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1 Pa? the Price o ' ; I More?I I cream separa || ' * begin norenc H with the price. You ma} Is easily pay too little anc 9. just as easily pay toe || much. If Learn the secret o |g gears that work withou v35 loeVi T #?arn thf IL>acn lad... ? - ? .? importance of a self adjusting bowl spindle bearing. Discover the difference between bras,' and phosphor bronze a: a material for bearings Buy a separator with ar oiling system that canr few minutes of a run. meets these specificatior work for a long time is; IHC Cream Dairymaid, B! It is the cheapest sep; cause it will do better wc any other separator. IHC cream separatoi are easy to run because accurately made and th ently lubricated. The the strongest used in any and spindle bearings ; frame, but have no con tact is between the steel bronze bushings. The so that there is no lost i They are entirely protec and at the same time a cleaning. See the local dealers chines and ask them for skimming efficiency of ai can get catalogues and them, or, write International Harvester (Incorpo * mm ]EsSSMS8^^^?1Umb4a * ' X Roads Dots. Plowing and hauling fertilizer are the orders of the day. Rev. B. 0. Herlong spent a recent Sunday and Sunday night at Mr. D. H. Lawson's. Those visiting Mr. M. L. Rister's family Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Lemuel Berry and Mies Lucia Bachman. Mrs. Johnnie Sfcurkie spent a few days recently with her sister, Mrs. W. F. Mack. | : Misses Qnincy Sbarpe and Adelle ! Hammonds were the visitors of Little Joe and family. Mrs. Jas. A. Sharpe has returned from'a visit to Sally where she visited her sou, Mr. D. W. Sharpe, telegraph operator. She was accompanied ?y Mr9. Wi?e EFutto. Mr. A Sharpe spent a recent 8a arday night with his daughter, Mrs. C. C. Sturkie. / Mr. A Sturkie, who got his hand hurt some time ago,, is improving Mr. and Mrs. David Sharpe's baby died Sunday of last week and was buried the Monday following. Mr. Columbus Sbarpe and Little Joe speut a happy time in Edmund recently. The school at Edmund and Gasfcon eame to a close Friday of last week. Everybody in this section is getting along fine especially Little Joe,and he is as fat as a rail. LITTLE JOE. The Cause ot Rheumatism Stomach trouble, lazy liver and deranged kidneys are the cause of rheumatism. Get your stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels in healthy condition by taking Electric Bitters, and you will not be troubled with the pains of rheumatism. Charles B. Allen, a school principal, of Sylvania, Ga., who suffered indescribable torture from rheumatism, liver and stomach trouble and diseased kidneys, writes: "All remedies failed until I used Electric Bitter9, but four bottles of this wonderful remedy cured me completely." Maybe your rheumatic pains come from stomach, liver and kidney troubles. Electric Bitters will give you oromnt relief. 50c and Si.00. Recom mended t>y Harmon Drug Co. i I It is generally accepted that Senator I E. D. Smith will offer to succeed him- : self, though there is formal announcement by him following the * tate- ' ment that Governor Blcase will offer for the senatorship. _ i + ^ m ? Cleaning Pressing Dyeing The Lexington Pressing Club ik ready to do your fall cleaning, press ing, dyeing, etc. We have a competent force and all work promptly and . meatly done. Let us fix up that old fcast year's suit for you. We make ? specialty of this cl?*s of work. Lexington Pressing Club. ] Lem Sox. Manager j 1 the^ Best?-No | io Less- | lot fail you even for a ii| The separator that J| is and that will do good B| 111 'II (Separator I uebell or Lily I axator you can buy be- |NJ ?rk and last longer than ^ s turn easily and they the working parts are || le bearings are suffici- || shafts and spindle are || ' separator. The shaft | - A-J U.. ire suppuricu uy iuc *** tact with it?the con- ^ spindles and phosphor gears are spirally cut sfc notion between them. |ted from grit and milk, | i re easily accessible for who handle these ma- f| demonstrations of the $| 11H C separator. You |s full information from ?