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DO YOU GET UP &? tWITH A I^AMB BACK? Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost everybody who reads the newsfpr papers is sure to know of the wonderful n . cures made by Dr. '?-?* |-l| Kilmer's SwampJ> 11 Root?the great kidlH - IIL rifv 1iv#*r anrl Mad - rr&xj lc der remedy. % ' rw'. ^ *s great medial. \ jjl ical triumph of the , hr~ _I, nineteenth century ; t li ' _?v ^ll discovered after years of scientific research 11 by Dr. Kilmer, the u, i , eminent kidney and bladder specialist, and is wonderfully successful in promptly curing lame back, uric acid, catarrh of the bladder and Bright's Disease, which is the worst form of kidney trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is not recommended 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 find out if you have kidney or bladder trouki<? wtipti -mrrif-itur mention readirfsr this generous offer in this paper and send your address to Dr. Kilmer II \ o & Co., Bingham ton, N. Y. The regular ggSjgjjjl a jaBB fifty-cent and onedollar size bottles are Homo of swamp-Root, 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. ra0FESSI02TAL~CARDS. &-?"*. D. 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. \ITM. W. HA WES, if Attorney and Counselor at Law. NEW BROOKLAND.S. C. Practice in all Courts. Business solicited. November 1,1905. C. K. EFIBD. F. 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, Lexington. S. C. T h. frick. J . attorney at law, chapin, s. c. Office: Hotel Marion, 4th Room. Second Floor. "Will practice in all the Courts Thurmond & timmerman, attorneys at law, i Y WILL practice in all courts, Kaufmann Bldg, LEXINGTON, S. C, Wo will be pleased to meet those having le. gal business to be attended to at our office in the Kaufmann Building at any time. Respectfully, y Wm. THURMOND. G. BELL TIMMERMAN, lbert m. boozer, attorney at law, columbia, s. 0. Office: 1S16 Main Street, upstairs, opposite Van Metre's Furniture Store. Especial attention given to business entrusted to him by his fellow citizens of Lexington eounty. 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 an prepared to practice law in all state and Federal Courts. Andrew crawford, attorney at law, columbia, a c. Practices in the State and Federal Courts, and offers his professional services to the citizens of Lexington County, Law Offices, t ) Residence, 1529 1209 Washington < > Pendle ton Street. ocreet. ^ ; Office Telephone No. 1372. Residence Telephone No. 1036. BOYD EVANS, .LAWYER AND COUNSELLOR. Columbia, S. C. $ nR. P. H. SHEALY, U DENTIST, LEXINGTON, S. C. Office Up Stairs in Roofs Building. ARTFTC ~G ILMORE, 1/ DENTIST. 1510 Main Street, COLUMBIA, S. C. :; Office Houbs: 9 a. m. to 2 p. m., and from 3 to 6 d. rc. irnBai g DEALER IN g 1 General | 1 Merchandise, \ & Corner Main and New Street, I | Opposite Confederate 5 8 Monument, 8 m Lexington, - - S. C. ? esesesesessseseseseaesss# * * * The Dispatch Job Printing * * Office is prepared to do any * J kind of printing at short notice. * We guarantee wotk fi-et class * * at reasonable prices. Give us * * a trial order. 2 * * ************************** jy^'vV- 4 ki^V-rf*' ' _ - - I The Lexino+cm Cisnatnh. Wednesday, September 19, 1906. TO ANNIEXLIATE THE ANARCHISTS. International Agreement Signed in Europe?Only Two Nations Out of It?Great Britain and Switzerland. St. Petersburg, Sept. 13.?All Europe, with the exception of Switzer land and England, have united in the movement t? stamp out the terrorists and in the future advocates of the bomb and revolver method of warring against constituted government will be hunted down as common enemies of law and'order everywhere. The Russian government has taken the lead in the movement and has succeeded in securing pledges from every government except the two mentioned for full police co-operation on their part in stamping out secret terrorist organizations. It is a notorious fact that many of the assassinations of officials in Russia were engineered in other capitals and there are terrorist organizations in nearly every city. Russia's secret police has been hampered hitherto in their warfare against anarchists because the latter sought refuge in other countries while plotting against Russian officials and then dispatched emissaries to c^rry out their conspiracies. In the future the Russian secret police will be allowed to seize terrorists without warrants in all countries which have agreed to the new pact. If ths Baby is Cutting Teeth, Be sure and use that old and well tried remedy, Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, for children teething. It sooth es 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. Our Presidents. A little boy about to enter the graded school desires to know how many presidents the United States has had. Of course all the