The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, January 17, 1906, Page 2, Image 2
h It is a well known fact that cotton, oz
K ginia-Carolina Fertilizers will bring the 1
8 Make healthy, strong, well-developed, ea
the fruit limbs at the base as well as all
flj ends of the branches of the cotton plant
I Virginia-Carolii
9 This is one of the several ways to inc
9 They contain all the materials neces:
H ments which have been taken from it by]
These fertilizers will greatly4'increase
g mixed by capable men who have been ms
9 lives. They contain materials in the ri
nj soil the plant-foods that it needs. Accej
? VirgJnia-CaroIiaa
br KiciunoncL, Va.
Norfolk, Va.
B Durham, N. C.
SB Charleston, S. C. HKliwMk
Baltimore, Md. KMfginia-Car
^HCciiemtoa
Increase Y>tirl??J|
Yields Per Acre |
m
jg JjW^aa
^^WEteS-AlU!BSEfi^i^vS
''
[COLUMBIA
We especially invite yon to come to 6ee u
Beds,, Lounges, Stoves, Lace Curtains, Side
DAYS SALE?FURS
W. H. SOWELL, FUENITTJ
Opposite Y. M. C
' J THE E
$ To Buy You
i SHC
? (At Old
? Wj . Koiro fkfl TYIrtot
^ IT V JL1C*/ V tUV XUVUV
i of "Leather'7 shoes in
^ comfort of the feet 'th
? at Live and let live p
?E. P. & F.
\ 1710 MAIN STREET
S We Bought Early B<
I New Books for
0* {I
s
I LEDGERS?Double
\ extra debit, whole
| journals-Two, i
columns, all style
\ prices.
| cashbooks-allsi
} columns, printed h
j | DAY BOOKS?Blott
\ books, receipts, dra
? etc.
| A full line of loose 1<
B 1
iOver in t.
COLUMBIA, SOI
TO ANY CHE WER of tobacco
mmrnmKmmwmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrmmmmtmmaa
' any other crop, produced with V ir- m
lignest possible price on the market. 55
rly cotton, with full grown bolls ou
the T-ay up to the very top and tip L.
.8, by liberally using ?3
la Fertilizers. g
rease your yields, P
sary to supply to your land the ele- gg'
repeated cultivation year after year. m
your yields per acre," for they are ffi
iking high-grade fertilizers all their ? I
ight proportions to return to your a
jt no substitute from your dealer, v" g <
i Chemical Co. ?% [f
2^"'WlLes i
HAbevel^r ;
SPOTLESS
ishing Machines & Wringers
s'rongest. Looks as if it would last a life
j. Easy to handle. Washes a tnb of
hes in 5 to 10 minutes
he Elepant Li^ht Rnnning Wheeler &
son J*ewicg Machine the queen of them all
he New Homo Machine. Ball beariDg.
t shuttle machine. Second hand manes.
Needles for all machines. Attaches,
shuttles, belts and the highest grade
rm machine oil? does not ruin joor mane
Impairing a speciality. Next door to
. Hi-t flnnrla Cnmft to See
! i. lavb O A/A J VAVVMV W v ? ? ?
J. H. BERRY,
02 Main St, Columbia, S. C.
TURE.
URNITURE CO.,
, s. c.
5 for your Furniture, Cheap Suites, Iron
Boards, Hall Racks.
nSH YOUR HOUSE.
BE CO., 1231 Main Street,
). A. Building.
/VWVWWW*
LACE J
r WINTER \
Prices.) J I
complete Fall stock ^
everything for the 5
at can be had, and ?
irices. J
A. DAVIS, I
COLUMBIA, S. C. J J
sfore the Advance. S i
I
~ ]
the New Year. ;
5
and single entry, < j J
accounts, etc. \ I
5
;hree, four and six \
5s of binding and g
(I 1
5 ]
zes, two and three J >
eadings, etc. | j *
ers, memorandum 5
ift and note books, {
* fe
>3 i
saf ledgers, etc. ? i
S i
tie Masonic Temple, \
(
CJTH CAROLINA, 1
i L!
r*WaVaVVjiWaV*WftVaVtV 1
?TO THE
who will cut out and mail us this a
The Lexington Dispatch.
