Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 10 Jun 1909, p. 6

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, H% M ,w;v;,>3T -J *<- itV »-• <f«.-.*. H -. * *• «. , fc*M • *'V*H , - . > » * ' v* lie Clew of the Liquor Bottles Edited by William J. Bacon ATme Stoiy of the Secret Service, as Told by Capt. Dickson • ft > , > ' i?v^ >ME years ago, before I be- S. came connected; with this I United States secret serv-* ice m the east, 1 was en- | gaged fey a member of the western express com­ panies to do some special work for them," began Capt. Dickson. "My head­ quarters were In Denver | and my work, on the whole, was decidedly Interesting. One adventure In particu­ lar'made me proud of my service for oui^'company, although it was largely a matter of luck that brought about my: success in that instance. 1 am a firm believer in luck, for it plays an Important part in every man's life, and it has figured to a large extent in my own affairs, I am free to confess. "A* daring express robbery had bee® committed in the western part of the state, near the Utah line, by three men. The messenger, had been mur­ dered and the passengers throughout the train robbed of all their money. The hold-np men secured something more than $15,000 from the express company's safe and fully $5,000 from the passengers. They took nothing but money, however, leaving valuable jewelry, diamonds and watches with th«lr owners, and ignoring the parcels in the express car. This circumstance showed that the gang was composed of experienced thieves, for money-is the hardest thing in the world to trace. * "I was notified of the robbery on the rfternoon of the second day after it oc- turred. and although I hastened to the spot with all dispatch and made my arrangement by wire, it was coon of the third day before I alighted at the nearest station. Here I had arranged for two horses and a prospector's out­ fit, deeming it best to follow the ban­ dit? in the disguise of a miner, as the robbery had been made at a point jiesr the mining region of southwest­ ern Colorado, and I expected to find the criminals at some of- the numer­ ous mining c&mps. **I have never been a believer in disguises except as to clothing. All efforts to change the face with grease paints and wigs and the like only tend to attract attention and direct suspi­ cion to the man thus togged out The casual observer might, not notice the deception, but the criminal, and espe­ cially the hunted criminal, is no cas­ ta! observer. He has formed the fcabit of noticing everything, and he will detect the least false point in a nan's appearance and shun him as if he were afflicted with the plague. "A change of dress will work won­ ders in a man's appearance. If a man can wear other clothes than those be is accustomed to, and wear them easily and naturally, he can more ef­ fectually disguise himself by this means than be can with all the wigs and paints and whiskers in exist­ ence. "Coming across the continental dl- tHe, I had suffered a slight attack of indigestion. I sent the porter after a flask of whisky, asking for a certain brand. He returned in a few minutes • *rtth one of the diminutive little bot­ tles customarily sold on sleeping cars at «.*jiiarter a bottle. It was not the had ordered, but the porter ex­ plained that this was the only brand of liquor the company' sold, and I had to be content with it. The label of the bottle stated that It was j>ut up «*pressly for the company. "On reaching my destination, I im- jeediately assumed the character of a Winer and set about my Inquiry. There was little information to be gathered beyond what was contained in the express company's report of the rob­ bery, of which I had a carbon-copy, ifiatisfied that time spent herei would l»e wasted, I set out for the scene of the robbery, riding a wiry little pony and leading another on which was packed my outfit of grub and cooking implements and miner's tools. "The place was a desolate spot The road ran through a broad alkali val­ ley which had not, at that time, been brought under cultivation by irriga­ tion. It was easy to pick up the trail of bandits and follow it across the val­ ley in a southwesterly direction to the foot-hills of the Rockies, where the trail disappeared, the rocky ground leaving no trace of hoof-prints. "Prom this point on it was to be a matter of luck and guesswork. I be­ lieved my men had made for Telluride, Ouray, Silverton or some other mining -camp, but I was not rash enough to venture a guess *as to which it might , be at that Btage of the game. These Camps, with their rough, shifting pop- viation, offered capital retreats for crtfninals, and from past experiences 1 knew that my three rogues would, . ltt all probability, remain in one of there camps until the excitement from the robbery had subsided, and then mafre for civilization to spend their mottey. t"For three days I drtfted at random thnmgh the mountains, following trails and paths, for there were no roads, endeavoring bB* pick up some clew or find the place where my party