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\ I ^ > *?*r j? (Prickly Ask, Poke So MACS POSITIVE CUBES 07 1L Physicians endorse P. P. P. as a splen" did combination, and prescribe it with |M great satisfaction for the ernes of all forms and stages of Primary, Secondary BH1 and Tertiary Syphilis, Syphiiitio Bhen- B xnatism, Scrofulons Ulcers and Sores, Glandular Swellings, Rheumatism, Kidaey Complaints, old Chzonio Ulcers that fag naTiDDiilc UHinnnn 3 haveresisted a!l treatment. Catarrh, Skin Diseases, Eczema, Chronio Female Complaints, Mercurial Poison, Tetter, Scaldhead, etc., etc. f P. P. P. is a powerful tonio and an ^55 excellent appitiser, building up the ^^9 system rapidly. If you are weak and feeble, and feel badly try P. P. P., and RHEUM p?? ? |,|H, J How Do You I Feed | Your Ci IS ; * x v". V v - : i'tVS, TXO YOU KNOW just * I . .1 need, and are you fun as required and in \ plant can use it ? >: : Suppose you should put the box, nail it up and place it in tfc pect them to thrive and grow fa Hardly! Well, did it ever occur to yot badly mixed fertilizers you are tion up to your crops?offering shape that they can't get to it ? Fertilizers, to do your crops the soil waters. These are cons the surface during the day and and repassing the roots of the p] contained in the water?and thii the plant can feed. % Therefore, when you buy fe with the idea of furnishing food same principle that you shoul< stock. It should not only conts phosphoric Acid and Potash, bi should be m soluble form of the fertilizer should be such absorb every particle of it, and 1 factured from materials that wi food at one time, but furnish a the entire growing season. This is the fertilizer you sh' ??i r\nck tttott Tf 1C imnrtCCl'l JLJJl VUljr V/UC V*UJ JLt, this by the dry-mixing of raw this at home with a shovel anc someone who has made it the s ence being'in the quantity. ' These materials must be gro quires machinery costing thou properly. They must then be complete, you have a compou exactly like every other ounce, part of which would contain to little Potash, while another ] opposite?and all of it contain i not available. Remember that the chemicaj test of its crop growing qualiti terize lumps and by the use oi the plant food; your crop C? You can take an axe, break corn; your mule can't. Don't risk -a crop failure! Insure your peace of inind 2 Arinc Animal An Fertii Manufact Armour Ferti ATLANTA, < mmmrnmrnammmtammmmmmmmmmm 1 ot aid Potassium.) L "FORMS AND STAGES oF ? yon Win regain flesh and strength. f Waste of energy and all diseases resulting from overtaxing the system are cured by 0 the use of P. P. P. < Ladies whose systems are poisoned and jb irhoeeblood is in an impure condition due tP to menstrual irregularities are peculiarly b hfinAflted bv the "wonderful tonic and ! SCROFULA J >? blood cleansing properties of P. P. P., Prickly Ash, Poke Boot and Potassium. Sold by all Druggists. 2 F. V. LIPPMAN Proprietor Savannah. - #Ca. ATISIYI ops? I rhat your cotton and corn lishing it in such quantities such shape that the food for your stock in a ieir trough?would you ext? i that when jrou use lumpy, putting this same proposi- 6 ; them plant food in such | any good, must dissolve in | tantly in motion, rising to | sinking at night?passing | [ant, which absorb the food 1 5 is the only way in which | utilizer, you should do so k for your crop and on the g 3 purchase food for your tin the necessary Ammonia, ? it above all else these ^ ?the mechanical condition | as to permit the plant to 3 the goods should be manu- i ill not give up their plant | steady supply throughout a ould have and can j?et? fe )le to produce a goods like 5 materials, whether you do | 1 a screen or buy it from ame way?the only differund to a powder, and it resands of dollars to do it so manipulated that when [nd, each ounce of which is and not a mixture, one 0 much Ammonia and too )art would be exactly the >lar--t food locked up and 1 analysis of a fertilizer is no