8 TIIE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 2, 1910. I WESTERN CROPS AVERAGE Harvest Keturni Dispel All Pessi mistic Stories. B. T. CRITCHLOW INVESTIGATOR y hronuhnnt t tan. and Idaho the I nrnier Who Tills Is a Ilecliledly Thrifty I'rrinn anil Hs Wraith to .. Because thli has born an exceptionally dry year there have been constant report that the crops on the wml-arld land woro a totaJ failure In a)', sections of the .vest. Early lti the ea.in the outlook vti very 11cou;6s1riB. hut at harvest time, it lui hecn IiumiI thai t'.ey arc up to the avorarc of previous yearn B. P. Critchlow of Ogden, Ltah. an acknowledged authority -f wentein crops and managfr of one of the Ogden main branches of the Consolidated Wagon and Machine company, has Just completed a trip of ovr !"0 miles through the I'tah and Idaho dry farmed sections Of the wheat crop he says: "I find In Box Klder county, where the pioneer work In dry farming Is dne, that tho threshing Is progressing In good shape and that the crops are nearly up to the average svanon. The yield Is running from ten to fifteen to twenty bushels per acre, and thla Is on land which Is soiling at but Jt per acre, and not for raw land, but for that which is fenced and under cultiva tion. ' In the Blue Creek district aome flelda diil better than this, and last year they averaged twenty bushels per acre In that section. Borne 400-acre tracts there pro duced an average of thirty bushels. Charles' Ounnell had such a tract and sold It for $X per acre after threshing time and after he has sold 12,0(10 bushels of wheat from the land- The crop brought more than the land, lie at once bought two sections from the Promontory Land company at from J10 to $15 per acre for the raw land. and It costs 15 per acre to clear off the sage brush. He will seed one section of this land during the month of August. Takes a l.Htle Time. "The first year's cultivation does not bring the results of succeeding years, as the land hn not had the opportunity to store moisture. Those who make the greatest success In the semi-arid belt are those who follow the :lan of summer fal lowing. The method la as follows: The ground Is plowed thoroughly soon after the crop Is taken off, and u Is then allowed to rest until the following spring. It Is found that more moisture Is stored In the plowed ground than In that which Is not plowed at this time. The field Is hanrowed early In the spring with a spike-toothed harrow, and this Is done again In about a month, not only to make Into a fine mulch so as to holu the moisture, but also to keep down vegetation. At the beginning of the third month It Is gone over with a disc harrow so as to prevent vegetation getting a start, which would use up the moisture. In July, Just under the surface. It will be found that the soil Is moist enough to be squeezed Into a ball, and In August It Is in fine shape to receive the seed and pro duce a crop next year. The fall wheat is usually planted in August, although some times the seeding season is delayed until September. "This year there are thousands of acres of splendid crops on dry farmed lands and toe failures found are much fewer than in previous years. Those that occur come from failure to take proper precautions in seeding, and when the crop winter kills it is because the soli had not been properly prepared or that the seed had not been properly drilled, and that the wheat had not obtained a good root start This failure to properly put In the crop is also the oc caslon for lack of vitality In the spring when such occurs. Work Jnst Begun. "The 1910 crop la one which I am sure will equal the one of 19ii, and that was a wet year, and I am sure' that the dry land farming work Is but begun. There are over 3UU.00O acres of Biich land within a radius of UK) miles of thla city which can bo bought at from S15 to $X per acre, and while tho best plan Is to put In but one half the land euch year and to let It lie fallow the next sinner, the returns from a single crop will pay the cost. "One of the favorue wheats now is the Aluska wheat, which is now liked by the miller. This Is the same wheat as the Seven-Headed Kgyptlun wheat raised hero thirty-five or forty years ago, and which the millers of that time condemned be cause it was too hard for their machinery to grind. "The oats crop in up to Its usual aver age, but