Wednesday, January 17, 1906.
A Letter.
Congressman L*ver says: I enclose
vou my check for the Southern
Farmer. I wi?-b for your Journal the
3UC.;ess ttmt such an undertaking i
deserves. I au? confident that eucb
a paper will be of inestimable value
to tbe agiicutturai iutereer* of tbe
State, an interest which is jast now '
beginning to march out of me gloom
into the broad daylight of immeasurable
possibilities. Tbe farm boy is
about to come into possession of his
owl; be is about to be tfce most
potential factor in the development
^ 0/mi4U T tfnot f Vittt t nuntif
j1 cue uuuiu' x 11 u?u iuau juviil
will teacb him tbn; tb?t it Will tench
bbe young manhood of the fcnnte thatit
takes as much brain to run a farm
successfully as it does to meaeure off
sloth or weigh sugar from behind a
counter; that it takes as much equipment,
as much capacity, and as much
LraiDiDg to get from nature her
hidden wealth as it does to reap
honors and successes in any of the
business or learned professions.
The paper which will teach this
central idea must be of great value
to the State. I wish you unlimited
success in the undertaking.
Your friend,
A. F. Lever.
The Grip.
"Before we can sympathize with
others, we must have suffered ourselves.''
No one can realize the suffering attendant
upon an attack of the grip, unless
he has had the actual experience. There
is probably no disease that causes so
much physical and mental agony, or
which so successfully defies medical aid. \
All danger from the grip, however, may
be avoided by the prompt use of Cliamberlain's
Cough Remedy. Among the
tens of thousands who have used this
remedy, not one case has ever been reported
that has resulted in pneumonia
or that has not recovered. For sale by
Kaufmami Drug Co.'
World's Meat Market.
Washington, Jan. 10?Nj other
cptrntry produces so great a surplus
of meat, and no other country, except
Ireland, eeDds so man^ cattle to the
Eoglish market as the Uoired State*,
according to a bulletin issued by tbe
department of agriculture ypaterdav
During the year ended June 30.
1904, tbe exports of p?okieg HoSa*
products were valued 8* $217,000,000,
while tbe exports of United States
cattle to British pr?rt? duriDg that
year amounted to 378,000 bead, valued
at $36,000,000, and along with
tbem were exoorted 223,000 sheep,
worth nearly $2,000,000
Belgium has become an important
destination for United States cattle,
? j i.i lonftrt
huu more ma" 10 uw weio ca^uucu
there duriDg 1904
If the Baby is Cutting Teeth,
Be eure and use that old aod welt j
tried remedy, Mrs. Winslow's Soothing
Syrup, for children teetbiDg. It
soothes the child, softens the gums,
allays all parn, cures wiod colic and
is the best remedy for diarrhoea.
Twenty-five cents a bottle,
tf It is the best of all.
Card from Arkansas.
Please allow me space in your
solumns to tell my friends and relatives
a few things of my new home.
I am located in Columbia county,
the southwestern portion of Arkansas.
Magnolia is the county seat. I
like the country fine and think it i?
i good farming country. I have not
^ - i "r i n
3een any laBd teat i neneve wouia
ot make a bale of cotton to the acre.
A. bale that doL'c weigh 500 pounds
here is Dot called a bale. They pay
the sixteenth here for ginning. So
jou see it takes about seventeen cwt
to make a bale.
We are all in good health. I think
it is very healthy here. I will wait
md see what this country is and
makes, then I will tell you more
D Lee Hat man.
Magnolia, Ark, R. F. D 4.
For any disease of the skin there is
aothing better than Chamberlain's Salve,
[t relieves the itching and burning sen
nation instantly ana soon enects a cure
Sold by Kaufmann Drug Co.
Praises Cotton Association.
