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HE RODE. ~ ' A Little Mistake of the Man Who Ran the Senate Elevator. IT'S always the rule that when the little buzzer in the private elevator on the senate side of the capitol?that is reserved for senators, members of their families and news* paper correspondents ? buzzes three times in Quick succession the elevator -conductor shall realize that a senator Tvants a ride and must have it quickly. The senator has the right of way to fhe floor he desires to reach and take? precedence over all other passengers. Should the elevator be upfc/vnn*? Karrtnd C?Wnn f? Rftrtr UVUUU, brvj vuu kk>v wvuuu rand the first floor button is pressed three times by senatorial fingers the conductor stor>^ his car forthwith and goes down t answer the mystic signal regardless of whether there are a dozen people aboard who want to reach the gallery floor in haste. The elevator men are furthermore under orders to pass up any outsider who * avails himself of the seaatorial ring. A senate elevator was going up the other day and had passed the second floor when the senatorial signal came ^ from the subway floor. The conducF tor reversed the controller and shot the lift basementward. Standing at the subway door was a stranger, bewhiskered and wearing a broad rimmed hat The elevator man refused to take the prospective passenger aboard. Three buzzes came again * from the cellar. The elevator darted down again and started up in a moment. This happened three times, when the elevator conductor paid. a hurried visit to the basement and ad vised the man at the buzzer that so long as he persisted in ringing three times in rapid succession he couldn't ride. "I'll advise you to cut that comedy,1" the elevator man slid to the man in the sombrero. "This elevator is for senators, members of their families and the newspaper men, You're not a senator, you don't look like you belonged to a congressman's family, and I know by your makeup you aren't a reporter. Unless yon have special busi> ness with some one connected with the senate you had better beat it over to one of the other lifts. Anyhow, cut out those three rings. I don't want to tell you about it again." v "I am Senator Fall of New Mexico," explained the stranger. "I was sworn is yesterday, and I guess I'll ride with yon." He did.?Puck. ft Better Than en Alibi, f Colonel G. M. Quarles, a tobacco planter in Christian county, Ky., has a darky manservant named Mose. g Moee was driving his Iross into town / one day when he suddenly remarked: "Marse Garrett dey had me up bespit nwh rfcmch lee* niaht fur danc teV i "I don't ?tppott yec were guilty, r , iPuci yon, Mose?" asked the colonel. I "Tas, soli; yas, arah," mid Mose. "I j ft was guilty of daneln\ and dey proved tt on me, too; but I cone clear. My j Mends stuck to me close, and after j dsm other niggers had done testified ag'test me my friends all got up and ^ testified dat, though it was true I i danced, I was so drunt: at de time I [ didn't know what I was doin\ So I I come clear, and the preacher 'sensed ? me."?Saturday Evening Post v . x *' Success. j % Success is merely a continubus % x performance of small deeds well x |> done.?Detroit Free Press. & i <S<3x?<3xS*3x3xSxS^^ ! Entirely Appropriate. Master?What are you doing? You're t Crushing oy brown boots with my L .wife's hairbrush. I . "Well, sir, what does it matter? ? ? - ? 1 I- M" T>?1 ? IIAU f lour wiie uas ngnt uair. ?jrexe aieic. H?r Apprehension. Thelma Smith, a little east side girl, ^ has heard a great deal about the danW ger of contracting uisease from handling articles belomring to others. She has been taught that she must not use the brushes and combs of other members of the family. On one occasion the little tot was fonnd industriously lathering her face v with her father's shaving brush. She was duly reprimanded and told that she should know better. "What will I catch, mararaa?wnisleers?" inquired Tbelma anxiously.? Kansas City Journal. Disciplino,. He?Do you think tfce family will ^ -consent? The Politician's Daughter?Well, tbey aren't instructed as yet, but ihey are bound by the unit rnle, and you've got ma on your side, and what she says goes.?Puck. Almost as Good. It was after the distribution of prizes at Sunday school. "Well, did you get a prize?" asked Johnny's mother, to "No," answered Johnny, "but I got (^horrible mention."