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^ME^'l-l " I 1 |T0 01M v^lj We wish to thank our f patronage in the past in the j "?7* <! onpc WorrAno TTarnoes Afrv || II JUL llVl UVUU^ VVVIJ -^j; We beg to inform them that < iVb;j line of Merchandise, Standar* have a select line of fe v p|i Dry Goods, Notions, Sho And our prices will be found SS-'l share of your trade.' |i RE?VES-Wm PAre Yom G r<"n .-9 r .-8 -i l: 4% ? - * [t:;i# l-M'- * i* ' -' ^ I FURN By H| We have every article in this lii III ; Installment, are the very lowest W HI gtving them just what they want at H erate What we carry in stock, but we r < v- see us, you will find any kind of Fur J "Bed Room, Dining Room or Kitchen I- ypu read this advertisement and be s r mmm I 1208 Main Sfree 19< Sfino' a1 Vk S She of le for dress and ev Farmers' media ; 1 work Shoes a s] if- : x v-i_ f may depend thai %he best Shoes that can be bought and at SEE OURS BEFORE TOU BI E. P. & F. A. I 1710 Main Street, Columbia, S. ?? . _ 1 ' frnOUSE PAIN I Good Paints, Cheap Paints, fine lastii I We want your orders, and mail orde I shipped the day received. We er< I the lowest price you can get anywhe I cards free. I Shand Builders' Suppl SIS Hampton St., Columbia, S. C. - - Phones ! 1 ? ' ? rsBSSBffi-B ftj v NEW BROOKLAND, S. C. w * We Want your business. It is our desire to pi 1 91 **ur lkl*n#y ^ you need K. Wo pay 1 6"j*0*CV?IUUtD, L. *. i |jg *** y VHl Wultont > * s x ' * # IS CUSTOMERS I =^== gw riends and customers for their purchase of Mules, Horses, Bugand solicit the same in the future- j >n Feb. 1st we will open a general i Fertilizers, etc., and will also es, Hats, St Groceries, Hardware, etc. '|f; as low as the lowest. Give us a ? ; SUPPLY CO., I F LEXINGTON, II II olng to Buy ITURE! ' le, and our prices, either for Cash or re take pride in serving our customers, prices that suit. It is useless to enttmassure you, if you will only drop in to niture you may" need for your Parlor u Think of us while at home when ure to call when in Columbia. [ FUME CO. it, Columbia, S. C. I want to shake hands n JS | with every man, woman or boy in this ummer neighborhood who helps II sell harness. I believe the mule m \0 W has a hard time and am others to suit trying to make him ery day wear. comfortable by making m and heavy comfortable harness. I jecialty. you make everything from t we give you a gee gj.rap a }j0rse a small profit. coUar and make it as ^ good as I know how. DAVIS, Let us help the mule I - Wilse W. Martin MAKER OF HARNESS T 5 ! j1 018 Plain Straal I COLUMBIA, t : : S. C. ng colors. rs will be I BALL. P. C. PRICE a quoting I COMMUNITY SILVER. re. Color Table ware that will wear, and give you perfect satisfation. r Pn Tm Snoont ?2 half doz V llUii | Dosssrt Spoons or Forks $3.50 h d ? H Table Spoons or Forks $4.50 h d 26i and i45i Knivos $3 to $7 half doz When you bay plated table ware, get the best there is ?? COMMUNITY SILVER. For sale by ANK if A. H. BALL & CO., Ill JEWELERS, Z&S * 637 Main Street, Columbia, S. C. j ease, lieave yM Repairing a apeeiaity. interestr tour m jsj] Man Zan Pile Remedy, Price 50c is TROTTt 4Ic guaranteed Put up ready to use. One Kaufmann Drug Oo. The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, April 8,1908. Pelion School Closing. To the Editor of The Dispatch: The Pelion Public School had its closing exercises last Friday night, April 3rd. One of the speakers, Prof. L. T. Baker of the University of South Carolina, was not present due to missing train connection. After a short prayer by Mr. Josh J. Shealy, there was four declamations rendered by the following students: Mr. Branson Holley whose subject was, "Blessings in Disguise;" Mr. Ralph Clayton, "Patrick Henry on Liberty"; Mr. Henry Laird, "Lee's March to Appomatox" and Mr. Sammie Gardner, "Vacation Time." The teacher gave a medal to the one that delivered the best declamation and after