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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Sep 1920, p. 9

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Fint in America TRINER'S - Bitter Wine . Brought to the American market 30 yean ago as die first Bitter Wine, k ii still first and second to •one. Unsurpassed lor poor appetite, headaches, constipation, flatulence and other stomach troubles. S At aS drug stores and dealers in medicines. JOSEPH TONER COMPANY I33S401 AAb«l OkMco. OL Sold Metal - flnatNi SUIIVnmIMO W/eQ\)ZK\ A. .or\An AUTHOR "THE ADVENTUREJ oj JHERLOC* COPYRIGHT CON AM DOYLE---- STOVE COUSIN EDIE. Synopsis.--'Wrftlng Ions after the events described. Jack Calder, Scot farmer of West Inch, tells how. In his childhood, the fear of lnvaion by Napoleon, at that ttme complete master of Europe, had gripped the British nation. Following a false alarm that the French had landed, Jim Horscroft, the doctor's son, a youth of fifteen, quarrels with his father over Joining the army, and from that Incident a lifelong friendship begins between the boys. They go to school at Berwick, where Jim la cock boy from the first. After two years Jim goes to Edinburgh to study medicine. Jack stays five years more at Berwick* becoming cock boy In his turn. A visit of Cousin Edle Calder of Eyemouth to West Inch gives no hint of the part she is to play in the Uvea of the. two friends. BetterThan Pills For Liver Ills. NR Tablets tone and strengthen organs of digestion and elimination, improve appetite, stop sick headaches, relieve biliousness, correct constipation. They act promptly, pleasantly, mildly, yet thoroughly. M Tonight, T< The Louvre Not So Much. He was evidently an ex-soldler and *n art lover. The first you could tell ty the American Legion button he wore, the second by the artistic touch in his manner and theme of speech. Another youth was sitting near him on the steps of the city library. He may or may not hare sought art «• Emerson paints it for us. "Dldja see the Louvre when you wtre in Paris?" asked the youth who may or may not have cared for art. "Yah," replied the ex-soldier. "And, "My, don't believe this stuff you hear about it bein' a fine gallery. I went all through it, and it ain't nothln' but • Jblg department store." Freshen a Heavy Skin ""With the antiseptic, fascinating Cntlcurt Talcum Powder, an exquisitely scented convenient, economical face, skin, baby and dusting powder and perfume. Renders other perfumes superfluous. One of the Cuticura Toilet (Soap. Ointment, Ta 1 cum)Ady. His Status Fixed. you ever drink to excess?" ask- «4Mhe girl's father. never touch liquor of any **How about tobacco?" *1 do not smoke. I have never had • 'Jlpar or cigarette in my mouth." «Ever gamble?" •Never. I do not know one card trani another." •I suppose you swear sometimes?" •No, sir. An bath has never passed my lips." "Dm. All right. Come out and have a stick of candy with me."--New lock Otfctral Magazine. Adapting Natural Power. With the ever-increasing supply of electrical energy furnished by the development of Switzerland's vast resources In water pikwer, consideration «C various electrically driven household appliances is growing from year to year, reports Consul Francis R. 8tewart, Berne. Up to the present time the use of washing machines in Switzerland has been very limited and electrically driven machines have been *W»ert only in public laundry Hope So, Indeed! 'f • "My new play is about rent profiteering." "I hope it brings dowQ the house."--Boston Transcript mm Night ^ M or rung n keepYbur Eyfes Cloan - Clear H*«lthy fcr Cere ji il ~ CHAPTER II--Continued. One day, when I came in from the sheep, there was my father sitting with a letter In his hands, which was a very rare thing with us, except when the factor wrote for the rent. Then when I came nearer to him I saw that he was crying, and I stood staring, for I had always thought that it was not a thing that a man could do. My mother sat beside him and stroked his hand like she did the cat's back when she would soothe it "Aye, Jeannie," said he, "poor WH He's gone. It's from the lawyer, and It was sudden, or they'd ha' sent word of it Carbuncle, he says, and a flush o' blood to the head." "Ah, well, his (rouble's over," said my mother. My father rubbed his ears with the tablecloth. "He's left a' his savings to his lassie," said he, "and, by goin if she's not changed from what she promised to be she'll soon gar them flee. He doesn't say how much, but She'll have enough and to spare, he says. And she's to come and bide with us, for that was his last wish." "To pay for her keep," cried my mother sharply. I was sorry that she should have spoken of money at that moment, but then if she had not been