WOMAN'S WOMJD.I ' ;•» ^ •' g '&08T0N AND NEW YORK YOUNGWO MEN'S ECONOMIC CjLUBS. ? A \ & /*, * -*•' * & 5 \ HnuGrNmU Totod-Aa EnatisfcWo- Opl»M of r«--MIm Emenon'i Appointment -- G*v« Better Than She Ctot'-JIIiM Mmu Win* Her Cm A gentleman, whose opinions ogyctiffy subjects the world has thought worth preserving, has said that, with st&*l^va. stations, men and women are intonated In the same snbjects. Lord Chesterfield,, Who never madis ^efepingJta^S|ra^ and whose knowledge of women no one Will dispute, is in this belief entitled to *ffjp®ctf»il ron^deratffcjn. " At .this mo *nent from Boston comes th& rows thai the young women there f6r some time have had a widely connected organiza tion of protective; cluh^i Thea© were formed two years ago under the inspiration of Governcrf 3EfcIEbaleyV Speeches. "t It seems that whenever the •Poke there was always conspicuous in the audience a young woman with a notebook. After the speech was ended she waisareto present herself with. * query in thr group th»t always eolltfctii j to shake hands with the speaker, "there Was an earnestness in her demeanor and a serious light in her eye that could only come from deep conviction and a high •purpose. This forbade the thought of a KToman reporter. These various young Women were, in fact, the representatives of the different foxing women's protect* ire clubs, now ft flourishing aJfiiiatad organizatidh. I • J The enterprise is not at all a new one. J£h this city a group of working girls has fbr six years had a club devoted to eco nomic subjects. This club, however, is Hot committed;to any selfish, one sided •iew of these questions, btit to the study ,:«£ the underlying principles. Their opiii- k Ions vary as their minds incline. One girl is a protectionist, another a free trader. It is especially interesting to s$e how aptly they are able to illustrate and illuminate their views out of their varied experiences as workwomen. One of these girls is a shirtmaker. A discussion {between this girl and Boqae picked Bos ton classic from the prbtective clubs Would be as interesting art event as the prize debates between Harvard and Yale. There is one thing to be said for the Bos ton clubs--they would nst wholly de stroy the exciting sport of ehtding the Customs.--^New York Snni " • < • • • • • • " • • • - - I How Mn. Grannie Voted. . |, The New York woman who silwam, #ies to vote was at the potts last ele$> ® tion morning at exactly 9:30, and the remarkable thing about it was that she did vote too. : It was Mn, E. B. Grannis, and she a nrjts ac-compaftletf by*tagfttheifc"' ^roman •ho wanted tosee Jnst how it was done, and if any of the terrible things which fgien are always predicting will happen . Would really come to pass when a wom an voted. Mr. Bartlett, brother of Mrs. grannis, also went along. ^ The woman expected that jeers,cat calls, insults and jostlings would be her lot. But instead thereof every man {Stepped aside respectfully for the small, determined woman to pass, and there Wasn't a loud word that referred to a Woman uttered. , The polls where Mrs. Grannis went %ere on Fourth avenue, between Twen- v ty-flrst and Twenty-second streets. Once Inside the charmed inclosure--in other Words, the barber shop--Mrs. Grannis politely preferred her request for the privilege of casting a vote. ^ "I am very sopry," said one of the ; Inen, *sbnt as a servant Of the public I #am here to obey orders. I think, though, that women ought to vote, and if I had any way would help them to do so.*' \i "If all tho women would do as you are , doing," spoke up another, "I think they Would have the ballot in a short time. They would convince men that they - fWero in earnest and really wanted it.w 1 Then Mrs. Grannis voted her ticket. r^;!lJhe didn't put it in the slot herself. Her brother did that But it was her ticket from beginning to end, and her brother id not know what was on it till he put in. " My brother," said Mrs. Grannis, "has to give me his vote every other because he knows that I am a prop* «rty holder--that I want the right of the pallet, and he feels keenly them justice $f the thing. We are opposite in our politics, which makes his unselfishness the matter very apparc«it.HsP&ew Recorder. not yBwayrwDe'iool [is and failures. So I say l is charming, bat 1 would cultivate a little more GrmiBOjj Chant. Miss Emerson's Appointment. Nellie M. Emerson of San Efpn* Cisco was affftftted a frfrirtfiStfc &f extent