Nebraska advertiser. (Brownville, Nemaha County, N.T. [Neb.]) 1856-1882, April 21, 1881, Image 6

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    Fcrlllilut; Land-Wlth IllustrntloiiB.
So lon us olroumstanocs niter oases
It will ho ntlcr folly to luy down any
cast Iron law with regard to fertilizers.
Hero, if anywhere, a man needs an
uduoaled common hoiic, anil needs It
to an uueominnn doL'ioo. I havo a
friend who owns a iarijo farm, prin
cipally dovotod to growing Nlock. Ho
vory naturally, and as I believe oorroet
ly, Hpruads nearly all tho manuro ujion
tlio grass land. Hut liow dons lio do it?
His hirod men haul it out and spread it
at tho rato of fifteen to twenty largo
loads per aero. Much of it can hardly
ho called sproud; it la thrown oil", a largo
forkful, or nearly so, in a plaee, and
loft in that position. Tho result is that
thoro aro many snots of say twolvo
inohos square, and often moro than
that, whoro no grass can posssibly
grow. Immediately around this minia
ture hoau there will bo an extra irrowth
of large coarse grass or hay that is not I
airroeablo to stoek and notprolitablo to .
the owner. If thoro woro but now and
4 lien Htieh a spot, it would be a small
matter; but when there aro hundreds of
thorn upon each aero it Ih really u vory
Horious matter to tho farmer, who is al
most universally short of manure. It
may bo said in defense of this, that tho
manure is there and the land gets the
beuollt of it; and sooner or later tho
result will bo seen in tho crops. All
this may be true to a certain extent;
but we do not wish to wait two or three
years for what wo might havo this com
inir season.
Where labor is seareo and high. It is
possible that, all things considered, it
may be best to haul from the barnyard
and spread directly on the land. In
mich cases, unless J had plenty of it, 1
woidd not put more than eight to ton
loads per acre, and then would be snro
that it is spread as evenly as possible;
it costs but HtHo to havo a man or boy
go over and spread evenly after tho
teams have loft it. Whoro labor is
plenty and reasonably cheap, I am
satisfied that it would bo a better plan
1o haul tho manure out into a heap,
and, if it is not composted, let it do
ay and then work It over and havo it
tiuilloiently lino to handle with a shovel
or our six-tinod forks. If treated in
tlds manner, six to eight loads per
uere, well and evenly spread, will give
a much bettor rosult, and a more im
mediate one, than tho one above noted.
Other, and somo very good, farmers
think it bettor to plow all manuro un
der, and my early reading upon this
subject was, plow (loop ana plow your
manure under; no matter if it is cov
ered deep, tho plants will find it.
Near twenty years sineo, I was break
ing up a piece of heavy turf. Upon a
portion of it 1 put some very rieh
manure, anil plowed it under not less
than eight and perhaps nearly ton
inches (loop. Tho other part of tho
iiold had no manure. I am watching
yet for somo rosult from tho manure
ho duo ply buried, but never oxpoot to
see any. This little circumstance set
mo to thinking and experimenting,
witii results about as follows:
L am perfectly satisfied that by bury
ing manure too doop it has not been
worth as much to meny many hundreds
f dollars as it would have boon if 1 had
nised it as 1 am now doing. In this I
3iin by no moans couiiued to my own
experiments. I havo seen the biuiio
teaching in many cases. A number of
years sineo a farmer, one of tho class of
wlncli wo unfortunatoly havo too many,
had reached tho point whoro ho had to
move either his manure or his barn, and
concluded to move tho former. It was
dry hot weather. It had been paekod
for years, and was broken up, hauled
out, and thrown upon the ground in
largo lumps, somo of thom as largo as a
pock measure. Tho land was a heavy
clay and Very dry. It was plowed
while in this "condition; and of course
broke up in large hard lumps larger
than the lumps of manuro which they
woro supposed to cover. Tho land was
sown with wheat, and tho crop, of
course, a failure, i liavo watched that
,Yicco of laud to this day, and it seems
to mo tliM the farmer might just as well
havo had his manure buried under the
pyramids. I could if necessary men
tion other instances whoro 1 havo seen
vory rieh manure buriod so doop that
there was no visiblo olToot ovon when
the limit was well cultivated. Thoro
are somo cases wnoro l would plow
under coarso manure, in fact I do so
more or loss every year, but never bury
11 so deep but what tho noxt season's
plowing will bring it all to tho surface
ugain.
