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DO YOU GET UP WITH A TAME BACK? t Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost everybody who reads the newspapers is sure to know of the wonderful A 11 cures made by Dr. 1 '???* Dry t Kilmer's Swamp I 1 Root?the &reat bidH L ney, liver and bladJ ffjE'V/ 1 - der remedy. J ri{ js/ It is the great med1\ yl \ ' !(]iMca* tr'mmPh the J ! li nineteenth century ; \ fl 'it 1 ' discovered after years [ A H?=*\B of scientific research I f _ _ = . by Dr. Kilmer, the ?* eminent kidney and w bladder specialist, and is wonderfully ' successful in promptly curing lame back, uric acid, catarrh of the bladder and K Bright's Disease, which is the worst M form of kidney trouble. f 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 findoutif youhave kidney or bladder trouble. When -writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper and send your address to Dr. Kilmer JSc Co., Binghamton. ft fifty-cent and oner dollar size bottles are Home of swamp-Boot. L sold by all good druggists. Don't make I , any mistake, but remember the name, * Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. PROFESSIONAL CARPS. rC. M. EFIBI>. F; E. DEEHEB. ' pFIRD & DREHER, . Jj " 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, a. C. T H. FRICK, J . - ATTORNEY AT LAW, '* CHAPIN, S. C. Office: Hotel Marion, 4th Koom, Second Floor. Will practice in all the Courts i mfiurmond & timmerman, k 1 attorneys at law, f will practice in all courts, f Kaufmann Bldg, LEXINGTON, S. C, f We will be pleased to meet those having: legal business to be attended to at our office in the Kaufmann Building at any time. t Bespectfully, } J. Wm. THURMOND. - G. BELL TIMMERMAN, Albert mi boozer, l; - attorney at law, L . COLUMBIA, S. 0. r Office: 1316 Main STreer, upstairs, opposite Van Metre's Furniture Store, i Especial attention giv^n to business entrustp ed to him by his fellow citizens of Lexington [ -county. f rieorge r. rembert, u ' attorney at law. 1221 law range, columbia, s. c. I. will be glad to serve my friends from Lex ington County at any time, ana a n prepareu to practice law in all ctate and Federal Courts. ; >" Andrew craweord, attorney at law, V columbia, a Practices in the State and Federal Courts, and offers his professional services to the citizens of Lexington County, Law Offices, ( ) Residence, 1529 / 1209 Washington \ > Pendle ton Street. Street. ( ) Office Telephone No. 1372. Residence Telephone No. 1036. k w boyd evans, ^ 9 n .lawyer and counsellor. Columbia, s. c. m, Dr. p. h. shealy, dentist, lexington, s. c. Office Up Stairs in Roof's Building. TAMES HARMAN, j dental surgeon, lexington, s. c. b ~ (Office in Eear of Court House.) Informs the public that he will be in his office every Friday for the purpose of doing dental work in all its branches. Dr. e. j. etheredge, surgeon dentist, leesville, s, c., T <"? ITino rrf X' Stnro. Al V/illUC (.MCI V. V. ways on hand. Dr. f. c. gilmore, dentist. 1510 Main Street, COLUMBIA, S. C. ; Office Houes.- 9 a. m. to 2 p. m., !and from 3 to 6 p. re. ~ dr. c. j. 0liveb0s, | " specialist o-n* '-ibwgm we; ear, throat,hose and ius3s. Guarantee Fit of Office and Residence. Gtasses. 1424 and 142'*> Marion St., March 15?ly. COLUMBIA. S. C. rfc 1 _ urugs, uiemicais, STATIONERY. 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, tc* or tonic. 25c, and money back it not satisfied. For Sale at Harman's Bazaar [ BBBa?OK3^M?BMgnilHMBPBBBMMBBPMBi The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, August 30, 1905. Tribute of Respect. At a regular meeting of LexiDgtoD County Farmers' Alliance, held July 14, 1905, the following resolutions were unanimously adopted: Whereas, God in His ail wise providence, has removed from our order, our much loved friend and colaborer, J. W. Dreher. Therefore, be it re8 jived, laf. Thot w? hnw in humble sub mission to tbe will of our Heavenly Father, and say, uTby will, not onrs, be done." 2ad, That, brother Dreher will be greatly missed from tbe ranks of our order, for be was always found at his post of duty and ever ready with wise counsel when needed. 3rd, That, in the death of brother Dreher the church has lost a faithful member, tbe county an upright and useful citizen and our order a devoted member and a faithful and efficient officer. 4tb, That, a blank page in our minute book be suitably inscribed to hie memory. 