Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 28, Number 48, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 29 January 1908 — Page 2

THE NAPPANEE NEWS. a. N. 'MURRAY, Pu Wisher. ■I * __ . 1 MAPPANEE. : : . INDIANA. BRIEF MS NOTES FORM IN MOST IMPORTANT EVENTS OF THE PAST WEEK TOLD IN CONDENSED FORM. * - ROUNDABOUT THE WORLD Complete Review bf Happenings of Greatest Interest from All Parts of the Globe—Latest Home and Foreign Items. THE THAW TRIAL. The Thaw trial was adjourned because witnesses from Europe were delayed by the Atlantic coast storm. Justice Dowling decided to limit each side in the Thaw trial to three expert witnesses and two of the defense's trio were heard as to the facts of the mental and physical examinations they made of Harry Thaw in the Tombs prison. In the Thaw trial Anthony Comstock told of letters he received from Thaw concerning Stanford White s apartments, and the defendant s mother testified as to insanity in the Thaw family. District* Attorney Jerome's long and severe cross-examination of Mrs. Evelyn Nesbit Thaw at the trial of her husband came to an end and the attorneys for the defense placed in evidence a letter written by the defendant in the fall of 1903 which completely corroborated the claim that, the girl who was to become his wife did tell him the story of her relations with Stanford White much as she has related it upon the stand at this and the former trial. Mrs. Evelyn Nesbit Thaw told her story for the second time. The repetition lacked the vitality of the first recjtal, but the great crowd in the courtroom, which Justice Dowling had refused to exclude, listened intently. District Attorney Jerome then subjected the witness to a pitiless cross-examination.

Miscellaneous. A fire which caused a property damage of $1,000,000 destroyed the city hall and police buildings in Portland, Me., and endangered (he lives of more than 700 persons. Andrew Jackson Detsch, who was charged with murdering Harry Ferree in a boarding house in Philadelphia, was acquitted on .bis plea that he thought Ferree was a burglar. The police asserted Detscta had discovered an intrigue between his wife and Ferree. but he denied this. Emily Yznaga, mother of the dowager duchess of Manchester and of Lady Lister-Kaye of England, died at Natchez, Miss. After administering a huge dose of laudanum to her young son Kenneth, Mrs. George Stetson of Burlington, Wis., dran£ the remainder of the vial In an attempt at suicide Friday. The boy, aged nine,is dead. W. Leo Bockemohle, cashier of the suspended Bank of Ellin wood at Ellinwood, Kan., under arrest for making a false statement of the bank’s condition in December, shot and killed himself when his bondsmen surrendered him. Gilman Mitton was burned to death near Kewanee, 111. I Charles Bradley, a fire captain of Minneapolis, Minn., was run over and killed by his engine. A fierce blizzard swept the Atlantic coast, endangering and delaying shipping, and doing great damage in numerous towns. In New York heavy snow fell and the storm caused four deaths. The International Harvester company of Milwaukee was indicted at Frankfort, Ky„ for violation of the Kentucky anti trust laws. S. R. Hamill of Terre Haute, Ind., associate counsel for John R. Walsh, died ih Chicago of pneumonia. Paul Kelly, the motorman who Was indicted for homicide in?' connection with'the New York elevated wreck in which 16 people lost their lives on September 1, 1905, was fohnd guilty of manslaughter in the second degree. A drastic prohibition proposal was,, unanimously and favorably reported' in the Michigan constitutional convention by the committee on liquor affairs. Rev. Dr. P. F. Dissez, a member of the faculty of St. Mary’s seminary, Baltimore, and who was one of the instructors of Cardinal Gibbons when he attended that institution, died, aged 80. Aurel Batonyi began suit in New York against Frank Work, his father-in-law, and two others for $1,500,000 for their alleged alienation of the affections of his wife, Mrs. Burke Roche. Edward Niedling, “the living skeleton,” is-dead at Ansonia, Conn. President John Mitchell of the United Mine Workers declined to accept a personal gift of $2,700 tendered him by the miners of Montana and Wyoming and it was given to Mrs. Mitchell for the education of her children. With a total vote of 4,236, about ‘ half the voting strength of the town, City, la 1 ., defeated the commission plan of municipal government by a majority of 329. ; Dr. F. M. An oculist of national reputation, died at Blnghami< n, N. Y.

