Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 8, 1910, Page 11

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BREAKING A WILD BRONCHO - Great Feat of Riding Shown by Charley Pargeon. ® BUCKAROO BUSINESS AT BUHL How an ldaho Town is Entertainef by & Real Broacho Naster Who Fully Understands His Busin BUHL, 1daho, May 6.- pondence of The Bee.)- great; a real old-fashioned ‘“‘buckaroo’; chaps, jingly spurs, mad horse, endless plain, stretching to the mountains, thirty miles away; “wranglers” and a shouting crowd of men, boys and women; and all of it out here In the far, wide spaces of Jdaho; the soft airs of the evening; the glow of the dying day and the curious pei- fume of the sage brush, making life sweet to live “Come on fellows!" That was the invi- tation. A knoll, outside of town was the stagg: Inside the barbed wire fence, out of km's way, was the parquet, with the proscenium arch of God's great blue dome, scintillatingly bright, over all. Th tor P was “Charlie,” better known around North Platte as C. T. Pargeon, the leading man ‘Was a blg blaeck “twister a horse that had never been ridden, which had alread thrown two men, one of them three times, and the price was whatever you wanted to put into the hat which Pearl Meredith, brother of E. T. Meredith, of Des Moines, passed among the crowd. ‘There is not the slightest Bttempting to describe the convolutions of that horse. He was a “twister” for falr and on earth Charlle mounted him, let alone stay on him, 18 now and will always remain a mystery A gunnysack about his eyes Induced the beast to stand long enough to adjust the hackamore, a toe In the stirrup, an agile fling of the body, and Pargeon was in the saddle; and the show was on. So rapid was the movements of that maddened animal that the eye could hardly follow them. It seemed to me that all four legs were in the air at times and the black body, wet with the sweat of terror, svin- ning round and round, with Pargeon's head for a pivot. At all times both horse and rider seemed to be in the air. With head between his forelegs he would bound over the wide plain, a cloud of dust following ) his frenzied efforts to free himself of his rider. Yes, Pargeon finally rode him. Fences compelled him to jump four or five times. A doctor's buggy In the way compelled him to take @ nasty fall, but—well, the other “buckaroos” say that “the horse was rode.” This morning Pargeon is sore, stiff and sits In the sun, his aching muscles slowly recovering from the unwonted strain, The town has forgotten the exhibition and the black horse is musing In his stall. Pargeon is very well known at North Platte. He worked for the Bar C outfit, better known as the Platte Valley Farm and Cattle company. He is another Ne- braskan out here in the west. And last year he won the first prize at the riding con- test held at Central City. He Is a wonder. ‘Life Sentence for Boy Murderer pecial Corre- jee! but it” was bit of use of extraordinary how Seventeen-Year-Old Bandit Who Killed Banker at New Albany is Convicted. ' CORYDON, Ind., May fT.—Thomas J. Hoal, the boy bandit, was found guilty of murder today and sentenced to life im- prisonment Hoal is a 1 ear-old Louisville boy, who last November executed an emazing single handed attack on the Merchants National bank of New Albany, Ind., with the motive of robbery. He compelled a negro chauf- feur to drive him to the bank at noon through crowded streets of Loulsville and New Albany. In the bank he seemed ex- tited, shot and killed Cashier J. 1. Faw rett, wounded President J. K. Woodward, and also the negro chauffeur. Without securing any money he dashed from the bank and attempted to cross the Ohio river to Loulsville in a skiff, being captured in mid-stream by the police. Mental defectivencss was the up by his lawyers, defense set SOFT WHITE Assured by the Use of CUTICURA Soap and Ointment These pure, sweet and gentle emoliicnts preserve the kands, prevent redness, roughness and chapping, and impart in a single "'tht that velvety softness and iteness so much desired by women. Ior those whose occupa- tions tend to injure the hands or who suffer from dry, fissured, itching, feverish palms and shape- less nails, with painful finger-ends, Cuticura Soapand Cuticura Ointment are wonderful, Charterhouse 8q.: h 3 B u'f.".