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IK> YOU G^T UP * <% ju^ WITH A I/AMB BACK? Sidney Trouble Makes Yau' Miserable. V. ' Almost everybody who reads the newspapers is sure to know of the wonderful ? ti ir. aires made by Dr. , *?-?''-Jry t Kilmer's Swamp* f Root, the great kidSVtfS^rrj li ney, liver and blaaB r^Sl ' ^er reme^>r* t * fvi \ r' Mf It is the great mediV I f f|[ i ical triumph of the \s= L I (I, nineteenth century ; jBjjy'-sj ), yr-, l(j[ discovered after years f In fe" of scientific research ^ J * : by Dt. Kilmer, the >m "* eminent kidney and "bladder specialist, and is wonderfully successful in promptly curing lame back, uric acid, catarrh of the bladder and * Bright's Disease, which is the worst form ot kianey irouuic. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is not recommended for every thing 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 fpP 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 you havekidney or bladder trouble. "W|hen writing mention reading this generous offer in tlus paper andsend your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co,, Binghamton, dollar size bottles are Homo of swup-Booc. sold by all good,druggists. Don't make ? any mistake, but remember the name. , Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, " 1 t?; \T V n? . ana me aaaress, Diuguamwu, ?? every bottle. raOFESSIONAL CABPS. i a d. martin, Attorney ^ A. AND COUNSELOR AT LAW, LEXINGTON, S. C. Office in Harman Building rear of ccnrt i bouse. Will practice in all courts. Special attention to collection of claims. WM. W. /HAWES, -Attorney and Counselor at Law. NEW BBOOKLAND.'S. C. Practice in all Courts. Business solicited. November l, 1905. / - ' C. *. KTIED. i x * DBEHBB. EFIRD & DREHER, . ATTORNEYS AT LAW, T T7V rwriTOU ft n fl f! JUiU<lU1Ui.vn v. u.. v. ?. * * * ' . ? Will practice ip all the Courts. \Business solicited. One member of the firm will al; i ways be at office, Lexington. 8. C. T H~FRICK~ J attorney at law, CHAPIN, & 0, Office: Hotel Marion, 4th Koom, Second Floor. "Will practice in all the Courts fFHURMOND & TIMMERMAN, 1 ATTORNEYS AT LAW, WILL PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS, Kaufmann Bid*, LEXINGTON, S. C, We will be pleased to meet those* having legal business to be attended to at our office fix the Kaufmann Building at any time. t Respectfully, fe peou Wm. THURMOND. G. BELL TIMMERMAN, ' * a lbert m. boozer, ' a attorney at law, i:'\ t columbia, 8. 0. 1 r v. i A . ' Oitzcs: 1816 Main Street, upstairs, opposite Van Metre's Furniture StoreEspecial attention given to business entrustr ed to him by his fellow citizens of Lexington county. George r. rembert, / attorney at law. im LAW RANGE, COLUMBIA. S. G. I will be glad to serve my friends from Lexington County at any time, and au prepared to practice law in all State and Federal Poarts. ? f A NDREW CRAWFORD, a . * attorney at law, columbia, s. c. Practices in the State and Federal Courts, " and offers his professional services to the eitizen8 c i Lexington County, -i - Law Offices, ( ) Residence, 1529 1209 Washington < > Pendle ton Street. V > < Street. ( ) Office Telephone No. 1372. ; Residence Telephone rw. iu3t>. K w BOYD EVANS, m W .LAWYER AND COUNSELLOR. Columbia, S. C. I r T\R. P. H. SHEALY, LT ; DENTIST, / LEXINGTON, S. C. Office Up Stairs in Roofs Building. ' TvB. F. C. GILMORE, V DENTIST. 1510 Main Street, COLUMBIA, S. C. " Omcs Houbs.* 9 a. m. to 2 p. m., and from 3 to 6 p. m. |N. L HASMANj *< DEALER IN ? , I General | 1 Merchandise, I ? Corner Main and law Streat, # ? Abmm.Ua fAnlaftarafa (d f vppvdliv Win via VI mw 5 Monumant, 5j { Lexington, - S. G. e oeasasaeasasasseasssaeseso A Poor Organ. Dam(s) the bile. That's what your liver does if it's torpid. Then the *>ile overflows into the Wood?poisons your system, causing sick headache, biliousness, sallow skin, coated tongue, sick 6tomach, dizziness, fainting spells, etc. Ramon's treatment of Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets strengthens the liver and makes it do its own work. Prevents and cures these troubles. It aids? 