The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 10, 1928, Page 16, Image 16

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The Slogan Pages Are Yours; Aid in
SMEM
THE STATESMAN dedicates several pages each week in the interest of the fifty-two to a hundred
basic industries of the Salem District. Letters and articles from people with vision
are solicited. This is your section. Help make Salem grow.
SOME LASDS HERE THAT HAVE WETTED
THEIR SELLING VALUE I
Others That Will Net $150 a Year, Though Their Selling: Val
ue Is Around $256 an Acre irrigation Systems in Hop
"arris That Have Paid for Themselves in One Season With
increased Net Returns
Editor Statesman:
What is the trne value of asrl
cultural land? This question has
provoked much discussion-, partic
ularly in the west, where land
prices have not reached, the - sta
bility which marks prices of lands
in the more thickly settled and
older communities. However,-the
true value of agricultural land Is
the amount per acre- upon . which
it will return a fair rate of inter
est. It is difficult to compare returns
from agricultural pursuits with
salaries paid in the cities. A salar
ied man receiving $3,000 per year
generally winds up the year with
no balance left in the bank. He has
used up his entire income on liv
ing expenses. On the other hand
the farmer who winds up the year,
witn a Dana Daiance oi iuv is
pretty apt to figure that this rep
resents the year's income from the
ranch. It is the certainty with
which the farmer can depend upon
the $100 balance on the right side
of the ledger which makes farm
ing a success or a failure.
Two elements generally govern
this balance crops and markets.
These in turn govern the price of
the land. Perhaps the best estab
lished land prices in the vicinity
of Salem are those lands lying in
what is known as Lake Labis h, a
few miles north of the city. In
thinking of the value of Lake La
bish lands, people have become ac
customed to thinking of $1,000 per
acre. Based upon the capitalization
of the average net returns per acre,
the value of these lands would ex
ceed considerably $1,000 per acre.
Net Over f lOOO an Acre
In fact there are many Incidents
when the net returns from these
lands nave exceeded $1,000 per
acre. The production of a good
crop each year on Lake Labish is
practically assured, as the lands
are irrigated by pumping or by sub
irrigation from the drainage can
al, and the, moisture which Is gen
erally the controlling element in a
crop production during the months
of Jnne, July and August is under
the control of the farmer.
Land values for small tracts In
the Irrigation project at West Stay
ton are fairly well established 'at
$250 per acre for land and water
rights. The ' question is, can the
owner of such lands, pay interest
on this investment?
Aet Retwms Over SI SO An Acre
The land produces from four to
eight tons of string beans per
acre which are contracted with
the Oregon Packing company and
the Stayton Canning company at
$75 per ton. It costs $25 per ton
THIS WEEK'S SLOGAN
DID YOU KNOW That the cheapest lands on earth are
here in the Salem district; that you can buy good farm
lands here Cor less than $100 an acre; less than it costs
to provide for irrigation in many project; lands that
are as rich as those of the Nile valley ; that you can bay
lands here, and, by the best farming methods, make
them pay their original cost every year; and, with nut
culture, you can make them pay several times their
cost, each year, in timecan make one walnut tree as
valuable as 60 acres of land at present prices; that if
the truth can be fully known, the land hungry will
flock here from every direction to put every idle acre
to use, and every slacker acre to full use, and help to
feed the hungry world and clothe the naked world with
bur products?
Dates of Slogans in
(With a few possible changes)
Loganberries. October 6, 19 27
Prunes, October 13 I
; Dairying, October 20
Max. October 27
Filberts, November 3
Walnuts. November 10
Strawberries, November 17
Apples. Figs. Etc.. Nov. 24
Raspberries, December 1
Mint. December 8
Beans, Etc., December la
Blackberries, December 22
Cherries. December 29
Pears. January 5. 192 S
Gooseberries, January 12
Corn, January 19
Celery. January 28
Spinach, Etc., February 5
; Onions, Etc, February 12
Potatoes, Etc, February 19
Bees, February 26
Poultry and Pet Stock. Mar. 4 ,
City Beautiful, Etc, March 11
Great Cows March 18 .
Paved Highways, March 25
Head Lettuce, April 1
Silos. Etc, April t
LegumeSr AprQ 15
Asparagus, Etc. April" 22 15 .
