University of South Carolina Libraries
Ready Now English Daisies, Pansiee, Rose Bashes, Privet, Olives, Magnolias, Orepe Myrtle, Snowball, Spans, OlematU, Honeytackle, Ivy, Wistaria, Grapes, Frnit and Shade Trees, Strawberry, Aspara* Sib, Beet, Cabbage, Lettuce and nioo Plants. . n BULBS?Caladioms, Cannas, Dah- I lias, Giadiolas, Tuberoses, Artichoke and Potatoes. Flowers for all occasions. AUSL niijL urewauuses Columbia, S? C, - -v . w .> .... **.? , .1. Ilotice, Trespassers. AU persons .are hereby notified not to trespass upon oar lands, in any manner whatever, viz: hunting, fish, ing, hauling anything off of said lands, pasturing or making roads. Anyone found violating this notice, mast take the consequences of the law, Mary P. 8wygert. A. Frank Swygert. Henry E. Harrnan. Feb. 8. 1915?I8p ' TAXNOTICE. OmcE,of C6ujtty; Treasurer, ? ' v a /"? t bSJUSUIUA V/UU AI X, O. V/. September, 20,1914. Public Notice is hereby given that State, County and School taxes will be received by me from October 15 to December 31st, 1914, inclusive. LEVY. For State purposes.. . 0 Mills 44 Ordinary County purpo's 4 u " Special County (bridges) U " n Roads........ 2 44 *' Constitutional school tax 3 " Total.. '.'161 Special Shools Extra Levies No. special school levy, No. Mills 2 ** ? li ? ? - 2 '* ** 44 4 ?f . 22 ?? ?. ? <? 9 i< 13 ? M ?? . 9 < 24 \ 44 44 44 2 *' 15 '? 44 '* S 4* lg ? ?? ? 2 ii 17 44 ' ? 2 ' IS 44 44 44 8 4 4 OQ 44 44 ?4 o 41 23 *' M 2 44 25 44 4. 4 ^ ^ 44 44 4 O " g* 41 4. > 44 2 f>9 44 44 44 g -44 30 " 44 " 2 " ' 34 4? 4 4 44 2 " ' . 4 (4 4 4 2 4 4 36 *' 44 44 2 " 37 41 44 t: 4 , 44 3$ - " 44 -44 2 44 40 V . 44 ** 2 " 42 " ? 44 4 44 44 ?. 44 2 4 4 45 4. *4*4; - V* 2 ' 44 44 44 44 2 41 60- 44 41 . 4. .2 " -r <. .4 < .? 2 44 172 "" 44 44 2 44 73 4 4 4 4 4 4 "2 ff 75 4 4 44 44 2 4< 76 44 44 4 4 2 4 4 7g * 44 44 2 " 44 44 44 2 " 44 r ^. 2 33 " '* 44 2 44 S4 * <i ? 2 4 85 " 44 \ 44 2 44 Ailj parly liable to Commutation Pvoad Tax may, before Jannary 1,1915 . pay |3,(ft commutation tax, in lieu of - working the roads six days. According to law the County Auditor will add the following penalties: ua January isc, iifio, one per ueui. i penalty will be added to those who have not paid. On February 1st 1915, an additional 1 per cent, will be added to those who have notjftid, making 2 per cent penalty for February. Still an additional 5 per cent, penaly will be added on March 1st., making 7 per * ?ent. penalty to be paid by March 1st, 1915. \ Tax books will be closed March 15,1915. When remitting give each township or school district your property is in. Give your name in full not your initials- Respectfully, E. L. WINGARD. Treasurer Lexington County, S. C. . fB WAI (Over i W 10c and 12c Goods reducec 15c and 20c Goods reducec 25c and 35c Goods reduce( | Borders and ( WRITE US WEBB 1827 MAIN ST. %====== i: ... ? " +-J " * ... WOdiTBite off News. Vernon, Pa.?Spontaneous combustion in a piece of dried cheese set fire to a house here recently. The cheese . had become dry on a shelf and the fire was discovered in time to save the house. Petrograa, Russia?Daring the half year since vodka has been prohibited in Russia more than 1500 secret distilleries have been discovered. Many of them have been refining shellac and converted methylated spirits into alcoholic beverages. Winsted, Conn.?Miss Elizabeth M. Kilbonrn, the first woman in the world to take a stitch on a sewing machine, died here recently at the age of 56. Oxford, N. Y.?The onlj* woman Civil War veteran, Mrs. Robert 8. Brownell, died here a few days ago. She enlisted with her husband in the First Rhode Island Battery of volunteers and saw active service for nearly three years. Chicago, 111.?When "Ben'' Rosen, stein died here recently it was discovered that *'he" was a woman and had been married for several yean. ontaH txt J fa est a a At k>it> hariaMa vhon I /he" dl^td. :- The two young- women: had 4marned,r so that the "husband" could do a man's work and make more money. . Chicago. 