Upon somo soils, remarkable results
aro produced by plowing under somo
vory coarso manure or oven straw.
Somo yeaiH since a merchant remarked
to mo: "You farmers say that dry
wheat straw is worthless as a manuro'
I replied that ohomical analysis Bhowod
drv straw to contain but a very small
.amount of fertilizing matter. "Well,"
ho retorted, "throo or four years sineo
I put a stack of dry straw in tho fur
Tows of a Hold that I was having
.plowed; it did not hold out for tho en
'tire pioco, but tho portion of it where
tho straw was put has producod vory
much larger crops than tho romaindor
of tho Hold, and is in vory muoh bettor
condition in all respects. Now bow do
you account for this if tho straw has
not acted as a fortili.orP" Fortunate
ly I was well acquainted with that Held;
it was an exceedingly rieh pioco of
land; a heavy black loam, with a sub
soil of stiff clay almost as impervious
to water as a stone jug. Tho loam was
trnnorallv a bod of black mortar in tho
. spring, and baked like bricks in tho
summer. Of courso it had not been
drained. 1 ropliod to him: "Your land
was vory rich, and tho effect of that
. largo amount of straw was simply mo.
ohanical. It loosenod tho soil, kept it
from baking in summer, and. in short,
jmt the land in suoh u condition that
tho growing crops could draw their
necessary supply of food from the
abundance tho land already contained.
It made loose and fine what before was
packed and hard.1' Ho admitted that I
was right. Now suppose I had con
oludedfrom this experiment of hh that
dry wheat straw was tho th'nir for
crops, and had collected and plowed
uiuler a large coat of it upon some of
my land, which is quite sandy with a
subsoil of fine white plastering sand.
Tho rosult instead of a benefit would
havo been ruin to my crops, from tiie
fact that tho soil is already loose ami
porous, and needs to bo made moro
compact and solid, instead of the oppo
site,,. II. Smith, in K Y. Tribune.
Tho Culture or tho Potato.
Around all largo cltlos, and indeed
near any plaeo which offers a cheap
route to market, potato culture is ono
of tho most prolitablo employments;
and though much has been written
about it, it is doubtful whether wo vot
know what is tho best way of going
about it.
.Just now wo havo boforo us a state
ment that our regular farm way of
growing them is all wrong, which wo
very muoh doubt, though it might bo a
truth to say that wo can do bottor. Hut
then wo aro not sure tho way proposed
is bottor. Wo aro told that to grow the
potato well we should haul tho manure
out in September and plow it in. In
early spring plow again, and puton about
throo hundred pounds of uiileaehed
ashos, ground bones and guano. Thou
harrow and Jant. 'J his requires three
plowings, beside tho harrowings, and
wo much doubt whether the inoreaso of
the crop, if any, would be enough to
cover the difference in cost over our
present single plowing system. Iloro
ono can take a pioco of old sod, manuro
it well with slaolo manuro, and plant
the potatoes at tho same plowing, and
the best and healthiost crops lollow.
Tho ground is well harrowed after
planting, and that is all not half that
proposed while tho crops are all that
could bo expootod. Tho manuro for
this purpose is generally preferred to
bo not well rotted-strawy manure is
the way farmers express it. Often it
is so long that a boy follows tho plow
and rakes it in for the next furrow-slice
to cover. Yet our essayist tells us that
rough manuro is the worst possible for
tho potato, as one may suppose by tho
recommendation to use bone dust and
guano.
