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The Lexington Dispatch WEDNESDAY, MAY 23. 1898. ? ?=?- - ? Index to New Advcrtistinnts. Teacher's Examination?John D. Farr. 31 Yotices will be inserted ?. in the Local department at the uniform price of o cents per line, to one and all.jg\ No Cure?No Pay. That is the way all druggists sell Groves Tasteless Chill Tonic for Chills and Malaria. It is simply ^ Iron and Quinine in a tasteless form. Children love it. Adults prefer it to ^ * bitter nauseating tonics. Pi ice, 50c St. Stephen's Congregation. The place of divine services for the immediate future of St. Stephen's congregation will be in the Methodc* o ist church. Our congregation and the public may expect services at tha. church on the following days I with certaint}: 1st Sunday, 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. 2d Sunday, 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. 4th Sunday, 8 p. m. Pastor J. G. Graichen. Before Yon Bide Your Wheel Be sure to shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It keeps your feet cool and comfortable, prevents sweating feet, and makes your endurance teD-fold greater. Over 100,000 wheel people a e using Allen's Foot-Ease. They all praise it. Luiies, insist on having it. It gives rest and comfort to smarting, hot, swolleu, aching, nervous feet. At all druggists and shoe scores, 25c. Sample free by mail Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Jefcoat Arrested. Dempsey Jefcoat, who is charged with burning the barn and stables of Mr. Richard Peele, on the Edisto, sometime ago, and was arrested last week but escaped from the constable while being brought to jail, has been recaptured and was safely turned over to Sheriff Caughman and will await trial at the June term of court. Secret of Beauty is health. The secret of health is the power to digest and assimilate a proper quanity of food. This can never be done when the liver does not act it's part. Doyou know this ? Tutts Liver Pills are an absolute cure for sick headache, dyspepsia, sour stomach, malaria, constipation, torpid liver, piles, jaundice, bilious fever, biliousness and kindred diseases. Tutt's Liver Pills Doing Well. A portion of the force of the Dispatch took a day off last week and spent it at the pond of Mr. Henry Smith with a view of coquettiDg with the finny tribe and inducing some of the flirts to bite at the tempting bait. They report a fine time with good results. Mr. Smith has a pretty place and is comfortably situated. He is surrounded by peace and plenty, and while a hard and incessant worker he always has time to speak a pleasant word with all whom he comes in contact. His barns are full, his cattle are fat and he lives at home and boards at the same place. Don't bo Afraid. "What has become of the free ferries which were so prominently agitated some time ago? Is it possible that some timid citizen is afraid that slfould they be established Wayler would use them in transporting the Spanish soldiers on his march from Key West to Washington, and hence do not care to have them? Timid ones, if this be the reason for the indifference now existing, let not your fears prevent you from helping in so an important work, for all armies are now provided with pontoon bridges and should the Spaniards ever reach Saluda they can cross, ferries or no ferries. We think Sampson and Schley and Dewey will give the Spaniards as much as they can do to "shinny on their own side," so let us have the free ferries. Sire Death to Bod Buss, Etc. The Standard Liquid Insect Destroyer is A No. 1 Polish for Furniture, a "Wonderful Disinfectant, safe, sure and speedy. No insect de-* stroyer ever yet devised has so fully and unquestionably met the desired requirement, that of certain destruction of Bed Bugs, Roaches, Ants, <fcc., and also the most perfect germicide in the word. If you are suffering with any o| the insects try this most wonderful Insect Destroyer and be convinced of its raeiit. It is the most perfect insect destroyer in the market. Invaluable to every household. Sold under a positive guarantee. Price, 2o ceDts, at the Bazaar. BtmKaHBBHBBaBBEaBHBHBm j PEXCIL AXD SCISSORS. Wayside !?ct?s Gathered Here and There by a Dispatch Kan. Candidate! Where art ttouT Commercial tourists are plentiful. Wanted?a dollar, just to see how one looks. We are feeling the effects of summer weather. Seasonable showers would be much appreciated. Court will convene here on the second Monday in June. A fine line of men's straw hats, at Mectze A Soms. In some sections the small grain ciops are said to be fine. No*, since everybody has been vaccinated, the small scare has died out. Subscribe for the Dispatch and keep posted as to the progress of the war. Call at the Bazaar fount and refresh yourself with a cool and delicious drink. Judge George W. Gage will preside at the June term of court for this county. For cheap dress goods, lawns and other summer goods, go to Meetze & Son. The publication of the Treasurer's annual report takes up muck of our space this week. There were two fishermen to every | minnow in the factory pond out fishing on Ascension Day. Rev. W. M. Harden did not fill his appointment at the Methodist church Sunday morning. Pilene, a sure cure for Piles. Try it, 50 cents a bottle. Murray Drug Company. Call for it. Ladies and children's hats will hereafter be sold at reduced prices, at S. O. Kaminer's. The price of cotton has taken an upward tendancy. It is now quoted in this market at G cents firm. Our sincere thanks are returned to Mrs. Paul P. Clark for a mess of large, fine, "White Globe turnips. Rev. and Mrs. S. C. Ballentine tested the new organ for Mr. B. J. Derrick, of near Hilton, last week. The Drs. Boczers have moved their dental parlor to the room * over Messrs. Efird & Dreher's law offices. Mr. T. F. Brantley, cf Or mgeburg, who is opposing Dr. Stokes for Congress from this district, spoke in Brockland Saturday. Buchu, Gin and Juniper, cures your Kidney troubles. Try it. Price 75c. For sale by all Druggest. The next meetiDg of Lexington Lodge, No. 152, A- F. M., will be next Saturday and every member is requested to be present. W. P. Roof has on hand a lot of guano and acid, and will keep a supp'y through the season. If you need any, go there to get your supply. Summer delicacies, fine family groceries, and the best chewiug tobacco can be found always fresh and cheap, at S. N. Hendrix, Columbia. Mr. A. S. Nunamaker, the sage of the Lower Fork, was in town yesterday entertaining his numerous friends. He is not favorable to the present war. "Wanted?Salesman to sell Lubricating Oils, from samples on commission. Liberal terms. The Euclid Oil Company, Cleveland, Ohio " A Board of Health has been organized at Brookland, and Rev. E. L. Lybrand, Dr. F. L. Sandal and G. A. Guignard have been appointed members. Messrs. Etird & Dreherare now in their handsome new office. Thej ocI cupy the entire first floor of the new buildihg recently erected by Dr. J. E. Kaufmann. CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. 2d Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use g In time. Sold by druggists. Miss Ella J., the handsome m l accomplished daughter of Mr. Clarence 0. Corley, who resides near Brookland, was married on the lS:b, 1898, to Mr. Sherard A. Carter. There will be preaching at Bethel (High Hill) next Sunday with Sunday school previous at the usual hour. Seiviee of prayer will be held at Mt. Olivet (Spring Hill), in the evening at 8 p. in. The small pox at "White Bock and vicinity, is on the wane. There are j no new cases and all are out again. | There were no. cases among the j white people nearer than in one ! family about five miles & way, and j they are now well. Iiorc bound, Mullen and Tar. Cures ; your Cough. Nothing like it. * 25c ! bottle. For sale every where. "We return cur thanks to Miss Pauline Boozer for an invitation to I attend the twenty ninth annual coirrmencement of the Columbia Female j College from Juue seventh to the i eij.trh. Mi?s Boozer will graduate ; from this institution this year. Game Cock Chicken Cholera Cure, an absolute remedy for chicken eholi era. No cure, no pay. 25c a packI age. Murray Drug Co. Ask your j store keeper for it. i Extreme Weakness Chronic Diarrhoea for Years-Feet and Ankles Swelled and Blood Was Out of Order?Cured by Hood's Sarsaparllla. "I