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1~ !; t 2 ? | ENGRAVED V If A f WEDDING $ Call and see th< I The R. L. BR * * t In the Mas i % Colum | | Embossed Morn H * a a#***##*#**#****** H * P *' H t | &y 1 0 aMMMBBaggarngBBBBagi^^faa ? ?? ??? ^vvvmww i OUR $ Spring an 5 JL STT ^ /ll\ ? ^ Are here and ready fo: ^ Lexington friends j buy this Stock of ? i could protect our S van'ced prices. T S Shoes are made of S Quality the Best f E. P. & F. ^ 1710 Main Strei Ip, '* ' */v\.wwvwv ? southern f Unexcelled Dinin #l\ Tkw ahivII DII1Iim?M QIhah jjfk imuugii r unman vi?i|i ^ Convenient Schedule A For fall information consult nearest Southe rn R. W. HUNT, I /IN BROOKS MORGAN, A. Old Reliable Standard SHOES! Mt > Near a pair of our Konqueror Shoes Jand you can't go wrong. a i _i _.. I _ t oo ia omy uy COHEN'S SHOE STORE, 1636 Main Street, COLUMBIA, - - S. C. 1 I % | ? 4* ? $ ? ? * v v ? v' * * ? ? ? $ *S* 2 * u: ISITING CARDS f ,, I VND | j INVITATIONS. I ! 3 latest styles, at * J ? J fAN Company, I | * i oiiic Temple, * ^ bia, S. C. | ? * R ............... * k & V * Pi Dgram Stationery % 6 ft \ eft***#**##****#***** \ j * W ' t wmwvuj NEW ifl SnmmftT11 OES ?f? * r the inspection of our a . We had foresight to ^ >HOES last fall so we ^ Customers against ad- S Ve GUARANTEE our i SOLID LEATHER and 5 or the price to be had. S A. DAVIS, ^t, Columbia, S. C. \ SPOTLESS hashing Machines & Wringers The strongest. Looks as if it would last a life time. Easy to liaudle. Washes a tub of clothes in 5 to 10 minutes. The Elegant Light Running Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine the queen of them all. The New Home Machine is Ball Bearing. Best shuttle machine. Second hand machines. Needles for all machines. Attachments, shuttles, belts and the highest grade sperm machine oil, does not ruin your macliine. Repairing a specialty. Next door to Wm. Piatt's Drv Goods store. Come to see me. J. H, BERRY, L802 Main St., Columbia, S. C. 5r#5r,5r^^J( RAILWAY.^ \i> g Car Service, j; ing Cars on all Trains, }K is on Local Trains. ^ as to rates, routes, etc., Railway Ticket Agent, or vy ). P. A., Charleston, S. C. G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga. $>\ j^i ^h|* w. a QUICK. Lexington, - - S. C., DISTILLER and DEALER | in TURPENTINE. Will, at all times, pay hi ghest market prices for Crude, based upon Savannah quotations. SAW MILLS. LIGHT, MEDIUM AND HEAVY WOOD-WORKING MACHINERY FOR EVERY KIND OF WORK ? ENGINES AND BOILERS S AND SIZES AND FOR EVERY CLASS OF SERVICE. H ASK FOR CUR ESTIMATE BEFORE PLACING YOUR ORDER. GIBBES MACHINERYCOMPANY COLUMBIA, S. C. ??aw III I The Lexington Disnatch. i Wednesday, June 6, 1906. j Swansea Notes. To the Editor of the Dispatch: Miss Sallie Rast was the charming T~ ~4-n t- r. ?-l ^>1 if Fnl "<inrf\n norhv" IlU5Ut'55 cl L <JL UOll^llUlUL apivu |/wi. vj at her home last Tuesday evening. The entertainment which was provided was very unique and caused much merriment. Delightful refreshments consisting of lemon sherbert and cake were served during the evening. Miss Rast was ably assisted in receiving and entertaining her guests by her mother, Mrs. L. B. Rast, and sister, Mrs. W. H. Wannamaker. It was at a late hour that the young 1 people took their departure, and all went away voting Miss Rast a most charming hostess. Miss Isable Brooker has returned home for the vacation from Batesburg where she has taught for the past session. Misses Lilla and Annie Mae Gantt have been in Columbia on a visit for several days. Messrs. P. E. Hutto and W. H. i-liQ Cn'oneoa Pvf'ni. WILL iCyiCJCUWki U11V unuiiuvu Jk. j k..k ans at the meeting of the Grand Lodge in Sumter last week. Miss Annie Rich, of Colleton, is with her friend, Mrs. W. H. F. Rast, , now. Mrs. L. P. Smith has been quite sick but is sufficiently improved to be out again. 