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jg NOTICE TO RETAIL DEALERS, gg 69 We are now Jobbers for the COLUMBIA 69 mJLM MAWAAn *TITT rtA J - 4.^ VV JJJJ rnun uirxuirii tu,, ana ttXt? pi CU l/U JL U1JLIJLK/JUL | vl'v -'S2 g00^8 at Factory prices. S3 k This is a great saving in FREIGHT the bug-a- Irs jiff bear of the small Dealer. 35 Sz Write and let us show the profit that can be K made in a side line of Phonorgraphs. 55 a Stop in AHEAD of the OTHER man. ZS Are well stocked with Cylinder and Disc Ma- 35 chines and all size Records for both. Zs ^^ijrstturh w I Can supply ANYTHING for the Home, *** Our line of Carpets, Art Squares and Bugs aim- frjg ply can't be BEAT. . S3 Carpets. . 45 cents yd. up. X a Rugs 75 cents up. B9 Lace Curtains 45 cents up. ' JQQj ! Dinning Room Chairs 95 cents up. XX Dressess. |6.00 to $85 00. Q9 Sideboards... ~ $12.50 to $150.00. flR ~~gg | We are offering a handsome Bug, Velvet Bros- |p| sels, 36x72, regular price $2.50, for $1.39. Jw? Hive one $20.00 China Closet left that we will XX sell for $l?.95. SS This will go to the FIBST THAT SPEAKS. : XX I Pianos, Organs Sheet Music, Standard Patterns, Office Furniture,, etc. m THOMAS & BARTON CO 1 S9 706-708-710 Broadway, Augusta, Ga. SS figcgegegBgegegcgcgegea?aea I | EMfiRltED VISITING GIRDS | j I ! WEDDING INVITATIONS. | | f | Call an4see the latest styles, at * | I ] Hie R.LBBYAN Company, J I I * In the Masonic Temple, S I | Columbia, S. C. ? j J * Embossed Monogram Stationery | | I ?????????????????????????????????????? | I THE WHITE ROW SEWING MACHINE I.:-,; ; ? - ~ . i The design and finish of the stand is unexcelled. Nothing to equal it has yet appeared on the market. STEADY, SWIFT AND SURE. ^*' '* - -* 1 I -:'v 5 . * ... < Has a very large Bobbin?Holds more thread than any other. BALL BEARING, A LIGHT RUNNER?STRONG and durable. It is something new. (White SHUTTLE Machine has been in use twenty-five yearsfr)' >.. p The NEW HOME stands at the top of SHUTTLE macliines. I have the latest. Always on hand good Second Hand Machines. Needles for all macliines and machine attachments, shuttles, belts and the best pure SPERM OIL. i J. H. BERRY, 1802 Main Street, Columbia, S. C. i 4^ 5^ ^ \3V- ^ I5r ^ >0r oATTmiii?i)\T n HT w * V i'M WUI'niilUH Miunill. ^ Unexcelled Dining Gar Service, ; ^ i!? Through Pullman Sleeping Gars on all Trains, ^ Convenient Schedules on Local Trains, ^ For full information as to rates, routes, etc. if/ ittk consult nearest Southern Railway Ticket Agent or w .C i W E. W. HUNT, D. P. A., Charleston??. C ^ ^^BROOKS MORGAN, A. G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga. ^ BSHf" PARKER'S I ; ^ stomac^' a breath, a pasty HP1&&S HAIR BALSAM J i complexion and other consequences of a rttsmvsTMacitm** and, beautifies the n?ir. I disordered digestion are qaicklv remov- I * ,BTOKftat 1 < ncp-nf J? W? I J xuk/" W*-^h.To B?tor? a?w| uJJ Two days treatment free. Sold 1 ^he Kaufmann Drug Co, ' v r \ W -' ^ * * Jr ??*3 <- / :> .. . ^ 'V . ' , I The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, November 14, 1906. THESE IMMIGRANTS HOMESICK. Fifty of the Wittekind's Passengers Refuse to Work in Darlington, Where They Were Sent Monday. Darlington, Nov. S.?Claiming that the conditions here were not as had been represented to them by immi- I grationin their European homes, fifty of the immigrants who came over on the Wittekind and were sent to Darlington Monday, let here this afternoon for Columbia. These immigrants were sent to the Darlington at the request of Mr. C. C. Twitty, general manager of the Darlington Manufacturing company and president of the Hartsville Cotton Mills, to work in the cotton mills. After reaching Darlington they declared that they had been told that they would get $1.50 a day, house rent and board freer and would be allowed to cultivate free of rent for five years a small tract of land, the land to become theirs if they remained for that length of time. When they found that these condi' ' "1 II I? ?ilia tlOIlS Old not pre van m iuc muis ucic they concluded that they did