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? CJ THe Thibodaux Sentinel. Official Journal of the Parish of L.afourche%iid Guardian of the Interest of the Town. VOL. XIV THIBODAUX, LOUISIANA, SATURDAY, MARCH 18, 19X1. NO. 19. 'Nq by the TRUST Süd Pi J.tiZ ?*kin ?^GO Your» for uni formity. Yours for great est leavening power. Your* for never failing results. Your* for purity. Your* for economy. Yours for every thing that goes to make up a strictly high grade, ever dependable baking powder. That is Calumet. Try it once and note the im provement in your bak ing. See how much more economical over the high priced trust brands, how much better than the cheap god big-can kinds. Calnmet is highest in quality —moderate in cost. lUcsived Highest Award— World's Pure Food Exposition. imtlKING PEOPLE DIFFERENTLY. IÎSI <» 'tit '"m'» y Serrant— Heavens I have knocked I tt» big flower pot off the window Meäje, and it struck a man on the I kotd. Mistress—What! My beautiful ma [»tea? Sewn brothers and seven sister» IMag In Foulsham, England, and the [•Owent parishes are receiving old s pensions. The oldest of the seven [fc tighty and the youngest seventy Their united ages total 530 JJttn. Their father was Philip Lam jtat, a carrier between Foulsham and fSorwlch, who had a family of 16, all j lam la Föulsham and of whom 11 are few alite. EDITOR BROWNE W The Rockford Morning Star. seven years ago I ceased waking coffee to give your Postum a W*L snffered acutely from various jasa of Indigestion and my stomach w ' lecome 60 disordered as to repel •®ost every sort of substantial food. feneral health was bad. At close «terrala I would suffer severe attacks confined me In bed for a week J;*®®* 8 - Soon after changing from to Postum the indigestion and In a short time ceased ♦rarely. { have continued the daily '° Dr exce " e "t Food Drink and rj®* To® most cordially that I am ■ ^ to you for the relief it has jjj you a continued success, 1 • Yours very truly, J. Stanley Browne, L«. " . Managing Editor." Kmrse > when a man's health Can Etan< i coffee without jjj.. bim drink it, but most ... ' organized brain-workers sim w «nnot. natura ' to c °ff ee her stomach and other organs ^I*ence to the complex nervous throwing it out of balance and tha borders various parts jujjj 6 Ke?p up this daily pois and serious disease generally 1^4« th* 168 w ^ en ninn or woman jy «.r 18 * coffe e is a smooth but dead I'*all h T ' health is of any value It jl e ' 8 tut one road—quit. " easy to find out if coffee be the % 6 troub,es . * or if left off 10 m a Pbstum be used in its place aiJ d diseased conditions ,|, *era 0 i)1e' SaPPear ' the prooï is un ' ^àr^r» 9 DOt goo< * " made by short I îtt, L. U must be boiled full 15 mln pdiiB « D er foiling begins, when the Vor an d the food elements are '"»Ölt out Of the is fciatabl ^t of the grains and the bev ready to fulfill Its mission of HHj "'"I comfort and renewing the ^ coffee. Derve centers broken down Q^Üf 8 a Reason." >en„Z» ttle book . "The Road to " In Pkgs. 2? Ä,m", b . OT * ''""f A new g I.- ," m tln »* to time. Thfr ****»!. "• *">«» and full of himu NEWS ÂS IT HAPPENS "IONAL. STATE, FOREIGN. INTEREST TO READERS. OF THE WHOLE WEEK'S OOiNGS •hert Mention of Interesting Happerv ■<•»8« From Day to Oav Through out the Woild. WASHINGTON. Plans for the reform of the currency laws will be prosecuted with a great deal of vigor by the members of the lational monetary commission during '.he summer and fall. A campaign of education will be started within a few weeks in the hope of creating sen timent in favor of a bill which probab ly will be introduced in both branches of congress when the regular session is convened in December next. The old guard of the senate is in great embarrassment over the persist ence of the head of the powder trust, Senator du Pont, that he be made chairman of the committee on military affairs. The question, aside from any fine point of propriety, appeals to the senate leaders as one of grave political expediency in that the public might send up a cry of indignation at the head of the powder trust fixing appro priations for the purchase of powder for the army. This view has not yet appealed to Senator du Pont, who still insists that