The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, January 22, 1913, Image 6
j The Light for the Home fo/LThoSl ;
j use?the best lamp you can buy is the Rayo.
There is no glare; no flicker. The light is soft and clear. The Rayo
I is a low priced lamp, but you cannot get better light at any price.
\ Rayo lamps are lighting more than three million homes.
Save the Children'# Eye#?and Your Own.
I The M W?i -w f 9mn Lighted without remoTing chimney or
WM * shade. Easy to clean and rewict
^ Made in various styles and for all purposes.
J At Dealers Everywhere
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
_ (Incorporated in New Jersey)
Mow ark, N. J. Baltimore, Mi
IW?^a??ai
If You Have Anything to Sell
Advertise in The Dispatch.
.. Knowing &e great importance of ttieae tools, wo make H a i
point 10 carry the best of every tool known to the blacksmith- |
: fog art. Whether for the shop or the farm, we are prepared - Jj
Is,serve you. You will find our prices hammered down fo the
] < lowest reasonable figure en everything you need. [
< Anvils85.00 and uo. Blacksmith's Vises $5.50 to S7.50.
: i
Lorick & Lowrance, ;
J i INCORPORATED. |
; V COLUMBIA, S - S. C. |
C. 0. BROWN & BRO.
|j - |73C MAIH STREET, COLUMBIA, S. C. I
it! ' ' T 1 r* ^ P i 1 1 . 1 f* /
;>i ls wnere you can una one or tne oest stocKs or ?
I ?PAINTS^
jj ; OF ALL KINDS |
f DOORS, SASH,
BLINDS & GLASS
if- LIME AND CEMENT. I
i| CABINET MANTLES. |
j! Call or write for Prices. !>
% 1912.... 1|
1 E r-CS^1 FALL and WINTER fk
" H?r I ....SHOES ?j;
I]]// \ We have a full and comJ/jf^-i
..?\ pleta stock of (all leather) |j||
/ ...x1' I stylish shoes for our Lexing- ykj
j&?py J ton friends to inspect. We $8 j
know we are selling the best ^
solid leather shoes for less [a;
\^mm I money than any one in the Sg
shoe business, come in and g?j,
r see for yourself, that will 3|| |
. >/ prove it. A pleasure to wait P|
^ sm on y?u anc* ^'ve y?u <nir
prices. We can fit the family, g?2|
men, women and children.
Parmftri1 Medium and Worlc Shn^c a 5n???;nl??
IE. P. F. A. DAVIS 1
, ANNUAL MESSAGE
Synopsis of Gov. Blease's Message
to the Legislature.
NAMES SOME SUGGEailONS
Was Read on Tuesday of Last Week.
Would Have a Flat wo Cent Rail
road Rate and a Licen e for Carrying
Crncealed Weapons. A Few
Other Sugg stions.
The annual message of Govenor
Cole L. Blease was read in the house
and senate on Tuesday of last week
and contained many matters of interest.
The recommendation for a
flat two-cent passenger rate on all
railroads, the levying of a one-mill
tax for the support of the common
schools containing a note of warning
that this must be enacted otherwise
the appropriations for the colleges
^ould be vetoed, the changing of the
name of the Ciemson college to Calhoun
university in honor of John (\
Calhoun, the consolidation of the
Medical college at Charleston with the
University of South Caroiina, making
it a branch thereof, a tax on water
powers, repealing of the law givinu
cities and towns the right to ^rant
exclusive franchises, the cutting of the
legal rate of interest to six per cent,
prohibiting banks from cbannna resr
ular.J customers exchange on checks
passing through their banks, prohibiting
the express companies from
charging for the return of money collected
on C. O. D. packages, were all
contained in th9 message.
Concealed Weapons.
The Govcnor recommended that the
Jaw against carrying concealed weapons
be repealed and amended so as to
provide for those desiring to carry
pistols to take out a thirty-day license
with the clerk of court and the publishing
of the list of such license
holders and the making the violation
of this law a prisun sentence
without the alternative of a fine, and
requiring every detective to register
with the secretary of state and take
out license, the passage of a resolution
submitting go the people an amendment
to the constitution providing for
the election of all judges by the direct
vote of the people, the passage of an
act making it a misdemeanor for any
reporter or editor to send out garbled
reports of speeches and the requiring
of the publication of a correction in
the same place and with as large headlines
as the original article.
