The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, August 16, 1911, Image 3
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PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
DR. G. R. HARDING,
THE OLD AND TRIED DENTIST, j
is at Lis office doing good wors at
moderate prices. Call to see him \
don't wait.
Near Hyatt's Park, COLUMBIA, S. C '
Branch Office 1521, Main street, over
Kinard's clothing store, Columbia,
S. C.
DR. F. 0. GILMORE,
DENTIST., !
I51G Main Street, COLUMBIA, S. 0.
t\wFmrrm Tl minx: 9 ft. m. to 2 D. 131.. an llOTO
3 to 6 d. m."
WM. W. HA WES,
Attorney and Counselor at Law.
NE^ BB00KLAND.8. 0.
Practice in all Courts. Business solicited.
November 1.19G5.
I m . .
DR. L. L. TOOLE, Dentist,
6018 Main St. : Columbia, S. C,
OFFICE HOURS: 9 A. M.-5 P. M.
V / ' \ ^7 * j
a. il xfssn. r r. e. deeseb.
Jtr. mimiKR.
JT/ ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
JJEXINOTON C. H. S. C.
Will practice In r.ll the Courts. Business
solicited. One member of the firm will always
be at "office, Lexington. S. 0.
J- h. FRICK,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
CHAHS, S C.
Office: Hotel Marlon, 4tb Boom, Second
Floor. Will oraotice in all the Courts.
Robert moorman.
Attorney-at-Law,
Admitted to Practice in all
Courts in'tkis State.
Carolina National Bank Building,
COLUMBIA., S, C,
HAY F. SOX,
DENTIST.
Edmund, Lexington County, S. C.
Thurmond & timmerman,
attorneys at law,
WILL PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS,
Citizens' Bank B'ld'g, Batesbcrg, S. 0.
We-will be pleased to meet those hayin* local
business to be attended to at oar office
in the Citizens' Bank Building at any time.
Respectfully,
Jr. Wm. THURMOND,
a. BELL TIMMERMAN.
Albert m. boozer,
attorney at law,
COLUMBIA, S. 0.
Owwio?: 1316 Main Street, upstairs, opposite
Van Metre's Furniture StoreSaoecial
attention given to business entrust
?d to him by his fellow citizens 01 i^exiuKxou
oountr.
DR,D.L HALL,
, DENTIST
COLUMBIA, S. 0.
Lutheran Publication Building,
1626 Main St.
Office hours 8 a. m., to 5:30 p. m
Doc* 23, 1907?6m
DR. C. J. GUVER8S,
1424 MARION ST.,
COLUMBIA. S. C.
Is prepared to treat all troubles of
Eye. Ear, Nose, Throat and Lungs.
"* ' " /^L.inrintPPfl.
The nc 01 special: 1C75 WKUUijlwvvm* |
, ?: 1
j
B. F. JOHES, H. D. V. j
' Graduate Veterinarian.
Out-of-town calls promptly
\ attended to
\ COLUMBIA, S. C.
\ L^>w Offices, i Residence, 1529
13<P9 Washington < Pendleton Street.
J Street.. (
^ Oflnce Telephone No. 1372.
\ Residence Telephone No. 1036.
\|A BOYD EVANS,
TTI LAWYER AND COUNSELLOR.
j Columbia. S. 0.
iiUESTEi SPILLS
DtAftfOND BRAND
** A^./
fcA^nflWcitt for CHI-CKES-TSR'S A
DIAMDJCU BRAND PILLS ia Red and/a\
Gold hnl'talUc boxes, sealed with Blue\fcp>
Ribboav VA" vo other. Buy oF your V/
. L>d Mk for Cni.CUES.TLK S V
BIAB^kp BCARD PILLS, for twenty-fiy?
years regarded as Best, Safest, Always Reliable.
S0LDC3Y ALL DRUGGISTS
? *...?f?*/u,liprtr "WORTH
EkVtKlwntnc
BEST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AMD CHILD.
Mas. Wi^slow's %oothiwo Syrup has been
used for over 6IXTY\YEARS by MILLIONS ol
MOTHERS for the|r CHILDREN WHILE
" TEETHING, with jtERFECT SUCCESS. 1/
SOOTHES the CH/ld, SOFTENS the GUMS.
1LLAYS all PAIJyTCURES WIND COLIC, and
is the best remedy for DIARRHCEA. It is absolutely
harmley;. Be sure and ask for "Mrs.
Winskrw's Soothing Syrup," and take no other
kind. TwenUf-iive cents a bottle.
Inliired by Scissors.
