The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, July 26, 1911, Image 2
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i TOflili
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2 Knowing the great im
X
j point to carry tne Dost <
ing art. Whether for ti
to serve you. You will
|' i J . lowest reasonable figui
1 - Anvils $5.00 and up.
f i Lorick I
4 1
t J INC
!] COLUMBIA,
| We Sen Lac
I $2.50 Sho?
Since January 1st,
our line of shoes t<
ladies' Solid Leath
"V- /
The same Shoes we hav<
and which you will alw
for we will sell to you 1
A Complete Line
Ladies' T
We specially invito
our Store.
<1 Jones
Cash
1 1554 MAIN ST
>
| GOOD
; And best of wo
j Feature that 1
. | The . Stat
j and er
0
' !: South Carolii
?jj AB work
j; Guaranteec
' I: Fence also,
j See us and ^
I i Your interest
I
"
: SOUTH CAROLII
(?
Phone 1558. :
j| COLUMB
SR. V. STILLER, Manager.
Iv \
fWWWWW
t IS IT PA
| WE
J The Very
5 Righ
| Webb's
\ 1627 Main Street
? DECORATORS: In Bi
J) Out of (
iunuuw
TtfM1gvfs^tvr
1SMTH I
parlance of these tools, we make it a j
of every tool known to the blacksmith- >
te shop or the farm, we are prepared \
find our p-ices hammered down fo the >
re on everything ycu need. i
Blacksmith's Vises $5.60 to $7.50. |
& Lowrance,
ORPORATED.
- - - s. c*
mn*m
Lies $2.00 and ?
>s For $1.50
we have decided to confine |
er Shoes to Retail It $1.50 | !
e been selling foi $2.00 and ?2.50 |
ays pay the other fellow high prices |
or the low price of |
leSO I
of Dry Goods, Notions,
'rimmed Hats, Etc.
i all Lexingtonians to visit
Dry Goods Store,
STOCK J j
rk is the strong ?j
lias helped to earn e!
N
:e-wide reputation 2
S i
idorsements of the ?j
1 11
na Marble Works. ?
s
M
H
: in either marble or granite 5
1 to satisfy. We sell iron S
Write or. call to s
N
ve will see that 2
is protected. ;
N
" M
1A MARBLE WORKS, 5
M I
1707 Main Street, ?
!A, s s. c. 2
1 M
H
? s : F. H. HYATT, Proprietor,, ||j|
iHfiimniiiiitiHmmtmtyxxu J
IHUUUHUH)
jnt? ja i
: HAVE IT Igp #
Poet. frnnHe a r?r? \
s
tly Priced, 5
Art Store *
Columbia, S. C. i
Liriap, Tapestries and Wall Payers.
*ity Work Solicited. A
bVtWVWtWVtWt
mTfirni?Tnn?wm?r m?m?
MURDERS HIS WIFE
AND HER FATHER.
"I went there for the purpose of
killing mv wife, and I am satisfied
with my little deed. I'm ready to die
mr it at. any time. My only regret is
that I had to shoot the old man. and
that I did shoot the little girl. The
o <1 man should not have caught hold
of me. I had to shoot him in the tussle.
As to the little girl, I didn't
know that she was in the bed with my
wife until the officers told me this
morning that she was, and that I had
shot her in the arm and leg. I am sorry
about that. ''
This statement was made by Samuel
N. Hyde, a white man of 27 years of
age, in the county jail at Anderson on
Wednesday 'morning, and tells the
story of two of the most revolting
murders that ever occurred in Anderson
county.
The place was in the Orr Mills village
at the home of Mr. M. V. Beasley.
The persons killed were Mrs.
Emma Beasley Hyde, wife of Samuel
N. Hyde, and M. V. Beasley and,
therefore, father-in-law of the slayer.
The little girl wounded is the 15 years
old sister of Mrs. Hyde, who was
asleep in the bed with Mrs. Hyde ai
the, time of the shooting.
TiYiTYx^iafplv jiftrr the shoolincr. i
I - .r - ? I
Hyde surrendered himself to Sheriff i
King, meeting him i;i the road and
hailing him as he tvas driving to the
9pot. Hyde climbed into the buggy
and asked that he be taken to j i).
The killing occurred at the home of
the Beasleys about 12:15 o'clock on
Wednesday mornir g, and according to
TTT-r?p>s .wvn sr,at>rnent. was Dremedi
tated in so far as the killing of his wife
was concerned. They had been separated
for a little more than two weeks,
the parents having declined to allow
Mrs. Hyde to remain with hor husband,
or to permit him visiting her at
their home, aud he Bays that he decided
to end it all.
Hyde had for a time been working
as engineer at the Gluck Mills. Tuesday
night he went to the park, taking
in the show, and about 10 o'clock
went to the Orr Mill village. He kept
a watch on the house in which the
Beasley's lived and shortly after 12
o'clock, when the lights had been
turned down, and he was convinced
that the members of the family had
retired, he.secured a chair, and entered
by the kitchen window, first having
removed his coat and shoes.