teachers could tell, but for the benefit of the board of trustees we will state that there have been 26. The oldest man elected was William Henry Harrison, who was 68. The youngest was Theodore Roosevelt, who was 43. Six of them served two consecutive terms. Grover Cleveland is counted twice in the list of 26 as his terms were not together. Three men died in office and two were assassinated and the vice-presidents succeeded them.? Carolina Spartan. Cured Say Fever and Summer Cold A. J. Nusbaum, Batesville, Indiana, writes: "Last year I suffered for tliree months with a summer cold so distressing that it interfered with my business. I had many of the symptoms of hay fever, and a doctor's prescription did not reach my case, and I took several medicines which seemed to only aggravate my case. Fortunately I insisted upon having Foley's Honey and Tar in the yellow package, and it quickly cured me. My wife lias since used Foley's Honey and Tar with the same success." The Kaufman Drug Co. Jumbo, owned by Andrew G. Wessel, of Brookville, Ind., which is said to be the largest steer in the world, weighs 3,500 pounds, stands 13 1-2 hands high, measures eleven feet around the girth, and seventeen feet two inches from the tip of the nose to the tip of the tail: Stop it! A neglected cough or cold may lead to serious bronchial or lung troubles- Don't take chances when Foley's Honey and Tar affords perfect security from serious effects of a cold. The Kaufmann Drug Co. The smallest thing with a backbone is the sinarapan, a little fish recently discovered by scientists in the Philippine Islands. It measures about half an inch in length. A sour stomach, a bad breath, a pasty complexion and other consequences of a disordered digestion are quickly removed by the use of King's Dyspepsia Tablets. Two days treatment free. Sold by The Kaufmann Drug Co. No private citizen and candidate for the presidency ever received such a na w T "Rrvnn had in "N"pu* UO u V* JLT* J * ** ?? *w .? York. The unanimous admiration of j the people was at high tide last week. How to Avoid Appendicitis Most victims of appendicitis are those who are habitually constipated, Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup cures chronic constipation by stimulating the liver and bowels, and restores the natural action of the bowels. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup does not nauseate or gripe and is mild and pleasant to take. Refuse substitutes. The Kaufmann Drug Co. State Vote. FOR GOVERNOR. Ansel 47,556 Manning 37,0S9 Ansel's majority 10,467 FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL. Lyon 49,507 Ragsdale 34,508 Lyon's majority 14,099 % FOR RAILROAD COMMISSIONER. Sullivan 45.766 Wharton 37,522 Sullivan's majority 8,244 Death of Mrs. J. S. Riser. The death of Mrs. J. H. Riser at the Columbia hospital on Saturday night was a great shock to our town. Although she had been sick for several weeks and hopes of recovery were small, yet the end was not expected so suddenly. An operation was performed just the day previous to death in hope that her life could be saved, but without reaching the desired end. jtier remains were orougnt nome on the 1 p. m. train Sunday, the funeral being held Monday from the Lutheran church and the body laid in the cemetery. She leaves a husband, seven children, an aged father and mother, brothers and sisters and many relatives and friends to mourn her loss. She was the mother of Rev. Y. Von A. Riser, of Rincon, Ga., Messrs. D. R., M. C., C. W. and Jos. H. Riser and Misses Lucy and Annie Rose Riser.?Leesville News. Clemson is Crowded. The fourteenth annual session of Clemson college opened Wednesday morning. Clemson is crowded, as usual. Nearly seven hundred applications for admission have been accepted, which means that making allowances for those who do not come after applying and for the return home of some who ao not succeed in passing tne entrance examinations, there will be in attendance when the work of the session gets under way about 630 students, the full capacity of the institution. Of the total number accepted, 423 are old students, a larger proportion than formerly. The present senior and junior classes are the largest in the history of the college, and the prospects are that next June will see the largest graduating class ever turned out fromXJlemson. The class of 1903 and the class of 1906, each numbering sixty men, have been the largest so far. Besides those accepted, 240 applicants were refused admission for this session on account of lack of dormitory and other accommodations, ISO being from this state and 60 from other states. Nothing shows better than do these figures the need of the new dormitory, which the board of trustees has already authorized, and which will be finished in time for the opening of the 1907 session next September. Deafness Cannot to Cured. by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion ot the ear. There is only one way to core deafness, ?nd that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an infhmed condition of the mu?ous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is itflimed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tubo restored to its normal condition. hearing will be destroyed t^rgver; nin- cas?