l8 THK OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: ATT.VST CO. 100. If our ILv, ft lH 21 son 3XSEBBBCT5RSBRSBESBQSS93 31 5) O -Special trains from Omaha at special rates. Her ii perhaps the last sreat op portunity open to the American farmer, stock raiser and grower of fruit the poor man as well as the rich man the forty-acre man with a big family as well as the land owner of thousands of acres to buy the priceless acreage of the Big Horn valley, Wyoming, at a bottom' price and on terms of nine equal Installments. Never before In the history of west ern development has any offer to the American agriculturist and rurallst been presented by company or Indi vidual that can compare with this last great occupancy right in the heart of the best and richest property of the Hanover Canal company In a land that is famous for its tremendous bumper crops, in a climate that is ideal, a soil which is the marvel of ex perts the world over; in a country where they havfc no cyclones, no torna-' does, no floods; no drouths. This will probably be your last chance to make your trip out into this , wonderful country and see with your own eyes the land not of promise, but the land of reality. Out at Worland, Wyo., they're going to sell 20,000 acres, right in the heart of the valley of the Big Horn, where canals are al ready in and the water is now read for farmers' use. The canals will be turned over to the farmers In 1909 to manage themselves. This Is official. Now, what does this mean to you? .What significance does It bear for you, your family, your children and the years to comet It means Teryuung, or u means nothing, according as you make up your mind right now, today, to act upon It or not, to go or to stay, to win or to lose, to progress or to stag nate, to make a thoroughly good and comfortable living along lines of least resistance, or stay poor, where land is poor and fight for life with a stubborn, niggardly soli. You are invited to come out where this virgin soil of the American conti nent has been thrown open for settle ment and development. You are in- vlted to coma yourself come with Sour boys, come with your wife, and read the story of alfalfa, where grows the plant Itself and that is revolutioniz ing the agriculture of the west. We. want you to come. We give you the chance to come. The railroads are co-operating with us and with you so that you can come. Low rates and special trains are at your service. Corn- r ......-.. . i . '. . $ ' ; ' :i-' ' 4 -Ai' ":- 44 .: '-' :;; ; :. : -4 " ?!s ? :'i , 4 'S' ; ' c .:-.' 4 v " " - 4 '4 r v : :: v t r - -4 1 4 ' j 4 i -. . ... ... 4 ! '. i .... l i ,., - - --w li'ilJii4.4Jtv"lut,.- , J Forty Acres of Sugar Beets Now Growing at Worland. Visit this Patch When You Come Out plete plans for the outings re already In shape, and If you don't tome, and if you do come and don't buy a few acres at least, then, indeed, it will prove your own fault' and not because opportunity failed to invite you. And right here let us tell you before we go any further that Prof. Buff urn of the State University of Wyoming, who Is called "the Burbank of Wyoming," has gtven it most emphatically for his opin ion that "this locality is the one emi nently fitted for the production of farm tad garden seed and as a place in which to breed and Improve plants, and for the favorable growing aud produc- Uon of crops in a climate lrca from storms, from hail and wind, 'luiing the growing and harvesting seaio.i; a soil deep and suitable In the mineral plant - foods, besides that combination of soil and climate so difficult to explain in words, which secures productiveness and the plants themselves wonderfully quick growing and fruitful, a long sea son free from frost and the yield anj quality of farm products unexcelled." These are the conditions we want you to know and to see and to prove ot your own knowledge, and ben you do know, you'll do what every other Iol ttEno IhKBaupt' ofi siirndl nniiinis esiips prosperous, rich and satisfied western i developer has done before you-"you'll buy all you can and get busy, and the land will do the rest." For lands in the Big Horn valley spell prosperity, and there has never been a hint of crop failure or a breath of suspicion that there might be. Now, we're go ing to tell you what you want to know in detail what the intelligent farmer and planter and grower bus got to know If he is going to know at all What about the climate? What about crops? What about alfalfa? What about grain barley, oats, wheat, rye? What about vegetables? And then what about your market and your prices, and how much does the land Itself cost? Maybe you'll want to know that first. And how can you buy it, and on what terms and under what title? And about water and the unfailing supply? These are the things you want to know. Read them, for they're worth it. Every letter In this public statement can be made to grow dollars Into your bank account if you're only Low willing to let it. Climate The climate of the Big Horn valley is open to so little criticism by those who know that its climate conditions are described as delightful and without any of those fleree ex tremes so common In the older-settled sections of the country. The 20,000 acres we are going to sell are sur- rounded by mountain ranges. The land lies in the Basin country and is well protected. We have, in dd-iitlon to the common characteristics of aridity, an abundance of continuous and In tense sunshine, warm days, but cool nights, and