There is m reasonable d<>ubfc of the
fact that the Southern Cotton association
has accompliebed woDders in up
aoldiDg the price of cottor. While
?ur own ppnple e7en members, >?re
r?ot giving the association credit for
ill it is doing, its influence >8 generally
recogn;z2d north ?nd abroad. While
everybody understands that the price
nf cottoa ought to be controlled by
the laws of supply and demand, and
while there is now a verv widespread
knowledge of the fact that these Ihwh
ire at present operatic*? tn a more
marked degree than ever before, since
BBHHnaBBBHBMflBa
If you haven't Red Meat Toba
Tr?? TO THE C(
We give you our absolute gi
Red Meat is made of better
gooi solid juicy chewing
nlr 7 of anv weight offere
A Writ name and address plainly !
dvertisement,we will mail him a c
Manufactured Only by^Liipfert-Si
? I tbe
cival war, tbere are many who j
have Dor. stopped to think that thin i
condition has been brought about !
almost entirely through the <-ff>rts j
of tbe Southern Gotten association, j
Of course ' if is a big word, ?"d j
may be used as a shortway arouni i
almost any propositiot: but we have
no hesiiatioD in saying tbHt ir is our
deliberate opinion that i? it bad Dot
been for the Southern Cotton asecciation
the average orice received f >r
the current crop of cotton would not ,
have been above 8 cents. We believe
a'ao that there is not a man in the
United States who is more tnoroughlj
\ s\f tKio f.iz-.f than in \T r
l ri ' uio iniyU luciu 10
Theodore H. Pnce, tbe ?brewd bear
leader of New York ?Yorkville Enquirer.
A Jamaican Lady Speaks Highly
of Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy.
Mrs. Michael Hart, wife of the superintendent
of Cart service at Kingston,
Jamaica, West Indies Islands, says that
she has for some years used Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy for coughs, croup
and whooping cough and has found it
very beneficial. She has implicit confidence
in it and would not be without'a
bottle of it in her house. Sold by Kaufmann
Drug Co.
The Flying Lizard of Java.
Tbe curious little animals known
hh flviutj l>z*rda (Draco v.jUn-) artoniv
found in Java, and ib^ir strange
appearance is supposed to have been
tbe origin of tbe dragon of the mediaeval
eastern imagination The reptile
is like an ordinary lizard, but is provided
with folds of ex'eosible t-kiD
which are spread out by tbe long
ribs aDd enable tbe anim-l to glide
through the air from tree to tree in
pursuit of tbe insects on wbich it
preys Wbea lying pi one on the
mottled surface of a bougb, it is an
excellent example of "protrp*'ve renemblaoce,"
as it is most diffieufc to
be seen unless jt moves.
In Serious Condition.
"Washington, Jan. 11?It was
stated at tbe N<ew Williaid hotel at
noon tbat Mre Minor Morris, tbe
woman who was forcibly fjected
/ . n?. . T-r .L
ironi toe wnite aoui-e k wee-K age,
remains in a dangerous condition.
At timed she iaps-s -d.o a comatose
state.
How to Prevent Bilious Attacks
One who is subject to bilious attacks
will notice that for a day or more before
the attack he is not hungry at meal
times and feels doll after eating. A dose
of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver
Tablets when these first symptoms appear
will ward of the attack. They are
for sale by Kaufmann Drug Co*
Family Burned to Death.
Lewisfcon, Pa., Jan 9 ?Seven per8
ins, comprising- an entire family,
were burned t) death in a fire wbicb
destroyed the borne of Isaac Syler, at
Pleaeantville, Juoiata county, this
morning Tbe dead arb Mr. Sjder,
bis daughter, Mrs. Peter Martin aDd
the latter's five children.
B^Equets will Lot feed tbe heart
hungry.
Wood's Seed Book
FOR 1906
is one of the handsomest and
most valuable publications of
the kind issued. The useful
and practical hints contained
in the annual issues of Wood's
Seed Book make it a most
valuable help to all Farmers
ana Gardeners and it has long
Vvoor* vonArm?oa Q T\ Ilivt/W !
lA/C'U UW V.J/ WW
date authority on ail
Garden and Farm Seeds,
particularly for southern piantipg.
