The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, January 02, 1907, Page 7, Image 7
#
I E.P.&F.
11710 Main Street
eeee?eeeeeeee? # *
I?db*iwAsA*<*A?*okoitPieftAiOioie>*>*
Lombard Iron Wor
AUGUSTA,
Fouodnr. Maohln* a^nd Boiler Works
Bridges, Roofs, Tanks, Tower and Building Cc
Cane and Shingle Mill Machinery and Repair
, road Castings; Railroad and Mill Supplies; Be
, _ <****>
Iffe A ti?
sb B High
! * E
LIGHT SAW HILLS asd GA
? Quick S
* ? , ?
?\ FOR YOUR
f GROCERIES,
II! GRAIN,
\ FEED,
I HARDWARE,
f | PAINTS,
! OILS, ETC.,
\ Always Consu]
I Lorick & L
J WHOLESALE
\ Columbia,
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I FAIRBANKS, MORSE
WE HAVE
.One 25 horse power Talbott, second hand
"" overhauled. This engine is in first class
anyone who is in the market for such a s
We are headquarters for anything in t]
V attention will be given to all inquiries ar
when you are in the market for anything
order elsewhere.
COLUMBIA STJPPL1
jj. H. Eleazer
4 >
1 Will Save you Money in his >
3
I Haberdashery |
J DEPARTMENT. |
J >
J The Best and Latest Furnishings |
j can always be found here in >
; Shirts, Collars, Cuffs, Cloves |
| UNDERWEAR. |
.. ! WHITE AND FANCY VESTS. I
; i
__ i ^9^"Our Fall Line
\ SOFT and STIFF HATS \
< i
are here, comprising Knox, Stet- j
(k son and other makes. Prices, \
J $1.00 to $5.00
< All the New Blocks in i
3 STRAW HATS, |
3 At all prices. |
J SUITS MADE TO ORDER. FIT ?
n GUARANTEED.
! 1514 Main St.,Columbia, S. C. |
W '< -,V5 .< *4
** V
.330DH .HJ'i
IallIToFI
WE now h^ve a complete stock of J
Fall and Winter Shoes in all leathers
and toes suitable for every day HARD
WEAR for men, women and children. 2
? J
Also the neat and natty dress Shoes to
suit the taste of all.
Stron? Points in Odr Shoes.
w p
SOLID LEATHER inner soles, conn- *
;ersand uppers, perfect fitting and abso
Lnte comfort. Prices the lowest (for the J
juality) that can be had. ?
EVERY PAIR WARRANTED.
A. DAVIS, {
Columbia, S. C. 2
? ^ ^
ks and Supply Co. I
GEORGIA I
i and Mill Supply Store. Engines, Boilers, ;
>nst ruction; Cotton, Saw, Grist, Oil, Fertiliser,
5; Building. Bridge. Factory, Furnace and Rail- > :
Iting, Packing, Injectors, Fittings, Saws, Files, ,
etc.; Shafting, Pulleys, and Hangers. !
CAST EVEFLY PAY [
Capacity for 300 Hands
as and Erie ENGINES, Kortintf and >
rt Injectors, Turbine Water Wheels, etc. >
Grn.de Mill BOILERS Built to Hartford
Specifications n. Specialty '
Locomotive Tender Tanks
Write Vt Before You Buy f
.SOLUTE ENGINES in Stock
hipment.
Lt \
owrance, Inc., \
AND DETAIL, i
S. C, \
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L___: -_ ._
i of all Trades Gasoline Engine
ists so little and will do as much work as ten 9
twelve men at less than one-tenth of one
an's pay. It is sent all set up, ready to run. e
an he belted to any farm machinery. Grinder,
lielier, Shredder, Hay Press, Pump, Churn, 1
sparator, etc. J
Other sizes of engines up to 200 H. P., operate on 8
as. Gasoline, Kerosene or Alcohol. &
Cut out complete advertisement and send for *Dua- 5
ited Catalogue No. Hg53 g
?> CO., Chicago, ID. |
MeaeagamMHaasaaE
for~sXle
I engine, in stock which has recently been
condition and will be a great bargain for
ize engine.
tie way of machinery supplies, and prompt
id orders entrusted to our care. Write ns
?, and be sure to get our prices before you
May 30.
