The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, January 29, 1909, Image 2

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EVERYTHING WAS FAVORABLE
80RRY HE DIDN'T MOVE TO WEST.
ERN CANADA BEFORE.
Mr. Austin wns n man who hnd
Mover liutl any iirovlons oxporlonco In
farming, but WcBtcrn Cnnmla hnd til
lurciucntD, and he profited. Hi got a
low-rate certificate from n Canadian
Government uncut, nnd then moved
What lit sit)H Is Interesting:
"llnnfiirly, Albt-iin, May lO-'OS.
"J. N. Urlcvo, Kern-., Spokane, V'iuli
Ington. Dear Sir: After n dozen or
more years of uutsucressful effort In
(ho mercantile business lu Western
Washington, lu August, J90;i, decided
to como to Alberta with a geutlemuu
who was shinning two cats live Block
to Kdmonton. I assisted this man
with (lie stock over one hundred
miles out In the lllicli Luke Country,
East of Kdmonton. Indeed, how sue
lirlsed, how favorably everything com
pared with my dicain of wliat I want
ed lo ace In a new country.
"Hail never had any experience In
farming, but I was Immedlalely con
verted into a fanner. And from that
moment I have prospered. Selecting
a homestead near Mich Lake, I re
turned for wife and three small chil
dren and freighted out fioin ICdinontou
In March following year wo shoveled
a spot clear of snow and pitched our
lent and commenced operations, at
thnt time wc had no neighbors, l-'oiir
years have pnsKed, the locality is well
nettled, two miles from railway sta
tion, with churches and schools, tele
phone and good road accommodations.
"Wo are enjoying the privileges
granted to any rural district in
Washington. The Illrch Lake Coun
try Ib no exception, this great trans
formation Is rapidly going on lu every
district in Western Canada.
"I estimate that every quarter sec
tion In every direct Ion is capable of
producing a comfortable living for a
family of ten forovor. After paying
for two horses und a cow, had just
110.00 to go on. Did my first plough
ing In my life. I wns very awkward In
my work, but nature was glad and I was
abundantly paid for my efforts. Our
cattle bus Increased to about fifty
hoad, which was very prolltablo on ac
count of the abundance of forage. To
farm was compelled to buy about four
hundred dollars' worth of farm ma
chinery on time, and the payments fell
duo last fall, ami you may wonder how
I expected to pay for them when we
had such a bad year. 'Twas a little
bad for Western Cnnnda or for a Mis
uourinn. Hut Is not 35 or 10 bushels
oats a pretty good yield per aero In
ninny Slntos? Then the price of
grain wont out of sight, so when I had
sold my crop I found 1 was able to
make my payments nicely, besides wo
hud lots of feed. No one has any busi
ness raising cattle without growing
grain, or vlco versa. As to the winters,
did not food my cattle, excepting the
calves, a fork of hay until In March.
Have found the winters much more
pleasant thnn wo did In Western Wash
ington. This Is straugn und hard to
explain, but 'tis true, nevertheless, at
40 degrees bolow zero we have inorq
comfort than you would nt 20 degrees
above, so still and dry with bright,
Bunny days. My wife says that the
only regret she has Is thnt we did not
come hero ton years ago, ns we would
now certainly have been lu n position
to rot ire from hard work. Most wom
en soon become satisfied as neigh
bors begin to come round thorn.
Hnvo 98 ncres in crop this year,
besides two acres potatoes, which
have always brought me a fair
price. Wo Had a ready market for
cvory tiling we produce. To the Poor
Mnn Hero is n chance to establish
yourself. To tho Rich Mnn Horo is a
chance lo buy lnnd for $10.00 to $15.00
por acre which will produce more crops
than a half dozen acres of your $50.00
to $75.00 per aero land. And it not
very much mistaken, tills year will
provo an oyo opener to thoso who are
a llttlo sceptical. The troublo with
mo Is that I hnvo so much to say so
fnvorablo to Alberta 'tis hard to bo
brief. Respectfully,
(Signed) "P. S. AUSTIN."
Silly Question.
Him Am I tho first man you were
over engaged to?
flor Don't insult me. You know
porfoctly well that I am 25 years old.
Do I look like a lemon?
$100 Reward, $100.
