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SOME CHEAPNESS YOU CAN PAY Tod )EAR FOR THE GOODS ^VE SELL YOU CHEAP ARE GOOD GOODS. TRY US CN A MAIL ORDER % Your nearest mail box places you right next door to us. LOUIS COHEN & CO., 23/and 234 KING STREET, CHARLESTON, S. C. 1 list II «B w asiKin in DM. The Largest Retail Mail Order Haase In The South- „ , WHLM ARE YOU COMIKC \\e #r« more than snstified with the reepocse our advertiaemeote do you Intend to write. Either met with from the readers of this paper, hrom the number of orders we fillet!, we have not received one complaint—which speaks well for our Mail,Order Department FACE TO FACE With facts. The truth comes out. Let’s put you face to lace with some of our Bargains. w»y will be satisfied with your pur chases. I AGAIN WE WISH TO IMPRESS IT UPON THE MERCHANTS V '*• ' ! • ' )ur irtethod of helping them to carry a more varied stock at a lesser outlay, one by which they can rapidly increase heir business. We’ll cut all piece goods from the cheapest to the finest grades, and sell it to you at WHOLESALE PRICES. SPECIAL OFFERINGS UNTIL SOLD per yard, cents per .-Ladies Cream Brilliantie walking skirts, regular value $4.00. our price 2.98 each. * Ladies white Lawn and Lingerie shirt waists, open back, short sleeve's, profusely trimmed with laces and em 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 ynest quality, Indian Head, three,Lucks on at each seam. Regylar value$1.75 our price $1.25 each. . ’ Ladies Black China silk waists, fronts covered with 3-4 inch tucks, Uicked backs, regular value. 4.75, our price 3.00 each. We carry a complete line of Gent’s Furnishings, and Ladies and Children Muslin Underwear. Agents for Dr. Jaegers Celebrated Sanitary Underwear and Ladies Home Jonrnal Pat* terns |0 and ISc each. * * r O PALMETTO? I MANUFACTURING ^CO. Makers Of The Famous “Palmetto LABLE # o 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 appearance. - rt ' They arc made under the direct superv ision of the most expert cutters and tailors in our own factory' at 28 and SOth’East Fourth St„ New York ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM. Southern Headquarters: l :iO Hay up st. and 39 Pinckney st. Charleston, S. 0.~> ■H-M H-H-IM 1111111 ml MU-M I'H I 11 I I Sail and be Convinced. lodern r Slothes. The time is come when progressive Clothiers must lend their experience toward educating the people in*the art of Clothes selection and the relative value of materials and workmanship. I have a lovely line of ready to wear hats, dressed hats, trimmings and notions on hand. New goods constantly arriving. -■ o Mrs. Newton Hiers, Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera & Diarrhea Remedy Almost every family has need of a reliable remedy tor colic or 'diarrhea at tome time during the year. This remedy is recommended by dealers who have sold it for many yean and know its value. It has received thousands of testimonials from grateful people. It has been prescribed by phy sicians with the most satisfactory results. It has often saved life before medicine could have been sent fp at a physician summoned. ✓ It only costs a quarter. Can K afford to risk so much for 10 ) BUY TT NOW. THE STALK BORER. It Attnrk. Tomntoi-n, Votutoen and Some Other I'lmita. For several years coiuplaints have been Lean! of a lioror that attacks po tatoes, tomatoes and flowering plants, notably dahlias. The lusoct is also found In rhubarb, rap weed, cocklebnr and corn. When the tunnel is cut open and the larva taken out, it Is fonnd to be an Inch in length, flesh colored, wiUi four longitudinal brown str1i»es extending from the head to the aimh extremity. When ready to change to the pupal form tin* larva deserts the tunnel that it has made and buries Itself In the soil. After a time the adult !/ > SOLD BY JOHN M. KLEIN. For instance, ottr experience has taught ns that there are not more than five Clothing manufacturers in America whose products are worthy a high place in your estima tion. These are the ones we handle. No matter from which of these you select, yon can’t get anything but good merchandise—the best that America affords * The Best Bread Fob Children, work or noni.K in tomato stalk. * oniergos; ns this tiiki* place In the fall, it is likely that the adults hide away and hltieniute in that form. There Ls reason to suppose that there is one generation each year. The life history of this pest seems to reveal no weak points where a spray can be made to avail The fact that It works on many of our common weeds indicates that clean culture over wide arcars will cut down the supply ma terially. Other than this we shall have to depend on cutting out the larvae, keeping close watch for wilting plants and examining nil such systematically and regularly.