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Double Your Crop Yields by Using the Celebrated TRADE *1· -- ya Bull Dog SBrands - , >> Fertilizer MARK ManfatLtaIl ed by 1le New Orleans Acid and Fertilizer Company aho imake a sn; ci f o lf Wl l I f.IIl'llJl7LHlN. Thoil twn most i Popular 131a .1: t f I: , IertIr fow n iriari :tn lands that hMice nut beii nXt ;) *-tti t I i.;'c . ft" Louisiana Rice Gr(ower I, 1," A xilal., l'miPh phoric Arid, 2 per Cunt Iotasui. Dissohed Bone anJ Pot!sh- 12 2: 12 jr cr-i t Available I'hosphliorie Acid. 2 pt : V: t'i " Fur uce un ulntls Lot Lal in llanit'] sevoral years tinnsfcUtjve Iiouduras Rice (iroer 12 pi t it Ava :able Phosphorie Acid, 4 per cenlit IP ta> , ' DissoI'ed Bone ani Polas:h Ii) 4: 10 prt-' cunt Available Ilhosphoric Acid, 4 , c " t :.t tThe use of :a or o -:. -e hWaunk in ru citnt ti'tantitie, will more than double 15 ,IT 1: .11 i'1, Ko I (l :\10 D 1 MO POK showing the Guaranteed An 1 alyse,ý: a:! It,'.1 !l l itANIlý FERTIl'Ll/Ei . 0,4 il.1I ltG I0 IJ AN I'S ARlE SOLD BY : THE GLOBE WAREHOUSE A. R. ARCENEAUX, Prop. TT^9ýý^.TTT ^'T"^.ýT Pýý T'S' TTTT .ý7t^P TTTT ýT~"ý T " TTTTw-n 1.11. . C. S. R J. (KANSAS (FlY SOVTHIlIN IlAILWAY ri o) 9 o tin SThe Popular Route to the North fI r Th'lroughº. Kiansas City ot at Buffet Sleepers from Lake Charles. 9M11 urn OBSERVATION CARS ma ma Through thie Mcuntains of Arkansas. in I ad' - - - - -is C of ( For H'altn rua recuper tion visit $the I tha Orl SoL PHUR SPdINGS S S ALL YEAR HEALTH RESORT 6 of t JIllustrated folders sent free. pos ha% CI' cau S G, HOPKINS, S. G. WARNER, 000, DIV.IPASSENGER;AGENT, GENERAL PASSENGER AGENT, acr ing TEXARKANA, TEXASI. ST. LOUIS,IM0. av our Grow 75 or 100 Bushels of Corn per Acre Your acres that are not producing what they should can be made to yield a great dleal more. Careful ,ued sel ction, thorough cultiva tion and the best fertilizers will build up your farm, compcl bigger yields, bring you bigger profits. Virginia-Carolina Iigh-Grade fertilizers are carefully mixcd for the purpose of makinrx your crops produce the big yields you should get. They have prodiuc'd more big corn yields than any othcr ft rtiizers. They tire fmadlt of the very best raw ma terials that skill can (d( vise and money ('In l1,aY. They are accurately proport oned and tare fully mixed into iu <t balanced, most drillable fertibz 'ty turr (.'n use. Iow to sc(ure Nigger corn vield is well told in our 1012 YEAIR BOOK1. Copy will lu sent you free for your asking. SALES OFFICES 1lchmani, Va. Char!estcn, S. C. Norfolk, Va. Ealtimure, Md. Atlanta, Ga. Columbus, Ga. Savannah, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Columbia, S. C. Memphis, Tenn, Durham, N. C. Shreveport, La. Alexandria, Va. Winstun-alem, N. C. Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers For Sale By Welsh Warehouse & Supply Co. WELSHI, LA. Paper Napkins, the kind for Card of Thanks. which you have been paying 35 To iiour ianuv kind friends and neihi cents pecr huiidred, for 25 cents bm s, whoi so kiindly assisted an, per hundred, at the Jon.NL Blook sYinpatlized with us during the recen o re d, illness and death cof our beloved wit .Store. and mother, we desire to extend our Crepe paper, 5 and 10 cents per nost sincere thasflly, roll .t tm:e Joe i AL Book St,:e. I Ca. W. Con: and f nil Paper Napkins, the kind for which you have been paying 35 cents per iuundrce., for 25 cents per hundred, at the JOUrNAiL Book .Store. Crepe paper, 5 and 10 cents per roll :t the JoBUoN.L ook St;re. Card of Thanks. To our inauv kind friends and nei hli. bu s, who so kindly assisted anti sin patJuized with us during the recet illness and death of our beloved wife and mother, we ldesire to exteud our most suincere thanks, Respectfully, Gto. W. Ciu ::c and f:! unl SNAT'LOAILNAGE COGAESS I~L i: GI(EdI' IPDmliE TO L~, SState Has 1(000,000 Acres Richest S Land In The WGrid That Can Be S Reclaimed By Drainage. ri " ~ I t i vt "iti/i': i : tilt, S tate or rin dis I-po'ssible' to iuakl the .icon.i N;'lid 1u .tirnai e tO gI'rI5 to he Le, in this citv April lUth to the 13th, o '. (f the S ImiOst sIeIl tesful t2itheri iurs 1: tilte his tore of our State"'' decinred (;tvetrnr Satile's, who, when he goes tll of the FI'xelutiv e ( air' next aI, av r t ieP te h"is entire time and attenitcon to the S Ivariious allu I ti l ti rprIiisis ii. Saint Bernard and other sections of the State. "Louisiana, as a whole, will be i Creatl I eneIfit-tedt and ideiy alvr i tised by the holding of this important Contention in theitv of Nevw t riFans during one of the imost do ig;tful mounths oif the year. We an vital'y interested in the subicwt of rI!i:Iana tion by drainage, for, of the il00), ill acres of wet lands in the nultend SLit tcs nearly 11,400,(OO}0 are in tilhe ate of t;Louisiana. V p. L. Chappuri, with whan' ii hav become associated in this 2rt t(t wo-rk of develo(ping and ri-elai tinii our -4wasite lands. is now dermonstrn:,w tle productive vaiale of tIhis ch am-ntern of lands on his large tract in Saint !. e C nard l'ari.h. Edward Visner, P'ioneer in reIla rmation of our wet lands lhat clwmiLa strated the agricultural anid l'rt+:ui folral value of these lanuds whin Sbinognht under ncultivation. "9\lr. Chappuis and Mr. \Winner 9 are not the only men in this lnuiiness of showinE what the a r'Iiulturral possibilities are in our State:," Con tinued G;overnor Sanders. "There Sare scores of other citizens in this work, and I do not believe that there Sis any doubt hut that hundreds of others will follow alon; this line. In a comparitively short time, the wet Sand waste lands of Louisiana will be undler cultivation. ''"Evcry indication points to a re markable increase in our population in the next ten years. "Louisiana is today, one of the lest advertised States in the Union. This is due largely to the activity of sone of our public-spirited citizens, and to the very effective Publicity Campaign that is being carried on by the New Orleans Board of Control of the Na tional Drainage Concress, and the__ Chicago office of this Association which is under the direction of Mr. A P Edmund T, Perkins, Acting President b of the National Drainage Congress, S San association organized for the pur tea pose of developing the States that sa have large areas of land lying idle be cause of too much watere a s "Louisiana has approximately 28,- gIa bee; 000,000 acres with not quite 6,000,000 Te acres under cultivation. The brinc- Th or ing of more land under cultivation is tion t u a vital and important subject to all of tin our people. A subject in which every st stru man and woman in our State should thr take an active interest. Our soil is e fertile and productive and with the expI into proper efforts, we oan induce a thrifty and Intelligent class of farming people san to come and locate on our lands. he where they will fld not only a soil hd productive and abundant in its yield, oth but a climate that is delightful to live cm in, fo "Every citizen in Louisiana is in. boo terested in mraklngthe Second Nation al Drainage Congress to be held in an New Orleans. in April, such a success that it will attract the attention and admiration of the whole country," soui soll that Dr. Dowling Waging War on Insani- port edut tary Conditions of New Or.- tien leans Restaurants. up a In the battle against dirt and dis- tbe ber ease in Louisiana, the Board of bas IHalth's guns are now trained on the has ancient barricades of the Crescent born City. ho prt The warfare begun last August when Toh a report of conditions was made to w the Mayor and local health oileers by Dr. Oscar Dowling, President of the iol State Board of Health. folr In accordauce with the policy of the Hoard to leave the remedy of sani- int tary conditions as far as 1)ossihle to the the people of the coitnununits, nothing she mIre was done for five months. bo A second inspection begun the latter booy part tf February convinced Doctor· 'le Dowli ng that little if any improvieinent 1tlS htal bIeen otale. As a result o eut ot h ninety or more places inspected, eight een restaurants, cafes, bat-r mott lunchto pral counters wet-e closed within three days with orders not to re-open until con- s ditions wet-e reported satisfactory by the inspectors, real pt r~~f T'1'here are vet Ilundreda of eating cial places to visit. It is the Ilurpose of the Board to have the work continue , until all have been passed upon. The nmanarers of the reputable g places so far inspected have exI-essed a