Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (July 24, 1910)
3 T VilAL LNUltHE b hi Missionary Conference Does Not End in Talk. Idaho's Normal School and Its Efficient Head GREAT SPREAD OF CHRISTIANITY I- TTTE OMATIA SUNDAY BEE: JULY 24. 1910. jlSJg"" . 0 i 1? ; Report of Iter. Arthur J art no a firtm fthOTVs that Considerable Progress Ha Item Made In Japan. BY, D. V. FRANCIS. N.AT YORK. July .-(Speclal Dispatch to The Bee.) The great world' missionary conference, which met In Scotland last month, U not to end In talk. It will have a vital Influence In the spread of Chris tianity throughout the world for many year a. . The outcome of the discussion waa the establishment of a continuation committee, which will be the brain and the arm of the conference acting In the future. Thl means that the conference has not been merely a sneaking enterprise; it Is not to part and end In talk. It Is to live and set. The commltteo Is to be of an Interna tional and representative character to lay down lines for a future development. It Is to consist of thirty-five members of thta conference, distributed as follows: Ten froi.. IV oi th America, ten from the Continent, ten from the Cnlted Kingdom, and one each, respectively, from Australasia. China, Japan, India, and South Africa. Ten ytars from now It will doubtless organise an Other conference one In which the church on the mission field will be much more largely represented, and In which, perhaps not only all Protestant agencies will be represented, but also the great Roman Catholic and Greek Catholic communions as well. Alrccdy the continuation committee has met and organised for work. It elected lr. John R. Molt as chairman and Dr. Eugene Stock and Dr. Julius Rlchter as vice-chairmen. Mr. Newtun W. Howell. K. C.,' of Toronto, was appointed treasurer. It was decided that these four officers, to gether with Sir Andrew Krsser, tlie Rev erend R. W. Wardlaw Thompson, D. 1., the Reverend Arthur 3. Drown, D. D., the Rev rerend James U Barton, D. D., and Count juoitxe snouia iorm ine execunvo turnum- tee. Tho continuation committee appointed Mr. J. H. Oldham as Its. secretary, and In vited him to devote his whole time to this work. ' It was decided to take Immediate steps to confer with the missionary societies In Eu rope and America as to the possibility of bringing into existence a body which mtght serve as a medium of communica tion oeiween rnioiuniy wieuw Gov ernments in matters affecting the common Interests of different missions working in a particular area. The committee resolved to carry further In certain directions the Investigation be gan by the commissions of the conference and to undertake certain fresh Investiga tions which the proceedings at the confer ence showed to be necessary. For this purpose nine special committees, having as their chairmen members of the continua tion comml'tee, but including members from outside that committee, were ap pointed to Investigate and report on various subjects, Including: x 1. Unoccupied fields. 1 The creation of a board of study with reference to the training of missionaries. .p x mm -n w M m i-"L!s't'w,'l nsf- v s " a- tin gjm Mm- . - M-waae t V , tsaMsj.jrV mmm I f v: : -K , V-a - 'mm X v ' 1 1. Mil ill ----- -. ,mmv rnm-ir-- MTtL-i . , i Trc&ident ATWOrTY 6 GYMlUM OTATE rORMAl, CHCCtL --0 j i Ma'irnn. 1 All) t... sdsn i si I ' ALBION, Idahe, July 23 (Speclal.)-An Iowa man who Is making good In Idaho Is President Q. A. Axllne of the State normal school, located at Albion. President Axllne was born at Fairfield, la., and spent his boyhood days in Pratt county, Kan., but returned to Parsons college at the place of. his birth to obtain his education. After serving as principal of the high school at Cawker City, Kan., as supervising principal of the Klrwln, Kan., schools, and as super intendent of school at Humeston and Corn ing, la., he accepted the presidency of the Albion state normal In 1904 and has made a wonderful success of the work In this In stitution. The Institution was established at Albion at a time when It was but a village, forty ; v4r miles from the railroad, and when the state appropriation was not sufficient for its maintainance. The contributions of public-spirited cltlsens of Cassia county car ried the school through Its first trying times, and It Is now firmly founded. There are .thirty-one acres in the campus, four completed buildings, and before the fall semester opens the splendid new gym nasium will be ready for use. The