1 C. May 27, 1906. [Received too late for last issue.? Ed. Dispatch.] The Very Best Remedy for Bowel Trouble. Mr. M. F. Borroughs, an old and well known resident of Bluffton, Ind., says: "I regard Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy as the very best remedy for bowel trouble. I make this statement after having used the remedy in my family for several years, jl am never without it." This remedy is almost sure to be needed before the summer is over. Why not buy it now and be prepared for such an emergency? For sale by Kaufmann Drug Co. Happy and. Restful Vacation. It is certain you deserve it and have earned it. Your work has been hard. It has often been carried on under great discouragements. Often you have received but scant sympathy from the patron. All too often you have failed to receive a kind word and expression of good will and of a desire to co-operate with you. But you have done well. That should cheer your hearts and bring you the right to enjoy a period of rest. No doubt you have often been misunderstood and, in consequence, harshly judged. We all oto "Wrt rlnnht von often feel dis hartend. We all do. But you kept on with your work and you have done well?how well you may never know till you stand before the great throne of the Highest, and see some of the good fruitage of the good seeds you have sown. May you have a good time as you go back to the old home and the dear old folks. Think of us with pity during the plum time, the peach time and the watermelon time. Blessing upon each one of you! May peace and happiness fill your hearts.? Union Times. Cured of Blight's Disease. Geo. A. Sherman, Lisbon Red Mills, Lawrence Co., X. Y., writes: "I had kidney disease for many years and had been treated by physicians for twelve years; had taken a well known kidney j medicine and other remedies that were j recommended but got 110 relief until I began using Foley's Kidney Cure. The first half bottle relieved me and four bottles have cured me of this terribl^ disease. Before I began taking Foley's Kidney Cure I had to make water about fiftYuvn mirmfos. dav and nierht. and passed a brick-dust substance, and sometimes a slimy substance. I believe I would have died if I had not taken Foley's Kidney Cure." The Kaufmann Drug Co. Greens and Gaynor Again. Macon, May 31.?The United States circuit court of appeals today granted a supersedeas in the case of Messrs. Gaynor and Greene, convicted in Savannah of conspiracy to defraud the government in connection with harbor improvement work. This has the effect in staying the execution of the sentence imposed on them. Veteran Killed oy Sting of Bee. Spartanburg, June 1.?Mr. John H. Zimmerman, aged 60 years, died at his home this morning at 5 o'clock from the effects of a bee sting. Mr. Zimmerman lived at Cedar Springs, and while at work yesterday afternoon was stung on the lobe of the right ear. After walking for several steps he fell to the ground in an unconscious condition. When the bee stnnf Mr. Zimmerman he called out I ^TT ITIIII ? I I TT? ?.?W~I ? to his wife and she ran to his aid. Before she could reach him he- had fallen and outside of a few incoherent remarks made during the night, Mr. , Zimmerman never spoke again. When medical aid reached him he was black J in the face and was apparently sufferI ing from strangulation. Mr. Zimmer! man was carried ir.to his home and was attended by physicians all during the night. Every remedy known was administered to the sick man, but | death resulted at an early hour this morning. The attending physician stated that the stinger of the bee had penetrated to a blood vessel and that the poison from the bee had been so powerful that it caused death. Unknown Friends. There are many people who have used Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy with splendid results, but who are unknown because they have hesitated about giving a testimonial of their experience for publication. These people, however, are none the less friends of this remedy. They have done much toward making it a household word by 1 1 ? ^ ^ 1 +-/~v ineir persuuui xt"cuxxxxxxt-xxiuxnvxx;-> iv/ friends and neighbors It is a good medicine to have in the home and is widely known for its cures of diarrhoea and all forms of bowel