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I' Thousands life Kidney Ti Treibie and Refer Suspect it. '1 How To Find Out. Fill a bottle or common glass with your . "water and let it stand twenty-four hours; A a sediment or set evicience ot kiaHj|p| Pv&X Ee^ tr?u^e' t.?? Bu ^ \ to pass it or pain 5 I^.'-:' " ' in the back is ^ also convincing proof that the kidneys f and bladder are out of order, "What To Do. r A There is comfort in the knowledge so ] often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's h0j Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy, ^-g fulfills every wish in curing rheumatism, pain in the back, kidneys/liver, bladder ^ and every part of the urinary passage. wt It corrects inability to hold water ^ v; and scalding pain in passing it, or bad " | a ; effects following use of liquor, wine or cei : ^ / beer, and overcomes that unpleasant ne- " cessity 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 dis- "we tuessing cases. If you need a^nedicine go I you' should have the best. Sold by drug- wi gists in fifty-cent and one-dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle and a , book that tells by mail. AddressDr. hb?": * hamton, N. Y. When Home of Biramj>-Root writing mention this paper and don't I make any mistake, but remember the name. Dr. -gilmer's Swamp-Koot, ana the address, Binghamton, N. Y. PE0FESSI01TAL CABDS. A A D. MARTIN, ATTORNEY , A* AND COUNSELOR AT LAW, LEXINGTON, S. 0. . j|R|f Office in Harman Building rear of court Will practice in all courts. Special , attention tcrcollection of claims. life WM. W. HAWES, *T Attorney and Counselor at Law. NEW BBOOKLAND. S. C. \ Practice in all Courts. Business solicited. November l, 1905. v 0. *. D1BD. F. E. DEEHKB. Mm; DFIRD & DREHER, * f v >: , JCl ATTORNEYS AT LAW, 'H LEXINGTON 0. H.. S. C. i * i I Will practice iff all the Courts. Business ha: ;? solicited. One member of the firm will- al- *al v ways be at office, Lexington. 8. C- ^ . -? rmTrrtr }:^"r V I XI. JCIV1V/J1, 0. J. ATTORNEY AT LAW, CHAPm, & 0. SR|- Office: Hotel Marion, 4th Boom, Second Ni vv Floor. Will practice in all the Courts. ca: ;* ill I ffHURMOKD & TIMMERMAN, ^1 mg&,i X . ATTORNEYS AT .LAW, QU j ' VUL PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS, 1 Kanfmann Bide, LEXINGTON. 8.C. 8p We will be pleased to meet those having le- wi gal business to be attended to at our office W? tn the Kauf mann Building at any time- ( " Respectfully, * J. Wk. THURMOND. * G. BELL TIMMEBMAN, i A LBERT M. BOOZER, J% ATTORNEY AT LAW, ?tj COLUMBIA, 8. a ' ^ " Oitxcz: 1816 Main Street, upstairs, opposite Van Metre's Furniture Store Especial attention given to business entrust- ho ed to him by his fellow citizens of Lexington " oounty. pEORGE R. REMBERT, _ I V U ATTORNEY AT LAW. ' 1821 LAW RANGE. COLUMBIA. S. C. q? I will be glad to serve my friends from Lex- ha ington County at any time, and am prepared to practice law in all btate and Federal sir gBfe'r Courts. r to Andrew crawford, p* ATTORNEY AT LAW, In COLUMBIA, S. C. i Practices in feie State^nd Federal Courts, ' and offers his professional services to the sti - eitizens rj Lexington County, ^ Law Offices, ( ) Residence, 1529 H< p;"/ 1299 Washington < > Pendle ton Street. th< Street. ( ) ? Office Telephone No. 1372. ha Residence Telephone No. 1036. foi WBOYD EVANS, .LAWYER AND COUNSELLOR. th< Columbia, S. C. . ' . ... be m v HR. P. H. SHEALY^ Or U DENTIST, a] LEXINGTON, S. C. W Office Up Stairs in Roofs Building. ? T\R. F. C. GILMORE, n? l) " DENTIST; 1510 Main Street, COLUMBIA, S. C. Office Hodbs* 9 a. m. to 2 p. m., and from 3 to 6 d. m. ba ? Dc pTiS|i g DEALER IN g ba I ft ah Aral I Hv 9) UV11V1U1 jj ' ~ IP V I Merchandise, 1 8 Corner Main and New Street, ? on | Opposite Confederate ? i Monument, . 5j ve jg Lexington, - S. C. g of esesssesssesesesssesssss* ? ? 111 A Poor Organ. Dam(s) the bile. That's what your on liver does if it's torpid. Then the bile ou overflows into the Vood?poisons your an system, causing sick headache, bilious- if ness, sallow skin, coated tongue, sick < stomach, dizziness, fainting spells, etc. Ramon's treatment of Liver Pills and , Tonic Pellets strengthens the liver and makes it do its own work. Prevents vo and cures these troubles. It aids? ex doesn't force. Entire treatment 25c, go Derrick's Drug Store aud C. E. CorL?y. on v . " - 1 HAT SKINNER BOY,' Music Dealer Trusts Innocent Youngster With a Banjo. AS TO DELIVER INSTRUMENT it It Fails to Reach Its Destination )wing to a Row In Street Car as to Vhether Banjo Was an Infernal Machine or Not. [Copyright, 1907, by E. C. Parcells.] lumpy Skinner was on his way me from school the other day, with : usual innocent look on his face, d he was passing a' music store ten the dealer came to the door and d: ;Sonny, you look to me like an innolt boy." Yes, sir, I am," wis the reply; I think you are a boy that can be isted." I know I am." Well, a man left a banjo here last ek to be repaired. It's all ready to home, but I have no one to send th it. If I should give it into your j ? J ELLlO, BUB! THAT'S A QUZEB XJND 07 HATBOX." ads and promise you a quarter for dug it to 232 Harrison street, I beve you would do the errand all :ht" 'I surely would, sir." 