Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 28, Number 44, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 1 January 1908 — Page 2

THINAPPANEE NEWS. i Q. N. MURRAY, ffuMlsUer. NAPPANEE, i t INDIANA BRIEF NEWS NOTES FOB TIE IST IN MOST IMPORTANT EVENTS OF THE PAST WEEK TOLD IN CONDENSED FORM. ROUND ABOUT THE WORLD Complate Review ®f Happenings of Greatest Interest from All Parts of the Globe—Latest Home and Foreign Items. WASHINGTON NOTES. The captains of the American battleships and their staffs were entertained at luncheon by Sir Henry Moore Jackson, the, governor of Trinidad, and later were the guests of the governor at the horse races. Rear Admiral W. H. Brownson resigned as chief of the naval bureau of navigation, presumably because of disagreement with Surgeon General Rlxey as to putting medical officers In command of hospital ships. Commander Cameron Winslow was named to succeed him. The officers and crews of the American' fleet were given a hearty welcome at Port of Spain, Trindad, with garden party, luncheon, ball games, etc. The president signed a proclamation creating two additions, aggregating 78,000 acres, to the San Gabriel national forest in southern California. Col. Woodbury, acting commander at the department of the Columbia, U. S. A, said that the whole Pacific coast would be helpless in case the navy should prove unable to prevent the landing of a force of 20,000 Japanese or other foreign army at Any of the numerous unprotected bays along the Coast. The American battleship fleet celehrated Christmas at Port of Spain with a dinner, regatta and other entertainments. A verdict of not guilty was returned hy the Jury at Washington in the case pf the train crew who were indicted for manslaughter in connection with the wreck at Terre Cotta, D. C., on the Baltimore A Ohio on December 30, 1906, in which 43 persons were killed and upward of three score injured. Medals of a suitable character are to be given to all citizens <St the United States who have-seared on the Isthmus of Panama for 'two years in theservice qf the government and who, during that period, have rendered satisfactory service.* "* *?- ‘ Earnest protest was made by Senator Newjands of Nevada to Secretary Taft against the Withdrawal of fedferal troops from Goldfield before the local officials have made other arrangements to protect the mines. MISCELLANEOUS. A Grand Trunk passenger train collided with a, freight train in a fog near Lenox, Mich., and five trainmen were killed. Five persons were burned to death In a fire which destroyed the house of John Clark at Watertown, a suburb of Boston. In a pistol battle following the robbery of the Vandalia passenger depot in Smithboro, 111., one of two robbers was shot five times and Emory Brown, city marshal of Sorento, 111., was wounded twice. Three men robbed the bank of Camden Point, Mo., of $4,000, biit were pursued and captured by a posse. Feud, alleged larceny and love are mingled in the case of Gus Stanley, king of a tribe of gypsies, who, with eight of Mb men, was locked up in New York in default of SIO,OOO bail. King Gus is accused of grand larceny by Queen Dora, head of another tribe. One million dollars is to be set aside for founding and maintaining the charitable institution planned by Mrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy, chief of the Christian Science church, for the training of Indigent persons as healers. Maxwell Spencer, aged 26, of New York, a young man of evident wealth, died on the east-bound Burlington train as It entered Lincoln, Neb. llaj. William A. Mercer, who for lix'jraars has been superintendent of the Carlisle Indian Industrial school, has resigned. MaJ. D. H. Boughton, U. S. A, head of the war college at Ft Leavehworth, has plans for a great maneuvering field In Platte county, Missouri, to be used jointly each year by tjie National guard of Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska and lowa John* Chandler Bancroft Davis, for Ihe past 24 years reporter for the United States supreme court, and formerly United States minister to Germany, filed in Washington. Gen. Skallen, governor of Warsaw, who recently closed 1,600 Polish ichools and disbanded a number of labor unions, has ordered all the Jew. Ish clubs in Poland to close: James Garden, colored, was lynched at Henriette, Okla., for the murder 1 of a white m^n. At Conway, Ark., Mrs. Emma Hearaess, a widow, was shot and killed by James Hall after a quarrel over two flogs whieh Hall had killed. Sister Tbeiresa, a nurse at St. Mary’s hospital in Milwaukee, was shot and killed by Gustav Wlrth, aged 32,-who Is supposed to be insane.