was troubled with chronic diarrhoea for eight years and tried everything I was told was good for it, but no medicine did me any good. I kept up all the time bat was so weak I could not do anything. If I walked a few hundred yards I would be out of breath. My feet and ankles swelled very badly and I had about given up all ! hope of ever being well. I read about Hood's Sarsaparilla, and, knowing my blood was out of order, decided to give it a fair trial. I have now taken nine or ten bottles of it and several bottles of Hood's Pills, and I am perfectly well." Mrs. S. A. Ward, Battlcboro, N. C. Hood's Is the Best?in fact the One True Blood I'urificr. Sold by all druggists. Si; six for ?5. H/vrwd'c Pillc arc tlie l,est after dinncr liOOU S i 111S j,in8j ;ij(j digestion. i&c. The next examination of school teachers will be held on June 17th. Mr. Samuel B. George is having his two store houses, one occupied by Mr. H. M. Wiugard and the other by the dispensary, recovered with shingles. The name of Thomas H. Hughey of Peak, should*be added to the roll of the Newberry company, which has volunteered to fight the Spaniards. His name was uniutentially omitted from the roll by the State. The Seivern and KoDXville Railroad has been inspected and received by the Railroad Commissioners. So far the road is about seventeen miles long, from Seivern to Batesburg, where it connects with the Southern. Persons who are in arrears are reminded that if they are not coming to town, that the mails still continue to arrive and that a portioD, if not all, of their indebtedness can be saftly sent this way and will be greatly appreciated these dull summer times. Murray's Iron Mixture, the best Iron tonic made. Makes pure, rich blood. Pi ice 50c, large bottle. For sale at your Druggist. We were mistaken in saying that beginning on Wednesday after the fouith Sunday in this month, there would be preaching By the pastor of Baptist church every Wednesday, at 8 p. m. There vi:l be preaching there on every Wednesday evening after the fourth Sunday in each month. Mr. S. Luther Smith, a man who has faithfully discharged his duty to his country in time of war and peace and who has made one of the best County Commissioners Lexington has ever bad, aDa the first Supervisor under the constitution of 1895, was in town Saturday, stepping around as spiigbtly as a beardless boy in search of a wifeMany readers of the Dispatch will be pained to learn cf the death of CjI. W. II. Folk, which occurred at his home in Edgefield, on thel2inst. Mr. Folk practiced law at Batesburg in this county for a number of years and from thence moved to Edgefield. He is said to have been a lawyer of unusual ability and one of the most eloquent members of the Edgefield bar. Death cf Mrs.-Fannie Caughman. Mrs. Fannie Caughman, relic of Dr. H. I. Caughman, crossed the river of death on the night of the ISib, inst., in the 97th year of her age. She had been an invalid for years and bore her suffeiings with that patience and foititude which characterizes one who has made peace with God and trusted in his promises of a glorious resurrection beyond the grave. In her daily walk and conversation she beautifully exemplified the realities, f .Le doctrine she professed. Of loveable disposition, thoughtful for the comforts aidpleasutes of others, she was honored and esteemed by all. As the iufirmaties of age began to tell upon her physical endurance and she could no longer mingle amoDg her relatives and friends. She sought comfort, consolation and strength in communing with her Lord and Master through faith and prayer, and when the dread summons came to her she felt no fear for his rod and his staff supported her and with her death was swallowed up in victory, j As gently and as peace fully as a babe j ujonits mother's breast, she fell asleep on earth to awake in heaven Her mortal remains were laid away to rest in the St. Stephen's cemeteiy and her funeral services was conducted by the Lev. A. It. Mitchell, pastor of the church of the G^od Sheperd in Columbia. Masonic Notice. The regular communication of ! Pom aria Lodge, No. 151, A. F. M, 1 will convene in Masonic ball, Peak, S. C, on Saturday, May 28, at 8 o'clock p. m. Bretheren take due . | notice and attend promptly. -Tr>lm f KvvrrrArf Master. ff.Iunblt to Women. n?;>oetr!!y valuable to women is Browns' Ir :i Hitters. Backache vanishes, headache disappears. strength takes the place of wreknex, ant! t it?