ies. The chemist can pull various means search out in't. * open the box and get the is well as your crop by using | mr's | isnoiiiated I izers J nrcd by ilizer Works I 3EORGIA E I ? tHE-UFEOFAFOSSIL HUNTER^ jkfjO&G a biaefc Jpoassta sfepra fjT And. b?Ua- ?bat tatme* Mae iata ere* J jTTL taceons , 1 stalked the rad&xtr boodosaur Acid JahycAothodoiit Tonaoioos. SHbere dpadir diptowJoci pconi. Among the wilds of upper Jura i I slew that ^vil omened fowl The ancbaeopteryx ma crura. j Wheij. whirling tlircugh the tulcry crops | 7 heard a heavy hoofed cclt>-.j*?s. 1 What might it be?iriveraiopu i Or scaly Porlheus rriulossus? "Ha, wretch," I cried, "your time has come! Prepare to skip the reservation, Homaiodontotherium I" 1 choked him with his appellation. I I've biult myself a shelter where. Beneath a mountain's jutting cornice, The pterodactyl combs his hair And serenades the heeperorois. 'L-. ' And there at night 1 muse upon / > ^ The fossil hunter's life of glory. " At dawn I chase the seuglodon; At eve 1 dine on dinosaur!. ?Charles H. Sternberg. Sure Proof. Two young lawyers, members of the. bar but a few weeks, had grown rath-. er obstreperous in the office of one ofii the court clerks. "Here, you get oat of bene," said the? aterk. "We don't have to," the more talkative one promptly answered. "Wfe've^ got a right in here. We're lawyers." "Ah. go on!" the clerk replied. "You're nothing of the kind." "Sure we are," the spokesman rejoined. Then, turning to his comrade, be commanded. "Buck, go over and get your sign."?Success Magazine. j A Safe Rule. When they came home from dinner at the Italian table d'hote the fiat was, like an oven. The woman ran around throwing up all the windows. "Why don't you turn off the heat?" asked the artist. "Never!" cried the woman. "Always^ open every window when a flat's too warm, but don't turn off the heat. It may never come on any more."?New York Press. t - i * ! Preferred a Mask. "Now," said the architect to the fug!-' tive trust magnate, "that you are to settle here, you want a comfortable residence. Would you prefer in this new house a southern exposure?" "Good heavens, no!" cried the magnate. with a shiver of horror. "Any: ? _ i. i i. x J Hind or exposure is just wuai ? uuu want."?New York Journal. He Knew. Young Lady?What do you recommend for a brother? Clerk?That depends upon whether he's your brother or some other girl's. Young lady blushes. Clerk (watching her)?That being the case, right this way, please.?Cleveland Plain Dealer. 1 ' His Experience. & T-^l % "Every time 1 pick up a hairpin on the street 1 set a letter. 1 never knew it to fail." "I did. I picked up one the other day and put it in my pocket, but 1 didn't get a letter." "You didn't':" "No. but my wife found it, and I got a lecture." Fishy. Mother?If you have been to Sunday school, how is it that your hands smeil of fish? Johnnie?I?I guess it came from this Sunday school paper. Yer see. Jonah an' th* whale are ou th' cover.?Spokane Spokesman-Keview. Justly Happy. "Father." said little Hollo, "what is a happy medium?" "I suppose, my son, that It Is one who can earn several hundred dollars a day by making tables and chairs move around the room."?Washington Star. She Had a Past. Bacon?What's mat oici yeiiow neu cackling so for? I understand sne hasn't laid an egg in a year! Egbert?That's right. She's Jiving in the past!?Yonkers Statesman. Mollycoddles. First Chauffeur?War is absurdly sentimental. Second Chauffeur?Yes. they actually go back and bury the dead.?Chicago Tribune. I | His Status. "Well, my little man," inquired a visitor pleasantly, "who are you?" "I'm the baby's brother!" was the ingenuous reply.?Truth Seeker. A Sympathizer. Willie?Had er scrap wit' sis? Dat's . < fT',. _ T 4- TT-tth noimn . v> li.v. i uu l muuj i>nu her myself half the time.?Cleveland Leader. Harmless Hop. He (a eot old. he 1? not zoung. The Chinese laundryraan Hop Lang:. The yellowed cheek, the slanting eye. The humble noee. the cheek bone high. The