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- W???E???B^??BHM Tbeosands Hare Kidney Troable anil 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 yvfcJrTSrunhealthy conIIv\ dition of the kidIWA I r ne3"s? ^ ** staius / - ?^r ^nen ^ *s evidence of kidj\J \\J $ ne\* trouble; too j^UJJ frequent desire * " *? J&s to pass it or pain in the back is also convincing proof that the kidneys and bladder are out of order. What To Do. x .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 noia 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 manv 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} tressing cases. If you need a medicine i you should have the best. Sold by drug? gists in fifty-cent and one-dollar sizes. t You may have a sample bottle and a book that tells all -r^rr about it, both sent free by mail. Address Dr. gayBBHB ^?352 Kilnjer & Co., Bing- ' hamton, N.A". When Homeof Bwwnp-itoct. writing mention this paper and don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y. VftrtTraaffTrtWAT. CASUS. ??? MHWOVai I II ?; C. X. EFIBD. F. E. DKEHEB. Efied & dreher, attorneys at law, lexington c h. 8. c Will practice in all the Courts. Business solicited. One member of the firm will always be at office, Lexingto^, 8. C. t h. frick~ , J attorney at law, chapin, & 0, Office: Hotel Marion, 4th Boom. Second Floor, Will practice in all the Courts mhurmond & timmerman, , 1 attorneys at law, WILL practice in all courts, Kaufmann Bids:, LEXINGTON, S, C, We will be pleased to meet those having legal business to be attended to at our office in the Kaufmann Building at any time. Respectfully,. _ IT. Wit. THURMOND. G. BELL TIMMEBHAN, Albert m. boozer, . ' attorney at law, columbia, 8. a Office: 1816 Main Street, upstairs, opposite Van Metre's Eurniture btoreEspecial attention given to business entrusted to him by his fellow citizens of Lexington 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 anytime, and an prepared to practice law in all ctate and Federal Courts. Andrew crawford, attorney at law, COLUMBIA, 8. Practices in the State and Federal Courts, and offers his professional services to the ffflTwns of Lexington County, Law Offices, M Residence, 1529 1209 Washington < > Pendle ton Street. Street. ( ) Office Telephone No. 1872. Residence Telephone No. 1086. ?BOYD EVANS, LAWYER AND counsellor. Columbia, S. c. he. p. h. shealy, v dentist, lexington, s. c. Office Up Stairs in Roofs Building. JAMES karman, dental surgeon, lexington, s. c. (Office in Bear of Court House.) Informs the public thathe will be in his office every Friday for the purpose of doing dental work in all its branches. tvr. e. j. etheeedge, l) surgeon dentist, leesyille, s, c., Office over J. C. Kinard & Co's, Store. Always on hand. tvr. f. c. gilmore, it dentist. 1510 Main Street, (JO.LUM.biA, s. u. Office Houbs.- 9 a. m. to 2 p. m? land from 3 to 6 p. m. DR. C. J. OLIVEROS, EYE, E^, THROAT,NOSE AND IUN3S. Guarantee Fit of Office and tiesidence. Glasses. 1421 aDd 142^ Marion St., March 15?ly. COLUMBIA. S. C. Drugs, Chemicals, STATIONERY. I PAINTS - - OILS - - GLASS. GARDEN" SEED?Bulk and Package. THE SICK MAN'S FRIEND. Licensed Druggist and Chemist. KINARD, LEESVILLE, - - - S. C. To Cure Constipation take just a mite of Liver Food before retiring each night. Ramon's Tonic Regulator supplies it in a palatable form of powder, te*. or tonic. 25c, ana money back if not satisfied. For Sale at Harman's Bazaar BMMMgM?BB??H?B?? Some Breezu Kicker Items 1 What Has Been Going on In the Neighborhood of Giveadam Gulch. ! j IT is generally believed in Grass \ K Valley that the city clerk of that I town, who has been missing for three weeks, has been devoured I bv a bear, as he was last seen In the company of one. We learn that a man from Indiana is about to start a paper at Pine Hill, where six different editors have been shot or run out within two years. We congratulate him on being either a fool or a brave man. The party who came along the street at midnight the other night and hurled a rock through our bedroom window !