Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 30, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 February 1911 — Page 2

The Daily Republican Kray Day Kxoept Sunday HEALEY A CLARK, Publisher*. RENSSELAER, INDIANA.

When doctors graft it la folly to bo sick. Another tiling that will make Milwaukee famous iff a “woman policeman.” 1 r "-rt--- • • * ■ Why worry over .good roads when We are all on the verge of taking to 'wings? If war scares keep on accumulating they may be offered by the dozen at rates. When women are required to sit on Juries they Bhould be permitted to bring their knitting. Western fanners are returning to the effete east to buy up the deserted farms of that section. Fir lumber fias gone gone up one dollar on the thousand. Now. all together: This is going too fir! Goose-bone prophets are of the opinion that this winter will stretch out as long as a British election. . Alfalfa in various forms is to be served at a banquet in Colorado. Now who is "brother to the ox?” Alexander wept because he bad no more worlds to conquer when he should have hustled around and found 'a few. Pittsburg ants to annex about a dozen suburbs. This is likely to start a new annexation movement in Cleveland. The unarmored cruiser Detroit, which cost $ .233,000, has Just been sold for $20,000. So run the fighting ships away. : New York’s largest hotel is to cost $17,000,000. It is to be built on Herald square at Twenty-fourth street and Broadway. School teachers think they are entitled to pensions, but can teaching be called war since corporal punishment has been abolished? A Boston man declares that he can prove that there are nine hells, and we presume that discovering that the furnace fire is out is one of them. That New York man who started to Shoot himself but thrice changed bis mind in time to dodge the bullets Inay live to congratulate himself on his fickleness. Morocco is to pay money to Spain for the war which Spain recently fought In Morocco. Such is the embarrassing consequence of coming out only second best Maybe some time they will invent a padded aeroplane which will not rise more than ten feet from the ground. Then the careful man will become interested. He has football in tne fall and track athletics and baseball in the spring and now the college student has ice hockey all winter. And ’ yet be is said to play too little. In the year 1910 the American hen laid 17 dozen eggs for every man, woman and child in the country. We have reason for believing, however, that at least several dozen of those eggs are still In cold storage. A report from Berlin has it that Emperor William has become interested in boxing. It Is not likely, however. that he will at his time of life try for the middle-weight championship of Germany. Men who began life as waiters now own one of Chicago's biggest hotels. But, of course, they were good waiters and never spilled soup down anybody's back nor forgot to renew the contents of the finger bowls. The Episcopal bishop of Michigan ■ays that bridge whist players are Just as much gamblers as Wall street plungers or Monte Carlo patrons. They must play for more than a quarter of a cent a point out that way. By drinking 20 bottles of beer a day for 30 days a St. Louis man won a suit of tailor-made clothes and $250 in money, but the chances are that a man with a thirst like that will pawn the clothes, and he certainly won’t have the money long. If that ship that got into New York the other day with a load of elephants and pythons and other creatures could have been stuffed into the stockings of several million children It would probably have settled for all time demand for Noah’s arks. When rat carry plague aqd cats an* dogs that kill or drive them away carry diphtheria and tuberculosis, both of which are affirmed by the experts. It seems there is nothing left for threatened humanity but to get off the earth. _ That technical secret attack upon the Atlantic coast by our returning battleship fleet will be valueless unless the Mole Bt. Nicholas liar and the New England faker who heard so much cannonading at sea in 1898 are allowed to get Into the game

