University of South Carolina Libraries
Women as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney and Bladder Trooble. Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, discourages and lessen s ambition; beauty, ^^vitrr.1 vigor and cheerfuljft ness soon disappear when the kidneys are ? OPt or^er ?r Kidney trouble has become so prevalent &JL ^at it is not uncominon for a child to be born afflicted with ?n i.' 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 thedifflr culty is kidney trouble, and the first step should be towards the treatment of these important organs. This unpleasant 1 1 * -3 nf XTOU DIS IS QUC IU & wuvuwivu. v* the kidneys and bladder and not to a * habit as most people suppose. Women as -well as men are made miserable-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 size bottles. You may have a sample bottle by mail free^ also a Home of Swamp-Root, pamphlet telling all about Swamp-Root, including many the thousands of testimonial letters received from sufferers cured. In wilting Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., be sure and mention this paper. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the ad* dress, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. D. MARTIN, ATTORNEY . AND COUNSELOR AT LAW,! LEXINGTON, S. 0. Office in Harman Building rear of court house. , Will practice in all courts. Special attention to collection of claims. WM. W. HAWKS, Yv Attorney and Counselor at Law. NEW BBOOKL AND. S. 0. Praetioe in all Courts. Business solicited. November l, 1906. r O. W. XKBD. I. S. DBEH22. EFIRD A DREHEB, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, J . LEXINGTON 0. H.. 8. 0. Will practice in all the Courts. Business solicited. One member of the firm will always be at office, Lexington. 8. C. H. FRICK, " , ATTORNEY AT LAW, CHAPIN, & O. Officer Hotel Marion, 4th Boom. Second Floor. -Will praetioe in ail the Courts mHUEMOND & TIMMERMAN, ' . L ' ATTORNEYS AT LAW, WILL PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS, r Kaufmann Bldg.LEXINGTON, 8. C, We will be pleased to meet those having legal business to be attended to at our office m the Kaufmann Building at any time. < / Respectfully, !f. WM. THURMOND. x y? G. BELL TIMMERMAN, A LBEBT M. BOOZER, ^0L ATTORNEY AT LAW, COLOMBIA, S. 0. Omcs: 1316 Main Street, upstairs, opposite Van Metre's Furniture Store. Especial attention given to business entrust" ed to him by his fellow citizens of Lexington county. \ \ nRORGE r. rembertT U , ATTORNEY AT LAW. 7 1221 LAW RANGE. COLUMBIA. S. 0. I will be glad to serve my friends from Lexington County at any time, and am prepared to practice law ip all btate and Federal Courts. ' Law Offices, -f ) Residence, 1529 1209 Washington < > Pendle ton Street. Sfcre-;. ( ) ' Office Telephone No. 1372. Residence Telephone No. 1036. WBOYD EVANS, .LAWYER AND COUNSELLOR. Columbia, S. 0. 7 nR P- H. SHEALY, ; V " DENTIST, LEXINGTON, S. C. Office Up Stairs in Roof's Building. Dr. f. c. gilmore, DENTIST 1)10 Main Street, COLUMBIA, S. C. \ Office Hours; 9 a. rn. to 2 p. m., and from 3 to 6 d, m. Dr. d. l. hall, dentist, steedman, s. c. Office hours 8 a. m.. to 5:30 p. m. Dec. 23, 1907?Cm 11 d. han] | DEALER IN ^ I General f I Merchandise, | | Corner Main and New Street, t ) Opposite Contederate | 4 Monument, 4 g Lexington, - - S. C. g Mr. Wm. H. Anderson, M. D., of Soda Springs, Ida., says vhat Bees Lax' ative Cough Syrup has relieved coughs and colds where other remedies failed. Its gentle laxative effects especially recommend it for children. It is pleasant to take. For coughs, colds, hoarseness, whooping-cough. Money refunded if not satisfied. Sold by Kanfnianii Drug Co. The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, April 1,1908. Goes to Inspect Sis Co&n. Atlanta, Ga., March 28.?Jasper M. Smith, the eccentric capitalist