Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 53, Number 28, Jasper, Dubois County, 21 April 1911 — Page 3

edlOB PAROLES

LIFE PRISONERS APPLICATION FOR FORTY SEVEN CONTINUED UNTIL THE NEXT MEETING. PARDON GRANTED PETILLIOTT Loul3 Jaquith, Charged With Murdering Samuel Cooper, a Policeman, Freed After Serving Sentence of Ten Years. Indianapolis. On tlio rocommondatlun of the stnto board of pardons Clov- . i nr Marshall issued paroles to throo li'e ptlttoners under sentence for inurr. pardoned John I'otllllott, a fori . . r life prisoner under parolo, and t ':,... others; rocotninondod tho parolo v, ti n prisoners serving indeterminate . nt.'iHOK, and don led pnroloH to 20. hi pllcatloiiH of 47 for paroles w.M' continued until the next moetJohn Clino, sentenced to tho stato I . i,n in 1SÖS for a life term for inurr i aroled by Govornor Durbin and l ;i arct'rated on the rocommendaii. it if former Oovornor llanly in 190", .-..m w&b parolod on the recommen- . : un of the state Ixiard of pardons. 1 m was convicted with Frank Siplo ! i hf murder of Frank Smith, a Pllee f.n.i.ty farmer. Smith had sold some )hh- and fell In with Clino, Siplo and ii,tr men, who were drl "king. Clino kit th" party at noon. Smith died of t..oiihlno poisoning. Cline, while lutox hated, declared that he had given ih morphine, which, ns ho said, i.viM-il Smith "to turn up his toes." .i). was addicted to tho use of mor- ( '.im- was convicted on his own testlt :. Heproscntatlvo V. E. Cox, . :.. was county prosecutor nt tho tii. wrote a letter to fcrmor Goveri.t Durbin, which was the basis on h. first parole. Mr. Cox declared that r;trif could not possibly bo guilty of ,. j'.icity In the crime, since he left i'.. nth.rs shortly beforo the noou !. ,r and did not return. Louis Jaquith, another convict who Imp paroled, had n criminal recd I tore his sentence to tho state Iii on for murder. Ho served a term, 1 t mutig in 1SS5, for receiving stolen p-l . and a term of one and onel .ilf ciiri beginning In 1S90 for lart y Wbilo Jaquith and other men v r robbing a house In Importe, pHn.uci Cooper, n policeman, was shot am! fatally wounded, and Jaquith him ? elf was wounded whon the burglars v.r surrounded. Jaquith was senttd in 1901. Tho state board of I ti took the position that there to .ldence that Jaquith llred tho !'' whith killed Coopor. Ati.r -ervlng nearly seven years in i- ti tor a murder comiuittod at in Hancock county on eloc1 ' i ! - lit. 1901, Clmrles Van Blaricon. ! -n a parolo. There was somo ' . '! surrounding the murder, M.i.1 n;h committed while a Crowd ' ' W ithered at the railroad station l- M..SA.-H receiving tho election re 'v,- Van Blaricon always has ' ..in-d his innocence. TV Ir.ns were issued to John Petllii'v on parolo, who was son- '' "I from IJnrtholomow county, ' 1 'nr murder; George- Finney, conin 190S in Lapörto county for ' .i iKhter, but out of prison on a - , i i sentence; George Vollmer, " ' : d from Hendricks county, ' ' !"r petit larceny, and Mlnorva iui"-. sentenced in 190G from Van-'k-county to tho woman's prison n ;t der. Federation's Subjects. 1 I'f' Kram of tho next meeting of ' ?!,ite Federation of Clubs, to be ! ' ! it: Indianapolis in October, was " '" 'he exocutive commltteo of the 1 l' n, nt tho closing meeting of ''' 1 1 of directors. Two subjects ''ie special consideration. " will be the child and tho other ' ' ( cHicg. Other subjects will bo ' 1 ". at the round tables, which lrs of the directory believe to valuable pnrt of all federation ; ' "i n The keynote of tho South ' ' ' ' Ming was "Woman's Rospon1 : to tho Community." and for " ! It was "Childhood's Hill of l:u!' For Indianapolis it was sug- ' "I i' fhould bo "The Child and I' r.-ntK," in line with the Parent'"It ansocintlon movement which ' !rnt ion will push vigorously Vl" J. W. Caswell of the civics ;, 1 1 ,,. urjjed tho women to use ff"rts for tho advance of civic ' ' "i i-'im and beautifying of towns - iiW. i tho educational depnrt1 ' 'he subjoctn of social hyglone '"l 'Iran journalism were regarded '"liRnf importance. Dr. Martha 'roth nald the brain cells of the jni i depend on what the mothor gives " an,! shP pleaded for tho education or 'he mothers. 125 Take Test In Pharmacy. HnV'li SLa,P bonnl ot Pl-nrmncy con'"d the quarterly examination for i-Pdcnnts fr ilconsc8 R8 regiBtered rharmacistg nt tho stntehouse. One 2 1 ? n'"1 ,Wonty-Ilve applicants ap,7 rf 1,10 examination, which wns ' m the house of representatives. 0 nwihcra of tho state board of rhannacy are: A. F. Sala, president, nehemor; W. 11. Fogna, Mount VerrJD I1' Uui,,ler. Salem; Hurton

