m JYrfrrJ y Thk NitioJil Gfgnpkjl rgn WHERE AMERICA'S VAL UED DOCUMENTS ARE KEPT The most Importunl chronicle. of Homo nnclcnt tuitions lmve coino down to present gcneratlonM engraved on porphyry nnd tnnrblt. The United Stntcs, however, having existed wholly In nn "age of pnper." bus nil Its moBt precious historical records In the form of pnper documents, which can easily be destroyed hy lire, and Injured by dampness, extreme dryness, or rough handling. A recent Are, which destroyed Ir replaceable records In the census bu- j reau at Washington, and an almost simultaneous (Iro In the State cnpltol of West Virginia, which practically wiped out the archives of that State, have reinforced the argument of those urging that a fireproof hall of rec ords he built In Washington so the federnl government's priceless papers may be kept In safety. While the Constitution Is the most Important document possessed by the United States, the Declaration of In dependence comes first among our great state papers In point of time and probably In the hearts of the American people. The original of this challenge to tyranny which, like the shot fired at Lexington, has been heard round the World, and has, helped to mould monarchies and colonies Into repub lics, Is In the hands of the depart ment of statu and Is kept in a steel case In tho Stale War and Navy building, which adjoins the Whttu House on the west. Tho original ot the Constitution Is-locked In the samo case, which may therefore he consid ered tho steel Ark of tho Covenant pf tho government of the United States. Washington's farewell address may fairly bo considered one of the great est papers produced in tho 115 years of the republic's Independence. This document Is not owned by the federal government, but Is kept In the New York public library, at Forty-second street nnd Fifth avenue. The next paper to stand out as a mllcpost In tho shaping of u national policy Is tho message to congress by President Monroe proclaiming the Mon roe Doctrine. Tho original message Is In the files of the senate In tho capltol building at Washington. The Gettysburg address of Lincoln, scrawled in longhand, is In the library of congress nt Washington., Lincoln's Emancipation Proclama tion Is In tho library of the statu de partment It) Washington, and there too are all the treaties entered Into by the United States, from that ot 1778 with the French and that of 17811 which closed tho Revolution, down to tho present. Among these perhaps the most Interesting nre those which have contributed to the great terri torial growth of the country. There Is tho treaty of 18():i with Franco which arranged for what is prohnbly the greutest real estate "deal" In history tho Louisiana l'ureKnse. There Is the treaty with Spain, which added Florldn to tho new republic; and the uncompleted trenty with the Independent republic of Texas which led to tho only Instance In which a separate nation has merged Itself with the United States. Near them In the1 tiles of the statu department are tho treaties with Mexico adding to the United States, California and tho other territory west of Texas and south ot Oregon; the treaty with Great lrlt- aln adding Oregon; the treaty with Hiisslh arranging for the second great est purchuse of territory, the Alaska Purchase; and the treaties which havu resulted In bringing Huwall, the 1'hll lpplnes, Port Itlco, Guam, and the Vlr. gin Islands under the American flag, WHERE FLEET VISITED LIMA AND CALLAO American lUuu Jackets of the At lantlc fleet recently visited Lima, cap Itnl of Peru, after the passage of thu fighting ships through the Pauanui canal, Tho licet lay at anchor at Callao, tho port of Lima, only a few miles nway. The history of Callao's sheltered bay, which constitutes one of the host hurbors on tho Puclllc coast of South America may bo considered to have begun shortly after Plznrro and his bearded comrades entered Peru In 1532. From Callao In the years that fol lowed, sailed a constant stream of gal leons loaded with thu gold and silver that thu Conqulstadores stripped from the rich continent on which they had gained u foothold. Lima, only eight miles Inland, became the scut of the vice-regal government by which all South America was ruled, and Callao was practically the only gato through which the treasure gathered by tho colonial agencies Una poured Into tho lap of the Spanish king. Closo to Cnllno often hovered llrltlsli nnd Du'ch pirates to swoop down on tho treasure ships. Callao was tho llrst Puclllc port In South America jto havu completed modern harbor works. A half hour after boarding uu elec trie enr