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THE LEXINGTON DISPATCH.! j & Bepresentative Reurspaper. Savers Lexington and the Borders of the Surrounding Bounties tihe a Blanhet. VOL. XXXI. LEXINGTON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, Al(i 1ST 21. 1901. NO. dl ) BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM ?IN? WESTERN SOUTH CARUUNA. ?o? bates seasonable. ?o subscription si per annus: o JOB PRINTING A SPECIALTY. Queen Quality XV OXFORDS C\f $0.50 There is nothing to compare with them. If you want a pair ? ^ ? -1 r j jot uxiorus ior urt'ss vuu uic j seen to be correctly dressed if I you wear the QUEEN QUALITY. LEVER, '"THE SHOE MAN," - 1603 Main Street, COLUMBIA, - - S. C. Feb. 6 - ly. IMSUBAi OF SOUTH CAROLINA State, City & County Depositors COLUMBIA. S. C. Capital Paid in Full $150,000.00 Surplus 60,000.00 Liabilities of Stockholders 150,000.00 $360,000.00 SAYING'S DEPARTMENT. Interest at the rate of 4 per centum per annum paid on deposits in this departm ent TRUST DEPAR1MJENT, This Bank under special provision of its charter exercises the office of Executor, Administrator, Trustee or Guardian of Estates. SAFETY DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT. Fire and Burglar proof safety deposit for rent from $4 00 to $12 00 per year. EDWIN W. ROBERTSON, President, A. C. HASKELL, Vice President ' J. CALDWELL ROBERTSON, 2d Vice President G. M. KEiiiiX.uasmer. February 12?ly. When writing mention the Dispatch. IN CONFIDENCE, Don't oive me away, And I'll tell you the remedy of the day, Listen! it is L. L. and Z. It makes the system clean and pure, Will health and strength to you secure. Strictly a vegetable preparation, Mild and pleasant in its operation 2To need for nostrums just made to sell, Its Life for the Liver that makes WVB well. HILTON'S LIFE FOE TEE LIYEB AND SIDNEYS. Wholesale by the MURRAY DBCG CO., Columbia. S. C. For Sale at THE BAZAAR. Mav 15?ly. When writing mention the Dispatch. PARLOR RESTAURANT, 1336 MAIN STREET. COLUMBIA, - S. C., The only up-to-date eating House of its kind in the City of Coinmhia It is well kept?clean linen, prompt and polite service apd get it quickly. Quiet and order always prevail. Yon get what yon order and pay only for what y on get. Within easy reach of desirable sleeping apartments. OPEN ALL NIGHT. B. DAVID, Proprietor. February 20. GEOP.C-E BHUNS MAIN ST., COLUMBIA, S. C., JEWELER "d REPAIRER Has a splendid stock of Jewelry, Watches, Clocks and Silverware. A fine line oi Spectacles and Eyeglasses to.at every one, all for sale at lowest prices. pS* Bepairs on Watches first class quickly done and guaranteed, at moderate prices. .. 50?tf. When writing mention the Dispatch. DR. E. J. ETHEfiEDGE, SUKGKON DENTIST, LEESVILLE, S. C. Office next door below post office. Always onhand. February 12. ENGINES BOILERS. Tanks, Stacks, Stand Pipes and Sheet-Iron Work; Shafting, Pulleys, Gearing, Boxes, Hangers, etc. Mill Castings. *yCaet every day; work 200 hands. LOMBARD IRON WORKS & SUPPLY C AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. January 27? BEESWAX WANTEDIN LARGE OR SMALL QUANTITIES I WILL PAY THE HIGHEST MARket price lor clean and pare Beeswax. Price governed by color and condition. RICE B". HARMAN, >*. the Bazaar. Lexington, S. C. For Sale. 1-SEVEN HORSE POWEPv POKTABLI Engine and a complete well boring ont fit. For further particulars, apply to o: address, A. J. FOX, Dec. 5?tf, Lexington, S. C. i if/Min ^ [ Scrofula THE OFFSPRING i OF HEREDITARY 1 i BLOOD TAINT. V . I Scrofula is but a modified form of Blood Poison and Consumption. The parent t who is tainted by either will see in th? s child the same disease /C? manifesting itself in ^ the form of swollen j t glands of the neck and j throat, catarrh, weak i?3f'* r~ ^ v"a ? i c eves, offensive sores t and abscesses and of- ;3aR, tentimes white swell-.?? ing ?sure signs of W/yy^yf>^^X r 8 Scrofula. There may \//C^yr ' be no external signs for f ^ 0 a long time, for the disease develops slowly ?i in some cases, but the poison is in the blood and will break out at the first favor- a able opportunity. S. S. S. cures this wast- 1 g ing, destructive disease by first purifying r and building up the blood and stimulating , *and invigorating the whole system. j o J. M. Seals, 115 Public Square. Nashville,Tena, j says: " Tea years ago my daughter fell and cut j 8 her forehead. From this wound the glands on ; the side of her face became swollen and burstcd. J E Some of the best doctors here and elsewhere 1 attended her without any benefit. We decided j & , to try S. S. S., and a few bottles cured her en- I tirely." 