he should succeed Senator Warren, who goes to appropriations. By affixing his signature to the con tact for the manufacture and print ing of stamped envelopes and stamped newspaper wrappers, Postmaster Gen eral Hitchcock put an end, for at least four years, from Juij 1 next, to a con test that has waged intermittently for more than a quarter of a century. Speaker-elect Champ Clark is au t hority tor the statement that one of the first acts-of the sixty-second con gress, as jar as the house is concern ed, will be to pass a joint resolution ap proving the Arizona constitution, the vote which led Senator Bailey to ten der the resignation which he subse quently withdrew. Mr. Clark believes that the resolution sent to the senate with the overwhelming approval of the house democrats will not fail to re ceive the same strong democratic sup port that it received on the closing day of the senate's exciting session. JTJjie xe.signation of Richard A. IJallin . „ . ger of Seaîtle a'fe eedffetary o^ the «P* terior Tuesday was accepted by Presi dent Tait and Walter L. Fisher of Chicago was appointed as his succes sor. I DOMESTIC. In a nip-and-tuck game San Antonie won from Austin Sunday in the ninth inning by a score of 7 to 6. A wallop by 1 hird Baseman Thrailkill in tne ninth brought the winning run across the pan. Word was received at the Swiss le gation in Washington Sunaay or the death of Dr. E. Brenner, a member oi the Swiss federal council. He was elected to the council in 1897 and was president of the contederation in ISHtl and 1908. He was 55 years old. According to a statement given out by the Oliver Mining company, of Du luth, Minn., Sunday five bodies had been taken from the Virginia mine, eight known dead were still in the mine, one was accounted for and foui were injured. Winfield Jewell, a private of the Fourteenth coast artillery from Fort Moultrie. S. C., lying in the hospital, Private Alfred Bookhaulder of the One Hundred and Twenty-seventh in the county jail on a charge of assault to murder; Police Officer Patrick Regan at home suffering from several bad cuts on the back and shoulders and one house partly burned and two wrecked, is the story in detail of a riot which took place Saturday night at Galveston. Great American financial interests have perfected their plans and are pre pared to issue an ultimatum to the Diaz government in Mexico looking to the retirement of President Diaz and the establishment of Senor Jose Y. Limantour, now minister or finance, at the head of the government. After seeing her 5-year-old daughter Estther, crushed to a pulp by being struck by an automobile, picking up the mass of mangled flesh and bones and running four squares to the City Hospital, Mrs. Mary Koffman of Cin cinnati, Ohio, went violently insane Sunday, when informed by the officers of the institution that the child was dead. A riot was narrowly averted by the timely arrival of the police di rectly following the accident. The senate Thursday adopted the house concurrent resolution providing for sine die adjournment of the lej-is lature at noon on March 11. The weather is fair and somewhat cooler now over the greater portion of Texas and the western cotton belt, but it is warm and generally cloudy in the East, with light rains in many lo calities. Moderate precipitation has also occurred over the middle and southern plateu. The stores of M. Kigg, J. B. Small & Sons, I. Freedman and J. M. Slaven were burned Friday at Rock Island, Texas. The two-story building owned by N. C. Rigg in which was the post office and telephone exchange was al so lost. Loss is estimated at $15,000. Five powder magazines of the Du pont Nemours Powder Compan taining 180 tons of finished bla< der and dynamite, exploded a: me plant of the company one mile north west of Pleasant Prairie, Wis, Friday. One man, E. S. Thompson, a foreman, is known to be dead; Miss Alice Finch of Elgin, 111., dropped dead of heart disease, caused by fright; 350 people were injured. Ernest H. Wands, Americau flnan cial advisor to the Nicaraguan govern ment, left Corinto, Nicaragua, Thurs day for the United States. Mr. Wands is coming to America on a mission, it is understood, to place Nicaragua on a firm financial basis. With