In tho city of Cnllno tho trav eler alights at one of tho many plazas In Lima, tho capital of Peru and u thriving city of 'JOO.OOO Inhabitants. Not far nway he will find tho conter of tho city's life and traditions the Plaza Mayor, or "great square." All of tho city's stfect car lines radiate from this center as though represent ing tho influence nnd power that radi ated from the same spot to all South America when Lima was the "City of the King." On one side of tho Plaza Mayor rises tho cathedral with Its lofty twin towers. Plznrro Is said to 1-ave laid tho foundation stones. Ills mummy is now exhibited Inside the structure. Facing another side of the main plaza Is the old vice-regal palace, still used for governmental purposes. Not far nway is the oldest university In the western hemisphere, the Unlversl dad do San Marcos, established more than half, u century before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth. In the Lima of the present the classic old Unlversl dad shares the educational Held with tho thoroughly modem technical col leges devoted to engineering, medi cine and agriculture. Limn and Cullao, thought of vaguely perhaps by many as somewhere tiear the northern end of South America's Pacific coast, are approximately 1,000 miles south of Panama as far from the Isthmus as Key West Is from Nova Scotia. Though only ten degrees south of the equator, and therefore well within the tropics, these cities, due to tho dryness of tho western slopes of the Andes and to the cold Humboldt Current that washes the coast, have an equable climate. Tho tempernturo In Hummer (December to May) sel dom rises above 80 degrees Fahren heit, and In winter rarely falls below 00 degrees. VALPARAISO, WHERE OUR FLEET VISITED ValparuW, home of Chile's navul academy, was visited recently by the United States Pacilic licet while the tlantic fleet was anchored at Callao, Peru. The hurbor of Valparaiso, while not so remarkable as thuL of Hlo do Ja neiro wuero tropical verdure runs riot among granite crags, lior so Idyllic us vivid, miii-hnthcd Naples, still deserves to rank with them ami three or four others as the most beautiful and strik ing of the Important harbors of the world. It Is no detraction to say that Valparaiso's name "Vale of Para dise" Is not merited. Such u name suggests, soft lines, rolling greensward, dower-strewn meadows, shady paths, noble groves. The beauty of Val paraiso Is more austere. Sailing Into Valparaiso the voyager enters u wide seml-clrcular bay flanked by. high capes. Otf a narrow level strip of ground Unit borders the curv ing shore lino is the well built busi ness section of the city. Behind and above this level portion of Valparaiso tower bluffs and steep seml-arld hills. These highlands once hemmed In the old city, but modern Valparaiso has burst Its bonds. Fine cnstle-llke resi dences now cling to tho slopes of many of the bills or perch upon the edges of tho bluffs. Valparaiso has a population of ".'!(),- 000. It Is by far the most Important South American Paclllc port, and the uiimiu! value of Its commerce exceeds that of Montevideo on the Atlantic coast. While Pernios Aires and Montevideo on t lio cast const lmve been handi capped by the shallowness of their harbors, Valparaiso's dltllculties have lain in the opposite direction. Its wnters are so deep that the building of breakwaters and Jetties was de layed until UM'J. Thu carrying out of the entire harbor Improvement now under way will cost $15,000,000 or more. In 1000, the year In which San Fran cisco was destroyed by earthquake and lire, Valparaiso was also devas tated hy the same two forces of de struction. Like San Francisco, South America's greatest Paeillc port city has risen from Its crumbled stone and ashes not merely to rehabilitate Itself, hut to become even greater and more prosperous. Valparaiso Is In practically the samo latitude as Huonos Aires, Car' Town, and Sydney, and Is about the same distance from the equator in the south as Sun Francisco and Charleston, S. 0 In the north. Because of South America's position considerably to the east of North America, Chile's great est port Is almost due south of New York, ami therefore him about the same time. Warships are always to ho found In the harbor of Valparaiso, for this. Is one of Chile's chief naval bases. It Is also the location of the Chilean naval academy, whose buildings, on a great promontory, dominate the liar bor. No better view of the city and harbor of Valparaiso can be hnd than that from the parked grounds of this Hue Institution. BIRTHPLACE OF BOARDS OF TRADE AND TRUSTS He who thinks that vast