5th, That, a copy of these resolutions be furnished the bereaved family. 6tb, That, a copy be sent to the county papers and The Progressive Farmer and The Cotton Piant for 'publication. A. S. Frick, J. W; Eargle, J. W. Summer, Committee. The Original. Foley & Co., Chicago, originated Honey and Tax as a tliroat and lung remedy, and ou 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 coughs and colds. The Kaufmann Drug Co. Tribute to Lesiagton. Ladies and Gentlemen of Lexington: I voice the sentiment of all the old Veterans in saying that you reached the zenith of glory when you gave them the grandest and most friendly entertainment that ever I witnessed. The program was rendered to perfection. Your town is our modern Athene. The Veterans' names and desds were praised and lauded to the skies; the music was soul stirring and soul cheering, and wafted our hearts to heights unmeasured by the eye. The arrangement for our board and lodging was the best we've had on Bach occasions. Here we attempt a tribute to the fair ladies of Lexington: Athens of old never could boast in all her glory of such beautiful and refined ladies as dear old Lexington; pretty, intelligent and cultured with Christian hearts full of sympathy, who's real worth and loveliness ie beyond discription by poet's pen or M * ? painter 9 orusn. Oar Confederate women, I am sorry to say, has never been honored as they deserved to be. Such mothers, wives, sisters and daughters as they were, can be found only in our Sunny South, and boys, I know such sweethearts as those girls who wore the homespun dresses could not be found anywhere on the globe but in the South. Our Confederate women, their voices live on the breeze and their spirit com88 at will; at midnight on the seas her bright smiles haunt us still. To do honor, yea, to pay homage to them, should be our highest aim. We would kneel at their F t * 1 1 1 ieet, or tain wouia we lay aown upon their graves and kiss the sod beneath which they sleep. I long for the time to come when I will see a mon? ument erected to their memory whose shaft would mingle with the skies, with an equestarian on top whose wings in angel form will sit upon that shaft with all the sweet and lovely inscriptions that inventive genioaa can conceive. "Were I crowned monarch enriched with many a gem, I'd give my regal throne for one sweel kiss from them." May a kind creator send down upon our Southland his blessingE and give all the spirit and power tc render unto our deceased Confederate mothers all honor due to them. "They lived a life without stain or stamp, Always keeping heaven in view: They made them a grave too cold and damp For hearts so warm and true.1' Ragged Veteran. A Touching' Story is the saving from death of the baby girl of Geo. A. Eyler, of Cumberland, Md. He writes: "At the age of 11 months, our little girl was in declining health tmnhlo on/I fTi'A "WiL'ii senuua 1111 wfiu iiyuuiv, u.jLLv?. mu physicians gave her up. We were almost in dispair, when we resolved to try Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds. The first* bottle gave relief; after taking lour bottles she was cured, and is now in perfect health." Never fails to relieve and cure a cough or cold. At The Kaufmann Drug Co?s. drug store; 50c. and $1.00 guaranteed. Trial bo rile free. Polios Cannot Restrict. New Orleans, Aug. 25.?If all the houses are properly screened and disinfected there are reasonable hopes of a complete cessation of the yellow fever in New Orleans before October first, in the opinion of Surgeon General White. At the present l! lL. 3 1 J!..( I wme roe ieaerai meaicai omcers are making a complete sanitary survey of the city for the purpose of acquiring statistics covering every habitable portion of the city. There has been considerable trou/ bie with the Italians in the community of Good Hope, a short distance above New Orleans. An emergency hospital has been erected at that place, but the Italians are in rebellion against it and there is not a sufficient police force to compel them to submit to the regulations. A large number of cases of the fever have been discovered at Bayou Bouef. This focus was established by communication between Bayou Boeuf and Patterson. Prof. Boyce, of Liverpool, baB agreed to fill some instructive lecturing engagements at New O.leans. Peculiar Disappearance. J. D. Rtrnyan, of Butlerville, 0., laid the peculiar disappearance of his painful symptoms