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fMALARIA^ A headache, biliousness, in* m I digestion, rheumatism, m W pimples, blotches, yellow V complexion, etcx, are all M, -2 5 .*? idlglld VI puiauiid m jrv/u* n blood. These poisons M should be driven out, or serious illness may result V To get rid of them, use B Thedford's" I Black-Draught! the old, reliable, purely .! vegetable, liver medicine. M Mrs. J. H. Easier,' of ? Spartanburg, S. C, says: 9| "I had sick headache, for years. I felt bad most of M the time, I tried Thed ford's Black-Draught, and now I feel better than when I was 16 years old." m > Your druggist sells it, in ml 25 cent packages. K fncict nil ThpifFAPrl'c 11 A UVW? VU I1VWIVI U t* JB I } ! - Depth of Poverty. The wayfarer asked for old clothes. , "I have none,*' said the head of the j house. "Not even an old pair of shoes?'' "No; but here is an old automobile you may have." "Thanks, boss, but I have enough trouble supplying my own wants without begging gasoline from door to door."?Louisuine-Courier Journal. Bites or stings of poii-jnous insects which cause the flesh to swell should be treated with DARBY'S PROPHYLACTIC FLUID. It counteracts the poison, reduces spelling quickly and eases pain. It i equally as valuable when applied * u sh wounds, burns, scalds, cats or o.j ;9es. It causes the flesh to hea^ v - and leaves no disfiguring scar. :.. _e 50 cts per bottle. Sold by " ;gists. Lauri "* Voy, a young white man of Coll i.,.. jounty, committed suicide a few *? ago with a gun. It was at the of Crosby's mother that Charl.o Jones was assassinated three days before. Helped Keep Down Expenses. Mrs. J. E. Henry, AkroD, Micb,, tells how she did so: "I was bothered with my kidneys and had to go nearly dobble. I tried a sample of Foley Kidney Pills and they did me so mnch good that I bought a bottle and feel that they saved me big doctors' bill." Kaufmann Drug Co. When a fight begins with himself, a man's worth something. r Each age of our lives has its joys. Old people shonld be happy, and they will be if Chamberlain's Tablets are taken to strengthen the digestion and keep the bowels regular. These tablets are mild and gentle in their action and especially suitable for people t of middle age and older. For sale by ail dealers. God overrules in live9 where he is not allowed to rale.?Anon. | J^fdR GQ| . S Milam is guaranteed under the i|in ff pure food and drugs law to con3 tain no opium, morphine, strych- |^| B nine, mercury, potash or other ? M dangerous or habit forming H 3 drugs. Thus you take no chances with your health when you take ?f Milam. I *<M<acu. .Rheur I I I will always take pleasure in reccmH V mending Milam for Uric Acid troubles. C. T. Barksdaic, former U.S. Postmaster, P Danville, Va. m Jot nearly eight years I suffered with W rheumatism -at times unable to walk. 1 n r. fi t r? ? K cm taking Miiaro wiin great oeiicm, 3 am now able to walk and suffer no pain. H Mrs. Ira R. Preston, Abingdon, Va. W Rheumatism affected my heart until I 8 could not lie down without such pain that M I could hardly bear it Milam has made (ffl me feel like a new woman. Mrs. J. P. U Brown, 633 NT. Sth St., Richmond. Va. K For IS years I was confined to my bed H the greater part of the time with rheumaM tism. Milam has been a Godsend *o me. M I now walk about my farm? the swelling jS has left my limhs and joints reduced to H normal size. F. L. Gristle, R. F. D. 1. H Chocowinity, N. C. 0 St wi!S do yen no goo< g to gain, alS to h K Your druggist has MUam or ran get g - TWS R3ILAM MEOICIH ISP i ? ^'V****?-* y %Tfc<iG rfrf'r nil .-hwm'-- Ji . ..0 REPORT OF THE CONDITION Of The PALMETTO NATIONAL BANK, at Columbia, S.C., at the close of business June 14th, 1912. RESOURCES loans and discounts $1,731,97? 02 C rerdrafts secured and unsecured 15,781 15 I . S. bonds to secure circulation 250,000 00 U. S. bonds to secure U. S. deposits 80,000 00 < Other bonds to secure U.S. deposits 6,000 00 Premiums on U. S. bonds 7,000 00 S. C. Bonds, securities,etc. 275,104 16 ' Banking house, furniture - and fixtures 26,878 80 Due from national banks ' (not reserve ; agents) $ 77,884 30 Due from State and private banks and bankers, trust companies and savings banks 180,098 18 TVic frrtm an- ) uv AA VM. proved reserve agents 156,586 S5 , Checks and other cash items 30,766 07 Exchanges for clearinghouse 36,852 15 Kotes of other national banks 11,100 00 Fractional paper currency, ( nickels and cents 220 03 Lawful money reserve in t , bank, viz: , Specie 17,388 10 Legal tender 1 notes 61,270 00 i Redem p t i o n fund with U. S. treasurer (5 per cent of circula- i ticn 12,500 00 584,665 18 i Total $2,977,408 SI ] LIABILITIES Capital stock paia in $250,000 00 50.000 00 kJUi pxuo X . . Undivided profits, less ex- i penses and taxes paid 92,707 07 National bank notes outstanding ? 