monopolies ure modern enterprises, or that chatu bers of commerce are latter day civic institutions, or that Prussians first strove to Implunt Kultur with a sword in iuh, wilt be disillusioned If he reads tho history of Ultra, chief city of Latvlu, on thu Haltlc, through which city such Intercoursu as has been bud with nusslu in recent mouths has largely been carried on. Itlga, which was attacked by Gcr mail troops In 1010, hud to wrest It self free from Prusshm control onco before, and thereby hangs thu story 'of mi early exploit like thu attempted THE NORTH PLATTE SEMI-WEEKLY TJUI3UNE ft fltibjugntlun of Belgium und tr. depot tntlon of its workers. About the middle of the twelfth cen fury n few German merchants' estab lished settlements about the mouth of the Dvlnn, which empties Into the Gulf of Hlgn nine miles below the present city of Ulga. Whereupon Bishop Al bert, In tle role of missionary, sought to colonize the territory In 1201 by building a town where Ulga now stands nnd the following year he founded the Brethren of thu Sword. Tho new order was well named. It killed where It could not convert, though slaughter was not the main ob ject after a foothold on the promising Haltlc port was obtained. Tho "mis sionaries" were sntlslled to reduce tho native population to serfdom; ap propriate the land, and build fortified towns and castles to uphold this min iature feudal system In n land ther aimed to exploit. Hut the Llvonluns are a liberty lov lug people. They resisted despotism then, nnd mnny times filter, just a n year or so ago they rebelled against Bolshevism. When their early oppres sors became too severe they arose and drove out the "missionaries." Later Livonia, and Itlga, which became Its cnpltnl, espoused the Christian rellg fon; and the Order ot tho Sword merged with the Teutonic Knights and continued to operate In other qunrters. Though Prussfa's political hold was shaken off Hlgu, It maintained Its economic ties fhere, nnd ludlvldunl Germans usunlly have been Important factors In Its commerce. This phnso of German Inlluenco wns consum mated when Itlga. In the thirteenth century, became a member of tint, Ilnnseatlc league, the llrst great trust which for two centuries controlled practically all tho trado channels of continental liurope north of the Alps'. The third modem aspect of medi eval Itlga Is to be found In the fam ous "Blockheads." It was this body which soon came to have the civic Im portance, nnd apparently mnny of the functions, of a chamber of commerco or hoard of trado today. Originally It was organized by the young traders who came to Itlga, as u social club, to afford fellowship In addition to the needful board nnd lodgings during their sojourn. Since the members were mostly young men, progressive, and somcwhnt assertive, they took their name to distinguish themselves from their elders, or grey beards. Naturally their table talk turned to ways of promoting business, and soon the club became, In effect, an organization for n "Bigger, Better and Busier Ulga." as the modem trade body would phrase It. From the beginning of the World war Ulga was an obJecUve of tho Central powers, because of Its Impor tance as a focal point for tho lumber from White Hussla and Volhynln, the llax from northwestern Hussla, nnd other products from a wldo area with which It has rail und water communi cation. Its pre-wur prosperity Is in dicated by the growth of Its popular Hon from 102,000 In 1807 to more than 500,000 In 10111. r KLAGENFURT: A SELF DETERMINED AREA The Klagenfurt area, tho only region u which a plebiscite was provided for i the treaty between the nllles nnd ustrla, has been retained by Auslrla s a result of the vote which was tak u several months ago. When the cruzy-qullt patch-work of llversti peoples that made up the old Austro-Hungartan empire was ripped apart by the treaty of St. Germain and rearranged more nearly in accordance with nationality and language, it was' lour that the old Austrian province f Cnmlolii, extending from the King- nfurt urea south almost to Flume, was Slavonic u. Its population, it was therefore Included In the Jugo slav kingdom along with the other ob- iously Slavonic provinces In tho southern part of the old empire: Bos nia, Dulmntlu, Herzegovina, Croatia and Slavonln. Cariuthla, the province adjoining Carnlola on the north ami containing the Klagenfurt area, was recognized, on the other -bund, to be predominant ly Teutonic as a whole. Hut It was seen that the southeastern section of thu province, the valley of tho Dravo river about Klagenfurt, hud a heavy population of Slovenes. It was felt by