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W TBOFSSSIONAJL CASUS, j fs DR. G. R. HARDING, THE OLD AND TUIED DENTIST, Is at his office doing good wora at >;? moderate prices. Call to see him ion't wait. Year Hyatt's Pwrk. COLUMBIA. S. C 'JL nR P. oraiuffOBK; ? If DENTIST. | W 1110 Mam Street. COLUMBIA, S. 0. Owes HouB8.-9a. m. to 2 p in., an ltoin ' > " ' 3 to 6 d. m XT?" 4 ' n/u. W. HAWKS, if Attorney and Counselor at Law. < - ' BBOOKLAND.8. 0. ^ _ ..... *ra?uo* In all Courts Business soucitea. Zs ?rtVAttib?r 1.1906 $W$?r- : | - DR. L. L. TOOLE, Dentist, 1608 Main St. : Columbia, S. C, Z$. OFFICE HOURS) 9 A. M.-5 P. M. IWfe B, a. iCJTIKD. W. B. DB&HKB ttFTRD & DRBHKK, ' & ATTORNEYS AT LAW, | Vxt\a?o\ca sc P Will practice lu all^tho Oourtb*- Businetjb ?licit-Ad. One member of the Arm will always be at office. LfSjf nflrton. 8. 0. ^ T H. FRICK, B ?J. ATTORNEY AT LAW. f 08M1N > c. Office: Borel Marlon, 4th Boom. Secoud flonr ^11} practice in all the Conrts J I ~! QOBERT MOORMAN. It Attorney-at-L? if) Admitted to Practice in all \ , Courts in this State. Carolina National Bank Building, COLUMBIA. S. O. . \ *"* ^ j f . RAY K bUA, DENTIST. Edmund, Lexington County, S. O. THURMOND A CALLISON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, WILL PRACTICE IS ALL COURTS, We will. be pleased to meet, those laving legal business to be a tended W, at oar offloe at an.V time. KAUFMAXN BUILDT G v Lexington, S 0. k. J. WM THUKtt >ND. Sept 13,1911. T. 0. OALLISO . Thurmond & timmerm s, . ATTORNEYS AT LAW, W'liL eKAOTl E IN v L OOUKTN Citizens' Bank B'ld'g, Bates burg, S. O We ?vlil be pleased to meet those having legal baet teas to be attended to at our offle* lithe Citizens' Bank Building at any tlraa ' KAeoeotfuUy. S. W*. THUKMOND. G BSwL flUVBRMAN. / - ? A LBKRT M. BOOZER, A r' ATTORNEY AT LAW. 00* UMBl-v * - M"1- ^ nnarftlrft. onnoAlte QlViUft; MiOOUUUO'lWti Van Metre's Pamiture Storeattention given to business entrust* d to him by his fellow citterns of Lexington aoantv. Dr. d. l. hall. DENTIST 1 . OOLUMBIA, 8. 0 , v .. Lath* ran Publication Building, 162<? Main St. Otfcoe hours s a. m.. to 5:80 p. m * Dec 2X. 1907- -tfm l'-*"* ... 08. C. J. OLIVEROS, 145J4 MARION ST., COLUMBIA, S. O. I? prepared to treat all troubles of E>e Ear, Nose, Throat and Lungs. Ti>e fir of SiiectMclfi* Guaranteed. BARNARD B. EVANS, Attorne at Law. MIMNAUGil BLDG , COLUMBIA, S C. J t- * I Practice in all t'ourts. MONEY '10 L* 'AN . V. J Lr.w Uitiueo, ^ Residence, 1529 |2;??? Washington < Pendleton Street. Street. f Ob"*** Telephone No. 1372 Residence Telephone No. 108b. U BOYD EVANS, LAWYER AND COUNSELLOR. J OOLrMRJA. S. 0. DR. A. J. ADAMS, DENTIST, SWANSEA, SO. CAROLMA. SO?6 nip . E. L. HARTLEY, Batesborg, .. . .S.C. Surveying, Terracing, Leveling. Any Que de?ir;ng sunh please let mn know. All Work guaranteed and promptly done. ' $5.00P-r Day. {Electrics i Bitters I Succeed when everything else fails, i i In nervous prostration and female 8 weaknesses they ere *he supreme I remedy, as thousands have testified. I FOR KIDNEY.LIVER AND I STOMACH TROUBLE I it it the best medicine ever sold I | over a druggist's counter. j | DANGER PERIOD OFWOMANS' LIFE FROM 45 to 50 Interesting Experience of Two Women?Their Statements Worth Reading* Ashevflle, N.C.?" I suffered for years with female trouble while going through the Change of Life. I tried a local physician for a couple of years without any substantial benefit Finally after repeated suggestions to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, I quit my physician and commenced using it with the happiest results. I am today practically a well woman and anxiou3 to contribute my mite towards inducing others to try your great medicine, as I am fully persuaded that it will cure the ailments from which I suffered if given a fair chance. "If you think this letter will contribute anything towards further introducing your medicines to afflicted women who are passing through this trying period, it is with .great pleasure I consent to its publication."