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jf In IK FRIH We wish to thank our f XX|| patronage in the past in the ] :???l s p-ies. Wap-ons. Harness, etc.. We beg to inform them thatr> line of Merchandise, Standar ; have a select line of || : Dry fiocds, Notions, Sho Xxi| And our prices will be found share of your trade. I BEEVES-WIT1 |g Swansea, s ? ? " ' i ' ^ L ? 0 CITIZENS 0 ** Y? ? I FURN iiiiiwwb We have every article in this li Installment, are the very lowest. 1 fj ]| giving them just what they want at B 11 wsite what we carry in stock, but w< IJ "v< see us, you will find any kind of Fu fl . Bed Boom, Dining Room or Kitche | j j yOU this advertisement and be jom-sww I 1208 Main Sire ?????????????? F URN IT U R E J FURNIT We carry a foil line of Furniture and 1 ; % Goods at lowest prices. See our line of Rockers, Chairs, Bedsteads, Bedroom Suites, Dining Suites, Leee Curt; . Shades, Carpets, Rugs, Art Squ We buy in solid car lots, which enables than most merchants. Just give us a call ai A * > rest : : : COFFINS AND CASKETS A SPEI Swansea Furnitui SWANSEA. S. C. ?? L fHOUSE PAIN f I | . Good Paints, Cheap Paints,fine Ias1 n We want your orders, and mail ord I shipped the day received. We ai the lowest price you can get anywh B cards free. I Strand Builders' Supp 615 Hampton St., Columbia, S. C. - , - Phonet ? ( I^^ROOKLAND^"5! % NEW BROOKLAND, S. C 5# We Want your business. It is our desire to m your money with us until you need it. We pa JM times a year. % J, C. OUICNARD, L. S Vice* President. e IS CUSTOMERS If 'riends and customers for their purchase of Mules, Horses, Bugand solicit the same in the future. on Feb. 1st we will open a general d Fertilizers, etc., and will also et, Hats, jilt Groceries, Hardware, etc. ; as low as the lowest. Give us a j|s|. ' SUPPLY CO, 1 C C w a ^3P F LEXINGTON, oing to Buy iture; <S ? ? ' ne, and our prices, either for Cash or We take pride in serving our customers, piices that suit. It is useless to enum} assure you, if you will only drop in to rniture you may need for your Parlor n. Think-of us while at home when sure to call when in Columbia. 1 FIDE CO. et, Columbia, S. C. I want to shake hands 1 with every man, woI |< n p | nan or boy in this neighborhood who helps sell harness, louse Furnishing j believe the mule has a hard time and am 'W?' trying to make him lillSy Window comfortable by making fures, 8tC? I comfortable harness. I us to buy cheaper I make everything from id we will do the, I a gee strap to a horse I collar and make it as CIALTY. : : : I , T , , I good as 1 know how. re Co., Let us help the mule I ? Wilse W. Martin maker of harness I TC | I 1118 Plain Street " i columbia, : : : s. c. ting colors. I y - _ _ I Kodol For ?re. Color J J 0 ^ ig 0 S t! 01\ I p I Our Guarantee Coupon I If E - II If. after using two-thirds of a $j.oo bottle of 1 I UUlt H Kodol, jou can honestly say it has not bene* } 7 fited you. we will^ refund your money. Try v Kodol today on this guarantee. Fill out nod __ . , .B1 Hi sign the following, present it to the dealer at I 251 and 1451 the time of purchase. If it fails to satisfy you return the bottle containing one-third of the medicine to the dealer from whom you bought aQd we will refund your money. Town Sthte I Sign here cntThU Oat I IANK. i DigestsWhatYouEat wl And Makes the Stomaofa Sweet 'pi..... Leave |j * C. DaWITT * CO., Chtc^c 111. y interest lour m ' jajj ManZan Pile Remedy, Price 50c is ' TROTTI 81 guaranteed Put up ready to use. One * SfJ application prompt relief to any form of * (jj Piles. Soothes and heals. Sold by the Kaufmann Drug Co. The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, April 1,1908. MUST HAVE HUNTING LICENSE. An Important Announcement From the Audubon Society. f The News and Courier has received * the following: c The Legislature of South Carolina 1 provided for a license for non-resident * hunters many years ago. This license * was fixed at $25, but was seldom, if c ever, collected. The amount was re- c duced at the session of 1907 to $10, ( with 25 cents fee to the clerks of the ( courts for issuing said licenses. Practically every State in the Union has * a non-resident license, and some of * them exact a license of $50. In oth- 1 era the license is good for only one 1 county and has to be renewed in each 1 county the liunter enters. ? < The Audubon Society, of South Car- 1 olina, has labored under many diffi- 1 culties in trying to collect this non- 1 resident license. The old law per- ^ mitted a guest to hunt without paying * this license, and some are not aware ; of the change. If a man's guest were 1 allowed to hunt without license then ' there would be an end of license, for 1 each and every incomer would be a I guest of somebody. This may in : some individual cases work hardship, but it is perhaps impossible to point 1 to a regulation of any kind that would not work hardship on somebody. The State's right to exact this license has been passed on by the United States Supreme Court and settled for all time. The money collected from non-resident licenses goes into the hands of the State Treasurer, where it is placed to the credit of the "game protection fund," and is drawn ont and used for enforcing the game laws. All good citizens should insist on visitors paying this license and report them when