a very close contest the judges decided that Mr. Ralph Clayton had won and Mr. J. D. Haltiwanger in a few well chosen remarks presented the medal. Prof. Henry P. Stuekey, of Winthrop College, was next introduced. He spoke on the subject of 4'Agriculture and School Gardens for the Public Schools." After briefly discussing our dependence upon, and relations towards, plants, animals and the soil, he discussed at more length the value of having elementary agriculture taught in our schools and school gardens connected with these schools. The next and last speaker was Prof. Cleon W. Stuekey, the one who has striven for six long months for the welfare, uplifting and common good of all those connected with the Pelion school. He took for his subject, "Unity." He appealed to the people to stand united, for in unity is strength) in disunion is weakness. Said he: "All is well in the school, church and community as long as all stand handin-hand united." After thanking the people for the many hospitalities shown him during his stay among them, he announced that the pleasures of the evening would be extend ed farther, ana soon couples of young folks were participating in a cakewalk. All enjoyed the occasion. The winners were: Mr. Titnmie Gardner j with Miss Tressie Fogle, Mr. W. L. Yonce and Mrs. Minnie Best, Mr. Harry Fogle with Miss Katie Smith, and Mr. Herbert Fogle with Miss Carrie Smith. We walked but all in vain. However, we wish such occasions would happen oftener. All went away glad that they had been there. C. Pelion, April 6. Young 2Can Sills Himself. Vernon Stancil, the third son of Mr. C. W. Stancil, of Sumter, shot himself through the head Saturday night about 11 o'clock. He was found un-' conscious a few minutes after the shot was fired and taken to the MoodOsteen Infirmary, where he died soon afterwards. The ball entered the temple in front of the ear and came out on the other side of the head at about the same place. The young man, who was 19 years of age, was bright and of a very pleasing address. No reasons for the act can be positively determined, and they will probably remain a mystery. Ti. f- *J i.1 i. 1. - 1 J "1 J ?1? J.L la twuu mat ne nau ueen unnjaug lately, but some of his nearest friends deny that he was addicted to the habit. It is known that he had lately applied to several places for work without success, but this would not account for the suicide, as he had a home and a number of friends who would have helped him. Silling in Bufea Shop. As s result of a shooting scrape iu a negro barber shop in the town of Yorkviile on Saturday afternoon John Warlick iu dead, his brother, Jeff, is painfully though not; seriously wounded, and Lawrence ftfarley is in jail charged with murder. All are young white men. The exact facts connected with the occurrence are not known, but Lawrence Marley, John, James and Jeff Warlick were in the barber shop when Marley and John "Warlick, between whom, it is said, bad blood previously existed, became involved in a quarrel when Warlick applied a vile epithet to Marley. The latter M Dispensari Total Invo Dispensary. No. Location. Stock on Day of Lexington 1 Lexington $4,1 Lewiedale 2 Gilbert 2,3! Peak 8 Peak 3,3. Brookland 4 New Brookland 8,51 Total $13,5 STATE OF SOI Lexingtoj Personally appeare Lexington County Di deposes and says that Sworn U '4 left the shop and shortly afterwards returned and asked Warlick if he meant to say he, Marley, was so and so. Warlick repeated the former ep- , ithet and made for Marley, using his ' | fists freely, and at this juncture the latter drew a pistol and commenced to shoot. When he finished four 1 shots had been fired and John War- 1 lick lay dying and Jeff was supposed 1 to be mortally wounded. ( John Warlick, the dead man, re- * cently finished serving a short term J in the penitentiary, having been convicted for beating an old and compar- 1 atively helpless Confederate soldier ' in a most brutal manner. 