'doesn't force. Entire treatment 25c, Derrick's Drug Store and C. E. Corley. GRAVE CHARGES AGAINST EAMMEI Statements by Attorneys, Messrs Stevenson and Matheson. Who An Outspoken in Their Declaration t( the Courts. Reflects Very Serious ly on the Ex Chief Constable of the State Constabulary. ? 4'The affidavits were obtained by i method of legerdemain, which ir most instances smacks of fraud, anc men like Mr. Tate of Eutawvile were tricked by their former chum, Mr Hammet, into signing ignorantlj what was not true," is the positive characterization of the arts of U. B Hammet, deputy collector of interna revenue for South Carolina and for mer chief dispensary constable fo: South Carolina, contained in the brie! of Messrs. Stevenson & Matheson attorneys for the State dispensary commission in the matter of the assessments of internal revenue taxes against the State of South Carolina. On the strength of affidavits alleg ed to have been secured from various dispensers throughout the State officqprs serving under him and now or file in the office of Maj. Micah Jenkins, collector of internal revenue for the district of South Carolina, demand was made upon the dispensary commission on May 7, for $32,527 foi license fees claimed to be due the United States government as a result of the fact, as alleged, that dispensers had sold beer in greater quantities than 4 7-8 gallons in single sales, making them liable to the wholesale liquor dealers license; $4,527 of this amount^ covered a period of fifteen months'prior to the date when the demand was made upon the commission for settlement; the other $28,000 being charged up for the period beyond that date. The dispensary commission paid the first named amount, $4,527, under protest and on July 2 W. F. Stevenson appeared before the commission oi internal revenue, John G. Capers, at Washington, and argued for the refunding of the amount, his grounds being: (1) That there was no prooi that sales were made in wholesale quantities; (2) that, if the prooi were convincing that dispensers had made sales in greater quantities than 41-8 gallons, the State would not be liable insomuch as any such action would be clearly in violation of the statute law of the State and of inf structions given to the dispensers from time to time by those in authority. Mr. Stephenson submitted numerous! affidavits to the commissioner oi internal revenue from dispensers throughout the State, and, according to those affidavits, Mr. Hammet had resorted to most questionable means to secure the affidavits winch, it is said, are on file at the office of Maj. Jenkins. Several of the affidavit* submitted by Mr. Stephenson contair charges against Mr. Hammet of a serious nature. It? is alleged thai Hammet secured the affidavits in a fraudulent manner, and, not onlj that, but that he made interlineations after the affidavits were signed.? Columbia State. j Best Medicine in the World for Colic and Diarrhoea. n "I find Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera aind Diarrhoea Remedy to be the besl remedy in the world," says Mr. C. L Carter of Skirum, Ala. "I am subjec! to colic and diarrhoea. Last spring il seemed as thongh I would die, and ] think I would if I hadn't taken Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. I haven't been troubled wit! it since until this week, when I had s very severe attack and took half a bottle of the twentyfive cent size Chamber Iain's Colic, Cholera and v Diarrhoef Remedy, and this morning I feel like t new man." For sale by Kaufmani Drug Co. j Unclaimed Mail. List of letters remaining uncallec for in this office for the week ending July 15, 1907: t Males. Braum, S. B. May son, Dr. Wheeler, J. W. Hiller, Henry. Nobles Tent Show. Publisher Peoples' Record. Females. Canery, Miss