Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 28 Feb 1907, p. 8

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PLACING IMMIGRANTS / _, fPUENDfD WOftK OF i'N'EW YORK i>; .. DISTRIBUTING AQjENC*^* 0*ngeetlei» In Cities Relieved J|eo<iina Ovt the Ruaafen iltto Plates Where v/ Are Needed. By The Immigrants are pouting into ttl. country in ever increasing num­ bers, and there is always a tendency OB tlieir part to herd in the large' Cities, especially New York. This is true especially of the Russian Jews, Who, because of the persecutions in tlie czar's dominions, .are flocking to this country. To correct this over­ crowding an industrial removal office has been established in New York city, which is doing a remarkable work about which the general public knows little or nothing. The office was started a little over five years ago and since that time it has sent away from this city 29,413 persons, almost all of tl^m recent arrivals from Russia, who knew no English Jewish immigrants Who Have Become Farmers. •ttd were,, la many cases, practically penniless. Of these about 16,000 were wage-earners; the remainder their Wives and children. „ When an immigrant, just arrived «rom Europe, is directed to the re­ moval office by some acquaintance he (gives a record of his antecedents to Some employe there. This record is Investigated by the office staff. If the applicant is adjudged to be a suitable •person, he is sent away to some place In the United States where he will have an opportunity of earning his •living. If he has friends or relatives In some particular town,, hfe goes "there; otherwise he goes to whatever place 4 determined upon by the nI moval office. The success of this system has been very marked. To take the Russians «ent to Toledo, Ohio, as an example, one Russian immigrant there is now earning $70 a month, another ?60, an­ other $16 a week. To show the diversity of occupations, one is em­ ployed in the Wheeling & Lake Erie railroad shops, another in the Pope Motor Car works, another in the American Can company, another in the Gendron Wh^el company. These men had been in the United States only a few weeks .at the time they were sent to Toledo by the removal office. In Omaha, Neb., men sent away from New York city by the office are now working as upholsterers, plas­ terers, butchers, carpenters, tailors and as mechanics in the Union Pacific railroad shops, at w&ges ranging from $15 to $25 a week. In short, estimating the average earnings of men .sent away b^ the removal office at $500 per ^npum, which is far from a high figure, it may be said that they are earning $8,000,000 per annum, which is ( no mean addition to the industrial wealth of the country, when the fact is borne in mind that the great bulk of those earning this amount came to this country as helpless foreigners. A recent investigation by agents of the office showed these facts: Sis men sent to Columbus, Ohio, had savings in banks ranging from $75 to $300, and aggregating $960, notwith­ standing the fact that three of them were sending money home to Russia and two of them had brought their families from there. Of nine men sent to Nashville, Tenn., three have their own stores already. Two carpenters sent to Minneapolis have savings of $800 and $700, respectively, and one shoemaker sent there owns his own house. A Pittsburg machinist is earn­ ing $20 a week; another $4 a day. Three of the four have bank accounts ranging from $300 to $500. Of those sent to Rochester, six have purchased houses and others have bank accounts as high as $500. Twenty-nine men sent to that city have aggregate bank savings and holdings in real estate amounting to $8,000. It must be borne in mind that none of these men, when sent away, "had employment of any kind in New York. Every one was out of a job when sent It entails more responsibility than the removal office is willing to assumt to take a man out of a paying job here and send him elsewhere, where he may or may not succeed. The bulk of the men whose cases are cited above came here as immigrants, many of them destitute. John Barrett & mm 14; . ' - THAW IS WORRIED BY LUNACY COMMISSION TALK Renewed < Report# That Jerome Will |Take This Course--The Defend-; Ff (im^graiint'e Mother Is Said to "i Have Consented. J3# ', P yr.n..-':* : % • »f.<« . «• '"< :•.•, v • < , t ' ' „ > C t' ' *'" i*\ •ork.