The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 17, 1919, Image 3

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    This summer don’t spend hours over a hot stove!
Serve Libby’s delicate Corned Beef chilled — it
will give you an entirely neW.,idca.t)f how easily
an appetizing summer meal can be prepared
Get a package from your grocer today.
Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago
% A spinster says a stolen kiss Is bet
ter than no kl»s at all.
‘-‘BAYER CROSS” ON
“Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” to be
genuine must be marked with the
safety “Bayer Cross.” Always buy an
unbroken Bayer package which con
tains proper directions to safely re
lieve Headache, Toothache, Earache.
Neuralgia. Colds and pain. Handy tin
boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few
cents at drug stores—larger packages
also. Aspirin is the trade mark of
Bayer Manufacture of Monoaeetic
ncidester of Salicylicacid.—Adv.
PUT PROFITS INTO DIAMONDS j
Many Reasons Why Increased Demand
for Precious Stones Invariably
Follows Devastating War.
Tlie waste of war, by which manj
suffer and few reap returns, is always
accompanied by a demand for precious
stones. This war has differed only
from other wars in that the demand
| was greater. Profiteers in the allied
f countries have bought for the purpose
of display. Profiteers in enemy coun
tries waut diamonds, because they sup
ply the safest way of concealing new
ly acquired wealth. As the diamond
Industry is the closest corporation in
the world, values are not likely to de
predate, unless all the profiteers want
to change their investments at the
same time. At tlie present moment
the price Is higher than it has ever
been.
The diamond dealer is of all trad
ers the least hampered by office re
strictions. He frequently carries the
bulb of bit stock in trade about with
him In his waistcoat pocket. The pub
lic street is, as often as not, ids only
market place. In Union gardens,
which Is the chief center of the dia
mond industry in Loudon, may fre
quently be seen little groups of two.
three, or more well-dressed men, peel
ing intently through little, monocle
lenses at gems worth many thousands ;
of dollars.
Call not that man wretched who,
whatever ills he suffers, hits a child to
love.—Southey.
FARMERS ARE WORKING HARDER
And using their feet more than ever before.
For ail these workers the frequent use of
Allen’s F\t>ot=Ease, the antiseptio, healing
powder to be shaken into the shoes and
sprinkled in the foot-bath, increases their
efficiency and insures needed physical com
fort. It takes the Friction from the Shoe,
freshens the feet, and prevents tired, ach
ing and blistered feet. Women everywhere
are constant users of Allen’s Foot=Ease.
Don’t get foot sore, get Allen’s Foot=Ease.
Sold by dealers everywhere.—Adv.
It is far bettor to give work which
is above the men than to educate the
men to tie above the work.—Ruskin.
The charm of a bathroom is its spot
lessness. By the use of Red Cross Ball
Blue, all cloths and towels retain their
whiteness until worn out. 5c.
NO NEED FOR THEM TO PART
Young Msn Willing to Sacrifice Him
self to Soften Slow to Poor
Father-in-Law.
The young rnan hail asked him for
file hand of Ids daughter, and a pang
wrung the fatherly heart of Sir. Jones
as he looked at the youth, and thought
of the bitterness of parting with his
well-beloved eldld.
“I suppose. Oliver.” be said at last,
“It is only natural and right that when
the young birds have become old
enough to fly, they should leave their
parental nest and go with their chosen
mates to build nests of their own, and
yet It pains ine when I think of one
of my fledglings getting retidy to flj
away.”
“Tills seems to be a good sized nest,"
suggested the young man. anxious to
soften the blow: “perhaps you'd ratio
er have me and Gertie stay here.”
Choice of Girla.
First Guest—Won't you .join me in
requesting young Squalls to recite?
Second Guest—Hut I don't like reci
tations.
First Guest—Neither do I. Hut if
the .voting beggar doesn’t recite he'll
sing.-—Stray Stories.
The Real Spendthrift
“Kasy money always goes quickly."
“Yes. Nobody spends money quite
so recklessly as the man who lias just
borrowed a sum.”
ffljSBtHiitiHin’HiniiiiiniHHiisiiiHiiiHHHiiiiiHiifJiiisnaiiraiiijffljiEHnTJifiiiiiiimis
S S
i i
| You Hesitate to Give I
* 1 Coffee to Children I
I I
1 Then why give it to grown
~ 1 folks? You can pleasantly
f solve the question of a
IS table drink by giving all
the family i
Postum Cereal [
Boiled full , 5 minutes after 1
boiling begins, it tastes
much like superior coffee. I
Its an economy.