not care to to stay. Mr. Twitty tried in every way to induce them to remain, but his efforts were unavailing. They would not spend the night in the houses provided for them nor would they go to restaurants and boarding houses, at which Mr. Twitty offered to defray their expenses until they could be sent elswhere, or until they cared to go to work. They said that they would accept no favors, and spent the night in the waiting room of the Atlantic Coast Line passenger station. This morning Mayo^ McCullough, Mr. Henry Hennig and other citizens opened negotiations with them, offering them all sorts of inducements tc get them to do work other than in the cotton mill, bnt all propositions were rejected. Hearing that some of their fellow immigrants were in Columbia, they left the station about 2 o'clock today to walk to that city, but Mayor McCullough headed them off and promised to give them transportation on the train tonight. This offer was accepted, and they left for Columbia on the 6.29 train tonight. They are ' / ! very home-sick, and declare they are j going back to their old homes, but it is hoped here that they will become satisfied and contented in Columbia, or wherever they may locate. Watson will Straighten Things. When asked last night over the long distance telephone as to the trouble at Darlington, Col. E. J. Watson, the State immigration commissioner, stated that he had only just reached Columbia himself, and while he had been informed of the arrival of the immigrants there on the train from Darlington last night he had not had an opportunity in make any close investigation. Col. Watson does not, however, attach any great importance to the matter, it is unfortunate, of coarse, oln-ot-a Via QOT'C ninrft fVP UUl' tlJC'Jl C 13 ai? aj> 3) uv guj u| less difficulty at first, until the strangers become somewhat accustomed to things and get adjusted to new ways of living. As to the immigrants being brought to this country through false representations. Col. Watson absolutely ? * repudiates any such suggestion. Col. Watson says that not only was he very careful himself not to paint any false pictures; not only was all the literature used by the department, conservative and truthful; not only were all the agents employed by the department instructed to tell prospective immigrants the exact truth, but he himself went about among the immioTants before the Wittekind sailed from Bremen and satisfied himself t 1 that they were acquainted with just what they might expect upon reaching this country. The immigrants who went to Darlington are Austrians. Col. Watson thinks that the whole' trouble is that they got up to Darlington, were cut off from anybody they knew and got frightened and very homesick. He expects to take matter up this morning and to quickly smooth out their j troubles for them, providing them with homes and work which they will find to their notion. ? News and Courier. In Time of Peace. In the first months of the RussiaJapan war we had a striking example of the necessity for preparation and the early advantage of those who, so to I speak, "have shingled their roofs in dry I weather." The virtue of preparation j has made history and given to us our j , greatest men. The individual as well ! , as the nation should be prepared for any emergency. Are you prepared to sue- . cessfully combat the first cold you take? ; A cold can be cured much more quickly j when treated as soon as it has been con- j tracted and before it has become settled 1 in the system. Chamberlain's Cougli Remedy is famous for its cures of colds and it, should be kent at hand ready for 1 instant use. For sale by Kaufmann Drug Co. So Tired It may be from overwork, but the chances are its from an In active LIVER.? With a well conducted LIVER one can do mountains of labor without fatigue. It adds ahundred per cent to ones earning capacity. it can be kept in healthful action by, and only by Tutt's Pills TAKE NO 3UB8TITUfE. BODY FOUND IN SEWEB Piece by Piece Remains of Man Turn Up. Birmingham, Ala., Nov. 8.?The remains of the body of