University of South Carolina Libraries
r C Potash ^ is necessary for cotton to-produce 6 high yields and good fibre. Write for our valuable books on | | fertilization; th~y contain informa- | tion that means dollars to the | farmers. Sent free on request, i Write now while you think of it I GERMAN KALI WORKS ^ | 93 Nassau St., or Street0**1 i PE0FESSI02TAL CARPS. C. K. EFIBD. F. E. DEEHEB. EFIRD & DREHER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, LEXINGTON C. H. S. C. Will practice in all the Courts. Business solicited. One member of the firm will always be at office, Lexington, 8. C. JH. FRICK^ 7 ATTORNEY AT LAW, CHAPIN, S. C, Office: Hotel Marion, 4th Koora. Second Floor. Will practice in all the Courts ; ^ rTHURMOND & TIMMERMAN, 1 - ATTORNEYS AT LAW, WILL PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS, Kanfmann Bldg, LEXINGTON, S. C, W? will be pleased to meet those having logal business to be attended to at our office in the Kaufmann Building at any time. ' Respectfully, J. Wai THURMOND. ^ G. BELL TIMMERMAN, Albert m. boozer, attorney at law, ^COLUMBIA, S. C. Office: 1316 Main Street, upstairs, opposite Tan Mftre's Furniture StoreEspecial attention given ro business entrusted to him by his fellow citizens of Lexington county. W. A. CLARK. WASHINGTON CLARK. qlark & clark, attorneys and counselors, No. 1233 Washington Street, COLUMBIA. - - - - S. C. peorge r. rembert, XX attorney at law. 3221 law range, columbia, s. c. I will be glad to serve my friends from Lexington County at any time, and an prepared to practice law in all crate and Federal Courts. ' - , . Andrew crawfordT ? attorney at law. OOLUMBIf, s. , _ Practices in the State and Federal Courts, . and offers his professional services to the citizens of Lexington County, Law Offices, ( ) Residence, 1529 % 1209 Washington - > Pendle ton Street. Street. r ) Office Telephone-No. 1372. i , ' Residence Telephone No. 1036. ?BOYD EVANS, .LAWYER AND COUNSELLOR. COLOLBIA, S. C. <r . - F\R. P. H. SHEALY, IF DENTIST, ? ' LEXINGTON, S. C. Office Up Stairs in Roof's Building. JAMES HARMAN, DENTAL SURGEON, LEXINGTON, S. C. % (Office in Kear of Court House.) Informs the publiethathe will be in his office every Friday for the purpose of doing dental work in all its branches. DR. E. J. ETHEREDGE, SURGEON DENTIST, LEESVTLLE, S, C., Office over J. C. Kinard & Go's, Store. Always on hand. HR. F. C. GILMORE, DENTIST. 1510 Main Street, COLUMBIA. S. C. Office Houes: 9 a. m. to 2 p. m., and from 3 to 6 p. m. s. ^ . ' i t DR. G. J. 0LIVEB0S, 'mSmm nrc, ear,'throat, hose ARtl IUN3S. Guarantee Fit of Office and tiesidence. 'Glasses. 1424 and 142* Marion St., March 15?ly. COLUMBIA. S. C. 4sk_ I *?- ? ? _. > !(n ? II qp PARLOR HtSIAUKANl. IKAVID, Proprietor. . . 1336 MAIN, COLUMBIA, S. C. The only up to date eating hou?e of its kind in the City of Columbia. It is w^ll kept ?clean linen, prompt and p,4bte service. You get what yon order and pay only for > ?- what you g9t. Withtn ^asy reach of desirable sleeping apartm ent s. OPEN ALL NIGHT Drugs, Chemicals, STATIONERY. PAINTS - - OILS - - GLASS. GARDEN SEED?Bulk and Package. THE SICK MAN'S FRIEND. Licensed Druggist and Chemist. kinard, leesville. - . . s. c. ?? ? Sas Stood The Test 25 Tears. The old, original Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic. You know what you are takiDg. It is iron and quinine in a tasteless form, No cure, no pay. 50c. , ?naegHB?s?im a i m imai mmaun c?? Old Zeb White The Well Known Possum Hunter Tells a. Bear Story. " jS& S to varmints," said old Zeb /II White one evening as he roasted chestnuts over the hickory fire, "I think the b'ar ahead of all other sorts. He may not look so mighty cute, but when you cum to find out about a b'ar he's got mo' fun in him than a monkey. Tnar's heaps ?' times when he'd rather have a lark than a fout, and you've alius got to pitch inter him fust to make a row." The old man was asked to relate some instances of bear hunting, and, rrsii-i-; nir n fTvr* hie ninp 1lf? S3 id! L LAli^ Ct VVU4 A. \y A. UAM ? "When I built my fust pigpen yere I knowed that b'ars would be around arter the hawgs, and so I aimed to make it b'ar proof. It was a mighty \ * j ^ * ' <\ % I I "I WAS SKIPPIN' AHEAD O' THE C'-.ITTER." stout pen, with a powerful doah to it, but I hadn't had a liawg in thar ino'n a week befo' a b'ar took him out. Jest clawed that doah open sumhow and weDt off with the hawg befo' I could git outer bed. "When I put a second hawg in thar I didn't dun leave no doah at all, but made the pen all logs. Thar was also logs on the roof, with dirt on top o' the logs, but that same old b'ar cum along agin and went through the roof and got the hawg. He jest tumbled them logs around as if they was sticks. I