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| Tiie Lexington Dispatch Wednesday, April 2. 1902. _ IT PAYS. It pays to wear a smiling face, And laugh cur troubles down. For all oar litile trials wait Oar laughter or our frown. Beneath the masrc of a smile Our doubts will fade away, As melts the frost of early spring Beneath the sunny ray. It pays to make a worthy cause, By helping it. our own; To give the current of oar lives A true and noble tone. * It pays to comfort every heart, Oppressed with dud despair. And leave in scrow-darkened lives ^ ?1 ~ ~ rst' VwirtVifnOCC f h pro git.'aLU Ul iaxigLJ.uuv.oo uuwo. It nays to give a helping hand To eager, earnest youth. To note, with all their waywardness. Their courage and their truth; ... To strive with sympathy and love Their confidence to win. It pays to open wide the heart And "let the sunshine in." Better Than Pills. The question has been asked, "In what way are Chamberlain's Stomach & Liver Tablets superior to pills?" Our answer is: They are easier and j more pleasant to take, more mild and gentle in effect and more reliable as they can always be depended upon. Then they cleanse and invigorate the stomach and leave the bowels in a natural condition, while pills are more harsh in effect and their use is often followed by constipation. For j sale by J. E. Kaurrn&nn. Society Celebration. To the Editor of the Dispatch: j ' In the evening of March 11, at j 7:30, the Chrestonian Literary society 1 held its llth anniversary in the college auditorium. Notwithstanding an 1 Evangelist meeting at the Methodist 1 church and a popular entertainment 1 at the opera house, the spacious college auditorium was crowded with 1 an appreciative audience. The President, J.'W. Deliinger, of Cberryville, N. C. in a few well chosen sentences, bade the audience welcome to the exercises. The first on the programme was an oration by M. L Manney, of Cherryville, N. C. He spoke of the benign and elevating influences of home and its hallowed associations. The home is the conservator of Church and State. Given good homes and you have a prosperous Church and a well governed State. Given corrupt and badly managed homes and you find i small churches and a poorly governed State. Iq this world of strife and ! \ turmoil the home is like an oasis in j the desert, toward which men, when ; wearied and faint, turn themselves j ; j from the unsympathetic self seeking: ! J world of business to that rest and ; 1 smvpathy for which their souls thirst, j * Around one's hearthstone he finds ] that love and sympathy and cong:eui- i ality that points to the Father's ' home in heaven. At the conclusion of this oration j came the debate on the question, as 1 follows: ''Resolved, That the United States ' 1 should build and control the Nicara- j J j I guan Canal." The affirmative was opened by K. ! A. Price, of Priceville. S. C. He be- | gan by showing that the United States, since her incipiency as a nation, had believed that an isthmius canal would be of inestimable value to her commerce. She was looking forward to tbis when she signed the Claytor-Bulwer treaty, April 10, 1S50. England used tbis as a bar rier agaiDst the United States for a j long period, Thi9. however, was an- j nulled by the Haj-Pauncefcrte treaty j which was agreed upon the latter j part of the year 1899. The latter j treaty gave the United States liberty ; to construct such a canal whenever j 1 Congress saw fit. The speaker then j went on to show that the construction l of a canal of this sort would benefit ; the United States by giving a short- ! er route' to the markets of the east j and by forming an expeditious pas- I sage from the eastern to the western j waters that wash our shores. In no i ' ? I "1 c-n v Datcer way couiu me illiujcuoc cur | dIus that is sow in our national treas | ury be expended. The young giant j of the new world, to whom all things are possible, is waiting to tear the , two Americas apart whenever Congress gives the word. The isthmus j of Panama has clasped the throat of commerce between the eastern and j \ * western part of North America foi more than four hundred years. Let Congress giv9 the word and let the work be done. H. A. Kistler, of Eeedsville, N C, opened the negative side of the debate. The eastern markets, he said, would be of no benefit to us since cotton can now be produced there cheaper than it can be here. The surplus in the national treasury can be spent to a much better advantage by putting it to the improvement of our educational system. Besides, should a