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Go to Henry Drug Store, Chapin, S. C., to have your eyes tested for glasses. Examination free. We also hardie a full line of drugs, g patent medicines, jewelry, paints, f etc. ; M??wa?COBM ! 11 IP?BMP PENCIL AND SCISSOES. Send U9 your dollar. We need it. Mrs. Wright, of Atlanta, i9 visiting her father, Maj. John Wilson Butler. 6 or 6 doses "666" will cure any case of Ohills and Fever. Price 25c. 38 Say, that dollar would look mighty good to us now. Dr. Ray Fisher Sox has been appointed postmaster at Edmund instead of W. H. Clarke. 5 or 6 doses "666" will cure any case o Chills and Fever. Price 25o. 38 Mrs. L. I. Kaminer, proprietress of the City hotel in Columbia, accompa nied by her charming daughter, Miss Pearle. was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. A. Geiger, on Sunday. For Wagons and Baggies, will close oat a few jobs at a low price. P. M. Frick. Mr 8nd Mrs. Robert F. Bowe have returned to their home in Greenville, after a visit to the latter's parents Hon. and Mrs. C. E. Efird. Ask for our big FREE list of Farms ? for Sale. Johnston Realty Company Johnston, S. C, , 20 tf ? Miss May Bradford, of New York, is visiting friends in Lexington. - Pineules cures Kidney and Bladder diseases. Thirty days treatment $1.00 tf Kaufmann Drug Co. . Mr. I. Robb Kleckley was in town yesterday and placed on our table a cotton bloom, plucked from his farm on the 19. It was of the Hawkins pro lific variety. Mr. Alvin M. Jones, of Columbia, is a recent addition to oar force, succeeding Mr. Edmunds. Misses Mattie and Jennie Brown, Mary and Katie Belle Caughman and Rosa Rouche joined a party in Columbia and visited the Isle of Palms Sunday. Try the new mackerel, good size for 5c, at M. D. Harmon's Grocery. . Misses Jennie Bickley and Ella Price left on Tuesday for Columbia, whei e they will pursue the course for profe. eional nurses. ICE CREAM: Snow King Steei Frame Ice Cream Chorn9, the best on the Market at J. S. Wessinger's, Chapin, S. C. Misses Alma Long, Pearle and Ruth Clar|KY Dr, Gardner ai d Mr. H. Dibble George, formed an automobile party that went to Columbia on Friday night. Mrs. B. D. Clarke is spending the week with relatives at Edmund. Mason's Fruit Jars?the best?all sizes at right prices, at H. N. iCaminer & Co. Mrs. C. M. Efird was a visitor to Co' . lumbia on Monday. Everybody patronize the moving picture; show here this week. The admis ion is small enough for every person to attend. For oil stoves with or without ovens, Hammocks, Porch Swings and Settees, Ice Cream Freezers, all seasonable and useful articles, go to Scv ti Hendiix's Furniture Store Willie B. Sandlin has returned from a visit to his home in Georgia. We want YOU to be one of 20C0 visitors to THE LAND OF WATERFALLS ; write for Booklet BOARD of TRADE; Brevard, N. C. 41p. Mr. Juiitjs Areheart, of the Hebioj section, sends us a cotton bloom from bis farm, plucked on the 16tb. He says bis cotton is fair y good and is blooming ri^ht along. Lexingtonians, you are cordially ir-* - ?? yicea to mase our oiuio ;um uo?uquarters while in Columbia aDy timj whether you buy or not. Win. Piatt & Sons. Mr. O. F. Meetze, son of Mr. Scherod Mc etze, is lying critically ill with typhoid fev? r at his home in the Fork. Unr er the skillful treatment of Dr. R. E. Mathias, however, it is hoped that his recovery will be speedy and permanent. Mr. John D. Taylor, Gilbert 2, also sends us two blooms, plucked from his farm on the 19th. His cotton was planted April 11. Mr. Al. Buff, of lower Dutch Fork, has been carried to a sanitarium in Colombia, to be treated for pellagra. If you want a good meal wThile in Columbia always go to the Parlor Restaurant. Ben David has the best, served in any style desired, at a modorate price. Magistrate W. E. Lorick, of Irmo sent Ezell Johnston, a negro, to the chaingang for 20 days last week on the charge of assault and battery. Mr. J. J. Long, from up on Hollow creek, has erected a neat cottage on Harman street, on a lot recently purchased by him. Good Lnck Fruit Jar Rubbeis 10c at W. P. Roof's. As to Barbecue Notices. Hereafter The Dispatch will