The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, September 04, 1907, Page 6, Image 6
MMBBMwiMiMMMMftxattRvaflanMiai
The Lexington Dispatch.
Wednesday, September 4,1907.
. . ?
i ' Peacilliags from Peters.
' To the Editor of the Dispatch:
W. Frank, of the firm Caughman
Bros., Columbia, paid a visit to his
old home and parents, Mr. and Mrs.
George Martin Caughman, last week,
accompained by his wife and the two
very interesting babies.
Mrs. G. Robert Kieekley and son,
George Dixon, have been visiting the
family of Mr. and Mrs. J. Wesley
Kieekley.
Mr. Robert Kieekley is engaged at
carpenter work across the Saluda at
the Henry Harman place.
Mrs. Lot Price nee Kyzer, of Titusville,
Fla., with her children, who
; > have been visiting kindred since July,
; will leave for herhome this week.
Prof. C. G. Carroll, former principal
of Peters and Providence schools
during >87 and '88, is among his old
pupils and friends.
The Palmetto Collegiate Institute
will be increased by four of our boys
and girls when convening?Messrs.
Wilbur and Quince Hendrix and Misses
Minnie and Anna Belle Kamiuer.
Sickness still existing in our midst.
Miss Allie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
David Franklow; also Master Frank,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Hamp Roof. The
malady appears to be of a malarial
& , type, however, malignant in the
Franklow home.
We are glad to mention that Mrs.
D. Franklow has sufficiently convalesced
from her recent sickness to be/
able to attend to her domestic affairs.
Miss Grace Dell James, grand- j
daughter of Col. D. Tom Barr, closed
her summer school at Center -30tb,
inst.
K ? Meetings on hand?Horeb, Shiloh
iand St. John's.
Mr. John Schneider .is improving
his dwelling, also erecting new barn
and Nuthouses.
Messrs. "Jenks" Harman and Jas.
Lindler are cleaning out their wells
and placing the sanitary curbing of
terra cotta instead of decaying wood.
Messrs. Simeon* Hendrix and James
Lindler are much interested in colt
raising. Each one out viewing the
other in putting their respective colts
in order for the fall county fair. The
blue ribbon is what they're after.
Miss May Derrick after an absence
of two weeks has returned to her old'
home, Mr. J. W. Kleekley. She has
been visiting the hometof her father,
Mr. Frank Derrick, Sw'itzerneck.
Mr. O. Fred Hendrix had a house
turning one day last week. He is
contemplating a tasty addition, fronting
the public highway, seven rooms.
- Mr. George Hayes contractor.
"The horn of ye hunter is heard
'mid forest and dell, hill and vale."
Fox hunters on the path. Col. Grail'.,
* ham with his unexcelled pack of 20
high bloods; and the rural packs of
Messrs. Roof, Hendrix ana others
gives us the authority to repeat?
* *Hide out bu9hy tails.'V \
The Hendrix brothers, Sim and*
Harry, are putting np a tenant house
on their 100 acre plat on the river.
Papa's Girl.
We Guarantee Satisfaction.
X y. ^ I
J, .A. Brogdon, of the National Sign
Co., Dayton, O., Writes under date of
Oct/12,1906: "Nosena is the only preparation
I have ever used that relieves
my affection so speedily and pleasantly.
I am getting the first real pleasure out
of breathing- that I have experienced
.since I contracted catarrh six years
so; Money would not? buy my tube of
Nosena if I could not get. another.
Bay Nosena from Derrick's Drug |
Store and O. E. Corley and get your
money back if not satisfied. Sample
tube and booklet by mail 10 cents.
Brown Manufacturing Co.,
St. Louis, Mo. and Greenville, Tenn.
r-' -
Obituary.
