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gwrtjv*zz r<-. """Tea GRIST FROM | THE WIRES F,-. latest Dispatches Ground Down For Hasty Consumption. ^ j ???? ! WHOLE WORLD IS GLEANED JThe Four Corner* of the Earth and the Seven Seat Are Made to Vialrf a Trihut# r\f Inten. i estlng News. runmiin?j??iiiiiflHi!iiiJi:iuynimiimnKiiHiHiHiHinN!MiiHi!it?iiuwH!H!fi | Washington I William H. Wilder, representative of the third Massachusetts district, died in Washington. David Lamar, the Wolf of Wall Street, was arrested here on a warrant charging him with having impersonated a Federal officer. Lamar was arraigned before the United States Commissioner and was released on $3,000 bail. A fight will begin for his extradition to New York State. Secretary Wilson ordered John A. Moffit to Calumet, Mich, to confer with President Moyer of the Western Federation of Miners with a view to settling the copper strike. The Senate, 44 to 37, passed the Tariff bill. Mr. La Follette, Republican, and Mr. Poindexter, Progressive, voted with the Democratic majority, while the two Democratic Senators from Louisiana voted against their party. rlllHllinWttffllllHIII!ll(IHIIIWIIII!IIIItlHlH!!!!Mlllf!It!iniiHi!!HWUIHWI!l|S Personal f..i;iiHiiiUHi!iiniininiiiiHiiiiwuimiHii!i?ii!flnHniiii!iii!iini!ii?iU!nnHiif^ President Wilson sat in a grove el pine trees at Meriden, N. H., and saw his youngest daughter, Eleanor - , Wilson, play the star role in a pas- j toral masque symbolizing the protest J of the naturalist against the slaughter j birds for millinery purposes. George Curry, one of the most picturesque members of the 62d Congress, eloped from Washington to Jtockville, Md., the capital's Gretna Green, and married Miss Martha Clara Gans ,of Union town, Pa. Curry is fifty years old. His bride gave her age as twenty-one. Prince Albert of Monaca arrived at ' New York on the yacht Hirondelle. ! After his call on President Wilson he will visit several cities and hunt in Wyoming. Rear-Admiral Hugo Osterhaus, retired, arrived at New York on the steamship Berlin from Amsterdam. He brought over a number of birds, with which he will start a canary j farm in this country. Sporting 1 Go-Between, the famous racing stal- j lion, winner of the Suburban Ilandi- 1 cap in 19o6, fell dead under the wire i as he won the mile running race at j the Berks County Fair, at Reading, I Fa. Jenks. a colored jockey, fell with j the liorse, but was not hurt. Connie Mack has signed Pitcher Oeorge Waring, of Saratoga, for the Athletics. Waring is said to be one cf the best semi-professi jnal boxmen in the northern part of New York. Bombardier Wells stopped Gunner Moir in the fifth round of their fight for the heavyweight championship of Great Britain at the Canterbury j Music Hall, London. Arthur Pelkv, the heavyweight i tghter, whose victory over Luther Mc- j Carty in a Calgary arena was followed ! by the latter's death, has parted com- J panv with Tommy Burns, has man- j s.ger. He says he and Tommy faked \ their bout at Calgary last March. General More than 200 vacationists are ; homeless as the result of the fire which swept Salisbury, Beach, Mass., causing a loss of $150,00. The Southern Pacific Railroad ! agreed to a wage increase averaging ' 10 per cent., thus averting a threat- I ?.ed strike of its telegraphers. A coroner's jury in Chicago excner- | ^ted Nicholas Bulkema, 17 years old, | who shot and killed his father