this end in view he will consult with officials of the state department and American bankers for a loan to the Nicaraguan government ranging from $12,000,000 to $15,000,000. State Game Warden Emmett Smith says that he has appointed about nine ty-five wardens in various parts of the state. About 50 per cent of these are ^old-overs. In all cases where no ap uointhents have been made, he says ♦.he old wardens will continue to serve unrtl the new wardens are appointed and qualified, which in many cases will be the reappointment of the former wardens. The Caro hotel at Caro, Texas, own ed by the Saner-Whiteman Lumber Company, and occupied by A. G. Aut rey, was burned Saturday. Two dwell ing houses and the Baptist Church were also burned. Loss $6,000. The threatened breach between Geo. J. Gould and the Kuhn, Loeb & Co. Rockefeller interests over the elec tion of a new board of directors was obviated at conferences Saturday, at which assurances were given the bank ing interests that the agreement reach ed some time ago would be carried out to the letter. This outcome came af ter a day of uncertainty, during which the renewal of an open contest for control of the Missouri Pacific was in the balance. The report of the subcommittee of the committee on liquor traffic, which was appointed to make a full report on the daylight bill Tuesday filed their report. This subcommittee consists of Representatives Nichols of Hunt, Brownlee, Brown, Gaither, Lawson, McDowra and Johnston. The report is an answer to the governor's veto message. It adopts the opinion of As sistant Attorney General Mead, who heldr contrary to the governor, that the bill was valid. . A. E. Folsom, who has been ar Irfestetfin Oklahoma'City on the chatte of forging cashiers' checks upon Texas and Oklahoma banks, is apparently the man who attempted to pass a $12,000 draft, drawn by the American Nation al Bank of McAlester. Ok., upon the National Bank of Commerce of St. Louis. The $12,000 draft was deposit ed in the City National Bank, and the depositor at once attempted to draw against the uncollected deposit. If forecasts made at Atlanta, Ga. f Thursday.; come true, the next great movement of settlers will not be to ward the West or Northwest, which heretofore have been the Mecca of persons seeking new homes, but to the old South. This sentiment was ex pressed at the first session of the South Commercial Congress meeting. FOREt&N. After having cut the telegraph wires and torn up enough of the railroad to stop communication between Torreon and Durango, a band of 300 rebels was twice engaged in battle Sunday by a force of 100 federals. The first en gagement took place at El Coyote, an hacienda near Saucillo. A number of federals were killed before the rebels were forced to retreat, leaving 60 dead upon the field. It is reported that among these were six Americans. A body of 120 insurrectos was cut to pieces by State rurales at San Bar tolito, Pueblo, Saturday, according to reports. More than fifty were killed, eleven seriously wounded and twenty seven captured. Owing to the fact that the rurales have adopted the revo lutionists' tactics of ambushing their enemy, none were killed and only a In reply to current reports that Ger many had asked for American inter vention in Mexico, or that ft proposed to take independent measures to pro tect German interests and German subjects in that country Baron von Kiderlen Waechter, secretary of state for foreign affairs Saturday says that Germany had made no representations to Washington on the subject, and does not contemplate taking any steps in the matter. A moving picture machine in a small theater at Bolognie. in the southern part of Novgorod Province, Russia, ex ploded Monday and instantly flames shot up, sweeping rapidly to all parts the building There was a terrible panic among the spectators and ac cording to the reports received nearly hundred persons, many of them chil dren. were crushed or burned to death. Half a dozen others were injured. Ba ron Taube, chief of the gendarmie troops at St. Petersburg, and two of his children, are reported to be among the dead. Mutiny has broken out in the ranks of the Mexican rebels holding Mexica li, as a result of the Inactivity of the leaders. Lord Amphil raised a discussion of American and Canadian reciprocity in the house of lords in London Monday by strongly condemning what he term ed the inaction of the government, which, he declared, had forced Canada to abandon her national policy and of fer to the United States some of the advantages which she had so freely given to Great Britain. S Louisiana State News foj >pe9l9^5 of Ipterest Our Readers Government Expert Lectures. Mandeville.