MissiAlda Crawford, while viciting
^ at TVWillins, started across the room
with* a pair of scissors in one ii3nd
whfen she stumbled and fell on the
flo6r. The seizors plunged through
fcfer mouth, entering a> the jaw, and
inflicting a serious wound. One of
the points broke off as it s ;ruck a tooth.
A mouse thinks he is more important
than an elephant.
[If weak, you need Cardui, ji
the woman's tonic. Cardui ||
is made from gentle herbs, 11
acts in a natural manner, P
and has no bad results, as ||
some of the strong drugs m
sometimes used. Asamed- ||
icine?a tonic?for weak, |g?
tired, worn-out women, ||
Cardui has been a popular ||j
success for over 50 years. H
The Woman's Tonic
I Mrs. Lula Walden, of g|
Gramlin, S. G, followed SI
this advice. Read her let- ||
terr "1 was so weak, 11
when I first began to take IS
Cardui. that it tired me to H
|| walk just a little. Now, I Pf
11 can do all the general ||
1 housework, for a family of ||
|| 9." Try Cardui for your l|
?1 troubles. It may be the J||
H very remedy you need. fgf
?gpr
THE JEWELER
I
1508 Main Si, Columbia, S. C.
REPAIRS
WATCHES
ASD
JEWELRY
Hakes Them Good as New
MI?1Y AT CI
ittJDilJilUO
AM)
BADGES
\
Manufactured" in Our Own
Shuns far Schools and
Other Purposes.
AVERY, The Jeweler
1508 Main St., Columbia, S. C
(BE WORLDS GREATESTSEWIH3 MACHINE
j|j|?HT RUNN|y||^
tf.rnu want either a Vibrating Shuttle, Rotary
Kiiuttleor a Single Thread [ChainStitch]
Sewing Machine write to
IKE BEIY K3K5E SEWIN8 MACHINE COMPANY
Orange, Mass.
i?*nm* sewingmachines are made to sell regardless cf
":ty. \>rt the X?W Home is made to wear.
Our guaranty never runs out.
^oiti by authorized dealer* only,
FOX SALS BY
I. ??? n ?/\/\r , ! A f> A
I ft< r. Rvvr, bcxu^ion, a. b>.
gTw7linoler,
Chapin, S. C.,
j
j Has an up-to-date line of
C0FFIH3 AND CASKETS
On hand, at prices to suit everybody.
Prices range from $1.50 np U; $50.0:.
Oall on me and I win save yon money.
I am prepared to famish a hearse whenever
desired in conmction witb my undertaking
business Jan. 1?ly
BLEASE WELL RUN
FOR SECOND TERft
Says He Will Make Rac<
on Bis Record.
Chester, August 0.?The picnic a
Feasfcerville today, under the auspice
of the Literary Club, drew 1,500 peopl
from Fairfield, Chesterfield and Unio
eounties and many from Columbia.
The feature of the day was th
speech of Gov. Blease, who was th
guest of the occasion.
Gov. Blease criticised the work c
the State colleges advocated lynchin
for one crime, and took occasion to an
nounce that he will run on his recor
for another term as governor.
W. C. Clayton presided over th
meeting and introduced the governoi
The governor complimented the com
munity on the opening of the club. H
mentioned the higher state institc
- - - ?
tiona of learning, saying mat i,ucj
sjpport was becoming a burden, owin
*to what he called extravagant appro
priations by the legislature, and state
that they were favored at the expens
of the rural schools. He oompare
them to the denominational college*
He declared that the denomination?
colleges were furnishing the judge
and the men in high office in the stat(
He said he was not opposed to Stat
colleges, but was in favor of moi
money being given to the rural schoo:
He stated shat ht-had not gone throng
| college himself, but that after he ha
fought the world, the flesh and th
flevil for 20 years, the people had hoi
| ored him with the office of governo:
He cited this as an example to sho^
that a boy need an education to su<
ceed.
Touching oh his p&rdofl record, th
governor said he had no apologies t
make for the clemency he had exe
* 3 Ia fVio narnlin? i
CltifcJU , XVCiDiXiU^ UU vuv>
Otis Hilton, the white man from Che
ter, who was sent to the penitential
for life for killing a negro, he 6aid h
had affidavits from men whose woi
he did not dcmbt concerning the facl
in the case, and that from both thei
and the testimony he did not hesitat
to parole Hilton, and he wotild alwaj
do the same where a white mm is ii
volved with a negro. He declared h:
business was to take care of the whit
man; that he was not an enemy to tt
negro, dud mat tne negiu aiusi sw>j j
his place. Turning to lynching, h
said he favored lynching a negi
whenever he committed the namelei
crime on a white woman, and that
this was standing for lynch law, the
he stood for it.
