The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 26, 1903, Image 6

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    -"-M
E O’NEILL FRONTI»H
Xjblished every thrvrsday by
D. H. CRONIN.
NEILL. - - - NEBRASKA.
BRIEF TELEGRAMS. jj
Bandits who held up a Burlington
train in Montana got but $7.50.
Lieutenant Peary says he hopes to
make another effort to reach the north
pole.
Colonel Richard L. Walker, known to
every politician In Kansas as "Lick"
Walker, died In Topeka.
Arnold Green, LL.I)., one of the
most prominent lawyers in the state
and widely known as a scholar, Is dead
at Providence, R. I.
| The president will appoint James R.
Garfield to the position of commission
er pf corporations under the new de
partment of commerce act.
Ex-Stato Senator C. 11. Smith of
Jackson. Mich., has wired to Wash
ington his acceptance of the office of
prosecuting attorney at Manila.
The Standard Oil company has de
clared a dividend of $20 per share,
payable March 26. This Is $10 more
than the last dividend declared.
At Atchison, Kan., a verdict for $10,
000 has been rendered In the district
court in the breach of promise case
of Miss Olive Sells against Peter W.
Allen.
By unanimous vote the Nebraska
senate has adopted a joint resolution
providing for the election of United
States senators by a direct vote of the
people.
It is reported that Hon. Edward H.
Blake of Ontario lias been retained
by the Canadian government ap coun
eel before the Alaskan boundary com
mission.
i ne united nauways company oi
San Francisco lias applied to the New
York Stock exchange to list $20,000,000
4 per cent sinking fund coupon bonds
of 1927.
< Active preparations are being made
for the early departure of the flagship
New York and the cruisers Boston.
Marblehead and Banger for the coast
of Honduras.
By unanimous vote of the Athletic
council Iowa State college has elected
B. J. Wefers, once the world’s cham
pion sprinter, as track team trainer
for the coming season.
The statement 1b made in London
that Lord Charles Beresford has ac
cepted the command of the channel
rquadron. This will necessitate his re
tirement from parliament.
Nathan Doras, a diamond broker of
Philadelphia, was robbed of $7,000
Worth of diamonds within ten minutes
after stepping from a train on his ar
rival In Chicago from Cincinnati.
It is the present intention of the
navy department to order Captain Pur
nell F. Harrington, now at the New
York navy yard, to Bremerton, Wash.,
to take charge Of the navy yard
there.
| If. F. Kronskyn of Seoul. Korea, ar
rived In Tacoma on his way to New
York and Philadelphia to contract for
idols to be used in the heathen tem
ples of his country as well as for
China.
There were three deaths from the
plague Monday at Mazallan, Mex. Two
hundred and two patients with the
plague have been admitted to the laz
aretto since it was established and
121 have died.
J. S. Clarke, the Canadian agent in
Australia, cables that a hot wave has
struck Australia and is burning up the
vegetation in the pastoral districts
and undoing advantage derived from
the recent rains.
Albert Pfaff, who decorated and fur
nished most of the great trans-Atlantic
liners of the Hamburg-American and
North German Lloyd companies, died
in Berlin. He bequeathed about $500,
IRM> to various chanties.
A bill has been introduced in the
Wisconsin senate to make the teaching
of the doctrines of criminal anarchy a
felony and punishable by imprisonment
for not more than ten years or a line
of not more than $5,000, or both.
Dr. William R. Brooks, director of
Smith observatory and professor of
astronomy in Hobart college, has been
awared the comet medal of the Astro
nomical Society of the Pacific for the
discovery of his twenty-third comet.
The Belgium chamber of deputies
had a stormy discussion on a bill in
trodueed by the premier imposing a
tax on foreign companies having
branches in Belgium amounting to 2
per cent of their profits and requiring
them to publish annual sheets. A
commission was appointed to examine
the bill immediately.
Joseph Barry, the musical composer
and director of the South Wales school
of music, died in London.
Jesus Urueta has been selected by
President Diaz to represent Mexico at
the international educational congress
in Rome.
The Colorado senate passed the bill
appropriating $25,000 to defend the
Kansas-Colorado water suit.
Colonel R. H. Pratt has received of
ficial notification from the war de
partment that he has been retired as
colonel.