Margaret Pulton, aged *6, and Jane Fulton, aged 82, sisters, were burned to deatjr in their home near SL Clairsville, O. Miss Georgia A. Smythe, a waitress in a Boston lunch room, has received news from her home in New Brunswick that she is entitled to a fortune of 1200,000 by virtue of being a great-great-grandaughter of Maria Fitxherbert, celebrated in history as having been married to King George IV. of England. Hocking, la., a small mining town, was partly burned. The powder house of the mines exploded and started the fire. Dr. Farmano Lopez, who was connected with the recent conspiracy to blow up Premier Franco of Portugal with a bomb, made a daring escape from the San Julia prison, a strong fortress at the mouth of the Tagus river. James H. Smith and his daughter, Mrs. Mattie Halpin, were burned to death at Irvington, Ind. The Haytian revolutionists captured the town of Port-de-Paix. It was announced at an alumni banquet in New York that $50,000 needed to obtain the gift of $50,000 by Andrew Carnegie for the Illinois college at Jacksonville, 111., had been raised. All the missing passengers and crew of the steamer Amsterdam were taken into port at Hook of Holland by the Norwegian steamer Songa. District Judge (George M. Bourquin at Butte, Mont., approved a loan of $200,000 by Edward Creighton Largey to the State Savings bank, a suspended Heinze institution, to resume business.

The will of Mrs. Lydia Bradley, who died at Peoria, 111., leaves $4,000,000 fO the--Bradley Polytechnic institute, affiliated with the University of Chicago, and only $5,000 to heirs and others. Three valuable miniatures of the duchess of Fife, the queen of Norway and Princess Victoria, all belonging to Queen Alexandra, were stolen by burglars from the studio of an engraver in London. Turie Nordstrom, wanted in Chicago for passing a forged check amounting to $15,000, was arrested at Mayport, Fla., on board a yacht which he had purchased at Brunswick, Ga, Several hundred men were clubbed by the Chicago police and a number were more or less seriously hurt in the loop district when 200 uniformed patrolmen and detectives charged an “army of the unemployed” in efforts to disperse them. The “army” was marching toward the city hall to demand work. It was finally disrupted. Frank J. Constantipe, who killed Mrs. Louise Gentry in Chicago and who attempted suicide in the Joliet penitentiary by throwing himself from a gallery, died. Several severe earthquake shocks terrified the inhabitants of towns in Calabria, Italy, and did great damage to buildings. An attempt to overthrow the monarchy and proclaim Portugal a republic was nipped in the bud by .the prompt action of the government. The plot was organized by a small group .of advanced republicans, the leaders of whom were arrested. The plan was to assassinate Premier Franco and then depend for success upon street risings, supported, by secret, republican and labor organizations, armed with bombs and revolvers. Believing that his illness would result) fatally, John Fetter, aged 73_ years, of South Bethlehem, Pa, confessed that he murdered his daughter, Ella Fetter, aged 39 years, in November, 1894. Fire at Deer River, Minn., destroyed a block and a half of the business portion of the town, causing loss estimated at SIOO,OOO. Mrs. Henry A. Alexander, daughter of. the late Gen. Joseph T. Torrence of Chicago eloped from Hyeres, France, with William Graham Biakeston, an Englishman. The Baltimore & Ohio railroad cut all salaries of officers and employes receiving $l5O a month and over. Three firemen were killed and 15 Injured in the worst fire Baltimore has had since the big conflagration of 1904. The loss is estimated at $500,000. Charles Mitchell, aged 70 years, .a retired wholesale dealer, died at St. Joseph, Mo. He was wounded on the Meirimar/in its first day’s fight with the MorAor during the civil war.

