y acHary MaintoIc,iDnt21VFR CALLED BY DEATH IN IOWA HOME CONSUMER IS QPTIMISTi "PubHthed by F. Q. 8CHRESNER. HcHENUT, ILLINOIS -The fish Is the real father of lies. There will continue to be mor* weather than aeroplanes in the high er altitudes. Now we are told that flat life will eaose as to round out existence In a lunatic asylum. Cincinnati surgeons are going to amputate a citizen's six-inch nose, but not by keeping it on the grindstone. For some time to come, however, the popular way of crpssing the Alps •will be by means of the tunnel under them. Progressive Republican Senator Passes Away 4 Suddenly of Dilatation of the Hear!--His Vitality Was Weakened by Campaign ia Wis consin--Gave Life for His Country--Was Famed as an Orator. Good old authority says that It's impossible to teil all the stars, but Uncle Sam's experts have catalogued them. It is reported from New Jersey that a cow wrecked an aeroplane. It must have been the same cow that jumped over the moon. Sometimes it does seem that every body in the world is calling every body else a liar, and nobody knows whom to believe. The average driver of a sprinkling cart, as perhaps you have observed, always becomes fiendishly active just before a be»vy rainstorm. And if yOu do find baseball in heav en, and if the umpires manage to get there, too, how do you expect to express your opinion of them? "American women make poor wives," says an English writer. Yes, a foreign husband can make an Amer- fcani^rife poor, in short order. It may be old fashioned, but never theless we cling to the notion that a revolver is something that no man carries for any good purpose. Occasionally, when the weather man predicts "partly cloudy," he is breaking it to you gently that a rain fall of an inch or more impends. A Wyoming girl recently killed a coyote by beating it with a riding Whip. If you meet a Wyoming girl with a riding whip be polite to her. New York chews more gum than altty other city, we are told. If it's really true, New York must know how to chew and talk at the same time. Somebody suggests that the United States should go into the business of coining half pennies. They might come In handy to put into children's banks. We have read the new football rules and have arrived Joyfully at the conclusion that the grand old game will still be the antithesis of a pink tea. A New Jersey rag picker in one week found $1,800 worth of Jewelry In old clothes. Moral--sift your old clothing before sending it to the rag picker. A Pennsylvania woman found a $200 pearl in an oyster she was eating in a hotel dinner. From which it is to be Inferred that the pearl-fishery season Is fairly opened. Fort Dodge, Ia.--United States Sen ator Jonathan Prentiss DoIIiver died suddenly Saturday night at his resi dence while being treated by an oste opathic physician. The cause of death was dilatation of the heart, due directly to an attack of acute indigestion. It had been believed that he had almost entirely recovered from tile attack of indigestion from he had been suffering for a | «*eek, but his exertions in the political campaign had weakened his vitality. Physician Hears Efid Come. While working over the senator the physician, Dr. E. M. Van Patton, used an Instrument to listen to the heart action. He had counted 14 regular strokes and had informed his patient. Two more strong heartbeats were recorded and then two faint ones. Then the physician heard nothing. He thought for an Instant that his steth oscope was faulty. He glanced up and discovered that his patient was dead. It was learned that a consultation of physicians was held a week ago. The dceision then was that the senator might prolong his life by relinquishing his work, but that he never again would speak in the senate or thrill an audience from public platform. Gave Life to Country. Dr. A. H. McCrelght, one of the con sulting physicians, declared to Mrs. declaring, however, that the senator must give up his public work. He himself repeatedly said that he was not seriously ill, declaring that If he were he would "set the wolves howling" and admitting that he had a horror of knowing that the politicians were discussing his successor while he was ill, on the theory that he might die. Talk of Successor. Nevertheless, within an hour after