Im NEBRASKA LEGISiATUREf
I — • 11
* A Synopsis of Proceedings in Both Dr&nches of +
the Twenty-Eighth Genera.1 £
Assembly. +
j ?
SENATE.
Tn the senate on the 17th, senate file
No. 109, repealing the free text book
law, was reported back from the com
mittee for indefinite postponement. S.
F. 142, relating to insurance, and S. F.
85. also relating to insurance, were re
ported bark and placed on general file.
Senator Jennings’ resolution, asking for
the appointment of a committee to in
quire Into the affairs of the office of
the commissioner of labor, was adopted.
The chair appointed the following com
mittee to act under the resolution: Sen
ators Jennings. Hasty and O’Neill. The
following bill was introduced and read
the first time: To provide for and es
tablish a state accountant and to fix
a salary therefor, and to define his du
ties and to declare an emergency ex
isting. Providing that no person shall
be considered a qualified teacher who
has not reached the age of 17 years,
was considered in, committee of the
whole and reported back for indefinite
postponement. Providing that petition
ers who ask for more than one special
election in one year shall deposit the
cost of such election with the city or
village clerk, to be forfeited If they fall
to carry the proposition which they fa
vor. Repealing the law providing for
the payment of bounties for the destruc
tion of wild animals, was reported back
with the recommendation that It be lir
definitely postponed. Providing the
amount of fees to he colected by the
secretary of the state board of irriga
tion, and S. F. 138, relating to the stor
nge of water for Irrigation purposes,
were considered and reported back to i
bo engrossed for third reading.
- I
In the senate on the |Sth 8. F. 137
Water rights and irrigation passed. 8.
F. 49, providing that city treasurer shall
be ex-officio treasurer of school board
and providing for boards, passed. 8. F.
65, relating to marks and brands, passed.
8. F. 126, providing that state superin
tendents shall prescribe general course
of study, which school boards may fol
low. Amended that no change in text
books be required. BUI passed. Senate
went Into a committee of the whole with
Sloan of Fillmore In the chair. S. F. 120.
realting to school lands, and providing
when they shall revert to the state upon
non-payment of taxes or interest, amend
ed and ordered engrossed. 8. F. 191, by I
Young (by request) Joint resolution fix
ing the amount to be set apart for the
erection of a sodhouse and modern farm
buildings, showing the progress of Ne
braska, as an exhibit at the Louisiana
Purchase exposition. Mrs. Louise Bow
ser wants the state to give her $2,000 out
of Louisiana exposition appropriation.
She agrees to erect a two-rtory sodhouse,
with ft restaurant in lower story, upper
story to be open and public, all to cost
$20,600. 8. F. 192. by Sloan of Fillmore
(by request)—Re-enacting representative
feature in fraternal societies. S. F. 193,
by Marshall of Otoe (by request)--Defin
ing the name and purpose and providing
for the government and mulnlenance of
the Nebraska School for I he Blind. S. F.
194, by Marshall of Otoe (by request)—
Defining the name and purpose and pro
viding for the government and mainten
ance of the Nebraska School for the
S. F. 142, by llowell of Douglas, had
rough sailing In the senate on the 19th
nnd after a long discussion in the com
mittee of the whole no action was taken,
the bill to retain its place on general file.
The bill provides that before unincorpor
ated mutual companies shall have power
to Insure outside of the members of the
company or to pay officers more than $2
per day or to employ solicitors, the com
pany shall deposit with the state a surety
bond for $100,000. Standing committees re
ported the following bills for general file:
Defining dessert Ion of wife, husband or
minor child; regarding game and fish
commission and season for killing game;
no claim for subscription to news
paper or magazine shall be valid except
for time ordered; providing Jhat courts
may order judgments paid In install
ments; providing for the supersedeas of
cases appealed to supreme court ; provid
ing for bonds to 6c given by parties sell
ing liquor; H. R. 114, providing for the
printing of the report of state superin
tendent, amended that printing be let by
state printing board—recommended for i
passage; H. R. 4S. providing for cost of 1
bonds of school board treasurers to be
paid by districts recommended for pas
sage.