‘..t Ja , . P qft | been scarcely | Cuba already THE - OMAHA' Austria Seeks | Settlement for the Near East| Quietly Working to Bring About a | Concert of Powers to End the “Ques BY EMIL ANDRASSY VIENNA, May 7.-(Special Dispatch to The Bee)—Austria is quietly taking the lead in an endeavor to bring about a con- cert of the powers for the final settlement | of tha near eastern guestion. At the ex- penditure of a vas{ deal of diplomatic energy the difficulties arising from the un- | rest of Rulgaria and Servia has been raightened out, the Cretan troubles had been quieted temporarily at least, but now | comes the outbreak In Albania which has| assumed the proportions of civil war and | which will tax the resources of the Turkish | government to deal with | The disaffection of the Albanians is due to conscription, an objection to registering | their land for taxation, and an attempt to | prevent the use of Roman charac The Albanians also strongly re- sent the attempt to levy octrol for pur poses of beautifying Pristina. | A« all the mountain tribes have joined the revolutionaries, the task of the tr will not be easy, butn time dc will succeed In restoring order and arrest- | | Ing the ringleaders, who are mostly ad-| | s in the schools | herents of the ex-Sultan Abdul Hamid, | who enjoyed privileged positions under the former regime, but lost them with the restoration of the constitution. | The great danger is that the restless Bulgars and Servians may be drawn into| the fighting and the general conflagration in the near east which Austrla has striven | %0 hard to avert may be kindled in spite of | all efforts to prevent it. 1 understand that | no formal propositions have been made for ncerted action on the part of the powers. but tentative suggestior have been well | received at the various chancellertes. It is hoped if the powers do intervene now that they will settle the questions which threaten the peace of rope definitely The duke of Vizen, better known as| Prince Miguel of Braganza, in finding that, | although he has married a rich wife, the latter's closest relations are not going to| allow the lady's mill to b for the purpore of getting him out the | financial difficulties he had got himself into before marriage. They regard the creditors, | it is aid, as vultures, and, although, in the | interests of the young wife, they are will- | ing to pay the creditors half their claims, they declare they will not_go beyond that offer. Evidently the manner in which | Comte Boni De Castellane dissipated Vh-j dollars of his wife—the daughter of Jay Gould—has taught American parents to be cautious when their children contract al- liances with foreign nobilities. The new Austro-Hungarian hattleship | Zrinyi has been launched at Triete from the yard of the Stabilimento Technico. Tt s | said that the broadside fire will possibly | exceed in the welght of shot per minute that of the Dreadnought class of warships. COULD REMEMBER WATERLOO Recently Dead, of the Englishwom Vivid Recollection Great Battle. LONDON, May 7.—(Special Dispatch to The Bee.)—Death has been active among the centenarians recently. Mrs. Mary Mat- thews died at Tywardreath, Cornwall, aged 106. Untfl a few months ago she enjoyed remerkably good health, and could see to thread a needle with the naked eve and to. do patchwork, at which she was an adept. Mrs. Matthews has a vivid recol- lection of how the victory of Waterloo was celebrated by bonfires and the roasting of whole oxen. Four of her children are still living, and she leaves & long line of descendants extending to the fifth genera- tion. The death is reported from Kilnantick, Rathangan, county Kildare, of Mary Tuite, whose age was given on her coffin as 115 Even these records, remarkable as they | are are surpassed by that of Mrs. Cranley, who lives within a few miles of Rathan- gan. She is sald to have attained the ex- Had the traordinary age of 124 years. Revolution in Cuba means much more to the American people than the ordinary Latin-American revolution. Not only the United States pledged to the world to preserve order in Cuba, but American busi- | ness and economic interests in the island, present and prospective, represents billions of dollars. Cuba is more richly endowed by nature than any other one country on carth. It now produces a greater amount of cane sugar than any other one couatry. | Its tobacco flelds. furnish the material for the best cigars, material not to be obtained elsewhere. 