Father and Daughter
Are Burled Together
Anderson, July lt>.?The bodies of
W. V. Beasley and his daughter, Mrs.
Emma Beasley Hyde, who were- slain
yesterday by Samuel N. Hyde, husband
of the latter, were laid to rest
side by side in Silver Brook cemetery
this afternoon.
At the coroner's inquest it developed
that the linen on the bed where Mrs.
Hyde was shot caught fire from the
explosion of the pistol and it was completely
consumed. This shows how
j close Hyde was to his wife when he
fired the fatal shot. The coroner's
j jury returned the usual verdict, hold!
ino- Hvde responsible
'ft J X
Hyde maiataiushis demeanor today,
stating that he is as much pleased as
I ever, over the success of his acts.
Want Special Court
To Try Samuel N. Hyde
Anderson, July 20.?Petitions signed
by 00 citizen*, including every
member of the coroner's jury, askiug
f.-w ft anooin.1 brm r?f r.rimiual nourt to
try Samuel N. Hyde for the murder of
his wife and father-in-law, have been
sent to Solicitor Bonham. The next
term of court of general sessions is not
scheduled until late in September.
There has been no agitation that would
suggest a contemplated lawless move,
but the general desire prevails that
Hyde be given a speedy trial.
Barbecue at Edmund.
On Saturday, July 29, I will furnish
a First Glass Barbecue at Edmund.
Music will be furnished by a brass
band. Speaking by Gov. Blease, Congressman
Lever, Prof. Tate and others.
A grand rally of the people of the entire
southern section of Lexington
m-mmZ 1 1 Vl SV AM f Pwn i
*juuijiv wux uc luio ULU031UU, nam
from Columbia will arrive about 9 a.
m., returning; at 6 p. m. Train from
the South will arrive at 10.50 a. m., returning
at 4 p. m.
4w38pd L. E. Jefcoat.
Right in your busiest season when
you have the least time to spare yon
are most likely to take diarrhoea and
lose several days' time, unless you have
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy at hand and take a
dose on the first appearance of the disease.
For sale by all dealers.
Money i9 the root of all evil.
Foley's Honey and
Tar Compound
I Is effective for coughs and colds in
I either children or grown persons. No
! opiates, no harnifnl drags. In the jel|
low package. Refuse substitutes.
. Kaufmann Drug Co.
I
Honest Medicines
Versus Fakes.
President Taffc's recent message suggesting
an amendment to the Pure
Food and Drugs law in its relation to
i prepared medicines, does not refer to
| such standard medicines as Foley's
Honey and Tar Compound and Foley
Kidney Pills, both of which are true
medicines carefully compounded of ingredients
whose medicinal qualities are
recognized by the medical profession
itself as the best known remedial
agents for the diseases they are intended
to counteract. For over three decades
Foley's Hone\. and Tar Compound
has been a standard remedy ror
coughs, colds and affections of the
throat, chest and lungs for children
and for grown persons, and it retains
today its pre-eminerce above all other
preparations of its kind. Foley Kidney
Pills are equally effective and meritorious.
There arc -10,000 government clerks
in Washington. In 1008 the total ol
goyernoment employees was 236,902,
of these 13/21 were women. These
figures did dot include the eonsulr.i
and dinlomatic service?81,000. InlSCS
there were approximately 370,065 Federal
employes; the census bureau added
abcufc 3,000 to those. Treasury dcdartment
employees most?6,996.
Foley Kidney Pills are composed oi
ingredients specially selected for theii
corrective, healing, tonic, and stimulating
effect npon the kidneys, bladder
and urinary passages. They are
antiseptic, antilithic and a uric acid
I solvent. Kaufman;; Drug Co.
James M. Hust r, o? Washington,
Pa., bought a pipe in Illinois, 50 years
ago, for $100, and now he advertises
that he wants to trade it fcr an automobile.
Experts say ib is worth $1,000.
The pipe is 200 years old and is a ca.rvMd
ooo oanredGerman m t e scham.
Old Soldier Tortured.
?T ontforo/t rmsnAflkahle
rui j uui o ^ oumvavv* ~
torture from indigestion, constipation
and liver trouble," wrote A. K. Smith
a war veteran at Erie, Pa., "but Dr.
King's New Life Pills fixed me all
right. They're simply great." Try
them for any stomach, liver or kidney
trouble. Only 25c at Kaufinann Drug Co
Elias Morse, of North Livermore,
Mo., has a cow from whose milk he
has obtained au ayerage of a pound of
butter a day since June. The cow is
more than twenty years old, but her
teeth are good and she eats her food as
well, apparently, as she ever did.
AAUFADTIUH tlfADnC
uuitirunimu nunua
Many a Lexington Household
Will Find Them So.
'To have the pains and aches of a
bad back removed; to be entirely free
from annoying, dangerous urinary disorders
i9 enough to make any kidney
sufferer grateful. To tell how this
great chaDge can be brought about
will prove comforting words to hundreds
of Lexington readers.
A. Marks, Depot St., Lexington, S.
0., says: "I had pains in mjr back
and sides for mouths aud did not feel
well at all. My kidneys did not do
their work as they should and I knew
that. I needed a reliable kidney medicine.