Three persons were killed and 17 Injured in a collision on the elevated tracks of the Pennsylvania railroad jiMrif outside the station at Camden, N. J. Mason Burnett, aged 15, son of Dr. and Mrs. George W. Burnett, of Greepvllle, 0., was killed by an explosion while engaged in chemical research at the high school laboratories. Despondent . over continued illhealth, Henry F. Terry, a well-known society man of Brooklyn, committed suicide by shooting himself through the chest. In Muskogee, Okla., fire destroyed the three-story bufldlng and the stock of the Whitlow-Williams Wholesale Drug company. Loss, SIBO,OOO. The mayor of Portland,' Ore., ,said Japanese spies had procured maps of that city Snd of its water supply pipe system. James Simpson, paying teller of the Farmers’ National bank of Philadelphia, was arrested oh a warrant charging him with the embezzlement of $4,400. The Sunday closing movement in Chicago received a set-back when a jury found a saloonkeper not guilty of violating the state law. J. C. Cain,-sentenced to life imprisonment for murder, committed suicide with a razor in jail at Des Moines, la. Henry Wulff, former state treasurer of Illinois, died in Chicago. Because they believed that a prominent citizen had been murdered in a Chinese restaurant 1,500 men raided the oriental quarter of the town of Lethbridge, Alberta, and wrecked the district The Delta Tau Delta fraternity house at the University of Illinois in Champaign was destroyed by fire, the loss being $4,000. Henry Thaxton, colored, to death for murder, was reprieved just as the black cap was being drawn over his head at Birmingham, Ala. J. Frank Zahm, a prominent broker and tobacco manufacturer of Toledo, O. committed suicide. Miss Cora Marie Arnold of Denver was married in Santa Fe, N. M., to Albino Chavarria, a full-blooded Indian. The-wedding ends a romance which began five years ago. A murder combining* the elements of mystery and deliberate cruelty that take It out of the ordinary was committed on the Hackensack Meadows In the town of Harrison, N. J., and the nude body of the victim, a Comely woman of perhaps 30 years, was found nearly submerged In the Icy waters of a little pond. She was seen crossing the meadows with a man during the night. Resolutions were adopted unanimously at the biennial love feast of Indiana Republicans, urging the nomination of Vice President Charles W. Fairbanks for the presidency. ‘ Judge A- B. Anderson refused th fake the case of John R. Walsh, the jfiirmirSdhlcago banker, from the jury Jn ih fe< feral court and order the defendant dismissed on a plea made by Attorney John S. Miller. Albert G. Beaunlsne, assistant to the publisher of the Chicago Daily News, died suddenly of heart disease. At Dayton, 0., the third explosion in as many weeks at the Kings powder mills fatally Injured two employes. George W, H. Davis, president of the Farmers’ Grain company, which owns a line of elevators In North Dakota and Manitoba, died at Devils Lake. N. D. By a majority of 545 Raleigh, N. C., voted out Its liquor dispensary and becomes a prohibition city. Frank Amos of Hastings, Pa., made despondent by the fact that he had broken a temperance pledge, shot and klllec himself. The pope, on Christmas eve launched the severest blow he has yet dealt modernism, the pronunciation ajt the greater v „ excommunication against all concerned in the production of the monthly review II Rinnovamento, which Is published at Milan. Rear Admiral Charles W. Abbott, redied at Warren, R. 1., aged 78 years. In 1853-64 he went with Commodore Perry on his famous expedition to Japan. Papers in a case to test the legality of the discharge of the privates of companies B, C and Dos the Twentyfifth United States infantry (colored),* following the disorder In the streets of Brownsville a year ago, have been prepared by a New York law firm. Reuben H. Warder, superintendent Os Linboln park, In Chicago, and secretary of the park board, Is dead. James B. Conkling, a prominent business man of Middleton, N. Y., was found unconscious with one ear filled with lead. At Reading, Pa., Roland P. Stokes shot and instantly killed his father-in-law, Dr. John Y. Hoffman, former city treasurer. Bands of Kurdish raiders besieged the town of Urunlah, Persian Armenia. Bertram Somers of San Jose, Cal., shot and killed his five-year-old boy, mistaking him for a burglar. Ernest G. Stedman, vice president and a director of the J. C. Lyons Building and Operating company of New York, against which a petition in bankruptcy was filed, committed suicide by JumpMg in front of a subway train. Railroad construction In the United States has progressed during the past year on almost as largi a scale as during the- year 1906, according to statistics gathered by the Railway Age. At Carml, HI., a crowd of men and boys held up and robbed a Big Four coal train of more than 200 bushels of coal. . . Search is being made In Kansas and Missouri for Genille Cave-Browne Cave, believed' to be the heir to the title and estates of Sir Mylles CaveBrowne Cave, an English baron recently deceased.