DISTRICT
o
aim
to have the beans picked, and there
are other expenses In connection'
with their production. Assuming
a crop of four tons, to the acre-, the
gross returns would amount to
ISOtt. It Is safe to assume that the
net returns will exceed 50 per cent
of this amount, or $150 per acre.
It is obvious that these laads on
an interest-paying basis greatly
exceed the established value,
though it must be kept in mind
that the area of beans which any
one can handle is comparatively
small.
Other Otsh Crops
ME TEAR
The gross returns from PPPr-j points, and cotton and cottonseed
mint on these irrigated lands haveMj points.
- A . . A . . I . . - -
exceeded $150 per acre, of which
it is estimated that $100 per acre
is profit. Potatoes, tomatoes, ber
ries and all kinds of truck garden
products can fae sUcce88fully grow
n
on these lands, and the gross re
turns per acre are very high.
hough the area which can be suc-
cerfully devoted to truck gath
ering is comparatively small.
More Than Paid For System
Many of the best hop yards are
daily being irrigated. The owners
of some of these yards have in
stalled expensive irrigation sys
tems. One grower recently stated
that during 1927 the added re
turns from his yard due to irriga
tion more than paid for hop yards,
but it is safe to assume that -the
returns from any successfully ep-1
eraiea nop yara would pay lutes
est upon a higher valuation than
is generally placed upon this pro
perty in this vicinity.
We venture to say that If the
irrigated land of Lake Labish. with
its very high returns from celery
production, the irrigated lands in
the Wnl Stavtnn rifatrfot with
,wonderfu, CTop9 orthe
gated hop yards, with their as
sured
returns, were in California
rather than in pregon, their re
turns would be fully capitalized
and their mines placed according
ly. These lands could not then be
purchased for the prices at which
they are being offered today.
PERCY CUPPER.
Salem, Ore., June C, 1928.
(Mr. Cupper was formerly state
engineer. He ts the engineer for
several irrigation and other proj
ects in this section. Ed.)
Alfalfa makes good silage, ac
cording to, tests carried out by the
ureson Agricultural college ex
periment station. If weather con
dltions are such that hay cannot
be cured, the .crop may be put in
the silo. Half cured alfalfa is not
as good for ensilage as when freak
nut hs use as neb is- far more
profitable than losing It.
Oregon Statesman
Orapes. Etc., April 29
Drug Garden. May 6
Sugar Industry, May 13
Water Powers. May 20
Irrigation, May 27
Mining. June 3
Land. Irrigation, Etc., June 10
Floriculture. June 17
Hops. Cabbage. Etc., June 24
Wholesaling, Jobbing. July 1
Cucumbers. Etc, July 8
Hogs July 15
Goat. July 22
Schools. July 29
Sheep, August 5
Seeds, August 12
National Advertising. Aug. 19
Livestock, August 1
Grain Grain Products, Sept. 2
Manufacturing, Sept. 9
Woodworking, Etc. Sept. 19
Automotive Industries, Sept 23
Paper Mills. Sept. 30
: X Back copies of the Thurs
day edition of The Daily Ore
gon Statesman . are on hand.
They are for sale at 10 easts
each, mailed to any, address.
Current topics 5 cents.
THE OREGON
Making Them Helpful to Your " Wonderful City and Sect
FARM PRICE INDEX
HIGHEST IN 3 leiS
A farm price index the highest
In almost three years Is reported
by .- the bureau of agricultural
economics. United States depart
ment, of agriculture. This index
on1 May -15 was 14$ per cent of
the pre-war level, an advance of S
points since April 15. At 148, the
bureau saye, the index is 22 points
above May a year ago and is the
highest point the index has reach
ed since August, 1925. It is the
highest May figure since. .1920.
The advance during the period
April 15 to May 15 is accounted
for by increases in all groups ex
cept dairy products which showed
a seasonal decline of 3 points.
Grains advanced IS points, fruits
and vegetables 2 points, meat an
imals 9 points, poultry products 7
The farm price of wheat was n
per cent higher on May 15. than on
April 15, the bureau reporting
that the unfavorable winter has
resulted in one of the heaviest
abondonments of winter wheat on
record. The condition of winter
wheat was about 10 per cent low
er on May 1 than a year ago, indi
cating a production about 11.9
per cent less than in 1927.
AMES. Iowa, June 2. (AP)
Veterinarian of Iowa state col
lege have performed operations
which effectively and harmlessly
silence' animals whose vocal char
acteristics have developed to the
point of being a nuisance. The
process has reached the point
where it nearly always la success
ful.