they fail to pay it. Between 3,000 and 4,000 men come into South Carolina annually to hunt, but this year the merest fraction of them will pay license. The Audubon Society has pursued the policy this year of not prosecuting a man who hunted without license provided he paid the license on demand. Hereafter all parties found hunting without license will be indicted and fined for each day they hunt without license. There are sufficient non-resident licenses to support a vigorous enforcement of the game laws if these licenses are collected. In the present instance the weakness of the Society has been presumed on, and its confidence has been generally abused. The natural and inevitable presumption for the future will be that the man who hunts without license is trying to evade the payment. James Henry Rice, Jr., Secretary. Letter to S. F. Ffird, Lexington, S. C. Dear Sir: We repeat: Every job painted Devoe takes less gallons than of any other paint. If not, no pay. Yours truly, F. W. DEVOE & CO. P. S. The Kaufmann Drug Co., sells our paint. "Health Coffee" is really the closest Coffee Imitation ever yet produced. This clever Coffee Substitute was rer^p.Titlv nroduced bv Dr. ShooD. of Racine, Wis. Not a grain of real coffee in it either. Dr. Shoop's Health Coffee is made from pure toasted grains, with malt, nuts, etc. Really it would fool an expert?who might drink it for coffee. No 20 or 30 minutes tedious boiling. "Made in a minute" says the doctor. Sold by M. D. Harman. Send Lever to the Senate. Under the above caption the Edgefield Chronicle printed the following letter last week written by an "Edgefield boy," who is now making his home in Washington: "It seems that politics in South Carolina has its charms no less renowned than war. Within a few months it will be the privilege of every South Carolinian to express his choice of a man whom he would have as his representative iu the greatest legislative body on earth. I trust my people will use again that good sense they displayed in electing "Pitchfork Ben," the political war-horse of Edgefield, when they come to select his colleague. Congress is a great battleground for the parties directing the affairs of this nation. There is a vast difference between the militia captain on dress parade, whose conduct and actions on the field of battle are a matter of speculation, and the captain who has seen service on the firing line, who knows the enemies' tactics, and bears a brilliant, meritorious record. "If the people seek a man who has been weighed in the national council, by a part of their own State, and was not found wanting, let them consider the Hon. A. F. Lever, whose worth " ) md usefulness to his State have exended far beyond the fractional part ivhich he represents. Something nore than ordinary clay is in a farmer x>y who "makes good" in Congress ifter barely escaping the constitu;ional requirements of age. The Rep esentative of ordinary attainments md energy finds all the problems he 'eels disposed to solve to the satisfaction of his constituents within a few jounties or fixed geographic limits. Kr. Lever represents only a part of he State, but if he is expected to give )roper attention to the demands made >n his time by the citizens in every ;ounty, he should be given the honor >f elevation to a position where he ;an serve mem oetter. ' 'Mr. Lever is the leader in having he government establish 4the Appaachian Park Preserve, a matter of rital interest to the industrial devel>pment of South Carolina. Nature's aws are being changed by the wanton iestruction of the mountain forest, lature's great reservoir. If the mountains are stripped of their trees, the water which falls there washes away the soil, Alls the streams, causing overflows on the fertile bottom lands, ind they become agents of destruction to crops and property. Millions Df dollars are invested in electric plants and cotton mills along streams having their origin in the Appalachion range. The flow of water is steady and sufficient for present needs; but scientists say that unless protection is furnished by the government, the trees regulating the flow of water will soon be destroyed, and the day is not far distant when the streams will lose their power. "Congressman Lever has shown s friendly interest in the farmers anc their institution, Clemson College His recommendations have securec work in the agricultural department for* number of Olemson graduates, who continue scientific research anc are sent as agents of the department back to the Southland to disseminata information and teach the farmeri how tp realize the marvelous possibilities of their lands. I would oom mend him not only to every friend o Clemson, but to all who desire to se< the right man in the right place Send him to the Senate, and wit! Benjamin R. Tillman he will do muci to restore South Carolina to the com manding position she. held in th< national household before the &torn of civil strife left her prostrate. Mr Lever has the power to combine con ception and action?what men cal moral courage?and is always read] with a reason for the faith that is ii him. Tom Reed, "The Czar of th< House," once said: "A Statesman i a dead Politician." Lever is recog nized in Washington as a statesmai very much alive; and should he be come a candidate for the Senate, le