1t has important mineral d posits. It has wonderful fruit producin possibllities. And as yet its resources have touched. Cuba is so close to the United States | that the American people are directly af- tected by conditions in that countr is a principal source of food the United States, more than of all the sugar used In this being of Cuban origin. The in creasing cost of living will force the United States to make the most of the | possibilities of troplc America as a food producing country. Cuba, wonderfully fer- | tiie and having its chlef port only ninety | miles from an American rallway terminus, | is worth many millions of dollars to Amer- wan business today, It is worth bilifons | | for the future. The important Industries in Cuba are, of course, the production of sugar and | tobacco. The tobacco eulture is restricted \n. a small section of the western end of | | the islafid, and is advanced to a high state | of development. The tobacco business can- not be expected to grow greatly. Much | of the Cuban tobacco s manufacetured in | the island, but great quantities of leaf | tobacco are sent abroad, especially to | the United States, to be made up. This nt of the tariff and it has re- in the bullding up of two clties | in Florida inhabited mostly by Cubans. | But the sugar business is now, and has | | been for years, the most important Cuban | industry. lLast year Cuba produced, in | round numbers 1,500,000 tons of cane sugar. | The next greatest cane suger production | was in lave, 1,250,000 tons, and then came | our own Hawall with 5,000 d Loulslana | with 30,000 tons. The total sugar crop of | | the world was 14,710,000 tons, of which about | | 5,000,000 tons Wwas cane sugar. | | The United States in that year consumed 12,196,000 tons of sugar, of which approxi- | mately one-third was produced within the tarift borders of the country, which in-| cludes Porto Rico and, to a limited extent, | the Philippines. Cuban sugar is entitied to a reduction of 2 per cent of the customs duties when It comes Into States, American wares going supply for one-third country most Trouble in Cuba- | the entirc American demand for sugar. | 1and Little Princes : Lusty Laddies Spanish Crown Dispels Rumors of De- formity of Children of the King. MADRID, The Bee) May 7.—(Spectal to | Unfavorable Dispatch rumors concern- INg the health of the heir to the Spanish throne have been insistent within the last few weeks that public alarm has. been caused an extent necessitating surances from the highest authorities. It has been freely asserted that both the prince of Asturfas and his brother, Don Jaime, were deaf and dumb. The prince of Asturias, it was further alieged, was mentally afflicted, while Don Jaime was threatened with a serious spinal com- plaint. The latter report was dispelled by the reproduction of the latest photographs of both the royal children, on Jaime's appearance being that of a child of more than ordinarily robust health. Other doubts, however, stiil persisted in the popula: and uninstructed mind until to re | removed as the result of several interviews | held with the little princes by persous of high sianding. These interviews have been published in the newspapers, and they have had the effect of putting an end to the groundless and mischievous rumors in question. So far from showing any dis position to weakness, physical or mental the Spanish royal children are not only extraordinarily healthy and strong, but extremely Intelligent. The prince of Asturia, who has Inherited his mother's fair complexion, is a strong, well developed child nearly 3 years old. He speaks Spanish, of course, and Eng- as well as his age can allow, and is always learning French. He ls very fond of using the words he knows in the latter language, and amused those around him immeasely a short time ago by dismissing a photographer of an illustrated paper who been admitted to the prince's private snapshots with ‘est fini," and a had apartments to take