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/ yM WE PAY FREIGHT ON ALL CASH BILLS of $10 and over. » %- CAREFUL PACKING AND PROMPT SHIPMENT. ’sCld. Reliable Dry Goods Store, 80 AND 82 HASELL STREET, CHARLESTON, S; C. of Walletl>oro and Vicinity to Inspect our Extensive Spring Stock and Get in Touch with th e Best Values, the Largest Variety and the Lowest Prices. Mail Receive Prompt and Careful Attention. WH GUARANTEE IN ' EVERY TRANSACTION. New Cotton Fabrics. $7 in. Poile da Nerd OughoM, l*4c. yard SC in. Wjm Mfldra* $«0t yntitr. UU-yard r / **fr ' ** f '* • ICO Cm wWli 70 in. wide oil Davltai al Me. das. Unbleaeh lYatek. COc. yard. ■ i -i JBILt^CK: SILKS. We control the sale of aotne of the beet Blaek Bilks sold in this market k Warranted Block Silks extra wide at $1^<V 105, $1.50, and pM yd. •si STtts ♦^tSM' io wear at 73c. •LOO, $LS5, $L50 awd $tJ^ yd. Calarsd Bilks » swdlsss rariety of iw styles ia ilain aad Faaeics. SPRING NOVELTIES. Every seaeon Cads as is the frost rank with the latsstSaod moat novelties in Silas, Dress Goods, &c. stylish Black Dross New and Stjrliah |prrn< Dross foods. At,! reliable broads. David Glasgow farrapt s, ?~l2£‘xrvs t.Ot'Z. % r 1 »r^ The old mem magnificent of the American Navy. I HE moot fanx>M oaval oSkfl| fta Amertean htotorjr was ISrvM aioafsw Fanaaut. 1114 ASutral Priestlew Pahrtos at 75* $L00,$U5, $1J0, p.QA yard. Blaok Baite 50a 75o. fUO yaST^ Brilliantines at 50c. 15c. $1.0), $U5, $1.50 yard. y., Kid Gloves at Gort. $imo LadiesJKid Gloves 79c <1 << u 11 11 11 11 11 11 ii 11 11 SPECIAL IN READY TO WEAR GARMENTS CORSETS. Jumper SQk Suits in Brown, Blue Black at iiaoo aua 5ilk Shirt Waist Suits braded yoke aud Cuffs, at $15.00 Fancy Silk Suits in latest styles, $’8.oo, $22.00 and $25.00 rine White Lawn Waists tastily made $1.00, $1.50, £2.00, $2.50 to $5.00. lollies iittsliit We carry a very extensive stock of Lawns, Under Garments, products of the ben factories in the country at moderate prices. v KERRISON DRY GOODS COMPANY, 80 and 82 HASELL STREET. We carry a complete varie ty of the best brands of CORSETS We fit with satisfaction the stout and the thin figure. Prices range 50c. to #5.00 a pair. On«ot the most Imiuent ana augoy- Idr conditloL* that beset humanity it Catarrh of the Bile Duett. There are several little duett hading from the Liver and Gail Bladder that anite into one main or "Common Bile Dnct” which carriev the bile and other fluid into the intestines. When there is a Catarrhal condition of ihete ducts the whole aystem it affected and all kinds of mean feelioga are experienced. Ordinary liver pilla and powdert fail to telieve thia condition. An eminent phyaician a profeator in a Columbus, Ohio Medical College, wrote the prescription from which Kydale’t Liver Tablets are made, and they never fail to relieve this very common condition. For Biliousneaa and Torpid Liver they are without an equal Fair Play. There It In mo^t men that Instinct which Is cne of the best herltagea from boyhood—thia instinct for fair play and for giving everybody **a chance." H*ppv is the man that eats on ly for hutager, and drinks only lor thirst, and lives by reason, not by example, aud provides for use and necessity, not for oaten- tatibn and pomp.—Seneca. . „ r , , , but One doae convinces, aud that done it. nrofaniiy won’t cure them. Doan’s Itching pllet provoke profanit free Write for simple. Rvdale Remedy Ca, Newport Newt, Ya. Guaranteed oy John M Klein. Maintaining His Dignity. Even the elevator boy has to draw the line somewhere to prevent his be ing made too common. The maid who' announced to the gxiest waiting at the door that "she didn't hear her until •he had rung three times’’ meets her match iu the elevator boy described by • writer in tbe New York Evening Peat ‘Tf any one calls, Percy, while 1 nm oat, tell him to wait. I shall be right back.” said the woman to the apart ment house elevator boy. There was no answer. **Did you hear me? Why don’t you •newer?