»»'»»* fiii^iiiih^iT/iipWi' . . - . • . - , . , ' J' " ' * " " < # ' ' ' V - X' rag MrggyifrT PRAIIfPBALgll, ^HMM1;^ - v I'" <• «<£&< 5fi% &Vj- "r'.v K/j •» "•<•' '*OMb '"'Al ' /?*&?*& © &YIWC&*hVOO *rl " •, •: . • i'^- 1. MT*' '. » i#f. V: 8;jsfc® *? fis&Mzazr J&J&-* ACK to the soil! Idaho or fcmttl Well, anyway, Chicago woke tip the other morning to stare at a scene a bit out of the ordinary on the grounds of the Chicago Motor club at Sixtieth street and Cottage Grove avenue, within a stone's thfcow of the Midway of • World's fair fame. First 1m- . pressions recorded several big "limiy trucks, 25 automobiles of varied vintages |uid makes, a score or more of "bungalow trailers," Ifnen and women in khaki, children of all ages, family washing flapping on lines, fires going, the luneU of bacon and coffee, family breakfast groups, •""I « big sign that set forth that the Chicago \ - jr sir7JFXr J7*7i Urn *r>si'r<r>- ^lotor club was entertaining "Gen." W. D. Scott's ^,-V^ ' •£Uam **>(. CsJ x , i i '.fe ;% Sli.: Anodern caravan, en route from Brooklyn, N. Y., to Buhl, Idaho. ;. '4 "Times change and we with them," sagely re- 'f Snarked an ancient philosopher. They do, Indeed, ^ > flhough probably we change less than do the times. & t'or Chicago, young as It is--it was not incor- £*%orated as a .city until 1837--has seen many a * ^ ^ jraravan headed west In the old days. But tb«y *• : • jfvere caravans of "prairie schooners," drawn by ^ ^ <>xen or mules. And the men and women were go- , "ing forth to face the unknown, fight. Indians, turn . /' Vp the prairie sod, contend with grasshoppers and .v ^rought and put up a fifty-fifty battle with fate ,y*?^3|or a home and a living. * . ' Not so this caravan. It was^traveling in com- ^.jpjfdrt and at speed. It knew just where it was go- _»-:\v ^|ng. It was scheduled for kindly attentions along j..: -the way and a warm welcome. Its land was se- -tured. There was water for Irrigation. Houses ^ " lind warehouses were ready. Everything down to A 'fhe last detail had .been arranged. Failure was jfc *; linthinkable. Success seemed assured. Shades of Kit Carson, Marcus Whitman and l /fcrigham Toung! What a contrast the Lincoln ; highway of 1921 to the Santa Fe trail of the k „/'^Thirties, the Oregon trail, of the Forties, the Mor- ^"ytnon trail of the Fifties, the "Pike's Peak or Bust" Of the Sixties! b- The figures of the census of 1920 show that the 1"}.'4rend of the population from the country to the ; ^Ity has become greatly accentuated since 1910. *' ' JNow, for the first time in the country's history. Jiiore than half the entire population is living In %'/ f*'urban territory." That is to say that of the popu- ^;.^rt«tlon of 105,683,108 perscyis 51.9 per cent are Uv- |ug in cities and 48.1 per cent in rural communities. Jn the census of 1910 the corresponding percent- F.' Ages were 46.3 and 58.7. V " '. This is a condition that is regarded as neither ;^- :*eslrable nor entirely safe. Therefore many are fc the projects to get city dwellers back to the soil. Back to the soil! An American slogan for Amerleans! Yet the country does not extend a general ^ Invitation to all comers. It is not ready to support ir " <m indefinite number of miscellaneous applicants. Jdother Nature is very far from being the beaevo- Hflent old soul she Is pictured by the fictionists w^o frrite farm prospectuses. She does not give her Ip " bounties for nothing. She demands full payment. 1% And she exacts full penalty for mistakes. It Is the surest kind of a sure thing that the H (Country home that pays its own way means hard * work for somebody. There will be blisters, backfcches and sore muscles that will have to be worked ,|from soreness Into strength. Ere the billowing grain delights his eye, the city man will understand why providence or nature or evolution pro- Dlded him with eyebrows. Moreover, there Is a slowness and a deliberation |n nature's ways and methods that to the city man, Cj'f" iused to doing things upon the instant, will be little C* Jess than maddening. It Is useless to rage against * V , j|lie ordered processes; they cannot be hurried. city man must learn to wait for seed time f t Thnd harvest and to possess his soul in patience. So it ia evident that there is a balance to be Struck. The city is