The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, May 06, 1908, Page 2, Image 2
S. B. Mc MASTER,
COLUMBIA, - - S. C.
<
We have the largest stock of
Base Ball Gocds, Bishirg Tack],
Guns and sporting goods of all
descriptions, Automobiles and
General Repair Shop, in South ;
Carolina. : : : : : i
Cur prices are the lowest : :
Write for what you want, and ;
when in the city give us a call.
iiiib-?- in iwi n ! ?nun "
Columbia, S C.
WVWWW/VWVVWWWWVW*
I NEW SPRING STYLES. I
& Onr store is bubbling over with new goods. Every ^
5 department presents something new for spring. Ladies^ \
^ dress goods in great profusion, and at lowest prices. All ^
i winter goods now going at reduced prices. Come to see us ?
while in town. ^
i
WM. PLflTT & SON, I
Main Street, Near Postoffice, J
COLUMBIA, S. C. T
LEE A." LORICK T BRO,i
1519 Main Street Columbia. S. S.
JOBBERS - AND - DEALERS - IN
Stoves and Ranges,
Stove Pipe, Tinware,
Enamelware, Hollow Ware,
Tin Plate, Iron and
Asphalt Roofin ,
Eve Trough and
Conductor, Sheet Metals,
Wood Mantels,
I Grates and Tiles,
>j Kow is Refrigerator time and onr store is packed with them We Jj
I have them in all sizes and styles and from the cheapest ro the ij
highest priced ones made. Write us for catalog a.n<l prices, or 'j
better stall, come to store where we can show yon the most com- jj
plete stock of Refrigerators and Ice Chests in the Carolina.*.
Parr?!t-Bail?yG?. Inc. ||
"STOVE and REFR!CEPATOR PEOPLE," jj j
1248 Main St., - Columbia, S. C. !j j
I wsswf p. p. p. PACKING i
^ I I-.*? e^x-.y o> '? ? ?? ? ? ? ? ? __
ife'j?e?aSr'^ It- lasts ier.7'-r. n creeps It's? f?-:o'K-n.
rb'N^" Ol It a r.;0;?'y saver. V,V ( arry a iar?? sleek.
COLUMBIA SUPPLY CO. . . Colombia. S. C. j J
1 i
The Lexington Eispatch.
Wednesday, May 6,1S08.
Strong Drink.
It is a warrior whom no victory can
satisfy, no ruin satiate. It pauses at
no Rubicon to consider, pitches no
tents at night, goes into 110 quarters
for winter. It conquers amid the
burning plains of the South where the
phalanx of Alexander halted in mutiny.
It conquers amid tlie snow
drifts of the North where the grand
army of Napoleon found its winding
sheer. Its monuments are in every
burial ground. Its badges of triumph
ciit; iiiVj w iiivjii iiiv^ui ;iv;i vv c ax.
Its song of victory is the wail that
was heard in Eamah?"Rachel crying
for her children and weeping because
they are not."
The sword is mighty, and its bloody
traces reach across time, from Nineveh
to Gravelotte, from Marathon
to Gettysburg. Yet mightier is its
brother, the wine cup. I say
"brother," and history says "brother"
Castor and Pollux never fought together
in more fraternal harmony.
David and Jonathan never joined in
more generous rivalry. Hand in
hand, they have come down the centuries,
and upon every scene of carnage,
like vulture and shadow, they
have met and feasted.
Yea; a pair of giants, but the greater
is the wine cup. The sword has a
scabbard, and is sheathed; has a conscience,
and becomes glutted with
havoc; has pity, and gives quarter to
the vanquished. The wine cup has no
scabbard and no conscience; its appetite
is a cancer which grows as you
feed it; to pity, it is deaf; to suffering,
it is blind.
The sword is the lieutenant of death,
but the wine cup his captain; and if
ever they come home to him from the
wars bringing their trophies, boasting
of their achievements, I can imagine
that death, their master, will meet
them with garlands and song, as the
maidens of Judea met Saul and David.
