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The Lexington dispatch. $ Bepresentatiue fteujspaper. havers Lexington arid the Borders of the Surrounding bounties Like a Blanheb 1 c rOL. XXXI. LEXINGTON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER BO. 1901. NO. 51 c ^ . niDBijjDCBTJBMBMBTrrinrririTi?BTrrriWTirTWMniTi?r~mTTn ^? mtrmmmmmaa^muuLj^ 4 ffST SDVEfiTISlKS KEOIUM j ?in? WESTERN SOUTH CAROLINA. ?u? rates reasonable. 0? . : subscription si per annum 0 ; JOB PRINTING A SPECIALTY. 1 One j Dollar Bill, Four pieces of the l>est sole leather, six pieces of heavy dongola, or navy calf, a few nails, sev- " eral yards of silk thread, several yards of waxed thred, some heavy lining marie nn into the best - ~r School Shoe for 3 Child, and all for A. DOLLAR BILL. 1 | If you don't buy your children this kind you don't treat them right. I LEVER, I "THE SHOE MAN," 1603 Main Street, ! COLUMBIA, - - S. C. i Feb. 6-ly. ^ i jlillAMiEBAl CiV JWH7TH CAkOl^INA State, City & County Depository COLUMBIA. S. C. Capital Paid in Full $150,000.00 . Surplus 60,000.00 Liabilittes of Stockholders 150,000.00 t $360,000.00 SAVINGS DEPARTMENT, f Interest at the rata ol 4 per centum per an- a nam paid on deposits in this department j TRUST JDEPAR1MENT. 8 This Back under special provision of it* I charter exercises the office of Executor, ] Administrator, Trustee or Guardian of Es . tales. SAFETY DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT. ) Fire and Burglar proof safety deposit * for rent from $4 00 to $12 00 per year. ] EDWIN W. ROBERTSON, - \ Pyesidept, A. C. HASKELL, Vice President r J. CALDWELL ROBERTSON. c 1 2d Vice President f G. M. BERRY. Cashier. . Febrnary 12--ly When writing mention the Dispatch. J TN nfiNfMNOE. : AAS WAS* w?J Don't we as away, **?- And m tell you tlie remedy of the day, Listen! it is L. L. and E. It makes the system clean and pure, ^ 1 Will health and strength to you secure. Strictly a vegetable preparation, J?ild and pleasant in its operation " No need for nostrums just made i to sell, t Its Life for the Liver that makes c you well. ^ HILTON'S LIFE FOE THE ' LIVES AND SIDNEYS. Wholesale by the MURRAY DRCG CO., f Columbia. S. C. * For Sale at THE BAZAAR. May 15?lv. W. A. RECHLMti, ABTIST. j COLUMBIA, S. C. t IS NOW MAKING THE BEST PIC- 1 tures that can be bad in this country, v and ail who have never had a real fine pic- B tore, should now try some of his latest f styles. Specimens can be seen at his Gal- g lery- tip stairs, next to the Hub. When writing mention the Dispatch. r BEESWAX WANTED ? i IN LARGE OR SM? LL QUANTITIES \ I WILL PAY THE HIGHEST MAB- c ket price for clean and pure Beeswax. c Price governed by color and condition. RICE B. HARMAN, ! At the Bazaar. Lexington, 3. C. * DB. E. J. ETHEREDGE, j SURGEON DENTIST, ? LEESVILLE, S. C. ] Office next door below post office. Always onkand. : February 12. j ENGINES BOILERS. Tanks, Stacks, Stand Pipes and Sheet-Iron Work; Shafting, Pulleys, Gearing, Boxes, Hangers, eto. Mill Castings. BfCast orery day; work 200 hands. LOMBARD IRON WORKS * SUPPLY CO AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. t January 27? For Sale. 1 SEVEN HORSEPOWER PORTABLE Eng:ne aDd a complete veil boring ont lit. For fa ther particulars, apply to or address, A. J FOX, Dec. 5?tf. Lexington, s. u EDWARD L. ASBILL. / Attorney at Law, LEESYILLE, S. C Practices in al! the Conrts. Business solicited. Sept. SO?6in Notice Trespassers. All persons are hereby xctifi-d not to hUot, haul straw or trespass in any manner whatever npon onr lands adjoining e">oh othrr. The law will positively be enforced against all tres p lasers. d. n. shull. GFO. C SKULL. lizzie shull. October 3, 1901. 