one thing; the country is anf" jpther. The city cannot be transplanted in the And ne one can strike thi# balance for " ^ "^he would-be back-to-the-lander; be must do it Mor himself. | In striking this balance, however, there is more • to be taken into account than the dollars. There ^ ; #re the beauties of nature. There is pure air, * , Nundefiled by smoke and soot; a place In the sun, no skyscrapers overhead to shut out the blue i&oral and financial. He will find a real home. And old Mother Nature will likely throw in health, • strength ai^d happiness for good measure. One of--the photographs reproduced herewith shows Royal N. Allen of the Chicago Motor club welcoming William D. Scott, leader of the caravan. Mr. Scott used to live in Minneapolis. Then he went to Boston. Later he became a successful sales manager in Brooklyn, with a home at 230 Decatur street. He is a middle-aged man, with-a wife and two children. During the war he made a reputation as a "four-minute man." He had made up his mind to drive to the West this summer, buy a ranch, hang up his hat and grow up with the country. Several of his neighbors grew Interested and asked to go along. And that's how the colony idea started. Then Mr. Scott wrote to commercial clubs and state and county officials in different parts of the West. Gov. David W. Davis of Idaho responded promptly with a definite' offer. Mr. Scott went to Idaho and made a study of land in Twin Falls county, along the Snake river. Here's the way Mr. Scott tells it: "That settled it. When I saw that land I knew it was just the place I was looking for, and I immediately took an option on 5,120 acres. The land was offered to me at the uniform price of $125 an acre, with water rights, $25 an acre to be paid down at purchase and the balance within ten years at 6 per cent interest. "This whole land project is supervised by the State. It is financed by the Idaho Farm Develop- . ment company, the president of which is E. T. Meredith, who was President Wilson's secretary of agriculture and who is a practical farmer and the proprietor of an agricultural newspaper in Des Moines, Ia. Mr. Meredith and his associates^, incorporating under the Cary act, spent $625,000 developing these tracts. The waters of three t|to- "Utarles of the Snake river, draining the watershed of the Jarbldge mountains, 47 miles south westward from our colony, were dammed and impounded in the Cedar Creek reservoir. Thence a . steel flume leads the water down through the canyon of the Little Salmon river, Irrigating the lands which we have taken up for our^future homes and ranches. We have, in all, an area tof about three miles by six. , "This irrigation enterprise Immediately made jnarvelously fertile many thousands of acres which theretofore had been merely a sagpbrush prairie. The area had been used only as cattle range and was one of the most sparsely settled districts in the state. With irrigation, there isn't a better country ' for growing alfalfa, onions and the famous Idaho potatoes. On farms in the same neighborhood and enjoying like advantages to ours there have been grown world record crops of alfalfa, wheat to the tone of 92 bushel to the acre, and potatoes rating as high as 642 bushels to the acre. *Buhl, our nearest railroad town. Is aboat 12 mfles from the most distant ranches of our colony. It Is a lively town only nine years old, but with about 7,000 population. A fine road! which is more than 50 miles long and which runs directly through ovr tract, connects Buhl with the new mining town of .InrhWlgi^ .Out of the Jarbldge mountains tl^e Guggenheim interests have taken more gold than all the yellow metal yielded by Alaska. The town X of Jarbldge is the natural center of that rich country, ahd our colony will be its nearest source of supply, with a good road running straight Into (L" Mr. 8cott returned to Brooklyn bubbling over with enthusiasm. His enthusiasm was Infections. kkv and the stars and the moon; honest thirst He was besieged with applications for member- [A, * » makes nectar ofm tiUhe- god1s _ out oa#f water ffnrAomHl T1..4 iim R 10A aama ntlll Mtfilra AIlftT 19ft & 1 jfhe well and buttermilk from the spring-house; W " ihi\ appetite that would put a soul under the ribs Death; sleep the like of which no city man