The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, April 01, 1908, Page 7, Image 7
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. '' the best Shoes that can be 1
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t?J?J? U U ICS J5HA.
E. P. & F.
1710 Main Stre<
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*
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L I* 1<*l ll-t ifl it lifll -t "* --* lit- "* 1"- ^ ,J- "*
; Lombard Iron Wei
AUGUSTA
/ . '
; Foxmdry, Meiohlne and Boiler Work
-* f Bridged, Roofs, Tanks, Tower and Building C
\ Cane and Shingle Mill Machinery and Repai
< road Castings; Railroad and Mill Supplies: B
' I Oilers
* LIGHT SAW MILLS and G.
Quick S
Ifi-V " - v - - - -' *
J For Roofing Tr
| VULCANITE
5 Made ready for use, sati
K x new
J Weatherproof, Ro1
J BEST : ROOFING :
\ \ Is extremely durable.
J cold. Always pliable anc
\ together in the rolls, Is <
\ and coated with superior
J cannot evaporate; therefi
^ Requires no i
i Guaranteed to c
v K hoofing Pitch in 600 lb b*
? Coal Tar - - - .
\ INCORI
i WHOLESAL]
^ Columbia,
f^VWVWWVW^
QUALITY
.' * . ;
You have probably bought many thi
good, that cost a good price, but und<
V.
test of service soon proved themselves w<
" ! > "
It might have been shoes that sooi
.?
the sides, caps^broke down, heels gave
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V-fii- ;
gave out and soles were plated.
& - < ' \ i
To'gnard
\ FL'l wear, and^be
ff wear your mc
, ^ . and choice st<
T. A.
Opposite Post Office,
^SOUTHERN'
^ / "Bexcei'el' ?'n'B
5 Through Pullman Sleepi
^ Convenient Schedule
j For fall information
j/i consult nearest Southern
?l> J.C. LUSK, I
- BBOOKS MOBGAKT, A.
<
19D8
ring and
Summer '
Shoes
all kind of leathers to suit
dress and every day wear,
rmers' medium and heavy
rk Shoes a .specialty. You j
y depend that we give you
bought and at a small profit. 1
FOEE YOU' BUY
A. DAVIS,
et, Columbia, S. C.
, , n .A iAIAM
its and Smb Co. I
, GEORGIA ?
s and Mill Supply Store. Engines, Boilers, '
Construction ; Cottou, Saw, Gnst. Oil, Fertilizer,
rs; Building. Bridge, Factory, Furnace and Rail- >
elting, Packing, Injectors, Fittings, Saws, Files, j ,
>, etc.: Shafting, Pullevs, and Hangers.
CAST EVERY DAY > '
Capacity fcr 300 Hat.nds
ie.9 and Erie ENGINES, Kortirvg and >
ier Injectors. Turbine Water Wheels, etc. L
i Grade Mill BOILERS Built to Hartford >
Specifications a Specialty ?
Locomotive Tender Tanks L
Write Ua Before you Buy P
&.S0LINE ENGINES in Stock
ihipment. '
^VWWVWWW^ |
oubles We Advise ' J
ROOFING |
irated and coated under a \
process. J
bproof and Fireproof. i
MATERIAL : KNOWN ?
Not affected by heat or J
I flexible. It does not stick ^
easily affixed. Impregnated K
damp-proof materials which >
ere i
mnual painting. ontain
no coal tar.
irrels - $1.25 per 100 lbs \
$4.00 per barrel T
'ORATED, ^
E and RETAIL, i
- - - s-ci
'SHOES!
ngs that looked
? the rugged
Drthless.
i run over at ^
way, sewing
i
against these tilings, especially in footconfident
of getting the best quality foot>ney
can buy, take advantage of the large
:>ck constantly available for making pleasi
at our store. '
it for W. L. Douglas Shoes for men, $1.5C :
BOYNE,
Columbia, S. C. ;
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KAlLWAi. ^
i!>
I Car Service, J
ing Cars on all Trains, JK ;
is on Local Trains.
as to rates, routes, etc. W;
Railway Ticket Agent, or yy <
i. P. A., Charleston, S. C. j
G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga. '
Route 2, Gaston.
ro the Editor of The Dispatch:
The Sand Mountain school taught
byMissMincy Pound, closed recently,
with dialogues, tableauxs, song drills,
3tc.. A large audience was present.
