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I THE LEXINGTON DISPATCH. & Bepresentative Bewspaper. Savers Lexington and the Borders of the Surrounding Bounties hihe a Blanket. TrrtT ww LEXINGTON, S* C., WEDNESDAY, JANDAEY 28 1910* 1 j ? UUi Aikikiki mmmtmmmmmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmmmmsatmmmmm CLEARANCE NO HU! For the next 30 duce our Shoe stool less'of cost- The stc ed and you will find tage to see us for ? ? C save you munc^. v_ will also be sold at DUCED PRICES. "ft goods must go. For soap for 25c, other s proportion. Call an you buy or not. G. H. JjALLN - I THERE IS NO P 9 This is the sentime I our homes, and we I effort to make them i tractive. I Nothing goes so f: 1 homes comfortable 1 good [ FU RNI 1 Not necessary hig | but the stylish, we I finished, medium a: | as well. I We offer you the b I sortment in the So 1 make selections at t 1 purse. 1 "I AMI ruuin iu uu show goods. 1313-19 MAIN ST. COLD .Dissolution Notice. By mutual consent G. H. Hallman haspurchased the interest of D. E. Hammond in the mercantile business of Hallman & Hammond, at Gilbert. The business in the future will be conducted by G. H. Hallman & Co. We feel gratlful to the public for their liberal patronage in the past and solicit a continuance of the same, guaranteeing at all times to do our best to j please every one. G. H. Hallman & Co., 3wl4 Gilbert, S. C. ' mmR Min i imiivkiwf "IIVIIJ V | j, IBB , Mf v W if??;Wca^a.^B Pre I WP sp.11 t.hft r,< ? ? \/ N/ V/ v~> w ? have them in any anything in our li place and we wil] We are not s* gound business. RHEA L! 1109 HAMPTON ST. SHOE SALE VtBUG days we will rek, almost regard>ck must be reducit to your advanwe will certainly )ur general stock ^ a m* TT T*n ; U-ltJiiAIij it-Dre need the money; instance: 7 cakes tandard goods in d see ns whether IAN & CO. , s. o. LACE LIKE HOME I nt we all have for I should make every I comfortable and at- | ar towards making I and attractive as | i -m i i r% c l 1 ;h priced furniture, 1 11 built, beautifully n ad low priced kind | iestand largest as- I uth from which to J >rices to please any | r big new store to MBIA.S.C. PHONE 111 | Sewing Kasfcinos. The Champion New Home, New Acme and other new improved drop head machines; nicely finished in oak; easy running and perfect sewing; fully guaranteed; for sale at factory prices for cash, or on easy payments, at The Bazaar, tf Rice B. Harman ______ 1 Piedmont and Old Mill cigarette coupons wanted. I will redeem these in cash. Rice B. Harman. S, BUGGIES. I We have a ^ of Tennessee Mr S and all broke. We also hai of Rock Hill Bu 1 high grade worl elebrated Studeba] 'r size. When yon ne. come in a.nd li [ do our best for yo trangers, and our j IVE STO( > ' ** ' V Mr. Luther Smith Succumbs To Lingering Illness Mr. S. Luther Smith, 'one of the county's most honored citizens, died at his home, in the Dutch Fork Thursday night. Mr. Smith was a good, brave and true soldier of the Confederate war. He joined Company C, under Capt. Godfrey Leaphart, on the 10th of December, 1861. This company was later attached to the 20th Sonth Carolina regiment, under Capt. L. M. Kitt, which regiment was organized at Camp Hampton, near the State Fair grounds in Columbia. Mr. Smith was severely wounded in battle at Cold Harbor June 1,1864, and never sufficiently recovered to re-enter service again. For two terms he served the county faithfully as supervisor, and was also county commissioner for a like period. He was one of the most widely know men in the county and was deservedly popular. For the last year he had been in failing health, being confined to his bed for the last three months with Bright's disease, which was the immediate] cause) of death. The deceased was a lifelong member of High Hill Lutheran church,; and was one of it'3 strongest pillars. He was the father of a large family of children, six of whom are living as follows: Mrs. J. J. Bickley, Mrs. G. A. Derrick, of Lexington; Mrs. Perry Fulmer, Mrs. J. J. Ballentine, and Miss Lillie Smith and Mr. Charlie Smith, of the Dutch Fork. He is also survived by a large number of grandchildren. His wife preceded him to the grave several years ago. His remains were buried on Saturday in lhe cemetery of High-Hill church at half past 1 o'clock, with funeral services by his pastor, the Rev. J. B. Haigler. In the death of Mr. Smith the county has lost one of its best citizens. I Bargains Bargains i WHILE THEY LAST 1 I A limited number of slightly ? used $95 High Grade Organs ft for only $58.50. ! These Organs appear near 4 new and are warranted to last a I long life time. a Terms of sale given on appli- g 1 cation. M Write for catalogue, stating g terms desired. k This is an opportunity in a I life time to possess a fine Organ B at about cost. R Answer quick for such bar- E gains don't last long. g Address h I ujii nun? urn mm I mmunc o niuoio nuuot j 1428 Main St. Columbia, S. C. fij PIA.NOS AND ORGANS I IND HARNESS nother shipment ? i ^ J n Lies tnat are gooa 7e a good supply ggies, and other ?S. ker wagons, and l are in need of ook through our u. guarantee means CK CO., COLUMBIA, S. C. ??a?w^??w?