attend ance was Increased by 70 per cent during the last year, a manual training depart ment has been added, and over $3,000 worth of scientific equipment has been put In. The courses have been revised within the last yeas, and in every way the Albion state normal Is forging to the front. Presi dent Axllne has In his faculty teachers from tne universities and colleges of Berlin Chicago, Nebiaska, Iowa, Colorado, Kan saa, California. Michigan, and Wisconsin and tho work done Is of the highest char acter, and when the seventeenth year of the school begins In Septemher It will be with an equipment which will make It posslbl to do even better work than In the past Crossing on a, Fivc-Day Boat Economical Turn of Steamer Owners that Cheats Passengers Out of Breakfast New Post of Fishguard and Its Romance Senator Depew on Shipboard Miss Milholland and Her Suffragette Views SHAKESPEARE A POOR 11 AN? teen, the number after his death, when Na thanlal Field was admitted, and we have a grand total of assumed profits of from 56.000 to 66,800 (about $280,000 to $324,000 a Prof. Wallace's Discoveries indicateyear1or)th,e company)- Jhi' '?rt of ". - graphical fancy" pictured Shakespeare as a Small Incomt. ON BOARD S. S. LUSITANIA, July 4. 1910. To the Editor of The Bee: For the second time I have been caught by the scurvv trick which Is Dlayed every day on S. The development of training schools for j board ship, of setting the clock ahead an hour during the night with the hope that passengers may get up too late fov breakfast. I always feel Imposed upon when I have to combine breakfast and luncheon while living at the ship' expense. I have just made a tour of Inspection of the great seventy thousand horsepower turbine engines which drive this leviathan of the deep through the waves at ajt av erage of thirty miles an hour making the trips across the ocean, Jin schedule time, varying but a few mRMes on the long journeys of more than 3,000 miles. The turbine engine Is a wonder of slm- missionaries. 4. Christian education In the mission field, 5. Christian literature. . The securing of uniformity In statistical returns. T. The SDnolntment of an International committee of Jurists to draw- up a brief statement of recognised principles undeiiy In, the relations of missions to govern S. The best means of securing a larger Dlace for missionary Information In the aeptiinr Dress. 9. The advisability of publishing ln-whole or In psrt the evlderce received by the commission on tne missionary iucbubb. That this work will have a , wonderful Influence on the future of Christian mis lions may not be doubted. Rev. Arthur Judson Brown, one of the sjecetaries of the Presbyterian Board of pllclty. Imagine the great driving shaft Foreign missions, made an extended tour on one end of which the winged propellers of China, Japan and Kora last year, com- 0f four blades are bolted which bore their pletlng his Important trip In December. way through the water and force the great A summary of his official report la now ship ahead with the speed of a race horse, issued by the board, giving the views of an On the other end of this great shaft, which xpert on the status of missions and of af- is aa large around as an ordinary man's fairs In general In those countries: body, is welded a series of small blades, "There are now nearly 600 organized hundreds In number, set at right angles to churches In Japan. More than one-fourth I the shaft. Against these blades the steam are self-supporting. These churche have a I Is forced, which In turn, compells the membership exceeding 70,000.. Iast year the shaft to rotate, on the same principle that membership Increased 10 per cent. There I the wind blowing on the arms of a wind are nearly 500 ordained Japanese workers, 1 mill forces It to revolve. Could anything 600 unordalned male workers, 200 Bible wo-1 be more simple? The propeller blades at men, and nearly 100,000 scholars are taught one end of the drive shaft and the turbine In over 1.000 Sunday schools. There art I blades at the other end about 4.000 students In Christian boarding It does away with all the great cylinders schools, and there are 100 Christian kinder- and platon rods which we are accustomed gartens and other da school where S.OOOIto gase at In open mouthed wonder on 4tcholsr are taught. About 400 students engines of the old type, such, for example. are trained in tno tneoiogicai scnooia, ana i as we nave in the pumping station at Flor- 130 women In women Bible