canal be built at all, the Panama route would be much the better and less expensive. It would be well nigh impossible to construct and maintain harbors at the extremities of the Nicaraguan route owing to the nature of soil in these localities. M. K Stirewalt, of New Market, Ya , closed for the affirmative. As to the cost of the two routes, that ^ considering rue engineer e guarauiccu cost of the Nicaragua!! and the past cost of the construction of about two-fifths of the Panama canal, the Nicaraguan would be by far the cheaper route. Besides this, there is doubt whether the Panama route could be bought at all. The stock of the present Panama Canal Co., is held by hundreds of private citizens of France, and it would be almost, if not altogether impossible to secure an unincumbered title to the property. We need the canal as a highway for our commerce and we need it as a means of defense. Let it be built and fortified. P. D. Pence, of Fortsville, Ya., closed for the negative. He said that we could not rely upon the estimated cost of this canal. The enormity of the pn ject renders it impossible to accurately hs the cost. This the most ardent supporters of the project admit. . At best it is taking a leap in Lhe dark. Even after it has been completed seismic disturbances may at any time render it worthless. 3tIore than this, we do not need the canal a3 a means of commerce. Our country extends from one ocean to the other. The products of our western slope may be shipped to the Orient while that of our eastern slope finds a ready and profitable market elsewhere. It this vast rmount of money is to be spent, let as expend it upon our mental and material advancement. Tne committee to decide this ques;ion, consisting of D. L. Russell, of :his city, S. S. Manney, of Cherryville, Si C, and Professor F. E. Sigman, }f this city. The decision was made by consultation and announced in :avor of the affirmative. The announcement was made by Mr. Russell in a pleasing and eloquent manner. Then came an oration by C. J. 3ox, of Columbia, S. C. His subject was "The Love of the Beautiful.*' Man has in hi3 heart an emotion that / is gratified only by an observance of S-Vio V\oo n f i-f 111 Tr> ofi-iirtf inn LUv ucauLiiui. jLta IUU tjucti uuuua of the universe the Great Architect bas in everything provided for this. j n i The world is full of beauty over us, beneath us and around about us. We see beauties in the heavens, in the deep end around us en every hand. God made these for man's admiration and gave him the faculty of admiring them. We should, therefore lose no opportunity of seeing the handwriting of God?the beautiful. "Freezing a Mother-in-law" was well rendered, and sent the audience away in transports of merriment. Throughout out the programme was interspersed with music rendered by the young ladies, and by no means unappreciated part of the exercise. Student. Gftfld fftr Sib en vri a.fi cm n WWW! WW" HVM V Last fail I was taken with a very severe attack of muscular rheumatism which caused me great pain and annoyance. After trying several prescriptions and rheumatic cures, I decided to use Chamberlain's Pain Balin, which I bad seen advertised in the South Jerseyman. After two applications of this Kemedy I was much better, and after using one bottle, was completely cured.?Sallie Harris, Salem, N. J. For sale by J. TT f rj. jtvauimaim. Love is God. General Mixture. May 20th is the day fixed for turn1 ing over to Cuba to the civil governI ment, and oo that day the United j States soldiers will be withdrawn. > I Know One Sure Itemedj for an obstinate cold. Its name is Pyuy-Balsam. It is said the happiest man in ' Georgia has six fiddles, ten children, | thirteen hounds, a deaf and dumb i wife and a moonshine still that has i never been spotted by the govern1 ment. Five alleged pickpockets were ar! rested in Atlanta. They are supposed to be the ones who robbed the preachers at the Bible conference. One of them was a woman. Turkey emphatically refuses to accede to the demand of the United States for reimbursing this government for the 872,000 paid the brigands for the ransom of Miss Stone. Hilton's Life for the T : X d rvTrrt ! juiver unu niuncvs %j overcomes constipation. The wheat crop of Nebraska is very promising. With favorable weather the winter wheat will yield about forty million bushels. The j spring ' wheat will increase that amount considerably. A dog i3 not allowed to trot across some of the strongest suspension bridges in the world. The vibration 1 which his motion nroduces is danger ous to