had •pent the first night after the robbery. Tb9 hold-up Hafl occurred about noon, anfl, by hard riding, the three high­ waymen could penetrate some ten or twienty miles into the fastness of the mounatins before it became too dark to travel further. It was out of the ;* question tor any one to advance through that region after dark. I hoped to find the place of their camp, injd felt Sffe I wou»d do so by perse- * vorlng. "Late the third 'afternoon I stum­ bled! on -the ashes of a cawpHre, and close beside it, "among the fiirs and cedars, I found where horses had been tied. This was what I had searched for, and I felt sura that I would here find something of value. I camped a short distance from the place so I would not disturb it, leaving my examination until the next morn !ng, when I would have a good light, it then being tqo dark to attempt such a thing. "That night, by the light of toy campfire. I read again the report ;of the robbery as given by the train hands. Near the last of it was the account of the sleeping car porter who related, with evident grief, that he had been relieved of $6.15 in silver, and that the bandits had rifled the liquor cabinet of the buffet, taking with them all of the whisky and a few bottles of the rarer and stronger wines.; "Early next morning I examined the deserted camp of the highwaymen. There was nothing but a burtied-out pile of ashes and charred sticks and a few empty bottles. The bottles gave the clew for which 1 searched. The highwaymen had certainly made their men. They had not stopped there cer­ tainly, so I took the trail to Telluride, a mining camp farther on in the moun­ tains. Telluride was then a camp of 800 or 1,000 souls, and there was a bit of a mining boom on which daily brought new prospectors to swell its citizenship, fatuous souls brought there by the greed of gold--a lure that never fails to attract victims in swarms. For three days I searched in vain through the saloons and dance halls and other places where the rough miners congregated without finding a trace of my three rogues. That Infal­ lible sixth sense of mine was doing its best to keep me longer in Tellu­ ride, althonugh my judgment told me to move on to Silverton; but in^ the end my intuition won the fight and I remained. "One evening I was drinking with a raw-boned miner. The whisky was abominable. The distillery where it was made would never have recog­ nized its product in its present form. I complainedp of the poor quality of whisky and asked my acquaintance if there were not some better stuff to be found in the camp. He said there was not, at any of the bars, but that ho had been given an amaxingly good drink by a miner, whose name he men­ tioned. He said it had been in a little bottle which held just fenough to tease one, but it was the best liquor he had drunk since he left Kentucky many years before. He licked his lips in pleasant memory Of the drink. "I almost gave myself away, so keen was my pleasure at this chance remark. I inquired about the gen- *"It would have been the rankest folly to have attempted their arrest! without assistance--although I did tackle such a job once in my salad' days, as this scar will testify," and he pointed to an ugly wound at the back of his neck, partially covered by his flowing gray locks. "But that Is an­ other story. I decided to call on the United States deputy marshal, a man of tigerish bravery, for assistance.. There was no chink or crack in the door through which I could gain * peek at the Interior of the cabin, so I dropped down on my hands and knees and crawled around to the back of the cabin where I thought there might be a window. There was a win­ dow, but It was closed with a heavy shutter, and I could not find any point to peep through; but I did find some­ thing on the way around. My hand touched something round and smooth, and I clutched it involuntarily. It was one of the little whisky flasks. After I had left the cabin I struck a match and examined It. The, label of the car company was still oh it "The deputy marshal was found at one of the dance halls and he soon summoned a reliable posse. We sur* rounded the cabin, from which still is­ sued the sounds of revelry. The men were stationed at every point about, it. Then the marshal and I rapped on the door. In response to our summons one of the miners staggered across the floor and threw the door wide open. We tripped him up and rushed over him into the cabin. The men were too drunk to make any resist- nnce, and captured them without I f . THREW TMfDOO/? 