ever juiOV£S. From many viewpoints farming is the highest i *nd best of callings. Farming is an honest busijf/ i t t>e>8. The farmer is no useless consumer, no para- >7 Mte. He is a producer; he contributes directly f/• '"^;£to the wealth of the nation. He is Independent • -f ^nd is beholden to no man for place or favor. He does not climb up by dragging others down. the fundamental natural resource from which , the nation draws its life. And the fanner is the »4r <\f tK* AAnntrr IVk*Yes; back-to-the-land is the right thing for the •TV,./-right man. He will find independence--mental. ship. But the 5,120 acres will make only 128 tracts of 40 acres each. So a weeding-out process was begun. Every prospective member was put through the third degree. The rule was laid down that every accepted member must be "100 per cent American"; must have at least $3,000 in cash; must be able to take care of himself and family until the first crops are marketed. Even then the 128 members of the colony were quickly secured. In the meantime, the Idaho people, who had evidently taken a shine to the Brooklyn people, were doing their part. Governor Davis visited Brooklyn and addressed a meeting of the colonists. The Buhl chamber of commerce sent Ben H. Bushman,, on* />f its {eiders and secretary of the Rotary club, with ofTers of service from the chamber and the flub. So the deal went through without a hitch ar&aTyp-f and the start was made from Brooklyn on July 28L The only semblance of trouble nas over the selection of those to form the first caravan. Of course, there was disappointment on the part of those who had to wait. But there were reasons why all could not go. The principal one Is that it is impossible to clear the sagebrush off all of the 5,120 acres kll at once and prepare the land for cultivation. Also, some members require time to close out their business interests to advantage^ Probably the second caravan will not set out till next summer. Of the colonists, as a whole Mr. Scott says this: "Of the 400 or more in our colony aboat 00 per cenl are Brooklynites. Approximately 25 per cent now live in other boroughs of New York city; about 10 per cent hail from New Jersey or New England, while the remaining five per cent come from scattered localities, some of them in the South. About 10 per <%nt of the whole number of these pioneers are former residents of the West, but not more than 15 per cent of them have had any practical experience at farming either in the East or In the West. "Nobody is borrowing trouble because of lack of experience, however. Idaho is by no means shortsighted to the advantages the success of so widely advertised an enterprise holds out. Experts from the Idaho Agricultural college are to provide supervision and skilled labor for the first year. We are told that if we work in harmony with these experts, obeying their directions, they will guarantee results. The Idaho authorities predict that we can pay out by the end of the third year on tho proceeds of alfalfa, onion seed and potato crops. As further evidence that Idaho waits for us with welcoming arms outstretched, a construction company already is at work erecting permanent bungalow homes for many of our party, to be available directly on our arrival. And there is being built a warehouse in which may be stored such household effects pending their occupancy of their new domiciles as the colonists may elect to forward to Idaho Instead of consigning to the auction man before the.v shake the dust of Brooklyn from their feet. Probably there will be not less than 80 carloads of freight, chiefly household effects. to be forwarded by rail." Some people would doubtless think that an automobile journey of 2,500 miles was quite a trip under the circumstances and that the railroad could do the job not only faster but easier. The colonists have figured that ail out. Says Mr. Scott: "In the first place, railroad transportation rates are awfully high; we travel much more cheaply this way. Besides, a motor car is an essential on an Idaho ranch; why not kill two birds with one stone? We've got a pretty complete caravan; we're traveling pretty comfortably. Speeding Is not permitted, the idea being to maintain a steady pace of about 12 miles an hour on an average, the caravan