The ONLOOKER

by WILLBUR D. NESBIT

Ghck sTek.es

I’mp! Vo' mighty big nil' sassy ez yo* stroll erlong de street Wtd do paten’ leatheh twinklin' ev’y time yo’ moves yo’ feet, But 1 wants ter tel) yo', sinne.lt, .clat one day yo’ll hev ter t«lft •Bout de wlienee on why en whahfo’ ob de dttTnnt ways yo’ walk. En yo’ bet tell be a-thinktn* what yo' goin' for ter say For dey got yo' on de prog’am on de f Jedgnitnt Day. Kn it’s watch on pray In de narrer way—t Ain't bit .soil For tley got yo’ on de prog'sm on de Jedgmint Day. Pcy's er heap o’ things yo’ doin' dat am elutteh'd up wld doubt En yo’ projlck. mighty scan’lous whilst yo' think yo’ ain't found out, Pey’s a lot ob low-down meanness klvered undelineath yo’ hide— But yo’ woah yo’ stan’-up collah and watoh-en-ehain wid pride, But de scales tiortn' hoM no gyahments when de Lawd finds whut yo’ weigh— For dey got yo’ on de prog'am on de Jedgmint Day. O. ye’ sheep dat stray! ——— Find de narrer Way—(Hit ’em bahd, brotheli!) Per dey got yo’ on de prog'am on de ——Jedgmint Pay. Pey'll be singin’. dey’ll be speeehin', dey’ll be lots ob keepin' still. But dah won’t be no displainln’, fer yo’ goiter pay yo’ bill. En yo' eain’t be big en sassy when day strip yo’ to yo’ soul En day p'lnt yo’ to be numbeh dat dey give yo’ on de scroll. So ye’ betteh be a-thinkin' what yo’ goin’ fer ter say Fer dey got yo' on de prog'am on de Jedgmint Day. ~—" En yo* hottelr stay •" In de narrer way—(Amen! Say on!) Fer dey got yo’ on de prog'am on de Jedgmint Day. "

Will It Come to This?

With a determined air the man steps from his house and starts down street. On his head is a prodigious structure. adorned with bows of ribbon, imitatibn fruit, artificial flowers and the like. Beneath it protrudes a lot of artificial hair, arranged in puffs, coils and knots. His shirt is cut low in the neck and the bosom is perforated. He wears no coat and his shirt sleeves end at his elbows. He wears a voluminous pair of trousers, from which his ankles, clad in dropstitch silken hose, emerge and are again concealed in a pair of high-healed, glossy slippers. He gets about half a block from home when an officer stops him gnd demands the meaning of his masquer ade. “Cothes for men! Clothes for men!” he shouts, as he is dragged away to the patrol box. Later in the day his wife is summoned from a suffragette meeting to bail him out. She expresses herself forcibly on the growing tendency of men to attempt to usurp woipan’s sphere.

Comforting.

The best man is doing his best to make the groom brace up. "Where's your nerve, old man?" he asks. “Why, you're shaking like a leaf.” "I know I am.” chatters the groom. “But this is a nerve-wrecking time for me. I’ve got some excuse to be frightened, haven't I? I’ve never been married before.” “Of course you haven't,” soothes the prospective father-in-law.. “if you had you’d be a darned sight worse scared than you are." _

Like a Man.

“But tell me, at least, what you think of me. Give me one word — Just one word, that I may— ’’ “There! That shows the unrear sonableness of a man. As if any woman on earth could express herself in one word!”

Yes.

• “Here's a funny photograph. One of the boys took it over in Germany last year, and he was feeling pretty gay at the time, which how it happens to be out of focus. He had been drinking, and—" “And he rook a schnapp shot?” /■: < . Jc.

FOR COUNTRY-WIDE EFFORT

Fot* of Tuberculosis Havo Plan to, Use ftfloct Powerful Weapon on Earth. | (TJ : v f April 30 has been s«t aside this year as “Tuberculosis Day,” and will bo observed in 200,000 churches in the country in a manner similar to that of “Tuberculosis Sunday” in 1910, when 40,000 sermons were preached on the prevention of tuberculosis. In the first official announcement of 41 the occasion, made by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of. Tuberculosis, the leaders of the movement state that they hope to enUsflU of the 33,000,000 church members in the country. In one respect Tuberculosis day will differ from Tuberculosis Sunday of 1910. Instead of requesting the churches to give to the tuberculosis cause a special Sunday service* the national association ii going to ask this year that meetings at which the subject of tuberculosis and its prevention can be discussed, be held on Sunday, April 30, or cn any other day tear that date, either in the week preceding or the week following. “What we want,” says Mr. Livingston Farrand, executive secretary of the National Association for the Study report on this movement, "is to have this whole subject of tuberculosis discussed in all of the 200,000 churches of the United States at as nearly the same time as possible."