the senator's death, the question of who his successor would be was the theme of general discussion in politi cal circles. It is predicted that Gover nor Carroll will not appoint any per son to fill the vacancy, for the legisla ture about to be elected will convene within eight of ten weeks. Governor Carroll is a candidate for re-election, and it is believed by many that he will leave it to the legislature to fill the vacancy. Dolliver's Life Story, Jonathan P. Dolliner was born In 1858 near Kingwood, Preston county, W. Va. He was the son of a minister in the mountain district. He had to pay part of his own way through West Virginia university because his circuit riding father's income was small. At seventeen, when the boy had won his graduation diploma, he began the study of law and was admitted to the omcm, mm m BOSS n SfcV «V-> "f-'V, :• :>mi f•: - • - - - -"Wmit* Vila,to KILLS iiE'i i ;«u wi in SCORE HURT IN CRA8H GRAN© RAPtD8 AND IN DIANA ROAD. ON ACCIDENT IS DUE TO FOG Having discovered and excoriated the meanest man, what shall be said of the woman who is charged with appropriating and pawning her neigh bor's false teeth? On the hottest day of the year New York authorities received bids for the removal of snow. If It had been put to a vote of the sweltering citizens, they would have unanimously re solved, if only snow would come Just then, to let it stay. Uncle 3am is going to build a barb- wire fence 1,000 miles long on his southern border. For a respectable lady smuggler such a device would be even harder to beat than a pier full at custom house inspectors. A woman in New York cut off her husband's ear because he annoyed her by talking too much. That shows the illogical and Inconsequent nature of woman. If a man had been in her place, he would have cut off the of fending tongue. J I JONATHAN P. D0LLIVER. United States Senator from Iowa. The new postal savings bank sys tem will soon be in partial opera tion at least. The government has on hand 6,000,000 of the stamps which can be sold at ten cents each, with the cards to which they are to be at tached. The cards also cost ten cents each, so when a card has nine stamps affixed the whole may be turned in to represent a deposit of oue dollar. Such an arrangement encourages small savings, the nggregate of which may become very large. A New York lunacy commission Is attlmped by the question! Is a man Insane because he reads his paper up side down. Well--er--was it a New York paper? Dolllver that her husband had given bis life to his country as much as had any soldier who had been killed on the battlefield. Mrs.- Dolllver said the senator, while In Washington last winter, studied the tariff schedules constantly, far in to the night, taking little time to eat and then going back to work immedi ately. Such work told on his physical powers, undermining his naturally rugged constitution. Death cut short Mr. Dolliver's plans to help Senator Beverldge in the In diana campaign and to aid Senator Clapp in Minnesota. At the state con vention he declared he would enter every one of the 99 counties in Iowa, whether invited or not, to 6peak in support of the stat» ticket. He met Colonel Roosevelt at Omaha on the latter's recent western trip and ac companied the former president to Sioux City. From there he returned to Fort Dodge. It was his last campaign work. Believed He Would Recover. During his Illness the senator and his wife insisted that there was noth ing serious in his ailment, and the physicians expressed the same belief, bar on coming of age. Fame as an Orator. It was in 1884 that Mr. Dolllver first achieved national fame as an orator. He made a speech at the Republican - state convention as temporary chair man. His speech was printed in full and was widely copied all over the country and even in. England, where It was cited as a rare specimen of mln> gled wit and power and condensed or atory in political speaking. Wins Leadership In Congress. Mr. Dolllver was elected to the Fif ty-first congress from the Tenth Iowa district and was five times re-elected. Easily hi$ oratory and strong mental ity earned him a high place in na tional affairs. In 1900, on the death of United States Senator J. H. Gear, Governor Shaw found Mr. Dolllver was the logical successor to the seat In the upper house. He was appointed, was elected in 1902, and was re-elected when his term expired. When the Republican leaders looked about for a possible running mate for McKinley, Mr. Dolliver was presented as Iowa's favorite son. In 1908 also he was urged to accept the vloo-preai dentlal nomination and rofused. Freight snd Work Train Collld*-- Trainmen Escape--43 Persons In jured on Frisco Road In Oklahoma --Cars Go Through Bridge. Portland, Ind.