Population Ratio Fixed by Boards. Limitations imder tho Proctor law, as adopted by tho various bonrds of commissioners in Indiana counties, have nil been fixed. Practically all the city councils have, under tho now rogulntlons, sot tho amount of yearly llccnao that shall bo paid for tho privilege of Belling liquor. The lists with tho llguros follow: Tho coujjtles which have limited their EaloonH to one to each 1.000 inhabitants are Adams, Hartholomew, Ilontoii, Hoone, llrown, Clinton, Crawford, Daviess, Decatur, Dekalb, Delaware, Klkhart, Fulton, Gibson, Grant, Hamilton, Hancock, Hendricks. Henry, Howard, Huntington, Jasper, Jofrerson, Jay, Jonnlngs. Johnson, Kosciusko, Laurencp, Madison, Marshall, Miami. Monroe, Montgomery, Morgan, Newton. Orange, Owen, Perry, Pike, Porter, Pulaski, Putnam, Randolph, Hush, Scott, St. Joseph, Steuben, .Switzerland. Tippecanoe, Tipton, Union. Wabash, Washington. AVella, "Whito. Whitley. Those which havo limited their saloons to one to each 50O follow: Allen, Blackford, Carroll, Cubb, Clnrk. Clay, Dearborn, Dubois, Fayette. Fountain, Floyd. Franklin, Greene, Jackson, Lake, Liporte, Martin. Ohio, Parke. Posey, Itlpley. Spencer, Sullivan, Vnndorlnirg. Vigo. Vormlllon, Warren. Warrick, Wayne. Lngrango ami Shelby have placed the limitation at one to each 900; Harrison, Knox and Xoble at 800; Marion at 700 and Starke at COO. The following cities havo adopted maximum license fee of $500: Decatur, Columbus, Lebanon. Delphi. Lojcansport. Ilraill. Frankrort, Washington, Greensburg, Auburn, Muncie. Goshen, Connemllle, Dana, Newport, Franklin, Warsaw, Mitchell, Anderson, Indianapolis, Plymouth, Peru, HloomIngton, Martinsville, Rising Sun. Valparaiso, Winchester, Attica, Covington, Rochester, Princeton. Marlon, Linton, Noblesville, Greenfield, Newcastle. Kokomo, Seymour, Huntington, liensfielacr, Madison, Eugene, Cayuga, Rushville, Rockport. Angola, Sullivan, Vcvay, Tipton, Wabash, Doonvlllo. Illuffton, Monticello, Columbia City and Boonville. Hartford City and VInccnnes havo fixed their license feo at $350. Clinton at $700, Kendallville and Cannelton at $-100, Fort Wayne. Kvansvillo and Torre Hnute at $SfJ0, Lawronccburg. Gary and Richmond at $250, and Mount Vernon at 5325. Twenty-four incorporated towns have adopted the maximum llcenso feo of $300 and are as follows: New Haven, Fowler. Nashville, English. Corydon, Jasper, Ilrookvllle. Bloomfiold, Danville, Pittsboro, Rrownstown, Greenwood, Lngrange, Crownpolnt, Shoals. Kentlaml, Albion, Paoll, Rockvlllo, Petersburg, Wlnaninc, Scottsburg, Knox. Liberty. Newport.