absolutely a country that is ' storm proof." and the steady, even aridity or dryness is one of the most important blessings you could ask. And there isn't such a thing as too much moisture from rain, because that never Injures your crops. The practical farmer will know what It means to be free from the rotting of seed in the ground and free from the mildewing of crops or the rpoillng of hay. With us soil moisture condi tions are under our own control, so that we can secure the best in growth, health and productiveness. We can govern our moisture, because we water by Irrigation, and the Big Horn river carries a never-failing volume ot sup ply. Inexhaustible, and which with de veloping vegetation will become even greater in the jears to come. And no rain failures In this lower part of the Basin. No danger from hall. The sea son free from frost, which saves the more tender fruits and vegetables. The fastest growing crops in the world right here and all with an Irrigation system scientifically perfected and under absolute control, so that a crop failure never could occur except through gross neglect or Ignorance. Soil The soils of this section vary, and are therefore suitable for a large variety of crops. We all know that new Bolls are gener ally uneven, so that changes are apt to occur, on small areas. It takes more time to tame and to put into tilth some soils than it does others. But we have no poor soil. And w e Big Horn IS give you all the advice of west e r n experience and of the gov ernment experts; 2k Line Canal. useful to you in devoting par ticular soils to particular uses; but there isn't an acre in this whole sec tion that won't grow alfalfa and more of it than anywhere else in the world, and the growing of this plant !n rota tion solves any soil problem vou'll face from now to doom's day. These soils are rich and deep; an abundance of the mineral plant foods, so that you need no fertilizer. The comparative lack of nitrogen and organic 'natter in arid soils is immediately remedied by rotation with such crops as alfalfa, and this is the land of alfalfa. Some of our heavier soils are well suited to the production of sugar beets. Sugar llccts. Here is an easily-grown and won derfully profitable crop. Sugar beets of the Big Horn basin show a phenom enal percentage of sugar and command the very highest prices. In fact, the sugar beets of the Big Horn basin hold the record of 18 1.4 per cent sugar. These lands are ideal for beet growing. You are close to market and within touch of the highest price paid and the beets you grow commanding the highest price. Your average crop of sugar beets, even on raw lands around Worland, will show up as high as seventeen tons to the acre, and you, the grower, re ceive $4.50 per ton f. o. b. tracks, and U left with the tops and crowns on your hands, which have a feeding value of 1 7 per acre. So sugar beUs are a big matter in this section; in fart, every purchaser of land in the Big Horn val ley will be asked to make .1 contract for from ten to twenty-live acres of beets. For we have assurance's '. nut as soon as we succeed in producing ti.000 j?icre8 or. Deeu r0 ",na,,- w.e 11 Have a Idliui t liuiiauu, .u.u nuru we get the factory you and th other growers will get 95 a tou for your beets Instead o f $4.50. The develop ment of the sugar beet bubinei. out here will double the value of this land. We know so be cause 1'. has been the history, of land develop ment in every sugar beet district In the Tnlt ed States. Take the Billings. Mont, fac tory, for ln.itance; you can't buy an acre of land any where in the vicin ity there within 3 miles of a railroad and 60 ot tha town for less than $100 an acre. We may be mistaken, but wc Sugar Beet tlino Htgj Moinni . Valley Jim "wihificelhi to TDsi"y fioip 511 believe that this is the sort of informa tion you want before you put a dollar Into land anywhere facts and figures, crops and prices, instead of frills and fancies. That's why we'je trying to give 'em to you. Otlier Bolls. "The lighter, sandy bench lands are River, Our Water Supply and High Line Canal. .of""" deep, fertile and kindly to work. And 'the heavy sage brush bottom lands ' are " wonderfully productive, even in the raw state, ready for onion growing, trucking or general farming. And we1 have none of that "white alkali" which is destructive over some limited areas la parts of the arid region. There is none of it in tfce Big Horn basin. Cropn You know what crbiis are. but you don't know' what crops can be till .'.yo.11 farm out here where you "raise the limit." Think or alfal fa in buKches nine feet high! Think of three, four and nve cmungs a season: Think ot "alfalfa teed as bringing the highest prices on the market today. But we've got to-rell you something about these crops, so we'll condense It as best we can. Crops here range from Canada peas to Spanish peanuts and from Arc tic plums to Chinese peaches. You can raise anything and they all grow like the beanstalk of Jack the Giant Killer. There is good, opportunity to develop a generous number of special kinds of farming, such as the raising of seeds, bees, poultry, pedigreed stock,' fruHs, dairy products, hogs, etc. And for every one of these specialties there is a demand right now far in excess of the supply. If you're going in for mixed farming, you can market a large variety of crops through your stock. In what we call pure farming or the raising of crops directly for the mnr- ket. you'll find a world of opportunity