It is raised by Irrigation, and so can be defended on. Barley does well on tile dry-farmed land and tiie crop this year la up to the average. The crop raised ucre is principally of the club varieties, but the farmers are being encouraged to raise the two-rowed varieties of malting barley, especially those near Ogden and Bait Lake City. The expansion of the dry furmlng nietood means a wonderful ad vance in this as well as in wheut crops of the future." The Cady Lumber company is now located at 417 Bouth lDth street. One-half block norm oi too Auditorium, where their friends will be heartily welcomed. New Central Distributing Plant of the Hartman Furniture Co. arflPPm 4a BBSS : .3 Hi Ijbi! HE HAHTMAN FrKXITlUF. T I AND CAHFliT COMPANY now I I ha under construction in Chl- tutsu an iw.w wttrviiuus. wmun is to Uu used aa a central dis tributing plant (or the great chain uf Hartman aloree. The main build in will be 333 feet in length extending' from tbe alley eat of Wentworth avenue over to l.usalle street and from Thirty ninth street on the north to Fortieth street on the south. This Immense plant will be located on the Chicago Junction railroad, which connects with every road In the r tilled States. The private switch track In the bunding and alongside the building Is sufficient to hold twenty-eight loaded freight car. The building will be eight stories high, of mill construction, equlpiwd with automatic sprinkling system and con tain floor space of nearly twelve acres. This mammoth building is Intended as a storehouse for the immense stocks received from their various factories to be drawn upon by th various Hartman stores as wanted. m lira a s IVllslJJ iJlJjJli. fl lfll f J JM is ADVOCATE OF DRY FARMING B. P. C HITCH LOW. Union Pacific to Have Exhibit at Big Show Display of Products from Northern Colorado Will Be Feature of Laud Products Show. One of the most Interesting exhibits seen in years Is promised Omaha by the Union Pacific for the Western land Products Exhibit to be held here January 18 to 28. It Includes a complete display of the various products that are raised In northern Colorado, and more especially in Weld county, by both dry farming end by Irrigation. The famous Greely potato-?, which are raised in great quantities In nls county, are in the foreground of the ethlbit ard besides, there are specimcnts of grain, grasses, sugar beets and fruits and veg etables which would do any county proud O. L. McDonough, colonisation agent of the Union Pacific, is i;i charge of the local end of It and promises that Omaha and Nebraska will open thel- eves whtn they see It. Prof. W. G. Brandenber of tho Col orado State Board of Immigration will te here with 260 colored views for uteroptl con lectures and a number of novel f mov ing pictures showing how farming In this county Is done. W. B. Lafflngwell, the official lecturer of the Union pacific, will also be on hand. The same exhibit bhiwn here wil be used In the Pittsburg and Clii-ago land shows In October and November, rcspcC' lively. R. A. Smith, advertising agent of the Union Pacific, returned FriJay from Pueblo, where he had been to attend the National Irrigation congress, greatly 1m pressed with the prospects In Colorado. "Potatoes and sugar beets wero Just being harvested whea 1 was thete, and bumper crops are the prospers for tho season, said Mr. Jm.th. "The sugar beet crop there la enorni'Mii, Weld county having three sugar factories, producing from 35.000 to 46,000 sa".ks of sugar daily, consuming yearly ab tut 1'2,'XK) tons of sugan beets, valued at over 11,000,000. This year's output .if potatoes will ex ceed any other year by far. In former years there have been 10.QJ0 cars shipped out of the county east.'' Building Work Falls in Extent But for a Million-Dollar Permit Sep tember Would Have Been Very Low. September was not a very uusy month In building this year and if It had not been for the 11,000,000 permit Issued to '.he Union Pacific the record would have fallen bev eral hundred thousand dollars below the September figures for last year. In 19u9 permlu were issued for 134 buildings, to cost 1314,275, and In 1910 ninety-eight were erected, costing ll.2O2.4;0. In 1908 the fig ures were 1W permits and an expenditure of t473,MOO. For the first nine months of the year 1910 la doing very well, although It is not quite up to 1909, which was a record breaker. This year there were 1,2S0 permits for buildings, costing $5,2). 