Matfc^. Rawl, Miss Lila. Thnmnsori. Mrs. R. I. Tucker, Mrs. Hester. Dreher, Mrs. Sarah. Fitzgerald, Miss Bertha. These letters will be sent to the dead letter . office July 29, 1907, i: not delivered before. In calling foi the above, please say 4' advertised, giving date of list. S. J. Leaphart, Postmaster. Prevents Headache. Force them! No?aids them. Ramon 'i treatment of Liver Pills and Tonic Pel lets strengthens the liver and digestive organs so that they do their own worl and fortifies your constitution againsl future trouble. Entire treatment 25c Derrick's Drug Store and C. E. Corley. A man feels awfully rich when he'e got a few dollars his wife doesn'i know about.?New York Press. The bites and stings of insects, tan sunburn, cuts, burns and bruises are re lieved at once with Pinesalve Carbolized Acts like a poultice, and draws out in flammation. Try it. Price 25c. Sole by K&ufmann Drag Co. . SOME KICKER ITEMS, ! Lets Doing In the Neighborhood , of Giveadam Gulch. i WHITE WOLF HOTEL AFFAIR. i .tfhat Happened to the Saddle Drum1 mer From the City of Brotherly Love 1 Who Kicked Because Things Were J i Not to nis i_iKing. j ^Copyright, 1907, by M. M. Cunningham.] T Major Henderson of Lone Jack an5 nounces that he will shoot us on sight. . We hope he will pay us the borrowed 1 money he owes us first, p We have a communication from the F Black Hand of New Mexico demanding that we put the sum of $1,000,000 > under a certain stone within thirty T days or suffer death. J j Mine host of the White Wolf hotel has been somewhat perturbed for the last five days. A Philadelphia saddlery drummer who was a guest of J the house kicked because his table knife happened to lack a handle and t . n J iiii! I j KICKED BECAUSE HIS TABLE KNIFE pAPPINED TO LACK A HANDLE. 1 . because the shine had worn off his teaspoon, and in the altercation resulting 1 he was shot through the shoulder. Mine host, who is a new man from I Idaho, shouldn't worry about such i trifles. Tliev are incidental to every , busy community. The old landlord thought times were dull when he didn't pepper at least two kickers per week. t Bill Hope and Jack Downer of Grass Valley fired ten or twelve shots . at each other on the street the other s day without effect and were then ar( rested fbr disturbing the peace. The holy terror is a thing of the past, in' deed. ? , - i We understand that a protest against j us as postmaster has gone to Washington because of the horse race the other day in which we rode our own * horse and came out ahead. It will be 1 in vain. The postmaster general k knows a good thing when he sees, it, - and we are a good thing. i r Mr. William Lee of Chicago was j here the other day looking for his son Henry,i from whom he had not heard for a ^ear. We aided the coroner to look over his books, and it was discovered that the missing Henry was [ reposing under a yew tree over on Wolf creek. He got all mixed up on horses about six months ago. t We believe that if a thousand mar[ riageable young women were brought t; out here from the east each and [ every one of them could find a husband within a week. We also believe t that 090 of the thousand would wish 1 they hadn't before the end of the first J fortnight We did intend to lie about our circulation this week, but one thing and t another has happened to call our mind elsewhere. Watch out for next week. We have got a hair raiser of a statement coming. For the moment it is enough to say that we are hitting the I billion mark again and that the em? press of China is writing us private letters and begging our advice as to how to run her old Empire. On Tuesday evening last at the meeting of the common council Alderman Finnegan denied our ruling that an amendment to a motion must be voted on first, and he started to draw to uphold his contention. He was slow, as usual, and when he found that we had him covered he sat down and subsided. The mayor who can't run a council with Cushing's Manual and a gun i is a dead failure, f j Our esteemed contemporary, whom we have not mentioned for the past two months, claims to have shot at us last Friday night as we were returning from a party on Cochise place. Perhaps he did. This is the first we 5 have heard of the affair, but we don't i ' _t . M 91. 