The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, July 04, 1906, Image 3
a
va
SOME CHEAPNESS
YOU CAN PAY TOO
DEAR FORTHE GOODS
\VE SELL YOU CHEAP
ARE GOOD GOODS.
TRY US 01 A mil ORDER
Your nearcftt mail box
places you right next dAor
to us.
LOUIS COHEN & CO.,
234 and 234 KING STREET, CHARLESTON, S. C.
1 iii 11 n ir sum 011 ■ m obi.
9
The Largest Retail Mail Order House In The South.
We are more than gratified with the response our advertisement*
met with trom the readers of this paper. From the^number of orders
we tilled, we have not received one complaint—which speaks well for
our Mail Order Department.
VAC E TO FACE '
With facts. The truth comes
out. Let’s put you fac;e to
face with some of our
Bargains.
WHEN ARE YOU COMING
or do you Intend to write. Either
way will be aatiafied with your pur-
chaaea.
AGAIN WE WISH TO IMPRESS IT UPON THE MERCHANTS
" . 0 O • '
Our method of helping them to carry a more varied stock at a lesser outlay, one by which they; can rapidly increase
their business. We'll cut all piece goods trom the cheapest to the finest grades, and sell it to you at
WHOLESALE PRICES.
SPECIAL OFFERINGS UNTIL SOLD—
Fine quality Colored, figured Taffeta silk suiting. Regular retail price 50c, our price cents per yard.
36 inch white Glasgow Linen Finished Suiting. Regular price 'everywhere 12 1-2 c. Our price S cents per yard.
44 inch all-wool Prnama Cloth suiting, Navy and Royal Blue only. Regular value 50c, our price* 29 cents per
yard. - v
Ladies Cream Brilliantie walking skirts, regular value $4.00. our price 2.98 each.
Ladies white Lawn and Lingerie shirt waists, open back, short sleeves, profusely trimmed witl
broideries. Regular value $1.75, our price 1.25 each.
27 inch white mercerized figured madras suiting, regular value 20c, our price 9 cents per yard.
Ladies walking skirts, made of the ijnest quality, Indian Iliad, three tucks on at each seam. Regular value £1.7 5
oifr price $1.25 each;
Ladies Black China silk waists, fronts covered with 3-4 inch tucks, tucked backs, regular value. 4.75, our price
3.00 each.
i We carry a complete line of Gent’s Furnishings, and Ladies and Children Muslin Underwear.
Rgents for Or. Jaegers Celebrated Sanitary Underwear and Ladies Home Journal PaU
b terns fO and 15c each.
ith laces and em-
PALMETTO, I MANUFACTURING • CO.
n
Makers Of The Famous
“Palmetto
T.-
LABLE
Clothing’’
The best made, Best fitting and best Wearing Cloth
ing at popular prices bear this label on the inside coat
pocket. There are none to surpass these goods in
their stylish make-up and up-to-dateness in general
0 i ,
appearance.
They are made under the direct supervision of the
*
most expert cutters and tailors in our own factory' at
28 and 30th^l2a»t Fourth St„ New York
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM.
Southern HeadQuarters: '■*
- &
80 Hayne st. and 80 Pinckney •!,!
Charleston, S. 0.~>
i
Mill M 1 H4I mill I'M 1 Wl"l 'H 1 M 1 1 1M I Mil >
Call and be (Convinced.
I have a lovely line of ready
to wear hats, dressed hats,
trimmings and'notions on liand.
New goods constantly arriving.
Mrs. Newton Hiers.
_
Modern
Slothes.
The time ia come when progressive Clothiers must lend
. ' . their experience toward educating the people injthe
art of Clothes selection and the relative value of
materials and workmanship.
Tor instance, our experience has taught us that there are
not more than live Clothing manufacturers in America
whose prodocts are worthy a high place in yonr estima-
„ tion. .Theeeare the ones we handle. No matter from 0
which t>f these you select, you can’t get anything
but good merchandise—the best that America affords
Chamberlain’s
Colic. Cholera X Diarrhea Remedy!
