The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, March 04, 1903, Page 7, Image 7
////&[/#/ the terror of strong to
lj//// takes the joy of life a*
J [ mWm./ill open to any disease. A
If//^V ifif stronS purgatives and druj
IIIIBBI III ^eaTC y?? * worse conditi
llllBI (it treatmen
f^SS
\\\\^^A\vn which help the natural for
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Booklet and free (
Complete treatme
HARMAK'i
The Lexington Dispatch.
Wednesday, March 4-, 1903.
Matrimonial history often begins
where a romantic courtship ends.
Flattery wins women, and flowers
fetch men.
A barber is a "shaver," no matter
what size.
A cow may kick the bucket and
still do herself no injury.
' A short acquaintance is always
trying to make a touch.
The report comes from Charleston
that the guano movement is very
heavy. The outlook is for the sale of
400,000 tons.
Gypsy bands and intinerant horse
traders will be required to pay ah annual
license of $500 to do business
in this State.
At Newark, N. J, a fast express
out through a trolley car crowded
with children, killing twelve and in
juring twenty.
An old-line Georgia Democrat suggests
William R Hearst and JobnB.
Gordon as the next Democratic presidential
ticket
Snow in the Idaho mountains re
eently averages 18 feet deep and in
some places is 35 feet deep. The
cold is intense.
Fifty women have been jailed in
Patterson, N. J., charged with stealing
coal from oars of the Lackawanna
& Western railroad.
Senator McLanrin says he does not
know where he will live or what he
will do after the 4th of March, when
his Senatorial life ends.
Gov. Aycock, of North Oarolins,
t i a i *? * ii t *
Dae oeen elected to aenver toe literary
address at the Newberry College
commencement in Jane.
If it's a bilious attack, take Chamberlain's
Stomach and Liver Tablets
and a quick recovery is certain. For
sale by the Kaufmann Drag Co.
A colony of Boers from South
Africa have selected for their home a
tract of 200,000 acres of land in
Texas. They will make excellent
citizens.
Spain has been given heavy damages
against English shipbuilding
company because of the non-delivery
of torpedo boats at the time of the
Spanish American war.
The first month of spring. Put
your system in shape now and escape
.? *it m i ?__i! i r "m
tne ins mat springtime onngs. jc or i
this use Ramon's Tonic Regulator. j
Harman's Bazaar.
John Smith and A. T. Wright, ]
young men of Birmingham, Ala., in
love with the same girl, settled their
differences recently with a pistol
encounter in which Wright was
killed.
J. Izard Middleton, of Baltimore,
has presented to the State through
Governor Heyward a copy of a portrait
of his grandfather, Arthur Middleton,
one of the signers of the
Declaration of Independence.
Greenville, Tenn.
I have thoroughly convinced myself
that Dr. Baker's Blood and
UiytSL vure io ilo uucsu uicuiwuo
made for Indigestion and Constipation.
(I have tried them all) and
was cured by the use of this medicine,
after all others had failed. I
most cheerfully and unhesitatingly
endorse it. Yours truly,
H. N. Baker, Mayor.
For sale at the Bazaar.
I
I??1??M??^
en and daKease women,
ay and makes the system \N\^Hgau\\
issist Nature; do not take
js, which act for a time, but v\\^Hbu\\
on than before. Use a gentlo w \ W8g Hi
t. That is t| I S:
SLIVER PIUS I
MC PELLETS IB
ces to restore perfect health, jj j^^Bll II
t the roses on the cheeks, jfjBBS J t
ample at all dealers. fjlJ^^Blljj
nt for 25 days, 25c. ///f mm? j!ji
ENEVOLLE.
5 BAZAAR.
Gaston county, N C, is agitating
? tV>? vntina of $300,000 for ffood
w~w * d ? 7 o
roads and Lincoln is talking about
$200,000.
Columbia is discussing tbe matter
of inviting the Confederate Veterans
of this State to hold their annual reunion
in that city tbe present year,
and it is said that Spartanburg will
become its chief competitor.
For bruises, cuts, burns, wounds
of any sort?for rheumatism, stiff
joints and sore muscles, Ramon's
Nerve and Bone Oil is a prompt
remedy. Harman's Bazaar.