—The lecttire on dairying delivered by J. H. MCLAn of the dairy division. United £• tat<>3 ^Department of Agriculture, was well auftended, both by local dairyre«#%ttfti l^isitors from Lewisburg, Abita Springs, Slidell and Covington. He argued that the princi pal needs for dairies in the South were to supply the demand for milk and butter, and as a means of enrich ing and improving agricultural lands He spoke of the natural advantages; especially in this immediate vicinity in the way of climate, water supply and the ease with which feed can be produced. The advantages to the dai rymen consist of regular employment for laborers, a regular income and cash returns for the proprietors. He said that with proper care a herd should increase from 60 to 70 per cent per annum, and hogs and poultry could be raised on the skimmed milk, and the value of the fertilizer for improv ing the soil was of great importance For Special Rice Meeting, Crowley.—The Rice Association of America has taken steps to call a meet-^ ing of American riçe interests at Beau mont to be held at some time prior to the special session of congress, the object being to decide on the course to be pursued relative to the rice schedule in the new tariff bill. It is anticipated that the rice schedule will be scrutinized by the ways and means committee in the preparation of the new tariff measure, with a possibilty that it will be changed to the detri ment of the industry. The object of the consultation of interests is to de termine whether the industry shall be represented before the ways and means committee and to provide for such rep resentation if it is deemed advisable. Arranges for Agricultural Rally. Mansfield.—The first meeting of the newly organized Chftmöer of Com merce was held this week. Arrange ments for a general agricultural meet ing were made,- at wtrttA -peanut cul ture, hay-raising and the production of corn will be discussed by experts. The Kansas City Southern Railway will co operate in this matter, and the pro gram anticipates a large affair. The chamber plans for a system of sewer age and water works, and a heroic ef fort will be made to accomplish re sults. f Seek to Recover Land. New Orleans.—Dabney H. Maury of Peoria, 111.; Mrs. Sue Mason Maury of Philadelphia, and Mrs. Rose Maury of Austin, Tex., have filed suit in the United States circuit court against George H. Gause to recover laiid said 'o be worth $4,000 in-St. Tammany Pa rish, Louisiana. The petitioners say they are heirs of Nannie H. Maury and Dabney H. Maury, equal owners of a arge tract of land in St. Tammany. The petition asserts that Mr. Gause, now in possession of the land, has no clear title. Rice Institute Lands. Lake Charles.—The Incorporation of the American Lumber Company this week marks another step in the sale □f the Rice Institute lumber lands in northwest Calcasieu. The domicile of the company is Merryville, where the mill of the West Lumber Company is located and the capital stock $1,000, 000, practically equally divided be tween J. M. West and Sam Park. Was Good On Escapes. Crowley.—A white man was arrest ed at Lafayette and brought to Crow ley to serve out an unexpired term for a minor offense. Nearly a year ago he broke jail after having fooled the jailer by leaving a dummy in his cell and hiding until the jailer had made his rounds. He was recaptured and on the way to Crowley he sprang from a moving train with handcuffs on hij wrists and made good his escape. New Orleans Rice Market. New Orleans.—The market for rough rice was steady Saturday. Mills show ed some disposition to take on sup plies. Clean rice was steady, with a good inquiry for choice grades, but of ferings were scarce. Quotations; Rough—Honduras steady at $1.60 and $3.00; Japan steady at $1.60 and $2.90. Moving Large Rice Mill. Midland.