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I LOUIS COHEN <& COMPANY 232 and 234 KING STREET. CHARLESTON, S. C. *• ■ • • •’* 1 • ; t . i a a . - ^ - ■■ *" . The house that gives you “SATISFACTION^ or your money back. —the Digest wholesale and retail mail order house in the south— ' i * . • \' • OUR STOCKS FOR FALL AND WINTER ARE THE CHOICEST PICKINGS OF THE MARKETS . OF THE WORLD. > Vrlte u hr samples and prices of uTtUnt yon need—Ton'll get them by return mail Ve pay special attention to orders entrasted to ns from merchants. STYLE, QUAUTY AND LOW PRICE CONSTITUTES OUR BIG BUSINESS BUILDERS. Oat of oar magnificent selection we are booed to please yon. Oar stock Is too large to Itembe. Write as. t * Plaid till for waists la a large vailety of deeigns and colorings. Priced at 68, 75,85, $1. and $1 35 per yard. Write for samplee. Every need for fall and winter is ready for yon In these dtpartmenta. Every thing necessary to make yoa feel and look comfortable—and the best part of it is the little price. We are showing a tremendous line of Black and Colored dress goods in plain and fabrics, checks and plaids Prices range from 13 12 to $5. per yard. Write for samples. 86 inch Colored changeable silks, value $1. Oar speeUl price 88c per yard 36 inch Black Taflfeta silk, valae 75. Oar special price 59c per yard. Ladles silk waists without question the prettiest assortment in the south. $3 50 to $15. W carry a complete line of infants and childrens cloaks, hats and caps. Boys' suits, separate pants, etc. Write for prices. Silks, Silks, Silks, the largest silk house south of Baltimore. Fancy Taffeta silk suitings, prices range from 49c to $2. per yard. Write for samples. ’ Ladles Waists made of white and col* ored wash fabrics. Priced 89c to $5. 86 inch solid colored taffeta silk, large of new shades. Value $1. Oar special price 88c pe( yard. Ladies Cloaks, newest 1906 models, a large ranee of styles to choose from. $5 00 to $50i each. Ladies new Walking Skirts, made of all the popular fabrics of the season. Large variety of styles and colors to choose from. $2.50 to 920. Ladies strictly man tailored suits. All the most stylish models, made of the oop- ular fabrics. Prices from $8 75 to $50.00 per suit. I We are showing a new line of Floor Coverings, Carpets, Mattings, Art Squares, Rugs, Lace Curtains and Uphol stery Furnishings. We will gladly quote prices. Write us or come yourself. . « Agents For Dr. Jaegers Sanitary Underwear and Ladies Home Journal Patterns 10 and 1Sc. | Reduction Sale r / For sixty days I will sell at cut prices on all of my stock of dry goods. Come, now is the time while the prices are right This is a cash sale and we will make the prices right Can't wait or you might miss a bargain. We are also carrying a nice line of fresh Groceries and paying highest prices for chickens and eggs. Always ready to serve you. Sot ton is King ~i c‘ / The good price paid for cotton this fall has given you. we hope, some spare money. If it has we would be gfad to ha If it ve Dr. J. B. Padgett YOU DEPOSIT IT WITH US. . o When you sell your cotton don’t carry the money home with you where it may be lost, burned or stolen, but deposit it with us, and ^ carry home your pass book and check book, which no one will want but you. We pay 4 per cent in terest in the Savings Department Farmers and Merchants Bank. WALTKBOSOa. C. 4 fetsiiger, Modern Slothes. The time is come when progressive Clothiers must lend their experienoe toward educating the people in the art of Clothes selection and the relative value of inaterials and workmanship For instance, our experienoe has taught ns that there are not more than five Clothing manufacturers in America whoee products are worthy a high place in yoorestima- • toon. Theee are the ones we handle. No matter from which of theoo yon select, yon can’t gal anything bnt good merchandise—the Diet that AnMrica siforda This is a fens of protection that inspires confidence with yon and can’t fail to benefit ns noth. On these lines we ask your patronage; on theoe lines we hope to J. L. DAVID * BROS V Charleston, s C. f Be an advocate of progeess. Don’t be content to remain m a rut The most progressive idea these days is the idea of good roads. Talk abont them to your neighbor. Oar farmers pav enoqgh mod tax each year to pay the interest on $250,000 worth of bonds and get nothing bat discontent in retorn. Better pay half that mnoh on good roads and be content Its a money making proposition.