The following bills were reported bark
by committees in the senate on the 20th.
with the recommendation that they be
placed on tlie general file for passage:
S. F. 152. providing that the deposit of
a check or draft in a bank shall be
deemed evidence of due diligence in col
lecting the same; S. F. 128, providing
that no judge, sheriff, clerk or consta
ble shall be allowed to practice as an
attorney in any court of the county in
which they hold office; S. F. 149, pro
viding when an Injunction may be grant
ed by the court; S. F. 154. providing for
a commission to revise the statutes; S.
F. ST, providing that heads of families
shall have exempt from attachment $300;
S. F. 118, providing u proceeding to re
vive a judgment can only be brought
within five years after the judgment
becomes dormant; S. F. 125. providing
the articles of incorporation of a corpo
ration may be amended by a vote or
three-fourths of the capital stock; S. F
155, providing when a defendant is found
guilty the court shall render judgment,
including costs; S. F. 158, providing it
shall not be necessary to serve notice
of suit on a minor child to be adopted.
The following bills were read the third
time and passed: Senate file No. 38. de
fining conditions of child dependency,
prescribing methods of protection and
penalties for neglect; senate file No. 98,
to prevent the mutilation of horses by
docking; senate file No.-439, legalizing
bonds for t lie construction of Irrigation
eanals and works; senate file No. 120,
1 providing- if any lessee of educational
lands shall be in default of payment for
six months or any purchaser shall be in
default for one year the lands shall be
declared forfeited by the board of edu
cational lands and funds; house roll No.
32, providing for district ownership of
text books In cities; house roll No. 279,
appropriating $10,000 from the fund of the
hospital for the Insane at Norfolk, for
use of the hospital for the insane at
Lincoln; house roll No. 42, providing for
the organization of school board, salary
of secretary, etc.
HOUSE.
H. TU 202, by Good of Nemana, ap
propriating $2,800 out of the state library
fi nd for a library at the Peru Normal,
was passed In the house on the 17th,
as was also 11. R. 37, by McClay of
Lancaster, providing for state burial
grounds for Inmates of Lincoln chari
table Institutions. II. R. 135, by Tooley
of ('lister, providing that one-fourth of
the school apportionments to the vari
ous counties by distribution among
them on the basis of the number of
school districts instead of pupils, as
now, was defeated by a vote of 48 to
41. H. R. 103, by Jones of Otoe, pro
viding for district nominations and elec
tion by the people at large of all the
county commissioners, was recommend
ed for passage. Bills were introduced
as follows: To require street car com
panies in cities of the metropolitan class J
and of the first class to operate cars
during certain times after midnight,
prescribing maximum fares and pro
hibiting the collection of any fare from
any passenger who is not provided with
a scat. Requires one car hourly from
midnight to U a. m. and fixes maximum
fare at 3 cents. Fine of $.">0 to $100 for
violation. To entitle registered phar
macists of five years’ experience to a
renewal of registration without exami
nation. To repeal the law requiring
constructors of street railways to ob
tain the consent of the voters of the
municipality before building, without
which franchises may not be granted,
arid to repeal provisions requiring pre
cise route and termini to be named in
articles of incorporation, the route not
to exceed length of five miles. To au
thorize the organization of mutual in
surance companies to insure property
against loss or damage from tornadoes,
cyclones and wind storms.
In the house on the 18th II. R. 265,
by Burgess of Lancaster, providing for
an appropriation of $85,000 to erect a mus
eum and library building by the State
Historical society in Lincoln, was rec
ommended for indefinite postponement,
as was also II. R. 237, by Gilbert of
Douglas, providing for a commission of
engine and boiler inspectors. The house
took up a special order, the report of
the committee on public lands and build
ings that the Girls’ Industrial home at
Geneva be closed, on the plea that there
are not enough Inmates to justify its
maintenance, and that he inmates be re
moved to the Boys’ Industrial school at
Kearney. After vliscussion the report of
the committee was tabled. Sweezy
moved that two items in the bill approved
by the committee be stricken out. These
items were $450 for blue books furnished
by the State Journal company and $437.50
for bills furnished by Harry Porter.
Sweezy claimed that in the first place,
the contracts for these supplies ought
to be made by the house instead of the
secretary of state. lie disputed the fair
ness and justice of both bills, and de
clared as to the files that, while they
cost the house $1.75 each, they were
worth not more than 30 cents. The mo
tion was carried. New bills were intro
duced as follows: To license and provide
against the extortion of pawnbrokers and
to fix the maximum rate of interest
charged by them at 10 per cent per an
num, and to provide that pledged articles
must be advertised in a newspaper of
general circulation for four consecutive
weeks before they can be sold. Penalties
from $50 to $500. To declare void sales,
trades or other disposition of entire stock
of goods or merchandise, wholesale or
retail, or portions theref, in bulk or
otherwise than in the ordinary course
of the vendor’s business.
