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Show OSMOSm V c , 'I iiin muiiniv; itaii, :jumav ouin:xt i:xA3Jixi:i:: AMUSEMENTa... WIIAT UAL CAINE THEATER tTAHNA THIS Th,p.rful company iLimuuu Daily Si ail). diets become leas every year. They Entirely pleased with hi American meet in contentions without any diftrip, but ut icily worn out aa the i ficulty. Only the Untiariuu, as one Bom"tic PHy re-ul- of Algiers Oe Prisoner of escvr.ivc American hospitality, llall Caine, who returned to thi country on Tueaday. la night expressed to a Daily Mail representative hie view ou a number of interesting topicii connected with hia journey. Mr. Hall Caine went to America tv rehear the production of hi aiicoeulul play, Th Prodigal Son. "I aui airaid," aid Mr. Hall Caine, tha; 1 have not returned to England in the best oi health. The American goe fail, hut hu make hia guesia go atill faster. The pe.ee by which th American kill liinitclf compares lu velocity with the pace by which he hills his foreign guesti only ns tha paea of a five-crtrolley car oom-parwith that of n Mercedes automobile. j Dinner, suppers, speeches and nr--1 ' ery American n born speech-makeSuch ia tha daily experience of tho for-eigner, so called, whom the American' delights to honour, l have too many friends in America to permit Of niy ever going to that hospitable country again. And your play, The IVoiiigad Sou. How was that received?" 1 found It well received; but, aa the 'Dally Mail' has already Informed its readers, 1 made no concealment of my dUaaUafactiutt with it a an artistic production. The production in America was hardly recognisable by me a the play which is u beautifully iotd nt Drury Lana. The American audience, however, is the kindest, most sincere, most sympathetic, and most indulgent in Ihe world. A production that cannot succeed in America cannot succeed anywhere. The Prodigal Son' was playing to crowded houses in Harlow When 1 left Non York. The Drama's Infirmity, And' the state of the American drama T What I describe as the cardinal Infirmity of the American drama la the absence of competent stage producers It it sure there are few. and they are doing distinguished work: hut, takeu broadly, it would not be too much to any that tha dominating force on the American stags at this moment la the one of 'makeshift. Of the rare and knowledge brought to bear on aiage productions by the best English and European producers the American public knows very little. As it is ten years since you last visited tha States you must have nob man.v changes? The first and obvious chance is the extreme growth of New fork. Hut the physical changes era trival compared with tha commercial, political, and religious ones which confront the of American life. At this moment Apierir la going through one of tin periodical outbreaks of commercial conscience. Commercial morality ia under the X rays, and the result 1 n sense of shame nod humiliation which all the beat Americans feel. Nobody will go to the penitentiary a the result of tha shameful disclosures that aro being made. On the other hand the moral sens of ihe old Puritan stock in America is so far outraged that men long held in honour will probably be heard of no more. 8onie names with which we are familiar in England are rapidly disappearing from. of American rcspert&biii-lyth roll-caOther will follow in due courfe. And politically? The great political change which 1 noticed in the growth of American imperialism. The old theory that Amerl ca must concern itself only with its domestic affairs has given, place to the idea that it baa in duties,' its responsibilities, its rights, and ila privileges in relation to the nations of the world. war was no The doubt partly responsible for thla change, but a atill more - important factor la the personality of President fiooaevelt. ! cannot sufficiently extol tha virility and at the same time the Puritan simplicity of the principles with which the President la Insnirng tha American people. We want more of hia kind everywhere. The worlds want ia men. and Roosevelt Is a man every inch of him. Mr. Frank Lindon. to Mont Criato). 4 K Squl rrZZZL tha Great --English Drama M Tyl0r, Th. Ticket W af Leave Man. No higher 20 and JO cents. By ,0 . tiu-h.