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> - We are pleased tc T merons friends of I \ we are constantly re< 5 to our carefully sele | Spring Dry Goo ^ and respectfully invi ^ spect these goods. K we can please as to J the goods and will t ^ /N ^ right. Uome to see J Main St Nes 5 COLUMBIA, - y A A A A |A gk i?L <^ i * 'j ^lr ^UF V v -r*V > , . 1 " Whiskey I Morphinehabit. | habit. Cured by KEELEY 1329 Lady St., (or P. O. Box 75) Colon solicited. SLX^iriM Dealer in i m-t< I I -CSTvTTTTTT?,1 mm" ' W mfim.V^iN -A- W ? full 8TOVE REPAIRS AL1 933 GERYAIS STBE: V%IEIo"u.sefux?iis All for cash at lowest prices. Will apprecia Friends. I gnarant DOORS. | 11 m 3 Main St., Co S Is where you can fegj ' StOi ? & of- al! r-J v O 'tS jg^Mr. Lee N. Fj O ton, is now with us i you and show you o C. 0. BR01 SASH. W. T. MAR WHOLESALE - DEALI 0\xr 2 TT'^L J _ xugii vrrautJ vjtuui Possibl( Dan Valley Floi Ask for our quotations before you Molasses, Can G< Everything We > W. T. MAI 1406-1408 ASSEMBLY - mmm THE ONLY NATIONAL BANK IN COLUMBIA. . UNITED STATES. STATE. CITY AND COUNTY DEPOSITOR!. Saving's Department. Paid up Capital ... $200,000 Surplus Profits . - 70,000 Liability of Stockholders - 200.000 $470,000 Interest allowed at the rate of 4 per cert, per annum, pavable May 1st and November 1st W. A. CLARK, President. Welie Jones, Vice President and Cashier. f ^ ^ To Cl I Take Laxative Bro 8 Seven Million boxes sold is post 12 * ) announce to our nu- ^ <exington county that J ceiving new additions J cted stock of 5 ids and Millinery | ite you to call and in- ^ We are confident that i the high quality of K >e sure to make prices 5 us when in the city. & ir Post Office, J - S. C. 5 Cigarettes ! All drug and Tohabit. | bacco habits. INSTITUTE OF S. C. ibia, S. C. Confidential correspondence HOOK, ill Grades of 3 aad STOVES line of VAYS KEPT OIV HAND. ET, COLUMBIA, S. C. ? nT-s t an a* j \4unww (TIN SONS, ERS - IN - GROCERIES. v?otto: \ is at the Lowest 3 Prices. or a Specialty !! purchase your Grain, Meal, Flour, x>ds, Tobacco, &c. Sell We Guarantee. ITIN SONS, ST., COLUMBIA, S. C. ! Samuel Speocer, a prominent con, tractor, wa* found dead in an alleyway in Fort Smith, Ark., recently with a bullet bole in hie bead and his pockets turned wrGng side out. John Dow, a negro, shot and killed his wife and her father-in-law and mother-in-law and another negro womaD at Sulphur Bock, Ark., on Tuesday of last week. The trouble began because his wife refused to go home with him. At the commencement of Charles ton Medical College on Wednesday diplomas were given to 27 graduates in medicine and 21 in p&aroiacy. ire a Cold in Oi mo Quinine Tablets. >c months. This signature,*?1 .te a liberal share of the trade of my Lexington ee to give satisfaction, I BLINDS. no TT lumbia,$ C., | find one of the best ?3 cks of fcj P< lNTS^ "* Q I kinds. ? illaw, formerly of Gas- g and will be glad to see p ur stock. NH &BRO. m AQQ The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, April 12, 1905. "Will Give TJs Trouble. "Even if Japan be victorious in its conflict with Russia, I can see pothing ahead for the masses of people of that race but a long period of tribulation," said Mr. F. Rawdon, of London, England, who is at the New Willard and who has lived in Japan for many years, says the Washington Post." "It must not be supposed that because the Japanese have displayed extraordinary military prowess that they eDjoy good economic conditions, or that there has been any great improment in the status of the common people since the abolition of the feudal system, some thirty-five years ago. The masses still subsist on meals costing from 2 to 5 cents, and the ! man over tbere who is able to eat a 50 ceDt dinner is a grandee of the first magnitude. Any