University of South Carolina Libraries
Tin, .in ii t _ _i j ilu i. -nTTifni???rminr i>?rM?rrmr iwriirirnTrwMrr- 11 |JI ir-wiinirnTTiri---rii tn? iMiiiimiMmrBTiT-wiT?n-nrrr??-????????? ?mi ??iwwwwummbhbbmbbbwmwibm isiiwii 1 hi nrnmrnmrntmrnmrnmrn^imkilmm^mimaitm ? I ADVERTISING RATES. BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM ^T*|J J-J I J-* | IV T^A XT F\ ICO A TV* W ?j?-??? 1 ntr LcAli>U 1 U1 >1 IJlorAl tn. ss"; RATES REASONABLE. mfnth^dTertlae for threfc' wx an,i 0x0171 q ~ Notices in the local column 5 cunt* per subscription$1 peb ANNUM * ? Sepresentatiue Kaujspaper. Gauers Lexington and the Borders of the Surrounding Gounties Like a Blanket. u ? oent a word, wl en they exceed 100 words. O ? Marriage notices inserted free JOB PRINTING A SPECIALTY. VOL. XXX. LEXINGTON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER IT. 1900. NO. 49 G. M. HAKMAN, Editor and Publisher. .minn hiiiiii ii?iiiiiiibbii?Ii?nwrmj That Grow and Bear Frail. ( Write for our 60 page 11Stv'-fiiSB :ustrated Catalogue and 40 >age pamphlet, "How to ^ ?iant and Cultivate an Orhard," Gives you that incSb?--^gV ormation you have so long wanted; tells you all about vJK? 3? hose bis red apples, lucioiis reaches. ,inrt Japan plums vith theirorien'al sweetness, g. ill of which you have often >vondered where the trees th"10 irom '^at produced MM :Y?RYTHIX8 GOOD IN j ^ Unusal flue strckof SILVER ) MAPLES, young. thrifty trees Hf a tiU Smooth and strai ht, the kind that live and gr<>w off well, \'o old, rough trees. This is he most rapid growing ma|S|E/<dEj|^ tde *nd one of the raostbeau'(llJ shade trees. write lor prices ana kivo ?* wauts* |8p||j^ f. Van Liudley Nursery Co., Pomona, N. G. When writing mention the Dispatch. ! Fire, Life and Accident ; I lixii ran co. j Only First Class Com paries Represented, See my List oi Giants: Assets. /ETNA FI3E, of Hartford, Conn $13,019,411 CONTINENTAL (FIRE), of ?? v._!_ Q cnq jxew iur& . v,wv,w? PHILADELPHIA UNDERWRITERS, Phila., Pa-. 16.528,773 /?TN\ LIFE, of Hartford, Conn 47,584,967 FIDELITY AND CASUALTY, of New York 3 482,862 l?y Companies, are Popular, Strong and Keliable. No one can give yocr business better attention; no one can give jon bttter protection; no one can give yon better rates. ^BEFOBE INSCBING SEE-fe^ ilice 13. Harman, General Insurance Agent, LEXINGTON S. C. When writing mention the Dispatch. W. A. HECKLING, COLUMBIA, S. C. Is now Making THE BEST Pictures that can be bad in this country, and all who have never had a real fine pic tare, shoald now try some of bis latesi styles. Specimens can bo seen at his Gallery. np stairs, next to the Hob When writing mention the Dispatch, iOAiiiilEBM OF SOUTH CAROLINA State, City & County Depository COLUMBIA. S. C. Capital Paid in Fall $150,000 00 Surplus 3 ,000.01 Liabilities of Stockholders 150,000.00 $335,000.00 SAVllTG-S DEPARTMENT. Interest at the rate of 4 per centum per an nam paid on deposits in this department Tit US T JDEPAR1MJENT. This B*nk under special provision of it* charter exercises the office of Executor, Administrator, Trustee or Guardian of Estates, SAFETY DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT. Fire and Bnrgiar proof safety deposit for rent from $4 00 to $13 CO per year. EDWIN W. ROBERTSON, President, . A. C. HASKELL, Vice president - J. CALDWELL ROBERTSON, 2d Vice President. G. M. BERRY,Cashier. February Vi?ly When writing mention the Dispatch. Saw Mills, Light and Heavy, and Supplies. CHEAPEST AND P.EsL'. J#"Ca*t ?very day: worn 140 hand*. Lombard Iron Works and Supply Co., AUGUSTA, GKORG14. annary 27? When writing mention the Dispatch. GBOROBBRraS MAIN ST., COLUMBIA. S. C., JEWELER "d REPAIRER Etas a splendid stock of Jewelry, Watches, Clocks and Silverware. A fine line of Spectacles and Eyeglass-^ to fit every one, all for sale at lowest prices. 