, Henry Eliaa Amick was born in
i Lexington county,; South Carolina,
October 2S, 1857, Nand departed this
life July 12, 1907, making his stay on
earth 49 years, eight months and fourteen
days. He was united in holy
matrimony in 1879 to Sarah Catharine
Seigler. They walked together for
28 years and/to this union was born
ten children, two of which preceded
him to the Golden shore. Bfe leaves
? e*
S. to mourn nis loss a loving wire ana
nine children. He was a loving, kind
jj| \ husband, and highly esteemed by all
who knew him. ~ B.
%-iir ] t f ,
1,1
Subscribe to Some and Farta.
We are pleased to advise our readers
that we have made arrangements
with the publishers of Home & Farm,
whereby we can give this valuable
' farm journal?the best of the kind in
the south?for the small sum of 25c a
year. Home & Farm is published
twice a month and besides containing
everything that interests the
farmer, it has a lot of reading matter
for every member of the family ? especially
the housewife. The Dispatch
and Home & Farm one year for |l.25;
Home & Farm alone 25c. Subscribe
now.
Had Tetter for Thirty Years.
\ I have suffered with tetter for thirty
years and have tried almost countless
remedies with little, if any, relief.
Three boxes of Chamberlain's Salve
cured me. It was a torture. It breaks
out a little sometimes, but nothing to
what it used to do.?D. H. Beach, Midland
City, Ala. Chamberlain's Salve is
for sale by Kaufmann Drug Co.
Sefased To Siss Her Mother.
A rather stirring scene was that this
morning at the Southern depot, when
Mrs. Thomas B. Ycung tried to kiss
her nine-year-old daughter, Irene
Glenn, of Gastonia, who, with her uncle
and aunt, were at the station on
their way to Columbia, S. C.
The mother had not seen her child
for many months?in fact since the
mother and father, N. P. Glenn, were
divorced. The court gave the child to
her father and Mr. Glenn has had the
little girl in Gastonia with him since.
Within a few hours after the divorce
was granted, Mrs. Glenn was married
to Mr. Young, of this city, and has
been making her home here.
When the mother went to her daugh|
ter this morning at the station and
! lovingly threw her arms around her
and kissed the child, the aunt of the
child rushed to the little girl and tried
to take her away. The mother said:
4'Irene, don't you know me, it is your
mother; don't you love me?"
"No, I don't love you; don't kiss me
any more," was the child's reply.
"I haven't seen you for so long;
Irene, kiss me," pleaded the mother.
The child began to scream, and it
was then that her aunt came to her
assistance and the mother turned and
walked away.
There were many bystanders and
the attention of them was attracted
by the child. Mrs. Young is a handsome
brunette, tall and graceful. She
is well known in Charlotte. The affair
of this morning was a most pathetic
one and many a heart was wrung by
the treatment of the child to her
mother.?Charlotte Chronicle.
2Tew Snake Silling Record.
Some weeks ago The Index reported
the case of a man in Yorkville who
killed an old snake with 68 young
ones. This seemed to be the record,
but last week Butler Ross, colored,
was in town and reported that while
cutting a ditch for Mr. Sebe Agnew
near Rosa a few days before, he had
killed a moccasin with 90 little snakes.
This establishes the record for the
whole State of South Carolina and
possibly the entire South Atlantic.
This seems to be a great year for
| snakes and corn.?Greenwood Index.
Lost and Found.
Lost, between 9:30 p. m., yesterday
and noon today, a bilious attack, with
nausea and "sick headache. This loss
was occasioned by finding at Kaufmann
Drug Co., and Derrick's Drug
Store a box of Dr. King's New Life
Pills. Guaranteed for biliousness,
j malaria and jaundice. 25c.
Did New County Do It?
It is stated that a piece of property
; was bought in Branchville some time
ago, and brought something like
$3,000. This same piece of property
was offered for sale a short while ago
and sold at auction for only $2,300.?
Orangeburg Evening News.
"Writing With, A Feather."
The ignorance of the young people
is amazing. A few days ago, a good
looking young man came into the office
when the Editor was making music
with a quill pen, a genuine stub.
