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j - Tiae Lexington Dispart Wednesday, March 19,1902. Trying to Save "The Party." | Cuba Way be Made to Bleed Aagin. j But What of That? Washington, March 12.-Overtures j have been made for the compromise of the conflict over tariff concessions to Cuba and there are evidences that i I the two elements will come together, probably on a proposition to have the 20 per cent, reciprocal reduction ap- ! ply for one year from nest December j and covering one sugar crop. Prominent members cf the ways and means committee, who have thus far led the contest for Cuban reciprocity, have signified a willingness to accept this compromise proposition. rr"-? ?s\f AAmnrnmioa aro ! JLLlti (J Vfjt tUICO Ui WU1|/1ULUIWV to be considered by three Republicans from each side, namely: For the ways and means, Chairman Payne, and Representatives Dalzell and Cannon for the opposition to the ways and means, Representatives Dick, of Ohio: Fordney, of Michigan, and Morris, of Minnesota. Soon after the overtures of com- I promise were made the leaders of the | element opposed to the ways and means committee called a conference. I The sentiment was rather unfavorable to accepting the plan of 20 per I cent, reduction for one year from next December and some of those i present were favorable to rejecting ! the plan. But it was urged against i this course that so long as overtures j for adjustment had been made in good faith it was only proper to meet the committee representing the ways and means. It was therefore decided by vote tc name a committee to meet j Messrs. Paynef Dalzeli and CannoD. 1 Later Mr. Payne and his associates j were formallv advised that they would be met by a committee from the j other side. As there was a desire to ; consult the wishes of all those co- j operating with the opposition forces ! a call was issued to meet at 2 p. m tomorrow, at which time the final plans will be made. During the meeting the statement j was made that one of the beet sugar j advocates had been assured by rep- j reeentatives of the ways and means j committee that the plan of compromise would not cover this year's su- j gar crop and would apply only to the ' crop of next year, harvested prior to December, 1903. Some doubt exist- i ed, however, as to these assurances and it was considered quite vital to : learn with definiteness whether the j 20 per cent, reduction would apply i.- A? i~ tu iwu crupo ui iu uuc. It was stated afterwards by the ways and means committee members that the compromise plan would affect two crops?that of this year and next?allowing 20 per cent, off of each. There was no purpose, it was : stated, to limit the reduction to a sin- \ gle crop. This matter will probably 1 be left to the arbitration committee, i "with the indications that the beet \ sugar conference will insist on limit--j ing the reduction to one crop, that of ! next year, and with that limitation ; will be inclined to accept the plan of compromise. Greenville, Tenn. I have thoroughly convmced mv- j self that Dr. Baker's Biood and ! Liver Cure is the finest medicine j made for Indigestion and Constipa- ; tion. (I have tried them all) and j was cured by the use of this medi- | cine, after all others had failed. I j most cheerfully and unhesitatingly ! endorse it. Tours truly, H. N. Baker, Mayor. j For sale at the Bazaar. He Ban a Newspaper. Chicago Lsdger. v I A Nebraska drummer tells how a Battle Creek preacher tested the effects of hard times on his congregation. At the conclusion of his j carmnrt Via oaid* OV4UJVU UV k'W?a v> "Let all persons in this bouse who ars paying their debts stand up." Instantly every man, woman and child?with one exception?arose to their feet. The preacher seated them | and said: "Now let every person who is not paying his or her debts stand up." The exception noted, a care worn, t hungry-looking individual, clad in his last summers suit, slowly assumed perpendicular position. ' How is it, my friend/' asked the minister, "that you are the only man i in the congregation that is unable to ' meet his obligations." "I run a newspaper," he answered | meekly, "and the brethren who just j stood up are my subscribers, and? and? "Let us pray," exclaimed the min- j ister. I Stepped Into Live Coals. "When a child I burned my foot frightfully," writes W. H. Eads, of Joue&ville, Va., "which caused horri ' - i? on ? U,,?- pn/1l. bJe leg sores ior ow yeaie, uui ( len's Arnica Salve wholly cured me after everything else failed." Infallible for Burns, Scalds, Cuts, Sores, Bruises and Files. Sold by. J. E. Kaufmann 25c. Samaria Notes. To the Editor of the Dispatch: We are having nice, pleasant ? ? i.U ?