Lexington dispatch-news. [volume] (Lexington, S.C.) 1917-1919, June 13, 1917, Image 7
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Do not allow the U
poisons of undigested
fcl food to accumulate in Ljm
your bowels, where they
JB are absorbed into your Bgp
system. Indigestion, con- HsUWfm
stipation, headache, bad gp||
ijfJH blood, and numerous |G|
PHP other troubles are bound
J|j|g to follow. Keep your feL
Bra? system clean, as'thousands
of others do, by Btaa
W?Li taking an occasional dose
jgflj of the old, reliable, veg- Bral
PI etable, family liver medi- gp|g
PlM Thedford's Hp
DIrtnl/ nrniiffnf
Diauirmcuigui
fe|L Mrs. \V. F. Pickle, of
mT| Rising Fawn, Ga., writes:
CmSS "We have used Thed^3
ford's Black-Draught as
H| a family medicine. My
mya mother-in-law could not IfaHpj
^jTj take calomel as it seemed ,J?p
mMS too strong for her, so she ggjgg
used Black-Draught as a wjh
Hr mild laxative and liver ^sag
regulator... We use it |y||^
jn in the family and believe iaaL
|l it is the best medicine for I |
mgft the liver made." Try it
WrLA Insist on the genuine? LlS
Winthrop College
SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE
EXAMINATION
The examination for the award of
vacant scholarships in Winthrop College
and for the admission of new students
will be held at the County Court
House on Friday, July 6, at 9 a, m.
Applicants must not be less than sixteen
years of age. When scholarships
are vacant after July 6 they will
be awarded to those making the highest
average at this examination, provided
they meet the conditions governinff
th*? award. Atmlicants for
the scholarships should write to President
Johnson for scholarship examination
blanks. These blanks, properly
filled out by the applicant, should
be filed with President Johnson by
July 1st.
tSchojarsh"*ps are worth $100 and
free tuition. The next session will
open Septem- er 19, 1917. Tnr farther
information and catalogue, addross
Pr n i'i nt D. B. Johnson Rvk
HU. S. C.
HAS A GOOD OPINION OF
CHAMBERLAIN'S TABLETS.
"Chamberlain's Tablets are a wonder.
I never sold anything- that beat
-i them," writes F. B. Tressey, Richmond,
Kv. When troubled with in
X 1? i y 1
? aigesuon or constipation give tnem a
* trial.
SUMMONS FOR RELIEF.
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
COUNTY OF LEXINGTON.
Court of Common Pleas.
T. P. MEETZE, Plaintiff,
versus
Alfred J. Fox, Karl F. Oswald, Ella
V. Fox, Joh S. Fox, James H. Fox,
Emily Fox Wingard, the Home National
Bank of Lexington, S. C.,
and The Palmetto National Bank,
defendants.
SUMMONS.
fo the Defendants above named:
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED
and required to answer the Complaint
in this action, of which a copy is herewith
Served upon you, and to serve a
copy of your answer to the said complaint
on the subscribers at their office
at Lexington, South Carolina,
within TWENTY DAYS after the service
hereof, exclusive of the day of
such service; and if you fail to answer
the Complaint within the time
aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action
will apply to the Court for the relief
demanded in the Complaint.
TIMMERMAN, GRAHAM & CALLISON,
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
To the Non-resident Defendant, Al
fred J. Pox, above named:
TAKE NOTICE that the Complaint
in the above entitled action, together
with the Summons, were filed in the
office of the Clerk of the Court of
Common Pleas, in and for the County
of Lexington, said State, on the 17th
day of April. A. D., 1917.
TIMMERMAN, GRAHAM & CALLISON,
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
Subscribe to The Dis~atch-News.
Good Sight
/ is priceless
Good Vision
is necessary to good sight.
Eye strain is common.
Eye strain can be overcome.
Headache, squinting and cross-eyes
are caused by defective vision.
We examine the eyes for defects.
We correct the defects with proper
fitting glasses.
*s&r
VERYt^JEWELER
COLUMBIA 5.C.
JL
L 1508 MAIN STREET.
I
I LIBERTY LOAN BOND
CATECHISM IS GIVEN.
I
Questions Are Asked and Answered
as to its Object and Benefits
to be Derived.
i
i ;
n . _ . _ l 1 ^ ^ i. ^
following is a noeriv loan eaicjchism:
Q. What is the loan for?
A. To pay for feeding:, clothing
I and munitioning the men who are
fighting for you.