483. Last year the figures were 1,31a and 36,594,280, anj in 1908. 1.219 and $3,174,016. An Aato Collision means many bad bruises, which Bucklen's Arnica Salve heals quickly, as It does sores and burns. 25c. 1 For sale by Beaton Drug Co In acditiJ to this mammoth building shown abovt there will be a large admin istration building consisting of three stories and basement, of strictly fireproof con struction, built entirely of steel with a frontage of 125 feet on Wentworth avenue, having a beautiful ark laid out on the north and extending from Wentworth ave nue to the alley on the east. In the center of Ii sails street In front of the main merchandise building there will be an im mense factory building etxendtng from Wentworth avenue east to the alley and located directly on the Chicago Junction railroad. There will also be an Immense barn of sufficient six. to accommodate 200 horses. It wll enable the Hartman concern to buy out the complete stocks of any number of factories and store the goods until wanted by the various stores and In this manner to take advantage of trade condi tions which result so greatly In the lessen ing of prices on home furnishings to ths people. It Is hoped to have the storehouse ready by February 1, 19 U. isjm si ii a iiij.j.j.jn'vrvv uvr-i it id . Z . .3:3" " " " "WNsUJJfiJ 3 " i i iJmu ii i, u i2i3i2sj2323S 5 f M" 4'tUaMH31 " M i i i I ii H"! " " " MM?,H3j7S 1 I Ml 11 ( ai ' ' i i. ..pw m TIMELY REAL ESTATE GOSSIP Sereral Deals Pending to Be Com pleted in Short Time. OCTOBER WILL BEAT LAST MONTH I'nlon Pacific Spendlnat Over l,800,- OOO In Omaha n Bnlldlni Bargains on Market last Mow. fhe money market continues to be the chief subject of gossip In real estate cir cles and a note of optimism is K-'ng sounded. Dealers declare that It is becoming more easy to finance deals and men !n are nibbling at property are more encour aged by the better chance of getting loans to complete the transaction. A new business month began yesterday and It Is most certain to be a bMter one than September, which was rather dull for some dealers. That things have already Improved is shown by the fact that aeveis.1 agents have deals of good size under way and are nearly ready to complete) and an nounce them. It is a good time to get Into the marrcet now, because more than usual the num ber of choice bargains are being offered the discriminating. These bargains are not of any one or two classes, but In the list of really "good buys" In downtown business property, residences and rr,M- dence sites in the Immediate residence ill- tiicta, and suburban lots and tr.vcts. Par ticularly In the downtown district are some good chances at present for the in vestor, which are told of In detail In the advertising columns of this paper. On general principles, too, a real Invear- ment, wisely placed, is a good thing right now. On of the city's biggest business men, If not the very biggest, recent! de clared apropos of the Cudahy lot deal on Seventeenth street, that downtown Omaha realty Is held far too low as a general rule, and that purchasers of It will reap a golden harvest. Thla was a man v!h no realty of his own to sell and his words may be taken as without ulterior motive and as expressive of his genuine and ex perienced opinion. The new Union Pacific headquarters will be one of the handsomest and best equipped office buildings in Omaha. The construction will be of preassd brink with terra ootta trimming, and up to the third story the walls will be decorated with marble panels. There will be marble walnsco tings in all the corridors. The Dodge street entrance, which Is to be the real front of the building, is a very beautifully designed arch with an In tricate design, carried out in several dif ferent sorts of material. On top of the twelfth story will be the cornice, ten feet high and projecting four and one-halt feet. The pattern of this corresponds to the general scheme or ornament in the window cornices and the entrances, and Is very elaborate. Every office In the building will be well lighted with a window on the outside. The whole floor service will extend up for two stories, and above that will be a court and an "L" addition, which will give the floors the shape of an "E" with the top horizontal line left off. .There