sharp we should have been on the roadside in a twelvemonth. . "Aye, she'll pay, and she's coming this very day. Jock, lad. Til want you to drive to Ayton and meet the evening coach. Your cousin Edle will be In It and you can fetch her over to West Inch." And so off I started, at quarter past five, with Souter Johnnie, the longhaired flfteen-year-old, and our cart with the new-painted tailboard, that we only used on great days. The feoach was In, just as I came, and I, like a foolish country lad, taking no heed to the years that had passed, was looking about among the folk In the Inn front for a slip of a girl with her petticoats just under her knees. And as I slouched past and craned my neck there came a touch to my elbow, and there was a lady, dressed all in black, standing by the steps, and I knew that it was my cousin Edle. I knew It I say, and yet had she not touched me I might have passed her a score of times and never known it My word, If Jim Horscroft had asked me then If she were pretty or no I should have known how to answer him! She was dark, much darker than Is common among our border lassies, and yet with such a faint flush of pink breaking through her dainty color, like the deeper flush at the heart of a sulphur rose. Her lips were red and kindly and firm, and even then, at the first glance, I saw that light of mischief and mockery that danced away nt the. back of hpr great dark eyes. She took 'me then and there as though I had been her heritage, put out her hand and plucked me. She was, as I have said, in black, dressed In what seemed to me a wondrous fashion, with a black veil pushed lip from her brow. "Ah, Jack," said she. In a mincing English fashion that Bhe had learned at the boarding school. "No, no, we are rather old for that--" This because I, In my awkward fashion, was pushing my foolish brown face forward to kiss her, as-I had done when I saw her last "Is this our carriage? How funny It looks. And where am I to sit?" "On the sucking," said I. "And how am I to get there?" "Put your foot on the hub," said I; *T11 help you." I sprang up and took, her two little gloved hands In my own. As she came over the side, her breath blew in my face, sweet and warm, and all that vagueness and unrest seemed in a moment to have been Shredded away from my soul. I felt as if that instant had taken me out from myself and made me one of the race. It took but the time of the flicking of the horse's tail, and yet something had happened, a barrier had gone down somewhere, and I was leading a wider and a wiser life. I felt It all In a gush, but shy and backward as I was, I could do nothing but flatten out the sacking for her. Her eyes were after the coach which was rattling away to Berwick, and suddenly she shook her handkerchief in the air. "He took off his hat," said she; "I think he must have been an officer.'He was very distinguished looking; perhaps you noticed him--a gentleman on the outside, very handsome, with a brown overcoat" I shook cry head, with all my flush •f Joy changed to foolish resentment Ah, well, I shall never see htm again. Here are all the green braes, and the brown, winding road. Just the same as ever. And you. Jack--I don't see any great chari^ in you, either. I hope your manners are better than they used to be. You won't try to put any frogs down my back, will yon?" I crept all over when I thought of such a thing. "Well do all we can to make you happy at West Inch," said I, playing with the whip. Tm sure it's very kind of yon to take a poor, lonely girl in," said she. "It's kind of yon to come. Cousin Edle," I stammered. "You'll find it very dull, I fear." "1 suppose it Is a little quiet. Jack. Not many men about, as I remember It By the way, that crabbed old doctor had a son, had he not?" "Oh, yes, that's Jim Horscroft, my best friend." "Is he at home?" "No; he'll .be home MOB. He's Still at Edinburgh, studying." • "Ah, we'll keep each other company until he comes. Jack. And I'm very tired, and I wish I was nt West Inch." I made old pouter Johnnie cover the ground as he had never done before or since, and In an hour she was seated at the supper table, where my mother had laid out not only butter but a glass dish of gooseberry Jam which sparkled and looked fine In the candle light I could see that my parents were as overcome as I was at the difference in her, though not In the same way. After supper, when she had gone to her bed, they could talk of nothing bat her looks and her breeding. "By the way, though," says my father, "It does not look as if she were heartbroke about my brother's death." And then, for the first time, I remembered that she had never said a word about the matter since I bad met her. CHAPTER IH. The Shadow on the Waters.