I got a supply of Doan's Kidney
Pills frorr the Kaufmann Drug Co.
and since I used the contents of one
box, the pain disappeared and my kidneys
have become normal. I advise
other kidney sufferers to try Doan's
Kidney Pills." (Statementgiven March
9, 1908.)
PRAISES DOAN'S AGAIN.
Mr. Marks was interviewed on March
23, 1911 aud he added to the above:
UT nlnocn.n i *1 ^ATlfirrVli M Of TT) V T)rP
JL l>anc ^ioauuic 111 , r.v
vious endorsement of Doan's Kidney
Pills. I certainly think that this preparation
is worthy of the highest
praise."
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Mifburn Co.. Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name?Doan'e?and
take no other.
I Honesty j
in Jewelry I
"If it came from Sentz's, yon
know it's all right," is what one
nf nnr customers remarked to I
| another the other day. B
I When yon bay Jewelry, yon B
generally have to take the "Jew- g
ieler's word for it" whether it is I
good or not. B
That's just where our reputa- R
tion for honesty and fair dealing
counts. 1
And furthermore, we will Jal- B
ways give you your money back I
and ask no questions any time fl
you are dissatisfied with a pur- B
chase. 8
Special attention to mail orders, h
CHARLES I Sim, a
I JEWELER, 1
I 1439 Main, Columbia, S. C I
V Makes rich, red, j
H System ? clears the brain ?:
fi A positive specific for B
Drives out Rheumatism ar
? is a wonderful tonic and bod
I F. V. UPPMAN,
? I????a
! I THE BEST IS NOT;
; I TOD GOOD FOB ; ;
| OUR CUSTOMERS;i
Iw e are exclusive agents in Columbia
for the Best Furniture Manu-.
facturers in America.
We show the largest and best as
sortment of high grade Furniture
in the entire South.
I A visit to our store will be ?
treat for you because we wil
show you all the new ideas it
Furniture.
You are always welcome and yot
will not be asked to purchase.
VAIMETRE'S
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
EMBAUER,
Columbia, S.C.
$1 ri ft nnftu
I U. U. DlfUl
1730 Him STBEE'
;j| Is where you can find
I OF AL1
DOORS, "Si
BLIND;
| LIME ANI
<! n A TBT "Ml? HP
ji U XX JlJJL 11 JLJ A
yi Call or write for Prices.
1 The Cafd\
.5 1552 Corner Main and
Cr
2 Colombia Bank. Central.
o H. W. WOODWARD, I
2 American and
J Rates: American $2. and t
2 European, 75c and
2 Headquarters for the 1
2 CUISINE UJ
* Proper and Careful Atter
: Now Under New Management
GINS
lectors. Pipes* Vahes and fittings. Light Sa
I Cane Mills in stock. LOMBARD IR
| COMPANY, Augusta. Ga.
The Palmetto
COLUM
WE ABE
A Depository for the 1
> of South Carolina the
of Columbia,
WE OWN
$400,000 United States
Carolina Bonds.
W ?i OULlviX
Aocounts of Banks, Fi
WE PAY
Four Per Cent, on dep
Aolnnloffl/1 rtnoiH
LGlCPli oaiuuiuuvu t|uon
WE PROMISE
Our best efforts to trai
satisfaction.
PALMETTO NATIONAL
CAPITAL
i Wilis Jones. President.
Ash, Poke Root and Potassium) @
Powerful Permanent |
ef- Stubborn cases Good results are 89
illy yield to P. P. P. lasting?it cures H
:kly when other medi- you to stay cured ?l
cines are useless 3H
. P. P. I
Dure blood ? cleanses the entire ?
strengthens digestion and nerves. |B
Iood Poison and skin diseases. H
id Stops the Pain; ends Malaria; H
ly-builder. Thousands endorse it. n|
SAVANNAH, GA. I
VfeArSistri5rte^f|^^PE ?
LIMBERTSPS I
HOLLAND-DUTCH it*'] 1
: LUXURI(XJ5iiOT E5 | ^
- #
r, COLUMBIA, S. C. I
one of the best stocks of
Li KINDS J
I
S & GLASS
) CEMENT.
MANTLES. I
2
Nell Motels |
Taylor Streets. Opposite ?
ly located. Columbia, S. C. %
'roprietor and Manager. ?
9S
European Plan. %
it
52.50 per day. *
$1.00. Large, Cool Booms '? . '
U. C. T.'s and T. P. A.'s. I
^EXCELLED. 2
*
ition Given to All Gueatv
^ *
Watob n? Grow.
*
E PAIRS
RIBS, Bristle Twine, Babbit, &c., far any make
ENGINES* BOILERS and PRESSES
pairs for same. Shafting Pulleys, Belting, Inw.
Shingle, and Lath Mills, Gasoline Engine*
ON WORKS AND SUPPLY
"
National Bank,
BIA, S. C.
jD?ted States Government, the State
County of Kichland and the City
i Bonds and $100,000 State of South
irms, Corporations and Individual*.
%
osits in our Savings Department, in*
torly.
iisact your bnsiness to your entire
. BANK, - - Columbia, S. C
i $230,000.00
J. P. Mjlttkkws, Cashier