will be eight elevators for passengers, and on the top floor a complete club-house tor the use of employes. The Union Paci.lo took out a $1,000,000 permit for the erection of this building. Permits are pending for shop additions to cost (236,000, ana S60.000 more goes for the postofflce sub-station. The Burlington Is helping the good work along by spending $100,009 on Its new freight depot. The Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway company has decided to put on the market two pieces of property which It has not used for a long time and which, though Ngood property, Is not likely to be available for the purposes of the street car company In time to come. One piece is the northwest comer of Woolworth and Park avenues, where once was located the old horse car barn. It Is now used as a livery stable. The property Is 100x150. The otuer property Is the electric power house between Nineteenth and Twentieth streets, beside Nicholas street. This is a building of massive construction, 132x204 feet, which is at present used by the Baker Ice Machine company. .Four grading machines and gangs of workmen will be retired from work on the Douglas county roads November 1, after having built over seventy-five miles of new road in the past season. Only a few in cidental road Jobs remain now to be fin ished, such as the repavlng of Dodge street from Forty-eighth to Fiftieth street. A surplus of $9,167 remains in the In heritance tax fund after the expenditures maue on several miles of roadway on west Dodge and v. streets and the Flor ence boulevard. County Commissioner Pickard announced Friday there had been more road work done this season than ever before. SUGAR WEIGHERS PARDONED Fonr Men Sentenced In Connection wltn Castoms Fraidi to Be Helen aed. WASHINGTON, Oct. 1 -President Taft has pardoned Edward A. Boyle, John R. Coyle, Patrick J. Hennessey and Thomas Kehoe, four sugar weighers who are serv ing sentences for connection with the cus toms frauds at New York. FIME TOOL-. ONE OF OUR SPECIALTIES We carry the latest up-to-date tools and our prices are right Contractors Supplies Chain Blocks, Triplex and Differential; Asphalt Tools and Shovels; Steel Tray Barrows; Manila and Wire Rope The Only Complete Stock ot ICE TOOLS in the West Exclusive Agents Oifford Wood Co., Manufacturers. James Morton & Sons Co. 1511-13 Dodge Street Another Fight On for Estate of Joe Connor Long Threatened War Develops Among Relatives Over Cutting Up of $500,000 Estate. . Long-threatened warfare among the heirs of Joseph A. Connor broke out In county court Saturday when Frnnklln Lamb of Chicago filed a tW.OOO claim against the estate of the eccentric eld man over whose jr.00.000 worth of property two terrific legal battles have already been waged. The breach which has existed between Connor's sister. Mrs. Ellen J. O'Connor, and her daughter, Mrs. Mary Lamb, of Chicago, wife of Franklin Lamb, Is now in legal evidence. Franklin Lamb Is the plaintiff In the suit In behalf of his son. The really moving spirit is doubtless Mrs. Lamb, who was the most prominent figure among the heirs in the contest with the church for the estate. The petition asserts that Joseph Connor promised to bequeath M,000 to his gTand-nephew, Franklin, Lamb, Jr., the promise being alleged to have been made to the parents on condition that the boy come to live for a time with his grand uncle. Mrs. Lamb signed a division agreement with Mrs. O'Connor, Miss Grace Connor, the adopted daughter, and Mrs. Mary Hlnes of Colorado, another sister of Con nor. Mrs. Lamb testified in the trial that the reason she, a niece, was let In on the same terms as her mother, Mrs. O'Connor, was because Connor had promised to do as much for Franklin Lamb, the boy, as for Miss Grace Connor. With this one-fourth or one-flth share, (a five-part agreement was made later), Mrs. Lamb was supposed to rest content. It Is patent that she has not and falling to reach an agreement with the other heirs, his initiated suit. The Connor will case so far as the ad-J mining of the estate to probate. Is now before the supreme court where it was ap pealed after a district court Jury has sus tained the county court In refusing to admit the alleged will a copy of which was offered for probate. The proponents It will be remembered asserted that the will was In existence at the time of Mr. Connor's