--Clifford W. Hartridge, atfd that a cup of broth liad "been ner AULD BRIG OF AYR ,|eoT8 URGED TO SAVE IT FROM CAPACIOUS AMERICANS. Rosebery Fears That aires of This Land Will Million- Snap Tran#p°rt - - • : teric Bridge. t | The American millionaire has come be known in Europe as the con­ noisseur of everything which is old slid rare, and his money has not only bought many a priceless art treasure hut entire castles as well which his energy has torn down, shipped across the ocean and reared again on Amer­ ican soil. This has led the European to realize that nothing is sacred to the European that an American with push t ahd gold may covet. • The latest object of concern to the Britisher is the "Auld Brig of Ayr" which Lord Rosebery is urging the .Scotch to purchase and hold lest it catch the fancy of some American and ft be transported bodily to American «oM. • . S o c o n c e r n e d w a s t h e t i t l e d E n g l i s h - over the matter that he recently *»ade a trip to Glasgow and in a pas­ sionate appeal urged Scotland to pre­ serve the old bridge for the sake of its Association with the name of the t>oet Burns. He charged that the Scots were open to the charge of cant, a * thing that Burns hated, when they honored and revered his memory and «ftuld not raise $50,000 to preserve Its fioBt cherished associations. All this presents an interesting and new phase of the American terror In Europe and the British Isles. Even their old bridges they feel are not safe to them. There is a touch of humor !• the American reader at least In the substance of Lord Rosebery's ap­ peal as reported in the Manchester Guardian. i He said he had come to Glasgow "in many different characters, but he never before came in the character [•.••pi what the poet whom they were thlnking of that day would have called jolly beggar.' He was a jolly beg- j'ijar that day, at least as jolly as he t " J 4 J B ' J ' i i . f : could be under the circumstances, cause the avocation of a beggar was not very congenial to him, from want of practice. He had begged in Edin­ burgh; he appealed to the old 'Chuckie Reekie,' as Burns called Edinburgh, and he hoped the old 'chuckie' was go­ ing to lay some eggs. If she were slothful the Cock of the West would be down, and would rival, and more than rival, all her efforts. It was no secret that what he was asking from them that day was a certain sum of money, to be got within a very limited time, to save what was not merely the subject of one of Burns' famous poems, but was also an object of na­ tional and antiquarian interest. "He regarded it as absolutely neces­ sary to save the Auld Brig. Other­ wise, supposing they failed to find the money, they might have the Auld Brig purchased by some great American multi millionaire, who wonld have all ma ittrntmph, copyright, by .Underwood a Underwood, IT. T. Our former minister to Colombia, just appointed director of the Interna­ tional Bureau of American Republics to which Andrew Carnegie has donated over a half million dollars for a new building to be erected in Washington. Mr. Barrett has filled several important diplomatic positions, amo'ng them are: the position of Minister to Siam, settling by arbitration claims involving three million dollars and securing first exact interpretation foreign extraterritorial jurisdiction, Asiatic countries; undertook several diplomatio commercial investigations in Japan, Corea, Siberia and India; war corro- apondent in the Philippines in 1898; was Minister to Argentina find Panama prior to«his appointment in Bogota, Colombia. ENGINES RUN ON SNOW. NEW N LOCOMOTIVE BUILT NORTHERN PINERISH. FOR Mounted on Sleds, the Machine Hauls k Great Loads of Logs--Has Novel T r a c t i o n D e v i c e -- S p e e d o f Five Miles an Hour.-' ' ' w Minneapolis, Minn.--A new and powerful snow locomotive for use in large part in hauling logs in the pineries of northern Minnesota, Wis­ consin and other northwestern states has been built and put into service. A portable boiler, firebox pattern, is mounted on a heavy channel Iron frame which extends from the extreme front to the rear of the machine. The channels support the cab and the coal tender. A water-tank is carried under the boiler on the same frame. The latter In turn is supported by the heavy traction wheels in the rear and by the sled in front. The boiler is ten feet in length, 35 inches in diameter, tubes 1% inches. Four cylinders are provided for transmitting power. These are at­ tached in pairs, two engines on each side of the boiler, bolted to the frame and boiler in an upright position. Each pair of engines is equipped with reversing liifk motion. The traction device consists of two heavy runners, one on either side of the engine, which are carried on a 5%- inch iron shaft. On each end of these runners is attached a pair of heavy boxes in which Iron shafts run. Each shaft has a heavy sprocket wheel and these wheels mesh into and carry the tread on log chains. The latter are 12 inches wide and about 28 feet long. ... Each pair of runners also has two tool-steel roller chains. These chains are shown on the sides of the sprock­ ets under the tread chain. This trac­ tion device is novel and certainly the most interesting part of this locomo­ tive. When the engines are started power The Auld Brig of Ayr. the stones numbered and have them again built together in his back yard at Chicago. If they did n6t save the Auld Brig--if he could embark on'sucb a hypothesis as that--he would wish that that should be its fate. That act, in the New World, would be an eternal reproach to Old Scotland. The real feeling he had at heart in this matter was to avert that stain from Scotland and from the Scottish es­ cutcheon, which he thought would be absolutely indelible. is transmitted by spur pinions on crank shafts to pinions on the front end of the driving shafts. On the rear end of these driving shafts are at­ tached bevel pinions which mesh in large bevel gears running on quills on the main bearing. These bevels also have a spur gear attached to them which carries the power through an intermediate gear and another spur gear to the shaft of the rear sprockets/ the rear being the driven sprocket. All gearing is cut from solid steel. The runner castings, sprockets, tread chains and all parts subject to severe strain are made from a high grade of cast steel and are bulit for severe work. The cab is fitted up in the usual lo­ comotive style, each engine having quadrant and level for reversing. The regular type of locomotive throttle la used. These engines weigh about 15 tons without coal or water and about 18 tons when ready for the road; With 200 pounds of steam pressure they de­ velop about 100 horsepower and have a speed of from four to five miles an hour. When the roads are well graded and iced these engines will handle from seven to ten heavy logging sleds. Sev­ eral engines hauled 60,000 feet of green hemlock and hard wood to the load and made three round trips every ten hours on an eight-mile road, or 50 miles a day. The builder of these snow locomo­ tives, a manufacturing company of Eau Claire, Wis., has delivered several of them td lumber firms, principally in Minnesota and Wisconsin, and suc­ cessful records were made. One en­ gine near Walker, Minn., took nine sleds to the landing, each sled parry­ ing 12,000 feet of white pine and Nor­ way logs, and one made four trips on a five-mile road every day. This engine is particularly serviceable when the timber is scattered or stands in small bodies. Uncle Sam's Commerce Is Booming. His Trade Growth in Two Years More Than $3},000,000. Is TOLD WHAT IT WAS K fcw,,;, '•Now, air,I hope we shall have ho difficulty in getting you to speak up," said the barrister, in a very loud, com­ manding voice. 'I hope not, sir," shouted the wlt- ^ttess^at the top of his lungs. - "How^llare you speak to me in that $ v • way?" crleaMhe lawyer. i "Because I can't speak no louder, • - «lr," said thf ostler. - J& "Have you been drinking?" • "Yes, sir." |Lty. I "I should infer so from your con- l duct. What have you been drinking?" j*. "Coffee," hoarsely vociferated the knight of the stable. 4 i •' / f" "Something stronger than coffee, ; -fir, you've been drinking! Don't look ^ f, it me like that, sir!" furiously. "Look «t the jury, sir! Did you have some- f"-rVfJhing in ypur coffee,.-*Urffv.' "Yes, sir." ; . J5."% "What was It?"' IptJr "Sugar."' V; "This man Is no fool, my lord--he is Worse!" stormed the counsel. • I "Now, air"--turning to tfce witness --'look at me. What beside sugar did you take in your coffee this morning?" ^ The ostler collected his forces, drew a deep breath, and, in a voice that could have been heard half a mile away, bellowed out: "A spuue! A apune, a»* nothing else!" A Peculiarity. *• "Do you still believe in :tf$ faith cure?" , I" "Yes," answered the tolerant man; "but there's this peculiarity about itV It always appears to be good for some­ thing that somebody else has and yon haven't."--Washington Star. Washington.--The enormous growth in American trade with its noncontigu­ ous territories in the last calendar year as contrasted with the preceding one is shown in figures compiled by the bureau of statistics of the depart­ ment of commerce and labor. In value this commerce aggregates $131,000,- 000, compared with less than |100,- 000,000 in 1904. Of this trade $59,000,000, in round numbers, consisted of merchandise shipped to those territories and ,$72,- 000,000 worth of merchandise receiv­ ed from them. In addition to this there was received from Alaska over $18,500,000 worth of gold, being its own production, and $6,500,000 of for­ eign gold, principally from the British territory adjacent. Qf the $59,000,000 worth of mer­ chandise sent to the non-contiguous territories about $22,000,000 worth went to Porto Rico, $17,500,000 to Alaska, $12,500,000 to Hawaii and $7,- 000,000 to the Philippines. The following