The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, March 28, 1906, Page 3, Image 3
?v _ m^gBMnmnnnnBnmi
DO YOU GET UP
WITH A EAME BACK?
* Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable.
r Almost everybody who reads the newspapers
is sure to know of the wonderful
o cures made by Dr.
,<* < ' -*j Kilmer's SwampI
Root, the great kidt
nev, liver and bladvr^Sl
(der remedy.
H N It is the great medtjfi
ical triumph of the
I, nineteenth century ;
k f4 \fe=j i, " TT-, u{]i discovered after years
{? ueri of scientific research
v; f ?p3<r~- ~by Dr. Kilmer, the
1 1 " "y ~ " eminent kidney anci
bladder specialist, and is wonderfully
Successful in promptly curing lame back,
uric acid, catarrh of the bladder and
Bright's Disease, which is the worst
V fbrm of kidney trouble.
Dr. Kilmer's .Swamp-Root is not recommended
for everything but if you have
kidney, liver or bladder trouble it will be
found just the remedy you need. It has
. been tested in so many'ways, in hospital
work and in private practice, and has
proved so successful in every case that a
? special arrangement has been made by
which all readers of this paper, who have
, not already tried it, may have a sample
bottle sent free by mail, also a book telling
more about Swamp-Root, and how to
find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble.
When writing mention reading this
generous offer in this paper and send your
V address to Dr. Kilmer
& Co., Bingham ton, g 5g5|
fifty-cent and one-^^^^3ls==SPii=
dollar size bottles are Homo of Swinp-Roat
1-3 1 Unn't nioVp
SKMU OV <U1 gUW Ui wu w
any mistake, but remember the name,
Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root,
and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on
every bottle.
-n) * - i i ????
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
Ad. martin, attorney
and counselor at law,
lexington, s. c
Office in Harman Building rear of court
house.
Will practice in all courts. Special
attention to collection of claims.
* - wm. w. hawes,
*7 Attorney and Counselor at Law.
NEW BBOOKLAND. S. C.
: Practice in all Courts. Business solicited.
November l, 1905.
? # 1 ?*
V C. *. XFIBD. F. E. DBEHBB.
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.
?| S ''
Jh. frick.
attorney at law,
UtLAriJN, S, U.
Office: Hotel Marion, 4th Boom. Second
Floor. "Will practice in all the Courts
Thurmond & timmerman,
attorneys at law,
WILL PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS,
Kaufmann Bid*, LEXINGTON, S. C,
We will be pleased to meet those having legal
business to be attended to at our office
In the Kaufmann Building at any time.
Respectfully,
ir. Wm. THURMOND.
G. BELL TIMMERMAN,
Albert m. boozer,
attorney at law,
COLUMBIA, S. 0.
Office: 1816 Main Street, upstairs, opposite
' Van M* tre's Furniture StoreEspecial
attention given to business entrusted
to him by his fellow citizens of Lexington
a county.
peorge r. rembert,
u attorney at law.
1221 LAW RANGE, COLUMBIA 8. C.
$ I will be glad to serve my friends from Lexington
County at auy time, and an prepared
to practice law in all state and Federal
Courts.
xttydwttt- m? awparih
/? XI X/1VU TV V1.TA 11 JL
^ A ATTORNEY AT LAW,
COLUMBIA S. C.
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. ( )
Office Telephone No. 1372.
Residence Telephone No. 1036.
?BOYD EVANS,
.LAWYER AND COUNSELLOR.
v Columbia, S. C.
DR. P. H. SHEALY,
DENTIST,
LEXINGTON, S. C.
Office Up Stairs in R-oof s Building.
TlR. F. C. GILMORE,
v U DENTIST.
1510 Main Street, COLUMBIA, S. C.
Office Houes.- 9 a. m. to 2 p. m., .'and from
S to 6 d. m.
sptliiffl
i DEALER IN g
rGeneral I
I Merchandise, 1
* * ? U-!- ?M<I Maim CUAAI /
fj uorner main a?u ncn ?* ?? ; ?
5 Opposite Confederate 5
f Monument, A
g Lexington, - - S. C. g
It is not difficult to relieve blind,
bleeding, itching or protruding piles
with ManZan, the great pile remedy.
It is pnt np in collapsable tubes witli
nozzle, and may be introduced and applied
at the seat of the trouble. Stops
pain instantly. Sold bv Kaufman Drug
r co.
\
^ * >
The Lexington Dispatch.