very great change for the better is impossible in a country that has only 148,000 square miles and a population of at least 45,000,000. Added to this that there is only 11 per cent, of arable land in Japan, and it is obvious that for the multitude there is no escape from the grinding poverty and from long hours of poorly paid soil. Modern methods copied from the East have brought to Japan many newly established industries, but the poor people who crowd their factories work for wages that the meanest laborer in Eogland or the United States would scorn. "Now with the increasing hardshiDS that the war entails, thousands of Japanese after its close will wish hoffcr thfiir enndition bv comioar to tbe Uoited States, and I have not the slightest doubt byfc that they are goiDg to prove a source of trouble to your people if some legislation of a restrictive character is not adopted. Wherever they come they will work for smaller wages thsn Americans or l sdv other white men, and this will beget an agitation such as was bad in California against the Chinese, and probably result in the same exclusion/' . In a Pinch Use Allen's FootEase. Shake into your shoes Allen's FootEase, a powder. It cures corns, bunions; painful, smarting, hot, swollen feet. At all druggist and shoe stores, 25c. 25 SSaybe So and Maybe Not. Mr. A. TV. Brabham, of Olar, S C., in a letter to tbe State, claims that ill OK AAA AAA I Lit) OUUIL1 Will pittuii auco of cotton this year and under normal conditions will make 14,000,000 or 15,000,000 bales. He seems to base bis estimate on the heavy shipment of fertilizers and ibe number of mules and horses which have been purchased by the farmers this year. Mr. Brabham besides being an intelligent farmer is a wide awake business man and must have some good reaBon for making this statement, but we hope that be is in error this time. Should Mr. Brabhanrs esiimate be correct, then as he says "Nothing but the Almighty can keep cotton above 5 centy by Octob^i 1st, 1905." Distressing. Mrs Hetty GreeD. the noted financier, was talking about the vicissitudes of housekeeping, says the San AotoDio Express. "Accidents occur in housekeeping," she said, "as distressing and horrible as any that occur in the world of fioance. "A woman of Bellows Falls gave a party last year. Pie was served at the party, apple pie, with the crust very pret'ilv ornamented. The woman called the cook into the dining room. " 4AEary,' she said, 'this cru9fc looks very nice. How did you scallop it so beautifully?' 44 'With your false teeth, mum,T the cook answered/' To Cure a Cut, Sore or Wound apply Ramon's Nerve & Bone Oil promply. It isantiseptic?stops the pain and causes healing by first intention.:?5eand money back if not satisfied For sale at the Baza<ir. A List of Patriots. Laurens Advertiser. For Governor next year it poems to be understood that Senator Richard T Mo J. ULLdUUlU^, Ui O j Ull. 111.* JL Ansel, of Greenville, Mr. M. L Smith, of Cainden, Mr. A. C. Jones, of Newherry, will run It is also said that Ex-Governor John C Sbeppard, of Edgefield, and Senator Brice, of York will be in the field, [and the probability is that Mr. C. C. Featherstone, of Laurens, will answer to his name when the roll is called. And the half has not yet been told as there are legions of patriots who are only awaiting an opportunity to offer themselves a sacrifice upon their country's altar for the sake of holdi ing office?Dispatch | Ef?39B9SHB3EEK9R59E?MSHHBPB3E9BIB9HBBBfcw IPDflV | Iv ASUjr fa Two Days. 1 ' /5y ?* on every I ! 25c. J j Tutt's Pills FOR TORPID LIVER. A torpid liver deranges the whole system, and produces SICK HEADACHE, ?. Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheumatism, Sallow Skin and Piles. There is no better remedy for these common diseases than DR. TUTT'S LIVER PILLS, as a trial will prove. Take No Substitute. Tesas Letter. To the Editor of the Dispatch: The little town of Roans Prairie was amused by a sbatn battle not long since, which scattered those who knew nothing about it, especially the darkies. That's right boys, why I not have some fun. A glass facorfcy is beingr erected near the town on the HGNrailroad, ; which will make several articles of I glass. Farmers are rapidly rushing their farm work. We are expecting another railroad through the Prairie in the near fu| ture, the line already beiDg surveyed. | The Company is the Trinity and ! Brazos Valley. There has been ; several surveys through the Prairie but this is said to be the only oDe that is successful. We certainly need another road and depot. Some folks of this place speak cf visitiDg LexiDgton county, S. C, the latter part of this year. I am proud j they think so much of my old home au In TMait- if anrl T faul nrclt.t ciirP j tbat they will enjoy themselves, j The Rev. Mr. Adams and family, I Mr. George Cone and the writer ate | dinner with Mr. M. H. Hendrix Sunj day last and must eay that there was j a most delicious dinner spread be' fore us. Some time ago we had a hail &' m | that damaged the peach crop, -^e | ground was covered with pieces of i ice that would measure three-fourths | of an inch and smaller though the j rain soon came and it disappeared. ! Parties or sociables are very nuj merous in and around this section. I March 29, 1905. Dodd H. ? i Cheated Death. j Kidney trouble often ends fatally, but ! by choosing: the right medicine, E. H. Wolfe, of Bear Grove, Iowa, cheated death. He says: "Two years ago I had kidney trouble, which caused me greatpain, suffering and anxiety, but I took Electric Bitters, which effected a complete cure. I have also found them of gTeat- benefit in general debility and nerve trouble, and keep them constantly I on hand, since, as I find they have no equal.'' Sold by The Kaufmann Drug co., druggist. Guarantee them at 50c. i ? . . j Protecting a Bride and Groom. I A bride and groom had been much | troubled by the stares of people at i hotels wherever they went. So when | they arrived at the next hotel the j groom called the colored head waiter. "Now, George," he said, "we have | been bothered to death by people j staring at us because we are just j married. We want to be free from ! that sort of thing here. Now, here's i two dollars, and remember I trust | you not to tell people that we are just married, if they asked you. Understand?" "Yas, sab!" said George; "I understand." All went well that dav. But the i ! following morning when the couple { came down to breakfast the staring was worse than ever. Chambermaids I in the hall sDickered; the clerks behind the desk nudged each other; I everybody in the dining room stared. ! When the couole returned to their I room it was only to see a bead Bticki ing out of nearly every room down the long hall. This was too much. This was the limit! Angered beyond control, the groom went to the desk and called for the ! bead-waiter. I "Look here, vou old fool," said the * | groom, "didn't I give you two dollars | to protect my wife and myself from i this staring business?'' "?ae, sab, you did," said George. "Pon me sould, I didn't tell, sah." "Then how about this stariDgf asked the irate groom. "Its worse here than anywhere. Lid anybody ask if we were just married?"' j "Yas, sab; several folks did," rej plied George. : "Well, what did you tell them?" ! "I tole 'em, sah," replied the hoDf st negro, "you wuza't married at all." ? ! Tho Rnoeian onvernment admits a I total loss of 107,000 in killed, wound] ed and captured at Mukden. | Among the 1.086 immigrants who j landed in New York on Tuesday