*s oat cf ten are caused bv Catarrh which is nothing but au inflamed condition of the mucou3 surfaces. \Vo will give One Hurdred Dollars for any case of Deafcees (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hali'j Catarrh Cure. Send tcr circulars-free F. J. CHENEY & CO,, Toledo. 0. Sold bv Drcegist3. Take Hall's Familv Pills for constipation One way to beat a canning man at his own game is with a club. Marrying a rich widow isn't a bad sort of get-rich-quick game. A man's wife usually has more confidence in him than he has in himself. It doesn't satisfy a man's hunger when he is compelled to eat his own words. If wishes were automobiles the demand for gasoline would exceed the supply. People never get as much enjoyment out of their wickedness as they pretend to. A college education costs enough to support a boy if he didn't have it. A man can exercise some control j over children if they are somebody | else's. No matter how much a widow once { knew, she is willing to learn it all over again. Women have the remarkable faculty of growing mature without getting any older. More than 5,000 Russian Jews emigrated to Palestine in the month of June. Street beggars in the London area are estimated to make $1,500,000 a year. I I I m ^T". Afc ?1 *~T^ 'YThe Song I of the Hair I There are four verses. Verse 1. I Ayer's Hair Vigor stops falling | hair. Verse 2. Ayer's Hair I Vigor makes the hair grow. | Verse 3. Ayer's Hair Vigor I cures dandruff. Verse 4. | Ayer's Hair Vigor makes the i scalp healthy, and keeps it so. I It is a regular hair-food; this 8 is the real secret of its won- 8 derful success. | The best kind of a testimonial? a "Sold for over sixty years." g lm /o wj v. v* ajrcr v^u*i ijuwcx^i iuucchm ( VV Aiso*manu?acturers of || S ?*k ? 9 SARSAPARILLA. R 1/ M HflrQpiLLs- k |dL \*B O CHEERY PECTORAL. Ao Hindrance. "Why do you always persist in sayi ing you will not be a candidate for office?" "Because," answered Senator Sorghum, "it sounds properly modest and does not in the least interfere with my chances in case a nomination wants to come my way."?Washington Star. All Together. Mrs. Malaprop?Yes; he had ten pallbearers. Mrs. Jenks?But they weren't all active, were they? They didn't all carry the casket. Mrs. Malaprop?Yes; they carried him?er?unanimously. ? Philadelphia Ledger. No One to Ask. Ethel?I wish I could find out if he has any bad habits. Editli?can 3*011 not? Ethel?No. He hasn't a friend in the world!?New York Press. A Summer Romance. Summer maiden. Full of fun. Summer fellow. Chapter one. Moonlight evening. Naught to do. Tender topics. Chapter two. Sparkling diamond. Love will be Ever, cherished. Chapter three. August passes. Girl no more. Likewise diamotid. Chapter four. Young man wakens. Heart to mend. Love next season? No! The end. ?Perrine Lambert in Judge. Equally Ignorant. The author of "Reminiscences of a Country Politician" once asked a laborer in an English village how old he was. "I be just the same age as the queen," he said. "It be either a fortnight older or a fortnight younger. I don't rightly know which, ana I don't suppose her kuows either." CT A HPTT r>T? QOTTTTT P. \ "ROT JN" \ J.U V/JL K-'V V A AX X*y County of Lexington, Court of Common Pleas. S. E. Hendrix, James P. Hendrix and Lillie Hendrix in her own right, ana as administratrix of the estate of Jas. E. P. Hendrix, deceased, Plaintiffs, against Hat tie Harman, Winford Harman and Earle E. Hendrix, Defendants. Partition of Real Estate. IN OBEDIENCE TO THE DECREE of tiie court herein, signed by Hon. J. C. Klugli, presiding judge, and dated September 4. 1906, I will sell to the highest bidder at public outcry, before the court house door in Lexington, S. C., during the legal hours of sale 011 the first Monday in October, 1906, 1. All that piece, parcel or tract of land, containing twenty acres, more or less, situate, lying and being in the county and State aforesaid, adjoining lands of the said Edwin Harman and of the said J. E. P. Hendrix, J. B. Seay and G. W. Kvzer, being made up of a portion of several tracts. 