The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, May 03, 1917, Image 7

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\ ~££z-^rm-^TfiO Acres
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free to * ^ to m«» »**sWi
2 S1X^J acres of I
sr h^DRED ^sD/HOMESTEAD ndto
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Ba t ng Mother.
I- I t »U Mud e'harlle.
“I - - larlldiif that Mould make
Ji * ®f tUtM/M Vt
* •• • Mi.it?" ftftkeel t«i4»:twr.
"•i'jrt! ' Mi4 tlw- Ilfg
Enthusiastic Praise for Well
Known Kidney Medicine
I • t • ‘ T.4 a Bwdi nr for t!s*
pa** r .fleet «*-.-» to tvagM* «*t rahie
• K I: »Jt to tt''U
b ■ - • m m. i > Tv^'riRwTi led Ac
e~ * . *.* ‘ r--j.rt» re-need from tbow
« . o J r. I ats met. irf!> that it
i* A r»Bic *- lt»4 *!H t.w
sat riAl'ixmftf at p* •#*
Vm trulr nivri
V V 1U.RU: hrufr-*:
Sept fl, MUt Oxford Neb.
fre e What Souap-Eoot W.U Do for Yoa
• tea ws'j to Dr. K. r-wr A Co..
I ; . - =.- a. N. Y'., lor a aaa.pie mm bet
t 1 - Will ***«are art. tie Y oa will
a - r- - -e a Doi^et «! tCaable lafor
t 1-4 r t about -te ki iaet . id blad
der V -a wr - .of, be »urr aad nwnljon
tie {*•■— Re* -T Bfty-eea* aad one
e r» lor •» t at ail drug
w-rm — Ad».
THOUGHT IT “REGULAR TALK**
L tt e k -se-ja-^en Attendant la Very
M_c*■ S.-o» aed Wren Told That
Set Can Speak Eng. ah.
I‘* ' )«» '.If ■' ;* . ;rti Mhe of us
- for *. .»> if the center of the uni
t. •«* •! .:* «) • - ..ur folks" do 1* the
pr.-per ’! •; ml all elfc- mere eccen
* — loin lacking. hut It come*
«• ■ .. sitig'.x in childhood.
-t speak Ftwi :n<*st heau
t.f lied Elsie'* tig sister.
* - .f* — t » t.g <!e—-ribed at length
To ’ll- ';•! > a' the SU(<|ier table the
<-t- ami arcrunphshment# of a new
fr end. a girl who had lived several
}-»r* nbroad ar.d had cotne recently
t«> Kara's wlsail.
“I .: a a g.rl." put it. Elsie at thl*
;> t*. >ith an air of importance. “and
►be tod to live In England. She's in
aiy l t.dergarteB and she ran -peak
English ! gaeas ~
-Weil a hat of Thatr demanded
K ra *■*» cats you speak English."
-Jfc. 1 cunt; I don't know how!
Why of course I cnn’t speak English."
Elsie appealed froth the laughing face*
now toward her “can I. mother?”
VeesiiJf you can «f*eak English,
child •» what «e all *peak: we're
speaking it now."
“What? I» it Eng; *h we're talking
right this nnnute? Is It truly.
mother*"
*•< »f cv -,r*c my dear' What lan
guage -t 1 iua *«h»sc It was that we
t alk T "
-Wi t mother. I didn't sujipose It
a*» Eng *h or any other language.
I a- '.-t regu ar talk, of
course "
Strictly in Keeping.
-fi„i i.,a ~ee where some railroads
to r< — charges for icing
refrigerator cars?"
w i -r t 'hat giving the public
a cw5<J deal?"
True rmneoiv Me* in making the
it*. u*e of what i* tertight.
Relieved Her Feelings.
• •• uami summer afternoon little
"ti the porch with her
:•! She became quite restless;
1 down und around she would
d ?::i:11 '• > with a big >igh, she
'■ r., f n t,..r little rocking
r :i d -:i.d ■ "Oh. darn the good
■ " gracious.”
H. r mother said: “Why, Helen,
bat made you say that?”
11 I Ju>: t ad to say or do some
thing.”
irbin lea dry up an 1
i. - ; ear with Doctor Pierce's Golden
M- i: Discovery, in tablets or liquid.
—Aiiv.