got a third hawg, and as I reckoned how the b'ar would work I sot two traps on the roof of the pen. He couldn't do no fussin' around up thar without bein' eotched." "And so you got him?" was asked. "And so I didn't, sah," smiled Zeb as he put more chestnuts on to roast. "The fust night I had them traps sot the b'ar cum down and walked all around fur an hour or two, as his tracks proved. I was sartin he'd either got to give up hawg meat or be cotcked, and fur two or three days and nights I was powerful pleased. At sundown..one evenin' the old woman got sight o' the critter out by that chestnut tree. He sot up and looked at her and cocked his eye and grinned, and when be was gone she says to me: io fliov onr in fj /jCU >"t liiLC, IO UUJ - v..-, ~ b'ar? " 'Never heard as there was,' says I. 'And what about it?' " 'Kase that old b'ar is gwine to play us some trick as suah's yo'r bo'n. He was grir-min' as reg'lar as a human bein', and 1 could almost hear him chuckle.' "I didn't pay much attention to her words," explained Zeb, "but that was whar I missed it. What d'ye reckon that b'ar did that night? I'd shet him out by the door, and he knowed thar was danger on the roof, but he'd planned a way to git that kawg, and that's what he was grinnin' about. "That night he dug under the logs and got his pork, and he left a hole as big as a bar'l where he went in and cum out. I've alius reckoned that when he got up into the thickets with his meat he laughed fur an hour at the easy way he had beat me. Arter that I went out o' hawgs. knowin' I had no chance agin sich smartness. "Then thar was the case o' that b'ar who used to have a den about a mile west o' this. In his goin' and cumin' he made a reg'lar path, same as sheep. I sot a spring gun on the path and felt purty suah of my game, but he walked around the gun. Then I sot a big trap and kivered it all up, but he jumped over it. Then I laid out fur two hull nights to git a ftbot at him with my rifle, but lie went meanderin' some other way. I was powerful mad when I went home, and the old woman sees it and says: " 'It's no use, Zeb. That thar b'ar has got fun in him, and he's Iaughin' at yo\ He's probably a brother o" the one who got our hawgs. Better jess let him go and save yo'r temper.' "But I Wouldn't do it," said the old man. ',T made up my mind I'd have the best1 of that varmint befo' I got through. Next day I took the spade, and at a proper place on the path I dug a pit long 'miff and deep 'miff to hold an ox; took me two daj*s to do it, and when it was finished I kivered it over with sticks and leaves and dirt, and, upon my soul, nobody could tell that I'd bin diggin'. I was dead suah that old b'ar would cum along and go plunk to the bottom o' the pit, and between my back ache and thinkin' o' him I didn't sleep much that night. "Jest as soon as I could eat breakfast I was off, but when I got to the pit it was the same as when I had left it. That made me b'ilin' mad, and I started up the path to the cave to rout the varmint out. I wasn't keepin' the lookout I should have been, and all o' a sudden the critter jumped out on me. I I was so skeert that I dropped my rifle I ind turned and run, and lie followed <lus beliiud." "And you outran him, of course?" was asked as the old man paused and looked sheepish. "I was skippin' ahead o' the critter." he slowly replied, "when I cum to that pit. Befo' the Lawd, but I was so rattled I dun forgot all about it. and the { fust thing I knowed I broke through. The fall nigh broke my neck, and inebbe it was ten minits befo' I knowed whar I was. "Then I looked up, to find that old b'ar lookin' down, and if he wasn't reg'larly laugliiu' then may I never eat another yam. Why. sail, his sides was 1 shakin, and his mouth went cTar back ' to his ears, and when I realized how he 1 must feel I almost laughed with him. "He hung around fur half an hour, smilin' and chucklin', and then disap peared, and it was an uum i.-hu I got out o' the pit and got home. I was the maddest man in all this world, but I had to make the best of it. That b'ar had got the joke on me. and I knowed he was bound to cum out ahead every time.*' | "And you have other instances?" "Well, sah, I might tell vo' about the b'ar who hid in the cabin yere about five y'ars ago. "The varmint had bin hangin' around the place fur two or three months, but I couldn't never git a shot at him, nor would he put his foot into a trap. He was jest full o' tricks, and two or three times when I was sittin' on the steps and my rifle wasn't handy he'd show up and cock his eye and put on a grin. "I tried to pizen him, but he left the meat fur the foxes. I got dawgs arter him, but he only played with 'em. I had seven traps sot around the house one night, but the varmint cum and tipped over the rain bar'l and got away all rieht. One dav the old woman went visitin', and six men o' ns got together and beat lip the woods fur that b'ar. We sighted him twice and then lost him, and when night cum we had to give it up. Me and the old woman was talkin' about it at supper, and I says: "'I've started in fur b'ar, and I'll have that critter if I have to hunt the hull state over.' " 'No use,' says she. 