University of South Carolina Libraries
| Schools an I ' are || As has been ^heir cust THE R. L I MASONIC TE1 I Text Books a I Com? , I We'll not close at 6, b ipiilliiiil jJMepljl ** Imittat* T> nc ^ WUi UUJCI i-i?c S -Northern markets, a J new Fall Goods are I Millinery | j S We have bougl # linery this season- th' r embracing all the la ! J We have the pi 5 Goods?representinj | ' 5 have never struck tl i hence our prices are f wM. PlJ J Wnin Strec fCOLUMBIA, mwwwi 1^19 Main S JOBBERS A. Stoves and Banges, Stove Pipe, Tinware, Enamelware, Hollow War< Tin Plate. Iron and Asphalt Boofing, Eve Trongl Conductor, I ip-v Wood Man1 Grates and line Pipe, || THE PRICES TELL (I D hia IS. Whol f GROCERS, FLODI f SEED RUS |r - We Want the Merchants, ington County to Call an I*urchaae&* We Can W Money. [' . .' r 1833 did 1825 Uki . p; ' i&MSi 'y > . ' t' * &-vV r ^ ' id Colleges Now Opening! * * ' ' * / om ior nearly three quarters a century ; fFLE, COLUMBIA, S. C. 11 supply all nd School Supplies. before the rush. > : ut'remain open for the benefit t unions and others. BBBKIBBHHBtBRBBBBBSHBiBBBEIBBSBSB : < , wwwwvww\ ill Goods! ; just returned - from the crirl fhp ad-vanp.fi stvles in KJLLV*. VAjlv ? j arriving daily. rnd Dress fioods. it the largest stock of Milat we have ever carried, ist shapes and colors, rettiest line of Ladies' Dress y all the latest weaves. We le market more favorable, : the lowest they have ever m*]| wt son, it, Near Postoffice, - S. C. uuuuuuw rick & bro V/ Itreet, Columbia. S. S. ND DEALERS - IN 5, i and Sheet Metals, ?ls, v Tiles, Fire Brick and Clay Pumps, Pipe, Fittings, Valves, Cocks, Hose, Electric and Gas Fixtures, Paints and Oils, Cutlery, Wire Nettii THE QUALITY SELLSDAY & 00. esale and Retail l, FEED KM GEAD IT PROOF OATS. * Planters and Farmers of Le d See Us Before They Make 17u I Your Wants and Save X i n Street, COLUMBIA, S. C. r OUR PISS !% have found favor with every bo 1 ?babes and men, the little girl | pinafores and her mother and 1 |j grandmother. They are of t sweet, delicious, wholeson melt-in - your - mouth kind, a we're anxious to have y ou t them if vou don't know the pi I $ ducts ofv our ovens. If you $ know we won't have to ask yc 1 REIDLINGER'S STEAM BAKER f COLUMBIA, S. C. | The Lexington. Dispatch, j i vveonesday, October 16, IS07. ==? 5 Sallie Gibson Gono to Tezas. t I * Mrs. Sallie Gibson left Columbia \ yesterday for San Antonio, Tex., \ where she goes to appear as the pros<( ecu ting witness in the case against 4 Rufus F. Williams, charged with asf saplt and battery with intent to kill i and highway robbery. The fall , term \ of the criminal court of the seventh 5 Texas district will convene at San ^ \ Antonio Monday of next week, Octo- 1 J DtJr XI, Ull Wlliuu uauc uuc uoot ugoiuav , j Williams is expected to be called. ] > Mrs. Gibson will reach San Antonio < j Saturday. S Although Mrs. Gibson was placed under a cash bond of $7,500 by the Texas authorities to insure her apf ' pearance when the trial of Williams fl was taken up, it was rumored around S Columbia that she would forfeit the bond and not return and appear against the defendant. Mrs. Gibson U was indignant when these rumors j were called to her attention and de| clared with much emphasis that she ,< would be on hand when the case was j called. In a letter to Mr. 1.0. Baker, j prosecuting attorney, written last i week Mrs. Gibson said she would | leave Columbia on October 9 and | reach San Antonio on the 12th. In her letter she said that she was comBing to prosecute her assailant and haa had no idea of remaining away. cjn Williams is still in jail at San- An .tonio, where hs has been confined ?' since early in June, when he assaulted Mrs. Gibson and took $61,000 in ^ cash from her. The crime with which J he is charged is a capital offense - in ^ Texas and the court refused to grant ^ him bond in any amount. When he ^ was arrested he was found aboard a W Southern' Pacific train with Mrs. ^ Gibson's hand