25C,000 00 Due to other national banks $488,114.97 j Due to State and private banks and bankers 269,522 75 1 Due to ap- I proved reserve agents . . . 527 Go Dividends unpaid. 58 00 Individual deposits . subject to check. 1,199,480.92 j Demand certificates of deposit 20,030.00 Certified checks.. 10,532.72 ! Cashier's checks i outstanding ' 2,069.57 United States de- j posits...... 74,702.31 . Postal savings deposits . . 843 83 j Deposits of U. S. ! disbursing oflicers 3,818.44 $2,019,701.14 j Bills payable, including ' certificates of deposit ~ for money borrowed 300,000.00 Reserve fund 15,000 00 I Total ?2,977,403 81 \ i State of South Carolina, County of ! Richland, 89: | I, Wilie Jones, president of the j above named bank, do solemnly swear i that the above statement is true to the I best of my knowledge and belief. , | WILIE JONES, President. I Subscribed and sworn to before me this 19th day of June, 1912. R. BEVERLY SLOAN, Notary Public, S. C. c Correct?Attest* < FRANCIS H. WESTON. JNO. J. SEIBELS, s E. W. PARKER, I Directors. ( i . Gentle words, quiet words, are after ! all the most powerful word9. You take no chances with your | money either, for if you buy a B S2j| course of six bottles and are R "* net benefitted you can eet your B , money back for the asking. k No dispute 110 ars&nient? you M W?0 are the judge. B i>r in*" natism I have been a ercat sufferer with rheumatism and for several years un? m able to attend to my duties eontinu- BH c;? of Milam made a new* 0 UUMj . ut\ man of me. Claude Curling, 541* E. Alain H St.. Norfolk,"Va. BS I spent over *3,00.1 for rheumatism with H 110 benefit whatever until I tried Milam. H It has done all you claim for it in my flg rase. I. H. Wade, corner Church and 9 Lee Sts., Norfolk, Va. Eg For a long-standing and aggravated Ipfe case of rheumatism I am clad to say T re- f01 eeived more benefit from the use of Milam B than all the other treatment extending 1% over a period of ten years. C. F. Larger. ga with \V. M. Kilter Lumber Co.. Hunting- Eh ton. W. Va. *23 SincefakinghbottlesofMilammyrheu- Fj' inatism is entirely gone, my complexion and appetite improved- i wouldn't take Kg $50 for the good it has done me. A. Mc SB ! flride, Danville. Va. 5&-V i to put it off-r-nothSng fg 'jsc. Act today. fi it very quickly from a i:y drug jobber. JS i C CO., ?ns., Danv'K^, iei ! *" ' rf sr.-?^.<sr I ? . > :-.Vw. - , it., . . v Teach Them To Save By Depositing Money. Savings Banks, Parents. Children and Education. Angnsta Herald. There ought to be an intimate and close connection between all these fonr things. They are of mutual help and benefit. When working together they produce the best results for individual happiness and for the common good. There are two illustrations of what they can accomplish. "We agreed from the first, my wife and I'\ said the father of a boy, now in school, "that we would contribute 25 cents a week to a fund for the education of onr son; and to keep us np to cne mars we nave a mno icgmicAiun bank in onr room. When the savings amonnt to $10 we put it in the savings bank. "When the amount reaches $10 or so, and the savings bankinfcerest day has gone by, I buy usually a $100 bond. There are many of these now oh the market, and I usually pick outonethat La selling at less than par and which pays from 5 to 6 per cent interest". Another parent undertook to put aside 25 cents a day for his boy's education. This plan was put into operation on the day the boy went to school for the first time. He was six years Did. Twenty-five cents a day amounts to $91.25 a year. Loaned out at 8 per cent, and with the interest compounded, this man has found that in thirteen years he has a little over $2,000. Says the father: "At the age of 19 the boy is just starting to the university, taking an engineering course, so his money will not increase any further. It will take the $91 a year and the earning on the ?2.000 and some more, which I will ad vance him, to meet his college expenses. "I never saw anything impress the boy as has the growth of this fund. It has ground into his nature the value and power of steady saving. He will start life with a neat capital and an education?in fact, with all that any ooy needs'1. Why not start a savings