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Woaea as Ve& as In An lade n - Miserable by Kiddey and U ladder Mie. Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, R discourages andlessensambition; beauty, r?vigor and cheerfulness soon disappear when the kidneys are . ?Ut ^ N 'r n ~*ll become so prevalent ^ " ^ is not uncomyy mon for a child to be WJborn afflicted with 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 nassaee. it is yet afflicted with bed-wet- ot ting, aepena upon ic, wua. v*. 1D cultj is kidney trouble, and the first- a: 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 "w habit as most people suppose. tt Women as well as men are made miser- di able with kidney and bladder trouble, h] and both need the same great remedy. cj The mild and the immediate effect of , g ^ Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold gl I cent and one-dollar iflBBPgjcfij size bottles. You may BfiBSgBp' ?S5S ** have a sample h( | by mail free, also a Horn* of Swimp-Boot fs W . pamphlet telling all about Swamp-Root, lij SpI' | including many of the thousands of testi- h fgi monial letters received from sufferers n ? cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., ^ !?? Binghamton, N. Y., be sure and mention r this paper. Don't make any mistake, - - - ? - O IDUt rememoer tne name, owaujfrxvwv, Br. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the ad- Q1 dress, Binghamton, N. Y., on every tl bottle. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. 1 D. MABT]$r, 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. ~ TITM. W. HAWES, f T Attorney and Counselor at Law. NEW BROORLAND. 8. C. Practice in all Courts. Business solicited. November i, 1905. C. V. XFZBD. F. S. DBEHEB. PPTRD & DREHER, JJ ATTORNEYS AT LAW, LEXINGTON 0. IL. S. C. Will practice in all the Courts. Business solicited. One member of the firm will always be at office, Lexington. 8. C. t~h7frick, J. ATTORNEY AT LAW, chapin, & 0. Office: Hotel Marion, 4th Boom. Second Floor. Will practice in all the Courts. jj mHURMOND & TTMMERMAN, ft-- 1 ATTORNEYS AT LAW, fa WILL PRAOTIOE IN ALL COURTS, it Kaufmann Bldg, LEXINGTON, 8, C, w Wawili be pleased to meet those having le- ^ ralbasiness to be attended to at our office ||fev- In the Kaufmann Building at any time. a; Respectfully, tl J. Wk. THURMOND. w G. BELL TIMMERMAN. ^ ft & A LBERT M. BOOZER, u A ATTORNEY AT LAW, n COLUMBIA, 8. 0. d Omcs: 1816 Main Street, upstairs, opposite w Van Metre's Furniture Store. f( Especial attention given to business entrusted to him by his fellow citizens of Lexington county. pEORGE R. REMBERT, M mM . U ATTORNEY AT LAW. ti 1221 L^W RANGE, COLUMBIA. S. 0. d< ) I will be glad to serve my friends from Lex- hi f ington County at any time, and an prepared <|< to practice law in all btate and Federal Courts. M k NDREW CRAWFORD, ^ A ATTORNEY AT LAW, J COLUMBIA, & C. h( Practices in the 8tate and Federal Courts, u and offers his professional services to the citizens cA Lexington County, & Law Offices, ( 1 Residence, 1529 S 1209 Washington < > Pendle ton Street. ? Street I ) ai Office Telephone No. 1872. ^ Residence Telephone No. 1086. ^ WBOYD EVANS, .LAWYER AND COUNSELLOR. cj Columbia, S. 0. tt HE. P. H. SHEALY, * U DENTIST, . LEXINGTON, S. C. Office Up Stairs in Roofs Building. ^ T\R. F. C. GILMORE, ~ <* 1/ DENTIST. tt 1510 Main Street, COLUMBIA, S. C. 81 Office Houss.- 9 a. m. to 2 p. m., and from te 8 to 6 p. m. " 6ft696SSS6S6SSSSSS96S6SS9Sft I h' ?u n uiDuiiui!' I iVli U, 11/111171/1111 ?. $ DEALER IN g w I General 15 I Merchandise, 1E | Comer Main and New Street, e {J i Opposite Confederate | ^ i Monument, | h ( Lexington, - - S. C. e ogggggggggggge ? A Poor Organ. ti Dam(s) the bile. That's what your ti liver does if it's torpid. Then the bile overflows into the blood?poisons your jM system, causing sick headache, biliousness, sallow skin, coated tongue, sick stomach, dizziness, fainting spells, etc. e< Ramon's treatment of Liver Pills and SJ Tonic Pellets strengthens the liver and 01 makes it do its own work. Prevents h and cures these troubles. It aids? s< doesn't force. Entire treatment 25c, u Derrick's Drug Store and C. E. Corl ?y. ^ I ; iOWSER ACTS GENTLE 1 I efuses to Be Disturbed by Things as of Old. OT A KICK OR COMPLAINT. rifo Apprehensive That He May Be Coming Down With Measles or Whooping Cough?He Astonishes Many Others. [Copyright, 1907, by P. C. Eastment.] When Mr. Bowser left home for the fice the other morning, he was talkig about the world turning on its Lis every twenty-four hours and the atter being one worthy of investigaon, and all day long