Wood's Seed Book mailed
free to Farmers and Gardeners
upon request. Write for it
T.W. Wood & Sons, Seedsmen,
RICHMOND, - VIRGINIA.
Wo solicit your orders direct, for both
VEGETABLE and FART/ SEEDS,
if your merchant Cop> not sell
WOOD'S SEEDS.
PARLOR RESTAURANT.
B. DAVID, Proprietor.
1336 MAIN St., COLUMBIA.. S. C.
The only up to date eating house of its
kind in the City of Col urn Ira. It is well kept
?clean linen, prompt and polite service.
You tret what y>n order and pay only for
what v?u get. Within easy roach of desirable
sleeping apartments
OPEN ALL NIGHT.
The children's jubilee of good health
follows the use of Bee's Laxative Honey ]
and Tar, the coiigh syrup that expels ]
all cold from the system bv acting as a J
cathartic 011 the bowels. Accrtain '
remedy for Croup, Whooping Cough \
and all lung and bronchial affections. J
Sold bv Kaufmanu Drug Co. I
??b??a?PWBawBBMWiBnwwwawB
ceo in stock, write the factory?we
3NSUMER : JBM
uarantee that each 10c plug of
tobacco and contains more
quality than any other 10c 8S
d or sold by any factory. In
here: JfflgL
:ard which will entitle him to one 5c (
:ales Co.. Wiaston-Salem, N. C.
WHO SI
SKETCH OF THE LIFE
And a True Story of How
Had Its Birth and How
it to be Offered for Pi
This remarkable woman, whose
maiden name was Estes, was born in
Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1819, coming
from a good old Quaker family.
For some years she taught school, and
became known as a woman of an alert
and investigating mind, an earnest
seeiker after knowledge, and above
all, possessed of a wonderfully sympathetic
nature.
In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkhara.
a builder and real estate operator, and
their early married life was marked by
prosperity and happiness. They had
four children, three sons and a
daughter.
In those good old fashioued days it
was common for mothers to make
their own home medicines from roots
and herbs, nature's own remedies?
calling in a physician only in specially
urgent cases. By tradition and experience
many of them gained a wonderful
knowledge of the curative properties
of the various roots and herbs.
Mrs. Pinkham took a great interest
in the study of roots and herbs, their
characteristics and power over disease.
She maintained that just as nature so
bountifully provides in the harvestfields
and orchards vegetable foods of
all kinds; so, if we but take the pains
^ -? ' ? j i - J 1 1_ -
To una mem, in me roots a.nu nerus
of the field there are remedies expressly
designed to cure the various
ills and weaknesses of the body, and
it was her pleasure to search these out,
and prepare simple and effective medicines
for her own family and friends.
Chief of these-was a rare combination
of the choicest medicinal roots
and herbs found best adapted for the
cure of the ills and weaknesses peculiar
to the female sex, and Lydia E. Pinkham's
friends and neighbors learned
that her compound relieved and cured
and it became quite popular among
them.
All this so far was done freely, without
money and without price, as a
labor of love.
But in 1873 the financial crisis struck
Lynn. Its length and severity were too
much for the large real estate interests
of the Pinkham family, as this class
of business suffered most from
fearful depression, so when the Centennial
year dawned it found their property
swept away. Some other source
of income had to be found.
At this point Lydia E. Pinkham's
vegetable compound was maae Known
to the world.
The three sons 'and the daughter,
with their mother, combined forces to
FITZM/
Dry Goods, No
BACK INTO TH
We wish to inform our friends and pati
in new quarters?the same stand that we
more space, modern in every respect, witl
bought at the lowest prices, which you w
before it will be too late for you. This si
lience we can't charge you with somethin
kindly help yourself to the Bargains. Tli
before. Yours Truly.
JOHN FITZ
1704-1706 MAIN SI
WHOLESALE
Greatly in Demand.