Detective Warrants
The governor scores the compi
?i i? ? - i
nuiict ^oueiai iwr intving turned
down the warrants of his detectives
and accuses him with having
seriously interfered with the enforcement
of the laws and ask that
it be made mandatory on the comptroller
general to pay his warrants on
his contingent fund. He ask that an
act be passed making it necessary for
the chief justice to hold in his hands
the certificate of a reputable physician
that a circuit judge is ill and unable
to perform nis duties before such ju^ge
be excused and a special judge appointed
in his place, hie recommends that
Clover and immediate section of
York County which suffered so severe
ly from the storm last- year be exempted
from taxes for the year.
The Hosiery Mill
The Governor renews his attack on
cotton mill mergers and again recommends
that the hosiery mill at the
state penitentiary be abolished. He
attacks trust and combinations and
cites the Carolina Public Service cor
poration as a trust. This is the company
which has been buying up ice
plants through out the state within the
last few months.
State was Prosperous
A warning is issued to the new
members against allowing themselves
4- ,-v l\n noi a1 i n f a onnr\i\rhno am f b a
W 1 LA LU DU^Ul UUt; VJI1 tliC
floor propositions which they opposed
in conmiittee room and in which they
are in the majority. He reviews at
length tne prosperity of the state and
pleads with the legislature to lay
aside any political feeling1 it may
have and to enact laws for the good
of all the people.
The message covers several thous
i
ciiiU \\ UIUJ3,
<lin
How to Bankrupt the Doctors
A prominent New York physician
says, "If it were not for the thin stockings
and thin soled shoes worn by
women the doctors would probably be
bankrupt.'' When you contract a cold
do not wait for it to develop into pneumonia
but treat it at once. Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy is intended especially
for coughs and colds, and ha9
won a wide reputation by its cures of
these diseases. It is most effectual
and is pleasant and safe to take. For
? I... ?11
adir uy on vtc;t*nr*
There is usually a way of getting a
man to do what you want him.
How many married people know just
what they promised to do when they
got married? We refrain from asking
how many are keeping those promises.
The S outh Leads.
Washington, D. C., January 9,
Presided Finlsy, of the Southern JR. ii]
vay Company, commenting to-day
upon the record of cotton mill consonstruclion
during the calendar year
i912, said: "The Southeastern States
it-d all other sections of the country ii
cotton mill development in 1912. There
were 37 new mills built in the Unitec
States during the year. Of these 21
were in the Southeastern States. Out
t 533,100 new spindles 425,000, or 8{
per cent, were in Southeastern mills
and out of 9,774 new looms, 6,450, oi
66 per cent, were in Southeastern milli
Thtce fimirpc rpfpr nr?lr to new mill:
and take no ao ount of the large ad
dtions made during the year to exist
ing plants by which the manufacturer!
capacity of the section was largeb
ncreased. The aggregate increase
ias been so great a9 practically t<
Q9ure the maintenance of the recorr
made by the cotton producing state
? the year ended August 31, 1912
vvhen the mills of the South consume*
nore cotton than those of all othe
'actions of the United States."
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Re
ward for any case of Catarrh that can
not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have knowi
F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, an'
believe him perfectly honorable in al
business transactions and financiall;
able to carry out any obligations mad
bv his firm.
NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE
Toledo, O
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally, acting directly upon the blooi
and mucous surfaces of the system
Testimonials sent free. Pries 75 cent
per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for consti
pation.
in T ftrtOTTlllfl
V'lliUXgCD 1U liCCSTUib!
The new year has seen some mov
ing in and around Leesville. D. A
Quafctlebauin has moved with hi
family to Bishopville. He was assis
tant cashier in the National bank o
Leesv?Ile. He becomes cashier in i
bank ot Bishopville. J. O. Eargl
and family now occupy the housi
vacated by Mr. Quattlebaum.
Killian Oxner has moved his family
into the court house on Lee street
Mr. Younginer is erecting a home o]
Bennett Avenue. He comes from nea
Barr, in Lexington county.
Many people were here attendinj
the funeral of Arthur Bouknight. Th
services were conducted from hii
home at Batesburg, but the intermen
was in the cemetery of this place.
Some new students have enrolled a
Summerland college since the holi
days. Others are expected durinj
the second term.Drives
Off A Terror
The chief executioner of death in thi
winter and spring months is pneu
monia. Its advance agents are cold
and grip. In any attack by one o
. these maladies no time should be los
in taking the best medicine obtainabl
to drive it off. Countless thousand
have found this to be Dr. King's nlev
Discovery. "My husband believes i
has kept him from having pneumoni;
three or four times," writes Mrs
George W. Placp, Rawsonville, Vt.