Mrs. Bowser as worried over what he might do tat evening to prove that the world id or did not turn. She remembered Is buying new milk cows, Leghorn lickens, slabsided pigs, burglar arms, balloons and fire escapes, and \a xen a nrpnured for the worst when i came home at night. She half exacted that, his first words would tell ?r that he was going to start a frog irm, but one look into his face deghted her. Mr. Bowser was calm, e was composed. He was dignified. : was clear that he wasn't going to y any gas saving invention or make 1 experiment with the water pipes. Throughout the dinner his talk was liet and without enthusiasm. She irew out a hint about the world turn ' was a tramp who had called to ask fob monet. tg on its axis, but be did not rise to . He didn't seem to care a red cent hether the old world turned or stood ill. She expected him to break out 3 soon as dinner was finished and iey had returned to the sitting room, at he sat him down like any dignified itlzen -and lighted his cigar and took p the evening paper. After a few ilnutes there was a ring at the front oor, and he answered it in person. It as a tramp who had called to ask >r money. Unusual Calm. Ninety-nine times out of a hundred ir. Bowser would have blasted that amp's eyes for coming to the front xh*. Then he would have yelled at m. Then he would have rushed him }wn the steps and out of the yard, [re. Bowser waited in vain for sounds f conflict. In a quiet and dignified ay Mr. Bowser informed the caller lat there was a charities' lodging ouse two blocks away and advised Im to walk down there. He was not ren red In the face when he returned his chair. Only five minutes later ie woman next door began singing ad playing the piano. The singing as harsh and the playing harsher. nly a week before when the nuisance ad struck up Mr. Bowser had walked p and down the room making all sorts f threats. He had even asked where le crowbar was and vowed he would > in and smash that piano to splinters. Mrs. Bowser expected another scene, at none came. Mr. Bowser continued be serene. He didn't even try to relember whether the old ax was down dlar or out in the shed. The cook in le kitchen said that murder must irely follow such sounds, but she lis>ned and listened and heard no stir, rben the woman next door had tired sreelf out, Mrs. Bowser observed: "It seems to me that such things lould be forbidden by law." "But if she calls it playing and slngig we must put up with it," replied [r. Bowser, with a smile. Then the front bell rang again. He ent to the door to find three men. and ie of them explained that they were a immittee from the Ninth ward to Xer Mr. Bowser the nomination for le aldermanship. Previous commit?es when this sort of job had been lit up had been invited into the lirary and tendered wine and cigars, ut this one did not get beyond the ont hall. The callers were quietly at firmly informed by Mr. Bowser that e had no further aspirations for potical honors and must decline their Xer. They hinted that they would ke to talk things over while drinking bottle of claret, but he excused him?lf on the ground of business and orked them out. "Wliv didn't you accept the nomina on?" asked Mrs. Bowser when he relrned. "I prefer a quiet life and my own )nie," he replied. Not a mouth before he had express3 his desire to ruu for mayor and had lid that his home was the worst run stablislimeut iu America. When she ad observed that a committee was ?eking to "work" him, he had walked p and down and shouted and charged er with being the most suspicious > ami distrustful person be had e) heard of. 8aya Ha'll Consult Wife. A week before, unknown to ] wife, Mr. Bowser had looked at a s ondhand auto that was for sale a encouraged the owner to think would become the purchaser. The m had got tired of waiting and had co: around on this particular evening see whether the sale was off or He rang the bell in an aggressive w; and when it was answered he said"Well, Bowser, about that autoyou want it or not?" "I haven't consulted my wife yet." Mrs. Bowser overheard the wor and, as he had never consulted her his life about the buying or selling anything, she at once developed p pitation of the heart. "What's your wife got to do w it?" demanded the man. "A good deal, sir. I shouldn't thi of buying such a thing unless she v satisfied. I think, to cut the mat short and not bother you further, tl I will wait another year before inve ing." The man muttered a "Hump!" a departed without a good night, but 3 Bowser was still serene when he turned to his chair. A few minu later Mrs. Bowser remembered tl T^on+aH c/imathinp' from