the structure. The dogs are I carried over in vehicles. A cat walk| ing across a floor of a brick building I shakes it more than many people. ; Henry Leitner, who lives in the ! lower portion of Fairfield county, i has is his possession a bale of cotton j which he has been holding ever since "before de war." It is said to be of | a good grade and that he has j been offered very fancy prices for it. Hilton's Life for the Liver and Kid n i neys win cure ; dyspepsia. During the month of April the | rate to the Charleston Exposition will be *2 every Tuesday from Columbia I and in th9 same proportion from other cities. This ought to take crowds to the exposition every Tuesday. The census statement recently printed credited New York City I with 1,270,069 inhabitants of foreign I birth, repeesenting every nation in j the civilized world, and many that j are classed as uncivilized. The additional fact is now given cut that 400,000 residents of this municipality are natives of other states of the ! Union than New lY>rk. Every state "? -? i ? ^ I ana every territory is represemeu m | the metropolitan population. S The great est ambition of Anier- j? g ican men and women is to Jiave B 1 g homes blessed with children. The B h woman afflicted with female dis- S 9 ease is constantly menaced with eg 0 becoming a childless wife. Xo a ? medicine can restore dead or- IS gans, but Wine of Cardui does ra S regulate derangements that pre- ? 0 vent conception; does prevent 0 a?I;av^ , uwa iCMUit; W t'Uh. fc*> functions ami shattered nerves ffi and does bring1 babies to homes n barren and desolate for years, k Wine of Cardui gives women the p health and strength to bear heal- K thy children. You can get a B dollar bottle of V?*ine of Cardui & from vour dealer. WINE" CARDUI I 143 Market street. Memphis, Tenn., April 14,19C1. fig In February, 1901,1 took one bottle of te "Wine of Cardui and one package of W Thedford's Blank-Draught. I h.idbcen 6 married fifteen vears and had never g given birth to a child until I took Wine B Iof Cardui. No-.v I am mother of a fine I babjr girl which was born March 31,1901. &j The baby weighs fourteen pounds and I E feel as well as any person could feel. Now my home is happy and I never will B be without Wine of Cardui in my house 9 again. Mrs. J. W. C. SMITH. D For the best plain stick and fancy candies, always go to the llazaar. 1 j J m !to tne acre at icss cusi, uiisju:* n mere money. More Potash | in the Cotton fertilizer improves the K K soil ; increases yield?larger profits, jj 9 Send for our book (free) explaining how to | 3 get these results. | GERMAN* KALI WORKS, S 93 Na>?nu St., New Yo:k. H wwa Tut5. v gg.f-.x3:ga? The Sinful Brother. It was at a certain church meeting, and the good bishop was calling for reports. He had a rather stern, sharp manner which sometimes jarred a little on the nerves of the more timid. By and by he came to Brother B, a lay delegate. "Borther B , what is the spiritual condition of your church?" demanded the bishop briskly. ''I consider it good," said the brother. "What makes you think it is good?" went on the bishop. "Well, the people are religious. That is what makes me think so." "What do you call religious? Do they have family prayers?" nf f.hpm dn and snmo do not." ' Do you mean to say that a man may be a Christian and not held family prayer?" ' Yes, sir; 11hidk so." "Do you hold family prayer?" "Yes, sir," returned the brother very quietly. "And yet you think a man may be a Christian and not hold family prayer?" j "I have a brother who is a better man than I am who does not hold I family prayer." "What makes you think he is a better man than vou are?" "Everybody says so, and I know he is." "Why does not your brother, if he is such a good man, hold family prayer? thundered the Dishop. "He has no family," meekly answered the brother. -o- ? Suit Against Seaboard. The Charlotte Observer says that Col. D. A. Dicker!, father of Engineer Claude Dickert, who was killed in a wreck on the Seaboard Air Line near Monroe, N. C , last October, has brought suit against the road for $30,000 damages. The case will be tried at Newberry. Mill Simt Down. Fitcburg, Mass, March 28?The | entire force of weavers of the Fitck' . T -?11_ 1 11 ; Durg worsted raiiis hjuu iLie ju>ei;ijj mills of the American woolen com- j pany struck today in sympathy with Rhode Island employees. The mills j are shut down. Lynching in West Virginia. I Caspar. W. Ya . March 28.?Chas. ! Woodward, convicted of the murder ; of the Sheriff of this county, was ! taken from jail