- jrl??\v of health readily eoines t<? the pallid eheek when this woneh rf"l remedy is taken. For sickly eliihlren or overworked men it lias no equal. Xohoiuc should i.e witliout this famous' remedy. Ji.-C.VL-'Iron Hitters is sold hy all dealers. WAR m Paragraphically Told for ths Bensfi: cf Busy Headers. The whereabouts cf the Oregon is still a secret. A company of regular engineers will go to Manila. Spain's finances are said to be iu an excellent condition. The Senate is still discussing the the War Revenue bill. It is said that Spain is despondent over the war situatiun. The battleship Oregon has not yet ' arrived at Key West, Fla. All cables between Cuba and Madrid have been disconnected. The sixty ninth New York regiment left for the South today. Dewey has Manila bottled up safely and is maintaining a strict blockade. Twenty-one transports are at Tampa waiting to take troops to Cuba. RoosevOt's regiment of rough riders has began its movement eastwards. The Governor has give the State companies until Thursday night to recruit. The Phillipine revenues are to be collected by the Vuited States authorities. Furious cannonading was reported fmn the eastern extremity of Cuba on the 23d. The Red Cross hospital ship is to follow the American transport lleet into Cuban waters. It is stated that a steamer leaded with arrffe and ammunition at Mobile on the 23d, for Cuba. No authentic Dews relating to the movements of American and Spanish fleets is now given out. Hilton's Iodoform Liniment will kill the poison from poison Ivy, counteract poison from bites of snakes, stings of insects. In a sure cure for sore throat. Will cure any case of sore mouth. 23c. The President has appointed John Gary EvaDS, to be Iuspector General with the rank of Major. ^ The staff of Major General Fitzhugh Lee has been announced. No South Carolinian is on it. The Cubans are fighting their way to the coast, where they will join with our forces of invasion. South Carolina's quota of troops is nearly full, only three companies lacking their completement. Spain is said to be manning Alegciras, a stronghold opposite Gibraltar. It is said to be almost impregnable. Gen. Lee passed through Columbia this morning enroute for Tampa, Fla. He received an ovation everywhere. Report has it that American warvessels are sailing under Spanish flags for the purpose of deceiving the Spaniards. S. M. Goary, Pierson, Mich., writes:?"DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve is curing more piles here today than all other remedies combined. It cures eczema and all other skin diseases." J. E. Kaufmann. Our heavy artillery boys will be 11 'il- 11-, 1 J!?4 conneciea witn roe Auanca uivison but will probably be assigned to duty at Poit Royal. Thirteen hundred volunteers from the Tar Heel State, passed through Columbia Sunday, enroute for Jacksonville, Fla. The location of the flagship of the blockading fleet on the North coast of Cuba, is a secret and the blockade thorough. A terrible submarine explosion in the Yucatan channel shocked the American ships, hurling men to the decks. No damage was done. The Spanish reserve fleet is reported to be mano'avering in Cadiz ! waters aud will remain there until j its destination is decided upon. S. E. Parker, Sharon, Wis, wiites: "I have tried De Witt's Witch Hazel Salve for itching piles and it always stops them in two minutes. I consider DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve the greatest pile cure on the market." J. E. Ivaufmann. The review of volunteers at Chick- | amauga, Monday, is said to have ' been grand and inspiring. There j were nine thousand troops in line. It is said the South Carolina maiines will man an auxiliary cruiser. They will go to Brooklyn navy yard and take charge of the Celtic King. Repotts from State camps to Adjutant General Corbin show that 112,000 out of the call for 125,000, have been mustered into the volunteer army. Several leading dealers on the I -1 rf i 1 l' 1 : 1 I ? I -LrJDdOD OCOCK J\xcnauge aiu saiu l-j i be in possession of the advance news l of the forthcoming announcement of j a Franco-Spanish alliance. It is reported that Admiral Samp- j .'on has again destroyed Cervera's j | squadron, in the Windward passage j while another report has it that i Cervera is still at Santiago. IMBBl ' ALWAYS KEEP ON HAND f 0 THERE IS NO KINO OF PAIN OR 0 3 ACHE, INTERNAL OR EXTERNAL, 0 THAT PAIN-KILLER WILL NOT RE- 0 0 LIEVE. 