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I I " ' ' *?- %r - ? - . < - - " . . . , ,. . . ?<< * tUHyST v?w<* " ' v V' ' .x j " ^'n | " "' !' I 1 1 ' W~' ~ - - i Ni'\ I 1* . ,jm I A JkmnUy Nemqpmper : FbrtMm /VocuXtow ftXa PoUtieml. | m?i, Agnomltmrmtmm* (\,mmm imt liii Ufa. J vVKtiKLY L A ?J A > ' li ?i "v.: \ MAY ll 190| uiw ??. ?? << WHERE 1 W"e are kept bui One of tbe Best Stocks in Upp We say with confidence there is <lise in the state than we have toda; been svatunatically weeded out, an and up to date btock, representing frnnii 1 nniirnln nf /IWaI** rioau Ailliaid Ui IdlUlbC WUilll We have just opened one ease at a great bargain, our bargain p styles and are splendid sellers. Oi plain fast colors Job price 5 cent 12 ? and 15 cents. Batistes and They are hue values and will go ra T Fortune for Latimer. i R W L., the Washington cor* respondent of The News and Courier, says that Representative . Latimer has made something over $100,000 by speculation in Mexi can mining stock, The lucky strike is a deuelopment of the past few weeks. There isnosug gestion hut that the deal was per* fectly legitimate. lie. B J)i icoi.ti'e Attli iHurt.ee $100 May be wort ? you more than $100 nf you littV-. a ctil <1 who sous bedding fr?m Incooieitene. of water during ?>eep. ' urea oid and young alike. I' irrexfh ihe irouhie at oihw. $1. Ho d t>.. J K Macaey St >, Oruggiat, Luu ?*Bter. * ?: An exchange says that it take ' a rich man to draw a check, a 1 pretty girl to draw attention, a 1 horse to draw a cart, a porus plaster to draw the Hkin, a toper to 1 draw a cork, a free lunch to draw a crowd, an advertisement in your home paper to draw trade. ( scon's Emuloian LIIIUKMUII of Cod Liver Oil is the means 1 of life, and enjoyment of life to thousands: men women and i children. < When appetite fails, it re- i stores it. When food is a j burden, it lifts the burden. When you lose flesh,it brings the plumpness of health. When work is hard and duty is heavy, it makes life bright. It is the thin edge of the wedge; the thick end is food. But yihat is the use of food, when you hate it, and can't digest it? Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil is thefood that makes you forget your stomach. If you have i not trled^lt, ^send for surprise you. J SCOTT & BOWNB. Chemists. HO? Pearl Street. New York. I 50c. and SI.OO i all druggliti. PayyourSubscriptioa. I T H E G HE CROW sy. Our niatchh com er Carolina. not ? better assortment of morchan Y. What old goods we had have d now we take pride in our now the latest and best in everything. Goods. figured Satin Stripe Lawns bought rice 5 cents. They are beautiful le case seersuckers in strines and ts. We are receipt of a lot of will run them at 8 and 10 cents pidly. HE GiJ The YoQDger Brothers Maj Nov Be Paroled. Advantage Taken of New Law to Secure Release of the Celebrated Prisoners. St. Paul, May 7.?At a regular meeting of the board of mana- I gers of the State prison today at; Stillwater, unauimous action was; taken in favor of paroling Cole and James Younger, now serving life sentences. Cole, James and "l^ob" Young-! er have been in Stillwater since 1876 for the Northfield, Minn., bank robbery and the murder committed duriog chat raid, in which they participated in the James gang. The Janifg brothers, l 1 j6886 anu "rank, escaped to Mis i Bouri. Two of the mem hers of ' the gang were killed and Bob Younger died in pruon Owing to the pecular circumstances surrounding the capture of the Younger*, efforts hare been un~ ceasing to obtain their pardon. They might haye escaped at the time but remained behind to care for one of the gang, who was raor- ! tally wounded, and who.i , it is said, the others, favered killing. The youngers were sons of Col. Henry W Younger, a wealthy southerner who moved to Mis r souri in 1830. After the guerilla warfare incident to the civil war, they joined the James gang and svaded all efforts at capture until their sensational midnight raid on Northfield. i How They are Called. Booker Washington tells a story a colored man in Alabama who i jne hot day in July, while he was it work in a cotton field, suddenly j if nnrvA/1 a J 41 ?u|<|fou, mm, luiimug towaru in? ikies, said: "De cotton am so grassy, de work am so hard, and the sun am so hot, I blieve dis , larky am called to preach !" It is not an exceptional case. A , good many young men who are ( lot darkies have received the tame kind of "call" t# work, or !, bunt for work, in town. ANSOl DS GATHE iss values draw I KlPtifmSi ili A oami g- ? ^ mm m ^ / * w tu | Fine Shoes, Slippers, and Oxfoi Here, we are doing h tromenc in this line Oor second lot ?