8 m-Irpc n??wr an ft nurp r blood to nourish and k/j^i and is a positive anci j ^cH(F safe cure ior Scrofula, j It overcomes all forms of blood poison, &' whether inherited or acquired, and no 1 ^ remedy so thoroughly and effectively i cleanses the blood. If you have any Ci i blood trouble, or your child has inherited ! u some blood taint, take S. S. S. and get . i the blood in good condition and prevent p the disease doing further damage. j .1 Send for our free book and write out physicians about your case. We make no 8( charge whatever for medical advice. j THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA. GA. ? Historic Haunts. I 4< : ti Woods Holl. Mass . Au^.. 5. 1901. fi To the Editor of the Dispatch: p As a young hopeful in scientific j ei directions it became my pleasant duty si to travel from Chicago to this famous p, laboratory, justly famed since the ir days of Louis Agassiz for the great n| men who have labored here, and the Sj zeal with which they have inspired tl young investigators. It was my ic privilege to visit maDy places of in- p< terest but the major portion of my , e1 time was devoted to historic BostoD, ; b; the city of stately elms and the home 1 of art, culture and genius. With due ui apologies, I send these hasty obser- rt vations on things Northern, historic 1! and traditional. j fe Very soon I made the usual faith- | ef ful pilgrimage to the field of the bat- j A tie of Lexington. Save for the heat | tl it was a glorious day in every respect, i iz (The thermometer was bobbing up ! a around 9S degrees in the shade.) w Taking one of Boston's splendid suburban cars, we were soon crossing ti the Charles and speeding slong his lc silvery banks, in sight of the very ti spot where Paul Revere stood and n watched for the signal to swing from 3t the tower of the Old North church n over in Boston. For several miles I ^ the track lay along the very read over j g which he sped on the mission fraught lc with so great import for the young tl nation then being born. Old fash- a ioned, study and quaint buildings j n were pointed out as a legacy from that j tl distant past. Imagine our interest j ic when passing one of these to fce J A told that here Samuel Adams was | a roused by the midnight rider j u and that yonder slabs are tablets j g erected in memory of those pa- j I triots who shed their blood as j b 1 a willing sacrifice for the liberties , ^ we now enjoy. As did the British, i C( we hastened on to Concord, a small 1 i | town on a river of the same name, g (The reader will pardon if I thread j e my story on the historic account.) j 0 Here the patriots had collected the j j stores which Gage was anxious to de- : stroy. A rude bridge crosses the i stream where a few farmers, roused I hv thfl brave messenger, had assem- I ~~ J " o bled. As tbe Biitish advanced Pitcairn rode out with the order?"Disperse, ye Rebels-!!" The story, of j i course, is familiar to every school j 8 i boy. A splendid stature by the | ? gifted French, tells the pilgrim of , that glorious day and deed. Caivedin 1 bronze, the figure of a minute man, ; ^ flintlock in hand, fearlessly gazes in | a the direction of tbe advancing Red- j ^ coats. On the front of the granite base are the lines: | ^ "Here the embattled farmers stood j And fired the shot heard round the i ^ world." The battlefield is quietly beautiful. I g The business portion of the town has j i! ' migrated eastward Stately elms, | I thick spruces, graceful white pines v shelter the scene from the garist eye a of day and cast 4(a dim religious B , light" upon the epoch so sacked to t our hearts. | c r It was impossible to leave Concord j L without visiting Sleepy Hollow, for c i I 1 M 'W. j \ if yxeso maiiv str 0j Solicits a Sh i here lie the ashes of Emerson, Hawborne, Thoreau and Louisa M. Al:ott. A rugged stone, with simply j lis name carved in bronze, marks the : esting place of the great Essayist. 