*’ asked the woman, with some heat M I'never answers, ma’am, unless 1 doesn’t hear, and then I says ’What 1 * ” Manufactured at Newport News, Va Bold from Maine ro Florida, ready any amply able to help all in need at i nd time or place irrespective of aatioaality creed or color. Such is the record of, Rydale’s Liver Tablests, nude only for liver and Dowel troubles aud the, beet remedy known for Chetanh of thb Biie Ducts. Write Rydale Remedy Co , for free sample. Guaranteed by John to Klein. Ointmeut cures itching, bleeding or protruding piles after years of^euffering. At auy drug »t<»re. o He preaches well who lives well —French Many a man wears a thinking cap under his silk hat. All my Winter Millinery and Dress Goods from now on will be sold strictly at Cost Watch Mv w Bargain Counter for specials every week Constipation causes headache, nausea, dizziness, languor, heart pal pitation. Drastic physica gripe, sicken, weaken tbe bowels aad don’t cure. Doan’s Kegulets act gently aud cure constipation. 25 cents. Ask your druggist. '•V. IT "i. A > <ri-M -i yti. •; 0? MRS. W. A. BLACK I Moat disfiguring akin eruptions, scrofula, pimples, rashes, etc, are due to impure blood. Burdock Blood Bittota la a olearning blood tooio. Mokee you clear* yed. clear-broined.clear-skinned. I Working Him. ’They certainly are working that boy too hard at college.” mused the fond papa, as he thoughtfully signed up another check for his Industrious son. ■aid tbe I’m very Suffering A Dollars Saved. B. 8. Loper, of Mariila, N. Y., says: "I am a carpenter and have had amay i’a Arnica Salve. It has saved' mo saflhriac and doilan. It it by far the beak. hoaitpg •slva I have over toaod. Heal* borne, aloera, fever saree, enasma end piles. 26c at Joha M Klein’s Druggist. Stops earache in two minutes, tooth ache or pain of burn or scald in five minutes; hoarseness twelve hours—Dr Themes Eclcctric Oil monarch over pain. If a Woman Haa Brains. If a woman’s got brains a man Is sd astonished that ho forgets to find out If she has good looks.—Dolores Bacon -In High Places." “One of my weaknesses,” bon vivant. “is Swiss cheese, fond of it” “Ob.” excleimed ‘ the dyspeptic, “that's the cheese with the holes in It! Very indigestible.” “Are they? Well, I never eet the holes.’’—Philadelphia Press. 8wist newspaper: “Boerd and lodging required in a fine family by a German lady of the Middle ▲tea etc. Pinesslve Csrbolised acts like a p tioe draws oat inflrm&tiou and poison. Anuieptic, heeling. For chapped heads ips, cats, burns, fcrauoe has about concluded by this time that Gen. Sheridan’s re mark about good Indiant would ap ply equally well to Moors. ' The Tima to Quarrel In Lanarkshire there lived a laird named Hamilton. Ha was noted for his peculiarities. On a certain occasion n neighbor waited upon him asking the favor as a neighbor with the loan of £20. It was only a bill of accommo dation for thsso months, which lad to tho following reply; “Ns, as. I conns do that” laird? To have done thing for Ithero.” Aya. aye, Tammsa, but nets within ye haa seething shoot! I conns 4s It.” Ttl a sms' affair to lotrd- ■ -Wool ys wad git IBs sfllsr fret tho as Bo careful about that little oongh. Get sometning riaht rway* some good, reliable remedy that will move the bow els Kenedy’s Laxative Conch Byrap acts gently yet prompily on tbe bowels and allays inflammation at the same time. It is pleasant to take and it it especially recommended for children, as it tastes nearly as good as maple sugar. Sold by John M Klein a He Ought te Know. It is said that the late Professor Cobu of Breslau, the famous botanist, thus opened his course of lectures on botany: ‘The four chief constituents of plants are: Carbon, C; oxygen. O; hydrogen, H, and nitrogen. K.” Then, writing down these four letters, with apparent careleaanes. on the black board—COHN—he smiled, observing. Tt Is clear that I ought to know thing a boot botany.” Tfli« is what Hor. Jake Mo^re. State) Warden of (Jeorpia. says of Kodol For r>y‘j'*»psm: "E C Dewitt vfc Co.. Obica- j go. 111—Dear Sirs—I have mfTered J more thn twenty \e«r* from ind irea- 1 tion About eighteen months ago I had ' growu so much worse that 1 conld not dUre* , a ciust of corn breui and could , uoi irtsin anything on my stomveh 1 ! lost 2-) Ibe ; iu faci I made up my mind that i could not live bat a short time, j when * (riend of mine recommended i Kodol. I consented to try U to please , him nnd 1 was better in one dav. I row weii’h more fan I ever did in my life and am in b tier health than for many years Kodol did it. t Keep a bottle con- slantlv. and write this hoping that humsnitv will b* benefitt-.d. Yours very