not insert barbecue notices except under the following terms: One cent a wcrd fur each and every insertion, and cash must accompany the notice. Count your words and send one cent for every word and there will be no misunderstanding. The P. J. Porter Moving Picture Show here this week is an unusually high class entertainment. The pictures are the best to be had and yet only a small price is charged to see the entire 2,000 feet of films. The programme is chaDged nightly. Furniture, Furniture, cash or credit. Three piece suits $18, $20, $25, $30, $35. Rockers, $1.50 to $5.00. See us before you buy. P. M. Frick. When you go to the show tonight leave your little hammer at home, for the price of admission does not justify knocking at all; and then the show is good, too. For best brands of syrup in cans, all size?, go to M. D. Harrison's Grocery. Mrs. Alice Timmons and daughter, Miss Mabel, of Columbia, spent a few days with friends here this week. Bring us your job work. All work executed in a skillful manner on short notice. Mail orders receive prompt and careful attention. The Dispatch. Moving Picture Show here this week * coon it9 Tf Tint". VOtl floil't JUL a Y O J VU OVVii -.v. ^ know what you are missing. Wanted ?500 doz. Eggs, 10C0 chicken's within 10 days. Call before you sell, will pay best prices. P. M. Friek. Prof. L. A. Sease, of Clemson College is taking a post graduate course in English attheUniuersifcy of Virginia GROCERIES?You always find a nice stock of groceries at the right prices at my store. The best flour, the best meat, lard, sugar, coffee, and all kinds of canned goods, and the best of everything good to eat. M. G. Caugbman, 33 New Brookland, S. C. Miss Mildred Hoi k ha3 returned to her heme near Brookland, after a pleasant week's visit to her sisters, Mrs. B. F. Dent and Mrs. C. P. Heise. Vnn unll find Leerffett's "Nabob" * "O Pancake Syrup in 10c, 20o and 50c cans at W. P. Roof's. The wijd storm af Monday evt ^ing blew down the large barn on the Maj. Meetze place, near the depot. Fortunately it contained no stock at the time. We have everything new and pretty in dry goods, notions, etc.,?the very latest out and the prices will make yon smile. Come and see. H. N. Kaminer & Co. T> /\n <1 fV?rv Kn r ncnu uiiu vjai i/gvuv UVVAVVO* We have some of Mr. Paul B. Clark's fine honey in pound packages, at 2 for 25c. Tne Home Makers Club will meet Fri lay afternoon at 4.30 in the school building. The ladies of Lexington are invited to attend. Mrs. A. L. Hartley, Pres. 'Loosen up" for the show tonight. 10 cents won't bankrupt anbody. If you haven't it, borrow it. Mr. W A. Edmunds, until recently an employe in our office, has accepte a position with the Cheraw Cdronicle. "JDutcti's" stay among us nas uwi. very pleasant and we wish him great success in his new position. * i Baptist Sunday School Convention. Program of the Lexington Baptist Sunday School Convention will con vene with the Convent church, on Saturday before the second Sunday in July, 1911, at-10 o'clock a. m. 10:30, Devotional exercises, conducted by Rev, J. C. Hall. 1:30 to 11, Enrollment of delegates and reports, etc. 11, Sermon by Rev. B. J. Reynolds, onlvip/?f. Snwinty th? Seed: altemale UUVJww ? ? ? 9 Rev. W. R. Corder. Recess for Dinner. 1 to 2, Query: Are faithful Sunday school teacher rewarded for their labors ? If so, when and where ? Dis. cussed by J. K. Day and R. J. FallawSecond Query: What constitutes a lively and successful Sunday school ? Discussed by W. S. Rynehart and W. J. Smith. Third Query: Where do the churches get their best and most faithful members ? Discussed by C. H. Corbitt and W. R. Lowe. Essay, by Miss Ethel Brooker. Miscellaneous and adjourn. Sunday, meet at 10 o'clock. Devotional exercises by the president; Essay, by Miss Rosa B. Fallaw. 11 o'clock, Sermon by Rev. J. Hartwell Edwards; alternate Rev. W. B. Fallaw, subject, Reaping the Harvest. J. G. Fallaw, President. S. N. Hook, Secretary. Notice! All parties holding claims, either county or school are hereby notified to present the same for payment to E. L. Wingard County Treasurer on or before June 30, 1911. 