:
At Grocers. !
s
Two sizes, usually sold at 15c and 25c |
HOW DEMPSEY TRAINS.
I do not know sa much about Dempsey*»
pifefhod of training as I do about that of
\Villard. The day I saw him exercise he
bCKgn by pulling weights. This developed
•'especially the muscles of his shoulders
girdle, the upper part of his back and
bjs arms. Tie worked for speed quite as
*much as for strength. He next spent
several minutes in punching a heavy
punching hag. It was said that this bag
was shaped somewhat like the human
body and weighed 75 pounds. This was
followed by an exhibition of skill in
punching an ordinary light punching bag.
With a novice this exercise trains the eye,
the sense of location, speed and direction
especially. With an experienced bag
puncher fancy punching does not call for
much nor train much.
Then followed two very swift rounds
of boxing with a husky opponent. Under
ordinary circumstances this becomes six
rounds, two with each of three opponents.
Tins is followed by a bath and rubbing
down.
There were rumors of all kinds of ex
ercises taken in secret. How much of
this rumor is truth I do not know. It
is certain that Dempsey takes long walks
daily. A part of the distance covered is
done at a run.
^i\oad work takes off weight and in
creases wind and endurance. It likewise
develops the muscles of the legs. It is
said that he spends some time in wrest
ling. Wrestling calls for much better
muscle development as well as much
better wind and more endurance than
does prize fighting. Pugilists are all the
better for having small Tegs—considering
the method classifying by weight.
Wrestlers must be strong in the legs. (
Wrestling especially develops the mus
cles of the neck and trunk. 1 have never ■
seen a prize fighter who impressed me
as being so good a physical specimen as
is any one of several wrestlers.
Dempsey is reputed to spend some time 1
each day on the beach in bathing trunks.
At any rate, the skin of his body Is
burned to reddish brown about as deep
as that df an Indian. Skin of this color
holds back the heat rays of the sun.
I presume he does nothing to keep his
back straight. At any rate, he has con
siderable curve in the region of his ribs.
Much of this is due to the crouching
position in which he spends so much of ,
his time, since it is his position in boxing
ortrl ffo’litinc'
Certainly, He Knew.
From the Buffalo Commercial.
An American gob in England, Standing
on the platform of the railroad station,
stepped on the scales to weigh himself.
Tne scale; was graduated by stones, a
stone being equal to 14 pounds. He seemed
to have some difficulty in figuring it out
and finally an English gentleman stepped
up and said: ‘ Can’t you tell your weight, ;
Jack?”
“Sure,” replied the gob, “It's about 11
•tones, two bricks and a couple of boards.” ,
Coy Mary.
From Everybody’s Magazine.
Jat didn’t know how to pop the ques
tion and appealed to his mother. Then
to the girl of his heart—“Mary,” said he,
“mo mother wants to know if ye’ll come
and live with us always?” •
“Go home,” said Mary very coyly, “and
tell your mother I will.”
To Make Sure.
From Whizz-Bang.
“Where you very sick with the 'flu,’ j
Bast us?”
“Sick? Sick? Man, Ah was so sick
mos’ every night Ah look in dat er casu- ,
ally list for mah name.”
An Expert.
From Heads Up.
Capt. Hardboiled—What did you do Vn
civil life, Jones? *
Jones—I was vice president of the Jones
Rubber Company.
Capt. Hardboiled—Good, you can pump
up my motorcycle tires.
Not a Chance.
From the Arkansas Thomas Cat.
To Miss Emma Zetwald: There ain’t a
chance in the world for the girl that wears
oversize white stockllngs. i
Shoot!
From the Knoxville Sentinel.
"Dear.” I cried, resolved to change her.
'There are words I burn to .say!”
Then she made this cryptic answer, “All
right, Charlie, blaze away.”
Maud Muller Motoring.
Maud Muller on a summer’s day
Was driving rather fast, they say. j
The constable, who had a grudge.
Took her before a county judge.
The county judge. In surly tones, !
Fined pretty Maud eleven bones. I
She paid it with a haughty stare.
There wasn’t any romance there.
—Louisville Courier-Journal. 1
Tax Slackers.
rrom x ith t\e\v iurji v omniertiai.
In ft »ston the members of a firm of
A’ool dealers have been found guilty of
m att<-nipt to de^aud the government of
ncome tax returns and have been st n
enred to pay a fine of $10,000 each and to
ierve is months in prison. They recently
ried to compromise by an offer to pay the
government $1,IiOO,QO.>. In such a case as
his the ends of justice are best served by
i prison sentence, as a mere fine could ,
nerely be charged off to expense account.
