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new I beria 0 E nterprise AIND irSDt£PKlNDEINT OBSERVER- Conaolldated March 1st, I902. subscription $1.50 pe<? annum DEVOTED TO THE ADVANCEMENT OF HONE INTERESTS. HEW IBFRIA, LA., SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 1911. M W PlSHER, Eriito' BU1BI* 6 INSURANCE REAL ESTATE NOTARIAL WORK Alphonse Davis, Elks Theatre Building New Iberia. La. "THE POPULAR CAFE" Smith's ALBEliT STAFFORD, Sufic-anor. WILLIAM STAFFOKD, Mauser. CHOICE WINES I LIQUORS Lunch Counter Excellent. The Patronage of the Public Solicited. Corner of M ni u and Ibmia Slrt-ets f 1*^ .3; .^5 ^S, ^5 ^3 T5 "5 "5 -T5 "5 -"5 • Th« Vegetable Garden. If you are poing f o have si jrard^n, have a pood on; 1 , nwd the only way to have oiip is to plant fresh and reliable geedt suitable for this rlimate. The following ^nn be planted the uionth of March and April, Heat-. Bush and Pole beans. Early Cabbage, Carrot*, Corn. Cucumbers, Kgg Plant*, Lettuce, Water and Mutfk Melon, Mustard. Okra, Parnley, Pepper, Pumpkin, liadittb, Hoquette, S«iua >li and Tomato. For Sale by E. J. CARSTENS. SEED MERCHANT. New Iberia, La. J Now is the time to have your PANAMA HAT CLEANED and reshaped, While 1 Am in New Iberia. Call and see the Practical •HATTER Any old Hat made 00k like NEW. Price is very low. Give me a trial, that is all I want. C CIT RRPf; 317 West Mian Street. Jll^ULdWJ, NKW , BK „ IA . Junius Hart Piano House 7011 TOj ('anal St. New Orleans. W. C. M OK I? EL L, IteproKcu tativ e. Office 328 Week« Stieet. Phone 225 P. O. Box 385, NEW IBEKIA. Player Piaaos, Pianos and Organs. HOLD ON EASY TEKM8. Repairing, Tuning and Voicing. : : ; : f All Work-Guaranteed THE SAFEST «Ml QUICKEST ««V TO TRANSFER MONEY 18 BY L0N6 DISTANCE TELEPHONE FOR RATES WW TO LOCOL MMOES O0MRERLARD TELEPHflHE â TELEBRMPH CO. INC0IINNATB> •THI Man 's CREArEST drtTTT W Pf\T T TPÄT" SCHOOL Of BUSINESS." tfWULJai UVl*W9fir£â. NEW ORLEANS, LA. YOU* Shotrlft be siren thefceot tr«l«i»|r.to pro per* then for nt«A U MlbNk Personal laotnietiaa, Fty »»lpl«pr £& Office* Mo ivUrepreaentalleae to oocmo ota« tfrntR. Through the » ptitu S 1 000 fermer Is recocniaed ivaM, Pt«d «oooial School. ovth tha oKtaos ol ita »er Dudoaia, lo«W Catjo«« led e rtlfWna ta a WJda actlcal. Popular «â« Sbe QEO. IOC1S * MM New Iberia and Northern Railroad DAILY PASSENGER SERVICE. SOL'THUOUND No. l Lve. 1.00 p. tn. 1.85 " 1.45 " 1.55 " 2 00 " 2.10 " 2.20 " 2.40 " 2.55 " 8.10 " •> or oo Arr. 4.00 M STATION l'OKT HAUKE Rosin ARNAUDV1LLE Busliville Huron CBCEUA Grand Point PARKS ISLE L.VttHE Coteau Ultimes LOREACVILLK SEW UiERIA NORTHBOUND No. 2 10.30 a. m. Arr. 10.05 " 9.55 " 9.45 9.40 " 9.35 M 9.25 " 9.05 " 8.50 " 6.40 " 8.20 7.45 Lve. Connecting at Port Barre with Frisco and O. G. and N. E. NEW IBERIA—BATON ROUGE Leave New Iberia 7.45 a m. Leave Baton Rouge 9.55 a. m. Arrive Baton Rouge 1.40 p. m. Arrive New Iberia 4.00 p. m. United States Express Co., operate« over The New Iberia and Northern R. R., to all the principal pointa in United States and Canada. Phone Ü04 for any information desired E. H. BUFFINTQH, Smral Aptt, Mt Ifecrta, ll. ANHAUSER-BÜSCH BREW1FIG1SS0CI1II3I ST. LOUIS LAGER BEER NEW IBERIA ICE & BOTTLING WORKS SUCCESSOR TO ERA7H ICE &. BOTTLIRG GO. Ltd SOLE AtJKNTS NEW IBERIA Keg and Bottle Beer. R. A. JACOB ni aie mener New Ma. Phone 396. P. 0. Box 377. Office With City Jubge. PROPERTY FOR SALE. Center ALL BARGAINS. Property corner of Dalo and strffct» for »nie or rent. iloute mid lot eorner Fulton Mid La» nslle, M* nil stört» building on preuisea. Price $1 JU9.00. V'Hcanl lot W. Main St. opposite Saliool House. Price $40 U. Terms. Two vnrant lots on Iberia St. 50x225. Price 440(1 eauli. Blanc property on W. Main St. opposite Bernard's Wugou Faetoiy. Piiee $2250. Terms. Lot on CbRrles St., 100x150. Prie» $530. House and k>t on Prairie Ave., near Charles. Price $1450. B>nth*i propeity oo Julia st., $2400. Call at Pfister Bros. for anything in the line ef Jewelry Prices Always Right FOR SALE. Clerc Building, corner Main and Iberia Streeta. Residence, Iberia near Main Street*. Residence, Iberi» aud Centra Streeta. Fifty Acre Farm oa Southern Pacific Rail road, oue-balf mile from eorporate limits. The above properties are all owned by the estate of Cbas. Clerc, Sr. Apply to R. F- CLERC, P. O. Box 810. New Orleans, La. Eggs For Sale. Single Rose Comb Rhode Island Red Eggs for stock and free range. Regis tered Stock. Orders taken for day-old chicks aud Old Trusty Incubators. MKS. W. J. CONDON, Phone 85, New Iberia. La J. M. PERRY HOUSE and SIGN PAINTE1, PAPER HANGER, fini shi ng in Hard 011 a Specialty New Iberia, La. FOR SALE. A battery ot 3 boil, t» 00 x 18, 3 tubes, including St*ck and FM^echiag. Id firat elaaa condition, aud teady fir ose. In spection at oui mill. THE KYLE LUMBER CO., LTD. Franklin, La. not* fur iiïo.