The house convened at 2 o’clock, on the
10th and Immediately went into commit
tee of the whole, considering bills on gen
eral llle. Among the important bills
acted on was H. It. 136, by Davis of Buf
i falo, providing for a Jeerease of interest
rate on county funds in bunks from 3 to
2 per cent and that counties may deposit
money within 50 per cent of the capital
stock of the bank instead of 30 per cent,
as now, and that Where banks located
in the county refuse cr neglect to bid
on said money or where there are no
banks in the county or none having suf
ficient capital stock, then any surplus
over the 50 per cent that the county may
receive shall be deposited in banks out
side of the county having sufficient cap
ital stock. This bill was recommended
for passage, as was also H. R. 7, by
Juhnel of Washington, changing the
method of appraising the damages In
condemnation proceedings by railroads,
and H. R. 51 by Cassel of Otoe, compell
ing road overseers to open ditches Ln
April and October, and II. R. 148 by
Perry of Furnas, allowing uniform fees
for sheriffs for service in justice, district
and county courts. 11. R. %, by Warner
of Lancaster, precipitated the house into
a brisk discussion in which Douglas
j county members, especially Kennedy,
figured prominently. It provides that the
| county supervisor shall be made the coun
I ty engineer and* have charge of all the
| work devolving upon the latter. It like
wise brought up the old bridge bill dis
cussion and Kennedy opposed the bill,
and finally secured the adoption of an
amendment excluding Douga'.a county
from the operation of the measure,
I which in Us amended form, was recom
i mended for passage.
; Two eventful proceedings occurred in
j the bouse on the 20th, one an appeal
! from the decision of the speaKer an4
| the other a call of the house to note
absentees and members present and not
j voting. Both came as a result of the
fight over H. R. 103, by Jones of Otoe,
the bill providing for the election of the
county commissioners by vote of the en
tire county, which had been denominat
ed a party measure. Jones, the author,
was absent and an effort was made to
have the bill passed over until the au
thor could be present. Sweezy and oth
ers opposed this. Sweezy, who was
against the bill, agreeing to pair with
Jones. The speaker ruled that action on
the bill should be taken, and Spurlock
of ('ass moved to appeal from the de
cision of the chair and was seconded by
McAllister of Deuel. The speaker was
sustained. The other remarkable inci
dent was when the bill was put to a
vote. Several members present refused
to vote, whereupon Douglas of Rock
moved I he call of the house and the
motion carried. The bill was finally lost,
fifty-one votes being necessary for pas
sage. The house then took up the bridge
bill, II. R. 112, and voted to recommit
it. It passed II. R. 79, by Loomis of
Dodge, requiring teachers in district
schools to keep school the statutory term
or make report showing the tax levy
has been made and is exhausted. The
house in committee of the whole recom
mended for passage 11. R. 127, by Mere
ulitD of York, as amended by Speaker
Mockett, providing that no intoxicating
liquors shall be sold on the premises or
within two miles of any federal army
post or fort; also H. R. 167, by Weborg
of Thurston, providing for a memorial to
congress for a constitutional amendment
permitting the popular election of United
States senators.
TO COMPEL MEN TO VOTE.
Representative J. A. C. Kennedy of
Douglas county may introduce a bill
providing for compulsory voting in cities.
Ho is known to be interested in the sub
ject and is said to be collecting data and
information with a view of drawing up
such a measure. A bill to compel every
qualified elector in the country districts
to vote already has been introduced into
the legislature by Representative Ellers,
and is known as II. R. 159, being now In
the hands of the committee on elections
and privileges. It provides a voting tax
of $3, a receipt for which shall be given
by the judges of election when each man
casts his ballot, the receipt to be ac
cepted by the county treasurer in pay
ment of the tax. The only other alter
native than paying the amount is a
sworn statement decalring physical dis
ability on election day. Mr. Ellers also
has introduced H. R. 158, which seeks to
make the general election day each year
a holiday, on which the schools and all
places of labor shall be closed.