But as he numbers the victories of
each, his pean will be "The sword is
my Saul, who has slain his thousands,
but the wine cup is my David, who
has slain his tens of thousands."?
Tom Watson in The Jefferson.
i *" * *
jj iue ripe,
Fire Brick and Clay
rumps, ripe,
Fittings, Valves,
Cocks, Hose,
Electric and
Gas Fixtures,
Paints and Oils,
Cutlery, Wire Netting,
~ i ~i_n_ ~ =L^^t.t=* ? ? ? ? -^ ? > ^ ^ ? ? ? ? - ? ? ? ? ? - - REFRIG^^^ORS!
i
1
m ful. woman s meiicioc, m i
m PJLDMI! :
&& vilM* L'
v? \J ;> ? ii '? 3 1i-i]}
J ^ "I rccrrtrter.J Car.-'i i fo r.*! *.*; ^';- *
| vonctj," vriitfS JV..-.3. A. v. Silver -;v-;
I oi Tern. r.tl v:\-Ji &
v'Ci henin-rac. fcia-b^drAi; r.* ';. ..
-he: y.vc:;cu, c.;ks b rhj <Y:.-s k <
M- /. ? . . .
| Vvi! ..ill) l?vi" V -'/.vO *#' jfV..-*' " ,
; ;j k:kVvcr ii:a . I;
| , .. .. .. ^ # vr ' t
:- ! -1 !
? _ ^ __ .-% ' \
! '* ' ' ' * . " . ' j "i
. / ' ' ' , . ?
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I
If the Baby is Cutting Teeth,
Be sure and use that old and well tried
remedy Mrs. Winslow's Soothing
Syrup, for children teething. It soothes
the child, softens the gums, allays
all pain, cures wind colic and is the
best remedy for diarrhoea. Twenty
five cents a bottle. Guaranteed under
the Food and Drug act, June 30,
1906. Serial number 1908.
tf It is the best of all.
Jury Awards Her $35,000.
A verdict for ?35,000 damages
against the New York Central and
Hudson River railroad in favor of
Miss Annie Mahoney, who was in- ,
jured in the wreck of the Brewster
express in February, 1907, was re- ,
turned in the supreme court last week.
Miss Mahoney sued for $100,000.
One of her legs was amputated as a
result of her injuries. She was n t
school teacher and the sole support c f i
her mother. (
? i
Notice to Our Customers. t
We are pleased to announce that J
Foley's Honey and Tar for coughs, *
colds and lung troubles is not affected J
by the National Pure Food and Drug J
law as it contains no opiates or other *
harmful drugs, and we recommend it \
as a safe remedy for children and adults 2
Derrick's Drug Store. J
Spider Bite Kills Girl. f
Martins Ferry, O., April 29.?Miss
Annie Cox, a society girl, died yes- ]
terday from a spider bite received
three days ago. The girl's body became
greatly swollen soon after she 1
was bitten and she suffered intense 1
pain. J
ic rooUv *] ??> r?Tr?coct-. T"
XXVUXV11 VvUVV AO 1 VUAiJ l/iiv VAVOV O V -
Coffee Imitation ever yet produced, "v
This clever Coffee Substitute was re- v
cently produced by Dr. Shoop of Ra- I
cine, Wis. Not a grain of real Coffee in i
it either. Dr. Shoop's Health Coffee is t
made from pure toasted grains, with a
malt, nuts, etc. Really it would fool v
an expert?who might drink it for Cof- r
fee. No 20 or 30 minutes tedious boil- s
ing. "Made in a minute" says the
doctor. Sold by M. D. Harman.
8 Every Month I
t ja You may ttriok, because you Kg ?
g bare hog bad it, that you must H ^
have a headache every south, CM t
m being a women. fll c
N Eat H you think so, you are IB |
KB wrong, since a headache is a ^ I
BS sign of disease of your womanly raa t
pn organs, that thousands of other Sa
women have been able to relieve jl$B
KB or care, by the use cf that wonder- Eg?