ûÎKi.iw ilatwl M»r«h 7. l&Ws.drawo ) ÄÄÄäiÄ H S: I *ri ma«!«- payable three [3j y«»r* after d»te with ; interest nt H jwrcent per »imam from maturity • laud paraphed t,r identification with an Art of, Mortgage bef»»r»* Kdtfar (»rim a. Notary Public, oo j March ith. LiWtt, hereby gir*« notice that the | «âme haabeen l«»«t or mialaid a»d aa the naid nota j I ha* been paid ir. full the public ia wurned not to ' negotiate %hm same A auitable rtwaré will ba paid for its return to TUB J M BU ROI'IRRES CO. LTP., Em«l A Buri(ui«re«. HerreUrjr Th- U nd,r.i«a^!wn^,f^rUj.pro«U..ry ' Subscriptions taken at this of fice ft r the Times-Democrat and j New Orleans Picayune. mULraaOO,^ â» CURE ma LUMOB WTTM Dr, King's New Biseewry \T he E nterprise AND OBSERVER, CoNSOt IDATfD Published by Enterprise-Leader Pub. Co. Ltd. Subscription $1.50 Per Annum. ARGUES FOR ATCHAFALAYA. New Iberia, La. Feb. 4, 1911. The divorcing <»t* the Mississippi fr. »tn the Red ninl Atchafalaya riv ers is a measure absolutely nee essar.v to reclamation of over 8,01 Ml'01>0 aeres of ü he richest lands in Ihe world, lying i.i th«' Atchafalava basin and the Tensas levee district up to the Arkansas line. 1 have shown by statistics thft) every acre of land in these districts that lias been reclaimed by levees and eiil'tivnted produces crops of the value of •'j : 42 p r acre in cotton and rice and $";> per acre in sugar cane. All tiiis produce was shipped to your city, and the return ship ments in the way of plantation supplies and machinery have amounted to about the same. I have shown that by the di vorcing of the Mississippi from the I{e,I iind and Atchafalava riv ers you will protect front over flow in the Atchafalava bnstn over 1,000,000 acres of these rich lands. I know this to be a positive fact. foK I settled in that basin in 1tf4!>. as did hundreds of others, and opened one of the most prof itable sugar plantations, as many others did, about the same time, and we were never troubled by floods until after the Civil war. Owing to thu floods* of the Miss issippi since we have had to abandon the cultivation of 110 000 acres aud they are now grow in? up into a wilderness. When these settlements were made, the Atchafalava was a small stream, navigable only by liglr. draft boats. Now it is mighty river, several hundred yards wide and over 100 feet deep, and has overflowed its basin and is jeopardizing the high cultivated lands of the Teche and Terrebonne parishes, and threat ens to divert the whole channel of the Mississippi by that shoit route to the gulf. In view of these facts, why is it that there is such opposition on the part of the Progressive I T n jon, the various commercial or ganizations. jhe mayor, the coun cil and polit^rans to this divorce ment? So far I have heard but one reason alleged, and that is that it would raise it he "flooa height and endanger the country or coast below. Do our outlets lower 'the flood heights and prevent the country from overwlow ? I am positive they do not. I have been living in a country, that is in the At chaAalaya basin, which iü forty miles wide, full of outlets, largo ai vers, lakes and Innumerable smaller streams, many of them larger than the Atchafalaya. from which they take their source. D > all th<> outlets prevent floods or protect the country from over flow* Every person that knows the country knows that they d<> not. Ikies the great outlet of the Atchafalaya, which embraces not only the mouth of the Red. but also miles of abandoned levees above the mouth of the Red, lower the flood height above the Red? Not one particle. On the con trary every writer and the peo ple all claim the floods are high er than ever known before the Civil war. some of them as much as five feet, and they have to build their levees higher than be fore In the face of these facts. ask what good do these outlets do? Every person