in de- ! fence of his mother. Commission government was de- ! feated at Rahway, N. J., by a vote of j -486 for and 669 against. There were 1 many rejected ballots Frank Sandhcfi'er, a mechanician, -was killed when an automobile, driven by Barney Oldfleld, overturned at an auto race in Carona, Cal. Oidfield was unhurt. "Vt'lthln an hour after the vote was j <aken on the tariff bill many Senators were at the station in Washington preparing to leave town. It is certain tJhat the Senate will not be able Xo rata1$ a quorum, but it is the * nil"t79tandiiig that no Senator will raise a point of no quorum. iVrtner County Commissioner W. N. lfliller, of St. Clairsville, Ohio, deblares he has achieved an odorless onion. Harry K. Thaw was thrust back Into the United States forcibly by Canadian immigration officials. He was seized and held in Colebrook, K. H. James Farley, the noted strike j breaker and horseman, died in Platts- I burg, N, V. He was 40 years old, at>u j want home to die two weeks ago, { After sending the summer with Ms racehorses at ibe tracks. He mac- s. I aiiliion dollars in his novel vocati?-. ! . ;r r"?\"T3rTv?: rrr r~?ms ~. "KffliOTSSWC ~*r~: Samuel Compel. In the lobby inj restigaUon verified in part Colonel ! Mvlhalr* statements. Jtmee Farley, the noted strike j breaker, died of tuberculosis at Ms | home in Plattsburgh, N. Y. Carrolltowa, Pa., with 2,000 inhabj itants, was practically wiped out by fire, owing to the lack of water. A white ground hog weighing 18 pounds was killed by W. H. Monroe, j of Lexington, Va. Workmen excavating in Platts! mouth, Neb., uneaxthed a mound of fifty-eight skulls. Governor Dunne, of Illinois, has designated October 9 as the State fire j prevention day, James C. O'Connor, a real estate i dealer, of Joliet, 111., was arrested, ! charged with forgeries estimated at ! $200,000. The Bureau cf Animal Industry re; ports that during the past year, hogs j valued at $60,000,000 died from hog j cholera. Senator Chilton, of West Virginia, took the page boys of the Senate to { the American League Baseball game, ! in Washington. Charles McEIfish and Seymour LindI ley miners, were killed in a premaj ture explosion of dynamite in a maa{ ganese mine, near Batesville, Ark. j Seth Lew was elected Chairman of ; the arbitration board that will pass on | the wage demands of employes on the t Eastern trunk lines. | The administration at "Washington I is losing hope that Provisional Presij dent Iluerta will be eliminated as a | candidate in the Mexican election. Theodore II. Waterman, a noted j grain speculator, who in 1909 made i $700,000 in cue day, died in a hospital | at Albany. j The New England Telephone Co. I voluntarily gave r wage increase of ; 20 to 25 cents a day to its men emj ployed as installers, j Albert Goldenburg, his wife and | four children were burned to death i when their home at Bridgeport, IH., [ was destroyed by fire, j The Lexington (Ky.) Board of Edj ucation issued an order providing that ' the bible be read in the class rooms I every morning before beginning the j session. I Chief James Flaherty, who ronrej senred the entire Police Department of ! Metuchen, N. J., resigned when the j City Council fined him $10 for attendI ing a clambake. The will of Dr. Oliver Livingston ! Jones, who died in New York city, of a revolver shot wound on August 9, ! was filed at Mineola, L. I., and friends [ estimated his estate at $6,000,000. Representative Anderson, Republii can," of Minnesota, resigned from the Ways and Means Committee, protest | ing against Democratic methods in j legislating on tariff and currency. ! The Administration at Washington is awaiting the meeting of the Mex! ican Congress. It is reported that the election there may be postponed and that members from the States in revolt will not be allowed to sit. "Orders to make time" were blamed for the many wrecks on the New Haven road in a statement submitted j to General Manager Bardo by F. S. j Evans, Chairman of the railway's employes. Mayor William J. Gaynor, of New York, died alone as he sat in a steamer chair on the promenade deck of the White Star steamship Baltic, which was nearing the Irish Coast. The eldest of his children, Rufus W. Gaynor, found him dead. Documentary evidence was produced at the hearing in New York before the Assembly Board of Managers by Mel? - r tt Vine r uiitr, u: iiuiixa auu x unci, bankers and brokers, that Governor Sulzer was the first one to bring his wife into his stock speculations. Mr. Fuller testified all his dealings were with Governor Sulzer and that he never transacted any for Mrs. Sulzer. In a decision rendered at Kingston, X. Y., in connection with habeas corpus proceedings aiming to compel the authorities of New York city to honor William Sulzer's pardon of Joseph G. Robin. Supreme Court Justice Hasbrouck held that "William Sulzer was regularly impeached and while awaiting trial had no right to exercise any executive functions. ^tUiiUliiiinitniillltillUmiUiliUilUliiUiiiSinUliiHiiUKiliilUUilllliMilUIU'U^'f : Foreign | run iuuiiuiii; auiii if:, iifi'iaaiiiiiiiiii'MiHijfirmf? The Zionist Congress, in session at Vienna, Austria, appointed a committee 10 promote the establishment of a Jewish University at Jerusalem. A Japanese armed force landed at Nanking. China. Fifteen persons were drowned in the wreck of a Zeppelin airship which met a hurricane and sank off Helgoland. Lieutenant XeEtoroff, a Russian aviator, was sentenced to thirty days' solitary confinement for unnecessary risk at St. Petersburg, when he looped the loop in an aeroplane. Professor Mercalli, accompanied by severaJ professors of the Mount Vesuvius Observatory, ascended to the crater and remained for two hours. They predict a great, reawakening of the volcano. W. ilall Walker's Nighthawk won the St. Leger stakes of $3:.M>00 at Doncaster, England. Knud Rasmussen, a Danish explorer, is reported to have found records left in Greenland by Peary in Tnltr U U1J ? AVW-. Joha Hvland, prominent in horse racing in tlrls country for many years, died from apoplexy at. the Hoppegarten race course in Germany. Sir Oliver Lodge, before the British Association for the Advancement of iJcience. declared that affection and memory might exist after bodily death. --^,VT?JU-A L M IH JiJJ? J I Election Results Sustained. Following a long executive sessio] last Thursday night it was announce* by the state board of canvassers lha tiie ruiing of the Lexington countboard of canvassers, in favor of th dispensary, had been sustained, W understand that the prohibitionist have announced their intention t carry the case to the supreme court. Governor Blease gives out the fol lowing statement as regards the recen elections: "I have nothing to do with the stafj board of canvassers, and I am realb not interested in what they have de cided or what they