death and that It later mysteriously dis appeared. We have to, 000 acres tributary to out city and we NEED FARMERS OF THR RIGHT sort to till the Idle acres. Will you come If we show you where you can make money easier than you ever mad It before In your life? Just answer thai question. Write me a note and say that you want to make a living a little bit easier than you have ever made it befor and, at the same time share In the devel opment of the country, and profit by tha rapid increase In the value of the lands. Write to me today. Tou 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 WILL DO FOR TOU. Write for the book. It costs nothing and may mean a fortune te you. Address C. B. afeQTyOWV, Beeretary IUKI COM CX. US, Baal, Xaamo. ACREAGE TRACTS FOR THE INVESTOR uu t on run SMALL FARMER THIS la our specialty. From One to One Thouaand acres. This business la made to terve your Interests. No sum of money, bowever small, la two 6 mall to get our best attention. And no sum, bowever large, Is too large to tax our capacity to TO FLACK AND I'LACK WITH PKOF1T TO THE 1XVKSTOK. We would like to bave you write to us for our booklets, literature and otber Informa tion. We are sure that you want to know about IDAHO. It is the last West and tbe rap Idly growing section of tbe 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 INVESTMENTS. POCATELLO, . . IDAHO HARDWARE PEOPLE yMSM 24.000 mmmmmmmmmmmummmmmmmmm tC lV K northwestern 4 .JW Expanded Metal Co. M W.AiA, E-! UafiUU iAIUULA'Um L 'i 5 uuETAL c 1 the Standard Material for S K C0I3CERTE I K$ REINFORCEMENT j I (JPEJTJ in floors, roofs, bridges, pavements, 23 h AWNINGS, BLANKETS, BAGS, In fact, everything made of awning, and we want you to know that when It's' made by the Scott Tent & Awning Co., that it ta made right, and the price is lower than others. We are here to make good. Our motto Is: "Help Us Grow," not "Watch Us Grow." For the first five months of our business we have landed the big gest awning contracts ever given to any Nebraska awning firm. We are able to handle your work, and we want it. Let us figure with you. Call Douglas 338. SCOTT TENT & AWNING CO, A. C. SCOTT, President and Manager. 314-310 South A SURETY BOND In my company guarantees the completion of the building according to tbe plans and specifications, within the time, free of liens and Incumbrances. Request It of your contractor and thereby protect yourself from an xiety and loss. (14,000 paid in losses by this agency last year. JH MITHFN 202-03 First National Bank Bids.. 11 fill ntW, Tlihon Doutlaa 127 AWNINGS AWNJNGS Taken Down, Repaired and Stored for the Winter. Rates Reasonable. Omaha Tont & Awning Co. Phone-Doug. 883; Ind. A 1883. I iSi'l -7!iC, ' ...V"1"" fill I ! r ! -:: tf, 111 I lyr ijlil Vhin comparison ibowi tha remarkable molarity fcatwaaan tha trad poal tlons of Omaha and Pooat.Ua. Ballroada oonvaf. b.r. and .T.rr opportunity la proa.at for any alart man wao oomfort, aaa aad plant?. LOOK AT THIS MAP YOU HAVE got to know about Fo oatello. It offers the most su preme opportunity for Invest ment, safe, secure, and bound to pay that the entire west shows forth to day. Poratello is a city; In every sense of the word Fooatello Is a city. Small yet, to be sure, but It is the renter of a vast Industrial area, all of which mnat pay tribute to this eager, earnest gTowing city; the en trepot for all mining, agricultural and commercial wealth of Idaho. And I want you to know about Pora tello. That's why I'll send a wonder fully beautifully book free of any sort of oost. I am not In the real estate business. But X do own property in Fooatello and I want to see Tt grow. I know thst you will want to invest money in Poretnllo when you know as mach about It as X do. That's why I want to nend vou this free boo' .. I invested my monev In PoeateUo be raue I absolutely knew that It would stow to be a big olty and I iln know that every single family thst comes to Pocstello will raise the value of ,ny property. 1 know that Ton will come to Fooatello, once v i know the supreme rhanres that awRlt the earnnet, sober, Industrious young man. Remember, then J. k1. ITJGERSOLL Pocatollo, Idaho FREE Double Your YJoney in Idaho INVESTMENTS Too oan find oat all about as by writing te the Oakley State Bank, Oakley, Idaho. We wlU positively guarantee to doable any earn of money yon put la our hands If 70a leave It with us loaf enough. The opportunities 1 aseated through Oakley and the development of ths Oakley Irrigation projeot, make unusual and eaUaordiaave returns oa Investments absolutely sure. Oakley Jnvoslment Co. Oakley (Cassia Co.) Idaho. 