'Hawthorne," cut on a plain slab and inclosed by a rude fence has failed I o conceal the identity of him who leeps below, for the shrubs all strip>ed of their leaves plainly tell of he many pilgrimages of fond adnirorR anxious to brine' awav some i angible reminder of American's 1 jreatest novelist. Plainly lettered : hafts show us the last resting place f the famous naturalist and near 1 iim sleeps the woman whose inimit- 1 ble books have brightened and in- ' pired cur happy childhood's days. ' )ne is impressed with the simplicity 1 f it all. They are altogether incon- , picious and would easily escape your ] otice. I hunted Hawthorne's grave \ wo hours and wa6 all the time within radius of 60 yards of the place. < Ireatness needs no tall monuments. | ' Now we follow the British back to iexingion. (Just the thoughts of tandiDg on this soil will thrill with elight any son of the "Empire ounty of South Carolina.) The attlefield is now kept as a kind of < ark, called "Commons" throughout ae northeast. A huge boulder that grved to protect a number of Amer :an soldiers is still standing just as i was when it rendered such service > our cause. Across the commons a ill shaft, now overgrown with gracell Boston ivy, tells where the princial fighting was done. At the northrn end a fountain stands. It consts of a huge granite base suporting the figure of a soldier done i broDze and of heroic size, in a inche at the base bubbles up cool, parkling water, symbolizing, I fancy, le free and abundant tide of Amer;an wealth, independence and proserity as having its source in the rents that took place on that small attlefield. The return trip to Boston was for c s far more pleasant that for those ^ ^treating British on that memorable 3;h of April. Uneven ground, stone mces, great boulders and dense for3ts, all still represented, offered the * mericans ample cover from which a ley poured that deadly and demoral- 1 ;iDg fire. Here and there, however, ^ marble slab tells in simple words ^ here a brave soldier fell. Once more in Boston, and as a fit- * t ng crown to a day filled with hal>wed association and memories, we ^ jrned toward Mount Auburn?the lost beautiful cemetery in the world. r ly friend and guide observed that 0 lost of us want to go to heaven ^ rhen we die, but Bostonians want to c o to Mount Auburn. Truly it is a ively place and one is tempted to sink that they are not so very wroDg fter all. Within that sacred soil lies ^ lore of genius, wealth and culture aan in any similar plot in Amer:a. Lowell, Longfellow, Holmes, ' .gassiz and others equally famous ^ re sleeping there. Standing with g ncovered head by Longfellow's . rave the lines of the Psalms of i iife come trooping through my ! rain, and I thought cf the many . rho have drawn strength and en- t ouragement from its beautiful lines. 1 'ruly he left many footprints to uide forlorn and shipwrecked broth- r rs over life's trackless and treacherus main. At his head is this strange j evice: i ( C < LEX3U ? =3 1 ?1 ( High on the hill, in a secluded 1 TcifVi o ronorlrat.nnfi for ft aenti- , J/VK, .. 4444 W. 4VV4?,44. , el lies the great Agassiz as if he } ad fallen asleep climbing from the ale of ignorance and superstition ust when he had reached a higher nd purer atmosphere of elemental ruth. The rugged boulder at his lead came from Switzerland and \ ?I U r% 4- Un/d f /~vl rl ? LOID lLit? Vt?rjr gittun Luav u?v4 , j iim so many secrets from the earth s j iast history. ( A day or two since it was my ] ;reatly prized privilege to visit Pen- < kese, a small island in Buzzard's i Say. Here in the summer of 1873 1 fere gathered under Agassiz's guid- < nee a few earnest seekers after truth. I Jany of these students have since .* >ecome famous. The school lasted ] mly this one year. The death of < Lgassiz in the following December 1 lissolved the union. The inaccessi- 1 GLOBE DRY t T31. i^zoi^ra^iTC EET, are of Your Valued 1 bility of this point rendered some ; other place more desirable and this j * i it.. ! wort is now going on at me jismuc , Biological Laboratory at Wood's j Hoi), twelve miles away. Tbe Agassiz laboratory was burned some years ago. Truly it was an ideal place to j study nature?far from the madden- I iDg crowd?the sea birds and creeping I things too wied to be afraid?the j wealth of ocean life in the tides at j I i your feet?the history written by j steam and fire in the faces of the ! rocks collected from no one knows , j i where and brought hither by the j . mighty forces at work in the infancy j 3f our earth?the rippling waves and ; breezes babbling and whispering the | stories they have brought from the j ' ends of the world. 