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N-W\jv, ftwsands Haw Kidney Traable and Never Suspect it i; How To Find Out. Fill a bottle or common glass with your water and let it stand twenty-four hours; a sediment or setKPSJlj tling indicates an ^ unhealthy conj neys; if it stains fjLk. ney trouble; too s>3i' \\l nl /" l^vVi frttnupnt rlesire to pass it or pain "" in the back is also convincing proof that the kidneys and bladder are out of order. What To Bo. t There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy, g|fe| 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 ne- 1 cessity of being compelled to go often daring the day, and ,to get up many times daring 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 fe. yon 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 FffiT'n i|py. i about it. both sent free by mail. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing?? g??V ftwmiwBirt. J namrnn. x. wucu writing mention this paper and don't make any mistake, bnt remember the name, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y. : I if PBOFESSIONAL CABDS. ' ?i W A D. MARTIN, ATTORNEY A. 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 WM. W. IJAWES, TV Attorney and Counselor at Law. NEW BROOKLAND. S. C. Practice in all Courts. Business solicited. November 1,1906. 0. X. KF1BD. F. X. VBEHXB. B FERD & DREHER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, -i mil . 1 . . *\f 1 LEXINGTON o. a. a 0. fWill practice in all the Courts. Business solicited. One member of the firm will al* ways be at office. Lexington. 8. C. T HTfsict^ J . ATTORNEY AT LAW, CHAJPIN, & 0. \ "^Office: Hotel Marion, 4th Boom. Second Floor. Will practice in all the Courts. i fTHUBMOND & TTMMERMAN, I I ATTORNEYS AT LAW, I WILL PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS, B Kaufmann Bide, LEXINGTON, 8. C, We will be pleased to meet those having loK . cal business to be attended to at our office W in the Kaufmann Building at any time. '' Respectfully, r Jr. Wk. THURMOND. G. BELL TIMMERMAN, A LBERT M. BOOZER, """""" A. ATTORNEY AT LAW, COLUMBIA, 8. a Owza: 1814 Main Street, upstairs, opposite ' * Van Mftre'B Furniture Storej Especial attention given to business entrusted to him by his fellow citizens of Lexington county. pEORGE R. REMBERT" ? ATTTH&VTCV AT LAW. 1231 LAW RANGE, COLUMBIA. S. 0. | I will be glad to serve my friends from Lex- | iagton County at any time, and a-n prepared ?. to ^practice law in all btate and Federal ; A NDREW CRAWFORD, te A ATTORNEY AT LAW. COLUMBIA, 8. C. r Praefclees in the State and Federal Courts, and offers his professional services to the citizens c.l Lexington County, \ Law OffioeB, (') Residence. 1529 MB 1909 Washington -j > Pendle ton Street. Street. ( ) Office Telephone No. 1372. Residence Telephone No. 1036. W BOYD EVANS, pfMJT .LAWYER X ND COUNSELLOR. Columbia, S. C. T\R. P. H. SHE ALT, U DENTIST, LEXINGTON, S. O. Office Up Stairs in Roofs Building. TIR. F. C. GILMORE, V DENTIST, tiem COLUMBIA. S. C. Office Houbs.* 9 a. m. to 2 p. m? and from 8 to 6 d. m. IETHff] DEALER IN g General 1 Merchandise, I j Senter Main and New Street, | Opposite Confederate | Monument, | j Lexington, - S. C. g 6969696SS969696S69696S690 A Poor Organ. Dam(s) the bile. That's what your liver does if it's torpid. Then the "rile overflows into the blood?poisons your system, causing sick headache, biliousness, sallow skin, coated tongue, sick stomach, dizziness, fainting spells, etc. Ramon's treatment of Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets strengthens the liver and *' * * 4 ? 1? D*y\rrnnfa 1 makes it go its own wura. x iocmc and cures these troubles. It aids? doesn't force. Entire treatment 25c, Derrick's Drug Store and C. E. Corley. k MR, BOWSER'S FARM, Goes Out to Buy One, but He Comes Home Without ft. HiS ANNUAL SPRING FEVER. Displays Great Ignorance Concerning His Ability to Raise Wheat and Corn and Till the Soil and Makes a Fool of Himself. [Copyright 1907, by Homer Sprague.] Mr. Bowser had been very quiet for five days. He had made no experiments and no purchases. He hadn't threatened the cat or pursued any " umbrella menders. He hadn't tried any gas saving patents or meddled with the water pipes. Mrs, Bowser had watched him closely and been a good deal worried. That he was lying lj>w to break out in some new spot she finally realized, and it troubled her to guess what new idea he would develop. When three days had gone* by without an outbreak, the cook came to her and whispered: "Ma'am, I'm a girl that is nearsighted." "Yes?" *Tm lop shouldered, and my toes turn in." "I know." "I've never been to May parties and