111.?The department that cmsed the most comment at the Fashion Show that opened here this j week was the one devoted to smoking apparel for women. Although the Blafckstone, Chicago's m09t exlusive hotel, has permitted women to smoke ' in the public dicing halls for several months, but two or three women have made use of the privilege. Post, Tex ?This town has the most complete cotton factory in the world. ine cotton IS tajsen irom lue larmers j wagons, ginned, spun, woven into cloth and made into sheets and pillow C3ses *in the one factory. HUSBAND RESCUED DESPAIRING WIFE After Four Tears of Discouraging Conditions, Mrs. Bollock Gave Up in Despair. Husband Came to Rescue. Catron, Ky.?In an interesting letter from this place, Mrs. Bettie Bulloch writes as follows: "I suffered for four years, with womanly troubles, and during this time, Icould only sit up for a little while, and could not walk anywhere at all. At tines, I would have severe pains in my left side. The doctor was called in, and his treatment relieved me for a while, but I was soon confined to my bed again. After that, nothing seemed to do me any good; 1 had gotten so weak 1 could sot stand, and i gave up in despair. At last, my husband got me a bottle oi Cardui, the woman's tonic, and I commenced taking it From the very first dose, 1 could tell it was helping me. I can now walk two miles without its tiring me, and am doing my work." If you are all run down from womanly troubles, don't give up in despair. Try Cardui. the woman's tonic. It has helped >ua*a 4 milliAM tirAmam in ?4c WI IUUIC UIOH A UUII1VU nuuiui, t*? no vw years of wonderful success, and should surely help you, too. Your druggist has sold Cardui for years. He knows what it will do. Ask him. He will recommend it. Begin taking Cardui today. Write to: Chattanooga Medicine Co., Ladles' Advisory Dept., Chattanooga, Tenn.. for Special Instructions on your case and 64-page bco* "Home , Treatment <oj Women." sent in plain wrapper. E60-B j ???? IG REDUCTION! TM LLPAF 30,000 Rolls rhich to Selec i to i to i to leilines Sold at Pr FOR FREE SS ART S PHONE 040 , ... ... . _ v Well Nearly-a Mile Deep. The deepest hole in the ground in Texas is at Spur, Diokens county, south of the eastern portion of the Panhandle. It was intended to be a well when 8. M. Swenson & Sons, holders of extensive Panhandle lands, employed H. P. Minihan to drill it, and was to have supplied the hamlet of Spnr with water. As a well, however, it. was a failure, but as a medium of increasing the knowledge of the scientific world as regards deep stratigraphy and as exploration of the formations of the vicinity, it wa9 a great success. Wrvrlr nn fhia rfApnpafc nf TVxafl "wells," which has never been "brought in'' and probably never will be, was started in Jane, 1909. All the tedious work was done with a rotary machine. For well purposes the hole was abandoned in November, 1913, when a depth of 4,489 feet had been attained. The cost of boring was slightly less than $10 per foot, thus the total cost was nearly $50,000, including the cost of the rig, piping and all expenses. The sale of the salvage broaght down the net expenses to aboot $45,000, for which there is to show a very <je#p bole in; the' grouxid5 for the part of the owners of-the land! ?Houston (Texas) Dispatch to the Ohicago Tribune. Clerk's Sale. r # State of South Carolina, County of Lexington. Court of Common Pleas. George Y. Hunter, as Treasurer of the Seminary Fund of the Eyangelical Lutheran Synod in South Carolina, Plaintiff, against Sain P. Roof, Defendant. Foreclosure. In obedience to the decree of the Court in the above entitled action, signed by Hon. R. Memminger, presiding judge, dated February 8, 1915,1 will sell to the nighest bidder at public outcry in front of the court house door in Lexington, South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale on the first Monday in March, next, the same being the first day of said month, the following described tract of real estate, to-wit: v All that piece, parcel or lot of land tying and being in the Town of Lex ingtor, in said com ty and State, fronting twenty-four (24) feet and one and one-half inch on Main street of said Town and measuring on the back .1 - r 1* - -T 1^*. A. ? ? _ A. _ ena or rear iiuc ox suiu iui iweuiythree feet aDd five inches, and bounded on the East by lot of E. G. Dreher, South and West by lot of W. P. Roof, and being the western half of a lot conveyed to E. G. Dreher and Sam P. Roof by Sam'l B. George, Olerk of Court, in case of Nancy C. Long, et