the allies that the question whether the Teutons or tho Slavs predominated In the region should be definitely de termined and that tho urea should tie attached, according to the desires of the majority of the re.nldents, to tho Teutonic republic xif Austria or to tho Slav kingdom to the south. The region which Austria retains as result of the plebiscite Is roughly almond-shaped, approximately fifty tulles in extreme length nnd twenty-live miles In extreme breadth, with an area of something moro than (WO square miles slightly loss than one third that of Delaware. It contains much mountain nud but also a portion of tho rich Drove vnllAy, one of tho most productive parts of Cnrinthhi. One of the most Important results of tho vote to the Austrlans Is that they will" retain the rich lead mines of Hleiburg, perhaps tho most Important In all the old territory of Austria Hungary. In tho city of Klagenfurt, with Its population of about 25,000, the Austrian republic retains one ot Its Important metnl-worVlug centers The Klagenfurt region enmo near being a bone of contention among three nations Instead of two. Its western end almost touches the dur ing top of tho Italian boot, nnd din ing a great part of the World wnr Its mountain peaks echoed tho thunder of tho great Italian nnd Austrian guus on the Isonzo front, a few miles io the southwest CO-OPERATION IS BEING PROMOTED More Attention Being Given to Organization by Farmers and Labor. DRIFTING BACKTD THE FARM Tendency of Drift Toward the Farm Has Reduced Wages and Makes Labor More Plentiful. Washington, D. C Labor and farm organizations, through their renp- pronchmcnt and their greatly Increased Interest of Into In the co-operative movement, are advancing that move ment In the United States with re markable rapidity; Whore two years ago there were only about 500 co-operative enter- irlces In the country, figures mudo available recently show there are now nearly 1,000, and new ones are coili ng into existence at the rate ot about 100 u month. Although the emphasis has been aid principally In the establishment of co-operjitlve stores, upon reduction In the cost of living, a much wider scope of the movf'inent Is in the minds if those who ure Its principal spon sors, 'titey seo In the growth of co operatives n gradual supplanting of he system of capitalistic production und distribution, und they hope, through expansion of their project, to develop u reil co-operative society. Drifting Back to Farm. Kansas City, Mo. Widespread un employment In cities bus created u drift back to the farm and relieved' the farm. labor shortage brought about during the war, reports of federal und state employment bureaus reveal. Farm hands in the great grain belt of the, central states are reported pleutltul at wages greatly reduced as compared with a year iuio. norm wacs in Kansas tins year uv rage .f it) per month, board and lodg ing, or about $20 less than n your ago, the free employment bureau In that tate reports. W. II. Lewis, Missouri labor commissioner, declares "there probably will not be uny sbortngu of, farm labor this year and wages prob ably will bo much lower than In any year since 3015." Investigating Charles Return. Hudapcst. Investigation of the at tempted return of former Emperor; 'buries to the Hungarian throne has been demanded at u meeting of ugran- Inn members of tho national assembly." It appears that the. antl-Carllsts bad', confidential agents near thu former emperor and It is declared they hnve list of men associated with Charles In ids attempt to re-establish his throne. The agrarian deputies have urged their punishment, on n charge of treason. Parks Teeming With Soldiers. London. From Malta, .Egypt, and other parts of the fur-Hung British em pire .troops are being brought back to the mother country to save It from the menace of socialism. The metropolis of thu world is taking on the appear ance of uu tinned camp. Kensington lardens, Hegents Park and Hyde Park are beginning to teem with soldiers and their olllcers. These men, fresh from other lands, give thu only note of color to the depression of London. President May Visit Alaska. Washington, D. C If President Harding has time for extended truvel, during the next four years, he may take' a trip to Alaska for n flrst-hnnd study of administrative problems then. Hi' has been Interested In devel opment of the northern territory for a number of years and had planned u trip there last summer, hut was pre vented from going by the presidential campaign. Stockholm. Tension Unit has been noticeable recently between Uussiii und Finland is becoming more acute. Bnl- shevlkl