circuses like other girls." "No." "I can't dance or sing or play the - J !i.U ^ planner, and I've never mneu wnu ?i street car conductor." "Well, Annie, whartare you trying to get at?" asked Mrs. Bowser. "Just this, ma'am: I've got a beau at last He's a young man and skeary. "I'm lop shottldebed, and my toes tubn in." Mr. Bowser has been keeping quiet so long that I'm expecting a dynamite explosion any minute. If there is one and he scaWmy young man off, I never, never can forgive him." There Was 1N0 Explosion. There was no explosion, although a climax came to Mr. Bowser's strange conduct. On the fifth morning at the breakfast table he quietly observed: "Mrs. Bowser, I am going out into the country today and may not be home at the usual hour." "Isn't it too late to hunt rabbits?" she asked. ; . "I am. not going to hunt rabbits." He snapped his answer in such a way as to forbid her from pursuing the subject further, and, though she wondered a great deal, she had no more to say. When he was ready to leave, he Vn* vr-sviiM tolanhnno h*?r if anv OtUU UU T? VUIU ??v thing happened to detain him overnight and, went away with a cloud of .mystery clinging around him like an April fog. He was hardly out of sight when the cook came upstairs to whisper: i "Is it to be dynamite, ma'am, with tiie house tottering about our ears?" "Of course not." "Won't he cut the water pipes and bring on another Johnstown flood?" "No." "Thank hearings for that! One explosion, no louder than a bang, would scare my young man away forever." Wanted to Buy Farm. Mr. Bowser had got his regular spring fit on' to buy a farm. He realized that if he said a word about it to Mrs. Bowser she would produce facts and figures to prove that he ought to be sent to an insane asylum, and he was therefore going to have the farm bought before he said a word to her. He took a suburban car running ten miles out and did not get off until he had reached the terminus. He looked arcrand the car for a toil hardened farmer to talk with, but he found none. There was a squint eyed man, however, who evinced a disposition to be friendly, and after a few remarks on the weather he was asked if he knew of any farms for sale. "Want one for vourself?" he Queried in reply. "Yes.** "Ever do any farming?" "Not to speak of." "Expect to make a living at It, or do yon want it for a plaything?" "I am not in the plaything business," stiffly replied Mr. Bowser. "If I find a farm to suit me. I shall buy it and move on to it. I shall farm to make money. I shall farm for my health. I shall farm to get away from the dust and racket, the graft and vice of the city." Thought Bowser Crazy. The man looked at him in a curious and puzzled way a moment and then took a seat on the opposite side of the car. Mr. Bowser thought his conduct rathsr queer, but said nothing, while the other presently sneaked out on the j rear platform and said to the conductor: "Have you taken notice of that baldheaded chap in there?" "Not particularly. What's the matter with him?" "Cray as a bedbug. If he jumps on to me all of a sudden and kicks my fibs in, I shall hold the company responsible for all damages." Mr. Bowser didn't jump on anybody. When he left the car, he took to the highway and walked a mile. Then he came to a farm he liked the looks of and turned in. The farmer was grinding an ax at a stone under a cherry tree, and his two strapping sons were tearing down an old rail fence and laying up a new one in its place. Mr. Bowser felt a farmerish instinct rise within him as he looked around. The robins and bluebirds were singing, the young lambs were gamboling, and nature was getting a summer hump on her. He imagined Mrs. Bowser churning at the back door while he swung a scythe in the meadow, the corn growing and rustling, the yellow wheat waving in the summer winds, and his expression was growing childlike and bland when the farmer left the grind' stone to ask: "Well, do you wish to buy chickens or lambs?" Liked Looks of Farm. "I am no chicken buyer," was the reply in tart t^nes. "I rather liked the looks of you* farm and so turned in. Perhaps it's for sale?' fhA farmer and his sons took a cood long look at the man before thein, and then the farmer replied: "Yes", I might sell if I was offered my price. Won't you sit down on the bench?" Mr. Bowser had never set out to buy a farm before, but a sort of natural instinct told him that there were certain questions 'he ought to ask. lie therefore sat down and lighted a cigar and assumed a knowing air and queried: "What's the submarine soil of this farm? I see that the surface is a sandy loam." "Do you mean subsoil?" asked the father, while the sons winked and grinned. "Of course." "It's blue clay, the best subsoil in the world." "What's your principal hay cro]>? clover or Holstein?" "You must mean timothy?" "Yes, timothy." "Why, we grow both, of course." "And how many hundred bushels of wheat to the acre?" continued Mr. Bowser as he scowled at the grinning sons.