al., vs. John Wesley Swygert, et aJ. Terms of sale: One-third/Oash, balance on a credit of one year, with interest from day of sale at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, payable annually, to be secured by bond of the purchaser and mortgage of the premises and insurance policy of the house for such amount as may be required by the said Olerk of Uonrt, said insurance policy to be assigned to him for the protection of said loan. The purchaser shall be required to deposit One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars with the Olerk of Court as soon as the property is knocked down to him, and upon his failure to comply with the terms of sale within ten days after the i J? . i i? . a ? . i : aay 01 saie, tne property snau do resold at risk of such defaulting .purchaser, and on the same terms, on some subsequent saleday, to be designated by the plaintiff; the requirement for a deposit of One Hundred Dollars at the time of sale is not to apply if the property is bid in by the plaintiff; the purchaser to pay for papers, for revenue stamps and for recording. CYRUS L. SHEALY, C. C. 0. P. & G. S. Dated at Lexington, S. C., February 9, 1915. George B. Cromer, Plaintiff's Atty. ==% 3 ' I >ER From :t 7c and 8c 10c and 12c 15c and 20c ices of Paper SAMPLES TADC 9 I Vl\k COLUMBIA, S. C. ====== * [Effect of Great Kidney Remedy is Soon Realized / mi L.feel it my doty to let yoa know what Swamp-Root did for me. I was bothered with my back for over twenty years and at times I could hardly get out of bed. I read your advertisement and decided to try Swamp-Root. Used five bottles, and it has been five years since I used it, and I have never been bothered a day since I took the last bottle of it. I am thoroughly convinced that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root cured me and would recommend it to others suffering as I did. My husband was troubled with kidney and bladder troubles and he took yoar Swamp-Root and it cared him. i This WAS fthnnt fifTA mok a r*n ? ? ? i on may publish this latter if you choose. Very truly yours, MRS. MATTIE CAMFIBLD, R. F. No. S Gobleyille. Mich. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 13th of July, 1909. ; AR\TN W. MYERS Notary Public, iM(i^forVanDnren Oo.. Mich. I etter to Dr. Kilmer <fc Co.. Bingbaroton. N. Y. Prove What Swamp-Poot W1H Oo.For You .v.;gend>ten cents to Dr. Kilmer.& po.? Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size .b6tile.: It will;convince anyone. >You. wili also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling: about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention the Lexington Weekly Dispath. Regular fifty-cent and onedollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores. adv. 17 If You Want to Be Loved. Don't, contradict people, even if you're sure you are right. T\ ii.'i ; fx.? _ i i lI _ _ ? Lfowi De inquisitive aoouc cneauairs of even your most intimate friend. Don't nnderrate anything because you don't possess it. Don't believe that everybody else is happier than yon. Don't conclude that you never had any opportunities in life. Don't believe all the evils you hear. 1 Don't repeat gossip, even if it doe's interest a crowd. * Don't jeer at anybody's religious belief. Learn to hide your aches and pains nnder a pleasant smile. Few care whether you have an earache, headache or rheumatism. Learn to attend to your own business?a very important point. Do not try to be anything else but a ijfeiitleman or a gentlewoman; and r that,means one who has consideration for the whole world, and whose life is governed by the Golden Rule: "Do UQtjM>fchers as you would be done by." '^flfinstian World. | : ' J - ?" SEVENTY-SEVEN YEARS OLD G8orge.W. Clougb, Prentiss, Miss., who had suffered greatly with kidney tronble, writes: "Foley Kidney Pills are the only remedy that ever did me any good at all." Just think of the reliof and comfort that means to him. Foley Kidney Pills are recommended for sleep disturbing bladder troubles, pain in sides or baok, rheumatism, and Kidney and bladder ailments. Har! mon's Drug Store. % adv. Only Part of Plot Against Carranza Los Angeles, Cal., Feb. 20.?The indictment of Harry Chandler, millionaire son-in-law of Gen. Harrison Gray Otis, owner of the L09 Angeles