The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, October 24, 1900, Image 1
v?
fe. -rsr-^. ADVERTISING RATES.
V- 'BT*sn?Ti??tKtN* 'pij *-* | CVIM/TTAM niCO A TVl-f zsxezekz
- ??,????? 1 fiti LdAIHUIUiN l/loi a i tn.j?~::
RATES REASONABLE. ?r.g to udv?,rti&e for thro*?. eix and thtlve
? ' months.
O Notices in the local column 5 cents per
ubscbiptios 31per annum & Kcpresentatioe Beurspaper. Bowers Lexington and the Borders of the Surrounding Bounties Like a Blanket. ? ? ?.
??? ? J cent a word, wi en they exceed 100 word*.
O ? " Marriage notices inserted free
,1)11 PRIMING k SPEfl.UTV. VOL. xxx. Lexington, s. c., Wednesday, October 24. 1900. no. 501 ^ ?**..
.
i ?e?a?bbmb? i
rgji
- Jj Piil'IT TREES 1
Jj^ST hat Grow and Bear Fruit.
Write for mir 60 page ilVv
titrated Catalogue and 40
ign iia'iphh-t, "Flow to
^ *iant and Cultivate an Orh-?rd,M
(_>i\>'s you that in/3SS>fg^y
" rnation v.?u have s<> long
" ^ ' - ? - ..11
P' .arueu: ieus you mi uvum
' .3* ios<- big ted pples. Juoions
>eaches, and Jap:n plums
viih tbeirorienia!sweetness,
g. til of which you have often
rendered where the trees
^nr'e from ihat produced
MihiVcHYTHIN? GODD IN
FSUITS.
J' rJfc tJmisal finest-ckof SILVER
-1% *7* 5IAPL E>, you ear, thrifty trees
vP 0* Ms ^ ~ruoott; andstrai lit, the kind
h;t Jive and gr--w off well,
N0 o!(1" rough trees. This is
he most npid growing ma.?le
..ndoiie of the mostbeauif:l'
shade trees.
Write for prices and give
ist of wants.
f,^an >llirscr>' c?.,
Pomona. N. C.
I
Wuen writing mention the Dispatch.
Fire. Life and Accident
Insurance.
Only First Class Companies Represented.
See ay List ol Giants:
/ETNA F1RF, c-f Hartford,
C01111 G13,019,411
CONTINENTAL ( FIKE >, of
Kew York 9.809,660
PHILADELPHIA UNDERl
WAITERS, rhila., Pa-- 16.523,773
/ETNA LiFE, cf Hartford,
Conn 47,584,967
FIDELITY AND CASUALTY,
of New York 3 482.862
My Companies, ere Popular, Strong nd
Reliable. No one can gtve jour business
better attention; no one can
give you better protection; no
one can give jou betttr
rates.
J3TBEFORE ^INSURING SFE?3t
liice 13. Ilarman,
General Insurance Ay eat,
LIXINGTON S C.
When writing mention the Dispatch.
W. A. RECMiMi,
COLUMBIA, S. C.
Is now making the best Pictures
that can be bad in this country,
, and all who have never bad a real line pic- |
tare, should now try some of his latest
stvies. Specimens can be seen at his Gal
lerv n;> stairs. uf>xt to the Huh
When writing mention the Dispatch,
' LOAAffiCIIAAGEBAl;
OF SOUTH CAROLINA
State, City & County Depositors <
COLUMBIA. S. C. i
Capital Raid ia Full $150 000 0< |
Surplus 3 ,000.0<
Liabilities of Stockholders 150,000. Ot 1
$335.000.0<
savings department. 1
Interest at tL-e rate ol 4 per cen'um per an '
uurn paid on deposits in this department i
2JUST DEPARTMENT. ,
This B--nk under specwi provision of it?
charter exercises the office of Executor
Administrator. Trustee or Guardian of Es
taxes.
SAFETY DEPOSIT DEPARTSfiEST. '
Fire and burg;ar pro .1 safety depos> I
tor rent from $4 00 to $12 CO pt-r year. ,
EDWIN W. ROSLP.TiSON,
President
A. C. EASEELL,
Vice President
J. CALDWELL ROBEKISON,
2d Vice President.
