University of South Carolina Libraries
Hammocks Almost Given Away! | \ Our HAMMOCKS were slow in coming so we \ i w g duplicated the order, and are therefore overstocked. j ... .? . __s_ :_ n 8 Here's your chacce to get a splendid article, maae in ? | 5 a strong material, lasting pretty colors, and at a price j I you can almost name yourself. j 6 Come soon before the line is exhausted, and come \ & before 6 o'clock, unless it's Saturday. j i fflfm n t rnvaw fin il | lllfi A. DAlAfl bU., | ! j| Books, Stationery, Printing, Binding and | 8 Allied Arts. \ | | MASOHIC TEMPLS. COLUMBIA, S. C. | Ma. ?i? ? ssssssBXSBaaBaaessssaaBSssssBsaa^sssssB | jJUST WHAT you WANTl ^WWWWWWWWWWV-W-W LEE I LOHICK & BRO, 1519 Main Street, Columbia. S. 8. JOBBEBS ADD DEALERS IN Stores and Banges, Store Pipe. Tinware, Enamelware, Hollow Ware, Tin Plate, Iron and Asphalt Roofing, Ere Trough and Conductor, Sheet Metals, Wood Mantels, Grates and Tiles, jriue ripe, Fire Brick and Clay, Primps, Pipe, Fittings, Valves, * Cocks, Hose, Electric and Gas Fixtures, Faints and Oils, Cutlery, Wire Netting. THE PRICES TELL. THE QUALITY SELLSJ. B. FRIDAY & CO., Wholesale and Retail GROCERS, FLOOR, FRRD AND ORAM, SEED RUST PROOF OATS. We Want the Merchants, Planters and Farmers of Lexington County to Call and See Us Before They Make Their Purchases. We Can Fill Your Wants and Save You Money. 1823 and 1825 Main Street, COLUMBIA, S. C. CT/vdt PARLOR RESTAURANT. DEEEICZ S DEITG ST?EE, B propri8tor> j LEXi. GTOx , b. U, \ 5336 COLUMBTA. S. C. I Will he fonnd YAGER S Cream Chlo- The only up to date eatinjr house of Its roform Liniment, the greatest of ail kind in the (Jity or uoiumoia. is wen sepi liniments for Man or Beast, Rheu- ?clean linen, prompt and polite service, mati^m psDPPiflllv Yon sot wn&t order &nd p&y only for j TrSn?c? ? what you get. Within easy reach of desiraYAGER S Sarsapanlla, the best of ble sleeping apartments. Tonics and Blood Purifiers. OPEN ALL NIGHT. YAGER'S Oleo-Vino, the System Builder and best of Cod Liver Oil CI IV A D Preparations?You can't taste the lll.il ARIf lllf 1 UliJ Oil. ' Ask For Yager's Remedies at J. C. KINARD, Proprietor, DERRICK'S DRUG STORE. Leesville- " * - S. C ,TT . . ttt ,a The best attention given guest. Mod(Hystona Woman s Friend) ern conveniences. Table supplied with best the market affords. j 5 ' 1TE77 GOODS. J iQOCOOCSSS* r ~SS - - - -"?"=rXXXX COOS5QOC | Summer Dry Goods. 5 ^ ? - - ? ^ * is-11 12? -r ? ^ ^ Marked very uiose. a iuu uue 01 every tiuuig ^ i that is new. J W 5 Millinery > ^ Just received a full line of Children's, Misses and Ladies' hats and W j ^ caps for summer wear. A fine line of everything in these goodi. We ^ X have marked these very close for the trade. ^ W We also have a full line of Men's Shoes, Shirts, Pants, in fact every- W 6 thing to wear. W j It will pay any of our Lexington friends to visit us before purchasing $ J elsewhere. ^ | VM. PIATT & SON, J Main St Near Post Office, \ J COLUMBIA, S. C ? The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, August 21,1907. Sots from Polios. To the Editor of The Dispatch: Crops are looking fine. They are i said to be the best in this section in j years. The farmers that have used nitrate of 9oda seem to be greatly pleased witii the results so iar. ' Those who have tried the Williamson i plan in raising corn, this season, speak favorable of it. Mr. James C. Fort has a number of hands at work, replacing the wasteway and dam that was washed away a few weeks ago. Messrs. A. M. Hutto and Josh J. Shealy are attending court, as jurors, this week. A number of the young folks attended the barbecue at Edmund last Saturday. They report plenty to eat and a nice time in general. Mr. W. F. Best, the agent at this place, accompanied by his wife, has returned from a visit to his old home in North Carolina. Dr. N. N. Scoffill is at Wagener, S. C., where he is attending to the needs of Dr. Portwoods patients, while Dr. Portwood takes a few weeks leave of absence. Mr. E. E. Felder has returned from the Jamestown exposition, and Washington, D. C., where he has been, for the last ten daj's, on business. Mr. and Mrs. Vestern L. Goodwin I T C C Vtoan iricif.Jnop I CI iiavilliCl) kJ v>) iiavvj vbvu relatives in this section. The protracted meeting is going on in the Methodist church at this place, this week. We hope much goodwill be accomplished. The pastor, Rev. W. L. Gantt is being ably assisted by Revs. I. N. Stone and G. W. Dukes. Mr. and Mrs. Simon Lucas of Mulberry, Fla., are visiting their parents and other relatives in this section. Mr. C. C. Hutto left Friday for Florence, S. C., where he has accepted a position as operator, at a good salary. Mrs. W. B. Ivey, who has been sick for some time is improving 9lowly. Miss Bernice Cay is visiting relatives at Wagener, S. C. With best wishes, I am R.L.C. August 12, 1907. How's This. We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all busi ness transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his nnn. Walding, Kin nan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent fee. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Calhou's Old Horn*. 4i'South Carolina has a tract of ground which it is preserving for the Southern children of coming generations, as the Government is saving Mount Vernon for those of the nation," said W. D. Evans, of Clemson, S. C. "I refer to the former home of John C. Calhoun. Calhoun's home was a beautiful estate of 1,100 acres. A part of the land is now occupied by , Clemson College, and the campus is one of the largest and most beautiful of any college in America. The State has taken steps to preserve the Calhoun property, and makes annual appropriations for keeping the fgrounds and the old house and outbuildings in order. It is a typical Southern man- 1 sion, with wide verandas, and was the scene of many a notable gathering in the lifetime of South Carolina's most beloved and famous statesman. 4'The Calhoun home is dear to the hearts of all South Carolinians, for we shall always look with reverence upon the memory of one of America's greatest men, as Calhoun was universally conceded to be." CATARRH and Catarrhal Headaches are quickly relieved by Nosena. It soothes the congested membranes, allays inflammations and thoroughly heals and cleanses. It keeps moist all the passages whose tendency is to thicken and become dry. Cures colds, throat troubles, hoarseness, liay fever, "stoppedup" nose, breathing through mouth while sleeping, offensive breath, etc. It is antiseptic and contains no chemicals or drugs having a narcotic effect, or that can cause the "drug habit." Derri )k's Drug Store and C. E. Corley. Fine Crops. Congressman Patterson was in Augusta on Monday, and said to the Chronicle regarding the crops. "Our people from Allendale, Blackville, Barnwell and Wiiliston territory have made fortunes, almost from cantaloupes this season. One of my constituents at Blackville, I learn, made over $20,000 clear, and at Barnwell a | number of our farmers made good big money. At Allendale along the lines of the Southern and Coast Line, the success in the watermelon belt has been phenomenal. "In addition to that great fortune," he continued, "the general crops throughout the entire Second District are so fine that we will have more prosperity in Aiken, Barnwell, Bamberg and Edgefield counties than we have enjoyed in years. The farmers all feel good, owe very little, and see their way clear to handsome profits." "The truth is we are becoming better farmers. We are making more corn on twenty acres than we former ly made on fifty acres. And the product is better now than it used to be. "Cotton is all right too. Early cotton is out of woods." But the late crop is not. We have been having a little too much rain the last few days and the weather is a little too cool. But with plenty of sunshine from now on there will be but one problemhow to get the cotton picked out. Eczema. For the good of those suffering with eczema or other such trouble, I wish to say, my wife had something of that kind and after using the doctors' remedies for some time concluded to try Chamberlain's Salve, and it proved to be better than anything she had tried. For sale by the Kaufmann Drug Co. Cruelty to Animals. Cruelty to animals is a crime which i9 punishable by a pretty good fine, and yet there is always some cases which never come up before the proper authorities. There are cases, however, which come up for trial from time to time, and this morning there was a case which was tried by Mayor Doyle. Two negroes, employed by a local market, were on their way to the butcher pen with a cow yesterday afternoon, and were treating the animal in a most cruel manner. The cow was somewhat stubborn and it was with some difficulty that it could be driven along. All sorts of means were used to drive the cow to the pen, and at la9t the negro who was driving the cow began using his butcher knife on the animal to urge him along. The cow was cut once or twice in the neck and several times on the tail.? Orangeburg