"Roaring" horses have been
permanently silenced, and dogs
that have yelped loudly and con
tinually have been "de-barked."
In a similar operation goats have
been "de-bleated" in a clinic by
Dr. W. F. Guard, head of the vet
erinary surgery department, and
his assistants.
The silencing operation origin
ated. Dr. Guard says, during the
war. when It was necessary to
"take the bray out of mules to be
need near the front to prevent
troop movements from being re
vealed to the enemy.
The operation was accomplish
ed by removing a part of the vo
cal apparatus in the throat, which
allowed the vocal chords to gtow
fast to the ' sides. Once grown
fast,, the chords no longer vibrat
ed and the mule was successfully
"de-brayed."
' Afterwards it was found that
"roaring" horse likewise could
be cured by preventing the vocal
chords from vibrating excessively.
Extraordinary vibrations or a
"roarer" deerese the horse's effi
ciency by making it short-winded.
Dr. Guard found.
1 The operation in the case of
goats and dogs Is somewhat dif-
ferentr although in both eases vo
cal chord vibration ts eliminated.
De-bleating" and "de-barking"
both are accomplished by remov
ing a section of the vocal chord.'
The operation Is described as sim
ple.
FOR LEAF MUSIC
GLENDALE. Cal., June 9.
(AP). An ordinary leaf is a mu
sical instrument in the hands of
John W. Norviel. Glendale city
director of recreation. .
Children long have held blades
of grass and leaves between their
thumbs and produced shrill whis
w his tlr by blowing on them, but
Norviel takes almost any kind of
a leaf and plays popular or class!
cal airs.
Hero are his directions for play
ing:
"Hold the leaf firmly againet
the lower lip so that it extends
across '. the small space between
the lips with rounded edge rest
ing upon the upper lip. Blowing
then causes vibration of the nar
row protruding portion and a
tone results. The vocal cavity
acts as a sounding box, and the
lips, tengue and pharynx are the
control mechanism as in wh let
ting.
- The lower aide of the leaf
produces a more pleasing tone
than the upper.- The range with
the average leaf is from G to
'A' below middle 'C upward two
octaves and two notes. The tone
quality of the leaves varies from
the softness of a. muted violin to
SILENTNIGHT FOR .
HMD SOLOISTS
FJ DIRECTIONS
the shrillness of a piccolo."
STATESMAN, SALEU, OREGON. SUNDAY HORNING, JUNE 10, 1928
INDUS!
IB 15 P
E
ACHE VALUE,
II CENT $1111
Cherries and Walnuts Pay. Well A Number of . Instances
Where Incomes Are in Keepirtjr With High Land Values
Farmers Who are Making Good in Dairying, a Branch That
Especially Needs Developing in the Willamette aVOey
Editor Statesman:
With reference to your inquiry
relatiyeto land values in the Wil
lamette-valley based upon actual
returns. I will say that wheTe pro
per rotation of crops and fertill
ration of the soil Is practiced, the
owners as a whole1 ate making
good returns on their investments.
The following actual instances will
be practical illustrations:
Actual Results
One man whom I have in mind
owns a 20 acre cherry and wal
nut orchard. He hires all of the
work done and keeps an accurate
record of his costs and Incomes.
His net return on hta investment
has averaged 6 V to 7 per cent in
terest on a valuation of $20,000
for the last five years.
Clearing S2000 and Over
Another farmer of whom I know
owns 20 acres within just a few
miles of Salem, which he values at
$14,000. That farm Is divided as
follows: nine acres of prunes, two
acres of pears, four acres of cher
ries, four acres of filberts, and one
acre of walnuts. Some of the or
chard is not in bearing, and all of
it averages from four to five years
old. In between the trees on 12
acres black raspberries are grown.
This man is clearing above all ex
penses each year, an average of
$2,000 and over.
f lOOO on 20 Acres
Another farmer owns a 20 acre
farm within two miles of the
heart of Salem, which is planted
six acres to Royal Ann cherries,
of which three and a half acres
are bearing; four acres of peaches;
four acres of newly planted wal
nuts, and a little other miscellane
ous fruit. His income from the
place in 192 was $1600, of which
$1300 were the proceeds of his
share of the crop.
Making 15 Per Cent on 91000
an Acre
I. also, have in mind a walnut
orchard which is producing, year
In and year out, 15 per ecnt on a
val nation of $1000 an acre above
all costs, Including pay for the
owner's time. The income on this
orchard, which is only 15 years
old, is increasing each year.