G. M. BERRY,Cashier.
Pehr-jarv T4-- ly
When writing mentioD the Dispatch.
vav/ Iv1111S
Ligh: iin'i Heavy, arid Siippiitn.
CHEAPEST AND BEST,
everyday; wor* laO ban da.
Lombard Iron Works
and Supply Co.,
AUGUSTA, GkG^GiA.
p unary 27 When
writing mention the Dispatch.
. 0EOBSB BBTT2TS
MAIN ST.. COLUMBIA, S.C.,
JEWELER "d REPAIRER
Has a splendid stock of Jewelry, Watches,
Clocks and Silverware. A fine line of
Spectacles and Eyeglasses to fit every one,
an lor saie at lowest prices.
Bepairs on Witches first class i
<- ic-kly done and guaranteed, at moderate <
f prjros so?t.f.
When writing nr.entiin ihePisratch. J
"beeswax wanted !
15 LAR3L OR SMALL QUANTITIES '
I WILL PAY THE Li ill EST MARk<-t
price lor clean an 1 pare bet swax.
Price governed by color and condition, 1
RICE E. HARMAN,
At the 3azaar. Lesliiffton, S. C.
THE
mm ubus ;
COLUMBIA, S. C.
CAPITAL $100.000 00
SURPLUS 3u,i00 00
ESTABLISHED 1-71.
urAi\f\^Aiir T> : i
>JA nuui/nwii, r reeuueub. i
JULfUs WAT KER Vice President. ,
EROME II SAWYER. Cashier.
DIRECTORS - Janies Woodrow, John A |
CrawJord, Julius H Walk. r. C. Fi'zsim
loons, Vv C Wright, W. H. Gibbes '
John T. Sloan. T. T. Moore, J. L. Mimnangh.
K. S Jovnes.
rpiiis BANK SOLlCiTS A SHARE, IF 1
JL not ail. of your business, and w.l) j
giant every favor consistent with safe and
sound banking.
'annarv 1fif?7--Tv
When writing mention the Dispatch.
ALL BIG- B0ZI1TG EVENTS
Are Best Illustrated and '"eserioed in |
POLICE GAZETTE
The I*'o rid-Pa mo us . .
. . . Patron of Sports.
$i.2C--13 W?EKS~$1.CC
>1 1LKi? T< i'OU K A i?J>KKtSss.
KlCHA;tl> K. FOX F..bnVhrr.
Franklin Square, New York.
[
I
BgHBaaKflBHBaBBnBHHBHEBBBi
ijUJI !
wmrM
ffjrlF
Fock=a=Bye Babyj
These are sweet words, but how much
pain and suffering they used to mean. It's
different now. Since Mother's Friend has
become known expectant mothers have
been spared much of the anguish of childbirth.
Mother's Friend is-a liniment to be
applied externally. It is rubbed thoroughly
into the muscles of the abdomen. It gives
elasticity and strength, and when the final
great strain comes they re-por.d quickly and
easily without pain. Mother's Friend is
never taken internally. Internal remedies
at this time do more harm than good. If a
woman is supplied with this splendid liniment
she need never fear rising or swelling
breasts, morning sickness, or any of the
discomforts which usually accompany pregnancy.
The proprietor of a large hotel in Tampa,
Fla.. writes: "My wife had an awful time
with her first child. During her second
pregnancy. Mother's Friend was used and
the baby was born easily before the doctor
arrived. It's certainly great."
Get Mother's Friend at the
drugstore. $1 per bottle.
THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.,
Atlanta, Ga.
Write for our free illustrated book. " Before Baby
Is Born."
Another Side of Farming.
Spartanburg Free Lunce.
The mercantile side cf farming has
been too much overlooked. We bave
been accustomed to think that otbers
should run that for us. We have been
so much engrossed in producing that
we have not given as much thought
to selling as we should have donp.
There are so many sharp traders in
every lice ready to mar age that frr
as, that we have quietly submitted
to their management, and. cf course,
ihey have looked after tb?-ir own in
terest. The result is that all we !
make i? consumed and yet we remain
poor. More than this, every class is
making more money out of our produce
than we make.
selling cotton.