Rev. J, W. O’Bryant, who has been pastftr of the Hyde Park Methodist church of St. Joseph, Mo., has resigned to become a street car conductor on a suburban line. King Alfonso of Spain while hunting had a narrow escape from being killed by a wild boar. The supreme court of the United States denied the petition for an appeal in the Chicago Street Railroad reorganization case. In order to prevent the spread of scarlet fever, the hoard of education of Minneapolis decided to burn a large number of text books. At Dowagiac, Mich., an audience of about 150, mostly women and children, was thrown intp a panic by a fire in a moving picture theater. No one was seriougly injured. The board of pardons of Minnesota commuted, to life imprisonment the sentence of Peter Nielsen Mathlasen, who was to have been hanged in Beltrami county for the murder of Johann Johannsen. Gov. Hughes, acknowledging the indorsement of the New York Republican club, virtually said be was willing to run for president if the party really wanted (o nominate him. Leslie M. Shaw resigned the presidency of the Carnegie Trust company. which he assumed early last March on his retirement from the treasury portfolio at Washington.

Three men were arrested in Messina, Sicily, charged with complicity in tile murder of a paymaster at Portage, Pa., several years ago. „ ' Dr. W. E.- Carter, a veterinary surgeon of Meadville, Mo., was by whitecaps. Fire destroyed a baggage car containing all the baggage of a party of 100 Shriners from St. Louis, Chicago and Kansas City, returning from the City of Mexico, where they had been to institute anew organization. Bennie A. Walker Os Canton, 0., is thought to be lost in the mountains near Los Angeles, Cal. He has been missing since January IS. It is announced in New York that W. D. Haywood, who was acquitted on the charge of murdering ex-Gov. Steunenberg of Idaho, will be the candidate of the Socialists for president. Nils Nielson, tender of the lighthouse on the New Haven breakwater, committed suicide by cutting his throat. He had saved many lives. Mrs. Mary Roberts Clark, a manicure, shot and killed Frank Brady, a newspaper advertising man, in the restaurant in Macy’s store in New York, and then committed suicide. She was enraged because Brady had left her to make a home for his aged mother. Gov. Warner of Michigan announced that former Gov. John T. Rich had accepted an appointment as state treasurer to succeed Frank P. Glazier, who resigned. To the booming of guns and the cheers of thousands on the accompanying pleasure craft, the American warships sailed from Rio Janeiro, bound for Punta Arenas. The Michigan constitutional convention committee on elections unanimously reported out a proposal granting women suffrage, with a recommendation that it be passed. Judge Phillips at Cleveland, 0., in deciding the case against the Amalga, mated Glass Workers’ union held that the organization was in restraint of trade and ordered its dissolution on the ground of public policy. At Albuquerque, N. M., the trial of the divorce suit of Mrs. Pearl Turner against Mark C. Turner, a federal clerk, was discontinued when the court was notified by telephone that Mrs. Turner had shot and killed herself. ■Robert Boyd Burch of Cincinnati, member of the Junior Academic class, was elected captain of the Yale football team. The girls’ dormitory of Bethany 1 college at Bethany, W. Va., was partially destroyed by fire, a hundred girls being rescued by male students. Fire Commissioner Lantry of New York said the city's fire hose was so old and rotten they had never dared to test it, . The secretary of the treasury announced that, owing to the great improvement in financial conditions throughout the country, he had begun the gradual withdrawal of deposits of public moneys in moderate amounts from the national banks. The Free Methodist seminary at Wesslngton Springs, S. D., was destroyed by fire. The toss Is^S,ooo. The Traders’ and Mechanics’ bank of Pittsburg, Pa.; the: private bank of A. C. Tisdelle of Chicago, and the Citizens’ bank at Beckley, W. Va.," were closed. r Gov. Magoon of Cuba was summoned to. Washington by President Roosevelt. •