all good men see to it that he is hon orably elected. This brilliant youn: man will yet write his name in bol< letters on the pages of our State' history. "Edgefield Boy." Pain anywhere, can be quickly gtoj ped by one of Dr. Shoop's Pink Pai Tablets. Pain always means conge* tion?unnatural blood pressure. D Shoop's Pink Pain Tablets simply coa congested blood away from pain center These Tablets?known by druggists ? Dr. Shoop's Headache Tablets?simp] equalize the blood circulation and the pain always departs in 20 minntes. i Tablets 25 cents. Write Dr., Shoo] Racine, Wis., for free package. Sol by Kaufmann Drug Co. J Put t is wonderfully >nvenient to do :hen work on a e that's ready 5 instant wanted, it of the way the it you're done. ;tove is the New 3n Wick Blue il Cook-Stove, t you avoid the overpowering al fire and cook rt, even in dog L_ NEW PI Wick Bine Fiai is so constructed that it cannc a room; the flame being dire the stove top where it is n< f=?j see that a stove s< I " reaion would h I ) a stove radiating f "New Perfection / \ comfortable. T1 | 11 If not with your de; TpUf convenient, econoo giver. If not with y Ml agency. A, , ,.A STANDARD ^ITTTTTII ^ (Iac< For Sale. ! Prettiest and cheapest lots on the market for speculative and building purposes, at Eau Claire Heights, within incorporate limits, convenient to trolley ; line, $80 to $285 each. Terms $10 cash; $5 per month, no interest or taxes. 5 per cent, discount for cash. 510 acres of land near Columbia, 100 acres in cultivation, balance woods, three tenant houses, necessary outbuild- i ings. Price $1,500; lialf cash, balance one and two years. i An improved place three miles from Lexington, 155 acres, three hundred | thousand feet saw timber, 500 cords good oak wood. Price $1,000. 70 acres of land near city limits, $35 per acre, on Winnsboro road. 20 acres three miles from State house, $90 per acre. House and lot Miller Heights, $625. ji ii 1 j. met; mue u.vr emugB, retu ciiesp, yerj little money required down, good terms on balance. j A veneering plant at Ridge Spring I for $450. 500 acres of land near railroad, $1.75 per acre. . j 104 acres of land 8 miles from town, on Camden road, four or five room dwelling; barn and stables, 40 acres in ] cultivation, balance woods. Price $1,200. An improved place of 884 acres on Ancrum ferry road, twelve miles from Columbia, sixty acres in cultivation, balance saw timber and woods. Grist j mill and Gin. Price $2,600, easy terms. Timbered right on 1,000 acres of land ; ) in Appling county, Georgia, five miles and naif from shipping point, and has been estimated to cut three million feet 3 of lumber. Price $1,000, cash. 500 acres of land on road to Atfgusta. nine miles from Columbia and two and j one-half miles from Lexington. About I fifty acres in cultivation, saw. timber ' enough to cut one million feet of' lum- j i ber, balance woods. Price $4,500. > House and lot on the car line to Hyatt i Park, corner lot, size of. lot 52x406. L Price $1,050. * Large store house, dwelling over the 5 store and rooms on the side. Also on same lot a two and single story dwelling Rents for $56.25 per month. Price k $o,100, |1,600 cash, balance one, two, [ three and four years. . Ah improved place of 840 acres, 12 ' miles from Columbia on the Camden \ 1 road. The place has a 8-horse farm b open on it, also 15o acres * in pasture, \ well watered. Price $5.50 per acfre. ' Terms, $2,000 dollars cash, balance Ohe, 1 two and three years. 1 * "T ~ b 110 acres of land, live miles from the 5 city, on the Winnsboro road, 50 acres in cultivation, 60 acres in woods. Price 9 $87.50 per acre, 1-3 cash, balance on - easy terms. 48 acres of fine bottom land three and . half miles from city, and will make a bale of cotton to the acre or 75 bushels 3 of corn. Price $100 per acre, easy . terms. 3 Enquiries will be answered promptly, and will take pleasure showing the 1 property. " > x : J. F. MOBLEY, ' EEAL ESTATE, . 1507 Main St., Columbia, S. C. i Phone 1816. 7 i In a Finch, Use Allen's Foots Ease. s A powder for tired, aching, swollen - feet. We have over 30,000 testimonia als. All Druggists, 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Trial Package " Free by mail. Address Allen S. Olmt sted, Le Roy, N. Y. 4w22 s Death of "Uncle" Emanuel d Canaan. 8 On Monday afternoon, March 23, "Uncle" Emanuel Canann, for many . years a familiar figure around Lexinor+on anil ono of fchft hpflt, TiPfrrnAft of J- ? O n this entire section, past into the '* great beyond at the advanced age of ^ 86. "Uncle" Emanuel was one of the b. few old-time darkies in these parts 18 and was always respected for his J many good traits. But few negroes>0 ever reach the heights of Good citip, zenship that he possessed and he will ^ be missed not only by the members of his race but by the whites as well. ' This Stove In j our Kitchen | iRFECTION I ne Oil Cook-Stove I 1 )t add perceptibly to the heat of S' j jcted up a retaining chimney to K' j eeded for cooking. You can K * ending out heat in but one di- K e preferable on a hot day to heat in all directions. The " keeps a kitchen uniformly tiree sizes, fully warranted j aler, write our nearest agency. tO T rtm-rk ? _ th? MA ideal * for family use?safe, ;J?? lical and a great light our dealer, write our near- vjMk I OIL COMPANY SS srporaM) ]