H IpIi
feeitmU~- g
ssSyasS**^ M. ! I
If there is any ore thing that a
woman dreads more than another it
is a surgical operation.
AYe can state without fear of a
contradiction that there are hundreds,
yes, thousands, of operations
performed upon women in our hospitals
which are entirely unnecessary
and many have been avoided by
LYDIA E. PINKS-SAM'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
For proof of this statement read
the following letters.
Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingman,
Kansas, writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
" For eight years I suffered from the
most severe form of female troubles and
rroc tolrl thot on onnvo+i on vttoc to tt onlr^
?? uo tviu tuut au (ioivii ?? uo injr vuij
hope of recovery. I wrote Mrs. Pinkham
for advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham'a
Vegetable Compound, and it has saved
my life and made me a well woman."
Mrs. Arthur R. House, of Church
Road, Moorestown. N. J., writes:
"I feel it is my duty to let people
know what Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable
Compound has done for me. I
suffered from female troubles, and last
March my physician decided that an
operation was necessary. My husband
objected, and urged me to try Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,
and to-dav I am well and strong."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulceration,
fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, and backache.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write lier for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
L Swarm of Bees Went to Boost
on Kan's Legs.
While trying to get a 9warm of bees
:o mve on a iyno ivir. w. n. ivioore,
vho lives near the Orr Mills, had a
jueer experience. Instead of lightng
on the limb provided for them
;he bees began hiving on Mr. Moore's
egs, and in a few minutes nearly
lalf a bushel of bees lit on him.. Mr.
Moore remained perfectly still and
ifter the last bees in the swarm had
t be carefully, gently brushed them
n a hive. He succeeded in getting
l11 but one bee in the hive and this
>ne flew up and stung him on his
land. This was the only sting he
jot from the mass of bees.?Daily
Mail.
Biliousness and Constipation.
For years I was troubled with biliousless
and constipation, which made life
niserable for me. My appetite failed
ne. I lost my usual force and vitality.
3epsin preparations and cathartics only
nade matters worse. I do not know
vhere I should have been today had I
lot tried Chamberlain's Stomach and
jiver Tablets. The tablets relieve the
11 feeling at once, strengthen the digesive
functions, purify the stomach, liver
,nd blood, helping the system to do its
vork naturally.?Mrs. Rosa Potts, Biraingliam,
Ala. These tablets are for
ale by Kaufmann Drug Co.
Negro Girl Shot to Death.
A negro girl, 14 years old, was shot
tnd instantly killed by Love Robinon,
an 18-year-old negro boy, last
veekon Mr. W. Mc. Culp's farm
ibouttwo miles south of Fort Mill. It
ippears, from statements of Mr. Culp
Lad other eye witnesses, that they
ladbeen quarreling in the field where
>oth were working, and that the boy
inallv left his plough and, going to a
touse nearby, borrowed a shotgun,
aying he wanted to kill a mad dog.
Returning to the end of the field
rhere the girl was working alone, alhough
in sight of Mr. Culp and his
>ther hand, the boy deliberately shot
ler in the breast, killing her instanty.
Robinson escaped, but was caught
ater in the day at Van Wyck and
aken to the jail at Yorkville.
"Will Go Abroad.
Senator Tillman will take a trip to
Europe next month. The Senator,
iccompanied by Mrs. Tillman, Dr. J.
V. Babeock and Dr. J. J. Watson,
vi 11 sail from Boston on Mav 113.
yiore News from the New j
England States. !
If anyone has any doubt as to the
i.rtue or Pole's Kidney Care, thev
leerl only ro refer lo Mr. Alvin H.
>nmp.-on, of "Willimuntie, (.'0:01.. who,
tfter almost losiuy; hope 01 recovery, 011
1 cr>->nn" of 1 he failure of so many rem- 1
finally tried FoI? v's Kidney Cure, j
vlo.eh oe says was "just the filing" for j
dm. as f.'ur b utles er:r< d i.im com- ]
di-rcv. }[? is now o:::iiv iv well and |
'i-ee ]'.* a all iii" - rinv i dear to j
mate kldn.-y .A-tffc. IVrrb-k's Drn>: j
:. : C.