The reader ot this paper will lm pirated to Iram
Out tliero la nt lcat one tlrraitiil dhraw that trlenro
tun bron abla to euro In all Itn ilaacs. and that la
Catarrli. Hall's Catarrh Cure In the only noMthii
cure now known to the mrdlral fraternity. Catarrli
helnic n roustimtloiiM dlneaw.-, requires a ronstltu
tlonat treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cum la taken In
ternally, aetlnit directly upon thu blood and miiroiM
eurlucca ol the system, thenliy (IratrtiylriK the
foundation ol the illsenw. and (lying the patient
Uriixth by building up the cointltutlmi ami Mint
ing nature In doing It work. the proprietor hit, a
n much faith In lu curative power that they ntler
One Hundred Dollars tor any com that It tail to
cure. Mend for lUt ot testimonial
Addrraa 1'. J. C1IKNKY & CO.. Toledo. O
Hold by alt nrumrlila, 75c
Take Hall's family rills tor constipation.
Man gives every reason for his con
duct savo one; every oxcuso for his
crime Bavo one; every plea for his
safety save ono, and that is cowardice,
Hcd, Weak, WVury, Wntery Kycn
llcliuvcd by Mtirlno liyo Uemody. Com
pounded hy Hxpciloucod I'hyHlcluns. t.'on
fortus to I'tiro l-'oml und Druit liw. Mu
rine Docmi't Smart: Hoothcn Kyo Pain.
Try Murine In Your Eyou. At Ui-ukkIsU.
Tho hand enn novor execute anything
higher than tho heart can nplre.
Kmorson.
l-II.KH tillltlCI) IN O TO 14 D.VYH.
PA7.0 OINTUKNT l BUaranteed to cure nnr cum
f iu-hlug, lllliid, llU-edlnK ur i'rntrudlng l'lloj Iq
o to 14 dayi or mouey rofundod. too.
Water from tho River Btyx should
be tlno for preparing mucilage.
I.ewix' .Single lliniltT the f.iinoui
Htruiht 6c cisnir, nlwnytt hct tpiulitt.
Your dealer or Lewis' l-'aetory, I'eori.t, 111.
And tho pretty girl usually has plain
tailing.
u- 3 - - 11 ' j ; o. ' iv
- S II. - 1R I W
-..-'IT er
"Which of You Three
Mtt.PHATT.
Toto lliV
1ST
SYNOPSIS.
Mr KiiluiiiDit I'm 1 1 lii-Knii comical imr
Milliiii of Hluiy. InliodurliiK wcll-lo-do
Nutliiiii Hctitlilcr of IiIh town, unit Kihvurd
Van lliuiit (mil Martin I In it Icy. twn rich
New Vmkpi'H Hi-kiiiK ti-Ht. Upciiuhd f
latter pair's lavish cvpfiiilituru of ntouoy.
I'nitt'H llrxt IiiipicsmIoii was cotuu'ctcil
with IliiuilU'H. Tile itrriviil of .lames
llopiter. Van HitintV vulet, biivo Pratt
the tleHlreil Infcii iniitloil nhoul the Now
YoiliPts. They wlHlii'd to llvo what they
tetinetl "The Nittiirnl Lire." Van Ultlllt.
It wiih le.irneil, wiin the mteceHful Hiiltor
for the hiinil of Minn Akmch I'iikc. who
KHVi' llilltle'Ui. "The IJeitVfMille" hear
u Ioiik utory of the (JoiticHlle wni'8 of
Mix. 1 1 it tt tin 1 1 .lane IMirvix, their cook and
inalil of all work. Ue-hle to lei her i;o
ami eniriiKe Hoi. I'ratt as eht-r. Twins
iiKfee to leave Nate Seiulilnr'rt ahoite anil
Iii'kIii iinavallliiK Hearch for another
iloinlelle. AilVentiire at I-'otirlh of July
eelehiatlon ut lOuntwIeh. Hartley renewed
it hoy. known iih "ltedtly." from under a
hoiMe'M feet and the urchin proved to he
one of JIIum I'ae'H cliaiKi'H. whom Hhe
had taken to the country for an outliiK.