It is probablo that different climates
will havo much to do with what is bot
in potato oulturo; and this may bo es
pecially true as regards the kind of ma
nure to use. Ab wo have said, hero in
Pennsylvania wo lind no better potato
fertilizer than half-rotten stablo manure,
while farther south -thoy raise excellent
potatoes by simply covering tho pota
toes y a deep mass ot straw, without
any other manuro or earth covering;
and it may bo that farther north or
west vory woll-dccayed manuro ma' bo
bottor still.
To show how muoh climato has to do
with tho best system of potato culture,
wo need only rofor to tho rocommonda
tion to plow potato ground in tho fall of
tho year. Mow, m tins part ot tho
world, wo lind that tho host results fol
low when tho potato is planted early;
and especially is this likoly to bo tho
case since the advent of the potato
beetle, which Is generally more de
structive to the lato than to tho early
crops. Hut in this part of tho world a
fall plowing means in most cases two
weeks later in tho spring, unless tho
land is vory loose, and iiormits tho
plowed land to bo as close as if there
woro no furrow slices mado. In sod
land, whoro the slices lio at an angle
against eacli other, the frost penetrates
io nearly uouoio mo uopiu n uoos in
unplowod land; and those very spaces
prevent tho warm spring sun's action,
which in ordinary cases soon takos tho
frost out of tho ground. It is the ex
perience of ovory f armor in this region,
and especially in sod land, that tall
plowing makes at least two weeks' dif
ference in tho timo at which it can bo
worked, and this is no mean item in tho
success of an early planting of tho po
tato crop.
It hooins then that In potato culture,
equally applicable to all, the proper
method of culturo takes rank with the
question of tho proper variety of potato
to plant; it is a local question, and one
must bo guided in the selection by tho
peculiar circumstances of tho
Gcrmantown ('.) Tekyraph.
ease.
lteproiliicliiff tho Colors of Nature.
Thoy say it has boon accomplished at
last. French chemists, it is claimed,
can take photographs in which aro re
produced tho colors as woll as the form
of tho object. This has always boon
ono of tho possibilities of tho photo
graph. Tho negative at lirst does ac
tually roproduco color as woll as lorm,
and if it could be kept in a vory dark
room tho shades would not die out.
Hut up to this timo it has been impos
sible to lind a mordant that would ron
dor tho colors permanent.
" Llko tho miow-llnko on tho rlvor,
A moniunt scon, then K"no foruvur."
What a marvelous change it would
make if tho camera could give us uaturo
in all it hues. Tho photographer to
day docs sad injustice to many charm
ing women. A classic outlino, no mat
tor what the complexion, takes woll in
an ordinary portrait. Hut those dear
little blonde women with tiptiltod
noses, charming complexions, all grace
and vivacity, thoy are orucilicd by tho
photographer. Lot us hail tho French
discoverer, and crown him with laurels.
Tho pretty women who look ugly in
photographs ought to, in some way,
shower benefactions upon him. Dario
fcsCs Monthly.
Our Young Headers.
A HOOD-BY TO WtNTlill.
Tho moiiilnw-liwotts iiro full, mid busy
(JcttliiK Wintorcjir to nan:
III tiunks of lew, nil imciccil Mini ready,
Aro stiinclliiK utiilur ovory trot-.
Ilia ovorcont", woll airoi! nml Mmkrn,
Aid ilimulliiK fropi ciil'Ii dripping hough;
For ho litis Muvi'il till iiwrtitlon,
Ami .Spring fs right upon him now!
Vo, hurry up. old Wlntor, hurry!
Hiiiiutlino, wo hope, you IIcmuio nsrnln;
Ilut liorc Is Hprlnif, hi Ptii'h it Hurry,
Kot'phiK buck her Htoros ol ruin I
Ve, ifood-hy, Kood-hy, old follow!
