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Women as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney and if. Bladder Trouble. Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, 1 discouragesandlessensambition; beauty, vieor and cheerful ness 50011 <^^sappear when the kidneys are " Irrrn M' W* ==**out or<^er ?* dis. Kidney trouble has ^>ecome 1s0 prevalent %h ^at ^ 2? not uncom" /y 121011 *or a ?? ^ ^ ff-i w^lF' born afflicted with win" weak kidneys. If the child urinates too often, if the urine scalds the flesh, or if, when the child reaches an age when it should be able to control the passage, it is yet afflicted with bed-wetting, depend upon it, the cause of the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the first Step should be towards the treatment of these important organs. This unpleasant trouble is due to a diseased condition of the kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as most people suppose. Women as well as men are made raiser- 1 able with kidney and bladder trouble, and both need the same great remedy. ] The mild and the immediate effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold by druggists, in fifty- _ ' cent and one-dollar tgfeigijsfeEI Ettafe} 1 size bottles. You may ?j jugg have a sample bnttlp by mail free, also a Home of Swunp-Booc. pamphlet telling all about Swamp-Root, , including many of the thousands of testi- j monial letters received from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., be sure and mention ( this paper. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, 1 Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. ( PSOF^sloyXlT~CASDir I D. MARTIN, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW, LEXINGTON, S. C Office in Harman Building rear of court house. Will practice in an wjuxib. opcuuu - attention to collection of claims. ?m. w. hawes, 7 Attorney and Counselor at Law. NEW BROOKLAND.S. C. Practice in all Courts. Business solicited. November 1,1906. C. X. 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, & C. v . * JH. FRICK. attorney at law, 0 . CHAPIN, S. C. Office: Hotel Marion, 4th Boom, Second V Floor. Will practice in all the Courts Thurmond & tbimerman, ' attorneys at law, WILL PRACTICE IN all COURTS, Xaufmann Bldg, LEXINGTON, S. C, We will be pleased to meet those having le- , Sal business to be attended to at our office l the Kaufmanu Building at any time. Respectfully, _ J. Wm. THURMOND. G. BELL TIMMERMAN, \ " t A LBERT m. BOOZER, . a ATTORNEY at law, COLUMBIA, S. 0. Office: 1316 Main Street, upstairs, opposite Tan Metre's Furniture Store. Especial attention given to business entrusted to him by his fellow citizens of Lexington county. peorge r. rembert, ij attorney at law. 1221 law range, Columbia s c. I will be glad to serv6 my friends from Lexington County at any time, and an prepared 'om <n oil stofo u n r} PaH Arfl.1 W piiKUUO la n U1 uu ?? ? CourtB. A NDREW CRAWFORD, it ATTORNEY AT LAW, COLUMBIA, S. C. 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. ( ) jp. . Office Telephone No. 1372. . Residence Telephone.No. 1036. WBOYD EVANS, .LAWYER AND COUNSELLOR. Columbia, S. C. DR. P. H. SHEALY, DENTIST, LEXINGTON, S. C. Office Up Stairs in Roof's Building. . , T^RTF. C. GILMORE, U . DENTIST. 1510 Main Street, COLUMBIA, S. C. Office Houbs- 9 a. m. to 2 p. m., .and from 3 to 6 p. m. PTHanI g DEALER IN g , 1 General j 1 Merchandise, I % Cornar Main and Naw Strati, ? \ Oppesita Contadarata | 3 Monumant, 5 i Lexington, - s. c. ? en*#****#******#**##**#**# * * * The Dispatch Job Printing * v ? Office is prepared to do any ? J kind of printing at abort notice. ? * We guarantee woik first class * * at reasonable prices. Give us * * a trial order. jj * * A****#********** t 5*/ ^ The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, July 18, 1906. TRUSTED NEGRO ASSAULTS WOMAN. Northern Woman Thought Negro 'Perfect Gentlemen."-?Brute Makes His Escape. Aiken, July 11.?News of a horrible j crime that was perpetrated about five miles from Aiken reached here yes- | terday afternoon. On Monday morning about 2 o'clock Mrs. L. S. Chapin was assaulted in her home by a negro map named Isaac Knight. The fact that Mrs. Chapin is an old lady, at least 65 years of ageK makes the crime all the more revolting. The negro who assaulted her had been in her employ for over three years. Mrs. Chapin lived in the house with no white person. The negro man, who lived in a room at the side of the house next bo the kitchen, and a negro family living in the yard, were the only ones who stayed near her. Isaac Knight had been off all day Sunday and did not come back to Mrs. Chapin's home until early Monday morning. Hearing a knock at the entrance of the house, Mrs. Chai pin went to the door to 3ee who it