The foregoing illustration are
returns based on orchard values as
well as land values, and should be
so considered. . ...
COMING BACK,
FIRM PRICES A
Prices Are Better Than They Were for Things the Farmer
Has to SeB There Are More Farm Sales Than for a Long
time; More m Last Year Than in Seven Years Preceding
Some Farmers Who Are Makirtj Good by Improving Their
Soil
Editor Statesman:
Farm prices and farm crops are
coming back. For about seven
years the farmer has had hard
sledding. When land. and CiUpr
have been down that long, it is a
sure thing that a change is in
near sight.
Already there have been some
ehanges occur over night. Beef
cattle, for one thing, are out of
sight, after being down about
eight years. Last fall farmers sold
oats delivered to the mills for 50
cents per bushel. Now they are
selling good gray Waldo Hills oats
out of their bins for 80 cents a
bushel.
In eastern Oregon they have
contracted wheat for $1.40 pei
bushel for the coming crop. Wool
was 34 cents last year; Now they
are paying 50 cents per pound
and even 52 cents for medium sta
ple. Grade ewes sold last winter
for $20 per head. r
California buyers are coming
here and paying $100 per cow, in
many cases taking the whole herd
at that price, or $125 for cowe
bought in single lota.
One may ask. th.en.why hasn't
land value come up!,Ln the first
place, these higher prices have Just
come. Walt till the farmer sells
his crops at these new prices.
There has, though, been mor
farm land sold and exchanged in
the past year than In the seven
years before. If you have been
busy and not around much, yoi
may not have heard of many sales
.being made. In my work with
the farmer, I have come in con
tact with a large number of sales
and exchanges. Now these are
not all exchanges or on time sales.
I know of many valley or eastern
men who have bought farms and
paid cash.
To show that farms can be
AND IS
I was just talking the other day
with the owner of a farm of 119
acres which has been rented for a,
few years, except 'that the" owner'
retains the use of the buildings for
a home, raising poultry, and keep
ing of a cow or two; garden and
fruit is also retained by the own
er. The place is valued at. $1C,-.
500. The owner's share of each
year's rental has- averaged from
$1000 to $1200 annually. The
crops grown on this place are the
ordinary farm crops of clover,
vetch, wheat, and oats. These re
turns are in addition to the fruit
for home use, garden and poultry
returns.
14 Per Cent on $200 Value
A farmer near Hopmere owning
a 223 acre farm, highly improved,
and valued at $50,000, has 60
acres of bearing hops. The balance
of the farm is not very intensely
cultivated and the owner does not
try to run the farm for capacity
income, but his net returns for the
past 10 years on that property
have averaged better than $7,000
a year, which is 14 per cent on the
valuation of better than $200 an
acre.
Dairying is Profitable
One other illustration will, 1
think, give you a fairly typical il
lustration of the returns that may
be expected from a dairy farm. A
short distance from Salem there
is a man who is keeping 30 head
of cows on a hundred acre place,
of which number 15 are milch
cows. The farm stock and equip
ment Is valued at $20,000. The
gross income is averaging about
$00 a month. The' net income,
after allowing for all expenses in
cluding the owner's labor, is bet
ter than $3000 annually, or in
other words, a net income of 15
per cent on the owner's valuation
of his property.
There is not a branch of farm
ing that needs development in the
Willamette valley more than the
diary industry, and the farmers
who are handling cows intelli
gently are making money. Or
chard and farm values in the Wil
lamette valley are on a conserva
tive' basis, and the farmer who
will use the more improved farm
ing and orchard practices ' win
make' money. '
A. C. BOHRNSTEDT.
Salem, Or., June 5, 1921.
INCREASINC
MM C M
SAYS IIS EXPERT
made to pay, will say that in
one instance a young man afte
renting a few years accumulated
a few thousand dollars and then
bought a farm, paying over" $100
per acre. The next year he built
a bouse, and this year a barn. A
good many barns are going up
this year, and several houses
Good farma are good investments,
and to make them pay depends
on the management. In manj
cases where farms are not paying
is where farmers spend from one
to three days a week in town. It
is true the farmer is entitled to
vacations, but not every week.
The business man in the city has
probably two weeks vacation in a
year, but when he la at work he1
stays on the job, not eight hours
as many think. He has a lot .of
work with his books most every
evening.