--Five laborers were Instantly killed and more than a score were injured, several seriously, when a north-bound extra freight train on the Grand Rapids & Indiana railroad crashed head-on Into a Work train, seven and a half miles south of here Friday. All were caught between flat cars on which they were riding and pulled under the wreckage of the engine, where their bodies were terribly mu tilated. The head of Milutin Tom'c was torn completely off, while Homle Mandie was completely disemboweled and his right leg cut off. A special train run to the wreck carried physicians, v*ho dressed tem porarily the wounds of the injured and brought a dozen of the worst hurt to the hospital here. The two trains met In a stretch of straight track in the fog, the engine men being unable to see one another until the trains were within fifty feet of each other. All Jumped and es caped Injury. The. track where the wreck occurred was being repaired by the men killed and both trains were running but ten miles per hour. Fort Smith, Ark.--Forty-three per sons were injured, 13 seriously, when St. Louis and San Francisco passen ger train No. 5 went through a bridge one mile west of Compton, Okla., Thursday night. The traiu left St. Louis at 9:85 o'clock Wednesday night for Paris, Tex. The injured were brought to Fort Smith and the 13 who were seriously hurt are in local hospitals. The wreck occurred on a short curve In the Winding Stair mountains while the train was pass ing over a small bridge. No cause has been assigned. The mall car broke through the bridge. The chair car landed in the bottom of the creek, the smoker was thrown crosswise on the right of way, while the diner stood on end in the creek. Five cars were piled up and the fact that there was no loss of life was probably due to the fact that the cars were made of steel. STANLEY KETCHEL IS SLAIN France is to equip its army with a new rifle at a trifling cost of $120,000, W0. Meanwhile the military author! ties are carrying on experiments with airships, which are expected to play an important part in war hereafter. If battles are to be fought high in air Of what practical value will be the costly new firearm? New Cincinnati Police Head Named, f Cincinnati.--William H. Jackson, a member of the detective force of the Cincinnati department, was Saturday appointed chief of police by Mayor Schwab to succeed Col. Paul M. Milii- ken, who was dismissed. Strikers Reject Peace Offer. Paducah, Ky.--The general griev ance committee of the striking Illinois Central shopmen Saturday rejected Superintendent of Aiachinery Bell's offer for peace. Byron L. Andrews la Dead. Evansvllle, Wis.--Byron L. Andrews of Washington, former proprietor of the National Tribune, died suddenly at the hqme of his mother in this city Saturday. Mr. Androws in 1881 was private secretary to General Grant. Moving pictures of the respective finishes of the man who rocks the boat, the man who speeds his auto. •Bd the other who drives across the railroad without stopping to look and listen might have a life-saving influ ence. S'A pnited effort is to be made by V^'ladndOB waiters to oust the foreigners Who are holding the lucrative waiting Jobs in. the fashionable hotels and restaurants of the British metropolis We expect later to hear the war cry: ."English tips for the Engli&h." Jimmy Barry 8tops Ferguson. New Orleans.--Jimmy Barry stopped Big Sandy Ferguson, "the white man's hope," in fourteen rounds of what was to have been a twenty-round bout at West Side Athletic club here Satur day. Ferguson's seconds threw up the sponge at the end of the four teenth. British Queen's Brother III. London.--Prince Francis of Teck, brother of Queen Mary, is critically ill with pleurisy. He has already under- gone two operations. Kills Wife and 8e(f. Havana, 111.