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DO YOU GET UP \ WITH A UAME BACK? m - Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost everybody who reads the news^ pnpers is sure to know of the wonderful W n ,? ^ cures made by Dr. * -| Kilmer's Swampj| Root, the great kidLr.JIk ney> liver and bladHpf'Wl"/ 1 der remedy, fir |s/ It is the great med- ! V| ft |M ical triumph of the j Eli' Srrril nineteenth century; ! PM discovered after years 1 it?-I I ?TYJ-st R - f ^raor^Vl I i ?. ?M by Dr. Kilmer, the I [ ' "11**7* * eminent kidney and i V bladder specialist, and is -wonderfully " successful in promptly curing lame back, uric acid, catarrh of the bladder and Blight's Disease, which is the worst form of kidney trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is not reci ommended for everything but if you have kidney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found just the remedy you need. It has been tested in so many ways, in hospital work and in private practice, and has proved so successful in every case that a special arrangement has been made by which all readers of this paper, who have not already tried it, may have a sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book telling more about Swamp-Root, and how to findout if you have kidney or bladder trouble. When writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper and send your address to Dr. Kilmer ffT. & Co.. Binghamton. dollar size bottles are Home of swamp-Boot, sold by all good druggists. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, 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 Harman Building rear of court house. Will practice in all courts. Special attention to collection of claims. t VTTM. W. HA WES, ^ XT Attorney and Counselor at Law. NEW BROQKLAND. S. C. Practice in all Courts. Business solicited. November 1,1905. C. *. KFIRD. r. E. DKEHEB. 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, Lexington, fcj. C. JH. FRICK. attorney at law, CHAPIN, S. C. . Office: Hotel Marion, 4th Koom. Second Floor. "Will practice in all tho Court? Thurmond & timmerman, attorneys at law, WILL practice in all courts, Xaufmann Bid*, LEXINGTON, S. C, We will be pleased to meet those bavin* legal business to be attended to at our office hi the Kaufuoann Building at any time. Respectfully, J. Wm. THURMOND. G. BELL TIMMERMAN, a lbert m. eoozer, a. attorney at law, columbia, 8. 0. Offick: 1316 Main S: reet, upstairs, opposite Van Metre's Furniture Store. Especial attention given to business entrust4 ed to him by his fellow citizens of LexiD*ton 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 auy time, and an prepared to practice law in all state and Federal > Courts. Andrew crawford^ attorjfey at law. ' columbia, 8. c. Practices in the 8tate and Federal Courts, and offers his professional services to the -1.' - * T _ ri/M.ntn citizens ul juoatukivu wuuij, Law Offices, ( ) Residence, 1529 1209 Washington < [ Pendle ton Street. Street. ( ) Office Telephone No. 1372. Residence Telephone No. 1036. XIr BOYD EYANS, w .lawyer and counsellor. Columbia, S. c. DR. P. H. SHEALY, DENTIST, LEXINGTON, S. C. Office Up Stairs in Roof's Building. Dr. f. c. gilmore, dentist. 1510 Main Street, columbia, s. c. Office Houbs.- 9 a. m. to 2 p. m., .and from 3 to 6 p. m. firOliil k g DEALER IN g | General 1 | Merchandise, | j I Corner Main and law Strait, fi | Oppasita Confadarata 5 < < 9 Monumant, 5 e Lexington, - - S. C. f> " * 1 lV Klin/1 It is not uimcmi wj ?uc?c j bleeding, itching 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 i pain instantly. Sold by Kaufman Drug Co. * The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, June 6, 1906. WEDDING MARRED BY TERRIBLE OUTRAGE. King Alfonso and Bride Had a Miraculous Escape from Deadly Bomb. Sixteen of the Party Were Killed Outright?Royal Carriage Splintered Madrid, May 31.?The public rejoicings over the marriage of King Alfonso and Princess Victoria had a terribly dramatic sequel at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon, when a bomb thrown from an upper window exploded with deadly effect near the coach occupied by the king and queen. Providentially King Alfonso and Queen Victoria es[ caped by an electric wire deflecting | the bomb, but at least 16 persons, most of them being of the personal and military escort and the others spectators, were killed. Many others were injured. One royal groom, who was leading a horse drawing the coach carrying the king and queen was killed. Several of those killed were standing on the balcony of the house from which the bomb was thrown. The explosion occurred just as the royal couple were about to enter the palace. The procession had just passed