satchel in his posses^ sion. In the satchel were 51 onef thousand dollar bills and $10,000 in / J gold. Reports printed in the <San Antonio Q papers and sent out from there to ^ other papers stated that Williams ac- , ^ knowledged to striking Mrs. Gibson, m throwing her into the river and then ^ taking the satchel containing the ^ money.?State, Oct. 11. t S A Card. c J This is to certify that all druggists J ^ are authorized to refund your money if * W Foley's Honey and Tar fails to cure f your cough, heals the lungs and pre- ' v vents serious results fiom a cold. Cures c W la grippe cough and prevents pneumonia ^ and consumption. Contains no opiates. ^ ^ The genuine is in a yellow package. * W Refuse substitutes. Derrick's Drug ^ Store. > f Convicted of Murder. e W Chattanooga, Oct. 8.?The jary in 4 J the case of Ed. Turner, of Breathitt X county, Ky., charged with the mar- 1 # der of his wife brought in a verdict of 0 f murder in the first degree after being ^ orit a few minutes today. On the \ W stand (yesterday Turner confessed the J crime. He showed no interest in the j ^ verdict. V Hard Times in Kansas. The old days of grasshoppers and ? drouth are almost forgotten in the pros- * perous Kansas of today; although a cit- c izen of Codell, Earl Shamburg, has not yet forgotten a hard time he encount- 9 II ered.. He says: "I was worn out and 7 discouraged by coughing night and day, ! and could find no relief till I tried Dr. * King's New Discovery. It took less than one bottle to completely cure me." a The safest and most reliable cough and cold remedy and lung and throat healer ever discovered. Guaranteed by Kaufmann Drug Co., and Derrick's Drug Store, 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. , , a The spinners have made contracts ? "? n V,n oio <\f fl ffoon norifa fni" 1 the goods they are marketing, so the c farmers as well as the balance of us ? are paying for fifteen cents cotton c * every time they buy a yard of cotton ^ cloth or a spool of thread. Then 11 farmers hold your cotton for fifteen J cents.?Ex. 11 t Let every farmer who has nice pro- f1 *ducts from the farm, orchard or gar- ? den send an exhibit to the County Fair. r A Greenwood county farmer sold a * bale of long staple cotton for ?150. fi I 1gi Hayisfc Wfr I "II Dragging I i I Down | Pains I ti 11 are a symptom of tne most serious | " 9 trouble which can attack a woman, | e. I viz: falling of the womb'. With this, | p generally, comes irregular and painful S E periods, weakening drains, backache, ii P headache, nervousness, dizziness, ii- m ^ ritability, tired feeling, etc. The cure is | g 5 TCardui I! The Female Regulator | jj i lb | that wonderful, curative, vegetable ex- g Yitract, which exerts such a marvelous, strengthening influence, on all female E organs. Cardui relieves pain and 9 a regulates the menses. It is a sure B I and permanent cure for all female j| complaints. I t: At all druggists and dealers in SI.00 E i: bottles. H t: "I SUFFERED AWFUL PAIN S in my womb and ovaries," writes Mrs. E r Naomi Bake, of Webster Grove, Mo., H j j, "also in my right and left sides, and S ^ my menses were very painful and irreg- V ular. Since taking Cardui I feel like a 3 new woman ar?d do not suffer as 1 did. v It is the best medicine 1 ever took." j s Nearly $12,000 A Uiven Away i This Amount in Premiums and Purses at State Fair, this Year. With scarcely a single exception the race purses to be given at the State Fair this year will be the biggest in the whole South. Something over 53,600 will be the total amount of purses for these great races this year, ind there will probably be a few hunired more added by the time the races start Never before in the history of the Pair association?for 39 years?have the officials been able to get up such 3ne races. Some of the best horses pn the popular race course will compete at Columbia this season on the Pair race track. The enthusiasm imong the owners and trainers in South Carolina for home