WAS DETERMINED TO ENLIST
Apg .cant. When Found Too Old for
Regular Service in Navy. Declares
He Will Go as a Pearl Diver.
M 1 bun ■ tou< Incidents have
ri. d the rush for recruits which
:. w *u-. n mad** at the army, navy anil
■ r].s .-nhsting stations dur
• ::.~T few days says the Indian
- Vew *. i >ne day at the navy sta
• tin- f- !- r:il building a big. niw
• d !• :• a applied for enlistment
- i. apprentice seaman.
<*:. examination, the officers at the
station found that he was just a little
-r age f. r tb - class of service. He
on offered to "ship” as a cook. He
. s a*k* d whether he had any recom
mendations for that sort of work.
“I haven't got uny recommenda
•: he said. "P.ut if you order some
!. .ti. and eggs I will show you what I
mn do along that line.”
That didn't seem to satisfy the offi
cers and the man appeared to be up
against it.
“Well. I won't ship as a fireman.” he
st. d “that sort of work is too tough
for uie. If you won't have me as a
cook I guess I will have to enlist as
jiearl diver.”
Eminently Qualified.
A tiny Ixiy wearing smoked specta
< • - -at on the curb and watched other
t.">s playing tiall in the street. He
ti.: de an excitable audience, jumping
up. moving his arms Hnd calling out
as if he really had something to do
irh the game. And sometimes—jtist
soai.-times—a boy would think to wave
track. He was rather a pathetic little
• bap. but he dldn' know it. for when
a man paused to ask hint if he was
having a good time he pii>ed out with
happy importance:
"Yes. sir; I'm the umpire."
“That’s a fine position. How did
• hey come to give it to you?”
“lbs-ause I can't see straight."
The man said it was a most excellent
reason, but he doubtless knew that
Tie- I.. >« 1: 1 a finer one.—Washington
Star.
Getting Even.
Surgeon (to auto agent)—Don't wor
ry ib,. operation will be as safe and
easy as that last <ar you sold me.
Within tin* case of a new clock of
•g. grandfather type is concealed a
_ | li Mid cabinet for records.
SS THOUSANDS 2ft
UPON THOUSANDS OF
HEALTHY BOYS & GIRIS EAT
Grape-Nuts
AND CREAM EVERY
MORNING BECAUSE
WISE MOTHERS KNOW
"There's a Reason
!
IIJ
The Easter Contains Features
Not Found in Some Other
Modern Structures.
BEST PROTECTION FOR COWS
There Must Be Freedom From Insects,
Gcod Ventilation and Comfort
in Temperature for Sure
Milk Production.
—
By WILLIAM A. RADFORD.
Mr William A. Radford will answer
questions and give advice FREE OF
COST or. all subjects pertaining to the
subject of building work on the farm, for
the read,rs of this paper. On account of
his wide experience as Editor, Author and
Manufacturer, he is, without doubt, the
highest authority on all these subjects.
Address all Inquiries to William A. Rad
ford. No. lsfT Prairie avenue. Chicago.
111., and only Inclose two-cent stamp for
reply
The important development of dairy
farming during the last decade is very
forcefully indicated by the changes
which have occurred in the stables
used on such farms. In the improve
ment of sanitary conditions around
such stables, one thing at a time has
been found wanting until the dairy
stable has come strongly into the at
tention of farm-building architects.
Ventilating experts and equipment en
gineers causing it to he given a thor
ough overhauling and redesigning.
Several types have been established,
all of which aim to accomplish prac
tically the same thing. Primarily, the
animals must he furnished the best
possible conditions in which to live
nnd, secoudarily, the building must be
easy to keep clean.
This is an Easter cow stable. It has
some features which are different from
other pond stables, some of which are
well liked by everyone who has tried
them out.
Where the winters are cold, as they
are where dairying has been conducted
to the best advantage, a stable really
should he built for warmth in winter
and clean, airy coolness in summer.
This design sometimes is fitted with
tral air duct to admit fresh air. Orel
this air duct is placed a wo.idea walk
built of 2 by 4 cross pieces, with the
boards nailed on lengthwise. This
leaves an opening between the 2 by 4
cross pieces for the entrance of air
into the stable directly in front of the
cows' noses.