was. She opened the door and found it was Knight. She went into the dining room and was fixing the negro some breakfast when he committed the assault. Mrs. Chapin has no near white neighbors, so she could not report the case at once. When the sheriff learned of it yesterday morning, he went to the community at once and tried to capture the negro, but he could find no traces of him. The crime had not become generally known in Aiken until late yesterday afternoon, when a posse of about 50 men under the leadership of the sheriff organized for the purpose of catching the negro. Mrs. Chapin wanted the case dropped, as she did not wish to appear in court in such a case, but, of course, the sheriff and the people of the community will not allow the negro to go unpunished if it is possible to capture ? ? _ .-v* V- . !1 _ J_ _ mm. .Every enort win De maae to bring the scoundrel to justice, but the people have agreed that there will be no lynching, Mrs. Chapin is a Northern lady, and before her misfortune did not understand the nature of the negro. She had put every trust in Knight and had even considered him the equal of the average white man. She had treated him as well as she could have treated any white person, thinking that he was a gentleman. She even declared on one occasion that he was a perfect gentleman. Knight was always respectful to Mrs. Chapin, but it could be seen by his actions among other negroes that the treatment he was receiving was giving him a false idea of his importance. On Monday morning the nature of the negro asserted itself; it could be held in check no longer. Mrs. Chanin was originally from Manchester, Vermont, but 9he has made her home near Aiken for a number of years. White people have warned her several times that she should not stay alone with no one near her except negroes, but she would pay no attention to them, thinking that the negro was worthy of trust. She came"* South with the New Englander's usual idea of negro character, and no argument that could be put forth could shake the negro from the pedestal on which she had placed him. While the white people of the community are not in sympathy with Mrs. Chapin's treatment of the negro, they are determ inea mat; ne snail De Drougni lu jublice. A white lady has been insulted ?that is enough, punishment must follow. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders For Children. Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse in the Children's Home in New York, Cure Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 30,000 testimonials. They never fail. At all Druggists, 25c. Sample Free, Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N Y. Body of Infant Found in a Bos. The dead body of a white girl baby, incased in a paper shoe box, was found in a small branch on Huger street two blocks south of Gervais at 6 o'clock yesterday morning. Whether the child was murdered and placed in the stream or it was a secret attempt to dispose of the body of a still born child, and possibly hide the shame of the mother, the officials have not been able to discover. The head had been crushed and the body wrapped in a cloth. A stone weighing a pound or more had been placed in the box to insure its sinking. The ghastly find was made by a negro boy, Philip Smith, who was passing the spot on his way to work and saw the box lying in the water which was only a few inches deep. He immediately informed persons in the vicinity and when the box was found to contain the body of a child they quickly notified the coroner. The officers spent the entire day in continued effort to find a clue to the identity of the child and the person who left it in the water, but nothing was discovered that would point to the guilty one.?State, July 12. Feeling Impending Doom. The feeling of impending doom in the minds of many victims of Bright's disease and diabetes has been changed to thankfulness by the benefit derived from taking Foley's Kidney Cure. It will cure incipient Bright's disease and diabetes and even in the worst cases gives comfort and relief. Slight disorders are cured in a few days. "I had diabetes'in its worst form," writes Marion Lee, of Dunreath, Ind. 4T tried eight physicians without relief. Only three bottles of Foley's Kidney Cure made me a well man." The Kaufmann Drug Co. "Wagner Without a Town Counoil. The town of Wagener, in Aiken county, is without municipal authorities, four wardens having resigned recently. Last May the board, it seems, passed a resolution, agreeing that in cases of petty crime, such as drunkness, fines should not be imposed in an amountless than $5. A prisoner arrested for disorderly conduct on the Fourth of T?