? Mrs. Julia A. Moose, 17 East St, Asheville, N. C. The Case of Mrs, Kirlin. Circleville, Ohio.?"I can truthfully say that I never had anything do me so much good during Change of Life as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. "Before I had taken one half a bottle of it I began to feel better, and I have continued taking it My health is bett zr than it has been for several years. If all women would take it they would escape untold pain and misery at this time of life."?Mrs. Alice Kirlin, 858 W. Mill St, Circleville, Ohio. The Change of Life is one of the most critical periods of a woman's existence. Atsuch t'imeswomen may rely upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Shoots Man at Grave 7 Whi e attending the fuuerai of a ; triend in Calvary cemetery, at Cleveland, Ohio, Mrs Mary McCarthy *hor and probably fatally w ui-ded John Gallagher, aged 28. Gallagher fell j*l the edge of the grave with a bullet in his left breast. > v T ?u will look a good while before you find a better medicine for couwhs -- -? ? 'A .1- ? *"li Onni/h WU V *.IU| llidtl uimuiurwaiu a vvb^" Remedy, [i not only give* rthei?it cure* . Try it whe?. you have a cough ?>r cold, and you aie certain to be pitted with the prompt cure which it will effect. For sale by Ail Dealers. A hammer sometimes misses its mark but a bouquet^erer. For rbeuraati-m you will fit d nothing better than Chamberlain's Lit intent. Try it and see how quickly it gives relief. i 'or aale by Al? Dealers. Rescued From Quicksand. Life t-avt-rs or the Cobb Island station Thur*-d*y rescued se\en men com p. sing the crewa of ihe barges Gaston and YV. Oarliou aud Mrs. Fi k, wife of Oapt. F ck. of >he Gaston, just b? fore the two vessels, sank in the quicksand off that Ooast. St. John's Cemetery Association. Thrre will be a c? le-l m^ti.ig of theCeuietery A.-s >ciaiion at S( John's ciurciti (Calk's R>ari) on Friday, Anril tlafith. 1912. a! 2 o'c.Oek D m. i BusimftHot mr.cn iini or w?l! bill p fur eou-iri* ration, at d a-I membi r.and rho?f in anyway ii.t^rtsted are urgtd 10 br pre sent. J. S. Hendrix, Chairman. j Th^m?n who knov- h j,j in the I ri M- n? C'l ? <)' MtVCP. j JPK "W TEE JEWELER j I 15CS Main Sr... Columbia, S. C. I REP A fits ! WATCHES JEWELRY Hakes Thai Good as Raw MEDALS BADGES Manufactured in Our Own Shops for Schools and j Other Purposes. j AVERY, The Jeweler 1603 ftflato St., ColumWo, S 0. j SDH U WING 10 HELP FNDB 01 SOUTH .HAS INAUGURATED IMPORTANT MOVEMENTS FOR BETTERMENT OF AGRICULTURAL AND INDUSTRIAL CONCONDITIONS IN THE SOUTH- | j EAST. ! A LEADER IN DEVELOPMENT ! ! 1 How the Southern Railway System Is < Working to Aid the People Already In the Southeast and to Attract Capital and Desira- ( ble Settlers tj This < t IWWWklV/ll? < Much attention has been attracted, ( In recent years, to the work which * many of the great railroad systems and a number of the lesser companies have been doing in the line of I practical development work for the f territories they reach. There is lit- c j tie question that this work has had j an immense mnuence in the advance I made in nearly all portions of the f | country and in the general prosperity ^ i and growth of the nation. People ^ recognize this fact, and are so im- j pressed by it that many communities ] and districts have come to look to the great transportation companies which serve them for leadership in nearly all efforts to develop their re- 1 sources. The business of the rail read company is to handle traffic. "Whatever work is undertaken outside s of that should properly haive a direct relation to the increase of the road's traffic. ? I it is generally known today that I In well planned and effective work to increase the business of the road by adding to the population of its districts and the utilization of the resources and opportunities of the various communities it serves, the Southern Railway System is a leader, while In mosv llnPR of this work it has been a pioneer. A resident of Oregon, connected with one of the great transcontinental lines, who has been ! making a study of the work of rail* | roads in this direction, recently stat! ed that in its development work the Southern had the best organization in the country. ! 