I CO., Columbia. S. C.
W. D. QUICK.
Lexington, S. C.,
DISTILLER and DEALER
in TURPENTINE.
Will, at all times, pay highest
market prices for Crude,
based upon Savannah quotat.irvns.
I KILL the COUCH
mm CUBE the LUNC8
""Dr. King's
New" Discovery
/CONSUMPTION Price
FOR I * OUGHS and 60c & $1.00
" V0LDS Free TriaK
Surest and Quickest Cure for all
THROAT and LUNG TROUBI
LES, or MONEY BACK.
&MIIWMWWWI IU IILI HE! HJHMIMJ.W IW-IPJWI
Place an order* with us for
I Joh Printing.
; $ r JQ ..f . , ?p I X . " '
tmmmmmmBmmmrmammmsmattamBMsmaanmaman!
The Lexington Dispatch, j
Wednesday, January 2,1907.
I ____________i
| January "Work on the Farm.
See here, dear Farmer, have you
any plans made ? Or are you dawdI
ling around waiting for something to
turn up ? Madison Dean claims that
he has work cut out for every day in
January, whether it is wet or dry.
When raining his shop demands his
attention and harness are mended.
Boyce Pollard says he sowed wheat
till driven from the field by rain and
he lacked two acres or nnismng, dui
he will plant oats on that lot the first
day of January when dry enough and
manure it well enough to make fifty
bushels to the acre. All over the
country there are lively farmers who
have their plans well made and they
will work up to them. Horse feed is
going^to be very scarce on many
farms before next June. Prepare at
least two acres to the horse and plant
in oats as soon as possible. After
breaking and harrowing land well mix
600 pounds of 10-4 acid potash and
300 pounds of cotton seed meal and
drill this in with a bushel and a half
of Appier, or Red Rust*Proof oats on
three acres of land. Use the oat drill.
If you do not own one buy it. It will
pay you in putting in ten acres of
oats. Then it is an admirable guano
distributor and we believe that it could
be regulated to drill peas. So mu. h
for the oats. Suppose you have
already sown your crop. Then take
advantage of all fair dfy days and
break, subsoil and harrow your land
for the next crop. Keep moving.
There is plenty of work for you.There
never has been a field that was
over-prepared for a crop. Get to
work on your plan for ^January work
at once, so that tqe very first day of
the New Year will find you busy. He
who puts in every day possible the
first three months of the year, will be
kept busy the last three months gath
ering his crop and sowing small grain.
Farmers who plow two to four
inches deep and make cotton the
principal crop are robbers in act and
spirit without getting any booty.
They rob the soil, they rob their
families and they rob the State.
Their land grows poorer, their families
are brought up in want and ignorance
and the State has some worthless
citizens. Corn, small grain, cow
peas, sorghum and Bermuda grass for
pasture are the foundation stones of
prosperous and remunerative farming.
It is now too late to talk about sowing
wheat this season. Rich lots sown in
January have made fine yields, but
it is better to sow oats up to the first
of March always sowing in the open
furrow. But * we do most earnestly
exhort you one and all to begin the
preparation for a eorn crop as soon as
possible. Prepare at least four acres
for each horse. It would be better to
make it six and put all your corn
fertilizer on that number and plant no
more.?Carolina Spartan.
Cured of Lung Trouble.
"It is now eleven years since I had a
narrow escape from consumption,"
writes C. O. Floyd, a leading business
man of Kershaw, S. C. "I had run
down in weight to 135 pounds, and
coughing was constant, both by day and
by night. Finall}* I began taking Dr.
King's New Discovery, and continued
this for about six months, when my
cough and lung trouble were entirelygone
and I was restored to my normal
weight, 170 pounds." Thousands of
persons are healed every year. Guaranteed
at Kaufmann Drug Co. 50c and
?1.00. Trial bottle free.
Obituary.
Mrs. Lula Smith, daughter of Mr.
Jefferson Smith and wife of Charlie
Smith, was born July 13, 1884 and
died September 3, 1906, aged 22 years,
2 months and 10 days. She was a
true member of St. Matthew's Evangelical
Lutheran church. Her body
rests in the cemetery of the same.
A. R. T.
How to Avoid Pneumonia.