through Mayor street and was about to turn into the Esplanade leading to the palace, when an explosion shook the buildings in the vicinity, stunning a large number of people and throwing the cortege into inextricable confusion. The royal coach was brought to a sudden stop by the shock, officers and soldiers of the escort falling to the ground about the equerry and horses that had been killed. The screams of the terrified multitude mingled with the groans of the dying. It was immediately seen that the royal coach was intact except as it had been damaged by flying splinters. King Alfonso immediately alighted and assisted Queen Victoria out of the carriage. They then entered another coach and were driven swiftly to the palace. All this happened so quickly that people away from the immediate vicinity were not aware of the tragedy that had been enacted and continued to acclaim their sovereigns. Soon, however, there appeared the empty royal coach with two horses missing and the others spattered with blood, several of them bleeding from wounds. The grooms and drivers looked deathly pale in their spangled uniforms. Then came a boy shouting that the bomb had been thrown at the king. The appearance of the king and queen in a coach brought out delirious ovations as the fact was recognized that the sovereigns had been spared. In the meantime the scene of the tragedy presented a horrible spectacle with dead men and horses lying about, literally torn to pieces. Intense excitement prevailed, the mob invading the streets while the forces of the guards sought to maintain order and block the approaching streets. The bodies were wrapped up in blankets j and removed on litters, while the j wounded were carried to hospitals in ambulances. The pavement was covered with blood, and the upper stories of the buildings nearest were spattered with it. The place from which the bomb was thrown is a boarding house. The chamber from which the missle was hurled was taken May 22 by a man from Barcelona giving the name of i Moral. When the police surrounded the house the man attempted to flee but was captured. Another man escaped over the roofs of the houses. According to an official statement it is not known whether one or more bombs were thrown. Frederick W. Whitridge, the Ameriea sneeial envov. wftnt, to the roval palace, where he was assured that the king and queen were reasonably tranquil considering the circumstances. Mr. Whitridge also called at the foreign office and on behalf of the United States expressed profound sympathy with the Spanish sovereigns and people. Will Cure Consumption. A. A. Herren, Finch, Ark., writes: ' Foley's Honey and Tar is the best preparation for coughs, colds and lung trrmKlo T lmra*- t.Viit Virk rvnrRfl mil. sumption in the first stages." You never heard of any one using Foley's Honey and Tar and not being satisfied. The Kaufmann Drug Co. SORROW I IT PICKETS. Tragic Death of Mr. Ferguson a Shock to Commnnity. Pickens, May 31.?A gloom was cast over the town of Pickens when it heard the news that their beloved citizen, John Ferguson, who lives near town was gored by a Guernsey bull. He had just finished feeding, when the^bull attacked him and knocked him down and gored him to death. His wife, Mrs. Hattie Ferguson, heard him cry out. She was sick in bed, but she jumped up and ran to the piazza. John Simpson, a colored man who was working for Mr. Ferguson heard him and also saw the bull goring Mr. Ferguson. He secured a pitchfork and fought the animal away. Earl Stephenson, another one V?or*^a TTrV> A TTT O C UI IUjL. i'Cigusun o iiaiiUD) nuu nuo near, ran up and pulled Mr. Ferguson's head out from under the barn. The animal crushed his skull and pushed his head under the barn. He was carried into the house and died a few minutes afterwards. He never spoke after he was hurt. Mr. Ferguson was a man much beloved by all people who knew him. He was a prosperous and progressive farmer and had an ideal homestead near town. He was 65 years of age and at one time was one of the larI gest merchants in South Carolina. He did business at Greenville, and sold goods over the entire upper Piedmont section, but several years ago closed out his business and retired to his old family home in Pickens county,where he continued to live until his untimely death. He was devoted to farming and paid particular attention to raising blooded cattle, and among his most valuable animals was the thoroughbred bull. His farm, comprising 1,000 acres includes the granite spur known as Glassy mountain, and has been in the Ferguson family since the Revolutionary war. Following" the Flag. When our soldiers went to Cuba and the Philippines, health was the most important consideration. Willis