_ ?* nMnaAnf on^ farmora nvp I WtJUlLltJi at JJICOCUl, auv* iu^uv.u w-w making good use of it. Not quite as much fertilizers will be used in this section as last year. Quite a severe cough is raging in this section. It is said to be the whoopingcough. With this exception the health is good. Mr. A. B Howard has moved from Columbia to this place for the purpose of engaging in the saw mill business. Miss Mamie Abie's school will close Saturday, the 22d inst. Mr. Editor, you are cordially invited to be present and nartake of the delicacies which will be served on that occasion. Several addresses byprominet speakers will be made to the school and the public. Mr. Elijah Hall, after spending a year on Cedar creek, has moved back to his old place and has made some heavy purchases in real estate. We are glad to have him back with us as he is a genial and pleasant gentleman and good neighbor, and his business interest is quite a help to the j neighborhood. Respectfully, w. Westmoreland. March 14. 1902. ? ? Trcte to Name. Planter's Cuban Oil, a - wonderful liniment for the Nerves and Bones. This celebrated oil cannot be excelled as an internal remedy where a quick and penetrating cure is needed for rheumatism, neuralgia, burns, cuts, sore throat, stiff neck or pains in any part of the body or limbs. We also have Planter's Cuban Relief and Nubian Tea for sale. Call at the Bazaar and get a bottle. la Egypt. They had woman doctors in Egypt over three thousand years ago. They used to bend over their male patients crooning: "Let me kiss him for his mummy." fwOMAN'S RELIEF! I A reailv healthy woman has lit- I tie pain or discomfort at tne I menstrual period. !No woman | needs to have any. Wine of B Cardui will quickly relieve those smarting menstrual pains and B the dragging head, back andB Isiue acnes caused by falling of the womb and irregular menses. VHNE"CARDUI has brought permanent relief to 1,000,000 women who suffered every month. It makes the menstrual organs strong and healthy. I It is the provision made by 2s a-1 ture to give women relief from? I I the terrible ache* and pains which blight so many home*. a Greenwood, La., Oct. 14, 1900. B | | I I have been very sick for some time. B | 1 I was taken with* a severe pain in my side and could not set any relief until I tried a bottloof Wine of*Cardu;. Be- fl fore I had taken all of it I was relieved. V | I feel it my duty to say that you have a B j B wonderful medicine. * B ? Mrs. M. a. You.vt. B j B Foradvl.Teand iil<vatnre,address. glvinjr oymp- V tonia. "The Ladle'.' Advisory Department," Tne B S Chattanooga Medicine Co., C&attanooga,Tenn. H j ! A Glorious Record. Tbe Number of Soldiers the South Furnished in Various Wars. Here is the percentage as shown by the figures in the Revolutionary, Mexican and Spanish wars as to population and as to quota of troops furnished: War of Revolution?Out of a total population in all the States of the Union, of say 3,929,214, that of tbe South was 1,792,710, contributing 7.04 per cent, of the troops, as against a population in all the States of the Union other than the South say 2,136,504, which latter, in all contributed only 11 22 per cent. War with Mexico?Of the whole population of the United States, of say 23,191,876 that of the South was 9,521,425, contributing 5 percent, of the troops as against a population in all the States other than the South of say 13,670,439, which latter contributed only 4 72 per cent. Spanish-American War?Out of a total population in all the States, of say 76,303,548, the South contributed 2 27 per cent., as against a populain oil tV>o Qfofao than t.hrt HUU 1U au liiU k^UUVVU \/VUV? VM w_ Soutb of 50,885,839, which latter contributed only 3 19. per cent. War of the Revolution?Southern States contributed 36;35 per cent, of the troops. War with Mexico?Southern States contributed 42.47 per cent, of the troops. War with Spain?Southern States 26 29 per cent, of troops. Dr. Bull's Pills fos* Liver Ills. One pill a dose. Box, 50 pills, 10 cts. Cure Constipation, Liver Troubles, Biliousness, Impure Blood, Dys 1 r\ CU pepsia, ivemaie <^olu pminte, uiumatu and Bowel Disorders. Dr. Boll's Pills never gripe. The Potato Crop. Prepare for a large sweet potato crop. They make a good hog food. They are good to have in the family about eight months in the year. Any variety of the yellow kind is*good for table use. For hogs and cattle the large red kind, are more prolific Land should be pulvarized 3 to 12 inches deep. Plant in two-foot rows. If you use commercial fertilizer and the land is thin mix 500 pounds acid phosphate, 300 kainitand 200 pounds cotton seed meal for two acres. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the mnnpv if it fails to cure. E. W. ? V, ? ? Grove's signature is on each box. 25c. An Abbreviation. Some one who believes that brevity is the soul of wit, writes, "Don't eat stale Q-cumbers; they 11 W u up." When a man is spoiling for a fight he is naturally too fresh. Selfishness is the result of a misdirected search for happiness. Fireproof building are provided with fire-escapes just the same. A practical man is the one who carries out the plans of a theorist. Possibilities of genius are few when compared with impossibilities. Onlv a fool man believes that a v . J ? woman believes everything he tells her. A small boy with an armful cf snowballs can make a strong man tremble. He who steals a woman's purse gets away with a lot of samples and other trash. Occasionally a man's greatness can be traced to the marriage of the woman of his choice to some other man. You will never wish to take another dose of pills if you once try Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They are easier to take and more pleasant in effect. They cleanse the stomach and regulate the liver aDd bowels. For sale by J. E. Kaufmann. Off for Charleston. The railroad fare from Lexington lo Charleston, on account of South Carolina Day at the Charleston Exposition, is $2.75. March 20th is South Carolina Day and tickets will be placed on sala the 19th and 20th, good to return five days from the date of sale. BBmaiaaBBBHBMBBga? xaBoma Bmt i s i."' vs': 'I fW^ ,|f ? 1 W&\ J Ct.,rr? B tii&itf ; Oy * i cliiL? || $5 Its quality influences $ a fPre^vT /->. t^e selling' price. I | ralgBr^ Profitable fruit j|j growing insured only | jj| jS&y when enough actual | ? ft Potash S | Jm&k is in the fertilizer. ?fl Neither qiian!i!v nor | ^Uil/:'V ^0SS^^C J OCEAN DERELICTS. The Fanny E. Wolston Roamed Ten Thousand Miles. Perhaps it is the natural instinct to personify every craft that floats; perhaps it is because they were once the domiciles of living beings that makes human interest in derelicts universal. They arc the embodiment of pathos, the menace of tragedy. Prom the slavery of man they have gone forth to the freedom of the sea. which means, after all, that they are stumbling blindly on to that destruction which ultimately awaits all tilings which are without the law. Some of them last but a day; others iloat for years. The average number afloat is usually about twenty, but in 18*-? an average of thirty-live a month was reported. Most derelicts are made off the coast of the United States in the gulf stream, and they arc prone to follow in the wake of the liners. Often they follow the ocean river around its great circle; and many of them get into the Sargasso sea. The most notable derelict was the Fanny F. Woiston, a three masted schooner, lumber laden, which was abandoned Oct. 13, 1SU1, and was last seen in 1 SO 4. She drifted at least 10,000 miles, following the great circle in a zigzag way. In this she differed from the W L. White, a schooner which was abandoned oil' Delaware during the blizzard of 1SSS. The White was a fast travel er and started immediately for Europe. At Iishe attained a speed of thirty-five miles a day. She floated lirst to the Grand banks and hid in the fogs that hang over that region. She stayed doggedly in the ? inist. floating around and around in a comparatively small circle, looming up suddenly under the bow of liners, sending cold terror to the hearts of fishermen, colliding now and then with other vessels and making a general nuisance of herself. Alter several months of this fun she suddenly left one day and continued her journey to Europe, grounding at last on one of the Xcw Hebrides after a cruise of ten months and a drift of G.SOO miles. Then there was the Ercd P>. Taylor, a schooner cut in half off our coast by the steamship Trave. The people on the Trave waited to see the two parts sink; but, strangely enough, they remained afloat. They became separate derelicts, and each went on a voyage of its own. The stem stood high out of the water, and the wind blew it north, hut tlie how, sinking low, was carried south by the cold shore current which runs from. Labrador south to Hatteras between the coast and the gull stream. The bow was destroyed oft Xorth Carolina. The stern grounded on Wells beach.?Theodore Waters in Ainslee?s. The Fatal Age of Fifty-six. Among men and women of genius there seems to he a strange fatality connected with the age of iifty-six. Some of the most renowned characters of the world have died on reaching that limit, including Dante, Hugh Capet. king of France: Henry Vill., Henry IV. of Germany, Paganini, Alexander Pope, Marcus Aurelitis, Frederick I. o| Prussia, Maria Louisa, empress <>i France; Saiadin, the great sultan oi Egypt; .Robert Stephenson. Scipic African us, Roman general; Helvetia?, tin? philosopher; Henry 11., the first of the Plant agenets; the elder Pliny. Julius Cavsar, Charles Kingsley, Juan Prim, Spanish general and si:ii?