- It was not very long before Cousin Edle was queen of West Inch, and we all her devoted subjects from my father down. The south room, which was the sunniest and had the honeysuckle round the window, was for her; and it was a marvel to see the things that she brought from Berwick to put Into it. Twice a week she would drive over. And the cart would not do for her; for she hired a gig from Angus Whitehead, whose farm lay over the hill. And it was seldom she went without bringing something back for one or other of us. It was a wooden pipe for my father, or a Shetland plaid for my mother, or a book for me, or a brass collar for Rob, the collie. There was never a woman more free-handed. But the best thing that she gave us was Just her own presence. To me It changed the whole countryside; aqd the sun was brighter and the braes greener, and the air sweeter from the day she came. Our lives were common no longer, now that we spent them with such a one as she; and the old, dull gray house was another place In my eyes since she had set her foot across the doormat. It was not her face, though that was winsome enough; nor her form, though I never saw the lass that could match her, But it was her spirit; her queer mocking ways; her fresh, new fashion of talk; her proud whisk of the dress and toss of the head, which made one feel like the ground beneath her feet; and then the quick challenge in her eye and the kindly word that bfeought one up to her level again. The more I loved her the more frightened I was at her; and she could see the fright long before she knew the love. I was uneasy to be away from her; and yet, when I was with $er, I was In a shiver all the time for fear my stumbling talk might weary her or give her offense. Had I known more of the ways ef women I might have taken less pains. We found our level after a time, when she saw that she had just to do what she liked and how she liked, and that I was as much at her beck and call as old Rob was at mine. You'll think that I was a fool to have had my head so turned, and maybe I was; but, then, you must think how little I was used to women, and how much we were thrown together. Besides, she was a woman in a million, and I can tell you that it was a strong head that would not be turned by her. Why, there was Major Elliott, a man that had burled three Wives, and had twelve pitched battles to his name. Edle could have turned him round her finger like a damp rag--she, only new from the boarding school. I met him hobbling from West Inch, the first time after she came, with pink in his cheeks and a shine in his eye that took ten years from him. He was cocking up his gray mustaches at either end, and curling them into his eyes and strutting out with his sound leg as proud as a piper. What she had said to him the Lord knows, but It was like old wine In his veins. I saw the corner of a newspaper thrusting out of his pocket and I knew that he had come over, as was his way, to give me some news, for we heard little enough at West Inch. "What is fresh, major 7" I asked. He pulled the paper out with a flourish. "The allies have won a great battle, my lad," says he. "I don't think 'Nap' can stand up long against this. The Saxons have thrown him over, and he's been badly beat at Leipzig. Wellington 1s past the Pyretw* s and Graham's folk will be ax Bayonne before long." I chucked up my hat. "Then the war will come to ah epd at last," 1 Wled. "Aye, and time, too," said he, Making his head gravely. "It's been a bloody business. But It Is hardly worth while for me to say now what was In my mind about you." , \ "What was that?" "Well, laddie, you are doing Mi* good here and now that my knee Is getting more limber I was hoping that I might get on active service again. I wondered whether, maybe, you might Uke to do a little soldiering under me." t My heart jumped at the thought "Aye, would I!" I cried. "But it'll be clear six months before til be flt to pass a board, and It's long odds that Boney will be under lock and key before that." "And there's my mother," said L "I doubt she'd never let me go." "Ah, well, She'll never be asked to now," he answered, and hobbled on upon his way. I sat down among the heather, with my chin on my hand, turning the thing over In mind, and watching him in his old brown clothes, with the end of a gray plaid flapping over his shoulder as he picked his way up the swell of the hill. It was a poor life this at West Inch, waiting to fill my father's shoefe, with the same heath and the same gray house forever before me. But over there--over the blue sea-- ah, there was a life fit for a man. For two days I turned It over In my mind, and on the third there came something which first brought my resolutions to a head and