According to the principle of warm
air circulation, this arrangement is
theoretically correct. Air is admitted
in the center of the room that is prop
erly proportioned and close enough
built to prevent the influence of out
side air currents. The cold air from
outside is heated by the lungs and the
body warmth of the cows. Warm air
will rise to the ceiling and spread in
every direction. As it loads up with
impurities, and as its temperature is
reduced, the air becomes heavier. As
it reaches the outer walls it descends
and is drawn through the outlet flues
from near the floor behind the cows.
Practical stable ventilation must bo
studied for each building separately.
What will work out in one stable
would be useless in another, because
of some peculiarity in the structure.
This center horizontal air duet is
worth a trial. Being made of con
crete. it may be kept perfectly clean,
and, being open, it is less of a harbor
for rats and mice than some of the
wall air duets that are placed in sta
bles. This center walk is made in
sections, so it may be lifted up and
-rested against the front of the manger
while the stable is being swept with a
broom or cleaned with a hose.
.Any system of stable ventilation re
quires a temperature above 50 de
grees F. to keep air in circulation. A
temperature above 50 may be main
tained in a good stable in zero weather
by packing the cows close enough to
gether. This is. of course, likely to
lead to the old argument about the
amount of air space required for ani
Rials, and this is a subject that has
never been settled to the satisfaction
of dairymen. But good cowmen like
to have the air changed whether there
is much or little to change. These
men make their stable ceiling low and
are particular to have a good-sized
cow in each stall.
In building these stables in the
East, dairymen are particular not to
leave any ledges to hold dust. They
use inside ceiling without beading and
they paint the ceiling in such a way as
to fill the cracks so far as possible, so
the ceiling is smooth and airtight. For
the same reason there are no window
stools. There are no unnecessary pro
Modem Sanitary Dairy Stable for Twenty-Eight Cows.
Floor Plan.
outside blinds, painted dark preen.
This is for the purpose of shutting it
up dark after the cows are milked in
the morning in summer. When the
blinds are shut the stable is so dark
that flies will not stay in it. Dairymen
have taken lessons from good house
keepers in this respect. Flies will
rrawl out of a very small crack to get
from darkness to light. Tou can’t
shut flies out of a cow stable, that is,
vou can’t shut them all out; but it is
possible to shut up a stable like this
so dark that they will all leave it be
tween morning and evening milking
hours.
Of course, the cows will carry flies
In with them when they are stahled in
the afternoon, and this cannot ho
avoided very well. However, some
Xew York dairymen have dark pas
sageways leading to the stables, where
a good mnny flies are brushed off by
the attendant as the eyws pass in. One
dairyman experimented with station
ary brushes in n dark passageway,
which is an automatic way of brush
ing the flies off the cows is they enter
the stable.
Easter dairymen usually are well
supplied with sma'l hills or banks on
which to arrange Zheir stables, barn
yards. ete. For this plan, a gently
sloping bank, falling away towards the
south or southeast, is preferable. The
north is usually protected by a group
of trees or high hoard fence.
During the last ten years stables
have grown in size and dimensions.
Little cellar windows of meager sizes
,n lonesome connection have been dis
placed by two sash windows, as care
fully made and adjusted as the win
dows in the house. The system of
ventilation in this stable is a combina
tion system, with the ceiling openings
that permit the ventilators to carry
off the warm air from the top of the
stable in summer.
There may be bui,t—,n the concrete
floor in the feed passageway—a cen
jections anywhere on the inside of the
i stable. The same idea is followed in
j the stall partitions.
In this particular stable the only
support to the ceiling is from the par
I tition uprights between the cows,
| which are cemented in the floor and
fastened to the ceiling by screws
through threaded plates. A loft over a
| stable like this is not used for any
! purpose except as an air space, and
the air is changed by having a window !
| in each gable. The silos are placed j
j between the stable and storage barn. 1
' with room for a feed carrier to pass
through ; this carrier track extends the
whole length of the cow stable, and
runs far enough into the storage barn
, to load the litter carrier.
The value of this arrangement may
lie better understood by the study of
[one fact—that north of the forty-sec- (
'ind parallel of latitude diere is an
average of only six weeks of good pas
ture. There are droughts sandwiched
in between late spring and early fall
frost, so that df-irymen are obliged to
supply manger feed for ten or eleven
months. In fact, some of the best
dairymen don’t depend on pasture, ex
cept to have a run for the cows for
exercise, fresh air and general health.