Wednesday, March 28, 1906.
A Defense.
Greenville Mountaineer.
SiDce the votiDg out of the dispensary
from this county and the closing
I of legalized places of selling liquor
| we have spoken in these columns
j several times of the improved condi|
tions here. The other Greenville
papers have done the same. But
there are some people in other places
who do not care to believe tbatthioge
are any better than they were under
the dispensary regime. When aDy
little thiDg occurs, they are ready to
clap their bands and shout, "I told
you so." It is tiresome to read some
of the deliverances of some of our
exchanges on this subject.
(Greenville has not reached the
millenium yet, we admit. There
have been things to occur lately that
all peace loving citizens deplore.
Blood has been spilt. Greenville
people regret these things, we do
not take pleasure in recording them,
but notwithstanding them, there is
no reason to regret the closing of the
dispensaries. It would be a blind
man, a deaf man who did not know
that conditions were much improved.
Ask any fairminded citizen and see
what he will tell yon. Ask the sheriff,
the mayor, the chief of police, the
policemen, the business men at large,
and the reply is the same. There
were blind tigers in Greenville while
the dispensaries were in operation,
there are some few still, we have no
doubt, but they are very sly. We
have a sheriff who is one of the most
faithful and conscientious of men.
He is doing bis duty. The constables
are vigilant, they are making it
rather warm for violators of the law,
but in spite of ail vigilance, there
will be some whiskey sold. No man
ever believed that when we voted the
diepensary from our borders, that all
drinking or selling would cease. We
wish that such was the case, but we
have no regrets. If the people cf
the county had another opportunity
to express themselves at the polls we
firmly believe the same decision
would be reached. All over the
county there are improved conditions.
The magistrates are unanimous in
saying that they have fewer cases
before them. Farmers are having
less trouble with their bands who
were in the habit of filling up on
cheap whiskey on Saturdays and
sometimes making the air resound
, with their boisterous conduct and
loud-mouthed profanity as they wended
their way homeward at night.
Many a dollar which used to go
each week into the coffers of the dispensaries
now finds its way into the
tills of our merchants in return for
some of the very necessities of life.
If Greenville people are satisfied, it
ought not to concern people in other
places who seem to love to point
their finger at us and exult, and attribute
everything that occurs to the
fact that Greenville no longer has a
dispensary. But some persons do
not want to believe there has been
any improvement, therefore they do
not believe it. But we Greenville
people are fully satisfied to get along
without any dispensaries, and we are
confident conditions are far better
than they were a few months ago.
Tortus Bv Savaffes.
"Speaking of the torture to which
some of the savage tribes in the Philippines
subject their captives reminds me
of the intense suffering I endured for
three montlis from inflammation of the
kidneys," says W. M. Sherman,of Crushing,
Me., "Nothing helped me until I
tried Electric Bitters, three bottles of
which completely cured me." Cures
liver complaint, dyspepsia, blood disorders
and Malaria; and restores the
weak and nervous to robust health.
Guaranteed by The Kauf.mann Drug
co., druggist. Price 50c.
?
Our Cotton on Hand.
Our efforts in tbese columns has
been chiefly directed towards checking,
if possible, the increase of acreage
by silly farmers in cotton; we
have not thought it necessary to give
any advice here to the farmers now
holding their cotton. These are men
of business, and are usually men with
sufficient grit, pluck and financial
backing to carry their points and
know what they are about. The cotton
holders that now have this matter
in band are about as good financier?,
. and have about as much collateral aDd
backiog behind them as the bear ele:
ment have. Cotton holders know now
that about all the 6cary holders have
been shaken out, and that the cotton
bear is dow up against the real solid
stuff. Spot holders are well aware of
the fact that the BpiDner has got to
have about all the cotton before the
next crop comes in, and it matters
not whether the next crop will be a
small or a large crop. The tbiDg is
this, the mills mast run or the walki
ing mobs that are pareding the
streets of the foreign manufacturing
r cities calling for work or bread will
wage riot. Stopping the mills under
such condition would be equivalent to
striking a match in a pov/der house.
Hold your holt, boys, and make them
come 07ei!?Anderson Intelligencer.
i
, Sleeplessness.
Disorders of the stomach produce a
nervous condition and often prevent
sleep. Chamberlain's Stomach and
Liver Tablets stimulate the digestive
1 organs, restore the system to a healthycondition
and make sleep possible. For
sale by The Kanfmann Drug co.
ff 1* A T.i ffl a W<m "i nn
MMVflWM *??? I ? ? ?? ?