| Company America ^ Best Known Cough Remedy For forty-three vears Dr. King's New Discovery has been known throughout the world as the most reliable cough remedy. Over three million bottles were used last year. Isn't this proof? It will get rid of your cough, or we will refund your money. * ^ s n J. o. UWCI19, Ul auciiuaiot w. WM writes the way hundreds of others have done: "After twenty years, I find that Dr. King's New Discovery is i he best remedy for coughs and colds that I have ever used." For coughs or colds and all throat and lung troubles, it has no equal. 50c and $1.00 at Harmon Drug Co. tLetter From Florida. The weather is fine in Florida these days. We have had one of the warmest winters we have had in a number of years. The cabbage crop is fine but it will not pay to gather them. This means that the crop will rot in the field. Oranges are not all shipped yet. They wilj finish up about the middle of Mai ch. There are about 150 acres in tomatoes around Wildwood and the crop is fine. Shipments to northern maikets ! are being made daily. FAIR FLORIDA. Fair Florida, Land of Flowers, Grassy dales and leaty bowers, Land of the lillie and rose Where the orange *nd citron grow. Laud where South winds blow, Free from ice and suow; Land of showers and sunshine, Dear home of mine. Land of palmetto and pine, Of fruits and vine, Amidst which to spend happy hours With singing birds and flowers. Land of sunny skies, Where time never flies; But lingers by lake and stream, Bathed in suulight's golden gleam. To wander by lake and stream, On which to drift and dream, Gently flowing onward ever, Brooklet and mighty rivers. Land by ocean bound, Where health and wealth abound; A joyous summer land, Of sea grit, cliff and coral strand. i A broad, bounteous land, Or" hilldale and shining sand, j Country of mo^fc fertile soil, Teeming with multiform gift of God. : Land of Eternal youth, | Fiower-deck, hu l-kissed queen cf the South; Land of heaven blest. In which to live, love, work and rest. r This is a true joem of Florida which I would be greatly obliged to you if you will publish it along with the letter. Respectfully, j JACOB A. HARSEY, j Wild wood, Fla. Fii ^ ^ r ?> r s!? ? ?3B c r? a TT. P PB HiiiiHI)! Hfc WOULD 4 Hungary has completely motorized its postal service. Spain is now building diminutive Dreadnoughts. Pennsylvania savings banks hold $377,025,11(> in deposits. The average yearly profit at the casino, Monte Carlo, is $5,000,000. Chicago fortune tellers are said to have a secret union and scale of prices. Illinois in 1912 produced 2S,000,000 barrels of oil of forty-two gallons each. Philadelphia is giving service badges to ail policemen serving five years or more. It costs $1,000,000 a year to maintain the national pure food bureau in Washington. Sierra Madre, Cal., now has one story apartment houses, Spanish mission style. Brand Whitlock of Toledo says he thinks Glasgow the best governed city in Europe. Dr. G. F. Sammis of Brooklyn has discovered that ether may be successfully used hypodermically. Not only will the house of the future be made of glass, but the pipes, conduits and sanitary fixtures. Five francs (90.5 cents) is more than the average laborer gets for a day's work in the Lyon district of France. The cleansing of the bottom of an ocean going vessel is now accomplished by a machine without leaving the water. ' The Astronomic society of Mexico , will present a medal and diploma to every astronomer who discovers a i comet. ' England and Wales together have 40 special schools for the blind, 51 for the deaf and 245 for otherwise defective children. A strong magnifying glass to be fastened to the thumb with a clip has been patented in England to help a person