MERIT WINS

There Is Probably No Other Known Remedy the Fame of Which Became World-Wide With So Little Advertising As Resinol. Merit won. Resinol did the work. It cured where other remedies failed. Its grateful user told the next sufferer, and he in turn told another sufferer, and he another, and so on and on its fame spread by this magical verbo.graph until it encircled the worlds The world knows now that Resinol will cure that torturing disease, Eczema. Your druggist will confirm it, and also will tell you that it is a quick and certain cure for Erythema; for .Tetter, for Herpes, for Psoriasis, for Eruption of Poison Ivy, for impetigo and all eruptive skin diseases. It is perfectly harmless and is the best application for the chafing of infants, for Milk Rash, Scald Head and other infantile skin troubles. It stops the itching of Pruritus Ani or Itching Piles instantaneously. Its efficacy for this trouble alone has made it indeed a boon to humanity. Resinol Soap contains the same medication in a modified form. It is delightfully refreshing for the bath, keeps the skin always pure and maintains the ruddy glow of health. It gives luster to the hair and keeps the scalp free of dandruff. Resinol Salve and Resihol Soap are for sale in all drug stores. Resinol Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md. -

A LOST ART.

“It seems to me that our tew maid ought at least to know how to serve water, if she was six years with her last employer.” “Well, it’s not surprising, dear. I know her last employer.”

BLAME PHYSICIANS FOR GROWTH OF DOPE HABIT

Druggists Say Prescriptions and Not Patent Medicines the Cause. New York.—Blame for the prevalence and growth of the morphine habit was placed on the shoulders of physicians, who prescribed the drug, at a meeting of druggists here tonight to protest against the recently enacted city ordinance prohibiting the sale at retail of any preparation containing morphine or its salts except upon a doctor's prescription. The ordinance is aimed primarily at paregoric and at stomach remedies, according to members of the board of health who were instrumental in obtaining its passage. Caswell Mayo, one of the druggists, said he had made a canvass by mail of several sanitariums and the replies convinced him 90 per cent, of the victims of drugs formed the habit as a result of using prescriptions given by physicians and only 8 per cent, from using proprietary medicines.

Vagaries of Finance.

“I understand you have paid the mortgage off your place.” "Yep.”, replied Farmer Corntosspl. “Then wby do you complain of hard times?” “All the neighbors have done the same thing. That leaves me with money on my hands that nobody wants to borrow.” '

Twenty-Five Years of It.

“Why do people have silver weddings, pa?” “Just to show the world what their powers of endurance have been.” —Judge’s Library. .

THE SCHOOLS OF WESTERN CANADA

In Some of the Cities and Towns the 8c boo I Buildings Cannot Accommodate the Increasing Numbers. One of the most Important factors In the building of a new country is the attention that is paid by the authorities to the education of the rising generation. Fortunately for western Canada, the settlement of that new country began in Buch recent years that it was able to lay a foundation for this work, gained by the experience of older countries. In this way the very best is the result. Throughout the entire country are to be seen the most improved style of architecture in school buildings. The cities and towns vie with each other in the efforts to secure the best of accommodation and at the same time get architectural lines that would appeal. Sufficient to say that nowhere is there the greater attention paid to elementary and advanced education than in western Canada. A report just to hand shows that in Calgary, Alberta, there are eighty teachers employed, and the enrollment 4,228 pupils. In the Province of Alberta there was a total of 46.000 pupils attending schools in 1909. The total enrollment for the year in city, town and village schools was 22,883, and the total In rural schools was 23,165. There are in the province 970 schools with 1,323 departments. At the close of 1909 there was a total of 1,096 school districts in the province. Great attention is paid also to agricultural education. The best uses of the soil and such other matters as tend to make the agriculture less of a drudge and more of a success are employed. When there is the combination of good soil, splendid climate and healthy and advanced ideas in the methods employed In agriculture, we see accomplished the results that have placed western Canada on its present high plane in the agricultural world. There is to be found men of high standing in literary spheres as well as in financial circles who are carrying on farming, not alone for the pleasure they derive but for the profit they secure. Mr. Adler, a wide-awake business man of New York, has a ranch near Strathmore, Alberta. He is highly pleased with his success the past year. He says: “On July 25th we estimated our crop at 6,000 bushels of wheat. A week later we increased our estimate to 12,000 bushels. A few days later we again increased our estimate, this time to 18,000 bushels, but after har* vest in September we found we had 20,150 bushels. If. that isn’t a record, what is?” he asked. “This crop was made with practically no moisture,” he continued, “and we pow have a better opinion of the fertility of Alberta lands than ever and value our lands higher than we ever did before.” Mr. Afiler, who has been on the ranch for about a week, leaves for New York Saturday. This gentleman is conducting a farm on. a large scale, and has plenty of means to develop it, and his may not be taken as a fair case. There are, though, instances of thousands who have begun life on small farms in western Canada with but brains and. the determination over and above the couple of hundred dollars in ready money that they possessed, and today are owners of large farms and handsome incomes, all the result of their efforts on land that was responsive to the touch of the hand that held the plow. Instances such as these can be quoted if you will communicate with the nearest Canadian government agent, who will also mail you free descriptive literature.