MImm l'.iKe and Hartley were xepnratcil
ilnrlin; u tierce ntiiriu. which followed the
picnic uat Halllim later. Van llrunt,
Pratt and Hopper were wrecked In n
Hiiuill. I'ratt lauded safely and a Ht-arch
for the other two icvealed an Inland upon
which they were found. Van Hrunt renl
cd It from 8cudder and called It Ozoun
Island. They lived on llio inland and
owner Hi'iidder hroiiKht ridiculous iiioh-
cuik an a iiiiien in Kiutituiic, innocently.
Hartley and Itopiier lu search for vIihiih
tohhed u private "iitahaUKh." I.ate at
nluhl their IhIiuiiI Iioiuii wiih illxtiuhctl hy
wild yellH. Hopper wan found In a frlKh't
nt what he mippiiHpil wax a nhoul and ho
Immediately tendered IiIh rcHlxuntlnn. In
chan;ii of a eump.iny of New VoiU poor
chlldteu MIhh Taironl and MIhx I'iik., vIh
Ited Dzonn Inland, tu another Htorm Van
nrtmi unit iiartie narrowly escaped he
Iiik wrecked, having alioiird chlckeiiH,
plKH. eic, with which they were to
tart a farm.
CHAPTER X. (Continued.)
I itihhod the wot Hand out of my
cyeH. There on a wind hummock In
fiont or us wan a girl. A aueer-Iooklng
female hIio wiih. too. Itomluded me
Home of llauiiuh Jnun l'urvls, being
built on the sumo Bpnro lines and hav
ing the name genoral look of being
all coiners. She hud on a striped cali
co dress, stripes running up and down,
nud her belt went ucross the middle of
tho stripes as straight as It 'twas laid
out with a spirit lovel. I couldn't seo
her face good, for she had on a sun
bonnet and 'twas llko peeking at her
through a null keg, but she hnd snap
ping black eyes and moved quick,
which wa'n't Hannah .lane's way by a
good sight. I stood und stared at her.
"I say you'ro pretty wet, ain't you?"
she says again, louder. "Why don't
you say something? Aro you hard of
honrlng?"
Hefore I could get my hearings
enough to answer Van Hrunt comes
dripping ulougHide. He wits still hold
ing the cigar stump lu his mouth nud
ho hud one of tho Plymouth Rocks
the rooster, as It hnpponed squeezed
tight under onu arm.
"Well, skipper," ho says, "tho Alk
has stranded and tho tinlmals mav now
Hello! What? Who?"
Ho looked at tho girl and iho at him.
Then ho says brisk:
"Can you cook';'
CHAPTER XI.
Eureka.
Whatever that girl might have ex
pected, from us, I gtioss sho didn't ox
pect that. It set her back so that she
couldn't spent; for a full minute;
which was something of a miracle, as
1 found out I uter.
"Can I what?" she says, llnully.
"Can you cook?" asks Van Hrunt
ngulu.
"Can 1" Then sho turns to mo.
"Ho ought to be attended to right off,"
T-J J
cmcf
-Zrzr -'& '
Is the Quahaug One?"
tJosepH C. Lincoln
Atirnon of "Capn Eri "Partnirs of the Tide"
Copypio.tr 1907 a 6 Bivhh a? CoHPtwr
it it it
Illustrations wr T.D.NtLvtu.
-2fc
she says, referring to Vnn. "Some of
that wet has soaked lu und he's got
water on tho bruin. Take that poor
rooster away from him afore he
squeezes It to death."
Van laughed and dropped the roos
ter. I cal'lato he'd forgot that he had
It. "Ket me explain," he begun. "You
see, we "
Hartley spoke then. "Wait 'a min
ute," says he, laughing. "I suggest
tbut we adjourn to the house and get
Into some dry clothes. Tlren we can
talk business, If the young lady Is
willing."
The girl looked ut him. "Business
is what I'm hero for," says she.
"Which of you three Is tho quahaug
one?"
"Tho which?" says I; and the Heav
eullcs both said the same.
"Which or you la the quahaug one?
I've got some business to talk with
him."
"Martin," says Van, grave, and
turning lo his chum. "Are you a
'qunhaug one?' "
"I guess he Is," says 1. I was be
ginning to see a light. Hartley's clam
ming cruise was turning out as I'd ex
pected. "Humph!" says tho girl. "Well, you
mado a clean job, Lys says. About
three buckets and a hair, wa'n't they?"