—The Midland Rice Mill, one of the largest and best-equipped in southwest Louisiana, will be mov ed to Eunice. Preparations for moving began Saturday and the piant will be ready for operation at Eunice by July. 1911. Dog Bites Woman. Crowley.—Mrs. Prater, wife of a farmer living six miles northeast of Crowley, was bitten on the arm by a dog supposed to be suffering from ra bies Saturday, and was taken to the Pasteur Institute at New Orleans for treatment. The dog had been tied up for several days because he appeared to be suffering from some ailment. Horse's Kick Proved Fatal. Berwick— Octave Mayon, a lad of 4 years, was kicked by a horse Friday and died from his injuries Saturday. Site Accepted For Postoffice. Lafayette.—News has been received from the Treasury. Department at Washington that the government has finally decided to accept Dr. George C. Babcock j site for the proposed pca «<-J office building at Lafayette at a cost of $15,00,0. The lot is at the corner of Jefferson and Vermilion streets, and is probably the best possible site for the building, being centrally located and in the heart of the business section. Some $65,000 has been appropriated for the building, and now that the ques tion of a site has been settled meas ures f(*' the construction of the office will likely be taken without delay. The appropriations have been seeded largely through the efforts of Senator Foster and Congressman Broussard. Fear Carpenter is Suicide. Shreveport.—Clarence Tremain, age 35 years , a local carpenter, who threatened several weeTis ago, on ac count of ill-health, to commit suicide, but lost his nerve after going into the woods, and returned home a few days later, has disappeared again, and his friends and relatives are afraid that he carried his threats of self destruction into execution. In a note addressed, Feb. 26. to his friend, Ted dy Vaight, a local sanitary officer, who just returned from New Orleans, Tre main stated that he had bought a new revolver with which to kill himself, as there was no hope of regaining his health. Sewerage District Created. Opelousas.—The Board of Aldermen have adopted an ordinance creating a sewerage district which practically embraces all the property within the lines of the old town, but excluding the new additions and the outlying por tions of the city which are not thickly inhabitated. The ordinance author izes the mayor to call an election for March 28 for the purpose of electing a sewerage board of five commission ers, who, under thp law. will provide for holding an election to take the sense of the property taxpayers resid ing within the district and otherwise qualified as to whether or not a special tax will be levied to support the neces sary bond issue. School Gives Entertainment. Roseland. —The postponed school en tertainment for the benefit of the li brary given in Reichert's hall was en joyable, and each number was finely rendered, the hall being packed. The affair was given in honor of Washing on's birthday, and everything pertain ed to the customs of that time, the place being gayly decorated with flags and bunting of every description, pre enting a beautiful appearance. The program of songs, drills, dialogues, etc., was carried through successfully. Suffers From Snake Bite. Lake Charles.—George Dahduri, a Syrian aged 25 years, was brought to Lake Charles this week suffering from the bite of a water moccasin. Physi cians have little hope for his recov ery. Dahduri, who was emplowed at the Woods camp, picked the reptile up not knowing its deadly character and was bitten on the arm. Opening of the Novena. St. Benedict.—Sunday marked the opening of the novena in the chapel of St. Joseph's Abbey preparatory to the solemn celebration of the feast of St. Benedict, the founder of the order. Every day during the novena "Missa de feria" will be celebrated. During Lent several of the Benedictine fath ers of St. Joseph's Abbey will be oc cupied giving missions in various pa rishes through the state. Arcadia Parish Roads. Crowley.