the dl ouc n uuivva store and that the coffee was out volunteered to do both errands, other occasions he had spent half hour to read her a lesson on shiftle ness, but he left the house this ti without a word. As a general thi: on entering the store of his fam druggist he has remarks to make ab< the drug trust the adulteration medicines, the highway robbery prices and the number of people p soned every year by leather headed tail druggists. In return and to i even the druggist has something to s about cranks and. husbands wh< wives know more than they do a folks meddling with other folks' bi ness. Surprises Druggist On this occasion, however, Mr. Be ' ser quietly entered the store, made remark on the weather and asked : what he wanted and got out. 1 druggist was loaded for bear, but didn't have to shoot He simply tu ed to a customer after Mr. Bowser t /lleannoirflfl find Sflifl: UlCa^yVM?VM ?? ? "That change in a man always cob about a month before his death. I st be sorry to see that man laid away. Mr. Bowser was told before he 1 the house that the order for the cof had been given at noon and neglect He had taken his trade away fr three different grocers for a like n lect, and he had threatened this o When the grocer saw him come in, turned as pale as death and got ret to lie about a wheel coming off wagon, bnt the next minute an aw load was lifted from his should when Bowser smiled and said: "Brown, I think you forgot our < fee. Rushed with business, of coui and you can be excused, and, being 3 here, I'll take it along." The grocer offered to send two b and two wagons with the two pom of mocha, he offered to go himself, offered to add a jar of jam to make for his neglect, bnt Mr. Bowser quit smiled and took the package under arm. "Did you rip him up the back, as ; call it?" asked Mrs. Bowser as i saw the coffee. "Brown is a very busy man th days," was the reply. "But are you going to trade there j longer?" "Why; of course. There isn't a f cer In the world that doesn't skip an der now and then." "Did the druggist say anything m< to you?" "No, dear." "Didn't he order you out of store?" "For what reason ? The druggist i I are very good friends indeed." For the next hour Mrs. Bowser sat a puzzle?not a kick or complaint shout or yell. When bedtime came, was still serene. Mr. Bowser asleep like a young child, and she i wondered and puzzled and peered him and said to herself: * ne loose use Air. cowser, ne < tainly is Mr. Bowser, but I can't mi this out unless he's coming down w the measles or whooping cough." M. QUAI The Club Joker. W ' Joker?Have you heard the story the bed? Victim?Xo. Joker?Tnere you lie!?Tatler. Missed Her. "How is your afternoon bridge c coming 011?" "Oh, very poorly. Dear Mrs. G bier lias left us." "But I thought she was an atroci< player?" "Yes, she is. But, then, she alw: had so many delicious stories to about her neighbors."?Cleveland PI , Dealer. reI KANT KEET DEATH BY Bia EARTHQUAKE bis ec- Waters of Gulf of Mexico Made to Boil nJ By Volcanic Action?Coast is Swept lie ian By Tidal Wave. me El Paso, Tex., April 18.?More than 1,000 were killed in the earthquake on' which destroyed the territory southwest of Mexico City. _d0 The list of dead may be increased greatly, according to late dispatches received here today from the affected ds, country. New volcanoes have broken ^ out and the burning lava has set fire ^ to the forests and people and live stock are fleeing for their lives, ith Scores of towns lying between Mexico City and the Pacific ocean have hk been wiped out by the earthquakes. ras In instances the earth opened and in , tei the great chasms thus formed swallowed up whole villages. ' The greatest damage resulted bead tween the City of Mexico and the Coklr. lima volcano, which is reported to be re- the starting point of the disturbance. tes Colima is now in violent eruption, the . most severe in the history of Mexico, 11 or ? and no estimate can now be placed on Qn the damage done or yet to be done. an One of the most alarming features , ss- of the dispatches received here is the me indication that there had been a large QS? loss of life in the City of Mexico, a ^ fact which the authorities are trying to suppress. Efforts to communicate 0f with the authorities have failed, but ,oi- private advices to commercial houses < re- say that the loss of life has been . get heavy, but that no- announcement say will be made. ] >se Messages received at the town of 11(1 Juarez, in Mexico, just across the J river from El Paso, says that when 1 all of the dead in the scores of towns and villages to the southwest have ( 5 a been enumerated, the list of dead will for far exceed 1,000. 