-1 : 3 ~ 4--U ^ *JUi^ was arraigiieu uciuic uuc uului^j-a for trial the other day and pleaded guilty. A resolution to fine him only $1 was passed. Austin alone voting against it. Next day he tendered his resignation, saying he didn't care to serve on a board so inconsistent. Then followed the resignation of the other wardens, leaving only the intendent, Mr. A. G. Ward, who has applied to the governor for an order for an election to fill the vacancies. Under the law, of course, the aldermen hold over until their successors are sworn in. Picnic at Little Mountain. There will be a picnic at Little Mountain, S. C., July 20th, by the Woodman of the World. Several good speeches are expected from prominent speakers. Music will be furnished by a well trained string band*. Not only are all Woodmen invited, but everybody is cordially invited, and expected to bring well filled baskets. Come, and enjoy a good day with us. A Tragic Finish. A watchman's neglect permitted a leak in the great North Sea dyke, which a child's finger could h/ive stopped, to become a runious break, devastating an entire province of Holland. In like manner Kenneth Mclver, of Yanceboro, Me., permitted a little cold to go unnoticed until a tragic finish was only averted by Dr. King's New Discovery7. He writes: 4'Three doctors gave me up to die of lung inflammation, caused by a neglected cold; but Dr. King's New Discovery saved my life." Guaranteed best cough and cold cure, at Kaufmann Drug Co., drug store. 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle, free. Zilled "by Lightning. Union, July 12.?Yesterday after noon at 4 o'clock, during a heavy storm, J. M. Briggs, better known as Blumer Briggs, was instantly killed by lightning, near his home, nine miles west of Union. Briggs was about 25 or 30 years old, and with Wallace I Briggs, aged 24, and a Bobo boy, about' 11, was working in the field when the storm came up. They were on their way home when the bolt struck them, the shock knocking all three unconscious, and when the two others came to their senses and glanced toward their companion, they found a red streak on his face and blood coming from his nose. He was dead. His hip and ankle were knocked out of ? 4- tlA T..OA kiiviai^ +-Vi 1 o affilrtinnn J VJi.il L. Iir ?ao uuntu una uivvxuvw at Padgett's Creek church. % - ^ , Eat one of Ring's Dyspepsia Tablets after eacli meal and you will not suffer with indigestion.?Sold by Kaufman Drug Co. Ed. Pearson-* colored, was taken by one hundred men from the deputy | sheriff near Swainsboro, Ga., on Wed- ! nesday and lynched. The night before the negro had been found by Misses Ida and Maud Derdan hiding under their bed. The cleansing, antiseptic and healing properties of Pinesalve make it superior to family salves.?Sold by Kaufman .Drug uo. Four persons were killed and twenty injured in a trolley car collision between Lockport and Buffalo, N. Y., j on Wednesday. There are 369 rural free delivery | mail routes in South Carolina, and of these 132 are in the Third district. I I ? ,.l 1L.-1 f JIWiliKJJWHUt1 U1WW J a ers\ IHMtMIILI li^kJCV Cj"HJUPg^PWtf ? >?!* CP??B I Bald? Scalp shiny and thin? g Then it's probably too late. | You neglected dandruff. If I you had only taken our ad- B vice, you would have cured I Hair Vigorj the dandruff, saved your hair, and added much to it. If not entirely bald, now is your opportunity. Improve it. 'I Iiavfi Avar's llair Vigor for over ?0 Z years'. I am now "I ve:ir? nl<) ami have a heavy Ej growth of rich brown hair. <iue, I think, on- D tireiy to Aver's Hair Vitror." y 9 i:s. M. A. Kkitii. lieMcville. III. B g ?t.o? a bottle. ... . avki! < ??. $ B Ailiiriitriritis _ l.mveH. Mass. 8 |ilfiwi?nw wmi.n lOl raw =s?a3>*.i* -y' Good Hair! lgaw^BwrnigBMBgaw??ssggi!C3Bwa? wuref - Do Chickens Pay? They will not pay when they receive little attention and food and allowed to roost on old wagons, buggies and in such trees as may be at hand. They will not pay the small fancier, that is the man who breeds fine chickens for rancy prices, n ne tries to raise nveor six varieties together. But the answer to the above question will bear directly on the person who raises chickens for his own use and sells the surplus when he has any. It is rather expensive to raise chickens in a small lot where they have no pasture. But it will pay the farmer to raise as many chickens as his lot and premises will support. The old time method of purging the system with cathartics that tear, gripe, , grind and break down the walls of the stomach .and intestines is superseded by Dade's Little Liver Pills. They cleanse the liver, and instead of weakening, build up and strengthen the whole system. Relieve headache, biliousness, constipation, etc.?Sold by Kaufmann Drug Co. Joseph Kimsey, white, who sells organs and machines for a merchant of Bamberg, shot and killed Otts Davis, colored, at Ehrhardt, in