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The Cause of Many Sudden Deaths. There is a disease prevailing in this country most dangerous because so decep? j![ |! lUjllft tive. Many sudden deaths are caused by it?heart disease, pneumonia, /Til keart failure or ' M r aP?Plexy are ?^en 'AH \/j result of kidtyT I I \ & nev disease. If I sA* ||y kidney trouble is { ed blood' will attack the vital organs, causing catarrh of the bladder, or the kidneys themselves break down and waste away cell by cell. Bladder troubles almost always result from a derangement of the kidneys and a cure is obtained quickest by a proper treatment ot ttxe kidneys. It you are leel- j ing badly you can make no mistake by J taking Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy. It corrects inability to hold urine and scalding pain in passing it, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to go often through the day, and to get up many times during the night. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and is sold by all druggists in fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles. You may have a sample bottle of this wonderful new discovery and a book that tells all about it, both sent free by mail. Address, Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. When writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, SwampRoot, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. ' PROFESSIONAL CARDS. * Ad. martin, attorney . AND COUNSELOR AT LAW, LEXINGTON, S. C Office in Harm a n Building rear of court house. TXTiH nmnfina in oil r?nn T-f C SrX>ni{ll M Ui 1U uu vvvuku. attention to collection of claims. wm. w. hawes, V? Attorney and Counselor at Law. NEW BROOKLAND.S. C. Practice in all Courts. Business solicited. November 1, 1905. C. M. EFIBD. T. E. DBEHEB. Efird & dreher, attorneys at law, lexington c. h.. s. c. Will practice in all the Courts. Business solicited. One member of the firm will always be at office, LexiDgton, S. C. T h. frick. j . attorney at law, chapin, & c. Office: Hotel Marion, 4th Boom, Second Floor. Will practice in all the Courts. Thurmond & timmerman, attorneys at law, will practice in all courts, Kaufmann Bldsr, LEXINGTON, S.C, We will be pleased to meet those having legal business to be attended to at our office In the Kaufmann Building at any time. Respectfully, J. Wm. THURMOND. G. BELL TIMMERMAN, . A lbert m. boozer, A ATTORNEY AT LAW, COLUMBIA., S. 0. Office: 1316 Main Street, upstairs, opposite Van Metre's Furniture Store. Especial attention (riven to business entrusted to him by bis fellow citizens of Lexington county. George r. rembert, ATTORNEY AT LAW. 1221 LAW RANGE, COLUMBIA. S. C. I will be glad to serve my friends from Lexington County at any time, and am prepared to -practice law in all state and Federal Courts. ______ Andrew Crawford, ATTORNEY AT LAW, COLUMBIA, S. C. Practices in the State and Federal Courts, and offers his professional services to the citizens of Lexington County, Law Offices, C ) Residence, 1529 1209 Washington < > Pendle ton Street. Street. ( ) Office Telephone No. 1372. Residence Telephone No. 1036. ?BOYD EVANS, .LAWYER AND COUNSELLOR. Columbia, S. C. Dr. p. h. shealy, DENTIST, LEXINGTON, S. C. Office Up Stairs in Roof's Building. TvR. F. C. GILMORE, / DENTIST. 1510 Main Street, COLUMBIA, S. C. OmcE Houes: 9 a. m. to 2 i?. m., !and from 3 to 6 d. m. jrnl?i g DEALER IN g I General 11 Merchandise, I Corner Main and New Street, g Opposite Confederate ? Monument, I Lexington, - - S. C. g It is not difficult to relieve blind, bleeding, itelling or protruding piles with ManZan, the great pile remedy. It is put up in collapsable tubes with nozzle, and may be introduced and applied at the seat of the trouble. Stops pain instantly. Sold by Kaufman Drug Co. The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, April 25,1906. THOMAS DIXON SOUNDS ALARM. ' Marriage, of Whites and Negroes in the North. Thomas Dixon, Jr., author of "The C anemaD,' sends to the Columbia Record Borne clippings from New York papers giving various details of the Sorites case and that of Mrs. -r o Oliver in New York. The first is a negro who was recently convicted of holding wbit9 women in slavery for immoral purposes. The second case was that of a white woman who was slapped in the face on a street car by a negro. Since f that time, as Record press dispatches have shown, Mrs. Oliver has been subjected to all Boris of insulting and threatening