?Life and Labor. TODAY. Sure, this world is fall of trouble? I ain't 9aid it ain't. Lord! I've had er >ugn, an' double, Reason for complaintRain an' storm have come to fret me, Skies were often gray; Thorns an' brambles have best me On the road?but, say, Ain't it fine to day. What's the use of always weepin', Makin' trouble last? What's the use of always keepin' Thinkin' of the past? Each must have his tribulation, Water with his wine. Life it ain't no celebration, Trouble? I've had mineBut today is fine. It's today that I am livm', Not a month ago, Havin', losin', takin', givin', As time wills it so. Yesterday a cloud of sorrow Fell across the way; It may rain again tomorrow, It may rain?but, say, Alii l) it line ivuaj ; If you are a housewife you cannot reasonably hope to be healthy or beautiful by washing dishes, sweeping and doing housework all day, and crawling into bed dead tired at night. You must get out into the open air and sunlight. If you do this every day and keep your stc mach and bowels in good order by taking chamberlain's Tablets when needed, you should become both healthy and beautiful. For sale by all dealers. The Company She Kept. A Boston couple, of middle age and kind hearts, spent their vacation near Augusta, Ga., and during their \isit took a great fancy to an old colored woman. When they left Augusta they invited her to pay them a visit, which she accepted with the understanding that they were to pay her expenses. Having arrived in Boston she was given a room in the house of the white folks and was invited to have her meals at the same table with her host and hnstftflii. "Mrs. Jones," said ths hostess, "you were a slayei; weren't you?" Mrs. Jones replied that such had been her condition of servitude. "I suppose your master never invited you to eat at hie table" hazarded the Boston woman. "No, honey, dat he didn't," replied Mrs. Jones. "My master was a gentleman. He ain't never let no niggers set at the table 'longtide of him."? The Popular Magazine. Pay Up Please. We are greatly in need of money just now to pay paper and other bills, and will, therefore, greatly appreciate it if those of our readers who are in arrears will call or send by mail and renew their aubscriptions at once. We don't Wit to stop anybody's paper. This is gampaign year and you will need Ine Dispatch to keepyonposted 18Sb WW ?ualityWARRANTED FOR ALL TIME. If you purchase the NEW HOME you will have a life asset at the price you pay. a ud will not have au endless chain of repairs. Quality P?nsidere<3 If you want a sewing machine, write for cur latest catalogue before you purchase. Tire New Home Sewing Mine Co., Orange, less. ? ?* A Watch is Valuable When it Keeps Time. If you want your watch to keep Correct Time, see M. WEISS, Waich Repairing a Speciafy Also Dealer in Watches and Jewelry. j 1320 Mam Stre.t, Columbia. S. C, I Opposite Palmetto Nation il Bank j Viny wrap??pa???? ? ?i?on ?r???m m if*1 CAMPAIGN ITINERARY, j Candidates for Slate Offices Be Here July 23. ] Jasper, (Ridgeland), Wednesday, July 10. Hampton, Thursday, July 11. Barnwell, Friday, July 12. Bamberg, Saturday, July 13. St. George, Tuesday, July 10. o Orangeburg, Wednesday, July 17. b St. Matthews, Thursday, JulyJlS. t: Columbia, Friday, July 19. k Chester, Saturday, July 20. Winsboro, Monday, July 22. r Lexington, Tuescay, July 23. f ' Saluda, Wednesday, July 24. * | Edgefield, Thursday, July 25. y Aiken, Friday, July 26. t] I r ne week off.. h Camden, Monday, August 6. h Lancaster, Tuesday, August 6. t) Yorkville, Wednesday, August 7. b Gaffney, Thursday, August 8. Spartanburg, Friday, August 9. n Union, Saturday, August 10. n JNewoerry, Tuesday, August; is. ? Laurens, Wednesday, August 14. 1' Greenwood, Thursday, August 15. si Abbeville, Friday, August 1G. o Anderson, Saturday, August 17. v Walhalla, Tuesday, August 20. Pickens, Wednesday, August 21. h Greenville, Thursday, AugustJ22. ii mm * rj Advice to Housekeepers. ^ Never burn your old shoes in the ^ furnace, says the Chicago Tribune. They fill the air with an unpleasant odor. Keep them to throw at the neighbor's cats. If the alarm clock fails to awaken p the hired girl at the proper time in the a< morning get another girl. An earnest, conscientious wife is al- g ways able to think of something about s the house that needs a job of repairing, tl It is not considered good form now J to keep the old family Bible, containing the record of births, etc., lying on o the center table. ^ There is no one in the world who sells wool at a cotton price. Foley's : Kidney Pills : What They Will Be for V** They will cure year backache* ktrenfthen your kid&eya, cor- & _ _ a _ ?