Read what these famous people say: WILL ROGERS— '' Well . . . what I. am getting at is not to tell bow I was welcomed in Nogales, bat the friendly way the people of our side of the line got along with the ones from the Mexican side. . . . Each side down there knew bow to give as well as take. The Arizona side didn't send them a note every morning making some complaint. If there was any difference of opinion, both sides knew they could get together and talk it over. It looked to me like a town where everybody was tending to their own business instead of somebody else's." BRIG. GENERAL E. EL PLUMMER— ‘ ‘ The people of Nogales do not have to use up their vitality in fighting climate." JAMES MARVIN MILLER— (Internationally known journalist and former Consul General to New Zealand. “The wonderful possibilities of the rich territory of Mexico adjacent to Nogales should make it one of the really big cities of the Border. M' ALVAROOBREGON— (Former President of Mexico, j "Mexico, today, we hope, stands on the eve of a new era of happiness and prosperity. History, in making record of this new development and this international concord, will give the credit for it to the citizens of Nogales, ivho started it." For further information write: NOGALES WONDERLAND CLUB, INC., Nogales, Arizona, or NOGALES CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, Nogales, Arizona. ISSION San Jose de Tumacacori—once San Cayetano de Tumacacori—lies eighteen miles north of Nogales on the Old Spanish Trails Highway. It was proclaimed a National Monument by the U. S. Government in September, 1908, and plans have since been formulated to protect the ruins and landscape the 10-acre park in which they stand. This site was first visited by Padre Kino in 1691 • Leaving headquarters at Dolores in Mexico late in the year, accompanied by the Father Visitor, Juan Maria Salvatierra, he traveled by way of Maria Magdalena Pueblo and a land called El Tupo to the mission of San Pedro y San Pablo de Tubutama on the Altar River. Thence they went to Saric and Tucubavi, in the same vicinity. Here they were met by a del- egation of Soaipuris who had come from the region about the present Tumacacori Mission. The Indians asked the father to visit them and they did so, probably going by way of the site of the present City of Nogales to Guevavi and thence onward to Tumacacori. Of more than local interest, Tumacacori was one of the first settlements to be established in the United States by the Old Spanish missionaries in their journeyings from the Rio Grande to the Pacific Coast. Founded in 1687 by Jesuit Father Francisco Kino, the mission was started about 1730, and was one of the series of missions of which eleven are in Sonora, Mexico. A few miles further north is Tubac, settled by the Spaniards in 1728, from whence in 1784 a military expedition under Captain Juan Bautista Anza marched to San Francisco Bay, A visit to Tumacacor't Mission more than repays the visitor for his time. You will be con-. ducted through at any time you choose.