->ncim : H.rirv Knox. Ame rican ]?ev<>!u; i-M* i rv i: Van Tromp. ;i-J,;::r i!; Abraham -Lincoln. Marrvat,the*i?:Vi*iisi: <inorijoWhiinfield, ot ralvinisiic Methodism: :* >'>: !*{ I)!!(!!.-v, earl <>i' Juicestor, i'avor<>r' <v? icmi Elizabeth: Johami * Jasper Snnrzheiin, (dermaii 1 -i m.i; a .1,1.1 T)!lV.-:?'l;l i! {i.lJ Fivdfrirk II. ol (ionnnny. ? St. J a UK'S Bud^?i. For tbe best plain stick and fancj candies, always go to the Bazaar. Garden work has been resumed. ! Oohm's Eke Store,! 4> <& sr 1636 3i.4ix street, ^ % ColuirsaToia, S. C.4 % V V 4> IS THE PLACE TO GET THE i^jg 4> BEST SHOES AT THE LOW- $ EST PRICES. <$ 4> EVERY SHOE SOLD WARRAN- ? 4> TFD. 4 "" ' i COHEN'S SHOE STORE. 1 Deeembe 18?3m. v 4 4 jjP (jHABLESTONjjm^ASH AND^UMBER[Jo I MANUFACTURERS OF DOORS, SASH, BLIPS, MOULDINGS, MILL WORK AND LUMBER. Writs for Estimate. / CATALOGUE ( CYPRESS AND We Save You Money. > Sent ^ YELLOW PINE Our Goods are tie Sest.) on Request. ( are Our Specialties. Factory Saw Mill and Ponds: Office and Yards: Ashley River and Cumming's Creek. 21 to 47 Ashley Ave., CHARLESTON, S. C. April 24?3 y. | | SOUTHERNfj I RAILWAY I THE GREAT HIGHWAY I OF TRADE AND TRAVEL. 9 I Uniting the Principal Commercial Centers and Healtfo and Pleasure Resorts of the South with the ^ ^ NORTH, EAST and WEST. Higb-Class Vestibule Trains, Through Sleepin^?Cars between New York and New Orleans, via Atlanta. I Cincinnati and * lorxcia roinis via misnis ana t? Asheville. New YorK and Florida, either via Lynchburg, Danville and Savannah, or via Richmond, Danville and Savannah. Superior Dining-Car Service on all Through Trains. Excellent Service and Low Rates to Charleston account South Carolina Inter-State and West Indian Exposition. Winter Tourist TicKets to all Resorts now on sale at reduced rates. For detailed information, literature, time tables, rates, etc., I apply to nearest ticket>agent, or address S. H. KARDWICK, W. K. TAYLOE, General Passenger Agent, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agent, Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga. I R. W. HUNT, J. C. BEAM, Tiiv. Passensrer Agent, District Pass. Agent, | SJT ( Parlor Restaurant poiit tbpf^ ' 1336 main street. 1 nil 1 IIlliM j COLUMBIA, - S. C., ; rnhe only up-to-date eating ASS Q& That Grow and Bear Fruit. JL House ot its kind in the City of Colutnbia. It is well tept?clean linen, Write for our fiO paefl il- prompt and polite service and get it quickly, lust rated Catalogue and 40 Quiet and order always prevail. You get l |p;1ge pamphlet, "How to what yon order and pay only for what jou Phint and Cultivate an Or- t Within easy reach of desirable sleepchard. Gives you that in- P J r formation you have so long apartments. SKIM wanted: tells you all about OFME1V ALL NIGHT. bm iB those big red apples, lucious . , Benches. and Japan plums 2. DAVID, PlOpriStOr. with theirorientalsweetness, p.L??r on * ^ all of which you have often February M. wondered where the trees _ jH&r* J came trom that produced -m. w. ^ t ^ : I m p ?. ? IN * A- RECKLING, i fffi num. AST1ST, ; I cX. jUnusal fine stock of SILVER 5T jMAPLES,youn?, thrifty trees f!OTJT\fRTA S f! B?iL 4smooth and straw hr.tho kind OwIjU J1I51A, &. O. Wmb&lk*1 Aud, *row ?S, we'K Ts NOW MA.KING THE BEST PIC It"",tha' 0411 b? ba? to tois country, pjffiffiijr'iDlo and one of the most beau- and all who have never had a real fine picS^^^ft tiful shade trees. tare, should now try some of his latest ' i ^ rlle foF Diaee? an^ c*ve styles. Specimens can be seen at his GalW&ZZ* ? wa lery. up stairs, next to the Hub. Tt-pftiniy mention the DisDatch. j |J|g||$| J- Villi Lindley Mirsrry 10,. ? j Pomona, N. C. j f-ur>iurr *" [. beeswax wanted e boilers. DLLw if " A ft rill I Ly Tank*. Btacka, lUnd Plpeiand Sheet-Irom j Work; Shaftlnr, Pulleys, Gearing, Bex**, ! IN LARGE OR SMALL QUANTITIES SiSaShaU. LOMBARD IRON WORKS * SUFFLT 00 ( J WILL PAY THE HIGHEST MAR- AUGUST A, GEORGIA. 7 j JL ket price lor clean au^ pure Beeswax. | Price governed by color and condition. ' T>TPTT ? WAPMAW .ki XVXUJJ A>. At the Bazaar. Lexington, a. C. January 27?