will decide. Lex iugton was a Blease county, and a a majority of her white people wan the dispensary I would be glad to se< them have it. Williamsburg was ven close and I would be pleased to see i gc in the dispensary column. So fa: as Sumter is concerned, like Orange lurg, I would like to see her stay dry The surrounding counties to her?a* least Richland, which has a majority for Blease?will be very glad to fura iah her citizens their liquor, and ge } the benefit of the money for gooc J roads and good schools. So I am reallj | not worried as to Sumter's outcome | I think nil those counties had good I iiist class ucclion commissioners, ant | hat what tiiev did they did consoicni tionslv, b Tie vdog from aU the facts bej ' 7 lore them that they wcro right, r-.nd ! u s f.ovcrncr, I shall sustain fhi.ii ! actions, regard'ess of what may b( ! ti.e of inion of tiie prohibitionists oj i at-vboov else." i i P-lArKoi" A? PinUU art Chifij'on "I am the mother of eighteen cl.il d.\n and have the praise of doing iuor< Work than any young woman in m> town," writes Mrs. C. J. Martin, Boom: Mill, Yt. "I suffered for five year.' with stomach trouble and could noi eat as much as a biscuit without suffi ring. I have taken three bottles ol Chamberlain's Tablets and am now ? well woman and weigh 1GS pounds. ] can eat anything I want to and as much a> I want and feel better than I have &: any time in ten years. I refer ti anyone in Boone Mill or vicinity anc the}* will vouch for what I say." Chamb'-iIain's Tablets are for sale by Ail i.) alers. adv. Mary and Her Wardrobe. M.wy had a little gown; | "A hobble, says the rhyme, A d ever3 where that Mary went 'Lock quite a lengthy time. ? Louisville Courier-Journal. Mary had a little skirt, She slit most in half, And everywhere thatmary went They saw her little call. ?Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Mary had two funny limbs, Dame Nature tried to bow them; And every where that Mary went. The sun would shine and show them. ?Cincinnati Enquirer. Mary had some baby pumps, She wore them to a hop; And every time she'd turkey trot, ! They'd go kerflop, kerflop, kerflop. ?Indianapolis Star. Dcn't Let Baby Suffer With Eczema And Skin Eruptions Rabies need a perfect skin-covering. Skin eruptions cause them not only intense suffering, but hinder their growth. DR. HOE SON'S ECZEMA OINTMENT can be relied on for relief and permanent care of suffering babies whose skin eruptions have made their life miserable. "Our baby was afflicted with breaking cut of the skin aii over the face and scaly. Doctors and skin specialists failed to help. We tried Dr. Hobson's Ecztma Ointment and were overjoyed to see baby completely cured I) fove on-, box was used,'' writes Mrs. Strulner. Dubuque, Iowa. 7bo IIirm n Drug Co or by mail, oOc-. lU KIrFEi! C HKMICAL COMPANY Ct. L mi-, Mo. Philadelphia, Pa. adv. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Comity of Lexington. Py Geo. S. Drafts. E-q., Probate Judge. Whereas, W. h Hoover made suit to me, to grant him u tters of adminivration of the estate of and effects of Orrie Hutto, debonus non; These are therefore to cite and admonish ail and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Orrie Hutto, debrnus non, deceased, that they be iud appear before me, in the Court of Proba'e, to be held at Lexington C. 1J., S. C., on 30 day Sept., 1913, next, after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said administration should not be granted. Given under my hand, this 15th day of S'-pu, Anno Domini, 1913. GEO. S. DRAFTS, (L.S.) Probate Judge Lexington county,S. C. Published on me ivm uay oi nepi. 1913, in llie Lexington Dispatch two weeks. 