< >f course, they want cows to get some
picking, and this is necessary to in
duce the cows to travel about. But
when it comes to actual feeding, the
stable is depended upon in summer as
well as winter. The storage of silage j
and the growing of alfalfa have brought i
about this change.
The old plan of growing soiling
crops is not carried on to any great
extent; labor is too expensive. SKI age
and alfalfa are better and cheaper. At
the same time, good cows appreciate
a feed once a day of green stuff. It
may be clover, oats, succotash, alfalfa,
or any other good forage crops, but
this feed is given as an appetizer more
than for the actual returns In milk de
rived from It
NOT NOBLE ANIMAL
Man Not Such Finished Product
as Imagined, Says Savant.
Human Body Has Points of Decided
Inferiority to Despised Mammals,
It Is Asserted.
Investigation is proving, declares
Dr. F. Wood Jones, professor of anat
omy at the university of London, in his
new book. “Arboreal Man,” that the hu
man body is no such finished product
of evolution as we have fondly imag
ined. It has points of decided inferior
ity to the physical frames of mammals
upoti which we look with disdain as
less finely formed titan ourselves.
Some of the lower animals are more
capable of exquisite adaptations than
are we ourselves. Their bodies are
more splendid instruments titan ours
are. more complex, indicative of a
higher stage of evolution on the physi
cal plane. The upright attitude of man
lias been employed as an argument in
favor of his superiority to the four
footed beast physiologically, although
the evidence makes such an argument
ridiculous. It would tend the other
way. says a review in the Lon
don Lancet.
If we compare man's body with the
body of so-called “tower organisms'"
v.e are astonished to find that his
points of resemblance are with the
lowest in the scale of conscious being.
Man is oddly unlike tile noble beasts of
the jungle; but he is amazingly like
the creatures of a primitive type that
infest the bog. the pond and the
swamp. His relatives are not the lords
of the forest, not the kings of the
jungle, nor the mighty eagle, but the
creatures of the slime.
How is it that the various elements
of the remote ancestral limb have been
preserved in human limits? Professor
.Tones' answer is that the primates
broke away from the early land living
mammalian stock while the primitive
(tones and muscles were still preserved
in that stock. These primitive ele
ments proved useful and were pre
served in that particular form which
adopted an arboreal life and used the
hand and foot to grasp with. The prim
itive plan on which the hands of man
are built can be accounted for only by
supposing that man's ancestry spent a
long pilgrimage in the trees. It was
during man's arboreal phase of exist
ence that the vast majority of those
anatomical characters which we re
gard as adaptations to man's upright
posture were evolved. These anatomi
cal traits indicate how low we are.—
Current Opinion.
Dirty Windows and Poor Eyes.
The factors largely responsible for
P°or illumination are small, narrow
windows, low power artificial lights
placed too far from the point of opera
tion. and neglect of facilities at hand
for obtaining light, according to the
Pennsylvania Department of Labor
and Industry. By this neglect is meant
lack of cleanliness. This applies first
of all to the windows. There is
scarcely a single industrial locality
which does not contain at least one
building, and all too frequently sev
eral bniidings of the same type. They
are built with a supply of window
space sufficient to illuminate amply
the interior. The dust and dirt accu
mulated upon them, however, destroy
in large proportion their usefulness.
The same condition is found in arti
ficial lighting. The electric light bulb,
dusty or streaked with dirt, the result
of hurried and incomplete attempts at
washing, often shaded with a fixture
meant to be a reflector, but which in
reality is anything but that, faintly
illuminates the work and impairs the
health and the efficiency of the work
er.—Scientific American.
His Fables Were Classics.
Jean de )a Fontaine, the seventeenth
century French genius, who ranks
among the greatest fabulists of all
time, died 222 years ago. at the age of
seventy-four, aud to the lust he was as
naive, improvident, reckless aud good
hearted as a child.
He was the son of a magistrate, and
in his youth proposed to become a
priest, hut abandoned that project aft
er eighteen months in a seminary, and
thereafter, for several years, led an
idle and dissipated life. His early ef
forts as poet and dramatist were of
little worth, and it was not until he
was forty-four that he gained fame
with his “Contes pour it ire"—tales for
laughter.