You can avoid pneumonia and other
serious results from a cold by taking
Foley's HoDey and Tar. - It stops the
cough and expels the cold from the system
as it is mildly laxative. Refuse
any but the genuine in the yellow package.
The Kaufmann Drug Co.
Solid Car Whiskey.
Greenville, Dec. 28.?A solid car of
whiskey was received here on Christmas
day. More booze was here this
Christmas than ever before in the
city's history.
Wise Counsel From the South.
"I want to give some valuable advice
to tnose who suffer with lame back and
kidney trouble," says J. R. Blankeuship.
of Beck, Tenn, "I liave proved
to an absolute certainty that Electric
Bitters will positively cure this distressing
condition. The first bottle gave me
I great relief and after taking a few more
' T woci a/\yv* wltt nnrorl cn OAm -
UUtlilCD) 1 ?QO uv/ vvuii
pletely that it becomes a pleasure to
recommend this great remedy." Sold
under guarntee at Kaufmann Drug Co.
Price 50c.
Gen. Litvinoff Assassinated.
Omsk, Asiatic Russia, Dec. 28?Gen.
Litvinolf, governor of the province of
Akmolinsk, was assassinated in the
street close to his effice today by two
unknown men.
?
1 111
FLUE CURING
ROASTING in
\
Flue Curing Develo
Found In Schnai
There are three ways us
mers for curing and prep;
to harm for the market: n;
cured, air cured and flue cu
old and cheap way is called
the later discovery and imp
v is called flue cured. In i
i the tobacco is taken fron
I and suspended over inte
' flues in houses especially 1
tain the heat, and there k
proper temperature until 1
process developes in the t<
stimulating taste and fragr
found in Schnapps tobaci
green coffee is made fra
stimulating by the roastin
Only choice selections of
juicy flue cured leaf, gro'
famous Piedmont country,
best tobacco grows, ar<
Schnapps and other Reyno
of high grade, flue cured
R. J. Reynolds To:
Inherited Memories.
A writer in the Nineteenth Century
tells a strange story of "inherited
memories." The ruins of an ancient
Roman fortress rise from the grounds
of a Mr. Phillips. A clergyman called
upon the owner one day and ashed to
see the ruins. "He told me he had a
distinct recollection of living there anu
that he held some office of a priestly
nature in the days of the Roman occupation,w
said Mr. Phillips. "One fact
struck me as significant. He insisted
on examining a ruined tower which
had bodily overturned. 'There used to
be a socket in the top of it,' he went
on, 'In which we used to plant a mast,
and archers used to be hauled to the
top in a basket protected with leather,
from which they picked off the leaders
among the ancient Gorlestonians.'
We found the socket he had indicated."
When Paris Was Dirty.
It takes the labors of 4,000 to keep
the city of Paris clean today, but in
times past that capital did not care so
much about the matter and was not
always pleasing to look upon. In 1348
King John of France made the request
that Parisians should not allow their
pigs to roam the streets. Charles VI.
(1368-1422) complained that the practice
of throwing rubbish into the Seine
made it a "great horror and an abomination
to look upon." Until the sevteenth
century everybody who could
went about Paris on horseback iu order
to avoid contact with the filth of the
streets. Various ordinances were made
to compel the people to sweep the road
before their own doors, but it was not
until 1791 that the dust cart became an
institution.
A* Lullaby.
Magistrate?You are accused of attempting
to hold a pedestrian up at 2 j
o'clock this morning. What have you
to say in your own behalf?
Prisoner?I am not guilt}', your honor.
I can prove a lullaby.
Magistrate?You mean an alibi.
Prisoner?Well, call it what you like,
but my wife will swear that I was
walking the floor with the baby at the
hour mentioned in the charge.?Chicago
News.
Ibsen on Friendship.
Friends are a costly luxury, and
when one invests one's capital in a
mission in life one cannot afford to
have friends. The expensiveness of
friendship does not lie in what one
does for one's friends, but in what one,
out of regard for them, leaves undone.
This means the crushing of many an
intellectual germ.?From a Letter to
George Brandes.
Just Like Him.
Arthur?You think 1 don't love you,
darling? Why, I would die for you.
Arethusa?Yes, and it would be just
like you to do it so that your funeral
wrmM pftmA nn n rl.nv vchMl T had to
give up a real nice engagement to attend
it. Oh, you men are so'Selfish!