of Atlanta, left last week for Chattanooga, where he goes to inspect a magnificent coffin he recently ordered for his own use. The casket costs $7,000, and during the interval between the present and Mr. Smith's death it will be kept in the vault already erected ?? j-I~ ~ ? J.: c > ? ior nit; rcucpuou oi uiat geuLiciiia.ii a remains. Mr. Smith is a well known real estate owner and pays tuxes on several thousand dollars. He is 74 years old, and has lived his life in single blessedness. He declares, however, that it has been his intention since early youth to become a benedict at the .age of 75, which will be next year. Recently he ordered a coffin from a Chattanooga firm of casket makers. He said he wanted to be sure and be buried in one of "old fashioned'' style. He does not like the kind generally used now, made in box-like form with rounded corners. He wants square corners and bulging sides at the point where the shoulders lie, so that his arms may have room for free play in case he "comes to." TTaw tft Avoid A Tvnend iritis. / Most victims of appendicitis are those who are habitually constipate. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup cures chronic constipation by stimulating the liver and bowels and restores the natural action of the bowels. Orino Laxative Frui? Syrup does not nauseate or gripe and is mild and pleasant to take. Refuse substitutes. Derrick's Drug Store. 2To Canning This Season. Positively I will not run my can-j ning plant for any one this season. The public will please be governed accordingly. W. H. KEISLER, Lexington, S. C., R. F. D. 5. The Piedmont Mutual Fire Insurance company of Spartanburg, announces that it will comply with the new insurance law, which requires that a deposit of $10,000 be made with i.t. ^ wie k3ta.be treasurer. i Isaiah McCottrie has been nominated for the collector of customs at Georgetown. An Insidious Banger. One of the worst features of kidney x trouble is that it is an insidious disease and before the victim realizes his danger he may have a ..fatal malady. Take Foley's Kidney Cure at the first sign of trouble as it corrects irregularities and prevents Briglit's disease and diabetes. Derrick's Drug Store. Night riders burned three tobacco warehouses in Kentucky on Wednesday night. A land slide blocked the Southern's track near Spartanburg one day last week^ 30 Days' Trial $1.00 is the offer on Pineules. Relieve Back-ache, Weak Back,v Lame Back, Rheumatic pains. Best on Sale for Kidneys, Bladder and Blood. Good for young and old. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. For sale by Kaufmann Drug Co. Illinois Republicans will endorse "Uncle" Joe Cannon for President. Bryan spoke at Richmond, Va., on Wednesday and was given an ovation. ManZan Pile Remedy comes ready to use, put up in a collapsible tube with nozzle attached. One application proves its merit. Soothes and heals, reduces inflammation and relieves soreness and itching. For all forms of Piles. Price 5Cc. Guaranteed. Sold by Kaufmann Drug Co. s A banker near Lincoln, 111., was L ivr\ Ktr fV\noro An \V/ nrl r. O XT I U^XU U M 9JJ *JL1 VIA TT ^Vt.C*J wuu robbed of ?5,000. Twenty people were injured by the oollission of a freight and passenger train in Kentucky last week. Here comes the Spring "Winds to chap, tan and freckle. Use Pinesalve Carbolized, (Acts like a poultice) for cuts, sores, burns, chapped lips, hands and face. It soothes and heals. Sold by Kaufmann Drug Co. ? o Not a Logical Conclusion. "If you have nothing else to do. suppose we go to that amateur concert." "Xo, thank you. Because I want to kill time myself is no reason why I should enjoy somebody else murdering it."