'Very well. You had better go up to nth street and take 'the crosstown p. Here is the banjo in its box, and len you return you shall have the arter." lumpy started off in the highest irits. He had gone only a block len he met that Thomas boy and is sainted with: "Hello, HumpL What you got there?" 'A banjo." V Q|? xi nam x yuurs r 'Nope. I'm taking it up on Harrison eet for a music man." 'And he trusted you pith a banjo, i he?" 'Yep. He said I looked innocent and nest" Going to the Top Fast. "Well, I never! Say, Hump, I don't mt to make you vain, but can you find ywhere in American history that sorge Washington was trusted with a njo belonging to some one else? No, ; you can't. You are going , right up , the top as fast as you can go, and I edict that they'll have your picture the papers in less 'n six months." the boy and the banjo had gone a >ck farther when they encountered a eet car conductor off duty and leanl up against a wall on the corner. i had had two or three drinks to keep e bears off and was feeling good. 'Hello, bub! That's a queer sort of tbox!" he said as he reached out r Humpy. 'It hain't no hatbox; it's a banjo in ire," was the reply. 'Is that so? Say, now, but I used to at the band playing on a banjo, tee when I played to a crowd over iundred strong men broke down and ipt. i li give you a tune. 'But you can't. The man told me t to open the case." 'Never mind what the man told you, any. I'm running this old car this p. I'll have you dancing before I ve played a dozen notes of 'Yankee >odle.'" lumpy protested ana hung on to the x/ but it would have been wrested >m him except that a policeman saw i squabble from afar and came hasting up the street. 'Oh, well, he can go on with his old njo," said the conductor as he reised his hold on the box. "All I inted was to play a few tunes and en up the old town a bit, but I'll inside and take two more drinks dead." Obeys Officer's Command. The officer told Humpy to hump nself along, and his command "was eyed. He reached Ninth street witht further adventure and boarded a r, but he was scarcely seated when a >wan beside him looked him over ry sharply and said: Bov, did the conductor take notice that box when you got on?' Yes'm. He asked me if I had a cat it, and I told- him 110." 'I hope you didn't lie to him. I was a street car once when a cat got t of a basket and clawed my face, d I have never got over the scare, you are carrying a cat"? 'It's a banjo, ma'am," explained linpy. 'I am glad to hear that, and I hope u haven't lied to me. The box may plode anyhow, and I wish you would farther up the car. I was on a car ce when a banjo or something else ( i, _ in a box exploded, and I had my eyeglasses blown off." Hftmpy moved to the front of the car and sat down beside q man who had been nodding with sleep. The banjo box happened to hit his knee, and he aroused and looked around and demanded to know who had kicked him. Then his eyes fell upon Humpy and the box, and he said: "Boy, I don't like it at all. I believe you are an anarchist and making ready to blow up this car." "Banjos don't explode, do they?" asked Humpy, with a smile. "A banjo, eh? And what are you doing with a banjo?" 'Taking it up to a man on Harrison street." May Have Been Infernal Machine. "Um! It may be a banjo^ and it may be an infernal machine. In these days we can't be too careful. A grocer asked me to open a can of chicken the T irnc tnrt clifirn fnr U liICi Uav> , UUL A. >?ao WW - W*. him. When another fellow tried it, it exploded and blew his arm off. We will look at that supposed banjo." "But I was told not tcJ open the box," protested Humpy. "Makes no difference, sonny. As ft freeborn American citizen I've got a right to know whether I'm riding with dynamite or musical instruments. Opea up!" "I shan't do it It's a banjo, and you can believe ijie or not." "The plot thickens," whispered the man as he assumed a knowing look. And of a sudden he grabbed the box and threjv up the cover. Then an oldish man who had been reading a paper laid it aside and said: *"I don't kiM>w why you couldn't have taken the. b$'s word." "I trust no one," replied the other. "Rockefeller, Rogers and the rest 'of