1 For Constipation. . Mr. L. H. Farnham, a prominent drug gist of ?pint Lake. Iowa, says: "Cham- . berlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets are certainly the beat thing on the market for constipation." Give these tablets a trial. You are certain to find them agreeable and pleasant in effect. Price, : 25 cents. Samples free. For sale by ] Kaufmann Drug Co. i ? i Prohibition in Birmingham. The Birmingham (Ala) News, Jan. 25, 1908, says: "For ten years Bir- ! mingham has not enjoyed so wonderful a period as it has since Jan. 1. So far prohibition in this community has proved a powerful agency in the betterment of the public morals. It has reduced the criminal record of this community in a striking degree. The number of arrests for drunken- 1 ness in January, 1908, was scarcely , one-sixth as large as average when saloons were in operation. There were only thirty-seven arrests in January 1908, as compared with 246 . for December, 1907 (under license), 1 and an average of 197 per month for i the year 1907 (under license). ? > MlWMDJ WW MHMWi The First National Bank of Bates- . burg has money to lend to their '( farmer patrons who can furnish satisfactory security. 4'Tell your friends about it." IRA C. CARSON, Cashier. ] W. W. WATSON, President. < . # , ( Saw Bis Leg Cut Off. At St. Louis, Mo., on Thursday pin- j ioned under wreckage caused by a i rear-end collision on the Burlington j Road, and with steam from a broken engine pipe pouring into his face, 1 Horace A. McKittrick, a stock broker ] of Brookfield, Mo., directed the am- < putation of his leg and furnished a dull jack knife with which the work j was done. The rough operation was j performed by the Rev. R. C. Allen, < of Grove City, Pa., but it failed of its ^ purpose, McKittrick dying later at a ] hospital. ] Four others were injured in the wreck. Several of the passengers ( were in the caboose of the freight j train and escaped serious injury, but \ McKittrick was caught between the 1 broken timbers under the passenger j locomotive. i t < Tillman in Atlanta Sanitarium. 1 Senator Tillman is now in Atlanta, 1 where he entered the Roberson Sani- , tarium on Monday. He will take a < dieting and massage treatment. Later, ' if sufficiently restored to health, he with Mrs. Tillman, will go to Europe. It is said that the Senator has fully made up his mind to take a complete rest. Woman Sills Negro Burglar. Montgomery, Ala.?Mrs. Ed. Jones,, a prominent woman, shot and killed a negro burglar at her home at 3 o'clock Sunday morning. At the time the shot was fired the burglar was engaged in a hand-tohand struggle with her aged father, Barney Rhody, and was attempting to pull him out through a window, where, it is said, a negro confederate stood ready to aid the burglar. Paio anywhere, can be quickly stopped by one of Dr. Shoop's Pink Pain Tablets. Pain always means congestion?unnatural blood pressure. Dr. Shoop's Pink Pain Tablets simply coax congested blood away from pain centers. These Tablets?known by druggists as Dr. Shoop's Headache Tablets?simply equalize the blood circulation and then "* ? ? j AA pain always departs in zu mmnues. zu Tablets 25 cents. Write Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis., for free package. Sold by Kanfmann Drug Co. ONTHLY STATEMENT OP TI es in Lexingto For Month of March, 1908. ice Including Operating Ex] Hand first Total Sales. of Each ' Month. Dispensary 82 24 IM93 96 llTsThT 94 09 1,365 24 72 97 56 46 1,301 90 84 72 99 49 1,590 08 100 95 32 28 $5,951 18 $371 10 JTH CAROLINA, ) r County. ] d R. L. Keisler, J. L. Shulerand J. W. Add ispensary Board, who being each duly and t the foregoing statement is true and correc ? and subscribed before me this 7th day of 1 Q. A. Derrick, Gov. Ansel Homes Infirmary Commission. Gov. Ansel has appointed the following gentlemen to have charge