?Atlanta Constitution. A Secret. Only she ar.d the baby knew! The nurse wa3 out and his mother too. Great-grandma said: "Why, haven't you heard I brought up nine? You're too absurd! j Now, run along and never fear, I'll take good care of the precious dear." But?the baby woke, and the baby cried. And the baby would not be denied. She rubbed him warm with tender hands; i She turned him over and eased his bands, i But ba.bics are wise, and this one knew His dear great-grandma through and through. And. well, she did it?half in fright, Yet simply a-quiver with delight. She rocked that baby and tried to sing The while she cuddled the little thing. And when he gurgled and hushed his cries And slowly, slowly, shut his eyes, Making a sleepy little coo-oo-oo. Quite as her babies used to do. Great-grandma, crooning a nursery rhyme, Had, oh, such a rapturous, wicked time! So they have a secret, just these two, For only she and the baby knew. ?Grace Stone Field in "\\7oman'3 Home Companion. I This popular remedy never falls tc effectually cure Dyspepsia, Constipation, Sick Jcedache, Rifiousness Ana ALL DISEASES arising from a rcrpid Lever and Bad Digestion The natural result is good appetite and solid flesh. Dose small; elegant' fy sugar coated and easy to swallow. r*kio Wo Substitute.. ?. ONLY A TRAMP. Raising the Curtain For a Moment on One of Life's Tragedies. A recent incident which holds in its simple outlines the possibility of past tragedy is described in the Xew York Times. It is another illustration of how careless the world is of the individual and how thick is the cloak which ode may wrap about his personality. Xot long ago a laborer employed by the Erie railroad in Jersey City was run over by a train and had his leg cut off. A policeman telephoned for an ambulance. The injured man lay on a grass patch, apparently bleeding to death. Just then a typical railroad tramp in dirty rags sauntered along. He tapped a policeman's elbow. "May I ask what's the matter, officer?" he inquired. "Man bleeding to death," Replied the policeman. "Would you mind if I looked at him?" asked the tramp. "I might be of service." "Go ahead," responded the omcer. Bending low over the wounded laborer, the tramp asked for water to wash his hands and then begged the crowd for clean handkerchiefs. With a half dozen deft, rapid twists, he made a tourniquet and stopped the flow of blood. "Are you a doctor?" some one asked as the man slipped away through the crowd. "I used to be," he replied as he hurried off. ?J Patriotism In the Making. Patriotism in New York is cosmopolitan. They have a flag drill In the schools in which the children of every race and clime, as the hymn book says, are taught to salute the stars and stripes and give "their heads, their hands and their hearts to their country." And in some of the big downtown schools you may see children from homes German, Italian, Syrian, Scandinavian, Jewish, Hungarian, Chinese, Armenian, Greek and heaven knows how many other nationalities all joining in this picturesque ceremony. It gives one a realizing sense of the variety of material which it put into this crucible we call a city and which in another generation or two will be simnlv American.?Boston Transcript. Talking Through the Nose. So called "talking through the nose*' Is not talking through the nose at all. but rather failure to do so?that is, instead of letting the tone flood into the nasal cavity, to be re-enforced there by striking against the walls of the cavity, which act as sounding boards for the tone confined within that cavity, we shut off the cavity and refuse the tone its natural re-enforcei ment. It tases on as a result a thin, unresonant quality which we call nasal, although it is thin and unpleaslng because it lacks trut? nasal resonance. The only remedy lies in ceasing to shut off the cavity.?Katherine Jewell Everts in Harper's Bazar. Heating. "I do wish," said Backlotz, "that we j had a decent heater in our house. How is yours? Does it keep the