--Charles Anno shot and killed his wife Saturday and then com mitted suicide by shooting himself in the head. Domestic troubles are said to have led to the tragedy. Champion Middleweight Pugilist Is Killed by Ranch Hand In Mis souri--Murderer Arested. Springfield, Mo.--Stanley Ketchel, champion middleweight pugilist of the world, died in a hospital here Satur day from the effects of a bullet wound Inflicted by Walter A. Hurts, em ployed on the ranch, of R. P. Dicker- son, near Conway, forty miles east of here. Hurtz, whose right name Is Dipley, escaped to the woods but was later arrested at the home of r. farmer near Nlanagua, Ma. He confessed to the killing but said he shot K>tchel because he was afraid of hinrfas he knew the prize fighter was armed with a revolver. He also alleged that Ketchel made Improper remarks to Goldle Smith, the cook at Dickerson's house. Th latter Is under arrest as an accomplice. More Riots in Nicaragua. New Orleans.--News reached here from Managua, Nicaragua, that disor der had broken out anew in the capi tal and that frequent rioting was oc curring. Aocording to these advices, the situation had become critical. very Aviator Hits and Kills Girl. Limoges, France-- M, Baillod, a monoplantst, In attempting a flight here Saturday, steered his machine into a crowd, killing a girl and in juring several other persons. Manuel Is Near Collapse. Gibraltar.--His friends fear that King Manuel will become a nervous wreck. He never ventures outside the gardens of the government house and would not even leave his room did not his mother, Queen Amelle, insist on It. Manuel looks wretched, worn, scared, unkempt in fact. With broken step he walks around the government house gardens, lamenting his fate and saying he has nothing to live for now. His mother is always with him and has him under complete con trol. Pumpkins Cause a Murder. Lewlstown, 111.--In a dispute over a load of pumpkins In Woodland town ship, this county, John J. Horton shot And instantly killed his neighbor, Adam Vance. Horton was sent to JalL Mexican War Veteran Dies. Marlon, 111.--James Reed, aged eigh ty-six years, died at his home in Ma rlon. Mr. Reed was a member of Captain Cunningham's company In the First Illinois regiment In the Mexican war. CENT POSTAGE HOW PROMHJE POSTMASTER GENERAL 8HOW8 RATE REDUCTION POSSIBLE. Says It Will Be Accomplished Without CurtalUag Service In the Slightest. Washington. -- That the postofflce department will soon be self-sus taining and that penny postage for first-class letters is a probability of the near future are statements made by Postmaster General Hlt.chc.nclL "Before the close of another fiscal year the federal postal establishment will become self-sustaining. This will be accomplished without curtailing In the slightest the service rendered or lessening In any respect its efficien cy." This was the stateme: made by the postmaster general. In connection with the announcement that he had submit-, ted to the treasury department, five days in advance of the time fixed by law, his estimates of appropriations for the post office department and the postal service during the fiscal year beginning on July 1. In private conversation heretofore Mr. Hitchcock has indicated his belief that it may be possible within a year or two, through the operation of plan? he had worked out. to place the postal service on a paying basis. MAKES PLEA FOR BEVERIDGE Roosevelt Plunges Into Indiana Cam paign and Tells People Why Sen ator 8hould Be Returned. Indianapolis, Ind.--Theodore Roose velt plunged into the Indiana cam paign Thursday with a trip across the state, in which he made a vigorous plea for votes to send United States Senator Albert J. Beverldge back to the senate. The last epeech of the day from the balcony of the Hotel English here was delivered before a crowd of 60,000 people. From the time the colonel got on the back platform of his private car at Covington, Just across the border line from Illinois, until he left Indianapolis he urged the throngs to eleOt the whole Republican state ticket The ex-president went to the utmost llimt in indorsing Beverldge. He gave him credit for having Initiate 1 the fight against the beef trust that re sulted in the passage of the pure rood law. Without the amendments put in that bill by Senator Beveridge, the col onel insisted, there never would have been any pure food legislation passed that was worth anything. SMASH 3 WORLD'S RECORDS The Harvester, Alleen Wilson and Joan Trot Sensational Raoes at Lexington Track. Lexington, Ky.