a f urexpected remark, courteous little wave of his tiny hand, The prince of Asturlas has very decided tastes of his own. He delights In all things flitary, and loves dogs and horses. His favorite recreation is to drive his younger brother in a fusny little phaeton drawn by two small ponles or to ride a tiny prancing steed, which was presented him, ‘and which Is a great favorite in the royal stables. . As for Don Jaime, who bears a striking resembjance to his maternal grandfather, Prince Henry of Battenberg, his principal object In life up to the present is to be an exact copy of his elder brother. One can- | to | not eastly distinguish special traits in the character of a baby not quite 2 years old, but it is said that the little prince’'s chiet characteristic is his bright and sunny dis- position and a declded taste for musical | sounds, | LORD SELBORNE TAKES , UP PROBLEM OF RACE | In Farewell Address He Discusses At titude of South Atrica Toward Mulatto People. JOHANNESBURG, May f—(Special Dis- patch to The Bee)—The farewell address of Lord Selborne created a sensation which has not yet died down. All he said lald the greatest stress on the superiority and responsibllity of the whites, with which he sympathised, but he differed from the prevalling tendency to lay all the stress on the black side of the mulattoes because he laid stress on the white side. They varied in character and characteristics as much as In external ap- pearance and he belleved the tendency to drive mulattoes down to the position of Kaffirs was unjust and unwise—unjust be- cause they- often had the thoughts and feelings of the white man; unwise because we must consider that one day we might | have to fact a great concerted movement of the native races. | Lord Selborne prophesied that in the| event of such a terrible catastrophe they | would find the leader of the native races | to be mulatto with the feelings, character and superiority of a white man, If they other nations to levy retaliatory or counter- valling dutles on Cuban sugar, so that the American market s the only one open to Cuban sugar. As a result 9 per cent of the Cuban crop comes to the United States. This constitutes more than half of the total sugar imports of the country. These figures show that Cuba already is | an‘important source of a valuable article of food which the United States is not able| | to produce in sufficient qualities in its own| territory It is asserted | on the highest technical authority that if the sugar land in Cuba owned by Ameri- can sugar interests were all under cane,| those American plantations would supply 1t is furthermore asserted that if all the sugar | in Cubi under cultivation, all | the cane sugar growers and all the beet | sugar growers in all the rest of the world | might quit the sugar business suddenly and the sugar supply still would be ade-| quate. In other words, Cuba is capable of oducing s much sugar in one year as is | now produccd in all the world, from both cane and bee While the cane and beet sugar business | in the United States proper is an important | agricultural interest, there seems to be no | g00d reason to belleve that it will increase were | with sufficient rapidity to supply more than its present proportion of the annually in- creasing demand. The American people must continue to buy two-thirds of their sugar abroad. Disputes over the sugar| tariff and matters relating to the sugar trust may be adjusted by legislation or otherwise, but the natural supply and de- mand will not be atfected by any goven- mental action. The Americans will have to | have sugar, and they will be unwilling to | buy it from far-off Java simply because some alleged Cuban patriots are continually | burning up Cuban sugar fields and sugar mills in an effort to get Into office, | The time has come, at last, when Ameri- | can statesmanship must consider practical ecohomy with relation to the food supply For this reason, If for no other, the United State nnot permit conditions in Cuba again to be disturbed by a serles of revolutionary wurs. lLast year Cuba sent to the United States wares valued at $100,- 00,000 and bought from the United States goods to the value of $60,000,000. This trade is greater In volume, both of exports