The South Carolina Inter-Collegiate
Oratorial Association, will hold
its annual contest in Greenwood
a o < inno /-v m * r? /* Artl I
O.JJIU ,(tT, .Lijuu. JL uc lunynmg V/Wileges
will be represented: ClemsoD,
Clinton, Erskine, Furman, Newberry
and Wofford.
The General Assembly of Tennessee
has passed a law prohibiting the
sale of whiskey in all towns of 3,000
inhabitants and under. There are
now only eight cities in that State
where whiskey can be sold legaly.
A woman in Minnesota, who died
the other day, left a million dollars
or so for the relief of the poor, with
an especial provision in ber will that
no politician should have anything to
do with the administration of the
trust fund.
A Mo nnvop nlant ia to hp pntfth.
? i?T r
lished at Neals shoals on Broad river,
twelve miles from Union, for the generation
of electricity for running the
Union cotton mills and for supplying
power for other factories in that city.
T. C Duncan is at the head of the
enterprise.
William White, a negro, claiming
to be from Washington, has been
placed in jail at Spartanburg for
collecting money from unsuspicious
negroes, telling that he was an emigrant
agent and would take them to
Washington, where they could marry
rich white women and walk with
them on the streets with their arms
locked.
I
You Know What You Are
Taking
When you take Grove's Tasteless
Chill Tooic because the formula is
plainly printed on every bottle showing
that it is simply Iron and Quinine
in a tasteless form, No Cure, No Pay.
50c.
? Government
Boat Sere.
A government boat, equipped with
everything necessary to cleat a channel
for steamboat navigation, arrived
at Granby last evening. The crew
.1 ..... ll
?. i. < -.aib iu nu;a. at uuuo upuu iuc
channel and clear away all snags and
other obstructions as quick as possible.
This is the first time the government
has sent a boat up as far as
Granby in several years, but there is j
one kept around Granby and the |
lower part of the river' all the time.? j
Columbia Record Febuary 25.
Hog cholera has made its appearance
at Greers, in Greenville county, i
Dr. Nesom, the veternarian at Clemson
College, has made an examination
of the affected hogs ?ud pronounces
it cholera. It is supposed
the disease was brought to Greers by !
hogs shipped to that place from !
Tennessee.
Prepared cocoanut, fresh and
sweet, at the Bazaar.
What Heaven Lacked.
Billy Saunders is a natural born
wit. He is in his eightieth year, living
here in New York, and is still
working at his trade, painting. On
a recent occasion Billy and one or two
of his mates were beautifying a lawyer's
office. The younger partner,
thinking to take a "rise" out of Billy,
said.
"I say, Billy, did you ever know of
a painter going to heaven?"
"Yes," replied Billy, "I knew of one
once."
"But do you think he stayed there?"
"Well, I did hear they tried to put
him out."
"And they did not succeed?"
"No. According to latest accounts
they had not succeeded."
"Why, how was that?"
"Well, sonny, ifc was this way:
They couldn't find a lawyer in the
place to draw up the papers."?New
' York Tribune.
Race Horses Roasted.
Cambridge, Mass., Feb 25?A
! large barn belonging to Charles A
Mackay, was destroyed by fire this
morning, and fourteen race horses,
beiDg held for nest week's sale, were
roasted to death.
All the horses had good records.
The loss is ten thousand dollars, with
no insurance. Among the horses
burned were Logan Boy, Mexican
Boy, Lafontaine and Jonah Boy.
-?-*
Working Overtime.
Eight hour laws are ignored by
those tireless, little workers?Dr.
King's New Life Pills. Millions are
always at work, night and day, curing
Indigestion, Biliousness, Constipation,
Sick Headache and all Stomach,
Liver and Bowel troubles. Easy,
pleasant, safe, sure. Only 25c at
The Kaufmann Drug Co's., drug
store.
Agree to Modifications.
Pans, Feb. 25 ?It is reported in
responsible quarters that the chief
officials of the Panama canal company
have informed the American officials
here that the former had no objection
to two changes in the agreement sugi
gested in a recent dispatch from Attorney
General Knox, who proposed
the acceptance of the company's ten
der, subject to two modifications and
to the United States senate's ratification.
As Knox's proposition is understood
to refer to the ratification of
the treaty before March 4, the officials
say the attitude which the company
will assume after that the date is still
undisclosed.
. .
Zt Saved His Leg.