Take cotton, the most important
money producing crop we grow. We
bave given more thought to this than
sny other, and how does this stand?
Even body gets better pay than the
producer. The picker gets gocd
wages fur picking; the ginner gets
good pay for ginniDg; the bagging
and tie men get immense profits,
furnishing the covering; the warebouse
men get good profits weighing
and storing, aod many of them bave
accumulated large fortunes in this
businrs ; the insurance companies
make very large money from every
:rop the sampler and street or
wagon buyers make gocd wages; the
railroad and ship companies make
larger profits than on any ether class
J freight; the compress men get immensely
rich rqieezicg the badly
picked bales: the larger buyers start
in I Uiiness with little or no money
and get to Le millionaires; bsokers
=;et handsome profits, furni-hing the
cash and pajing the bills; the manu J
faclurers double their capital and j
pay large dividends-; lastly but mostly
[be speculators?a vast army of
-harp traders and schemers wbodeal j
in Cotton iu sight and out cf sight,
and gamble iu options to the ruiu
and hurt of thousands of honest men
?often roll in wealth, when they
should be toiling iu chains.
Thus we see these fifteen classes
if men all makiDp Drofits. sometimes
"" D CT '
immense fortunes, and many others
incidentally getting a good liviDp,
while we often sell at less than tLe
cost of production. Take manufac
tured goods and follow them back to
the consumer aDd the man who
grows the cotton is a veiy liberal
consumer, and fine almost as many
profits attached. We stll a pound of
cotton for from six to eight cents
and sew cn our buttons with thread
for which we pay a dollar perpou^d.
None of these people are to blame
for making what tbey can and do.
They are only locking out for stlf
^ k.,f rr- kl "frvr '
luiricci, uu u r?c aio iu i/i?uuv i
selling tfcem our cotton without first ^
getting a profit for ourtelvrfi.
ii; w can this he djnk
\
First we must own the cotton. We j
can nfver control the sale of a mort- ;
gaged cr< p, or a crop made upod j
piovisiols bought od time. We (
\
SM TXT.
xRli
Hy l?SO MAIIV WTE
3N ? ci
C5U1IUIIS Cl k^i
must raise our own supplies and own i
tie cotton. This has been often said, i
but we have not yet learned what it j
really means. Then we must dis- I
tribute the sale through the twelve ;
months. By doing this we will avoid j
the numerous go-be-tweens and get
Dearer to the manufactories. "We ,
can thus step the forced sale we have :
been makiDg. We can avoid the an- i
nual glut of warehouses, railroads
aDd money markets. When we have j
done this, we can have a voice in the !
price. We have a practical monopoly
of growiog this great and essential
crop of American cotton. We
lose all the immense advantage for
want of business methods in selling.
- - - .1
When we get in this shape inaDy oi
us,wbfn.we found a cotton crop on
hand for which we cculd not get a
a Batisfactory price, would hold it
aDd quit makiDg cotton and give our
attention to something else until the
price W88 satisfactooy. Oi course
this means a great revolution in our
methods, but that is just what we
need aDd must have if we are ever to
get fair prices for farm products.
What I have said about cotton is
equally true of maDy other crops.
The seed of thecotton is another illustration.
Most of us sold oui seed last
season for about fourteen cents per
but-hel or less. A few who held od
get tweDty-five to thirty-five cents.
All could just as well have gotten
twenty five cents if tbey had waiied
Cotton seed are woith twenty five
cents to us, !hey are worth over that
to the oil mill men,aod why should
we sell them at fourteen cent:? I
trust that the farmers will read the
above caiefully and heed its meaning.
C. A. Wingo.
n .1 t_ o n
xvoeuucs, o
There is more Catarrh in this section
of the country than all other
diseases put together, and until tbelast
few years was supposed to be
incurable. For a great many years
doctors pronounced it a local disease,
and prescribed local remedies, and
by constantly failing to cure with
local treatment, pronounced it incurable.
Science has proven catarrh to
be a constitutional disease and therefore
requires constitutional treat- J
ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manu- j
factured by F. J. Cheney & Co., !
Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional
cure on the market. It is j
taken internally in doses from 10
drops to a teaspoonful. It acts
directly on the blood and mucous
surfaces of the 6ystem. They offer
one hundred dollars for any case it
fails to cure. Send for circulars and
testimonials. Address.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
The Twelfth Census.
Washington, October 17.?The !
enumeration rf the twelfth census is
completed and the enumerators :ire j
practically all paid. There were 53,000
enumerators and 297 supervisors j
The cost of the enumeration will be j
about ?4,200,000.
. - . I
The whole force of the census bureau
is being concentrated on the
work of tabulating the statistics already
gathered. The repoit of the j
census bureau when completed will :
occupy 8 volumes of a 1,000 pages.
The woik of the present census i* j
heavier by several million inhabitants j
than ever before,'but Director Her-'
riam thinks it will be ready for the j
public six weeks earlier than hereto- I
fore.
It Happened in a Drug Store.
"One day last winter a lady came
to my drug store and asked for a
brand cf cough medicine that I did
not have in stock," 6?ys Mr. C. It j
Grandin, the popular druggist of j
Ontario, N. Y. "She was disappoint !
ed and wanted to know what cough |
preparation I could recommend. I I
said to her that I could freely recommend
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy !
and that she could take a bottle of i
the remedy aod sfter giving it a fair j
trial it she did not find it worth the I
money to bring back the bottle and
I would refund the price paid. I.,
the course of a day oe two the lad.,
came back in company with a friend
in need of a cough medicine and ad I
vised her to buy a bottle of Cham j
berlaiu's Cough Remedy. I coDnde- j
that a veiy yo<;d i< coojmeDcUuo
for the remedy." Ii is for Bale by J
E. Ktufwaun.
GLOBE m
sc. 2^OI>TC:S:'
tEET,
iare of Your Yalu<
~ TO 1
who m:i
I will say that we have outdon
the gi(
Men's, Boy's a:
oveiicoats,
hats,
underv
nec
a:
Our Fall and Winter Suits are
style and lit, which makes tl
it a pleasure to treat peopl
factory way
MEN'S SUITS, $7 50, $
ci 11 TO O QO
au T <j owi i <J, c- \s,
CHILDREN'S SUITS,
Everybody in Lexington knov
pleasin
1523 1CAX2T S1]
OcfoVipr 17--1OJ??.
ESTABL
B I ^
Fine C
.IT REASOI
We ta
to ou
custc
our
i Retail Gross;
i
i
i
I
|
I
.
I
i
j Please visit our Establish
i S
i
Seasona
!' whether you wish to purch
vour visit and trust
LORIGK &
WHOLESALE ANI
COLUMBIA,
JUL! ], lv.
PANTS! PAN
We now have on hand the larg
line of Men's, Hoys' and Chil
Mackintoshs, Box Coats, 1
Lexinerton. ()ur oualitv
the CHEAPEST. \V
Lexington or (
SEE THESE GOOD
We have the tost line of
Leather Leggings, Hunti
Neckwear, Gloves, Col
and Notion
We are out for
a call, it will c<
Icok at our stoc]
Lcanliari
B
X-escin.^
October 3 tf.
' GOODS COM?
ro:LT, cn=3., 2
id Patronage. Polite an<
rwo sib
ID CLOTIM
e our previous efforts in showing the
?atest stock of
id Oiiildren's Suits,
fEAR,
KWEAR,
sD OTHER FURNISHINGS.
far above the average as to quality,
lem thoroughly reliable. We find
e squarely?it is the only satisof
doing business.
8 50, S I 0, $ ! 2 and S I 5.
3 50, 4 00 5 00 and 6 50
I 50, 2 50 and 3 50
rs the reputation of our goods in
ig the people.
COLUMBIA, s, c. '
[SHED 1865.
Groceries
(ABIE PRICES.,
ke pleasure in announcing
r many friends and formerj
mersthat we have reopened
ry Departmental
and it is now elegantly stocked |
with New and Tempting;
Goods. This Department is
one of the best organized
branches of our business, and j
goods are offered therein at [j
prices that will meet with jl
public favor. j|
lent and inspect our well assorted j
tock of jj
ble Goods, ||
iase or not. We will appreciate !j
to merit vour patronage.