t-ulv. Jake C Moore, Atlanta, Aug. lo,'lb04 ” Sold bv John m Klein. Oil Test For Kansas Roads. It is reported that the board of coun ty commissioners of Wyandotte coun ty, Kan., will oil thirteen miles of macadam roads In the county as an experiment. Tbe cost of tbe oiling Is estimated at $73 a mile. The roads are first swept, then sprinkled with oil, and after the oil has soaked In screenings are again scattered over tbe roadbeds. It Is proposed to give the roads about three applications of oil during the year. It ia impossible lor an - drug to digest food without the aid of the stomach. Mon cannot do natures work- he onn only nasi tt her, and any concern claim ing that they have a remedy that will digest food without tbe ' aid of the stomach, thereby allowing?*he atomaoh to lay Idle and resL are claiming the Imposeible. All remedies for stomach troubles should be given with the sole purpose of aiding nature and|enabllng stomach to do its own work One of the beat Stomach Specialist# in the U. S. wrote the prescription from which Rydale’a Stomach Tablets are made and they enable the stomach to do Its own work. Two sizes, 25c, and 5oc. John M Kleia - Still More Remarkable. “It la remarkable that birds are so in telligent, when they’re so small. Isn’t It?*’ asked one member of the. Easy Information club of her choicest friend as they walked home together from • talk on “Our Home Birds." “Yes, isn’t It?*’ assented the friend eagerly. “Why, Just think even how very clever the little cuckoos in cuckoo clocks are, aud of course they art only . little wooden birds!" •i « ■ "Wall, daughter, that young man at youra mode a record Inst evening.” “What do you mean, par ’’Your mother reported him off 4bs hatrack at 10 o’clock, and jot ho hadn’t your brother •t 12.”—LoalsvtUe at which was tot I rhka places ttos st head of tho tMt of oar naval •re, woo gtreB dartag the e|r« mir IS M a tool saswwfcst rasaaihshto that a man poet sixty years af o#ii tt may he In the navy. He family of the hta boyhood and woe hied to the sen. Though hat eleven yeera of eg# whoa the war of 1812 began, he served through that conflict, np to the begin ning of 1815. as a midshipman. From that time forth be remained In naval service, and when the civil war opened he was already a veteran of almost fifty years’ experience. Though born lu Tennessee and living in Virginia nt tlu* outbreak of the war, Fnrragut ndhered to tbe I’niou cause, went liorth and was n^slLTied to duty In command of the woKterp blockading squadron In the pdf of Mexico. Tbe story of his gunboats passing the l«t- tcrUs nt Npw Orleans, Port Hudson end VieUNburg under heavy fire, re- ruitirg in tbe capture of New Orleans nnd t pouing tho Mb - Issippl up to Vicksburg, greatly aiding General Grant iu the tc lions but triumphant campaign against the latter strong hold, Is unique in naval history. P.nt Farragut’s most scifsationnl nnd thrilling exploit was achieved at the entraiH-e to Mobile bay, where he was in Immediate personal command, his vessels plunging through a field of the enemy's tor|*cdoos, silencing the terri ble batteries and capturing Confeder ate boats in what was practically a fhmd to baud light. Schoolboys of many years foYome will be thrilled by the story of the brave old admiral lashed to tbe 'mast of his flagship, glasses iu band, watching and direct ing tbe movements of h'.s squadron In the midst of a plunging tire from pow erful forts. Farragut received from congrofsMhe highest honors possible, the ranks of rice admiral aud admiral being cre ated for him. He was the old man magnificent of tbe American navy. James Waff. HO’AEUTVS LOVE. The steam en gine was a play' thing when he began to tinker with it. 1 T waa George Stophenson^vbo, ob serving the lifting of a teakettle’* lid by tbe hissing and bubbling within, conceived and ersatod tho Unit crude steam engine, but tt was Jamas Watt who divined the immonao possibilities of steam as a motiva force and adapted the engine to practical uses. 8o many and so important wore tbe Improvements added by Watt'titot he ahorse honors with the inventor at the original engins. Watt tht steam engine, adapting it to | oral industrial servlco. He took ombryotic contrivance tt practically to g Salahad on hr parity for the Uatventty of M~ ~ ft tts ** ipeat ttepcawwMBt *