Eh ere has been no great outcry against
lie income tax as a war measure, and
renerallv speaking it has been eonscien
ioualy observed. Tax dodgers ar? slack- ,
*rs and for th • sake of those who have
lone their duty faithfully those who seek «
0 escape their responsibility by dishonest
netho.ls should be made to pay the pen
ilty.
WOMAN LECTURES WOMAN.
Women are beginning to n. sent the
.iea of being sex limited Equal suffrage
b only an expression of theli determina
ion to be recognized as man's (quid. '
Adieu Stanley Hall wrote “Adolescence,'' j
1 generation ago he made Home ,tate- I
nenla i dative to the physical and mental I
lecuiinrities of women which many women }
•eseuied as Implying that the was cor.* t
fitctio.idlly Ihfc. Lor. > Since that Mn;c 1 <
evcr.,1 physiologists nave made kind: on ( ;
t tcme-.itf, and whenever they do women ' I
lit Lack. i <
The rank and file are beginning to take I
tp the cadgeln of their sex r.ot only *
igiinst men but against those of their i
iwn .sox who by their lives, fotnlsh basis 1
or the resented opinions. The willing- '
less of women to undertake uny and •
ill kinds of labor as well as every kind 1
f sedentary en ployraent is In pint due 1
o The fact that women feel than their 1
•apneity has been t hullenged.
Those who feel that they are engaged !
n demonstrating the capacity of women* ‘
c»er>t the conduct of Uie flabby women '
she do little far 25 day* a month and 1
hen spend three days in bed nursing Ills ,
leculiar to their sex. They resent the !
i-orking girl who periodically absent, hsr- |
elf from work. They are beginning to
esent the woman who keeps nt work but l
dm during the lliree days or thereabouts >
loses up on gin or whisky or a«plriu or 1
wo of these in combination They say t
hat she furnishes ground for the con- ' ]
tuition of those who say that woman is 1
iirerinr in constitution. Furthermore. 1 I
hey say that il is liar svr ,■ and use- .
;ss. and tv»> •=.*»., 1 mi.: In a: cord.
♦ ♦
♦ SIMPLY GOOD BUSINESS. ♦
♦ -<-■ ♦
4 Prom the T*os Angeles Times. 4
4 "I wonder if it pays to be de- 4
4 cent?” queried a $26-a-w«ek clerk, 4
4 speaking to tin* writer of this para- 4
4 graph. 'Tve been a respectable, 4
4 law-abiding man for 20 years and 4
4 all I have to show for it is only a 4
4 few* hundred dollars in the bank, 4
4 no automobile, no comforts or 4
4 luxuries to speak of. not even a 4
4 diamond ring for my wife. Why, I 4
4 know soap box anarchists that 4
4 make more money than I do.” 4
4 Yet. In spite of his verbal explo- 4
4 slon, the speaker really didn't 4
4 “wonder if it pays to be decent"— 4
4 not a bit of it! He lias his health, a 4
4 living wage, his happy home and 4
4 hi* well earned good name, and in 4
4 his heart he knows eery well that 4
4 It has paid him to be decent, if it 4
4 did not pay to be “on the square” 4
4 the percentage of thieves anil 4*
4 scoundrels, compared to honest 4
4 men, would be 10 to one -and who 4
4 does not know that the opposite 4
4 ratio is nearer the truth? 4
♦ ♦
♦ + fA + +44444444444444.
D©t any person who disposes to differ
lead a booklet by Dr. C. D. Mosher, of
Iceland Stanford university. The booklet
is really a lecture given to n Y. W. O. A.
convention and an amplification of her
talk to girls at Leland Stanford.
She says that wo woman who is organi
cally sound need suffer from any of the
periodic troubles peculiar to women. By
tlie persistent daily use of one exercise
most women can cure themselves of these
troubles. 1 quote her instructions.
AH tight clothing having been remov 'd,
the woman lies down on a level surface.
The knees are flexed and to secure per
fect relaxation the arms arc placed at
the sides. One hand rests on the abdo
men without making any pressure. It is
merely to serve as an indicator of the
amount of movement. She is directed to
see how high she can raise her hand
by lifting the abdominal wall and then
to see how far the hand will be lowered
by the complctest contraction of the ab
dominal walls—drawing in of the abdo
men.