touring only during the day and pitching its bivouac each night. In addition to the passenger cars and the bungalow trailers, there are three three-ton service trucks, an administration car, a traveling postoffice and a quartermaster's car and a pair of extra trucks whose duty it will be to run ahead of the caravan daring the nights to keep It properly supplied with provisions and equipment. "And finally, the tour itself appeals to us sentimentally. We're seeing the country to advantage and we're going to have the delight of going through Yellowstone National park." The caravan reached Chicago by way of Albany, Buffalo and Niagara Falls, Cleveland and Toledo. It started west from Chicago over the Lincoln highway. It will follow the Way to Cheyenne, Wyo., where nh*t uoiugM were scheduled--bronchobusting. a barbecue and a regular "Out-where-the- West-beglns" celebration. pE WASTED NO TIME IN WORDS |'7-.,|!«rtilnly Neither Si Merrick Ner Jim Baldwin Could Tmthfullf Be Called Qarrutona. said Ovid Langley, there Is another town where there s *«re two men as little given to talking " Si Herrick and Jim Baldwin, but | doubt It" w Mre. Lanxley looked up from her knitting. . "What- they been dqjng now?" "I dropped into die hardware store Hiia afternoon after a pound of nails, and while I was there Si came in. He was carrying a teakettle that needed soldering. Jim came up to wait on him, and Si Just pointed to the Spot that needed fixing. " "Without saying a word, Jim took the kettle and went off into the back room, and fli sat down and began to read the newspaper. After a time Jim came back and handed the kettle to Si. It had twenty cents' marked on the side. "SI polled out a quarter and gave It to him, and Jim put his hand Into his pocket, took out a handful of change, picked out a nickel and handed It to Si; and 81 went away, carrying the kettle. And. by Jiminy, neither of 'em had said a word." "Well," said Mrs. Langley reflectively, "I guess if the truth was known there4! i lot of talk goet fn that ain't really necessary."--Youth'i Companion. "Byd's" Declaration. * "B^d" who had just started ft school, thought It very smart to use big words. His sister was told to slap his hands when he was naughty, so one day he came in, furious, and said: "There is absolutely no philosophy In sister hitting m« the way she ^oe^. She must be made to stop It**---<Sbl cago Herald and Examiner. MMtmmMwii LLINOIS STATC NEWS iimiiHiimmii Springfield.--The total enrollment in Springfield public sebwls lias reached more than 9.000. according to figures compiled by the superintendent. Aurora. -- Adopting the plan in rogue in colleges and universities, East Aurora high school board has engaged a de^n of girls for the school. Belvidere.--Voters of portions of Boone and Caledonia townships, Boone county, have petitioned the county board to create a new township^ to be known as Poplar Grove, Springfield.--Frank T. Sheets, for 14 years connected with the state highway department, has been made superintendent of the division to succeed S. D. Brndt.- resigned. Sheets was appointed by Governor Small. Galesburg.--The sum of $10,914 was turned ovr- to the Galesburg Cottage Hospital, a bequest with interest from the estate of Nancy Roundtree of this city. Similar bequests were made by the testatrix to the Free Kindergarten, and also the Catherine Home for the Aged. Lincoln.--One hundred thousand dollars worth of street improvements were voted for next year at a meet- !ng of the Lincoln board of local improvements. The improvements which are contemplated to come within the appropriation will connect the state aid highway through the city north and south, and will also connect with pave1 oient on the west. This will give the city ©f Lincoln paved outlets on all four sides. Springfield.--*The local offices of the Antl-Tuberculosls association are now laying plans for the state meeting of the organization which will be held at Champaign, October 17 and 18. An outstanding feature of the meeting will be a modern health crusade institute meeting to be held at the University of Illinois October 15. While this meeting precedes the sessions of tiie association It in reality will be part of the state meeting. Decatur.