figures show how American shipments of merchandise have increased in 1906 as compared with 1904; Porto Rico from $12,000,- 000 to $22,000,000, Alaska from $11,- 500,000 to $17,600,000, Hawaii from $11,000,000 to $12,500,000 and to the Philippines from $5,000,000 to arlittlB over $7,000,000. Shipments of merchandise from noncontiguous territories to the Unit­ ed States during the same period have increased as follows: Hawaii frtim $25,000,000 to nearly $30,000,000, Porto Rico from $14,000,000 to $20,760,000, Alaska from $10,500,000 to $12,000,- 000, while in the case of the Philip­ pines there is shown a slight reduc tion. The gold received from Alaska, the total of domestic production, was in 1904 a little over $9,000,000 and in 1906 $18,500,000. Rare Violin la Found. New York.--A violin, which the police said had a label marked "An ^mius Stradivarius, Cremonensis, Fa- Wiebat - Anno 1736," was unearthed among a quantity of supposed stolen goods. The violin and goods were found at the home of Ernst Erinkert, who is under arrest An expert will be asked to examine the violin to a» certain ff it is a genuine Cremona. $12,500 Paid for a Vase. London.--Twenty-five hundred gnt rieas, a record price, was paid at Christie's for a square-shaped Chinese vase of the Kang-He period 20 inches high. Bateea Bros, were the buyers. & i"1 Got There. "You shouldn't have been ib such m hurry," said the man at the top of the stairway. "I told you it was only one flight down." "Well," groaned the man at the foot, feeling of himself to see if there were any bones broken, "I made the. flight all right, didn't 1^'---Chicago Tribune. FRUIT GROWN UNDER GLASS. t^Phe grape of grapes for the table is grown In Belgium, and under glass," says the London Globe. "It is in no Arcadian rustic spot that this ideal culture flourishes, but in the wide­ awake metropolitan suburb of Hoez- laert, near Brussels. Here there is a whole region of glass--nothing but glass over a wide vista. The spectacle la one of the shows of tbe country, for amateurs and sightseers alike* A good many lovers of table fruit, whose interest in the subject extends no fur ther than the dessert stand, will prob ably be surprised to learn that it is from no native hothouse, but from Hoezlaert, that the great fruiterers In London, Paris, the Riviera, Vienna, Berlin, St. Petersburg and, irlrabile dlctu! even New York, recpf» the bulk of their winter supplies."' personal counsel to Harry K. Thaw, visited the prisoner at the Tombs Sunday and for an hour the two dis­ cussed various matters, among them, ft was said, the possibility that the prosecution might seek to interrupt the cross-examination of the defend­ ant's wife when Thaw's trial is re­ sumed Monday morning. It had been recorded, though with­ out apparent authority, that District Attorney Jerome would shift his at­ tack on the defense' and Insist that, the direct examination of Drs. Dee- mar and Bingham, the alienists for the defense, be concluded befor/ the state continued its cross-examiiiatioh of Mrs. Thaw. This move would be construed as in the direction of an application for a lunacy commission to examine Thaw. The report is said to have reached the prisoner and caused him no little uneasiness. Mr. Hartridge, however, was able to assure him that Mrg. Thaw's examination would be com­ pleted before the defense called other witnesses. Stipulation to this effect only sustenance for two days. She was so weakened as the result of her day's experience that she retired im­ mediately upon reaching her apart­ ments and did not arise until late Fri­ day. The only reason which took her from her bed even then was the call she had promised to make upon her husband in the Tombs prison. Ordi­ narily visitors are not allowed in the big gray building on holidays, but an exception was made with regard to Harry Thaw's wife and counsel. Mrs.'Thaw VIsits Husband. It was well after noon when Strsi. Thaw arrived at the prison. She was Accompanied by Daniel O'Reilly, one of her husband's counsel, and was shown at once into the consultation room; There had been reports In some of the earlier editions of the pa­ pers to the effect that Thaw waa him­ self in bad physical condition, but when he appeared to greet his wife he declared that he was feeling excep­ tionally6 well and wa^ enjoying hhi usual vigorous health. As Thaw rushed into the conference room he tVELYN NESBIT THAW ON THE WITNE88. 