0 T LOOK OUT FOR IMITATIONS AND SUB- J j J STlTUTES, THE GENUINE BOTTLE \ r BEARS THE NAME, ? ? PERRY DAVIS A SON. ? Since the establishment ot the press censorship nothing definite has been given out for publication, and , all the war news now is nothing but surmises and conjectures. The following are some of the States from which naval recruits j have been secured: Virginia, 255: Xorth Carolina, 95; South Carolina, 115: Georgia, 17, Florida, 113. While it seems that South Carolinians are slow in responding to the President for volunteers, yet when we remember that 45 per cent, of those who responded have been rejected, it will be seen that we were not so slow after all. Mr. Freeman Halstead, an American newspaper correspondent, has been sentenced by the Spaniards at St. Thomas, West Indies, to nine years' imprisonment for taking photographs of the fortifications of San Juan de Porto Rico. Representative Robbins, of Pennsylvania, has resigned his seat in Congress and has been given permission to go to the front with the rank of Captain and Assistant Quartermaster General. A British steamer has been seized by the United States auxiliary gunboat Osceola off Carryfoot light house, because she was acting in a suspicious manner. She had a cargo of cattle and was bound for Mexico. The first expedition is said to have embarked at San Francisco on the 23J. The City of Peking carried 59 officers and 1,044 men; the City of Sidney, 24 officers and G70 men: the Australia, 37 officers and G7G, all for Manila. % It is said that the United States has GO warships, battleships, cruisers, (armored and protected), gunboats, monitors, scout boats, dynamite cruisers and tugs, of which eighteeu are under Sampson; twenty under Watson and Remy; seven under Schley, and fifteen in general service. Hcm9 Marriage. Married, Wednesday, May 18,189S, at the residenceof the bride's parents, by the Rev. J. G. Graichen, Mr. N. D. Lee, of Bedford City, Ya., to Miss Rosa Meetze Harman, of this place. This was a quiet but beautiful home wedding in which manliness and beauty were united by the golden bands of love and happiness. The groom is a gallant son of a gallant State and comes from a long line of noble ancestry. Mrs. Lee is the eldest daughter of Capt. M. D. Harman, and by her beauty, vivacity, gentleness and charming grace endeared herself to us all and made her veey popular. At the appointed hour the parlor began to fill with the friends of the family who had been invited to witness the pleasing ceremony and at the announcement of the approach of the leading actors in the second scene of the drama of life it, was filled to its utmost capacity. The fair bride was handsomely arrayed in a lovely gown of white silk and carried in her hand a cluster of white lillies. Her bridesmaids, Misses Vinnie Harman and Lena Harman, were be comingly attired in white organdie gowns. The groomsmen were Messrs. Arthur F. Harman, a brother of the bride, and Thomas Rotan, a fiiend of the groom from Saulisbury, X. C. The bridal gifts were numerous, handsome and costly. The hoppy young couple remained with us until Monday receiving the congratulations and sincere wishes of numerous fiiends for their future happiness and prosperity, when they took the Southern train for Saulisbury, X. C, where an infair will be given them by the friends of the I groom in that city. From thence j they will go to the home of the I groom in Bedford City. A large number of the friends of j the bride went to the depot at this place to bid her good-bye. Lexington's loss is Bedford City's j gain and it is with regret that we | have loss Mrs. Lee, and will miss her ! from our social circle