M. E. Conference Closes. Tho sixty-eighth annual session of the North Indiana conference camo to a close at Kokomo. Bishop E. H. Hughes of San Francisco. Cal., presiding ollker, reading the appointments ns the last thing in the proceedings. The committee upon moral and social relations submitted a report which was adopted, deploring the desecration of the Sabbath, touching upon dlvorco evil, favoring a dignified Fourth of July and recommending the Methodist discipline In tho matter of tho government of the amusements of tho young people of the church. The conferenco declared: "Wo deplore the desecration of tho Sabbath now so prevalent, urge upon our people to make It a holy day of rest and worship, doing all in our power to secure laboring men one day of rest in seven. "Wo will endeavor as far as possible to rescue our Fourth of July, the birthday of our nation, from tho reign of frivolity and waste and make It a holiday to ho utilized for the cultivation of noble Christian patriotism and world-wide peace. "Wo deplore tho prevalence of divorce and the spread of licentiousness and call upon tho pulpit and press to cry aloud In no uncertain terms against these gigantic evils, which threaten the very foundation of tho home, of society and of tho individual life physical, moral and spiritual. Wo especially call tho attention of our ministers to the paragraph In our discipline on marriage and divorce. "We commend the special advice in our discipline on the subject of amusements and urge upon our people that they Intelligently and prayerfully study tho needs of our youtif; people In their homes and elsewhere, and seok to provido wholesome and attractive entertainment for them. "We heartily commend tho work of the Methodist federation for tho social service. "We note with satisfaction the organization anil spread of the Indiana Civic union ami hope to see its plnns and purposes extend throughout tho length and breadth of our commonwealth." E. F. Albertson read a supplemental report of tho committee on education, retiring from membership on the board of trustees of Do Pauw university former Gov. Wlnfleld Durbin and putting Arthur S. Cecil in his place. Blacksmiths Hold Meeting. The Blacksmiths and Horscshocrs of Indiana are holding tholr thirteenth annual convention at Laportc. Thcro are 100 delegates In attendance. Mnyor Darrow gnve the address of welcomo and F. J. Perry, state president, of Fort Wayne mado the response. An address by National O Ulcers M. J. O'Rourke of St. Louis followed. In the afternoon the reports of officers nnd different locals were made. Thcro was a smoker and social session at tho Auditorium