'he he Gentle and Effective. i rnlad ^ we^ known Manitoba editor writes: ] "As an ipside worker I find Chamber- Iain's Stomach and Liyer Tablets in- J 2es Valuably ?or the touches of biliousness ] iali natural to" sedentary life, their action i " being gentle and effective, clearing the eft digestive tract and the head." Price feG 25c. Samples free. Kaufmann Drug Co. ed. om $75,000 Die in Week. eg- ' ,no. Simla, India, April 17.?During the he week ending April 13th seventy-five idy thoueand people died in India frcm" the plague, which began in the Punjab fuI in 1897, since \^hen nearly a million and a half deaths have occurred. :?f- _ ' ' se, The Frne of Health. I'm "The price of health in a malarious district is just 25 cents; the cost of a box oys of Dr. King's New Life Pills," writes ads Ella Slayton, of Noland, Ark. New ] he Life Pills cleanse gently and impart Up new life and vigor to the system. 25c. Satisfaction guaranteed at Kaufmann his Drug Co., druggists. ( r0ll One bushel of good, home raised dhe white com is worth three bushels in the Western fields, ese mr If the BaTjy is Cutting Teeth, Be sure and use that old and well tried remedy, Mrs. Winslow's Soothing < ' " Syrup, for children teething. It sooth- J or" cs the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic and is the ean best remedy for diarrhoea. Twentyfive cents a bottle. Guaranteed under the Food and Drugs act, June 30, the Serial number 1908. -tf It is the best of all. 1 md ' ? " Wish we had as much garden truck t in in our cellar next fall as the average or city man thinks he is going to raise all this spring. fell _ S (Happyl > I Home 1 I To have x happy home Bj you should have children. B M They are great happy-home tt H makers. If a weak woman, g H you can be made strong B B enough to bear healthy chil- Ig | A dren, with little pain or dis- w| B comfort to yourself,by taking ffl ? unnuui J? A Tonic for Women # Bj It will ease all your pain, reduce B ?' & trouble, disordered menses, back- Jfl ? ache, headache, etc., and make & childbirth natural and easy. Try it. H jg At all dealers in medicines, In M llll) || "DUE TO CARDUI I , w is my baby girl, now two weeks S ' ' SW old," writes Mrs. J. Priest, of Web- H ( ster City, Iowa. 44 She is a fine c jm healthy babe and we are both doing m s || nicely. 1 am still taking Cardui, I ivs M and would not be without it in ? s I JS made of the very^best leaf that we can bujjr TAYLOR'S NATURAL LEAF " B . \ 1 \^v\\;you will use it exclusively in the future. Every merchant H V) \W'{SmWi\ ought to seUit?if yours don't, insist on his getting it for you. DONT FORGET H. JS.? TAYLOR, 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 nents. 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 nrith 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 J 90 for prices H. JSL. TAYLOR, COLUMBIA, S. C. i j"; flflMF TO SFF I IS l Our stock of New Spring Goods are now ready for your inspection, embracing everything in WASH GOODS, DOMESTICS, DRESS GOODS AND SILKS )f all imaginable shades and patterns, bought to please our 3ustomers. Fall Goods will be closed out at Bargain Prices. In Millinery we have 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. MAKE OUR STORE HEADQUARTERS. N. A. YOUNG, tttttat nn Atti a utt\ *nTim A TT wnuijijoaijii xxiyxj nxjiaxu, 1603 main stbeet, columbia. s. c. I The Palmetto National Bank, I columbia, s. c. f we abe A Depository for the United States Government, the State I of South Carolina, the County of Richland and the City B of Columbia. * ' we own I $400,000 United States Bonds and $100,000 State of South B Carolina Bonds. fl we solicit f Accounts of Banks, Firms, Corporations and Individuals. Br we pay ? Four Per Cent, on deposits in our Savings Department, in- B terest calculated quarterly. B we promise I IOur best efforts to transact your business to your entire 9 satisfaction. 9 PALMETTO NATIONAL BANK, - - Columbia. S. C. 1 CAPITAL $250,000.00 Wilie Jones, President. J. P. Matthews. Casliier. 9 WE HAVE FOR SALE )ne ~~) horse power Talbott. second hand engine, in stock which has recently been werhauled. This engine is in first class condition and will be a great bargain for myone who is in the market for such a size engine. We are headquarters for anything in the way of machinery supplies, and prompt ittention will be given to all inquiries and orders entrusted to our care. Write us vhen you are in the market for anything, and be sure to get our prices before you >rder elsewhere. Mav 30. COLUMBIA SUPPLY CO., Columbia. S. C. / j