where she was j a leader and a general favorite, and from our religious circle in which she took an active interest; but in her new home and among new friends j ' * i - x - f ! she will win tier way to me ncans ci . all. May happiness and prosperity at- { tend them in all their undei takings j and their journey adown the stream j of time be filled with pleasantness < and peace. - j Success?Worth Knew!ng. 40 year's success in the Rontb, p-r.ve? ! Hughes'Tonic a great remedy for C'/J/s j aud all Malarial Fevers. Better than t nine. Guaranteed, try it. At druggists ii )c, and $l.ofj bottles. I Iteins fr:n the Hilton S:c:::n. To the K-Jitor o? the Dispatch: The dread < f small \ ex and talk cf,! the war arc the topics Wheat crops arc g?,od and farmers say they are goii.g to depend on the Hour hantl at ho toe in the future. Mr. j?. J. D<nick is driving away all sonow an?l has welcomed the rejoicing, from the fact of his having purchased an organ, from which tLe i praises ascend. Mr. J. W. Derrick, the sou of J. J, has been able to work for some time. Mr. Derrick lias one more case of small pox in his family at present. Mr Willie Ivoon k-ft last Monday y \ to enlist us u volunteer in tie Cuban j war. \V. H. H. is fond of music. That's light Mr. Ililler, sow wild outs in your youthful da) s. The small pox is about to break up our holy service. C. If. Hick ley has erected a dwelling near here. Charley will soon finish his cage. He says the trap is set and he is sure of the bird if tLe bender dees not break. The people of the old Dutch Foik are now talking of old time hog and hominy, home ll <ur, hoccakes and ' riz" biscuits, and the return of tLe once familial hum of the old spinning wheel. Mr. lb ]>. Hilb-r, our thriving merchant, is now enjoying a "middle"' in his hand. Mr. M. S. Bickloy lias been the | faithful mail rider from "Wessinger's to Irmo fur some time and he has made himself popular by his promptness and courtesies along the route. Mr. Editor, I tl Lk you will soon get to announce some candidates from this side of the river. May God add his richest blessings to Dispatch and its craft. Bonny. ? ?? * +? ?- ? Dan't Neglect Voar Liver. Liver troubles quickly result in serious complications, and the man who neglects his liver has little retrard for health. A bottle of Browns'Iron Bitters taken now and tln-n uiil keep the liver in perfect order. If the dison-e has developed. Browns'Iron Bitters ;vi!l o'jro ii pornianontly. Str? n-_riIi ami vitality ? v. ?!! always fuiiow its n-<*. I iirowi).' Iiou Uittcrd is sold, by all dc-alcrs. List we<?k there was a c< llision with a section of a train carrying the trccps from Missouri, in which one soldier waski.lrdand several wounded. Another collision happened .Monday to the trains carrying the North Carolina troop', in which one was killed and several wounded. The Coroner's jury l as fixed the blame for the latter collision upon the conductor, engineer and flagman of the freight train, who, it is claimed, were asleep and did not notice that another train was to follow. The independent battalion of volunteers has been removed from the Fair grounds in Columbia to a grove near Sbandon, where they are now in camp. Col . Blandiug. of Sumter who has in charge of the Palmetto regiment flag which waved over our boys in Mexico, presented this flag to this battalion. Maj. Thompson iu accepting it promised to defend it with their honor, blood and life. Hew to Call Companios. There are no such commands row as the Abbeville Volunteers, Butler Guards, Sumter Light Infantry, etc. When once a company is mustered into the service it loses its home name and i6 known by letters. The designations of the companies mustered up to date are as follows: FOR THE REGIMENT. Former Name Army Letter. Abbeville Volunteers A Newberry Guards B Anderson Volunteers C Chester Guards D Lee Light Infantry E Greenville Guards F Catawba Rifles G Butler Guards H Richland Volunteers I UjI. J. iv Atsion commauuiug. In speaking of a company it would | be proper to say (for instance the I Richland Volnuteers) Company I, First Regiment South Carolina vol unteers. FOR THE INDEPENDENT JJATTAI.ION. Darlington Guards A Sumter