12th Street. 3 AWNINGS 11tr and Harney St. THIS IS A nix BOOK and that X want yon to have It with out expense. Of course I own prop erty In Fooatello. Of course I will profit by the growth of the city. The days of pure altruism aren't here, not yet. But that doesn't hurt the value of the book to you. The cover alone would sell fnr fifty cents In sny art store. The ploturns are really beautiful, and the Information in It Is valuable to any man who seeks to better his condition. Please remember that the country won't dn It all. Please remember that Idaho has no more room for drones than has anv nther state. Please remember that when you come to Idaho you'll have to work Just ss everyone else does. But It's a pleasant place to work; beautiful scenery, pure water, and good neigh bors. The soil Is the most fertile on earth. And X oan put you In the way of making a great deal of money where now. perhaps, you are havlnv to be satisfied with a living. Write for the book. Do It now. You've got to know about Fooatello. And the men who know first ar the ones who will win most. Writs right now I Write today I FREE Write to ns for Information. Albion aad tho territory surrounding this ooaaty seat town of ths richest oounty In Southern Idaho, will grow fastsr than any otber plaoe, beoanse It has further to grow. Get la now. Wo oan guarantee that you will double your money. Albion Realty Co., Albion, fdaho. Only sixty-four people can have this xnap. Pay one hun dred dollars uowui then take nix years to puy the balance, lit L.N we turn uer to you btanng orchard, worth N1 1 t-tS THAN laUU.OO PtK ACKfc:. Inn run n..i. ' H. UttO to 3.00U per year in lomineivlal Hpplee. Ion KNlvV WHAT 1HEV AKli WOKTH. Vou inUHl be an intellUent mar. SKND KOH Ol'll Kin'.K HOOK1.KT, WHICH TKI,l.H ALL AHOL'T THIS HKMAltK A1U.K plan. Forty cents h day 1h less than xomi" men throw away. Invent It I1KIIB. 1 ou do NOT tnke a chance when you buy orchard land. The rtsults are AHSOLV'TE- I. Y t'KHTAIN. Western orch ards. In other sections. HAVE PAID AS HIGH AS 13,000 00 pe.- year NKT. YOU CAN KA8ILT PROVK THIS Trees eluht yeara old, planted 48 trees to the acre, yield t boxen of apples TO TH1J TRKE. At $1.0 per box THIS IS AN 1NTOMK OF THREE THOVHANH TWO in'NDHEn AND FORTY HOL LARS. Our FREE booklet tells ALL about thin opportunity. Send for it RIOHT NOW. TO DAY. Thus Fortune beckons. Twin Falls Land k Orchard Co. F. S. Utsn. ftm., Twil filli. Idska WPTEF, AND ASK. US Yes, distinctly, plainly, write and ask us for the opportunities we can show you to DOUBLE YOUR MONEY IN SOUTHERN IDAHO. The land Is 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 tbe Middle West. Farm lands are cheap and can be bought on credit. You cannot make a mistake in 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. Hill & Taylor IRRIGATED FARMS Twin Falls, Idaho 500 bushels of Po tatoes to the Acre YOU 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 Snake River Valley has been known to produce EIGHT HUN DRED AND FIFTY JiUSHKLd OF POTATOES TO THE ACRE. You can RAISE POTATOES IN THIS VALLEY. RAISE THEM AND GET MONEY FOR THEM. Write to us about thla. We have the most hand.sumely Illustrated booklet written about this, THE TWIN FALLS TRACT in South ern Idaho, that has been printed for a long while. It Is mighty in forming, tou. IT IS KHliK AND WK WILL SKND ONK COPY TO YOU IF YOU WILL JUST WKl'j'K A POSTAL CARD Hkr QLliST. WRITK TODAY. J. E. WHITE TWIN FALLS, IDAHO All YOU OOIMO TO BUT Z.ASTOT No furinfr should think of buying a home before seeing copy of our Journal. It !ih lands, city property and stocks of poods iidvertim-d In It from every state In 1 the union, so that you can find Junt what you Mini in Iih . 1 ii lti ii . It reaches 60.- i 00(1 readi-rs noli Insiie. Advertising rates 2c per word. rend 10c for 2 months' trial ! suhxrriptlon. It will he stopped at the end of 2 month inili-sn you renew. Term I and Btal Estate Journal, Traer, Iowa. A BEE WANT AD will rent .ial vacant house, fill those vaoant rooms, or seoare boarders on short not.ee, at very small cost to you. Try It. K 1.; W WRITE.