^????? Frohibitioa Fight F**?* To Be la Seaate. Columbia, Jan. 25.?It is conceded , by every element in the whiskey fight that the main battle will bo in the senate. Ever since the "compromise measure" of last session and the subsequent elections in the 21 counties of this state, it has been evident that if the prohibitionists decided to press their claims further the state senate would be the scene of combat and it I has so turned out, I Tho aariafo nnaif inn nn fhp whislcPV I I * uvuwuv |y vui uiviwi V4i Vu v ii ?>w ? wj question is doubtful. A9 has already been stated there is a difference of opinion as to whether the compromise of last session should be binding or not on the members of this session. Although the members now appear to be practically evenly divided either on the question 'of prohibition or whether or not the compromise should be binding on thi9 session, the vote on the adoption of the bill as passed in the seuate last session would indicate that 30 out of the 39 members present voted for the measure. j. It is no longer a question of whether or not prohibionists consider the compromise binding, for evidently they do not, a statewide bill having been introduced in both the house and the | senate. But as predicted the first fight | jon the bill will be in the senate, the | t prohi measure being on the calendar | s a9 an adjourned debate bill for Thurs- * day. | The understanding how is that I t neitner 9iae win press a vuie m iue ? t senate until there is a full senate. Of I 2 course should the same number of I c senators be absent on either side and g t are paired it is probable that the vote ? would be taken. | Senator Carlisle pushed matters Sat- I urday by having the prohibition bill 9 S of la3t year ^substituted by the new | ? prohibition bill of his own ai:d there- g by the position on the calendar con- 3 5 siderably advanced. I c Between now and Thursday there ? r will doubtless be a great deal of dis- & ^ cussion as to the compromise bill cf jjj last year and the vote in the senate * will, therefore, be awaited with inter jj est. | . Earle Fort Dead. I J Mrs. J. C. Fort, of Pelion, received I e leicgram on Sunday announcing the g death of her step-son, Earle Fort, of E Texas. The telegram was from Dallas, I ( and no particulars of hi9 death were ? t criven. ? < Earle Fort wa9 well known here, 9 c having spent a portion of his younger a j life with hi9 father, the late Col. J. C. | 1 Fort, and the announcement of his jg c death occasioned much sorrow among fi j his friends here. g He was about 34 years of age, and I | ii survived by a wife and two children | t in Texas, and his step-mother aud two 3 T half-brothers and two half-sisters at | t Pelion, this county. a B37- T. S. Brown Bsroaved. Much sympathy is expressed for the Rev. T. S. Brown, the beloved pastor of St. Stephen's Lutheran church, upon the death of his sister, Mrs. Repass of Wytheville, Va. Mr. Brown left Lexington on Wednesday immediately upon receipt of a telegram announc- ? ing the serious illness of his sister but before his arrival at Wytheville Mrs. Repass had passed away. SPECIAL MASTER'S SALE. ? ~ i -i? AT n ?A By virtue or a decree ui tae cuun w i ? Common Pleas for Lexington County. I South Carolina, in the case of Henry I F. Geiger against S H. Owen9, Norton I W. Brookcr and others, dated Decern- I ber 3rd, 1909, I, John J. Earle, Special I Master, will sell on salesday in Fehru- | ary ne*t, being the 7th day of said fl month, during the usual hours of sale, S before the Court House in the town of | Lexington, County and State afore- Q said, to tike highest bidder: 1 "All that tract of land, situate, ly- 1 ing and being in the County of Lexing- tmn ton and State aforesaid, containing one _____ hundred and fifty-six acres, more or less, bounded on the North by lands of n .. Mrs. Moye; on the East by Congaree i R2l!W? River; on the South by N. VV. Bn oker, and on the West by tiie old State-Road I at the 7 mile post from the City of Co- | Trte **ov lumbia, S C." j clerks Terms of sale: One-half cash, bal- ' ance in one* year from date of sale, to- cmplc] gether with interest iHereon; said balance to be secured by a bond of the | ""xTicle! purchaser and mortgage of the prem I ^r0ll<rhc iscs sold. | ]yjaj| pp Said mortgage to contain the usual j gtenoo-n stipulations as to attorneys fees, pay- I raenj- *q] ment of taxes and insurance, and as to ! posjtjonf waste. wjjj pe n At such sale each bidder mav be re- pr ^ jQ quired to make a deposit with said Spe- ?truc'tioI1 cial Master, of Filty dollars; and if the writing t successful bidder refuses to make such ^.ruction deposit when required so to do, . then Rochest< said Special Master will immediately re-sell said premises at the risk of such rj.u bidder. . ,. JOHN J KARLE, neighbor Special Master, a little n Ma??????