2 v. E. L. Wingard. THE Clemson Agricultural College Enrollment Over 700?Value of Property Over a Million ai d a Quarter? Ninety Teachers and Officers. Seven fall four years courses, in Agriculture, Engineering, etc. rvoi. ooccinn rf ninp mnnftis in WOU X OVUC1VU V? . eluding all fees, board, heat, light, laundry, and nece?saryuniforms$12.187 i Students who are financially able, pay $10.00 tuition additional. SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS The College maintains 124 Agricultural Scholarships, and 43 Textile Scholarships, worth each ?100.00 and free tuition. (Students who have attended Clemson College c r any other College or University, are not eligible for the scholarships unless there are no other eligible applicants). Scholarship and entrance examinations will be neld at the county seats Julv 14th, 9 a. m. NEXT SESSION OPENS SEPTEMBER 13, 1911. Write at once to W. M. Riggs, President Clemson college, S. C., for catalogue, scholarship blanks, etc. If you delay, you may be crowded out. ? Notice Overseers! All overseers, both old and new in - * ' * ? - J each township, are requested to seuu the names of all hands between the ages of 18 and 55 who have paid the commutation tax; and also the names and ages of all those who have not paid in each of the several townships of the county, and turn the same over to the road inspectors of said township. It is impossible for the auditor to properly affix the amounts paid in without this information. Your promptness will therefore be appreciated. Louis J. Langford, County Supervisor. Lexington, S. C., June 20, 1911. tf. If at any time you need shoes, dry goods, groceries, hardware, plows of all shapes, never buy before you see us. We will treat you right. H. N. Kaminer & Co. THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Lexington.. By Geo. S. Drafts, Esq., Probate Judge. Whereas, 0. M. Bookman, made suit to me, vto grant him Letters of Administration of the Estate of and effects of Charley Bookman. These are therefore to cite and ad " "* i-1- ^ l-*? J J Jl I momsh all ana singular ice ainurcu tmu creditors of the said Charley Bookman deceased, that they be and appear, before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Lexington, C. H., S. C., on 5th day of Jnly, 1911, next, after publication hereof at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted. Given under my hand, this 19th day of June, Anno Domini, 1911. Geo. S. Drafts, (L. S.) Probate Judge, Lexington County, S. 0. Published on the 2Lt day of June, 1911, in the Lexington Dispatch, 2w PINEULE5 FOR THE KIDNEYS, BLADDER and HVEK DISEASES. RHEUMATISM, ACUTE BACKACHE, AND OTHER PAINS, PINEULES 30 Days Treatment For $1.00. ?? miwiBB mi n n ? OA mmm ukuii LU. LEXINGTON, S. C. CHICAGO MERCHANT MAKES STATEMEHT. After Spending Thousands of Dollars and Consulting the Most Eminent Physicians, He Was Desperate. CHICAGO, ILLS.?Mr. d. G. Becker, of 134 Van Buren St., a well-known wholesale dry goods dealer, states as follows: "I have had catarrh for more j than thirty years. Have tried j everything on earth and spent i thousands of dollars for other medicines and with physicians, without getting any lasting re- j lief, and can say to you that I } have found Peruna the only rem- i edy that has cured me per- J manently. Peruna has also cured my wife of catarrh. She always keeps j it in the house for an attack of 4 ? cold, which it invariably cures in ] a very short time." Real Estate and Life Insurance. o. o FOE SALE: 125 acres of Land in Lexington co., 2 miles north of Woodford, S. C., situated on a public road. Mail by Rural Route. 70 acres under cultivation. This place can be rented another year for $250 00. If sold in 99 days I will take $2,500. 81 acres of highly improved land in Lexington county, 1 7-8 miles of Woodford, S, O. 65 acres in high state of cultivation, clear of stump9, large barn, 2 tenants house all new, place under a woven wire fence, will produce 1 bale of Cotton per acre. Price $3,500.00. 1-2 cash Balance 1 and 2 years. 1 vacant lot in the town of Woodford, S. C. 250x90. This lot is in the heart of town. It i9 a very desirable storehouse proposition, if interested it will pay you to investigate. One storehouse and one lot in + Vio fnwn nf Wnr*rlfr>rrl S f!