schools. Several ence. By doing away with this, the greater of the larger churches have organised mis- part pf the complicated machinery, there sionary societies which are extending the is no occasion for extensive overhauling of work In Japan and In Formosa, Korea, macirlnery at the end of each journey, thus Manchuria and China. The Protestsnt saving time and expense. But perhaps the Christians gave for Christian work last greatest saving Is In space occupied by the year nearly SOO,000 yn $lvinn, tuibln engine, which Is almost incon "In most countries Christianity made Its ceivably compact and simple, and Justifies first converts among the lower strata of the prediction that the turbine Is the ma loolety. but in Japan It has won Its greatest rne engine cf the fut-.r. On tho old uocesses among the Samurai, or knightly (style engine an jp and down reciprocating clats. This Is the class which has turnlshed moton naa to be transformed into the majority of the army and navy of fl- crank motion to involve the driving shaft. cers, journallbts, educators, and leading men in the turbine engine you simply blow the generally of the rew Japan. Fourteen mem- steam against the wings of the shaft and bers of the lower house are Christians. A rotate It as you blow a pin wheel around former president of the house was a Pres- Wtn your breath. Steam Is genersted In b)terlan elder. great boilers and first forced Into the high "An eminent professor , cf the Imperial pressure turbine engine. After It has done university at toklo declares that 'at least iu work there It passes into the low pres- 1,000,000 Japanese outside tne vnristian aura turbine engine. From there It is church have so come to understand Chris- drawn off into a condensing chamber where liai.lty that, though aa yet unbaptised, they the ,team become water once more, and are framing their lhe according to the thi water Is returned to the boiler from teachings of Christ." whence It first came, and the merry round From communications received at this 0f usefulnes continue at a great saving office, from the utteranoes of the cnurcn I of water tanks. press, from rumors that come to the edl torial ear of conferences and discussions We Un(1 Bt tne new f Flsniru.rd more or less private, remarks the New tn, eKtreme west end of Wales .the nearest York Christian Advocate (Methodist i-pis- point of land to the American shore, a av copal), w are convinced that the Amen caq churche are entering upon a new stag of thought and action In relation to the Ing of 113 nautical miles over Liverpool. A special train awaits our arrival and whirls us into London in four and one-half ... - . . i. i . . . ru. T - ... I ,., .. ui luumrj. w hour at an average speed of fifty-five miles men s missionary Movement, in us aeveniy city campaign, was criticised for restricting Its dinners and meetngs to men, but Ita an hour, thereby effecting the saving of a I day In getting to London over the old rnnta vln l.lvrrww.l Plihirmr XI a plw. .1 V. V.. ..I , ..-.. i... w . -. 1 1 " v. . , .. ... " 'u"" ' the weatern termtnua of the Great Western iui hub . vi j miiituun inrvw iuiv un- rallroad, was first opened as a port of call in 1906 at an expense of nearly (10,000, 000 for breakwaters and terminal facilities, and Is destined to soon become one of the greatest harbors in the world. Fishguard is known to history as the only -place where the French made an attempt to invade England under the great Napoleon, during the time that was known as "the time of the great Terror." In 1797 a small body of French troops landed at Fishguard and after what Is known as the "Three Days' War." were lgnomlnlously taken prisoners by a mixed lot of peasants and women. "Some of the Welch women soon became the sweethearts of the gallant French prisoners and one dark night they opened the door of the prison and eloped with their French lovers stole a private yacht at anchor In the hay and safely made their way to France, where they married and presumably lived happy ever after. One morning about 7 o'clock as I was taking the morning air on the upper deck as a precautionary measure so that I might be able during the day to keep something or my stomach other than a hot water bottle, I met the venerable Senator Chauncy Depew. As we had the deck to ourselves we soon fell Into conversation. I said: "Senator, I deduct from your presence on deck at this early hour that you were brought up on a farm, and there acquired the habit of early rising." He saldv "Yes, and to that habit which I have never lost. I attribute the fact that I have burled most of the fellow who started out with me In public life." He recalled with pleasure his visit In Omaha during one of the coronation balls of King Ak-Sar-Ben, which he attended. Last night he Introduced as only the senator can In a most characteristic humorous manner Miss Ines Mliholland--a most beautiful young woman, 24 year of age, who addressed us on woman suffrage. Miss Milholland Is the young lady who success fully ied the shirtwaist strikers to victory recently In New York and against whom a suit for S2O0.O0O damages has been insti tuted by the shirtwaist manufacturers. She is an American girl, daughter of Colonel Milholland of the New York Tribune. She was introduced as the "Joan of Arc" of the woman suffrage movement. She says she Is a militant suffragette. All the men In the audience became violent partisans of the beautiful speaker at least while she talked as was evidenced by the collection, which amounted to $135. She didn't carry away the women how ever. She was entirely too good looking. I have Just been wstchlng a young matron promenading the deck with her little daughter. The ocean air la raw and an overcoat feel comfortable. Yet while the child wa warmly dressed above the equator she walks around with bare legs above her rudimentary stockings. I was so ldlgnant that for a moment I wished that her mother would be compelled to dress that way and parade around the deck just once and see how she liked It. My wife says we should not look at things that way because the lady la Elisabeth, which I submit 1 a totally irrelevant answer. We left New York Wednesday a 9 a. m., we dine in London Monday night. That's going some. F. L. HALLER. PROFITS OF THE GLOBE THEATER Papers in mm Old Lawsuit Suggest m Xtrr View of the Pact's Re sources and Banish Spec station. precedented prominence the masculine ele- tlan association and the brotherhoods. Is at ment In American Christianity. It was ork upon plans for a concerted effort, on new sight-Inspiring In its potentlallty-to an unprecedented scale, to present Christ rally more than 1.000 men at the call of effectively to the boys and men of America Christian service In every city. The steady n this generation. "In this generation" we advsnce of the brotherhood, with Its far- UM the phrase advisedly, for all the emDha- I ' reaching plans for the development of th work of Christian men for other men is another sign of the times. . The amaslng eagerness with which the public, without distinction of church. Is taking up the character culture of the boy through tbe various boy scout organisa tions, show the community In general hs begun to awaken to th urgency of the boy's case. He has been allowed to follow Ms own sweet will, too little influenced for mxl by home, school and Sunday school results that are now universally de ....U. At th present time a very able commit tee, representing U Young Men's Chris- BOMB THROWN IN NEW YORK Explosion on Sidewalk o Second Arenas Breaks Windows and Canaes Panic. NEW YORK, July S3. A panic unex ampled In the record of somewhat num erous similar occurrences on the east side followed th explosion of a dynamite bomb thrown on the sidewalk in front of a five story tenement on Second avenue today. The bomb dug a bole a foot and a half In diameter in the sidewalk, blew' out the glas In ahow windows all around and up set things generally In stores In the neigh borhood. Hundreds of tenement dwellers rushed to the streets In terror. The police believe the explosion to have been at Persistent Advertising la the Road to Big tempted vengenance on some of th stors future. (proprietor In the vicinity. a la that Mr. Mott and hla followers place upon the urgency of carrying the gospel to "the only generation that w can reach" applies with equal force at home. If we fall to mold to Christianity the rising gen eration in America, the accumulation of nineteen centuries must pay th forfeit. Dynamite Wreck Bnildlnara as completely as coughs and colds wreck lungs. Cure them quick with Dr. King's New Discovery. &0o and $1.00. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. Prof. Charle W. Wallace of Nebraska contributes to the Century Magazine some newly discovered evidence relating to Shakespeare's money Interest in the Globe theater and tbe wealth of the poet In his lifetime. Every age, writes Prof. Wallace, has had It own conception of Shakespeare, but we of today are enjoying a nearer ap proach to the man and hi associates than has been granted at any other time since his death. For nearly half a century scholars have been saying that we should probably never learn anything more that waa definite about the personal Shakes peare, but In ,the last six years I have had the privilege of finding among docu ments preserved In various English archives, and of reporting, numerous records relat ing to Shakespeare, his colleagues and dra matic rivals, and the contemporary thea ters, which supply materials that enable us to a considerable extent to reconstruct the life of the poet. First Definite Knowledge. Our first definite knowledge of Shakes peare's financial Interests in the Globe and Blackfrlars come to us from the Osteler-Hemynges records (which I made public in 1909) and from the documents, now for the first time revealed, in the suit of John Witter against John Heminges and Henry Condell. Previously we could draw only general Inferences from Inexact data and conditions. A hundred years ago the theory waa set going that Shakespeare must have disposed of any theatrical In terests he may have owned about the time rhe may have retired to Stratford. It was Inferred also, and Is stated positively In most biographical notices on the basis of that mere Inference, that he had no shares IrT the theaters at the time or his death. This notion arose from the fact that In his will Shakespeare does not mention -any the atrical Interests, and from the erroneous supposition that a will devise all the prop erty peclflcally. But the fact la that wllla rarely enumerate all the testator' posses sions. Shakespeare' Income from hi theatrical shares Is a perennial . subject of debate which these documents remove from spec ulation, in publishing the Osteler-Hemynges suit last October, 1 called attention to the estimate of f300 annual profit for Shakespeare's share, and gave warning that even that reduced estimate was ex cessive. Witter declares thst his own In come, previous to the burning of the Globe In 1613, and while he owned one-seventh of the moiety (that Is, one fourteenth of the entire property and profits of the Globe, the ssme as Shakespeare then owned), was from m to 40 a year. This weuld not ex ceed from 240 to 320, or from $1,200 to $1,600 on the money of today. If we multiply that sum of fourteen, we shall know the pfoflts of the entire company. Profitable Shores. It Is noteworthy that the amount of profit from one share In the Globe before 1613 agree with the similar amount of 30 from one share in the Red Bull, aa shown by new documents In "University Studies," and with a similar amount, estimated at from 33 to 53 for different periods, from one-sixth of the Blackfrlars prior to 1608. when Shakespeare's company took that theater and divided It Into seven shares. After the Globe waa rebuilt In 1614. the proflta were greatly Increaaed, Witter says, and he now offers to accept half a share, In lieu of the one forfeited, at a yearly rent of 13 6s 8d, or, aa sn alternative, to tske the profits from the house Heminges had recently been allowed to build on the Globe grounds, and from other houses there pay the rent of the entire property to Brend, and risk clearing then more than the 30 to 40, which he formerly received when each owned one-seventh of the moiety. A large fancy has hitherto assumed that Shakespeare's yearly Incoms from ' his share In the Globe was from ttOO to' 600 (In modern money possibly from 1.000 to I.S0 or from about $30,000 to $24,000 a year). Mul tiply that by fourteen, the number of shares at Shakespeare's death, or by lx- a shrewd business man who, having accu mulated large wealth (perhaps half a mil lion dollars), scorned the noble art of poesy after it had served such merely sor did ends, retired to his country residence at Stratford, and there lived the life of a wealthy gentleman. The Wltter-Hemlnges pleadings supple ment the Osteler-Hemynges records, and are also supplemented by them. Here we have Shakespeare and his associates In a precarious business enterprise that they have staked their whole future upon In democratic brotherhood. . Failure or suc cess affects not merely the financial re turns but the dramatic effort of both play wright and actors. Throughout Shake speare's plays and in the history of the company so far as we know It from re cords like these, optimistic Ideals domi nated the hard conditions. 