house warm?" | "No," replied Sububs. "but it keeps me overheated every time I attend to it"?Catholic Standard and Times. Didn't Agree With Him. A Carolina man was recently inspecting a farm owned by him and operated by an old friend wbo had pressed into service every member of his family, including his aged father. I "The old man must be getting along in years," said the owner. | "Yes; dad's nigh on to ninety," was ! fhek rnnlx "Is his health good?" "Well. 110. The old man ain't been hisself for some time back." "What seems to be the matter?" "I diuiuo, sir. I guess farming don't agree v.-itk him 110 more."-1?Success Magazine. Cheap Fun. He?You talk about men playing poker. It is 110 worse a vice than the shopping habit of the women. She? Perhaps not, morally speaking; but then. It takes money to play poker, whereas a woman can shop all day without it costing her a cent except | what she pays for car fare.?Boston Transcript. ' Might Have Known. An austere looking lady walked into a furrier's and said to the shopman, "I should like to purchase a muff." "Wlmt fnr''" rlpmnmlpfl thp man. "To keep my hands warm, you idiot!" exclaimed the lady?London Scraps. A Distinction With a Difference. Editor?You see, a story has to be just so to get in our magazine. Author ?Well, what's the matter with this one of mine? Editor?It's only so-so.? Puck. A secret is seldom safe in more thap one breast.?Swift. A. H. BALL. P. C. PRICE COMMUNITY SiLVER. Table ware that will wear, and give you perfect satisfation. Tea Spoons - - $2 half doz Dessert Spoons or Forks $3.50 h d Table Spoons or Forks $4.50 h d Knives - - $3 to $7 half doz When you buy plated table ware, sret the best there is COMMUNITY SILVER. For sale by A. Hi BALL I 00., JEWELERS, 1637 Main Street, Columbia, S. C. Repairing a specialty. Light-More Light Do yon wan/ to save money? Then nse the "Best" Incandescent Vapor Gas Lights and burn air instead of money. They give 50 per cent, more light than , a Rochester Coal Oil Lamp, consume 80 per cent, less oil and make 90 per cent, less heat. All Lamps guaranteed for a period of two years, provided they are handled according to our instructions. "Best" Incandescent Gas Lights, 100 candle power each, 300 candle power, one gallon of gasolene per burner, 60 hours, 6c., cost $3.60. The above is for lighting a room 20x60, 100 hours a month for one year. For prices, etc., write i C. H. HARTLEY, GASTON, S. C. Rheumatism I have found a tried and tested cure for Rheutn&tism! Not a remedy that will straiffhten the -* ?kw,ni/> nWnnios mvr turn hnny msioneu uuiu> vi tumuiv >.w* -? m growths back to flesh again. That is impossible. But I can now surely kill the pains and pangs of this deplorable disease. In Germany?with a Chemist in the City of ( Darmstadt?I found the last ingredient with ' Which Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic Remedy was made a perfected, dependable prescription. Without that last ingredient, I successfully treated many, many cases of Rheumatism; but now, at last, it uniformly cures all curable cases of this heretofore much dreaded disease. Those sand-like granular wastes, found in Rheumatic Blood, seem to dissolve and pass away under the action of this remedy as freely as does sugar when added to pure water. And then, when dissolved, these poisonous wastes freely pass from the system, and the causa^f Rheumatism is gone forever. There is now no real need?no actual excuse to suffer longer with, out help. We sell, and in confidence recommend Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic Remedy THE KAUFFMAN DRUG CO. Before Ycu Purchase Any Other Writs THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE COMPANY ORANGE. MASS. Many Sewing Machines are made to sell regard* fess of Quality, but the "?w Home" is made to wear. Cur guaranty never runs cut. We make Sev/:ng Machines to suit all conditions of the trace. The "Xcw Home stands at the head of ali Hijrli-jrraflle family sewing machines Sold by authorized dealers only. FO R SALS SV W . 