--Daniel M. Ross ojf Benton was elected to the office of grand outer guard by Illinois Knights of Pythias In session here and from this office will be automatically advanced until he attains the highest office the state has to offer, that of grand chancellor. The grand lodge voted to return to Decatur next year following the passage of resolutions, which must go over one year, to muke Decatur the permanent meeting place of the grand lodge. Chicago.--Chief of Police Charles Fitzmorris was found guilty of con- :empt of court because of Interviews 'ritlclsing Judge David, who presided it sanity hearings in the Wanderer nurder case. He has the choice of ac- :epting a $100 fine and five days in he county jail or no fine and six nonths in jail. The finding was made )y Judge David, who suspended servng of the mittimus for sixty days, lowever, to give Fitzmorrls' attorneys :lme to prepare an appeal. Springfield.--Gov. Leu Small anlonnced members of the Illinois educalonal commission, empowered by an ^ct of the last session of the legisla- .ure to Investigate the educational sys- :em of the state and make its recoiuuendations to the next session. Mem- »ers are: A. M. Shelton, Crystal Lake, ihalrman; State Senator William S. iray, Coatsburg; Representatove Har- •y Wilson, Plnckneyviile; Dean C. M. riiompson, University of Illinois; Mrs. J. H. Leiber, Winnetka, chairman of :he department of applied education, Illinois Federation of Womens clubs. Springfield.--Whether the sixty-four Cahokia mounds, three miles east of Bast St. Louis, were made by Indians burying their dead on the plains, tier on tier, and then carrying dirt in baskets to cover their bodies and earthly possessions, or whether the Indians dug into natural hills to bury their dead, is the long-mooted scientific problem which Prof. Warren K. Moorehead hopes to solve within the next two months. Prof. Moorehead, bead of the department of archeology at Phillips academy, Andover, Mass., and Internationally known for his scientific research work in Indian history, has been appointed to explore the mounds by Dr. A. R. Crook, chief of the Illinois state museum division. Joliet.---Directors of the State bank of Crete, which failed, about -thrfee years ago after the cashier, It Is alleged, lost about. $300,000 speculating on the Chicago board of trade, were held liable for the $400,000 of deposits In a decision by Judge Frank L. Hooper of the Circuit court. The suit was filed by Henry \V. Ohlendeff. a depositor. Judge Hooper held that the directors had been negligent of their .duty and consequently were indirectly responsible for the loss, which they must make good under the Judge's ruling. They were held liable Individually and collectively. The bank's auditing and finance committees. composed of directors, also are liable, the decision held. Urbana.--Six thousand four hundred and seventy-one students enrolled at the University of Illinois during the first two days of registration. That is 528 more students than registered In the first two days last year. Officials predict a 10 per cent increase over last year. Then 7,427 attended the first semester. Mollne.--Seventy-four aliens. Including 24 from Sweden and 19 from Belgium, applied f«»r first naturalization papers at a hearing here. Twelve other European countries went also represented. > Rockford.--Brothers . Godfrey Grants, furniture manufacturer, who died recently, sued to set aside his will. He bequeathed $150,000 to the First Lutherau church of thl? city. The brothers say he was "mentally Incompetent when tjtie ^wiU jWas made." " Aurora.--Members of • thf Masonic order* in Aurora have opened a campaign to raise $250,000 to pay for a new building. There are 2,000 members here. It is planned to break ground this fall and to complete th« .wlthln a jrear. t Rockford.--Nursing will he Instituted as a new course in Rockford high school, the first in the state to give such instractMb. „« Paris.--The plant wth rtie Parti Steam laundry was desttfffyed by Hire. The loss, estimated at $30,000, partially covered by Insurance. St. Charles.--What is believed to be the greatest flowing well in Illinois was struck at lire TimoroSsky sUiuQie* resort, near hwe. The well, which Is 125 feet in depth, flows 150 gallons of water a minute. Springfield.