last night and lynched by a mob. The lynching party was recruited from a crowd which gathered to see Woodward hanged. He was reprieved at the last moment by the Governor, pending an appeal. ! Sold! At Liverpool street railway station i recently, just as the train was about | to go out. a boy ran up to a ticket | collector and whispered: "Sir. there's two men travelling ! i rirst, and neither of them's got tick- ; ets " Oil went the inspector and search- j ed ail the first-class carrages through | but without avail: all the passengers j had proper tickets. Seeing bis informer standing near j the eutrance. he shouted: "Where's iwo two men without i . . . ticKets: "On the eiigiae of course ! shouted j the bov, as he edized away. Ferrj'e aud Crcsman's guaranteed gardeu seed for sale at the Lazaar. 4> ! CohensIsoStore.! 7 1636 3I.45X STREET, ^ ^ Colio.irci"teia<f S. C_, % IS THE PLACE TO GET THE <?> BEST SHOES AT THE LOW- ^ & EST PRICES. EVERY SHOE SOLD WARRAN- <$ 0 TED. 0 0 0 ^ I COHEN'S SHOE STORE. I Deeembe is?3m. wkt 4^ ^ HKARLESTONTjoeB^ASH AND^UMBER Qo I MANUFACTURERS OF DOORS, SASH, BLINDS. MOULDINGS, MILL WORK AND LUMBER. r m-i.* a.- \ ? A W A T rtW'T1!? / rT7T)T57eC! A ^T"Pi W I'llS 10* JEuSDliHawe. / rwa i W A A iWUWU ?**<*/ We Save You Money. > Sent -j YSLLOW PINS Our Crocds are the Pest.) on Eequest. ( are Our Specialties. Factory Saw Mill and Ponds: Office and Yards: Ashley Kiver and Cumming's Creek. 21 to 47 Ashley Ave., CHAKLESTON, S. C. April 24?J>. I* 5 i SOUTHERN [i RAILWAY l\ THE GREAT HIGHWAY CF TRADE AMD TRAVEL. 1 Uni':in? the Principal Commercial Centers and KeaKh and Pleasure Resorts of the South with the & I NORTH, EAST and WEST, f High-Class Vestibule Trains, Through Sloepir.g-Cars I between New YorK and New Orleans, via Atlanta, w Cincinnati and Florida Points via Atlanta and via g AsKoville. New YorK and Florida, either via Lynchburg, Danville I and Savannah, or via Richmond, Danville and | Savannah. Superior Dininj^-Car Service on all Through Trains. Excellent Service and Low Rates to Charleston ac? Sj count South Carolina Inter-State and West Indian ] Exposition. Winter Tourist TicKets to all Resorts now on sale at j reduced rates. For detailed information, literature, time tables, rates, etc., apply to nearest ticket*agent, or address S.H.HARDWICK, W.K.TAYLOE, IUt'flt/ H! ra??rnj(fr Uc?. ruji. ^jcr>(| mm Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga. H SR. W. HUNT, J. C. BEAM, Div. Passenger Agent, District Pass. Agent, Charleston, S. C. Atlanta, Ga. FEBRUARY 10. 1002. ' !! Parlor Restaurant J&S rRIliT Ml il 133G MAIN SXEEET. J&&% Mil! lilMO ! J COLUMBIA, - S. C., I i . { I rrsRE ONLY UP-TO-DATE EATESO j ! That GrOW and Bear Fruit, } X House ot its hind in the City of CoI ; lumbia. It is well kept?clean linen, I ' WrPe for our no pag^ i!- j prompt and polite service and get it quickly. I J lust rated Catalogue and T) { Quiet and order always prevail. You get ipagw pamphlet. "How t ? j what you order and pay only for what }ou 1niG\^slvS{ xtmx in- j ZeL Within easy reach ot 'desirable sleep.'topuation you haw so long > ing apartments. sTva-r lfi [wanted: tells you all about i OPEN ALL NIGHT. V'?^ & ;those big red apple?, lucious | j peaches, atni japan piu ins | 3 DAVID, Proprietor. with their oriental sweetness. vj,,,,..,. on o e\ all of \vhie.ii you have often r xebruary J). wondered where the trees I 0 ' V^- 'came from that produced ! r- ? -? ?T ^ / fh i 1 4 RECKL1M .d EVERYTHING GOOD IN i " * * Kit *2, FRUITS. j AETIST, <^r ' tUnusal fine stock of KILYEK J MAPLES.voupg. thriftytrees ; rDT,TT?trUT4 ^ O Hi*. V Smooth andstrai T. the kind GULUM.B1A, &. V'1' am! ?row oil wclj. JS NOW MAKING THE BEST PIC * J"?," can be ba? ? this, Soaa"yt'1" ,>!U' "l l,,e muSt keau- and all who have never had a real fane pictifnl shade trees. ture, should now try some of his latest ^ rltc for an'* e*ve styles. Specimens can be seen at his Gal' <?" up stairs, next to the Huh. |pP|^! J. Villi Liailley Nursery (*??.. vrhen writing mention the Dispatch. POMOSA. X. 0. i i fupsurc AMD Dccciuiiy u/AWTrrn ~ ^ pRuHlES BOILERS. BrhbWAA WAN! lU j TtnkL Btscti, Stand Plpestnd 8be?t-Iroi ! Work; Sbaftlcg, Pulleys, Gearing, Boxes, IN LARGE OR SMALL QUANTITIES | ^2?,%, *f? ^"rn^nu. j LOMBARD IRON "WORKS A SUPPLY C? ti'TTT D?V -Mir rimwT7<T MAP. I AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. S >? iiju J[ill j.jl1ju iJAVJJUUU J. .J....... X ket price lor ckati and pure Beeswax. Price governed by color aud condition. RICE 3 EARMAN, At the Bazaar. Lexington. S. C. January 27?