8TAN& n . ? v had been given, the lawyer said. That Thaw's fears have some basis in fact was evidenced in a statement credited to a court official. According to this man. Mrs. William Thaw, mother, of Harry, two days ago ap­ proached the district attorney through friends and expressed her willingness that a commission in lunacy be ap­ pointed. The mother's state of mind, It was said, was the result of having read the harrowing story told, on the Witness stand by her daughter-in-law, and the merciless cross-examination by Jerome, combined with the natural shrinking she felt from taking the witness stand herself. It is understood that Mr. Jerome, on his part, wishes to avoid at this time such drastic action as asking lor a lunacy commission. Mrs. Thaw Visits Husband. New York.--The principals In the Thaw trial spent Friday in reet, everyone apparently reliBhlng the res­ pite from the scenes which marked this week's proceedings. By the time the hearing is resumed next Monday morning it is expected that Mrs. Eve- Jjrn Nesbit Thaw will have entirely re­ covered her composure and be pre­ pared again to take her place in the witness chair. On Thursday it was said the young woman was on the verge of illness, clasped his wife In his afms, saying "My dear, brave little wife." Days More of Her Ordeal. The district attorney will keep Mrs. Thaw on the stand at least a day and a half more and may even stretch hia searching cross-examination through twice that length of time. It will de­ pend upon how Mrs. Thaw feels at the end of this period as to whether or not Thaw's counsel will go ahead with their ^redirect examination of her. Mr. Delmas has been making copious notes during Mr. Jerome's questioping of the witness, and he will likely endeavor to place a differ­ ent light upon some of the incidents which have been disclosed. With the cross-exapiination only half completed and with the redirect and recross-examination still in view, there seems no way to approximate the number of days in the Witness chair Mrs. Thaw has before her. If she is much fatigued at the end of Mr. Jerome's first cross-examination she may be released for a time, sub­ ject to recall. In view of the fact, however, that the defendant's counsel forced the district attorney to pro­ ceed with the" cross-examination against his will, he will very likely in­ sist in return that they shall also con­ clude with the witness before 4he is excused from the stand. Big Fire at PttKman Plant. Chicago.--Fire supposed to have been of incendiary origin destroyed 400,000 feet of valuable tropical woods --mostly ofthogany--at the {riant of the Pullman company Monday. Low Fare in Wisconsin. Malison, Wis.--The state railway commission Monday handed down a decision in the two-cent railroad fare question, ordering that the railways In the state give a flat two and one- half cent passenger fare. Won't Float the Coffee Loan. Rio Janeiro, Brazil.--The refusal of Uie Rothschilds to float a coffee loan has caused a sensation. The Jornal do Commercio says the rebuke should convince the government that the cof­ fee scheme Is a dangerous ad­ venture. Killed at Famous Toboggan Slide. St. Moritz, Switzerland.--Count Van Bylandt, (he well-known sportsman of The Hague, was killed here during races on tfcp. famons toboggan eowse here. Gets Divorce from George Cohan. New York.--Ethel Levy Monday ob­ tained a verdict from a jury in the su­ preme court' entitling her to a decree of absolute divorce from George Co­ han, the actor and playwright. /• Taft to Speak to Students. Minneapolis, Minn. -- President Northrop of the University of Minne­ sota Monday received from Secretary Taft the letter's acceptance of an in­ vitation to deliver the commencement address at the university June 13. Commerce Board to Hear Harriman. New York.--A subpoena was served Monday on E. H. Harriman, head of the Union Pacific-Southern Pacific railroad system, calling for his ap­ pearance before the interstate" com­ merce commission Monday next. - Want Freight Traffic Resumed. Kathryn, N. D.--An appeal to the governor of North Dakota and to the interstate commerce commission has been sent by the business men of this place, for actiion looking towajtf re­ sumption of freight traffic. -'J < I). S. DISPENSATORY id PB Describe* the Principal lagredi«rt» Cootained in Pe-ru-na. Are we claiming too much for Pertma When we claim it to be an effecttre^-Mrri4 remedy for chronic catarrh? Have abundant proof that Peruna is in real­ ity such a catarrh remedy? Let us see what the United States Dispensatory •ays of the principal ingredients of Peruna. Take, for Instance, the ingredient, hydrastis canadensis, or The United States Dispen at this herbal remedy, that ttls employed in the treatment of depraved mucous membranes, chronic rhinitis (nasal catarrh), atonic dyspepsia (ca­ tarrh of the shomach), chronic intesti­ nal catarrh, catarrhal jaundice, (ca­ tarrh of the liver) and in diseased mucous membranes of the pelvic organs. It is also recommended for the treat­ ment of various forms of diseases pe­ culiar to women. ji. Another ingredient of