4 METHODS OF AIDING FARMERS. A recent publication of the United 1 States Department of Agriculture said that the manifestation of interest by the transportation companies of the country in the betterment of agriculture has recently become so pronounced and general as to attract the j attention of all who are engaged in rural development: that this interest has been shown prlrffeipally in their : providing and running special trains for the dissemination of agricultural information among farmers, and in * their appointing agricultural experts I to position in the management of the I roads to give attention to the devel- ' ment of rural communities, and to the proper handlinr of agricultural products shipped from distributing ^ points cn their several routes of rail- ^ way. 1 T? -'1 fooHrma fha Cnnthpm I J LI ail UICCV Uil Vi4V ^V/MVMV... I railway System has been prominent. ( Its activity, however, are not confined to the lines of agricultural work mentioned, and in the way of industrial and of general development work the I I field of labor has been very broad. | The activities of a railroad compa| ny in promotion and development i work must be based on the special ; | D'^eds and opportunities of its field, i j Reginning with the organization of j the Southern Railway Company thi3 I work has 1 o?n planned with a view i to the largest and best development | cf both the agricultural and mdus- T I trial . resources of the Soui.iie.istem j States. < | This has meant a study of the ag- ; I ricultural, mineral, forest and manufacturing resources and opportunities, the advertising of them, part;mpntion ^ i? nrnvl. r\f Ctrl li /-vo 15 n cr r\n f nonnlo it Ill 1IIC "Ul r\ VI \uuvaui^ y resrardin gthe. value of their farm lands and natural resources and of the best utilization of-them, and of efforts to secure the fullest co-operation of all interests in the sections advanced. EXTENT OF THE WORK. ! The Southern Railway System, through its various lines, reaches Into and serves, nearly all the industrial and agricultural districts of Virginia, the Oarolinas, Georgia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Northern Florida and Southern Indiana and Southern Illinois. This includes a \ast emp're, in extent, and one in which nearly all manner ef resonrees nfwis p.nri noa? gibilities are found. To properly ; ^ serve such a territory the develop- i meot of work must embrace many ^ different avenues of activity. It has teea carried on with the ' * Mee that to fully utilize the resources { and to bring about the needed and ^ d^slr^d development new men and i<?w capital from the outside must he * brought in to work either independ- i ently or in connection with the men * and capital of the Southeast in developing our forest and mineral wealth ' and in extending our manufacturing ! , fetoreats* that more farmers must ba t < Induced to locate on our improved and unutilized lands and that the farmer* already in the Southeast must be made to more fully understand the opportunities at their command and to adopt the lines and methods of farming which will give theia the best results. Co operation must be the keynote of all the development or educational work a railway company does. It can accomplish little without the sympathetic and active co-operation of the people and the various agencies for development in its states and communities. All the Southern's work, therefore, has been based upon the eo-operative idea, has been to assist national and state authorities, educational institutions, commercial organizations and individuals in efforts to advance individual and general prosperity. The work for developing and in> proving the conditions along its lines is done by the Southern Railway System to increase its traffic and its earnings. However favorably, though, this character of work may affect a railroad company and its stockholders, it is worth much more, if carried en wisely, to the people and the several communities in the road's territory. The railway can profit from it >nly subsequent to, and as a result )f, the greater prosperity of the people. i i J mes Mim.