judicial. Coaimi^sioner Emer' sftn will take testimony as ab examining officer and will decide whether the ber are relevant, njabeirial.or the opposite. ,'s appointment came about in this w*y. When Attorney Thomad •J»lt^>f "Virginia was "in California last iujittmer, Miss"E^xerson proved herself a very valuable assistant to him in his in vestigation# under* the Indian depreda* ticms act. Together they made a tour of inquiry from Eureka to Los Angeles, ahd when Mr. Ball returned to Wash ington he carried with him a high opin ion of Miss Emerson's abilities.' Miss Emerson was born in Oakland, CaL. went through the high school and took additional courses in Maine and in Boston. She is an expert with the type- writer, and for several years she has con ducted a typewriting business in San Francisco. The Daily Call of that city, from which these facts are obtained, commends the appointment and rejoices that a daughter of California ia the first woman to hold the office. ?in style. Stangtss ai« »©trenttselr yet, although the present fashion is to <wMr t*t<twd or thwse. If -poesibfte,* [time TtHttt be gold, plain ot JftWiiea. iJtftei^feaiigles came gterter cl«^w, and now gaftft clasps of silver or gold, (lain' •:o* elaii&ttite. are aw- abioltite a^ieaslty |fdrj the- <50mp • ;*tldn of • evexy- Woxnftft'fl itoilefe^--NeW York Herald; ^ fs»i«e Bsir. the present f ashJon of lnx- WAN TURKEY. •tnvM»n Awl lore Ia tour Ho Turkeys for it is said that feotne 6f the <m rapidly in tfTe\_,T^_ '^fal«e"hair offered for sale is cut from lpay^iook1- Utatfee »ig fel- the heads of dead women. It is never |°^ 'n the picture. Evelr^ turkey that 'satisfactory, however, an experienced *s worth fattening at alt can be brought coiffeur being always able to detect it, 'nto as good condition as this prize win- Of human hair, Belgium exjwrts annu- ner ^ the blood is good. Scrub turkey ally about 8,000 pottnds, Italy 12,0(K) ^0°^ is as unsatisfactory as scrub horse pounds, Argentine Republic 2.600 pounds. cow Our illustration shows a British India 18,000 pounds, Japan 3,600 hronze turkey. At the poultry show ifa pounds, China an average of 140,000 Y6rk last spring, and at several of MoH«NRY YbUR BREAO- .1* H . ao>sr mi- '*&£$• :'ir, i a* 42 '•-'tiiw 3" ' e>> '%: • '•'ten is thin tz: -WH • •r#d ;04"i£ ' iUA -i V ' \ Qoye Batter T1i»n |he Got. [' | ' The folio wing notices, copied frotfi th« door of a blacksmith's shop at Brooch** ville, explain themselves sufficiently: | b© It None to oil persons that I Shall Not be • respoasibel for anuy dets contracted by emily Jane Herron because' She has left my bed & 'board* without cause. Solomon tlSikaoK. 'Nov..4,^80ai, ;• r, ^ . beneath the, foregoing was another, apparently Written by a h^ore c6m^>etent hSind--to wit: To Whom It May; 0«m»p»; ;r> f ^ Know ye, all men. That I, Emily J. Herron, since it has pleased my husband, Solomon Her ron, to advertise me as derelict of duty and truant to his "bed and board without cause," take this means to let the public know that he never furnished me with bed or board; thatl ey«q; had to sell at a sacrifice the bad my motner gave m© upon mj' wedding day to fur- l>feh° boartl for myself and him. He never had a bed for me to leave, nor have I one at/ pres ent, Furthermore, he has bestowed upon me nothing since our marriage, nearly three years S&Vt SO frssly $>S ^})uSv, »ud Cv£B65--oil ha had--• and indeed he would not have the latter bill for inheritance and would n,ot have been kept for me could life swap them tor bad whisky. I hereby Warn all good people to give him a wide berth and no credit. I will honor none of hid - debts or contracts. . . EMILY J. J3errqn. "-Indianapolis Sentinel. i "" I. pounds--the value of the whole of which is reckoned at £20.000 wholesale. The most difficult hair to obtain in perfec tion, and the . most expensive, ia the sil ver* gray and the bright red, politely termed auburn.' ,, wifd resentative, iwid who was Miss Ixmg«- Worth of Cincinnati, founded, as is well known, the Rosewood potteries in that city. She has recently added to he# Washington residence a large dining- room, ballroom and studio. The at&Skf contains more than ordinary studios, hi that it has every appliance and convene ienee for modeling in clay, together witH* a complete fnrnace for firing pottery and painted porcelain. Mrs. Storer has a great talent in modeling and decorating in clays and has been the inspiration w well as financial'backer of the Rookwooft establishment from the start. - ' no j 1. ; .