trouble. For sale by Kaufmann Drug Co. ??? ? Babies Dead in Trunk. Kankakee, May 31.?After a four hour search for her three youngest children, Ida, aged 8, Roselle, 6, and Pearl, two years, Mrs. Adelard Van Slette found them last night dead in a trunk in an upper chamber. The children had been playing out of doors much of the day, listening to music and watching a martial display. Late in the afternoon they went into the house to continue romping. Supper time and Mrs. Van Slette's calls through the house and yard failed to bring any response. At last the mother observed an old fashioned trunk, from which the tray I "L - J 1 ,1 4-lr, ^ null OCSIl tilKtlll UIIU WclS IVlUg UH tuc bed. Mrs. Van Slette lifted the lid and saw her two babies lying on a pillow in the bottom of the trunk. Ida was sitting upright, her head droopl ing on her breast. The children were j so still that Mrs. Van Slette stood in sympathetic stillness for an instant. Then she put forth her hands and touched Ida, and spoke. Contact I with the girl's head and lack of response froze the woman with horror. The children were dead. ?- v * Two Persons Cremated. Seneca, June 1.?Joe Hudson, a respectable white man, and wife were burned to death last night about 3 o'clock at West Union, eight miles from here. It seems that the house was completely enveloped in the flames before the fire was discovered and the charred bodies of the unfortunate couple were found just as they lay in bed. They had been married about six months and the man was a hard worker. No one is suspected of burning tt?oo lrv> num tVi a f i tilt; JlUUSt', UUU 11 v? as Jiiiuii" uiuv ; Hudson usually carried money with him, a short time ago having been seen with $350 in his pockets. Some | think the couple were murdered and | the house then burned. m How to Break Up a Cold. It may l>e a surprise to many to learn that a severe cold can be completely broken up in one or two days' time. The first symptoms of a cold are a diy, loud cough, a profuse watery discharge from the nose, and a thin, white coating 011 the tongue. "When Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is taken every hour 011 the first appearance of these symptoms, it counteracts the effect of the cold and restores the system to a healthy condition within a day or two. For sale by Kaufmann Drug Co. Leaves from Black Creek. To the Editor of the Dispatch: Since we have had line showers crops have started off wonderfully, but cotton was so badly injured from the cold leaving bad stands that there need be no uneasiness of being an over production in this section. Our gardens are backward, no beans and potatoes as yet. Rev. M. J. Kyzer is with us again and wears that same broad smile. He preached for us at Oak Grove, Sunday before last, a very inieresting sermon ! from text: "Watch for you know not I the hour when the Lord cometh." On last Tuesdav the third infant of * Mr. and Mrs. Austin Jefcoat was laid away in Oak Grove cemetery to wait the summons "to come unto me." The funeral of all three was preached by Rev. Evans Hall, assisted by Rev. Keel of your town. We were glad to have brother Keel with us. After all the great efforts to have the trolley f?o on the ridge we are looking for it through this country now in the near future. So you see the still sow drinks the slop. Col. D. J. Knotts was with us on a business trip last week. Traveler. THOMAS i (.OPPOSITE POl sr TTTV /T"^. WHOLESALE AND ] Men, Women and My stock is large, was carefully selected both the city and country trade and S in style, shapes and toes, down ro the which are made of solid leather an market for the money. I want t child in Lexington county and offer some extraor Work and Dr Your are cordially invited to call at my s office, when in'the city, and I will tak< and explaining their merits. Polite will strive to please yc DR. W H. TIMMERMAN, U. : ' President. 1 niti7Qns Ranlr WHHfc-UIIW UUilll PAID UP CAPITAI E. F. STROTIIER, Attorney, Annonnces to the public that it is now all the conveniences and facilities of suc< modating terms. Deposits solicited. 