You never see a man so puzzled as
Hartley, unless 'twas Van Brunt. They
looked at each other, at the girl, and
then at me. I explained.
"1 judge 'twas this young woman's
quuhuug bed that you and James
cleaned out t'other day," I says. "You
lemember I told you we'd hoar from
them qiiahaugs later."
"Oh!" says Martin. "Awfully sorry,
I'm sure. I hope you'll permit me to
pay for"
She bobbed the sunhonnet up and
down. "That's what I come for," says
she. "They was my brother Lycurgus'
quiUiaugs. Ho'tl Just bedded 'em.
Qiiahaugs Is worth a dollar a bucket
this time of your. That's three dol
lars and a hair. 1 won't charge you ror
the sticks, though what on earth you
done with them Is more'n I can make
out, and Lyn says tho same."
Van was grinning from ear to ear.
T'other Twin reached Into his pocket
and fished out a Bopplug-wet pocket
book. "Will the three fifty be stilllcleut?"
he usks. troubled. "I'm really very
sorry. It was a mistake, and"
"Oh, It's all right," says the glil.
"You didn't know no better. Pa says
fools and children ain't nccountubie.
You'd better spread that monoy out
to dry 'foro you pay mo with It. And
you'tl better got dry yourself or youlll
ditch cold. I can wait a spell, I guess.
Why don't you go after your boat,
ulster?" sho says to me. "You'll loso
it first thing yon know."
I looked whero she pointed and thero
was tho skiff stranded bottom up on
tho tip end of tho point Mat. I ran
after It, waded In and hauled It ashore.
Tho Heavcnlles hurried up to tho
house. When I come back the girl
was waiting for mo.
"I'll walk along up with you," sho
says. "Say, you'ro Solomon Pratt,
ain't you? I heard about your Nate
Scudder told pu. Ho Bald he'd let
this place to Sol Pratt und a couple of
crazy men from Now York. I thought
sure you'd swear when tho boat upsot,
but you didn't. You must belong to
tho church. What are you Metho
dist?" 1 grinned. "So you think a ducking
llko that would be apt to make a mnn
swear, do you?" says 1.
"Yup, If he hadn't got religion. Pa'd
have cussed a blue streak. You'd ought
to hear him when he has his norvous
dyspepsy spells. Did you say you was
a Methodist?"
"No-o, I guess I didn't. Let's seo.
Did you say your name was Dusen
bony?" She stopped and kind of M.zcd, like
a teakettle blllng over. "Sakes atlve!"
sho snaps. "I hope not! Do I look as
If I was carting a iinnio llko that
around? My name's Sparrow Kurcka
Fiorina Sparrow. What's the matter
anything?"
"No, not 'special. You kind of
fetched nic up Into the wind, striking
mo head tin so, unexpected. Just say
that again and say It slow. Eureka
Perunii what was It?"
She switched around and stared at
mo hard. "Kitreka Fiorina Spar
row," says she. slow anil distinct.
"Wnnt me to spell It for you7"
"No. thnnks. You might mix me up
somo It" you did. I had to leave school
early. Any more lu your family?"
"Yup. Seven of us, counting mo
and pa mnkes eight."
"Whut's their names?"
"Well, there's Lycurgus and Kdltha
und I'lysses nud Napoleon and Mar
guerite and Dewey bo's the baby.
Orent names, ain't they? Pa's do
ings, naming 'em that way was. Pa
says there's nothing like hitching a
grand name to a young ono; gives 'em
something to llvo up to, he says. His
own name's Washington, but he ain't
broke his buck living up to It, fnr's as
I can see; and ma used to say tho
same afore she died."
"Oo-h!" says I. "I see." I know
who she wa, now. 1 hadn't lived
around Wellinouth so very long, but
I'd heard of Washington Sparrow. He
lived In a little slab shanty off in the
woods about a inllo from Scudder's, and
had the name of being the laziest man
in t"wn.
d reached the house by this time
and 1 left Kurcka Fiorina in the kitch
en and went to my room to change my
duds. When I como down tho Twins
was In the kitchen, too, and I could
hear the Sparro'w girl's tongue going
like a house all re. Martin had Just
paid her for the quuhuugs und sho
wns telling how scarco they'd got to be
in the bay, and how her brother had
worked, to get a few bedded and how
he'd sold a couple of quarts to the
Baptist minister's wife und what she
said about 'em and so on. Tho Heav
enlles seemed lo be enjoying every
minute of It, judging by the .way they
laughed.