To City Engineer Rosewater is given
the credit for originating the compul
s< ry voting idea for cities. He says:
"It is one of the reforms that I would
make to improve citizenship. If citizen
ship is good for anything it is worth
earning. 1 do not believe in sending
carriages variously labeled for people on
election day.
"I no believe, however, that if every
man is compelled to vote or pay a fine
we will get an honest expression at all
times, either in special or general elec
tions. I would have a board of regis
tration like a census board, to check over
the list of registered voters to see wheth
er each casts a ballot and to keep close
tab on the eligible voters of the city.
The fine that should he administered in
case of failure to vote should be enforc
ed by the board, and $5 for each offense
tvculd be the proper amount.”
TO CONSIDER BRADY S BIRD.
Through the efforts of Senator Brady
of Boone, a meeting of the joint railroad
committee will he held In the senate
cTiamber on Monday. The meeting will
be open to the public and will be for the
purpose of considering S. F. 102, \fhich
was introduced by Senator Brady. This
bill provides that any railroad company
operating within this state shall* when
requested in writing, by the owner, own
ers, or operators Oi any elevator, at any
station within this state through which
any railroad is operated, erect and main
tain a side track of suitable length to
approach as near as four fe#t of the outer
edge of their right of way when neces
sary, and in all cases to approach any
elevator that may be erected adjacent to
their right of way, for the purpose of
loading grain into cars from said ele
vator. The bill carries a clause providing
a penalty of fcl.OOO for failure by any
transportation company to comply with
the law.
In view of the great movement now
going on in this state in the way of or
ganizing co-operative elevator companies,
it is thought, by those interested, that
this bill is one of the most important, if
not the most important, now before the
legislature, especially to all country dis
tricts. The recent organization of farm
ers perfected in Uncoln looks for its
hardest light for life with the railroads
on the very point answered by S. F. 102,
and for that reason it is desired by the
friends of the measure that all parties
interested will lend their weight to help
carry u through.
T ELEPHON E 1N VEST IG ATI ON.
The meeting of the telephone investi
gation committee developed some excite
ment. Representative Morsman of
Douglas insisted on the right of cross
amination by Morsman. The efTect of
City Telephone company, who had been
brought from Minenapolis by the so
called Independent telephone people to
testify as to rates. Senator Warner of
Dakota, chairman of the committee, de
nied tills right, and then Senators
O’Neill, Giffin and Meredith sided with
Morsman and the result was that Jud
son was subjected to a rigid cross-ex
amination by Morsman. The ffect of
the cross-examination was not encour
aging to the independents, but rather
favorable to the Nebraska Telephone
side of the controversy. At the conclu
sion of the meeting Senator llowell of
Douglas took occasion to resent a state
ment made by President Yost of the
Nebraska Telephone company that he
bad come to Lincoln as representative
of the Omaha Commercial club.
NELSON’S BILL DOOMED.
It is said that Representative Nelson’s
negotiable instrument bill is doomed to
postponement. The measure is a long one.
codifying the laws relating to paper of
this character. It is a copy of the Ohio
law and in many ways is a good measure.
It is meeting the objections made against
all radical changes. The members have
not time to study it carefully, and besides
the citizens are against innovations no
matter how good they may be. Repre
sentative Jouvenat of the committee on
banks and currency is in doubt whether
to give the measure his support and oth
ers have so indicated.
NEBRASKA IN BRIEF.
There is much sickness in and about
Exeter, with some fatal terminations.
Judge Geo. G. Bowman, a well
known lawyer, dropped dead on the
street in Omaha from heart trouble.
The W. S. A. club of Table Rock
celebrated the 83d anniversary of the
birth of Miss Susan B. Anthony.
There is an epidemic of measles and
scarlet fever in the vicinity.of Taylor,
but as yet no fatalities have been re
ported.
James R. Alexander and wife have
sold to Edward Andrews 320 acres of
land in township nine, in Otoe county,
for 119,200.
The York camp of the Modern
Woodmen has passed a resolution op
posing any change in the present sys
tem of assessment.
The fight for the rural telephone
system in the vicinnty of Murray be
tween the Bell and independent com
panies is on hot, with the independ
ents in the lead.
Farmers in the vicinity of Vestra
are practically starving in the midst
of plenty by not. being able to get cars
to ship out wheat and corn to market.