Promoters, mining engineers and other person* convicted of using the mails with Intent to defraud in con*, nection with the sale of stock in the Lost Spanish Bullion Mines company were in Dehver to fines and Imprisonment. Father John of Cronstadt, leader of a peculiar sect of Russians and by many regarded as a saint, is seriously ill in St. Petersburg. Thieves stole an automobile In which to take plunder from Whittier, a town near Los Angeles, Cal. Officers got' another motor car and followed, opening a fusillade on the fugitives with revolvers. The thieves escaped by leaping from the machine. Passenger train on the Lake Shore road bumped into a light freight engine two miles north of Franklin, Pa.,, and Fireman William J. Daly was killed. The Dutch cabinet presented its resignation at The Hague and the dissolution of parliament is likely to pillow. Fire destroyed a block of factories and stores in San Francisco, the loss being over $200,000. Cotton manufacturers of New England agreed to reduce their output by 25 per cent. * GoV. Broward of Florida appointed William James Bryan, of Jacksonville, to be United States senator, Vice Stephen Russell Mallory, deceased, for the balance of the term, expiring March 1, 1909. The Goldfield Mine Owners’ association filed In the circuit court of the district of Nevada a suit asking not only for an Injunction against picketing and interfering, but for the final dissolution of the Goldfield miners’ union. At Hyde Park, Mass., Dr. Walter R. Amesbury, of Milford, shot and instantly killed his wife Anna, a teacher of music in Roanoke college, Danville, Va., as the family were about to sit dtown to Christmas dinner. The St Louis university boys, chanplons of the southwest, were beaten by the Washington State college football team, 11 to 0, at Spokane. Lawrence Delmour, who, until he retired from politics several years ago. Was one of the most prominent members of Tammany hall, died of the grip. His natural reticence earned him the sobriquet of “Whispering Larry.” About 500 Mexicans with families are destitute at Los Angeles, Cal., haring been discharged by the railways. Charles E. McConnell, president of the Smelter City bank, of Durango, Col., which closed its doors December 17, was placed under arrest, It having developed that he had borrowed $lO,000 on the bank’s securities. Marines from the navy yard and negroes had riotous fights la the streets of Norfolk. Va. Mayor McClellan of New York announced he would remove the board of water commissioners for incompetency and misconduct. Flour shipments frqm'** Minneapolis for 1907 will fall short of the totals shipped during 1906 by nearly a million barrels. A decree was Issued fixing the date of the elections in Portugal as April 5. Surgeon General Rixey issued a statement reviewing the controversy in the navy over the command of hospital ships. New York, Chicago and the country generally celebrated Christmas In a way that showed no effects of the recent financial stringency. Dr. H. E. Belton has discovered In Mexico 17 of the 21 documents taken from Lieut. Zebulon M. Pike by Spanish soldiers in 1806. President Roosevelt went to Pinei Knot, Va, for a week. Martin Diller of Sterling, 111., member of the Sixth regiment, I. N. G., who was officially reported dead two months ago, returned home, refusing to make explanations. John Looney, politician, lawyer and newspaper owner of Rock Island, 111., has been vindicated on each of 34 counts qf criminal libel, bribery, extortion and conspiracy contained in indictments against him which were found by the grand jury last June. Miss Olive McDowell; 21 years old, daughter of Bishop William F. McDowell, Methodist Episcopal bishop of Chicago, died at Camden, N. C. Judge Rosalsky in New York suspended sentence in the case of Hugo C. Voecks, who pleaded guilty to blackmailing Raymond Hitchcock, the comedian. Col. Benjamin C. Lockwood, commanding the Twenty-ninth regiment of infantry, has been placed on the retired list of the .army, as brigadier general, on his own application, after more than 43 years’ service. An attempt was made to blow up the new steel bridge of the Pennsylvania Railroad company in course of construction over the Erie railroad tracks at Newark, N. J. ( J. Frank Carpenter, secretary of Hie Carpenter Paper company, one of the largest paper houses In the west, committed suicide at his home in Omaha by shooting. St. Louis university football athletes made heroes of themselves near Brocket Station, Wash., on the Canadian Pacific, where they helped to rescue trainmen from a disastrous freight wreck. Violent gales prevailed in* Colorado. Near" Boulder tWo coaches •of a train were blown into the ditch, one mail' being killed and five badly injured. ~ ' An employe in the post office at Erie, Pa., found a Christmas gift package containing an infernal machine: A sudden cold snap at the headwaters of the Allegheny river averted a flood which threatened to work great damage at Pittsburg. Asa result of the reorganization of the Pere Marquette Railroad company the office force of the road will bt moved from Cincinnati to Detroit.