--Itie question of unent* ployment of ex-service men will be discussed by delegates to the third annual/ convention of the state department of the American Legion, to be held In Decatur October 10 and IV 0 Rushville.--The Ray Tile works, which has been closed for many months, will he reopened on October 1. and operation will be continued throughout the winter, according to an announcement made by the company. Peoria.--Peoria has decided to experiment in the co-operative apartment building, the tenants to own the structure jointly and be their own landlord, sharing the cost of construction and operation, g Pians have been approved and ground broken for the new structure. Chicago.--Indictment and prosecution for mbrder of all physirtans found negligent in handling diphtheria cases, where death results, was announced by Commissioner Robertson as the plan of the Chicago department of health. Diphtheria is on the Increase In Chicago, many cases being reported each day from ail sections of the city. Alton. -- Mrs. Jane Burliam, a negress, aged one hundred and fourteen years, who was a slave on a Virginia plantation until freed after the Civil war, is dead. She had resided here for nearly half nt century. Two daughters, Mrs. Martha Jackson, age eighty-two, of Alton, and Mrs. Betty Hall, age eighty-nine, of Bloomlngton, survive. ;» Urbana.--Experiments with rock phosphate on wheat have shown encouraging results, according to 5 reports received at the agricultural experiment station of the University of Illinois from farm advisers. In Bond county, many experiments were made with good results by drilling phosphate rock in with the wheat just like commercial fertiliser. In one of thpsp ex|>eriments one farmer got more wheat with 257 bundles that had been treated with 300 pounds of rock phosphate than he did from 270 bundles that had been treated with 200 pounds of bone meal and acid phosphate mixed. Springfield.--From reports received on condition of crops In the state, the yield of corn this year will exceed that of last year, and will be 84 per cent of the normal, according to the federal crop estimating bureau for Illinois. Conditions during the month of August greatly improved the crop, resulting In an Increase In the production forecast over that of August 1. The forecast made on September 1 would Indicate a crop of 325,512,000 bushels, as compared with 297,326,000 bushels, the forecast of August 1, 294,168,000 bushels, the production of last year, and 346,330,000, the average of the five years, 1915-19. Springfield.--Declaring that the banking interests of the state have flagrantly violated state tax laws, the state tax commission, In letters to the boards of review of twenty-flve connties, asked for complete copies of all corporation assessments. Percy B. Coffin, head of the commission, announced that It Is their Intention to force the banks to pay a just share of the state's taxes. When that is "completed, Coffin says, the commission will turn Its attention to other corporations which have been evading taxes. Counties to which the letter was sent are: Adams, Champaign, Cook, Franklin, Henry, Jefferson, Kane, Knox, Lake, La Salle, Lee, Macyn, Macoupin, Madison, Marlon, McLean, Morgan, Peoria, Rock Island, Sangamon, St Clair, Vermillion, Will, Williamson and Winnebago. Chicago.--Four IUlnoisans have enjoyed incomes of more than $1,000,000 a year, it was revealed when the latest income tax statistics were made public by the collector of Internal revenue. The figures given out were those for the calendar year that ended Dec. 31, 1919, upon which income tax payments were made last year. The statistics therefore do not reveal whether the fortunate persona continue to enjoy In 1920 the million dollar plus Incomes. Neither do they Indicate who the four are or were, as it is against the income tax law to reveal this. Of the four listed two enjoyed Incomes of $1,500,000 to $2,- 000,000 a year, while two more had from $3,000,000 to $4,000,000 to spend in 1919 without touching their capital. Several other interesting f|acts are revealed by the statistics.' ^They show that the total ^number of persons In the state making income tax returns was 422,229, their income $1,662,796,- 441, and the total tax $99,398,236. Of the 442,229 making returns 248,251, or more than one-half, had Incomes of from $1,000 to $3,000 a year. Springfield.