The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, March 14, 1906, Page 7, Image 7

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g| " About a year ago," X 9 1123 Broadway, Augusta, Ga ll headaches and backaches, and Ier-V US VII * *> ?. w a V Wm ? . I immediately commenced tc like a new woman, and wi all sick women, for 1 kno\* them as it did me." Cardui is a pure, medicir vegetable herbs, which reliev pains, regulates female fur tones up female organs to proper state of health. Try it for your trouble. Every druggist sells : * - 1?yy P? 11 in uviLicz. " ' Salve! Salve!! Spread the Salve, but j let it be Pine salvr, natures remedy for ] i cuts, burns, sores, etc. Sold by Kaufman Drug Co. HappinesB is trine parts imagicE- | tion and one part brag about it. 1 DOORS. 173 S MainSt.,Coli a : Is where you can fii ' Jglj ' stock *g agaSfeE'.AX U of all ] H OS WT-Mr. Lee N. Fal * ^on, *s now us ai ^ you and show you ou] c. o. BROW SASH. ' ? . - ... iv BUY THI The Store Where Qua! ^SMPH* JE Post Office Block Cures Biliousness, Sick Headache, Sour Stomach, Torpid Liver and Chronic Constipation. ? 4 Pleasant to take ' '? -FOR SALE BY THE KAUFMANS DRUG CO. s sadache I writes Mrs. Mattie Allen, of || "I suffered with blind sick || I couid get no relief until I tried ^ RDUI ng e-emase i onsc m > improve, and now I feel sh to recommend it to ||j r that it will cure [ : lal extract of yy WWTE flj es female g 1 ictions, X We ^ g ) 3 jy es freely and frankly, describyy In? all yow symptoms. We SSia r yy employ a staff of specialists in femaie yy disorders, who will carefully consider fcriS yy yonr case and give yoa free advice. Do not [&? y hesitate, but write as today, giving acomplete [pi history of your troubles, end wc will send yoa plain Instrnctiocs what to do to get well. All corrcsndcnce kept perfedy secret, and reply sent yea ia L*. , sealed envelope. Address Ladles' Advisory Dept., \Y< HAT?ANQOGA MEDICINE CO., Chattanooga, Tecs, p UIIBilWiAibwmM'1 11iHfTI"f'l'hi' i Iff?'' Slumber Peacefaliy ver the lumber question. We have solved The best value for ever}' one's money 5 in our vard. Tliere is every variety of LUMBER sed here in the trade and the price t which we sell will gladden tho heart of he man wiio is figuring on a contract, We re headquarters for c Doors, Sash and Blinds nd especially ask the people of Lexington a call on us for their doors and Sash. N. H. DRIGGERS. Corner Lady and Gadsden Street, COLUMBIA, S. C. Phone 185. For bloating, belching, indigestion, etc., eat a Ring's Dyspepsia Tablet after meals. Sold by Kaufman Drug Co. When a woman hates somebody jit is a sign she is going to smile as if she didn't. ; BLINDS. ' [ 10 5 umbia, S (L f d one of the best P i :s of 13 I & kinds. ? law, formerly of Gas- q id will be glad to see p : stock. ^ !H & BRO. . CLASS. idren Cry ior It it's onr bread we're talking about. As a itter of fact many little ones prefer it to the :st toothsome cake. And who can say that ire's any better meal for a growing ohild than >owl of gencine bread and milk? Yon get re milk, we will supply wholesome bread, i th^e youngsters will have a cheap picnic at me. 'Phone if baby is hungry. EIDLINGER'S STEAM BAKERY, COLUMBIA, S. C. nrftTi _ : dloIi m ity and Price Counts. We now have a complete stock of all the Leathers and Toes. We can save yon money on yonr Spring and Summer foot wear, as we bought this stock early last Fall before the rise in the leather market hence you can see that this means a saving to the purchaser of about 25 per cent, on your shoes. Farmers medium and heavy weight work shoes a specialty. RMiLN, u Columbia. S. C. U1UNU ixative Fruit Syruj , LEXINGTON* 8 C. The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, March 14, 1906. Kentucky and Immigration. Senator James B. McCreary's bill dow pending in the senate of the United States to regulate immigration has a special interest for Kentucky, not only because it is the solution offered by one of the State's j senators to a question of great national importance, but because Ken- j tucky has of late shown a keen in- i terest in this subject. The measure ! proposed by Senator McCreary in- | creases the restriction upon unctesir- \ able immigrants and increases the facilities by which States with representatives at immigrant ports may secure from the great mass of immigrants that are pouriDg into the ! country, whatever they may need of : the better class of agricultural aDd j industrial laborers, and protest them- I selves measurably against immigrants j of an undesirable kind. j The first of these things Senator ; McCreary proposes to do by increas- ! ing the tax on immigrants from two i to five dollars, by adding to the list ; of excluded immigrants, and by in- ! creasiDg the efficiency of the iEspec- . tion service for enforcing this exelu- j sion. The other aDd is to be promot- \ ed by autborizing aDd directing the I I commissioner general of immigration j to maintain in connection with cash ; immigration station a bureau which ! shall furnish information as tc (ha j resources, products, manufacturer, 1 climate, soil, prices of