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Conviction F "When buying loose coffee or to have in his bin, how do 5 4f getting ? Som queer stories k could be told, if the people wh speak out. Could any amount of mere housekeepers to use Lion i the leader of all packac of a century, if they had not found Parity, Strength, Fiai Tills popular success ol LION CC ' * can be due only to Inherent merit. ' Is no stronger proof of merit than tinned and Increasing popularity. If flie verdict of MILLIONS HOUSEKEEPERS does not con\ m mm mm. _ _ m W WAn.Y | yon 01 ine mcnis 01 uun vur 1 it costs yon bnt a trifle to b I package. It Is the easiest we 1 convince yonrself, and to n I yon a PERMANENT PURCHASE A 9 LION COFFEE is sold only in 1 lb. sealed pac A and reaches you as pure and clean as when it li factory. S Lion-head on every package. Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums I SOLD BY GROCERS I EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO.. Toledo, i Overworked KIDNEYS ; Murray's Buclm, Gin and Juniper is prescribed and endorsed by ,4 eminent physicians. It cures when all else falls. Prevents Kidney / Disease, Dropsy, Bright's Disease, ' At all dm? stores. > 1.00 a Bottle. Or Direct from The Murray Drug Co., j COLUMBIA, S. C. Whisker ! Morphine habit. I habit. Cured by KEELEY 1329 Lady St., (or P. O. Box 75) Coluin solicited. 1 DOORS. ! I II n v JL V ? Main St., Col a C3 Is where you can f ^gj stoc >* 0? PJ of all fH HSg^Mr. Lee N. Fa J? ton, is now with us a ^ you and show you ou C. Q. BROV J ** SASH. W. T. MAR WHOLESALE - DEALE Ou.z IL - High Grade Good Possible Dan Valley FIoi Ask for our quotations before you Molasses, Can Gc ~ Everything We ? W. T. MAI 1406-1408 ASSEMBLY iiilllii. THE ONLY NATIONAL BANK IN COLUMBIA. UNITED STATES. STATE, CITY AND COUNTY DEPOSITOR!. Saving's Department. Paid np Capital ... $200,000 Surplus Profits . - 70. Of* * * * - Oi \. \ AAO Liability o: Stocsnoioiers - svw.vw $470,000 Interest allowed at the rate of 4 per cen*. per annum, payable May l3t and November 1st " W. A. CLARK, President Wxue -Tones. Vice President and Oasbi** i, ???? ???? 1 I *?*? Xo Cu I Take Laxative Bror 9 Seven Million boxes sold in past 12 r V oDows Trial 1 anything your grocer happens B rou know what you are S about coffee that is sold in bulk, 1 .0 handle it (grocers), cared to talk have persuaded millions of I Coffee, I Je COlfeeS for over a quarter jj| . it superior to all other brands in If /or and Uniformity? 1 >FFEE V j Yon Can Prevent Sick-Headache | when you feel it first coming on, by taking a | Ramon's Pill at once. It removes the poison that ' , * rnrA O nH causes inc itoudic. a s , ?, money refunded if not satisfied. 25 cents. For Sale at, Harnian's Bazaar. A gang of five white me were arrested in a car of lumber in Greenville on Monday of last week, charged with having robbed a reside, ce at Westminister the night before. They were well dressed and intelligent, but had the looks of northern toughs. Cigarettes All drug and Tohabit. bacco habits. INSTITUE OF S. C. bia, S. C. Confidential correspondence BLINDS. I I I || lumbia,S C-, J ind one of the best P ks of P P;2*ro:si^^ Q kinds. ? B llaw, formerly of Gas- ^ nd will be glad to see p ir stock. ctm & BRO. GLASS. ? . ] TIN SONS, RS - IN - GROCERIES. /lotto: Is at the Lowest ^ Prices. iir a Specialty !! purchase your Grain, Meal, Flour, >ods, Tobacco, &c. Sell We Guarantee. ITIN SONS, ST., COLUMBIA, S. C. r I pOSNES BOILERS. Tarn**. 8tack*, Stand Pipes and Bheet-Iroa Work; Sfcaftlaf. Pulleys, bearing. Boxes, Ban gem, eta Mill Caetiam. 