The exorcise is repeated 10 times. It is
carried out twice a day, preferably before
dressing In the morning and after un
dressing in the evening. It is to be taken
dally but especially is not to be neglected
during menstruation.
Lost Trade Secrets.
From the Boston Globe.
Numerous are the trafte secrets handed
down generation by generation from
father to son, and vast is the capital made
out of some of them in the commercial
world of today. Many, alas, are the price
less trade secrets buried far down below
the moldtring dust of the misty past and
lost to the world, perchance never acpin
to be recovered. Whal would a Royal
Aoademician of the present day give tu
be possessed of the secret held by the old
masters for mixing their colors so es to
render them imperishable and impervious
to the ravages of time? The red colors
especially of these artists of a bygone
epoch are every whit as bright now as
they were three long centuries ago. On
the contrary, the colors of pictures
painted only 100 years ago have lost their
luster, and are faded and decayed to a
deplorable extent. Again, in the world
of music, the 'manufacturers of violins
treasured a recipe for varnish that sank
into the wood of their incomparable in
strument, and mellowed it as well as pre
served It. With such extreme, relentless
jealousy, however, did they guard their
great secret that it. too, is lost, to all ap
pearances, irretrievably. Rather more
thaiMK) years ago there lived in a quaint
old world village in Wales a working
blacksmith, who had managed, by some
means or other, to bring the welding of
<teel to such a pitch of perfection that the
joint was absolutely Invisible and the
temper of the steel as fine as on the day
tt left the tester’s hands. He was offered
arge and tempting sums to divulge his
secret, but he kept it obstinately to him
self, and when his span of life had run
its course he took it with him to another
world.
The man who could disinter the buried
*eeipe for Roman mortar would he bowed
lown to and worshiped by the builders
>f the present day. How they made it is
l profound secret and bids fair to remain
so. The mortar is as firm now as it was
1,000 years ago; it has calmly scoffed at
:he ravages of tiifce and weather.
Mow First We Stand and Understand,
Mow first we stand and understand
\iul sunder false from true,
Vnd handle boldly with the hand
\nd see and shape and do.
Dash hack that ocean with a pier,
Show yonder mountain fiat.
\ railway there, a tunnel here,
tfix we this zone with that.
Ring me my horse—my horse? my wings
Phat I may soar the sky
r'oi- thought into the outward springs
find her with the eye.
For as the Future vaults her skies.
From this my vantage ground
l'n those ptil, working energies
«pj nor term nor hound.
we surpass our fathers’ skill,
)ur sons will shame our own;
t thousand things are hidden still
Ind not a hundred known.
\nd had some prophet spoken true
)f all we shall achieve
Hu* wonders were so wt'.dly ihw,
real no man would believe.
dean while my brothers, work, and widd
fbc* forces of today,
l»nd plow the Present like a field,
Ind garner nil you may!
fou. what the cultured surface grow*,
Di*p< nsa with careful hands;
Jeep under deep forever goes,
leaven over heaven expands.
—Teivny.on.
Teacher* Mill Hands.
From Fiber and Fabric.
The high wages and improved working
ondiitenr. I»v c?u’te>rtll* mills are attract'
rig many workers from other orctipa
Ions. and while thousands of alien work*
rs are gathering up their loot and prt par.
ug to leave the country more thousand*
»t desirable jieople are going into the
iiIlls, so that the gain more than offsets
he Joss and mill work begins to regain
ts high standing. Jtc^ort covuvh from
•Jew Uedford that Jk school teachers fi&ve
applied for work In the milLs of that city
or the summer vacation. Superintendents
nd overseers should find places for these
vorkers, us. given two months’ work in
he mills, they will never teach school
.gain, and it is the Intelligent elans of
worker*’ that will finally replace the alien
• rates and make mill work popular.
■ - -■ • ■— -
The Proper Treatment.
From the San Francisco Chronicle.
A few days ago a man in New York
■'as sent to prison for three years and
Ir: months for killing a pedestrian with
i- speeding auto. Nine years before the
a me man w as indicted for killing another
edestiian In the same manner, but the
ndlctment was dismissed. Speed mania
* ft uisease, and those afflicted with it
hould not be permit**! to drive a machine
me tie* iisexso is detected.
i
BIG POTATO YIELD
Western Canada Man Raised 500
Bushels on Two Acres.
He Think* He Did Pretty Well but
There Were Even Larger Crc is
In the Neighborhood—Live
Stock Men Prosper.