47. Lexington County Fair. Subscriptions received and certificates issued at my bottling plant from now until the opening of our fair. October 21st, 1913, for stock in the Lexington County Fair Association. Subscribers arc urged to pay as earh a* p< ssibic, as we now need the mor.e\. IVI. D. Harman, Secretary. Li xirgton, S. C., Sept. 1-t. 1913. is d" i WHEN YOU YAWN : A GOOD DEAL 0 In the day time, and feel dull, lazy and discouraged, you have every symptom of a torpid liver. t Simmons Red Z Liver Regulator (The Powder Form) is e a fine tonic for a disordered f liver. It acts promptly. The bilious impurities which have interfered with the free action 3 of the liver are driven out, the 1 j stomach is cleansed and J 3! strengthened so that it can \ I ^ f [more thoroughly digest food. t [ The bowels are purified and a I regular bhbit re-established. It is a splendid medicine for t>1 the whole system, Promotes f a feeling of energy, mental activity and cheerful spirits. t i j ' So!d ty Dea;e:s. rrice, largo pzc'ssge, S'.CO . I A?k forthcjjrnujr. -siih 7 th ]! ' ! yot; -ar-iot f't it. n-tril to v.?. w: r.-il! . i:?1 |.y rr'! 1 P"$t?ai<i. Siinni'uis I.iv.-r is ; i iqu: Horri f.-r I 'a 1 o r < :-r i'.. I'.ici-, Ji .00 j cr ! oott.c. L.ok /t.?r Ike lied Z iuuei. 1 i. II ZEILii* & C3., ?rcvs.t St. Loiiis, | Lp . t:s' j R0UK3 TSI? ; | Excursion Fares FROM Lexington, S. S. VIA ' i Q m l tb f*** n 1 l\i70T7 7 j UUULUV/i li iV'UiO CiJ i j (Premier carrier of fhe Soufhi. * I $21.S3. Philadelphia, Pa., and return, t ! account Emancipation ProI ' j clamation (colored) Septem^ | ber 1-30, 1013. Tickets sold 1 j August and Sept. 15. Final limit ten (10) dajs alter date i j .sale. * ' $10.00. Kuoxviile, Tenn., and Return , ("Good in coaches only"). [ ; j $3.75. Knoxville, Tenn., and return i "Good in coaches, parlor or slaepingcars, pullman charges additional'"). Account Naj tionai conservation Exposition, Sept. 1-Noy. 1, 1013. Tickets sold daily, Aug. 30 to Nov 1, good 10 clays trcm A. i n cr. ; $0.15, Savaimali, Gii., aiidroturn, account meeting isl ytiic;Slirine! Ak-e-Temple. Ticket s sold Sept. 11, T-\ i ood i;niii S.pt. ! 15' b. i j $7.40. Chart-?n^'.:ga, Ts-nn., ami return, account Annua! Ikicampiaejui, Grand Aiiny kipublic, Si-pr. 15-20. r,d3. Ticker? sold ironi.Sept. 12-19, lir.al i limit, Sept. 27, but on deposit of 50c and ticket, same mav t ' w be extended until Oct. 17, 1913 ( i $15.50. Nashville, Trim., and return : account National baptist Convex tion.(colored). Tickets sold Sept. 11, 15, 10, 11 with Una! limit returning Sept. 2(J, 1913. ' 5545.00. St. Pan! nriMinr.fanolis. Minn. and re mm, account Sovereign Grand Lodge I. 0 O. r. Sept. iOLI. Tickets s- Id from Sep:. 11, 12,vl3, linal iimit returning St pi. .'JO, I'M-,. | |1S.00. Louisville, ."Ky. and return, account Centennial Celebration Pi-rry's Victory, Septeinhor 2P-0 dober 1013. Tickets i sold Sep:, l'7, 2>;, 20, with final limit rt turning October S, 1013. i New York, X V and leluru, account General C." vent ion Protestant Episcopal church. Tickr-ts^scld October ?, d, (J, 1013, final limit returning Nov -i, 1013, j ?20.3"i. Atlantic City, X J and return account American Electric Railway Association. Tickets sold October 0, 10, 11, 12. 