'All .his actions go to show that he's a funny b'ar. and he'll be suak to cum out top o' the heap.' "Arter supper I went around back o' the cabin to tinker a hoop on a bar'l, and the old woman sot down on the doahstep with her pipe. Purty soon she gin an awful yell, and as I looked around she was tumblin' head over heels. Befo' the Lawd. sah, if that old ? b'ar wasn't standin' right in the doah, grinhin' and chucklin', and it was all of three minits befo' he took a stroll fur the woods and stepped oil as cool and calm as yo' please." 'But how did he come to be in the doorway?" was asked. "Why, sah, when we was huntin' him on the mountains he jest walked into the house, the old woman bein' out, and got under the bed and didn't cum out till he got good and ready. The fust thing the old woman knowed o' him was when he touched the back o' her neck with his cold nose. Yes, sah, he hid in this cabin fur above three hours, and then skeert the old [ woman and laughed at me, and drat my hide if he didn't make me a laughin' stock all over the country. "I'm sayin' and contendin' that b'ars are chuck full o' fun, and I'm almost believin' that if they had proper company fur six months yo'd h'ar 'em tellin' jokes to each other and laughin' like human bein's." M. QUAD. Just What Ersry'ocdy Should Do. Mr. J. T. Barber of Irwinville, Ga.; always keeps a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedv at hand ready for instant use. Attacks ,of cholic, cholera mobus and diarrhoea come 011 so suddenly that there is nc time to hunt a doctor or go to the store for medicine, Mr. Barber says: "] have tried Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy which is one oJ the best medicines I ever saw. I keep z bottle of it in my room as I have liac several attacks of colic and it has provec to be the best Medicine I ever used.' Sold by the ^Kaufmann Drug Co. Trivial Causes. 4 In meat unhappy marriages the cause of evil has been trivial. As Steele eaye, the first maxim in s married man's condition is that bus band and wife should be above tri flee. When two persons have sc good an opinion of each other as tc co'me together for life they will nol differ io matters of importance, be cause they think of each other wift respect and are prepared for mutua! assistance and relief. But for email er matters they have mede no prep arations, and hence springs the mis chief. Barring birthdays the societj woman tries to appear up-to-date. Sprained Ankle, Stiff Neck, Lame Sack. These are three common ailments foi which Chamberlain's Pain Balm is es pecially valuable. If properly appliec it will save you time, money and suffer ing when troubled with any one of thes< ailments. For sale by the Kaufmam Drug Co. INTERESTING LETTER WRITTEN BY A NOTABLEWOMAN Mrs. Sarah Kellogrgr of Denver, Color Bearer of the Woman's Relief Corps, Sends ThankB to Mrs. Pinkham. lette r was w ri t te n A.ve., Denver, Colo., to Mrs.Pinkmrnm kam' kynn,Mhss.: was troubled^with a IHg|3n5i great mental depression. I was unable to attend to my house work,and life became a burden to me. I was confined for days to my bed, iost my appetite, my courage ana an nope. " I could not bear to think of an operation, and in my distress I tried every remedy which I thought would be of any use to me, and reading of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to sick women decided to give it a trial. I felt so discouraged that I had little hope of recovery, and when I began to feel better, after the second week, thought it only meant temporary relief; but to my great surprise I found that I kept gaining, while the tumor lessened in size. *'' The Compound continued to build up my general health and the tumor seemed to be absorbed, until, in seven months, the tumor was entirely gone and I a well woman. I am so thankful for my recovery that I ask you to publish ray letter in newspapers, so other women may know of the wonderful curative powers of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." When women are troubled with irregular or painful menstruation, weakness, leucorrhoea, displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, flatulence, general debility, indigestion and nervous prostration, they cVirtit'M r?ri(?mW thara is ons triad