then blew them all to nothing, like a puff of smoke In the wind. I had strolled Out In the afternoon with Cousin Edle and Rob, until we found ourselves on the brow of the slope which dips away down to the beach. I pulled an armful of bracken to make a couch for Edie, and there she lay In her listless fashion, happy and contented, for of all folk that 1 have ever met she had the most Joy from warmth and light. There was a ship coming up with the wind--a black, sedate old merchantman-- bound for Lelth as likely as not Her yards were square and she was running with all sail set. On the other tack, coming from the northeast were two great, ugly, lugger-like craft, with one htgh mast each, and a big, square, brown sail. A prettier sight one would not wish than to see the thrt»e craft dipping along upon so fair a day. but of a sudden there came a spurt of flame and a«whlrl of blue smoke from one lugger, then the same from the second, and a rap-rap-rap from the ship. In a twinkling hell had elbowed out heaven, and there on the water was hatred and savagery and the lust for blood. ^_We had sprung to our feet at the outburst and Edie put her hand, all In m tremble, upon my arm. "They are fighting. Jack," she cried. "What are they? Who are they?" My heart was thudding with the guns, and It was all that I could do to answer her for the catch of my breath. "It's two French privateers, Edle," said L "Chasse-marees, they call them, and yon's one of our merchant ships, and they'll take her as sure as death, for the major says that they've always got heavy guns, and are as full of men as an egg's full of meat. Why doesn't the fool make back for Tweedmouth bar?" let Contents 15YlmdDrafllB ALCOHOL~3 PER GENT. , AAfe^etabtePreparatioafcrAi I similatin^theFood by Ee^statingtheStooacis and Bowels rf Children Cry M-o$? Thereby Promoting Checritataess and RMt&Wai® neither Opktm.Morphine not: I Mineral- NotNahcotic •SsS"** ass" Q*oust , A helpful Remedyfcf Constipation and Dtam** and Feverishness and . Loss OF Sleep jir^dtin^thctrfrcOT-mWM*/- Simile Jbx GrvTAimCOMMCK CASTORIA Special Care of Baby. That Baby should have a bed of its own all are agreed. Yet It b more reasonable for an Infant to sleep with grown-ups to nae 1 a man's medicine in an attempt to regulate the delicate organism of that same infant. Either practice is to be shunned. Neither would be tolerated by specialists in children's diseases. -•». > Your Physician will tell you that Baby's medicine msst b» prepared with even greater care than Baby's food. A Baby's stomach when in good health is too often disarranged by improper food. Could you for a moment, then, think of giving to your ailing child anything but a medicine especially prepared for Infants and Children ? Don't be deceived. Make a mental note of thisc--It is important, Mothers, that you should remember that to function well, the digestive organs of' your Baby must receive special care. No Baby i& so abnormal that the desired results may be had from the use of medicines primarily prepared for grown-ups. / •OTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET TMT » MOUND EKRY lOTTtC OF fUTCMOrS CMTMM GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of Exact Copy of Wrapper. V THK CKNTAUR COM N1W YORK CITY. Wrong Again. "Now, Just listen to our new neighbor talking to her baby," said Mr. Dubwaite, who was sitting by au open window of his apartment "That's what I call mother love."* "You ought to see her "baby,"' replied Mrs. TMibwaite, with a sniff. "That 'ittsy, pittsy precious? she's raving about runs around on four legs." --Birmingham Age-Herald. "IH stay and marry yo«." SOMETHING LIKE A BUGLER! (TO BE CONTINUED.) SOLAR SYSTEM MADE PLAIN Illustration Qlven by Herechel Is Probably tha Most Comprehensive Ever Devised. Perhaps our most graphic picture qf the solar system is given by HerscheL. Imagine a circular Qeld two and a half miles in diameter; place a library globe two feet In diameter in the very center; 82 feet away put a mustard seed. The globe would represent the sun and the mustard seed Mercury. At a distance of 142 feet place a pea, and another at 215 feet. Thesd will represent Venus and the earth, both as to size and distance. A rather large plnfiead at a distance of 327 feet will speak for Mars, and a fairsized tangerine a quarter of a mile distant will stand for Jupiter. A small lemon at two-fifths of a mile will play the role of Saturn, a large cherry three-fourths of a mile distant will answer for Uranus, and a fall* sized plum at the very edge of the field will proclaim Neptune. Eighty moons would be required to make one earth. A player there could throw a ball sii times as far as it can he thrown on American diamonds. A man weighing 150 pounds tbere would weigh 900 on the earth. The earth receives as much light and heat from the sun in 13 seconds as It gets from the moon in a whole year.