thread a needle. Black opals, for several years extensively mined in New South Wales. have become exceedingly tare, hardly any having been found toe nearly a year. With the exception of local food | supplies of fish, fruit and vegetables most of the food consumed in the Bahamas comes from the United States, I chiefly In the form of canned goods. Nearly three times as many British i as American workmen are employed In the construction of the Panama canal. Of 62,810 In the canal zone proper Great Britain claims 80,859 as | citizens, while the United States claims 11350. Prince Louis Alexander of Battenberg, who has become first sea lord of the British admiralty. Admiral Sir Francis Bridgeman having resigned, owing to ill health, is a naturalized British subject having been born at Gratz, Austria, in 1854. He was naturalized and entered the British navy in 186S. The last of the horse omnibuses of Paris disappeared from the streets Jan. 11. A long procession of motor| ears and toxica bs tilled with flowers solemnly accompanied it on its last journey, while immediately behind it was a motorcar covered with a pall and decorated with funeral wreaths and crosses. A l.nreo ns.mhpr of time clocks have been placed on the various tramway lines of Leeds. The conductor registers each time he passes a clock, which records the time. This has done away with timekeepers and has assured more regular running of the cars. Similar clocks have been in use in Liverpool and Manchester for some time. One of the few funds, if not the only one, left for charity by a president of the United States is used in Lancaster. Pa., for the purchase of coal for the poor at Christmas and for other good uses. The fund was left by President Buchanan, who was a resident of Lancaster, hnd the income now amounts to al>oiit $3,000 a year. If it is found possible the United States navy detriment will recover the cannon, bronze ornaments and other relics of the old American frigate Philadelphia, the hulk of which lias rested and rotted in the mud of the harbor of Tripoli since 1S04, when she was set on fire and sunk by Lieutenant Decatur to prevent her use by the pirates who had captured her. A novelty in the way>of a textbook ror teacmng migiisu 10 loreigu mwr ers is, it"is stated, to be used by the Chicago Young Men's Christian association. It will be called "Safety First For Foreigners," and each lesson will consist of a picture showing the best way of avoiding danger. It is hoped in this way to reduce the large number of accidents to foreigners in Chicago. In 1S13 the king of Prussia sent out from Breslau the famous "Call to my people"' (Aufruf an mein volk) that filled the city with his subjects and began the war for independence. Beginning May 1 and ending Oct. 31. 1913, Breslau will celebrate the event with an imposing historical exhibition, for which rulers, castles, museums and numerous citizens have lent their treasures of that period. Captain Roald Amundsen, the Norwegian explorer, has just been formally recognized for the first time in the United States. The National Geographic society, at its annual banquet in Washington, at which he was the guest of honor, presented hira with a medal In recognition of bis attainment of the south pole. When he goes north next year in an effort to reach the north pole he intends to carry a wireless equipment which will enable him to keep In touch with civilization. Tie Light for th< use?the best lamp you' There is no glare; no flicker. Th is a low priced lamp, but you a Rayo lamps are lighting more t! Save the Children's ^Rss/b Lamp: Madc 10 ym At Dea!e STANDARD ? "V ... (Iscerporatw Newark, N. J. p?. I HARMON'S : Oxford's ^ latest models : arriving evry- 1725 M and see n . , then, Colnml ^???M?? Pnlnmhifl I iimti UUIUII1MIU klllliM tyring i man Ufa Sash, Doors asi Finish, Pine, C Flooring, Ceiling, Weathe and Win Columbia, I We Havi VERY A1 I Some Ch< Studebaker Babcock and Our guarante Greg I !!!!