^??tofll How Do You Feed Your Crops? DO YOU KNOW just what your cotton and corn f need, and are you furnishing it in such quantities as required and in such shape that the ? plant can use it ? i Suppose you should put the food for your stock in a )0x, nail it up and place it in their trough?would you ex- j )ect them to thrive and grow fat ? 9 Hardly! Weil, did it ever occur to you that when you use lumpy, >adly mixed fertilizers ycu are putting this same proposiion up to your crops?offering them plant food in such i kape that they can't get to it? Fertilizers, to do your crops any good, must dissolve in he soil waters. These are constantly in motion, rising to he surface during the day and sinking at night?massing md repassing the roots of the plant, which absorb the food contained in the water?and this is the only way in which he plant can feed. s Therefore, when you buy fertilizer, you should do so vith the idea of furnishing food for your crop and on the | :ame principle that you should purchase food f - your ? itock. It should not only contain the necessary An. "onia, % Phosphoric Acid and Potash, but above all else i ->se should be In soluble form?the mechanical con. don >f the fertilizer should be such as to permit the pla: . ;:o ibsorb every particle cf it, and the goods should be ma. actured from materials that will not give up their pi: bod at one time, but furnish a steady supply throughoc.: | he entire growing season. f This is the fertilizer you should have and can &et? $ n enly one way. It is impossible to produce a goods like $ his by the dry-mixing of raw materials, whether you do f his at home with a shovel and a screen or buy it from ' >omeone who has made it the same way?the only differ- jj snce being in the quantity. \ These materials must be ground to a powder, and it re- | juires machinery costing thousands of dollars to do it imnfrlv Thev must then he so mnninulated that when \ complete, you have a compound* each ounce of which is ? exactly like every other ounce, and not a mixture, one iart of which would contain too much Ammonia and too ittle Potash, while another part would be exactly the opposite?and all of it contain pla:-*t food locked up and rot available. B Remember that the chemical analysis cf a fertilizer is no :est of its crop growing qualities. The chemist can pulrerize lumps and by the use of various means search out he plant food ; your crop caie'to | You can take an axe, break open the box and get the fj :orn ; your mule can't? g Don't risk a crop failure ! g Insure your peace of mind as well as your crop by using ? Armour's J Animal Ammoniated I Fertilizers j ? i Manufactured by | Armour Fertilizer Works' I ATLANTA, GEORGIA | ly Mali Slarks Wanted Hite's Early Pr?lific Cotton 3 j Seed. ; ernment Pays Railway Mail ' The mogt prolific cotton in existence out ot 20 yanetien tested at Georgia i SSOOto $1,200 and other Experimental station 1908. Hite's Pro . Co crtrt _ H litic gave the highest percentage of /ees up -o $2,500 annually. j-n^ ^ 0ee(j 0ffer0(3 are from cotton I which averaged more than two (2) Sam hold spring examinations ' bales per acre cn my entire crop. Get >ut the country for Railway ; some of these fine seed and make >rk?, Custom House Clerks, j money farming. Single bushel 82. :i iphers, Bookkeepers, Depart- ! bushels for $-5,10 bushels $]< ;.Co. Write erks and other Government ' f?r descriotion and testimonials. i. Thousands of appointments W. T. HITE, R. F. D. 4, Augusta, Ca. lade. Any man or woman ov- : 18pd . City or Country can get in- | ? ? -- ? A InAA InfAnrwftlirvri V% XT I 3 aiiu11 I icr iiiiui uiavivii i? * : mm m mm* it once to the Bureau of In- \ To Tll9 Public. '* 99 Hamlin Building. I am no longer connected with the 3r,-_ ' * j firm of F. S. Hutto & Co., Swansea, erage woman's idea of a good ; S. C., having sold my interest to F. S. is one who always sends back : Hntto. I. W. Hutto, lore than she borrowed. 2wl4 Swansea, S C.