and attractive demand for the pro duce. But perhaps the more important crops for market now pre grains and forage for home use and consumption, seeds also which can be shipped and potatoes for both home and outside market. Climate and soil .ire so fa vorable for the production of sugar beets that a home market has de veloped for this important crop. Alfalfa. This is the great sure crop, the key stone and the backbone of this wonder ful country. It is the most wonderful crop that grows. It is the bes and quickest soil improver known. It Is the best and most profitable roughage to feed in the world. Naturally It is the plant most universally in demund at the present time, and as its value be comes better known the demand for it will correspondingly Increase. For 'arid soils alfalfa is the Gibraltar on which and around which Is builded the whole superstructure of irrigation farming. You grow alfalfa for three years, plowing it under, and you will Increase your soil fertility that comes back to you in other crops by at least $30 an acre. And what else? At the ' t " - ' - "1 - ' v -4" ,1 :4'v.4:'4'4: ' r J1 4' : IHV '5'r- r - 1 , ... r - - - " 1 ? " - ;' ; - , : ; '.. Dump, Showing Present Method Cars for Shipment to Factory A wonderful trip to a wonderful country. same time you are receiving profitable returns in feed or seed. Alfalfa grow ing In rotation solves all the weed problems you ever heard of and with out extra labor. These 20,000 acres we are going to sell He in the heart center of the best alfalfa country on the face of the earth; the most won derful alfalfa samples ever shown came right out of this Big Horn basin of ours. Alfalfa bun dles 9 feet high! shown at the St. Louis and Port ' land expositions; other bundles 7 feet 4 inches in height sent down to the Wyoming State fair last fall! and all right from this same land. Cut your fields for hay and you get common ly a yield of from five to six tons of cured forage per acre. Far larger yields than this are officially on the records o f this section. Properly treated, B. H. Harrington alfalfa will yield you heavy crops of seed, and these will be found among the most profitable crops for the basin farmer to produce. Alfalfa yields from three bushels to over twenty-eight bushels of seed per acre, and the price wholesale for the cleaned and tested need has never been below 10 cents per pound. ' Just stop and figure this out. It gives you a return of from $18 to $168 per acre. And Big Horn basin seed Is the best that grows, su perior to any, because it Is "alsed far north, is uniform in size and possesses plumpness, color and the greatest germinating power. What wonder, then, that there is such a constant and high demand for this seed. Good farmer whn know how should raise an average of not less than fifteen bushels of seed per acre, worth, at 10 cents per pound, $90. Now allow a total outside cost of $20 per acre for production and you have a uet return of $70 per acre and this on only an average showing. Better yet, for the possibilities have been proven all through the valley to be double this estimate. , And yet they wonder why the land tB selling on these terms or as cheap as, It does; simply because they can't get the people to get on a train and go out and see it. That's Just the reason we're telling you the story In this full page of The Omaha Bee because we do want you to come. Twenty years 'from now this land will be unbuyableat any price. That's the reason. It has been demonstrated that Wyoming-grown alfalfa seed gives much better results when planted In the east or south than does either the Imported seed or that which comes from states further south. This In turn accounts for the unlimited de mand for it and for the fact that it Is bound to bring a premium always over any other seed grown. Now, Grain. Small grain ot some kind Is usually grown the first year on any uew land. Secondary crops of value for sod are 'corn, potatoes or millet, and very often good stanas 01 ai- falfa are obtained here even the first year. our srnan grains, however, are unexcelled In qual - lty and big returns are securea even from new soil. An other thing, small grain is useful In rotation to follow potatoes or,V other cultivated crop to use as a nurse crop for seeding back to alfalfa. Barley. One of the most of Loading . profitable s ui a 1 1 grains you can grow and there ll be it ;! more grown when more farmers un derstand how much more money they can make by growing more than they do. Barley is a money-maker in this section. It is superior In color, in weight per bushel, in yield und malt ing and feeding quality. North-grown barley Is famous throughout the world, and north-grown barley from the Big Horn valley Is now largely used by the leading malsters of the east, who value it on account of Its peculiar qualities, adapting It perfectly for ex port purposes. The big barley mer chants of Liverpool who came to the great International exposition ot this country could hardly express their en thusiastic commendation of the barley from the Big Horn. For the produc tion of pale ale It commands a high premium, requiring no artificial bleach ing. And this barley crop of yours, Mr. Farmer, right here on .t.hls land, will net you more than $20 per acre above the expense of ralstng--just bar ley alone. Oats. There's a great local demand for oats, and large yields, often more than 100 bushels per acre, and the crop' price from $1.25 to 2 per hundred pounds. Oats grown around Worland, right in our section where these 20, 000 acres lie, in this same section of the Big Horn valley, average more than forty pounds per bushel, and the east- t -t'K Spreading Water. ern farmer Is glad to buy the seed. One man last season showed samples at the county and state fairs of two crops of oats the same season from the same land, sown early and the first crop cut when green for hay In July, and the second crop by thorough Irri gation made to ripen In September. Wheat. The wheat crop is still the standard S...'