--From a Bulletin of the National Geographic Society! MCoId In the Head** IS.aa acute attack of Nasal OWturrh, Those subject to frequent "colds in tlie head" will find that the use of HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will build up the System, cleanse the Plood and render them leas liable to colds. Repeated attacks of Acute Catarrh may lead to Chronic Catarrh. HAUL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is taken Internally and acts through the Dlood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System, thus reducing the Inflammation and restoring normal conditions. AU Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, OhlOt OF SAME ORIGIN AS COAL Wood Believed to B« Basis of Jet, Stib- Ofeanee Long Uaed for Various Ornaments. • JfeOs a sort of lignite or anthracite, often cut and polished, which has the peculiarities In weight and texture of* the hardest kind of anthracite. It has been used in Britain since before historic times, and was common In the bronze age, from which tlm%|^have come Jet beads, button* rings, ahnlets and other ornaments. Julius Caesar alludes to the abundance of Jet in Britain, and Jet ornaments are found with Roman relics in them. The monks used Jet for rosary beads at Whlthy Abbey, and at Whitney, where It was found in the greatest abundance. It occurs In Irregular masses in bard shale known as jet rock. Often microscopic examination discloses coniferous wood In the composition of Jet It Is probable that Jet was developed when masses of wood drifted down a river, rotted or became water logged and sank out at sea, becoming gradually buried In a deposit of fine mud which hardened eventually into shale. Sometimes drops of bltumln are found In Jet cavities, which seems to confirm the suspicion of its wood origin.--Detroit News hll (i Player Who Could Produoe an Effect Like That Described Surely Was a Wonder. .Two darkies In a negro regiment ^ere boasting about their company buglers. G'long wld you, boy," eald one; u ain't got no booglers. We Is got boogler, and when 'at boy wraps off lip around that horn and blows puy-call it sound Jes' like that um Boston Symphony band playln' "The Rosary.'" "Yeh, I bearn you," replied the other. "Talk up, boy; talk up. To' is wadln' deep into trouble." "--An' when he sounds 'at tapoo the angile Gabri'ell hlwself Is lending1 a ear, boy. A ear is what I says." "Well, If yo' Is yearnin' fo' food yo* wants a booglar with an hypnotic note like we Is got. Boy, when Ah hears ole Custard-Mouth Jones discharge his blast, Ah looks at mah beans and Ah says, Strawberries, behave yo'selves! To' Is crowdln' the whip cream oat o' mah dish.'"--Qoid Chevron. " . m : • What lea Crtt ' ~ A tietgrroOr, seeing the seven-yearold daughter of a geologist playing with a bedraggled but cherished kitten, psked what her pet was called. "Well," replied the precocious youngster, "that depends. Father calls her a segregation from an Intrusive magma of doubtful genesis; mother refers to her as the basement complex; sister Helen Insists that she is a typical example of secondary Impoverishment ; but I just call her my «|«yf little kitty."--Boston Transcript ' The Observant Flivverist. "Some of those big financial foQPSj must be takin' quite a little vacatio<||S| remarked Farmer Corntossel. . * "What makes you think soT" •*<'.<] "Nobody has taken the authority til quite some time to boost the price cf' gasoline." V,,. To tell a boy to practice economy \ in the nee of soap Is wasting wordst Ity. Jealousy Is an admission of InferlMP* It Is an attribute of small mlndlfe. f Origin of Famous Quotations^ The henpecked man had Just obtained a divorce from his first wife. He was heard to murmur, with the only fiendish glee that had been his since the orange blossom episode: "And the first shall be last." We are all excited by the love of praise, and It Is the noblest spirits that feel It most.