2. All that piece, parcel or tract of land, lying and being in Lexington district, adjoining lands of the said George Campbell and lands belonging to the estate of Margaret Wingard, deceased, and containing thirty acres,more or less. id Fifteen acres, more or less, of the following tract of land to wit: All that piece, parcel, plantation or tract of land, containing sixty-one acres, (be the same more or less,) situate, lying and being in Lexington county, and State aforesaid, near the head waters of demons creek, b?ing waters of Saluda river, and bounded by lands of the said James E. P. Hendrix on the west, Jno. J. Seay on the southwest, the said Edwin Karman on the east and also the said James E. P. Hendrix on the north. 4. All that piece, parcel or tract of land, situated on Rocky creek, waters of Saluda river, Lexington county, bounded on the south by land of J. B. Seay, north and west by J. P. Hendrix and on the east by land of Drury Kyzer, containing fifteen acres, more or less. 5. Twenty acres, more or less, of the following tract of land, to wit: All that piece, parcel, plantation or tract of land, containing thirty-two acres, more or less, situate, lying and being in the county ajad State aforesaid, on Rocky creek, waters of Saluda river, ana adjoining lauds of G. W. Kyzer on the the south, Drury Kyzer on the east, the said Geo. W. Kvzer on the north and I J.T. l... 1.,,. a OH U1C Wt'M) UJ KJTXJ. _~1. .nxuixxLrei . <>. All that piece, pareei or tract of land, situate, lying and being in Lexington county, in the State aforesaid, and in Lexington township, containing I seventy-eight and one-halt acres/more or less, bounded by lands of IT. A. Derrick, (jr. M. Caugkman, J. J. Kyzer, M. L Kyzer and others. Terms of Sale?One-half cosh, and the balance to l)e paid twelve months thereafter, secured by bond and mortgage for the purchase money of said premises. Purchaser to pay for papers. SAM'L. B. GrKOlUiE, Clerk of Court. September 7, 11KM5. | FITZMAURICE'S | Three Arch Store. RE: DRV GOODS, NOTIONS, 1704 and 170 COLUMBIA, - - McCALL'S FASHIONS IN ST' 15 and 10 cents Fa We invite the frier ington to visit this sto values they never got received several car 1( will be sold at the clos self the honor to call a this is the house to tr? DRESS GOODS & SILK DEPT. This department is and has always enjoyed a rep. that the majority of people know of and is daily hearing about. If you want a dress go to Fitzmaurice's. AS A LEADER We offer 50 pieces of all Wool Ladies' Cloth 40 inches wide any shade that is good, only 35c. worth 50c. yard. CLEARED FOR ACTION. 25 pieces 58 inches wide all Wool Broadcloth, only 50c., the 85 c. quality. TERRIBLE SAURXEIL'E. 35 pieces all Wool Skirting in dark grey and modest coloring at 25c. yard, no lining required, worth 50c. HUNDREDS OF BARGAINS In the dress goods stock. Space does not permit a general statement. You must see. FHUKM1 *. H. 8CWELL COLUMBL We especially invite you to come to see Beds, Lounges, Stoves, Lace Curtains, Si 30 DAYS SALE?FUI W. H. SOWELL, FURNIT Opposite Y. M. DAVIS & I 1517 MA11 Harness. Sa AND EVERYTHING PERT^ O O L. U M Our stock being purchased be we can make it to the interest Our motto is "NOT HOW CP best is the Cheapest hithiti i uahj DONT : JEL. A. Ti Successor to Mi near post offic When you are looking for Solid Car Load Lots and at t) therefore, can sell you for less ments. Solid Oak Be Nine Pieces?One Bed, One Centre Table, Four Chairs. On No. 7 Blach with a complete list of Cookinj Black Oak, with a complete line is complete. All grades. Furniture of the same grade c 4 90 for prices. H. J0L. Ti COLUMI ESALE | FITZKAURICE'S \ .ND? > S r.uL. Three Arch Store. I CLOTHING, FURNISHINGS, 6 Main Street, S. C, OCK AT A MOMENT'S NOTICE shion Papers FREE. ids and patrons of Lexire this cominff fall for ? ^ before. "We have just >ads of Fall Groods that sest prices. Do your jid be convinced that ide with. CLOTHING for MEN & BOYS "Sure Mike," as the saying goes, 100 Men's Suits all wool the $8.00 kind at $5.00 only. 200 Boy's Suits as a leader, all wool, at $1.75 the suit. Ages 7 to 16 years. 100 Boy's Extra Heavy School Suits, don't wear out, at $2.50 to $3.50. They are simply elegant. WHOLESALE DOMESTIC DEPARTMENT Is a very large department in this house, bought at mill prices, and we can save small retail men a good profit. We can cut the quantities to suit. We ask an inspection as to quality and price. You owe this to yourself. You are bound to save all you can. 5 We want all our friends to jjjcall when in Columbia and * see us. Cm [TURE. FURNITURE CO., s. c. ? us for your Furniture, Cheap Suites, IrcT de Boards, Hall Racks. .INISH YOUR HOUSE. URE CO., 1231 Main Screet, C. A. Building. COMPANY, J STBEET. ddles, Robes LINING TO THE BUSINESS BIA.S.C. fore the recent decided advance, of all to buy of us. [EAP, BUT HOW GOOD," as the FORGET 5.YLOR, ixwell & Taylor, !E, COLUMBIA, 3. 0, Furniture. We buy only in? Lie luwest spot casn prices, we than if we bought in local shipdroom Suites. Bureau, One Washstand, One e Rocker?all for $17.25. : Oak Stove g TJtinsels, for $7.50. No. 8 list of Utinsels, $12.50. Our Prices guaranteed as low as an be bought. Write or phone 5IA, S. C.