He looked at it in amazement and
said: "I never saw any one write
with a feather before." Writing with
a feather, indeed! That is enough to
make the shades of Washington, Jefferson
and all the signers of the declaration
of independence blush with
shame because a young man, well
brought up, should, here in the beginning
of the 20th century call the historic
pen, made from the good gray
goose quill, "a feather."?Carolina
Soar tan.
Chamberlain's Cough RemedyOne
of the Best on the
Market.
For many years Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy has constantly gained in favor
and popularity until it is now one of
the most staple medicines in use and
has an enormous sale. It is intended
especially for acute throat and lung
diseases, such as- coughs, colds and
croup, and can always be depended
upon. It is pleasant' and safe to take
and is undoubtedly the best in the
i market for the purposes for which it is
intended. Sold by Kaufmann Drug
Co. *
> > ;
Must Send the Money.
All persons sending barbecue and
other advertisements for insertion in
these colums must remit with the copy
sent to the office one-half cent for
each and every word. Otherwise the
copy will be held over until paid for.
OiUik Acauauiic. /
Tliis disease is caused by a derangement
of the stomach. /Take a dose
of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver
Tablets to correct this disorder and the
sick headache will disappear. For sale
by Kaufmanri Drug Co.
Big Guns for Philippines.
New York, Aug. 29.?With the aid
of derricks the work of transferring
nine big guns for shipment to the
Philippines from lighters to the Indrani,
a tramp steamship lying at
South Brooklyn, is being carried on
briskly. .It is expected that before
another night falls'the main deck of
the Indrani will hold six 12-inch guns
and three 10-inch guns.
The guns are consigned to the
United States quartermaster's department
in the Philippines and several
of them will be used for the defense
of the dry dock Dewey, which
was last year towed to the Philippines.
Germany uses two and one-quarter
million tons of potatoes yearly in the
manufacture of alcohol, and only
350,000 tons of grain for the same purpose.
s f
I
NEW STATUTE CAUSE OF
WOMAN'S DEATH.
Mrs. Hare of Atlanta Dies for Want of
Dose of Morphine?Whiskey
Failed to Satisfy.
Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 29.?Mrs. W. F.
Hare, of this city, a resident of Marietta
street, is the first victim of the
new state law forbidding the sale of
narcotic drugs without the prescription
of a physician. Mrs. Hare died
at the Grady Hospital today.
Mrs. Hare, aged 46, and Mr. Hare,
ageci 42, were iouna in an unconscious
condition at their home today and
sent to the Grady Hospital, where she
died in a short time. Later her husband
was aroused from his stupor,
and there is a chance of his recovery.
He said he and his wife have been
addicted to the use of morphine for
the past ten or twelve years, and
their supply ran out Saturday. They
made an effort to purchase more of
the drug but none of the druggists in
the city would sell to them. They
turned to whiskey, and tried to overcome
the craving for the drug wfth
liquor, consuming about two quarts
, each in a day. He says, however,
that instead of satisfying the craving
for morphine the whiskey seemed to
increase it until they became unconscious
from the desire for the drug.
Upon examination of the two victims
the physicians announce that
Mrs. Hare's death is undoubtedly due
to the fact that the drug had suddenly
been cut off when her system had
been feeding on it so long that it was
an actual demand. 7
$100 Beward, $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased
to learn that there is at least one
dreaded disease that science has been
able to cure in all its stages, and that is
Catarrh. Hall's Cure is the only positive
cure now known to the medical
fraternity. Catarrh being a constitufir\na
I rHcAftcp rpnnirpc H. rvmst.itnt.innn 1
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken
internally, acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system,
thereby destroying the foundation of
the patient's strength by building up the
constitution and assisting nature in doing
its work. The proprietors have so much
faith in its curative powers that they
offer One Hundred Dollars for any case
that it fails to cure. Send for list of
testimonials.