500 Bushels of Po- monnsnnnnnnnsnnonoamsnonsnmannnoBsB tatoes to the Acre ol' know that potatoes aru X alwu) bUple. iotatoe are i i,e fcold. TUe markets Huctuate l very little ou potatoes. And it i you have GOOD potatoes you ! CAN ALWAYS KIND A MAR i KET KOH THEM. This 1 tho ' most remarkable potato couotry ! lu ALL THIS WORLD. The ' Snake Klver Valley has been known to produce EIGHT HUN I DHED AND FIFTY JIUSHELd ! OF POTATOES TO THE ACRE. You cun RAISE POTATOES IN THIS VALLEY. RAISE THEM AND GET MONEY KOU THEM. Wrlle to us about this. W have ii. iiiu.it liaml-ionif ly illustrated l.ouliit written about ttis, 1 Hli TWIN FALLS TllACT li South ern l lano, that l.ti been printed lor u lung while. It Is mlgnty in iui mill, too. IT Id FKh.li AND Wli WILL SliN'D ONkJ COPV TO YOU IF. YOU WILL JUST WlUTi: A POSTAL CARD ItlS EST. WRITU TODAY. J. E. WHITE TWIN Fi LLS, IDAHO SHRIVER IS TO SHOW CAUSE Ordered by State Board to Shove Why Assessments Should Not Be Increased. Douglas county may have prospered even more during the last year than the first returns of the county assessor showed. County Assessor fchrlver lias been notified to appear before the State Beard of Equal isation and Assessment to show cause why tho assessed valuations on certain proper ties should not be lncreaed. , A Viper In the Stomach Is dyspepsia complicated with liver and kidney troubles. Electrle Bitters help all such cases or no pay. 60c.- For sale by Beaton Drug Co. The Key to the Situation Bee Want Ads. $C!!S1 PRACTICAL Y-CAXXERY MAM in i.m Vi -IM vj rfa.iA.e!'.:-.'' x-k.-a a-,-,rMi a.M..Hv,rajc..1a,yja.a Crops Occupy Farmers' Minds J. H. Mott of Memphis and J. H. Storm of Yntan Talk of Conditions. J. H. Mott was in South Omaha yesterday with two loads of top notch cattle fed on his farm near Memphis, Neb. There was a nice shower of rain at Memphis Thurs day night and he say the cornfields In that section are looking well and are very clean of weeds. Mr. Mott said the farmer had little time to think of political affairs and had lost that great Interest which was taken In the questions of ten years ago. As a rule, he thought, they were satisfied with present conditions. J. H. Storm of Tutan, Neb., was a buyer on the market yesterday and secured a nice load of feeders at $3.50. He said he would buy more If there was immediate prospect of rain. There was not more than a sprinkle st Yutan Thursday night. - Mr. Storm Is not the first man to ask the question, "Do you think that comet had anything to do with our dry weather? Do you notice this year how little electric disturbance there Is and how little wind or blusterT In all former years of dry weather there was lightning every night and a great deal of electrlo disturbance. Did the tall of the comet rob the earth of some of the vital electricity 1 If so, will we get It back? Now, there Is a theory 1 would like to have some of the men who talked so wisely about the comet explore a little. "Our crops look well at Yutan and the corn Is all right for a few weeks more, but we are holding our breath, as you might say waiting for a good rain. The corn Is tasseltng now and rain would tnake bl ears." This town wants a cannery and wants It badly. If you are a canneryman of experience you can come to this place and make a stake. The country Is ready for you. YOU CAN COMiyHBRS AND THE RAPID 8ETTLBMRNT OF THE COUN TRY will make a FORTUNE FOR YOU. Buhl, Idaho, Is the market point for 60,000 acres Carey Act land; the richest land that lies out of doors. There Is cheap electrlo power gained from the falls of the Snake river. There are oceans of farm produce of every description. Everything Is favorable. Please WRITE ME AT ONCE. You can satisfy yourself about this If you will write to me at once. I can send you a booklet . showing JUST WHAT THIS SECTION HAS TO DE PEND ON: Just WHAT IT WJLL DO FOR YOU. Write for the book. It costs nothing and may mean a fortune to you. Address a K. MoQTXOWjr, orstsry BTTKI, COM- KXBCXAL CX.T7B, Buhl. laeao. A7 iu I . M s tun IIJ m Do You Weigh Too Much? The Real Remedy and the Receipc There are some stout people whom the above question does not seem to trouble ; very much. They are. however, wrong to be so careless, for obesity is a complaint I which brings many evils in Its train. There are others who have sought long anil esrnestly for a really reliable remedy fur ' obesity, and to these the following pre scription will be of absorbing Interest, be- -cause It presents In a simple and harmless form and sure relief a remedy which Is rapidly gaining a world-wide reputation. The