\Y:lV :: ivls ve VOll
vlik ii y.) i .-.i" . ? r is 11 >uy
: ?: -ris. Y - : 1
. V'-T v. t /
a
1
the best Shoes that can be boi;
SEE GUHS BEFOI
223 a o a
1710 Main Street, C
THE WHITE ROTARY:
The design and finish of the st
to equal it has yet appeared on th
STEADY, SWIFT
Has a very large Bobbin?Holds
BALL BE.
A LIGHT RUNNER?STRONG and dura
(White SHUTTLE Machine has been in tn
The NEW HOME stands at the top of SHI
Always on hand good Second Hand Macl
machine attachments, shuttles, belts and the
J. H. BERRY, 1802 Main S
Parlor Be;
BEN DAVID, P
NEXT TO SKYSCRAPER,
I
Finest Restaurant in South Caroli
Only Woma
Special Rates by the Week.
W AA 1 A
ULCalS
BEST ORGANS!1
At Factory Prices, c<
. PJ)
Every home can afford and
should possess the best Or- j
"R"F
gan. Terms so easy.
! gp
For a limited time we will j
GC
sell $00 Organs at only $75. [ p ^
Only $25 now; $25 Nov. All
1908; $25 Nov. 1909, and no
interest. ?
$80 Organs now only $95. j n*
Don't pav the peddler a ; I
j big profit, but come to us or
! clip and send this advertise- ;
ment with your letter asking ! ^j|
| for catalogue and price list, j
Lt0 , Vo
MALONE'S
MUSIC
HOUSE, 1p!
Columbia, S. C. s
PIANOS & ORGANS. 3
r" ^ f /
WW
I TWIST TO;
TV.- Vr?.r.* ' a fav ?ritc ^ ith r'v'ttcv? of V<:r?
? ? . 1 < 0 >
Yhvfiaiaand Nortij Carolina: .: ? .1 rfsuli: .
:v&i!ituinc*d. Beware f T'.\ . :
. if ! i-a" jet
flaw;;
rr ~ fc? f> ^ M ' r r /. \ r
J ?" -!J 3 '<s - ?. ^ jJ j Vi'
1908 ^
ing and
Summer
[ kind of leathers to suit
'ess and every dav wear,
era' medium and lieavv
Slices a specialty. You
X t
lepend that we give you
ght and at a small profit. ' j
IE YOU BUT 1
A. DAVES,
Jolumbia, S. C. |
SEWING MACHINE
and is unexcelled. Nothing
e market.
AND SURE.
i more thread than any other
4
vjr,
ble. It is something new.
;e twenty-live years.)
JTTLE machines. I have the latest.
lines. Needles for all machines and * i
best pure SPERM OIL.
tree!, Columbia, S. C. '
staurant,
roprietor,
COLUMBIA, S. C.
a*
na.
ill's Restaurant in Columbia
at all Hours?Night or Day.
)R.L.L. TOOLE .
1608 Main Street,
)LUMBIA, - S. C.
ilNLESS TOOTH EXTRACTOR
AND DENTIST. I
I
1ST PLATES - - - $10.00 j
LIDGE WORK (per tooth) - $5.00
>LD FILLINGS - $1.00 up
JNLESS EXTRACTION 25 and 50c .
dental work done at money saving
prices. Sep. 5 tf
Hi Hit lit,
LEXINGTON, S. C.
erary, Scientific and Classical
Gourses.
cal and Instrumental Music, Drawing
and Elocution. College Trained *
Teachers. Expenses for
Session $60 to $80.
ll Term Begins September 2, 1907.
ll Term Ends January 10, 1908.
ung Term Begins January 13, 1908.
*ing Term Closes May 15, 1908
>ena ior catalogue. Address
W. E. BLACK, Principal.
I. D. HARMAN, Secretary.
ao.*
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