T. Morgan, retired Commissary Sergeaut U. S. A., of Rural Route 1, Concord, N. H., I kavr! "I was two vears in Cuba and two years in the Philippines, and being subject to colds, I took Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, which kept me in perfect health. And now, in New Hampshire, we find it the best medicine in the world for coughs, colds, bronchial troubles and all lung diseases. Guaranteed at Kaufmann Drug Co.'s, druggist. Price 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Congressman Commits Suicide. Washington, June 1.?Congressman Robert Adams, of Pennsylvania, committed suicide today by shooting himself. He was not dead when found and was taken to a hospital. He died at 11.30. No cause was known for the deed until a letter to the speaker in which he * said that personal obligations exceeded his resources and ask-! ing that he be buried at congress' expense. 2&r. Bryan Endorsed. Cincinnati, O., May 31.?A Times Star special from Marion, Ohio, says: William Jennings Bryan was formolltr onrlnrcoil fnr tV)p "nrPQifiAT1PV in WJL1J V11UVA OVU JtVA MAV JW* ?> 1908 by the Democrats on the second sub-division of the tenth judicial district, consisting of Marion, Crawford and Wyandotte counties, here today. Doath From Lockjaw never follows an injury dressed with Bucklen's Arnica Salve. Its antiseptic and healing properties prevent blood poisoning. Chas. Oswald, merchant, of Rensselaersville, N. Y., writes: "It cured Seth Burcli, of this place, of the ugliest sore on neck I ever saw." Cures Cuts, Wounds, Burns and Sores, 25c. at Kaufmann Drug Co.'s drug store. Sid Hoskins and a man named McAdams had a duel in Jackson, Miss., on Sunday with pitchfork and barlow knife. Hoskins was mortally wounded and McAdams had an eye cut out. Chas. Nary, a beer dispenser of Columbia, has resigned because he is 44sick of the whole business." 'An Alarming Situation frequently results from neglect of clogged bowels and torpid liver, until constipation becomes chronic. This condition is unknown to those who use Dr. King's New Life Pills; the best and gentlest regulators of Stomach and Bowels. Guaranteed by Kaufmann Drug Co., druggist. Price 25c. Frederick Benedict, of Essex county, N. Y.. on Tuesday shot and killed his wife and married daughter and then . J ^ ^ commuted biuciue. Robert T. Rogers, awaiting his third trial for the murder of Jesse Brown, was taken from jail at Tallulah, La., on Tuesday night and hanged to a telegraph pole. Mrs. George Jeffcoat, of Bishopville, was bitten by a mad dog on Wednesday. The dog was a pet in the house. Stimulation Without Irritation In case of stomach and liver trouble the proper treatment is to stimulate these organs without irritating them. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup aids digestion and stimulates the live and bowels without irritating these organs like pills or ordinary cathartics. It does not nauseate or gripe and is mild and pleasant to take. The Kaufmann Drug Co. m i^/nuKi/ Iiff/eJ)ocfot Brings back health byarousing 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. A Georgian Assassinated. Augusta, May 31.?A special from Washington, Ga., says: At 6 o'clock this morning William Q. Bryant, one of the most prosperous planters of Wilke9 county, wa9 found lying dead in the front of his home, near Bessie, Ga., from a gunshot wound in the side. Tonight, after an investigation lasting all day, no clue had been found If the Baby is Cutting Teeth, Be sure and use that old and well tried remedy, Mrs. Winslow'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. Twentyfive cents a bottle. tf It is the best of all. Elias Ancrum, colored, who was shot by Policeman King in Aiken while resisting arrest on Saturday night, died on Monday. He is the second negro killed in Aiken within a month while resisting arrest. Two safes were blown open and robbed?one of $500, the other of $75 ?at Oaum, Ga., on Sunday night. Nerve and Bone Oil Cures Rheumatism, Cuts, Sores, Burus ard Bruises Large bottle 25 cents. Sold by all Druggists. Eight persons were instantly killed and 22 were injured in a wreck on the Lousiville & Nashville road, near Louisville, on Monday. Gordon Dubosc, president of the TfiTar "VTofinnnl hant r?f TTrt-slv. Ala... was arrested on Saturday on the charge of embezzling $40,000 from the bank. Every form of distressing ailment known as Piles or'giiiates internally. The real cause of the trouble is inside. ManZan is put up in collapsible tubes with nozzle, so the medicine can be applied where it will do the most good, and do it quickly. If you are suffering with | piles you owe yourself the duty of trying ManZan. Sold by Kaufmann Drug Co. The Atlantic Coast Line