LOWRANCEj
D RETAIL GROCERS,
- SCJ_
J J.
ITS!! PANTS!!!
est, most stylish and most attractive
Idren's Clothing, Pants, Overcoats,
Etc., ever shown in the town of
' is the best and our prices are
e will not be undersold by
Columbia merchants.
S EEFORiE VOU BUY.
Shoes, Rubber Shoes, Army and
.ag Coats, Shirts, Underwear,
lars, Cuff*, Hats, Umbrellas
s of ove-y kind.
business. Give us
Dst you nothing to
k.
t ?)
! a uraus,
=rtcn, s. c.
ANY.
nsr^o-iEis.
COLUMHIA, H
1 Prompt Attention.
0<
I SOUND SENSE FROM MR. STEELE.
i
: Solid Reasons Why Roundlap Bales
j Are Worth More Than Square
Bales.
Mr. J. H W Steele, Secretary of
the Texas Standard Bde Compress
Association, in a letter written to the
West Times, June 30, says: "Let me
say a plain word to a plain people:
For the same reason that you pay more
for a good coat than you would for a
ragged and sleezy one, so will the
Englit-h and German spinner pay
more for a neat, dense, well covered
1 bale than he will for what is left of
an unsightly bag. which has lost half
its value by wet, waste, pilfery and
dirt."
bor exactly tins reason rpmners
pay more for R undlap than for
square bales of any size whatever.
i It is precisely b<cau?e Roundlap
! bales are "neat, dense, well covered,"
protected against fire, moisture,
waste, theft aud damage, that they
are worth more to spinners than an
"unsightly" square "bag which has
lost half its value by wet, waste, pil- I
fery and dirt" It is precisely for
this reason, also, and because of the
savings made in the wrapping,
! handling and shipment of Rcundlsp
bales that buvers are able to and do
I ~
pay for them a premium above the
value of tquare bales sufficient to
pay the baling charge and leave the
owner a substantial profit b sides.
AT THE PENITENTIARY.
Superintendent Griffith Wants a Rebate
for Power Not Furnished.
Tbe Co!umbii Stato.
Work on the new penitentiary building
will proabably be finished by
January 1st. One floor has been
finished and two thirds cf another
is neasly done.
Captain D. J. Griffith, tbe Superintendent,
states that about $25,000
of the penitentiary's earnings will be
spent in permanent improvements
this year. A barn has been built at
the S.'ate farm, tbe reformatory has
been built, tbe roof of tbe hosiery
mill is to be overhauled, ard other improvements
made at tbe big stoc kade.
Captain Giiffi h has lodged a complaint
that the penitentiary can
not obtain regular power to operate
tbe hosiery mill. They have
been using the engines and boilers
for three weeks. Tbe mill has a
contract for power to be supplied by
tbe electric power company, and Captain
Griflrh wants pay for the time
when the power is not supplied.
Millions Given Away.
It is certainly gratifying to the
public to know of one concern in the
land who are not afraid to be gene
rous to the needy and suffering.
1 be proprietors oi Dr. Jtiing 8 iNew
Discovery for Consumption, Cjughs
and Colds, have given away over ten
million trial bottles of this great
medicine; and have the satisfaction
of knowing ii has absolutely cured
thousands of hopeless cases. Asthma,
Bronchiti?, Hoarseness and all
diseases of the Tbroat, Chest and
Lungs are surely cured by it. Call
on J. E Kaufmann, Druggist, and
get a free trial bottle. Regular size
50c. and $1. Every bottle guaranteed,
or price refunded.
?
When a rich man suddenly becomes
poor, or a poor man suddenly
| becomes rich, his true character
crops out.
No other pills can equal DeWitt's
Little E irlv Risers for promptness,
certainty and efficiency. J. E K iuf
maun.
Exports of com from this country
have risen from 20,7G8,213 bushels
in 1891 to 209,348,273 bushels in
1899. Bat little of this amount has
been used for any other purpose than
cattle fcol, the foreigner as yet not
appreciating corn as a food for himself
and fam.ly.
For npiaiQ", swellings and lame1
ness there is nothing so good as
! Chamberlain's Pain Balm. Try it. :
I For sale by J E. Kaufmann.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxitive Bromo Q linine
Tabhfcs. All diuggibts refund th?
money if it fails to cure. E W
Giovt'd bignutureisoneach box. 25c.