Bamberg county, on Tuesday in a . dispute about a machine the former had sold the latter. T. X. L. cures rheumatisms Sheriff Charles Wilson, of Clay county, Fla., was shot and killed on a train near Green Cove Springs on Tuesday by a negro prisoner. The sheriff's deputy then shot and killed the negro. Wilson was very popular and had recently married. For bloating, belching, sour stomach, bad breath, malassimilation of food, and all symptoms of indigestion Ring's Dyspepsia Tablets are a prompt and efficient corrective.?Sold by Kaufman Drug Co. Miss Millie Ellison was murdered in the National hotel, Minneapolis,Minn., on Tuesday. She had lately sold out *11 /J Vn n rl OCt pvAA juer uiiiiixierj uuamcsa <mu. uau tpujuuu in her possession. The money was missing when the body was found. Every form of distressing ailment known as piles originates internally. The real cause of the trouble is inside. ManZan is put up in collapsible tubes witli nozzle, so the medicine can be applied where it will do the most good, and do it quickly. If you are suffering with piles you owe yourself the duty of trying Man Zan.?Sold by Kaufmann Drug Co. Col. Lumpkin is evidently a political blue jay. Do you know where they are supposed to go every Friday.? Greenville Herald. Yes, the same place that Georgia disturbances originated. (?r4 ' V"** VYV - A# Littledoctor GIVES YOU a eomnlete treatment at our store for 25 cts. His specialty is Liver Complaints, all kinds, and he guarantees satisfaction, or money back. Ramon's Liver Pills nnH Tnnir? P#?11f?t<5 malrft permanent cures. Sold by all Druggists. I JUST WHAT YOU WANT i \ vrfTir rtLr*/*mc! ^ ^ Our stock is fully up to the standard. We continue ^ ^ to carry just such goods as please our customers, and ^ ^ the prices are always reasonable. Impossible, we have ^ # the prettiest line we ever handled. All we ask is a ^ ^ call and inspect for yourselves. ^ MILLINERY f J Our Millinery stock has some of the smartest Ready- J v to-Wear Hats you ever saw., The choicest styles of J ? most approved Millinery. These creations will please J K you, if you will only Igive us a chance to show you J K what we have. ^ l Main St. Near Post Office, ^ 2 5 COLUMBIA, - S. C. i 1517 MAIN STREET. Harness, Saddles, Robes AND EVERYTHING PERTAINING TO THE BUSINESS COL.U M B I A, S. C. Our stock being purchased before the recent decided advance, we can make it to the interest of all to buy of us. Our motto is "NOT HOW CHEAP, BUT HOW GOOD," as the best is the Cheapest. FITZMAURICE'S 1704 and 1706, FITZMAURICE'S 3 Arch Store, Main Street. 3 Arch Store. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. We have jusfc received a fine lotof Dry Goods, Notions, Clothing and Furnishings for Men, Boys and Ladies. The best values we ever had the pleasure of showing the kind friends of Lexington. It will give us great pleasure for our friends across the river to get these bargains. SPECIAL. | MENS CLOTHING. 1000 y'ds 36 inch Percale at Gj^ worth 10c. We will show one of the best lines to be 1000 y'ds Plaid Nansock, 6j worth 10c. seen any where, at $5.00 to $10.00. , 3000 y'ds Light Print, - - 3J worth 5c. AVPP A T T G 20 pieces EveningCrepon, at -- 12Jc. UvJi.KA.Liij? 50 pieces Scotch Lawn, at - - - -lie p0r the working man, 50c. pair to $l.Qf 5000 y'ds Organdee Lawn 8J worth 10c. j 50 pieces 36 inch White Lawn - - 6{c. j BOYS' SUITS 50 pieces 32 inch Lawn - 5c. , prom 5QC ^ $4.50, any kind you want. MADRAS AND PKS. 30 pieces White Madras and PKS for | shirts and suits only 10c. From 25c. to 50c. pair. FANCY DUCK SUITINGS. 50 dozen men's shirts, at 25c. each. <r\/\ :.1 1 olfi __ iuu pieces rnue siyi*x>, at- - - ?MEN'S HATS AND CAPS. DRESS GOODS AIsD SILKS. j We have any style yon want and at Prices very low for quality.- See ns 1 IKUJNKS AND oUll CA&JSS for a nice Dress. j At factory prices. z DONT FORGET JEL. JSL. TiLYILiORi Successor to Maxwell & Taylor, NEAR POST OFFICE, COLUMBIA, S. C, When you are looking for Furniture. We buy only in Solid Car Load Lots and at the lowest spot cash prices, we therefore, can sell you for less than if we bought in local ship ' V ? . ments. Solid Oak Bedroom Suites. Nine Pieces?One Bed, One Bureau, One Washstand, One Centre Table, Four 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. Our line is complete. All grades. Prices guaranteed as low as Furniture of the same grade can be bought. "Write or phone 490 for prices. rWm '?r' wv "' r ? AA* COLUMBIA, S. C. f^TTTj w Hfri rn "*7" f. H. SCWELL FURNITURE CO., * COLUMBIA, S. C. We especially invite you to come to see us for your Furniture, Cheap Suites, Iror Beds, Lounges, Stoves, Lace Curtains, Side Boards, Hall Racks. 30 DAYS.SALE-FURNISH YOUR HOUSE. W. H. SOWELL, FURNITURE CO, 1231 Main Street, " Opposite Y. M. C. A. Building.