Willi your ofiiiMihitf, skntiiiir. fun:
Hi Ini? Homo moro hy noxt JH'O'Miilior,
Whon tlin Kii tinner duytf nro iloiio.
Wlint's tho mutter, pretty Sprlmr-tlnio?
AIwiijr wi'oplnjr? tjotiiu would miy
You uro roxt'il, bucnuao old Wlntur
Alwiiyn lingers lu your wiiy.
Woll. ho'fl oiri Tho hrooki hnvo started!
Now Iho lilnM cun como mid Hlng.
8o welcome to tho hnppj-lioitrted,
l.miKliliig, budding, gcninl Sprluir!
Mrn. S. (J. Sdmr, in youth' U iinitanton.
GUTTING OUT SAW-LOUS.
All boys and girls know that boards
aro made of sawod log?, and that logs
aro trunks of troos. Kow, however,
know with what hardship and difficulty
the trees aro felled, trimmed and car
ried from the woods where they grow
to tho mills where they aro made into
boards.
In the far West and in tho wilds of
Maine are acros upon acres, and milo
upon miles, of evergreen forests. Ono
wooded tract in Maine is so vast that it
takes an army of choppers twenty years
to cut it over. Hy tho time it is done a
new growth has sprung up, and an in
termediate one is largo enough to out;
so tho chopping goes on year alter
year. Tho lirst or primeval growth is
pine. That is most valuable. After
tho pino aro cut, spruce and hemlock
spring up and grow.
Most of tiie men who live in the vicin
ity of the lake region work in the
woods in tho winter. Thoy camp in
tents and log huts near tho tracts whoro
they aro foiling troos. All day long,
day after dayT week after week, thoy
chop down such trees as aro largo
enough to cut, lop off the branches and
haul the logs to the nearest water. This
work is done in winter because the Ions
aro more easily managed over snow '
and ice. All brooks largo enough to
carry them, all rivers, ponds and lakes j
aro pressed into service and mado to
convoy the ponderous freight towards
civilization. All along the shores and
in tho woods aro busv scones men,
oxen and horses hard at work, the
smoke from the logging camps curling
among tho troos.
Every log has the initial or mark of
tho owner chonnod dooo into the wood
to identify it. Then, when tho ice i
breaks
up, the logs aro sont dow
the
JWli tho
brooks to the rivers aud through tho
rivers to tho lakes. Tho logging camps
aro disbanded, tho loggers return to
their homes, and the river-drivers alono
aro left to begin their duties.
The river-drivers arc the men who
travel with tho logs from tho beginning
of thoir journey till thoy aro surrender
ed to tho saw-mills. Each wears shoes
tho soles of which aro thickly studded
with iron brads an inch long: and each
carries along polo called a nick-polo,"
which has a strong sharp-pointed iron
spike in tho end. This thoy drivo into
the wood, and it supports and stcadios
them as tboy spring from log to log.
Thoir lirst duty is to collect "the
drive." Tho logs which form "tho
drivo" aro packed together and hold in
place by a chain of guard-logs which
stretches entirely around tho drive,
formin-g what is called "tho boom."
The guard-logs are chained together at
tho ends about two foot apart. Tho
guard is always much larger than tho
boom of logs, so that tho s'hapo of the
boom may be changed for wide or nar
row waters.
And the Jioad of each boom is a raft
which supports two largo windlasses,
each of which works an anchor. On
this head-raft about thirty river-drivers
take up thoir position to direct tho
course of tho boom.
To change its position or shape, ton
Uof the drivers spring into a boat or
bateau: ono takes a paddlo at tho bow;
eight take oars; and ono, at the stern,
holds tlio anchor. Thoy row with quick
strokes toward the spot where tho
anchor is to bo dropped, tho cable all
tho time running from tho windlass
"Lot go!" shouts tho foreman.
Splash! goes the anchor overboard.