- r. You don't knew that Ogden Brothers have changed hands. This is the Goodale Grocery Co. Wc believe in a welcome, and we not indicate it personally, but our goods form a tempting item The in hospitality. only first welcome the fare follows. prices and ought to offer a relish to your appe goods tite. ll WE ARE MEETING YOU HALF WAY Thai's Our Way Spanisb-Amerlca- P. ERNSTROM n Religious Changes. PRACTICAL H0RSE8H0ER. ara specially ' prepared for "Coma toting mean Horace. and ice how wa do It" 417 Twenty-thirotreot Oppooito Conaolldatod Wagon A Machino tompany. Phano SIS X. . Wa d Tha rollgtoua changes seem to me chiefly in tha direction of universality. The lines which divldo the denominations are becoming fainter. If evar me Idea of a United Catholic church ia attained, It will, 1 think, first be seen in the United B tales. The differences between Baptists, Congregar tionalltta, Presbyterians and Methc rr HARNESS be well made sad of good leather if yon went to get real satisfaction out of it. We are making should ,HE CLEVER commercial TRAV- PRICESLAP SPECIAL BLANKETS. WHIPS. nn and COMBS ROBES . CURRY werk only. thi for BRUSHES no Um Id making hia Wc cut nothing hut the beat brand u know ar ahead ni .v V. TANNLD LEATHER for OAK Of at tnllD yon want to catch uui 11 ur goods. Jhd you, Mr. Saleaman, with ELER ISS 7,1 CMC t tha . tong ?Tpla before tha whistle blow. tax you too much, either. We tc-- '1 trucking and carting busk nesldea, and hnve a quick action J.C. Plait Saddlery Co. 2213 Wash. Ava. 378 Twenty-thir- d at. -- Allen Transfer Co. PASADENA U CALIFORNIA ths residential dig ia tvV., buUri11 8tateA Nw mi!.1. walSL ROUTES GOOD PITHS TO cert. i ilI!. wbili!- W'ull-- the whe;: ..Liu o: forms' There Jle lllMi. uf aridity ilia: on-- i ;i lid y place to spend a r Jfonr nation. Only a sea hor Adw, tiSSwi The Utah National Bank OF OGDEN United States Depository ta president Casa Grande Hotel Vic. Projld SeSc. EProry mlAla E Hoto . r. WOODBURY. Caahlar "Elite Hotel of PasadenaManager. offws A. V. Melntoh ....Awiftant SS.inS ,1 day Interest Paid on Savin Account who protests agaiusi fundamental doctrines, and the Homan Catholic, who is ready io uni: with other branches of the Christian Church only on th teus of Aaarou' rod, are outside the libera Christian brother hood which is growing up all oter the though ii State. How does the American Pres compare with that of England? Xoi very favorably; aud I could a thla aa freely in America a ia the columns of the Daily Mail.' The time line a, the promptness, the power ol being on the nail sre almost as conspicuous in the beat American journals ta in pour own paper. H.u there i neither th aimplldity of form nor the breadth of in I eras t w kick onr best English papers show. Consistency is not a cardinal journalistic virtu, and nerd not be. Ii may b a true of a journal as of humanity, that la a leading characteristic of weak minds, but tha of the American newspaper, even of the best kind, from day to day. without shame or any attempt to wave the face, ia nn atuaiing and bewildenne fact to the English observer. Tha Englishman's Welcome. One of the outstanding features ol American journalism at this niomeut is the effort to combime with the newspaper th interest of a magaaine. A similar feature, 1 know, has long been a characteristic of the Dally Mail. Has the personal tone of American newspapers Improved? Decidedly. 1 was pleased to find that a man trousers, coat, neck-tie- , not to apeak of his hair and hie eyes, ara leas than formerly considered a proper subject for public comment. Then (here ia distinctly more sincerity of criticism and less indulgence in personal ridicule and abua Do not let me conclude. added Mr. Hall Caine, without saying that 1 of should be sorry if any criticism mine on America or Americana conveyed an unfavorable Impression. Nowhere is the Englishman ro much at home outside his own country a when he travels in the United States; no where so sure of sn immediate and hearty welcome; nowhere so certain tu find aims snd Institutions that have ail hit aympatby and that command nil his heart; and nowhere does he meet with men and women more able an4 earnest more, brotherly and sisterly. R'r-ha- y COMMENDS NEWHOUBE'fi TALK. Estimate af Beaton Con. and Motive in Giving It Analysed. Boston Consolidated must be regarded In an entirely different light aa n result of the recent public statements of President Samuel Newhousc, nays George L. Walker in the Boston declared haa Ha Commercial. through th press, over hia own signature, that, with its proposed reduction plaut completed, he is confident the company will be able to earn 8 per cent on ibe thares at 10U; He estimates that (hero are S.oim.oou tons of sight which ran be porphyry ores milled at a substantial profit. Besides this ore. there Is now sufficient massive sulphide smelting ore in sight to warrant an Increase of shipments from SCO tons