^ . Made Him Whlstlj»»<{i ) i T#o" ntodest little ©onnfcry • woiiien came to New York this fall and regtou tered at a certain quiet hotel. Here tbeyi were j6ined a little later by. the hosban<$* of otie of them, and to him was brought^ the bill for their week by themselves^, "Really," he said* after a long drawn i whistle, "either I have been grossly de>v jcerved in the wife of my bosom or there ihas been some mistake." He handed ithem the hit paper. Two bland heads | bent over it. Four startled eyes read this entry* "Brinks at the bar, $8.60." ] There had been a mistake.--Exchange,, the fairs this autumn, bronzes quite as targe as young calves were shown, The magnificent bronze is a cross be tween the Amerioan wild, turkey and the old fashioned black turkey. Every person Who works for his lir- iftg deserves a couple of generous slices of aust such a bird as this for his Thanks giving dinner. Farm people can have IV easily, for they oan rear their own birds. They can also sell some of the CAN'T BE SOUR tFroti GILLETT'S Him- •••.*>& a k tia ori .> i' i to .I'll - SISSt ^ -mvm Giw ccoNomidAl"i "'r'-!> J- E for "Magic" at your Grocer's. Let hM #«UiU^ othtr kind* to 9lh*r people. H. Miller & Son, oral sits i»r-- iuxm t oRAsni, MonniBentfl, Headatonea Cemetery • Work-, of «f«j, de-|"KteS acription neatly executed at Lowest Prices. SttlafiMtlW OMTUtMl. I at McHenry and Johi HI, ,whero\at\fiiV.iin •:can le found a good assortmc of finished work MenryWIIlw# 5 " ' •' yr»N !; B««Mt*« In FMhloa. | The touches of ribbon added to many kinds of fancy work this fall take the and food than on raw. The best fatten ( ifeA^^orvtjjd TdfaiAt. birds they rear to unfortunate cjity peo ple who cannot raise any ?<# tfediii&elYefc, and thus everybody Will be ^jppV. 5 By the middle or latter ^arij pf Octo ber the fattening of turkeys for Thanks giving market may begin. This is suffi cient' ' time if the birds'» already. & good condition. Feed them all they Will eat. One peculiarity of turkey^ "isthat they seem to do betted bn cooked grains Sfiippbd pure ated direct froril the Wfi^unced' a pure and w&ole* some tonic-«limuUmt by the rttedicsi fraternity every^4iere, Gives life, s ;ness to the land mfinifc. ifyoo ea6w».pewnwii < 83 8HOI Do yo« wmt fbenrf f #«5w,b •3. kwimI Miss Steans Wins Her After being refused ooramunion 4»y -a church in Columbia, S. C., because she worked three hours every Stinday as a tei&pftaste* girl, a decision that was up held by the Charleston presbytery, Miss Sadie Means has won her caee-e» an ap- , , peal to the South Carolina synod, which j ^ no Don. form of rosettes. Large rosettes made, of loops of wide satin ribbon are seen on new wastepaper baskets and smaller, ones upon workbaskets. The rosettes are often of different colors, as ohe oft yellow and one of pale pink. They leok, like double hollyhocks. Rosettes not aa> pretty have half a dozen different color® in their makeup. For lace trimmed ing food is corriiiieal and oatmeal scalded in sweet milk. This diet may be varied with boiled roots and any kind , cooked grains. Xwkeys are also ex< travagantly fond of boiled milk, curds aadbntteritmlk. by a vote of 63 to 40 ordered that the action of . the Charleston presbytery be Are There Too Many Trotter^ _ _ Are there too many trotters in the pincushions and pillows and full. country?" £$ked a breeder the other day* pompons L ma^ from iLnyloopa of That depends upon what standpoint m matter is looked at from. So far as the earning capacity of tfee average first class trotter is concerned--the good ones, mind yon, not the failures--it is • 'A Woniam iritis G-rit. •' Miss AlzadaLotz of Bent county, Colo., annulled', and that the church in Colum-1| has commuted her homestead entry and not worth talking about. Since the trot- bia "restore Sadie M. Means to all her paid the $200. The Business Bulletin ot ting campaign of 1893 opened it has been rights and privileges as a member in full j Colorado Springs says: "The young lady I an everyday occurrence for large fields communion of said ch^urcb*" Rev. G> is but 23 years of age, but is possessed of: of horses, every one of which could beat A. Blackburn,, pastor of the Second I true western grit and perseverance. For j 2:80, and quite a number of which were church, gave notice in behalf of the six months ehq, carried the mail a dis-j capable of a mile in 2:20, to start for purses of $300 or $100. It is on record Charleston presbytery that they will ap- j; tance of 30 miles over a thinly settled peal to the general assembly.