4>51pd ; ' ifMff t Vmm rHY& M" 1 PLAIN Ill we have placed ov our c V/a special rargj I MEN'S FA | i]k why are these suits spe< m propose to s I BELOW TH Kk to adveetise m |{$ G Invite You. tc >JP Xli I GIRARDEAU, W THE CL( M NO. 1601 MUX STBSEr, COS !}f| September Jl. 1901. There is more Catarrh in this secion of the country than all other diseases pat together, and until the last ew years was supposed to be incurible. For a great many years decors pronounced it a local disease, md prescribed local remedies, and )y constantly failing to cure with cc.al treatment, pronounced it incura>le. Science has proven catairh to >e a constitutional disease, and thereore requires constitutional treatment Jail's Catarrh Cure, manufactured >y F. J. Cheney & Co, Toledo, Ohio, s the only constitutional cure on the narket. It is taken internally in loses from 10 drop9 to a teaspoonul It acts directly on the blood >nd mucous surfaces of the system. Chey offer one hundred dollars for my case it faUs to cure. Send for lirculars and testimonials. Address, F. J. Cheney & Co, Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. A True Siatement of the Situation. Yhat Two Able Editors Have to Say About It. The Charleston Evening Post6aye: It seems as if President Roosevelt s determined to cut off the carpet >aggers and scalawags from the pie lounters in the south;1' to which Prof W H. Wallace, the able editor if the Newberry Observer remarks: And the Democrats who are helping lim to do it are denounced as Repubicans." But this is politics, you know. A Typical South African Store. 0 R. Larson, cf Bay Villa, Sunday's Siver, Cape Colony, conducts a store ypical of South Africa, at which can >9 purchased anything from the proerbial "needle to an anehor." This tore is situated in a valley nine miles rom the nearest railway station and ,bout twenty-five miles from the learest town. Mr. Larson says: "I ;m favored witfc tee custom 01 mrui>rs within a radius of thirty miles, to nany of whom I have supplied Chamjerlain's remedies. All testify to heir value in a household where a loctor's advice i9 almost out of the luestion. Within ene mile of my itore the population is perhaps sixty. )f these, within the past twelve nonths, no less than fourteen have >een absolutely cured by Chamberain's Cough Remedy. This must lurely be a record/' For sale by J. 3 Kaufmann. o \ C AiiilPET s We are out for Bu ^ Lexingtoi I NEW GOODS! ^ A 4^ J?''?L Our new Fall arc here ready f( I q| OlALiTV AM) Pf ^ Carpets. Rugs, Cocoa, and Napier, t Mattings Rubber and Wire Mats, T i'Oies r ertiufr i in ^ and everything carried in a f sample and prices, they ! Mutual Ci ^ 1517 MAIN ST., September 4. \ > $ ,<i i w. : *62? MAirsr STR 3id Solicits a Sh: OUNTERS NOS. 1 AND 2 SOME $lj J T UNS FOR YOU IN mj I I iii suits! 3IAL BARGAINS? BECAUSE WE ?fj ] JELL AT PRICES (JjJ 8 m t EIR VALUES 1 OUR BUSINESS. fllj ! CTfill and Inspect wjj j iem. ?u] e MARSHALL. |jj > THIERS, M \ NER TAYLOR. COLUMBIA., S. C. (Jjj\ * MK x 3a>. S| 8 The Proper View. j I a Newberry Herald aDd News. . J ^ What is the use for some of the 1 q newspapers of this Slate to keep e Jjarping upou the fact that McLaurin n controls the federal patronage in this State aDd has Democrats appointed j |to office? For our part we would ! rather see good Democrats, who will j not cbaDge their party affiliations for j f - /y* the sake of ctiice, put in crnce aoy jj day rather than have Republicans ap- j pointed to the same office, and if D President Roosevelt should appoint ! j negroes as postmasters and revenue ! a, I collectors he would be burned in I 0] 'effigy in South Carolina. Apart from j ? McLaurin's own beliefs on national 1 issues, he should be upheld by our , people in his efforts to have good men appointed to