The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, February 07, 1906, Page 2, Image 2
^vMoney In The Bank^jf
f The fanner's money-bag and bank ao- 3l
r'W /Sy* i\a count grow larger in proportion to the m thr^ \
rUMkx*V^?? fertility of his farm. To supply to your von# /I
V9Sf> *^3| farm land the elements that have been H j*ir i
T H'"Al taken from it by planting and harvesting jMBFi M A
season after season, use bountifully BiWyj
'Mill Jmfck every crop)?0 They lay at the
6 jHh|]jM/jM * ands of prosperous farms. I ^?~
These fertilizers are made of
suit of t?is combination is a
Jr ? Jf o land fertile and enriched, I
.>? ? which the testimony of thous- 1"! ^
ands of farmers show has no equal. Use I IflCrCoSi
iSS these fertilizers forall your crops?no mat- ?
SI ter what they may be. They will greatly I Ynt If
II ff "increase your yields per acre," and make I lvltll
11 II H UW MM your money-bag fuller. Ask your dealer jQ, i j
trll II fl m for them, and if he can't supply you, write I IlClQS
H. Is if H B a^M us direct. Don't pay your good money, I
Km II (1ml^M forgive your note, for any inferior sub- ur I
flUgm Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. V
S 4Mb Charleston. S. C. Memphis, Term. 'MBMNShbi^h
?ro
/7\ " SPOTLESS
|Washing Machines & Wringe
^ The stroogost. Looks as if it would last a
\w fmiSSiF time Easy to handle. Washes a tab
VMmHk The Elegant Li^ht Banning Wboeler
Wilson bewiDg Machine the queen of them
IBf? Ike New Home Machine. Bail bear:
??'"r . Pest shuttle machine. Fecond band i
P Hli chines. Needles lor all nachines. Atta
frM inents, shuttles, b6lts and the highest gr<
jw ^wl sperm machine oil-does not ruin jour i
Yv ' Jjf Mi oinne R*pairiug a speciality. Next door
M WM B M Wm. Piatt's Dry Goods store Come to
m mm HP 1 i || nrnnv
: * j ^ j. n. Duini,
1|J| 1802 Main St., Columbia, S.
m t To Buy Your WINTER 5
I SMOESS. i
J (At Old Prices.) J
J Wo have the most complete Fall stock ^
# of "Leather" shoes in everything for the i
T comfort of the feet that can be had, and ^
J at Live and let live prices. J
m J E. P. & F. A. DAVIS, I
i 1710 KAIN STREET. COLUMBIA. S. C. 1
5 We Bought Early Before the Advance. ^
*
Hp - ff B
New Books for the New Year.
jj ******************** ]
5 LEDGERS?Double and single entry, I
> | extrajdebit, whole accounts, etc. . 5
| JOURNALS?Two, three, four and six |
^ columns, jail styles of bindingi'and \
prices. |
^ r? ASWRnnTTR?All RiKAs. twoand three <
?* columns, printed headings, etc. j
\ DAY BOOKS?Blotters, memorandum }
^ books, receipts, draft and note books, {
f" . B etc. i
a i>
>5 A full line of loose leaf ledgers, etc. 1
A A <
I The R. L. Brvan Co.. i
| d ' ?
jj! Over in the Masonic Temple, 3
I COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA, 1
ill/: ; g ?
l?B* > '
T!!!r-?TT? ?
i
^y^,?,,'5,9^9'9^9v^/w*5r'5r'5r
4rnAiimiTnn\T n hi nr 1 \r \<i
| i^u u inriiijA nAIu ii A i.
j Unexcelled Dining Oar Service, M
i Through Pullman Sleeping Gars on all Trains,
^ Convenient Schedules on Local Trains. ^
/|\ For full information as to rates, routes, etc., ^
jvL consult nearest Southern Railway Tj^liet Agent, or
R. W. HUNT, D. F. A., Charleston, S. C. ^
fa BROOKS MORGAN. A. G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.
The Lexington Dispatch, j
^ 3ZZZZ==Z======I
I Wednesday, February 7, 1906.
> Billy Feliz's Letter.
To the Editor of tbe Dispatch:
(The record breaking warm spell
has given way to the cold bleak
I winds and rains of the North. I am
[ in a warm cczy room, with Mrs.
j Felix, enj jying ease aod comfort,
: after a twenty-eight mile drive
: through wind, fog, rain, sleet and
snow for such has been thus, Friday
the 26th. Uncle Sam's boys surely
earns all tbey get driving 26 and 27
days per month, exposed to such
climatic changes as we've had of late.
Bat I as one eDjoy the cool, bracing
air, move on and try not to complain.
Mr. Editor, you or your type force
or myself kindly slipped up on my
last communication relative to the
pistol carrying. May be we all are
at fault. What I wanted to say is
this: Pass a law prohibiting the
carrying of concealed weapons or exposed
for that matter, by any person
except a commissioned officer, sheriff,
magistrate, constable, and they carry
them where they can be seen.