- * ' "How many hundreds? Lord, man, but you can't mean hundreds! Land that will grow thirty bushels of wheat to the acre Is wortn wanting nrty miies to see. My land grows about twenty,* and it's called mighty good land." "W?ll, about corn?" was asked as Mr. Bowser's face began to get very red. "I've gone as high as forty bushels to the acre." "Did it grow already shelled?" . Both sons laughed right out, while the father looked at Mr. Bowser and scratched the back of his head and wondered what manner of man had dropped down on him. He finally answered: "The farm that grows shelled corn and wheat that don't have to be thrashed is five miles farther along the road." "But you make maple sugar all the year round, don't you?" continued Mr. Bowser in his desperation. Refused to Sell to Him. The father snorted, and the sons went "Haw, haw, haw!" and slapped their legs. Mr. Bowser jumped up, with fiery face, and was beginning to say something about insults when the farmer motioned him to silence and said: "Stranger, you don't look like the man who once sold me a gold brick nor like the feller that stole my hogs. _ I guess you are a respectable man who is a leetle off in the head from shoveling snow last winter. This farm is not for sale to you. I have never made o -nr-onf fnlrinrr nrlnntdcrn nf nllilrl " v.*. hood or insanity. If you have got a wife and will give me your name, I'll go in and telephone her where you are and ask her to send out for you." There was just one dreadful moment when Mr. Bowser thought he would explode. Then he got hold of himself and turned away and walked down to the gate and out of it. and down 'the road toward the car. He knew he was a wrecked man and that he should , never smile again, but with Spartan heroism he would not let the enemy see the iron in his soul. They called after him, and they haw, haw, hawed, but he walked and walked and never turned his head. Brahma cows and Leghorn turnips were no more to him. M. QUAD. As Usual. "Why are they crowding around the well? Some one in trouble?" "Yes; there was a woman at the bottom of it."?Boston Globe. ! PHYSICAL CULTURE. The Kind Hiram's Son Advised Him to Take. Hiram in old age wonders why he can't do as much as he used to do. Hiram's son being away from home, he writes to him for information as to how he may regain his health. His son, being a good athlete and knowing the value of physical culture, thinks that it would be beneficial to the old man to take morning exercises and so writes, but his imagination runs away with him at times as follows; "Dear Dad?In order for you to hring back your health and be as good a man as you used to be you should be come an athlete and go through some good, strong and powerful exercises. The first thing when you rise early in the morning you should give a leap in the air, hit your snoot against the ceiling and clap your heels lightly nine times together before you touch the floor. By doing this once over It will give your blood a good circulation and strengthen your nerves. It will also prepare you for the next performance which you are about to undergo. Give a high kick and slap your toes against the ceiling and at che same time fall to the floor upon your head thrice. This exercise will strengthen the neck bone, harden your head and keep the brain in good order. After this you should hoist the lid and go out on the roof and take deep breathing exercises. rin thp liifh ftftmpflnn. Wnlk off tho roof as though you -were walking through the air, but take good care that you fall flat to the ground on your stomach. This will prolong your wind, develop your breast, also make you see stars. Then you should walk In and get ready for breakfast and put up a growl about the victuals and all that's on the table. This exercise will prepare you for the difficult ups and downs of this world. All of these exercises should be undergone not less than once a day for a week, and if you are alive when your week is up you will be a healthy and ablebodied man." ?Judge's Library. / A Captain of Industry. A Kansas politician was asked by his wife to lay aside politics long enough one day to dig the potatoes in the garden. He consented and after digging for a few minutes ne returned to the house and said he had found a coin. He washed it off, and it proved to be a silver quarter. He put it in his jeans and went' back to work. Presently he went to the house again and said he had found another coin. He washed the dirt off of it, and this, time it was a silver half dollar. He put It in his jeans. "I have worked pretty hard," said he to his wife. "I guess I'll take a short nap." When he awoke he found that his wife had dug all the rest of the potatoes. But she found no coins. It then dawned upon her that she had been ''worked."