1&S" Beoairs on Watches first class quickly done and guaranteed, at moderate prices 60?t.f When writing mention the Dispatch. BEESWAX WANTED IK LARGE OS SMALL QUANTITIES I WILL PAY THE HIGHEST MARkc-t price tor clean ani pure Beeswax. Price governed by color and condition. RICE B*. HARMAN, At the Bazaar. Lexington, S. C. THE mmi iinuu COLUMBIA, S. C. CAPITAL $1(0 OX) 00 SURPLUS 30,000 00 ESTABLISHED 1*71. JAMliS wwuttun, rresiaent. ) JULIUS WAI KER. Vice President. EROME H. SAWYER, Cashier. DIRECTORS- James Woodrow, John a. Crawlord, Julias H. Walker. C. Fitzsim iuoas, W C Wright, W. H. Gibbes Jobn T. Sloan. T. T. Moore, J. L. Mimnaagh, E. S. Joynes. This bank solicits a share, if not all, of your business*; and will grant every f*vor consistent with safe and sound banking, tannarv 29. 1S97--Iv When writing mention the Dispatch. att tjt.'i Tsmrrun tttttctttb AUU mm* Are Best Illustrated and described In POLICE GAZETTE The Wo rid-Famous . . . . . Patron of Sports, $1.01-13 WEEKS-$1.00 il lLf I? T< *OUP. Ai>I>hE88. EICHAKL' K. FOX. Pubunker. ^ Franklin Squara, New York. The Sweetest Spot on Earth. The farm is not quite paid for. : Early and late the father and mother toiled, living sparingly and growing daily more silent and stern. The two sons, aged twelve and fourteen years, working as steadily almost as their parents, but the silence and re pression wore upon their heartp, and by degrees they becsme discouraged and then dissatisfied with their home. It was a terrible shock to the busy, preoccupied father, when by chance be overheard the two boys planning to leave home; and it did not take long to shape plans whereby the atmosphere of the whole place was ohaDged. His two manly sons were worth more to him than all the farms in the world. From a silent, apparently unsym nathcHA h? found it worth while to become once more a boy, interested in all tfc&t interested bis two boys, full of pranks and jokes, brim ming over with fun, a treasure house of tales of long ago that were far more thrilling to the bewildered boys than a dozen long books of adventure. The mother brightened up the I ! dreary home, bought some books, subscribed for more papers. She ' smiled now when her heart was < heaviest, and drew near to her sons in a way she never had time for be- 1 fore and the boys promptly adjusted themselves to the new conditions of the home, and voted it the sweetest spot on earth. ? The Farmers Are In The Saddle. i i For the first time in years the cotton farmer within reach of a Round- ( lap bale plant finds himself independent of compresses and bagging and tie men, who have grown rich out of the monopoly they have enjoyed of covering and compressing bis cotton. Besides enabling him to ^ sell his cotton in Koundlap bales at } a premium which, after paying the ( baling charge leaves him a handsome profit, the competition aroused by the presence of a round bale plant compels square bale buyers to advance their limits. How much cf the higher prices paid last fall w^s due to this competition patrons of Roundlap plants know. Why He Was Crazy. A man in the insane asylum gives the following reasons why he is crazy: "I met a young widow with a step daughter, and the widow married me. Then my father was a widower, met my step daughter and married her. That made my wife the mother in-law of her father-inlaw, and made my step daughter my mother and my father my step son. Then my step mother, the step daughter of my wife, had a son. That boy, of course, was my brother b cause he was my father's sod. He was also the son of my wife's step daughter and, therefore, her grand8od. That made me grandfather to my step brother. TheD my wife had a eon. My mother-in-law, the step sister of my eon, is also his grandmother, because he is her step son's child. My father is the brotherin-law of my child, because his step sister i9 his wife. I am the brother i r%t mr onn ??V?n ?B 1 Urt fVie ! UI UJJ OWU) " "V *W of my at'-'P grandmother. I am my mother's brother-in law, my wife is her own child's aunt, my eon is my father 8 nephew, and I am my own grandfather. And after