He denounced the hosiery mill i
the State penitentiary, calling it tt
"tuberculosis factory." He said h
enemie^were saying he was oppose
to "Yankees" because the promote:
of the hosiery mill were northern me
He said he was not opposed to Yai
kees, but was trying to rid the Stat
of this "tuberculosis factory," and r
iieve the poor wretches from their p
si lion.
The governor referred to J. Frasi
Lyon, saving that if Lyon were in
wanting to be governor himself 1
would have stood with Blea9e in h
fight against the hosiery mill.
4-Let him run for governor himse
and I will give him political tuberci
losis," said Gov. Blease. After th
Gov. Blease announced that he won.
be a candidate for reelection to the o
flee of governor; that he expected l
run on his record, and that if he coul
not be elected on this he would be sa
isfied.
Gov. Blease spoke more than a
hour, and he reiterated many of h
previously made sentiments.
J. Fraser Lyon, attorney genera
when informed last night what tl
governor had said at Feasterville, sai
he did not care to discuss the matte
Hitched Wife To Plow.
Child en Tell of Cruelty of Missou
Farmer.
Kansas City, Mo.?Lafayette Choat<
the farmer whose wife says he hitche
her up with mules and drove her i
the field, is in jtil at L'berty charge
with felonious assault. Deserted t
his wife and two small children, h
neighbors demand that he be proseci
(te 1. No one has volunteerd to sign
[ $500 bond for him.
The two Choate boys?one four ar
the other six years old?tcld the stoi
of their father's cruelty.
"Papa whipped mama with a b
strap,'' said Beathei. "He tied mar
ma's hands behind her with a roj
and then tied the rope to the ploi
and she had to walk to keep up or 1
dragged. We couldn't hardly kee
up, could we, Basil?"
"Mamma couldn't hardly keep u
either," Basil added.
"Mamma couldn't walk much
plowed ground with her hands tied b
hind her, and when she stumbled pa
would hit her with the strap."
"Did father whip mamma befc
that day?" was asked.
"Yes, papa whipped mamma lots
times," answered Beata?!. "He wh:
, ped us, too."
Lightning Strikes Churcta
During Funeral.
I) Mourning for Phillip Rrissel, whose
j body lay in a collin before the altar of
! St. John's Evangelical church at Kohl"
i viile, Wis., Mrs. Henry Conrad was
| struck dead and four other women
fc | rendered unconscious when a bolt of
j lightning pierced the house of wor^
j ship Sunday. Rey. John Frank was
I opening Pis mouth to oegm ms sern
mon when a vivid flash of flame and
deafening crash seemed to paralyze
e for a second the entire congregation.
6 The pastor's words of compassion
for the sorrowing family were never
^ uttered. Mrs. Conrad and a dozen
^ other women were knocked prostrate
l~ on the floor, while near them were a
dozen others, shrieking in terror, almost
precipitating a panic, which
6 iv?on rvrntTDTifhH
| uuunicuucu iucu fikTbuivu.
" Melon for Blease.
e
h Gov. Blease received from George
r Kay, of Honea Path, a watermelon
g weighing CS 1-2 pounds which is six
pounds more than the Georgia melon,
^ christened "Hoke Smith," which was
e recently sent to the White House in
^ Washington.
i.
ii Married After Tltree Days
:8 la Un on county a few days ago a
license to marry was granted by the
'e probate judge to a white maa whose
'e wife had been dead only three days.
Is E
h BLEASE WANTS 1
I DISPENSARIES BAD. |
II
i- Governor Blease is quoted in the g
r. Columbia Evening Record and the E
w Charleston News find Courier as say- 8
^ ing that he wants to 9ee liqucr disper- J
8iries estabUsbefl in eyery county in C
Lb South Carolina. P
r- ? I I
3f Gen. Gordon Has 11
s- Crossed The River. 11
y At Memphis, Tennessee, bu Wednes- |
|? day, George W. Gordon, soldier, lav -' I
u yer and statesman, passe 1 ont from j I
La among the living. Worn by an illness I
"6 dating from his last political campaign, B
,,e when he was re-elected to the NMiou- I
'8 al House of Representatives, the7 last g
general of the Confederacy to serve in ?
lg that body, answered the summons to
Join the invisible majority here today.
L0
The funeral obsequies were of a military
character, and the body was laid
6 to rest in the city of Memphis on Sun0
day.
^ Weakened by the heat of the previous
24 hours, and his feeble frame
n wasted by the ravages of a 9low illness,
the light of Gen. Gordon's life
n grew dimmer hourly on Wednesday.
le When, following a restless night, he
IS
woke from fitful sleep in the early
morning hours, the watchers at his
ra \
? -J? -a?- mAA Knf n /Nnnci.