us can't tell what minute we must confront danger. It seems to be a banjo, but is it one? Has it got dynamite concealed in its stomach? Are we about to be greeted with the strains of 'Old Dan Tucker,* or ai? we to be hurled into eternity without a moment's preparation?" > "You talk like a fool! Give the boy Kat. nn/1 etnn fArtlinO' " LUC UUA UUU O tVJ/ "Oh, I talk like a fool, do I? Say, now, you are an older man than I am, and you are baldheaded and bow legged, but you must apologize or there'll be a row here." ^ Men Began Scrapping. "You go to with your apologies!" Then the two men rose up and began scrapping. Humpy tried to get the .banjo box, but it went down on the floor between them and was stepped on. The conductor cape running, two of the men passengers mixed in, and five or six women set up a screaming. The row was over in five minutes, and when Humpy could make out the banjo he saw only a few strings and splinters of wood. / "W-what am I going to do?" he asked of the conductor, who had had his nose skinned in the fracas. "Was it your banjo?" "No. I was,taking it somewhere for a music dealer." "My son, you look innocent and lamblike." "And I am." "There is no%banjo; there Is no box. As there is no banjo and no box, there can be no delivery. It isn't your fault. It is what they call an act of providence, and no one Is responsible. Just drop off the car as easy as you can and t#ke that innocent and lamblike face of yours home. If your dear mother ? wants to know why yau are pale faced and shaky in the knees, tell her an auto cut off your coattails. See?** M. QUAD. , % 9 No Room For Expansion. Prospective Tenant?Rent this flat? Why, no one but a narrow minded person would rent such a flat as this! The Janitor?Faith, mum, it wouldn't even accommodate* a mind unless it was narrow.?PitlUburg Post. Some Difference. "Did I understand you to say that my appearance has improved?" "No; I said you looked more like yourself."?New York Life. Optimistic. Professor?What a good thing I had my field glasses with me today. It shortens distances tremendously.?Pele ATpIp So He Doesn't. If I meant what I said When I happen to speak. They would think me a freak And not right in my head. I'd be blamed to as great Or a greater extent And arouse as much hato If I said what I meant. , If I said what I meant. All r y friends I would lose. If that course I should choose, I would surely repent. I would have to be dumb Or considered 11! bred Ey acquaintance and chum If I meant what I said. It is sad, I must say. But it never would do. Speech can never be true In a literal way. My approach you would dread; That is quite evident. If I meant what I said. ? I If I said what I meant. ?Chicago News, n JSow Women Shop. "I have found out," said the grayheaded man, "why it takes a woman so long to do a little shopping. It is because she stops to count her money so often. I went shopping with a woman the other day. She pays cash for everything, consequently she took money along. She counted it just before she left home. She had $24.65. The first thing she bought was a piece of silk. As soon as she had paid for that she counted her money again, with a host of other shoppers and employes, of course, standing around watching the proceeding. After that she made severs 1 -other purchases, and upon settling fcr each one she counted her money. "I want to know all the time just how much I have left,' she said, 'so I'll be sure not to buy anything so expensive that I won't have money enough to pay for it. "But there is a simpler way than ? counting every time,' I suggested. 'Why don't you substract the price of 1 your last purchase from -your last | amount?' * I "Oh,7 said she, '1 neyer thought of | that, and anyhow I never- was very I good at subtraction."?New York Sun. J 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. Guaranteed under the Food and Drugs act, June 30, 1906. Serial number 1908. tf It is the best of all. ' s The Judge Slept. ^ Judge Memminger took a nap last Monday at noon and overslept himself ^ for one hour. All the court machinery was standing idle waiting for him to get his nap out. If a juryman had ~ done that what would have been the consequences? ? Chesterfield Advertiser. i BaII T*?i* Wa waw ^ * OA* *tAWW *4*9 *V*Vt?