||||E|| HE LIMPED OFF WITHOUT LEAVING HIS CAKD. in the postoflice must have been a stranger in town. We were out of bed and had put a bullet into one of his legs before ho had got his mouth puckered up to laugh. He limped off without leaving his card. We haven't said anything lately regarding our ambition to be the next president of the United States, but we are keeping up a lot of thinking all the time and shall be in evidence when the time comes. .Nothing is too tall for us. We have been postmaster of the town for almost three years and have been working hard all that time, and yet it was only the other day that we got the windows f the old building clean enough to gee through and found a clean spot on the floor.. Uncle ^am is industrious, but not proud. Mr. George H. Sheaver, the popular gunsmith of Rose Valley, denies that his wife has eloped, as stated in our issue last week. AH right, George. If you succeeded in heading her off, that is your good luck, and we congratulate you. Our informant probably took the will for the deed. . Old Jim Hewson, who was caught in a snowslide near Dog Creek last winter and held fast for four days, has invented and is now making use of fiftysix new cuss words, none of which are less than four inches long. It takeg a calamity to make some men do their best A keg of printer's ink which was on its way to us from Chicago was stolen from the freight house at Lone Jack the other day by half breed Indians and eaten up .for molasses. There were five persons in the plot, and all of them have gone up into the hills to take a vacation and rest up after their arduous labors. As mayor and postmaster of the town we must now and then take a bluff in order to maintain our dignity, but as plain Jim Hellso we own a mule which can beat anything in. the west on a half mile track, and we'll bet on it. Fifty bushels of onions came mto town yesterday aloug with fourteen barrels of whisky, and for the next two weeks our sanctum will be kept locked against the general public. Any one breathing through the keyhole must take his chances of being shot in the head. The Lone Jack Recorder charges us with killing thirty-eight men since we established the Kicker ar# asks why we are peruuiteu 10 Jive uu auu. swagger around. In the firs^ place, as the Recorder man could easily have ascertained, the number of men we have had to lay away in self defense is only fourteen, and in the next we are permitted to live on because no one cares to undertake the job of disposing of us. Editor Joseph Bray ton of the Pine Hill Banner called us a liar over the telephone the other day. We shall ride over to Pine Hill some day next week, and we'll bet $10 to a cent that Editor Joseph Brayton can't be found within five miles of his office as long as we stay in town. M. QUAD. Eas Stood The Tost 25 Years. The old, original Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic. You know what you are takiBg. It is iron and quinine in a tasteless form, No cure, no pay. 50c. T. X. L. relieves when properly applied. The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, August 9,1905. Notes from Ch&pin. Tbe rains have been fine and crops are good, with tbe exception of very early corn. Our merchants are all doing good business. Messrs. R. W. Frick & Son and J. S. Wessinger have bought a lot of cotton during month of July. Mr. Chas. P. Robinson has invested in an up-to-date brick machine and is making an excellent quality of brick, anmft nf which. I think, has been shipped to your town to Mr. Samuel George. Oar people" are jubileDfc over Mr. Robinson's success with bis brick business, as they think this means a cotton mill for Gbapin in the near future. It is with 8&dne88 that we learn of and report the death of Mr. John Henry Slice, son of Mr. Cal Slice, who once lived among ns but for several yeara has resided in Columbia. Mr. Cal Slice's wife was buried yesterday (Sunday) one week ago, st St. Jacob's, Wateree, church, and to- | day her son will be laid by her Bide. { This is surely very trying to Mr. Slice and his remaining family, but there is one who is able to comfort. They have the sympathy of this community. The Church Council of St. Jacob's pastorate met on the 20th of July and extended a call to Rev. F. K Roof of Newton, N. C., to become 1 pastor of this charge. Mr. J. S. WessiDger has returned from a week's trip in North Carolina where he went to buy a car of furniture. He reports a good time, as he visited his brother, Rev. J. C. Weesinger, near Lexington, N. C. and