Evening New9. Sis Victims ia Hospital. Chicago, Aug. 14.?Six victims of the mad dog epidemic in Danville, lite., are in the Pasteur Institute here. Two of them are mother and son. They were bitten by the ? i . i_ *ii i iormer's soil, wno was Diuen oy a dog and died several days ago from rabies. The patients are: Mrs. C. F. Davis, aged 44; bitten on the neck by her son Charles. Vance Davis, aged 23; bitten by his younger brother. Frank Berger, aged 28; infected by shaking the hand of Vance Davis. Charles Host, aged 40; bitten by dog. Lena Miller, 32 years old; bitten by dog. Mrs. Charles Swindle, bitten by dog. Men Past Sixty in Danger More than half of mankind over sixty vears of age suffer from kidney and bladder disorders, usually enlargement of prostate glands. This is both painful and dangerous, and Foley's Kidney Cure should be taken at the first sign of danger, as it corrects irregularities and has cured many old men of this disease. Mr. Rodney Burnett, Rockport, Mo., writes: "I suffered with enlarged prostrate gland and kidney trouble for years and after taking two bottles of Foley's Kidney Cure I feel better than I have for twenty years, although I am now 91 years old." Derrick's Drug Store. 0m a i J nam urew Attacjssa ay aaraged Foreigners. Saline Grove, Pa., Aug. 15.?Pennsylvania railroad passenger train crew, all from Sunbury, last night had a thrilling experience at Fulton station, where they were attacked by a mob of about 75 foreigners, men and women, who tried to assault them with stones and clubs because the train killed a man. That the crew escaped injury was due to their presence of mind in hurriedly moving the train away from the scene. When the crew stopped to put the body in the baggage car, Italians began to cry in chorus, "Me kill you," and in a few moments a mob of at least 75 had congregated and attacked the crew. Conductor Ray, appreciating the danger surrounding him and his crew, lost no time and sped onward with his train. Headache and constipation disappear when Rings Liver Pills are used. They keep the system clean, the stomach sweet. Taken occasionally they keep yon well. They are for the entire family. Sold Kaufmann Drug Co. Elections were held last Tuesday in Anderson and Richland counties on the county court question, and in each county the proposition was defeated by a large majority. Anderson also voted against issuing bonds for road improvement. The eyelids of the average man open and shut 4,000,000 times a year. Death of Sirs. J. S. Biekley. On Sunday afternoon, August 11, Mrs. Lucinda Caroline Biekley, the wife of Mr. Joseph H. Biekley, of the Fork section, died very suddenly. She had been in very bad health for some time, being confined to her bed the greater part of last year, but had improved some, and was able to get about. Sunday afternoon she went out to milk. Her husband heard her calljand ran to her; but she was beyond human help. Mrs. Biekley was born January 27, 1831, so that at the date of her death, August 11, 1907, she was 76 years, 6 months and 14 days old. Mrs. Biekley was the mother of nine children, two sons and seven daughters, all of whom survive her except one daughter. She also left 45 grandchildren and 26 great-grandchildren. When only seven years of age, Mrs. Biekley united with the Lutheran church. Many years ago, however, she, with her husband, transferred to the Methodist church. At the time of her death 9he was a member of Shady Grove M. E. Church, South. Mrs. Bickley was buried Monday, Aug. 12, at Salem Methodist church, where her daughter is buried. The funeral services were conducted by her pastor, Rev. E. A. Wayne, assisted by Rev. N. S. Younginer. For an Impaired Appetite. To improve the appetite and strengthen the digestion try a few doses of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. Mr. J. H. Seitz, of Detroit, Mich., says: "They restored my appetite when impaired, relieved me of a bloated feeling and caused a pleasant and satisfactory movement of the bowels." Price, 25 cents. Sample free. Kaufmann Drug Co. Message He Refused Told of Mother's Death. Des Moines, la., Aug. 15.?William Reynolds, a railway telegrapher at Mapleton, near Sioux City, on the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway, refused yesterday to take a telegram from a nonunion operator at Cedar Rapids. Later he was called by long distance telephone and told that his mother was dead at Cedar I "Ro-rkida Hoirtrr mpoqaorp had AV w refused to receive by telegraph. Shoots Sweetheart, Cousin and