bank fund for your boy and girl and start it on July 1st, when the banks open new interest accounts? STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Lexington, By Geo. S. Drafts, Esq., Probate Judge. Whereas, Felix Fox, made suit to me, to grant him letters of administration of the estate and effects of | R. W. Fox, deceased. These are therefore to cite and ad- , monish all and singular the kindred j ina ureaitors or rne saia n. w. Fox, deceased, that they be and ippear before me, in the Conrt of Probate, to be held at Lexington C. 3., S. C., on 2Sth day June, 1912 next, ifter publication hereof, at 11 o'clock n the forenoon, to show cause, if any ;hey have, why the said administra;icn should not be granted. Given under my Hand, this 12th day >f June, A. D., 1912. GEO. S. DRAFTS, (L. S.) Published on the l^th day of June, '912, in the Lexington Dispatch. 34 BARBECUE. We will furnish a first class Barbecue with refreshments at Steedman, s. C., July 4. There will be prominent speakers to address the crowd, every>ody invited to come and enjoy a well looked dinner. G. E. Rish, L. W. Mitchell. Hayes's Barbecue* I will furnish my annual 'cue with | refreshments at my place 011 Southern j railroad, one mile from Gilbert, Saturlay, June 29th. Passenger trains will stop both ways to take on and off passengers. Several prominent speakers i will be present to address you. Music j furnished by a band, and the photo man will be on hand to serve you. Dome and enjoy one of the best 'cues Df the season. Charges for dinner reasonable. IOOR HAYES. 3w34 She Admits 75 Summ i s, Wants to Marry Again Atlanta, Ga.?A woman who is on the shady side of 75 years of age is not too old to marry, in the opinion of the writer of a letter to a local newspaper from Spicelands, Ind., who says that she is open to a proposal of marriage from some Southern man with a home in the South, far from the cold climate of her state. The writer stated that the aspirant for her hand must be at least 75 years old, as that is her ago. According to the woman whose romantic nature evidently has not been dulled by the pressing of the years, her husband died about three years ago aud she is not averse to again entering the state nf vrnrllnck. Annual Barbecue. We will furnish our annual barbecue with refreshments on Saturday, July (ith. near Gilbert. A good dinner, fine mv. do, speaking by candidates, and plenty of amusements lor old and voiiu%. (,'otno. I.oha VOI:NGI::I:K, J I. .>1... IL. 1. i e .*! 1 i >. How Sine Found Him. A Nebraska girl in packing eggi wrote her name on one of them. Awa] off in California it fell into the hands of a young man, who immediately started a correspondence. Last weel he packed his trunk and came to No braska to claim his bride. This is be lieved to be the first in the history o ' 1 4- AtrAn A f/ill A/ J.N t)UTttSKii Li-lclli tlijl egg CVC1 uaiv/ucv out a wedding. But don't be surprised at anything in Nebraska. Mrs. Lela Love, wife of Wiley Love a farmer living near Covena, Ga., sayi "][ have taken Foley Kidney Pills an< find them to be all you claim for them They gave me almost instant relie when my kidneys were sluggish anc inactive. I can cheerfully recom mend them to all suff ?rers trom kid ney troubles." Kaufmann Drug Co. On the advice of Solicitor Bonhan a special term of court will not be had for the trial of T. U. Vaughn, forme superintendent of the Odd Fellows or phanage. The regular term comes ij September. When Buying, Buy the Best Costs No More But Gives The Best Results. H. L. BJomquist, Esdaile, Wis. says his wife considers Foley's Hone] and Tar Compound the best cougt cure on the market. "She has tne( """ VJwrlc Knf. Vftlov'fl frivPH till V CU1UUD A lUUO uuu x viwj u < v" ?. best result of all." Kaufmann Drug Co. We bear a whole lot about men at tending to their own business, bul what is a man's own business? When your child has whooping cough be careful to keep the cough loose and expectoration easy by giving Chamberlain's Cough Remedy as may be required. This remedy will alsc liquify the tough mucus and make i! easier to expectorate. It lias beer used successfully in many epidemicf and is safe and sure. For sale by ah dealers. Pressing a lever under one handle dumps a wheelbarrow that a New Yorker has patented, a spring rod lowering one of the sides. ? ? Move On Now! says a policeman to a street crowd, and whacks heads if it don't. "Move on now," says the big, harsh mineral pills to bowel congestion and suffering follows. Dr. King's New Life Pills don't bulldoze the bowels. They gently persuade tnem to right action, and health follows. 