1 1 want to wilt a single ieat 111 ms iaurei I crown. t. Advertisements for the Kicker Intended for our New Zealand edition of half a million should be handed In , early In the week to assure publlcak tion. Copper mine advertisements should be written iu such a way that they cannot be spotted as swindles at the first glance. On the ronte to Grass Valley the [ snow is still from twenty to thirty feet deep in spot*, but it Is hoped that by i ' HIS LEGAL PLEA. i ? The Lover's Application For the Hand of the Judge's Daughter. The judge's daughter was perturbed. "Papa," she said, knitting her pretty brow, 'T am in doubt as to whether I have kept to the proper form of I procedure. In law one can err in so ? many little technicalities that I am ever fearful. Now, last evening, George"? The judge looked at her so sharply ^ over his glasses that she involuntarily paused. "I thought you had sent him about his business," he said. "I did hand down an adverse dec-ic4r>r? " cho nnexvered "nnd he declared that he would appeal. However. I g convinced him that I was the court of last resort in a case like that, and that ^ no appeal would lie from my decision." II "Fossibly the court was assuming a little more power than rightfully be- % longs to it," said the judge, thought- ^ fully; "but let that pass. What did he do then?" ? "He filed a petition for a rehearing." ^ "The usual course," said the judge, "but it is usually nothing but a mere formality." "So I thought," returned the girl, ^ "and I was prepared to deny it without argument, but the facts set forth ~ in his petition were sufficient to make lj me hesitate and wonder whether his j case had really been properly present- a ed at the first trial." "Upon what grounds did he make ^ the application?" asked the judge. scowling. "Well," she replied, blushing a little, i "you see he proposed by letter, and his = contention was that the case was of that peculiar character that cannot be g properly presented by briefs, but de- | mands oral arguments. The fact that jr the latter had been omitted, he held, | should be held an error, and the point | was such a novel one that I consented to let him argue it. Then his argument was so forceful that I granted his petition, and consented to hear the whole case again. Do you think"? "I think," said the judge, "that the court favors the plaintiff."?Chicago Post. 0 n Womanly Logic. "Never." groaned a Euclid avenue picture dealer the other day, "never try to argue a woman into believing that she ought to pay a hill when she thinks otherwise. I tried it this morning?presented a bill for some stuff ordered tyro months ago. Here was . her irrefutable logic: ^ " 'I never ordered any pictures. " 'If I did. you never delivered them. " 'If you did. I never got them. " 'If I did. I paid for them. " 'If I didn't. I must have had some good reason for it. ,. " 'And if I had of course I won't pay.' ^ "What d'you think of that?"?Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Great Change. ^ | ^ "Boy. what has become of your poor. E '* "* * 4-1 4. 4-rv K/xs* U Diinu, oegglllg taiuer iuul useu iu ucs n around here?" gj "You see, he got a lot of money when I granddad died, and now he isn't blind any more."?Meggendorfer Blatter. 1 Good Job For Old Maids. n Miss Elder?Well. I maintain that 1 women can do anything that men can. J Mr. Gazzam?Oh, no. The auction- J eer's business is one a woman cannot | go into. Miss Elder?Nonsense! She'd make = every bit as good an auctioneer as a man. Mr. Gazzam?Just imagine an un- I married woman getting up before a crowd and exclaiming, "Now, gentlemen, all I want is an olfer!"