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to supply you] /SB./ ~ I II1& Ready made^ JjlW JlTnil $10.00, $12.00, limifm J i1i1I\m ored Suit* and ^ MiLin IQ- PENCIL AITS SCZSSOBS. Wayside Notes Gathered Here and There by a Oisoatch Man. Mr.' W. P. Roof spent Sunday at Baxter. ' * * Mr. J. E. Barre attended the Lutheran Synod in Augusta last week. "" ^ ? W T] Sweet) nonaa urates ? ?. ; - Harmsns. 'V Col. E. F. Strother, of Batesburg, was here Monday on legal business. i|'-' Mr. J. M. Craps is confined to his home with a case of LaGrippe. Buy a set of harness from The Lexington Department Store. Bead the Clerk's sales advertised in this issue. Valuable property will be sold next salesday. Miss. Jodie Caughman of Columbia visited relatives and friends in town S Saturday and Sunday. Please let us have your dues for the Dispatch. Everybody should settle I once a year. Dr. E. P. Derrick, who has been I under treatment at the Columbia I Hospital, has returned and resumed] his practice. The chain gang now numbers more M| convicts than ever it has before, so | |p|' reported. T k Bring your cotton and cotton/seed I to Lexington as the highest prices will be paid. , Mrs. Alma Geiger and son, Norman, I returned Sunday from a pleasant visit I to relatives and friends in Columbia. | A general stock of Turquoise ware I ? . consisting of cooking utencils, &c., at | : M. D. Hannah's. j It is rumored that a deep well will | soon be drilled on the court house j' * square for/the benefit of the public, i Mr. E. P. Shealy has been appoint- I ed magistrate for the third magisteri- I al district, vice, B. S. Mack, resigned. I A fresh lot of first patent flour of all I kinds just received atM. D. Harman's I and will be sold at lowest prices. For hay, grain or plantation sup- I plies go to T. B. Aughtry & Co's., I Columbia, and you will be treated all I right. j FOR SALE?Three or four bushels j of Chufas for seed. Apply at once to | Geo. W. Price, B. F. D. 5, Lexington, I S. C. lwpd. I Mr. Bun B. Swygert is doing a nice I butcher business at Brookland and, I judging from his pompous looks, he I certainly enjoys his own make of sau- I sage and meats. j A suit that suits at a price that I pleases! Let us take your measure | for an International Suit or Overcoat ] and make you happy. A full guaran- j tee goes with it. \ | E. G. Dreher & Co. I A new New Home Sewing Machine I for sale at a bargain, cheap for cash I or on easy terms. Apply at the Disvpatch office. ft WANTED?A white man with or urifchnnfc familv trt work on a farm: 412 per month and board. Apply to J. J. I I- . Seastrunk, R, F, D. 3, Leesville, S.C, , 4w2p 1 Jp^"Remember that the Dispatch Job Printing Office is prepared to do all kind of printing on short notice, at a very low price. Send in an order and we will please yon in price and workmanship. D. R. Haltdwanger, formerly with the Batesbnrg Advocate, is now with the Dispatch. He will shortly move his family here. His wife use to be one of us and we are all glad to get her back again. Souvenir post cards, comics, fancy flowers, scenes, etc., Lexington views. Pretty line of new and up-to-date cards at popular prices, at the Bazaar. Just received at Scott Hendrix's Fumiture Store a nice lot of felt mattresses and feather pillows, which can be bought cheap. Col. J. Brooks Wingard has resigned the office of Magistrate for this District. Mr. C. S. Bradford has been recommended by the Executive Committee for the place. There is always on hand a complete stock of hardware and groceries at The Lexington Department Store. Call when in need of anything in either line. FOR SALE ? White Wyandottes, (Duston Strain,) prize winners. Price for stock reasonable. Eggs in season. Write for particulars. 5 C. W. Cromer, Lexington, S. C. THE UNDER!: COURTEOUS TREAT f?. JfrS - V. ilG-G-EST AN] tifcyp.Z' '' i^'^y . ' . . -t-: v* - ? M OLUMBIA'S tment aglow with New Fall Goods We a r every want in onr line. ERT DAT IS BARGAIN DAT We sell the best at nnmatchable prices. 