BANK PAGE SHOT BY FOOTPAD

Edward T. Richter Is Seriously Wounded While Running From Robber Boy Is Accosted Under an Arc Lamp. Indianapolis. Edward T. Richtor, eighteen yonra old, 337 Forest avenue, a pago at tho Indiana Natlonul bank, was shot and seriously wounded by a hold-up man on East Market street, between Pino and Hermann streets. Tho bullet penetratod Richtor's right thigh and lodged under tho skin. Richter was taken to tho City hospital, whero tho bullet was extracted. It is belluvod 'he will recover uuIobs blood poisoning develops. Richtor was accosted by the robber directly under an arc lamp, he told the police. The robbor demanded that ho throw up his hands, Richter said, and nt the same time exhibited a revolver. Richter told tho police he turned and fled on Market street, and that tho robbor called loudly to him to stop, and when ho did not. fired at him. A number of persons who all they saw tho robber stop Richter and thou flr at him told the police the assailant ran a fow pnees on Market stroot and disappeared. Women's Society Adjourns. Wabash. The thirty-fourth annual mooting of the Women's Homo and Foreign Missionary society of tho Muncie Prtshytery adjourned here. Practically all towns In northern and eastern Indiana were represented. Following are the officers chosen: Mr. G. A.. Little. Alexandria, district president; Mrs. E. A. Smith, Munclc, and Mrs. George Lilly," Anderson, vicepresidents; Mrs. W. C. Hoover. Portland, Home and Freedmen secretary; Mrs. Elmer Hums. Wabash, secretary of young people'b work; Miss Susan Hardy, Union City secretary records and literature;' Mrs. R. E. Egbert, Marion, foreign secretary; Mrs. Hagoman, Muncie, foreign treasurer; Mrs. Charles Rood, Winchester, treasurer of Home and Freedmen. Easy Money Tempts Him. Hammond. Adnm Racke. aged seventy, old-time counterfeiter, who I pleaded guilty to a charge of couuierieuing, says no wisnes to spenu tho remainder of his life In prison. "I do not seem to be able to resist the temptation to make money easy," lie told United States Commissioner Surprise here. He was hound to tho fedoral grand jury. Mary Racke, a daughter of the counterfeiter, was released. The woman has lost her mind. John Racke, a son of Adam Racke, was sent to prison three years ago for passing spurious money, nnd the father was then released because of his age. Adam Racke served 1" years in a Minnesota prison for counterfeiting. Seeks Homes for Orphans. Marlon. Members of the Grant count' board of children's guardians aro searching for homes in which to place 2. children, who nr Inmates of ih orphannge. The ages of the children rnnße from babyhood to sixteen j-enrs. Persons taking tho children will not he required to adopt them, but will take them on CO days' probation, during which time thoy can arrive at a conclusion as to whether they desire to inahe some pornianont arrangement for keeping them. Court Takes Quick Action. Hartford City. Hono divorce courts were outdone In this county when records for quick relief from matrimonial misery woro shat tered in the case of Orlando against Rebecca Sipe. Sipe, a well-known oil aealer. brought suit before Judge Sturgls. The defendant was present with her attorney and filed n cross bill. j Evidence was taken and a docree issnort tn Mrs. S!n within tho hour on u desertion charge. Starts Proctor Law Test. South llend. The first legal test of the now Proctor ,law was made In the superior court before Judge Vernon Van Fleet, the enso being thnt of W. O. Macheniar of Mlshawaka, who was refused a license by tho county commissioners, acting under tho provisions of the Proctor law. Upon the outcome of this case depends the fate of 11 othor cases eo far filed In this county. The case will eventual ly roach tho supremo court. Lightning Kills Boy. Jefferson vllle. Calvin Richardson, son of George Klcharllson, near Chnrlestown, aged eleven, was instantly killed by lightning thnt ran down the sido of a barn in which ho was standing Ills clothes were Ignited. The barn caught lire and a cow was killet?. The father nnd an employe, William Nolan, were shocked. Falls Dead on Sidewalk. Wabash. Hurrying down the walk to greet her grandmother, tho two-yoar-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Conner of this city dropped doad. A few minutes before the child had swallowed six strychnine pills, believing them to bo bits of candy. Dloomington Man Caught, nioomlngton. A message received from C. H. Haskell, chief of police of St. Joe, Mo., announced thnt Squire Thomas, who Is wanted here on a charge of the Involuntary manslaughter of his stepdnughtcr, Miss Ethel Stewart, aged nineteen, was under arrest here. Sheriff James Browning departed for St. Joe to get tho prisoner, and the oflicers there will receive a reward of $100 for making tho nrrest. The reward money was put tip by James Smith, the victim's grandfather.