>f ia have just come in, with one, two i that could he desired and prices Ui Ladies Fine Summer Underwea has been recently added to 01 rhsso garments c?'Tie in good mm trimmed in lace and embroidery a prices are remarkably cheap, 25 c 26, $1.50. lNSON Ad Aged Couple Wed. Dr. I. R. E. Couturier and Mrs. Sbaw Marry iu Brooklyn. Cards have been received in the city to the wedding in Brooklyn today of Dr I R E Couturier and Mrs Shaw, the former well known in Charleston. Dr Couturier is 87 years old and bis bride is a year younger. \ Dr Couturier lived in Charleston for many years, moving to Brooklyn about five years ago. He is a graduate of the South ; Carolina Medical College, where 1 be took first honors in the class of 1836. He practiced for only a few years, however, and went into commercial pursuits. After the war he was for some years in the railroad service and for a few years before his removal to Brook lyn he was secretary of the Associated Charities. He has several children and grandchildren. He has been living in Brooklyn with one of his sons. Dr Couturier and Mrs Shaw, it is understood, bad no acquaintance with each other before they met in Brooklyn. The wedding is to take place at the home of the bride's son.? Chai leston Post. It only requires a great disaster like the Jacksonville fire ^ recently to show that men still sympathize with and will do all in their power to help ? there who are in trouble aud distress. Relief trams with supplies of provisions have been running from the neighboring towns all around into the helpless city, and a commissary established and thousands of hungry people fed. Telegrams have been received from all over the country expressing deep sympathy and offering aid. This big fire is not without its lessons, it should teach all our i?nuo ?uu ciiiesio allow tbe building of no wooden structures in the crowded and business portion of town. They are dangerous and likely at any time to repeat the Jacksonville disaster.?News and Herald. NT CASE :r you w he. cash buyers (daiiiing of dull I 'd Ties. loan bitsines. No bne cftn touch dies, misses and ehddrens Sand end three straps. The styles are over than elsewhere. r. nr stock also the Miss sand cbildro din and nams< ok and are heautifu nd are cut riurht and tit right. I senta, 50 cents 75 cents, $1 00, $ CASH Methodists are Successful. The Twentieth Century Than I Offering Has Been llaibed. i Nashville, Tenn , May 7.?Th< hoard of eduoation'of the Metho llist JCpiecopal church, south, me here tod*y, Bishop Calloway pre aiding. Dr J D Hammond, re cording secretary, reported tha $1,500,000 ordered ov the genor al conference us a thank offering for the Twentieth century hat been raised. Bishop Duncan delivered at address <>n mission schools. Tht work of classifying ctdleges wa* completed The Contract Awarded. Special to The State Charleston, May 7 ?The contract for the erection of the State building, otherwise known as the agricultural building, has been awarded to Cbarlecton contrac tors for $28 960 05 The re-* muinder of the appropriation of $50,000 will be used in getting up the State exhibits. Charleston raised today $130 for the Jacksonville sufferers, making $1,170 including the city's appropriation of $1,(>?>(). If.the people of South Carolina would only go to work in earnest the exhibit made by this State at the Exposition in Chaileston would show that South Carolina is the richest State in the South, not only in natural resources, but also in manufactured products. The fact is we do not really know how rich the State is and we shall never have such an opportunity to impress the investing and home seeking world with the splendid chances that await the industrious in the State. "C. C. C." on Every Tablet. Every tablet of Cascarets Candy Cathartic bears the famous C. C. C. Never sold in bulk. Look for it and accept no other. Beware of fraud. All druggists, ioc. PayyonrSubscription. ' * V . <-? mil'' I Vj IJ 1 n.tz E BARGAINS. it ling out the stuff. [ STOR ILL FIND while our imes, we are liut> I Men's Shirts and Shirt \ vis' Shirt Waists for men are tl lals cost, no vest, no snpendera, n allium! a light breezy shirt waist. | We have just received another 1 |6 0 cents on the dollar. 