The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922, March 26, 1918, Image 3

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    THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE. NORTH PLATTE. NEBRASKA
V!JfRs the great war-1
M time sweetmeat. I
TjfPi pleasure, the economy 9
M of a 5c package of 3
iBSHwVg f the A',led armies 1
i'Ir 5end Jttoyourwend 3
1S vvWivA longest -lasting re- m
Ml f f reshment he can M
W j CHEW IT AFTERJ
Win the War by Preparing the Land
Sowing the Seed and Producing Bigger Crops
Work in Joint Effort the Soil of the United States and Canada
CO-OPERATIVE FARMING IN MAN POWER NECESSARY
TO WIN THE BATTLE FOR LIBERTY
The Food Controllers of the United States and Canada are asking foi
greater food production. Scarcely 100,000,000 bushels of wheat arc avail
able, to be sent to the allies overseas before the crop harvest Upon the
efforts of the United States and Canada rests the burden of supply
Every Available Tillable Acre Must Contribute; Every Availably
Farmer and Farm Hand Must Assist
Western Canada has an enormous acreage to be seeded, but man power
b short, and an appeal to the United States allies is for more men for seed
ing operation.
Canada's Wheat Production Last Year was 225,000,000 Bushels; the
Demand From Canada Alone for 1918 is 400,000,000 Bushels
To secure this she must have assistance. She has the land but needs
the men. The Government of the United States wants every man who can
effectively help, to do farm work this year. It wants the land in the United
States developed first of course; but it also wants to help Canada. When
ever we find a man we can spare to Canada's fields after ours are supplied,
we want to direct him there.
Apply to our Employment Service, and we will tell you where you can
best serve the combined interests.
Western Canada's help will be required not later than April 5th. Waees
to competent help, 50.00 a month and up, board and lodging.
Those who respond to this appeal will get a warm welcome, good wages,
good board and find comfortable homes. They will get a rate of one cent
m mile from Canadian boundary points to destination and return.
For particulars as to routes and places where employment may be had
apply to: U. S. EMPLOYMENT SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Qualified.
"I thought Ethel could Hlcute."
"She ought to be able to. She
has a illplomn from n correspondence
school."
heaves in nortHKs can he
ItKLIKVKI)
Don't work Tour unrses while they
are Buffering with Hearts. Hellom
thorn with Diu David Hoiikrts'
Mora Tonic Physic Hnllnml
11KAVK PO WDRIt -Prif. 10 luk
A treatment that will ennuis your
horses to ln more work with lcnsdli
.ramfnrt. Head the rilArTIOLHOMB
" Veterinarian Send for free book,
lot on Abortion tn Cows. If no deal
er In ronr town, write
If. Dirtd Robirll'f et. Co., 100 Grand Annul, Yfiukethj, Wis.
What a Doughnut Is.
The ministry of food lias Informed
the Twickenham food control commit
tee Unit u doughnut Is not u bun. Lo
cal unrest litis been almost completely
allayed by the prompt and fearless de
cision. London Punch.
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 11-1918,
To keep clean and henlthy take Dr.
Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They regu
late liver, bowels and stomach. Adv.
Minnesota last year produced 20,
000,000 pounds of flsh.
After putting your best foot forward,
get there with both feet.
Carter's Little Liver Pills
You Cannot be fr A Remedy That
Makes Lite
Worth Living
Constipated
and Happy
Small Pill
Small Dote
Small Price
Genuine bears signature
AKffiiiS pARTER'S IRON PILLS
many colorless faces but will greatly help most pale-faced people
Spring Run of Distemper
MAY HE WHOLLY AVOIDED BY USING
QDsllINQ" A small outlay of money brings very
wfruiiiii great results. It Is a sure iure and a
preventive If you use It as per directions. Simple, saf
and sure. The Jl aive ts twice the quantity aud an ounct
more than the 60c else. Get your horses In best condltlor
for late spring and summer. All druggists, harness deal
ers or manufacturers,
8POIIN MEDICAL CO.. Manufacturers, Uoaben, lad.
iUILDBKSG
BENEFITS OF CONCRETE ROAD
,Mako Travel Quick, Safe and Easy,
Clean and Comfortable Saves
More Than It Costs.