The Walkers.

James M. Beck, the famous corporation lawyer of New York, is a native of Philadelphia, and to Philadelphia he often returns to see his old friends. , Mr. Beck, at a recent banquet In Philadelphia, defended corporations with an epigram. “The trust buster and the Socialist may do what they please,” he said, “but mankind will still be divided into two great classes —those who walk to get an appetite for their, dinner, and those who walk to get a dinner for their appetite.”

Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and Bure remedy for infants and children, apd see that it In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. Unnecessary. “Do you tell your wife everything you do while she is away?” “No; the neighbors attend to that.” —Houston Post. Dr. Pierce’s Please nt Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules, eaay« to take aa candy. _• The manly man makes altogether the best woman's min. piucs curico in e to 14 days fourdnuajiM will refund money if I’AZO t>IVTMKNT fell* to cure nny caso of Itching. Blind. Bicedui* ot Protruding nlaa la Bto M doya. Mo. Do noble things, not dream them all day long.—Kingsley. • ’"—y Mr*. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces influnimUon. allays pain, cures wind colic, 35c a botUa. Be a live wire, bat don’t burn your associates.

DISTEMPER b Its forma among a# ages ojhnr— l Xlfe uv4n& e fram Ha Hj*"* Itanr bottle' . guaranteed. Over 600.000 bottles sold last year ISO and SI.OO. Am good druggist, or send to mazmfactarenk. Agents wanted. Spohn Medical 00, flpea. Contagions Diseases. Goshen, Ind. Couldn’t Last a Day. Howell—l can tell yea how to Up* on ten cents a day. Powell—Don’t do It; Tve only eight cents. I had rather be kissed by an enemy than wounded by a friend who enjoys ed the Job. " t wisely directed, will cause her to give to her little ones only the mask wholesome and beneficial remedies and only when actually needed, and the well-informed mother uses only the pleasant and gentle laxative rem-edy—-Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna—when a laxative is required, as it is wholly free from all objectionable. substances. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co.

V Mjk. */V\ )/1] b Kow-Kure is not a “food”—it is a medicine, and the only medicine in the world for cows only. Made for the cow and, as Its name indicates, a cow cure. Barrenness, retained afterbirth, abortion, scours, caked udder, and all similar affections positively and quickly cured. No one who keeps cows, whether many or few, can afford to be without “‘Kow^Kun.’’ It is made especially to keep cows healthy. Our book “What to Do When Your Cows Are Sick”.sent free. Ask your local dealer for * Kow-Kurc, ' 'or send to the manufacturers. Dairy Association Co, Lyndonvilla, Vt. U IV 15 c ”TWO FOR 28 + yj n Urn* Less qusurv Amt Tax. Bui 10 Cur CoUAJts Maos, v Collar Comfort Is insured if you wear SLIP EASY COLLARS which all have the Slip Easy Tab shown above, This Tab allows the necktie to slide easily and is the most marked improvement made In collars during recent years. They come in all styles and are for sale by np-to-date dealers. If not at your store, write ns and we will see yon are supplied. C.W, FERGUSON COLLAR CO., Troy, N.Y. Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS ncvw^gjflFTV fail. Purely vegeU cure indi- L = » gestioß improve the complexion brighten Urn eyes. Small Pill, Small Dose,SuOPric*) Genuine e&uttxu Signature RAW FURS THE OLDEST FUR HOUSE IN Ml ERICA JOSEPHULLMANN, 18-20-22 West 20th Street, New York Branch Establishments under SAME NAME at LEIPZIG, LONDON, PARIS, Germany England Prance Drying and selling representatives in all Important Par Markets of the World, distributing each article where beet results are obtained, enable as to pay highest market prices for raw fare at all times. Our Raw Pur Quota Hons, Shipping Tags, tta, will be sent to any address on request. References: Any Here an tile Agency or Bank. lUASE MENTION THIS MKR WHEN MBWEBNO. Anen^JloemjeßalvcouresChronlcFlMrre^ione ElceraJJcrof ulous Ulcere. V aricowe Ulrere.likaolenll leers,Mercnriel Dicers,Whiteßwellinn.Milk lA>K.FeTerk>r«*,>lUl<Hm. PwMwiyae fsifiex By-elite*. J J'jLLLEN.beptJLUit J^nLMlnn. PATENTSS~S UinnV Photos descriptions A P O addresses MAHKY n i Thompson’s Eye Water tpiSO’St ■ ro^OUCH^RoLDMI!.

