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* QUITMAN, GA. To the Editor of The Dispatch: ; Thinking that you and the readers of The Dispatch might be interested ^ in this part of the world I thought I would send a few lines along with this dollar. This is a good country, in fact it is the banner county of the State. Here people raise their own hog and homiry, and come as near raising what they use on the farm as any place. It is a great stock raising country. Cot^ ton does well here, but it is not con* aidered a cotton country. There are 80 many other things that pay better ?oats, hay, watermelons and plnders. Hogs gather the pinders and thrive. - Crops are fine this year. We had a r drouth during the month of May and / part of Jane, but we are having good rains now. Sugar cane is not as good as last year. I Xjastly, the people are good and know how to make strangers feel at borne, and surely our.lines haye fallen inpleasant places. Wfe have all classes of negroes here. The industrious own their own homes and are good, iawablding people, bat wohave more of the other kind. . ^ Wifch/good luck to yon and your paper, I an, John F. Cheney. Quitman, Ga., July 29. Death of An Infant. Charlie LeRoy, the five months' old son of Mr. and Mrs. 0. T. Corley, of ' near Saxe-Gotha, died on Sunday at noon after an illness of. some days with pneumonia which followed whooping cough. The burial took place at Nazareth church on Monday ?*-. 11 fcha Rev. A. R. Tavlor officiating at the funeral. Mr. and Mrs. Corley have the sympathy of the entire community in their sad bereavement. | Barbecue at Samaria. . We will furnish a firetclass barbecue With refreshments at Samaria, S. 0., August 19th. Everybody invited. v < / . 41p C. E. Qnattlebanm & Bso. . ? " ^ . *v <4. V f . \ Good Roads Meeting. There wUl bis a good roads meeting ih New Brookland on August 8th at 4 p. m. The primary object of the meeting will be to discuss plans to complete to New Brookland or Columbia the good road which is being built in Calhoun county np to the Lexington county Hue. The supervisors of Lexington and Richland counties have A^ ' . .. ' Btt ^K& *i'.' ME t i A JS Ann C ; ( / ^ GSPECIAL: W< I .. . , Kma, as JL< <*\ ' y- ' ( ' t*. ' v * 1,000 yards! One lot of Rit The piecei v p One table of 2 A Iva AM ., I One lot of Itei I I I mean to 1 I odds and ends a I Columbia, S been invited to be present. Col. J. A. Banks, of Calhoun county, and Col. Wilie Jones and Capt. D. J. Griffith will address the meeting. All Lexington county citizens are invited. Turpentine Still Burned. The turpentine still of Mr. Fred Hartley, located on Black creek, was destroyed by fire la9t week, together with a lot of turpentine and rosin, entailing a heavy loss. Gibbs-Moyer. On last Thursday evening:, July 27, the Baptist church of this place was the scene of a lovely marriage, when Miss Leslie Celeste Gibbs of Lexington became the wife of Mr. Alden. Hodge Moyer of Johnston. The church had been tastily deco rated for the occasion, the colors being white and green. Ivy, Southern smilax, beautiful ferns and white cut flowers were used. The ushers were Messrs. Lem Sox and C. E. Leaphart. Promptly at 8:30 o'clock, Mrs. E. B. Roof presiding at the organ, a chorus?Peasant# Wedding March?was rendered by Misses' Caro and Ruth Eflrd, May and Annie Lou Taylor, Mae Boozer, Ernestine Barre, Annie Martha Meetze, B. H. Barre and Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Leaphart. To the strains of Lohengrin by Mrs. Roof, the bridal party entered?first the dame of honor, Mrs. Barney Craig of Graniteville, carrying an armfol ot bride's ros^a and lace ferns. Then came, the groom with his best man, Mr. J. J. Cirouch of Graniteville. The bride entered on the arm of her brother, Mr. W. Gibbs, who gave her in marriage. In an impressive manner, rising the ring ceremony, Dr. W. S. Dorset, of Johnston, prononnced the marriage vows. Daring the beautifully solemn ser~?j) nloqakti V1UO "VUUUUCUbCf1 uj mouuoissuuu) was softly rendered by Mrs. Roof. To Mendelssohn's march the wedding party left the church, and the /scene of loveliness lingered only in memory. Mr. and Mrs. Moyer left immediately for Johnston, their fatare home. The dame of honor wor6 a white lingefte dress of exquisite hand embroidery. The bride was gowned in a beantifnl white messaline satin, with drapery of chiffon cloth, trimmed in pearls, and wore a filmy veil caught nn with lilliaa of the vallev. She car ried a bouquet of bride's roses and del, icate ferns. The bride and groom were the recipients of many handsome presents. * I - . ^ x\ . i. ' N y ^.4 r ^ LA 1*1 A "lose at P / \ 3 have two or three >ng as lot lasts, ter I Lace, in five to ten >bons. The 'pieces s will not be cut. 57 inch flouncing th om counting the re: nnants in Souzine lave a lot of odd and < md put a price on the St., | . C. %f I Among the out-of town gue9ts were: r Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Craig, Miss Lottie J Jordan, Mr. J. J. Crouch, of Granite- \> ville; Mrs. Carra Belle Ryan and Mes- |? srs. Garland Coleman and Hamp Rho- ]! den, of Johnston; Mrs. M. Murphey, j! Miss Laura Murphey and Clarence '! Crosby, of Augusta, and Mis9 Nellie u Moore, of Washington, D. C. u Barbecue at Steel Bridge. |:| On Saturday, August 26,1 will furn- !