0P£N camp here. Each bottle bore the label of the sleeping car company, and some of them were the diminutive flasks of which I had drunk one on the trip from Denver. There was not a scrap of paper anywhere else to be found. •# "Elated with my success, I made a survey of the country and discovered a half-obscure trail leading farther into the mountains. I took up this trail and followed It as best I could until nightfall. Often I lost it, and sometimes I spent an hour or more casting about to pick it up again, as I have seen hounds baffled on the trail of a fox. About three o'clock that afternoon I found something that made my eyes sparkle. Shattered Into a thousand pieces was the remains of one of the small whisky bottles on a large fiat rock beside the trail where it had doubtless been cast in a playful mood induced by its contents. Among the fragments I found the label of the car company. "It was the dry season, and this was In my favor, for no rains came to obliterate the trail. For five days I followed the bandits across the hills and through the valleys, verifying my route from time to time by fragments of broken whisky bottles along the way, and at the places where they had camped for a night. The buffet-car must have been well stocked, for I found many bottles in this journey. "The trail eventually came to a well beaten road, which, from my map, I learned was the stage and mall route from Montrose, the nearest railroad point to Ouray, then a rather insig­ nificant mining settlement, t lost no time in getting to Ouray, for it was impossible to trail my men along this road and I was sure they had headed for the mining camp. "Two days were spent at Ouray without finding a trace of the three erous owner of the good liquor, with a show of indifference I was far from feeling. He was a 4ate arrival, it seemed, and lived in a shanty far up on the mountain-side with two com­ panions. The three were making a rather poor attempt to work a claim they had preempted. "Getting away from my loquacious miner-friend, I climbed the steep trail to the cabin and set about an investi­ gation of it with great caution. The men were at home, and from the sounds issuing from its closed doors I guessed they were having a rare old time that evening. I approached to the very door and listened with my ear to the planks to sounds of revelry within. The men were gambling and drinking, and I could hear the clink of coins and the rattle of bottles and the ribald jests with which they made their bets and gloated over their winnings and cursed their luck when they lost. 1 heard sufficient to make me sure that my much-sought bandks were In the cabin, although there was no direct mention of the express robbery. a shot being fired. They were hav« ing a big stud-poker game, played with gold pieces and currency instead of chips. There was some $8,000 or $10,- 000 upon the table. Strewn about the floor were many whisky and wine bot­ tles. In a box beneath one of the bunks was a solitary pint bottle of whisky, the last remnant of the con­ tents of the buffet car's liquor store. It was, as I said, a clean case of luck." (Copyright, 1908, by W. O. Chapmea.) (Copyright In Great Britain.) Played on Ancient Instruments* At a concert which took place in the large hall of the Royal museum at Stuttgart, recently, at which the king and queeh of Wurtemberg were present, no Instruments were used save spinets, clavicembolas and pianos of the seventeenth and eighteenth cen­ turies. .The most interesting of these were the one which was once owned by Johann Sebastian Bach, and an­ other on which Queen Louise of Prus­ sia learned to play. Pittsburg Matt Is "Loaded*' *- Perfect Fiend to Quote Statistical Ac­ cording to Writer in Harper's. The Plttsburger can carry'more fig­ ures of large denomination on his per­ son without your suspecting their ex­ istence than any other citizen of the United States. He is a reservoir of decimals and statistics. He must have ample justification, however, be­ fore he turns the spigot, but when he does there is a torrent no jnap can stem. If provoked and inclined to extend himself, in a five-minute talk he can fill you so full of miscellaneous indus­ tries--natural gas, steel rails, tin- plate, petroleum, steel pipes and sheet metal, fire bricks, tumblers, table* ware, coke, pickles, and all that sort of thing--that you will begin to feel likf a combination delicatessen and hard­ ware store. I have not begun to enumerate the different data I have collected on this subject, as I have no desire to make the reader feel small or to lose confi­ dence in himself. As I have pointed out before, the Pittsburger, or the man who is under the influence of Pitts* burg, must be provoked before he un­ burdens.--C. H. White, in Harper's. " gft IN SLUMS Mafty Foreigners \n Chidage's Ghetto Raise Their Poultry. Many .Recent Immigrants Irwrrt Their Attention to This Means of creasing Their 8lender I# comes and Providing pood. Chicago slums as great, big chick­ en farms! This has not yet come to pass, but it will if the raising of "spring chickens" which is now car­ ried on in many of the bystreets iand alleys of Chicago's Europe keeps up its present pace. On the outskirts of the Ghetto, in the Polish districts on the northwest side, back of the ynrds, in short, wherever immigrants who stand on the lowest scale of industry live, thou­ sands of chickens are being raised. Many a family in these districts may live in two basement rooms only--It may have no room for Its children to play in, but it has a little bit of