tr)ing to explain the relationship in our family eome seven times a day to our calling friends for a fortnight I was brought here?no, came of my own will." Not Out of a Book. "By the way, said the man who had stopped at the farmhouse to water his horse, fifteen years ago a j poor boy came this way and you j took him in." "Yet-?'' queried the fatmer some- , what surprised. "You were kind to him/' went on the stranger. "You fed him, gave him words of encouragement and an old suit of clothes, put five shillings in his pocket, aod sent him on his way rej icing He told you at the } time that never would he forget jour ! kindness. Am I rigbtV' "I believe you are,' replied the farmer. "He 6aid that if he prospered he , Ij |A' 1020 MAI>' ST. l~A Solicits a ? would Bee that you never had occa 8ion to regret your kindness to a poor, struggling lad." "Land sake!" exclaimed the farmer's wife excitedly. "It sounds like a fairy tale, don't it!" "Well," continued the stranger, "be told me to tell you that he was still poor. And as he drove away the farmer went out and kicked the pump viciously, while his wife threw the rolling pin at the chickens. Money in Pecans. % The best life insurance in the " o nanan ftfnwo Thaf lfinfl *iuiiu 10 a ^;cvau giuic* auh? % of an insurance company never bankrupts. The trees are not subject to disease, and are said to live 600 years. It is moDey well invested that would be bard for the boys to throw away. Single trees have beeD known to produce more than $40 worth of nuts in a year. The nuts have never been a drug on the market. Bamberg Nurseries, H. J. & Otis Brabham, proprietors, Bamberg, S. C, have these trees for sale. Their 1000 catalogue is now ready and can be had for the asking. It describes and prices their stock of fruit and shade trees, roses, evergreens, vines, etc. Mention this paper when you write. 51 A Dismal Outlook. Flossie is six years old. "Mamma," she asked, one day, "If I get married, will I have a husband like papa? ' Yes." renlied the mother, with an imused smile. "And if I don't get married, will [ have to be an old maid, like Aunt Kate." "Yes, Flossie." "Mamma," she said, after a short pause, "it's a tough world for us wosien, ain't it?" 1634 t New Clerks are being added growing trade. Two Buyers in ? ing up merchandise for us. 5,000 Yards Cotton Flannel at <3 5,000 Yards of Fine Dres 1,000 "S Our Boston Shoe and Men's Sho< ing these. $2,00 that we are s< it t ureas neaps ana at i: If you are lookir and land at ou: Yours for JBj GLOBE DRY EC. moutcxt REET, >hare of Your Valued His Life Was Saved. i | Mr. J. E Lilly, a prominent citi| zen cf Hannibal, Mo., lately had a i wonderfnl deliverance jfrom a frighti ful death. In telling of it he pay*: | "I was taken with Typhoid Fever, that ran into Pneumonia. My lunge ' became hardened. I was so weak I i couldn't even sit up in bed. Noth| ing helped me. I expected to soon ; die of Consumption, when I heard j of Dr. King's New Discovery. One bottle gave great relief. I continued j to U36 it, and now am well and strong, I can't say too much iu its praise." This marvellous medicine is the surest and quickest cure in the world for all Throat and Lung Trou| ble. Regular sizes 50 cents and $1.00 Trial bottles at J. E. Kauf! mann's Drug store; every bottle : guaranteed. An Appropriate Reminder. He was a rackety young man and kept very late hours. He was goiDg on a loDg journey, and on bidding : farewell to his beloved, he said to I 7 i hei: "Darling, when I am far, far away, | every night I will gaze at yon star ! aDd think of thee. Wilt thou, too, gaze at yen star and think of me?"' ''I will, indeed, dearest," she replied. "If I need anything to re! mind me of you, I would chooee this very star." j "Why?" he asked. "Because it is always out so late at night and looks so pale in the mornj iog-'' Worthy of His Hire. j A stranger got off the car, and, I accosting a newsboy, asked him to ! direct him to the nearest bank. 