Slue saw mail mc eiiyi was uuu c* to
n tion of hours, perhaps minutes. A9 I
3" the end approached peace seemed to
te envelop his face, for he smiled as with
comforting words he bade relatives
" adieu. He died afc 4 o'clock in the afternoon.
At the bedside of Gen. GorBr
don when tie died were his wile and <
other relatives,
le [
is
Falls Dead In Court Room.
If Wilmington, N. C., Aug. 10.?F. R.
11- Cooper, aged 59. counsel for the Atjs
lantic Coast Line Railroad company at {
I. Clinton, N. C., died suddenly in the
ia superior court room there early touay ]
f- as he was about to call a case for trial,
to He was seen to lean forward at a table
I, soon after court convened and a fellow
attorney shook hiia to find that I
t- lie had expired suddenly.
?
>11
j8 Foley Kidney Pills will check the
progress 01 your kidney and bladder
trouble and heal by removing the
cause. Try them.
'? Kaufmann Drug Co.
le
?v*vvvvvvvv*1
hi | '
"e 5 5 The Best Made?
5 > Also Good Shipm
p j 5 Old Reliable Rock Hi
111 RHEA LIV
\ r 1109 Hampton Str
o, J 'WWVWW^'VVV
i;>-1 wwvwww\/v$
? - t _ ?
(WE CARRY A
yfw
r LINE OF
pignEACTM/
P KODAKS,FILMS, PAPER AWE
H SHIPMENTS FREQUEN1
H INSURING F]
gg Send Us Your Ordi
M ? =
>/Xl
<A? V W-fcTTtkTS r A -A.T
| I'tilL K. L. AW
if,, _ ^ ^ C?LUMBIA' S
| | We have a
j c New aaud "1
? JE9^^HHn S 2 and 3 strap
s ? rial, and
i P s ington friend:
1 < .' P eral wear we
YS1HH s and Shoe 9 for
> '^QH| 5 at prices that
c > give yon the '
) P est prices.
< j|HH^ < a Specialty.
P M71A M?trt
| ^ ; I f IV mam
The F
Monthly lnc<
( I Door separti
V)JBSvJ PovertyO"
wheh *
ily be after y
J. T. COLEMAN Mgr. ALFREI
Charleston, S. C I
THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COI
Incorporated as a stock company by
John F. Dryden, President. H
FOR RO\
and DRESSED
Doors, Sash, Blind
Etc., Write or
N. H. DRICCE
COLUMBIA, - ; SOI
ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY FIGURED. M
SHINGLES AND LUMBER C
ALBANY GR
is the Best, Cheapest and Safe?
Fof a" KIadm of M*?
Does Not Drip, Splash or \
Pat np in 1,6,10,25 ?60 lb. Tins and K<
44Best Gaoda, Beat Prlc
^ -?.???,? cn?iY rn r*
gggg^pgg^ggBIBDOK9MBBDHBHHBHnBBnBBnnBBVHI
'VWVWVWWWW1
iv (m u w . _
-All Sizes and the Prices Suit Eve
- - - < _i_ tt:i
lent of Columbus, ana kock nu
11 Buggies, "A Little Higher in
E STOCK COM
eet, Columbia, South
WWVWW%*VWWV
/V WW. WW W WW
> OTHER SLPPIES. ffl
Wi
f$L&
RESH GOODS ^
- = m
COMPANY p||M
iijijiLi
'Pwa\ '""Mncl
SUMMER SHOES ? Ml
camplete ^line of all the | I *fl^R
\j um iu'uawc v^Lviuoi ouu j b
Slippers, in eVery Mate- Ji I
widtn, to please oar Lex- / I
3 for dress wear. For^en- J, I
have substantial Oxfords || I
Men, Women and Children < I'
willplease you We "do" !' I* sE9BR
r>est "Solid" Shoes at lowfarmers
strong work Shoes ' 4HH
See ours before buying. |
>< "***m'**^b .
fc F. A. DAVIS,!
St., Ciumbia.s.c.: I
Prudential /*
>me Policy is the
ng Comfort From jB
ide wil| your fam- ^^B
our death?
3 J. FOX, Special Agent, 9B
LEXINGTON, S. C. .'^B
rflPANY OF AMERICA, ^B
the State ol New Jersey
ome Office, Newark, N J
ugh"
LUMBER,
Is, ShirsgSes.
call on 9
:RS
fTH CAROLINA. -M
ARKET PRICES PAID FOR ?
?F ALL KINDS. 4
l a mb La, S. C.
vuuw? 5 1
.it I
:rybody. ^ ^
11 Buggies, the J ^
Price, BUT-" 5 J
PANY, | i
Carolina. ^ \ |
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