Should anyone else desire to carry
one, let the Clerk of Court issue a
Hg permit charging for the same one
hundred ($100) dollars, this to go lo
ife the school funds. Then the parly
carrying the pistol on or about his
person where it can be neen and his
ig. name be printed in the county and
State papers at least three monthB.
,de Anyone violating this act be fined not
]?j less than five hundred ($500) dollars,
>ee or placed on the county chain gang
not less than five years. When fine
is paid, same go to the school funds.
Should a law something like this be
placed upon our statutes you surely
q would see less good, honest men
killed and wounded by the ever ready,
handy pistol carrier.
Again Mr. Editor, I see my name
has been handed in as a material witness
to prove the unlawful cohabiting
of certain parties Dear here. Now
I want it strictly understood that I'm
opposed to lawlessness in any shape
or form, and would do anything as an
honest, upright citizen should do for
the uplifting of humanity, elevatiDg
the morals and building up of a pure,
clean citizenship; but think the party
or parties who assumed the responsibility
and liberty of using my name
' ?. a L.
sDould Dave consulted me umure uuing
so. I know absolutely nothing
about the matter except hear-say and
that ia not worth anything in court.
Washington Wilkinson, R F. D.
_ agent, has been here and inspected
~~ route number one, eminating from
i from Gaston and informed the writer
that he was going to make a favor- j
able report to the department.. The
mail handled is steadily increasing.
List month showed over 2500 pieces
handled. An order has gone forward
for 25 more boxes. When these are
erected the number of pieces will
easily reach three thousand, which is
tbe standard.
It is a difficult matter to decide
who wears the broader smile and
deeper grin, C. S Goodwin, J. A
' \KT 15 Valloir atiH oil hfi.
J AUUCUB Ui. IT JU? j. atiuiij HUM w
cause there have lately arrived new
boarders at their homes, who some
day we trust may make excellent
cooks.
The accomplished Miss Edna Fallaw,
is visiting her sister, Mrs. W. B
Faliaw. Billy Felix.
Jan 26, 1906
If the Baby is Cutting Teeth,
Be sure and use that old and well
tried remedy, Mrs. Winslow's Soothing
Syrup, for children teething. It
soothes the child, softens the gums,
allays all pam, cures wind colic and
5? is the best remedy for diarrhoea.
m . /? ?. i 11 _
? wenty-nve cents a uoiiue.
~ tf It i8 the best of ail.
Honesty is Best in Business.
^ The liar may succeed for a time,
'g but eventually he will pay the piper.
* Such a leseon is conveved in the folf
lowing incident told by Dr. Morden,
g and repeated in the Baptist Comrnon*
wealth:
m "If I hire you," said a Detroit gro g
cer to a boy who applied for work, "I
7 suppose you will do what I tell 300?" j
g "T e, Sir."
"It I told you to s?iy the sugar was ;
J high grade, when it was Ijw, what j
. would you SB)?"
f Hesitatingly the boy said, "I'd say
it." *
"If I told you to say the coffee was
I
pure, when it bad beans in it, what
would you Bajf
"I'd say it."
The merchant was nonplussed.
"How much would you work for?" he
inquired very seriously.
"One hundred dollars a week," the
boy answered in a business like tone.
"Ooe hundred dollars a week!" responded
the grocery man.
i "With percentage after the first
two weeks," said the boy coolly. "Ycu
see," he went on, "first class liars
come high, and if you need them in
your business you'll have to pay the
pricf; but I'll tell the truth and work
for three dollars a week " The boy
caught the grocer at his own game
and got the job.
Pirating Foley's Honey & Tar
Foley's & Co., Chicago, originated
Honey and Tar as a throat and lnng
remedy, and on account of the great
merit and popularity of Foley's Honey
and Tar man}- imitations are offered for
the genuine. These worthless imitations
have similar sounding names. Beware
of them. The genuine Foley's Honey
and Tar is in a yellow package. Ask
for it and refuse any substitute. It is
the best remedy for coughs and colds.
The Kaufmann Drug co.
Legislative Affairs.
The State Feb. 3.
Eleven hundred bills have been introduced
in the lower house. This
number was reached yesterday and
breaks all records. The calendar
now contains maoy which might as
well be withdrawn, for they will be
killed and the discussion would take
the attention of the house from other
matters. The appropriation bill ought
to come in by the first of next week,
aDd then the other bills must look
out.
+
Lame Back.
This ailment is usually caused by
rheumatism of the muscles and may be
cured by applying Chamberlain's Pain
Balm two or three times a day and rubbing
the parts vigorously at each application.
If tills does not afford relief,
bind on a piece of flannel slightly dampened
with Pain Balm, and quick relief
is almost sure to follow. For sale by
The Kaufmann Drug co.