and imports, than the combined trade of the United States with Porto Rico, Hawall and the Phiilppines. In the ten years preceding the Spanish war and the freedom of Cuba, the affairs of the island were in such bad condition half of what they now are, and the im- ports were less than one-fourth of what | they are today. The Cuban plantations | | seif-government | safety SUNDAY BEE: MAY We This is the BEST OPPORTUN- ITY you will ever have to DOUBLE YOUR MONEY! For $60, $100 or $1,000, can make sure of enormous profits. What we lose YOU GAIN. The lure of gold; the wish for a com- petence; the confident looking forward to an easy old age; these are the sentiments that animate you, as they animate all men. you Your savings, at 3% ; tn a year your hundred in = uvlnxl‘ bank earns for you THREE DOLLARS. A few pounds of sugar; a dozen pounds of coffee, and the year's earnings are eaten up. You can NEVER MAKE ANY MONEY by toil alone. You have GOT TO LET YOUR HEAD WORK. It's when your savings are IN- VESTED that you begin to MAKE MONEY. Let YOUR MONEY WORK FOR YOU; then you will need to work less, You would like to feel that YOUR MONEY IS WORKING FOK YOU, wouldn’t you? It will, it you will let it. Your momey will produce for you A GUARANTEED INCOME for as long as you will keep it INVESTED. And when you want to let go you can get back SIX TIMES WHAT YOU PUT L and poesibly SIX HUNDRED TIMES WHAT YOU PUT IN. There is no guess work. sure. It is guaranteed. We need the equipment; HAVE GOT TO HAVE IT. We are all ready to reap our profit. BUT WE It is FREE MAP OF WORLD'S GREATEST OIL FIELD. The Midway Ofl Field, California, is the greatest of all ofl flelds of the world. The map just completed shows location of all the wonderful gushers and all other wells in this field. One well produced a half- million dollars to its owners in thirty d._'ys. he “California Oil Bulletin," issued semi-monthly, tells the news of the ol industry in California and of the com- panies operating in all California ol | flelds. | The map and the “Oil Bulletin” for | six months FREE if you send us your name with this ad now. | The G. 8. Johnson Company, | 911 Phelan Bldg. San Prancisco, Cal. persisted in the tendency fo degrade colored people to the condition of the nativ He considered that except where mulattoes had manifestly adopted the habits and conditions of natives they ought to be led up to a condition in which they could recelve the treatment accorded fo the white man. Mixed marriages were fhe last thing he advocated, because he be- lieved them to be utterly hateful and wrong. Some Things You Want to Know V. Billions at Stake | were devasted by fire and sword and there was little sugar to send out. The Cuban people were impoverished and they had no money to buy forelgn goods. The acreage of growing sugar cane Is now twice as great as it was when Spain | left the island. Under conditions of pro- found peace and security, such as exist in | America, the acreage may be doubled again | and again. Milllons of dollars have been | invested in Cuban sugar plantations since | see the result of the second experiment of | the republic of Cuba in the business of If that experiment falls, more especially if it falls by reason of ths | precipitation of a raclal confliet, the in- vestors, both present and prospective, will demand that the United States govern- | ment take positive aetiog to secure the | safety of thelr investments and make Cuba permanently peaceful. The billlons of dollars at stake make it | impossible for the American naglon to | shirk its duty of maintaining a stable gov- nment In Cuba. If the republic shall prove itself able to cope with the present agitation, If it shall be able to pass the period of the next general election in then perhaps the Cubans will be able to work out their own destiny. But if there is another revolution there will be another intervention, and, in spite of sentiment and disinclination the United States will be forced to assume control of Cuban affairs. Perhaps, after all, this will be best for the Cubans. Surely the condition of the average Cuban, white or black, will be ad- vanced by permanent pea Tomas ks trada Palma, one of the greatest of Cuban patriots, summed up the case for the Cu-y ban