b Ymt HeaHh Worth 10c? That’s what it costs to get a—week's treatment—of CASCARBTS. They do more for you than any medicine on Earth. Sickness generally shows and starts first in the Bowels and Liver; CASCARBTS cure these ills. It’9 so easy to try—why not start tonight and have help in the morning? CASCARBTB me a box for a week’s SOW treatment, all druggists. Biggest seller in the world. Million boxes a month. THERE IS MONEY FOR YOU OUT IN OREGON Oregon Orchards are the most famous in the World. ROQUE RIVER VALLEY is the best orchard district in Oregon. It has made the Apple King. It has won the National prizes at the greatest shows ever held/ in America. It has received the highest prices ever paid for fruit in the New York and London markets. It has been declared by government experts to be the most perfect fruit belt In the world, and has proven beyond the question of a doubt that it will be the most important fruit section in the entire country. The development of orchard tracts Is very profitable. You can make SIOOO per annum on a five acre tract while your orchard is coming into bearing. You can clear SSOO per acre »'h}n your.orchard is developed. We will sell you a five acre irrigated orchard tract In the very heart of this wonderful orchard country, with splendid railroad facilities, near the prosperous city of Medford, planted to standard varieties of apples or pears, at $350 per acre, $350 cash, balance covering a period of four years. Let us tell you all about the glorious couptry of Southern Oregon, and the wonderful orchards that have mads this valley famous. Write for our literature. ROGUELANDS INCORPORATED Fred N. Cummings, Manager MEDFORD, OREGON

Splendid Crops In Saskatchewan (Western Canada) Bushels from 20 acres InjSllMHhtp of wheat was the thresher's lAS Bli idllTwWttlßnile return from a Lloydminster farm in the d* P ■ I season of 1910. Many M rKaVI I fields in that as well ns if m J other districts yiclilA led from 25 to 35 bulUrsh | AH J shels of wheat to the 4 A acre. Other grains in proportion. -• cASHj&m LARGE PRGFITS ore thus derived from the FREE lands of Western Canada. This excellent showing canses 2&T oebF J prices to advance. Land values r ri <'/vSo should donblein two years’ time.* « Grain growing, mixed farmr\affk 7>r0,l ing, cattle raising and dalryIng are all profitable. Free qTSff |SJsJ| Homesteads of 160 acres are ** Jt fl to be had in the very beat districts: 160 acre pre-emp-s /thiSf 4 tions at @3.00 per acre xvlthnrsLLJrM in certain areas. Schools and churches In every settle'4;' meat, climate unexcelled, I soil the richest: wood, water tejMSgrO and building material W'J’vVjfSjßiJ 1 Ifor*pa rticnlars as to location, I tb.reFOe'n low settlers’ railway rates and L, 6a « | descriptive Illustrated pamphlet. I “Last Best West,” and other lngSf ® QvGm formation, write to Sup’toflmmlISLgGssVJyTiW gratlon, Ottawa, Canada, or to Kffrfj\Sv * 1 Canadian Government Agent. | . tfc C. J. Bronghhin, 413MerrhsaU L. AT. L. . --'istr AM Bldg.,Chicago; W. H. Roger,, Sd floor Oag ' rV* W Traction Terminal Bldg., IndlgDapollst UpT-r i•dt 1 Sco.A.Hall, 12823 d St.,BJlwaukec.Win. KgO, t . "ffl (Use address nearest you.) *n

