs and Scisnicest value you ever saw. If you rd. Every ylfc-d warranted. No risk in a if not satisfied. 10 inch Lawn. rn. The value for loc, only 10c. tnd 121c, 36 inch. * 7 article we sell. K)ds bought and paid for. fN & BRO., | , COLUMBIA, S. C? I ne of the best stocks of | KINDS. . I lSH, , & GLASS, i CEMENT. | MANTLES. | f SEWING MACHINE stand is unexcelled. Nothing the market. i 'T AND SURE. Ids more thread than any other. 3AREVG, arable. It is something new. a use twenty-five years.) ITTTTTTT.K mo^ViinQo T Viotro fTialaia^ JA-*. A JL M 4M S 1 111 VOt JL JUOTV IUIC iaVVOU? [achines. Needles for all machines and the best pure SPERM OIL. Street, Columbia, S. C. aoE s: an save you money on your and Summer Shoes. . ii * t and wear they will give satisfaction to every wearer, s medium and heavy weight toes a speciality, and the rill please you. All fresh f HOE STORE, nd Price Counts." COLUMBIA. S. C. ! OUR PIES ive found favor with everybody * babes and men, the little girl in Lnafores and her mother and her :andmother. They are of the veet, delicious, wholesome, elt-in - your - mouth kind, and e're anxious to have you try lem if you don't know the pronets of our ovens. If you do aow we won't have to ask you. * EIDLINGER'S STEAM BAKERY, COLUMBIA, S. C. WOD BY HAND * 1 C of all Trades Gasoline Engine < ats so little and will do as much work as ten H twelve men at less than one-tenth of one an's pay. It is sent all set up, ready to run. K ..11 9 t . i B an be belted to any tarm machinery, vjnnaer, w idler, Shredder, Hay Press, Pump, Churn, ;parator, etc. I Other sizea of enginea op to 200 H. P., operate on B a. Gasoline, Kerosene or Alcohol. B Cut out cooplete adrertiaemeot and tend he (Bus- fl % , ited Catalogue No. HS53 fl ft CO., Chicago, ID. | >