- ; . i country. She is intelligent and hand- The case had excited a good deal of some and knows more in a minute than indignation, the friends of Miss Means j some town dudes do in a month who pointing out that ther© ,were several stand oh street corners and argue that prominent men in the satife church who women Should not be allowed to yote. worked on Sunday, althoagh they were not Compelled td do it by poverty, as she was. There seemed to be no good reason why the girl should be singled out for discipline. , ^ : My Lkdj'fBinne^ Bm, , K An English Opinion of Us. ;•i What do I think is the most remark- iible thing about the Atoeiiean Woman? Ber good humor under difficulties is sur passed by nothing I have ever seen. Per adaptability is wonderful. Her Versatility and quickness in saying the light thing at a moment's notice are most tarked. Perhaps greater than all these her intellectuality. She is so exceed- a liigly Greek in type. The prevailing 4|ype among your best men is Roman, e prevailing type among your best omen is Grecian. They settle things Intellectually and so seriously. Your fromen seem to have a sense of humor, out they haven't been accustomed to use 4& in developing buoyancy of character, Ijind they worry and hurry too much. Your girls are most charming and 'delightful, but they, too, do things with Jibe head rather than with %the heart. I ibiow you think English girls lack feel- j^ig because they are shy and constrained #-cold, you call it. It is because they 1 so much that they cannot let the ling bubble over in light words so y and. before everybody. They ven't been trained to express their feling so spontaneously, but it is there, would rather appeal to the heart of an i^nglish girl than to the heart of an Sjtnerican girl, but I had rather trust phe head of an American girl than the ^ead of an English girl. The American thinks far herself, decides for her- ilf, has her own opinions and isn't d to announce them. J have no de» to criticise. I belieye in seeing the of things.' I believe in judginff a 'the miUlher's btll this season, M5s fair to appall' even the most indulgeat hus band. .When milady of fashion buys a dressy iittle toque, she afeo buys a 4afx> and muff tin match. ^ These sets are the daintiest things im aginable, but their price is better left untold. A shop window displays a set fashioned in green miroir velvet. The little toque is of the velvet, which shades from palest green into dark, with the contrasting shadow tints a rich brown. The velvet is dented here and there and framed in a little sable bow, with the head and two tails adorning the toque in ' Harriet Ho»mer*s Work. Harriet Hosmer. whose statue of Queen Isabella met with so many misfortunes" in regard to being placed at thefgtir that it was not placed at all, is at last to see her work properly exhibited. At the Midwinter fair in San Francisco, which she will visit, it will have a prominent position. Miss Hosmer participated in Chicago in the dedication of the only thing erected to the memory'of Queen Isabella--a little pampas gr^s ptitilipn : in the California building. 1 * ** " r iln|all< on Women. 1 1 Sht-Senator Ingalls of Kansa* ieucldressed [ a large public meeting held recently at ' Doylestown, Pa., in connection with the ; teachers and school directors' institute. He is reported in the Doylestown Daily - Intelligencer as saying that W6man suf- front. The cape is formed of two velvet | frag0 g coming. -Women will vote as ruffles, very full and lined with the pal est green silk. They are edged with a narrow band of sable. The velvet muff is a peculiarly shaped affair. It hangs down in points at the sides and shows conspicuously its deli cate silk lining. It is bordered with sa ble and suspended from pale green ^b- tons.--New York Advertiser. Flea Color Fashionable. Jflea color will be the fashionable col or this winter. Women will have flea colored gowns and mantles, men flea colored overcoats and babies flea col ored cloaks. It was the unfortunate soon as they want to. If they don't, it will be the first thing they ever wanted and did not get. The progression of wo man from subordination to equality has been rapid." • • . The French blotting roll has at last found its way to our stationers' coun ters. It is a little roll of blotting paper arranged in a frame, and in principle re sembles a lawn roller. It is the most convenient form of blotter imaginable and, silver mounted, is a pretty orna ment. Just at the moment ears are out of r • w r _i j. ,, , style. Pro tern, they are to be wholly i?'