space, a two-by-four coop, wherein chickens are kept. Some of these coops are A sort of subdivision of the wood and coal shed which each tenant usually gets. Where no woodshed Is allotted to the tenant a big dry goods box is rapidly turned into a chicken coop. And if there is not even space for the dry goods box, tf* small barrel affords a comfortable home for two or three of the fowls. Those who are more fortunate in their woodshed space keep not two or three but a dozen or more chickens and about as many pigeons. The raising of chickens with some of the immigrants is a business mat­ ter. They think tbey can raise them much more cheaply than they can buy them from the butcher. The eggs which the chickens lay are sold at a premium in the neighborhood to In­ valids or convalescents. The woman who has fresh eggs for sale soon be­ comes known in the neighborhood and not only makes a little money this way but she gains a sort of prestige. She is considered a sort of a half doc­ tor, for she knows of all kinds of ill­ nesses and a remedy for each of them, Others - raise chickens not because theyv are after profits, but because they cannot endure to waste things. Thus many peasant immigrants in Chicago whp were accustomed to the strictest economy in the old country consider the garbage man and the garbage pail a sort of a symbol of American extravagance. They cannot think of throwing away crumbs of bread. SQ ..they raise chickens and feed them on these crumbs. But back of these'petty commercial reasons for raising chickens there is still another--a sentimental, sympa­ thetic reason. It Is the pitiable at­ tempt at having a touch of country life, the life which these people have led prior to their coming to Chicago, In the heart of their crowded quarters. Some of these ^immigrants, especially the older ones, like the grandmothers of the family, cannot reconcile them­ selves to American surroundings and city life. The grandmother dreams of the country and the life "on the land," which she led in her youth! And the sight of a few chickens affords an ex­ cellent background for her dream life. "Many of the old women here," said an Americanized foreigner in the neighborhood of Canal and De Koven streets, where many of the Slav resi­ dents make all kinds of efforts to raise chickens, "are never so happy as when they feed their chickens or busy themselves with protecting them from the rain or snow. Their minds are never so active, their imaginations I Feeding Their Chickens. never so vivid as then. They live en- tirely in their memories, and it Is then that you can most easily get them to talk about their past and the simple and poor but quiet and contented life that they led on the plains of Lithuania or on the Bhores of the Niemen. "And when you stop to think about it you can hardly blame them for this weakness. Chickens have been and are part of every peasant household' in Europe. A peasant. may he too poor to own a cow or a pig.ybut he always has a dozen or so chickens. Many of the immigrants here went to bed with the chickens and got up with the first crowing of the roosters, as they still do in most of the peasant villages in the old world. The rooster, too, served the peasants for centuries to mark the time of the day or night long before they ever saw or heard of such a thing as a clock. PASSING OF COWBOY Rivers That Make Damascus in Desert, Town Would Be Uninhabitable Were It Nipt for V > These Two Streams. K The sltuaticn "of Damascus is re­ markable--she stands Isolated on an Oasis of the vast desert which every­ where hems her in. 'You may see from Damascus the sunset firs touch with purple the low western hills 25 mtito away. * These hills mark the beginning of the great desert--beyond them there is nothing but a rolling waste and the long roads to Palmyra and Bagdad. The permanence and prosperity of Damascus are due to the presence of two rivers, which have converted this spot of the dreary, desolate and uninhabited desert Into a smiling and well watered plain. The Pharpar approaches only within seven miles of Damascus, but by n^eans of canals and aqueducts sends Its life- giving waters to the gardens of the city. The Abana is the stream from which the city's main supply of water is obtained. Minerva like, it springs full born from the base of a perpen­ dicular rock at Aln Fljih, in the heart of ti*e Antl-Lebanons, and runs a course of ten miles in a gorge, a large river 20 to SO feet wide and four feet deep, its waters always fresh and ice cold, casting out branches every­ where, permeating every nook and corner of the city, until, as one has said: "Literally, there Is scarce a street, < bazaar, khan, courtyard or dwelling house which has not Its mar­ ble or stone fountain constantly filled with running water supplied directly by the Abana Itself." Thus, the Aba­ na, not fruitlessly wasting her waters on that thirsty land, saves them in her narrow gorge till she can fling them well out on the desert, and ex­ pends all her life at once In the crea­ tion of a single city.