people, as distinguished from the race | Cuban politictans when he said “I always have believed, sinc L took active part in the ten that Independence was not the of all our noble and patriotic the alm to possess a stable government capable of protecting lives and property and guaranteeing to all residents of the country, natives and foreigners, the «xer- cise of clvil and natural rights, without permitting liberty war to become pernicious license or violent agitaton, to say poth- ng of armed disturbances of public order I have never feared to admit, nor am 1| afrajd to say aloud, that a ‘political ‘de- pendence which assures us the fecund bonus of liberty is a hundred times prefer- able (o a soverelgn and independent republic discredited and made miserable by the baneful ection of periodic ecivil wars.' the time ars war, final goal aspirations— the United |that the exports amounted to less than | And that statement forecasts the future of into Cuba | having the benefit of a similar concession. | This reciprocity agreement has caused all | | cuba. BY FREDERIC J. HRASKIN, Tomorrow—Bridge Whisty Will Share We But they glve no hint of the|jses, and other milllons are waliting only to | — | possibilities of Cuban sugar. $ — A farmer with a ripe erop of grain, and no reaper; a farmer with a crop of ripened hay, and no mower; & brick-maker with a quarry full of clay, and no moulds; a butcher with thousands of cus- tomers, and no slaughter house— that's our fix. The farmer would share his wheat with the man who would reap it, the butcher his trade with the man who'd supply the meat. Six Hundred Per Cent For You. Brunn-Kinney Company, Twin Falls, Idaho. PLEASE SEND ME YOUR PROSPECT. your guarantee and explaining In detail US, showing We will share our -profits with you ‘We can do this and have a GREAT DEAL LEFT. WE ARE SURE OF WEALTH. The great wealth that lies before us; that our eyes can see; our hands feel; that we can STUMBLE OVER makes us sure; MAKES OUR GUARANTEE ABSOLUTELY GOOD. We NEED YOU TO HELP supply the reaper; to gather in the crop. me BTN - WS " 10,000 With Need Your Help under no obligation. What we need is a stamp mili! A STAMP MILL O GRIND OUT GOLD! More THAN TEN THOU- SAND DOLLARS In quartz-bear- ing rock fs Iying on the ore dump of our mine at JARBIDGE, near SOUTHERN IDAHO, the STATE WHICH I8 FILLED WITH MINES! One hundred and ten miles from a rallway, we have the richest of all mines in that rich mining district. A STAMP MILL WE MUST HAVE; A STAMP MILL WE WILL GET! Send This This puts You can get in NOW. Or you can wait till the opportunity is gone. You can HELP REAP THIS HARVEST OF GOLD. Or you can stay out. Strictly it 1s up to YOU. WE OWN THIS ORE; WE OWN THE GOLD THAT IS IN THE ORE. It's true we can do poth- ing without a stamp mill BUT WE CAN SELL THE ORE NOW IN SIGHT, ANY DAY FOR WHAT WE PAID FOR THE MINE Brunn-Kinney Co., Twin Falls, Idaho Bliss, Idaho Townsite Opening Wednesday, June First BLISS TOWNSITE COMPANY F. C. MARINER, President. SAM C. BUSH, Vice-Pres. MRS. ADA M. MARINER, Sec’y-Treas. On Wednesday, June first, at Bliss, Idaho, will occur thé sale of lots in the new town of Bliss. A TOWN WITH GOLDEN OPPORTUNI- TIES FOR ALL LINES OF BUSINESS. Situated in the Center of 100,000 Acres of Fertile Irri- gated Fruit and Farming Lands. For full information address BLISS TOWNSITE COMPANY Bliss, Idaho Only have dred sixty-four this snap. dollars vears to people Puy one hun- down; then take six pay the balance. | HEN we turn over to you bearing orchards worth LESS ° THAN $500.00 You can make to $3,000 per year pples. You KNOW HEY ARE WORTH must be “an intelligent SEND FOR O SE < WHICH TELLS HIS REMARK orty cents a day throw cun You man ABOUT Invest do NOT you buy résults are CERTAIN in other PAID AS HIC ner year NET EASILY PROVE Trees elght vears old, 48 trees to the acre. hoxes " of apples TO TREE. At $1.30 per THIS 18" AN INCOME OF THREE ~THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED AND FORTY DOT.. TARS, Our FRFEE hooklet telis ALT, about this opportunity Send for it RIGHT NOW, TO. DAY. Thus Fortune beckons Twin Falls Land & Orchard Co P Lagenr, Pron. T chance ABSOLUTE Western orch- HAV LY ards THIS planted yield 9 THE “hox A | AND "REAL ESTATE JOURNAL, ACREAGE