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!Spp ipflP M THE LEXINGTON DISPATCH. ' W0 & Eepresentatitie Setuspaper. Souers hcxmgtan and the Borders cit the Surrntnidinp Bounties tihe a Blanket. :#|i XXX? LEXINGTON, S. C., WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY S3 1910. 17 i^MIIII I ?? ' M|M|| ? -|| TAILORING FOB SPRING Mr- ? lifx ? a ^ II Easter comes early this year and we are anxious to get your |? measure for a II Spx>ixtg f-'i || We are showing over one thous, || and styles of Woolens for Spring Suits || and Trousers and our fifteen years of I experience in taking measures for | Tailor-made G-arments, make us exl': || perts in this line- We guarantee a || fit?a suit that does not fit must not ^ || go out of our store. Please come early, if. || make your selections and have your f j || measure taken. Deliveries made when | || wanted. Prices twelve dollars and up pf H for suits. ? E. G. DREHER & CO., p || LEXINGTON, S. C. ;; i-v I' ' ?> y-- ??????, i psigp'', eE8 * n??? ?w??wwp??w??????a?? 11 ????? B lCc will buy 300 yards, of 10c will buy 25 8 Spcol SJlk, all colors, for 10c. ed Mull at Bates', B 5c will buy a 25c. patent 15c will buy th 0 8 leather Belt at Bates' 5c. drasintowmatBs B 5c will buy Dress Gingham | 10c will buy L< 5 and Apron Gingham, yd 5c. brie Nainsook 8 10c will buy Irish Linen, yard 10c. 8 worth double, yard 10c. 15c will buy 5( 8 10c will buy 40-inch Linen Hose, all colors, 8 Lawn, worth 25c, Bates' store, 7 l-2c will M yard 10c. Fruit Bleaching, 8 8 l-3c will buy 36-inch yard 7 l-2c. 8 white Linen, only, yd 8 l-3c. 10c will buy 8 81-3c will buy 40-in Lawn, cale, worth 15c. 8 white and sheer, yard 8 l-3c. less, yard 10c. 8 10c will buy Manhattan Silk $1.00 will buy 8 Chambrays, yard 10c. dow Curtains < B caa oi i j Kj JUU IVciSICi OMI L5, lil JDld.LK, D1UC, 1 B Buttons * H ??????????ac-??? I FREEX S To every customer purchg S Paris Made Pattern FREE, ? 5 like. No long faces here. Yo H n.niin ? J^ Cor. Main and Richland Wayla.d and Assaulted IF an the Street. While on his way home last Satur- r dav night about half psst eighto'elock, f Mr. Jas. A. Bcnknight, ihe popular a blacksmith of Mr. James E. Rawl, was i waylaid by two negroes and assaulted F j in the street. One of the negroes he h , recognized as being Mack Hill, the 9 I other he did not know. The attack r was made at the negro school house, d - -** TIT- T~ ? T> r near tne residence ui im. ucmi? iv, r Richardson on Main Street. As Mr. Bouknight approached lie saw two men standing by the street, but paid no j attention to them. When he had pass- E ed the men a few feet, Hill rushed up c behind him, grabbed him in the collar and exclaimed: "I've got you now; you tried to arrest me at Irmo, now it is my time." Before Mr. Bouknight j had time to defend himself or to realize r what was happenning, Hill commenced t fc;> hammer upon him with a pistol, while his pal used a stick. The sec- $ or.d lick felled Mr. Bouknight, r.nd he j c j lay unconscious upon the greend for j j j 20 or 30 minutes before regaining con- j | sciousness. j i Comiug to his senses he managed to I t i get to his home three hundred yards * ! away. The alarm was given and ; medical assistance summoned. | In the meantime the sheiiff's office ' had been notified and Deputv Sheriff . I 11 Miller went to work on the case. He | first went to the home of Hill, but ^ finding that he was not there he went I +v?o linmP nf hitt hrnthfvr about six IV/ V'UU UViiiV VI. I 1 miles above Lexington, where he was j found in bed feigning asleep. He was ! a.