wflinugucss to couily wid the Iae lw. J A Problem That Every Public School Teacher Must Solve. Sooner or later every public school teacher must solve this problem:-the salary question. Why is it that such a small per cent of teachers now en gaged in the public schools have not been in the work more then three years They like the work; it.s an honorable work, a noble work, yet they discon tinue it. The trouble is all in the salary question. After a teacher has struggled along thru a term of school, then into a summer normal at a heavy expense, he finds himself ready to go into school in the fall penniless. This same thing is repeated another year, and by that time he-eomes to realise he must solve the salary question, and he does it by getting into some other line of worl. Hundreds hay come to us and. prepared theminselves" for the business- practical courses of bookkeeping-business training, short hand, tvpewriting and telegraph, completed, ano. teacher can secure all, the greater salary then he can get in our public - schools. We have many solicited letters from former teachers, thanking us. for giving them the op portunity of securing a practical education and then saying; where they could buy them a home, And lay up something for old age. Where is the public school teacher who has been in, the work lifteen years who has saved enoughi money out of his teaching to buy him a respectable home, and make investments that will protect him and his family i.n old age? They are the excelption. We have the largest business train ing school in America. We have en rolled stupenuts from 39 states and six foreign countries. We have placed our graduates in almu.oat every state in the Union. We own and control the coplyrlghts of the famous Bylrne simlulilled shorthanmd and practical bookkeeping, which enables us to give a far more thorough course, and less exlpense than schools teaching other systems. Lare business fl lirms have learned of the efliciencv of our graduates, which makes it eass for as to place them in the very b)st salaried positions. Write for our free catalog and read letters from lirms telling us they prefer our griaduates. Tylem' (Commieo cial Coilege, Box A, Tyler, Texas. 5000 New Post Cards put in our rack this week JOURNAL BOOK STORE Potatoes for Eorly Market. A Lake Charles firm who took the matter up of shipping Potatoes with morthlern produce d.ealers recently has received a reply as follows: Your letter of a recent date was re. ceived and we note fully what 'on say, in which you state that a great many potatoes wilt be planted in your section Ithis year. We are pleased to hear this and will' state that you won's have any troubt in placing them is this market whoe they are ready tob move, "We can use all you can plhat down there, providing you can plant the right kind, and when the crop is ready to umeae you put them up.i the right shape.. "In the frst place you want to-plant the right kind, which would be the Red Bliss triumph, then when the crop is ready to move, these Potatos should be put in sacks containing about 101 pounds, well sorted and screened so that they are clean and not all lull of dirt. They should be sorted so that the stock runias nice and even. "If you had had any experienee or your people would know how to put them up and would guarantee to put thornem up right, we would take a chance and buy your crop eyven nunow." The Irish potato cropi here the past season was a failure and for the past several months those on the local market have niever sold for less than I $2 per bushel. Sweet potatoes are not suflicient here now to Imeet even the local de mand.-Lake Charles American 'Press. NINETEEN MILES A SECOND without a jar, shock or distulrbanc, t istho au \fuli Spedu Of our (:utlltl!