land, etc, cf j each State and territory, the route of ! travel thereto and the cost of trans- i portation, and the opportunities for j employment in each State and terri- j tory in the various skilled and un- j skilled occupations, together with the j rates of wages and the cost of living, i To the same and?and this is of special interest in view of pending legislation in Kentucky?Senator McCreary's bill provides that when any State desires to maintain an agent at ; any immigration Btationof the United i States, the commissioner general of immigration shall provide such agent with suitable quarters, permit him to have access to all immigrants and give him aid so far as possible. It is important that the United States should adopt stringent measures for the exclusion of undesirable immigrants, in view of the accumulated evidence showing that an organized effort is beiDgmade to unload a vastly greater number than usual of such imigrants on this country. It I is likewise especially important to ' Kentucky that this state should not \ passively take it& chance, without j effjrt to protect or help itself, when other States are providing official representatives at immigrant ports. If Kentucky does nothing, it will not only allow ail desirable immigrants, such as are needed on our farms and in our factories, to be diverted to States that have the enterprise to go after them, but it will be likely to reI ceive more than it wantB of the un- i desirable class, Bince there is Borne reason to apprehend an organized effort to send these undesirable people to the south, while the west and northwest get the pick of the thrifty Germans, Scandinavians and Irish. This immigration question is an important one and a practical one. A step toward putting Kentucky in position to derive some advantage from the provisions of Senator McCreary's bill is propoeed in the bill that has been introduced at Frankfort by Senator Newman. This bill provides for a commission which shall, among other things, look after the immigration interests of the State. It does noi go as far as some would like to have it go, but it goes in the right direction and would put Kentucky in a better position, both for securing that influx of thrifty population, for which there is such a demand in manv mrte of the State, and for im ? r ' - I posing seme check upon the kind of i immigration that the State does not j want. It provides also for supplying i needed information to investors and home seekers from other States. The interest manifested in the subCleanses the system thoroughly and clears - sallow complexions of P pimples and blotches. It is guaranteed ject of immigration at tbe State development convention, held in Louisville in October, 1905, leaves no doubt of the importance attached to this matter in Kentucky. The convention referred to was composed of 588 delegates from outside the city of Louisville, met to consider matters of concern to the State. This convention asked of the legislature the A A Jf _ . _ _ _ _ . 1. _ l_ enactment 01 some measure esiaoliebiDg a state bureau of immigration and information. Tbe bill introduced by Senator Newman would in fffect supply such a bureau in an econoinial and practical way ?Exchange. Afflicted with. Rheumatism. "I was and am yet afflicted with rheumatism," says Mr. J. C. Bayne, editor of the Herald, Addington, Indian Territory, "hut thanks to Chamberlain's Pain Balm am able once more to attend to business. It is the best of liniments.'' If troubled with. rheumatism give Pain Balm a trial and you are certain to be more than pleased with the prompt relief which it affords. One application relieves the pain, For sale by Kaufman Drug Co. Our Preference. County Messenger. There are always a few items of news that we never print. If it is something that would hurt the feelings of anyone who might read it, we leave it out. If it is something that reflect upon me canracter ana gooa name of nome innocent psrson, we leave it out; if it is something that would not be nice to read about tbe fireside and in tbo presence cf children and ladies, we never print i'; if it is something that would make a few hearts lighter, we are glad to print if; if it is something that would encourage ;aoy one to lead a better life, we are anxious to print it. There is enough that is good and wholesome to fill this paper every week in the year. We like to lead the pubiic into higher and nobler wa\s of thinking if we can. We like to do all we can for the improvement of society, and the betterment cf maukind. We believe that there is more good than bad in the world, and that part cf our duty is to pick out the good and overlook the bad. There is enough of pain and sorrow and heartache in this world without heaping coals of fire on the dime of shame and regret by parading tbe faults of those who err. That is our etjle and that is the kind of paper we believe in inak'Dg . If that tui 18 >ou, we are glsd io hear you say so. ?A does of Pine-ules at bed time will usually relieve backache, before morning. These beautiful little globules are soft gelatine coated and when moistened and placed in the mouth you can't keep from swallowing them. Pine-ules contain neither sugar nor alcohol?just gums and resins obtained from our own native pine forests, combined with other well known bladder, kidney, blood and backache remedies, Sold by Kaufman Drug Co. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Lexington, Court of Common Pleas. Drucilla Bowers, Plaintiff, against, Burr Bowers, Ellen Meggitt, Mary Oxner, Hassie Cleg, Delia Thomas, Thos. J. Bowers, Emma Parker, Jacob Bowers, Jane Stromes, Abner Bowers and Alice Bowers and the children of Sarah Shackelford, deceased, Defendants. ^ ~ A o. ?> 4-r? PrtPATrorc TT!11 oil JLU lilt; JLICXCilVlilLlUO JJUHVIO, Meggitt, Man' Oxner, Hassie Cleg. Delia Thomas, Thomas J. Bowers, Emma Parker, Jacob Bowers, Jane Stromes, Abner Bowers, Alice Bowers and the children of Sarah' Shackelford, Deceased. Summons for Relief. (Complaint Served.) yOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED X and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint 011 the subscriber at his office at Lexington, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated 7th February, A. D. 190(5. G. T. GRAHAM. Plaintiff's Attorney. To the children of Sarah Shackelford, d'eeeased. and Hassie Cleg, take notice that the summons and complaint in the above stated case were tiled in the office of the Clerk of Court of Lexington county, at Lexington, S. C., on the 7th day of February, 15)00. G. T. GRAHAM, (Vw22 Attorney for Plaintiff. Warning. This is to notify all persons that Mose Davis, colored, under contract with me for 15)0(5 has left without cause and that the law will be enforced against any one giving him employment. 4w20pd J. E. REYNOLDS. SKETCH OF THE LIFE ' And a True Story of How Had Its Birth and How it to be Offered for Pu This remarkable , woman, whose maiden name was Estes, was born in Lynn, Mass., February Oth, 1S19, coming from a good old Quaker family. For some years she tauglit school, and. became known as a woman of an alert and investigating mind, an earnest seeker after knowledge, and above all, possessed of a wonderfully symp? thetic nature. In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkhara. a builder and real estate operator, and their early married life was marked by prosperity and happiness. Tliev had four children, three sons and a daughter. In those good old fashioned 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 eases. 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 to find them, in the roots and herbs 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 1S73 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 made known to the world. The three sons and the daughter, with their mother, combined forces to THE PRICES TELL. J.'B. FRID Wholesale GROCERS, FLOUR, 1 SFFH RUST f V bw hi V I w w ? We Want the Merchants, Pic it)(fton County to Call and Se Purchases, We Can Fill X Money, 1823 1K25 Main Sti g I SAW MILLS. B LIGHT, MEDIUM AND HEAVY || WOOD-WORKING MACHINERY g| pOR EVERY KIND OF WORK B ENGINES AND BOILERS B AND SIZES AND FOR EVERY II CLASS OF SERVICE. || ASK FOR CUR ESTIMATE BEFORE M PLACING YOUR ORDER. Bgibbesmachinerycompany b| COLUMBIA, s. C. OF LYDIA E. PINKHAM the Vegetable Compound the "Panic of '73" Caused blic Sale in Drug 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 steorsed 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, i 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 assm*ed. until today Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vegetable Compound have become household words everywhere, and many tons 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, sne baa proviaea 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 her 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, including 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 ha:d-won knowledge, and for years she assisted her in her vast correspondence. m_ i I ?v..?n., -f^n JLO I1CI" JLL ilLl u ."5 Udliiian^ j.cn iuq 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 pen, and the present Mrs. Pinkham,^ now the mother of a large family, toox it up. With women assistants, some as capable as herself, the present Mrs. Pinkham continues this great work,and 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 for 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. ???^?canawtmmmwr??rnxmammmm THE QUALITY SELLS'AY & CO., and Eet&il fEED MB GEAII,. 'ROOF OATS. inters and Fanners of Lexe Us Before They Jlake Ihelr our Wants and Save You eet. COLUMBIA. S. C. j PSRLOR RESTAURANT. B, DMID, Proprietor. | 1336 MAIS St., COLUMBIA. S. C. ! The only up to dare eatirp? nouse or us , kitnl in tho CJity of Columb a. It is well kept I ?clean linen, prompt and p^l'te service. You tret what yon order and pay only for j what you ger. Withm easy re .eh of desira: ble sleeping: apartments. j OPEN ALL NIGHT. j jtm&k DR. C. J. CLSVEROSj j SPECIALIST ON' i visptlf^ye, ear, throat, nose i and 1un3s. ; Pit rtf Piffl ?<? iind Residence. ! UUiiiauic: x iw ui v AM G'jv^es. 1421 and 112^ Marion St., | March 15 ?ly. COLUMBIA. S. C. i T X L reiKVea wiieo properly j applied.