?London Tit-Bits. Prompt Denial. "Oh. you're cooked for this robbery all right," said the detective. "You left a strong clew behind you." "Dat's a lie," cried the prisoner. "De on'y strong tool I had wid me wuz a jimmy, an' I took dat away wid me." ?Philadelphia Press. The Only Way. "TCJitr rin o-jrth riirl Mnv mnrrv thnt mollycoddle of a poet?" "It was the only way she could think of to stop him from reading his stuff to her."?Cleveland Leader. " Marriage Omens For Mem ^ Married in white. r You're in for a fight; Married In gray. She'll grab your pay; Married in red, You'll have a bald head; Married in green. In your mirror 'tis seen; j Married in blue, It's tough luck for you; Married in pearl, You get the wrong girl; Married in yellow. She'll make you bellow; Qi Married in brown. One more chump in town; Married in pink. Joy for you?I don't think., m --Chicago New* pi DONT FORGET g* Ifl ffill Successor to Maxwell & Taylor, NEAR POST OFFICE, COLUMBIA, S. C, When you are looking for Furniture. We buy only in olid Car Load Lots and at the lowest spot cash prices, we herefore, can sell you for less than if we bought in local shiplents. Solid Oak Bedroom Suites. Nine Pieces?One Bed, One Bureau, One Washstand, One entre Table, Four Chairs. One Rocker?all for $17.25. No. 7 Black Oak Stove rith a complete list of Cooking Utinsels, for $7.50. No. 8 Hack Oak, with a complete list of Utinsels, $12.50. Our.^--" me is complete. All grades. Prices guaranteed as low as 'urniture of the same grade can be bought. Write or phone 90 for prices BE. A. TAYUOR, COLUMBIA, S. C. Our stock of New Summer Goods are now ready for your aspection, embracing everything in WASH GOODS, DOMESTICS, DRESS GOODS AND SILKS / ) f all imaginable shades and patterns, bought to please our ustomers. Fall Goods will be closed out at Bargain Prices. Ih Millinery we have the very latest styles and trimmings, lon't buy your hat until you have seen ours. f'\ Our notion department is complete with all the new novelLes, too numerous to mention here. We want our Lexington friends to call and see what we have, MAKE OUR STORE HEADQUARTERS. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, ' 1603 MAIN STREET, COLUMBIA, S. C. | The Palmetto National Bank, I | . COLUMBIA, S. C. I | WE ARE V a A Depository for the United States Government, th e Srate 8 w of Soath Carolina, Che Coanty of KLciiUad aud the City 8 3 of Columbia. 8 i WE OWN B $tOO,000 United States Bonds and $100,000 State of South Carolina Bonds. M WE SOLICIT m Accounts of Banks, Firms, Corporations aud Individuals. H WE PAY m Four Per Cent, on deposits in our Savings Depar tment, in terest calculated quarterly. m we promise 9 Our best efforts to transact your business to yoar entire S satisfaction. m palmetto national bank, - - Columbia, S. C. 1, ? CAPITAL $250,000.00 I' Wilie Jones, President. J. P. Matthews, Cashier. K 'I ts ma(^e *ke very leaf that we can buy BHI/Ni tMT .nlthUffl 1 ?.n *he very ^st l.eaf market in the world 10 tnose wno prefer a natural leaf tobacco 'mil!we unhesitating1y say after one trial of M i|||| TAYLOR'S NATURAL LEAF H Hb \) \ / you will use it exclusively in the future. Every merchant h^QB V) ought to sell it?if yours don't, insist on his getting it for you. n UAVRICCllfADTU ! ECZEMA and PILE CURE uB nHintgnunin, _ , ... f " CDEC Knowing what it was to snffer, BARBER rilfcE will give FREE OF CHARGE, ' to any afflicted a positive cure for 332 Main Street, Near Skyscraper, Eczemr, Salt R1 enm, Erysipelas, Piles and Skin Diseases. Instant relief Columbia, S. C. Don't suffer longer. Write F. W. WIL o LIAMS, 400 Manhattan Avenue, New Expert Barbers, Sharp Razors and ^ ork. Enclose stamp. lean Towels?Everything Firstclass. September 12 ly Thomas W. Reese will be g]ad to aty friends in the highest art of Zt BEE'S LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP ofession. July 10. tf. nelieves coughs and cold* %