letters written by negro men and women. Mr. Dixon's letter follows: Editor The Record: Permit me to call your attention to the enclosed ' cliDniners from this week's New York V 4 ? papers. The time has come for the South to boldly demand the repeal of all laws permitting the marriage of negroes to whites. Maine and Nebraska have placed themselves in ! line with Southern sentiment on this issue. The increasing corruption of our race in the North by the physical contact of more than a million ne: groes, is something appalling. ^ The revelation of the Spriggs case < is the foulest blot on the civilization j of the century. The real details of J this trial were never printed. The 3 half-whispered testimony of those { trembling, broken girls caused the f judge and jury again and again to j burst into tears. This negro was the 1 keeper of four prison houses into < which young white girls were kid- ] napped and held for years in slavery for black beastB to violate. He will serve but eleven years for these hideous crimes and will then return to his white wife and his old life. < Beyond a doubt this system of < secret white slavery to negro bestiali ty is universal m tne great JNortnern j cities. The increasing pollution of our ; racial life is easily fixed where it belongs. The open and shameless prac- , tice of social equality with negroes by some of our great educational i leaders, the pandering to negro votes, and the disgusting propaganda of shallow theorists are producing these fruits. A big buck negro is collector of internal revenue in New York. His imployment of a white girl stenographer is a daiiy object lessons to his race. In Chicago, recently, a public reception was held for negroes only who had married white women. Seventy-five of these mongrel families were present. The reflect action of negro infolence and crime in the North is quickly felt in the South. Letters tell the story and inflame the minds of South t_ i _ _ ern oiaca men. Will you Dot use your power in moulding the opini6n of the nation in this vital issue? Lest you may think, as has been foolishly said by my enemies, that my work is only for personal gain, allow me to Bay that every dollar earned by the Southern Amusement company in presenting "The Clansman" in the South has been promptly reinvested in its Northern produc. tion. As a Southern writer and dramatist I have given and sm giving the best cueigies ui my lua tu preserve rue purity of our race and avoid a slowly approaching but inevitable conflict. And I hope to have the continued support of my people South of the Mason and Dixon line. Sincerely, Thomas Dixon, Jr. Daniels Sillei by W. P. Little. The State, 20th. Clarence Daniels, formerly one cf the extra men with the street rail way^ was shot and instantly killed last night at 11.40 o'clock by William P. Little, a conductor with the street railway. From the information gathered by the police and the coroner there hae been a long standing difference between the two men and the shootiDg last Dieht waB the culmination of the disagreement. The shooting occurred just back of the car barn at the cor ner cf Main aDd Tobacco etreets. Little used a 38-calibre pistol and shot three times. As soon as possible, he surrendered to Officer Hedgepath at the union station and was placed under arrest. Little and Daniels had a difficulty on the car going to the barn, and Little, who runs on the Blanding street line, passed hie car in the shed and started to his home on the Richland factory bill, Daniels, who was in the car shed, followed him around the corner. There the shooting took place but what passed between the two men only Little knows and be will make no statement. One of the bullets struck Daniels in the centre of the forehead, another glanced off his cheek bone and another went through bis right breast. Death must have been almost instantaneous. Little is from Laurens county, is unmarried and lives in one of the bouses in the factory district. Daniels leaves a wife and several children. The dead man is a native Columbian, and was at one time an employe of the Southern railway. Grip Quickly Knocked, Out. "Some weeks ago during the severe winter weather both my wife and myself. contracted severe colds wliich speedily developed into the worst kind of la grippe with all its miserable symptoms," says Mr. Jr. S. Egleston, of Maple Landing, Iowa. "Knees and joints aching, muscles sore, head stopped up, eyes and nose running, with