An Established Reputation.
(A deputy sheriff and chief of police
of a Rhode Island city, known in his
- ?1 J
lifetime as a man wnose woru uuuiu
always be taken, once gave a whimsical
demonstration of his straightforwardness.
One day, according to a
writer in the Boston Herald, a grocer
went to him for information about a
certain Joe White, who had applied
for credit at his store.
"Good morning, sheriff!"
"Morning!"
"Do you know Joe White?"
"Yes."
"What kind of a feller is ht?"
"Putty fair."
"Is he honest?"
"Honest? I should say so. Been
arrested twice for stealing, and acquitted
both times."
A Habit to Be Encouraged.
The mother who has acquired the
habit of keeping on hand a bottle of
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, saves
herself a great amount of uneasiness and
anxiety. Coughs, colds and croup, to
which children are suscptible are quickly
cured by its use. It counteracts any
tendency of a cold to result in pneumonia,
and if given as soon as the first
symptoms of croup appear, it will prevent
the attack. This remedy contains
nothing injurious and mothers give it to
little ones with a feeling of perfect
security. Sold by The Kaufmann Drug
co.
Woman is Assaulted Near City
i of Atlanta.
1 Atlanta, Jan. 30.?Mrs. Nina May
Dupree, a youDg woman twenty years
of age, who lives with W. H. Grogan,
a prosperous farmer near Cornell, six
miles from Atlanta, was assaulted by
a negro this afternooD, who after cut
'? ' _? i
ting ner tnroat ana leaving uer iu a
ditch in a dying condition, escaped.
More than one hundeid men are on
his track, pursuog with hounds, and
if captured lynching is almost certain.
Wanted.
Beeswax wanted in large or rm^ll
qa?rit:ltef. Uuhec? market prices
paid iu c??b. at the Baz-a . if
Toe Aiken Augusta trolley line is
to be expended to Columbia 8Dd it is
stated that cars will be running over
the line in less time than a jetr.
v
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\
I
i
A TRULYJDEAL WIFE |
HER HUSBAND'S BEST HELPER |
Vigorous Health Is the Great Source of I
Power to Inspire and EncourageAll
Women Should Seek It.
One of the most noted, successful and
richest men of this century, in a recent
article, has said, '* Whatever I am and
whatever success I have attained in
this world I owe all to iny wife. From
the day I first knew her she has been
an inspiration, and the greatest helpmate
of my life."
To be such a successful wife, to retain
the love and admiration of her
husband, to inspire him to make the
most of himself, should be a woman's
constant study.
If a woman finds that her energies
are flagging, that she gets easily tired,
dark shadows appear under her eyes,
she has backache, headaches, bearingdown
pains, nervousness, irregularities
or the bluiS, she should start at .once
to build up her system by a tonic with
specific powers, such as Lvdia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
Following we publish by request a
letter from a young wife
Dear Mrs. Pinkbam:
" Ever since my child was born I have suffered,
as I hope few women ever have, with inflammation,
female weakness, bearing-down
pains, backache and wretched headaches. It
affected my stomach so I could not enjoy my
meals, and half my time was spent in bed.
"Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
made me a well woman, and I feel so grateful
that I am glad to write and tell you of my
marvelous recovery. It brought me health,
new life and vitality."?Mrs. Bessie Ainsley,
611 South 10th Street. Tacoma, Wash.
What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Comnonnd did for Mrs. Ainsley it will
do for every sick and ailing woman,
i If you have symptoms you don't understand
write to Mrs. Pinkham,
daughter-in-law of Lydia E Pinkham,
at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free and
always helpful.
Some Extra Spi
A1
" The Store Ilia
25 Ladies' Kain Coats, the Newtst Styles an
50 only Young Men's Overcoats,; special fo
125 only Ladi-s' Finest Fascinators, tor thii
50 only Fine Circular Shawls at 40c. and 5(
2U0 pirc s best Outing made, for this sale 7
2,000 yards very heavy unbleached Canton ]
sale 10 cents the yard.
100 fine New York Mills 72-90 Sheets, sold t
100 pairs fins New York Mills Hemstitchei
300 pieces No. 40 and 50 wide all silk Taffet
sale 10c. the yard
590 pieces Itibbon, 6 inches wide, all silk, ?
this sale 15c the yard.
We have never shown such bargains since w
showing.
LACES. LAC
ik fi
.1i*
We have over fifty patterns of 10c., 15c. ant
for this sale is onlv 5c. per yard. You will fit
this lot. Don't fail to see them. Ladies' Mo
each. Children's Fine Wool Caps, for this sa
Men's Famous President Suspenders only 3'
Fine All Wool Sweaters SI 25 each. Ladie
this sale only 59c. We have extra bargains ir
per pair. We don't buy anything that we car
Grade Tailor Made Suits, blacks and assorted
each We Lave nade no lots out of them, au
fail to see thera Ladies' fine Satin Lined Jac]
a sacrifice; our SI0 00 Jackets, $5 00 each; at
fail to se? thetr. Lambs' 10c. Lace Collars. f<
It would take an advertisement a mile long 1
And we a:e sellii g them in a hurry.