P. A. Danfortb,*of LaGrange, Ga.,
suffered for six months with a frightful
running sore on his leg; but
writes that Bucklen'a Arnica" Salve
wholly cured it in five days. For
Ulcers, Wounds, Piles, it's the best
salve in the world. Cure guaranteed.
Only 25 cts. Sold by The Kaufj
mann Drug Co , Druggists.
Train Huns Wild Down Mountain.
Altoona, Pa, Feb. 25.?One man
was killed, erne fatally injured and
four others more or lesB seriously
hurt in a freight wreck on the Pennsylvania
railroad at Kittanning point,
seven miles west of here today.
The dead man is J. H. Cox, a flagman.
The freight train of 36 loaded coke
and coal cars ran wild down the Allegheny
Mountain and collided with
another freight standing on the same
Ccfis/ire Dangerous.
How <W&n you hear the remark.
"Jt's onjy a cold," and a few days later
learn that the man is on his back
... / .
-wit]* pneumonia. This is of such
i common occurrence that a cold, bowI
i ever slight, should not be disregarded,
j Chamberlain's Cough Remedy coun|
teracts any tendency toward pneumonia.
It always cures and is pleasant
to take. Sold by the Kaufmann
Drug Co.
Why John \Vn* \li*cn(.
| The following brief but explicit tele!
gram was sent from a nearby state to
Georgia recently:
''Reason .lolin didn't git home fer
Christmas wuz?lie stoppe<l in a hotel
for the hrst time in his life an' blowod
?ut the gas."- Atlanta Constitution. ,
/tHEDFORoiV
/[BUCKDRAWtfTll
l^lSrU^M
j [Ia Constipation is nothing more
UflB than a clogging of the bowels
jP^ and nothing less than vital stag|a
nation or aeath if not relieved. flj
MP If every constipated sufferer j|
\ could realize that he is allowing S
poisonous filth to remain in his S
system, he would soon get relief. ?j
r Constipation invites all kind of
f contagion. Headaches, bilious- H
i': ness, colds and many other ail- ?
[ : ments disappear when consti- ^
I pated bowels are relieved. Thed- fl
I ford's Black-Draught thoroughly ?
A cleans out the bowels in an easy B
B and natural manner without the
V purging of calomel or other vio- I
m lent cathartics. *
1? Be sure that you get the origi- B
nal Thedford's Black-Draught, M
yg made by The Chattanooga Medi- is
W cine Co. Sold by all druggists in
2d cent and $1.00 packages.
8 Morgan, Ark., Mav 25, 1901. E
fig I cannot recommend Thedford's BlackDraught
too highly. 1 keep it In my house
all the time and liaTe used It for the last
; ten yeara. 1 never gave my children g?
Is any other laxative. I think 1 eoold gf
never be able to work without It
M on account of being troubled with ? jj
ftdflSk constipation. Your medicine Is
all that keeps me up.
C. B. McFABLAJfD.
/I HILTON'S
Lough cure,
^ A SYRUP.
Unique?tinlike any other cough preparation.
The quickest to stop a cough and
to remove soreness from the lungs. 25c.
THE MURRAY DRUG CO.,
COLUMBIA, S. C.
For Sale at THE BAZAAR.
Aug. 18?ly.
lif FRUIT TREES j
That Crow and Bear Frnit. '
Write for our 60 page 11wr-fetfr
lustrated Catalogue and 40
WjSEr page pamphlet, "How to
^3 Plant and Cultivate an Orchard,"
Gives you that information
you have so long
I wantedtells you all about
v'\- Ma those big red apples, lucious
\IIs50r peaches, and Japan plums
with their oriental sweetness,
. all of which you have often
>0^, wondered where the trees
came from that produced
aj| them.
EMWm lEVERYTHWB GOOD IN i
FRUITS.
tf* Unusal fine stook of 8ILVEB
MAPLES.young, thrifty trees
\$L * smooth and strai" ht, the kind
that live and gf ow off well,
' 5*t?i*??p old, rough trees. This is
LSIi&Ji&je the moBt rapid growing mapie
and one of the most beauT#X$kSafe"
tiful shade trees.
I??lkfa?w Write for prices and give
0 list of wants.
111111 * Van ^n^ey Nursery Co.,
Pomqka, N 0. ^
WOOD'S
Garden Seeds
Best for the "Sunny Sooth,"
because they are specially grown
and selected with a full knowledge
of the conditions and requirement^
of the South. Twenty-five
years experience and practical
growing of all the different vegetables
enables us to know the very
best, and to offer seeds that will
give pleasure, satisfaction and
I profit to all who plant them.