--Three world's rec ords were smashed at the Kentucky Trotting Horse Breeders' association fall meeting here Thursday. The Har vester, driven by the veteran reins- man Ed. Geers, lowered the world's two-mile record held by Cresceus from 4:17 to 4:15%, trotting the last quar ter In the sensational time of 31% sec onds. Alleen Wilson, 2:02%, a black mare by Arrow Wood owned by John W. Coakley, Boston, set a new record for pacing mares to wagon, negotiating the distance in 2:04%. In the Walnut Hall farm cup race, the four-year-old bay mare Joan, by Directum Spfer, trotted the first heat In 2:05%, setting a new record for the race, and the third beat of the same event she trot ted the mile In 2:04 3-5, making a world's record for a fouî yeajr-old of any sex. |» This Cass Child's Punishment Car Palled to Hav» tekfr • tary Effect. £: "' 'i. ---- .. : J 'g&m A little girj bad been so very naughty that her mother found It necessary to shut her up in a dark closet--in that family, the direst punishment for the worst offense. For IS minutes the door had been locked without a sound coming from behind it Not a whimper, not a snlf fie. At last the stern bat anxious parent unlocked the closet door and peered Into the darkness. She could see nothing. "What are you doing In there T she cried. And then a little voice piped from the blackness: "I thplt on your new dress and 1 thpit on your new hat, and I'm wait ing for more thpit to oome to thpit on your new parasol!" RHEUMATISM HiS HANDS CRACKED OPEN "I am a man seventy years old. My hands were very sore and cracked open on the insides for over a year with, large sores. They would ora&k open and bleed, Itch, burn and ache so that I could not sleep and could do but little work. They were so bad that I could not dress myself in the morning. They would bleed and the blood dropped on the floor. I called on two doctors, but they did me no good. I could get nothing to do any good till I got the Cutlcura Soap and Cutlcura Ointment About a year ago my daughter got a cake of Cutl cura Soap and one box of Cutlcura Ointment and in one week from the time I began to use them my hands were all healed up and they have not been a mite sore since. I would not be without the Cutlcura Remedies. "They also cured a bad sore on the hand of one of my neighbor's children, and they think very highly of the Cutl cura Remedies. John W. Hasty, So. Ef fingham, N. H„ Mar. 5, and Apr. 11, '09." G«t a S5-osoi vial. If it fcflfc to tup i ai ' v refund., your. •• moTBjr. MUNYON'S RHEUVATISV CORE • -bikmBBBS" FMresKffSfBWW1 Just Quessed. "Mrs. Wadsworth, I am very glad. Indeed, to meet you. But, haven't I had the honor of being introduced to you before? What was your name formerly, if I may ask?" "My maiden name?" "No; your name before you were divorced." "How did yon know I bad been di vorced?" "Why, hasnt everybody?" $400 Hash Guaranteed mm Good or Better Tfcaa Farms Selling at $30 Per Acre on L»d| Term. This Is the first chance you have had to buy good Florida farms as cheap as the large Colonisation Company. Our farms are In Southern Florida, in flowing-well district of Desoto county. Fine land for oranges, graP« fruit »sd early vegetables, Surround ed by cultivated lands, same township. Railroad facilities. Titles perfect; war ranty deed. Mot leas than 40 acres sold to each purchaser. $10 1CRE CASH W. E. DUNWODY, MANAGER 401 Oarli Bid*, JACKSONVILLE. IUi KNOWN SINCE 1839 AsRELI ABLE AS 800N BE WITHOUT MATCHE8 A8 WITHOUT RESINOL IN THE HOUSE, Reslnol is the never failing article resorted to by my wife for the many bruises, chafings, cuts, burns and' accidents of the children and has been our cure-all for years. I have used It In cases of irritation and Inflammation and have Invariably been relieved al most Instantly. We would as soon think of being without matches in our house as without Reslnol Ointment. B. Rush Davenport, Philadelphia, Pa. Sing! (, utile WANTED Ambitions men to act as representatives linniLU for the Union Central Lire Insurance younueB, unnoia. iso experience n X. K. SCHBVVER.GeneralA geot. Polo, "Thank You'®." The man who Is not thankkful for the lessons he learned in adversity didn't learn any. There must be plenty of thankful ness In the world if those who have loved and lost could know just what they have lost. "Why are you giving thanks? They took $10,000 from you In Wall street a little while ago, didn't they?" "Yes; but I got out with $20 they didn't know I had."