*? ^ A three-mule team belonging to Mr. j. Geo. C. Glasgow and hauling hay _ broke ithrough the Burton bridge, ^ over little river, in Floyd township, on Friday and fell into the water. ** The hay was much damaged, the * wagon was broken up and one of the mules was badly hurt. The bridge = had been in an unsafe condition for some time.?Newberry Observer. a ' Kidney complaint kills more people' H than any other disease. This is due to E the disease being so insidious that it | gets a good hold on the system before it is recognized. Foley's Kidney Cure will prevent the development of fatal disease if taken in time. A girl sees nothing wrong in kissing 11 the right man. It makes a woman awful ashamed to have you see above her shoe tops. 0 if they are shabby looking. C" Mrs. S. Joyce, 180 Sullivan St., Claremont, N. H., writes: "About a year ago I bought two bottles of Foley's Kidney Cure. It cured me of a severe case of Kidney trouble of several years' standing. It certainly is a grand, good medicine, and I heartily recommend it." _ Kaufmann Drug Co.I $ The government on Tuesday secured two lots adjoining the United States courthouse and pcsioffice in Greenville for $85,000 in enlarging the build in&- t: The good-night kiss comes under the head of farewell performance." Look | ,1 The trouble is, your liver's y | I sick. One of its products, | 1 "bile," is overflowing into H j |5 your biocd. & I ] You can't digest your food,, $ j M your appetite is poor, ycu * g suffer dreadfully from head- g j j| ache, stomach ache, dizzi- R J % ness, malaria, constipation, & | K etc. What you need is not a H g dose of salts, cathartic water w S or pills?but a liver tonic 1 H This great medicine acts gently on s E ra renews the appetite, feeds the nerves. 5 ~ ? clears th? brain and cures consti- 5 [| It is a true medicine for sick liver I 0] and kidneys, and regulates all the I H c 'gestive functions. Try it. I at ?3 9 At all dealers in medicines in S 3 2.5c packages. R % 1 - 31/* ^Tr-T?~l Big Crops of Corn can depended upon from land 8 % wmi that has been liberally fertilized I a complete fertilizer containASfAlLAULfcJnrr o i/ 0/ n i f-rr^nr^n ?0/ otrsnlnHlp JHctZ-T>^3-l s 0/2 /o v/0 ? PHOSPHORICg|fe phosphoric acid and 9% E1|i Potash Q O/ i|ia rtiSHSjil Just how and why 9% of Potash jfcMi jiSi" 11 ' \ is necessary our booklet will show. IJ I H in " GERMAN KALI WORKS I Bfi ^5^ I a New York?93 Nassau Street, or |^j|^ Atlanta, Ga.?1224 Candler Building Dim 111 TUB r [ mini i until DONT FORGET ELe A. TAYIiOR, Successor to Maxwell .& Taylor, NEAR POST OFFICE, COLUMBIA, S. C, When you are looking for Furniture. We buy only in olid Car Load Lots and at the lowest spot cash prices, we herefore, can sell you for less than if we bought in local shiplents. Solid Oak .Bedroom Suites. Nine Pieces?One Bed, One Bureau, One Washstand, One lentre Table, Pour Chairs. One Rocker?all for $17.25. 1 No. 7 Black Oak Stove rith a complete list of Cooking Utinsels, for $7.50. No. 8 Hack Oak, with a complete list of Utinsels, $12.50. Our " ine is complete. All grades. ^Prices guaranteed as low as hirniture of the' same grade can be bought Write or phone 00 for prices H. A. TAYIjOR, COLUMBIA, S. C. mm m sff iisi tfVlfML IU UfcL %J\J* Our stock of New Spring Goods are now ready for your ispection, embracing everything in WASH GOODS, DOMESTICS, DRESS GOODS AND SILKS f all imaginable shades and patterns, bought to please our ustomers. Fall Goods will be closed out at Bargain Prices. * % MIIiUIMERY. In Millinery we have the very latest styles and trimmings. )on't buy your hat until you have seen ours. jccrirxoM's. Our notion department is complete with all the new novelLes, too numerous to mention herb. We want our Lexington friends to call and see what we have. MAKE OUR STORE HEADQUARTERS. u 1 vAiiy p. Ill Hi IVVI1U! WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, 1603 main street, columbia, s. c. I The Palmetto National Bank, I columbia, s. c. ? we are f A Depository for the United States Government, the State B of South Carolina, the County of Richland and the City B. of Columbia. M we own 9 8100,000 United States Bonds and ? 100,000 State of South' B Carolina Bonds. fl we solicit 1 ? Accounts of Banks, Firms, Corporations and Individuals. B IW JrA x m Four Per Cent, on deposits in our Savings Department, in terest calculated quarterly. U WE PEOMISE | Our best efforts to transact your business to your entire S satisfaction. H PALMETTO NATIONAL BANK, - - Columbia, S. C. 1 CAPITAL ?250,000.00 I Wilie Jones, President'. J. P. Matthews, Cashier. 9 WE HAVE FOR SALE tie 25 hor^e power Talbott, second hand engine, in stock which has recently been erhauled. This engine is in first class condition and will be a great bargain for tyone who is in rhe market for such a size engine. We are headquarters for anything in the way of machinery supplies, and prompt tention will be given to all inquiries and orders entrusted to our care. Write us hen you are in the market for anything, and be sure to get our prices before you der elsewhere. May 30. COLUMBIA SUPPLY CO., Columbia. S. C. *? , v ... ? :M