has award- i ed to Barney & Smith, of Dayton, 0., a contract for 500 coal cars, to te delivered in December. Adolphus Merrit, aged 22, was crushed to death on Monday in a wreck in the freight yards of the Atlantic Coast Line road in Wilmington. For bloating, belching, sour stomach, | bad breath, nialassiinilation of food, and I all symptoms of indigestion, Ring's Dv- j spepsia Tablets are a prompt and effi- | cieat corrective, soia. oy ruiuimami Drag Co. Stach wAnoski, aged 20, was killed on Sunday in Houston, Texas, by be- j ing hit with a base ball bat in an amateur game. A man who kills time slays his own character. Some people appear to be proud of their ignorance. Eat one of Ring's Dyspepsia Tablets after each meal and you will not suffer with indigestion. Sold by Kaufmaun Drug Co. Those who are indebted for their "'ill noli r\f on/1 1 pctpci W ill V/an UA oouu UUU OV V tie. We need money at this season worse than at any other time, and | every dollar helps. When a inan doesn't complain to his wife about the breakfast it is a sign she is awaj' visiting her mother. Some boys that go to college can't even learn to play golf. T. X. L. cures cold in the head. A woman has such natural faith she can believe a thing she wants to though she knows she doesn't. He who marries for fun may be I sorry that he won. A good man hasn't much time to waste on a "good fellow." i t IIinT I4TIS 1 T j'JUdl WHAI # Our stock is fully up to tl ^ to carry just such goods as ^ the prices are always reaso ^ the prettiest line we ever # call and inspect for yoursel MILLI J Our Millinery stock has s< K to-WearHats you ever sai J most approved Millinery. 1 J you, if you will only Igive i J what we have. j WM. I A Main St. Near ? COLUMBIA, CWWWWWW DAVIS & t 1517 MAIN Harness. Sac AND EVERYTHING PERTA] C O L- U M E Our stock being purchased bef( we can make it to the interest c Our motto is "NOT HOW CH] best is the Cheapest. FITZMAURICE'S 1704 am 3 Arch Store, Main SI WHOLESALE We have just received a fine lot of DrvG for Men, Boys and Ladies. The best valu< the kind friends of Lexington. It will giv the river to get these bargains. SPECIAL. 1000 y'ds 36 inch Percale at 6', worth 10c. 1000 y'ds Plaid Nansock, (5| worth 10c. j 3000 y'ds Light Print, - - 31 worth 5c. I 20 pieces Evening Crepon, at - - 121c. j 50 pieces Scotch Lawn, at - - - 41c j 5000 y'ds Organdee Lawn 81 worth 10c. I 50 pieces 36 incli White Lawn - - 0]c. ! 50 pieces 32 inch Lawn - - - - 5c. j MADRAS AND PKS. 30 pieces White Madras and PKS for | shirts and suits only 10c. FANCY DUCK SUITINGS. 100 pieces nice styles, at - - - 121c. DRESS GOODS AND SILKS. We have any style you want and at : Prices very low for quality. See us j for a nice Dress. DONT F JBL. JSL. TJ Successor to Ma: NEAR POST OFFICII When you are looking for Solid Gar Load Lots and at th therefore, can sell you for less t ments. Solid Oak Be< Nine Pieces?One Bed, One ! Centre Table, Four Chairs. One No. 7 Black with a complete list of Cooking Black Oak, with a complete 1 line is complete. All grades. Furniture of the same grade ca 490 for prices. H. JHL. Ti COLUMB FURNI IH. SCWELLI COLUMBIA We especially invite you to come to see i Beds, Lounges, Stoves, Lace Curtains, Sid 30 DAYS SALE-FUR] W. H. SOWELL. FURNITI Opposite Y. M. YOU pi | IQOPS. 5 lie standard. We continue ^ please our customers, and # nable. Impossible, we have ^ handled. All we ask is a ^ ves. ^ NERY >me of the smartest Ready- J v. The choicest styles of J rhese creations will please J U3 a chance to show you J >LATT, Post Office, j S. C. J WWWWWW* iOMPANY, STREET. Idles, Robes [NING TO THE BUSINESS 3 I A, S. C. ore the recent decided advance, if all to buy of us. SAP, BUT HOW GOOD," as the 1 1706, FITZMAURICE'S Ireet. 3 Arch Store. AND RETAIL. roods, Notions, Clothing and Furnishings ?s we ever had the pleasure of showing e us great pleasure for our friends across MENS CLOTHING. We will show one of the best lines to be seen any where, at $5.00 to $10.00. OVERALLS For the working man, 50c. pair to ll.GC BOYS' SUITS From 50c. to $4.50, any kind you want. BOYS' PANTS From 25c. to 50c. pair. 50 dozen men's shirts, at 25c. each. MEN'S HATS AND CAPS. TRUNKS AND SUIT CASES At factory prices. ORGET LYIiORf swell & Taylor, 5, COLUMBIA, S. C, Furniture. We buy only in e lowest spot cash prices, we han if we bought in local shipiroom Suites. Bureau, One Washstand, One Rocker?all for $17.25. Oak Stove ' Utinsels, for $7.50. No. 8 ist of Utinsels, $12.50. Our Prices guaranteed as low as n be bought Write or phone IA, S. C. TURE. niiniiiTiinr rn Mlllltt bU., s. c. as for your Furniture, Cheap Suites, Ircr e Boards, Hall Racks. STISH YOUR HOUSE. IRE CO., 1231 Main Street, C. A. Building.