knows they prevent reclamation of millions of acres of the richest land iu the world and their development. I claim il is impossible to evefc reclaim these lands if the Mississippi is allowed to pour its floods over them. There is a reason for this. It is that the Mississippi carries mori mud and deposits with its waters than any other river in the world. that it takes a strong current to keep his deposit in motion, and the lea»t check to the current, by outlets or other means, causes it to make deposits into its bottom, filling up its channel and causing its flood height to be greater than before. This is the case at the mouth of the R«d. by the sounding of the she WCU' to Natchez last Slimmer. when it was found to have filled channel OT bed. from 25 to . ,}0 feet from hank tO l>HUK. , . p n ]f Js the Saille 111 the Atfllftia i k««:« ,..1,«-. flrsind rivpr IBJÄ DÄSIIJ, ^ UlraDU C battleship Mksissippi. when which when I first knew it was mighty river from 40 to 5(1 feet deep. now. from numerous outlets, has hardly enough water to float a light draft steamboat ; and I can show numerous cases where ba yous and lakes have filled up en tirely. In the face of all these facts, why is it that the intelli gent business men of New Or leans. the coast and up-country towns are opposing one of the best measure* reeomniendk'd for the reclamation of our rich, fer tile overflowed lands and do noth ing fo r their reclamation and de velopment. instead of by exposi lions and foreign commerce. It was a knowledge of these fact« that induced Major Eadea to confine the water by means of jetties to a narrow channel to Yffibl Will Build You Up and Make You Strong Old people, tired, weak, run down people, delicate children, frail mothers, and those recovering from severe illness, this is a fact. Thousands of genuine tes timonials from reliable peo f)le prove this claim, and to urther support the fact und prove our faith in what we say, we unhesitatingly de clare that any one who will try a bottle of VINOL will have their money returned without question if they are not satisfied that it did them good, JOHN R. TAYLOR, Ddruggists New Iberia. La. deepen the channel of South Pass from 1 to 15 to S feet or over, and which the engineers are now do ing at Southwest Pass, to make a 35-foot channel, to give thü eitv deep-water channel to the gulf. CAPT. E. T. KING. In N. O, Item. Saved His Mother's Life. "Four doctors had given me up." writes Mrs. Laura Gaines, of Avoca, La., 'and my children and all niv friends were looking for me to die. when my son insisted that I use Electric Bitten. 1 did ko , and they have done me a worl<l of good. I will always praise them." Electric Bitters is a priceless blessing to wwiHöH troubled with fainting and dizzy »pells, backache, headache, weak ness. debility, constipation or kid ney disorders. Use them and gain new health, strength and vig or. They're guaranteed V» sat isfy or monoy refunded. Only 50c at all druggists. Every man who takes an ex ecutive office under tin.' people swaears to faithfully execute the laws whigh^^lUe within his juris diction.'M: he doe,s not do it in every case Ity^t e^mes y to Jij.s, knowledge he purjures nimself. lit; may not like certain laws. They may to him seem -burden some to ihe people, bu't that is none of his business. It is his duty to fulfill his sworn promises and if the lawn are odious to the people let the people repeal them —Lonsrview Times Clarion. Never Out Of Work. The busiest little things made are Dr. King's New ar0 inviu „ thus has been es tablished this con fidence between Mrs. Pinkham and the women ever Life ' Pills. Every pill is a sugar-coat ed globule of health, that changes weakness into strength, languor into energy, brain-fag iutft mental power; curing Constipation. Head ache, Chills, Dyspepsia, Malaria. Only 25c at al l druggists . The only honest way to stop a newspaper is to s:tep into the of fice and pay up all arrearages, get a receipt and have your name off the list. To fire your paper back at the publisher marked "re fused" when you o)fe six months or a year, and never go near the office is not only disreputable, but superlatively dishonest as well.