have Invaded the ltcpola and Pornjcarvl districts to which the Itus- so-Flnnlsb peace treaty had guaran teed autonomy. The Inhabitants of the districts are fleeing Into tho Interior of Finland. Will Submit Reconstruction Proposal. Berlin. Germany will submit to the allied supreme council speclllc pro posals for the reconstruction of tint dovnstated regions of northern France In a note which now is neiug prepared and which will be dispatched beforo May 1, It Is announced nlllciully. Hlgu. Out of 75 deportees, who nr-. rived in Uussla from America on March 0, It Is reported that twenty were executed or Imprisoned ns an nrcblsts because they had voiced op position to the bolshevik regime. Warfare In Stock Yards Trouble. Chicago, III. Warfuro has broken out again among the stock yards work ers. Stanley Itobasz, former president ot Stock Yards District council No. 0 and business agent of tho Butcher Workmen's union, was fatally slugged by three men In n toxical), who over took him as ho was walking In tho street. One leaped out and fejlcd Robasz with n baseball bat and bent him Into Insensibility, fracturing his skull. He then leaped Into the taxi und was driven away. . j WORK OF LEGISLATURE The Smith brend bill, as amended by the sctiute, provides a tolerance ot two ounces to tho pound instead ot one ounce and also provides for hulf pound loaves. Other bills signed by the governor: H. H. 210 Legal recog nition to American Legion, Its women's uuxllinry and it long list of fraterni ties nnd sororities. It, H. 272 He quires Insurance companies organized hereafter In Nebraska to select only olllcers of good churacter and known ability. H. It. 101 Allows Omaha school board to pay 0 per cent on bonds heretofore voted ut 5 per cent; 55,000,000 bond Issue1 for new Com merclal high school Involved. S. F. 01 Halses salaries of court reporters from" $2,000 to $2,750. Favorable nctlon was taken by tho lower house on three bills alTcctlnq fhiwspnpers, approving for pnssagu House Hull 281 ulllxlng 8-polnt typo us standard for the printing of legnl no. tlces and for payment on that basis ot 10 cents a lino for tho Urst Insertion nnd 8 cents for subsequent insertions; House Iloll 200, governing publishers' nlllduvlts us to circulation and other facts; and House Holl 001, providing, till legal notices with few exceptions Khali ho published three times. Governor McKclvle sept u mcssngu to' tho senate usklng for the introduc tion, of n new bill to require district Judges to appoint the department of trade find commerce" receiver of stnto banks which are ordered' closed by that department. In the absence of a ills, tiict Judge any Judge of the supremq court may make such appointment. Speclnl rules to speed up tho work of the house by limiting debate on IdllB when they come beforo the com mittee of the whole are being formu lated by Speaker Anderson nnd thq committee on rules ut tho suggestion of the sifting committee. When tho house sifting committee made Its llnnl report It was an nounced that over seventy bills had failed to come through and there would be no chance now to bring them up tor notion at the present session. Governor McKclvle has Issued nn or der suspending from olllce John L. Schick, sheriff of Gage county. Tho nlierllT W charged with failure to en force the prohibitory law and with violations of the same law. The pure seed bill passed the sen ate. Farmer members forced un amendment to the bill permitting far mers to sell 10 bushels of seed un- nually to neighbors without subjecting the seed to Inspection. Nebraska Is to have u state racing commission of three unpaid members, according to the indicated sentiment of the representative diet In approving for passage the senate bill creating such a body. The lower houso killed II. It. 174, which provided for abolishment of the district rond overseer and conferred his powers und duties on the county highway .commissioner. The lower house by a vote of 71 to 11 pussed the bill creating u state bu reau of criminal identification (linger printing) to be under the department of public v'olfare. The house of representatives pussed the Christian Science bill which ex empts Chrlstinn Science healers from coniplylng'wlth the health regulations of tlie stnte. The house voted, 05 to 31, to recom mend for pussuge the much-mooted Norvul langunge bill, which Is tho SI man law of two years ago, with a few added teeth. Under tho new state constitution, water rights not heretofore appro priated limy be leased by the state, but are not to ho alienated. Thq house passed on third rending tho iintl-plckctlng bill, House Holl 017. The bill now goes to '.he sennte. , Seventy-one house bills met death nt one blow when the sifting committee ended Its labors. The house killed the Anderson nut!