1'. KOOF, Lexiugton. S. G. S&oret of a good liniment is in its warming, penetrating and scattering qualities. The ingredients of Noah's Lini* ment are such that with very little rubbing the parts are warmed, the inflam= mation and congestion scattered, and the relief is almost instantaneous. For Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lame Back, Stiff Joints, and Muscles, Sore Throat, Colds, Strains, Sprains, Cuts, Biuises, Colic, Cramps, Indigestion, Toothache, and all Nerve, Bone and Muscle Aches and Bains. The genuine has Noah's Ark on every package. 25c., 50c. and St-ooby all dealers in medicine everywhere. Sample by mail free. NOAH REMEDY CO.,RICHMOND, VA.,i 90ST0N,MA6S., U.8.A. The Kaul'manii Dru<? Co., Distributors I! ^ " No. | The People's j:j prospei SI Paid up Capital n Surplus and Individi 5! Stockholders' Liahil M | jj | For Protectio: 3 H. C. MOSELEY, President, F ! 5 W. W. WHEELER, Cashier. ( ' M 2 Better a conservative in 3 safe return when wanted, tin ; j doubt about the principal. *: A National Bank is a sa \$\ vision makes it so. Likewis jj guarantee of prudent conserv S We Allow Interei ! DIRE G. W. Bowers, J. A. C. Kibier, w J. H. Hunter, W. P. Pugh, 1* Ceo. Johnstone, H. C. ! N |R xxxmxxxmiimmmsiyixrma SPRING OFFERINGS In Men's and Ladies' Oxfords. "We are always looking after your interest when it comes to any kind of a shoe and we are showing one of the most complete lines of Spring Shoes, both in high shoes and oxfords, that you ever looked at. We have them in all the new shapes and leathers to select from. Big assortment of Ladies' Golden Brown Oxfords and high Shoes, which are all the rage now. Farmers heavy shoes a specialty. Our motto: "Same quality for less money." HARMAN'S i Post Office Block, SPRING 1908 v \ We beg to announce to ov that we are receiving all the for 1908, and we ask a carefii you buy elsewhere. Our stor beautiful millinery, and if ou hat, you can't be pleased. Ca] awaits you. Nb i Hi WHOLESALE 1603 MAIN STRE: Fill] BOUT JSriL? JiL? Successor to E NEAR POST OFFJ When you are looking- fo Solid Car Load Lots and at therefore, can sell you for les ments. Solid Oak Mi Nine Pieces?One Bed, One ? a mi.!, n ni r\ tientre laoie, x our unairs. u: No, 7 Blac3 with a complete list of Cooku Black Oak, with a complete ine is complete. All grades Furniture of the same grade i 490 for prices Ho JBL. rSDj COLU3I ??????3K?31????1 IX11111XXZlXS VvTTr <! T J TTTTT !N| 6994 i| National Bank ! N RITY, S. C. J 3 $25,000.00. | |j nal Profits $5,000.00. jSJ ities - $25,000.00. i ! H ti of Depositors. 12 /I. A. CARLISLE, Vice-President. |B GEORGE JOHNSTONE, Attorney. J terest on your deposit with its j J an a high rate and a feeling of ; J fe Deposit. Government super- i % e our Board of Directors is a |j| ative management. !fl af nn Timo Ticnrtci+e > iKi ^ V VIA X1UAV X ' ) M I CTORS: i R. L. Luther, M. A. Carlisle, Si Jno. B. Fellers, W. A. Moseley,. JJi Moseley, J. P. Bowers. [jj simmxmYmmmimxYizYxro SHOE STORE, - COLUMBIA. S. C. AT YOUNG'S. /wwvvwvvvwwvvvv I X. \ lr friends in Lexington cotinty advanced styles in spring goods I inspection of onr goods before e will again be headquarters for r designor can't please you in a il at our store; a'warm welcome YOUNG, 3 AND RETAIL, t ET, COLUMBIA. S. C. FORGET laxwell & Taylor, [CE, COLUMBIA, S. C, r Furniture. We buy only in the lowest spot cash prices, we s than if we bought in local ship sdroom Suites. j Bureau, One Washstand, One ne Bocker?all for $17.25. k Oak Stove rr j i n am va ? ag uunseis, ior 97.au. mo. 8 list of IJtiiisels, $12.50. Our . Prices guaranteed as low as can be bought. Write or phone i5i s. c. ; . J