.: " i 4- 4V;41.i.';-'t 4 1 i i 1 This Factory is Located at Billings, Mont. It buys All Sugar Beets Raised at Worland, Wyo. One like it Will Be Built at Worland When an Acreage of 6,000 Acres of Beets Has Been Secured. of the Big Horn basin country. And what wheat! On our new lands Wor land winter wheat has -made tremend ous yields. Although tho winters are open and dry, wheat has not winter killed, but produces thirty to forty five bushels per acre, with only one or two Irrigations, and your returns above expenses on this crop alone range from $12 to $2 4 per acre and a big demand for seed wheat. Ilyo I Is going to become standard crcp be. iiore very long, n is cam; iinr wuu 'a minimum of water, and a hog food uiut. .... - grown rignt in mis secnon, Biooa straw six feet tall and grown on new land, never irrigated before snd following a dry winter, with one light watering about two weeks before harvest. Potatoes. This Is the best potato couatry that lies out o'doors. jr here you grow crops of over 800 bushels per acre, and properly grown crops of from 200 bushels to 400 bushels per acre are sn averatce Drodurtlon. The cost of , raising sod marketing is exceedingly 'low, about $30 per acre, an1 ;his gives 'you net returns of from $50 to $7& per acre, and even more than that for carefully cultured crops. The Burling ton railroad U now giving a rate ot 40 cents on potatoes to the river mar kets, thus enabling you and every potato grower of this regl.in to com pete with northern Colorado grower3 on an even luiais. The Town and Its KuciUticH. Worland Is a little town, looking up about 1,000 Inhabitants something like 700 now, but a good trvn; two hardware stores, a furniture store, bakery and confectionery, nivat mar ket, clothing store, harness store, one hotel and three restaurants, livery sta ble, barber shops, laundries, farm Im plement stores, feed store, brickyard and one newspaper, the Worland Grit. We've got a good graded school and a Methodist and a Baptist church, and right close to Worland Prof. Buffum late of the Wyoming State university, has established his seed breeding farm, where they're doing wonderl'il things in the evolution and development of seed ' culture. Every acre of the 20,000 acres to be sold is within three miles of a rail road not an acre in the 2'), 000 that M over five miles from the shipping point. In fact, we have four shipping stations right on the land itself. Now, we've told you and the intelli gent, progressive readers of The Omaha Bee what these lands are. We have described theui In detail, frankly and fairly and honestly. Sonv ot them 12,000 acres we ivn under deed and offer to sell undor deed; 8,000 acres are "Curey act" land. Every title guaranteed solid hs the land itself; every deed and evert- title reg istered, recorded and protected. Now, now, can you buy these lands? What are they going to cost? How much down; etc? Here's the proposition: The' price per acre ranges from $45 to $60,. according to location and preference. When you get .out there and look the ground over, make your selection and come to terms of pur chase, they. will be as follows: Eight dollars per acre down in cash and the balance in nine equal installments, bearing 6 per cent Interest. Payments may be anticipated at any time and paid up in full if the purchaser sees at. We have, said that this Is perhaps the last great offer upon easy terms of the alfalfa lands of the Big Horn valley. And it Is. When, again, in this world will you be able to buy on anything like these terms uuch price less acreage as you have here? We venture the day will never come again on this continent. Think of buying this kind of land for $8 lown and nine years to pay 'the rest In! We ask you to write us at once. Make your arrangements to come along; you'll have a grand trip at a very, very low cost, and you'll see the rlch.Mt, rarest country in America. It is "one more opportunity you can't afford to let go by." So make up your mind now to do it now, and then come with us out to the Big Horn basin. V- i And now you want to know when to come to Worland, what the fare is, what railroads and what lime the trains start. Here's the schedule: Trains leave each of these cities over tho Burling ton railroad. Tickets are purchase able at any Burlington office or at the depot. Trains leave Tuesday, September 15, as follows: Round Trip Kan-. Leave. Time. Omaha 11 :59 p. in. Chicago 9:15 a. ni. St. Louis 9:0a. in. Kansas City... 8:05 p. m. Denver 7 : 1 5 p. m. $31.25 39.011 3H.6) 34.00 32.25 Any questions you want to ask or sny special details you want more in formation will be furnished you by Mr. J. L. Lewis, whose address appears be low. We will furnish you a book and maps, free, on application, both raiU irosd map and detail map of the land. Send your name and address for these and address all communications in reference to this TWENTY THOU SAND ACRE OFFER to . L. LEWIS, 801 Liggett Building, M. Louis, Mo., U. 8. A,