|Wi|?Trrwr7Tfr -^SKteSBb* -* k * UAma F?r readingC OUIil" for aii home can buy is the Rayo. e light is soft and clear. The Rayo innot get better light at any price, tian three million homes. Eyes?and Your Own. Lighted without removing chimney of shade. Easy to clean and rewick. rious styles and for all. purposes. ts Everywhere ^ OIL COMPANY ^ 1 {a New Jenty) Baltimore, Md> ?^??? mm\ We invite everybody to come in ilN STREET piSei Come and ijn p r see if we Jlfl, 0. b. don't. ier & ManufacCompany CTURERS OF id Blind, Interior lypress and Oak srboarding, Moulding Door dow Frames South Carolina e a Large Num saper If You \ , Mitchel and Hac Hackney the best >e means something ory-Conder Mi COLUMBIA. S. C. "Our Guarantee Means Somethi HHHBB52BK3SSHBH TAX NOTICE Olfice of County Treasurer, Lexington Cnuntv. Lexington, S. C., September ^ 20. 1912, LEW. For Stab- Purposes 5% Mills F"i' Ordinary County Purposes ... 4 Mills For Pa?: lii-.iMuedue.-.- .... ~ Mills Special County . (bridges) . . I'* Mills For Koiiil> - . . . ? Mills For Constitutional School Tax... . 3 Mills i Totalis^ 31111s Special School Levy Dis No. 1 4 Mills b[oi'ial school Levy t>is. >io.15 6 Mills Special School l.evy Dis. No. is S Mills Special School Levy Dis. No. 2j 2 Mills Special S<-hoo! Levy Dis. No. 34 2 Mills Special School Kevy Dis. No. 37 2 Mills Special School Levy Dis No. 42 2 Mills Special School Levy Dis. No. 75 2 Mills Special School Levy Dis. No. 6S 6 Mills Cr.r.rtirjl T IX i a "}? s\ CO Xfill-. Ot'VUiUJ / x/in. -IV# \JO ? 1M i j|M Special School Levy Dis. No. -,>6 2 Mills Special School Levy Dis. No. 35 2 Mills Special School Lovy Dis. No. 13 2 Mills Special School Levy Dis. No. 23 2 Mills Special School Levy Dis. No. 17 2 Mills Special Schooi Levy Dis. No. 63 2 Mills Special School Levy Di-. No. 12 2 Mills Special School Levy Dis No. 14 2 Mills Special School Levy Dis. No. 43 2 Mills Special School Levy Dis. No. 50 Mills Special School Levy Dis. No. s4 2 Mills Special School Levy Dis. No. 85 2 Mills Special School Levy pis, no. 71 2 Mills Special School Levy dis. No. 16 2 Mills Special School Levy Dis. No. 23 2 Mills Special School Levy Dis. No.29 3 Mills Special School Levy Dis. No, 45 2 Mills Special School Levy Dis. No. 78 2 Mills Special 8ehool Levy Dis. No. 79 2 Mills Poll Tax 81.00 Commutation road tax for 1912, $3 dollars, is receiyed at the same time as other State and county taxes. J9JF" Read instructions below before remitting: According to law the County Auditor will add the following penalties: On January 1st, 1913, 1 per cent, penalty will be added to those who . have not paid. On February 1st, 1913, an additional 1 per cent, will be added to those who have not paid, making 2 per cent, penalty for February. Still an additional 5 per cent, panalty will be added on March 1st., making 7 per cent, penalty to be paid by those who have not paid by March l9t, 1913. " Tax Books wiil close March, 15,1913. When remitting give each township or school district your property is in. Giye one name in full, not initials. Very truly, E. L. WINGARD, Treasurer Lexington County, S. C. 99b II QUALITY. WARRANTED FOR ALL TIME. If you purchase the 2TESV HOME you will have a life asset at the price you pay. ?nd will not have an endless chain of repairs. rfr., '""Tr ^ X /yjjt ? ' If you want a sewing machine, write for a our latest catalogue before you purchase. Tfis Hew Home Sewing Machine Co., Orange, Mass. On learning of the tragic death of her martyr husband, Mrs. Robert F. Scott, widow of Oapt. Scott, the noted Anartic explorer, said, "I must be A brave as my husband would wish me to be." And now comes the fifth candidate for Governor of South Carolina in ~ 1914, in the person of Richard I. Manning, of Sumter. And still there?s more to follow. ' / [ I III i berofthe I E2S. I Vant Them J kney Wagons, i built Buggies. I , 3' a ile Co., J *