federal cffices in ~ this State. > < Old People Have Their Troubles. ; ir | h; Mr. Francis Little, of Benton Har- ; i* bor, Mich , is over eight years of age. B Since 1865 he has been troubled more S or less with indigestion and constipa- k *'nn tioo frio/1 almost; ftvervthing ! H WiVU HUU UUU V*?vv? ^ % , in use for those ailments. Last August he began using Chamberlain's i S Stomach and Liver Tablets and was L soon feeling much better. In a re- j F j cent letter he says, T have used three = boxes of the Tablets and now think I am well." These Tablets improve the appetite .and invigorate the stomach, liver and bowels. For sale by J. E. Kaufmann. Simple Cure for Ringworms. For the removal of ringworms ' there is a remedy that is infallible. | It is the milk from the stem of a fresh fig. The milk of lettuce stalk j is also said to be good for roughness and discolorations of the skin. The simplest old fashioned remedies are j very often the best for a variety of toilet purposes and, though not invariably infallible by any meaDS, 1 should always be tried at least by a prudent woman before haviDg re- j course to patented remedies of vari- : ? ous sorts, which may be very irja I rious. ^ * If the Baby is Cutting Teeth Be sure and use that old and well \ tried remedy, Mrs. Winslow's Sooth- j ing Syrup for children teething. It i soothes the child, softens the gums, j allays all pain, cures wind colic and j is the best remedy for diarrhoea* Twenty-five cents a bottle. It is the best of all. I SHE 1 , I C*IPABV I! bH 1 UAAi ^ | siness and bid for i's Trade. || I] NEW STORE! f I and Winter Goods -SL ^ j ? )r inspection. ^ ilCE GI4RWTEED | c ^ ! \.rt Squares, Shades. Lace Curtains, , Linoieum, Oil Cloths, Cornices, Jk. , Table Covers, Piano Covers, irst class house. Write lor \y will be cheerfully given. ^ yv L-' iu]>et a, ill COLUMBIA. S. C. ^ 3m. ^ | GLOBE BBT ( E=C. ^oisrciErTC EET, ... are of Your Valued ' Stricken With Paralysis. Henderson Grimett, of this place, ffas stricken with partial paralysis md completely lost the use of one "> ? ? i- . irm ana siae. Auer uvmk ue&tcu >y an eminent physician for quite a vbile without relief, my wife recomnended Chamberlain's Pain Balm, tnd after using two bottles of it he is dmo3t entirely cured.?Gao. It. HcConald, Mar, Logan county, W. fa. Several other very remarkable :ures of partial paralysis have been ffected by the use of this liniment, 't is most widely known, however, as \ cure for rheumatism, sprains and uuises. Sold by J. E. Kaufmann. Some Work for the Next Legislature. At the rest session of the General Lssembly there will be a number of noportant elections. The terms of ix of the eight members of the cir 1 * i u ^ iuit oencn expire wiium iuv ycai 902. The term of Hon. Ira B. fanes, Associate Justice of the Su>reme Court, expires July 31, 1902. ?he following: Circuit Judges' terms xpire: R C Watts and J. C Klugh, <\b. 14; W. C. Benet aDd James Lldrieh. Feb 1G: Georee W. Gage, 'eb. 15 and 0 W. Buchanan, Bee. th. It is said Judge Buchanan and ugeBenet will not stand forrc-2lecion The Commissioner and the three )irectors of the State Dispensary , nd the Trustees of the State colleges rill be elected at this session. The , Jbairmsn of the Dispensary Board is ] lected by the Senate, the other two , rembers by the house. Wanted. Trustworthy men and women to j ravel and advertise for old estab- j shed house of solid financial stand- j C.I C.rTOA ~ ig. oamry c t ? jcm ouu ?.a- . j eDses, all payable in cash. No can- j assing required. Give references I ( d enclose self-addressed stamped ? uvelope. Address Mariager, 355 j laxton Bldg, Chicago. 51 ] A Happy Marriage. 