of ! last week were 1,010 Irish. Many of | rosy-cheeked and sparkling eyed girls j were io the lot. A Sre at Rickv Mount, N. C, on ! Tuesday did $110,000 worth of damI ^ 4 \ aee. Tee insurance amounted to | ! $54,000. The principal losers were j a lumber company and an ice com| PaD7j T X L relieves when properly applied. Chastity is to a wcrnan what va- j i racity i3 to a man. I Med! , ; ! I SEED SWEET POTATOES. IE YOU ? ' < HAVE ANY ! < ? Seed Sweet Potatoes ; ! . j .J to sell, either Pumpkin Yams, Vine less > J Yams or Georgia Bucks, write to us at { < once as we are ready to buy. Mention how ( j many 01 eacn yon nave to oiler, w rite ns. > ! FRESH FIELD AND GARDEN SEED \ The largest and most complete stock of Farm and > { Garden Seeds in the State, in packages and bulk. Write < us for Fertilizer and Seed prices. ( i Lorick & Lowrance Go j J (INCORPORATED I J COLUMBIA, S. C. ! ! ; 1 qquthern i V : s 0 2 The South's Greatest Systema 2 + Unexcelled Dining Car Service, S 1 THROUGH PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS j 2 OX ALL THROUGH TRAINS, 2 \ m o | CONVENIENT SCHED UES ON ALL LOGAL TRAINS, f 4 Winter Tourist Rates are now in effect to all Florida points. For full * information as to rates, routes, etc., consult nearest Southern Railway Ticket Agent, or: J |R. W. HUjSTT,! 2 Division Passenger Agent, 2 2 CHARLESTON, ... S. C. 2 ?? nnieiim H H CRISP, | NEW MERCHANDISE, | ^0 500 Men's Fine Fur Hate. ? 300 Ladies' Fine Leather in all the new shapes, sold ^ Antomobile Hand Bags, the Z-M-f formerly at $2 00 and $2.50 J 75c. kind at 25c. each. each, now at 99c. A 300 dozen Men's 25c. Sns- tip VP One lot Men's Hats, good ^ penders, during this sale, 10c. shaDes, at 20 cents each. J per pair. :bssd? 50 dozen Men and Boy's ^ 5,C00 yards regular 10c. per km Can*. The 50 and 75c. kind, ^ yard Laces, all kinds and ?? 1 - "* - n Mftlifi fif T-* * i **> rr OO la ~/\ Mj-Jr J H JOr III1S Sole tCULS. mm uuiiug \.u.ia oaic <J\s. ^ mm ^ WW 0Qe iot ^ien's An Wo01 j per ^ard ww A A Pants at 50 cents per pair. 5,000 yards 10c. EmbroidS3 500 pairs Men's Fine Pants ^ eries, Edgings ami Insertings JJL~ at 09c per pair.- ^ during this sale, 5c. per yard. WW 5a 25 dozen Men's Best Cordu- ^ All 25c. Embroideries, durrjjy roy Pants at $1 20 per pair. ^ ing this sale at 10c. per yard. iy> 100 Men's ierv Finest All K 100 pieces very fast Calicoes WW SJS Wool Fancy Worsted Suits. 0 and Percales, during this sale aS CO .sold everywhere for S16 50 ^ oc. per yard. CjfcJ WW Per suit- a11 sizes at $10'00 X 25 LaditS' $5 00 Jackets at WW during this sale. ? S3.48. CJ3 500 Boy's Two Piece Suits ^ '00 Ladies' Good Walking CJLJ at almost half price - SI 00, Skirts, at 85c. each. fyLfr S1.48, and S3 48?during this f 300 Ladies'Fine Dress Hats fpfffc sale> ^ sold for S3 50 to $5 00 each, One lot Men's All Silk ^ during this sale 51.69 each. djlif 3^55 String Ties at 5c. each. ? One lot Ladies S/.50 to CiJ One lot Men's Fine All Silk ^ S10 00 Dress Hats for S3.49 wyf 2 fl % 25c. Midget String Ties, dur- 0 daring this sale. Itn^ ILJMI ^ i r.'.n r Ww IDg ttll8 S8.I6 J UC- i,UjV ^(luics iiuc ucuistituuJVJ One lot Men's 50c. All Silk ^ ed Handkerchiefs at 2.\c. each. innp ft S Fine Four-in Hand Neckties, 0 500 only Men's 10c. white SttJ wjJ doring this sale 19*0. each, or ^ Handkerchiefs at 5c. each, wf# three for 50 cent9. ^ One lot Men's SI.25 tin2-fl-C une lot Men's Fine Rain & drevs Kid Gloves at 50c. each, Coats at SI.98 each. ^ 200 pieces full 36-inch 1,000 Umbrellas at half price ^ Bleeching at 5c. p^r yard. Hollar Umbrellas at 50c. All ? 500 Ladies' SI 00 and $1.50 J-fkf $5.00 Umbrellas at $2.00 each ^ Corsets at 25c. and 50c. dur. gg gg ?K3 ^ gg 8S isAJ 1210 Main Street, Opposite the Opera House, w9 ??5 H OOLT71?BIA, S. C. gg