'This way," said the "newsie," and, turning the corner, pointed to a skyscraper just across the street, j "Thank you, and what do I owe Fm. F. Fur i ar>a TVTo-i-n /U JLUtlU 1?XU;JLJU. almost daily to accommodate our sew York City are kept busy pick C. 33 Ontings at 5:, The 10:. kind. Tard3 Check Ginghams, at 5c. vroi 23,000 Yards Fine 7c. Check buy er has just clc 3S at about half tl WE HA.\rJE 0 WORTH elling for the creditors of a Large I piles of Suits, Par trices beyond the \ Lg for bargains anc r store. No troubl irgainsi, GOODS GOMPA '?IT, TIES., Pfifrnnn-cyp PnUt.fi and -JL. MtA VUUI^VI JfL. V/AA v v ? i "" ; you?'' said the gentleman, pulling a penDy out of bis pocket. 1 "A quarter, please." : "A quartei! Isn't that pretty high f for directing a man to the bank?" . 1 "You'll find, sir," said the young ' ster, "that bank directors are paid < high in Chicago." t l No Right To Ugliness. i i j ! The woman who i3 lovely in face, form and temper will always have 1 friends, but one who would be attractive must keep her health. If she is weak, sickly and all run down, she . 1 will be nervous and irritable. If she , has constipation or kidney trouble, , I her impure blood will cause pimples, . blotches, skin eruptions and a J wretched compli xion. Eleotric Bit . ; ters is the best medicine in the world to regulate stomach, liver / j and kidneys and to purify the blood. < : It gives strong ne:ves, bright eyes, . I smooth, velvety t-kin, neb complex- j ion. It will mak8 a good looking, J ( charming woman of a run-down in! valid. Oulv 50 cents at J. E. Kauf J s manu's Diug Store. f . t Not Ashamed to Own it. I r Judge Ed Jared in his recent ex| perience as a census enumerator in I Murfreesboro, had to get a 'cullud , j | lady's" census, and the following dia- I ( : logue was called off: ^ "How old are you, Mar)?" i ] "Ob, Lordy, mister, I dunno." ! "Were you born in Tennessee?" J n "N*, sah. I was bawn in Salem." i 1 "Where was your father born?" ' t "He bawu dar, too." j "Where was your mother born?'' | "She bawn in E ^gleville."' j r "Can you read?"' ! J "Yes, sab?" ' ( "Write?" ii "Yes, saL?" h "Speak EoglisL?" t "No, aah." i St., Columbia, | Until closed out we o Matchless and Unpret . th 8 1-3. Homespun at 5s. to all Dispatch n >sed a deal for 5,OOC leir regular price. E AI30XJT OF MEN S H [at House. We can sell you hats for ] its, &c., for men, bo whisper of competit: i wish to save mon( Le to find it, just fo! lKY, T-A.O-BI3, COLUMBIA, S. Prompt Attention. Oct Obituaries. Daniel Jesse, son of Andrew Corley ind wife, was born October the 22, LS89, and departed this mortal life September 30, 1900, makiDg his earthly pilgrimage 10 years, 11 nonths and 8 days. He was dedicated to God by the ite of holy baptism. Now God ]as taken him. Peace to his ashes and rest to his mmortal soul. C. A 1.? . A a i, r-iV-i f or nf T^ori ^LlLUtt I^COtl IWCj uauguvv* v* J md Emily Hoof, was born November 12, 1886, aDd departed this mortal ife October 5, 1900, making her ihort pilgrimage on earth 13 years, LO months and 23 days. She was dedicated to God in in ancy by the rite of holy baptism, md has been trained up in the Dbiistian faith, and was a faithful Sunday school scholar at the time of ier death, being a member of St. David's and Oak Grove Sunday ichcol. Father, mother, brother, sisters, md schoolmates must today bid an sarthly farewell to a loved one, but here is an eternity beyond the shores >f time, where loved one will meet, neet to part no more. C. N P. Pinckney Clogus was born lune 19, 1853, and departed this life )ctober 4, 1900, making bis earthly )ilgrimagt 4.7 years, 2 months and .5 days. Eis body was interred in it. Andrew's churchyard, there to iwait the resurrection from the dead. The funeral services were conducted >y the writer. H J. Mathias. Ad attempt was made to lynch the legro who ran into the buggy of Mr. r. W. Hydrick, near Woodford in )rangeburg couDty last week, caus g his death and seriously