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For District Attorney. To the IDemocrati oiers f f the Nine teenth Judicial District: '1 beg to hloteby announce my candida cy for the office of llistrlc Attorney at t4e appioacliing primary election. bMy candidacy for this important office Is basetl upon the belief which is enter- P tluned as to my tiluess for the position of ai~d abiliity to give ellicient public ser dl vice. t4 In event of my election it will be my policy to strictly enforce the law, im partially and vigorously. If elected 1 will serve the Police Ju- L ries of the Parishes comprising this dis- p trict, as legal adviser, without compen- s sation, as I countrue this to be the in tention of the law which fixes the duties and compensatiou of this office. If the above brief outline of the con t duct of the ollice of I)lstrict Attorney l meets with youu approval. I shall ap prctlatevour vote and support. ltespeectfully. 1 GOlRDAN A. SANDOZ. t Wanted to Exchange Texas d Land for Louisiana Land. , 12SU ACRES. J Situated in Yoakum County, three miles from County seat of Plains, Texas. Santa Fe R. i. now building very short o distance from this land. Every acr.e tillable, thlie, high, farm land. Addi- b tional Information on request. a Laizaire Bleuveuu. $- gr i. R. OLIVI ER DENTIST S OFkFI 'I: C ABOVE LABBE'B DLRU BTORE. ST. MARTINVILLE, LA. FOR SALE --One lot 200 front by 8 t arpents deep, store, residence, good fence t nlu town. on Main street t Laizaire Blenvenu. i- INN La, ondolet id Perdido street f NEW ORLEANS. L JUSTIN F. DENt.CHAUD. Proprietor. C VCITOIt ROBIN, Manager EUROPEAN PLAI, Rals $1,00 and up. ' Latest Improvements. OENTRALLY LOOATED Site formerly occupied by Ueneobaud Hote' OVER 65 YEARS' EXPERIENCE 1 TRAoE MARKS Dssions CoPYRloItS AC. I Anvone sending a sketch and descriptlin may quickly ascertain our optnon free whether an i inventlnn Is pr.hahly patent lhl. Commlutnla tionstlrtcliyennfldetltia. HAnDo0ao on Patents sent free. )ldHet agency for securing patenta. Patents takennthrough un A Co. receive spectel otkce, without charse, intb the Sdentiflc }ime k ia. A handsomely lIlnetrated weekly. I.preat er.. ulation of any aclentitlUe journal. Terms, 5a a nan• four months L old byalI newadealers. MUdNN o. ,b New Yrk 8EWINO , MACHINE OF QuALITnY. NOT UNDER ANY O OTHER NAME. WARRANTED FOR ALL TIML If you purchase the NEW HOME you will have a life asset at the price you pay,and will not have an endles chain of repalrs If you wtnt ascwing machine, write r our latest catalogue before you purchase. o The Newlien Sewing Machiine Co., Oraip, lar d It in need of OATS and CORN * get it from Laizaire Bienveon, he is supplying the public in feed. To Control The-Spread of at State Dtseases.: t"" i t Modern Sogar Planter. In the endeavor to bring about CI a more perfect system of sanitary procedure in connection, with the s proper disposal of carcasses, many c of whicb in the past have escaped 5 destruction and spread disease through the medium of infected C tissues. Dr. E. Pegram Flower, e Secretary, the Louisiana State Livestock Sanitary Board, an nounces the promulgation of a State regulation bearing thereon, which reads: P In order to prevent and control the spread of anthrax or charbon, hog-cholera, or other contagious, K infectious, or communicable dis eases of animals in the State, through possible error in diagno- b sis and the careless and sanitary disposal of diseased carcasses, it shall be the duty of the Police Jury of each parish to appoint one or more persons in each Justice of the Peace Ward as livestock sanitary officers, whose duty shall be to attend to the immediate and sanitary disposal of the carcasses of all animals dying in his or their respective wards in the manner I prescribed by the fiecretary and Executive Officer of the Louisiana State Livestock Sanitary Board, to-wit: The carcasses of all animals shall be immediately disposed of by burning or by burial in one or other of the following ways: Burning. - A suitable trench shall be dug about two feet deep by two or three feet wide, and of sufficient length to accommodate g the number of carcasses to be burned at one time. Across the top of the trench should be placed a sufficient number of green poles, or iron bars, if available, to act as a griddle on which to place the carcass. 'Ihe trench should be filled with kindling wood of some kind, and after the carcase is pla ced on the poles, or bars, it should be heaped up with heavier wood, and the whole saturated with coal oil and set fire to. In some sections of the State, wood may be scarce, while coal oil may be plentiful. In this case, a sufficient number of old gunny sacks, or other easily inflammable material that will absorb the oil and act as a wick, should be pla ced in the bottom of the trench and kept saturated with the oil. Or, the oil from a barrel placed at a safe distance, may be conducted into the trench through a pipe, anil the flow so regulated as to keep the absorbent material con stantly saturated with it. In any case, the burning shall be contin ued until the whole of the carcasse is consumed in order to destroy - every particle of infection. The trench method of cremating, or burning, is much less expensive than by burning the carcass upon the surface of the ground, as by the former a draft is created, and with fire above and below, con sumptiou is much quicker and with much less expense of time and material. Burial.