/ Address F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0.
Sold by all Druggists, 7oc.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipatipn.
Where to Have It Done.
Bring or send your job work to The
Dispatch office, such as note heads,
letter heads, bill heads statements,
envelopes, etc. In fact when you
want printing of any kind, except the
poor kind, come to The Dispatch
office. Prices the lowest.
Burned His Money and Then
Hilled Himself.
Webster City, Iowa.?After having
burned $1,500 in bills in the street and
throwing his diamond shirt studs and
rings into the sewer, Carl Pressly informed
the guests in the lobby of the
Park hotel he was going to die.
Crossing over to the City park, he
called upon passers-by to watch him,
then drawing a revolver from his
pocket, pressed it against his head
and fired.
Pressly was well known in this and J
adjacent states. He had been in this I
city on a spree for three weeks.
Thirty Injured on Southern.
| fAsheville, N. C., Aug. 20.?Passenger
train No. 41 on the Southern railway
collided with an engine on the
west-bound main line in this city at
11 o'clock this morning, damaging
both engines and the combination car,
Thirty persons were injured, none
fatally.
Lame Back.
This is an ailment for which Chamberlain's
Pain Balm has proven especially
valuable, in almost every instance it
affords prompt and permanent relief.
Mr. Luke LaGrange of Orange, Mich.,
says of it: "After using a plaster and
other remedies for three weeks for a bad
lame back, I purchased a bottle of Chamberlain's
Pain Balm, and two applications
effected a cure." For sale by Kaufmann
Drug Co.
Dilemma of a Fickle Young1
i Man.
An Atchison young man is in a delemma.
Several years ago he met an
Atchison young girl and they became
engaged. Both worked, and built
enormous air castles and painted the
future with all the colors of the rainbow.
Both began to save and the
girl was chosen as the banker. Every
Saturday night the young man gave
her part of his weekly salary. Now
, the girl has not less than $400 of the
young man's money. He wants to
break away, as he has met another
girl who looks better to him, but his
first love won't release him. She tells
him he can go if he wants to, but refuses
to part wTith the $400, which is
in her name in the bank. He is just
as secure as if he were tied to her by
riveted chains.?Atchison Globe.
The average man requires 1,600
pounds of food each year to sustain
him.
eg
| BUGGIES,
ea
SS ,
?5 t*^=^=
A Car Load
gg
gg Come and see my S
gmsi
caeaeseaesea
\
This is Headquarters
FOR
PIANOS \ ORGAN!
You "want a swee
i
toned and durable in
strument.
One that will last
long, long life time.
Our prices are th
lowest, consisten
with quality.
Write us for cata
logs, prices and term
MALONE'S MUSIC HODSI
COLUMBIA, S. C.
N. B. References: Any Ban
or Business Blouse in Golun
bia.
Established over 22 years.
Sterling Good!
Sterling silver, cut glass, fir
china, clocks. A fine stoc
1 1
always on hand for you 1
select from.
Keep us in mind when wan
ing anything in Je?elry c
Silverware.
Good watch work and be:
eye glasses.
If you can't come, send fc
i
our catalogue or telephone yor
order to us.
P. H, IACHICOTTEI CO
JEWKLEKS
1424 Main St., Columbia, 3. (
'Phone 934 *
G. HAYNESW0RTH,
BARBER,
1 rca;n axreex, near onyscrapc
Columbia, S. C.
o
Expert Barbers, Sharp Razors an
Clean Toweis?Everrthing Firstclass.
Thomas W. Reese will be glad t
serve his Lexington customers an
many friends in the highest art of th
profession. July 10. tf.
miio utile bb
LEXINGTON, S. C.
Literary, Scientific and Glassica
Courses.
Vocal and Instrumental Mnsic, Dravrin
and Elocution. College Trained
Teachers. Excuses for
Session $60 to $80.