Simself. Chicago, Aug. 15.?Michael DeTrain an Italian, last night shot and instantly killed Alvenia Vultman, seriously wounded her cousin, Alvina Awald, and then killed himself. De Train and Miss Vultmann were said to have been engaged at one time but that the girl had recently refused to marry him because of his wild conduct. The man blamed the girl's cousin for his dismissal. Warning If you have kidney and bl$f$er trouble and do not. use Foley's KMney Cure, you will have only yourself xto blame for results as it positively cures all forms of kidney and bladder diseases. Derrick's Drug Store. Baby Born in Saloon. Richmond, Va., Aug. 15.?A woman traveling from Philadelphia to Norfolk, while taking a stroll between trains near the Chesapeake and Ohio Main street station, was taken suddenly ill and darted into the first open door, which happened to be a saloon, the proprietor of which treated his visitor with consideration and I called an ambulance for her. Before the arrival of the ambulance she had given birth to a healthy boy. She wa9 taken at once to the City Home, where she was reported last night to be in an encouraging condition. Her husband, in Philadelphia, has been notified of the arrival of his heir. What a New Jersey Editor Says M. T. Lynch, Editor of the Phillipsburg, N. J., Daily Post, writes: 'T have used many kinds of medicines for coughs and colds in my family but never anything so good as Foley's Honey and Tar. I cannot say too much in praise of it." Derrick's Drug Store. Thirteen Persons Injured in Southern Wreck. Asheville, N. C., Aug. 14.?Passenger train No. 8 of the Southern railway, which left Asheville this morning for Lake Toxaway, was derailed at Selica, four miles beyond Brevard. All the cars were overturned and went? down a small embankment with the result that 13 persons were injured, though not seriously. The wreck is said to J have been caused by spreading rails. The executive committee of the Southern Cotton Association will meet at Jack9on, Miss., September 5th to fix the minimum price of cotton. The Honorable Jno. S. Wilson, of Clarendon, becomes Judge of the Third Judical District of this State on September 1st succeeding Hon. R. 0. Purdy, resigned. stimulate the TORPID LIVER, strengthen the digestive organs, regulate the bowels, and are un- * equaled as an ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE, In malarial districts their virtues are widely recognized, as they possess peculiar properties in freeing the ClnuroTi-flti b^SlCID i(UUl lUM ^VUVUI MV^UUU^ sugar coated. Take No Substitute. ? , Chester Woman Will- Practice Lav. Miss Mary Osborne, who is court reporter at Swainsboro, Ga.t is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Osborne, at Bullocks Creek. Miss Osborne anticipates entering the legal profession, and as the Georgia law, as it now * stands, does not permit women to enter the practice of law, a member of the legislature from Emanuel county, of which Swainsboro is the county seat, has introduced in the recent legislature a bill allowing females to be admitted to the bar in Georgia. Ed ITOBACCOI 9 TS a delicious chew, 9 9 * made from the best 9 North Carolina leaf; 9 9 a leaf that has a spec- 9 9 ial texture, a special 9 flavor and which 9 makes RED EYE a 9 9 specially fine and satis- 9 9 fvinechewinsrtobacco. 9 Most people "prefer itB to tobacco costing one Ask your dealer for it and fl insist on him keeping it. MERCHANTS * Write for Special Prices. ^B HAIRRBALSAM Cum-*ud. tt* M* Fmmotaa a lsronant grown. Hair Cam teslp dimiM A hair falling. , , JOe.andll.OOH Dnygisto 1 BBS] Cuts. Sores. Burhsj Sold by Derrick's Drug Store and C. E. Corley. ECZEMA and PILE CURE CD EC Knowing what it was to suffer, rntC will give FREE OF CHARGE, to any afflicted a positive cure for Eczema, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Piles ? and Skin Diseases. Distant relief Don't suffer longer. "Write F. W. WILLIAMS, 400 Manhattan Avenue, New York. Enclose stamp. September 12?ly T HAYNESWORTH, BARBER, 1 332 Main Street, Near Skyscraper, Columbia, S. C. o Expert Barbers, Sharp Razors and Clean Towels?Everything Firstclass. Thomas W. Reese will be glad to serve his Lexington customers and many friends in the highest art of the profession. July 10. tf. OKIND Laialin Frait Syrap Pleasant to take 4 The new laxative. Does not gripe or nauseate. Cures stomach and liver troubles and chronic con stipation by restoring the natural action of the stomach, liver and bowels. % Refuse substitutes, Prioe BOo. Derrick's Drug Store.