In many cases we are holding,
our laud too high. It is worth'
only what it will pay. If one has
limed and is raising alfalfa, sweet
clover, or any of the legume
crops, he has a right to pat a good
value on his land, but if one has(
been raising grain and summer,
fallowing for 70 years without;
putting something back, he has no
right to expect a high price, for
O a Ii 1 an d
Pontine
Sales and Service
VICK BROS.
High Street at Trade
it take Urn and money to bufld
ay the worn but land. " " V
It is tru Uio fruit man, ia hard
hit. M Mlr vW ki put out to
large an acreage and did not dl
ratty enough.
Wnen such farmer as the Gil
berts and Rlecks have bought in
the past few years 500 and 00
tons - of lime, and started with
very poor soil, and today are rais
ing ' fine alfalfa, sweet clover.
etch, red clover, rape, corn, and
good grain crops, these farmers
and farms should be watched, as
here Is a good example of what
eaa be don with a farm.
F. A. DOERFLER.
Farm Advisor. First National
Bank.
Salem, Or.. June 7, 1928.
LETTUCE HEEDS
IODINE. IS F
Iodine has been found to In
crease the growth of head lettuce,
say soil specialists at the Oregon
Agricultural college experiment
station. Preliminary fertiliser ex
periments have been made in the
college greenhouses and ! show " a
significant increase in growth
from the inclusion of one part per
million of Iodine in the form of
potassium iodine in water culture
used for the production of head
lettuce. One part per million has
been found helpful, but four parts
per million appears to be harm
ful. Claims hare been made that
Chilian nitrates were more valua
ble than synthetic nitrates on ac
count of traces of iodine found in
the former. Soils over large
areas in the northwest are be
lieved to be very low in iodine.
Preliminary tests show that io
dine salts will Increase iodine
content. However, it remains to
be determined to what extent io
dine in plants is assimilated from
organic compounds.
Bought It 6 Years Ago, Went
in Debt $5000; Now
$5000 to the Good
Editor, Statesman: ,
Salem and vicinity are especial
ly good for "diversified farming."
In some vicinities very few prod
ucts can be grown, but in Saleii.
vicinity nearly every thing can
be grown, that can be grown an
place.
One farmer in this vicinity pur
chased 110 acres of land six yer
in debt $5000 on this land. Now,
debt $0000 on this land. Now
he has $5000 to the good. How
did he do it? fly 'diversified
farming This farmer raises
corn, clover .vetch, oats, wheat.
potatoes, vegetables and fruit, al
so has a email dairy, poultry and
hogs.
Good land in the Salem vicinity
can be bought for reasonable
prices and can be mads to pay
returns on the investment if prop
erfj farmed.
W. E. MOSES.
Salem, Or., 651 Court St.,
June 9, 1928.
E
LATID CHEAP HERE
Salem's Greatest Opportun
ity Is as a Location for
Such Homes
Editor Statesman:
Salem's greatest opportunity is
as a location for suburban nomes
We do not believe there is anoth
er state capital in the United
States where land within a radius
of five miles of the city can be
bought at the low price that it
can around Salem, the state capi
tal and county seat of Marion
county. And I am sure there are
not many state capitals located in
the center of a more productive
valley with paved roads leading
from every direction Into a beau
tiful city.
Every acre of unimprored land
within five miles of this city
should be worth at least $1,000,
and every five acre tract should
Farm Lands Are On the Up
grade. Now ig the time to buy.
I specialize in high class Farms,
Stock Ranches, Fruit and Nut
properties. See me if you want
to buy. See me if you want to
tell.
A. C. BOHRNSTEDT
Realtor - Loans - Insurance
147 No: Commercial St.,
Salem, Oregon
OIL-0-MATIC
whatis it?
SEE
THEO. M. BARR
Phone 192
IDE GOOD ON 1210
All ACRE LAND HERE
BAN M
EDITORIAL
WANTED, A NEW BIRTH OF tfAITH ,V
" ' ; t - .- -
What is cheap land? Land is cheap that can be made t
earn a high rate of interest on its cost, after the payment c
all expenses, including allowance for depreciation OI eqUij
raent, taxes and good wages for operationr and management
land that will keep on doing this year after year, indefinite
If the land be located within easy distance from the ad van
tages of schools and other necessities of civilized and cultura
life. Land is not cheap, though it have the possibilities o;
profit making, without the latter advantages.