_ nftar ? """ ? " , ?. - , I depot, lot measures 5C feet front by 240 feet deep, situated thereon is a 9ingle sto^y frame building1 24x110 feet, this property is placed on the market for a short time only. One store and dwelling combined in the town of Woodford, S. C. Let 110x110. This is a desirable location and is offered to a quick purchaser for $425.00. % 400 acres of fine cotton land about 7 miles east of Woodford in Orangeburg Co,, 300 acres of this land is under cultivation. The location of this place makes it a very desirable, for a country store 1-3 cash, balance 1 and 2 years. 5 acres of land in the incorporation of Woodford, S. C., with improvements. This is an ideal place for a chicken farm or a lot proposition, it is offered for a sale for a short time only. 72 acres of good cotton land 2 miles west of Woodford, S. C., in n?o?f?fi'KnT'f? r?r\ nriUi imnrnvo. ViaiJ^CWUi^ f VT1UU iUI|/lVI V ments, within. 1-2 mile of church and school honse. This is a very desirable littie farm, 1-3 cash Bal. 1 and 2 years. 93 acres of good farming land 1 mile we9t of Woodford, S. C., with improvements, this could be made a very desirable farm, if interested it will pay you to look it over, Terms 1-3 cash, balance 1 and 2 years. o o A. Z. Stroman. Everybody will be at P. J. Porter's Show tonight. Are you going? Peak Items. To the Editor of The Dispatch: The dry weather has been broken by a nice shower, which has refreshed things a great deal, although some more would be appreciated very much. All crops are backward on account of the drouth. Mr. Jake Hipp and Miss Sadie Eargle were happily married at the bride's home on last Sunday afternoon. They left immediately for Orangeburg, where they will make their future home. In last week's issue "Rix" made the statement that the Peak boy9 did not get to finish their ninth inning in the game that was played at Peak on last Saturday afternoon between the St. John and Peak boys and also that the bases were loaded with Peak men when the game was called off. I beg to correct this statement. The ninth ining wa9 finished, and the men that were on the bases were all out, altho. the scores did stand 8 to 7 in favor of Peak. I also want to impress upon * Rix" mind that the Peak players are no babies. Some of them have been playing for at least ten years. St. John Base Ball Plaj er. Peak, S. C., June 11, 1911. BIB BARBECUE. 1. Taylor's Place. GILBERT, S. C. ! SATURDAY AUG. 5. The quality and quanity of my barbecues need no explanation. Everyone knows that when they come to Taylor's barbecues, they expect and get a treat. AZARIAH TAYLOR, Gilbert, S. C. Firstclass Barbecue. I will furnish a barbecue at Pelion, S. C., on July 4th, 1911. Everybody or anybody that wants a firstclass 'cue dinner, be sure to come. The Pelion big brass band will furnish music for the occasion. Two match ball games will be an interesting feature to lovers of ball. Speaking in the morning and afternoon by Lever, if possible. Everyone has a cordial invitation to attend. Respectfully, 3w34 R. T. ZENKER. 5g3zsaEgagsarssaasgaaBgBM^Bag AT THE ... jSC Jrfc M THEJ C OLUMB Are Grand I Grand li Tile MON' I? (J( Secures th the board. I Next week Tri - State Tournamen to go And Be Price Only 5 Pond Drawing?Barbecue. I will draw my pond and furnish a first-class barbecue at Swansea on July 4th. Everybody invited. Prices reasonable. J. M. Gunter. 3w. Notice C. N. & L. R. R. B ondhol de r s. ' All parlies holding bonds issued by | either Fork, Broad River or Saluda ? I Townships m .Lexington county, ouuui i Carolina, in the aid of the construct- I i ion of the Columbia, Newberry and Lauren9 Rail road are hereby notified that all such bonds will be due and payable on July 1st, A. D. 1911. Parties holding any of said bonds are ! hereby called upon to present the same for payment to E. L. Wingard, County Treasurer of Lexington County, on or by said first day of July 1911. E. L. Wingard, Co. Treas. Columbia's Theatres. ? ? i i It has been said that The Grana ana the Lyric Theatres of Columbia are uosurpassed by any picture