STATE HAPPENINGS RECORDED IN BRIEF

NEWS ITEMS FROM ALL OVER INDIANA. FARMER THREATENS FAMILYReunion Ends Unexpectedly When Mrs. Smith, Formerly of Indianapolis, Is Wounded by BrotherTries to Shoot Father. Lebanon, April 18. Layton Lnnpher. thlrty-ono years old, without any known cause and with an oath that he was going; to kill all his relatives, shot nnd probably fatally injured his siEter. Mrs. Edith Smith, twenty-eight years old. at tho home of his father. Isaac Lanphor, seven mllos northeast of Lebanon. Lanpher then tried to shoot his father, an invalid, but was prevented by other members of tho family, who overpowered him. Mrs. Smith assisted the others In overpowering her brother. She then fell to the floor exhausted. The bullet entered her hack under the shoulder blade and passed through her left Iuiir. Mrs. Smith Is a widow, her husbind having died at Indianapolis last fall. She, with her two children, have since mado their home with her parents. Members of the family were holding a reunion, when lan;her entered and pointed a .32-caliber revolver at his sister's back and pulled the trigger. After the shooting Lanphcr mado several attempts to got away before neighbors arrived and held him until the arrival of Sheriff Sam Hartor, who brought him to this city and placed him in Jail. Falls to Identify Suspect. Indianapolis. April IS. Hopes that the footpad who shot Edward T. Richter, eighteen years old. imge nt the Indiana National hank, hnd been apprehended at Rushville, when Jeff Waldon of Hloomlngton was taken frcm a C. II. k II. train as a suspect were blasted when Richter failed to identify the man as his assailant. Waldon was held, charged with loitering. The Dloomington man had beon in Indianapolis with two companions and was going to Columbus. O. Employes at the C, H. k D. yards, whon notified to be on the lookout for the highwayman, rocalled that AValdon had boarded an outbound train, and thoy notified the police. Waldon was apprehended at Rushville. Ho was returned here by Detectives Morgan and Stewart. At the hospital Richter declared V.'aldon was not tho man who shot him. Richter was stopped Friday night by tho hold-up man on East Market street between Pine and Hermann streets. Blown From High Dome; Dies. Lebanon. April 18. Joseph Illfns. forty years old. of Columbus, was killed by a fall from tho dome of the Hoone county courthouio. in tho course of construction. Illfus was a tinner and was at work by hlnuelf. A strong wind was blowing and It is supposed that the wind blew him off tho dome. Tho superintendent In charge of the building missed Illfus and inquiry among the other employes failed to locate him. Workmen, after a search, d If covered his body on tho roof. He fell on his hpad. which was crushed to a pulp. Tho coroner stated that Ulf us had been dod more than two hours. Preacher Turns Fireman. Kokomo. April IS. Rev. Lyman Dlltz. pastor of tho North Street M. K. church, whoso ecret marrinRe to Miss JInbol Manifonl of Pendleton was tho surprise of tho recent North Indiana M. E. conferenco. liy hs energy and alertness saved tho edifice in which he is to preach regularly from destruction by flro. The chnrch was fired by a spark from tbo chimney of a hourc near by. The blnao hnd gained headway upon tho roof whon Hev. Dlltz discovered It. Ho organized n volunteer company and had tho Harnes under control when tho firo department nrrlvcd. Contractor Becomes Crazed. Richmond. April IS Zaolmrlns nomlfoldt. a prominent contractor, became violently insane, acrordlng to members of his family, and threatened to take tho lives of his children. Members of the family were able to quiet Hondfoldt and had hoped to keep him In the seclusion of his suburban homo In Greenwood, hut lie again became crazed, thoy say, and he was taken to the county Jail, whore ho is confined. No cnuto Is known for his actions. Valuable Horses Burned. Lafayette. April IS.- Flro, supposed to be of Incendiary origin, destroyed tho large barn on the farm of Irvin Peters, a Perry township farmer, five horses and four cows being hurried to death. Three of the horses woro standard bred racers, sired by Rodwood. In nddltlon to tho live Etcrk. 500 bußhols of oats, 3O0 bushels of wheat, ten tons of hay nnd farming implements nnd vehicles wero doEtroycd. Death Delays Straight Case. Sholhyville, April 18. Owing to n death In the family of Alfred Arnold, ono of the Jurors, the trial of tho StreiRht will cbbo will not bo resumed In the circuit court

Why pay your hard earned monoy for a "cheap" trashy machino when yon can buy a reliablo DE LAVAL upon snort liberal terms tnat It will more than earn Its cost while you are paying for it. ' "When you buy a DR LAVAL you havo positivo assnranco that your .machine will bo good for at least twenty years of service, during which time it will savo every possible dollar for you aud earn its original cost over and over again. If you purchase tho eo-called " chean " separator you must Cay caah in advanco and then tako tho chanco of tho machino ecomiug worthless after a year or two of use, to say nothing

oi tno cream ic wm wasto wnno it aoes last, an 01 wnicn means that you havo virtually thrown away tho monoy invested in tnd hcap separator and wasted your time, labor and product

in tne Dargam. Tho DR LAVAL -separator skims cleaner and lasts longer JSe sure to see tho local r jfr JLJM Ol" V IV )(. IIIC lllMf DE LAVAL before you buy 0 The De Laval

yy I ri t Utz LAVAL OtKAKAlUK VU. NX Sj 163-18? D"C SO E. Madison Strot Dnuuu & sa-ramcxto 8TS. TSj NEW YORK CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO NA