'TAILORED SUITDEPARTM ains in Ladies' and Misses Cloaks, Skirts, a: Skirts, at $1.50, $2.50, $8.50, $4.00, $5.CO a] , $15.00 and $20.00. ffTTTTR AT SPPfJTAL s. If you want a bargain don't fail to visit . Cloak Department. rEBY AND STYLISH HEAD W! id Children. We carry a very large assoi ent and cannot be excelled in value and stj The farmers are now preparing for their next year's crop in the way of farming implements, and they are reminded that the place to find everything ih this line at the very lowest price is at T. B. Aughtry & Co's., Columbia. Mrs. W. P. Roof returned on Sunday afternoon, after attending the sessions of the Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary Society in Augusta. She also visiised frienas at Baxter and Batesburg while away. When in need of wedding presents you will find shem at Scott Hendrix's Furniture, Store in the way of nice sets, clocks, rugs, rockers, &c. toilet Mr. H. M. Jumper, of Swansea, is the champion fox hunter of that section. He has already caught this season nearly twenty foxes, and the sound of his horn, familiar in those regions, cause the cunning fox to ramble cautiously. Are you looking for winter clothes? Then go to E. G. Dreher & Co., the only exclusive clothing and furnishing store in Lexington. There you get the best, whether its a suit of clothes or a collar at the same price you pay for inferior grades. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Derrick have issued invitations to the marriage of their daughter, Miss Kate, to Mr. JoHPmh Martin Oanehman on Wednes day evening, November 28thj at eight o'clock, the ceremony to take place at the home of the bride, Lexington, South Carolina. The Editor will be in the Fork next week to mingle with friends and to receive his dues for the Dispatch. Look for him and have your money for the paper. He continues to add new names to the list and he expects to find several in the Fork. Court. On Saurdav morning the criminal court came to an end, when the jury failed to agree in the Stockman case. After remaining out over night Judge Memminger ordered a new trial, and thus the matter goes over. The jurors were: B. N. Bodie, foreman, G. S. Cumalander, J. E. Wessinfer, Irvin Jumper, C. P. Derrick, no. B. Boberts, H. D. Harman, C. W. Chapman, I. N. Bickley, W. J. Gantt, J. A. Eleazer and S. P. Bickley. Mr. Stockman was charged with the murder of H. J. Hartley, on Dec. 29, 1905, and was represented by Mess. Graham & Sturkie and W. H. Sharpe,. and Solicitor Timmerman was assisted by Messrs Efird & Dreher and Ed. Asbiil for the State. The trial lasted for three days, twelve witnesses being sworn for the State and eighteen for the defense. The Common Pleas court opened up Monday morning with Judge Mem minger at his post and the Clerk and Sheriff ready for business. 1 The first business was getting the petit jury organized. There were many absentees and so that Wade F. Corley, Samuel Rikard, Justus Wingard and Jacob J, Schwartz were crawh to fill these vacancies. After disposing of minor cases the case of Mary E. Able as administratrix of the estate of Oliver C. Able, who was killed by a Southern Railway passenger train at Leesville just two years ago. The action is brought bv Thurmond & Timmerman and Gra ham for $21,000 damages, and E. M. Thompson and W. H. Sharpe represent the corporation. This case was tried at the last spring term when the jury found for the company, but ..afterwards Judge Hydrick set the Verdict aside, because he made an error in charging them, and ordered a new trial. The case is still in progress. \ Brookl&nd Notts Notes. Brookland, Nov. 11.?Mr. E. W. Shull has nearly completed his handsome brick building on Meeting street. Work on the Baptist church is progressing rapidly. The congregation of this denomination has had many misfortunes. The church was burned in a two fire years ago and the cornerstone for the new building laid last February. In September a windstorm blew down the church, which had been completed, and the people of Brookland bravely set to work again to build once more. Col. W. W. Haws has located a new bottling plant here and has commenced business.?The State Nov. 12. SELLING STORE. MENT. f ins Hat D BEST BARGAINS. IVEIMNi GREAT ie ready WOOL XJ] for Men, Women and Child warm, at great value. OUR CHINA AND CE EUT is one of the most attractive c ad Suits *n ^ Department a wonder! in chen necessaries of all kind. P Table cutlery, Decorated plab at 5c. and 10c.t and a great v? Table cutlery and fancy Japa our Tail- ment be of interest and p ear J, L, HIMI "COLUMBIA'S 6REA1 . Some parent? rush off and buy a child a pair of cheap shoes because the child wears out shoes fast. What stupendous folly!! Good shoes cost more than shoddy ones because they are made of leather, and there is nothing like leather. There never has been found anything to substitute for leather. T.J-iinlrincr tn cftvp In rvr ertmf parents will throw away a dollar. Pay enough to get a good shoe of the kind you want then hold us responsible for the wear. Misses Box Calf and Heavy Glaze Kid school shoes -$1.25 and $1.50. Childs of same $1.00 and $1.25. EHRLICH'S, 1643 Main St., ( aai g||dbljB C A 1627 Main St., 1 uULUSHDIAj di Ui For Sale. I will sell all of my corn, fodder, pea vines, cotton seed, one horse, one wagon, harness and other articles too numerous to mention on November 26th, at 10 o'clock a. m., at Oliver Addy's place two miles from Gilbert. Terms of sale ?cash. M. L. Kyzer. 