FLEET OFF FOR RIO l ’ '' I. '' '; * ;■ PORT OF SPAIN BIDS AMERICANS A HEARTY FAREWELL. BAY ALIVE WITH CRAFT Admiral Evans Expects to Reach Rio Janeirq Friday Evening, January t 10-—Collier Awaits Him - There. Port of Spain, Trinidad.- —The American battleship fleet weighed anchor at four o'clock Sunday afternoon and steamed for Rio Janeiro. Accompanying the fleet were the supply ships Culgoa and Glacier. Early in the “morning the signal went up from Rear Admiral Evans’ flagship Connecticut to prepare for departure at three a. m., but owing to a delay in the coaling of the battleship Maine from collier Fortuna, it was necessary to change the sailing time. Long before the hour set a myriad of small craft, chiefly launches and steam yachts moved up and down along the lines of anchored warships, the merry parties aboard shouting farewells to the departing visitors. Thousands of residents climbed the surrounding hills to view the great white ships as tjiey moved outward on their journey of 3,000 miles and more, while boatloads.of excursionists went to the small islands in the gulf and others to the floa ing dock to catch the last glimpse of the ships that were so royally welcomed to this port almost a week ago. An average of from ten to 11 knots an hour will carry the fleet to the end of the second lap of the 14-000 mile Journey In about 12 days, and It was announced by Admiral Evans before his departure that he expected to reach Rio Janeiro on Friday evening, January 10. The newspapers here, and the residents, are unsparing in their praise of the exemplary behavior of the men, and the papers compliment Admiral Evans In the warmest terms. Rio Janeiro. —The United States collier Caesar has arrived here with coal for the American fleet The minister of marine has ordered the naval hospital ship Carlos Frederico to remain !n port for th.p disposition of Rear Admiral Evans when he reaches Rio Janeiro. OPENING THE DRUCE GRAVE. c. Workmen Remove Monument in Highgate Cemetery. London.—The work of opening the grave of Thomas ChaTles Druce in Highgate cemetery, to determine primarily whether the coffin contained the body of a man or, as has been asserted, a roll of, sheet lead weighing some 200 pounds, was begun Sunday. Incidentally, the clearing up of this mystery will help materially he progress of the famous Druce case. The three-ton monjument, which marks the resting place of the Druce family, was removed by a score of workmen, who were protected from public observation by q shed wfefch had been erected arouiid the burial plot. Within the shed electric lights were installed, so that operations might proceed without interruption. All of those In attendance at the opening of the grave and coffin have'' been sworn to secrecy, so that the result of the Investigations will not be known until the expert? give evidence at the police court. , * KANSAS TO BE CONVERTED. Great Evangelistic Campaign Planried to Last Entire Year. Kansas City, Mo. —"Kansas for Christ,” Is to be the slogan In a state-wide evangelistic campaign that Is ,to be pushed simultaneously in every cobnty of the Sunflower state next year. Hundreds of, ministers of various denominations, together with numerous well-known evangelists, are to hold revivals. An entire year will be spent In the movement and an effort is to be made to demonstrate to the whole country what may be accomplished in concerted religious work carried forward On structly busi-. ness lines. The great revival Is to he under the direct leadership of Rev. William Edward Blederwolf. The undertaking will be subject to the general supervision of a board of two ministers and two laymen from each denomination.,. Slays Sweetheart and Himself. Ablngton, Mass. —Miss Edith M. Ashley,-18 years of age, died Sunday from a bullet wound Inflicted Saturday night by her lover, Samuel-H. Stetson, 24 years old, of- Rockland, who killed himself after shooting her. Mother and Child Die In Fire. McArthur, O.—lsrs. Boyer and one child were burned to death and another child badly burned as tfle result of a fire that completely destroyed their home near Hamden, Vinton county, -i j , Miss Klnner’s Body Found. Michigan City, Ind. —The body of Miss Emogene Klnner of Penn .Yhn, N. Y., who disappeared from Michigan City on December 11, was found Sunday afternoon on the bank of a creek in a wild and unfrequented place. She had taugtit school at. Yonkers and at Nyak, N. Y. Over-study had caused nervous prostration, and she came here a month ago to recuperate her health and to spend the winter with a cousin. It is supposed that she lost her way in the country t>UCinber 11 and perished of cold.