Q. Where can I buy a bond?
A. At any bank; or at the Postoffice.
i Q. Aren'%t bonds too big for me?
| A. You "an get them any size
from $50 and $100 up to $100,000.
n t novo r\otr fall r-vt qvi
I JL/\J JL iJU > ^ CV C4 A J.
down?
! A. No.
Q. When do I have to pay the
j rest?
A. $18 on June 28th, $20 on July
i 30th, $30 on August 15th, $30 on
| August 30th; plus interest earned by
the bond before it is paid for.
{ Q. Would I pay at like rates for
other bonds?
A. Yes. For a 850 bond cut the j
figures in half. For a $1,000 bond
| multiply them by ten.
! Q. Tan easier terms of payment j
be had?
A. Most banks are arranging to !
carry the payments for subscribers
' and collect in monthly installments,
pay?
j A. 3 1-2 or cent a year.
Q. Do I have to pay taxes on
! them?
j A. No. Nor on the income from
1 them.
Q. How can I get my money out j
of them if I want it?
I A. They are salable on a few min- j
I utes notice in the bond exchanges. !
| Most people would be glad to accept
| them as money, even though they are
not legal tender.
Q. Suppose the Government
I should issue more bonds bearing 4 or I
5 per cent, interest like Great Britain j
has done, wouldn't my bonds go down 1
in value?
A. The Government provides for 1
this. You can turn your 3 1-2 per
cent, bond in at par as subscription
i for a new bond baring the higher ini
terest rate, if issued.
I Q. Hew is the Liberty Bond pay;
lrg 3 1-2 per cent, equal in attrac- 1
.ion to the saving bun* ray;ng 4 per
! cent7
A. It gives absolute security |
| against loss; interest starts from the
j day of investment; it is secure1
I against future taxation as well as
I . !
i present taxation. A great many
people think the bonds will sell at a 1
premium after the war. It is the op:
portunity of a life time for all peo!
pie who have money put away.
Q. Why should I put my money
j into bonds anyhow?
A. Your brothers are offering
| their lives to save the nation from i
i./v xl i! _f
j uien nves iu save uie nation iroin
| the great dangers that threaten it.
jYou are only asked to put your mon;
ey in a giltedged investment that will
: pay interest from the day you make ;
it. Ali you have in the world you i
owe to your country. If you fail to j
do the little bit that is asked can you i
j look your fellow citizens in the face i
without shame? Do your bit to make i
| sure that democracy shall endure in
this world.
GOOD FOR THE LITTLE ONES.
I T-? 1
Jtyery year sees a Dig increase in
the demand for Foley's Honey and *
;Tar Compound for coughs, colds, and j
; croup. J. A. Parker, Lundgren, la., i
| writes: "I gave my children, aged |
,two and four years, Foley's Hone^ i
and Tar for severe colds, which gave i
almost immediate relief. I also took !
same with good results."
Harman Drug Co. i
?
John P. Holland, the Patterson, N. !
i J., school teacher, built and launched j
| his first submarine boat?a cigar- ;
I
?iftSuaj ui qx ^{uo xjujo pad-eqs
' in 1875.
tzTBrmm
S1UD-IVI ?-1 B^Bia
Will cure Rheumatism, Neuralgia,
Headaches, Cramps, Colic
Sprains. Bruises, Cuts, Burns. Old
| Sores, Tetter, Ring-Worm, Eczema,
etc. Antiseptic Anodyne,
used internally or externally. 25c
????????j
| Used 40 Years ?
;W m
Rl 0 R I
jBfcl MM A I
g The woman's Tonic g
!
A Sold Everywhere A
r.a *
UttUtllHH
(
I i
CATARRAHAL DEAFNESS
CANNOT BE CURED
oe +Viov ' annftt
vy JUiai bi>^j
reach the diseased portion of the ear
There is only one way to cure catarrhal
deafness, and that is by a constitutional
remedy. Catarrhal Deafness
is caused by an inflamed condition
of the mucous lning of the Eustachian
Tube. When this tube is inflamed
you have a rumbling sound or
imperfect hearing, and when it is eritrely
closed, Deafness is the result.
Unles the inflamation can be reduced
and this tube restored to its normal
condition, hearing will be destroyed
forever. Many cases of deafness are
caused by catarrah. which is an nfllamed
condition of the mucous surfaces.
Hall's Catarrah Medicine acts
thru the blood on the mucous surla.
ces of the system.