DRINK WHEN YOU EAT
TAKE AS ) MUCH WATER AS
WANT WITH YO'JR MEALS.
YOU
If Im Kiv^ilpnt For fh« IHicentlon. It
1. < latruiMf. u» Neither t.aNtrlc Juice
Vor Work Properly t nlei*.
Lartrrly Dilated With Water.
Aimed every family has hfeed
of a reliable remedy lor colic or
diarrhea at some time during the
This remedy is secctnnaendcd
by dealers who have told it (dr
many years and know Its valtra.
it has received thousands of
testimonials from grateful people.
It has been prescribed by phy-
sidsui with the meet fehaactory
resulls.
It has often saved We before
medicine could have been scut fgr
or a physidan summened ^
it orJy costs a quarter. Can
fan afford to ruk so much (or so
>> BUY IT NOW.
V. <£&
This is a form cf protection that inspires confidence with
r you and can’t fail to benefit us both. On these lines
we ask year patronage; on these lines ye hope to.
retain it. * ”
J. L. DAVID <s BROS
Charleston* m CL
SOU) 13\ JOHN M. KLEIN.
The Best Bread Fob
-Children,
because of its purity and sup
erior quality is to be found at
HUBSTER’S BAKERY.
Always wholesome, tootnsome
and excellent And the Ser
vice as well as the Product is
-fifst class. Special cakes ba*
ed to order for Weddings, etc.,
on short notice.
ate and bon boos.
Hubster’s
How much water should wo drink
and when should wo drink It arc ques
tions so simple that at first siiriit their
discussion seems superfluous. One
Would uuturaliy answer, ‘Think all the
water you wish when you are thirsty,”
but authorities say, “Drink more than
you wish when you nre not thirsty,”
for they recommend that a gallon or so
l*e drunk between mcalk, which is
more water than we,ueed and the very
time the system least demands it. Us
ually we experience thirst duriUK or
directly after entyi^.
Inasmuch us 87 |mt cent of the whole
body is water. Which is. of course, be
im? used up every moment, there is no
question that we should drink of ttiis
element copiously, but it is a serious
question whether sve should refrain
from water ut meals—the time we par
ticularly desire K.
There is a class of person*, ever
growing more numerous, that believes
that whatever is is wrong. For the
qatural and simple they would substi
tute tbo artificial and complicated. To
driuk water while or directly after eat
ing is a natural Instinct. Give a dog
bis dinner, putting a bowl of water
near It, and observe that he will first
eat all he can and then Immediately
drink. Wild antrmiis look for a stream
after feedim;. (’age birds will stop
jtecklug at sissl to peck at water. Chil
dren have a iierpctual thirst, nod I
have Keen babies that, unlike young
Oliver, bare refused to eat more when
denied water after every few mouth
fills.
It is especially important that balden
be given what water they wish and at
the time they wish ft. which is usually
at table.
The thinner food is the more easily
and thoroughly it digested; in fact.
It cannot be digested until It has iieen
made liquid by the gastric and intesti
nal jiiices. .Indigestion is caused often
by food that has not Imhui sufficiently
moistened by the digestive secretions.
There are sound physiological rea
sons for our craving water with meals.
Water i# the solvent that constitutes
P3 per cent of the gastric Julew. Now,
when one eats a hearty meal and does
not drink, the amount oC.water In the
stomach is not -sufflcient^thoroughly to
moisten the gregt quantity of food,
and this makes digestion difficult On
the other hand, when enough water it
ingested with the food the latter la
well moistened and broken up, the di
gestible particles being then readily
acted on by the.gadtric Juice and after-
la the In'rge intestine. Had oris;-* qf
constipation arc caused dry ejjyl©
remaining in the inb ‘u, v,t.cro it
sets up an .inflanunatidh that somo-
times proves fatal, d fy,. fOv^cetC Of
course, resisting peristaJti.* !!ctl< >. Tbo
excrement of i>ersoiis t i.g . rom
constipation is always dry and »eird
and Is a potent eauso of npiieudlcltls. ''•
The id eft that water drinking at
meals unduly dilutes the gastric julc^
is nonsensical, water being not so pal
atable that one is apt to driuk more
than his digestive functions require,
As a matter of fact water generally
facilitates the digestion of albuminous
substances. In this connection Dr. A.