cheerful faoe. the wfiUag heed That serves the proudeet ta the land. His back yard yoa may aoeo with oare^ No drfrtr fees vtrkie there! ? * Lyles Confesses- rm Declaring: that the lashes of a gailfcy kg conscience were too much for him, ll Henry Lyles, a negro accused of the II murder of his wife, has confessed to Deputy Sheriff Sim J. Miller and Dr. W H. (Jr. Eleazer, of Spring Hill, that he had killed her. ^ At the inquest, it will be remember- SB ed that Lyles claimed that he had left | J LILI LnTion A nlrrbtin An Aof i An Qtul mU 111^ IIW 4.1 OV Vll LilU iiJ^UUXU V[UUOUWU) UllVi upon hearing a gunshot, returned to feg find his wife lying across the bed cold H i:i death with a gunshot wound just ra below the lefc shoulder. Upon being rj questioned, however, as to his where- p| abouts during the time he was away M from his home, he could not give sat- w isfactory explanation, and the jury gJ held him responsible for his wife's ri death. jyj In making his confession Lyles stat- fj ed that he accidentally killed his wife. 9@ He stated that somebody had been bothering around his house, and that ? he had borrowed a gun and two shells jLfl from relatives; that, on the night of the killing he and his wife M| went to bed early, hi9 wife dropping rj off to sleep at oncethat about nine or BB ten o'clock he heard some one on the I | outside, and he seized the gun; that I I in loading it, when he breeched it shut II one of the shells was discharged. He 99 I says his wife wa9 sound asleep and n never movad, the load causing instant rj death. He says that he loved his wife M as well as anybody ever loved a wo- jyj man, ana uiau ntj wuuiu uui> uivvc xi.m- vn ed her for anything in the world. The officers, however, do not give EH much credence to this 9tory; they are U satisfied that Lyles did the killing, ylj but they assert that it was a case of frg cold-blooded murder. Lyles' wife be- Pi longed to some kind of fraternal order EH which carried an insnrance clause, Lj and it is believed Lyles' motive in HI killing his wife was to collect the U money. rj The killing took place near Chapin ra in the Dutch Fork. Farm Shoes. H The well known and old reliable IH shoe firm of E. P. & F. A. Davis, of HH Columbia, are offering special bargains in farm shoes, just at this particular time. But they carry a well O selected line of shoes of all kinds and for every purpose. When you buy y shoes of Davis you have the satisfac- Bra tion of knowing that they are the best that is made. === Trapped a Bawk. Messrs. D. P. and Roy Sease, of | near Gilbert, trapped a hawk last |j Thursday, which measured four feet g f and eight inches from tip to tip. g - -<50- | 1 Write Fcr Free Calendar. 5 Write to the Palmetto Fertilizer Co, | ^ Columbia. S. C., for one of their hand- | t some 1910 calendars. They are free ^ ^ for the asking. Read their advertise- J ^ ment elsewhere and call for their jj brands. In writing for calendar, i f mention The Dispatch. i ? ~ j rrrrrrh An aching back is instantly relieved by an application of Sloan's Liniment. ( This liniment takes the place of massage and is better than sticky plasters. It penetrates ?without rubbing?through j the skin and muscular tissue ^E? right to the bone, quickens the =?= blood, relieves congestion, and gives permanent as well as Hit temporary relief. Here's the Proof. Tt Mr. James C. Lee, of 1100 9th St., out S.E.,Washington, D.C., writes : "Thirty ^ years ago I fell from a scaffold and senously injured my back. I suffered terri- llflC bly at times; from the small of my back lint, all around my stomach was just as if I TrliL had been beaten with a club. I used u i every plaster I could get with no relief. bale Sloan's Liniment took the pain right 80111 out, and I can now do as much ladder mon work as any man in the shop, thanks to , v bust Sloan's JS1 Liniment \Z ! Mr. J. P. Evans, of Mt. Airy, da., j By i says: "After being afflicted for three y years with rheumatism, I used Sloan's Liniment, and was cured sound and W well, and am glad to say I haven't been suit troubled with rheumatism since. My Ice was badlv swollen from my hip to my knee. One-half a bottle took the ! 