1 On the Isle of Penikese, Ringed about by sapphire seas. 1 Fanned by breezes salt and cool. Stood the master with his school. j ' Dver pails that not in vain, SVooed the west wind's stead? strain, Line of coast that low and far i ( stretched its undulating bar, { IVings aslant across the rim Df the waves that stooped to skim, 1 Rock and Isle and glistening bar, I Fell the beautiiul white day. 'Said the master to the youth: We have come in search of truth, frying with uncertain key \ Door by door of mystery: ' , iVe are reaching through his laws. * ro the garment hem of cause, I 3im, the endless, unbegun, y The unnamable, the One * jight of our light the source, ] -life of life and force of force. 'As with the fingers of the blind, ^ Ve are groping here to find Vhat the heiroglypbics mean I c )f the unseen in the seen, | j Vhat the thought which underlies ! future's masking and disguise, i c Vhat it is that hides beneath j , Slight and bloom, and birth and death. I t 5y past efforts unavailing, j a )oubt and error, loss and failing. )f our weakness made aware, ; r )n the threshold of our task ~ .et us light and guidance ask, ,et us pause in silent priijer,' " J [From Whittier's, "The Prayer of Agas- * ? -] : James J. Wolfe. C ? r How's This? 0 t We offer One Hundred Dollars r i. teward for any case of Catarrh that annot be cured by Hall's Catarrh ? 1 V lure. i v F. J. Cheney & .Co., Props., I Toledo, Ohio. y We, the undersigned, have known J1. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, ,nd believe him perfectly honorable a all business transactions, and j ^ inancially able to carry out any obli- : I [ation made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Druglists, Toledo, 0. Walding, Kinnan Is Marvin, Wholesale Druggistp, ; c Toledo, O. i ^ Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter- j tally, acting directly upon the blood I md mucous surfaces of the system, j Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Iruggists. Testimonials free. ^ Hall's Family Pills are the best. t Batesburg's Candidate. To the Editor of the Editor: * Batesburg has read somewhere of j he claims of the county in the Conjressional race and very naturally las joined in the demand, that we be ^ tccorded recognition for long services n the harness, and it has occurred to ! is that our town has never had a 1 , ( :andidate before the people of Lex- ! ^ wtIM'IA of 4 V* n como time TX7P UgliUii YVJUilC UU IIJU oauiV iimu ?? v iave kept on piling up the votes for j )ur neighbors. Oar worthy townsman, Prof. J. B. I rowill, one who has been reared vith us whose prattling feet in his j Doyhood and ever since has trod our ; native soil, has announced himself a j jandidate for the vacancy in the ! State Legislature, and while we will ! < support him lojally and ask our J/v Vl/ilr* t,Q nro SlOTJfl t Q Vliotl- 1 11CX1UO LU JUCJp uc, no ljuio luo | jst regard for all the gentleman who i ( nay be in the race and as Democrats i { ve, in the end, will support whoever j ( .he people nominate. Occasional. * 1 Saves Two From Death. ? "Our little daughter had an almost j 1 fatal attack of whooping cough and j Dronchitis," writes Mrs. W. K. Havi- ; ( and. nf Armonk. N. Y.. "but, when i 1 "7 ' ' I ill othjr remedies failed, we saved J 1 aer life with Dr. King's New Dis- j ' jovery. Oar niece, who had Con- j ' sumption in an advanced stage, also j ' ased this wonderful medicine and to- I < lay she is perfectly well.'' Desperate j 1 throat and lung diseases jield to Dr. 3 King's New Discovery as to no other ! medicine on earth. Infallible for ' Doughs and Colds. 