of indigestion and biliousness to Dr. King's New Life Pills. He says: "They are a perfect remedy for dizziness, sour stomach, headache, constipation, etc." Guaranteed at The Kaufmam Drug Cc's. drug store, price 25c. Robert 0. Shields, an operator in the Belton cotton mills, was run over and hilled by a Southern train at Greenville on Wednesday night. W. L. Gilbert, watchman at the Seaboard at Abbeville, waB shot in the shoulder on Monday by a negro whom he was trying io arrest for stealing a ride. The negro seized the officer's pistol and shot him with it. Planter's Horse and Cattle Powder?the best on the market. Large packages, 25 cents, at the Bazaar. Police Captain Miles O'Reilly, of New York, received an infernal machine, loaded with dynamite, through the mails on Monday. This is the Hiiril innlirnmont: nf tho lrin^ oonf. VU11U AfcAUV*. UUJVWW V/A fUV UiUU UVUU through the New York mails within a week, the other two having been sent to bankers in the city. Mrs. Mary Mapes Dodge, editor of St. Nicholas magazine since 1873, and author of several books for children, died at her summer home in Tannersville, N. Y., on Monday.Fifty-eight head of Jersey cattle were sold at Biltmore on Tuesday, at auction, the average price being $207. Kyle Moore was hanged at Eldorado, Ark., on Tuesday, for the murder of Lige Moore a year ago. Necessity knows no law, but many a young lawyer knows necessity. It hurts a girl awfully to get sunburned through her openwork stockings. Every man takes his turn at acting foolish. A statement isn't necessarily false because you disbelieve it. Dollars are more plentiful with some men than common sense. gag eb 1 CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS *jj kd Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. ?1 M Use In time. Sold by druggists, nl TFWr11-' P ' 8,1J,W" 'If 'J" HTW.m TJ "' HffflTfTfl TTJCDi A WOMAN'S ORDEAL OREADS DOCTOR'S QUESTIONS j Thousands Write to Mrs.Pinkham, Lynn, \ Mass., and Receive Valuable Advice Absolutely Confidential and Free There can be no more terrible ordeal to a delicate, sensitive, refined woman i than to be obliged to answer certain I questions in regard to her private ills, even when those questions are asked ! by her family physician, and many j continue to suffer rather than submit to examinations which so many physicians propose in order to intelligently treat the disease; and this is the reason why so many physicians fail to cure female disease. This is also the reason why thousands upon thousands of women are corresponding with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lvnn, Mass. To her they can confide every detail of their illness, and from her great knowledge, obtained from years of experience in treating female ills, Mrs. Pinkham can advise women more wisely than the local physician. "* " TV:_i_T J I iteaa now iurs. iriuKiiitm jucipcu. mi o. T. C. Willadsen, of Manning-, la. She -writes: i Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? "I can truly say that you have saved my life, and I cannot express my gratitude in words. Before I wrote to you telling you how I felt, I had doctored for over two years steady, and spent lots of money in medicines besides, but it all failed totlo me any good. I had female trouble and would daily have fainting spells, backache, bearing-down pains, and j my monthly pericxls were very irregular and finally ceased. I wrote to you for your ad-. * vice and received a letter full of instructions ' just what to do, and also commenced to take 1 Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. ] and I have been restored to perfect health. ] Had it not been for you I would have been in i my grave to-day." Mountains of proof establish the fact that no medicine in the world equals Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for restoring women's health. I FOE TEE TOILET. I b % NSNj| Sweet Soaps, Castile Soaps, Per- jg 5i fumery from Hovt's 5c. size ^ German Cologne to tlis fe Finest Extracts,Toilet g Powders, Pomade Hair Oil, Bay Rum, etc. ^ 5j Combs, Hair p ^ Brushes, Shaving j2 Brushes, Tootli and ^ 5j Finger Nail Brushes, etc. ^ ? See our line of useful Toilet e ? Sets, suitable for "Wedding Pres- j3 euts, Birthday Presents or Gifts. |j ^ There are numerous other articles S that vrill pay you to call and see. ^ I c I HABMAN'S - BAZAAB. g I Lexington, S. C. | The State of South Carolina, County of Lexington. By Geo. S. Drafts, Esq , Probate Judge. WHEREAS, M. S. BICKLEY MADE soit to me, to grant him Letters of Administration ot the Estate and effects of Henry A. Swygert. These are therefore to cite and admoBish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Henry A Swygert. deceased, that they be and appear, before me, in the Contfc of Frobate, to be held at Lexington, C. H , S. C., on the 7th day of September. 