—The Gaffney Ledger. REVIVO unMcsnnun “lafca Wall Mai •fia.” . . SSSayo. It acts l t^chly.cnry when othara fail. ^ewarfuUy Pertinent Remarks. By Jerome P. Fleishman in “Profitable Advertising” for October. Every now-and-then advertising brings onoe-in-a while results. M Space nsnally hasn’t anything to do with results. It’s what you pot in that space that counts, “Don’t make the mistake oi grum bling about your competitor. Make a noise like a winner. “Business don’t grow by lock It is pluck, posh and pnblicty. v Make the do-so of year advertise- mentjosta little better than the •ay-so. It paje. “Advertising does not create mine. It s up to you, Mr. Merchant, to deliver the goods after your printed announcement has brought people to your establishment.’’ Place property with se for eele. If yos with to boy oonealt at. We have property for tale In every Stats. . Fire, Ills and accident Inference Ott Real Batata Co. »»»■•. CU FASTIDIOUS SOSES CURTAINED FRONT HOUSE.! n»e Best Type of BulMInjr D* - rlscd Fop tho Raiser of PooHrr* A. F. Hunter,' the father of tbs scratching shed poultry bouse, de scribes In American Poultry Advocate the moat valuable a range meat for thAe* type of atroctura. He strongly ad* • ▼ocatea the curtained front scratching abed, with solid construction for tho roosting rooms. Every one understands me general arrangement of these bouses, but the five accompanying U- t lustra tions wUl be helpful. In Mr.. Hunter's plan each combined pen and* shad covers 18 by 10 feet, the curtalaod front abed being 10 by 10 (Set and the roosting room adjoining being 8 by 10' feet, room sufficient for twenty-flvo to thirty fowls of the American or thirty* fire to forty of the Mediterranean va rieties. No “walk** la required because the walk la through gates and doora, from abed to pen and pen to shed, and •o on to the end of U^e house and out the other end. The much desired venti lation of the poultry bouse Is vary varied in this plan, at the discretion and according to the judgment of the operator, and can be adapted to the dif ferent seasons in half a cl oxen different ways. In summer the doors and win* P«rU«n Pvt**** !*•*• Part. Li b«lvr*fn Sheds Shevrovj Ciirta-rA Ofx ..c J u.'loHorf- One down Ne*t Baits Entrance in Rear FVonl Se/-jw'*-ig-Shed Back ef RaeeUnq Roe*w i an H-LPKCL VIEWS. dows are :ill wide open and the cur tains are bcoUcd u;> n^aiust the roof out of the way. It Is to be remembered* that the doors between the two pens are never to be left open when there are birds iu the pen. They are always kept closed except when opened for tho attendant to pass through from one pen to another. When the nights begin to be decidedly frosty close the win dows In the fronts of the roosting pens,, but leave shed curtaius hooked up and* doors between pans and sheds open. When It begins to freeze dose the cur- , tains fat night) In fronts of sheds, bnV atlll leave doors bet weens peni an£. sheds open. These doors are neveA, dosed excepting on nights of solid* cold, and for rral rrro weather, from 5 above to away below zero, dose the cnrtslns In front of the roosts, and sill doora and windows are dosed. An a4K dltlonnl protection against cold In ex tremely cold latitudes would bs to doable wall the back of the roost pan' from the sill up to plate and then/Op! the roof rafters four feet, packing the! spaces between the studs and rmftar, with planer shavings, straw, swale hay! or aeaweed (the latter is vermin proof), 1 then have ii hinged enrtkin to drop down to within about six Inches ot front of roost platform and extending j a foot below It. This curtain we wonidl dose only on the very coldest nights— aero nights. In this varied manner tbS|| ventilation of this type of house It) managed, and If the manager of it nsesi his Judgment (common sense) the ven tilation la admirably adapted to tho seasons as they change. ef Heat mmd Cel# ei “When fresh laid eggs are pat inte cold storage with a sweet, pure atmos phere at a temperature of 84 degrees F., vary little, if any, change takes place in their quality. The egg Cases should be fairly dose to prevent circu lation of air through them, which would cause evaporation of the egg contents. "Whan an agg la covered with boUlag water In a balnmarle or doable bailee; and the temperature of the water Ik the outer veeeel maintained at 189-188 degrees F. for 80 to 45 minutes, the hard cooked egg results, with the yolk dry and mealy apd the white solid, yet tender:*' Morgan poultry farm peopW writs as follows to Poultry Success: Tbs following feeds wa have found euffldent for a laying ben or growlnl pullet: Oath, barley, cprn, millet, wheat middlings and bran. Animal food lx some form. For grit ordinary round gravel. Cinders arc also good, deal water; that’s alL - Lina breeding la where a strain of lewla is brad in Una year after year without the Introduction of new blood, hot should not be practiced without a of tbs aihjsft. It to a quastlea whaOw there Is sag