and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes such trouble. No other medicine in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine: Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. Health is too valuable to risk in experiments with unknown and untried medicines or methods of treatment. Remember that it is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound that is curing women, and don't allow any druggist to sell you anything else in its place. R ;bert J. Barnes, a well known cotton man, was shot and instantly killed on Wednesday by Bvr m Trammell, postmaster at DothsD, Ala. Trammell surrendered at once, saying that Barnes, who boarded at his his bouse, had "wrecked his home." Mrs. F. M. Cope, of Chpas, S. C.. has brought suit for $75,000 through attorneys McCailough & McSwain, for the death of her son, Cbae. M. Cope, brakeman, who was killed in the Ogden train wrecfc in Greenville the 29 h of April. If people were given all they prey for the world would have to be enlarged. : FOR THE TOILET. ' | | i || Sweet Soaps, Castile Soaps, Per- 0 furriery from Hoyt's oc. size p jjg German Cologne to the ? g Finest Extracts, Toilet g 5 Powders, Pomade ? | Hair Oil, Bay * g Rum,etc.- g ?) Combs, Hair ^ 6 Brushes, Shaving S [ ^ Brushes, Tooth and g ' pj Finger Nail Brushes, etc. p ^jj See our line* of useful Toilet fe NSets, suitable for "Wedding Pres- ? ents, Birthday Presents or Gifts, p ^ There are numerous other articles ? ) j| that will pay you to call and see. | 1 N HARMAN'S - BAZAAR. 1 1 ii I - ^ Lexington, S. C. ^ L B I RSS B I Ming Tackle. 5 All Fisherman should re; member that the headquarters i for fishing tackle is at the - Bazaar. Yuu can find any kind of fishing tackle you may in stock all the time Such as: > HOOKS. LINES, BOBS. TROT s LINES, NETS, CANES, ETC. J. B. Reidliuger, RAM RR. ' iOLTJMBIA, - - S.C. Fresh Bread, Plain and Fancy Cakes, Pies, Cream Puffs, Buns, Rusks, Rolls, in fact everything that is i good to eat usually found in a first class bakery. Mail Orders Given Prompt and Careful r attention. 1 To Cure Constipation take just a mite of Liver Food before retiring each night. Ramon's Tonic Regulator supplies i it in a palatable form of powder, tea or tonic l 25c, ana money back if not satisfied, , For Sale at Harman's Bazaar They are Open for Inspection!! i Say, it is up to you whether you would save anywhere from 81.75 to $2.00 on a Spring Suit. We have in stock the greatest variety of spring suits and Gent's Furnishings to be seen in Columbia. Every Pattern is the latest Fad of Fashion. Greys, .Tans, Blues and Browns! Prices ranging from $2.75 to $18.00 and every article a bargain. $5.98 buys a swell thing in two piece suits, so don't forget to call on FRANK'S - JOBBING - HOUSE, 1427 MAIN ST., COLUMBIA, S. C., while in the city. Thanking you for past patronage, respectfully Frank's J obbingllouse. | To the People of Lexington! | When you need shoes for heavy work?in the ; the field, on the road and for ail round hard work?you certainly do want shoes that will j give you service, besides feel easy on your feet. ; Our shoes for hard wear cannot be surpassed. There is every element in them that is substantial for wear and comfort. We select the leather from top to toe that are used in these shoes, therefore we candidly say there are no better shoes made for heavy out door service. We also have a full line of Shoes and Rubbers for cold weather?for home and outdoor wear. When you want shoes for dress-up, remember we can supply your wants to your entire satj! ;sfaction. j Whenever vour need shoes for Men, Women II > ? ; i and Children we believe we can serve you best?vour shoe wants will be carefullv at* : tended to at this store. Thanking you very j kindly for your patronage and awaiting the ! pleasure of seeing you soon at our store, we remain, yours very truly, e THOMAS A. BOYNE, (OPPOSITE POST OFFICE.) j 1736 Main Street, Columbia, S. C. | I Tho 0 I Stan fnmnanv !i | 1190 Hi Li US]till UUHijJUUj | I ;! DESIRES YOUR PRESENCE ' I at the Sales Reception of their latest ideas ! |;j WEDDING INVITATIONS i | and | ! I SOCIAL STATIONERY ! | ;;! on Any Afternoon, the early day of Summer \ I |!| at any o'clock J; i in the Masonic Temple, Columbia, S. C. |j I PRINTING AND ' j; jj ENGRAVING ON SALE - ' j CONTINUOUSLY THEREAFTER. j| ' ?uy Your SPRING SHOES COLUMBIA, S. C. Nothing hut Solid Leather Shoes Sold and Every Pair Guaranteed. They are here and of course are beauties, because they are Keith Konquerors in High and Low Cuts. Elacks and Tans, A.U Leathers, Union Made. You are respectfully invited to call when in the city and inspect the ?e goods. Qaalifcy guaranteed. re hen's Mil op Slurp liUlltll KJ KJMVV KJCVA 1/ ^ 1636 MAIN ST.. COl UM8IA. S. 0.