Concrete roads arc country bouloj
vnrds They benefit a community In
making travel quick, snfo, easy, clean
and comfortable. They extend neigh
borhood limits, bring more people lnta
personal touch with each other, In
crease social opportunities and there
.by remove the monotony of Isolation!
bring greater content to the youth on
tho farm, make city and country neat
neighbors aud Increase school attend
ance, thus cultivating n desire fur ii
broader knowledgo and higher stand
ards of living.
Concrete roads make dally rural mull
delivery n fact, every homo unit In the
community Is put on tho news win
with the political, financial, industrial
and trading centers of tho earth. Tin
best thought of the world In every 11m
of human effort and human achieve
mcnt is transmitted overnight to th
breakfast table of tho communltj
served by n network of concrete ronds
A concreto road saves more than It
costs. It Is open to maximum tralllcj
all the year round. It brings greater
freedom and ease of movement In
travel and transportation and perma
nently Increases land values.
IVTADAM WAS ROAD REPAIRER
He Originated Method of Covering Sur
face of Ground With Impermeable
Crust or Covering.
Just 200 years ngo was born "tho.
first of the pioneers who took up thd
work of scientific road building." John
Metcnlf showed how to carry 'solid
hlghwnys across difficult bogs, und
Thomas Telford built his roads, topped
with gravel, on a solid foundation of
stone blocks. But tho great reform of
the art came In with John Louden Mc
Ailam, who traveled 30,000 miles over
the English and Scottish roads to study
tho conditions and needs for himself.
Bestowing n new word on the lan
guage, ho originated tho method of cov-
Macadamized Road.
cring tho surface of tho ground with
nn Impermeable crust, cover or coat
ing, so that water would not penetrato
to the soil beneath. A road thus
"macudamlzed" was found to yield less
easily to weights pressing upon It, and
could not be broken up by the action
of frost. But while tho inventor's fnmo
spread his resources dwindled, and
though made surveyor general of roads,
ho had to depend for his recompense
on a parliamentary grant. McAdum
(Was a road repairer rather than a road
builder, but his system went all over
tho world.
SPRING CARE OF HIGHWAYS
Go Over Road With Grader to Clean
Out Ditches Fill All Ruts
With New Material.
Every spring before the ground he-,
conies too hard tho road should bo
thoroughly gono over with a grader to
clean out the ditches, so that tho water
may have a free outlet. The ruts and
holes should be filled, elevations In tho
road and shoulders on the side of tho
road planed off, tho grade Improved,
and tho road put In good condition.
Earth roads have a pronounced tend
ency to rut. When ruta begin to ap
pear on tho surface great caro should
ho used in selecting new material, with
which they should bo filled Immediate
ly. Ono fundamental principle that Is
of special Importance In the repair
of any road Is that whatever material
Is used in tho construction of the sur
ace, the same material and no other
should be used In Its repair. A good
road with a surface of clay should bo
repaired by using clay, a gravel road
with gravel nnd a surface of limestone
with limestone.
Hog Needs Protection.
Tho hog Is lather scantily provided
with hair and tho wanner the country
tho less hair. Therefore, ho needs pro
tection during the storms of winter.
Unless you provldo it, you invito colds,
Influenza, lung troubles, rheumatism.
Sowing Slow Seeds.
In sowing seeds that sturt Blowly,
as parsnips, celery, etc., It Is well to
sow with them a few strong, quick
germinating seeds to break the crust
and mark the rows so that cultivation
may begin early.
Swift & Company
Publicity
At a recent hearing of the Federal Trade Commission thero
was introduced correspondence taken from the private files of
Swift & Company, which showed that the Company had been con
sidering for some time an educational advertising campaign.
The need for this publicity has been apparent to us for sev
eral years. The gross misrepresentation to which we have
recently been subjected has convinced us that we should no longer
delay in putting before the public the basic facts of our business,
relying on the fair-mindedness of the American people.
The feeling against the American packer is based largely on
the belief that the income and well-being of the producer and
consumer are adversely affected by the packers' operations,
resulting in unreasonably large profits.
Swift & Company's net profit is reasonable, and represents
an insignificant factor in the cost of living.
For the fiscal year 1917 the total sales and net profit of 'Swift
& Company were as follows:
Sales
$875,000,000.
Profit.
$34,650,000.
This is equivalent to a $3,465. profit on a business of $87,500.
If Swift & Company had made no profit at all, the cattle raiser
would have received only one-eighth of a cent per pound more for his
cattle, or the consumer would have saved only one-quarter of a cent per
pound on dressed beef.