--A hole, or pit, shall be dug of not less than six feet deep, I so that there shall be a space of 1 not lees than four feet from the upper surface of the body of the carcass to the surface of the ground Where there is suspicion, or the fact is known, than an animal has died of a contagious, infectious, of communicable disease, such as charbon, or anthrax, hog-cholers, I etc., four to six inches of lime shall be placed over the bottom of the - hole, or pit, the surface of the car oas covered with lime to the same I depth, and the hole filled in with f earth. I A hole or pit for this purpose f shall not be dug in the vicinity ofa any water course, or well, in order 1 that contamination of such water supply, by infection from the car. t case, may be prevented. In communities where public animal crematories are available, carcasses may be disposed of in such crematories. Where possible, and practicable, carcasses shall be disposed of eith. er by burning or burial, where they lie, or are found. When carecasees have to be re a moved for proper sanitary dispo sal, they shall be conveyed to the place of final disposition, in, or on, some suitable vehicle, as a wa gon, cart, sled, etc., and not drag ' ged along the road, highway, or ' tield, as infection may very easily be spread in this way. ' In case of the removal of char bonous carcasses, especially, the ! natural body - opening shall be plugged up, or stopped, with lint cotton or tow saturated with an effective germicidal agent, such as - e crude carbolic acid, etc., to pre vent and disinfect any discharges that would otherwise issue from such openings and leave fresh cen 1ters of infections. And, the ground on which such carcasses shall have ý laid, previous to removal, shall be burned over or carefully and tho roughly sprinkled with a strong solution of crude carbolic acid, s the various coal tar dips, or other effective germ destroying agent, in order eradicate whatever infection r may have been left on said ground. All vehicles used in the remo val of carcasses, and particularly of infected carcases, shall be tho roughly disinfected with some ef fective germ-killing agent, such as those already mentioned, imme diately after being used. When the vehicles are of little or no monetary value, it is safest to burn them up after using. While careful sanitary burial in the ground, as above given, may be quite effective, the process of Id burning, as described, is safer; is - the true hygienic method at dis l posing of carcasses of all kinds; and is the one urgently recom mended in all cases when possible ii by the Louisiana state Livestock Sanitary Board. a The police juries are hereby au thorized and empowered to pre- c scribe such penalties as they may deem necessary for the punish- ir h met eof the sauitary officers ap- w i. pointed by them who fail to per form, or neglect, their duties. ,d Any owner, or owners of such , carcasses who shall in any way in- h tr terfere with the sanitary orders of the police jury or its livestock sanitary officer, or officers, shall be guilty of misdemeanor as provided d by Act 274 of the 8sseiou of 1908. For soreness of the mulcles, whether I Induced by violent exercise i injury, there is uothing better thau Chamber- i lalu's Liniment. This liniment also re lieves rheumatle pains. For sale by all t d druggists. I8 Acres Fine Land Of good cane laud, situated about 8 acres south of the Levert Plantation., Parish of St. Martin, La., for sale with L ) all the improvenmeite, one dwelling p, house 16 32, Kitcheu 9-12, dinning loom E f '-12., corn crib, stable, blacksmith shop, o 2 plows. I double plow, harror desk cul tivator, I two horse ecart, feed cutter, all C in good order. Price $1100. In G. LIND, Box 115 St. Martinville. La. Cs ------- -- IN SMen of pure motives anud highb Sideals are needed to reform our A " laws. Politicians are not capable 1 of this task.-Ex. I r. Save every orop that will make e feed for the animals. No one need ol h fear that he will have too much b feed. A surplus may be sold at a to s fair price, but if bought, feed is " f always high. Mave the feed crops. t J. J. BURDItwýBO;, ....Manufacturers of.... RED CYPRESS LUMBER, SHINGLES, CISTERNS, SYRUP BARRELS & BRICKS, r And carry a large stock of Long Leaf Yellow Pine Lumber Flooring, Sidlng and DementUon OUR PRICES VERY LOW. S ~" CALL AND SEE US AND SAVE SORE lONEY. ii You Read the Other Fel i- low's Ad d, You are reading this ie one. That should con vince you that advertis g ing in these colums is a I profitable proposition; ýr that it will bring business n to your store. The fact 1. that the other fellow ad vertises is probably the S) reason he is getting more business than is falling to you. Would it not be - well to give the other fel Slow a chance 0 To Read Your Ad In These Columns. il C 'umr F S`TT NSALE I I 6th. Another lot of ground in the townof 8t. SUCCESSION SALE. Estate of Mrs. Emma Voorhies deceased wife of B Louis C. Duchamp, l Probate No. 5i72 a, 1Ith Judicial District Court, tate of Louisiana, it Parish of St. Martin. By virtue of a commission to me issuaned from it the Honorable the Nineteenth Judicial District 1c Court in and for the Pariah of it. Martin, State ti of Louisiana, I, the undersigned. Emma Du-. champ, in my capacity of admintstratix of