injuring lis wife. The negro had to be taken o Columbia and confined in the pententiary for safe keeping. I s. c. I ffer the following 'edcnted Bargains: saders. ) pairs of Ladies' Don't miss seeCATS [0 cents up. ys and children ion. 3y join the crowd Low the crowd. I c" llr^ x>ber 13* f Pretty _ Children 44 We have three children. Before the birth of the last one my wife use i four bottles of MOTHER'S FRIEND. If you had the pictures of our children, you could see al a g ance that the last one is healthiest, prettiest and ,% finest-looking of them all. Ky wife thinks Mother's Friend is the greatest and grandest remedy in the W world for expecta n t mothers."? Written by a Ken- K" tucky Attorney-at Vv- ' JTg&L iMS Wn CD I rjin prevents nine-tenths of thi I fj; flf I] suffering inctdent to child^ birth. The coming mother'! disposition and temper remain unruffled throughout the ordeal, because this relaxing, penetrating liniment relieves th? usual distress. A good-natured mothct is pretty sure to have a good-natured child, The patient is kept In a strong, healthj condition, which the child also inherits. Mother's Friend takes a wife through th; crisis quickly and almost painlessly. II assists In her rapid recovery, and ward! off the dangers that so often follow delivery. 5old by druggists for $1 a bottle. THE BRADF1ELD REGULATOR CO ATLANTA, OA. Send for our free illustrated book writtc{ xpre.sly for expectant mothers. STATE NEWS. What Our Neighbors Are Saying and Doing Condensed for Busy Readers. The Georgetown trouble is quieter but through the rural potioDs cf the county conditions are &tiil very unsafe. A car load of 6hrep was shipped from Prosperity to Columbia recently. A 13-year old boy is said to have been abducted from bis home iD Florence by a man who peddles clocks. Mr. John H Mclver, brother of Chief Justice Mclver, died at the home of his brother in Cheraw on the 8th in8t. The Republicans of the Sixth Dis trict have nominate R. A. Stewart, a Degro lawyer of the Manning bar. for Congress. Mr. J. W. Moore, of Lancaster, accidentally fell from a moving train at Rock Hill last week, and had hie left hand cut cff By a vote of 40 to 37 the voters of Propperity decided at an election held on Monday of last week to establish a dispensary in that town. In the third primary Tranham received the nomination for Sheriff of Kershaw county by a majority of 19 votes. There will be a contest. A pig of a York county negro rooted up a pot of English gold, in dominations ranging from $5 to $20. It is thought that M^j >r Furgurson buried the pot while on hip way to meet dtfeat at the battle of King's Mountain. Mr. Dave H. "Witherspoon, who was at one time a compositor in the Dispatch office, was ii jured at NcwVvorrtr mcflnllr nrt thp nf the KUk * J *N.-v r Columbia, Newberry aDd Laurens R R Co, by falling through a bole thereon. There is some talk of a suit for damages. The Prosperity Voice cf the People has changed from a patent outside to an all home priot, and it also shows many other evidences of the successful effjrts of its energetic and enterprising manager to givo the people of Prosperity and virility a paper worthy their support. The Baptist church cf Brookland, of which the Rev. J. E Daren is the pastor, was dedicated last Sunday. The Rev. T. M Biiley, of Greenville, preached the dedicatory sermon. Work was started on this building last June and it is ro:v c<m pleted and free from debt, as a result of the persevering industry of the Baptist brethren and sisters of that town. Pelion, in Lexington county, on tUI ClI^ CA.cuaiuu VA IUV Railway, sent a car load of lumbrr to Prosperity, in Newberry county, last week. This is but another evi dence of the developing power < f * r ilroad. Had this road not been built, the lumber industry of that section of the county would rot have been developed, and the pine forests there would have remained in tbeir primeval state. To collect a j ldgtneDt of $428, which was