an unknown man found in a sewer here, piece by piece, undoubtedly show foul play. The coroner's jury found a verdict of death by violent means at the hands of persons unknown. Eleven days ago the trunk was found near the mouth of a sewer south of Bessemer; later fragments of a leg turned up and Tuesday a foot incased in a newspaper was fished from a sewer near Brighten mills, a short distance from the sewer's mouth. Yesterday the skull was found in the sewer with every indication of foul play. Another leg and foot were found yesterday. There is no clue to the indentity of the murdered man. Sells More of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy than of All Others Put Together. Mr. Thos. George, a merchant at Mt. Elgin, Ontario, says: "I have had the lc^cal agency for Chamberlain's Cough Remedy ever since it was introduced into Canada, and I sell as much of it as I do of all other lines I have on my shelves put together. Of the many dozens sold under guarantee, I have not had one bottle returned. I can personally recommend this medicine as I have used it myself and given it to my children and always with the best results." For sale by Kaufmann Drug Co. Silled by Q-as. Chicago.-r-Two girls, Hannah Heiber, age 20, and Rose Stuper, age 20, are dead and two others are dying, as the result of a mysterious gas asphyxiation case at the German Hospital in Hamilton county. All of the young women were employed in the hospital a9 domestics and slept in the same room on the top floor. Early today employees of the hospital smelt gass and, broke open the locked door of the room, where the two girls were found dead and the other two unconscious. Wether the deaths are due to a suicide pact or not, i9 not known. 1 Had a Close Call. "A dangerous surgical operation, in volving fche removal of a malignant ulcer, as large as my hand, from my daughter's hip, was prevented by the application of Bucklen's Arnica Salve," says A. C. Stickel, of Miletus, W. Va. "Persistent use of the Salve completely cured it." Cures Cuts, Burns and Injuries, 25c. at Kaufmann Drug Co. druggist. To Serve a Lunch to Veterans. The members of Camp Hampton auxiliary and of the .Wade Hampton chapter U. D. C., held a joint meeting yesterday afternoon at the residence of Mrs. Legare. It was decided that t lese two bodies serve a lunch to the veterans attending the unveiling of the Hampton monument on November 20. I, is hoped that the lobby of the capi13l can be obtained for this purpose and the lunch will be served before the ceremonies. Made Happy for Life. Great happiness came into the home of S. C. Blair, school superintendent, at St. Albans, W. Va., when his little daughter was restored from the dreadful complaint he names. He says: "My little daughter had St. Vitus' Dance, which yielded to 110 treatment but grew steadily worse until as a last resort we tried Electric Bitters: and I rejoice to say, three bottles effected a complete cure." Quick, sure cure for nervous complaints, general debility, female weaknesses, impoverished blood and malaria. Guaranteed by Kaufmann Drug Co. drug store, Price 50c. * i? ii -i ?* ? 7 - r\ Are you troutuea wuu put^.- vjue. application of ManZan will give you immediate relief. Sold by The Kaufmami Drug Co. Never lend yourself to the borrowing of trouble! A cold taken at this time of the year is generally hard to get rid of but it will not- be able to withstand Bee's Laxative Honey and Tar. That will cure all colds, coughs, croup, whooping cough, etc., by driving them our through the bowels. If you have a cold, try it and if not cured get your money back No opiates. Sold by The Kaufmann Drug Co. Many shady reputations ax*e due to the casting of reflections. Tone the liver, move the bowels, cleanse the system. Dade's Little Liver PiUcs iimrur o-rnrkQ Slnlrl Vvv Tllft TCfttlf X. XXXV? XXV/ * V/X ^Aljk/Vi J ? **>/ maim Drug Co. | THOMASi (OPPOSITE PO cox-tjzmie WHOLESALE AND Men Wnmen and iliuilj IV UU1U11 U11U My stock is large, was carefully selected both the city and country trade and ? in style, shapes and toes, down to th< which are made of solid leather an market for the money. I want 1 child in Lexington county and offer some extraoi Work and Di Your are cordially invited to call at my s office, when in the city, and I will tak and explaining their merits. Polite nr-ill offitro fn nlooaa tTt ft DU4XVU W |/AVUOU J DR. W H. TIMMERMAN, U. President. Citizens Bank PAID UP CAPITA] E. F. STROTHER, Attorney, Announces to the public that it is now all the conveniences and facilities of sue modating terms. Deposits solicited. 