2fO d ztn Bo,'.-. Fur and Wool Hat's, special
$1 o'J and S'2 00 Ha's. about 300 in the lot.
Lot Mo 2?Men's wr? high grade H>us. b.'act
for this sale $' f>0 each.
300 Men's Fine Cheviot Suits, h'ack or navi
St 93 ihe suit There are ecdksK otter i
sizes, all prices (.all and inspect this s:ock.
pockethook.
Opposite the Theatre.
C0LUMB]
Wbere tbe life knows no waste tne j
heart knows no weiltb.
It is a sin to suffer with backache and ! J
pains over the Kidneys, when a single ;
dose of Pineules will give relief in one <
night. Suffering women should heed
these warnings ere it is too late. Female 1
trouble may result. Pineules will
strengthen the Kidneys and bladder. ,
cleanse the blood and relieve the aches i (
and pains of Neuralgia and Rheuma- !
tism. Sold by Kaufmans Drug Co. j '
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 Fanners
ana Gardeners and it has long
been recognized as an up-todate
authority on all
Garden and Farm Seeds, particularly
for southern planting. ,
Wood's Seed Book mailed
free to Farmers and Gardeners
upon request. Writs for it.
T.W. Wood & Sons, Seedsman,
w^fjr.^Aain A 1
R:v*ncjJW!Mu, - y.ri.vxiiMi/u
We seiicit your orders direct, for bcih
VEG2TA2LE and FARM SEEDS,
if your merchant dor-- not sell
\VOO;ve c r-crr>3_
PARLOR RESTAURANT.
3. DAVID, Proprietor.
1336 MAIN St., COLUMBIA. S. C.
The only up to date eatinz house of its
kind in the City of Columbia. It is well kept
?clean iinen, prompt and polite service.
You set what you order and ray only for
what tou ser. Within easy reach of desirable
sleeping apartments.
OPEN ALL NIGHT.
T. X L. relieves when properly
applied.
^ h^rkbalsam
Clear*es and beautifies the aair.
58EhSk&> <i> %iim Promote! a luxuriant growth.
Never Fails to Eestore Gray
Hair to its "Xou.th.ful Color. .
Cure, ecalp di*ca*e? 3t hair tailing.
Mc. and <1.00 at Druggist.
PGIHES BOILER3.
Tuk*. euckA, ttui Pipes sad SkssWlrca
Work; SkafOac. Pulleys, flmln, >?n
Hangar*. at& Mill CaaCUkfS.
VCut arsry day; work 900 kaads.
* tMIAXO IKUH WUUl M Bvrriii w
UQUflTA, OTOlWfl
acial Bargains
o
i
t is Different."
d bestquali y. <5, $10 Ob aud $12 60 each,
rtbissale, $4 75 each
i sale 50c. 75c and $i 00 each.
)c. each.
\i. the yard. Only 50 yards to each easterner
ihannel. never i old under 12*c ; for this
ill abont for 85c ;for this sale 60c. each,
i Pillow Cases, for this sale 15c. each,
a Ribbons, the 15c. and 20c. kiad, for this
issorted colors; the 25c. kind all over; for
re have been in business as we are now
ES. LACES.
"\ /0 ! "
i / * * t
^ \ J
125c. Lace9, all in cue lot, and the price
id almost anv kind ot Lace yoa want in
urning Handkerchiefs for this sale I2?c.
le 25c.
Oc.
s Fine Black Mercerized Silk Petticoats, fo
i Men's Suspenders at 10c., '25c. and 5Cc.
1't get at bargain prices. Ladies' High
colors, some in the lot sold as high as $25
;d the price is $5 and S7 50 each. Don't
kets, the newest and best stvles. bought at
id all $15 00 Jackets $7 50 each. Don't
Jr mis ba.it; uu. cacu.
to tell you all the good things we have.
CLOTHING.
for this sale 25c. each. Lot 1.?Men's
i'on can take joor choice for SI 00 each
is, pearls and browns, all the new shapes:
7 Hoc, sold as a rule, for $3 50, our price
varieties tor men, boys and children all
We'll make the prices right to suit your
"The Store That is Different."
[A. S. C.
The Yellow Fever Germ
lias recently been discovered. It bears
i close resemblance to the malaria germ.
To free the system from disease germs,
the most effective remedy is Dr. King's
New Life Pills. Guaranteed to cure all
diseases due to malaria poison and eonstipalion.
25c. at The Kaufmanti Drug
?o's., drug store.
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