By this measure; by these two measures, the Salem dis
trict has the cheapest land in the world.
Salem is essentially a farming center; a fruit growing ant.
gardening center. The greatest prosperity and growth o
Salem will come and will endure with the greatest prosperity
and growth of the surrounding country
And that will come with the beet possible use of the land :
with the production of the most valuable money crops on eact
acre of land ; with intensified and diversified farming devel
oped to the limit, following the slogan, "More acres and more
to the acre," and sticking everlastingly at it.
To the prospective new corner, the writer will say that a
well posted man made the assertion -not long ago that there
are more than 100JD00 acres of land within, a radius of twenty
miles of Salem that, planted to the right crops, may be made
to, produce money returns that will pay for the present
purchase price of the land each year.
That is a rather sweeping statement ; but he proved ii
And that land is surely cheap that will pay its entire cost
each year. That statement cannot be made of any similar
body of land in the world ; and proved.
And land values here will go on steadily increasing for gen
erations, when the land is put to the right uses.
For instance, filbert trees will increase in value for many,
pears; so will walnut trees for hundreds if not thousands of
years.
With proper rotations and renewals of fertilization, our
land will never wear out. The oldest land in the world in con
tinuous use is the richest land in the world ; for instance, in
France and Italy and Spain.
The Salem district has the cheapest land in the world ; con
sidering what the buyer may now secure it for, and the pro
ducts that are possible
That is, considering its potential productive value
And the full'potential value of any single acre of land ir
the Salem district will not be realized till it is put to its best
use. For instance, beaver dam land in this section is worth
perhaps $100 an acre to raise hay on, while it is well worth
$1000 to $1500 an acre on which to raise celery or onions or
onion sets or head lettuce. It is worth several times its hay
price to raise mint pn.
The same claim may be made as to good land for walnuts,
filberts, red or black raspberries, evergreen blackberries, lo
ganberries, etc., and as to three or fotrp or five story farm-
ing in a number of combinations, as for instance tree or bush J
fruits and nuts and poultry and bees.
And there is a great possible diversity j
As has been said and repeated many hundreds of times in 1
these columns, this is the land of diversity ; this is the coun
try of opportunity.
Considering the above facts,
faith in the future of our industries on the lano!
Needs this new birth for her own people
Needs also the vision, vigorously acted upon, to invite mnfe
good farmers to come and settle on our lands ; to the end that
our slacker acres may be used to their full potential possibilr
ities
. Needs major irrigation developments
And we need investment companies to divide up" our large
holdings and back purchasers of- small tracts to the limit of
making their holdings pay, by having the right equipment
and methods of working their acres.
Salem will be the solid city it ought to be) with an endur
ing backing only when we have more prosperious farmers
and still more and more of them
With the industries on, our lands joined up with our industries-
in the towns and cities.
be improved and occupied by home
loving people.
In the greatest home making
country in the world, good land,
good water, good climate, good
schools and colleges, good people.
and everything that goes to make
gooa nomes, wny enouian t we
prosper?
JOSEPH BARBER REALTY
Joseph Barber Realty Co.
Salem, Ore.rJune 9, 1928,
Read The Classified Ads
GRANDMA IS NOBODY'S
FOOL
She kept after grandfather
until he bought the lot and
house. It's about the wisest
thing you could do to follow
their example.
INSURANCE MONEY TO LOAN
RICH L. REI1V1ANN, Realtor
19 N. High St. . - , PHONE 865
Salem needs a new birth of
Close-in Large
ROOMING HOUSE
FnrsUshed, Reduced to 99,000.
Roombajg House Easy walking
to all business. S8250.
Income property close ii
of tbe best bay, f!200.
Gertrude J. M. Page
484 Court St,
Phoneleor 1184
SALEM HIGHWAY
TRACTS
New nice 4 and 5 room
houses with V acre of
good soil. All" City con
veniences with County
taxes.
$100.00 down and $30
per month including int.,
will buy one of these
houses.
SPECIAL
157 acres of fine land. 140
in cultivation. Fenced in 7
fields. Mostly sowed to clov
er and grass. Several acres
of Beaverdam-land. Good
buildings. Improvements are
worth 110.000. Owner will
sell for $15000.00 and take
Salem home in trade up to
about $000. 00 and give
Trx. fine, terms on the bal
ance. The place is clear of
all incumbrances.
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