house in the South. To be convinced that this is true, one need only to visit these i theatres once. The pictures presented are thrilling, excitiDg and instructive. J The Passion Play, presenting many life-like Biblical scenes, The Burning of Rome, pathetic Western love scenes, J etc., are the type of picluree shown at The Grand and The Lyric. The elaborate furnishings and the cooling electric fans make the Theatres a comfortable pastime. The Columbia orchestra with many of the most noted New York and Chicago sii g >rs, affo- d most excellent music. Prices 5c, 10c, Nervous Prostration. "I hear your wife is golDg to a sanitarium. NothiDg serious, 1 hope?" "Oh, no. She's secretary of her cluh." "Yes?" "And after carrying the club minutes all season in her bead she sat down the other day and tried to write 'em out"?Pittsburg Post He Knew. Mrs. Wedd?John, what do you think of a man who smokes cigarettes In a room where ladies are? Mr. Wedd?I think he needs a wife like you, my dear.?Boston Transcript Value of Silence. "Speech is silver," says the boarding house philosopher, "but silence, rightly used, is what makes golden weddings possible."?Toledo Blade. Don't hang a dismal picture on the wall, and don't daub with sable aod gloom your conversation.?Emerson. L W JO G?9 l ltre; 1 IA, S. C. I Indeed and 1 i Effect 1 rGOMERY || I ? I .8 best on 1 during the H Fireman's 8 1 t don't fail | J / Amused. AN ELUSIVE BONE. ' V: i Luz Is Said to Be Indestructible, but It fl Is Hard to Locate. t fl Much scholarship aud anatomical fl knowledge hare beeD employed from H time to time in efforts to identify the fl i bone luz, said by ancient Hebrew. fl writers to be the nucleus from which B the body is reconstructed at the resur- fl j rectiou. There are many marvelous B stories of the indestructibility of luz, fl and the bone has been located by rival fl claimants to the honor of discovering fl it in various parts of the human skele- fl ton. fl The most careful searching of the last' fl published and amplest treatise on oste- ^fl ology will not result in the discovery ^fl of the bone called luz. It will be necessary to go to the Frankfort edition fl of the 'Thoatrum Anatomicum" of H Caspar Bauhinus (1G21? fyr a descrip- -fl tion: 'it is stated by Ueurew writers,, to be a bone which cannot be destroy- fl ed by fire, water or any other element, H nor be broken or bruised by any force. Its site is In the spine from the eighteenth vertebra to the femur. H "We read that the Emperor Hadrian H once asked Rabbi Joshua, the son H of Chanm, how God would resurrect. H man in the world to come. He made H answer, 'From the bone luz in the H spinal column.' When Hadrian asked H him how he came by this knowledge and how he could prove it the Rabbi Joshua produced the bone so that the H emperor could see it When placed In S water It could not be softened; it was H not destroyed by fire, nor could it be H J 1 n-han nlopp-ft OH L ' gruuuu uy any wtn^uit nuvu ail anvil and struck with a hammer 9 the anvil was broken in sunder, but H the bone remained intact" Hieronymus -'9 Magius represents that according to 9 the Talmudists, the real bone Is near the base of the skull, whether it be in<|^9 the base itself or In the spine, Vesalius ^9 writes that this ossicle is described by the Arabs as resembling a chick pea in 9 size and shape, and Cornelius Agrippj* 9 describes it as "magnitudine ciceris 9 rnundati" (the size of a shelled pea), 9 Different anatomists have held it 9 variously to be the sacrum, the coccyx, 9 the twelfth dorsal vertebra, one of the 9 Wormian btnes in the skull and one 9 of the sesamoids of the great toe.? 9 L.onaon lancet. ?????????? ^ The Puls? Beat. The readiest aQd roughest estimate Sj of time is the pulse beat It is sad to S know that the human pulse beat is not V exactly sixty to the minute. That is one of the faulty disarrangements of j life. But it comes pretty close. And jfl the rough and ready calculator of thy time between the flash of lightning ^ M and the thunder depends on his pulse fl when he cannot see his watch. To the ordinary man a second is a pulse bfeat -~T-ortdon Chronicle. A Subscribe Now. M