George R. Haynes, a judge of the Sixth judicial circuit of Ohio, died at Toledo. Arnold C. Saunders, 56 years old, a well-known coal and vessel man, died at his home in Cleveland, 0., of pneumonia. Charges were filed at Charleston, W. Va., before Judge Burdette of the Circuit court against Judge John S. McDonald, president of the Kanawha county court, accusing him of official misconduct, neglect of duty, habitual drunkenness and gross immorality. The Spanish minister of foreign affairs announced that the Spanish representatives in Morocco have been instructed to recognize Abd-el-Aziz as the only sovereign and that Spain regarded Mulai Hafid as a pretender. Earthquake shocks, which have caused the shutting down of the Glendon mines at Hibernia, N. J„ are thought to be due to the settling of the mountain range in which the mines are situated. Socialist suffrage demonstrations in Brunswick, Germany, led to a collision with the police, in which several persons were wounded and many arrests were made. Morris J. Jessup, retired banker and long prominent in civic affairs in New York, died from heart disease. The marriage contract between Count Szechenyi and Gladys Vanderbilt provides that they shall share mutually Jn the proceeds of their esstates. An attempt to dynamite a loose tobacco factory' at Clarksville, Tenn., resulted in the killing of two negroes by a watchman. Gov. Patterson of Tennessee commuted the death sentence of Lee Holder, aged 19, to life imprisonment. Holder, about a year ago, murdered his father. Betts academy at Stamford, Conn., one of the oldest preparatory schools in the country, was destroyed by fire. Fire at Clinton, Tenn., destroyed 24 stores, two hotels and four residences. The/United States grand Jury at Parkersburg, W. Va., indicted Cspt. William M. Hall, United States engineer, charging him with violation of the federal eight-hour law. President W, iieo Bochcmohle of the suspended BsrJc of Ellinwood, at Elllnwood, Kan., was arrested on the charge of having sworn falsely concerning the condition of the bank.

BIG BANK CLOSED NATIONAL OF NORTH AMERICA IN COMPTROLLER’S HANDS. ITS RESOURCES DRAINED Persistent Rumors Caused Heavy Withdrawals of Deposits—President W. F. Havemeyer inatitutioa Is Solvent. New York.—President W. F. Havemeyer of the National Bank of North America announced in a statement issued Sunday night that the directors of the bank bad decided to request the comptroller of the currency to assume charge of the affairs of the institution. Mr. Havemeyer said that, owing to persistent rumors afloat, there had been a continuous drain on the resources of the institution and the indications were that the withdrawals would be so heavy Monday that the bank would be unable to meet them, and that the action placing the affairs of the bank under the charge of the comptroller of the currency had been taken to insure that all depositors would be treated alike. President Havemeyer declared that be believed the bank is entirely solvent and that with careful liquidation the stockholders will receive par for their stock. Comptroller Ridgely Issued a statement in which he said: “At the request of the board of directors of the National Bank of North America, the comptroller of the currency has ordered the bank to be closed for liquidation and appointed -National Bank Examiner Charles W. Hanna as receiver. The action of the directors was not taken because they considered the bank insolvent, but on account of the difficulties of realizing on the assets of the bank rapidly enough to meet the heavy demands of depositors in the last few days and probable further large withdrawals feared. “The receiver will proceed at once” 8 with the liquidation of the bank and the payment of its creditors. It is estimated that all depositors will be paid in full.” The bank, which had been known as the biggest of the Morse string of financial institutions, underwent a reorganization in October. Alfred H. Curtis was succeeded by W. F. Havemejter as' president, the former becoming vice president in place of C. W. Morse, who retired from the institution. On January 14 there was a further reorganization, Mr. Curtis being dropped from the vice presidency and from tbe board of directors.