>. ish a firstclass barbecue at the new steel bridge at Wyses' Ferry. Good j, speaking and a fine ball game will be i| features of the day. Everybody in- ]! W. F. Lindler. VllVVAi 42 | SHE COULD SHOUT Mrs. John W. Pitchford of As- ! pen, N. C. !; I will always use Hunt's Care for ! itching trouble, and tell all I see about ] it. Icould8hout now to kDOW that i we are all well of that dreadful tronble ]! The first of last fall my little boy broke , mt with some kind of itching trouble, j! Thinking his blood was bad, I gave lim a blood tonic, but he got worse <! and could not sleep at night. Some | said he had itch and told me what was <! good for it. I used what people said ]i -Pn-m finf if. rli/1 nr> trnod. Mv I W&o j^V/UU AVI XKI VMV av ? other two children and myself took J the disease from him in January, 1911. i I saw Hunt's Cure advertised and I | purchased a 50c box. It helped my i little boy so much I got a box for each ]J of the family, and now we are all well i] of that awful trouble. Hunt's Cure will cure itch in a short time if you i] will go by directions. We had it in J!| its worse form and used Hunt's Cure i and are now all well. j!| Thanks to A. P. Richards Medicine i Co., of Sherman, Texas, manufactur- J ers of such healing medicine. Mrs. J. W. Pitchford, Aspen, N. C. : Sold by, J. R. Langford, Swansea, S C . W. A. Oxner, Gilbert, S. C. Kaufmann Drug Co. Lexington S. C. Little Mountain Re-unlon. 1 jg The Little Mountain reunion of ^ Newberry College will be held on Friday of this week. The C. N. & L. 8 railroad will operate excursion, as usual. Dental Notice. * s I will be at Pelion, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, the 9th, 10th r and 11th of August, prepared to do all g kinds of Dental work. t 40 RAY F. SOX. ? c F. P. Caughman 1 i VETERINARY SURGEON -I PHONES: Office s4i Residence tos J 1306 Assembly St., Columbia. S, C. ( HUB omc Odd: rices thai i "hnnrly?nrl frovrlci f\f J JJLUJUViA VVl J %jVJL VtU VJk l yards to the custc 4> yard pieces, specia run about 1 to 3 ya at sold from 25 to mnants, yard Silks . . md values all the wee! m that will move then I LB HC r ar rei gj by hydraulic | There is I weaKening fi I or climate si I p&ucle I Waj Every pai 9 A4 thft nnh a L easier and last Come in Gregor Open Cotton'Bolls. 1 On July 29 Mr. J. L. Gleafcon, of Peion, sent to Tbe Dispatch office the ^ irat boll of new cotton, and yesterday ti lr. Mike Gable, of Lexington route 1, ^ an f tnr a KaIIo V/UU WIT V K/VAiOl v y j Picnic at Kaminer's. si The annual picnic at Kaminer's pring on last Wednesday was largely t< attended. A fine dinner, as usual, was ai erved. Dancing was indulged in by nany of the yonng people; and other ;ames were played. A striking fea re of the day was an impromptu ad- j Iress by Prof. C. E. Wessinger, who j ipoke on education and farming. The ! c nusic for the occasion was famished ! c jy the local band. I ? t The Dispatch and Home and Farm j N ~ TT # A t rtr ^ ->ne i ear iur qi.zo. ? s ana tin : Will mc Bleaching in short >mer, yard tl to close out, yar< irds to the piece; s] 50c yard, in 2 to ' ? / I k. As we pro through O o i. Join the merry crc BHHMUBHHRB \ StudebaKer hub bands are made of ined Iron perfectly adapted for thi nds are welded by electricity and the : pressure. riot the slightest possibility of Stud< rom usage or from weather condition ever? enough to injure them. rt?Iron or wood?Is made in the same nrf banrfinrf. That's whv StudebaKer longer. and see the Studeba&er. y-Conder Mule COLUMBIA, S. C. t Ic Got 120 Days On Gang. it Henry Harris, a negro, was sent to le chaingang for 120 days by Magisate Wallace E. Loiiek, of Irmo, on [onday, he having been tried and con- A icted on four charges?vagrancy, asiult, carrying concealed weapons and &H tealing. Magistrate Lorick is proving to be a ^3 jrror to the evil doers of his district, ad is doing good work for the county. Hopkins9 Stock Taking. ^ J. L. Hopkins is taking stock and losing out the remainder of the leftiver goods from the great damp sale, j le is offering the biggest bargains in he history of his store, and our peo- H >le will find it to their advantage to ;iye him an early call. i wl b ^b lengths, regular 1C # 1 ... necial. vard . " 7 %f 1 yard pieces; spe< 1 T om rrrunnr fr\ L 5LULA am gvmg lv >wd at Hopkins' and yc S1616 Colu I 0S | ner\ ! r\ds m wheels to m w IP W ^ m ^ a specially s use. Hub in shrunk on sbaKer hubs s. No strain i L i careful way wagons rem ' Co., | lew Victors New Supply of the Latest d Most Popular Double ced Victor Records, Needles d Graphophones. iaufmann Drug Co Lexington, S. C. L I I Em , ) cents g 11 3c 19 15c a 1 25c I I throw out the >u will be glad M st, I imbia, S. C. I ?-i