? Wood's New Seed Book for 1903
(Mailed on request) is full of good
? things, and gives the most reliable
? infonnation about all seeds, both
for the Farm and Garden.
T. W. WOOD & SONS,
|r Seedsmen, Richmond, Va.
J WOOD'S SEED BOOK also tells all
about Grass and Clover Seeds,
Seed Potatoes, and all
Farm Seeds.
! Write for Seed Book and prices of any
Farm Seeds required.
Parlor Restaurant,
1336 MAIN STKEET.
COLUMBIA, - S. C.,
mHE ONLY UP-TO-DATE EATING
1 House of its kind in the City of Columbia.
It is well kept?clean linen,
prompt and polite service and get it quickly.
Quiet and order always prevail. You get
what yon order and pay only for what you
get. Within easy reacli of desirable sleeping
apartments.
OPEN ALL IVIOIIX.
B. DAVID, Proprietor.
|S GURtS WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. E3
Im Best Cou^h Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
Ea time. Sold by druggists. gf
il Union Made Shoes, j
1903. |
:We extend to our Lexington friends a hearty welcome to inspect our line of Ij|
SHOES p
They have never been equal for the price. On (remnant) lots prices greatly
reduced. Spring Stock will begin to come on February 15th, W
CALL AND SEE US BEFORE BUYING. ||
E. P. & F. A. DAVIS,I
;1710 MAIN STREET COLUMBIA, 8. C.fl
i February 11#?ly.
j h
A Specialty. i
1 ATLANTA GRANITE
AJSJD
Marietta Marble Works.
We have the best eqaipped plant in the South, -with up to
date pneumatic tools aud polishing machines which puts us
in a position to do all kinds of
Marble and Granite Work
at very lowest prices. Estimates made on all kinds of
Cemetery Work, and Building Material.
Wholesale and retail. Call on or address,
S. G. HOZLEY & CO., 7. W. BASHES,
Proprietors, Atlanta, Ga. General Agent, Ridge Springs, S. C.
May 8?ly.
BLACK LANGSHAN
. ii ?
are the best all round Fowls on the
market. I have few very fine
COCKERELS AND PULLETS
for sale at low prices. They are from the purest and beet known strain,
and have been selected with the greatest care. For farther particulars,
address.
G. M. Harman, Lexington, S. C.
Slll fH CIKOLIM MARBLE WORKS
17?7 MAIN ST., COLUMBIA, 8. C.
MARBLE AND GRANITE
j Dealers South. We use the best grade material in manufacturing
' Monuments and Headstones and guarantee our work and
j fiinish to be tbe best. When you hear a man complaining
that he can buy so much cheaper from some
*?^ow w^o ifl an*i?ns to sell anything, you
|?2Bi3SBSH can put it down that he will get cheap stock,
cheap work, and of course a cheap job.
We can compete with any fair dealer
~. in thi? country, but we cannot
gaBpPpBp^^y^gl say we will sell as cheap as
some as we do not care
work.
IRON I WIRE FENCING, GRAV E LOT COPING, WE,
for sale. Write to us or see our
ME. P. B. EDWARDS, LEXINGTON, S. C.
and we will see that you are treated fair.
SOUTH GABOIJNA MARBLE WORKS.
September ll. 4A?tf
y DO WE KEEP f|
I GOOD STOVES? I
1ijp? Yes, and at prices surprisingly low as compared with quality. I?
V This is onr No. 8 GOLDEN BOD Cook Stove, with 20-inch
K Oven at $8 00; with 22 icnh Oven. $22.00, and these
prices include a complete set of Cooking Utensils.
" We also have Stoves and Ranges varying in price
?& from $8 to $4o,00, No more complete stock
j^p to be had anywhere in this State.
S There are none better than our Leader and Comfort Air <?
jjpj Tight Heaters for Wood. S
IP No. 016 LEADER at 82 25 f&
No. 118 COMFORT at 83 00 M
|2j No. 121 COMFORT at 84 00 Jg
^ No. 126 COMFORT at 85.00 PI
m B
Send Tour orders and inquiries to us.
I LEE 1 Mil 1 int. i
IB m
'4$, 1519 MAIN ST.. COLUMBIA, S. C.
March 19?ly^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^