TRACTS FOR THE INVESTOR OR FOR THE HIS 18 our specialty. From T One to One Thousand acres. This business is made to serve your interests. No sum of money, however small, is two small to get our best attention And no sum, however large, s too large to tax our capacity to TO PLACE AND PLACE WITH PROFIT TO THE INVESTOR. We would like to have you write to us for our booklets, lterature and other informa tion. We are sure that you want to uvuat A, It is the last West and the rap idly growing section of the United States. Here you can make big profits on small in- vestments. Land can be bought on credit. Write Right Now, Write Today GRAY @ GRAY VESTMENTS, POCATELLO, - . IDAHO Kliuw Are You Looking for a Home? No farmer should think of buying land before seoing o copy of The Farm and Real Estate Jowrnal. It contains the largest Iist of lands for wale of any paper published In lowa. Reachs 5,000 readers each lssue, and (s one of the best advertising mediums to reach the Farmers and Home Seekers ihat you e we will mail you the Jous i0c in slver ‘or stamps you the Journal for two months on t s FARM County, lowe You The Jarbldge-Pavlak {s the VERY BEST PROPERTY IN THE SENSATIONA L NEW GOLD FIELDS of Southern Idaho and Northern Nevada. IT IS IN THE HEART OF THE DISTRICT. The Bourne mine, the Pick and Shovel, and other promising prospects lie all around us. THE JARBIDGE- PAVLAK 18 IN THE HEART OF THE DISTRICT. On one of these mines there are twenty-one leaces. Our vroperty is free to mine. WE HAVE MINED IT. J. H. Price, the famous mining engineer, says we have hundreds of thousands of doilars In sight. OUR SHAFT I8 SUNK, OUR ORE BODY HAS BEEN MARKED OUT. WE HAVE TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS ON THE ORE DUMP. But we can not send the ore to a smelter, There {s no transportation. We have SPENT OUR OWN MONEY IN DEVELOPMENT WORK. And now we want fo CET A STAMP MILL TO GET OUR MONEY BACK: TO GO ON WITH NDEVEL- OPMENT WORK. We will share this money with vou We will sell fust enough of our stock to get that stamp mill AND NOT ONE. SINGLE SHARE MORE. We will let go of not one share more than is necessary. We have IN- VESTED OUR OWN MONEY. WH RELIEVE IN IT. WE KNOW IT 18 GOOD. Here is our plan: The ONE DOLLAR shares we will gell for fifteen cents Buy many shares as you wish: send THRER CENTS for each share vou want to buy: GIVE US THE NAME OF YOUR OWN BANKER. WE WILL SEND THE STOCK TO HIM. To HIM yon can pay the other twelve cents. The moment the stamp mill f= un we begin to pav dividepd THEN YOU GET YOUR DIVI- DENDS JUST AR WE GET OURS. Rend THRERE CENTS8 PER SHARE TODAY, the name of YOUR BANKER and you BRGIN TO SHARFE THE PRO¥TTS OF A GOL.D MINE WITH TREN THOU- SAND DOLLARS LYING ON ITS DUMP. SFEND TODAY Send right now. YOU CAN'T LOSE. And for every fifteen cents vou nut in YOU GET ONE DOLLAR BACK. Send NOW. ON CREDIT IN IDAHO You can make a better home in Idaho than in any other state; there's more to make & with! The landscape of mouncain, and river, and hill and vgle; the fertile irri- gated land; the quick cash mar- kets; good neighbors; all these are in Idaho. Get busy today! Right now! We will send you a beautiful booklet free of cost. A post card request is all. Send today. This booklet tells of American Falls the one power city of the intermoun- tain west, Wealth awaits you HOWELL INVESTMENT CO. American Falls, Idaho. tatoes to the Acre OU know that potatoes are always staple. Potatoes are like gold. The markets fluctuate very little on potatoes. And if you have GOOD potatoes you CAN ALWAYS FIND A MAR- KET FOR THEM. This is the | most remarkable potato country in ALL THE WORLD. The S8nake River Valley h been known to produce EIGHT HUN- DRED AND FIFTY BUSHELS | OF POTATOES TO THE ACRE. You can RAISE POTATOES IN THIS VALLEY. RAISE THEM AND GET MONEY FOR THEM. Write to us about this. We have the most handsomely fllustrated booklet written about this, THE TWIN FALLS TRACT in South- ern Idaho, that has been printed for a long while. "It Is mighty in- ming, too. IT 18 FREE AND WE WILL SEND ONE COPY TO YOU iF YOU WILL JUST WRITE A POSTAL CARD RE- QUEST. "WRITE TODAY. | J. E. WHITE TWIN FALLS, IDAHO TWENTIETH Reuch ¥ CENTURY FARMER

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