35 ceni Sshirt worth from 50 cents to $1. us Wonderful Millenery Succes Hy ^he Two stocks gone nlready. 1,- Miss Evans' tine work has char prices on niillinerry this season pretty banded sailor at 20 nwitu STOR A Class Reonion i All Members Meet Together Here After 22 Years. s The State, May 10th. in this week of reunions there t have been many of various kinds, - among them none have been mor< fraught with genuine pleasure t than the class which graduated in - 1870 at the Carolina Military inI stitute formerly located at Chari lotte, N C. Their names are Arthur KSani ders, of Hagood, Sumter county; ) Joseph B Guess, of Denmark; i Albert Gibert, of Willington; T S Carter, of Lancaster; R K : Wylie, of Lancaster, and Hasell Thomas, of Columbia. Twentytwo years has intervened since ho! * /!-*? J - 1 1 v..u<*y wi ^muuunon, una aur* ing this time they haye never met 1 until coining to Columbia this 1 week. Twenty-two years ago they hud their class picture taken. \ ester day the same class met in an artist's studio and had another class picture made. No matter if their faces were not so fresh and boyish and their limbs not so lithe and elastic as in the days when they played ball on the athletic grounds in charlotte?no matter if "the hoary frost of eternity" had sprinkled some of their raven locks, and the soarows and disappointments of life had left their impiess in deep lines on their i faces yet to each other they wore sti!! the same Sanders unci Guess , and Gilbert and Carter and Wylie , and Thomas as boys are wont to call each other at school. With keen pleasure did they recall many of the incidents of their school days together, not forgetting to mention with bated breath the names of their old sweethearts in charlotte for all are married now, j one of them, Mr. Joe Guess has ! been married twins and inintlv they are the fathers of 24 living children. (Jpon all of them fer; tune has smiled and the majority of them are blessed with a liberal i portion of this world's goods. All stand well in their respec-* tive sections and all ?re worthy sons of whom South Carolina can well be proud. \ vaists. le go They till a long felt want. No othing hut a pair of summer trousers What could he nice for hot weather, lot of tine sample shirts and pants at ts, 40 cents, 50 cents and 00 cents for 00. IS The third is now going rapidly. Our med hoth town and country. Our are lower than usual. We offer a E. M issionaries Eaten by Natives 5 Brisbane, Queensland, May 8.? A aearcb party, which han returned from New Guinea, discovered the h If-eaten remains of the Rev dames Chalmers and the Rot ' Oliver Tomkins, of the London 1 Missionary Society, and their f< L lowers, who were massacred in April by natives of Fly river, New Guinea, after a tribal fight. ' The punitive expedition party destroyed the villages and canoes of the district where the massacre occurred and killed 24 natives. The last tight of the war he- 4 tween the States took place in Western Texas ou May 13, 1865, between a Federal force under Col. Barrett and a Confederate force under Gen. Slaughter, the latter being victorious* Gen. Kirhy Smith surrendered the last Confederate array on the 26th of May. KAQINCt. KOAKIMO F I.OOO Washed down a telegraph line which Chas. C. Ellis, or Lisbon, la., had to repair. "Standing waiat deep in icy water," he wiites, "gave me a terrinle cold and cough. It grew worse daily. Finally the best doctors in Oakland, Neb., Sioux City and Omaha saul 1 had Consumption and could not |ive. Then 1 began using Dr. King's New Discovery iirill WtLC wllnll V /nit'xa/1 Kw 01 v ? ??? ?? mw ?? ??*?i j i?y niA UUl' ties " Positively guaranteed for Roughs, Colds and all Throat and Lung troubles by Crawford Bros, and ,J F Mackey & Co. Price 50c and $1.00. RELIEF IX SIX HOUR. Distressing Kidney and gladder Disease relieved in six hours by"NBW Orkat South Amkkican Kionky Curk." It is a great surprise on account of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain in bladder, kidneys and back, in male or female. Relieves re fention of water almost immediately. If you want quick lelief ami cure this is theremedv. Hold by J F Mackey A Co , Druggist Lancastei, H. C The One Day Cold Cure. For cold in the head and tore throat ttae Ken tnott'a Chooolate* l.axative ^uiuinc, the " Oaa Oay Cold Cure." IW*l WJIU \>.tv, c, ., .. iHax.nu vo>n kavo:ii* aivi i ?r ' -t. i un? oq.u o.?:, j i 'qiMg