"and for coughs, colds and croup
have never found its equal." Guaran
teed for all bronchial affections. Prici
50 cts. and Si.00. Trial bottle free a
Harmon Drug Co.
Back to the Days of Cheaj
Eggs.
The Greenville Piedmont says:
"We can remember when you coulc
buy six eggs for a nickle." The New
berry Observer says "those were gooc
old days undoubtedly; but I can re
member when eggs, fresh from the
nest, sold in Prosperity for 8 1-3 centi
a dozen from merchants at that price
they having taken them in trade
But "nover again." Once upon s
time we bought two dozen eggs fron
a man of fifteen cents which had four
teen chickens concealed in them foi
which he made no charge.
Could Shout For Joy.
"I want to thank you from the hot
tnm nf '' \xrrr\t.n 17
vv/**-* wa* ? ? " * Ww \_' X>. XVUUfl
of Lewisburg, W. Ya., "for the won
derful double benefit I got from Elee
trie Bitters, iu curing me of both <
severe case of stomach trouble and o
rheumatism, from which I had been ar
almost helpless sufferer for ten years
It suited mv case as though made jus
for me." For dyspepsia, indigestion
jaundice, and to rid the system of kid
ney poisons that cause rheumatism
Electric Bitters have no superior. Tn
them. Every bottle is guaranteed t<
satisfy. Only r>o cenis at Harmoi
Drug Co
?
Mr. Howell Cliffton Roof died at hi:
home in this county on Jan. 11th ii
the 38th year of his age. He was i
prominent citizen of the community
in which he resided and had a larg<
family connection, who together witl
numerous friends and acquaintances
i.
I Liiuuin ins ut*i ariui tj nence.
When you want a reliable medicine
for a cough or cold take Chamberlain'!
Cough Remedy. It can alwajr9 be de
pended upon and in pleasant aDd safe
to take. For sale by all dealers.
SB H
I g|
[Lameness^
r I Sloan's Liniment is a quick B J J
- I ness in horses and other farm B
| "Sloan's Liniment surpasses any- 9
5 t tiling on eartn ior laiLK.'^esa jii uvmw ? _ _
and other horse ailments. I would | 1:1
7 not sleep without it in my stable."? 9 Wl
Mautin Doyle, XfJ
432 West 19th St., New l'ork City, ga
Good for Swelling and Abscess. jg
1 Mr. H.M. Gibbs, of Lawrence, Kan.,
R R. F. D., No. 3, writes:?*' 1 had a maro I
with an abscess on her neck and one I
COc. bottle of Sloan's Liniment entirely H
cured her. I keep it all the time for fl
galls and small swellings andfor every- E
thing about the stock." 2j S3?
SLOAN^I i
is a quick and safe remedy gj ^
for hog cholera. p.
X Governor of Geof^r. uses !
Sloan's Liniment for Hog Cholern. H
' " I heard Gov. Brown (who is quite a a|
B f'l.mnrt rt,' i ti lt lip hf!,i UOV-.W lOSt & Ifi
^ n hog from cholera and that bis remedy ?;
M always was a tnhlospoonful of Sloan's jra
e g| Liniment in a gallon of slops, decreas- Kg
ja in? the J?se as the animal improved. j5g
| H Last month Gov. Brown and myself Rj
ffl ^vcre at tho Agricultural College jg
building and in the discussion of the H IB
ravages of the disease, Gov. Brown ji /|
ri I gave the remedy named as unfailing." 58 f|ji
I Sayan*^ah Daily is'ews. B
5 I At All Dealers. 25c., 50c. & S1.00. 9 III
Sloan's Book on Horses, Cattle, B "
? Hogs and Poultry sent free. ?3
B Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston. B
James Tyler, of Aiken, a member
of the Twelfth Regiment, McGovan's
Brigade, died at the "Home" in Cog
lurabia on Dec. 30, at the age of 75
~ years Also, R. J. Browder, of Williamsburg,
an inmate of the "Home," y
a a member of Co. G., Twenty-first *
0 Regiment, died there on Jan. 10 in ^
6 tne 77th year of his age. n
Ic
. .Noblesvilie, Ind., says; "Alter suffer- AJ
a ing many months with kidney trouble, Q
after trying other remedies and prescriptions,
I purchased a box of Foley
Kidney PiJls which not only did me
I more good than any other remedies I
e ever used, but have positively set. my
kidueys right. Other members of my .