Tlio boat then darts back to the head
works. Out spring the men to help
turn the windlass to wind the. cable in.
Thoy sing as thoy work, and tho wind
lass ereiiKs a monotonous accompani
ment as "Meet mo by moonlight, or
the popular "Away over yondor."
comes Hunting over the rippling water.
Meanwhilo another bateau luus been
out with anothor anchor; and as both
windlashos turn, the boom swings
toward tho anchorage, and thus is oo
much further on its way.
Though tho moil sing as thoy work,
and make tho host ol thoir mishaps
with josts and laughter, thoy often
carrv homesick hnnrls. In cold mid
-Jtt'k i
stormy weather thoir hardships aro
great, an involuntary bath in tlio icy !
water being an event of frequent oc
currence. Also their work demands a
constant supply ot strength which is
vory trying; frequently a head-wind
will drivo them back from a position
which it has taken sovoral days to gain,
and all tho toil of fresh anchorages
must bo repeated.
Tho most dangerous part of tho work
is sluicing" tlio logs. When the boom
roaches tho run which connects tho
lako or river with tlio dam through tho
sluieo of which tho logs must pass, tho
chain of guard-logs is detached, and
fastened in linos along both sides of the
run, and tho rafts are drawu off to ono
Bldo and anchored to trec. Tiie river
drivers, armed with their pickole,
are then stationed along tho run, on tho
dam, wherever thoy may bo needed.
Tho liberated logs now come sailing
along, their speed quickening as thoy
near tho sluice. When they reach it
thoy dart through, their drill, rapid,
continuous thud mingling with the roar
of tho water. How thoy shoot the
sluice! log after log two, six, a dozen
together pitching, tossing, struggling,
lcapinir end over end; finally submitting
to destiny and sailing serenely down tho
river toward another lake.
Meanwhile the river-drivers with
their long polos aud quick movements,
looking not unlike a band of savages,
havo enough to do, with steady feet,
and eyes on tho alert. For of all the
vast "array of logs -and I onco saw
twenty-four thousand in ono drive -not
ono goes through ho sluieo but is
guided on to it bv one or more of tho
drivers. Thoy often ride standing on
the floating logs, conducting this push
ing that, hurrying another, straighten
ing, turning and guiding; and just bo
foro the log on which a driver stands
reaches the sluice ho springs to another.
Woe to him if his foot should slip, or
his leap fail! Ho would bo crushed
among tho logs in the sluieo, or dashed
among the rocks in tho seething water.
After all tho logs aro safely sluiced,
the chains of the guards aro slipped,
the rafts aro broken up, and theso,
windlasses and all, follow tho logs.
Then tho boats aro put through tho
sluice. Sometimes when tho dam is
high, somo of the river-drivors go
through in the boats- a dangerous
practice, this; for often the bateaux
have gone under water, cntiroly out of
sight, to come up below the falls, and
more than onco havo lives been lost in
this foolhardy feat.
A boom generally passes from three
to six dams aud sometimes takos four
months to roach the mills.
Occasionally tho logs become jammed
in tho rivers, and must wait for more
water; if this can bo supplied from a
lake above, tho difficulty is easily
remedied.
In the Spring of 1880, a jam occurred
at Moxico in Maine. Tho lo:j.s were
piled forty foot above tho water and
covered an extent of area as largo as
an ordinary village. This great jam
attracted many visitors from all parts
r,r ti, ,.,. ,,ii ti, 0ninr frmlw.a
of tho Iloxt year could supply tho river
wilh wnlor sUffl0j0Ut to loose them and
imrthoni on their wuv. ilw. S. IS. 0.
Samuels, in Wide Awake.
Holler In Spiritualistic Phenoincnn no
Evidence of a Man's Insanity.