As a by-product the yield of potatoes
on the farm of Ben Pawson of Coal
dale, Alberta, was somewhat of a pny
iug proposition. Coaldale Is In the
Medicine Hat district of Alberta. Med
icine Hat is n place, pictured In the
mind of many Americans, where the
weather man holds high carnival, and
when he wants to put a little life or
spirit Into the people just moves the
mercury down a few notches. The
rascal has thus given Medicine Hat a
rather unenviable place on the map.
But It isn’t half as bad as It is pic
tured. Anyway. Ben Pawson likes It.
Last year he grew six hundrtd bush
.a e M aA.a a ___ m i
» w* vu v ui.tva v* iihim
that had no special preparation, and
only the usual precipitation, or rain,
as the less cultured would call It.
When he couldn’t work at his hay or
grain, because of the damp mornings,
he gave them some attention. And
then evenings between supper and
chores and bedtime he gave them some
work. Anyway his yield was six hun
dred bushels, and he sold the whole
lot for $285. Ben la satisfied. Still 1
there were larger yields than this In
the neighborhood.
If one might speak of hogs In the
same breath In which you speak of po
tatoes, there Is nothing In the ethics
of literature that would create a de
barment. Taking advantage of this
license It will not be out of place to
state that large potato yields ore not
the only feature of Interest In tills
new and Interesting country. Amongst
others hogs are having a good deal of
attention. Not long ago, hogs reached
the $24.00 mark on the Calgary market.
It doesn’t cost much to raise a hog
>ind very little to bring him to a weight
of 200 pounds. Don’t cost much ! Cer
tainly not. Bat wlmt about the man who
recently paid $350 for n Duroc Jersey
Hoar? That was all right. That man
'.new wlmt he was doing. He was do
'{.g what a great ninny other farmers
in Western Cnnndn are doing today.
He Is acting on the old “saw," thnt
“It costs no more to raise a good crit
ter than a poor one." That Is the rea
son that Western Cnnuda Is looming
large In the live stock world. The best
Is none too good. The same may be
raid of horses, cattle, yes, and sheep,
too. The very best sires and dams
of the best breeds are purchased. And
while big prices are paid, It is felt thnt
the demand for pure-bred stock at
home and abroad will bring returns
which will warrant any reasonable
price that may be asked.—Advertise
ment."
Double Capacity.
“Old Man Bobbitts is a mean con
eeni, Isn’t lie?"
“Mean? Why, that old skinflint is
a regular twin screw.” — Baltimore
American.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTOKIA, that famous old remedy
for Infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of|
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
State Leads in Blind.
Pennsylvania lms more blind people
among Its residents than any other
state, but the percentage Is greater It.
_ __ I
TO TREAT HORSE COLIC
No Drenching — A Child Can Give It
« mki eon cvuunuD
Old Kentucky Mfg. Co., Inc., Paducah, Ky.
t.OOU ACiilift, schools, railroad, telephone. '
fenced, uLuudance water; 1,400 a. meadow,
»pen lo forest reserve; A-l for stock, dairy,
rheep ranch; In the temperate Bitter Itoot
Talley Oeo. F' Brooks, own.. Missoula. Mont.
— ~
| EVERYTHING FAILED
Then Mrs. Bozarth Used Doan’s
for Kidney Trouble. Says
Worth Weight in Gold.
“Doan’s Kidney Pills are worth
j their weight in gold for they cured-fne
after all other medicine had failed,”
says Mrs. B. Bozarth, 87 Water St.,
Mt. Holly, N. J. “For over three years
I was in misery.
“The pain in my back
grew worse until I had
to go to bed. I did
nothing but toss about.
The (tinging pains shot
through my bodv and
my bead ached and
throbbed. Mv eyes felt
ae though they would
bulge out of my head.
The blinding dizzy spells
Ufa. Baurtfc made me think I was
going to lose my mind.
Everything would turn dark.
“The kidney secretions burned, were
the color of coffee and paused every
few minutes in very small amounts. I
felt all a-flutter with nervousness. I
scarcely ate anything and I lost twenty
four pound*. I felt ehort of breath and
my heart would palpitate. Sometimes I
would shake all over and become numb.
"Doan's Kidney Pills soon gave me
relief. I couldn't believe this little 00c
box had helped me after the doctors’
expensive treatments had brought no
results. Three boxes of Doan's cured
me. Sworn to before me,
R. J. B. SLACK. Notary Public.
Gel Dean's at Aar Stare. OOe a Boa
DOAN'S VS5V
FOSTEIt-MILBURN CO. BUFFALO. N. Y.