3 feoiily have used them with similar '
t results." Take at the first sign of kid
ney trouble. Harmon Drug Co.
t *
Many Give Pennies to Help fl
z Idaho Editors.' |J
Boise, Idaho, Jan. 16?Released from
jail after having served ten days' senlovirtoa
ft m ft^ Aftnwf X? Q f
lui v;uuiciiipu vi uuuii) JLV? U*
? Sheridan and C. 0. Broxon. publishers
s and editor of the Capital News, and Et
f A. R. Cruzen, a stockholder, found da
? that from every State in the Union
s had come 1 cent contributions to pay
v the $500 fines assessed bv the court.
* Half of the necessary amount has been jL
1 received. The Idaho Supreme Court A J
, sentenced the men for publishing a ,
e message from Colonel Theodore
* Roosevelt critizing the court.
t
A woman is willing to let a man *
have the last word if it comes in the *
* form of an apology. ?
See our new top buggies at $10.00
, cash. Open buggies $35.00. We make /
the price. Gregory-Oonder Mule Co.
In attempting to take his own part
s many a man grabs the whole thing.
3 '
A Great Buiidine Falls
when its foundation is undermined, and 1
t if the foundation of health?good digesx
tion?is attacked, quick collapse fol- *
lows, On the first signs of indigestion, M
Dr. King's New Life Pills should be
f taken to tone the stomach and regulate
liver, kidneys and bowels. Pleasant,
easy, safe and only 25 cents at Harman
Drug Co.
A whiskey is glass a tumbler?and so \
, is a man who drinks too often from it. j
- ]3
i Escaped After Fifteen Years I
i W. P. Er.oyles made a successful es
. cape after fifteen years of suffering
t from kidney and bladder troubles. Fo- I?1
, ley Kidney Pills released him and will *
- do just the same tor others. He says; yea
"They cured a most severe backache !
j with painful bladder irregularities, and
> they do all they claim for them." Re
i fuse substitutes. Harmon Drug Co.
The size of a dollar depends 011
3 whether ir. is coming c r going.
1
i ~
j Some men don't seem to want arep3
utation for paying their debts.
1
Here is a remedy that will cure your
cold. Why waste time and money ex- j T
perimenting when you can get a prep- J j-|
aration that has won a world wide rep- i
J utation by its cures of this disease and
3 can always be depended upon? It is
known everywhere as Chamberlain's Qq
} Cough Remedy and is a medicine of '
real merit. For sale by all dealers '
i
Avex?y
THE JEWELER 4
)8 Main St. Columbia, S. C.
EPAIRs
1
WATCHES
AND
EWELRY
>kes Them Good as New
EDALS
AND
BADGES
inufacturec in Our Own
Ihops tor SciicsSs and
Cih?r lurpcses J'
/ERY, The Jeweler
508 Main St., Columbia, S. C.
\ MAOTOF THE
TOE BUSINESS
My motto is painstaking conscientious
Optical service. I have
one of the most completely
equipped optical offices, in Columbia.
Let me do your optical
work and show vou how I
can serve yon. Spectacles and
Eye-glasses repaired and lenses
matched in 30 minutes.
Three graduate opticians of many
ears experience to serve you and .
7e can promise you the highest deree
of accuracy, reliability and satisfaction
in all cases entrusted to
le. Come and see us, we make no *
barge for our examination.
. H. Berkman
ESTABLISHED 1879.
1418 MAIN STREET,
COLUMBIA. S. C. '
BEAR IN MIND
. D. Kenny Co.
Is Headquarters for
ear. Coffee. Teas. Rice.
w ' / / /
c. Fresb Coffee roasted
iiy.
Don't pat off buying
>ur coffee and sugar,
liey're going Higher.
C. D. KENNEY CO. .
1639 Main Street,
Phone 157.
Columbia, S. C.
?? >
\ Watch is
Valuable
? :i tr t: tx?
vviieii 11 iveeps lime, u
you want your watch to
keep Correct Time, see
A. WEISS,
Watch Repairing a Speciaty
Also Dealer in Watches
and Jewelry. 36
Assembly st., Columbia. S. C.
ARMS!
ARMS!
Tt i. 1 ? ,.y^^.A
ii you waci 10 uuy a
farm at right price anywhere
in South Carolina,
call on or write me. If you
want to sell your farm quick
for cash, make your price
right and I will sell it for
von, no matter where locat
<1. -ell choice city*'
,.? y. (no.
? v ;"\ 1 1 r
wpc fx* U1LKC1 I,
1507 Main Street,
lumbia, - South Carolina,
Always Hustling."
<