50c and ?1.00 bottles. Guaranteed by J. E Kauf- < mann. Trial bottle free. < IOODS COMPA Patronage. Polite and ] To the Democratic Voters of Lexing- | fnn Cnuntv. It is very seldom that I have any- j thinf* to eay in newspapers but I deem it quite necessary to say a few words in favor of Lexington's most gifted young son, Hon. A. Frank Lever. Friends, if you will consider this question in the proper light, you will j soon reach the conclusion that this is | not alone Mr. Lever's fight, but your j tight as well. If fie is elected to | CoDgre88, will not that be an honor j to Lexington count}? will not that be ! an honor to the Dutch Fork? will it ' oot be an honor to every man tbat i [lasts his ballot in this election? will j pou cut him down, politically, in his | pouth when he promises to shed aonor and luster for Lexington lounty ? Does not South Carolina feel proud * ' 1.1 )i ner great statesmen woo Degan i ;heir career in early manhood, and f she had killed them politically, in j heir youth, could South Carolinians ! )f today read ther names with the j latisfaction that they now do ? Ye?, vhen a Northern gentleman quotes Daniel Webster to us for his greatless, we return to them the names of * Calhoun, Judge O'Neal and Wade lampton. Who knows but what v Lexington county has a man that j f rill shed as much honor on his | "S ;ountry as John C. Calhoua or j s Daniel Webster, if the people will : s inly give him a chance. There can ; a >e no opposition to Mr. Lever on o .ccount of his record or ability for s to man in JLexington county win ten j u rou that Lexington has an abler j h roung man than Mr. Lever. I ven- j h ure to say, he is better fitted for j degress than a great many that are c tow there, fifty years old and even ii lder. Lexington county now has ri he opportunity of electing a Cong- p essman and honoring one of the ^ uainiest young men that she has a >roduced for a number of years, and o ?ho, if sent to Congress, will make ^ jexington county's name famous a nth his own. Now, friend?, in conclusion, let us h ay aside our little prejudices if any ^ nd roll up the largest majority for Jr. Lever ever given a candidate in d jexington county. Democrat. i t( - * i A Minister's Good Work. J a "I had a severe attack of bilious 0 olio, got a bottle of Chamberlain's ^ 3olic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem- a dy, took two doses and was entirely ^ lured," says Rev. A. A. Power, of Emporia, Kan. "My neighbor v icross the street was sick for over a | f( peek, had two or three bottles of j r, nedicine from the doctor. He used j ^ hem for three or four days without j jj elief, then called in another doctor j j, vho treated him for some days and j 0 jave him no relief, so discharged ^ )im. I went over to see him the c iext morning. He said his bowels 0 were in a terrible fix, that they had | v >een running off so long that it was f, ilmost bloody flux. I asked him if le had tried Chamberlain's Colic, p Dbolera and Diarrhoea Remedy and ^ 2e said, 'No.' I went home and ^ Drought him my bottle and gave him ^ me dose; told him to take another a Jose in fifteen or twenty minutes if i v 2e did not find relief, but he took no I c nore and was entirely cured." For sale by J. E. Kaufmann. Colleton's Candidate. t Colleton Press and Standard: The first of the meetings ordered j f oy the State Democratic executive ; ? i c committee for the Seventh CoDgres- j fional District took place at Sumter ' Dn yesterday. There are qiyte a ^ arge number of candidates in the j. field and the result will be awaited : j with much interest. ! Colleton is fortunate in having but j 4l one candidate, most of the other | I v oounties having two. Thia gives ! ^ Major Howell an advantage in the contest which will likely count for ! ^ much in the result. He will receive, j is he deserves, the hearty and active j 3upport of the Democratic voters of this County and will likewise poll a eery heavy vote in Dorchester and other counties. His past services to I the Democratic party, and the sacriSc63 which he has made,. entitle him to a large measure of favor in this contest. When a very young man in 1878 he became the County chairman of the Democratic party in this I County and for many years thereafter ' NY, T .A.G-IE!E3, COLUMBIA, N. Prompt Attention. Oct< Cut! SHOE 1550 MAIN STREE' Sells Brand Ne Shoes at prices Columbia. Remember the pi S, F, SFIIVAR ROSS HIE PLACEI 15SO rin 4-A 1 "r/Toiti uu tu iut/v luaiu will soon! SHIVAR CUTS all kinds < 1550 ZMZaln. St., C August 7?3m, erved the people most faithfully and earlessly in that position. His serices at the time to which