returned by Hickory, Asbeville and Spartanburg, which trip sfforde very fine mountain scenery. The Trustees of this school district have employed Prof. J. D. Farr bb principal and Miss Blanche Eyzer r b assistant of the Cbapin school. With these teachers we should have one of the banner schools of the county. The trustees have solicited subscriptions and have secured enough money including the public funds, to run an eight months school The school will be graded and diplomas issued to each scholar finishing the latt grade. The trustees have received the library and case, which will add much to the school. Chapin is oa a boom. Real estate coQtinues to change bands and new residences are being built. Mr. T. M. Brown's residence will soon be completed and Mr. W. E. Koon commenced work oa bis residence. With best wishes for yon and the dear old Dispatch, I am yours, Chapin, S. C, July 31, '05. W. Sow to Avoid Pneumonia. We have never heard of a single instance of a cold resnlting in pneumonia when Foley's Honey and Tar hts been taken. It not only stops the congh but heals and strengthens the lungs. Ask for Foley's Honey and Tar and refuse any substitute offered. Dr. C. J. Bishop, of Agnew, Mich., writes: 'T have used Foley's Honey and Tar in three very severe cases of pneumonia with- good results in every case." The Kaufmann Drug Co. The Middleburg Kills. Manufacturers (Baltimore) Record. The Middleburg mills has awarded contract for installation of 4,000 additional spindles, increasing the equipment to 10,000 spindles and 300 looms. Wanted. Beeswax wanted in large or small quantities. Highest market prices aid in cash, at the Bazaar. tf | FOE THE TOILET. ? ? \ jg Sweet Soaps, Castile Soaps, Per- ? p fumery from Hoyt's oc. size p k German Cologne to the k P Finest Extracts,Toilet ^ S| Powders, Pomade p Sk Hair Oil, Bay g ? Rnm,etc. P p Combs, Hair p Kj Brushes, Shaving |jj ^ Brushes, Tooth and P p Finger Nail Brushes, etc. ?j ^ See our line of useful Toilet e P Sets, suitable for Wedding Pres- j| P ents, Birthday Presents or Gifts. p 6 There are numerous other articles E |j that will pay you to call and see. || I HAEMAN'S - BAZAAE. 1 1 1 | Lexington, S. C. | Cure ForJThe Blues! ONE MEDICINE THAT HAS NEVER FAILED I Health Fully Restored and the Joy o1 Life Regained When a cheerful, brave, light-hearted woman is suddenly plunged into that periection 01 misery, me i5i-un.o, n is a sad picture. It is usually this way: She has been feeling "out of sorts'1 for some time; head has ached and back also; has slept poorly, been quite nervous, and nearly fainted once or twice: head dizzy, and heart-beats very fast; then that bearing-down feeling, and during her menstrual period she is exceedingly despondent. Nothing pleases her. Her doctor says: 44 Cheer up: you have dyspepsia; you will be ail right soon." But she doesn't get " all right," and hope vanishes; then come the brooding, morbid, melancholy, everlasting BLUES. Don't wait until your sufferings have driven you to despair, with your nerves all shattered and your courage gone, but take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. See what it did for Mrs. Rosa Adams, of 819 12th Street, Louisville, Ky., niece of the late General Roger Hanson, C.S.A. She writes: Dear Mrs. Pink ham:? 411 cannot tell you with pen and ink what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me. I suffered with female troubles, extreme lassitude, 'the blues,' nervousness and that all-gone feeling. I was advised to try Lydia E. Pinkham's "V egetable Compound, and it not only cured my female derangement, but it has restored me to perfect health and strength. The buoyancy of my younger days has returned, and I do not surfer any longer with despondencv, as I did before. I consider Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a boon to sick and suffering women." If you have some derangement of the female organism write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice. ???????n Saladi Reuaioa. The Annual Reunion of the Alumni students, and friends of Newberry College for Saluda, Edgefield and Aiken counties will be held at Delmar, on Friday, August 18th. Program: "Newberry College, 1865-1905 " Prof. D. B. Busby. "What students do at Newberry College." Mr J. W. Oxner. "The duty of