Sad.
First Baby?1'ou look sad.
Second Baby?I am. I feel keenly
the responsibility of having parents
who cannot afford to have me.?Smart
Well Tnrned.
"How old are you?" asked the insur- j
ance agent of the lady.
It was thoughtless of him, and her
indignant "Sir!" brought him straight- i
way to his senses.
"Of course, you will- understand," he j
went on, "tfcit we have to be careful ;
about making contracts. I merely j
wished to assure myself that you are
legally of age."
/
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IMPROVES TOBi
IPROVES GREEI
ps the Stimulating Arc
pps that Satisfies Toba
;ed by far- Hundreds of i
iring their on sale that look
imely, sun outside of the ii
red. The bacco is flue cur
I air cured; miea cnej
roved way sweetened a,r <
Sue-curing chew of Schnapf
i the field hunSer lonSer 1
, , such tobacco.
:nsely hot Expert tests i
3uilt to re- cured tobacco, g
:ept in the Piedmont regior
his curing jess sweetening
ibacco the and has a who
ant aroma satisfying effect
co, just as kind of tobacco y
grant and satisfy, more ths
ig process. expectorating, s
this ripe, and chew Schn:
wn in the Schnapps is lil
, where the ers formerly bou
i used in to$i.ooper pou:
Ids' brands at 50c. per poun
tobaccos. 10 and 15 cent j
bacco Company, Winst<
???1W3QOO??B??BCTO[^?
IT'S TIME
FOR YOU TO
FURNISH YO
Kitchen with f
RANGE.
You pay a little more to
an ordinary Range, but
Range lasts a life time.
Our line gives you wid<
select from. Our guarant
purchasing.
If you contemplate buy
of any size, our stock can
you with prices from $20
Steel Ranges made. Sele
LEE A. LORIC
1519 Main Street, Go]
THE PRICES TELL.
J. B. FRIDA
Who'esaleand R<
GROCERS, FLOUR, FEi
SEED RUST PROl
We Want the Merchants, Planter
ington County to Call and See Us
Purchases. We Can Fill Your
Money.
1823 and 1825 Main Street, (
AWWWVWWWt
IJUST WHAT 1
I NEW GO
I Fall and Winter
^ Marked Very Closev A full
I mat is new.
Millixi
Just received a full line of Children's,
caps for fall wear. A fine line of everyth
marked these very close for the trade.
We also have a full line of Men's Shoes,
thing to wear.
TABLE OIL CLOTH A
It will pay any of our Lexington friend;
elsewhere.
WE PLATT
Main St. Near Poi
COLUMBIA,
wvwwvwvw*
ACCO LIKE
N COFFEE
tma and Taste
cco Hunger
mitation brands are
like Schnapps; the
mtation plugs of toed,
but the inside is
tp, flimsy, heavily
^nrerl tnharrn? one .
>s will satisfy tobacco
than two chews of
prove that this flue j
town in the famous J
l, requires and takes !
than any other kind, :
lesome, stimulating,' i
on chewers. If the !
<ou are chewing don't
in the mere habit of =
top fooling yourself
apps tobacco,
ke the tobacco chew- j
ght costing from 75c. !
nd; Schnapps is sold I
d in 5c. cuts, strictly
slugs.)N-SALEM,TN.~
C. .
TTT*
UA.
i fine Steel
start with than for
remember a Steel
3st price range to
;ee protects yon in
ing a Steel Range
.not fail to interest
to $65 for the Best
ct to-day.
jK & BRO.,
Lumbia. S. S.
THE QUALITY SELLSY
& CO.,
stail
;d and grain,
nC HATO
jr urt i o.
5 an*? Farmers of LexBefore
They Make Their
Wants and Save You
COLUMBIA, S. 0.
j
imfl
i i~i ~ii i~i i i"^ ? i ? ? i ? ? ^ ? * ? **
ODS. I
x^ccccgrxcscc \
Dry Goods i
line of everything J
Lery ? i
blisses ana .Laaies nats ana ^
ing in these goods. We have ^
Shirts, Pants, in fact every- f
l SPECIALTY. 5
s to visit us before purchasing f
& SON, I
st Office, S
- - - S. C ?
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