After the exercises by the school,
Messrs. Shumpert and Kyzer spoke of
Miss Pound's good work, as well as
the importance of children using their
time for mental improvement at home
?? W*A11 oq in u/>ViAA!
AO VTC^ll OO AH O\>?AVV4i
Several prizes were awarded to the
most deserving and a candy treat to
all the pupils.
Miss Stone, who was present by
invitation, spoke in the interest of
temperance and kindness to dumb
animals, as well as to mankind, with
a view to forming a "Band of Hope,"
which State organization is being; connected
with both Sunday and day
schools in some parts of this and
other states. It is hoped that her
effort may be a9 "bread cast upon the
waters" to be gathered, at farthest,
after many days.
After her address there was a cakewalk,
which was participated in by
both pupils and visitors.
Miss Stone's school at Chalk Hill
closed on Friday, the 20th instant,
O rroof f\r\ t.Vna nhilHrpn.
>YltU O tl W MiV
Miss Alice Pound is spending some
time with her brother and friends in
Columbia.
Mr. and Mrs. M. Pound spent a few
days here with relatives recently.
Mr. S. M. Sightler, one of the oldest
citizens of this section, died on the
21st, from the effects of a stroke of
paralysis. He was buried in the
family grave-yard, near his late home.
The large attendance of friends and
neighbors from far and near, bespoke
of the high esteem in which he was
held. He leaves a wife, four sons and
two. daughters, to mourn his loss.
Rev. Bass of New Brookland, performed
the funeral service.
Gaston, Mch. 28. M. E. S.
Death Was on His Heels.
Jesse P Morris, of Skippers, Va., had
a close call in the spring of 190(5. He
says: "An attack of pneumonia left
me so weak and with such a fearful
cough that my friends declared consumption
had me, and death was on my
heels. Then I was persuaded to try
Dr. King's New Discovery. It helped
me immediately, and after taking two
and a half bottles I was a well man I
again. I found out that New Discovery
is the best remedy fo? coughs and lung j
disease in all the world." Sold under !
guarantee at Kaufmaun Drug Co., and
Derrick's Drug Store. 50c. and $1.00. J
Trial bottle free.
m
Apparently Asleep.
A remarkable case of suspended animation
is reported at Maycock, N.
C., where Bessie, the 10-year-old
daughter of a farmer named Ijerry,
ties seemingly dead, but with a body
3till warm, and a face with all the
natural coloring of life.
The child fell suddenly to the
ground a few days since. Two physicians
pronounced the girl dead. The
face of the child retaining ifcs natural
color and her body its warmth, however,
the parents of the child refused
to permit a burial. The young girl
presents every appearance of being
asleep, except that her limbs are stiff
and there is no breath.
Chamberlain's Has the Preference.
.
Mr. Fred C. Hanrahan, a prominent
druggist of Portsmouth, Va., says:
"For the past six years I have sold and
recommended Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It is a
great remedy and one of the best patent
medicines on the market. I handle
some others for the same purposes that
pay me a larger profit, but this remedy
is so sure to effect a cure, and riy customer
so certain to appreciate my recommending
it to him, that I give it the
preference." For sale by Kaufmann
Drug Co.
There is a tradition in Germany
that it was customary in the middle
ages to put an elderberry plant over
buried treasures. A farmer of Oelsdorf
while plowing close to such a
bush unearthed a vessel containing j
2,300 silver coins of the eleventh cen- |
tury.
A staircase has been invented which
plays tunes as it is walked up and
down upon. A series of pins are
pres?ed by the feet and play songs
and drums, while others are connected
with collapsible chambers,
which blow various instruments.
There were 583,310 adult women
employed during the year 1906 in the
industries of Prussia.
Itis estimated that 10,000 deer were
killed in Wisconsin during the past
season.
At Detroit, Mich., a street car
jumped the track last week, ran into
a crowded store and seriously injured
20 people.
Mr. S. L. Bowen, of Wayne, W. Va.,
writes: "I was a sufferer from kidney
iisease, so that at times I could not get
3ut of bed, and when I did I could not
3tand straight. I took Foley's Kidney
Dure. One dollar bottle and part of the
second cured me entirely." Foley's
Kidney Cure works wonders where
Dthers are total failures. Derrick's Drug
Store.
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Conductor and Passenger Zill
Each Other.
Abbeville, March 24.?Burnett Brock
a young white man of Calhoun Falls,
shot and killed Conductor C. D.