?tober I3tf
Dots and Dashes.
Smoke Sweet Violets. They can
be bad at the Bizaar.
Woff >rd C >llege now ha3 an en
rollment of 22'.) students.
The gross income of the railroads
of the State for the year ending June
30, was over ?8,000,000.
This is the season when mothers
are alarmed on account cf croup. It
is quickly cured by Oue Minute
Cough Cure, which children like to
take. J. E. Ktufmann.
Secretary H< lloway reports that
entries to the Slate Fair ate coming
in and he is kept busy.
Scores of farmers in Darlington
couDty will realize $100 per acre
from their tobaeco crop this year.
The best method of cleausing the
liver is the use of the famous little
pills known as DeWitt's Little E irly
Rivera. E?sy to take. Never gripe.
J E Kaufmann.
The machinery for the Eaaley cot
ton mill is fast being plact-u in posi
tion and ere loDg the wheels will beMn
fA rtVAlra
giu IU 1C ? Jlf c.
The membership of the Chrittian
Temperance Workers in this State
numbers more than a 1,000 women
and children.
hi CURES WHERE All ELSE FAILS. JgT
M Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use gj
Ed la time. Sold by druggists, gf
Work will 6oon begin on the birracks
for the Uuited States soldiers
at Sullivan's island, the land having
been condemned.
One Marion farmer i9 out more
than a $1,000 because he coDtr&cUd
last spiing to sell his cotton crcp at
seven cents.'
Torturing skin eruptions, burns
and eores are soothed at once and
promptly healed by applying DeWitt's
Witch Hazel Salve, the be-t
known cure for piles. Beware of
worthless counterfeits. J. E. Kiufmann.
More than one hundred girls aie
boarding out at Winthrop College on
account of the crowded condition of
the building. The new domitory is
badly needed.
A short while ago an operative in
the Union cotton mill was stung by a
spider. In a short while signs of
blood poisoning set in, and within
twenty four hours he died.
M. M. Moore, Clerk City Council,
(Jjlumbup, (*<?., writes: 1 bave
kcowD Teethina (Teetbipg Powd^i)
to remove worms when all other
remedies had failed.
There will be do more Saturday
holiday at Winthrop. The authorities
have decided that it would be
better for all concerned that the
weekly holiday shall be on Monday
instead of Saturday.
The Harris Lithia Springs property
has been sold to a syndicate of
Philadelphia and Augusta capitalists,
Mr. Harris retaining a considerable
of stock in the company. The capi
tal stock of the concern is to be
$125,000.
Buck?boal, N C, May 16,1898.
Gentlemen:?Four years ago I was
helpless with a misery in my back.
I could not return myself in bed. I
was treated by my physician, but he
did me no good. I took one bottle
of Dr. Baker's Female Regulator and
it cured me. I think there is no
medicine on earth like it.
Mrs. Emma E. Myers.
For sale at the Bazaar.
The women have got up a discussion
whether a wife ought to open
her husband's letters. None of tb*m
ever really does il, but she won't even
admit to the others that it is because
olio r?.icor,*r rtarn to
U JOVU V V-*Ui V VV.
Father?"I think you'd better seed i
that young man about bis business.
He doesn't seem to be very steady."
Daughter?"Why, father, he calls ;
every night but Saturday. He
couldn't be much steadier than that."
"For three diys and nights I suffered
agony untold from an attack of j
cholera morbus brought on by eating i
cucumbers," says M. E Lowihcr,
clerk of the district court, Centerville,
Iowa. "I thought I should
auiely die, and tried a doz n diffVr- j
put medicines but all to uo purp se. J
I bent for a b >ttle of Chamberlain's J
C ?lic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy
and three doses relievtd me en- j
tirely." This remedy is for tale b) J
J. E Kaufmann.
Brave Men Fall
Victims to stomal b, liver and kidney
troubles as well as women, and
all feel the remits in lo&s of appetite,
prisons in the blood, backache, nervousness,
headache and tired, listlesp,
run-down feeling. But there's no
need to feel like that. Listen to J.