Nothing is more in demand than a ]
medicine wlucn meets modern requirements
for a bl< >od and system cleanser,
such as Dr. Kind's New Life Pills. They
ire just what yon need to cure stomach
md liver troubles. Try them At The
Kaufmann Ding Oo.'s Drug: Store, oOc.,
guaranteed.
will supply you direct. ???
W m
:ut of Red Meat Tobacco FREE at
IE WAS
OF LYDIA E. PINKHAM '
the Vegetable Compound
r the "Panic of '73" Caused
ihfic Sale in Drue- 'Stores.
restore the family fortune. They
argued that the medicine which was
so good for their woman friends and
neighbors was equally good for the
women of the whole world.
The Pinkhams had: no money, and
little credit. Their first laboratory
was the kitchen, where roots and
herbs were steeped on the stove,
gradually filling a gross of bottles.
Then came the question of selling
it, for always before they had given
it away freely. They hired a job
printer to run off some pamphlets
setting forth the merits of the medicine,
now called Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, and these were
distributed by the Pinkham sons in
Boston, New York, and Brooklyn.
The wonderful curative properties of
the medicine were, to a great extent,
self-advertising, for whoever used it
recommended it to others, and the demand
gradually increased.
In 1877, by combined efforts the family
had saved enough money to commence
newspaper advertising and from
that time the growth and success of
the enterprise were assured, until today
Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vegetable
Compound have become household
words everywhere, and manytons
Of roots and herbs are used annually
in its manufacture.
Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not
live to see the great success of this
work. She passed to her reward years
ago, but not till she had provided ' means
for continuing her work as
effectively as she could have done it
herself.
During her long and eventful experience
she was ever methodical in ner
work and she was always careful to preserve
a record of every case that came to )
her attention. The case of every sick
woman who applied to her for advice?
and there were thousands?received
careful study, and the details, includ- *
ing symptoms, treatment and results
were recorded for future reference, and
to-day these records, together with
hundreds of thousands made since, are
available to sick women the world
over, and represent a vast collaboration
of information regarding the
treatment of woman's ills, which for
authenticity and accuracy can hardly
be equaled in any library in the
world.
With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her
daughter - in - law, the present Mrs.
Pinkham. She was carefully instructed
in all her hard-won knowledge, and
for years she assisted her in her vstst
correspondence.
To her hands naturally fell the
direction of the work when its originator
passed away. For nearly twentyfive
years she has continued it, and
nothing in the work shows when the
first Lydia E. Pinkham dropped her
tpen, and the present Mrs. Pinkham,
now the mother of a large family, took
it up. With women assistants, some as
capable as herself, the present Mrs.
Finkham continues tms great work.ana
probably from the office of no other
person have so many women been advised
how to regain health. Sick women,
this advice is "Yours for Health"
freely given if you only write to ask
fcr it.
Such is the history of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound; made
from simple roots and herbs; the one
great medicine for women's ailments,
and the fitting monument to the noble
woman whose name it bears.
fsnsio iPlnihinff
UUSId) UaUlliill^
E NEW STORE.
:ons in Lexington that we are once more
formerly enjoyed, only entirely different,
1 a stock of entire new goods which were
ill readily see by calling at Fitzmanrice's
ore cost yon. nothing. No rent to pay,
,g we can't charge you. for. Will you
lis Fall nothing like the bargains offered
MAURICE.
P., COLUMBIA, S. C.
AND RETAIL
1^
HAIR BALSAM
riSsfaSam^ Bta pimt-vi g.r.d beautifies the nair.
Vf1 om3 I'roir.otca & luxuxiaut growth.
-Never Fails to Bestore Gray
Hair to its Mouthful Color.
Curt* scalp di.'ftws & hair failing.
5?^L?jr^53 JOc.ant! jl.Wat DruggiaU
T. X L cures Leuta^ia
t_ i .. ? :_
tJtJ'I'lUSV * j-l UJU UU iUULU 1U ti
benrr lull of U.Vi-.
any store handling this brand.