-rested about 4 o'clcok Sunday morn- ' ing and brought to jail. He denies the charge, but Mr. Bouknight is satisfied that Hill was the one who assaulted him. Several months ago while Mr. Bouknight was policeman at Irmo he had ? occasion to arrest Hill for being drunk 1 and disorderly. At that time Hill drew I his pistol and shot the officer without J warning. For this offence he was ar- ( rested, and at the trial he pleaded ; guilty to the charge and was senter.c- 1 ed to pay a fine of ?100. * * ' / Mr. Bouknight's injuries are very nniwnnnnHBnnTxiaHnraKiBBMi fiajyim HHHIBII?iII ?m-^ii - TMnawgirrrnr" iiiib n i ? im i i ? irmi in ic Silk strip- long, 60-inches ' , yard 10c. $1.75 will buy e finest Ma- seilles Quilt, larg ites', yd 15c. 5c will buy a onsdale Cam- cum Powder, bo and Batiste, 10c will buy ? Toilet Soap, 3 )c Silk Half for 10c. pair 15c. 4 l-2c will bu buy 36-inch Don't buy too mr limit 10 yds, 1 penny will 5c Pearl Buttons 36-inch Per- 1 penny will a i n* j We sell it for saieiy rms, uo* 1 penny will 1 collar lc. a pair Win- 1 penny will 1 3 1-2 yards Gold Eyod Neec 3rown and White, All-1 i. Will be Sold For $ re TB ising $1.00 or more Tnef falrp n r?A#vn ill f ' W WW ^ wwj^r ?_ _ ?u are welcome. CO D. I Sts. SELLS I flBHHHHHHHHIIHI ) >ainful, but not necessarily fat?'. The severest injury is behind the ight r and unless something unoreseen arises he will soon be himself .gain. Deputy Sheriff Miller deserves much raise for the way and manner in which ie worked on the case. Had the news pread fast it is probable that the egro would have been summarily Lealt with, a9 he is known to be a des erate ch -racter. Since the above was written "Will jeaphart and Dick Keisler, two other tegroes, have been placed in jail in lonnection with the crime. Legislature Has Adjourned. The South Carolina Legislature adourned at an early hour Sunday norning, after having been in session he usual 40 days. Many bills were passed during the ession. The liquor law remains unihanged; the prohibition measure eyng on the senate calendar. The law governing the working of oads in Lexington was changed, but he full text of the bill we have not .je ;een. There were other changes. Gasss Havo Boon Settled. The special masters' sales appear- j ng elsewhere in this issue in the cases >f the Citizens' Bank against N. W. Brooker and others, and Henry F. Beiger against S. H. Owens, Norton W. Brooker and others, will not be joldon the first Monday in March, the same having been settled. The advertisements had already been printed svhen notice was received that settlement had been made. At TIm Grand. The performances at the Grand rneatre, in Columbia, this week are kot-r.pr than pvptv if snnh he* nossible. Trie best singing and dancing, the j finest moving pictures, superb vsude- i ville, together with a number of high I ela-s sp.-'c alty acts, comprise the pro- | grammes. Tne house is crowded to ] almost standing room every afternoon ! and night, which is evidence of the j continued and growing popularity of j the Grand. MBiilifliM wide $1.00. | 1 penny 'a$3.50 Mar- j plated 10c e size, $1.75. i 25c will 25c box Tal- I cuff button: x 5c. 25c will i 25c box of en, 58 inch cakes in box $1.00 wi tic seam D y Sea Island. tern $1.Q( ich, yd 4 l-2c. 50c will buy 1 dozen Shirt, extn 5, dozen lc. size 50c. buy 1 dozen 10c will en c', . white and juy a ten cent , ,. J yard 10c. Duy 5c paper 50c will lies lc. and Nets f< Wool Panamas, Har 2.79, .Worth $5.00 A ! a?na?pup iiM'inn 7 7 I JCi ? ? ^aaa from us during tb >ur store; you can ?ME! a m 9A I T FOR LESS. Court Proceedings. Ti When The Dispatch went to press last week the case of G. P. Spivey, of Columbia, against the Southern Rail- ^ei way Company, a damage suit for ?25,- ?0 000 for alleged personal injuries, had 9 c not been completed. The case was ( given to the jury on Wednesday evening, but the jury did not bring in a f0I forr1ir>fc until npvt, mr.rnincr. finivpv i Pn was awarded a verdict for $i,0C0. /la The next case wa9 that of Miss Edith . I}] Gregory, of Warrenville, againt the to Southern, in which it was alleged that ^ a passenger train carried her by the depot at Lexington on the 31st of Juljr, ] 1908; that she was put off the train Cc about a quarter of a mile down the mi road, and that she sustained injuries of. by thus being rejected from the train js , to the amount of ?2,000. The jury fail- an ed to see it that way, however, and she was given a verdict for $25. Col. gr George Johnstone represented the railroad and Messrs. Graham & Sturkie St the plaintiff. ^ The rase of Mis3 Emma Blalcck, of th Union, identically the