- clgaret bill by a vote of 50 to 28. Governor .McKclvle has appointed Judge Charles A. Goss of Omaha and Carroll 0. StaufTor of Oakland Judges of the Fourth Judicial district. Ills appointment was the result of the action ot the legislature In Increasing the number of Judges In that district from soven to nine. The district com prises Douglas, Hurt and Washington counties. Failure of the governor to lncludo nn appropriation for tho salary of Dr. W. H. Wilson, stnto epidemiologist, ie Bulled In that olllclal's resignation. An amendment to Senator Good's bill Hxlng potato grades for Nebraska, proposed by a house standing commit teo to tuko care of the early potatoes grown around Kearney nnd marketed during July and August, wns adopted by tho house beforo It advanced thq bill for third reading. Attorney General Davis Is urged by Walter Hollnnd, a Washington lawyer, that ho should begin action against cho national government to prevent It from selling any more public hinds lo cated within tho borders of Nebraska, Sight Regained After 2j ..trs. Mrs. Jenkins, wlfo of n mason living nt FIcur-dc-Lls, a llttlo villago near Pcngnm, In Monmouthshire, has Just recovered her sight after being com pletely blind for 22 yenra. Sho was struck by lightning 23 years ngo, nnd In conscqucnco of the shock sho lost her sight n year afterward. Sho nlso became subject to trances, some ot which lasted as long us 1-1 dnys. On Saturday night she suddonly ex claimed to relatives in tho houso: "I can see," and began to describe tho objects nround her. Her doctor be lieves the recovery will bo permanent. London Times. Another Call to Arms. A Ind of twelve, riding his wheel nt top speed, suddenly burst nut sing ing. "Good-by, Mu Good-by Pn, good by mule with your old hchuw." An old darky, sitting half asleep on the' hoard scut of n llttlo old wagon, and drawn by ij gray mule, roused him self and exclaimed, "WMuit, you goln agin?" Cutlcura Comforts Baby's Skin' When red, rough nhd itching with hot baths of Cutlcuru Soup und touches of Cutlcuru Ointment. Also make use now and then of that exquisitely scent ed, dusting powder, Cutlcura Talcum, one of the Indispcnsnblo Cutlcura Toilet Trio. Adv. Most people do what makes them hnpplcst In this world, regardless of the next. It's better to be brought up on a bottle than to be brought down by one. Wo feel sorry for n man who gets what h6 really deserves. SeimiaitattCTinflfc TH4DC HAS HlSISTIRtD o..rATcix ovrics THE GREAT Poultry and Hog Feed 100 PURE No Adulteration Makes Pig Hogs Makes Chicks Chickens Reducet White Diarrhoea and Cholera Lottei Increaeet Egg Pr&Uuction ORDER NOW Don't Wait a Day You Are Mining Something Good PRICES REDUCED TO Bbls 500 lb3. 3Xc per lb. Half bbls., 300 lbs 4(c per lb. Quarter bbls., 140 lbs 4Jc per lb. f. o. b. factories SPECIAL. NOTICE You may deduct one-half cent per pound from above prices, for cash with order, during April and May. Consolidated Products Co. Dept. 300 Lincoln, Nebr. uwFairv Sodas nocked in-tin . Jib keep the dainty freshness in ffW""lWW.wm " UW. 1 IMS. 111 K""V t Fairy Soda Crackers and Milk ! ! ! Tatty and appetizing at any time Fairy Soda Crackers are highly nourlhlne cereal food In highly concentrated, most palatable and caally digested form. Chil dren especially relish and thrive on them, tin returnable cans Fairy Soda Crackers keep fine nnd fresh until used. Aslt your Orocer for I-TKN'S FAIIIY SODAS and be sure you get the genuine. 6 EIGHT FINE FARMS Eastern Nebraska; Western Iowa; Douglas County, Nebraska; Pottowattamle, Taylor. Adams. Fremont Counties, Iowa. Hundred sUty to six hundred forty acres, highest grade, best neighborhoods, highly productive finest Improvements, close In. On main roads Equipment If desired. Prices right. Terms to suit, low Interest. Possession at any time D. A. BAUM Owner. City Nit'l Bldg.. OMAHA EIGHT FINE FARMS 10c a Holl, i5o a Pack An, cu. to each. Post card, from anv .& S imsHOWWHITE BAKERIES Ml CUKTOOKlA0HACn0HAHA Jgl W . . . " oc eacn. - Oklahoma film Finishing Co.. 31114 v.i. P.O. Iloi 070, Oklal.omn oi3 TOIIACCO Aged TWu yearn N im.li lugs. - From FAHM to YOU Sinokini" ? chewing. Quality guaranteed luul ml ship only THK I1EST after exi.ert han.inS- paid. Onkrldge Farm. Dept A. MayfleidrKy! n.T; SnaT c'nlcWc Sale. Co.. 132 N. th A . IHrSlftrh.Wl'J! KIXiKWOOl) FAHM FOK Hl i.'"71 7" 280 acres. Hancock rountvV Illinois- a",!'" KTllKETEIl. Vkokuk. IOWA.' W. N U OMAHA, NO? 161921.