"Introduce us to the lady, skipper,"
says Van, when I come In.
I tlono the honors. "She's one or
Washy Sparrow's tribe I mean fami
ly," says 1. "They llvo over lu the
woods heroaliouts."
"I guess trlbe'll do," says Eureka,
cutting In quid;. "There's pretty near
enough or us to make a town, seems
sometimes. You'd think so if you hud
to get tho meals for 'em, same's I do."
"Yon!" says I. "Do you cook for all
that gang? How old are you?"
"Seventeen last March. Cool; (oi
'em? Guess I do! And scratch to get
things to cook, too; else we'd have to
live on suit air pudding with wind
suss. 1 take in washing, und Lycurgus
he goes fishing and clamming und
chorlng around, and Kdltha helps me
Iron, and we all take watch and watch
looking out for tho young ones."
Hnrtley spoke then. "We're looking
for n cook," he says. "Will you come
nud cook for us, and help about the
house, here? Mr. Prntt Mnds the Job
too big for one man."
She bobbed her head. "Yup," says
she, dry as a chip. "I should think he
might, judging by what I've seen. No,
1 can't come. I'vo got to stuy home
und look out for tho folks."
"Why can't your father do that?"
asks Hartley.
"Who pn? I guoss you ain't heaid
about pa. Ho's sick. Got his never-get-over,
be says. Pa's had most every
kind of symptom there is; phthisic
nntl inllucncy and lumbago und pleu
risy. Now he's settled down to con
sumption and nervous dyspepsy. Afore
ma died sho used to try to cure him,
but tho doctor and pa had a row. Tho
doctor said pa didn't have consump
tion nor nothing else; what he needed
was hard exercise, such us work. Pa
said the doc didn't know his business,
ami the doc said maybe not, but he
knew pa. So pa told him never to
darken our door again, and he ain't
except to como uroimd once In a while
and collect something from me on the
bill."
"Well," snys I, "mnybe you kuow
somebody else that would do for us.
Who's a good cook and general house
keeper that would bo likely to hire
out?"
Sho thought for u moment or so. "I
don't know," sho says. "Most folks in
this neighborhood Is too high toned to
go out working. Tuoy'd rather stay
to home and take boarders. Mrs. Han
nah Jane l'urvls Is about tho only
one, and you'vo had her."
Martin made a fuce. "Wo have," ho
aiys.
"Yup," suys Euroku. "She told Mr.
Scudder that you was crazy us all got
out, nud sunk lu worldly sin besides.
She saltl you'd get your pay hereafter
for treating her tho way you did."
"We hope to," says Van, cheerful.
"Now, Miss or Sparrow, we want
you to como and help us out. We'ro
Crusoes on a desert Island and we
need a Man I should say Woman
Friday. We'll pay you so much," he
says, naming u price that made oven
my eyes stick out, and I was used to
high prices by this time.
"A month?" she says, staring at
him.
"A week," says he.
She hud a queer way of doing every
thing by Jerks, like as If sho was hung
on wires and worked with n string.
Now she straightened up out of her
chair so sudden you almost expected
to hear her snnp.
"A week?" she sings out. "Oh!"
Then sho looked nt me.
"Oh, it's so, If he snys so," says I,
resigned like.
"Lnnd snkes! A week! I never
but It uln't no use. What would be
come of pa and the children?"
"Couldn't you come over for tho
ditys, at least?" asks Martin. "You
might go home nights, you know."
And thut's tho way It ended, finally.
The Twins had made up their minds,
und when that happened, heaven nnd
earth wouldn't change 'em. At last
Eureka said she'd talk It over with
her folks and Van Brunt said wo
would come over to her house next
duy and get the decision.
"There!" says he, when the Sparrow
girl had gone. "Skipper, the cook
question Is settled."
"Maybe 'tis," says I. "Looks to mo
as If you'd settled It the way tho feller
settled tho coffee, by upsetting It. For
chaps that pined for rest and quiet you
two do queer things. Do you realize
what getting mixed up with Hint Spar
row gang Is likely to mean?"