--Biblical World ^Loved of all the nation as an insti­ tution particularly American and wor­ shiped by the small boy, the day of the cowboy is passing. The dashing swashbuckler, with his leggings, his swaggering sombrero, his belt, revolvers and lariat will soon be no more, he Is vanishing from the plains, a victim of the coming of a more modern way of doing things. The knell of the cowboy's passing existence is sounded in the decision to abandon the reunion of cowpunchers, for many years an annual event in Texas. This used to be held at Seymour, Texas. It was an event to which the whole southwest looked forward, and cowboys from half a dozen states ma(le long trips in the saddle in or­ der to be on hand for this reunion. It had b$ea planned to hold it as usual this spring, but those who had it in charge found so little interest that they started an investigation to find out what had become of all the cowboys. Their discoveries were depressing from the standpoint of the small boy, who In dime novels and pictures has worshiped the deeds of the sharp- shooting, broncho busting, fearless men of the plains. So widely has the cowboy been scat­ tered by changed conditions that, like Othello, he could truthfully say that his occupation is gone. Not more than a few hundred cowboys could by any possibility have been brought to Sey­ mour, and as this would have been as far short of a true reunion as a swal­ low Is from composing a summer, it was reluctantly decided to have no conclave, and this means likely that the old picturesque institution has passed for all time. Seymour, now the center of culti­ vated and agricultural section, was a dozen years ago given over to gra­ zing. In 1897 it was the scene of the largest gathering of cowboys ever seen In this country. The men from ranches in Texas, In- HE NEEDED THE PRAYERS. The late Lord Sackville, as all the world knows, became persona non grata to the government while he was an ambassador to Washington through expressing an opinion on the political situation. "It was through a mean trick that Lord Sackville was led into this ex­ pression of opinion," said a London correspondent the other day. "Once, in describing the trick to me, he com­ pared himself to a country clergyman. "This clergyman," he explained, "was waited on one Sunday morning by a young man. " 'Will you kindly ask the congrega­ tion's prayers this morning,* said the young man, 'for poor William Smith?' " 'Willingly,' said the clergyman. "And at the proper moment in the service he besought all those present to pray earnestly for the unfortunate William Smith in the great trouble and peril that encompassed him, "That request, he was pleased to note, made a deep impression on the congregation dian Territory and Oklahoma rode to the gathering and more than 20,000 cowboys and 500 Indians rallied to the camp, and pitched their tents in Seymour. The influx of the Bettlers to the Panhandle and the ranch terri­ tory of western Texas had at that time just begun, and the advance of the farmer, who was destined to take the soil from the cattle grazer, was yet in the future. On the second night of the reunion Seymour saw the remarkable spec­ tacle of 20,000 cowboys riding back into town, at breakneck speed, each man with his six-shooter out, and fir­ ing Into the air. The bombardment lasted for more than an hour, and the spitting of the flashes and the detonation of the shots ma^e a most thrilling effect. do great a success was the whole affair that it was resolved to make it an annual event ,and itlooked as though the spirit of the western life had been saved by getting tbe com­ rades together once more. * Real estate operators fotind that a lot of the land used for grazing could under proper conditions be turned in­ to the most fertile farm land and yield a far greater'profit. The life of Texas underwent a change. The farmer began to take the place of the cattleman, and even where the latter managed to main­ tain his way, he began to apply ne«^ methods to the care of his herds. The autmobile began to be seen in the west. At first the cowboy laughed. What could the motor car do to push him out of his calling. It couldn't tame a broncho. It couldn't shoot, and certainly was unable to throw a lariat. But the auto got over the road fast- It could make a round of the ranch at far greater speed. And It wasn't like a horse. It never tired out, and an automobile of fair size could take around four men who could do the work of a dozen under .the primitive conditions of the west * r young man who had asked for the in­ tercession in Smith's behalf the cler­ gyman said: " 'What is the matter with your friend? Do you think it would do any good if I were to call on him?' "Tm afraid not.' was the sorrowful reply. " 'Is It as bad as that?' said the cler­ gyman. 'What is the trouble, then?' WHO HAVE DAUGHTERS Rod Help in Lydia E, Rink- ham's V»etaWe Compound Winchester Ind.