Fall Term Begins September 2, 100"
Fall Term Ends January 10, 190?
Spring Term Begins January 13, 190?
Spring Term Closes May 15, 190?
Send for catalogue. Address
W. E. BLACK, Principal.
M. D. HARMAN, Secretary.
^^waw^anzs^^gg^ugjiMH/jnaiejui
o^IRI^LLWa?
The Best Made.
>tock. I am satisfied I can pie
and Prices.
% - - Little Mi
! > > WHOLE
FITZMAURIGE'S
i ? vi ai } RET.
j | I jcOLUME
^ Arriving by the carload every day an
I DRY GOODS, 11
0 ! To be seen anywhere. We are offering 1(
j oc per yard. This is positively the grand
5,000 yards of Good Sea Island at 4c pe:
1,000 yards 4x4 Madras at 10c?the 15c ]
Our Black Goods Department is full up
cilans. Our 54 inch Mohairs at 50c is the
want Black Goods see us.
? ' Our 36 inch Taffeta Silk at $1.00 per ya
buying a new dress from us. Money bac]
Grand Sale ofL
a* 5,000 yards of 40 inch Shear White Lav
5,000 yards fine Cambric Percale at 10 a
NOTICE?Value for your money in an]
McCall's Patterns in stock at all times.
^ We prepay charges on $5.00 worth of gc
I?!
a A nnirttfii
U. U. DltUn
5 | IT30 MIN STREET,
||j Is where you can find o:
I OF ALL
'' DOORS, SA
BLINDS
? | LIME AND
CABINET ]
m h
ij Call or write for Prices.
%A^AAA^AAAAAA/^^^AAAAAAAA^A
J* ? ?
j^^AmBAf^MORS^
i >
j llAGONu S3
c? ~
\ ?5
L m
" JLA-IL
I * ^;
;ons, all sizes, ca
Cg
~~wv~w ~ 6?
ase you in Vehicles fiffe
? 8S v
utain, S. C. ?
i^S?G9G0CdCd ,
??. . V
SALE < > ^
- FITZNIAURIGE'S
UL < Throa Areh Qtnrc >
IA s c
d we arc showing the strongest- line of
IS and CLOTHING
>
X) pieces Solid and Plaid Chambray at
est value ever shown here,
p yard,
kind.
with the Best Black Mohairs and Scisnicest
value you ever saw. If you
rd. Every yard warranted. No risk in
k if not satisfied.
10 inch Lawn. *
rn. The value for 15c, only 10c. '
md 12Ac, 36 inch.
j article we sell.
)ods bought and paid for.
IN & BRO, f.
, COLUMBIA, S. C., |
i :l
ne of the best stocks of |>
KINDS. I "
cir 1
Jc GLASS,
CEMENT.
j|j ?
VIANTLES.
OUR PIES
ve found favor with everybody
?J ? 4.1 _ _2_i "
UtlUCS tUXU IliCli, L11C 11LLit? gin 111
nafores and her mother and her
andmother. They are of the
reet, delicious, wholesome,
elt-in-your-mouth kind, and
s're anxious to have you try
em if you don't know the promts
of our ovens. If you do"'
low we won't have to ask you.
LOUNGER'S STEAM BAKERY, j
COLUMBIA, S. C.
fOOD BY HAND wh-0 ? ,
of sli Trades Gasoline Engine
;ts so little and will do as much work as ten
twelve men at less than one-tenth of one
n's pay. It is sent all set up, ready to run. <
n be belted to any farm machinery. Grinder,
_n? ci u_. P P r'L?
wcr, uiiicuucii a lay a i a uiupt v/iiui ut h
sarator, etc. fi
)ther sizes of engines up to 200 H. P., operate on
i. Gasoline. Kerosene or Alcohol. B
ut out complete advertisement end send for iQus* JR ?'
ed Catalogue No. Hg53
(8b CO., Chicago, PI. |