Alumniea to the College. The duty of College to AlumnieB." Rev. M. M. Brabham. "The Alumni: What they are doing " Hon. E. H. Aull. "Pleasures of an Education." . O D Seay. "Newberry's School of Technology." ^ Dr. Geo. B. Cromer. Address: Dr J. A. B. Scherer. W. Aug. Shealy, D. A Quattlobaum. Committee. * The Original. Foley & Co., Chicago, originated Honey and Tar as a throat and long remedy, and on account of the great merit and popularity of Foley's Honey and Tar many imitations are offered for the genuine. These worthless imitations have similar sounding names. Beware of them. The genuine Foley's Honey and Tar is in a yellow package. Ask for it and refuse any substitute. It is the best remedy for couglis and colds. The Kaufmann Drug Co. Without a Backdown. Birmingham, Eng., Aug. 4?The Post states that English Ambassador to the United States Durand has cabled Lord Lansdowne the principal features of the Russian-Japanese peace terms. The stipulations made by the opposing nations are of such nature, the paper declares, that they have caused the conviction that the negotiation to bring the war to a close will be unsuccessful, unless one of the countries gives way considerably from the poeition it has taken. A $1,000 Worth of G-ood. A. H. Thames, a well known operator of Buffalo. 0., writes: "I have been afflicted with kidney and bladder trouble fnr -o-pprs -nassini? travel and stones with excruciating pain. I got no relief from medicine until I began taking Foley's Kidney Cure, then the result \?as surprising. A few doses started the brick dust like fine stone and now I have no pain across my kidneys and I feel like a new man. It lias done me $1,000 worth of good. The Kaufmann Drug Co. Jobenn Hocb, the man of many wivee, convicted of wife murder, was to bang in Chicago on Friday, but got a reprieve just before the time for execution. Tliey are Open for Inspection!! Say, it is up to you whether you would save any t p a1 we J- - <bn aa c* o. ?i. rrr wnere iruui 01.10 10 $^.uu on a op ring ouii. we have in stock the greatest variety of spring suits and Gent's Furnishings to be seen in Columbia. Every Pattern is the latest Fad of Fashion. Greys, lens, Blues end Browns! Prices ranging from $2.75 to $18.00 and every 5rrt.iP.le a b5irp,ain. &5.Q8 hnvs a awell tbino* in two piece suits, so don't forget to call on FRANK'S - JOBBING - HOUSE, 1427 MAIN ST., COLUMBIA, S. C., while in the city. Thanking yon for past patronage, respectfully Frank's Jobbing House. 1 t. a. n..hl .1 i i IU (lie ruupiu Ul LGAIII^IUIII I When you need shoes for heavy work?in the the held, on the road and for all round hard work?you certainly do want shoes that will j give you service, besides feel easy on your feet. Our shoes for hard wear cannot be surpassed. There is every element in them that is substantial for wear and comfort. We select the leather from top to toe that are used in these shoes, therefore we candidly say there are no better shoes made for heavy out door service. We also have a full line of Shoes and Rubbers for cold weather?for home and outdoor wear. When you want shoes for dress-up, remember we can supply your wants to your entire satisfaction. i Whenever your need shoes for Men, Women - and Children we believe we can serve you \ best?your shoe wants will be carefully attended to at this store. Thanking you very kindly for your patronage and awaiting the pleasure of seeing you soon at our store, we i remain, yours very truly, I THOMAS A. BOYNE, /OPPOfiTTT!! POST OPRTr.F. ^ 1736 Main Street, Columbia, S. C. The R. L. Bp Company \ ;! DESIRES YOUR PRESENCE . ? !i (! * '' !> at the Sales Reception of their latest ideas ]j WEDDING INVITATIONS and ]! j SOCIAL STATIONERY j; ;! on Any Afternoon, the early day of Summer j' | at any o'clock !; in the Masonic Temple, Columbia, S. C. j'j lj PRINTING AND ' || ;| ENGRAVING ON SALE j| <! CONTINUOUSLY THEREAFTER. !J 'iSfiltf J^t) Bny Youp I COLUMBIA, S. C. Nothing but Solid Leather Shoes Sold and "EvArv Pair (ximraritAAfL They are here and of course are beanties, because they are Keith Konquerors in High and Low Cots, Blacks and Tans, A.11 Leathers, Union Made. You are respectfully invited to call when in the city and inspect theie goods. Quality guaranteed. Cohen's Shoe Store, 1636 MAIN ST.. COI UMBIA. S. C.