NEW YORK l73-'77 wii.AM strut MONTREAL

CHICAGO 14 & 1 6 PwtN"-.ttS CTROT WINNIPEG

" Am AW 'milium 1 öymptoms Were There. "Your husband might have a little solid food directly he begins to mend." said the doctor. "But how am I to toll?" Inquired the anxious wife. "The convalescent Btagos of Influenza," replied the doctor, "are marked by a slight irritability." "Tho next day ho called and found the patient's wife radiant. "When I refused to order his steak and onions," she explained, "he came into the kitchen and smashed fourteen soup platos and a dinner scr"ico; so, of course. I sent out for steak at once." Stray Stories. AN ESTABLISHED FACTORY Producing standard goods jimhI by stores, bank, farmers and practically cverybod , is t-cmling its special representative to open a distributing office for thw district and other unoccupied territorv and deirea a resident distributer with l'X) to Sl.tx! in cafh. carrying t-tock for immediately filling orders ; we allow $100 to ?2lM monthly compensation, extra commisioiH, office ami other expenses, per contract, according to Mze of district allotted and lock carried; permanent arrangements, references required. If you can fill iequirements write promptly. " Libert x Manufacturing Association, 230 West Huron St., Chicago. Crippled by Tuberculosis. According to a recent report by Dr. Conrad Biesalski of Berlin, there are 75.000 cripples in the German empire out of a population of 00.500,000. Over 50.000 of tho cripples are in, need of i proper treatment Doctor Dicsnlski states that In 15 per cent, of the cripples examined, their deformity was due to tuberculosis of the bones and joints, and that there were 10,000 such children in great need of medical treatment. He advocates the establishment of a seasido sanatoria for this latter class of cripples. Need of the Agriculturist. "Here I am," said the returned wanderer, "bnck with tho fortune I said I would make nnd ready to pay the mortgage off the farm!" "Ef that ain't hard luck!" exclaimed the fanner. "As times are goln' now that mortgage ain't bothorln nobody. I'd a heap ruther have seen you broke an' ready to do regular work for wages." Deaths From Wild Beasts In India. Wild boasts ami snakes were the cause of 21.904 deaths in India in 1908. Tigors killed 900 people, leopards 302, wolves 2G9, other wild animals 0SC. and snakes 19.73S, whijo 17,920 wild animals and 70,491 snakes wore de stroyed. ConslirHttifln flowly impairs the central health Garfield Ten corrects constipation nnd. benefits the entire yttcin. Man's host possession is a sympathetic wife. Euripides.

No Man is Stronger Than His Stomach

A itrong man is strong all over. No mnn can be strong who is suffering from weak stomach with its consequent indigestion, or from some otb discaso oi the stomach and its associated organs, which impairs digestion and nutrition. For when the stomach is weak or diseased there is a loss o( tho nutrition contained in food, which is the source of ell physical strength. When a man "doesn't feel just rijht," when he doesn't sleep well, has an uncomfortable

feeling in the stomach alter eating, is languid, nervous, Irritable and despondent, he is losing the nutrition needed to make strength. Sach a nan should use Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It cures diseases of tho stomach and other crjians of digestion and nutrition. It enriches the blood. Invigorates the liver, strengthens the kidneys, nourishes tiie nerves, and so GIVES HETiLTH 21ND STRENGTH TO THE WHOLE IIODY. You can't afford to accept a teeret nostrum as a substitute tor this nonalcoholic medicine op known cowrosmoN, not even though the urgent dealer may thereby make a little bigger profit. Ingredients printed on wruppcr.