0 the Editor of the Dispatch: At the home of the bride's parents, 1 the presence of many friends, at alf past nine o'clock Sunday morn- i ig, Oct. 20, 1001, Miss Ellietine i lish was married- to Mr. Charley I mith. Rev. Evans Hall, a well- i nown Baptist divine was the cfficiat- 1 )g minister.- t The attendants were Mr. Sam 1 healy with Miss Sue Corley: Mr. ( iaFayette Dunbar with Miss Adelle t :ish; Mr. E S. Gantt with Miss I We carry everyth from the c COOIS ? to the J We also have in s line of the be Organs, Sewiu (liniinM Rftftm and Kite -iT'Lote of Sl'gbtly Damaged Farnitui make 500D OAK CHAIRS FOR 2 GOOD E Come and See Us! Post Office Block, Sfpt^mbf-r :*m. iOODS GOMPJ TIE3., Patronage. Polite and Leila Smith, and Mr. Ciifton Smith with Mis9 Cora ftisb, who entered the beautiful hall in the above order j followed by the lovely bride arid handsome groom. ! When the impressive ceremony : had been finished and the bride and groom had received hearty congratu- ; lation3 and best wishes, the bridal party betook themselves to Florence church, four miles distant, to attend service. A most interesting and impressive sermon was delivered by ' Rev. Hall, and the merry party was nn small addition to the large audience After service came the return to the home of the briders parents where had been spread a ' feast of "ye olden times." The table j was a loDg and wide one in the yard, \ out from the dining room. It was well filled with substantiate and deli j cacies such as could be provided j only by so noble aDd kind hearted J ?rru? rtarf.v ?nd the I peopie. luc ui iuai ? many friends and relatives er pyed a bearty meal and there was still an abundance left. Mis9 Ellistine is the third daughter of the well-known and highly respected Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Rieh and inherits from them sterling qualities which will make her truly "a help mate/' Mr. Charley .Smith is the eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. S R Smith, so favorably known end highly respected , Ktt ail flriftrlfiv has been associated K,J ?... j with his father ia business and doubtless will be as pood business manager. Therefore, for the young ' couple, we predict much success in life. Tdey have our best wishes for j a long, happy and prosperous life! j A Little Loss Of flesh and strength, little barkng, obstinate cough and a little pain j n the chest may not mean galloping consumption, but they are signs J :hat prudence will not neglect. A i "ew doses of Allen's Lung Balsam - J ;ause a free discharge ot mucus ana 30 loosens the cough. It heals the I Lflamed air passages and all its beneficent work is accomplished with- j jut a grain cf opium. We Make It and She Spends It. l The Difference Between Each of Us. The editor and his wife disagree vitli each other very materially. She 3et8 things to rights and he writes j ihings to set. She reads what others ! vrite and he writes what others read | She keeps the devil out of the house j is much as possible and he detains dm and could not go to press with)ut him. She knows more things , ;han she writes and he writes more ihiogs than he knows. fOUR HT._^. ins: in Furniture )rdinary 3TQVE | inest irnifure. tock a complete st makes of i g Machines, }hen Outfits. ?^?