--Judge. All persons suffering from piles, or any form of rectal ailments. Write me for tree trial of my Positive, Painless, Pile Core. «. it. TARMEY, Auburn, tndtanm WANTED S O I L E D D R E S S E 8 Waists, Gents' Solus, Carpets, Portieres, Plumes,etc. Bend to ttehmlow's, SMB-8 N. Halsted St.,Chicago, the largest Cleaning and Dyeing Establishment In Wast and you will get Uaeai back cleaned ox dy«d aaa pressed satisfactory. Write for prices. LIVE STOCK AND MISCELLANEOUS I in fi'i'eat variety for sale 1 wbstebs; snwrim wsio: i.ow«s dame ftU., Ciisfess# BiTCHT VOCR1DEAS, They may bring; "HI t™ i wealth. 64-page Book Free. Bst. i Pat. Attic.,Box K. Washington PltsgeitUa Popularity of Thais. "Every other young actress Is call ing herself Thais," said Henry E. Dix- ey at a dinner at Mauquin's. "Thais McQinnis, Thais Endicott, Thais Schmid>--the thing Is universal. "Universal and ridiculous; for they wjio have read Anatole France's story of 'Thais' know that she was a very naughty little girl, Indeed. I am quite sure that no real reader of 'Thais' would ever, under any circumstances, consent to be called such a name. ' It makes me think of a man who, taking his infant daughter to be bap tised, told the clergyman to call her Venus. " 'But I refuse to call her Venus,' said the clergyman, Indignantly. 'Ve nus is the name of a pagan goddess.' " 'Well, how about your own girl, Diana?' said the man." Men are Inclined to boast, yet, ao cording to statistics, three out of four are buried at somebody else's ex pense. Posse Seeks Woman's Slayer. Hammonton, N. J.--Her head crushed in with a grubbing hoe, the body of Mary Strong, the wife of W. H. Strong, a farmer living near here, was discovered by her husband Satur day. Two tramps who passed the (arm are suspected. A posse of farmers are searching for the tramps. Fighter Diee In the Ring. Enid, Okla.--A prize lighter known as "Kid" Fisher was killed in the tenth round of a fight at Meno, near hers. Saturday. •hip Sinks; Seven Drowned. Cuxhaven, Germany.--The fishing steamer Senator Holthufen collided with and sank tfce Swedish bark Diana Thursday. Seven of the Diana's crew were drowned. The survivors were brought here by the steamer. Admiral Out for Offloe. Farmlngton, Conn.--Rear Admiral W. 8. Cowles (retired), brother-in-law of former President Roosevelt, was nominated Thursday by the Repub licans for representative from this town In the general ssseibty. COFFEE WAS IT. People 8iowly Learn the Facts. "All my life I have been such a slave to coffee that the very aroma of it was enough to set my nerves quivering. I kept gradually losing my health but I used to say 'Nonsense, it don't hurt me.' "Slowly I was forced to admit the truth and the final result was that my whole nervous force was shattered. "My heart became weak and uncer tain in Its action and that frightened me. Finally my physician told me, about a year ago, that I must stop drinking coffee or I could never ex pect to be well again. "I was in despair, for the very thought of the medicines I had tried so many times nauseated me. I thought of Postum but could hardly bring myself to give up the coffee. "Finally I concluded that 1 owed It to myself to give Postum a trial. So I got a package and carefully followed the directions, and what a delicious, nourishing, rich drink it wasl Do you "know I found it very easy to shift from coffee to Postum and not mind the change at all? "Almost immediately after I made the change I found myself better, and as the days went by I kept on Improv ing. My nerves grew sound and steady, I slopt well and felt strong and well-balanced all the time, "Now I am completely cured, With the old nervousness and sickness til gone. In every way I ••U onc* more." It pays to give up the drink that acts on some like a poison, for health is th© greatest fortune one can have. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellvlile," in pkgs. "There's a Rea- tos." MEDICINE MEAL ESTATE. PLORIDA I.AND--From one acre home sites up to colony propositions. Orange, grapefruit JroTes, Improved and unimproved trook farms, . M. Wlllson, Jr., Kls&lmstee, Florida. Q^AACBES FKAIKIB--3 mllea good town. About 600 cultivated; buildings, feneea, good wfii. $22 per acre, half sash, balance terms. Write O. Stone, Wadena., Basis. Bank Beferanees. -\fONEY-MAKJ5K8--General Store -"-1- dfse ana Building, chance of Ohotoe wheat fa run, raw aad Improved ard Gamble, Sheridan Lake, Colorado. re Mercban- [V INTERJ Dd belt of of No the slse farm wanted, 1 have it. 3.8. Darnsll, Gonther, f\A,ICAmASr PAKM LANDS. Rich new sell, im a.;dollars, im proved farms 26 dolluis per acre. Town lot* a spe cialty. For particulars write Blsworth A Wfight, Watroun, Saskatchewan. PigngAND ree and cattle ranch house, good buildings, never falling springs, project ed railway within three miles4X6 per acreJBalf oash, Farm 3600 acre*. Qood houie and buildings. U7.O0 per acre. In fertile All acres, five rooi acre*. Qood house and buildings. (17.00 '.terms. Bobert Lake, Calgary, Canada, VOU WANT WHAT Wl HATE-- free Irons cola wimeits, vjUuiivi, 1» and cloudbursts. Pears and apples pay Horns L^iUiorlul _ . _ pples pay ov er Ave hundred dollars pti ai ro. Kxoolknt bunting snd fishing. Prlcei reasonable. Writ® A. N. Parsons, Heel Estate, Grants Pass, Oregon. a i caa Bits line (0 acre alfalfa, dairy orchl en ranch, good house, barn, black; shop,chicken house and windmill, go assorted trees,' all fenced. Improvement*! railroad from Portland to Baermim;nt®. balance on mortgage1. arty. We«tlake a Kiehols, Sacramento, .1 MJ cro-ci liuicM W' We sell farmi uud ulty projH California! •sva i^enti commissions If you wuit •> home of IB* Tebtmenta, Small or large tracts direct from tbi owner, ten to t wenty-five dollars per acre, near towij with 2i passenger trains stopping dally. OpporwuaiTj for Wealth. ' THE8PANIAK0S never found the roumaia of Youth" because they went to the Heber Springs, Arkansas, is the place for nealUi wealth and happlneesr^&n^seek it elsewhere, hrf write today for prices and partlcnlarajo^sutchell | Thompson, Agents for Railroad idiittwi, at BsUi T7*OR SA1LK--Audratn county. Mo., farm--I hav* -a- for sale 100 acre* of lanifc. 7 miles frwtn Vandaua. Mo., with two-story, gix-room house. 60 feet of •ar ches, splendid barn, good well *pd wind unU; all land can Uncultivated: that I will sell for 185.00 per acre This 1bgood wheat, oata, corn, timothy Ind clover rnnd. and lb located in a splendid communltyi Close to school and country sU.re and lb ou u. rand route Will loan 16.400on this place. Writo oi call on me. John S. Uatson, Vandal la, Mo. r*LIVEtAND, OHIO, ha« Jumped from thlrty- vy flrsl place to sixth place in American cities aad will have a million people by laiO. Immense for- iiiiici havo been made lu fains lands near the «]ty, I have bold W,U0l> acres, making many uieu rich, and J can help you tu a splendid farm Investment lira tor particulars. I own and con dUCt will write .< In »hmt 3} ye elusive farm business in Ohio. Bstab- llsiied 3} yojirs. Bverything guaranteed Inst as res- MMenieJ. II. S. Cook. 'The Farm Man, JBlackstooa Building, Cleveland, Ohio. TEXAS Li» BUYERS ATTENTION I InveatiKatn any bod* of land In tl for one U»-. So.; ami kIto yue the cold ill Investigate any bod* of land In this attt* .»!• you for one dol la! aisd jtlro yon the noiii tacUlt- ilting frysn our investigation. We owotui land.ail selling, neither do tfn advise joa HlmrcU) 3ay, dUinteruMed report upon xkus but wo do furnir.h *ou oan re 1 v Knclas..« write for information. Tan bureau or nuua, m asa» g*. dollar Willi Inquiry, or cuaacfttui. airorttii! f ioon MISSOURI i.ANi> CHEAP-GOO* v* Eighty. Crop producer! Money maker! Wall Improved, two-awry house, good baru>>( miles from Wjaconda. this Is a. bargain j-t 165. Choice 90H aura*, forty in eulUvati„u, tifly-ai* in pasture enclosed la woveu-wirti lence, goou Improvements, small UT- . chard, mile from Wvaeonda, 162. 81 acres, fairlm- piovements, eitra fertile soil, thoe crops, all ujidsf cultivation except 18 acres bottom pasture land.SM nilifh from town, cheap at (tin. Wyaconda is a gooa j^Tuw^town ou Urt!' Wj&coBd*