Dmville, Va, March 22?James
Dooley, an ex convict in jiil at Chatbam,
the county seat, on the charge
of matricide, was told today of the
death of his mother, Susan Dooley,
whom he brutally assaulted about 10
days 8go. Dooley showed little or
no emotion when told that bis aged
mother had died as the result of injuries
inflicted by him, and declared
that prior to the assault he had been
drinking heavily and remembered
nothing about attacking her. The
victim of the inhuman crime was
buried yesterday afternoon, and a
most remarkable phase of the affair j
is that no coroner's inquest was held.
District Attorney Warned.
Kooxville, Teon., March 22 ?Gen.
J. R Penland, United States District
Attorney, today received an anonymous
letter in which he was severly
criticised for saying that he thought
the lvnchinff of the negro Johnson at
Chatt&Dooga was not justified and
that the sheriff of Hamilton county
bad been negligent. The letter was
mailed in this city and is well written.
The district attorney is warned
against proceeding in the interest (f
the government.
G-. B. Burhans testifies After
Four Tears.
G. B. Burhans, of Carlisle Center, N.
Y., writes: "About four years ago I
wrote you stating that I had been entirely
cured of a severe kidney trouble by
taking less than two bottles of Foley's
Kidney Cure. It entirely stopped the
brick dust sediment, and pain and symptoms
of kidney disease disappeared. I
am glad to say that I have never had a
return of any of those symptoms during
the four years that liave elapsed and I
am,evidently cured to stay cured, and
heartly recommend Foley's Kidney Cure
to any one suffering from kidney or
bladder trouble." For sale by Kaufman
Drug Co.
Exodus of Jeurs to United States
1 ?
XJClllLI, JiaiLU m| -au uuuauauj
large number of Jewish emigrants to
the United States and South America
are expected to leave Germany after
Easter and an influential committee
has been formed here with the object
of directing the emigration to the
best places. So far as the Uoited
States is concerned the committee
will publish advertisements throughout
Russia advising emigrants to
avoid New York and all the Eastern
States and committees will be formed
at GalvestoD, New Orleanp, Baltimore
and other Southern seaports
which, co operating with the com
mittees in the interior, will direct
emigrants to places where they can
work at their trades. The committee
here has been informed that many
Jews who are well-to-do are Drepar
ing to go to the United States.
T. X. L cureB neuragia.
Reuben Bird, aged 2G, a walking
boas of the Louisville Nashville
railroad, was shot to death on Tuesday
near Knoxville, Tenn., by negroes
of the working gang.
A telegram from MarioD, N. C. on
Tuesday says that in a fight betweeD
a foreman and a gang of Italian laborers
on the South & Western railrord
the former killed seven with a
crowbar.
1^M^
TRADE MARK
Hi REGISTERED
i|j|i|r ferti
MB|y crops fi
jWjigMljfiy balanced \
time till har
SSffiV from cotton to
Br ; mn
V Fish scrap is used
under all crop con<
^B for the Royster trac
h heb
h thi:
Hk Norfolk, Va. P
RA Columbia, S.C.
T. X. L. cures rheumatism.
Joseph Byland, a New York bai- j
tender, cboked his wife to death on j
Thursday and then ki Ld himself j
with a pistol.
A liquid cold cure for children that is j
pleasant, harmless, and effective is Bee's I
Laxative Honey and Tar. Superior to !
all other cough syrups or cold remedies
because it acts on the bowels. An ideal ;
remedy for Coughs, Colds, Croup,'
Whooping Cough and all curable lung i
and bronchial affections in child or j
adult. Pleasant to take. Sold by Kauf- j
man Drug Co.
Success never comes to a man wfo
i* afraid to face failure.
DAMONS Nerve ana isone un tiures 1
Rheumatism, Cuts, Sores, Burns
and Bruises Large bottle 25 cents.
Sold by all Druggists.
Before You Purchase Any Other Write
THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE COMPANY
ORANGE, MASS.
Many Sewing Machines are made to sell regardless
of quality, but the " New Home " is made j
to wear. Cur guaranty never runs out
We make Sewing Machines to suit ail conditions :
nf T"-a ?? Xow Iliimc *' <;*andsatthe !
head of all Sli^h-irr .tde family sewing machines j
Sold by authorized dealers only.