WELCOMED BY ARGENTINA. American Torpedo Boat Flotilla Arrives at Buenoa Ayres. Buenos Ayres.—Attended by a division of Argentine torpedo boats, the American torpedo boat flotilla, which left Rio Janeiro January 21, entered the port of Buenos Ayres at 8:30 Sunday morning, the arrival being witnessed by a great crowd of spectators. A few minutes later Commandant Moreno, of the ministry of marine, went aboard the Whipple and welcomed the American officers in beihalf of the government of the Argentine republic. The trip from Rio was pleasant and all the men are well. MRS. EDDY QUITB CONCORD. Christian Science Head Removes to Brookline, Mass. Concord, N. H. —Mrs. Mary 0. Baker Eddy, founder and head of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, left her home, Pleasant View, in this city Sunday and by a circuitous route in a special train went to Chestnut Hill, Brookline, Mass., to a house recently purchased by the Christian Science denomination, where she will reside permanently. FIRE PANIC IN THEATERr\ Several Persons Are Injured in Dee Moines Opera House. Des Moines, la. —The Evans case, adjoining the Grand Opera house, caught fire Sunday evening. The alarm was spread to the theater- A small panic resulted in which a number were injured, but probably no one was hurt seriously except one woman who was jn the balcony. Several women fainted. Famous Chess Master Dies. St. Petersburg.—T. Tchigorin, the noted chess master, died here Sunday. He was born in 1850. Tchigorin took part in many national and international tournaments and on a number of occasions was high in list of'winners. Burglary In Kalamazoo, Mich. Kalamazoo. Mich. —Saturday night burglars entered the jewelry store of F. R. Darcy and took goods valued at SIO,OOO, including diamonds, watches and the better grades of jewelry. Ouida Dies of Old Age. Roine. —Miss Louise de la Ramee, better known by her pen name of Ouida, died Friday night in the home ,of her faithful maid, lolina Cervelli, near Florence. Her death was due to ; old age, but it had been hastened by the privations which the novelist was | forced to undergo since the disappearjance of the fortune her writings i brought her. No friends were near | when the end came, the only person in | the miserable hut which served as the writer’s home during the last two ! years being the old servant wopaan.

NEW CEMENT MADE JAPANESE FIND ÜBE FOR VOL* „ CAN 1C ABHES. •. ’. -*“ 1 ——L Quantities Already Exported—Discovery Strikes One More American Product from the List of ! Japan’s Necessaries. The saving Japanese, who are forced to play g. close game with jlfe because of the narrowness of their island Mid tbe tremendous yearly increase in the population, have learned to take cunning advantage of every byproduct of nature. They rake the sea beaches for seaweed to use to burn into charcoal. Now they are turning the many and troublesome volcanoes to good purpose by manufacturing the volcanio ash into cement. To them belongs tbe credit of discovering that the scoria that sweeps down from volcano vents and sears the neighboring countryside may at least be tolefated, if it has to come, as an economic asset. G. H. Scldmore, American consul at Nagasaki, has reported to the department of commerce and labor at Washington that a Japanese company organized to work volcanic ash into cement had already paid a dividend of nine per cent, for the first half year on a capital of 200,000 yen and that it had more orders in sight than it could fill. The Mitsu Bishi and Kawasaki dockyards, the two great privately owned dockyards of the empire; the government naval yards at Sasebo and the Wakamatsu Iron Foundry Company were all being supplied with the new ash cement. The government had recently granted a contract for 60,000 hags of the stuff to be used in the new harbor works at Keelung. Quantities have already been exported to north China, Formosa and Korea. The ash, which is obtained from two of the great craters in the so-called Japanese Alps, running through the main island of Hondo, near the West coast, is ground and screened at the new company’s factory, and because of the nature of the composition it needs nothing but water to become very good cement. One asset the new company can count upon—the supply of the crude material is inexhaustible, and, the more that is carted away the more land will be uncovered for the struggling farmer. The discovery : of the new cement strikes one more American product from the list of our exports which had been necessaries for Japan. The Portland ce Blent manufactured in Oregon and Washington was the only cement in nse in Japan before the keen Japs turned the scoria into a paying proposition.