"If the whole flock Is llko the speci
men bird we've seen," be says, "It'll
mean Joy. If there wns ono thing
needed to make Ozone Island n de
light, a gem or purest ray serene, that
original would be the thing. She's a
circus in herseir. I shall dream to
night or pu nnd the doctor. Ho, ho!
By the way, what's her Christian
mime?"
I told the name the whole of It.
How them Heuvenllcs did laugh.
"Eureka!" says Hartley. "Splen
did!" "Eureka!" says Van. "We have
round It! Sol, let's have lunch."
I got 'em something to cat and then
the three or us put in the afternoon
chasing the wild animals. The chick
ens was fairly easy to get hold of; I laid
a trail of corn up to the door or tho lien
yard and trapped the most of 'em that
way. But the pig was a holy terror.
" i'd bad his experience with Ozono
Islanders thnt morning and ho didn't
want any more. Up and down that
blessed sand bar wo chased him, get
tng upset und thing ourselves out. The
pig race over to Eastwicli wa'n't in It.
I did most or the chasing; the Heaven
lies superintended, as usual, and gave
orders und laughed. They pretty nigh
laughed themselves sick. Finally tho
critter bolted Into the woodshed and I
locked the door on him. It was six
o'clock when I dumped him into the
sty. Or all the Natural Life days I'd
had yet this one was the liveliest and
most weurlng. A week like It and my
natural place would have been the
burying ground. I cal'late I lost three
pound that afternoon. I was getting
so thin that when I fell down my legs
made' grooves In the sand.
The next forenoon me nnd Hartley
went over to close tho cook trade.
Van wouldn't go. He said the garden
ing and the shipwreck and the steeple
chasemeaning the pig hunt had
given him sensations enough for a
week or so; he hud somo of 'em with
him yet. So Martin said he'd go, for
my sake. 1 borrowed a couple of spare
oars from Scudder, when ho arrived
with the morning's dose of ski in
milk und cream and butter, and, as I
took care to row the skiff this time, wo
made the passage all right. Then
wc walked up to the Sparrow's nest.
'Twits u pretty shabby-looking shack,
now I tell you. Shingles dropping faff,
and fence falling down, and a general
shortage of man's work everywhere.
But thero was a bed of bachelor but
tons and old maid's pinks under tho
rront window, and the windows them
solves wns clean and bright. Eureka
had tlonc her best to mnke tho placo
homey;' you could seo that.
Sho let us in when we knocked at
the kitchen door. Her sleeves was
rolled up and there was a big basket
or clothes by tho steaming wasjitub.
Kdltha, the 12-year-old, was grinding
at tho wringer and Dewey, tho baby,
was setting on tho Moor playing with
a rag doll. Tho rest or tho tribe
except Lycurgus, who had gone ped
dling clams was oft playing.
Eureka, slic apologized for things
being so upset, but thore wa'n't any
need for apologies. Tho liouso was
plain nnd poor you could seo that It
took a mighty lot of stretching to
make both ends como in Bight of each
othor, lot alone meet; but 'twas clean
as a whistle. Even tho baby was
clean, all except his faco and hands,
and no healthy young ono ought to
have them clean.
"Good morning," says Hartley.
"Havo you decided to cook for us?"
Sho bobbed her head over tho wash
tub. "I'vo decided it, ir pa has," says
she. "Ho ain't mado up his mind yot.
Ho wanted to sleep on it, ho said. I
guess ho's done that. Ajiyhow he's
Just got tip. Stop right into tho din
iug room and talk to him. You'll havo
to oxcuso mo; I'vo got to got thl3
washing done nforo noon, somehow."
So she pitched Into tho scrubbing,
bending lu tho mlddlo exactly llko n
Jointed pocket rulo, and tho Twin and
me went Into tho dining room.
(TO DE CONTINUED.)
As It Shouldn't Be.
"No," remurked tho man who
I'entued to be talking to himself, "It
Isn't right."
"What isn't right?" queried the
party who overheurd tho remark.
"The wasting of bo much money on
cake frostlngs at a wedding, consider
ing tho futuro unceasing appetites of
tho happy couple for plain bread," ex
plained tho noisy thinker.
s
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GwWxe owes; ceaws&$
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To OeVvfe beweJvivaV
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HANurACTURCO Cl THE
CALIFORNIA
Fig Syrup Co.