W. Gardner, IJaville, Ind. He says:
''Electric Bitters are just the thing
Lr a man when be is all lun down,
and don't care whether be lives or
dies. It did more to give me new
strength and good appetite than
aDyihinff i could take. I can now
eat anything and have a Dew lease on
life." Ouly 50 cents, at J E. Kaufraann'sDtug
Store. Every bottle
guaranteed.
One day, btfore the late Lord Russell
was elevated to the bench, he
was sitting in court, when another
barrister, leaning across the benches
during the hearing of a trial for bigamy,
whispered: * Russell, what's the
penalty for bigamy?" ''Two mothersin-law,''
instantly replied Russell.
Homely women have odo consolation.
It is only the beautiful, or at
least the pretty hd(1 interesting, who
are mentioned in the newspapers in
connection with suicides and scandals.
Dr. W. H. L^wi?, Lxwrenceville,
Va., writes, ''I am u?ing Kodol Dyspepsia
Cure in my practice among
severe cases of indigestion and find
it an admi'bble remedy." Many
u . t ?i : J i
UUUUltiUS U1 pUy SIUl^UP uepcuu upuu
the use cf K >dol Dyspepsia Cure in
stomach troubles. It digests what
you ea', and allows you to eat all the
good food you need, providing you
do not overload your stomach Gives
instiDt relief and a permanent cure.
J. E Kaufmann.
The iifluence of good humor on
life are manifold. A happy disposition
helps in business, increases the
pleasure of others, makes its owner
contented, assists him to forget mental
worry and eo preeerves his health.
Brown?I never saw such a fellow
as White is. It takes him so long to
make up his mind. Black?Not at
all. I have known him to make up
his mind ten times in half an hour,
aDd in a different way every time.
Ramon's Tonic Liver Pills, a pleasant
remedy for all diseases arising
from a disordered or torpid liver.
Thev are the modern cure for constipation,
biliousness, sick headaches,
specks before the eyes, etc. They
do not sicken or gripe, mild inaction,
thorough iD effect. Only one a dose,
augur coated and pleasant to take.
Price, 25 cents a box. at the Bazaar.
Mr Kawdle?"I wish you wouldn't
interrupt me every time I try to say
somethiug. Do I ever break in when
you're talking?'' Mrs. Kawdle?"No,
you wretch! Yju go to sleep.
' What becomes of all the pins
used?" is the question just now worrying
half the world. It is evident
that tbo^e who are puzzled over this
simple proposition never tried walking
on the fl jor nights in their barefeet.
A new remedy for biliousness is
now on sale at J. E. Kaufmann's
drug store. It is called Chamberlain's
Stomach end Liver Tablets.
It gives quick relief aod will prevent
the attack if given as soon as
the first indication of the disease
appears. Price, 25 cents per box.
Slj rnrloa frat>
WUUirvu
When you have no appetite, do
not relii-h your food and feel dull
affcr eating you may know that you
need a dose of Chamberlain's Stomach
and Liver Tablets. Pace, 25
cents. Samples free at J. E. Kaufmann's
drug store.
President Wilborn, who has been
traveling in the State, in the interest
of the Cjtton Growers' Association,
sajs the movement is being enthusiastically
supported. The convention
to meet in Columbia during the State
Fair will be largely attended.
While Captain C F. Camp, pas
senger conductor on the Asheville,
Spartanburg aDd Columbia Railroad,
was attempting to put cflf hi9 train a
boisterous and drunken white man
at Pacolet depot who would not pay
his fare, the man seizjd Mr. Camp's
It-ft hand in his mouth and bit it
bidly. Mr. C imp's arm is badly
swollen his band having been poisoned
by the bite.
+. ?
Red Hot From the Gun
Was the ball that hit G. B. Steadman,
of Newark, Mich., in the Civil
War. It caused horiible Ulcers that
ho treatment helped for 20 years.
Tnen BickUn's Aroic* Salve cured
him. Cures Cuts, Bruises, Burns,
Bjils, Felous, Cjrns, Skin Eruptions.
B t-t Pile cure od earth. 25 eta., a
box. Cure guaranteed. Sold by
J E. KiufuiahD, Druggist.