Times, nn nharorp nf having encourasred a revolution movement against Lower California, brought statements today from agents of Gen. Oarranza, the constitutionalist leader in Mexico, that prominent men in various parts of the United States probably would be arrested soon on similar charges. The indictment of Mr. Chandler, Walter Bowder, manager of a large ranch on the California-Mexican border, and five other pereons by a federal grand jury was only the beginning of the result of an investigation by the United States government, it was asserted by department of justice agents. The grand jury, it was said, would continue it9 investigation of an alleged plot to set up a new government in Lower California working on information furnished by six government agent9 who resided here several weeks. The plot, it was said, was nationwide and had for it9 object the overthrow of Carranza. lor Kidney and BladderlrouMcs^ j FOLEY ^ KIDNEY m PILLS ]>|l|i J f0r Backache, ^ Rheumatism. Kidneys Bladder. I FOR SALE BY HARMON DRUG CO .... 1 S',V % Girl is Charged -with Infanticide Asheville, N. 0., Feb. 19.?Jessie May Carver, a beautiful glri of 18 and a member of a prominent family of Buncombe county, is held at the county jail on the charge of infanticide, it being charged that the young woman murdered her infant by abandoning it in the 9now when the temperature was below freezing one night last month. The girl refuses to make a statement. According to the story told by the girrs people, she arose on the night of January 21, left the house withont iking her sister, and that about 2 o'clook in the morning the sister oame to the mother's room, declaring that something was wrong as the dog was barking in the yard. The mother says that she and her daughter took a lantern and started for the yard, when they met the other daughter, Jessie May, coming in through the kitchen, apparently almost frozen. They then heard the cries of an infant and, aft^r a short search, found a new-born babe lying in a thicket, almost dead. Every effort was made to revive the child but it died that morning. .The girl has beep under surveillance.' since the day of January *22. bnt ex-. treme illness made it impossible tobring her to jail until yesterday. Frank James Dies , Peacefully in Bed Excelsior Springs,. Mo., Feb. 18.? Frank James of the notorious James gang died on his farm near here late today. James, who was 74, had been id lii-neaun several months ana was stricken with apoplexy early today. One of the last members of the robber band whose unparalleled career cf crime during the war and the unsettled period that followed kept the people of a dozen States in terror, Frank Jame9 had been living the life of a quiet farmer for more than 30 years. The son of a minister, respected throughout the community, Frank James joined Q'lantrell's guerillas in the War of Secession, together with his brother Jesse, and rook part in the sacking of Lawrence, Kan. After the guerilla? disbaudeel the James brothers became bandits. Many notorious crimes of the decade following the war have been laid at the door of the James-Younginer gang, of which the surviving members were Frank Jampc n.r\ri Pnlp Ymmorinpr tlia lafcfpr of whom is now living at Lees Summit, Mo. Detectives surrounded the James home near Kearney, Mo., on January 25, 187c, and threw a lighted bomb into the house, thinking to kill the James brothers. It exploded, tearing the arm off their mother and killing their brother, Archie. In 1682, after Jesse James had been shot and killed in his home in St. Joseph, Mo., by Bob Ford, also a bandit, for a reward of $50,000, Frank James J surrendered in Jefferson City, Mo. After his surrender James was taken to Independence, Mo., where he was held in jail three weeks, and later to AaII nfin ttt novo Vi o rnYv> r?i "-ftil Q UdliattU) TV licit UD a t iJLiMiLitvc iu jcan ca year awaiting trial. The trial wa9 hard fought and lasted several weeks. Finally James was acquitted and went to Oklahoma. He never was in the penitentiary. COLDS & LaGRIPPE 5 or 6 doses 660 will break any case of Chills & Fever, Colds & LaGrippe; it acts on the liver better than Calomel and does not gripe or 6icken. Price 25c. THE MOST COMPLETE LINE WE HAVE EVER SHOWN IN