This condition has existed since last
September.
What appears to be a very rich de
posit of lead was discovered in a
quarry a few miles west of Barneston,
Gage county, and considerable ex
citement prevails in that neighbor
hood as a result.
Alonzo Wymore, a widower, aged
about45 years, living with John Lar
son, on the George Joyce farm near
Alma, was found dead in bed by Mr.
Larson. Heart disease is supposed to
have caused death.
William Webber, while working with
a gang of men on the Burlington
bridge which spans the Missouri river
at Plattsmouth, fell to the ice below,
a distance of about seventy feet, and
was injured so badly that he died.
H. A. Cheney, president of the Se
curity bank of Creighton, has been
named as receiver of the Bank of Ver
digris, after a fruitless effort on the
part of the owner to furnish a suitable
bond to guarantee its liquidation by
himself.
W. J. O'Brien, superintendent of the
state fish hatcheries near South Bend,
received large consignments of trout
eggs from Bayfield, Wis., Manchester,
la., and Leadville, Colo. This makes
over 500,000 trout eggs now in process
of incubation at the hatcheries.
C. W. Kiser met with a singular ac
cident at Howe. He and W. B. Cooney
were digging the grave of Mrs. W. A.
Wright. The ground was frozen hard.
Cooney was using an ax to cut the
soil and struck Kiser on the hand,
splitting the hand open almost the
length of it.
Cyrus Kelley, aged fourteen, was
out hunting near the home of his half
brother, Jerry Kelley, on the Loup,
Garfield county line. The gun he car
ried was discharged accidentally, the
charge striking him on the right side
of the chin and ranging through the
head. Death was instantaneous.
Mr. Hellfly, a traveling man, in
York, met a little girl near the post
office who was not dressed very com
fortably, and on questioning the girl
she told him her feet were cold. Mr.
Hellfly at once took the little girl into
a shoe store and bought her a new
pair of warm shoes.
Rev. E. E. Wilson, who has been
pastor of the Methodist Episcopal
church in Nebraska City for the past
five months and who, before coming,
was a missionary in South America,
has been selected by the Methodist
Episcopal missionary board of New
York city as missionary to Porto Rico.
After being out five hours the jury
in the case of the State of Nebraska
against Charles Cain, charged with
robbing a Rock Island freight car at
Beatrice last fall, returned with a
verdict finding the defendant guilty of
petit larceny. Judge Letton sentenced
him to the county jail for thirty days
at hard labor and ordered him to pay
cost of prosecution.
At Long Pine after driving his
wife and stepson from the room with
a revolver, Fred R. Ingalls turned the
weapon on himself and inflicted a
probably fatal wound in the head. The
family was at dinner when the tragedy
happened. Ingalls is the official watch
maker for the Elkhorn and has long
been in business at Long Pine. An
uncontrollable appetite for drink,
which has ruined his health, was the
cause of the deed.
John Shoemaker, living one mile
east of Bertrand, while working with
a corn sheller at William Karstens,
was caught in a shaft, breaking both
bones of his right arm, causing a
compound fracture and other bruises.
Governor Mickey has paroled Chas.
L. Sharp of Papillion. Sharp has been
serving a sentence at the penitentiary
for car robbing, committed on the
Rock Island. The parole was granted
at the request of several prominent
Papillion people, who have taken aD
interest in the man.
PROSPERITY IN CANADA.
The Farmer In Western Canada Achieves
Wonderful Success.
One of the first things that the man
who wishes to change his residence
endeavors to find out is where he can
go and succeed. It need be a matter
of little doubt or indecision now. Dur
ing the past four or five years the de
velopment of Western Canada has
been so rapid, and the conditions of
life there so widely known, that up
wards of 500,000 Americans have taken
up their homes there, and the experi
ence of these people is that they are
thoroughly satisfied with their choice
of home.
The methods of farming there are
similar to those adopted in the United
States, but the operations are simpler,
the yield of grain greater and the
profits more satisfactory. Ranching
is carried on with lots of success.
Mixed farming is always profitable,
while the results in grain-raising are
as certain as splendid soil, excellent
climate and lots of sunlight can give.
The yields of-, but nothing is as
satisfactory as the experience of the
farmer himself, and extracts are se
lected from one.