/"j re at less than half what it cost to j it. >5cts EACH. BEDSTEADS FOR SI.UU. Before. You Buy. | Columbia, S. C. I X IIY, tT^.G-EI3, COIiUMniA, s. Prompt Attention. Oeto r " r Thousands Sent Into Exile. L I Every year a large number of poor j sutterers wnose lungs are sore ana racked with coughs are urged to go 1 to another climate. But this is cost- ! ly and not always sure. Don't be : an exile when Dr. King's New Dis- j covery for Consumption will cure j you at home. It's the mo9t infallible medicine for Coughs, Colds, and all , Throat and Lung diseases on earth. j The first dose brings relief. Asfounding cures result from persis- j tent use. Trial bottles free at J. E. Kaufmann's. Price 50 cents and ; AA $1 vu. + TO BUFFALO AND RETURN. I A Graphic Account of the Wonderful Sights Up North. To the Editor of the Dispafcb: With your permission I will give I your readers a succint review of my i i 11 _ t> i : id .:i: i VIBH ro me irau-AUjeriutiii JLiipuaiuuii ; and the great citie9 of Washington, ! Philadelphia and New York, includ j ing the wot Li's greatest natural won- 1 der?the Niagara Falls. Leaving Columbia early on the morniDg of October 3rd, accompanied by Mrs S urkie, sf < r a f< urfeen hours' continuous ride over the South- | em, we arrived in the beautiful city rf Washington, parsing through some pretty towns inN >rth Cirolins, especially Greensboro: also through i the bills of old Virginia, where were vi.-ible many of the old log cabins of ante bellum days with cracks daubed with clay. Lynchburg, Vs., is a pretty, picturesque city on the banks j of the James river. We found com- j fortable quarters at the Howard House in Washington within a few ! paces of our depot- This queenly city with broad avenues and tall j : steeples, in which is situated the j i grand capitol where th? iaws of our | i nation are made, the White House ! i and the departmental edifices, hasi,! the reputation of being the loveliest j city on this continent if not in the \ worm ''Washington city is full of j i fVlA Vkoof on/1 Koora ilio | 1 UlCUiUUOO KJi. I;UD pBDi'i auu wuaiu vuv impririt of pre&ent majesty and ap i proacbing grandeur." Every American should visit the capital of liis nation. Such a visit sets the heart on fire < wish greater devotion to our country's needs and kindles anew the patriotism i of the visitor. A few of the many noted i spots that may be seen in this beau- j tiful city are the following: Burial ; place of the author of "Home, Sweet Home," Henry Clay's former home, Church attended by Presidents j < Adams, Jackson and Lincoln, stream where Robert Fulton tested his steamship, home of Daniel Webster, i also his old law office, Talmage's old church, place of Guiteau's execution ! and many others too numerous to ! i mention. We expect to stop over ' again on cur return home and see more of this Eien city. We continued our journey onward Txsnio railrnaH fn > UVCl IUO 1 CUUOJliaUiK A.U4ft*\SWBV? 4V , New York. This run is a pleasant one indeed, through a beautiful coun- , try and pasting through Baltimore | i and Philadelphia. We arrived in the great Empire City on a lovely Octc- ! ber afternoon at Cortland ferry, and j soon we found ourselves in one solid mass of surging humanity, with street cars and vehicles of all kinds ! creej. ing slowly through the \ a it mul titude, while sky scrapers, sixteen to twenty-two stories high, could be teen everywherf: and elevated rail way cars rushing overhead loaded with passengers. (People in New , York wishing to go very far in a hurry have to take an elevated steam oar. They carry four to five coaches about the s'ze and seating capacity of our -*l U~r. nU^nt ordinary runway cuu^uoo) avuuu every five minutes and run all over j New York, across Brooklyn bridge ! and all around the latter city. They have elevated stations about every five blocka?small squares?and usu ally carry more passengers than can be seated) We were fortunate enough to gfct seated in a street car soon, and after about two hours creeping and easiog through the great crowd, with other cars in front and in rear of us as far as we could see doing the same thing, we reached the Broadway Central Hotel, where we were | pleasaotly quartered. New York ? i i l. 101 :i i City proper is saia to oe ?05 