we have reerred ought never to be forgotten. Vhite supremacy, which bad been ecured as the result of the mighty truggle of 1876, was still in jeopardy nd had to be maintained in the face f dangers aDd difficulties. But the orvice which he rendered ehowed hat the white oeoDle of the County ?r ?r " I ad made do mistake in selecting im to fill so important a position. In 1882 Major Howell, with other itizeDs of the County, was indicted 3 the United States Court and caried to Charleston for trial before a artisan Judge and a packed jury. Fho can ever forget those troublous cd excitiDg timet! The recollection f all that was suffered and endured i with us still. The days of suspense ud trial, while the result huDg embliDg in the balance, made the eart grow eick. But the end was nally reached and the last hope of 3e alien and the carpet bagger was ashed to the ground. In 1882 Major Howell was elected 3 the State Senate and for eight ears he served our people faithfully rirt tffiniontli? in fViof. imnnrfanf ffice. He was eleeted a member of tie Constitutional Convention of 1895 nd rendered valuable service in that istinguished body. Since bis reirement from the Constitutional Conention be has not been a candidate 3r any office until now. What the esult of this contest is going to be re cannot say, but we hope and beeve that he will win. We do not utend to disparage the claims of any ne of his competitors, but we feel no eeitation in saying that there is no andidate in the field more deserving f the office, nor is there any who rould render more efficient and faithul service. In conclusion, we call upon our leople to go out to the polls on elecion day and vote for him as one man, bus testifying our appreciation of lis past service and our good will for , man who has spent his life among is and has shown himself worthy of onfidence and support. White Man Turned Yellow. Great consternation was felt by he friends of M. A. Hogarty of LexogtoD, Ky., when they saw he was urning yellow. His skin slowly hanged color, also his eyes, and he uffered terribly. His malady was fellow Jaundice. He was treated >y ihe best doctors, but without )enefit. Then he was advised to try Clectric Bitters, the wonderful Stom,ch and Liver remedy, and he writes: 'After taking two bottles I was vholly cured." A trial proves its Qatchless merit for all Stomach, Liver ,nd Kidney troubles. Only 25c. Sold >y J. E. KaufmanD, Diuggist. Warships for the Isthmus. Washington, August 15.?It has >een definitely decided to have a war :hip on the Pacific side of the Isthnus. Heretcfore the Iowa only has >een ordered to San Francisco. Dr. Taft Bros, Asthmalene and >ther reliable medicines are for sale it the Bazaar. When in town call to see us. 1 )ber IStf Price STORE, T, COLUMBIA, S. C.t w Solid Leather never known in ace, 1550 Main St. L\D ADVERTISES. SHIVAR CUTS THE PRICE. ;T STEEET. Street and you learn that THE PRICES on rf SHOES. EclvmaTolsi, S. C. Love Finds a Way. The odd circumstance of a widow DeiDg reiusea a marriage license oecauee she was too young to wed is reported from Cincinnati. The law in Ohio fixes the age of consent at 17 years. The widow, who came from Kentucky, had been married there at 16, and her husband had died within a few weeks. When John Koch came along and soothed her lacerated heart and persuaded her that another husband would be the best thing under the circumstances, she was still a little short of 17, and the clerk in Ohio refused the license. However, the pair crossed the river into Kentucky, where the bride-to-be wasn't too young and they were married. There is No Family Medicine so favorably known as Pain Killer. Por over sixty years it has been used by Missionaries in all A. _ _ M A. I 1 J A. 1 _ i. _ pans 01 me woriu, not oniy to t-ouuteract the climatic influences on their fam.Iies, but for the cure of all dineases of the bowels, and for wound*, burns, bruises, etc Avoid substitutes, there is but one Pain Killer, Perry Davis'. Price 25c. and 50c. The Special Champion. Augnsta Herald. The definite announcement that Hon. A. Frank Lever will be in the race for congress is causing the largest amount of enthusiasm brought forth for any candidate in Lexington county. He is regarded as the special champion of the people, and the common