A good. Intelligent farmer named
Mears, John Mears to be exact, left
Cavalier county, North Dakota, two
years ago and followed the thousands
whp had already gone to Canada. He
had twenty-five years’ experience in
Minnesota, in buying grain, including
flax, but in all his experience he never
saw a district so well suited to the
growth of flax as Western Canada.
The financial results of Mr. Mears’
operations in a single season are as
follows: Wheat, 3,000 bushels, 1 hard,
at 5714c, $1,785; 2,680 bushels 1 North
ern, at 54c, $1,457.20; Oats, 1,750 bush
els, at 35c, $612.50; Speltz, 154 bush
els, at 75c, $115.50; Flax, 324 bushels,
at $2, $628. Total, $4,598.20, a return
of more than $4,500 from a little over
250 acres, an average of $18 per acre,
is surely testimony sufficiently strong
to satisfy the most incredulous as to
the money to be made out of the soil
of the Canadian West. It is to facts
like these—arguments expressible and
demonstrable in dollars and cents—
that the steady northward movement
of American farmers is due. Mr.
Mears is settled near Areola, Assa.
A number of Americans who have
chosen Western Canada as a home
had the idea that a man enjoyed less
freedom in Canada, but they soon
found their mistake, and say the laws
of Canada are the most liberal in the
world, and such as prevent the litiga
tion which breeds so much bad feel
ing between people in the United
States and costs them so dear in law
yers’ fees.
me government has estaonsnea
agencies at St. Paul, Minn.; Omaha,
Neb.; Kansas City, Mo.; Chicago, 111.;
Indianapolis, Ind.; Milwaukee, Wis.;
Wausau, Wis.; Detroit, Sault Ste.
Marie and Marquette, Mich.; Toledo,
Ohio; Watertown, S. Dakota; Grand
Forks, N. Dakota, and Great Falls,
Mont., and the suggestion is made
that by addressing any of these, who
are authorized agents of the govern
ment, it will be to the advantage of
the reader, who will be given the
fullest and most authentic informa
tion regarding the results of mixed
farming, dairying, ranching and grain
raising. and also supply information
as to freight and passenger rates, eta
Trust not the woman that thinketh
more of herself than another; mercy
will not dwell in her heart.
ONLY TEN DOLLARS FOR THREE
MONTHS’ TREATMENT.
DrH. Richards & Van Camp of 1404 Farnam St.t
Omaha. Neb., treat Catarrh and guarantee a cure.
The doctors are old established and reliable phy
sicians of Omaha. Their treatment includes a
lung tester Inhaler, local and constitutional
treatment, and they guarantee to cure any case
of catarrh of the nose, throat or lungs in ninety
days or refund the money. If you nre afflicted or
interested call or write for further information.
Social reformers seldom think it
worth while to qualify themselves for
their task.
RED CROSS BALL BLUE
Should be in every home. Ask your grocer
for it. Large 2 oz. package only 5 cents.
Those who cater to evil propensities
never satisfy the hunger of their pa
trons.
Mrs. Winslows nootninK Syrup.
For children teetblnp:, soften, the gum,, reduce, in*
dammatlun, allay, pain, cure, wind colic. 25c a bottle.
Even the comparatively sober have
no objection to the gold cure.
- WHEN YOU BUY STARCH
buy Dedance and Ret the best, 18 oa. for
10 cents. Once used, always, used.
If you have a heart never let the
world know it. It is such awfully bad
form.
«miiiih >■■■■■■■ i 'iiii'iinimn|
SAVE MONEY I
Buy your goods at M
Wholesale Prices. ■
! Our l.OOO'P&ge catalogue will be sent ■
upon receipt of 15 cents. This amount ■
does not even pay the postage, but it is ■
sufficient to show us that you are acting ■
in good faith. Better send for it now. ■
Your neighbors trade with us —why not ■
you also Y §f
2 CHICAGO |
The house that tells the truth. M
VMMiiiiiHHr
StfIMOLLER & MUELLER]
-SELL AN-—
ELEGANT
PIANO
FOR ONLY $168.00
On S5 Monthly Payments. Write {or
Catalogue, PriceI, Etc. ^
SCHMOLLER & MUELLER
Manufacturers. Wholesale and Retail Piano Dealers
1313 FARNAM STREET. OMAHA