—The Fifth Ward of Ar cadia Parish has spent about $5,000 on roads this year, disbursing the money under the commission system with excellent results. A consider able part of the money has been ex pended in drainage. The roads of the ward are now as good as any in the parish and the tax under which they have been improved has several years to run. Charged With Chicken Theft. Broussard.—Officers succeeded in breaking up a gang of chicken thieves by the arrest of Martin Champagne, Felix Oliver, Jr., and Luc Hollier. Chicken coops have been the prey of thieves for a long time, and, af'*r nvestirjation by the mayor, hens b* longing to a widow were located in the yard of Champagne, who, upon being taken, implicated the other two. Bonded for Manslaughter. Many.— H. C. Fiske, charged with murdering Alvin James, at Sodus, was arraigned before Judge Sorrell for pre liminary trial. District Attorney Pal mer waived examination for man slaughter. He gave $2,000 bond, and was released. Health Board Names Officers. Plaquemine.—The Board of Health have elected officers as follows. Presi dent, Dr. W. L. Grace; santiary inspec tor, James Riordan e<i. MANY REBELS WEBE KILLED SAND OF 120 CUT TO PIECES AT SAN BARTOLITO PUEBLO. More Than Fifty Killed— Rurales Am bushed the Rebels—Americans Killed and Captured. City of Mexico.-—A body of 120 in surrectos was cut to pieces by state ru rales at San Bartolito Pueblo, Sunday. More than fifty were killed, eleven se riously wounded and twenty-seven cap tured. Owing to the fact that the ru rales have adopted the revoiùtionists' tactics' of ambushing their enemy, none was- killed and qnly a fe.w wound Colonel Guerrero, in commaifc of the rurales, upon learning that the rebels were marching to attack the munici pality of Nativitas, sent 100 of his men to meet them. Fifty others were or dered out to cut off their retreat. The first force selected a favorable position overlooking a ravine through which the rebels must pass and when I hey were in the trap opened a merci less fire upon them. The rebels are said to have made a stubborn fight, but at the end of a half hour were completely demoralized. Reports from Chihuahua, delayed several days in transmission, relate a distressing state of affairs in that city. Owing to the closing down of some in dustrial establishments and the run ning on short time of others on account of shortage of coal, many workmen have been thrown out of employment and are facing starvation. A measure to their advantage, however, is one ini tiated by Governor Ahumada'requir ing all merchants to present an invoice of all provisions in their possession, and regulating the sale of same as to quantities to individual purchasers and as to prices. Many of the merchants were said to have advanced their prices 30 per cent. These have been compelled to reduce the quotations to a fixed schedule, which is not greatly above normal. Lack of workmen to prepare for the planting of crops on the haciendas pre sages a shortage of foodstuffs during the coming season. Other Fight«. El Paso, Tex.—Conditions bordering on panic reign almost'throughout Nor thern Mexico at present. Stirred by the belief that the revolutionary move ment hasi reached a critical stage, the insurrectos in the states of Chihuahua and Sonora are reported to have re newed activity in tearing up railroads and telegraph wires. Numerous towns according to reports, are under seige by the insurrectos and thousands of women and children, cut off from sup plies, are rendered helpless. Following the receipt of corrected details concerning the battle of Casas Grandes, a town of perhaps 500 people, about 150 miles southwest of El Paso, where 80 men were killed last Mon day, news reached here of a fight at noon Saturday at Agua Prieta on the border across the river from Douglas, Ariz. Five hundred insurrectos at tacked 300 federal troops but were re pulsed with a total of 35 dead and wounded on both sides. The fighting was short and the insurrectos armed only with rifles, soon scattered under the fire of a machine gun. What is believed to be a reliable re port of the casualties at Casas Gran des says that 15 Americans were killed and 17 Americans were taken prison ers. Suit for $20,000. Houston, Tex.