—It. H. Pettit, Michigan. This is a form cf protection that inspires confidence with yon and can’t fail to benefit ns both. On these lines we ask your patronage; on these lines we hope to retain it 1 — J. L. DAVID <S BROS Chari eoton* » C. Always wholesome, tootnsome and excellent And the rier vice as well as the Product is first class. . Special cakes ba*. ed to order for Weddings, etc., on short notice. HEADQUARTERS. For Sparrows fine Choco- | ate and bon bons. 'Mubster’s jBakery. ALFALFA SEEDING. la Late Suminer or Fall For Reirloaa South of Chirniro. Where thirty-six Infix** rain or more falls alfalfa should be seeded In August or early in September in the northern states south of a line drawn east and west through Chicago. This lias been proved to Is* true for eastern Ivannas, Iowa and Illinois and Is prob ably true all through the section named clear to the Atlantic Occam The rain fall is good; the land has l«*en under cultivation for many years and Is well filled with weed seeds. Under these conditions spring seeded alfalfa bos a hard fight with weeds.'crab grass and fox tall and In a majority of cases Is either beaten or the stand Is thin. With fall seeding an early crop can be taken off, the alfalfa seeded and three or four crops of hay gathered the next year, no time being lost JSa Jus.*!?® Jdn*«r MUM* M0 heaving out Is irmeh less where* alfalfa Is sown in tin* l.iti.* summer. It should l«e sow n early euoiuh to ipakc eight tb te: i"r!:e.- of LTow th boforo the ground freezes. In,every imtance known to the writer of a trial between fall and sprlii" seviihig the fall >*«•* nm hns glv* en the tUk’k^st stand, ihe strongest plants and the heaviest yield of hay the • next season after the seeding. Where an early crop of potatoes or garden truck can be taken of*' in time the ground should not lx* plowed, but leveled, anil the surface ftu«>d. This makes an ideal seed bed. Early outs and small grain can be cut for hay or harvested for grain If they ripen In time. The ground should be plowed at once and well luirrov ed each day as fast as plowed. After the plowing *tiAM lM‘en finished lit the ground for alfalfa and wait for a good rein After this comes harrow again and then sow - II. M. Cot troll in Itural New Yorker. i Alfalfa Seed. Feed of alfalfa averages larger than red clover seisl and shows less tend* emT to purple lu Its eolorli.g. Good soyhIk are t*f an obscure greenish Ot reddish yellow. Infective s< etls art brown and generally shrivcltsl, as In clover. The shape is not very constant, but in nil go al samples then* are frb* quontly deelde<11y kidney sha|s*d seeds, strongly convex On one side and con* cove ou tlx* other. From these tho shape ranges to short, wide seeds, sometimes decidedly truncate oblique* ly at the larger end. A typical seed measures O.UU by 0.1C> by O.ui inch. Ko Grain In the Orchard. Ill ere are jimny ways of caring fot nn orchard. W e work our, land In com as lung us possible, in order to culti vate tho trees and keep the land clean, 'fills Is to prevent ns tieing troubled by rabbits. Where tlx-re an* no trees Of grass wo can put the richness bAClt into the wdl with clover. If the land U rlcli this clover may be cut for hoy; If l>oor it should be left tmd turned under to enrich the land ns much ns possible. Never plant any of the small grains In the orchard. Growth is the most nec essary Item for the young tree.—T. H. Todd, Missouri. With the Ivootom. The healthy hog Is the grass fed hog. A thoroughbred boar- that’s what you want. Brood fowb should be neither poor nor fat. Good betiding is always necessary Ih the hogpen. iKiii’t try to keep rrtbre hogs tbAfi you can feed i>rofltally. / Tlie more the hogs lire in the pastUTb tho better the|’ will tie. Sunshine and fresh «lr ore great dll* Infectant*. Dost shut them out of tho hog house. i) “w.'Jf littledodor. .j Brings back health by arousing the Liver. The liver is the cause of most illness.-it gets lazy. Ramon’s Liver Pilli and Tonic Pellets restore the natural functions. ^ w Don’t use purgatives-* rgai try Ramon’s Complete Treatment. 25 cents, / Walterbcro Drug Company. Brown Manufacturing Co., St. Lonii, Mo., and Greenville, Tenfi. COLLEGE OP CHARLESTON. CHAKLEStON, 3. C. 121st Year beginR September 28 Letters, Science, Engineering One scholarship, give free tuitioi to each county of Sooth Carolina Tuition 140. Board and furnishet room in Dormitory $11 a month All candidates for admission an permitted to compete for vacan Boyce scholarship which pay $101 a year. For catalogue, adrei . Harrison Randolph, . President orjuncs New Discovery Stop 1M Cwwh.