! by heavy 4.ve» <* hair in «h. shiny brown chestnut color which is known in France as puce. One after noon Marie Antionette appeared in a gown of that tint, when the king re marked, "That couleur de puce suits you admirably," and the ladies of the court, overhearing what he said, ex claimed, with the usual flattery of court iers: "Puce! Oh, delicious! What a charming idea!" And as soon .as they were free hurried off to their dressmak ers to order a flea colored gown like that' of the queen. Later on a color called double puce was invented, and for a sea son was all the rage.--St. Louis Post- Dispatch. The Most Recent Fad. latest fashionable fancy, wluch is only talked about and has not as yet been put on exhibition at the shops, is anklets. Every one is talking about them, and every one is supposed to be wearing them, although the fact cannot be proved. Never since the bangle craze, when every woman wore all the silver, fashion of other days, or hidden behind the 6hort, fuzzy, much curled "cat locks" now so generally and as a rule so unbecomingly affected^ The students of Va^sSi' have offered a prize of $2(5 for the best story with a Vassar girl as a heroine. Recent statis tics show that the Vassar undergraduates ate 847,942 pickles last year. There must be plenty of heroines among them. that a mile close to 2:12 has been trotted for a $300 purse, and in the faster classes on the programmes this summer the number of heats better than 2:20 where the consideration in the way of a purse was remarkably small would mount up into the scores. Down at LaPorte, Ind., for instance, on the Fourth of July, there was a free to all race far a $300 purse. So good a horse as Jalisco was the winner, but he had to step the opening mile in 2:20± and the second in 2:19£. By winning the race he received first money , $180, out of which came a 10 per cent entrance fee of $30, making the net sum paid to the best horse $120. To get the animal in shape* for a first class performance such an one as would win, it was necessary that he should reach the track at tea«t (two days ahead of the race. It costs something to ship horses, and then there is a driver and rubber who must be paid all the time, and altogether it is pretty hard to figure out how the oWner of a horse that wins $800 purses is going to make both ends meet in his i horse speculation. The trouble is there is so much trotting that the purses must necessarily be small at hine-tenths of the places where meetings are given, for the simple reason that the attendance is bound to be moderate and the gate- re ceipts correspondingly light. ' One trouble is that a man. With a 2:20 trotter or 2:16 pacer will generally keep campaigning such an animal at a loss rather than sell him for road use at the price the market offers. Everybody who has had to do with the trotting turf knows this--knows that there is never a meeting, big or small, but that some unfortunate--more likely half a dozen of him--must be assisted by friendly hands to reach "the next town," where "I'll have a pretty good horse and get a piece of the purse." What owners want to learn is to sell the first time a fair price is offered, re membering that even what most of them would consider the. insultingly small amount of $1,000 is better to have in the house than a 2:20 trotter that can hardly keep even when he wins, while as soon as he is out of the first flight there is a big deficit every week. The times are such that prices running well into the thousands will no longer be given for road horses unless the speed and other The young women of Festiniog, Wales, have sworn not to run into debt, use im proper language or liquors and not to ' qualities are of an exceptional charac ter. There are entirely too many 2:30, 2:20 and 2:35 horses produced every year for the price of them not to be affected. S It is not so very many years ago that the have aught to do with young men who do these things. -• : - i -III III/-I 1 i »lli : . Women are xromeii's moSt ttferciless critics. George Eliot said, "These poor, | entire 2:30 list did not contain as many silly woman things; they've not the sense to know ttfk no use denying what's proved."