4 ] quarterly. Friends and acquaitances ar Bank whether they have business or not Directors?Dr. W. H. Timmerman, Dr P. Timmerman, E. F. Strother, Isaac Ed NEW GOODS "AT THE STORE T. We propose making 1 record breaker, and ' right by offering some bargains that we hart before the trade. 25 dozen Misses' and Children's Satin Caps, satin lined, the 25c. kind, for each 10c. 25 dozen Ladies' 25c. Corset Covers, for each .17^c. 10 dozen Ladies' 50c. Corset Covers, eacn.... 25c. 5 dozen Ladies' 75c. Night Gowns only, each 50c. 25 dozen Ladies' 50c. and 75c. Waists to close ont at, each 39c. 25 dozen 50c. and 75c. Silk Baby Caps to close ont at, each 25c. 50 Ladies' heavy black Stockings, the best ever offered for, pair 25c. 20 pieces fine All-Linen Table Damask, some 72-inch wide. 100 dozen Cotton Towels, the 10c. and 15c. kind, only, the dozen S9c. 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 81.50 and 82.00 Watches, for this sale, each 99c. 10 dozen large size Glass Pitchers, formerly sold at 25c., now 10c. 500 pieces Fine Decorated China ware,! worth 10c. each, now 5cJ 25 Men's $3.50 Silk Fancy Vests, now each SD95 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' this sale, eacli 50c. i Opposite the Theatre. COLUMB V. BOYNE, >ST OFFICE.) 3I-A-, S. C., RETAIL DEALER IN Children's Shoes, with a view of supplying the demands of Shoes from the most fashionable cuts 3 seviceable every day plow shoe, all of id guaranteed to be the best on the to shoe every man, woman and . to do this I am prepared to :dinary bargains in ess Footwear, ifrttKi 1 7QA "Wain Sf-raof nrirv-vcrifn fV?a TV\afc IIVA ^ A ' iUiMiAJk WViVVUj V^Jk/VA74W Vi*V e pleasure in showing von my stock attention will be given yon and I on in qnalifcy and price. ? i X. GUNTER, A. C. JONES, Vice President. Assistant Cashier. of Batesburg L STOCK, $30,000.00. BATESBURG, S. C. located in the new Bank Bnilding with cessfnl banking. Monies to loan an accomoer cent, on time deposits interest payable e cordially invited to call on Officers of and see oar institntion. . M. U. Boatright, U. X. Gunter, Dr. W .wards, W K. Slieaiy, J. F. Kneece. EVERY DAY, HAT'S DIFFERENT." the month of October a will begin the month of the most wonderful i yet been able to place 4 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 Handkerchiefs, 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 ings, for this sale, pair 11c. 100 only extra good Men's Umbrellas, for this sale, each 99c. 10 boxes 10c. Sweet Soap, for this sale, cake 5c. 1 pair regular 50 cent. Cuff Buttons for 25c. 2 regular 25c. China Pitchers for 25c. 2 regular 25c. Butter Dishes for..,. .25c. 2 regular 25c. Buggy Whips fori 25c. 1 pair Ladies' or Gentlemen's Gloves, the 50c. kind, for 25c. 15 yards Silk Ribbon, all colors 25c. 2 yards 25c. Taffeta Ribbon for 15c. 5 dozen fine Pearl Buttons for 25c. noir Qtrnicrc fnr IV */Vs. KJJ11VV KJlllUgO iVVV. 2 pair 25c. Side Combs for 25c. 4 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 glad to show you through, "The Store That is Different. IA, S. C Slumber Peacefully Tver the lumber question. We have solved it. The best value for every one's money is in our yard. There is every variety of "rm JU U ^YLI5Jii?t used here in the trade and the pries :it which we sell will gladden tho heart of the man who is figuring on a contract, We are headquarters for Doors, Sash and Blinds md especially ask the people of Lexington :o call on us "for their doors and Sash. N. H. DRIGGERS. Corner Lady and Gadsden Street, COLUMBIA. S. C. Phone 185. \