--Cicero. A Forced Levy. Ail old farmer, who was complaining terribly of a bad harvest, met the minister of the parish, and, as usuali proceeded to hold forth on his favorite topic. "Ah, yes. Farmer Giles." said the worthy parson, "you have, I must confess, good causp to complain; but you must remember that Providence cares for all. and that even the birds of the air are provided for." "Ay," said the old man significantly, "all o' my corn." Another Kind. "Do yon see yonder hdbse? I know for a fact there are spirits In it." "A haunted bouse? How interesting 1 Do the spirits make a disturbance in the sleeping rooms?" "No; they are kept In the celtlr." Get Back Your Health! Are you dragging around day after day with a dull backache? Are yoo tired, and lsme mornings--subject to headaches, dizzy spells and sharp, stabbing pains? Then there's surely something wrong. Probably it's kidnej weakness! Don't wait for more serious kidnev trouble. Get back TOUT health ana keep it. For quick relief get plenty of sleep and exercise and use Doan't Kidney Pflls. They have helped thousands. Atk your wetohbort An Illinois Case Mm* V. Dawson, 115 Si •Byflwiai Everett St., Streator, 111, 8ay*: "I bad an attack of rheumatic pains. was ail through my muscles and in my back. I was so sore and lams that I could hardly work. I took colj settled all through me, making the trouble worse. I ' heard so much about Doan's Kidney Pills curing such attacks, that 1 took some. Two boxes cured me completely." • G*tDou'ixAv9loN,flO««BN DOAN'S VfAV FOSTER.MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y. rli KILLS PESKY! BED BUGS P. D. Q. A tie bo* of P. D. Q. makes • MB j quart of UM strongest bus lilllsr <S ] earth. The new chemical. P. D. Q.--Peak* Devil's Quietus--puts the everl&stln* t® ( bed-bug*, roaches, ants and fleas. Peak? bed-bugs can't exist where P. I>. Q la used, as It leave* a coat In* on thrlr , •Hi and prevents hatching. , • box of P. D. Q. goes farther than i a barrel of olil-fashioned bug killer. < P. D. Q. will not rot or stain clothing., i kills flaas on dogs. Tour droffri."t hssi < It or ha can get it for you, or smt pre- i paid on receipt of price by the Owl i Chemical Works, Terre Haute. Indian^ I It you fear to lose your dignity yon have nothing worth losing. "Mapping" the Air. The greatest discovery yet made III exploring the air Is that the atmosphere consists of two layers, the lower extending frog* sea level up to 10,- 000 meters. In which there Is a steady fall of temperature with elevation. This is called the troposphere. Above this there Is no fall, and up to 20,000 meters a slight rise. The upper layer Is known as the stratosphere. It (s actually possible today for an airplane to rise from the ground to the bottom of the stratosphere, say about six miles. In one hour. If we want to explore somewhat higher, say 20 miles, we Install light Instruments on t sounding balloon. A Looking-Back Word. A woman always has time for r flection when she sees a mirror.--Oar-* toons Magazine. Figures compiled to England stum that the world's consumption of tea Is steadily increasing. John Adams was the longest Ihred of the presidents, dying la hit ninetyfirst year. &&•' .vH'i V:, TV* . .Z • ^ .Jr, tyAose u)ho haOe used POSTUM instead of coffee during the past year are sure to be ahead in purse and axe Quite apt to be ahead in health. Fair price, tiniformly pleasing flavor and general table satisfaction JPostum in first place wi Inaigr a. family. Cuticura Soap Clears the Skin and Keeps it Clear Soap 25c. Ointment 2S sad 50c, Talent 2Sc. !* re's a Jfeasori Mala ly Bostum Cereal Companyfac, Battle Creek, Mich. g £ HOXSIE'S CROUP REMEDf I A certain cur* tor Croup and cungesttwS ' colda Preventa Pneumonia. No nausea. SOfe , s "Eatonic, in Four Days Did Me $20 Worth of Good" ? i So writes Mr. Edward W. Bragg 0#;'V v Mecca, Ind., who suffered fronfc stomach troubles for a long time bufe could not find anything to help hin% . ; but at last had faith enough to giv* / > eatonlc. a test. It quickly remove<|; the excess acids and poisonous gasetv .4..^ from the body und the misery dls» „• appeared. Of course, when the causfe of the trouble is removed, the suffered' ;; must get well. Eatonlc is quick, sum and safe, and the lasting benefit* come in new strength, life and pep. Your druggist will supply you witiv eatonlc at a trifling cost and every ail* ing person should get it today. Adv. Uumwrkrr*--Are jrou liUNMad In prvdii*. tlve farm land*, suitable for r nisi rut cuttla, hours and ?ht?ep? Adaptable for diversified farm Inn Splendid roadn. schools. cburchM. • Write McSwaln Realty Co . MontKiimery. Ala* FRECKLES gBjgBBSMa. Boy Pecos District Leases New whll* jim . .. . $1.00 au »fi». |u> 00 caah-ii buys 10 acres. I year commercial lease* •, Shallow wells producing, dtep teats drilling. These leases due to advance shortly Buy; * aa many 40-acre tracts aa you cui at 11.00 aa acre, hi down, balance 1b 50, <0, * - tO days. Write for full description uj map, or aend order now before raise, Henry B Clark. 101 Main St . Kort Worth. Teiaa. Far Saie by Owner--Several rich atiUTtai farms In Mississippi Delta. Richest lafcrt M earth. J. B. Vanl.andliutbam.Ur*»BYU||*t)lta» Help tad rwulka Far staked Aajrakn^ any buslneaa. Valuable teteimattoa. **'--*-- free. Amer Bua «* . Baatoo Harbor. Mtoth W* ftL 41* IW. ... * , ' < i

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