- m . m recx urinary irregularities, ouua. up the worn oat tissues, and a eliminate the excess uric acid d that causes rheumatism. Prevent Bright's Disease find Dia- u bates, and restore health and d strength. Refuse substitutes. For Sale By Kaufmann Drag Oo. c _ - cl Shoes! Shoes! For Every Member n of the Family. f< Our Standard Brands in Men's Shoes are as follows:? W. L. Douglas, AldeD, Walker & Wilde and Leouard, Shaw & Dean. Prices ranging from ?2.50 to $4.00. In our high grade line are the Torrey and Nettleton, which sell for $5.00, $5.50 and $6.00. I i f I I We also handle the very best ! grades of Ladies Shoes that can be bought, for a reasonable sum. Corae and see our Fall and | Winter Stock. ! T, A. BOYNE, ^ !T3fi Hal. ?f.,3o:.wbi9,$, C, I j I Opposite Post 0)bce. I i FORTY-ONE WERE KILLED* IN WRECK. )eath List In New York Wreck Has Reached That Mark. Corning, N. Y.. July 5.?Twentyive of the dead in yesterday's wreck >n the Lackawanna railroad have teen identified and 16 still await ideniflcafcion. Forty-one persons were ;illed and 51 injured in the disaster. When Wm. R. Laird of Buffalo ariyed here today he found his entire amily, consisting of his father, his rife, five-year-old daughter and twoear-old son, were killed in the catasrophe. Mr. Laird, who is employed i a Buffalo printing establishment, jft that city last night kno ^ing only hat his father, George Laird, had een killed. Me naa received no mDrmationof the fate of the other lembers of his family and visited the lorgues searching for tLe missing nes. At the first place he found his ttle boy and girl, laid out side by ide on a single stretcher. At the secnd morgue he found the body of his rife beside that of his aged father. The family had taken advantage of oliday excursion rates for a reunion 1 Buffalo. It was George Laird's first lilroad trip in 60 years. A State investigation of the accient was begun today by representayes of the public service commission. For every purpose of a flesh healing niment for man or beast there is no emedy more powerful than DARBY'S ROPHYLACTIO FLUID. It is in ddition to its effectiveness on the esli a wonderfnl internal remedy. It Sieves Cramps, Colic, Dysentery, ore Throat, Swollen Tonsils, and ick Stomach. As a disinfectant for oe -ick room it is of extraordinary alue. It destroys germs and purifies le air. Added to the water for barhlg the face of a fever patient it is not nly refreshing but it tends to allay le fever. Price 50 cents per bottle, old by all Druggists. When the applet! are poor don'fc you rish you could sell them by mail? Fanny how the people in Chicago eep right on buying from their retail >ores. The man who looks over the goods rst doesn't have to overlook defects fterward. You cannot cut very deep into the rdinary price ef an article without cinching a hole in the quality. Europe learned from China the art f papering the walla of rooms. The Brazilian india rubber gatherer verages sixteen pounds of sap a day. School furniture is needed in Jamaia because of the increase of pupils nring recent years A female goat lives on an average 3n years and gives a quart of milk a ?y. During the year 1909, 322 persons rere killed and 17,800 in jured by vehiles in the streets of London. The latest; police census of London aows 10,379 boys under fourteen enaged in street trades, of whom 4,931 re newsboys. The South African Railway ,Compay has reserved 30,000 acres of land >r planting with eucalyptus trees for >es. Chemical lire apparatus which can e carried on horseback where roads re poor or lacking altogether has een patented by a S'orth Carolina inentor. ???I11 mmmmm iwbwwwbmmwmwww?BM 1 BUGGIES anc swe have illSgrades wlfp from the medium mk to tne best mat pmm BL 1 is made and the price is right. W OauciSi Columbia, r Life Saver J | H In a letter from Branch- B fij land, W. Va., Mrs. Eliza- B B beth Chapman says: "I B i Eg suffered from womanly B , B troubles nearly five years, B i H All the doctors in the coun- B H fir rliH mo nn rrnrirl I HI I IT UIU 111V/ ll\J gvuu. X lUUft H Cardui, and now I am en- H , tirely well. I feel like a . new woman. Cardui saved H ; my life! All who suffer H from womanly trouble B , should give Cardui a trial" fl iCARDUl i The Woman's Tonic m 50 years of proof have m , B convinced those who tested fl ? B it, that Cardui quickly re- fl ] fl lieves aches and pains due fl 5 B to womanly weakness, and fl ' h helps nature to build up fl fl weak women to health and fl B strength. Thousands of B fl women have found Cardui H Hj to be a real life saver. fl M Why not test it for your B| B case? Take Cardui today! ||j m tAiTnir TILT nAm atpattl1 i iro rui/uiwLa Anderson Man Will Make i 200 Bushels on One Acre. Anderson Mail. 1 Mr. J. R. Miller