Swift & Company, U. S. A.
SB
HONOR CREDITED TO GERMAN
John Peter Zenger First to Uphold the
Liberty of the Press In the
United States.
Fate plays curious tricks with men
nnd things. Tho man who Is given
credit for first upholding tho liberty of
the press In America wns a German,
says tho Rocky Mountain News. It
was Just 184 years ago that this man,
John Peter Zenger, was brought to
trial for a newspaper Ubol which re
sulted from newspaper criticisms
passed on British public officials.
Zenger founded the New York
Weekly Journal, tho. second newspaper
In New York. The paper was publish
ed In the English language, and It
mu do use of very plain language.
Zenger was arrested on n charge of
libel and thrown Into prison. For some
time ho edited his paper from behind
the bars, but was at length released
nnd continued to publish the paper un
til his death In 1740.
The prosecution of Zenger for libel
wns tho first case of the kind, on this
side of the Atlantic, and aroused great
public excitement. When Zenger re
ceived acquittal it was considered a
great victory for tho principles of free
speech and a free press.
. la.
of bold'
coming to farmers from the rich wheat fields of
Western Canada. Where you can buy good farm land ' '1
at $15 to $30 per acre and raise from 20 to 45 bushels
of $2 wheat to the acre it's easy to make money. Canada
offers in her provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta
160 Acre Homesteads Free to Settlers
and other land at very low orices. Thousands of
farmers from the U. S. or their aons are yearly taking
advantage of this great opportunity. Wonderful yields
also of Oatr, Barley and Flax, mixed Farming ia
fully as profitable an industry aa grain raising. Good
schools; "markets convenient; climate excellent.
Write- for literature and particulars as to reduced
railway rates to bupt. immigration, uttawa,
Canada, or to
W. V. DENNETT
Room 4, Dee Bldfl., Omaha. Neb.
Canadian Government Agent
Right.
"Old Bostely says he has a million
dollar brnln," observed tho mnn who
wns always picking up Information.
"He's quite right," answered tho
other; "It would cost him fully that
much to find out yhat's the matter
with It."
Most particular women ubq Red Cron
Ball Blue. American made. Sure to please.
At all good grocers. Adv.
Kisses can never be copyrighted
which is fortunate for those who print
them.
Every poison has Its remedy.
Case of Apple-plexy.
A teacher wus explaining the garden
of Eden story to her class.
"Strange," she said, "thero Is abso
lutely no Vecord made thnt Adam or
Eve ever died." "What Is your opin
ion John?" asked tho teacher.
"Well, I dunno 'bout thnt," remark
ed the pupil, "but I 'speet they died
with upple-plexy."
Multiplied Bliss.
"Jupiter has eight moons,"
"Gee whiz 1 Fancy escorting a girl
under eight of 'cm!"
Some people look at home as a sort
of coaling station.
In the bright lexicon of tho hustler
(here Is no such word ns "enough."
Evening Things Up.
"My father has nn Income," said
Bertha, proudly.
Lorettn looked at her In a puzzled,
way for a minute and then declared
"My father's got a boll."
Important to Mothers
Exnmlno carefully every bottlo of
CASTOItIA, that famous old remedy;
for infnnts nnd children, and seo that It
Bears the
Signature
In Use for Over Ik) Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Cautona
People who have tho least to say
usually have the most to talk about.
Many a man gets behind because he
looks too far nhcad.
1
1,716,000,000
Pounds of Fl our Saved
if each of our 22,000,000 families use this recipe
instead of white bread.
One loaf saves 11,000,000 pounds; three loaves a
week for a year means 1,716,000,000 poundssaved!
Enough to Feed the Entire Allied Army
Corn Bread with Rye Flour
1 cup corn meal
1 cup rye Hour
2 tablespoons sugar
5 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup milk
1 gg
2 tablespoon shortening
Barley flour or oat flour may ba used instead of rye flour with equally good
results. Sift dry ingredients into bowlj odd milk, beaten egg and melted
shortening. Stir well. Put into greased pan, nllow to stand In warm place
20 to 25 minutes and bake in moderate oven 40 to 45 minutes.
Our new Red, White and Blue booklet, "Best War Time Recipes." containing many oilier
recipes for making delicious and wholesome wheat saving hods, mailed free address
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., DeptW, 135 William St., New York
FOOD WILL WIN THE WAR