DAISY FLY jgiaaajjgaB
^idi jmim j—aha all flies, lieat
^ clean .ornamental cob
utsSiSruA
HjOWREgsrCBlIlAill metal, can't spill «nr
HRayTtanJflRjhKSVVPfiRfi uP®w; win not. eat)
KSTw gORQMS SI Sf In Jam anything.
WBfclW^iC^KgL^WMMj Guaranteed effective.
KSEsffiEf * JMsusk.
^4WUSSSl£*hiMfcr prepaid, ti.s.
■ABOUD SOJUBSt, IN MKalbAm.BrMklm, H. Y.
MILLIONS
Suffer from
Acid-Stomach
Millions of people suffer year after year
from ailments affecting practically every
part of the body, never dreaming that their
111 health can be traced directly to acid
stomach. Here Is the reason: poor digestion
meuns poor nourishment of the different
organs and tissues of the body. The blood Is
impoverished—becomes weak, thin, sluggish.
Ailments of many kinds spring from such
conditions. Biliousness, rheumatism, lum
bago. sciatica, general weakness, loss of
power and energy, headache. Insomnia*
nervousness, mental depression—even more
serious ailments such as catarrh and cance#
of the stomach, intestinal ulcers, clrrkund*
of the liver, heart trouble—all of these can
often be traced directly to acid-stomach.
Keep a aharp lookout for the first symp
toms of acid-stomach—Indigestion, heart
burn, 'belching, food repeating, that awful
painful bloat after eating, and sour, gassy
a tomach. BATONIC, the wonderful modern
remedy for acid-stomach, la guaranteed to«
bring quick relief from these stomach mis
eries. Thousands say they never dreamed
that anything could bring such speedy relief
—and make them feel mo much better in
every way. Try BATONIC and you, too,
will be Just as ent? isiastlc in its praise.
Make your life worth living —no aches or
painn—no blues or im.-lAttch.1y—no more of
thst tired. II-*' j feeling. II* well and.
strong. Get I; . your physical ar.d mental
punoh; your vim. vigor and vitality. You
will always be weak and ailing us long as*
you have Hdd-8tom.,ch. So get lid c»f 11 now,.
Take BATONIC Tablets—they ta*le good—
you eat them like a bit of candy. Yourr
druggist has BATONIC—60 cents for a big1
box. Get a box from hjm today and If you.
ire not satisfied he will refund your money.
FATONIC
croft VOUR ACID-STOMACH)
Aerial Wonder
The Aerial Balloon climbs high into air by
its own power. Greatest novelty hit iq
years. Every boy and girl wants one.
Send 10 cents iq-coin to SANO SALES
CO., P. O. Box 1404. Des Moines. Iowa
SiOUX CITY, PTG. CO, NO. 29-1919.
Wed Cbtai&’sSk.
“Horn o£ Plenty" % 3k^
f^Sgf Western Causd a for M
ryqgr yearshas helped to teed S
if the world—the same resporisi- §w
f'/il'irfV'c _ * —^ fcilit y of production still re3ts upon her. B
IfL. /i?;SL™y gWhi’.e t i«h prim for Grain, Cattle and Sheep R
TJjwryffljW'S' are cure to remain, price of hind w much below its vclu*. Js
a •&"&?/ * Land capablo of yielding20 to45 bush- §§
fj f «!* of wheat to tho aero can bo had on 1
— rTY 'fc easy terms at front $2S to ¥30 per «1
aero—good grazing land at much less. §§
J*MgSQj3&££rSa**[ Many farms paid for from n single year’s crop. Raising B
FA A^i.A cattle, ehec^ and hogs hr into equal success. The Government H
’ jrTfe»JpUaJrccSwjitAV' -.ct encourages farming and stock raining. Railway and B
landCompanieioffsrsnuauallndncemsstato Home Seek- 9
KwMiSSCTh ScV*r.V*- *■ “r‘,us may oe stocked by loans at moderate interest, fl
E *..-it VaA ’jarPly Wcetern Caneesoffers low taxation, good markets end shtjj- ■
Bt tree schools, churches and healthful climate. s PS
I®(lj*^w Kd|* tvw tWsSt Kcr particulars aa to rtaiurad railway rureg. toenhonof laad, tiler
»'‘r$£Oy/* t*at*d Ltcratuffc. ©Ic.. atn)Iy Co ^u>t. of Inamie..OVt\«a, Csa.. ot
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