1 ERIE'S NEW EQUIPMENT. During the year now drawing to a close the Erie Railroad has put Itself Into the best of condition for the handling of the immense quantities of freight that pass over the rails of this, one of the meet important of all freight lines of the Trunk-line group of railroads. There have, just been delivered to the Company the last of an order of 3,000 box cars, each with a capacity of 40 tons for the handling of merchandise freight that originates In the numerous factories on the line of the road. To the 4,500 Steel hopper gondolas for carrying coal and ore that were added to the equipment In 1906 the Erie has added In 1907 3,000 more cars of this type, each with a capacity of 60 tons. This gives to the road a tidal of nearly 30,000 of each of these (ypes of cars added within the past five".years, thus fitting It for the rapid handling of freight of all classes. The Erie has also added within the year 27 new express cars of the most modern type for its express freight service which has been growing rapidly of late. To help hanl these cars the Erie has purchased within the year 35 locomotives of the Consolidation tyqfe, all of which have been put in service on the Western end of the road, besides the three Mallett type engines Which have been widely noted as the largest engines ever constructed. Sixty passenger coaches of the latest type have been added to the passenger equipment for use on the lines in the Suburban territory about New York city and the first all steel passenger coach manufactured for use on steam rail lines is now being tried out on the through service, to see how It will serve during the cold weather. This experimental coach is being subjected to the most onerous tests that its efficiency in service as well as its safety may be determined. It was the Erie that firqt built and used the all steel postal -car, an experiment that proved so successful that two more are to be added to the equipment early In the new year. The Erie also put into service during the year the first motor car of the Ganz type used In this country, and is now giving It a thorough trial on its Newburg branch to see if it will work as well as It is reported to have worked In Europe, where the type of car has been In service for several years. J. H. MADDY. THE DIPLOMAT.

Governess —Who was the wisest 3 Pommy—Solomon. loverafess—And who was the wisest man? * * Tommy—Well—er—lt’s either you or can’t make up my mind which. ■ / BUFFERED TWENTY-FIVE YEARS. With Eczema—Her Limb Peeled and Foot Wat Raw—Thought Amputation Was Necessary—Believes Life Saved by Cutipura. “I have been treated by doctors for twenty-five years for a- bad case of eczema on my leg. They did their best, but failed to cure it. My doctor had advised me to have my leg cut off. At this time my leg was peeled from the knee, my foot was like a piece of raw flesh, and I had to walk on crutches. I bought a set of Cuticura Remedies. After the first two treatments the swelling went down, and in two months my leg was cured and the new Skin came on. The doctor was surprised and said that' he would use Cuticura for his own patients. I have now been cured over seven years, and but for the Cuticura Remedies I might have lost my life. Mrs. J. B. Renaud, 277 Mentana St., Montreal, Que., Feb. . 20, 1907/’ Changed His Mind. “Well, what are you doing there?" asked the lady, addressing a tramp who had just climbed a tree in time to escape a savage bulldog. “Madam,” replied the hobo, “It was my intention to ask for a handout, but in the Interest of humanity I now request that you give any surplus food you may have on hand to my canine friend down there,” The extraordinary popularity of fine white goods this summer makes the choice of Starch a matter of great importance. Defiance Starch, being free from all Injurious chemicals, Is the only one which is safe to use on flpe fabrics. Its great strength as a stiffener makes half the usual quantity of Starch necessary, with the result of perfect finish, equal to that when the goods were new. v '- - / Friendly Advice. “Say, old man,” began Marxley, “that ten-spot I loaned you—” “I haven’t forgotten, old man,” interrupted Boroughs. “Don’t worry; I still have it in mind.” T —- “Yes, but don’t you think it’s about tiine you relieved your mind?” 1 Life Is to be fortified with many friendships. To love and to be loved ia the greatest happiness of existence. —Sydiey Smith. /