2w3pd Final Discharge. Notice is hereby given to all persons intreseted that I will apply to Hon. Geo. S. Drafts, Judge of Probate, in and for the couny of Lexington, State of South Carolina, on the 22d day of December, 1906, for a final discharge as Administratrix of the Estate of J. Fred Jefcoat, deceased. Rachel Jefcoat, 4w5 Administratrix. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails, sold by Derrick's Drug Store. j EXPERIENCE. Years of Experience are at Your COMMAND. v / Successful experience has been ours and we want everybody who has eause to feel that there is anything the mat ter with their eves at all. to call and have us give them proper tests. THESE ABE NO CHANGES EOS EXAMINATIONS. CHARLES F. SENTZ, OPTICIAN, JEWELER, 1439 Main St., Columbia, S. C. Alway! i/l O O W B MAIN AND BLA 9L m 9 ? : DEPARTMENT^ tTDERWEAR I A GREAT CA . t ? i i 1 . L *11 t_. I ren, tne Kina mat win seep you where you can find the be* Oil Cloth, Linoleum Rugs OCKERY DEPARTMENT gan Rugs 30x60. Price 98 >f our Department Store. We show OUR MEI * Z?L is the largest in Columbia Agate ware, iln ware, Glass ware, Furnishings for Men and 38, cups mid saucers bowles, etc., ^ aud ^nmisl,it ^ unety of fine glass and China ware. 6 e nese ware. A visit to this depart- SHO] fitto_a For Men, Women and Ch LI A IiriV O rn that please the closest buj \\\M & III.. J"! NEW DEES We are offering great \ II DEPARTMENT STORE. new weaves and stylish d: I * Babcock Buggies, Hackney Bug Columbia XX Av?m I And plent; OLD HICKOR Are First in the Heart GREGORY-CONDER 1113-1115 Plain Str< 1 Lexington Sa I LEXINGTON, | Oldest Bank in Lexington Goui I DOES - A - GENERAL m Accounts Invited on Favon m Bate of 5 Per Cent Allowed in t t / / Wells! Wells!! ?" ON TUESDAY, N RERLEY ft KYZER 27?1906' ^ginning a DCfflLCI tt liiun9 we yrtl sell at put THE - WELL - MEN. the estate of Williai as follows: One hors< If you want to do well, be well and ?m ment? look well, get Berley & Kyzer, Lexing- kitchen furniture, 1 ton, S. C., to put you in a Terra Cofcta melodian and a vast Well wliich will give you pure water. books, merchar _ . . , . , . . , ^ ary goods, hardware, Our prices are right, our work is right. laud; containing 50 a Give us a trial and be convinced. lying two and a lia ? Gilbert, on the old 1 SCHOOL BOOKS are positively sold ' \v. t. uraps piace. for cash. Harman's Bazaar. Oct. 29, 1906?3w3] COLUMBIA'S SMAI s Visit nr-Q nEl O. NDING STREETS. ? ? n BDR HIM iStK OAKS, SUITS THE STOl : STORE A1 RPET DEPARTMENT = ;t at the right price. Matting, Carpet, -/ and Art Squares. Ask to see our bar- *] c. Both sides alike. W "S IS9 DEPARTMENT 1 , the Department abounds in the best fcfrjf \ Boys'. A great showing of Clothing W?J \ ^ . at Special Values. B<vJ ES ! SHOES!! W ?1 ? ildren, the kind that wears, and at prices Mr Wm S GOODS AND SILKS bargains in this Department?all the ress fabrics. i ? gies, Buggies, lies Buggies, Hickory Buggies, ? <i."U y UJL LlltJill. ? Y WAGONS s of Our Countrymen. MULE COMPANY, set, COLUMBIA, S. C. r * ' I ' ' ' . \ I vings Bank. ? pifal and Surplus $20,000. I able Terms. Interest at the M he Savings Department W. P. ROOF, Cashier. the 8US6Y FOR SALEF t 10 o'clock a. m. ? $48.00 : >hc outcry, to the Flpst-class leather quarter-top bug- ' srsonal property or gy guaranteed; set of single 11 Price, deceased, buggy harness, $8.00. j, one wagon, corn, Georgia Vehicle Manufacturing Co., eas, cotton seed, w. Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga. household and two organs, one quantity of good Notice, Trespassers, idise, consisting of TliiS is to notify all persons not to <sc. One tract ot or trespass in any manner ^ore 0f,. ss; whatever upon my lands. The law will It miles north ot positively be enforced against all tresLugusta road, near m. s. Metz. b. D. Price. Ballentine, S. C., Oct. 18. 4w2 ?d. JL PROFIT EMPORIUM. ' PROMPT ATTENTION. IE OF LITTLE PRICES. * \ I