--Springfield is leading all other cities in Illinois in its building program, according to reports submitted at the meeting of the State Associated Building Contractors, held in Danville. The reports showed that In proportion to its size, more building was being done in Springfield than in any other city In the state. Chicago.--Through the efforts of various agricultural and farmers' organ- UatloiiS, • reduction in iiiv in-igut rate charge on shipments of limestone to all points in Illinois has been secured from the Illinois Central railroad. Washington, D. C.--There were 2,626,547 i»ersons ten years old and over in Illinois engaged, in gainful cupatlon In 1920, constituting 40.5 per cent of the total population of 6.4S5.- 2S0, the census bureau announced. Of this number 2.085,378 vvera males and 541,169 were females. Springfield. -- Governor "Small announced the appointment of Lawrence H. Beclierer of Kankakee to be state superintendent of charities. Becherer has been temporarily Id' charge of the Industrial school for the bMeg In WONDERFUL GAIR IN WEIGHT REPORTEOf Yoang Woman Only Weighed 1#^ Pound*--Now Weighs Over 100 - ** ""sand Is Gaining Every Day. "Before I began taking Tanlac I oetf weighed 76 pounds, I now weigh one hundred and am gaining every day," said Mi.>3 LsSue Duvia ui CS*6& tanooga, Tenn. ."I bought my first bottle of TanlM at (His City, Ind., and tt helped me m much that I continued using It. IjMtf always been very delicate and suffMed a great deal from stomach trouble SM0 rheumatism. I rarely ever had any V petite %nd simply could not relish Any* thing. I fell off cutil I only weighed 76 pounds and was so thin I looks# perfectly awfuL This Is the conditio* I was in when I began taking TaB&Mb "Oh, I feel so different now. Even my complexion Is improved. My appfe tite is good and I can hardly get enough to eat. Tanlac is simply grand ttn<l 1 can truthfully say it is the only medicine that has ever done me say good." Tanlac is sold by leading drngg$§ta everywhere.--Advertisement, ;:-V She Oidnt Mind it. Algernon Tassin, whose views cernlng women in his play, ""EMf Craft of the Tortoise," are very Irritating to many women, tells of on« at a lecture of his, who turned to another woman, seated hear bar, and said fierAly: "I'd hate to be married to that man!" "Oh, it Isn't so had," replied Mtsl Tassin. "I don't mind it."--New York- Bvwtnv Post ' ; Cl The hurt of a burn or a cut (tope Cole's Carbolis&lve la applied. It quickly without scars. SOc and Me by all druggists or send 30c to The J. W. COM* OSL, Rockford, PL--Advertisement. |;i| Animal Superiority. . ^ "Did you ever see a movie star WtOk*- out some kind at silly affectation7" "Only one." "Man, woman or childf "Neither. A dog."--Blrmlngha*V Age-Herald. f , And Attractive. "wfcat la meant by a *natiooal nre,' par' "A dollar mark, my son." GENUINE BULL I DURHAM | f ^ tobacco makes 50 flood cigarettes for 10c t > • IP'jWe want ymi to have that *i'T #1 * ibeat papor tor "BOLL.": f # new yott om roaotaal 4 'p • • |,;yj*rtthoaohpapfca»sakaakf "Vs 24 leavea «f ;•*•* very finest aigarMi ? paper In the world. U' omght tomorrow Alrfght ' glkSTAWOiirip olive tar heals sore throat Dont cough all night--a few drupe gives quick relief. N*Ter lAUaKOCXSLkK. cold and J* dSi -- ctnmi Cuticura Soap •IS IDEAL- For the Hands Sea? 25C, Otatesat 25 mi 50c, Take* Sc. •m "TaSESS HAIR BALSAM mOHtnMDpMMH Issea&s&sitiSKSh) HINDER CORNS a-- Mi aakaa vaftW nq. S»krMU«jl|nr ' EPILEPTICS Would roe car* to toara aboat a«w rutoaai tr«atm«nt for Immtdlttt relief of efiUnv. / positively •topping wlraree from Srat daT*Q Ose. Iaformatloa Free. '^SPBCIAUST.* , Prawer A S9S. LANDER. WYOMING. Waterproof Aprom Bey d'.rwt--tb« beet at lowMt coet--attractive pauerna at Otnehes*, Percale. Plata--spL prices on reqoeet. Amer. Apron Co.. Ill* Bldg., Seattle, Wuk. MOXKT! Oct ta on (round Seoc at money malting proposition. Remit we will send sample* with dlrectleM. Profit a rSKTN a CO.. A1.PINB. M' r*r Sale--Fin* ste a?re 4*1 rr farm. Mattel Wla. GUARANTEED bargain. $7S A PartieslM% |«rns rf ated owner. Bos 10. SU«*rlaMVk Cultivated Gtaeeac. Ten dollere per *e*a$k Uug? pk« «*e<i tor ti.»o Seari ter elsseftwe, Henry Bs Kn«bl*ueh.Or«wer.ilis»pfcjefce»%afc