A novel ease was decided in the Chi
cago Circuit Court, the other day, in
which Judge Ttiley hold that proof that
Sl ma" Doiiovou in spiritualistic pne-
nomena was no evidence 01 a man s
insanity or incapacity to tako care of
his own affairs. Tho undue inllucnco
in this case was that exercised by a
spiritualistic medium, Mrs. Chamber
lain, over Colonel II. W. II. Cushman,
now deceased. Cushniau held a policy
in the Republic Lifo Insurance Compa
ny for 810,000, winch his executor I
claimed as an asset of tlio estate. Mrs. i
Chamberlain elaimod it on an equitable
assignment, which tho executor resisted
on the ground that at the timo of the j
assignment Cushman was incapable of j
making a binding contract, owing to
insanity caused by .spiritualism. It
was proved that for many years Cush- j
man had been a firm believer in com-
munication with departed spirits; that
ho had boon in the habit of consulting j
spirits daily, and placed much value j
upon counsel purporting to come from
them through mediums, and atono timo
had investod largely in a worthless mine ,
through their advico. I
Juifgo Tully said that mon who stand I
high in science, Judges who adorn the
bench, attorneys, solicitors, clergymen,
physicians, literary mon of the highest
ability, and, in fact, men in ovory walk
and condition of life honestly bolioved
in those phenomena; and so it would
bo tho sheerest nonsense for him to hold
that belief in tho phenomena known as
spiritualism was per sr any ovidonco of
unsound mind. It might lead to un
sound mind, but not necessarily so.
Hut in the caso before the Court it ap
peared that tho assignment to Mrs.
Chamberlain was in tlio nature of a
gilt, for which thoro was no money
consideration. It appeared that for
years Cushman had lived with tho nie
ditim, and that she was almost con
stantly in his thoughts, and ho claimed
to have received communications from
spirits through her. In following En
glish decisions in regard to tho inllu
cnco of spiritual mediums, which throw
tho burden of proof on them that no
such inllucnco was exerted, Judge
Tully hold that tho gift of a policy in
this way was procured by unduo inllu
enco, and decided in favor of the exec
utor. A pretty sorvant girl in a Roches
tor (N. Y.) boarding-houso won the
ardent lovo of two boarders. Hoth do-
1 8ll-oa t0 marry her.
! to chooso botweon
She was puzzled
thorn, and furthor
complicated tho affair by accepting first
ono and then tho other. Tho rivals at
! length agreed to meet hor in a room
together and got hor final decision.
I When tho momentous occasion camo
ono tried to inlluonco hor by drawing a
knifo and declaring that ho would not
I survive a refusal. Tho other, not to bo
outdone, placed a pistol at his head and
sworo that lio would blow his brains
j out in caso of disappointment. She
1 took tho daggor man, however, and the
pistol man allowed himself to bo dis-
armed, though ho vows ho will dio on
, hor wedding day.
- t 9
Wood is more valuable whon sea-
I soncd under cover.
iff E WtP9P- $
! rtfcK THEGREA? -gill
I iron
Neuralnia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Soreness of iho Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Soro Throat, Swell
ings and Sprains, Burns and
i acaias, uenorai aoaiiy
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Hoadacho, Frosted
Foot and Ears, and all other
Pains and Achos.
No reparation on earth cqnnU St. .Tacops Oil
m iv mife, aurr, ultnvlc nml cheap Kxtrrnal
llfmi'ily. A trial en lulls hut the omipunitlvoly
trifling outlay of fiO Outs, and every olio suffering
with ialii can hare cheap and rosltlro proof of It
claims.
Directions in Klcirn Languages.
BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALEE8
IN MEDICINE,
A. VOGEIER & CO.,
lialttmore, Md XI. 8. A
WOMAN'S TKIlDlHQPm'
HRS.LME.PINKHAM.OFLYW.IUSS,
vucoTKiicn or
LYDIA Ea PBNECHAM'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND.
Tho Positive Curo
for nil thoi Painful Complaints nnil Wcnlcnciw
so common toourbest fcinulo population.