-, J rg d the urue of P. B Glover u> a < he -k ai d >res *i teditut the First N .ti ai bai.k >f Aiken He ii \v nM8 -u jail. 41 Mv lniie m n had a very severe old. I w-ih ??c inn end? d c. 11-\ t h?m>eiIain's i eugh Remit-dv, a. d b fur* a iuia.ll t)? ttle t!i i-hed tie w.,n as \tli as ever,'' wrhen Mrs H Si ks. 29 i g Str-et, S\dne\, Austiaia. Chis n-rnedy is n r i-ale by A.l? Dean ra. Forty-six bridge* were wa*-h? d i-way n York county by ft>e recent fre-het, ihtailiOK a loss ot $15,000. And ail men are alike?*xcept those rho are different. City Hole! and Cafe, AMERICAN and EUROPEAN GOOD CLEAN ROOMS NEAR THEATRE AND STATE CAPITOL American Rate* $1.25 to $2.00 i Surjpean Rates, Ro -ms, 50" and up. Mrs. L. II. KAMINER, Proprietress, 218 Main Street Phone 851 COLUMBIA, S. C. BEAK IN MIND C. D, Kenny Co. Is Headquarters for sugar. Coffee, Teas, Rice, stc. Fresh C offee roasted iaiiy. Don't put oft buying four coffee and sugar. Fhey're going i igher. C. D. KENV EY CO. IV! a us ~ueei, Phone 157. s~> i ' \ ' (^ I r*t ?i -> * , V / V f i LI l L ? * 1 . i * * ? ' * J j ->-?-?? '~ . ..|*-r_~gmc. 73^VS9?=: *v% v % V v ^ ^ J ft v^vv^-wwv p $ The Best Madet T Also Good Shipn P A Old Reliable Rock Hi r J* ^arry a j | RHEA LIV ' lino UamntftP fitl i ! W J *>V%WWV*-WV ^wwvwwvwi AN UNEASY FEELIF bowels, caused by indigestio quickly to SIMM RED LIVER REi (TITK POWDI It removes all impurities or ferme stomach and bowels and restores that i activity and cheerfulness that belongs solo ay dealers, price, i A*k tor the genuine with the P<-d Z on the lnt end t>y mail p ntpaid. Simmons Liver llrgulmor i. it. Brie*, 01.UO per bottle. Look tor the Led Z labi J. H. ZEILIN 6L CO.. PRC J | *'- -, R? V.?u<?v>>.6?T ?5?- v * ^teio^.' ''^ ivinwBiwa^ . *-~ ! ! ! Ill Wll?I 1^?111 mill I I??I II III M WMI Tour Job Work K j|? EASTfl ^ nu^rtnv iiiivla, PA?*?K SHIPMENTS FREQI jf| INSURIIN Si Send Us Your | THE R. L BRYj H COLDMBI lite uiu We have added to our Hen most complete and up to date Traveling and Hand Bags in line of small leather novelties, 5517 Street V^'^'^'V^'V'vVtV -All Sizes and the Prices Suit n . _l_ lent ofXoIumbus, ana kock ill Busies, "A Little Higher tock of Horses and Mules al E STOCK CO reet, - Columbia, Sc V* WVI 4G in the stomach or f| n or constipation, yields ONS z CULATOR IK FORM) nted food, cleanses and tones the ine feeling of exhilaration, mental ; only to perfect health. ! LARCC PACKACC. Cl.OO. >rl. If y^u ceannt get it remit to at. wo wfi* i put up i.no m liquid form f?r U.<>u? who prefer el. 5PS., ST. LOUIS. MO. | ??^?mmmmmmS ??MB?ammi? ???Mm jim??? an ittf OUR PIES re found favor with everybody tabes and men, the little girl im lafores and her mother and her mdm other. They are of the eel delicious, wholeso&e, >lt-in-your mouth kind, anc 're anxious to have von try ?m if you don't know the promts of our ovens. If ^ou do ow we won't have to ash you launger's steam bakery COLUMSiA. S. G. leatly Done Here A *ULL {Jk i IIAN?* Ai\U 01 HER SUPP1ES. || jent, m IG FRESH GOODS || Order Today ^ \N COMPANY | a, se c. less and Saddlery goods the > line of Trunks, Suit Cases, Columbia, also a complete all at popular prices. o<* ^ Columbia, S. C, -imMKLta .mvr":. V'V > i+ X# V V v *V ^ ,<$ W WWVfc';.-. 1- $ nns \\ UilU > 5 < $ ! i t Everybody. \ r Hill Busies, the 5 ^ in Price, BUT-" ? II the Time. 5 ? 11 MPANY, I $ >uth Carolina. 5 ^ ^UVWVl^ J