Jacobi In his work on “Infant Diet,”
page 07, says:
*Tn experiments upon digestion bf
albumen with gastric juice obtained,
from the stomach of animals it was no
ticed that after a certain time the proc
ess began to slacken, but was renewed
merely by the addition of water. Tho
gastric julcn became saturated with
the substance it had dissolved aad
ceased to act upon what remained un
til It had been dllubsl In The living
stomach this dilution i ;1 v< u creator
importance, for It pen.ur* f the im
mediate absorption of sidistancoa
sidtible in water anti wl. h »l«) not re
quire the s|H*cirte actio 1 oi the gastric
Juice.” Neither the gu^’rie itii«4* nor
[>epsln has any true tli <• live action
unless tlicy be largely dilute<i with wa
ter. J
It gtw*s without snylag that it is not
the food that is ingested, but that,
which is digested, that does good, and
this principle hoJUs good with water,
which is practically a food. Now,
when one resists tin* perfectly natural
desire to drink while eating he may bo
Dot thirsty several hours afterward,
but he Is advised nevertheless to force
himself to drink at that time. But if
he drinks then, the wnfi^fT having no
food to mix with it, will go. through
him, as it were—that is, It will do uo
good.
The lmi>ortnnee of water to the hu
man economy may be inG-rmd from
the various purposes it subserves.
First, It softens and dissolves solid
foods, thus facilitating their mastica
tion ami digestion; second, it main
tains a din* hulk of Mood and the
Rtrueturea of tin* h<*dy; third, it- keeps
Kill-stances in solution or 5U‘pension
while moving in the Nniy; i nirth, it
supplies elements in the Ixniy’s chem
ical changes, fifth, it makes easy tho
cMmlnntlon of waste material; sixth, IS
discharges supcrtluoas heat by train
t piration through tin* skin and by emis
sion through other outlets, and, sev
enth, it supplies in n convenient form
heat to or abstracts heat from tho
body. Home of tHUse functions nra*
performed by water in Its liquid state
and others in a state of vapor. 0
Have you indigestion? Try watef
instead of drugs with your food.—O.
Elliot Flint in New York World.
■HEADQUARTERS.
For Sparrows fine Choco- warJ tbaorbed. Again, wkan tbt par-
It t *1 • Maflw jKatfaa+gwt «aa«ian
tlally dlgeated food (chyme) pa—e Into
the tnteetJnee It te moat Important that
If be very molet partkmlariy aa water
.;U . .. ,
.-.'I
Drink an an Aid t» Good Itondn.
The saloon is responsibie for tho
gocsl roods of Jasper county. Mo.,
which is the location of the Joplin min
ing district, says the New York i\iuer*
lean. When the boom started there an
immense number of saloons “followed
the flag,” and the money received in
payment for licenses was spent In
roud Improvement. As a result the
roads compare favorably with any lu
EurojM*. and mine owners nix* using au
tomobiles in getting about their prop
erties.
« *.
.Zbi
Mlemcior ■
CUKtS
Liver Complaints; uses
only Ramon’s Liver Pills
and Tonic Pellets, and
• gives your money back if
hot satisfied. Your liver
- iUktic biggest trouble
rmKer. If you ’vould be
well,try Ramon’s Treat
ment. Only 25 cenia^.
W alter be ro Drug Company.
Brown Manufacturing Co.,
St. Louis, Mo., and Greenville, Term.
The
Has Stood The Teet 05 Years,
old original GROVER’S
Chill Tonic. Yon kaoW what