Light Infantry B KJisto Riflc-s C Mauning Guards D Maj Tiiompsou commanding. If an army officer or u newspaper reporter in writing of a battle desired to allude to the Sumter LigLt Infantry that company would be designated as Company B independent battalion of South Carolina volunteers. Cut these designations out and keep them for reference. A ganon of PUBE UNSHED OIL mixed I BEST PAIN 1 ["in til e WO,'1 IL I? for fc. 10or a* QWf. SomsSjS&^ | of your pair.t bill. Ts r\n arr.nr DmAr-tit than Pure j White Lead and is Abscix'tkey not poisonous. | IIammar I'aint is made ?f th- Bi>t Paint .Ma- ' TEniALs--sucli us all tr? < > 1 paitiWs ?:-? . ami is | ground Tnicic. very Thick. No trouble to mix, any l<oy ran do it. It : the Common Sense of House Paint. No liETTEr. pain: can be made at any cost, Uriah? Not to Crack, Buster. PnKLorCinp. F. HAMMAR PAINT CO., St, L0tii9, Mo. j So!<l and b"i.ira::t'.*rrd by Tiilisiii Kniii*in.;inn, j rn a is M A/ i>I:.\I.i:U r\" Paints, Oils, Glass, Etc.! M rich .Hi?Hm. McNulty's NEW SHOE STORE. We have removed into our new quarters, No. MjOMain street, next door to Wright's Hotel, and are fast getting in position to serve our friends and patrons with a fine line of SHOES. THINKS AM) TRAVELLING BAGS, EVERYTHING NEW AND UP TO DATE. w. e. Xe.rt to llri'/lifs Hotel, COLUMBIA, S. C. October 13?dm. "BEST YET." Wards, S. C., March 7th, 1898. . Rock Hill Buggy Co , Rock Hill, S. C. Dear Sirs: In behalf of your latest spring "Rest Yet", we think it is cor recny mimed. We tlnuk it is by far the best spring we know of. Its ease in riding surpasses all others. Its durability is unquestionably the best. Our friends and customers speak very highly of it. Yours truly, " JAS. A. SATCHER & SON. "BEST RIDING." \ Hickory Grove, S. C., March 7,1898. Rock Hill Buggv Co, Rock Hill, S. C. Dear Sirs: I have tried your "Best Yet" spring and find it the best riding bu<jgy I have yet used. Please send me two more of them. Yours truly, J. B. MARTIN. ROOK HILL BUGGY COMPANY. For .Sale by AV. II OOF, I^exingrton, H. C. H. J. GREGORY & CO., Donly & Sease, Columbia, S. C., Lewiedale, S. C., MATTHEWS & BOUKNIGHT, May 11?ly. Leesville, S. C., I)RS. I). L.. liOOZEJl & SONS, 1515 MAIN STIIEET, COI-UMBIA, s. I'lioiSE a:i(i. One of the firm will fill appointments at Thnrsday, Friday and Saturday before the Second Snnday of <ach month. Except July and August when there will be no appointment For months of February, June and September Court Week will take the place of the regular apj ointment. Loxiuffton Oflioo, ovor Knuiiiiunn^ Drug1 Stor?, YOU WANT To know where to buv Plows. To know where to buy Hames, 1/ ' HAME STRINGS, CLEVISES, LAV RINGS, IIOES, AXES, all kinds of FARM IMPLEMENTS, COLLARS, BLINDS, BRIDLES, HARDWARE for Your Houses, SHOE NAILS, HORSE AND MULE SHOES, TINWARE AND WOOD EN WARE, STEWART & PRENTISS, IS2b MAIN STRhtT, COLUMBIA, S. C. October 2S. lvr. DRY GOODS, MILLINERY AND FANCY GOODS. We wish to call the attention of the People of Lc-tin^ton to the fact that we now keep a lull line of Dress Goods in Black and Golors> The best values for the money can be found at onr store. We have Dress Goods from 5 cents per yard up. THE BESTCAXICOESocperyd. Fast Dyes -ANDROSCOGIN MUSLIN, only C cnets. LADIES' CAPES. We have the best values in tli city. Cloth Capes from 75 cents to $15.00. Plush Capes $ J. 00 to $15.00. MILLINERY OUR SPECIALTY. We can ?ive yon Trimmed and Untrimmed Ilats at your own price. Give us a call when in town and be convinced. N. W. TRUMP, 1517 MAIN ST., COLUMBIA, S. C. October 13 -ly. LORICK & LOWRAlfCE, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN Choice Groceries, If you can't come to see us, write us a postal card for prices on anything you can think of in the Grocery line. We will answer you promptly. Our price list for California Evaporated Fruits is now ready. JftyOur piicc list for Staple and Fancy Candies is now ready. trSTOur price list for Fireworks is now ready. A postal card brings them to your door..ito# HARDWARE AND CUTLERY. Ileathiutirlcrs for FiflilftwamKiarihiMs. Wholesjjle :iud Ii<kt;til I>o|)of for Faints, Oils, Varnishes and Glass. LORICK & LO WRANCE, COLUMBIA, G. C. Jan. 1.?1 v.