9MTCast every day; work 300 haada. | MUBISO I BOM WORKS * SVPFLV 09 AUGUSTA, GXOMIA. i i I i j* If Nervous and Run Down i simplv improve your circulation. Remove the waste* matter that clogs the blood by taking Ramon's Pills?then tone the nervous system with the Tonic Pellets. All in one box for 1'5 cts. md money back if not satisfied. For Sale ar Haxnum's Bazaar re a Cold in On no Quinine Tablets. aonths. This signature, ? ! The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, May 3. 1905. I | A Letter from North Georgia. To the Editor of the Dispatch: I left White Rock March 16, and made the trip all right and enjoyed it finely. I stopped over in Athene, Ga , one day and visited many parts of the , town. Athens has many of the mod- | ern improvements of a first class city. There are located some of the finest business colleges in the South. It is one of the finest cities that I : ever the pleasure to visit. Well, I have located here in the ' northern part of Georgia and like the j place exceedingly well. This is one j of the finest parts of Georgia. The j people are very modest and indus- j trious. Since I have been among ! them they have been very kind to ! me and remembered me in many j ways with vegetables, for which I | am very thankful. Such thought- j fulness makes me feel that I am I i among friends. This is a grand j farming country. They grow every- j thiDg on the farm from a cow pea to 1 sweet potato. The chief products j are cotton and corn. The corn was ; mostly all planted when X arrived, j Cotton is raised in abundance. The farmers make from sixty to eighty bales a piece. This is a fine small grain country, ; but they do not pay much attention to sowing it. The wheat is about ready to head now and is looking j very fine. The soil is very easily ! cultivated. It is a dark sandy one j and has but very few rocks. There have been some gold mines discovered lately, but they have not worked them to any extent yet. Land sells very high (from $75 to j $100 per acre) in some places. The | farming here is nearly all done by ! the negroes. There are about six negroes here to one in Lexington coun- | ty, S. C. The late freeze did not damage ! the fruit crop at all. There will be ; peacbe3 in abundance. It, however, damaged the young corn and early gardens to some extent. The little town of S contains five large stores and one grist and fiour mill. The grist mill runs two days in a week, one ginnery that runs four seventy-saw gins and ! ginned 1,670 bales of cotton last season. Two churcheB are hear?a Baptist and Methodist?one school that runs ten months in the year. - " ! chitis and la grippe. At The Kauimann | j DrugCo's., drag store. Price 50c. and j SI.00; guaranteed. Trial bo ttle free. i - i I I John Gray, a weaver at the Wood- j ! side Mills in Greenville, was shot ' ! . i j and severely wounded by a negro ; gambler who escaped. The negro \ ; with several others had been surpris- i ! ed while gambling. 1 i I II ill IIHIII I II I H IWi? IMIHMTO e Day /72S ?? Oft every I box, 25c.J ] Our greatest loss is the .Lutneran church. I have met but one Lutheran yet that resides near here. The people do not celebrate EaBter as the , people do in South Carolina. They do not celebrate anything but Monday after Easter, and on that day they have barbecues, picnics and i fishing parties as well as other amusements. They had a grand celebration on Memorial day which was yesterday. All of the graves of the dead Confederate soldiers in the cemeteries were beautifully decorated with flowers and evergreens. In conclusion I will say that the members of the family are all well and like the place and the people. Wishing the Dispatch much success, I arm E. K. April 27, 1905. Saved by Dynamite. Sometimes-a filming city is saved by ' dynamiting a space that the fire can't i cross. Sometimes a coaga naags on so j long, yon feel as if nothing but dynamite [ would cure it. Z T. Gray, of Calhoun, j