FIVE MONTHB IN HOSPITAL. OT. i* ( Discharged Because Doctore Could Not Cure, ■ Levi F. Brockway, 8. Second Ave.„ Anoka, Minn., says: “After lying for tflve months in a hospital I was discharged as incurable, and given only six months to live. heart was affected, I had smothering: Spell*, and sometimes fell * unconscious. dt got so I couldn’t use my~ arms, ipy eyesight was Impaired and the kidney secretions were badly disordered. I was completely worn out and discouraged when I began using Dean’s Kldnejr Pllla, but they went right to the cause of the trouble and did their work well. I have been feeling well ever since.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box, ‘Foster-MUburn Cos., Buffalio, N. Y. j The Most Suspicious Ever. Henry Clews, the hanker and author, wtre'Talking at the fUtoion club lit New York about a certain financier. “No wonder the man; Is so successful," said Mr. Clews. ‘Tie is the most, careful, the most suspicious fellow I ever heard of. In fact, he reminds meof a Staffordshire farmer my fatherused to tell of. “It was said of this farmer that,, whenever he bought a herd of sheep, he examined each sheep closely tomake sure that it had no cotton in it.” The Judge’s Inkwell. Judge Boyd, of the Irish bench, kept a supply of his favorite “pizen” on. the desk before him in an Inkstand of peculiar make. When he wanted &- sip he took it through a quill pen,, while counsel professed entire ignorance of the little maneuver. “Tell the court truly,” he once said to a. witness, “were you drunk or sober?” “Qnite sober, my lord,” replied theman. And his counsel added, with &- look at the Inkpot: “As sober as a judge." Muslcl Muslol Muslcl Special. Send now. Four latest sheet music successes —30c. Get them while they erenow. “Clementine” serenade, a beautifuk song; “Ivah” waltz, very catchy: “Wapita” march, a hummer; “Reuben Brown a comic song worth while. “Gingerine” twostep, that “foot-warmer” with above, 7<r extra. Any single one, 15c. Bert S. Elliott,; National Capital Music Pub., 22 Que St., N. W., Washington, D. C. What Better Proof Is There? Jackson—Heaven bless him! He* showed confidence In me when th* clouds were dark and threatening. Wilson —In what way? . Jackson—He lent me an umbrella! —Stray Stories. Stop That Cough before It. becomes chronic. Get Brown’s Bronchial Troches, the best preparation known for coughs. After slzjing up their husbands, we don’t blame some women for being fond of dogs. 7 O NET OK* “BROMO QUININE” That Is LAXATIVR BROMO QUININK. Look for th* signature of B. W. GROVB. Used the World over to Cura a Cold in One Day. 36c. The man who attends strictly to his own' business has a good steady job. Lewis’ Single Binder straight 5c cigar i* Csd quality all the time. Your dealer or wis’ Factory, Peoria, 111/ In polite society a snub is a sort at upper cut

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SPOT GASH FOR SOLDIERS AND HEIRS All federal soldiers and sallow who served "90 days between 1861 and 1868 and who homesteaded less than 160 acres before June 23,1814, are entitled to additional homestead rights which 1 bay. If soldier Indeed, Me heirscan sell. Tali to old soldiers, widowsand heirs. Find some soldier relative who went West or South after the war and homesteaded government land. Get busy and make some easy money. Write Henry" N. Cupp, Washington, D. 0., for further particulars. nfiIDVIUA raising clover, timothy. UAIK T Hilts Oorn. vegetables,strawberries. -mail grams, poultry, sheep, cattle, hogs or horses, are as profitably undertaken In Stevens County at lb lowa, Illinois or Indiana., WANTGD, tenants or purchasers for several improved farme hereabouts Kasy terms given purchasers. Full particular, by mafl. Write nil icnnuii land-for saM, easy terms, to 100 per uALIrUnNIA UK. One orop pays It. Wonderful returns ironi grapes, peaches, cantaloupes, sweetpotatoes and Perries. Located near great Frttoi} markets in celebrated TURL OK IRRIGATION UIBTRICT. Abundant water. Write for literature, questions answered. HII.MAR LARD COMPANY, wnera. Turlock. Stanislaus County. ALBERT* PEACH SALES Apples fifty to one hundred and fifty. Berries and truck make large profits. Improved farms ten to forty dollars per acre. Unimproved two to eight. Healthy. Splendid water. Write for booklet “Johnson County.” Johnson County Realty. Company, Clarksville, Arkansas. Your hide tahhed-cWl's HIDES make fine, warm robes. We are the oldest house doing this kind of work. Are responsible, and know how. Write for prices. ( THE WORTHINB&ALGER CO.,Hillsdale. Mioh. FARM OPPORTUNITIES aKRS&gSfIS wealthy Marlon County on beautiful Willamette River. Hop. walnut ands rnlt farms pay 800 to *506 per acre, net; dairy farms pay $100; improved farms, BO to 800 per acre; unimproved, 16 to 86. For ln- . formation write BOARD OP Trade. Salem, Oregon. PATENTS aQd trade marks odSeek A or Information sent FREE.