same as that of Miss Gregory, resulted in a verdict of ^30 for the plaintiff. The same attorneys appeared in her case. cc On Friday the case of A. W. Hutto, ^ of Swansea, against F. M. Hodge and cc W. L. K. Johnson, in which the plain- in tiff was slitting the defendants as bondsmen of Paul E. Hutto, was tried. ^ After the evidence had been conclud- oi ed Judge Watts directed a verdict in in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount with interest and costs. Tne jE attorney for defendants, Graham & Sturkie, will appeal to the supreme a] court. DePass & DePass, of Colum bia, represented the plaintiff. hi At the conclusion of this case court la was adjourned sine die, and all jurors ^ excused. Only about a half dozen trial cases were dispisposed of during 2? the term of two weeks. kj mm tr Pi Shako Into Your Shoos Allan's Fo- t" Eas<\ a powder. It cures (lain- M ful. swo'len. s'"iir intf. nervous feer and instantly r -k- s ' hosting: out of corns and bunand nia \*ms walking easv. Try it to-day. Ko'd ovory vhore, Sample FREE. Address, if AUe i S. umisP-d, Lo Hoy, N. Y. will buy a gold- 5c wi collar button 1c. Lace on buy a $1.00 set of 3 and scarf pin 25c. v buy 50c Table Lin- Panama es wide, yard 25c. brown, v 11 buy 3 pairs Elas- $2.19. rawers, same pat- q^ ^ \ -pw . It's a bea buy a 7oc Dixie . . i pattern and full want n? 10c wi buy Irish Braids in bon, No ecru, 25c values, . colors, y buy all-over Lace ^c v/* or dresses 50c. j While tb i i? nr_: w lGSomeiy i niiiincu mywhere. ?M???MM??wmmM Biwinin?^wnwi irawn i ?naMiii ^ JF& ^2 JE 11 e next 10 days we see that everythir I El <Z9 B HBH Colun lemas Ccrley Died Last Niglit. \fter an illness of typhoid fever exiding over ten weeks, Mr. Thomas rley died at his home above Corley XJonnelly's store last night at ^lock. 3n the second of last December he .s married to Miss Jennie Forrest, Scotland, the ceremony being pe? med by the Rev. J. P. Knox, in lumbia. Two days later he and his fe set np housekeeping, and a few ys thereaiter he was taken ill with phoid fever and has been confined the bed ever siuce. A.11 that skilled physicians could deje, the best nursing that friends and ;ed ones could give, was of no avail. He was a son of Mr James W. rley, and in the prine of >oung inhood. beincr onlv thirtv-one vears r CT % v w age. Besides his young wife, the deceased survived by his father, step-mother, d several brothers and sisters, all of lorii have the sympathy of the en e community in this their hour of ief. The funeral will be held from St. ephei-'s Lutheran church this after?on at 4 o'clock conducted by the ?v. T. T. Brown, of Lexington and e Rev. J. P. Enox, of Columbia. Will Organize Com Club. There will be a meeting held in tbe >urt house next Saturday, February th, for the purpose of organizing a >ys' corn club. Every boy in t! e >unty should be here "to participate the movement. Mr. Ira W. Williams, head of the ivernment farm demonstration woik . this state, and Prof. D. N. Barrow, (Jiemsou College, will be the lea* g speakers. Botli of these gentU en are at the top when it comes to nuning, and both are v<>ry entertainLg speakers. A number of Prizes wiil be offered, id the rules of he contest annouue1 on Saturday. Let every farmer in the county be ere with "his boy on Saturday. A irgeand enthusiastic gathering "is ai>cipated. ??? ro Backache or Ki.--.ey Pains. If you have pains in the 1. . bladder or idnev trouble, dizziness an . c cf energy, y Mother Gray's AUSTRAL, ' EAF, the leasant berb cure. As a regit - it has no Uiftl. At Druggists, or by x;. . "'lie. Ask >-day. SAMPLE FREE. A<; . -s The other Gray Co., LeKoy. N. Y. Get your garden seed at The lizaar vou want to obtain the best i..salts. BBM?W?WWWBWI B.BH.H WW? visum* il buy the best Val |jj the market, yard 5 C. I will buy an all-wool | Shirt in blue, black or j|J ^orth $5.00, at Bates' at Hat at Bates' store. M Luty. Just what you ht now at right price. ?3 11 buy all Silk Rib- || s. 22, 40 and 60, all || ard 10c. || 11 buy a $1.00 Sailor. If ,ey last 25c. /ith Silk and i will give a l lg is spring I ibia^CjJ