KNOWNsince IB36ASRELIABLE _ (TRADEMARK) «« black V CAPSULES SUPERIOR REMEDY FOR MEN etc etc ATDRUGGISTS TRIAL BOX BY. MAIL 50C •• PLANTEN, 33HENRY ST. BROOKLYN.N Y.

pAP-I)E-GRir, the simple, effective, laxative v ■' remedy, has relieved many of severe Colds, LaGrlppo and Neuralgia. 25c at druggists. Sample* free. Parr Brothers, Govans-Baltimore, McL Fruit and OrnanunUl Trcca, Small Fruit,, true to name. 1-2 agents’prices. Finely illustrated catalog FREE Est. 24 years Add., HOUR SLKSKItY, Su. 17, LaKajctta, IU. HEAL, ESTATE. FLQRiDAFARM forsTo.OO CASH And $5.00 a month. Five acre truck farm in the famous Pensacola District between two railroads, canning factory on property, for $300.00. Have a soil expert and demonstration farm to show you how. Invest near a growing city in a climate that can’t be beat. Write for literature. PENSACOLA REALTY CO.. Pensicola, Fla., P. 0. tu 21 "Vs ICIIIGAN FARMS produce more beans than "*■ those of any other state in the Union, Eaton Is the banner bean growing county; also produces best crops of hay, w neat, com. oats and is noted for lisdairy products and live stock. We bavelmprovetV farms for sale in this best county of the best state lor *jo per acre and np. In many instances one crop pays for land upon which It Is grown. These farms are near market, school, eburenesand bave advantages of rural mall, telephone und improved countiy. Save tbls and send fur list. Muliiken Real Estate Agency, Muliiken, Michigan. PRINCE ALBERT, SASKATCHEWAN the center of the surest mixed farming district in Western Canada, offers certain success to workers. For free literature giving particulars of free homesteads, maps, etc., writs JUJUS L WOODHASD. Scartiry bud «i link. Prita Albert. Sak. R 2 A RENTER NO LONGER—Wo own the land and make a specialty of selling on easy terras, we can suit you In 40, 80, 180 or 820 acre improved farms in Central Minnesota. Rich soil, crop failures unknown,good schools, fine churches. Write for map and full description. Minnesota Land Co., Glen wood, Minnesota. ■pARMS—“Hack to the East”—2Bo a., mostly level, ■*- near village. 85 a. new seeding, 16 a. timber, fair hulldlngs. running water,orchard,34 IluUtelns, hens, turkeys, hogs, hay, straw, potatoes, oats, buckwheat, farm tools. AH fortiihOO: Flsoodi>wn. You see, you’ll buy. Catalog free. Schultx Jk Uyer, Farm Agency, Binghamton, N. Y. IGII FARM andTIMHKR CATALOGUE A A now ready, containing the best and most complete list of farms and timber lands for sale In Viralnla, North Carolina. South Carolina, Georgia nmf Florida. Write for it today. Collins A Van Denbergh, Dickson Building, Norfolk, Virginia. 'Attention homes ekkersi now u -**- your opportunity to purchase good, high, rolling farm lands. In one of the best localities In the south, nt one-third value. The flrst time these lands have been offered for sale. W.W. Dickson A CO., Agents for pure country syrup—OntrevUle, Miss Virginia Farms and Homes FRKB CATALOGUE OF SPLENDID BARGAINS B- H. CHAFFIN* CO„ Inc., Richmond, Vfl. A f ICIIIGAN FARMS—AII kinds and tlsea Boar •* u terms, near churches, schools, stoma, railroads; slso cutover hardwood land, make* excellent farms, falsa* ss4 Ilf Seal »>e*. Ron* * Co., Mel I—*, Sisk, isTodb KBw«vjsßEjsi«hai two seams coal, good corn land,on pike road, will double In value la abort time. flesM. *ee^ls«eale,Obie AlIKSOntl FARMS—2O. 40. *Al® acres. Charfton Oranty. Bnlendid wheat, corn, potato and clover land; good schools and ehurehea FTnAstook, plenty of water. O.W. Rucker, Brunswick, Missouri. \pHBOURI FARMS—I have some bargain* in J.VA improved farms In MaeonCorintv,Missouri. If you are [ lnteree < t^aDifarm_lsDd i write me what yon