uinee long, north to south, and 24 to 3 j miles wide. We visited Soutti Ferry, , going on the roof (f the Bowling Green office building, one of the tallest in the city, where we could get a good view of New York harbor alive with steamboats of every variety, plying in all directions; the statue of Liberty on Bedloe's island, and a bird's eye view of Brooklyn on the east and Jersey City on the wesf. The Battery and Aquarium at Cistle Garden were not omitted. The Aquarium is specially interesting. Here we saw a larorfi sturgeon, seals, turtles, eels and fishes of all kinds, including a Missie-sippi catfish about the size of a well grown six year-old boy. The i most wonderful piece of ingenuity hnd skill visited was Brooklyn bridge, riding across on an elevated railway car, thence around Brooklyn C ty on the Loop Elevated Railway cars, and comiog back to the bridge we walked j across back to New York in order to get a better view of this wonderful j bridge. It contains two elevated ; railway tracks, two electric car | tracks, two passages for vehicles and ! in the midst a wide passage for pe- ; i destriam; and thousands were cross- i ing this bridge when I crossed. The ? V #4 I ' \? 4 i? C"? rv V s * % $ !' (i i p bor I3tf ^ SHOES!! : BIGCEST STOCK Men's Brogax AND I Fine Shoes 75 CIO ' 1550 Main Street, FOR JrllGrll GR SHIVAR CUTS Angufit 7?3m, car lines?elevated and electric? i' were full of cars loaded with passen- 8 gers; the vehicle passages were jrm- ? med with vehicles cf all kinds, while k pedestrians passed in almost innu- 1' merable numbers. Mrs. Sturkie soon n got tired of New York, saying, "let's 1< get out of this place. There are so b many people, so much noise, the o buildings so tall and the streets so 8 narrow till I feel that I am shut up 'k in some great prison wall in which I j1 am crowded nearly to death.'' But a . r. i.i.: l _l u -i_i _ i o' auer is&iug a rest at our nuiei, sue ? consented to go with me to Central ii Park, where we visited the menage- ? rie, Art Musuem, Reservoirs, the Obe- si Lisk and other points of interest. The b obelisk is an ancient statue with an b interesting history. It was presented to the city of New York by the c! Khedive of Egypt. It was swung tl into position on January 22ad, US81, costing nearly b 100,000 to get it t> ci New YTork. It is about 70 feet high p and weighs nearly 220 tons. It is ? said of it: "Since it was quarried I near the torrid zone^it has traveled h the entire length of Egypt, most of that of the Mediteranean sea, and the whole width of the Atlantic o ocean?a distance of 6,400 miles, b proving itself a first rate sailor for * an old salt of thirty-five centuries, I having in the course of its long exis- fi tence, seen Moses? Pharoan and his I host going to destruction in the Red Sea; Shishack marching to the conquest cf Jerusalem: Cambyses desolating the land; Heroditup, Solon, Piato and other Greek students of h Egyptian lore; Alexander the Great o on his victorious expedition through A the land of Gosher ; six and a half * eeaturies of Roman sovereignty and ^ Christian struggle at Alexandria: all c the long line of Moslem rulers since g Caliph Omar: and now looking down C upon the million dwellers in New York city, whose site even was unknown to the Eastern world when this obelisk bad an existence of two thousand years."' Wall street, the a famous spot where the business in- M terest of this country is centered, is q a small short street extending from c the famous Broadway to the foot of Brooklyn bridge. Here are situated the offices of our moneyed kiDgs *L m ~ a! J ^ <?? iU /V l WlltJCr, lb ltt Hii.U, 1U1C3 Liir uuaui/iai policies of our nation. How strange one feels from away down South, P standing on Wa 1 street viewing the ^ lofty edifices of this historical spot Bellevue Hospital was visited and & was kindly shown through the wards, 81 operating rocm3, museum and 81 other places of interest. Having ~ heard so much of Grant's tomb on ^ the Hudson, I was anxious to see it and found it not only a Iomb, a monuoent. but a good size building of t) pare marble, cutting about $600,000. ci Vehicle nor bicycle is permitted near t< Good II H WHE?f IS Ci GOTO CI 1S30 IvS-A-IENT and. he will s CHEAPER t them elsewh COHEN. 