(,l11pl S l f1ace. W\ e wonder at supl ease of natures' mo1veOO!ot, and so do those weho take Dr. Kin c's New Lif fe ill. No uin, no distress just tho rou h work tha t h1ius io .alth an Aged Lady Gone Tohr Mrs. D. M. Dorland,wbob her eighty-fourth mile olm some little time ago was cel %Eal reward Satedayl 14-30 o'clock, at thebs hbos daugbter, Mrs, L. G. ILlW tity. Deceased bad bee' health for a number of the end came not une: shabort scripture and prIaTeri wars held at the Lewis bosr afternoon. Rev,. Webb,of it diat Chureb ofRClating, while immediate members of thef present, on account of the ness of Mrs. L. G. Ihdel threatened with pneumoufl mains were taken back to t home in Brsara, Ohio, for Dr. L. G. Lewis accompl casket. Miss Nancy Craine, wa) Ohio, D(eember 7, T s21 " Welsh, La., March 2, 1912 tained the arelof 847e3rs and 26 dais. Early in lifel with tlhe Methodimt EpiscoPal and has rmained a devoWi ever sinCe. in th! e3r oe was. united in mnrriage to r. Dorland, to whioh unlier children were lrn, three o Mr. Frank L. lorland, of Ohio, Mr. Ed. M. I)rland,ofl Nebraska, and Mrs, L. G: dWelsh, La., 5urvive toi mOU' parture of a sai'tld aotber. The svnp'a ! f the evtire nity is ext2ndld buo Mrs. fantilv in tli ' ft. TO MOTHERS AND OTN0 You can up" . Iden's:1ru to cure mhil',: f 4ctcem ttittt Dj; ," t' li lir heas S iu~o .. vi LU 1, We ht) J of L1Wr AnnuWaWi Op.ning -) ~c· 19~4~ ct~s ;Illt~s a i.I,, Ir7 'rrtern na Lingeri- , Silk Tafieta and Foulard lJrcsc .i. - Wash est Trimmings, Shirt ai sts, .Skirts, etc., in fact t - of a for Spring will ba on display is i OPENING D S SMONDAY AND TU[ESAy heI llparch 11th flarch 12th he S We invite the women of Southwest Louisiana t;, he our guests h Opening IDays that they may acquaint the m bc; °c with Paii latest creations. You will not be urged to buy. "e want you t know the effect of our efforts in placing before :o;,ii the result iat months of planning and anticipation. r, s t New Spring Tailored Suits Foulard Dresses $6.95, i ita e erge Dresses Sere.g, Whip urts 1 d iyl)- $1.50 and $10.00 to $20,00 onal t', eaves are here in a mo-t X ou will be surpirisd i) OL \ 'r rat of moi of liberal assottmentl t in white and the sItuartn ea of sylle erri ranl : , d St::is disticct: olors, prices fro Q $15 to $35. in this showfiuL' of I'uulard ' A S- I)tres se in a Wide range cf pt- . ressesi f .kter ate d n o l"" r ant r d"t.. r r ill for after Ir Changeable Taffeta Dresses ..... ....6.5, 7.50 and $10.00 e Rar. f $7.50 to $25.00 1 Tafta has cone birck to its Wash Dresses $5.50 to $10 House Dresses sl toi ci larcc1ytd f ol clir th .. tlr'1i tain to ..W t'' ilp, own this :easot. -chageaie .iefor air imorro - - ul h liberat assai- gea4i flects are m ost favored by iot f tr iO ai , a l as, .or \ ir II rer al uLl ,., n~~~~e 't . n-ýu e am Mtt:ýad ra;, C "i. S srtut d essers. \Ve have a ed and Wt' I', ues, Linen at e l ri a a llK1 S liberal asborumnent, prices tang- I b;p Wash l)rrras in the nCw ati! gi VsJ ilnd servica in from........7 50 to t25.l00 *inL stvles, priced from.... sizes: atv:s that are r ........... ..__........+ .50 to *10 P eaee. P ri" e it. ..t14 New Spring Skirts $5.00 New Tie in Waists 1.25 Sit Wais t0$ roNwTi n ast$12 Shiirt Waists S8c, to $0100 to $6.50 h nlue of this speial A cornmprebensi'e sbowing in The new wais tihat fastens iDo iof Lir:irrie Waists in e the nmost f a v o red fabrics- Without luttotni or pia, shown uln l L models ik Whipcords. Viumreanx, Men's in Lawn, Linrie and Tub are lace a hI Silks in aliite and colorts-sold hn lace ao Wear Serges and novelty iix- in Lake Charles 1) Iroider trilrned in ao t excluslvely in Labe Cha~rlesi by Ltures-Black, White and all us. Au excellunt price range ceilent range, every one wanted colors..E5.00 to $10.00 . $1.25 to *6.50 *l.o. Iriced at...., SSend us your mail orders They receive prompt indi- Sample requests receive vidual attention at the mfeii to attention, hands of expert shoppers, and are filled eame day as All inquiries promptly received. Lake Charles iggest Best and Iasiest Store pli to. :"N e aeeo N eNO e·eeeeN""N e"O"N ýý " YOU SHOULD NOT BE WITHOUT IT The rates for Telephone Service of the Cumberland Te Sand Telegraph Companv, are so reasonable that every one ca to place a telephone in their place of business and residee. " are in communication with all your friends and relatives in tie * as well as outside places, and our Long Distance Service enacble " to communicate with every city and town of importance, in the t * States, at most reasonable rates. Information will be fumish calling the manager. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Com S Ieorprates. *******************e~eoe~seeseggaggggggggg S.· ~~·····H·0·0······U