raised racers Is at fever heat already. By the time the judges get ready to call "Go" at the Fair Grounds the excitement will he most intense. Some very fast tiorses are already scheduled to run luring Fair Week and the trotting purses will bring some of the most renowned horses ever seen on a Southirn track. Its a case of "money talks" md the purses offered this year have ittracted hundreds of the big racers from all over the country. The entries for exhibits this year as recorded are much above the average 3f previous years. Particular attention seems to be giveg to the agricul* ^ Ml V. (rural department., xiere wm ue awn Lhe best cotton and the best corn and jxperiments for improving stock and ill kinds of implements will be demonstrated. It is useless to say that :his Fair will be the best in the history of the association when such a large sum is offered for competing jxhibitors?over $8,000 as premiums. The dates this year are Oct 28 to Nov. 1., inclusive. And every day will oe crowded with pleasure and profit Football and athletics, balls and theitres, the famous Midway will be simply marvelous. " ? Transfers of Real Estate. The following transfers of real es.ate have been recorded in the clerk's >fflce since our last issue: Byron N. Bodie to Leesville Cotton Hills, 41 16-100 acres near town of ^eesville for ?3,087. Mrs. Dora I. Drafts to Leesville , Cotton Mills, 14 2-10 acres near town >f Leesville for ?2,130. Mrs. Dora I. Drafts to Mrs. Lizzie L Shealy, 5 acres near Leesville for 1750. Mrs. Lizzie A. Shealy to Leesville . Cotton Mills, 5 acres near Leesville or ?1,200. C. M. Efird and H. A. Lorick, ex- < cutors, to M. W. and H. C. Lorick, I :69 acres in Fork township for ?1,650. G. C. Steele to Martin L. Warner, 50)? acref in Fork township for ?3,00. T7! Tnahinpfc tn "D. IT. ITneka AVU^UV dUl AMMK/AUW w >aa, lot in Swansea for $30. A. L. Eargle to D. J. Padgett, lot n LeesviUe for $500. J. H. Price to J. C. Kirby, two lots d Brookland for $1,175. M. E. Johnson and Sallie I. Hutto o K. L. <Lybrand, lot in Swansea for 500. D. S. Sturkie and others to Winter Jturkie, 53 acres in Bull Swamp townhip for $250. Eliza Spaler to Leroy Hutto, 165 teres in. Bull Swamp township for 11,000. Samuel Bouknight to J. C. Williams tnd others, lot in Bajesburg for $100. CATARRH and Catarrhal Headaches ? re quickly relieved by Nosena. It oothes the congested membranes, allays nflammations and thoroughly heals and leanses. It keeps moist all the pasages whose tendency is toAhicken and ecome dry. Cures colds, throat trou- 1 ties, hoarseness, hay fever, "stoppedip" nose, breathing through mouth rhile sleeping, offensive breath, etc. It 3 antiseptic and contains no chemicals ?r drugs having a narcotic effect, or hat can cause the "drug habit." Deri *k's Drug Store and C. E. Corley. 1,198,173 Have Seen tHe Fair. Norfolk, Va., October 9.'?For the irst time in the life of the Jamestown Exposition, Director General- Alvah , I. Martin today made public the exposition attendance, figures, his tatement showing a total of 2,198,173 dmissions from April 26, the opening ' ate, up to and including September 0. Mr. Martin said he considered it ime for the public to know just what he Exposition attendance has been. A Criminal Attack n an inoffensive citizen is frequently lade in that apparently useless little abe called the "appendix." Its genrally the result of protracted constiJ "s1 ^ ?? liTron fnrrvir T")tv anon, luuuwiug u ? OA uvi ^/v* *. . _ Zing's New Life Pills regulate the liver, revent appendicitis, and establish reglar habits of the bowels. 