—A suit have been fil ed by the Union National Bank of Houston to determine the rightful owners of $20,000 deposited in the bank in 1910 by James T. Stewart in the name of ' Rex O." sometimes konwn as "Rex O (Me.)" address un known. It is alleged that the money was placed in the bank and since that time Stewart has died in Opelousas, La., and that claims have been made to the money by Jimmie Stewart Brock and J. B. Brock, who claim that they are the sole heirs to the money. Texas Officers Eager. Austin, Tex.—The adjutant general 's department has been notified by the secretary of war that instructions as to attendance of officers at maneuvers will be given as soon as the schedule can be worked out. The adjutant gen eral has requested that Texas be per mitted to fill any vacancies caused by other states not availing themselves of their quota, and that if unable to care for all Texas officers at one time, they be allowed to rotate for as long a tour of duty as may be found advis able. Strike Settled. Port Arthur, Tex.—The Gulf Refin ing Company's boiler makers and help ers, about seventy-five of whom have been on a strike at the plant of the Gulf Refining Company and the Texas Company, reached an amicable set tlement of their differences and re turned to work Monday. To Cure Tour Pimples. Take a cup of GEAND MA'S TEA every night before retiring. Pleasant to take and marvelous results in two weeks. Package 25 cents. Mnnyon'a Rheumatism Remedy relieves pains In the legs, arms, back, stiff or ■wollen joints. Contains no morphin^ opium, cocaine or drugs to deaden the pain. It neutralizes the acid and drives oat all rheumatic poisons from the srs> tern. Write Prof. Munyon, 63d and Jeff» erson St»., PhUa., Pa., tot medical id* Tice, absolutely free. RHEUMATISM MUliiUMG T E CURED A BAD SPAVIN. Mr. B. H. Key, Marion, N.C, writes: "My horse had a very bai casa of spavin and nothing did any /ond u-itil I tried your Mexican Mustang Liniment, X rubbed the spavin frequently and plcrtifully with the liniment and soon saw an i nproYement. In this treatment I poured mj palm full of lin iment and then rubbed ito i the spavin until nearly dry. I did this three or four times a day and my horse was completely cured. It is sure to cure if properly used." A spavin is a serious ailment and needs a powerful remedy. The above letter proves Mexican Mustang Lin iment cures even b&d cases and does it thoroughly, too. 25c. 50c. $1 a bottle at Drue & Gen'l Stores. Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief— Permutât Cor»' CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS uevcr „ fail. Purely veget able—act surely but genlljr on the liver. Stop sfter^ llinw distress—i cureindi-l gestion — improve the complexion — brighten die eyes, f oiatl Pill, Small Dsse, Small Pric^ Genuine numb«« Signature Carters ITTLE IVER PILLS. PARKER'S,. HAIR BALSAM Cleanaef and beautifies the hals. Promote« ft luxuriant growth. Never Pail» to Eeetore Gray Hair to Its Youthful Color* Caret tcalp di«eases Ac hair falling gOc, and # 1-00 at Druggirt» TOR ALL EYE DISEASES Texas Directory SEEDS W for oar new T^idsome 1~ revised cata log. It will pay you as it ta especially compiled for our Southern States. REICKARDT & SCHULTE COMPANY The Texas Seed House 206-208 Milam Street Houston, Texas McCANE'S DETECTIVE AGENCY Houston, Texas, operates the largest força of competent detectives in the South, they render written opinion* in cases act h a ndl ed by < R easonable rat—. MACATEE hotel European plan. Rates $1.00 per day and upward a Cafe Prices Reasonable. Opposite Grand C en t r a i Oepot, Houston, Texas. THE BEST STOCK SADDLES ïï-'JT able prices, -write for free . illustrated catalogue. Oy A. H. HESS A CO. 305 Travis St.. Houston, Tern. PATENTS Obtained and Trade-Marks registered. Consul tation and Information Free. Write for Invent or's Guide Book. Offices at Houston, f>0&-10 Moore Building, San Antonio and Washington. Main office Lumberman's Bank Building. Phone 4790. Houston. hardway jl^cathey GRAIN & HAY Straight or mixed cars out of Hous ton. Askfof our weekly quotations. E. S. DIXON & COMPANY HOUSTON TEXA« is a wonderful new liq uid headache and' neu ralgia remedy. It will make y oar head "light '' in a few minute«. It is abs 'htely safe and j harmless. 10c, 25c and 50c bottle« at all drug store«. THE HED-LTTECO., . Mfrs. Dalla*. Texas |