La Fontaine's masterpiece. his
“Fables," were published between H56S
and 1*594. the last book having been
completed shortly before his death. In
these he satirized the whole range of
human nature in its animal counter
parts. and produced a work that will
always rank as a great classic.
The Eccentric Chinese.
Petroleum may he a thing for which
one's taste lias to he cultivated. At any
rate, the Chinese dislike the smell and
touch of it so badly that they are much
in the situation of the people who
seventy-five years ago had salt works
in western Pennsylvania—they abomi
nate the petroleum and abandon a well
when the proportion of oil to brine
gets high. Their repugnance for crude
petroleum may tie measured by the
fact that in China it takes from one
to three generations to bore a well!
For the refined products of petroleum
they have no such aversion, or even
for the tin cans in which they get it
from the United States, making out of
the latter a source of almost as many
of tin* necessaries of life ns a South
Sea islanders finds in his favorite co
conut pahn.—The Nation's P.usiness.
A Helping Hand.
Decker (watching the game over her
shoulder)—Gee. .Miss Oldgirl, Td like
to hold that hand of yours!
Miss Oldgirl—Oh. Mr. Decker, this
is so sudden!
Low Postage Rates.
The cheapest postal service in the
world is said to be that of Japan. Let
ters travel for two sen—about seven
temhs of a penny.
Figuring on a Necessity.
“Ton ought to be happy, with wheat
at $2 a bnshel.”
“I'm not,” answered Farmer Corn
tossel. “I’m not any happier than I'd
be if the springs were going dry for a
season and water was worth $2 a gal
lon.”
FOR SKIN TROUBLES
That Itch. Burn. Torture and Disfig
ure Use Cuticura—Trial Fife.
The Soap to cleanse and purify, the
Ointment to soothe and heal. They
usually afford immediate relief in ach
ing. burning eczemas, pimples, dandruff
and most baby skin troubles. They
also tend to prevent little skin trou
bles becoming great if used daily.
Free sample each by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
Guaranteed Harmless.
“What does this chap do for a liv
ing?" asked the secret service man.
“Writes musical comedies.”
“Pass him along. He never had any
thing to do with a plot in his life."
An
Excellent
Medicine
FOR THE STOMaCH
THE LIVER
SND BOWELS
Hstomach Bitters
Try a bottle at t.:e first sign
of Indigestion or B-iicusn^ss
See Man
'Cperatiens
The Right Medicine in Many Cases
Does Better than the Surgeon's
Knife. Tribute to Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound.
Doctor Said Operation or Deatb—But Medicine Cured.
Des Moines, Iowa.—“My husband says I would
have been in my grave today had it not been for
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I suf
fered from a serious female trouble and the doctors
said I could not live one year without an operation.
My husband objected to the operation and had me
try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. 1
soon commenced to get better and am now well
and able to do my own housework. I can recom
mend Lydia E. Pmkham's Vegetable Compound to
any woman as a wonderful health restorer.”—Mrs.
Blanche Jeffekson,703 Lyon St., Des Moines,Iowa.
Another Operation Avoided.
Richmond, Ind.—“For two years I was so sick and weak from
female troubles that when going up stairs I had to go very slowly
with my hands on the steps, then sit down at the top to rest. The
doctor said he thought I should have an operation, and my friends
thought I would not live to move into our new house. My daughter
asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Yegetable Compound as she had
taken it with 'good results. I did so, my weakness disappeared, I
gained in strength, moved into our new home, do all kinds of.garden
work, and raised hundreds of chickens and ducks. I cannot say
enough in praise of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Yegetable Compound.”—Mrs.
M. O. Johnston, Route D, Box 190, Richmond, Ind.
Of course there are many serious cases that only a
surgical operation will relieve. We freely acknowledge
this, but the above letters, and many others like them,
amply prove that many operations are recommended when
medicine in many cases is all that is needed.
If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medi
cine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened,
read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence,
INFLUENZA 'zsssss*.