163 y IS THE T HE SELLS C. July, 31.?3m. ADVERTISINO RATES. Advertiseaiont# will be inserted At the ate of 75 cents pur square of one 1 eh >ace for first insertion, and 50 oente per nch for each subsequent insertion. Liberal contracts zn*de with those wish* r.g to advertise for throe six and twelve ao-it'ns. Notices in the loonl column 5 cents per ma each insertion. UDituaries charged for at Jhe rate o! one ent a word, when they exceed 100 vorda. Marriage notices inserted tree. Address J. M. HAKMAN, Editor and Publisher. iiiiiiTE COLUMBIA, S.C. TATE, CITY AND COUNTY DEPOSITORY 'aid tip Capital ... $200,000 arplns Profits . - 60,000 Saving's Department. Deposits of $5.<K) and upwards received. ubcrwb iiiiuwuu in. me riue 01 * per ceah or annum. W. A. OLAliK, President, Wilik Josss, Ciwbier. December 4?ly. SHOES!!! IN COLUMBIA. is 59c. a Pair . I ID I . Cents to $5. TO j.'?<A Colombia, S. 0., ADE SHOES. THE FRIGE. t. The en trance is from the sooth ide and entering an open portico the isitor is met at the door by the :eeper. On going inside and walk g up to a circular railing in tbe aidst of the apartment, the visitor !>oks down about ten or twelve feet >elow and sees two beautiful vaults, ne containing the remains of 4'Ulyes S. Grant" and the other those of Julia A. Grant." Looking above, nof rwar fViaac canUu Kalno Via aaaa . ugv \J ? Vi WUVBV lUUi VU MVtvnf iiv OVV0 beautiful circular cupulo?the inide crown of structure?constructed 2 graceful and artistic form. This lonument occupies a most beautiful iter on the Hudson. Tt is said to ave no equal on this continent, peraps not the world. But reader, I must now come to a lose, and tell you about my trip to be world's greatest natural wonder -Niagara Falls?on some future ocasion. We are today in Philadelhia?the "City of Homes," stopping t the Windsor hotel, not far from ? odependence Hall of Revolutionary ame. More anon. L K Sturkie, M. D. [ The above article has been in this fiice for some two or three weeks, ut circumstances were such that it 7AR imnnsRihle to handlft it snnner. t has howevtr, lost cone of its reshness and interest by the delay? Editor Dispatch.] Don't Let Them Suffer., Often children are tortured with ;ching and burning eczema and ther skin diseases but Bucklen's irnica Salve heals the raw sores, xpels inflimmation, leaves the skin without a scar. Clean, fragrant, heap, there's no salve on earth as ood. Try it. Core guaranteed. )nly 25c at J. E. Kaufmann's. Lamar, Ark., Suffers from Fire. Lsmar, Ark., October 24.?Nearly 11 the business houses in this town rere destroyed by fire last night, 'he loss aggregates $150,000, partly overed by insurance. Food Changed to Poison. Putrefying food in the intestines roduces effects like those of arsenic, ut Dr. King's New Life Pills expel ie poisons from clogged bowels, ently, easily but surely, curing Contipation, Biliousness, Sick Headche, Fevers, all Liver, Kidney and towel troubles. Only 25 cents at . E. Kaufmann's. What will eventually become of be tramp, if, as reported, his Satanial majesty finds work for idle hands 2 du! Winter CHEAP! >LUMBIA 3HENS ' STESEET, iell you SHOES ;han you can buy TDV TTTTUT we. ixii miu. 0 Main St., 53l^ce. HEAPEST!! "V