6HG( pain and swelling out." " _ T1 Sloan's Liniment jRteT mori has no equal as a |4|| ^re(* remedy for Rheumatism, Neuralgia fiBBSBS t,ate or any pain or BfiflSBSQOT S. C stiffness in the "j^6; muscles or joints. B g J d_ Prices, 25c., 50c. and $ 1.00 IJfowl ^or Sloan's book on I H horses, cattle, sheep. . T|''ri "*Vi 9 . -n and poultry seat B IllUkS^JLl 01 r free. Address | ~xT: ' B Dr. Eul 8. StoaB, Iam^I Proi Bottw, Mm., U.SA fiSBw I . ? > g S53 gsgj There is mere E to a Fertilizer | - US.CUR. r&M. ftCULy y The mere mixing of ?? ; materials to obtain analy- n \ sis requires no special q knowledge. Thevalue f| of a fertilizer lies in the ? source from which the n plant food is obtained. N ; \i- Each ingredient in F Royster goods is selected I with a view of supplying P the plant from sprouting Pj , until harvest. The plant Ft i is not overfed at one jP| ' time and starved at an- Nj other. T wenty-five r| years experience goes with j| every bag. nj | TRADE MARK Hj Sold by reliable dealers throughout |J the South. 0 F. S. Royster Guano Co. m * NORFOLK, VA. M FHE PLACE TO BUY!4 Fancy and Staple Groceries, Cigars and Tobaccos, g 'old Drinks of all Kinds. We make a specialty of 2 Landling Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls at lowest prices. | Barber Shop in connection. We solicit a share of | he patronage of Chapin and community and are .here & o please All we ask is a trial. | SUMMER & BOOZER,! CHAPIF, S. C. | " 2<GTra -*"? -WWI-IW.-JIMI 11 BU ? w'Ti.. r. n.mr%rK.---;yrr i Select Fertilizers Wisely So many kinds of Fertilizers flood the market, and all nanufacturers make such astounding claims for their proluct that often times one is puzzled what to buy. PALMETTO STATE BRANDS ire compositions of high grade blood, tankage and foieign ~- | Ish guano. All tests show that they are above the guaran- ( -ee, Practical use has placed them in the lead. Try Pah I 1 netto brands this year. | Let ns send you all information wanted and a beautiful I ;alender for 1910. ' I THE PALMETTO FERTILIZER 00., I Factory and Office: Columbia, S. C. I *' *"iys ifl?CMte sterling Goodsl ie mo9t prolific cotton in existence w of 20 varieties tested at Georgia fl erimental station 1908. Hite's Pro gave tho highest percentage of 0x ?. ~ fl All seed offered are from cotton Sterling Sliver, cut glass, fin? fl 2h averaged more than two (2) .. , , . fi , . s per acre on my entire crop. Get oiucks. it niie e of these fine seed and make always on band for you t& fl ey farming. Single bushel $2, 3 H icia for $5,10 bushels $16.00. Write select from. fl Inscription and testimonials. Tr fl r. KITE, R. F. D. 4, Augusta, Ca. ^eeP us in mm(* ^ ben want- ? 1 ing anything in Je?eiry or = - SiJverware. I Good watch work and best I 5) state of south;carolix\a, , -m County of Lexington.. eje glasses. ? George 3. Drafts, Esquire, Probate If you can't come, send for I tdge. hereas, E. J. Ranch made our catalogue or telephone your to me, to grant him Letters of , , linistration of the Estate of and uiuta to us. its of Paul E Lowman. .. T , ^ ^ lese are therefore to cite and ad- s) II } \ JlHffinTfTI Ij! CI ftf 1 I ish all and singular the kindred and ( , ||, Llli'llul 1 Jji OL IUm I ltors of the said Paul E. Lowman, ^ :ased, that they he and ap- JEWELERS, before me, in the Court of Pro- H to be held at Lexington c. h 1424 Main St, Columbia, S. c | on 23rd day of l1 eb. 1910, next, r publication hereof at 11 o'clock in 'Phone 934 fl forenoon, to show cause, if any they 3, why the said Administration ^ dd not be granted. [yen under my hand, this 7th day .^1 eb. Anno Domini, 1910. A fire? JBOliens f or 0iuv? Gbo. S. Drafts, (L. 8.) We offer three 60-horse power, IQMh )?te Judge, Lexington Ooonty, S. C. pounds pressure boilers for saleJ^H lbliahed on the 9th daj oi Feb. $200.00 each. Saxe-Goth* Mills, ~