— La. Democrat. FREE ADVICE TO WOMEN Women Buffering from any form of d to promptly coro j municate with Mrs. 1'inkham at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, »ead and answered by women. A wo-, man can freely talk i of her private ill ness to a woman; from, it is more than possible that she has gained the very knowledge needed In youv case. She asks nothin* in re turn except your good will, and her adrics has helped thousands. Surely *ny woman, rich or poor should be glad to take advantage of this gener ous offer of assistance. Address Mrs. Pinkham, care of Lydia E. Ilnkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Zlasi. Erery woman onght to hava Lydia E. Pinkham*» 80-p*ge Text Book. It is not » &ook for general distribution, as It is too expensive. It ia frea and only obtainable by mall* Write fer it today. America which , never bee^ broken, Never has she pub-1 lished a testimonial or used a lett?r I without the written consent of the writer, and never has the Company allowed these confidential letters to get out of their possession, as the hundreds <f thousands of them in their iiles w ill attest. Out of the vast volume of experience which Mrs. Pinkham has to draw AUTO INDUSTRY 'ill s- I Lafayette, La.. Apr. Ent' rprise. New I luv ia. I The anwiMineeni.nt throuirh the New Orleans press this week ot the successful organization of the New Orleans Automobil,. M ,nu I factory as a btaneh of the Atlanta .Motor Car Company, and of th'' unqualified endorsement of that project, after a caretul slwh of li s plans and purposes, by the ! New Orleans Progressive I'nion. is I especially gratifying to commet - j cial and financial interests in j Lafayette, for the reason that a number of local people are inv tors in the pa,rent company in At lan a. William P. Mills, who is Secretary of the Atlanta Com pany, and whose ability as a me chanical engineer and gas engine [expert is one of the fundamental assets of the company, is a La fayette boy who after completing a course at the Industrial Insti tute. entend the college of t •<• h - nologv of Tulane Pniversity, and afterwards itooty employment in a factory and machine shop i• i Milwaukee, Wis , for the purpose of perfecting himself in his chos n work us a mechanical engineer. He-has made good in the manu facture of automobiles in Atlanta, and will now give his talents to the New Orl ans branch, in which ■ he will mike principally motor trucks and commercial vehicles of all kinds, The financial support given to the movement by Lafay ette people has come chiefly through the efforts of Dr. N. I'. Moss, President of the First Na tional Bank. Other Lafayette parties who have invested in th company are F. Demanade. pres. and gen. mgr., Wholesale Grocer Co.. -f. C. Xiekerson, real estate; W. S. Toirian, capitalist ; O. C. Mouton, lawyer; Joseph Billeaud. planter; J. II. Bernard, merchant and planter; T. M. Biossut. gen mgr. and vie - pre«, Peoples Cot ton Oil Co, i A. H. Denbo. Lafay etto Sugar Refinery ami of Denbo & .Nicholson, wholesale hardware; M. Billeaud. president of Hank 'd 1 Broussard and of Billeaud Sugar Refinery, and Others. Among tb New Orleans capitalists and busi ness men that have taken hold of the movement, to that city are President Joseph M annuls of the Bank of St. Bernard; A. P. Per rin of the Crowlev-Perrin Co.; L. L. Villere. cashier Bank of St. Bernard ; A. J. Clave rie of A. J. Claverie & Co.. president of the Live Stock Exchange; George II. .Conrad, general contractor; Oliver S. Livaudais, lawyer and others. -, _ roads encourage the greatest e*-j change of products indcommodi lies between one section awl another. Good rwids are of great value to railroads as feed ers.—Red River Democra t. Midnight In The Ozarks and yet sleepless Hiram Scranton of Clay City, 111., coughed and coughed. Ile was in the moun es- neve it savea '".v mc. ire j" for it. made a new man of me, s0 that I can now do good work a}fa j n " J\>r all lung diseases, CO ughs, colds, la grippe, asthma, Constipation brings many ail ments in its train and is the prim ary cause of much sickness. Keep your bowels regular madam, and you will escape mnv of the ail ments to which women are sub ject. Constipation is a very sim ple thing, but like many simple things, it may lead to serious con sequences. Nature often needs a ' little assistance and when Cham berlain's Tablets are given a't th< by all dealers. GOOD ROADS. i,r . ... , brat indication, much distress an be aVolded - bul,i a Forty years ago there was some excuse for bad roads, for