Geological. Miss Dora —Papa, Jack told me the other day that you wouldn’t believe he had money enough to support me unless he showed it to you. Has he done it?” Prudent Father—Yes, dear. He proved it by the testimony of the rocks.—Chicago Tribune. ft A Business Man’s View. “Wealth,” remarked the man who moralizes, “can be made a great influence for good.” - - - : “Yes,” answered Mr. Dustin Stax; “and yet when you start in with the kind of a man who has to be hired to be good, it’s mighty hard to get your money’s worth.” Too Realistic. The husband of the pretty actress had shot at her press agent. “Now, see here,” exclaimed the agent, with some impatience; “you oughtn’t to be so careless. Next time don’t stand so close. Those blank cartridges scorch a man at six feet.” Overheard at the Christmas Dinner. Miss Swellgirl—The rich people of this country seem to be money mad. Mr. Cashless (with a sigh)—Oh, they are not half so mad as the people 'who haven’t got it THE MARKETB. New York, Jan. 27. LIVE STOCK—Steers $3 75 0 7 50 Hogs 4 30 § 4 45 Sheep 3 80 @6 7# FLOUR—Winter Straights. 4 60 @4 76 Wheat—May l 09%@ t to July ? 1 05%0 1 05% CORN-May 69%@ 69% RYE-No. 2 Western 92 0 93 BUTTER—Creamery Firsts. 21 0 30 EGGS—Good to Choice 27 0 30 CHEESE 9%@ 15%, CHICAGO. i CATTLE-Cholce Steers .... $5 50 @ 6 Fair to Good Steers 5 00 ® 5 50 ' Yearlings, Plain to Fancy 6 00 @ 5 50 Fair to Choice Feeders.. 360 @ 4 75 Calves ~. 400 @6 75 HOGS-Prime Heavy 4 20 @440 Mixed Packers 4 20 @ 4 30 Heavy Packing 4 15 .0 4 35 BUTTER-Creamery 21 @ 30 Dairy 17 @ 23 LIVE POULTRY 9%@ 11 •EGGS ...... ... 18%f 28 POTATOES (per bu.) 58 0 62 GRAlN—Wheat, May 1 01%@ 1 03 July 97%0 98 Corn, May 60%@ 62 Oats. New, May 61%® 61% Rye, December 76 @ 76 MILWAUKEE. GRAlN—Wheat, No. 1 Nor’n sllO @1 12 May 101%® 102% Corn, May 61%@ 61% Oats, Standard 52 0 53 Rye, No. 1 84 @ 84% KANSAS CITY. GRAIN-Wheat, May $ 97 © 97% July . '. 90 @ 90% Corn. May 62 @ 62% Oats, No. 2 White 48%@ 60 ST. LOUIS. CATTLE—Bee! Steers $3 75 06 10 Texas Steers , 2 90 @5 26 HOGS—Packers 4 00 @ 4 60 . Butchers 445 -& 4-55 SHEEP-Natives 3 60 @ 5 50 OMAHA. CATTLE—Native Steers .... $3 00 @ 4.80 Stockers and Feeders ... 2 80 @ 4 50 Cows and Heifers 2 00 @440 HOGS-Heavy 4 15 @ 4 25 SHEEP-Wether* ..r... 6 00 ii 5 50