the b estate of Mrs. Emma Voorhies and of the com- w munity of gains and acquete that heretofore ex- tl isted between the said Mrs. Emma `Voorhies, u and her serviving husband , ouis C. Duchamp, ai will sell or cause to be sold by a competent olli cer. at Public Auctiont, to the last and highest i bidders, at the last residence of the deceaaed c Emma V,.orhies. at Bt. Martinville, Sit. Martin p 'arisht. Htate of Louisiana, between legal sale hours. on Saturday, August 17th, 1912, the following described property belonging to the1t estate and community of gains and acquets, t,.wiL: let. Hloueehold furniture such as beds, war droles, chairs Ac. one piano, two automobiles. one gas beat, pri.misory notes secured and un scured, store accounts, books and Iook cases ci anld other movables too numerous to mentiou; 2nd. That certain town lot with all the im I rovements lhereon erected and thereto belong ing, situated in the town of I. Martinville, Sit. Marlin Parinh, State of Louisiana, and bounn ted North b) lot of Mrs. Alfred Fuselier and ti that of LDJchamp llardware ('ompany; outh by lot of W. IH. ('ozine; East by lot below describ- hI ed. and West by Lft. Martin street, (being item I No. neof the public inventory made of the r property ,of the said Estate and community of a gains and acquets, on July 1, 19112. and on tile.) o 3rd. That certain town lot situated in the u said town of St. Martinville, St. Martin Parish, Louisiana. bounded North by lot of Demurger; iouth by Jefferson Street; West by lot above de scribed and by that of Mrs. Alfred Fueslier, and East by Bayou Teche ktreet; being item No. Two of said public Inventory) there b ing 1-8 of a portion of said lot belonging to Mrs. Eliza Du champ of Paris, France. 4th. The undivided one third of that tract of land situated in the first ward of the Parish of a St. Martin, State of Louisiana, west side of Ba-. i you Teche, containing one hundred and fifty rI superficial arpents, more or less, bounded North by lands of J. T. Lytal and others, form erly of A. Maraist; East by Public Roud; Booth by Terrase Roaed; and West by land of Laurent d Alexandre or assigns; the remaining two thirds b belonging to T. J. Labbe and Judge James Si- ft mon. Being item hNo Three of the said public Inventory. 5th. A town lot situated in the said town of a St. Martinville, Sit. Martin Parish, Louisiana, a tin the Olivier addition) and containing 4-Itl d of an arpent in superficial area, bounded north by lot No. K of plat of survey of the said Oli. vier addition, plat annexed to sale Mrs. Olivier - to E. Prat, Stooth by lot of samid plat; East by lot D1 of said plat and West by College street. b This lot being No. 3I of the said plat. Being tern No. Four of aforesaid public Inventory. a 11th. Another lot of ground in the town of 8t. Louisiana, being No.- of square No- of the Duchamp partition. Bounded North by lot of Blanchard or of assigns; East by lot of V. lio bert. West by Lasealle street and South by Ber ard street. Being item No. Five of said publio inventory. 7th. Another lot with all the boildings and improvements thereon erected and thereto be longing, situated in the said town of St. Mar. tinville, St. Martin, State of Louisiana, and measuring sixty three (at) feet on Main street by a depth of - feet; together with a right of way or passage eight (8) feet wide, connecting - tie rear of this lot with Jefferson Street South, and running between the lots of C. Gitekunst and Jules Francois. Bounded North by lot of P. Simon; South by that of the Commercial Bank; East by Maiu Street and West by lot of C. tiutekunst. (Being item No. kix of said public invenfory.) ittit small farm with improvements there on e l and thereto belonging, situated in the arish of Mt. Martin (third ward) west of Bat U 'Teche (State of Louisiana) and contain ing about forty-tive (5ii) arpents in superticial area. Bounded North by lands of J. B. Levert and of othere;kouth by those of Hebert; East by those of it. Olivierand West by those of Olivier; there is a road belonging to this tract of land connecting it to the 40 arpent public road west. Being iten No. Seven of the said public inven tory. 11th. Also lote 3, 4. 5, and 6 of the Brouseard addition to the town of Breaux Bridge, St. Mar tin Parishl Louiiana, (puschased at tax sale) and being item No. Eight of said public inven tory. All the movables and a sutlicient quantity ,of the said immovable. are to be sold for the pur. lue of Imaing the debts of the said Estate and ceoma unity of gains and acquete; all to be done as provided for by law and conformably to the order of the atoreesad Court granted in this matter July 11th, 1112. Terms and conditions: CASH. EMMA DUCHAMP, AdministratriL What Makes a Woman? One hundred and twenty pounds, more or lese, of bone and muscle don't make a woman. Its a good foundation. l'ut into it health and strength and she may rule a klugdom. But that's just what Electric Bitters give her. Thousands bless them for overcoming fainting and dizzy spells and for dispelling weakness, backache and tired. listless, worn-out feeling. "Electric Bitters have done me a world of good." writes Eliza Pool, l)e pew, Okla., "and I thank you, with all my heart, for making such a good me dicine." Only 50. Guaranteed by all all druggists. For Sale 2 good Bicycles with brand new Puncture Proof Tires, at a bargain. Laizaire Bienvenu.