our country was poor. Now it is on a boom, there is no excuse. A good road is always to be desired and is a source of comfort and convenience to every traveler. Good roads attract population, as well as good schools and good churches. Good roads improve the value of properly, so that it is said a farm lying five mib-s from market connected by a bad road is of less value than an equal farm connected by a good road. A larger load can be drawn by one horse over a good road than bv two over a bad one. Good of tains on the advice of five doc j t0 who sa j,j j, e } 1H d consump . , f., niu i „„ v 1( .i n the on, but tound no help in tnt wo-, climate, and started home. IKar i j»fr of Dr. King's New Discov çrv j, e foe^an to us (; it. "I be ^ save d my life." he writes AUTOMOBILE LAW SUIT. Abbeville, Mar. 29.—Taylor & she Oremillion attorneys of Crowley, , , it • • fh(1 District re- ha^e filed suit in the Uwtrn r her Court on lr"hall of Komj rJrous sar ,j 0 f this parish who is seek be j t0 POVer damages in the - tlAnnft ,• (K T^nUiam »um of flO.iKK) ot the Louisiana Intensified harming & Drainage (Company of Gueydan for the death of his minor son, who was accidentally struck and killed by for au automobile, alleged to belong too . to said corporation, while running ! oo the streets of said town late fer 'one afternoon in February of [the present year. , , . . croup, whooping cough, hay fever, hemorrhages, hoarseness or quin I RV j ts t j, e known remedy. the p'. 5() , M Trial 5ott j e 1 r " ç i... „n to ,1 tee. Guaranteed by al drug the gists in «301 Baking Powder Absolutely Pure The Only Baking Powder Made from Royal Grape Cream ol Tartar. Safeguards the food against alum* Chemists* tests have shown that a part ol the alum from biaeult made with an alum bakinu powder passes Into the stomach, and that digestion Is retarded thereby. Road tho labol and mako a uro that your baking powder ta not mado front alum. NO ATTEMPT MADE TO LYNCH NEGRO AT BREAUX BRIDGE. St. Martinsville. La., April 11. Much excitement still prevails at lir-aux Bridge and its vicinity Sunday evening's tragedy in which Arista Guilbcau was killed, Drozan Du pi us. Sr.. mortally and 1>)| izan Dupius, Jr., Seriously wounded by Raoul Jeon Baptiste, a 20-year-old negro. Many threats were made against the slayer, but no mt tempt was made to lynch him. «s he was •biMught here immediaitiely and with his brother, lodged in the parish jail. This morning it was said there was no hope for the senior Mr. Dupius rto recover, and bis death is only a matter of a few hours. Other Negroes Mlay Have Been Ii| It. It is believed from the investi gations thalt were made at the home of Baptiste, that other ne groes than the accused had a part in it lie murderous attack on the thr^e white men. The facts of the affair as learned by a States rep resentative today differ material ly from the published accounts. Baptiste was charged with steal ing chickens at Grand Point, where Guilbcau and the Dupius family live. It win determined rather it ban have him arrested to teach him a lesson by thrashing him. Sunday evening Mir. Guilbcau and the Dupius, father and son, went to the negro's place. They whipped him and 'then started fop t h air homes, separating, however. Mir. Guilbcau went in one direc tion and the Dupius in another. As Guilbcau, who was unarm ed. was passing the Baptiste house on horseback shots were fired. Guilbcau fell from his horse dead. Guns and Rifles Found in House. The Dupuis' heard the report of the gun and hurried back to the assistance of their companion. As they nî*ared the house they were met with shuts fired in rapid succession. Both were hit and the elder Dupius' horse was kill ed. Mr Dupuis. Sr., was shot in th,. head and i" other parts of the body, an,l his son in the elbow and leg Afiter the shooting Baptiste and his brother left the cabin. Th v made their way to Breaux Bridge and surrendered to Deputies Kid tier and C hampagne. Six guns an,| rifles wer - found in the cabin and the physicians f (ho ( ; tlil ,,„ MU hîu1 kj wj a ^ ^U.— States, ting his paper out lat-, saying it was caused by physical dcmorali zation due to "sitting too close to the hoard-house window." The "cussed compositor" set the stuff, leaving out "the letter "n" in the window. The editor had to leave, but his trunk is still at the boarding house. The excuses of ihe editor just will not be gulped down, es pec i ally by those who at not "next' I to the routine of newspaper com j posing rooms, and he is decide"' Washington. Ind. April 3.