1013, with final limit re j turning October, 21, 1913. i $20.60. Nashville, Tenu, a; * return account Southern Educational i Association, October 30-November 1, 1913, tickets sold Oct 2S;and 29, fiual limit Nov 5, 191 3. $20,90. New Orleans, La, and return account National Association Grain Dealers, tickets sold October 11, 12, and 13, 1013, final limit returning Oct IS, 1913. $42.6-5. Lul?a, Oklahoma^'and return account International Farm and Soil Products Exposition, tickets sold Oct 18-21, 1913, final limit returning Nov 6, 1813. | Pullman, sleeping and dining car j service on through trains, good cou! venient through and local schedules. i For detailed information, etc., call ! ! } upon nearest ticket agent, or write j S. II. Hard wick, PTM.; II. F. Gary, j | CPA.; Washington, D. C.; W. E. ! ; McGee, AGP., Columbia, S C; Ma- ! j grnder Dent, I)PA, Augusta, (ia. i i >?? ?wn?otooMOonj? ui H?aw? JCT?????mmmmmwwa??? '^jwa aw.wi : .^.? ~ SmS^SN SHAPE I cyspt | dilHrL |j| i.: ^ .'? . "L' ? i li ^=^^SS I try them. Hi . . , IS OfiiiHpnp ? Ipp^^fpopo i i i ^ 5 A? sJ 3 * 5 ?? 3 y. x* 6fe_ i { ? w W ?' 3 ? v J 8 ? 3 s i [ 5 % | O 8 "4 5 ? g 2 * % ? ?T ;. * S ? 5 " Y ? ? * ? 1 P S S 8 ! II glliil&giiii*! 15/ t &S &M3-*S ? Sa&fcifel I , E ' V>? til at -i ii ? W5 4-3 W.'. f X fl.'iav v ?: -_* <?. .'? -W,^ i I I j tl *> II j l| \LS!>?''V .-? t,": .<!* % J fP j ,i u Viy 4Lc''--J?? .. v-i5 / <v-i. j ^ '-$w'& w in f i - j jvlore Cccds for Sarr,c f-?"oney. | i k I J Same Coeds for Less ".?:)nev. If ! li i \S~ r ^ r-jrmwr .'vr.r*.rw . .* *#n"?-wnrj:. - *" -.. ^-wwmv.inv:. <> /.'.wrc-fr/ .w.x/..' *:?s^ "T atrirrcrT.TMMcr f | ^Mrm-1- *nr>r-" j-r.cffrvmur^MC.-. tct/w.;W;.?JBV. .-sxaCTJU .'-'-ex.?. - >*UC?H#arv va J.-S? J?VX.7.: --?? Columbia, S. C. Phone 4?3 i 'f% w- P r? feC R %"$ ili T 54 is E3 s !Lut G ^ ? '*?** tf i *\ X tsus C& * Jobbers and Dealers in Stoves Ma:.*:'Ranges Tiles tinrl Gratr-s ? nrr.aces Heaters Steve Pipe Steam. Gas. Water Pipe Hollow-ware fii.d Fitting" Enamel Ware "Water Cic r-e-ts and Tin and Galvanized Ware Trimmings "Wear Ever" Enam'Ir-d Iron Aluminum Ware Ba;h Tubs and Lavatories | Bath Room Accessories ! Terra Cotta Soil Pipe and Fillings ! Sewer Pipe Compression Cocks I Fine Pipe SCps and Bibbs Farm Drain Tile Fire Brick and Fire Clay i Sporting Gocds Tin Plate Pig Lead Solder J -M A*b<-: Jos and Rcgai Copper INIetal Shingles ^ '= F*'U Ventilators 1 \ r>;,r;;'r . Galvanized and Black P 1 iivsmbizcu ?/.o< ting Sheet Iron r ? Metal Ceiling Root Paiur Gutter and Conductor Pi tip Tinners' Tools Corrugated and V. Crimp ed Roofing Pumps and Well Goods Ridge Roll Rubber Hose Ynl'ty, Etc. Our Stock is Complete; Prices Low; Deliveries Prompt. Let j? us quo ? you before you buy. iB ? a? e?? ? mi i ii i i i' ~ ~ 11 i r >r-sBBBSExnEsacinnKBanaMBaBami |? ~~~ MANUFACTURERS OF ' B ** ? Sash, 0932*3 and BilfjJ, Interior Finish, i j || Pin3, Cypress and Oak, 1 p Flooring, Sailing, Waathsrfcoarding, Moulding, J? If Socr and Window Frames. |1 jjr; r *-? JUT.MMXCNMD MB ? M ' ? ?H nu:'."X ??3K?1.1 ??B???C?1??? MM Columbia, Soudi ^ Caroiina.^^^^^ * I I73Q MAIN STREET, COLUMBIA, S. C. Si |j Is where you can find one of the best stocks of || ? f\V ATT "RTTTlTTS K i V V JL AJLAJ AJ AAAA1 W ^ ;/ DOORS, "SASH, BLINDS GLASS . I lime and cement. I i cabinet mantles. J jj Call or write for Frices. 'jj ;