COLT DISTEMPER

DE LAVAL I Cream Separator SOON PAYS FOR ITSELF g Occasionally tho intending buyer of a cream soparator who has hut a small amonnt of ready cash to invest ia tempted to put his monoy into ono of tho so-called "cheap" machines which aro being largely advertised.

1 pay3 ior itself. It rnns easier, JO than any other cream separator. DE LAVA.L aqent and try a JJA t UfCflfe drift L 1 U any cream separator. Separator Co. nSJ Si SAN FRANCISCO 1016 WlSTtBN AVTNUt SEATTLE 1 1 muwvwwwNNS St Don't Persecute your Bowels Cot mt adurtSci and ThT n brutal tvtnh unnccoulT CARTER'S LIVER PILLS PorrJr TrtruUe. A cratljr on the liter, Asuatte btle. tad toethc the driicate m?mwiM a of the bow d. Con CcattiMÜM. Elan Sick UttutM asJ U&CMtiM. u raHtce bxnr. Small Pill, Small Doee, Small Prica Genuine tantu Signature 52 Why Rent a Farm nd b e compelled to par to your landlord most of your hard-earned profit? Own your own tarm. Secure a tree Homettead In Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta, or purchaie land in one of these districts and bank a profit of SIO.OO or 512 .OO an acre every year. Land purchased 3 years aco at SIO.OO an acre has recently ' hanged hands at $25.00 an acre. The crops crown on these i - i W0k Become Rich uavauc, xou can by cattle ratsinc.dalo'lnc.tnixed firmln? and cram crowincr in tte provinces of Mnnltuba, Sailtatclievfan nnd Alberto. Free homestead nnd preemption areas, aswell as land he'.d by railway and land companies, will prolde homes fur millions. Adaptable soil, hraithful climate, splendid schools and churches. liootl rallwa)s. l.-r hvfDftt' ru'es. ili-srrtptlTe-Iterature Last l!rt Wen."' how tor at htheruunt ry and otlwr partim ars. wrlio U Hup t of ImmlKr ' ".Ot'awa. Canada, or to tbo I anadian buTcrnnient Acent. Rsmv iit IW Trirtlw lrrJMt Wt, laOjUNlrj. ItfliM, r (tuäit Gncraattt 4jttt UlttMt tiMtg. Trirtl. Otb. I w address nearest juu.i Sä 320 ACRES ONLY S320 I An excellent opjHrttitiity for a profitable InvextI nifiit. A -tÄ) arre t'tali Kann will net you a never falllup permanent Income. Trantportaj lion free If you take land. KANSAS CITY LAND CO., Dept. M Suite 714 Finance, hanjai City. Mo. EARN SiO DAILY Start a trost sehen IHMt tttnl linRlne. Sample t,ickacnil particular Sic. UK aoiwui. 1 1! U Its, ALAHUA, BOYS AND GIRLS .uh'mSr name Mil; i.-ii j..u what i- hare. 'Don't mit! this c nee (ou.i.i urn u ltv tuaiM.M, ioior, ohio. j cm Salesladies Wanted from Silk Mill ran i-nm fiotof&weeklr. 1-anli titan, ntldrrkS 1. II. .-jklrt Co., I.yiin, .Muni. SilStRHlCTlOY rum Very rare, from tho Interior of Mexleo. Appan-miT d-ail revived liy nlaalnjr Irs water. lie postpaid. Hat J'-rrO i IMIVWw, Cat. FP.AZIER'S DISTEMPER CURE

little Amw

Jnf6äy MITTLE

II II SSSSl

lf-YH.-U

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We Alwotntely Gt'AKAN'TEE to Cure nnl Prerent thl llwae or return your money, n Ll'iuiit fjlTen 1 tile toti(no or plnrttl In feci. Bate fur Mare, Colt or Stnllion Pink Kre, Kpuoo'ic, Ciu?li oii-l Colli Ctireil wl.h ono liotIe. II 00 bottle hold tiiree W)-eent lnittle SctlU for free Itorse lluoktct. Hold by l'rntil.tn or j rupitiil from BIHKLEY MEDICAL COMPANY, Dept. A. Nappanee, Into