Ga., writes: "ily wife had a very aggra- | vated cough, which kept her awake nights. | Two physicians could not help her; so she j took Dr. King's New Discovery for Con- j sumption, Coughs and Coids, which eased i her couah, gave her sleep and finally cured j ! her." Strictiv scientific cure for bron- I A HAPPY HOME Is one where health abounds. With impure blood there cannot be good health. With a disordered LIVER there cannot be good blood. i ? '? _ i > ttrnn i a. [ revivny ine rorpiu uv^ aaurcMurc ! its natural action. A healthy LIVER means purs blood ^ Pure blood means health. Health means happiness. Take no Substitute. All Druggist* What Shall We Raise? To the Editor of the Dispatch: The important day has dawned upon us as farmers to resort to other means than raising cotton for 7 cents and live. Most especially those of us who are paying a handsome rent ' MM . a Mi?.. _ mt _ ior sou mat we are tilling. J.ne average farmer who tills his own land, can, by alternating and vacating his crops, afford to raise a few odd bales of this 7 cent staple. But the question confronting us is simply "What shall we raise'?" This problem is quickly and easily solved. First of all the farmer must remove from his upper story the idea that he must raise cotton as a money crop. When he will do this and resort to something else, he will readily find that there is success to crown any honest endeavor a man may choose to pursue. Your scribe has no doubt in his mind that if a man should prepare his lands and go into the peanut, strawberry, pea, sugar cane, or even corn and chicken business, and put his honest labor, skillful management and his full mind and a determination to it, would make a success. And notwithstanding the fact that should he fail in one of these enterprises, why try another. Here is one advantage of raising other crops instead of cotton. Most any crop can be produced with onethird less labor than cotton, considering both the cultivation and gathering of the fleecy Btaple. Take potatoes for instance. A very thin soil with rough barnyard manures together with a high grade acid with only two or three good cultivations is all that is necessary to produce from 80 to 100 bushels per acre. They also at the same time, improve the soil they grow upon at a fast ?a^a TKo fa or fKof. flnlfivatoa labCi xuo miujci tuuv uwhihvuu sandy land has also a grand opportunity at his door. With peas selling all the way from Si to Si 25 per bushel, and just think of the amount of peas can be raised by simply sowing them among corn during lsy-by. Yet many an acre of wheat stubble land lies idle from June till April while a crop of peas could be easily made and at the same time, the viDes left on the land after picking would be worth at least their weight in average commercial fertilizer. I heard a wise old farmer only a few days ago in some farm talk say, that he produce peanuts on a somewhat large scale, that he plants upon shallow soil, uses two hundred pounds of commercial fertilizer per acre, plants very close, sells peanuts cff of seven acres to the amount of 8800. He also cures the vines which bale up at least five Iods of the finest hav, which we will venture to say, is worth at least $15 per ton. And now if one man can do this why can't another do similar. What shall we raise? Why raise plenty of corn and hogs for our own home consumption and experiment with some new crop or crops. I have written this hoping that many of us may go to thinking ere planting time once more arrives. With best wiehe3 to every farmer I am, That's Who. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy the Very Best. "I have been using Chamberlain's Cough Eemedy and want to say it is the best cough medicine I have ever taken," says Geo, L. Chubb, a merchant of Harlan, Mich. There is no question about its being the be-t, as it will cure a cough or cold in less time than any other treatment. It should always be kept in the bouse ready for instant use, for a cold can be cured in much less time when promptly treated. For sale by The Kaufmann Drug j m ritfi n m ~ *? ** ^ ** *- -?>- *> y <t> rvn I Wauled! 9 9 j! i SEED SWEET POTATOES. IE YOU || ! HAVE ANY |l ! Ji i Seed Sweet Potatoes ij J ^ ij J to sell, either Pumpkin Yams, Vineless j 1 Yams: nr fi-finrtria Hn/?!r? writ#* tn lis fit > { VA V V VJk ^ MVAAK/f TI A A WV V V vaw %? v ^ < once as we are ready to buy. Mention how I J ] idany of each you have to offer. Write us. > ! FRESH FIELD AND fiARBEN SEED j < > * The largest and most complete stock of Farm and ^ Garden Seeds in the State, in packages and bulk. Write i | < us for Fertilizer and Seed prices. > ! Lorick&LowranceGo il J (INCORPORATED > J COLUMBIA, S. C. I : i[_ fsOUTHEKN | ! % 2*,-A.XX/W-A-"5r, 0 The South's Greatest System, A * M.J 7*! Om? CakuiAA 5 2 uuexcenea uining uai ccmwc. v I THROUGH PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS j i OX ALL THROUGH TRAINS. { | CONVENIENT SCHEDULES ON ALL LOCAL TRAINS. o ? 0 ^Winter Tourist Rates are now in effect to all Florida points. For full % information as to rates, routes, etc., consult- nearest Southern Railwav J Ticket Agent, or: " jre. w. HUNT,! ? Division Passengsr Agent, % 1 CHARLESTON, - S. C. 5 ?f CRISP, H H linn MrnnuAimior H 25 NtiHf ivicnunMiiuioc. cd S3 bssothimi^^ S3 S^8 500 Men's Fine Fur Hats. ? 300 Ladies' Fine Leather S^P in all the new shapes, sold ^ Automobile Hand Bags, the formerly at $2 00 and $2.50 0 75c. kind at 25c. each. ^W each, now at 99c. ^ 300 dozen Men's 23c. Sus vv One lot Men's Eats, good W penders, during this sale, 10c. shapes, at 20 cents each. ? per pair. fgp*S7 50 dozen Men 8nd Boy's ^ 5,C00 yards regular 10c. per Caps. The 50 and 75c. kind, ^ yard Laces, all kinds and lor this sale 25 cents. f qualities, dnring this sale 5c. QyqG? One lot Men's All "Wool ^ per yard Pants at 30 cents per pair. ^ 5,000 yards 10c. Embroid500 paiis Men's Fine Pants f eries, Edgings and Insertings at 09c per pair. ^ during this sale, 5c. per yard. 25 dozen Men's Best Cordu- 4P All 25c Embroideries, duryUJ roy Pants at $1 20 per pair. ^ ing this sale at 10c. per yard. 100 Men's ^ery Finest All ^ 100 pieces very fast Calicoes - _ ttT?.,?otT Wor?tpd Snits. w and Percales, during this sale Bll UU1 x i. ? sold everywhere ior $16 GO ^ 5c. per yard. liLf per snit, all sizes at $10.00 ^ 25 Ladies' $5 00 Jackets at ^Jyj daring this sale. ^ $3.48. yT|y 500 Boy's Two Piece Suits ^ 100 Ladies' Good Walking at almost half price-$100, T Skirts, at 85c. each. yrj| $1.48, and $3 48?during this ^ 30O Ladies'Fine Dress Hats .^.111 sale. a sold for $3 50 to $5 00 each, ^ One lot Men's All Silk ^ during this sale Si.69 each. String Ties at 5c. each. p One lot Ladies $7.50 to One lot Men's Fine All Silk ^ $10 00 Dress Hats for $3.49 25c. Midget String Ties, dur- ^ daring this sale. fiiii ina this sa'e 10c ^ l,0CO Ladies'line hemstitchOne lot Men's 50c. All Silk ed Handkerchiefs at 21c. each. (EaS Fine Four-in-Hand Neckties. 0 500 only Men's 10c. white during this sale 19c. each, or ^ Handkerchiefs at 5c. each, WW three for 50 cents. TT One lot Men's $1.25 unune lot Men's Fine Rain (w dre- s Kid Gloves at 50c. each. Coats at $1.98 each. ^ 2Co pieces lull 36-inch WW' 1,000 Umbrellasathaif price V Bleaching at Gc. per yard. Dollar Umbrellas at GOc. All & 500 Ladies' $1 o0 and $1.5o Z-M-f VV So 00 Umbrellas at $2.o0 each ^ Corsets at 25c. and 50c. dur- WW w ing this sale. ss ||| ^ pipTipi^"" ^ || TV. I. I uimirn, B 33 1210 Wain Street, Opposite the Opera House, gg O QT-,tTM IE3 IES. O. g^|