We will give One Hundred Dollars
for any case o.f Catarhral Deafness
Kv Ca
LJicXL U ^ v.uiv.u kt j * * v?.. ~
tarrah Medicine. Circulars free.
All Drucrgists, 75c.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
DOCTORS FOR END
OF KING ALCOHOL
New York, June 7.?Dr. Charles
H. Mayo of Rochester, Minn., was
inducted into office as President of
the American Medical Association in
the grand ballroom of the WaldorfAstoria
last night.
Three thousand physicians and
surgeons, with a scattering of their
women folk, filled the floor space,
packed three galleries and overflowed
in-.o the wide corridors.
By its aanlausc this audience,
which st">cd for the best in medical
and surgical science in the United
States a d ;re voice of which may
be accented as expre-rng the major
ity opinion of th associaton's 80,000
members, put the stamp of its approval
in the folowing assertions of
the great surgeon from Minnesota
made in his installation speech:
"Alcohol's only place now is in
the arts and sciences. National Prohibition
would be welcomed by the
medical profession.
"Our country should secure a medical
cabinet officer in the near future.
"Must Not Lower Standards."
"Our great task now is to propagate
and train bacteria to be man's
true slaves.
"More good will come of tongue
control than from birth control,
"Medicine has become now nearly
an exact science.
"The war has been followed by a
hysterical demand to lower the standards
of education of physicians. A
lowering of the standards must not
be permitted. If we ever needed educated
men it is right now."
Has Had Beneficial
A man is not treating himself fairly
when he neglects his backache,
rheumatic pains, dizziness, stiff joints
muscles, or other symptoms of Sidney
or bladder trouble. Isaac B. Turman,
1277 Washington Avenue, Ashburv
Park, N. J., writes: "I used Foley's
Kidney Pills and had the most
beneficial results from same."
Harman Drug Co.
Lowest cosi
of real
much each pound of rough a j
you must divide the price p
rRAD
RUCi
eg? H ? ww i v
VHU
LiNn
cost exactly what you pay for th<
no useless lint. To really know
style hulls and Buckeye Hulls yoi
real roughage.
Even though Buckeye Hulls do j
style hulls, you can't realize ho\
until you consider how much rr
Other A
Buckeye Hulls go farther.
They allow better assimilation
of other food.
No trash or dust.
Mr. Dan Wolf, Hammond Bldg
*'i E> 1 TT.
i uiit jceuuty DULKeye TJI
them a satisfactory filler t
meal and other concentrat
feed stuff, Buckeye Hulls a
the market."
To secure the best results and to dev
thoroughly twelve hours before
! wetting them down night and morning
this cannot be done, wet down at 1
feed the hulls dry, use only half as r
Book of M'X(
Gives the right formula for ever:
South. Tells how much to feed
tening, for work. Describes Bucl
using them properly. Send for y
Dept. k The Buckeye
Atlanta Birmingham Gree
Augusta Charlotte Jack
| LIED ABOUT HIS WIFE.
Greenwood Journal.
A gentleman remarked to us a few
days since that a man who is mighty
fond of liquid fire, called at the office 1
of the Judge of Probate and stated
that he wished a ticket to get a quart
for his wife who was mighty noorlv.
Of course this fellow did not want
this stufi for his wife. In all probability
she will never see it. She
may get a whiff of it on her husband's
breath which is no uncommon j
thing, and one which she most heart- j
ily detests. We submit that it is bad j
enough for a man to lie and swear to
it as this man did, but he should be ;
ashamed to tell people that his wife !
is drinking liquor. No man should be !
willing to slander his good wife who
has suffered in a thousand wavs on !
account of hi? drinking:, and who j
would rejoice it the were not a
drop of vile stuff existence.
But just think of a fellow mean
enough to give his wife liquor when
she is sick. We can not believe that
there is a man in Greenwood so mean
as to do a thing like this. No, sir, :
men do not give whiskey to their j
wives sick or well. We are strongly j
nclined to the opinion that when a |
man comes in the Probate's office to j
tret a ticket to buv linn or nnrl cnvs it i
<? ? ?.
is for his wife he should be turned !
down immediately and his name re- 1
ported to the grand jury to be pros- !
ecuted for perjury.
SICK WOMAN HAD
! CRYING SPELLS
I Restored to Health by Lydia
E. Pinkham s Vegetable
Compound.