of the erection of the State's infirmary for Confederate veterans on the property of the State Hospital for the Insane in Columbia: J. M. Reed of Chester, D. Cardwell of Columbia, J. C. Cantey of Camden. J. Q. Marshall of Columbia, and Wilie Jone9 of Columbia. The commission will meet within the next few days and proceed at once with plans for the erection of the building. It will be recalled that Khft IPCIQIUflTTO for the work. A. Healing Salve for Burns, Chapped Hands and Sore Nipples. As a healing salve for burns, sores, sore nipples and chapped hands Chamberlain's Salve is most excellent. It allays the pain of a burn almost instantly, and unless the injury is very severe, heals the parts without leaving a scar. Price 25 cents. For sale by Kaufmann Drug Co. For Sale. Prettiest and cheapest lots on the market for speculative and building purposes, at Eau Claire Heights, within incorporate limits, convenient to trolley line, 180 to $285 each. Terms $10 cash; $5 per month, no interest or taxes. 5 per cent, discount for cash. 510 acres of land near Columbia, 100 ' acres in cultivation, balance woods, three tenant houses, necessary outbuild ings. wee li,6(X); half cash, balance one and two years. An improved place three miles from Lexington, 155 acres, three hundred thousand feet saw timber, 500 cords good oak wood. Price $1,000. 70 acres of land near city limits, $35 per acre, on Winnsboro road. 20 acres three miles from State house, |90per acre. House and lot Miller Heights, $625. Three nice dwellings, real cheap, very little money required down, good terms on balance. A veneering plant at Ridge Spring for $450. 500 acres of land near railroad, $1.75 per acre. 104 acres of land 8 miles from town on Camden road, four or five room iwelling; barn and stables, 40 acres in cultivation, balance woods. Price $1,200. An improved place of 334 acres on Ancrum ferry road, twelve miles from Columbia, sixty acres in cultivation, oalance saw timber and woods. Grist mill and Gin. Price $2,500, easy terms. Timbered right on 1,000 acres of land in Appling county, Georgia, five miles wd naif from shipping point, and has >een estimated to cut three million feet >f lumber. Price $1,000, cash. 500 acres of land on road to Augusta, line miles from Columbia and two and ine-half miles from Lexington. About ifty acres in cultivation, saw timber jnough to cut one million feet of lumber, balance woods. Price $4,500. House and lot on the car line to Hyatt Park, corner lot, size of lot 52x406. ; Price $1,050. ' Large store house, dwelling over the ?tore and rooms on the side. Also on same lot a two and single story dwell ng items ior fou.zo per month. Price ?5,100, $1,500 cash, balance one, two, ;hree and four years. An improved place of 840 acres, 12 nilesfrom Columbia on the Camden road. The place has a 8-horse farm Dpen on it, also 150 acres in pasture, well watered. Price $5.50 per acre. Terms, $2,000 dollars cash, balance one, two and three years. 110 acres of land, live miles from the city, on the Winnsboro road, 50 acres in cultivation, 60 acres in woods. Price 137.50 per acre, 1-3 cash, balance on easy terms. 43 acres of fine bottom land three and half miles from city, and will make a bale of cotton to the acre or 75 bushels of corn. Price $100 per acre, easy terms. Enquiries will be answered promptly, and will take pleasure showing the property. J. F. MOBLEY, REAL ESTATE, 1507 Main St, Columbia, S. C. Phone 1816. Dfcftfc HARDING, The Old Veteran Painless Tooth Ex un^iui ouu uciiuoi, iuiu iuaiu on CXI) Columbia, S. C., sign of the Big Tooth, is now at his office and will be all summer. where he will do all kinds of Dental Work in the best manner and with the best material. lApr IE >n County *nSeS Breakage. * n nn f 7 ou $2,478 88 2 05 1,026 80 6 35 2,048 21 4 20 2,005 21 |21 90 $7,559 20 y, members of the severally sworn, t. ipril, 1908. Notary Public.