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Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect it How To Find Out. Fill a bottle or common glass with your water and let it stand twenty-four hours; a sediment or settlingindicatesan SicJt-TTSi unhealthy condition of the kidW y neys; if it stains evidence of kidney trouble; too to pass it or pain 1 in the back is also convincing proof that the kidneys and bladder are out of order . What To I>o. There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy, fulfills every wish in curing rheumatism, pain in the back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passage. It corrects inability to hold water and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to go often during 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. If you need a medicine you should have the best. Sold by druggists in fifty-cent and one-dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle and a book that tells all about it, both sent free gfpgag} by mail. Address Dr. ?Sg*??5H|!fc Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. When Homo of Swamp-Boot, writing mention, this paper and don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Einghamton, N. Y. | PEOFESSZO yAlTCAEDSr dTmartin, 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. ?m. w. hawes, Attorney and Counselor at Law. NEW BROOKLAND. S. C. Practice in all Charts. Business solicited. November 1,1905. C. X. EFIBD. 7. E. DREHEB. m^ird & dreher, ju attorneys at law, LEXINGTON C. H.. S. C. Will oractice in all the Courts. Business solicited. One member of the firm will always be at office, Lexington, 8. C. T H. frick. J . attorney at law, CHAP1N, .S. C. Office: Hotel Marion, 4th Koom. Second Floor. Will practice in ail the Courts. Thurmond & timmerman, attorneys at law, WILL PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS, Kaufmann Bldg, LEXINGTON, 8, C, We will be pleased to meet those having legal busioeas to be attended to at our office In the Kaufmann Building at any time. Respectfully, 3r. Wh. TflURMOND. G. BELL TIMMERMAS, A lbert M. boozer, a attorney at law, columbia, 8. C. Office: 1816 Main Street, upstairs, opposite Tan M* tre's Furniture Store. Especial attention given to business entrusted to him by his fellow citizens of Lexington county. G~eorge 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 a~n prepared to practice law in all state and Federal | Courts. Andrew crawford, attorney at law, COLUMBIA, 8. C. Practices in the State and Federal Ourts, and offers his professional services to the citizens of Lexington County, Law Offices, 1 ) Residence, 1529 1209 Washington < > Pendle ton Street. Street. (V Office Telephone No. 1^2. Residence Telephone No. 1036. Wboyd evans, .lawyer and counsellor. Columbia, s. c. DR. P. H. SHEALY, dentist, lexington, s. C. ~ TI _ Ti_;i J.* Office up stairs in nou s -DuiLuiug. tTrTf. o. gilmore" v dentist. 1510 Main Street, columbia, s. c. Office Houbs: 9 a. in. to 2 p. m., and from 3 to 6 d. m. [irniBi] g dealer in g I I General I I Merchandise, 1 I Corner Main and New Street, ? t Opposite Confederate % 8 Monument, | J The Dispatch Job Printing * ? Office is prepared to do any * J hind of printing at abort notice. J * We goarantee work first class * * at reasonable prices. Give ns * ? - a _ _a ?. * a trial oraer. * .f * P i i The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, August 29,1906. What Wo Saw Abroad. To the Editor of the Dispatch : We have very near lived to see fortyseven winters of our life, and we j venture to say through this period of time we have never traveled a dis- ! tance of forty miles north, south, east | or west from our old homestead up to j six or seven months ago. Now, Mr. Editor, if you and the dear readers of the Dispatch will excuse us this time. We will promise to do better in the future. The first thing in wmcn we shall mention is why don't the city of Columbia take lessons under the city of Augusta, Ga., and make Congaree and Broad river bridges told free. The people who live on the South Carolina side of the Savannah river seems to be priviledge characters so far as crossing the two bridges which span across the river over into the city of Augusta for every five cents for a footman, ten cents for a buggy, forty-cents for a two-horse wagon, is left over in the city of Augusta, Wake up Columbia. The old State of Georgia has her portions of railroads. Her fruit industry is wonderful. Thousands of dollars worth of fruit is shipped out of the State every year. We weie very much surprised to know the interest in which are taken in fruit growing in Georgia and Alabama. In Gadsden, Ala., a Mr. Elliotte, an extensive trine I grower, who was hauling with five wagons day and night for two weeks, Sunday not excepted, realized, after all expenses was pad, $3,000 for his crop. Now, my good people, how much cotton would you have had to raised to have brought this amount of money, not counting the work from Xmas to Xmas. Open your eyes, good people. Well, ye would like to ask our solicitor and lawyers a question. Is it customary for them to sit on a chair with their legs crossed and one arm thrown back of chair to question a witness while on the stand? Now, we experienced this sight in an Alabama town. Well, we want to tell you something else. We had occasion to stop oyer in Chattanooga, Tenn., last Friday, and who do you suppose we saw there with a hee-gum-hat on. His excellency Governor Heyw-d and his staff, and we found them chatting with three nice young ladies, too. That was all right governor. We were proud to eee you with the young ladies. We had the pleasure of seeing the governors of Georgia and Alabama, and according to our judgement, so far as looks and intelligence, Governor Heyward would certainly take the red ribbon. One more- sight to relate, and that is Lookout Mountain at Chattanooga. The street cars run to the foot of this mountain, a cable wire is used to pull us on top, from which we can see over into seven dif- | ferent States?North and South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, j Kentucky and Virginia. Now, Mr. Editor, as this is campaign year, is there any demand for raw hide traces. [No, but the dispensary answers all purposes.?Ed. Lexington Dispatch. [ Good wishes to everybody. * B. B. H. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cored by Hall's Catarrh Core. F. 4. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J Cheney lor the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made bv his firm, \Y ADDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. O. Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, nctiDg directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of u e system. Testimonials sent lree. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold . *?y all druggists. Take Hail's Family Pills for constipation Advise for the Newly Married. If it were possible for the young husband to take up life where some prosperous business man has laid it down there might be spared him the self denial and long years of labor that otherwise lay the foundation for his future success says Aunt Jane in Wallace's Farmer. Most young people muit begin life with very little money or experience, and it is to them I wish to preach. Perhaps the income may be sufficient to provide a nicely furnished home in a rented house, plenty of rich food expensive clothing, but there is nothing left. "In the beginning." Those are wonderful words. A new life is opening before you; old things have passed away. You have cut asunder the chains that bound you to the old home. You have embarked together alone on life's sea. Look well how you steer the bark, lest you become wrecked on the shoals or reefs of expensive living and wastefulness. jBegin with economy as your watchword. Begin by giving up all useless expenses. Begin by being contented with living sufficiently within your income that you may lay by some thing from your income each month. "In the beginning" it is so much easier to start right than it is to get right after the habits of living have been formed. "In the beginning" I the foundation is laid for successful ending. Begin right, end well. After a while sickness will be sure to come to one or both of you: added expenses constantly arise, and unless you begin to save from the start you will find it difficult to save at all. ^ T\/?.V? ? f TTAIIWriAlf ATTAMTT f AT*f 1 1/ UC11 v Jl/Ui 3 Oil CVC1J VV/XXLJLV* ^ in life and become mere1 'money grubbers." Enjoy necessary comforts but beware of unnecessary luxuries. Learn to be contented with what you can afford, and don't worry because some neighbor or friend has more expensive things than you. Look well to the little expenses?Ex. Galveston's Sea Wall makes life now as safe in that city as on the highest uplands. E. W. Goodloe, who resides on Dutton St., Waco, Tex., needs no sea wall for safety. He writes: "I have used Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption the past five years and it keeps me well and safe. Before that time I had a cough which for years had . been growing worse. Now its gone." Cures chronic coughs, la grippe, croup, whooping cough and prevents pneumonia. Pleasant to take. Every bottle sTiaranteed at The Kaufmann Drue | Co's., drug store. Price 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. i . ? . Kills Seel: Hslp in Foreign Lands. On account of the great scarcity of mill help in this it has been necessary for one of the neighboring Carolina cotton mills to get foreign help, and it is learned that there will be five Belgian families and about 15 Englishspeaking immigrants brought to this section in a few weeks to work in the mill. The Belgian help has been secured through the aid of Immigration Agent Watson, of South Carolina, who is in the east now looking for suitable immigrants for the people whom he represents. The bureau proposed for the State of Georgia was for a similar purpose, but on account of a large number of bills having priority it had to be carried over until next year, at which time it will most likely be taken up and passed. All of the mills in this section of the country are needing labor, and it is belived that they will eventually have to resort to the eastern fields to get the people to work in the mills. Through the efforts of Immigration Agent Watson, of South Carolina, there have been a large number of immigrants brought into that State, and it is believed with the proper efforts exercised in this State that the situation in regard to labor could be relieved to a great extent.?Augusta Chronicle. Charleston Convicts. Three convicts on the Charleston chain gang pretended to be sick and were left in the stockade last Thursday. About 3 o'clock, p. m., they called for water and Herman G. Stello, the guard in charge went to the pen to carry them some. They attacked him, capturing his pistol and beat him so severely that he died. They opened the guards' trunks, put on citizens clothes and escaped to the swamps. One was captured Sunday. , The others are at large. "Make Hay While the Sun Shines." There is a lesson in the work of the thrifty farmer. He knows that the bright sunshine may last but a clay and he prepares for the showers which are so liable to follow. So it should be with every household. Dysentry, diarrhoea and cholera morbus may attack some member of the home without warning. Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, which is the best known medicine for these diseases, should always be kept at hand, as immediate treatment is necessary, and delay may prove fatal. For sale by Kaufmaini Drug Co. The Japanese Hot Satisfied. London, Aug. 24.?The Daily Telegraph's Tokio correspondent says that the Japanese consul at Vancouver, having reported that it is impossible for him to obtain a satisfactory or full report of the killing of the Japanese poachers by Americans in the Aleutian Islands, the Japanese government ha9 decided to carry out its investigation of the affair and may send its consul to the Prihilof Islands. * First Columbia Bala. Thp first bale of cotton for this vear was received in Columbia today by Messrs. Daniel Crawford & Sons, the consignor being Mr. John Sumter of Gadsden. The bale weighed 582 pounds and graded easily as good middling, bringing 9% cents, or $56.75. ?Columbia Record. i \Buy Hair \ at Auction? j At any rate, you seem to be getting rid of it on auction-sale principles: "going, going, g-o-n-e !" Stop the auction I with Ayer's Hair Vigor. It certainly checks falling hair; no mistake about this. It acts oc a rpanlor mokp? 8 the scalp healthy. Then you must have healthy hair, for I it's nature's way. H The best kind of a testimonial ? g "Sold for over sixty years." 1 wnin win mi nil him mil > ii mi iTfir~i? S A Jfl-uae Dyj.u Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. | . Also manufacturers of S ? ^L. SARSAPaRILLA. 81 11HP1TQ pills^ ' ^^CHERRY^CTORAL^ | ITo Wonder He Moved. The following notice was found posted on a deserted homestead in the arid regions of Kansas: "Four miles from a neighbor, sixteen miles from a postoffice, twenty-five miles from a railroad, fourteen miles from a school house, forly-one miles from a church, 180 miles to town, COO mile s to a democrat, half a mile to hell and the same distance to a republican. Gone to South Carolina?God's country?to get a fresh start." When applied and covered with a hot cloth Pinesalve acts like a poultice. Best for burns, bruises, boils, eczema, skin diseases, etc.?Sold by Kaufman Drug Co Mother and Child Brown. While fording Kutman creek, about twelve miles from Walhalla, Mr. John Watkins, a prominent farmer, his wife and three children were swept from their wagon by the severe swollen stream. The iro':her and infant child were drowned, the father and other two children were rescued. Every form of distressing ailment known as piles originates 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 yon owe yourself the duty of trying ManZan.?Sold by Kanfmann Drug Co. Hoke Smith Wins. The primary election for governor of Georgia on Wednesday resulted in a sweeping victory for Hoke Smith, he carrying 110 out of 145 counties. He will have 294 votes in the State convention out of 366. The intense itching characteristic of salt rheum and eczema is instantly allayed by applying Chamberlain's Salve. As a cure for skin diseases this salve is unequaled.. For sale by Kaufmann Drug Co. The moon is a magician that often turns a man and a maid into a pair of turtle doves. The cleansing, antiseptic and healing properties of Pinesalve make it superior to family salves.?Sold by Kaufmann Drug Co. The tie that binds can't touch a tight collar. Eat one of Ring's Dyspepsia Tablets after each meal and you will not suffer witn indigestion.?soia uy ivauiman Drug Co. Fate dcth make beat biscuits of us all. UttleDocfor GIVES YOU a complete treatment at our store for 25 cts. His specialty is Liver Com plaints, all kinds, and he guarantees satisfaction, or money back. Ramon's Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets make permanent cures. Sold by all Druggists. j JUST WHAT roil WANT ? Just received a full line of new r I Fall and Winter Dry Goods g To be marked very close. A full line of everything J > that is new. J ? JMUUj.ne:i*y 5 ^ Just received a full line of Children's, Misses and Ladies' hats and ^ caps for fall wear. A fine line of everything in these goods. We have ^ ^ marked these very close for the trade. ^ f We also have a full line of Men's Shoes, Shirts, Pants, in fact every- ^ ? thing to wear. f S TABLE OIL CLOTH A SPECIALTY. ^ ^ It will pay any of our Lexington friends to visit us before purchasing & ? elsewhere. ^ I WM. PLAT! & SON, l g Main St. Near Post Office, % 5 COLUMBIA, S. C ? DAVIS & 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. | BARGJLINS! t $ And No Humbug About It. J K WE are offering Summer goods at Greatly J ? Reduced Prices, in order to close them out x ? before the Fall stock comes in. If you will J f! only come and look through our stock you J K will be convinced that we mean just what we J ? say. J ? THIS SALE WILL LAST FOR THIRTY DAYS] ? ^ Will be glad for my Lexington County ? A friends to call and secure some of these rare ^ i Bargains. :::::::: ^ r ^ WHOLESALE AND RETAIL^ ? ^ 1704-1706 Main Street. - - Columbia, S. C J evvvvv%vvvvvvwwvvvvvvvi5 > DONT FORGET 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 Ua k.iseciroom suites. Nine Pieces?One Bed, One Bureau, One Washstand, One Centre Table, Four Chairs. One Rocker?all for $17.25. No. 7 Black Oak Stove with a complete list of Cooking TJtinsels, 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. TUT jrvrv "wr COLUMBIA, S. C. FURNITURE. nr ii omirri i ninmiTiinr rn w, n. ouncLL mrnmt iu., COLUMBIA, S. C. We especially invite yon to come to see us for your Furniture, Cheap Suites, IroT Beds, Lounges, Stoves, Lace Curtains, Side Boards, Hall Racks. 80 DAYS SALE?FURNISH YOUR HOUSE. W. H. SOWELL, FURNITUBE CO, 1231 Main Screet, Opposite Y. M. C. A. Building.