alternate spells of ;hills and fever. We began using Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, aiding the same with a double dose of CliamberLain's Stomach and Liver Tablets, and by its liberal use soon completely knocked out the grip." Sold by The Kaufmann Drug Co. Obituary. Caroline Rebecca, wife of Sim Hitc, l?C? ? O 1 QCQ OW/-J WHO LIU1U UCpbCUJUCl U, AUUU, auu died April 14,1906 Thus another chair is left vacant in the household. She was baptised in infancy, confirmed in early life, a member of StDavid's Lutheran church, and remained faithful till death. She leaves a kind husband and six children, two having preceded her to a better land, and a host of friends and relatives to mdurn her departure. Her body was laid to rest in St. David's cemetery by her pastor, Rev. R. E Livingston, i A friend. If the Saby is Cutting Teeth, Be sure and use that old and well tried remedy, Mrs. Wmslow's Soothing Syrup, for children teething. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for diarrhoea. Twenty-five cents a bottle, tf It is the best of all. Democratic Clubs Organise. To the presidents of the respective Democratic Clubs of Lexington Countj: The State Democratic Executive Committee has called a Convention of the Democratic party of South Carolina to be held on May 16th according to the constitution. You will please call a meeting of your respective clubs Saturday, April 28, as provided in the constitution for the purpose of organizing for the next two years, and elect delegates to the County Convention to be held at Lexington C. H. on Monday, May 7. The representation in the County Convention is one delegate for every 25 members and majority fraction thereof according to club roll of 1904 . John Bell Towill, uounty unairman. A Lucky Postmistress is Mrs. Alexander, of Cary, Me., who has found Dr. King's New Life Pills to be the best remedy she ever tried for keeping the Stomach, Liver and Bowels in perfect order. You'll agree with her if you try these painless purifiers that infuse new life. Guaranteed by Kaufmanu Drug Co., Druggist. Price 25c. Upon the application of M. L Little aDd others, the State Supreme Court yesterday named May 8:h at 1 50 p. m. as the time for the examination of applicants for the bar. Mr. Hoose - holder It has always been my desire to secure for my customers the best of everything at ^ ?r- gajT the lowest possi- Bfflfrll-f' ble price. fSBfljjffillM' VJflB As regards J9H paint in particufar, I am pleased to announce that after thorough investigation I have accepted the exclusive agency for Hammar Condensed Paint, |^H which is guaran, teed for five years 'B|^B with, back of this guarantee, the great St. Louis House of Hammar, with a half nillion dollars cash capital and a third of a century reputation for honorable dealing. rri _ _ 1_ _ 1 2- TT mere is no guess worK auout nammar Paint. We sell you the paint and oil separately. It isn't ready mixed. You can mix it yourself, and all you need to do it with is a stick. Paint live# only so long as the oil in it lives. When you mix the paint with oil yourself, which takes but a minute, we absolutely guarantee it to wear for five years and to look well at the end of that time. By purchasing the fresh oil separately and taking a minute's time to mix it with Hammar Paint you save 25%, which means in a nutshell that you have not paid for canned oil at paint prices. One gallon Hammar Paint and one gallon linseed oil covers six hundred square feet of surface, two coats, which is the closest sticking, farthest spreading. and longest lasting paint in the icorld. Come in and talk it over. There ia nothing else like Hammar Paint, LEXINGTON DEPT. STORE KIMRD'S HOTEL, J. C. K1NARD, Proprietor, Leesville, - - - S. C. The best artenrion given gnest. Modern conveniences. Table supplied with best the market affords. Sick headache results from a derangement of the stomach and is cured by Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tab lets. Sold bv The Kaufmann Drug Co. John Andrew?, colored, proprietor of a stable at Bessemer, Ala , shot aDd killed Taylor Johnson aDd wounded Will Milstead, both white, on Sunday night. The difficulty occurred about a horse the white men put in the stable. Andrews is in jail. T. X. L. cures rheumatism. Israel Ludlow, inventor of the aeroplane, or flying ship, was so badly hurt in a fall at Atlantic Beacb, Fia., on Saturday that he will probably die. When 2C0 feet high his machine broke and fell with him to the earth, breaking his back. For headache, constipation, etc., Dade's Little Liver Pills are best. They cleanse and. tonic the Liver. Sold by Kaufman Drug Co. Judge Prince sentenced 20 negroes and a white man at Saluda on Saturday. The sentence of each negro was $30 and of the white man $150. Ail paid up. T. X. L cures neuragia. The man behind the plow is worth more to the country than the man behind the gnr?