—An editor here is convinced the lot of it h 'e editor is not all a ImmI of ros He wrotp an excuse for get j( . . . ,, m The Tenderfoot Farmer It wai one of thcae experimental larmer», who put <rern spectacle* on hia cow and led her ahavinfti. Ilia theory wis that it d'dn't matter what the cow ate »o lon< a* she waa (ed. The question* of digestion and nouria/unent had not filtered into his calculation*. It'a only a "tenderfoot" farmer that would try such, an experiment with a cow. But many a farm«-r feeds him• M*lf regardless of ditfeation and nutrition. He might almost as well eat *hav inga for all the good he geta out of bi* food. The re*ult is that the stomach grow« "weak" the action of the organs of digestion and nutrition are impaired .«xl the Buffers the miaeriea of dyspepsia and the agonies of nervouaueaa. To atrmattken th* stomach, restore the activity ot the or gaaa of dictation and aatrltloa and brace ap the nervem, ass Dr. Plerce"a Golden Medical Dlacoverr. It la aa aa falling remedy, aad haa the confidence of phylclaaa aa mail aa tha pralaa of thoaaaada healed by Ita uae. In the strictest sense "Golden Medical Discovery" is a temperance medi liae. It contains neither intoxicants nor narcotics, and is as free from alcohol aa from opium , cocaine end other dangerous drugs. All ingredients printed oo ita outside wrapper. Doa 't let a dealer delude you lor hi* own profit. There is no medicine lor i, lirer and blood "juat M good" aa "Golden Medical Discovery." STATE PRESS COMMENTS. So far as women's right to vote is concerned there should be no question whatever« The mere fact that they are females should cut no figure these days. If they have the capacity to take care of fheir own business they should have the right to say how that business should be regulated ac cording to law. This cannot bn accomplished except by women be ing given opportunity to say through the ballot, what they wish done. While men who spend intue or less* time in jail for ment al aberrance «itV permitted 'to vote, u by should not women who own property and pay taxes?—• St. Marv Banner. Kicked By A Mad Horss. Samuel Birch, of Meetovvn, Mis., had a most narrow escape from losing his leg, as no doctor could heal the frightful sore that de veloped, but at. last. Buckleo 's Arnica Salve cured it completely. Its tilt; greatest, healer of ulcers, burns, boils, eczema, scalds, cuts, corns, cold-sores, bruises and piles on earth. Try it. 25c at all druggists. Don't folget that, your neigh bor, though he differs from you politically, may be just as honest in Iiis convictions as you; that this is a free country where free dom of opinion is one of the big gest of the broad foundation stones of >ur government, and there would be an cn ( | of that form of government without it. B,. tolerant, therefore, or rather not tolerant, but. rational,patriotic, and good natur d. Stand by your convictions 'and let. your neighbor stand by his if so dis posed. Keep cool. Argue poll ties if you will, but do it calmly and reasonably, and bear this fact always in mind, that just, as you have made up your mind unal terably as to the way in which you will vote, ninety-rtine hun dredths of the voting population has done the same thing.—Louisi ana Democrat. When a medicine must he given to y.iung children it should be pleasant to take. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is made from loaf sugar, and the roots used in its [•reparation give it « flavor similar to maple syrup, making it pleas ant to take. It has no superior for colds, croup and whooping cough. For sale by all dealers. T. Percy Ogden of Crowley who was with the administration ring left them and made a speech at, the Good Government meeting and roasted Sanders and his adminis tration, but Sanders let out the reasons why Mr. Ogtft n is not pleased with Iiis administration. Ogden was after a fat job which lie wanted Sanders to give him, he was not very particular about one special job, but he wanted one of several goo,] fat jobs, which be • lid n«>t : gef. WVH, wo believe when a politician can not a job from his faction, it is time for him to quit, and Ogden did the right thing. -St. Martin Messen ger.