25c. at Kaufmnn Drag Co., and Derrick's Drag tore. Fold Ore Found in 2Tew Yorlr. New York, Oct. 9.?Beneath the last river, 150 feet from shore and 00 feet below the mean water mark, ff Roosevelt street, gold has been iscovered. If the vein assays in pro.' ortion to that brought to the surface b will run to the enormous figure of 40,000 per ton. The department of ridges is making a series of borings. It is claimed indigestion is the Nation- : 1 disease. That's why the demand for . tings Dyspepsia Tablets keeps increas- 1 ng because they do the work. Stomach rouble, dyspepsia, indigestion, bloatng, etc., yield quickly. Two days reatment free. Ask your druggist bout them. Sold by Kaufmann Drug k>. A small boat capsized in the Ashley iver and three negro men who were a the boat are supposed to have been rowned. George Haynes, of Orangeburg.conicted of murder 21 years ago and entenced to life imprisonment, will >e pardoned by Governor Ansel. Ijli^ Ig^l^^j^^^Where yon Q When yon IIIVO'OppPf' " 5muRe" 0{,cn yc \yW^ ^ somc ro Lff j ( nace docs lm (J x pick up ai I PERFECTION I (Equipped with Si A to the room you want to heat\m house. It has a real smokeless ))/m smoke or smell?turn the w illfuwL. ** ^ow as y?u ?brass |([([([nL ' that gives out glowing*! 1111k ished in japan and n anywhere. Every I ""JteytoLzmp \\ reader. It gives a brilliant, steady light j j that makes study a pleasure. Made ol brass, nkkc II with the latest improved central draft burner. E< /1 If you cannot obtain the Perfection Oil Heater III your dealer write to our nearest agency for descr III STANDARD Oil. COM] l \ (Incorporated) \\\un\?tt\\ffiitnn\\tnn\?H\um\ttUHm F. W. WAGENER COTTON DEPARTMEN1 We have arr Cotton to best ach licit consignments, We give spec handling Staple C< Seed," 'Tlorodora this grade. it ' U II l( NvV i II i V m '1 I V\7A [HE H ROTARY The design and finish of the i to equal it has yet appeared on 1 STEADY, SWIF Has a very large Bobbin?Hoi BALL BE A LIGHT RUNNER?STRONG and du (White SHUTTLE Machine has.been in The NEW HOME stands at the top of SI Always on hand good Second Hand Mi machine attachments, shuttles, belts and tJ J. H. BERRY, 1802 Main s ' TRADE MASK . rff)l?? i I^HLeathers. 1 ?' HARMAN'S S' Post Office Block, I BANK OF H : CHAPIB Our banking facilitie: place them at your comm ierest paid on time depoi with your business. J. F. H< J. A. BLACKWELDER, want it? ^^JlJIJII/r A -no smeii?no ironoie. ^W//////// *"" >u want heat in a hurry * om in the house the fur- ^\\y ? not reach. , It's so easy to Wl. id carry a W I Oil Heater I nokeless Device) I ?suitable for any room in the n i device absolutely preventing Jfll ick as high as you can or Jrl j\ ; font holds 4 quarts of oil Mr icat for 9 hours. Fin- lllf j ickel?an ornament /==^\\\\\\v heater warranted, jt " >1]]]) 1 plated and equipped J J j JI \ 11| | irery lamp vrarranled. j I or Rayo Lamp from I l1f==Ql II I y iptive circular, (((((((((*^^^'^^((((((1 & COMPANY, f, Charleston, S. C. anged to handle rantage, and sob a tial attention to Dtton, viz: "Allen " and others of . POLE HARNESS single harness and all the "toggery" _ your horses need can be found here, in superior workmanship and fine quality. When you are buying a harness this is the place you want to buy at. Everyone knows that our fine driving or draught harness cannot be beat for beauty, reliability and superior excellence, and our prices are beyond competition for Al goods. -4 DAVIS & COMPANY, 1517 Main Streets Columbia, S. C. * fflffllli MM stand is unexcelled. Nothing ;he market. r AND SURE. . j ds more thread than any other iaring, rable. It is something new. use twenty-five years.) RUTTLE machines. I have the latest. tchines. Needles for all machines and tie best pure SPERM OIL. ? Qfnnnt P nlnmhio Q P 4| uil CGI, bUIUlilUUl, U. U. 1 NEW SHOES; OLD PRICES. The time is near at hand when you wiil make your seBection for your fall and winter SHOES. We have now in store for you one of the most complete stocks to select from. All the new styles and leathers, and at Money Saving Prices. Quick sales and small profits. Farmers9 heavy work shoes a speciality. Remember our motto: "SAME SHOES FOR LESS MONEY" tLOifi STUKHj, COLUMBIA, S. C. tH A PIN, I r, s. c. I s are excellent. We 1 land. 5 per cent, in- g sits. Kindly favor us g rtNFVniITT ^achiAr. 1 ^ mm mm o v w j v President. | HHH^HHiiimiiii mnmmmmf +