S0LDDYLEA0ING DRUGGISTS S0A BOTTtf
Western Canada the Pennant Winner
"The Last Besi West"
The government of
Canada now gives
to every actual set
tler 160 acres of
vlicut-Jrowltii
land free and an
additional 160 ncies
at $3.00 an acre. The 300,000 contented
American settlers making their homes in
Western Cunndu is the best evidence of
the superiority of that country. They are
becoming rich, growing from 25 to 0
bushels wheat to the acre; 60 to 1 10 bush
els oats nnd 45 to 60 bushels barley, be
sides having splendid herds of cattle raised
on the prairie grass. Dairying is an im
portant industry.
The crop of 1908 still keeps Western Canada
in the lead. The world will soon look to It at
its food-producer.
"Tho thing which most Irupmwxsl rn wns the
Dmynlluito of tin, cuuntrjr that Is nTullnblo tor
nurli-ulturiil purpinch." A'atlviml litntortnl
VorftlliolliltllCf, tnti.
Low rail way rates, good schools nnd churches,
mnrkets convenient, prices the highest, climate
perfect.
Iiinds ure for mlo br Hallway and Land Com
pnnlus. JdiscrlptlTii iKiiuptilntsand mnrm sent free,
i-nr rallwiir rums and uttior tnfomiutlun npplr to
Supcrlntrnilpntnr Immigration, OtUiwu. Canada, or
thu authorized Canadian Government Agent:
W.V.BENNETT.
801 New York Lit BulKlnf. Ooski. NcktiU.
When your Watch Stops
Yoa caaael make tt go by skaklag H.
wncntno uowcis aro
constipated you can
disturb them with
cathartics but, like
the watch, they will
not be ablo to do
their allotted work
until they are put
into proper condi
tion to do it.
Ono cannot mend
a dclicato picco of
mechanism by vio
lent methods, and
aaV
no machine mado by man is as fiuo
as tho human body.
The uso o pills, salts, castor-oil
and strong cathartic medicines is
tho violent method. Tho use of
the herb tonic laxative,
Lane's Family
Medicine
is the method adopted by intelli
gent people.
Headache, backache, indigestion,
constipation, skin diseases all are
benefited immediately by tho uso
of this medicine.
Druggists sell it nt 250. nnd 50c.
MMMiM,M,MMMM
"A Little Cold is a
Dangerous Thing"
and often leads to hasty disease and
death when neglected. There are
many ways to treat a cold, but there is
only one tight way use the right
remedy.
DR-D.JAYNE'S
EXPECTORANT
is the surest and safest remedy known,
for Coughs, Croup, Bronchitis,
Whooping Cough, Asthma, Pleurisy.
It cures when other remedies fall.
Do something for your cold in time,
you know what delay means, you
know the remedy, too Dr. D. Jayne's
Expectorant.
Bottlei In thtte lzes, $1. 50c, 25c
SIGK HEADACHE
CARTER'S
Positively cured by
these Little Pills.
ajaaM 1 'nicy also reiiere Di
aHtlTTL E I tress from Dyspi-pHln, In
El , IdlgetttlonniidTooIIeorty
Q I V t K I Eatln? A Perfect reca
ll Q A eJy fur DlzzlneHx, Nan
mm rlLLOi sea, DnmHlnc, II ad
IJJB TiistelntheMouth,Coiit'
HHaaaaaal lcl T"fnie, Pain In the
1SSSS5 iHlilo. TOKPID tlVKlt.
They regulate tho IlowelH. X'urely Veiretuble.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Similo Signature
REFUSE SURSTITUTES.
ICARTER'S
WlVER
IPJLLS.
SEED BAR LEY.0;:
aaaaaaaB I'er Salroi'a catalog naea i. .
Largest crowors of teed barley, oati, wheat,
tuotu, corn, potatoes. Brasses, cloveru uml
farm tneds in the world, lilt catalog f rro 1 or.
onu iuu in nam pa aim receive sampion 01
barley ylolillng 173 bu. per acre, llillion
Dollar Grass. Oats, Speltr, etc.. etc.. easily
(4o and we add a sample farm seed novelty
never noon uy you URiorf,
SALZERSEEDCO., BoxW, la Cross, Wis.
DEFIANCE STARCH letf l0 wo"c w111 l1
iimvi, innun startup ciottiM alon.
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