lodged in bis office against the Southern Railway Company, Sheriff Buford chained a freight train tn th#? tranb at. \awVk?rr? nntil tbe moDey was forthcoming. After a delay of several hours tbe Southern's officials came to taw and No. 862 went on her way toward the setting sun. Mrs. Margaret Ricbel Senn, widow of the late Captain R. D. Senn, lately died at her home in Colombia, after a long and painful illness, in tbe 78'h year of her age. She waa born in this (Lexington) county in 1823, and was the daughter of the Hon. Louis Pou, but has been living in Columbia since 1845. Mrs. Senn was a devoted and consistent member cf the Washington Street Methodist church in the city of her adoption, and those who were acquainted wi.b her bear testimony to her exemplary life, her deep piety and her beautiful Chistian graces. Her rera tins now r^st besile those of her Lusband iD Elmwood. Mr. S A Pearce. who has charee of the census for this district, it mistaken in bis claim that "Near Brookland is really a part of Columbia," as he i3 reported to have made the other day. Unlike the other suburbs mentioned by him, Brookland is no part or parcel of Columbia, and is not even a suburb of that city, because "it is really not an 'outlaying part' cf the city.*' It is situated in a different county (the grand old "State of Lexington'') with a broad river dividing it from Columbia. It baa its own municipality; its own large commodious business houses, with its I'^e and progressive business men. Its people are Lexingtonians by birth or adoption and all tneir interests are wedded to Lexington county. Near Eowesville, in Orangeburg county, a negro attempted to assault a youDg lady of prominent family, lately. Sbe screamed and the negro was pursued and caught. His captors grimly used a knife instead of rope and the negro was turned loose a tenible and living warning. An exchange dishes out the following advice to young meD: "My son, follow not in the footsteps of a loafer and meke no example of him who is born tired, for verily I say unto you their business is over stocked, the seats in the corner are all taken, and the wbitling places are all occupied. It is better to saw wood at two bits a cord tban to whittle in a loafing match and cu98 the government. My son, away with the cigarette habit; for lc! thy breath stinketh like a glue a factory, and tbv appearance is less intelligent than a stone dummy. Yej, thou art a cipher with the rim knocked cff " To mistake one's talents or overrate one's ability is always ridiculous and often dangerous. In most proposals the young lady is pressed for an answer. When a sum in arithmetic doesn't come out right it is a total wreck. Some magazine poetry should be used as ammunition for the magazine guns. The man who is unable to find his match may have to go to bed in the dark. Shortly after the wedding march many a man discovers that he is an April fool. The only perfon a confidence man -- ?- ?tnnor | can rope in is uuu wuu uuoou ? the ropes. [ A girl who ia an accomplished co1 quet can dirt a fan and at the same time fan a flirt. Tbe smaller the girl the larger the doll to appease her incipient maternal affection. Cheap Rates to the County Fair. The Southern Riilway will sell round trip tickets to Lexington and return, account of the Lexington County Fair, as follows: CAumbis, 55 cent?; BarFs, 20 cent?; Gilbert, 40 cents; Leesvilie, 70 cents; Batesburg, 80 cents; Ridge Spring, ?1 20; Johnson, $1 60; Trenton, $1 80; Edgefield, ?2 00; Graniie; ville, $2:40; Augusta, $2 75. c/>v?or?ii]o r.f the 8Decial train. iUC IT in addition to the regular passenger I trains, will be as follows: Leave TrentoD, 5:00 a. m.; Johnston, 5:20 a. m.; Ridge Spring, 5:40 a. tn ; Bate6burg, 7:00 a. m.; Leeaville, 7:15 a. m ; arrive at LexingloD, 8:20 a m. L^ave Columbia, 6:30 a. rn., Blatding Street; arrive at Lexington, S:20 a. m. A fine lot of Guinea Pigs for sale ebeap by the pair. Icquire at the Dispatch office.