Peruna, cory- dalis formosa, is classed in the United 1 States Dispensatory as a t^pic. So also ";ik~ is cubebs classed as a stomachic and as * tonic for the mucous membranes. - Cedron seeds is another ingredient of Peruna, an excellent drug that has ^ been very largely overlooked by the * medical profession for the past fifty years. The seeds are to be found in very few drug stores. The United t States Dispensatory says of the action of cedron that it is used as a bitter tonic and in the treatment of dysentery, ' and in intermittent diseaaea aa a sub­ stitute for quinine. Oil of copaiba, another ingredient of Perunaris classed by the United States Dispensatory aa a mild stimulant and diuretic. It acta on the stomach and intestinal tract. It acts as a stimu­ lant on the genito-urinary membranes. Useful in chronic cystitis, chronic dys­ entery and diarrhea, and some chronic diseases of the liver and kidneys. Send to us for a free book of testimo­ nials of what the people think of Pe- - runa as a catarrh remedy. The best evidence is the testimony of those who have tried it. ^ The Motor Voice. The tennis elbow, the bicycle foot, the clergyman's sore, throat and all manner of disabilities that come from modern conveniences are familiar to ns. The motor-omnibus voice was dis­ covered by a young woman who was riding outside a motor-omnibus, and trying (as is her habit) to ta!k. And the horrible truth suddenly flashed on h e r m i n d , a n d f r o m h e r l i p s . . . . "I c-c-can't keep-pip-pip my voice sufe> tut-till."--The Reader. Col. Silas W. Burt, who was re­ cently elected president of the Civil Service Reform association, was naval officer under the first Grant a&» ministration. AWFUL NEURALGIA Pain Turned This Woman's Hair .White but She Was Cured by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. ; lio not seek relief from suffering simply, but free your system from the disease which is the cause of your suffering. That is the message which a former victim of neuralgia sends to those who are still in its grasp. Hot applications, powders that deaden the senses and others that reduce the heart action may cause temporary re­ lief but the pain is sure to return with greater intensity. Mrs. Evelyn Creusere, who has a beautiful home at 811 Boulevard West, Detroit, Mich., suffered for years with neuraJgia until she tried this tonic treatment She says: "My trouble began about six years ago and I did not rest ais I should have, but kept up about my many duties. After a time I became so weak 1 could not do any work at all. I had severe backaches and such dreadful headaches in the back part and top of my head. My eyes were easily tired andxat times I saw black spots before them. I consulted sev­ eral doctors but without the slightest benefit The pains were so intense that my hair turned white. "I lost continually in weight and strength and was almost in despair when a friend recommended Dr. Wil­ liams' Pink Pills. I tried them ac­ cording to directions and soon began to feel relief. At the end of three months I had gained ten pounds In •weight and had no more trouble witi my nerves. I have been in perfect health ever since and can heartily commend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all druggists, or sent postpaid, on re­ ceipt of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes for $2,50. by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady. N. Y. A Positive CURE FOR CATARRH Elf's Cms Bala U quickly absorbed. fiives Relief at One*. It cleanses, soothes, heals and protects the diseased membrane. It cures Catarrh and drives away a Cold in the Head quickly. Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell! Full size 50 cts. at Druggists or by mail- Trial aice 10 eta. by mail. ' t Ely Brothers, 56 Warren Street. New Yoriu I •4 Eastern Washington Farm Lands Olfer the best advantages for a home of investment. Climate unsurpassed. destructive wind or hail storms, pests. Crops sure. We offer the bex| raw and improved lands at low pri<*?t and easy terms, near good towns aiif markets. Railroad fare refunded to pur» chasers. Low excursion rates. Write at once for illustrated pamphlet and man THE BIG BEND LAND COMPANY. 1 Washiaftta Street, Spokane, Washin{to% CHEAP LANDS Fnexce'led for general fara. WMMtM WlrWN Iur, stock, dairying, fruits, truak. etc : convenient to the very t»*t market* and transiM*? tatlon facilities Write nearest office for lists aminuL hettlon*. M. V. Richards, Land and Industrial Aretttj «»^h*rn Rt. and MohUeAOhio R. R . Washington d3] southern RT. and Mobile*Ohio R. R . Washington 1 c. 8. Cham. West. Chemical Bidic , St Louis, PATENTS waa. Patent At. aahlncton. D. 0. Adv low. Highest i I i

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