people love him, and have every confidence in his devotion to this interests, and his ability to defend their rights. The Best Prescription for Malaria, Chills and .fever is a bottle of Urove's Tasteless Chill Tonic. It is simply ron and quinine in a tasteless form. No cure?no pay. Price 50 cents. i SHC I SHOES! f cos M NO. 1686 MAIN STRE S m Is the J' A cheap. f Kdmu t fl , Shoes Of them # ^ vou. M Any si ^ for les L CO! MP Don't buying fi^Kenier ^ Shoes theni. H NO 1636 MAIN STEEEt || THE P: ICOHEN 18 ^ July, 31.?3m. ADVERTISING RATES. Advertisements will be inserted at the rate of 75 cents per square of one i oh s^Ace for first insertion, and 60 oents per inch for each snbseqnent insertion. Liberal contracts made with those wishing to advertise for thres, six and twtlva months. Notices in the local column 6 cents per line each insertion. Obituaries oharged for at jhe rate of one cent a word, when they exceed 100 words. Marriage notices inserted free. Address G. M. HARMAN, Editor and Publisher. Job Couldn't Have Stood It If he'd had Itchine Piles. They're terribly annoying; but Bucklen's Arnica Salve will cure the worst ca9e cf p ies on earth. It has cured thousands. For Injuries, PaiHs or Bodily Eruptions it's the best galvft i? the world. Price 25c a box. Cure guaranteed. Sold by J E Kaufmann. ? Campaign Dates. The following dates have been appointed for the Congressional campaign for the Seventh District, tMHB nominate a candidate to succeed tb^Hfij ate Dr. Stokes: Orangeburg County Committee to Y| aasien meetings for August 21, 22 ? and 23. St. George, August 2G. Holly Hill, August 27. Summerville, August 28. Monck's Corner, August 20. Walterboro, September 3. Colleton, Committee to fix a county meeting, September 4. If the Baby is Cutting Teett Be sure and use that old and well tried remedy, Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething. It soothes (he child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for diarrhoea. Twenty-five cents a bottle. It is the best of all. Double Murder. News has just reached Greenville, S. C., of a double murder near Gardner's cross roads, in the southern section of this county. William Gardner and Mack Dixon, both white, < quarreled over some small matters, ^ Gardner drew a pistol and shot three bails in Dixon's abdomen. Then Dixon knocked Gardner down, took the pistol from him and shot the two remaining balls in Gardner's body. Both men died in a short while. What's Your Face Worth? Sometimes a foitune, but never, if you have a sallow complexion, ajaundiced look, moth patches and blotches 1 on the skin,-all signs of Liver Trouble. 13at Dr. King's New L'fe Pills give Clear Skin, Rosy Cheeks, Rich Complexion. Only 25 cents, at J. Kaufmann's New Drug Store. raKl "You Talktoo Much." It is related that a parrot and dog being brought together in a room, the parrot for the fun of the thing said to the dog, "Sic bim," the result being that the dog, seeing nothing else to attack, went for the parrot, which lost a good share of its tail feathers before it escaped to its perch It is related that the parrot, after inspecting damages, said to himself, . "Poll, you t8lk too much." This io a . good story for all our readers to remember. Wanted. Trustworthy men and women to travel and advertise for old established bouse of solid financial standing. Salary $780 a year and ex- ___ peDses, all payable in cash. No canvassing required. Give references and enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. Address Manager, 355 Caxton Bldg, Chicago. 51 Heavy Fighting in Panama. ^ Kingston, August 15.?The steam ship Darian from Colon reports heavy fighting on Monday on the outskirts of Panama and Colon. The rebels are steadily advancing on the towns proper. A large number of wounded of the government troops were taken to Colon on Monday. ?? Let U3 have your dues for your paper. >ES! i shoes! i :en, r ET, COLUMBIA, S, C., & man who will sell you Shoes Having bought the R. H. W lids Co's Entire Stock of Fine 3# at a great sacrifice, I will sell at juices that will astonish ^ tioe in mv place will lie sold s than FACTORY j& SI: fail to see my shoes before j0| It will pay you. nber you get Solid Leather * at less than it costs to make jjte r, COLUMBIA, S. C., IS LACE, 4 TIE MAI. J IM ^4