4 j quarterly. Friends and acquaitances are Bank whether they have business or not; Directors?Dr. "YV. H. Timmerman, Dr. P. Timmerman, E. F. Strother, Isaac Ed"AT THE STORE T] We propose making record breaker, and i right by offering some bargains that we have before the trade. 25 dozen Misses' and Children's Satin [ Caps, satin lined, the 25c. kind, fori each 10c. j 25 dozen Ladies' 25c. Corset Covers, for each 17.1c. 10 dozen Ladies' 50c. Corset Covers, eacn 25c. I 5 dozen Ladies' 75c. Night Gowns only, I each 50c. i 25 dozen Ladies' 50c. and 75c. Waists to | close out at, each 30c. 25 dozen 50c. and 75c. Silk Baby Caps to close out at, each 25c. 50 Ladies* heavy black Stockings, the best ever offered tor, pair 25c. 20 pieces fine All-Linen Table Damask, some 72-inch wide. I 100 dozen Cotton Towels, the 10c. and 15c. kind, only, the dozen 89c. One lot of 10c. and 15c. Embroideries for, the yard 5c. One lot of 10c. and 15c. Laces for, the ! yard 5c. 100 Alarm Clocks, sold everywhere for $1.00, our price 59c. 55 only $1.50 and $2.00 Watches, for this sale, each 99c. 10 dozen large size Glass Pitchers, formerly sold at 25c.. now 10c. 500 pieces Fine Decorated Chinaware, worth 10c. each, now 5c. I 25 Men's $3.50 Silk Fancy Vests, now each $1.95 25 dozen Boys' Heavy 25c. Black Stockings, for this sale, pair 15c. 5 dozen Ladies'$1.50 Fine Black Sateen Waists for this sale 99c. | 5 dozen Men's $1.00 Silk Mufflers, for I fViw pjifli 50c. WM. F. Opposite the Theatre. COLUMI V. BOYNE, I 4 ST OFFICE.) ^ 3XA-, S- C.? 4 RETAIL DEALER IN J Children's Shoes, I with a view of supplying the demands of hoes from the most fashionable cnts i seviceable every day plow shoe, all of A i guaranteed to be the best on the 1 ^ o shoe every man, woman and to do this I am prepared to dinary bargains in ess Footwear. < tore 1736 Main Street, opposite the post 3 pleasure in showing you my stock attention will be given you and I J >u in quality and price. J I FINE BUCK lAHSSHAKS LARGE. HARDY. ^ jil&nest all round general ma purpose fowls. Good Winter Layers. SP Cockerels and Breeding r Stock for sale . F Cheap. * Eggs $1 per setting. j ^ RICE B. HARMAN, J w Lexington, S. C. V- ftTTNWT?, A n JONES Tice President. Assistant Cashier. ^ of Batesburg J STOCK, $30,000.00. BATESBURG, S. C. ' located in tlie new Bank Building with 3essfnl banking. Monies to loan anaccom>er cent, on time deposits interest payable > cordially invited to call on Officers of and see our institution. . M. U. Boatright, U. X. Gunter, Dr. W wards, W. K. Sliealy, J. F. Kneece. 1 HAT'S DIFFERENT." j the month of May a will begin the month mool TTT/^\-n rl OT?"Pn 1 W J. UJIXV/ 1JL1WU (J VV V11U.VJLXU1 ! yet been able to place J 15 dozen Men's heavy Fleece-Lined Undershirts and Pants, 50c. kind for this sale, the garment 37-}c. 25 dozen Ladies' 10c. Swiss Embroidered H andkerchiefs, for this sale, each 5c. * 5 dozen Ladies' 25c. Hose Supporters for this sale, pair 10c 500 yards All-Linen Table Damask, for this sale, yard 25c. 25 dozen Misses' 15c. fine Black Stock- j ings, for this sale, pair 11c. 100 only extra good Men's Umbrellas, for this sale, each 09c. 10 boxes 10c. Sweet Soap, for this sale, cake 5c. 1 pair regular 50 cent. Cutf Buttons for 25c. - i ^ - /mi # T^?i i if 2 regular 2oc. unma nucners ior zuc. 2 regular 25c. Butter Dishes for 25c. 2 regular 25c. Buggy Whips for 25c. 1 pair Ladies' or Gentlemen's Gloves, I the 50c. kind, for 25c. 15 yards Silk Ribbon, all colors 25c. 2 yards 25c. Taffeta Ribbon for 15c. J 5 dozen fine Pearl Buttons for 25c. 10 pair 5c. Shoe Strings for 25c. 2 pair 25c. Side Combs for 25c. -1 Ladies' 10c. Back Combs for 25c. 25 Gold Plated Collar Buttons for.. .25c, 10 spools best Spool Silk for 25c. 12 Ladies' 5c. Mourning Handerchiefs for 25c. 20 Spools Turkey Red Cotton ,25c. 2 pairs Men's regular 25c. Half-Hose * for 25c, Hundreds of other bargains for Spot Cash. Come to see us; look us over. Will be j glad to show vou through, FURTICK, "The Store That is Different. < 5IA, S. C.