--"Four doctors tola me that they could never w>a>A me regular, and that I would eyent. jally have dropsy. I would bloat, and sufferfrombearing- down pains,cramps and chills, and I could not bleep the Lucky, Indeed. They were strolling through museum. - "And here are the Egyptian mum­ mies," remarked Mrs. Flathouse. "Just to think! They haven't moved for over 4,000 years." "Lucky dogs!" said Mr. Flathouse. "And just to think we have- to move everr spring;" ' *••&•••&$ ••!. • ' Answered. "Why do Artists always sign their pictures?" "It's an agreement they have, so that nobody will be abJe to blame ow « . I ' U»IM tho ' nn unme> nnt> AIM." nights. My mother wrote to Mrs. Pink, ham for advice,and I began to take LydiaE.Pinkham's Vegetable Com. pound, After talcing one and one- naif bottles of the Compound, I am all right again, and I recommend it to every suffering woman.'*--Mas. MAT DEAI,, Winchester, Ind. Hundreds of such letters from girls and mothers expressing their gratitude for what Lydia E. Pir.kham'g Vege­ table Compound has accomplished for them have been received by The Lydia E. PinkhamMedicine Company, Lynn, Mass. Girls who are troubled with painfnl or irregular periods, backache, head­ ache, dragg!rig-do vvn sensations, faint­ ing spells or indigestion, should take immediate action to ward off the seri­ ous consequences and be restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vege­ table Compound. Thousands have been restored to health by its use. If you would like special advice about your case write a confident tiai letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her adfieo is fraa and always helpful. _ 45 to 50 Bu. of Wheat Per Asia have been grown on farm iiinds to WESTERN CANADA Much lets would be satisfactory^, The pa. eral average is above twenty bushels. "All are loud in their praises of the graet crops and that won- derful country."--&E» from correspondence Nattona I EdttotM Association of Augustf 1908. ft ia now possible to secure a homestead of 160 acres (tee and another 160 acies at $3.00 pier acre. Hundreds have paid the cost of their farms (if purchased) and then had a balance of from $10<Q0 to $ 12.00 per acre from one crop. Wheat, barley, oats, flax--all do well. Mixed farming is a great success and dairying is highly profitable. Excel­ lent climate, splendid schools and churches, rail­ ways bring most every district within easy reach of market. Railway and land companies have lands for sale at low prices and on easy terms. "Last Best West" pamphlets and maps sent free. For these and information as to how to secure lowest railway rates, apply to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa* Canada, or the authorised Canadian Govern* Stent Agent: trd Street, Milwaukee, Wis TOILET ANTISEPTIC ---NOTHING LIKE IT FOR TUP TCTTIl excels any dentifrice I Ht I U1 fl in cleansing, whitening Mid removing tartar from the teeth, besides destroying all germs of decay and disease which efdnaiy tooth preparations cannot do. TUF lim ITU Pa^tine used as a movth- I fit fflUU 1 n wash disinfects the mouth and throat, purifies the breath, and kills the germs which collect in the mouth, causing sore throat, bad teeth, bad breath, grippe, and much sicknesa. sj^ngjjji when inflamed, tired, ache and burn, may be relieved and strengthened by Pax tine. a® saTT" Ja miw will destroT the gsrats l#fl I Aflrirl that cause catarrh* heal the in­ flammation and stop the discharge. It is a son remedy for uterine catarrh. Paxtine is a harmless yet powerful fiermicide,disinfe<5tant and deodorizer. Used in bathing it destroys odors and ' leaves the body antiaeptically clean. FOR SALE AT DRUG STORES.SOe. OR POSTPAID BY MAIL LARGE SAMPLE FREE! THE PAXTON TOILET CO., BQ8TON, MASS, Constipation-- Neariy Every One Gets It The bowels show first sign of things going wrong. A Cmcaret taken every night as needed keeps the bowels working naturally without grip, gripe and Chat upset aick feeling. ^ > Ten cfcat box. week'a treatment. All drug stores. Blffgest aeUar !• ibe workl--m till on boxes * VFHfeR STRIP-- Keepsom Cold,T>anipness,I>nst audNoise. Havos Fuel. Stopa Rattling Windows. Durable, KOcctivo. Inexpensive. Writa _ Jor particulars. Agents wanted. METALLIC WEATHERSTRIP COMPANY, 211 flsrcasMs rises, 1st tagstss, Csl Always Ready NO STROPPING Always Sharp NO HONING KNOWN THE WORLD OVER DAISY FLY KILLER: placed atty~wb«HI (tracts and kills ,|1 file*. S««t, cleao, o rim mental, court-nidi t. cbeapi lull »!•«» . Oaa- not » p H I or OT«r wiii son orlnjurr*n.y thing. Qaarauteea effeo> ttv*. OfaiUraiM*, 20b** H araiV SaaunT lteite KalkAvMK* Brwkl;.. IM*. fKKK.ATttD FARMS--Ii * Utah. so-, i InaxhanstllU*. wati ahine ample, markets na tioeUed. 15 bu. oats, tiu bo. wbaat, M* ou. poiajpesjP tona gmg&rbeeis.etoaaaltatfa.almlf»*ia4lMtoli» » Winn a r«iiabl®tarii!i>? hi _eaoheuni ill unity _ tiunnlaon Valley, water i»i>nndant. sun- Ona acre yields So u it* JUKI MS to 160 n*U represent us. Come tat <«. A. l each eoarara&tty to r '• i i'-i «• Ml Investigate out proposition. ,1 --s- -- . ro«d». 3 one 27 to AM t. Vat particulars, wrtt» II|. NITE IT|^^ •••A - SL* ;V.rd

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