-'1 ; •: Women do more than half the world's work, and yet there Was a little Worn* gold or even jewelled bracelets she could in'» huildinif at OhiPMfl scheceat aquo get»Jb^^th(nreb^aiqrthing80 barbaric ffSSMt comr^^f^^ 3 ' r i-T - './I.. m;. "I **;•*<. 0 names as there were trotters beat 2:30 last season for the first time. That tells the story. There is a good market for trotting speed right now, when every* body admits that times are hard, but It is at prices consistent with the facts lit •-& f • ; «" 1' . T **;v /•>,. iSSBlit fiwKgliimli. DE. FRTJTiJEf -r-WBL-liBSH*. At WOODSTOCK, Friday, Nov. 24..I «> -t ur r> tVif'.HOf U ivntrH .TO? .V; C,; ffyoawMt aflw DRESS S d'model.tl jr pketot, wlta 4**ci1p» I ^, lU«#lo tijibSki Mtkntk," #Mk -- - in th« U.&t^foeigb.cMurtrita L B.l.iN6W&00. or>F. MttN-romec, WA»aiit«T«M,:D. e. DR D. O. fRUTH, LatoBurgetmm the Provident Medical His 1ong*xperlence In :tlie largest '(Ml in the world ennblas him to aril all Or X*RVOlTS, 6KIH AND BLOOD diSfM«8n latest scientific principles. DH rBU TU has no superior in diagnosing and treating disease)# and deformities. He will give S60 for any case be cannot tell the disease and where lo«ated in five minuter. Medical and aijrgtesl , d^seaseN, scu e and chronic Oatarran, aiseasei of the Eye, Bar, Nose, Throat and I>angs, DyssapuR, BrlHht'e Dieeaee, Diabetes, Kidney, Liver. Bladder, Ohronir Female and sexaal Diseases speedily cored by treatment that b»s never tailed in thousands of cases that bad beta proiieuiioed beyond hope. Many people nwet death ever? year who might have been restored to perfect health had they placed their caeee in the hands of experts. DR. FRUTH has attained the most wonder- fai success in the treatment«f caeee to which he devotee special attention, and after years of experience, has perfected the most infalll ble method of curing Orcastic VVeakness, Ner vous Deullltv, Premature DecHneof the Man ly power. Involuntary Vital Losses, Impair ed Memory Mental Anxiety. Al>eence£f Will Power, Melancholy, Weak Back and kidney effactiOPS if consulted before Idiocy. Insanity falling Fits or Total Iin potency result from YOUTHFUL ERRORS, the awful effect, which blight the most radiaut hopes, unfiling pati ent for business study, society or marriage, anmiallv sweeping to an untimely grave thoub .nds of young men "f exalt' <1 talent asd brilliant lutellect. PILES CURED with out nam, knifeeutery, EPILEPSY positive, ly cured bv our new and never failing hospl tal treatment, rKES EXAMINATIONS of the urine, chemical and microscopical, in all cases of Kidney Diseases, Bright's Disease, Diabetee and Spermatorrhis. Bring cpeci- wens. WONDERFUL CURBS perfected in all cases that have been neglected or uusklll- fuliy treated. No experiments or failures. We undertake no Incurable cases, but cure thousands given up to die Remember the date and eome early as his rooms are always crowded Ofres snd oonrespondence csnfldential, and treatments^nt by express with full direct- ions for use, oat personal oonsoltatlon pre ferred. > DR. D. D. FRUTH. 3632 Lake Avanua/.Chfoago. FOR PBOTECTIOII, MOT FOR 0RHAMENT. frlte DUBOIS ft DUBOIS, Fatafit AUome*. fintt, Tntfrwdo, Duty VtSmMi ' > »•' Axei4liPMsaa basinetsma^aotaBfdt -' ni.? ' IRODSRATE RESk; nfeSai^Se fives to AddreM mn WCDDE TTashbigtom, D.c^ pmi» Ooaipsfayii^miM fcraeenlitaatlOBeg 4fce lscgsst sod nost ^nflmntial nswvapf^ in the united states, for the express purpose of yrateefc tea Oi«lr nfeierihen against anscrapolone and incompetent Patent Agents, and each papst printing this advertisement Touches for the response lllKrifiu l^ltatinittttottheFreaeGlaiinsCompaai'. (n'liilin'.-^l^ I»II« ifffilill I'i'ili >!>>» • V , Mi J? XX»J2iJ2i.-- :TV - Land in California Free, / ^ ^ ygTThat can grow, if irrigated, Oranges, Grapes, or any fruit in Caiiforma that will grow by ir- ri^ation This land has no mar ket value without irrigation, Wo will Plant the Trees Oell'- Tale care and cultivate them for 5 years for half the profit, pay the taxes, labor and other charges, will pav you back the first year after irrigation one-third oi your investment if you will help get irri gation. Price f35 for 5 years, payable f5 per month till $25 is paid. FREE DEED to the land, no charges to you for taxes or labor or trees. Address California Land and Water Eaehaoge, > 288 Main St.. Dayton, O* pfhm IF I»I Wilt MFOBUnM MOOT Wo!®? SOLWEST™ Widows, Burrirors of Inventive Age WA8HIN a speehutf?1? * S'-Xl.. : i# •• .'1