Symprffigs Clea nses the System Effectually', Dispels Colt Land neach aches due to Constipation; Acts naturally, acts truly as a Laxative. Best forMenVomen and Chilch reji-youngand Old, 7? its jßeneficial EffectsAlways huy the Genuine which has ihe full name of the Company P CALIFORNIA - Jic> Syrup Cos. by whom it is manufactured, printed on tbe* -front of every package. SOLD STALL LEADING DRUGGISTS one size only* regular price 504 pr battle. SICK HEADACHE | Positively cared by ,RS ■■* p'u- ’* They also relieve DieP tress from Dyspepsia, In* digestion and Too Hearty ■ D Eating. A perfect rent■i* edy for Dizziness, Natt,9s sea, Drowsiness, BaA Taste in the Month, Coated Tongue, Fain in the ____JBlde, TORPID LIVER, they regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable, SNALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE, pabtcd'cl Genuine Must Bear uAKI tno Fac-Simile Signature Ills m REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.

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What a Settler Can Becure In WESTERN CANADA 160 Acres Grain-Growing Land FREE. 20 to 40 Buihel* Wheat to the Acre. 40 to 90 BiuheL Oat, to the Acre. 35 to SO Buthele Barter to the Acre. Timber for Fencing end Buildings FREE. Good f twi with Low Taxation. Splendid Railroad Facilitiee and Low Ratoa. Schools and Churchee Convenient. Satisfactory Market* for all Productions. Good Climata and Parfact Health. Chances for Profitable Investment*. Some of the choicest grain-producing land* I* Saskatchewan and Alberta may now be acquired in these most healthful and prosperous sections under the Revised Homestead Regulation* by which entry may be made by proxy (on certain conditions), by the father, mother, eon* daughter, brother or sister of Intending homesteader. ->■ _ Entry fee in each case is 110.00. For pamphlet* “Last BeatWest,"particulars as to rates,routes* best time to go and where to locate, apply to C. J. HOUGHTON, ■asm 4M Qaincy BUf.. CUcafs.BU *. H. 10QE1S, third flsar. Trsttlos Tirmlosl Blfe* Infiansrslit. 14.; f T. 9. CUUO. Bssm UL Callahan Block, Milwaukee, Vis.

ne io WHITE LILY MFG. CO. 1700 Rockingham Road DAVENPORT „ - - . IOWA SPOT CASH FOR SOLDIERS AND HEIRS All federal soldiers and sailors wbo served 90 day* between 1861 and 1866 and wbo homesteaded less than 160 acres before June 23,1874, are entitled to additional homestead rights which 1 bur. If soldier Is dead, hie heirs can sell. Talk to old soldiers, widow6and heirs. Find s me soldier relative who went West or Bouti after the war and homesteaded government land* Get busy and make some easy money. Write Henry N. Copp, Washington, D. €., for further particulars. Death Valley A fortune i* to be made in wiling Lee-Koster ■' mining share. Writ* for particulars. TONY O. ANDESON 405 Laughlin Bldg. Los Angeles, CaL FOR SALE state rights ot a simple, original and unique Patented Device pertaining to the hor9e, can be sold by mail, every stable is waiting tor one, tor price and particulars WILL J. O’DONNELL 3 Atlas Street. • ROCHESTER, N. T. FARM OPPORTUNITIES |near Salem, Ore.. “The Cherry efty” on the beantiful Wi Uamette Riyer. Hop. walnut and fruit farms pay *2OO to 1600 perocre. net: dairy farms pay *100; Improved farms *26 to *2OO per acre; unimproved, *5 to *26. Excursion rates to Salem in March and April. Par Information address. Hoard of Trade, Salem, Ora Pacific Investment Syndlcatel^ n Sffi?i& - Financial Agents. Loans on first mortgage. Millions needed. Only place except Gary where building lsdona by wholesale. Buy and sell stocks and bonds. Float lineal securities when satisfied of their merit. Writ* today If yon want better returns for your capital. PA TENTS Book Aof Information seat FREE. ' •u-----r. _ ■ Virginia Farms and Homes. Productive soil. mild, healthy otlmsts. Splendid markets jwrlto for catalog. a.a.ciuWlisco.,l.., si.kw~4.Ta,