It will cure entirely tho worst f orm of Feiiuvle Com.
plaints, nil ovarian troubles, Inflammation anil Ulcera
tion, Falling and Displacements, and tho consequent
Spinal Weakness, and Is particularly adapteU to tlio
Chauge of IJfc.
It will (lls.olTO and expel tumors from tlio uterus In
n early Ktago of ijfvelopmcnt. Tho tendency to can
cerous humors there Is checked very poedlly by Its imo.
It remove falntneai, ilatulcney, deftroyaall craving
for stimulants, and relieves weakness of the stomach.
H cures Hloatlnir, Ucadacho, Nervous 1'rOTtratlon,
General Debility, Sleeplcuncxn, Depression and Indi
gestion. That feellnj; of bearing down, causing pain, weight
and backanho. Is always ioriunnently cured by Its use.
It wilt at all times and undcrall circumstances act in
harmonr with tho laws that govern t ho f einalo pystcm.
Forthocuroof Kidney Complaints of either sex tills
Compound is unsurpassed.
liYIUA K. lUXKHAM'S VEGETABLE COM.
FOUND i prepared at !U3 and 23S Western Avenue,
Lynn, Mais, I'rico t. Six bottles for J'. Sunt by moll
In tho form of pills, also in tho form of lozenges, on
receipt of price, St per box for olthor. Mrs. I'lnkhim
frcclyanswora all letters of inquiry. Send for pamph
let. Address as abovn. ilentton this liptr.
No family should bo without LYDIA K. riNKUAM'3
UVEIl 1'IIXS. Thoy curo constipation, biliousness,
and torpidity of tho liver. CSccntapor box.
Bold by MORRISON, PLUMBER & CO., Chicago, 111.
FOB HAXK ilTC DUCGOISTS.
for the Cu-oof Couch", Colds. Hoarseness, Asthma.
Ilronchltls, Croup, Inlluenzn, whooping Cough. Incip
ient Consumption, &c, Price ouly 25 cunts a botllo.
Do You Wish To Know?
1. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW about Kan-as-her
jieonle, tier homes, her tonus, her products, her
towns, her counties uwl her public Institutions?
8., DO YOU WISH TO KNOW about tho
wundcifui climate, the no les wonderful scenery, tho
charming summer roxirts, tho iiiagtilllcont minus and
the liurvnluui fro will generally of Colorado.
3. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW uhout New
Mexico, which Ujust developing a I'llinatuand a mineral
wealth surpassing oven that or Colorado?
4. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW bom Art
son j, without doubt llio richest mineral country In tho
United Btauw, with other advantages of oil mate and soil
, 6. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW "bout Call,
fornla mid Ihe section of thu UolJeu aiopo, both north
ml tout h?
. 0. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW alut Old
Mexico and Ha prospects t
7. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW liw to reach
these Mates nml Territories cuMly and quickly?
U thM art thr tldnji you vlh to know, mitt to
Care U. I'. & T. A. O. S. (I l.KKli,
A., T. A S. F. It. It- Toiiuku, liansiiH.
Mammoth
YIELD
From I to 10
KurirerStalK
1AO Ilusheli
to the Acre.
GClxiSs & no Xr'atroULcaL
M'uliav fiecn 11 r. Crolev's Held of corn. and know Oia
nbnvotnlia true M J Lawrence Kdllor turner , A.
J. llHrrln, Attorney. J. A. Ilrown, C'ltiU Criminal C'ourti
Cant Hrott.Mailnu Inimaiii' Asent all of Cleveland, O.
11. riilnney.r U., Itockpoit.O I'llce by malt, pout
prepaid, Sl.uo mi-quart. Liberal discount for uimh
JontiuB. Hnd your in ibrntv as thu amount UllmlKd.
H. A. CUOMSI.tY, Cleveland, Ohio.
bjHh. dill 35i ft ft ?LM
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