Swink, of the Charleston & Western
Carolina railroad, at that place this
afternoon. After being shot through
the heart, the conductor shot his assailant
once, fatally wounding him.
He was brought here to jail where he
died. It seems that Brock got on the
train at Lowndesville and had some
words with the conductor, telling him
he would see him later.
The shooting took place ju9t after
the train reached Calhoun Falls with
the above result.
Conductor Swink is from Augusta.
Brock was drinking, this fact no doubt
causing the trouble.?The State.
"One Touch of Nature Makes
the whole World Kin."
When a rooster finds a big fat worm
lie calls all the hens in the farm yard
to come and share it. A similar trait
of human nature is to be observed when
a man discovers something exceptionally
good?he want9 all his friends and
neighbors to share the benefits of his
discovery. This is the touch of nature
tliat makes the whole world kin. This
explains why people who have been
cured by Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
write letters to the manufacturers for
publication, that others similarly ailing
may also use it and obtain relief. Behind
everyone of these letters is a warm
hearted wish of the writer to be of use
to some one else. This remedy is for
sale by Kaufmann Drug Co.
22,000 Cotton Mill Operatives
Affected "by Wage Reduction.
New Bedford, Mass., March 30.?
Notices of a wage reduction averag
ing ten per cent were posted m an tne
cotton mills la9t week. The reduction
will become effective on April 6.
Yarn mills, which are outside the
New Bedford Cotton Manufacturers' j
association will, it is understood, take j
similar action.
About. 22,000 operatives will be |
affected. J
?
A Card.
This is to certify that all druggists are i
authorized to refund your money if I
Foley's Honey and Tar fails 'to cure j
your cough or cold. It stops the cough, j
heals the lungs and pi events serious re- j
suits from a cold. Cures la grippe j
coughs, and prevents pneumonia and j
consumption, Contains 110 opiates. The j
genuine is in a yellow package. Re
fuse substitutes. Derrick's Drug Store, j
N
Henry Bisc^ff, a draymaster of j
Charleston, killed one of his colored j
employees last week. Biscoff claims
self-defence.
The body of a negro half ~eaten by
buzzards was found in a swamp near
Turbeville last week. A note was
found nearby saying that he had been
murdered.
Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup?
the cough syrup that pastes nearly as
maple sugar and which"children like so
well to take. Unlike nearly all other
cough remedies, it does not constipate,
but on the other hand it acts promptly
yet gently on the bowels, through
which the cold is forced out of the system,
and at the same time it allays inflammation.
Always use Kennedy's
Laxative Cough Syrup. Sold by Kaufniann
Drug Co.
Jack Blake, a negro, was hanged at
Georgetown for the murder of another
negro on Friday.
DeWitt's Little Early Risers, the famous
little liver pills, Sold by Kaufmann
Drug Co.
Howard McFadden, of Clarendon
county, was accidentally shot with a
22-calibre rifle by his companion,
Carl Garland last week and died a
few hours later.
WHAT THE KIDNEYS DO.
Their Unceasing Work Keeps
Us Strong and Healthy.
All the blood in the body passes
through the kidneys once every three I
minutes. The kidneys filter the blood.
They work night and day. When
healthy they remove about 500 grains
of impure matter daily, when unhealthy
some part of this impure matter
is left in the blood. This brings
on many diseases and symptoms?
pain in the back, headache, nervousness,
hot, dry skin, rheumatism, gout,
gravel, disorders of the eyesight and
hearing, dizziness, irregular heart,
debility, drowsiness, dropsy, deposits
in the urine, etc. But if you keep
the filters right you will have no trouble
with your kidneys.
Lewie Hall, living on S. Main St.,
Lexington, S. C., says: "I suffered
from kidney trouble for several years.
There were severe pains in my back,
and my kidneys were at times very
| copious while at others so scanty that
I could scarcely void them. When
| this occurred, I suffered severely and
frequently became alarmed about my
condition. I grew weak, lost flesh,
could not sleep well and was nervous.
I finally went to the Kaufmann Drug
Co., procured Doan's Kidney Pills
and began using them. I can honestly
say that I never found a remedy
that gave me so much relief. I am
not as yet cured, but am improving
rapidly and I have no hesitancy in
recommending Doan's Kidney Pills
to other sufferers."
For sale by all dealers. Price .50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New Xork, sole agent6 for the United
I States.
Remember the name?Doan's?and
| take no other.