brought to the city . Thursday probably the first four horse , load of couutry raised Irish potatoes 1 ever sold here. He disposed of them . easily and could sell several hundred bushels at a fair price, He sold his potatoes to the grocers. , . Mr. Miller planted abont an acre of Irish Cobbler potatoes, and will sell at least; 150 bushels, besides what he keeps for his own use. The total yield will be something oyer 200 bushels. But that is not all of the story. He j has com planted in the middled of the potato rows that is now kneo high, four inches apart, in the best of condi- 1 tion, and he is going to try for a rec- 1 ord yield. Mr. Miller says he is going 4 to try to clear $250 on that acre; and ] if his corn turns out well he is likely * to do so. Ths total expenses including the remainder of the work of cultivating the corn, will be in the neighbor- 1 hood of foO. In this connection it might be stated that Irish potatoes are beini* ship- ( ped to this market in large quantities, } and the price is high for this season of } the year. If more farmers nad had t Mr. Miller's foresight they could have made a nice sum of money besides ^ keeping at home the money that is be- ^ ing sent away for this important arti- , cle of food. ! , You don't buy land by the descrip- ] tion?you look at the land. Apparently a profit is not without honor save in its own country. ^ A paper umbrella is cheaper than 1 one of silk, but sometimes it rains. It is hard to make a house seem like { home with mail order furniture. i Co See Our Line oJ 1 WAGONS when t C 0mmm m i i ? ! i im mm > n ^ 1 1" ; >-:ll fWi 'r; ' ' ''? ; f?-' '$''' / irtian Bra m I?K?MUMMM??BBIB?? Deadly Family Quarrel. Sister Shoots Her Sister After Her Father's Death. Crouching behind the bodies of her father and brother, who had falle* victims in a family feud. Miss Georgia Sharp, of Sherman, Tex., fought! a close range shotgun battle with her brother-in-law, Henry Waldrop, in th? yard of his home, and after wounding her own sister and slaying her nephew, wa9 killed by a shot from Waldrop'a weapon. Miss Sharps a moment before being killed, had sent a charge of buckshot into Waldrop'a shonlder. Thinking victory hers, she leaped toward him when he brought his gna to aim, and pnlled the trigger, tha charge striking her in the face. Money owed to Waldrop by his father-in-law for clearing away timber caused the feud between the fcw? families, and the fatal quarrel started when a young son of Waldrop's taunted L. W. Sharp, Georgia's father, as he was passing the house accompanied by his son, Walter. Th? Inff A* aU a ?- - ? lavijci uuaacu nic uvy wnu was men ?hot down by the eider Sharp. Walirop appeared at the door, shotgun in band, and fired both barrels, his father in-law drooping. Georgia then took P the fight. Joyous Wedding. Hauled about the town in a hay wagon while hundreds of friends pelted and showered confetti upon them, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin H. Clark, Jr., who were married at high noon to-day in the Bridgeville Methodist Episcopal church, were carried to the depot, only to meet the climax of pranks. Just as the train was coming in the crowd sang, "Ble9t be the Tie That Binds," and bound the couple tightly together with heavy timber chains. Phese were secured with a large padlock and the key thrown. Unable to free themselves from the predicament, the newly-weds were carried into the Pullman and'were obliged to occupy cne chair. Hundreds of friends who had come from all parts of Delaware, Maryland ind Pennsylvania to witness the affair Evere in it to the last, and the serenade yas one of the most strenuous imaginable, the bride being nearly at the aoinfc of collapsing when carried on :he train. A dispatch received from Wilming?n states that the tie was strong atisl ihe honeymoon was delayed for ow in hour in that city in order to have :he "binds*' broken by a mechanics? Seaford, Del,, Dispatch to (he New JTork World. Five Victims of Lightning Stroke^ News was received at Sumter Tbtfralay of the killing by lightning of one aegro oonviet and the rendering anccusciou9 of five more, at :he State farm at Haloed on Monday afternoon during a jhunder shower. The negroes were on ;he lower part of the farm when the itorm came up. At first it was thought that all of the men were killed, eut five of them regained eonsciousaees after several hours. When 37cu are sure you are penny wise, make sure you are not pound foolish. It isn't the price yon pay but the ^oods you get that counts in the long *un. W HDD "~"1 ? ? L you go to buy, South Carolina.