25c at The Kaufmann - JLrug uu. Do not desert your work, but pierce into its heart, exalt it to its loftiest conception, if you would be more holy. I ?Phillips Brooks. ! FISHING TACKLE-Have you seen our new line of fishing tackle, embracing hooks, lines, bobs, net3, canes, etc? We have everything to make your fishing trip successful. The Bazaar. Julia Ann Boston, colored, died at her home in Anderson" councy last week. She was more than a hundred years old and v?as the mother of 24 children?four girls and 20 boys, most of them still living. Mrs. M. A. McLaughlin, 512 Jay St, LaCrosse Wis. writes that she suffered all kinds of pains in her back and hips on account: of kidney trouble and rheumatism. "I got some of Foley Kidney Pills and after taking them for a few days there was a wonderful change in my case,for the pain entirely loff mv and. hins and I am IJ r thankful there i9 such a medicine as Foley Kidae3' Pills." Never to tire; never to grow cold; to be patieut, sympathetic, tender: to look for the budding flower and the openiDg heart; to hope always like God; to love always?this is duly. i Cleaning, Pressing and Dyeing | The Lexington Pressing Club is I ready to do your fall cleaning, pressing, dyeing, etc. We have a competent force and all work promptly and neatly done. Let us fix up that old last year's suit for you. We make a specialty of this class of work. Lexington Pressing Club. Lem Sox, Manager. When we hear a man boasting thai he never takes a vacation we immediately take precautions that he doesn't take something else. ? - mi...... jbaroecue ax wmic auv&. We will furnish a firstclass Barbecue at White Rock on the *2(>th day ol July next. Speakers and candidate* from Lexington and Richland counties are invited to attend and discuss the issues of the dav. W. It. METZ. 37p J. P. ADPY. BOARD and LODGING, 909 Gervais Street. COLUMBIA, - S. C. I am prepared to accommodate mv Lexington friends and the public witl j pjod meals ana conmmaun- uci.j Transient or regular boarders at rf a j sonablo rates. NIJAli SPAIjOAPO Pi-POT. dC2 5ilUfJS??S7. Proprietor, 1 3 , a glass or bott S It makes one think of e I and wholesome and delig i A ^n&> teeming with pala I & your soda fountain old oal MB m Frpp 0u,r, -new b, 1 Ivt telling of t Cola vindication at nooga, for the asking Demand the Genuine as [ Whcnever^^. THE COCA-COL^ r rou see an Atlanta, ca. Arrow think 2*J j of Coca-Cola. | || F"^?? The Old 1 We have added to our Heme most complete and up to date 1 Traveling and Hand Bags in C ; line of small leather novelties, a 1517 Main Street i I Am Headqus Doors, Sash s High Grade and See me before placing your or< N. H. DR] * COLUMBIA E. OSCAR FALLA i | She will not bum the will not burn her fi tshe uses the New Pei V Tor toast*or roa^t i th? For boil or broi$ > p" For fry or bake 5) l\\ f v i ^ Every dealer has it. Handsomely J top, drop shelves, towel racks, etc. L j quoise-blue. - Made with 1, 2 and 3 b 1 every stove. . Cook- Book also given to ; fl ^ mailing cost, j*' - STANDARD OIL j (Incorporated i:i 5 1 % NEWARK. N. J. 1 I jj ^-.rwcmr>^?t>',w i j?murv \ g]?.'! UJH |i? ipii? wii ff?B ! I SHAFTING 1 PULLE j S ^ 7*b%a.uc&'*i???xHJK*?tfi imnp<MyarrjipjKHibsnwi ( I n m*r> ~ v* ,v *\r\ if '*\r * ^ 7 r.r^ i I r t*". - <; ;- - f ^ - - < - _ n^Wi ImrejgBT'AWcgL.:i*.v..vy<a-. <K.?w^*-a -~t >irr?s.x-J^a.ai?i..,JT.v<j =333 J ; -V.sr; ^ he Old J I aken Bucket led to the brim with 1 d, clear purity?no such M :er nowadays. V )ack the old davs with ? J k of ^ verything that's pure 1 1 htful. Bright, spark- M 1 ken bueket '* VV9 *&II T made by CfgSflKxff) flfin J r*r\ RcoT-a.^%Av8(U\ fl Reliable iss and Saddlery goods the ine of Trunks, Suit Cases, J dlumbia, also a complete \ .11 at popular prices. < Be Co., ' Columbia, S. C. irters For i ind Blinds.. 4 I Low Prices ier for building material \ [QGERS, 4 , S. C. j W, Sales Mgr. j The ' New j Perfection j Toaster * An} Tone, even a I : little girl, can make toast on the j New Per/Action ? 11ii 11~iii11 ? , Oil Cook-stove J : toast, and she ngers either, if fection Toaster? . M re is no other stove that is as ck and as handy as the New rfection Oil Cook-stove ? the j| ivenient stove for all purposes, V the year round., I ' finished in nickel, with cabinet ! ^ -ong chimneys, enameled tururners. Free Cook-Book with anvone sending 5 cents to cover ! , COMPANY J i?w Jersey) |j M BALTIMORE, MD. J ^ ' i J I Y5~| | BELTS**"] j J p* ! m i f. '-f ^ >.? V,1' t. ? ! } '.?? ? "5 ? 1