*brut now. TJAJBHTS Nervf^and Bone Oil Cures Rheumatism, Cuts, Sores, Burns and Bruises Large bottle 25 cents. Sold by all Druggists. Feminine intuition is the mother of "I told >ou so " BT HASR*!*ALSAM j cj:a we.iu-.:ea ue uu. IffJi'1KV*^ *& WE Promote! a luxuriant growth. I flSSCTSS1- - .-ifa iff ever Fails to Bestore Gray! Hair to its "Xouthful Color. I '"'*'""" *p'l>^<li*'ue9 h a i r _ t al iing. j It i p well to attfii.pt much, prov & ing one can do it wrii Littledoctor Brings back health by arousing the Liver. The liver is the cause of most illness--it gets lazy. Ramon's Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets restore the natural functions. Don't use purgatives-try Ramon's Complete Treatment. 25 cents. Sold by all Druggists. mm IWwSffWwANfl I 2TE77' SPRIGS' G-OODS. | i Our stock is fully up to the standard. We continue ^ i to carry just such goods as please our customers, and ^ i the prices are always reasonable. Impossible, we have ^ ^ the prettiest line we ever handled. All we ask is a i ^ call and inspect for yourselves. ^ < onniun kiii i mrnv < s ormnu milliner i s J Our Millinery stock has some of the smartest Ready- ? K to-Wear Hats you ever saw. The choicest styles of K most approved Millinery. These creations will please ? K you, if you will only Igive us a chance to show you ? K what we have. K ? Main St. Near Post Office, ^ j S COLUMBIA, , S. C. ? DAVIS I COMPANY, 1517 MAIN STREET. Harness. Saddles, Robes AND EVERYTHING PERTAINING TO THE BUSINESS COLUMBIA, S.C. Our stock being purchased before the recent decided advance, we can make it to the interest of all to buy of us. Our motto is "NOT HOW CHEAP, BUT HOW GOOD," as the . best is the Cheapest. FITZMAURICE'S 1704 and 1706, FITZMAURICE'S 3 Arch Store, Main Street. 3 Arch Store. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. We have just received a fine lot of Dry Goods, Notions, Clothing and Furnishings for Men, Boys and Ladies. The best values we ever had the pleasure of showing the kind friends of Lexington. It will give us great pleasure for our friends across the river to get these bargains. SPECIAL. | MENS CLOTHING. I 1000 y'ds 30 inch Percale at 6 J worth 10c. j We will show one of the best lines to be 1000 y'ds Plaid Nansock, 6] worth 10c. seen any where, at $5.00 to $10.00. 3000 y'ds Light Print, -- 31 worth 5c. | mrpi? at.t.g 20 pieces Evening Crepon, at -- I2.?c. j ^ 50 pieces Scotch Lawn, at - - - 4\c ; for f}ie working man, 50c. pair to $1.0'. 5000 y'ds Organdee Lawn 81 worth 10c. 50 pieces 30 incli White Lawn - - 0}c. / BOYS' SUITS 50 pieces 32 inch Lawn - 5c. prora 5QC any kind you want. MADRAS AND PES. T>axttq 30 pieces White Madras and PES for j B0YS PA:NTS shirts and suits only 10c. j From 25c. to 50c. pair. FANCY DUCE SUITINGS. j 50 dozen men's sliirts, at 25c. each. 100 pieces nice styles, at - 12.>c. j piat? aatta oa'Psi DRESS GOODS AND SILKS. | MEN S HAToAND CAPS. We have any style you want and at I Prices very low for quality. See us TRLNKS AND SUI1 CASES for a nice Dress. At factory prices. DONT FORGET H* A. TAYLOR.^ Successor to Maxwell & Taylor, NEAR POST OFFICE, COLUMBIA, S. C, When you are looking for Furniture. We buy only in Solid Car Load Lots and at the lowest spot cash prices, we therefore, can sell you for less than if we bought in local shipments. Solid Oak Bedroom Suites. / Nine Pieces?One Bed, One Bureau, One Washstand, One Centre Table, Four Chairs. One Eocker?all for $17.25. No. 7 Black Oak Stove with a complete list of Cooking Utinsels, for $7.50. No. 8 Black Oak, with a complete list of Utinsels, $12.50. Our line is complete. All grades. Prices guaranteed as low as Furniture of the same grade can be bought. Write or phone 490 for prices. JtA. A. COLUMBIA, S. C. UI mi m ?cT COLUMBIA, S. C. We especially invito you to come to see us for your Furniture, Ciieap Suites, Ire Beds, Lounges, Stoves, Law Curtains, Side Boards, Hall Racks. 30 DAYS SALE?FURNISH YOUR HOUSE. W. H. SOWELL, FURNITURE CO., 1231 Main Street, Opposite Y. M. C. A. Building.