1S05. next, after publication hereof at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted. Given under my hand, this 22nd day of August. Anno Domini. 1905. GEORGE S. DRAFTS, J. P. L. C. Published on the 23rd day of August. 1905, in the Lexington Dispatch. 2w43 THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Lexington. By George S. Drafts. E<q., Probate Judge. tt7hereas, e. t. rauch has W made suit to me, to grant iiim Letters of Administration ot the Estate of an effects of Catherine Epting. These are. therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Catherine Epting, deceased, that they be and appear, before me, in the Court of Probate. 10 be held at Lexington, C. H., S. C, on the 7th day ot September. 3 90-3, alter publication hereof at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted. Given under my hand, this 22nd day of August, Anno Domini 1905. GEORGE S. DRAFTS. [L. s.] Probate Judge, Lexington County. Published on the 23rd day of Auonst 1905, in the Lexington Dispatch. 2.^43 State of South Carolina, County of LexiDgton Bv Geo. S. Drafts, Esq , Probate Judge. ' "YT7HEREAS, E. T. RAT7CH MADE V V suit to me to grant him Letters of Administration of the Estate of and effects of David Richard Epting. aiC) UU^A^lViV) WV V*"V ikUAMWu i8b ail and singular the kindred and credi, tors of the said I avid Richard Epting, deceased, that they be and appear, before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Lexington, C. H., S. C.. on the 7th day of Sept, ' 1905. neit, after publication hereof at II o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration r should not be granted. Given under my hand, this 22nd day of August, Anno Domini, 1905. GEORGE S. DRAFTS, [L. S.] Probate Judge, Lexington County. Published on the 23nd day of August, 1905, in the Lexington Dispatch. 2w43. T. X. L. relieves when properly applied. Vitey are Open for inspection!! Say, it is up to you whether you would save anywhere from SI.75 to $2.00 on a Spring Suit. We have in stock the greatest variety of spring suits and Gent's Furnishings to he seen in Columbia. Every Pattern is the latest Fad of Fashion. Greys, Tans, Bines and Browns! Prices ranging from $2.75 to $18.00 and every article a bargain. $5.98 buys a swell thing 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 you for past patronage, respectfully ier?i b tst "h i vt trank n j oDOing House. Dry OOods, Notions, Clothing, BACK INTO THE NEW STOEE. We wish to inform our friends and patrons in Lexington that we are once, more n new quarters?the same stand that we formerly enjoyed, only entirely different, nore space, modern m every respect, witn a stoci: 01 entire new gooas wnicn were xmght at the lowest prices, wliicli you will readily see by calling at Fitzmanrice's before it will be too late for you. This store cost you nothing. No rent- to pay, lence we can't charge you witli some^liing we can't charge you for. Will you tindly help yourself to the Bargains. This Fall nothing like the bargains offered before. Yours Truly. JOHN FITZMAURICE. FITZ1AUR1CE, 1704-1706 MAIN ST., COLUMBIA, S. C. WHOLESALE ART) RETAIL "fejmH" f-CJfo B?y Your SPRING SHOES COLUMBIA, a. O. Nothing but Solid Leather Shoes Sold and Every Pair Guaranteed. They are here and of course are beauties, because they are Keith Konquerors in High and Low Cuts, Blacks and Tans, A.11 Leathers, Uaiou Made. You are respectfully invited to call when in the city and inspect these goods. Quality guaranteed. 1636 MAIN ST.. COl UMBIA. S. C. I We are pleased to announce to our nu- ^ merous friends of Lexington county that ? we are constantly receiving new additions to our carefully selected stock of J. Spring Dry Ms and Millinery f and respectfully invite you to call and in- ^ ^ spect- these goods. We are confident that C K we can please as to the high quality of K 5 the goods and will be sure to make prices 5 ^ right. Come to see us when in the city. ^ I MS mm Ell ATT I fwivi riiHi t,\ Main St. Near Post Office, f