FOR SALE BY
W. Jr>. ROOF,
L-xin^<on. S. C
?? i
Standard
SHOES: I
Wear a pair of our Kon- j
queror Shoes and you j
can't go wrong*.
Sold only by
HAWS SHIIF STdBF
UUIILil U UllUli U1 UIILI) i
1636 Main Street,
COLUMBIA, - - S. C. !
Fertilizer 9
Fewer acres, lighter labor, larger yields?a happy IB
Dmbination secured with FARMERS' BONE, the fig
Iizer croved oerfect bv twentv-one vears of sreat 13m
'" l " I ~ / / / o [VtSWi
om Southern soil Farmers' Bone is richest in IB
food for every stage of plant growth from planting |?
vesting, and is suited to a great diversity of crops, wgm
corn, wheat to small truck. |B
Made witin Fisbi 98
in every ton of Farmers* Bone, insuring nourishment jU
iitions and making it famous as a crop saver. Look 9H
le mark. SB
LE'S THE SALES RECORD H|
SK OF THE CROP RECORD fflg
X 1890-1,500 TONS \ jH
f 1895-12,000 TONS \ M
1900-58,455 TONS \ l|j
305?130,091 TONS\
S. R0YSTER 6UAR0 00= ia?M:c
HUHUUUVVUHVVHW^
pJST WHAT TOU WANT f
I WEW Sg&IHG POODS. |
$ Our stock is fully up to the standard. We continue ?
i to carry just such goods as please our customers, and #
^ the prices are always reasonable. If, possible, we have ^
^ the prettiest line we ever handled. All we ask is a ^
^ call and inspect for yourselves. ^
| SPRING MILLINERY i
K Our Millinery stock has some of the smartest Eeady- \
K to-Wear Hats you ever saw. The choicest styles of ^
J? most approved Millinery. These creations will please ?
^ you, if you will only {give us a chance to show you K
K what we have. ?
WM. PLATT,
? Main St. Near Post Office. i
? COLUMBIA, S. C. J
DAVIS & COMPANY,
1517 MAIN STREET.
XT 1 AC 1? Sill AC?
AND EVERYTHING PERTAINING TO THE BUSINESS
COL-U M B I A , S. O.
Our stock being purchased before the recent decided advance*
we can make it to the interest of all to buy of us.
Our motto is "NOT HOW CHEAP, BUT HOW GOOD," as the
best is the Cheapest.
FITZMAURICE'S 1704 and 1706, FITZMAURIGE'S
3 Arch Store, Main Street. 3 Arch Store.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
We have just received a fine lot of Dry Goods, Notions, Clothing and Furnishings
for Men, Boys and Ladies. The best values we ever had the pleasure of showing
the kind friends of Lexington. It will give us great pleasure for our friends across
the river to get these bargains.
SPECIAL. ! MENS CLOTHING.
1000 v'ds 30 inch Percale at <>} worth 10c. , We will show one of the best lines to be
1000 v'ds Plaid Nansock, 6} worth 10c. ! seen anv where, at $5.00 to $10.00.
3C00y'ds Light Print, -- 3A worth 5c. I * a\-t?patt?
20 pieces EveningCrepon, at -- 12.'c. i u?ttAAdjo
50 pieces Scotch Lawn, at - - - 4Ac j por rjl0 working man, 50c. pair to $1.00
5000 v'ds Organdee Lawn SA worth 10c. j
50 pieces 36 inch White Lawn - - (>{c. , BOAS'SUITS
50 pieces 32 inch Lawn - 2c. j proni 50c. to $4,500, any kind you want
Mw?>A m^ND ?]dSpKS for ' B0YS' PAXTS
30 pieces White Madras and PKS for ,
shirts and suits only 10c. k \ Prom 25c. to 50c. pair.
FANCY DUCK SUITINGS. ,-,0 dozen men's shirts, at 25c. each.
1000 pieces nice styles, at - - - 12Ac. | MEN'S HATS AND CAPS.
DRESS GOODS AND SILKS. i
We Imve any style you want and at 1 TTjTtxttC< Aien <;tttt p
Prices very low for qualitv. See us I TRUNKS AND SUIT CASES
for a nice Dress. j At factory prices.
For headache, constipation, etc., PARKER'S
Dade's Little Liver Pills are best. They !
cleanse and tonic the liver. Sold by | HF*!g^jA^nlitfS'o
tt r -n??? fSTStX*^!JWB Kair to it? 'Youthful Color.
Kaufman IJrup LO. A ha:r falling.
I