reader may make up the prescription for himself (or herself) on getting the in-; gredients from the druggist or the istter will do so willingly. This Is the full recipe: H os. Msrmola. ' H os. Fluid Extract Casrara Aromatic, and m os. Peppermint Water. Take a dua or one teasDOonful after each meal and at bedtime. This admirable and quite harmless rem edy will soon take off pounds of the of fending fatty excess; and as. day by day, the weight decreases, strength and vigor will return In equal ratio; for, be it ob served, there Is no fasting or exercise re qu'red. Rett, good food, regular doses thee are all that la necessary to reduce weight to norms). Increase the supply of pure blood, clear the skin, beautify the complexion, and restore energy and ex cellent spirit. Adv. Only sixty-four people have this snap. I'uy one hun dred dollars down; then take six years to pay the balance. 1 HEN we turn over to you a bearing orchards worth NOT LESS THAN $500.00 PER ACRE. You tan make from $1,000 to $3,000 per year In commercial apples. You KNOW WHAT THE 1' ARE WORTH. You must be an Intelligent man SEND FOR OUR FREE BOOKLET, WHICH TELLS ALL ABOUT THIS REMARK ABLE plan. Forty cents a oay is less than some men throw away. Invest It HERE. You do NOT take a chance when you buy orchard land. The rt-sults are ABSOLUTE LY CERTAIN. Western orch ards. In other sections, HAVE PAID AS HIOH AS $3,000.00 per year NET. YOU CAN" EASILY PROVE THIS. Trees eight years old, planted 4 8 trees to the sere, yield boxes of apples TO THE TREE. At $l.n0 per box THIS IS AN INCOME OF THREE THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED AND FORTY DOL LARS. Our FREE booklet tslls ALL shout till opportunity. Kend for It RIGHT NOW. TO DAY. Thus Fortune beckons. Tu.1. r'la I f. A..I J r M ' ' r.r, !..,,. ' W ACKLAGC TK ACTS KOU THE INVESTOR OR FOR THE SMALL FARMER THIS U our specialty. From One to One Thousand acres. This business is made to terve your interests. No sum of money, however binaU. is two small to get our best attention. And no Bum, however large. Is too large to tax our capacity to TO PLACE AM) l'LACE WITH l'ltOMT TO THE INVESTOR. We would like to have you write to us for our booklets, literature and other Informa tion. We are sure that you want to know about IDAHO. 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 Eight Now, Write Tour, GRAY . GRAY INVESTMENTS. POCATELLO, - . IDAHO WWTEP, AND ASK. US I MIT tU nOI PltASE WRITE. DISTINCTLY iiuiiBWiii I'M Yes, distinctly, plainly, write and ask us for tbe opportunities we can show you to DOUBLE YOUR MONEY IN SOUTHERN IDAHO. The land It filled with new ways of living well, comfortably, happily and profitably. Send today for THE FREE BOOKLET which describes Southern Idaho so well that WE BRING IDAHO TO YOU. We can show you how to make money. We need money to loan on approved security at such rates as to net you 7 per cent. You can't get such rates in the Middle West. Farm lands are cheap and can be bought on credit. You cannot make a mistake lu SOUTHERN IDAHO even If you buy with your eyes shut. But WRITE TO US FIRST. We point the way to easier, happier, pleasanter living! Any bank In Twin Falls is our reference. Ml & Taylor IRRIGATED FARMS Twin Falls, Idaho ESS I B Are You Going to Buy Land No fLrmar tkould think o( buying hrm htfort ring copy of otff Journtl. II hat Undg, city property tni i-Jk or ,ai advortt.wl in It from rviy staio In tho union, o that you can find Ju.t what you with In lu columna. It ri-ai-haa ei.uuo vadors aark laru. Advartlalng rataa, Ic par o,d. Ian-1 lot for 1 manthe' trial eubacnpt'.on. It will fta alopp-d st lha arid or v mom ha unlaaa y roua. FAKM AND REAL KSTATB JOURNAL. TKA&K, IOWA. Money makes more money In. Ida ho than In any other western state. That's why the Burley Sta'e Bank can pay a greater per cent of Inter est with absolute safety. You can't know about this unless you write for FREE INFORMA TION. WRITE TODAY; BE SURE AND DO IT RIGHT NOW. You can double your Incoms. Mid west Hank pay 8, and w Lsy t nt on sll sums, lame or small. David Eccles of our bank, th presi dent, is worth 125.000,000. it g Brownlnf. vice-president. Is worth al most ss much more. Tou ran be at one with these, big. big men. Writ today. Be sure and write to day Burley Stato Dank SUBLET, ZDAJIO. SAVIO ICOLEI President. M. 8). 3IUOWJIIMO, Tloe-rre. S). OkUTEB, SICH, Cashier. SOXTBI.B 'OUBt HOK XT IK IDiXO, TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER Reaches the I.lva Stock Mea. 4