Fever, Epizootic
And all diseases of the horse affecting his throat speedily
cured; colts and horses in same stable kept from having*
them by using Spohn'g Distemper Compound. 3 to 6 doses
often cure; one bottle guaranteed to cure one case. Safe
for brood mares, baby colts, stallions, all ages and con
ditions Most skillful scientific compound. 50c and $1
per bottle; 15 and tlO a dozen. Any druggist or deliv
ered by manufacturers. SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Goshen. Ind.
Marital Graft.
Mose Johnsing—What will be yo’r
charge fo' marrying me and Melindy
to-morrow?
Parson Jackson—Two dollars.
Mose Johnsing—Well, say, just
charge her five and send me de differ
ence to Lake Squeedunk, whar we’s
gwine on de honeymoon.—Puck.
Old Gold — Silver—Antique
or broken Jewelry. Diamonds, Watches, Platinum,
etc. We pay full value— money by return mall. Oldl
reliable firm. Stag gpaelaitWa C«., D*pt. 17, B*jU»orr BdL
w. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 17-1917.
—1■—■>
In Italy a process has been invent
ed for making sidewalk tiles of screen
ings from old brick pavements.
Do You Neglect
Your Machinery?
The machinery of the body needs to
be well oiled, kept in good condition
just as the automobile, steam engine or
bicycle. Why should the human neglect
his own machinery more than that of
his horse or his engine? Yet most peo
ple do neglect themselves. To clean
the system at least once a week is to
practice preventive measures. You will
escape many ills and clear up the coat
ed tongue, the sallow complexion, the
dull headache, the lazy liver, if you will
take a pleasant laxative made up of
the May-apple, juice of the leaves of
aloes, root of jalap, and called Pleasant
Pellets. You can obtain at almost any
drug store in this country these vege
table pellets in vials for 25c—simply
ask for Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets.
There can be no counterfeit if they
have the Dr. Pierce stamp. Proven
good by 50 years’ use.
WHAT HOME FOLKS SAY
Omaha. Neb.—“All my life Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets have been
used in my home for sluggish liver and
biliousness. When I was sixteen years
of age i had a very severe attack of
biliousness and the ‘Pleasant Pellets’
were the only medicine I took and they
cured me in short order. Since that
time I have not used any other liver
medicine because they are simply per
fect. I am glad to recommend them
to my friends.”—MRS. C. H. CONE,
4205 Brown St.
Omaha, Neb.—“For the past 26 years
I have kept Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel
lets in my home ready for immediate
use in cases of sluggish liver and con
stipation, and they have proved most
satisfactory. I heartily indorse them
as a safe and reliable home remedy ”—
MRS. JOHN SYME. 4207 Brown St.
Write Dr. V. M. Pierce, Invalids’ Ho
tel. Buffalo, N. Y.. for free book on
stomach, liver and bowels.
Canada’s Liberal Offer ©f
Wheat Land to Settlers
} is open to you—to every farmer or farmer’s son
| V^^1° *s anxi°us to establish for
himself a happy home and
Tjf7W\3mTj&PA prosperity. Canada’s hearty
I nUMrLVjklM I invitation this year is more attractive
LdMfl Q IT I than ever. Wheat is much higher but
0f il Jfy L A I her fertile farm land just as cheap, and
djggl rin the provinces of Manitoba, Saskat
chewan and Alberta
wU^L 5 160 Atie Homesteads Are Actailly Free to Settlers
end Other Lead Sold et from SI S to 120 per Acre
,The Breat demand for Canadian Wheat will
" 1 ke*P 2P,*h* Price- Where a farmer can get
-■ ,. near £ for wheat and raise 20 to 45 bushels to
^ r*\ ■ ,h* »cre he u bound tomake money - that's
yon can expect in Weatem Canada. Won
\yl derful jnelda also of Oau. Barley «nd Fla*.
KS’»b&K5ijr£,S,‘SS; “ “> “
“$w|K| an^TOwajTa«sss.’
\iJki) Kiwi marketeconvenient.climate
k^vTlfTl WlTwaH 1 Ls an DnnBual demand for farm
* ,YI rliillRH JSfi2!,*ii1I3Pd£?.wle many /ouna men who have
LAti\• Mlllli "rite for literature and
iJflSf ftJRJ ESSSS^c&St,,3a.5i1;y» *•*“ w 801,1 of
fjjplH W* ^ BENNETT
T 'XW Boom 4, Dee Olds., Omaha. Neb.
Canadian Government Agent