HARNESS, SADDLES, COLLARS, BRIDLES, ROBES, HORSE BLANKETS, ETC. We have a special home-made slip Harness for one-horse wagon at $5.00. A Set of Buggy Harness for $10.00. We buy Hides, Furs, Tallow, Beeswax aDd pay highest market prices. Wilse W. Martin, 1110-1118 Plain Street, COLUMBIA - 8. C. mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmma THE MAN WHO'S SQUARE. We may name a hundred drawbacks That a man must meet in life, We may say it'j all a "battle" And a never ending "strife/' Then resolve to meet it bravely, Stand the test?do and daro? But the secret of true victory lies In one word, just be SQUARE. ' There is something in the twinkle Of an honest fellow's eye That can neyer be mistaken And can never be passed by. Be hi9 station high or lowly, there's That dauntless, upright air Which convinces all beholders that The man they see is SQUARE. Heaven gives them such influence over Those that daily meet, It they see a fallen brother they Will help him to his feetMake the "sneaks''a bit uneasy mak'g The "false" act kind of fair, The greatest rough on record respects The man who's SQUARE. Shafting, Nkyi, Belts,* Rtodrt ami FUts, Teeth, Locks, Etc. LOMBARD IRON WORKS, AUGUST*, GA. Gel oat circular before you buy. Sheriff s Sale Under Execution STATE OF SOOTH CAROLINA, County of Lexington. In the Court of Common Pleas. R. J. Jeffords, Plaintiff, against Minnie F. Williams, Defendant. In obedience to a certain execution lodged in my office in the above en* titled case. 1 have levied upon and will sell to the highest bidder at public outcry in front of the court house door at Lexington, South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale on the first Monday in March, next, the same being the first day of said month, the following described tract of real estate, to-wit: All that certain lot or parcel of land I situate, lying and being in the Town I of New Brookland, in the County of I Lexington, in the State of South I Carolina, bounded on the East one 1 hundred and thirty-two (132) feet, : more oi less, oy an alley; on the south one hundred and sixty-eight (16S) feet and six inches, more or less, by Meeting Street: cn the West one hundred and thirty-two (132) feet more or less, by lands of Mrs. Maggie Epting; and j on the North by lands of Mrs. M. A. Williams and S. B. Holley, one hundred and sixty-eight (168) feet and six inches, more or less, the same being levied npon and attached as the property of Minnie F. Williams. TERMS OF SALE: Cash, purchaser to pay for papers. . SIM MILLER, Sheriff Lexington County, S: C. Dated at Lexington, S. 0., this 6th day of February, 1915. C. P. Branson. W. B. Martin and R. E. Oope3, Attorneys forPlff. Clerk's Sale. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Lexington.' Iu Court of Common Pleas. The Bank of Swansea, Plaintiff, versus 0. K. Lybrand, et ai., Defendants. Foreclosure. In obedience to the decree of the court in the above entitled cause, signed by Hon. R. W. Memminger, presiding judge, dated Februarys, 1915, I will sell to the highest bidder, at public outcry, in front of the court house door, at Lexington, South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale, on the first Monday in March, next, the , same being the first day of said month the following described tract of real estate, to-wit : All that piece, parcel or tract of laud, situate, lying and being in Bull Swamp township, County of State aforesaid, containing One Hundred acres, more or less, and bounded as follows: On the north by D. B. Sphaler and S. P. Wingard; on the east by Blackville public road; on the south by estate of Joseph Schumpert; and on the west by Argoe and others. Terms of Sale; One-third Cash, balance on a credit of one and two years, secured by bond of the purchaser and mortgage of the premises sold, the credit portion to draw interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum; the said bond to contain the usual clause ?ottni.nflv'n foAs nnr^haser to Day aa tu uuui uvt u - - * for papers, for revenue stamps and for recording, with leave to pay all cash CYRUS L SHEALY, C. C. C. P. and C?. S. Dated at Lexington, 8. C., February U, 1915. C. M. Efird, Plaintiff's Attorney. Edwin G. Dreher Hretarance LEXINGTON, S. C. Largest and Strongest Old Line Companies,