?Philadelphia Ledger. A Record "Break" (Billiard Term). Master?What in thunder are you doing, John? John?Well, sir, looks as if I was goin' to make a record break, sir!? Sketch. Just Enough. "I never could use money with a clear conscience," said Mrs. Goodsole, "that had been made in stocks. I never could forget that somebody else had lost it.". "That being the case," replied her husband, "I guess I'll give to some charity the $300 I made today." "Oh. Charley! Did you really? That with the $300 I have saved will be just enough to pay for the European trip that I've been dreaming of for years." ?Chicago Record-Herald, He Wanted Pie. "Mamma," said small Harry one day, "I want a piece of pie." "It will soon be dinner time," rejoined his mother. "Have patience." "But I don't want patience," protest ea tne little renow. "i want pie. ? Pittsburg Post. Cause For Complaint. Mamma?When I whip you, Johnny, you know I do it for your own good. Johnny?Well, I wish you wouldn't take such a strenuous interest in my welfare.?Detroit Tribune. Real Joy. Doesn't it warm you when Some one comes in, When luck has harried him, Borrows your tin; When a man thinks of you On the down trend. When life has battered him. You are his friend. But is there anything Equals your glee, Makes you as gladsomely Glad as can be, As when that same man comes Loosed from the rack, Basking in fortune's smile, And pays you back? ?Houston Post DONT FORGET ?^ ^ ^ Successor to Maxwell & Taylor, NEAR POST OFFICE, COLUMBIA, S. C, When you are looking for Furniture. We buy only in Solid Gar 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, Pour Chairs. One Rocker?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. Onr line is complete. All grades. Prices guaranteed as low as Furniture of the same grade can be bought. Write or phone syu ior prices H. A. TAYLOR, COLUMBIA, S. C. Our stock of New Spring Goods are now ready for your , inspection, embracing everything in WASH GOODS, DOMESTICS, DRESS GOODS AND SILKS of all imaginable shades and patterns, bought to please our customers. Fall Goods will be closed out at Bargain Prices. ivrxx^iEIxiianBRY. In Millinery we haye the very latest styles and trimmings. Don't buy your hat until you have seen ours. NOTIONS. Our notion department is complete with all the new novelties, too numerous to mention here. We want our Lexington friends to call and see what we have. matte OUR STORE HEADQUARTERS. N. XTOUNG, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, 1603 MAIN STREET, COLUMBIA. S. C. I ISle Palmetto National Hank, I COLUMBIA, S. C. I WE ARE I A Denositorv tVir the United States Government, the State fl I of South Carolina, the County of RichLand and the of Columbia. WE OWN ?100,000 United States Eonds and $100,000 State of South g Carolina Bonds. W WE SOLICIT , f Accounts of Fatiks. Firms, Corporations aud Individuals. - WE PAY 1 Four Per Cent, on deposits in our Savings Department, in terest calculated quarterly. * m we pbomise g Our best efforts to transact your business to your entire S PALMETTO NATIONAL BANK, - - Columbia, S. C. 1 CAPITAL $250,000.00 g Wilie Jones, President. J. P. Matthews, Cashier. g \ show/down No tobaccos ever made ' can surpass our Plug, Twist and Smoking. Wherever exhibited in competition with the world, they have never failed LU wm uie guiu meucu xui tiicu. gcuciai ca^chcii^c, Jiign ^uaiit^ and for their decided superiority ouer all competing brands. i "SHOW DOWN" is one of the coming brands of America. Only a few years old, its unrivaled qualities have made it one of the leadmer sellers over all other flue-cured Dluers. It thoroughly satisfies and perfectly suits everybody and all ! , classes. Sold at 10c and 15c per plug or 5c cuts. Always buy "SHOW DOWN," and save the tags. There is many an article you need for your comfort or entertain| ment which these tags get for you without cost A copy of our 1907 premium catalogue, which is one of the largest and most attractive ever gotten out by a tobacco manufacturer, will be mailed to any address in the United States on receipt of only 4c in postage stamps or 8 of the tags we are redeeming. I Hancock Bros. & Co., Lynchburg, Va.