One Mai will cc
you foal
Slo&iv's
Liiunveivt
will relieve soreness and
stiffness quicker and easie
than any other preparatii
sold for that purpose.
If penetrates to the bor
quickens the blood, drive
away fatigue and gives st
and elasticity to the muse
Thousands use Sloan's L
I for rheumatism, neuralgia, h
sprains, contracted muscles
joints, cuts, bruises, burns, <
or colic and insect stings.
A PRICE 25 <,50$. & $ 1.00
I: : : CHAPD
Our banking facilitie
place them at your comrr
terest paid on time depoi
with your business.
J. F. H
J. A. BLACKWELDER,
The Palmetto
COLUMB
WE AEE
A Depository for the Ue
of South Carolina the C
of Columbia.
WE OWN
$400,000 United States I
Carolina Bonds.
WE SOLICIT
Accounts of Banks, Fin
WE PAT
Four Per Cent, on depos
terest calculated quarter
WE PROMISE
Our best efforts to trans?
satisfaction.
PALMETTO NATIONAL ]
CAPITAL $
Wilie Joxes, President.
I ^ *
O w 6
Is your Liver all right?
Are your Kidneys in a
healthy condition? If so,
2 HILTON'S LIFE for S <
S x. the LIVER 2
2 and KIDNEYS 2
will keep them so. If not, |
Hilton's Life for the Liver |
and Kidneys will make J
2 them so. A 25c. bottle ?
will convince you of this
fact Sold wholesale by
% The Murray Drug Co., 2
2 Columbia, S.'C. 2 j
2 For sale at The Bazaar, 2
2 Lexington, S. C. 2
#
Jm BEOS.,
GUN and LOCKSMITHS
1719 Main Street, 1
COLUMBIA, - S. C.
Repairers of v
GUNS,
JBICYCLES,
AUTOMOBILES,
ETC., ETC.
We give special care and
attention to all work in our
line and solicit a share of the
patronage of our Lexington
friends. Satisfaction Guaranteed.
nRllii>od WHISKEY HABIT8 .
H S| U| 11 A^| cured at home with- I
I i
B B B. M. WOOLL-cY, M. D.
^P> Atlanta, G&. Office 104 N. Pryor Street.
Furs and Beeswaz Wanted. ^
Wanted?Otter, mink, coon, fox
and all kinds of furs. Highest prices
paid for beeswax and furs. Rice B. ~
Harman, Lexington, S. C.
Don't cough your head off when you A
can get a guaranteed Remedy in Bees '
Laxative Cough Syrup. It is especially
recommended for children its its pleasant
to take, is a gentle laxative thus expelling
the phlegm from the system.
For coughs, colds, croup, whoopingcough,
hoarseness and all Bronchial
trouble. Guaranteed. Sold by Kaufmann
Drug Co.
wiuiii i w i m\ i nn ii i ii in ii ii iim iiwk mi mi??
\ s JT/
sr
s wfBHBH
iniment wSMSRt |
?oH}QChe1
r, S. C. : : :
s are excellent. We
land. 5 per cent, insits.
Kindly favor us
ONEYCUTT, Cashier.
President.
National Bank,
IA, S. C.
lited States Government, the State
'ounty of Richland and the City
tonds and $100,000 State of South
ns, Corporations and Individuals.
its in our Savings Department, inly.
ict your business to your entire
BANK, - - Columbia, S. C.
250,000.00
J. P. Matthews, Cashier.
Portrait Photographers.
Opposite Wright's Hotel,
COLUMBIA, ---SC.
?o?
Strictly Hisrh
?/ C_J
Grade Work.
i
Old and New Pictures ,
Copied and Enlarged.
Please call and see our beautiful
Photo Color Dispay.
. \
Sterling Goods
Sterling silver, cut glass, fine
china, clocks. A fine stock
always on hand for you to
select from.
Keep us iu mind when wanting
anything in Jewelry or
Silverware.
Good watch work and best
eye glasses.
If you can't come, send for
our catalogue or telephone your
order to us.
P. II. LU'IIOTTE & CO,,
JEWELERS,
[424 Main St., Columbia, S. C
'Phone 934
i
BROWN LFGHORN FOWLS
il Prizewinners; the greatest
layers. Its eggs tbafe
TraKWLAl>ay. Good foragers;
feather quickly and mature
early. Eggs for hatching
fresh from yards, $1.00
' per 15.
EICE B. HABMAN,
Lexington, S. C.
i. ' t