Enhaut, Pa.?* 'I was all run down and
weak inwardly. I had female troubles
and nervous feelings
and my head bothered
me. I would
often have crying
spells and feel as if
I was not safe. If
I heard anyone coming
I would run and
lock the door so they
? . ? jk would not see me.
i >/ /Jp I tried several doc;
and th7 di^,n?t
flMlB help me sc I said to
-M, &*4u.kzi my ?j g-Uess
' I will have to die as there is no help for
y r?i m. . r _
ire. cue goi, me one 01 your nine |
books and my husband said I should try ,
one bottle. I stopped the doctor's !
1 rr.edicir.e and took Lydia E. Pinkham's 1
Vegetable Compound. It soon made a
change in me and now I am strong and j
i do ail my work."?Mrs. AUGUSTUS !
Baughman, Box 86, Enhaut, Pa.
Why will women continue to suffer
day in and day out and drag out a sickly, j
half-hearted existence, missing three- !
fourths of the joy of living, when they
can find health in Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound ?
If you would like free confidential ad- .
vice address Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine
Co., Lynn, Mass.
? = i
II i
t per pound
roughage
mmm
mMM wdmr ph
pound of rough- j
indicates. This
i|f is because they
^ are one-^ourt^
lint which has !
- ~ no food value.
To know how
;e in this form is costing you,
>er ton by 1500?not by 2000.
? MARK
*fyf
LLS X
"LESS |
_ I
em. Every pound is all roughage?
the difference in cost between old
n must know the cost per pound of
I
;ell at a much lower price than old
v much less they are costing you
lore real roughage a ton contains.
i
dvantages
Sacked?easy to handle.
They mix well with other forage.
Take half as much space in the
barn.
. &Mfg. Co., Hammond, La.,says:
ills to milch cows end find
vhen mixed with cottonseed j.
es. At the present price of
re the cheapest roughage on
J
elop the ensilage odor, wet the hulls
feeding. It is easy to do this by
for the next feeding. If at any time
east thirt- minutes. If you prefer to
nuch by bulk as of old style hulls.
? "
ed teeds tree
/ combination of feeds used in the
for maintenance, for milk, for fatkeye
Hulls and gives directions for
our copy to the nearest mill.
Cotton Oil Co. Dept. K l j;
nwood Little Rock Memphi$
i son Macon Selma
i
Phone 1057
COLUMBIA FLORAL COMPANY Inc.
P. 0. Box 116, 2414-2418 Main Street
COLUMBIA, S. C.
Cut Flowers, Designs, Bouquets, Baskets, Etc.
Flower and Garden Seed, Bulbs and Plants.
Reasonable prices?prompt delivery.
Fine Carnations a specialty. Ask for list.
i
^Maw<wrM'jmmv
TBI ?T T3*
Money to Loan
On Improved Farming Lands on long time in sums of Two Thousand
dollars and up, interest payable annually.
Lands exclusive of buildings must be worth double amount of
loan applied for.
Write or Cime to see nie.
A. C. JONES, - Batsburg, S. C.
i
For Windows and Doors make life
worth living.
We Ve Got Them
Don't put up a rusty, wornout old
screen. It won't keep the flies, mosquitoes
and insedts out, but will
make it harder for you to "drive
u D ]
tnem out. uuy our new screens miu
screen wire. This will make home
look pretty. Then you can be safe
from these little disease-bearing pe?ts
?and be comfortable all summer.
i
Lorick & Lowrance, Inc.
Incorporated
COLUMBIA, S. .C
Brookland Bank
New Brookland, S. C.
I Board of Directors:
Henry Buff. Sewell K. Oliver. E. W. Shull.
j G. A. Guignard. R. N. Senn. L. S. Trotti.
J. C. Lybrand. A. D. Shull. P. J. Wessinger.
Advisory Board:
Frank W. Shealy. Lemuel Hall. Jas. A. Summersett.
I I
The Oswald Garage
Goodyear Tires and Tubes
Lathe and General Repair Work by Expert
Mechanics.
Complete Line of Ford Parts and Automobile
Accessories Always Carried in Stock.
Gasoline, Oils, Greases and Columbia Igniter
Batteries.
Local and long distance telephone connections.
Call us day or night. We can take
care of your troubles any hour dav or night.
*/ v c *?
FREE AIR FOR THE CONVENIENCE OF OUR FRIENDS
AND CUSTOMERS.
The Oswald Garage
Lexington, S. C.
J-jrsni? No. 118.
I