dally, at present, to 75U tons daily after the new plant of the American Smelting company is completed, and Mr. Newbousa thinks that its production of imeltlng ores alone will yield the company a profit of 9150,000 per month. A tunnel in this portion of the mine haa recently been driven fifty-onfeet in ore that averages 8 e per cent copper. Testimony of this character is always of such tremendous importance that the measure of the man who gives it should be carefully taken and his possible motives thoroughly aualyzed. Mr. Newbouse is a man of large business affairs, and hia mining record has boon almost a encceaalon of 'remarkable successes. Th many undertakings he now has la hand are of far too great importance to permit him to take needless chances. It is ridiculous to assume that hie speculative interest in the company! stock could have led him to aay what lie hae about Boston Consolidated, as his holdings must already show, him a very huge profit. The most careful anatasis of the Newbouse statement caQot fail to convince one that hia actuating Impulse was just s be stated it; T feel it my duty g president and manager of the company to urge stockholder to retain their shares even though the temptation to sell at a profit la strong. Otherwise stated. President Newbousa has a clearer conception of bis duty to the stockholders of hia company than 93 per cent of the corporation officials of the world posses, and be dared lo do it. Tha mine and Us probable earning capacity bad enormously increased in value and be recognised that It was tbs right of tha owners of tha property to know It. Hia action entitles him to the highest possible commendation. He ha set an example that can well be followed by In every departcorporation officials ment of induxtri-i- l activity. Instead of using hia knowledge for his own personal ends, as is too often done by mining officials, he hus given Ihe stockholders' the information in the most convincing terms at bis command and has put himself in e position to be held personally responsible for Its accuracy. ''There is a limit to the Information that anyone can obtain concerning the value of a mining stock. An examination by a mining engineer of standthe best ing is usually considered method of securing knowledge that will warrant, one in making Investment. Such information can hardly be compared with that conveyed by aa they Mr. Xewbouse's statement are backed by a man of reputation who has deli be lately put bis reputation at nuke. It will probably require nearly a year to perfect the plans for and construct the Boston Consolidated company's new milling plant. In the meantime the shipment of 250 tons of smelting ore dally, which is now netting the company a profit of 840,000 monthly, will continue. The company has already rained all the money that will be required to build its mill and prepare the property to produce an& ship 2.000 tons ef milling we daily. The profit on this should be at least 81, and it Is net improbable that it may reach 83 per ton. If plans do not miscarry, therefore, Boston Consolidated should be able to begin dividend pa) menu In 1907; and if Mr. New house's Judgment can be credited, the stock should in that year be wnrth mre than 850 per share. vi-l- .i i:- u.c now - in the - io the their first buriurr enieipriM.. u,. ti.si was carrying The other day in a town t.f-- mill-!lrorn Chicago a oung man went fiom case io ca . .n a luuii-soui.. office ou: im: suit of i:iij: and uf some of the mo; that one is lii'iii'.cgcd u ui iul Itbooks was th priva e iil'iury of a bu. oung man who got h: icai-- i by delivering newspapers. Tins tuau b.gau carrying a route when lie was in one uf the lower grades of :m cit cbooL He carried (be route mil!! lie bad carried himself through tin- ngh'lt grade. When hi-- went into the high school still neen carrying cewepapcrs. b those at least who wei up carl 'enough lo see him. He carried paprrs until he graduated. Then he began to uad law. but i. a hia baud that flung morning against the doors of hundreds uf people in his city. Tills young man cum mued to carry a neakpsper nniie mini niter the Supreme court of Jlli mu told him he was a Uy, r. Many Gat Start on Routas- U isn't the jouag man who tell the inry, although be is ptuud io mem ion li career aa a newspaper boy and young rnsn. Thr person who gives the best account of hie work ia the woman who counted out his paper to him he worked every morning. Bite o hard carrying bag filled with papers about the town that she feared that he would not paa hi examination. She was afraiu be would get rick, ltui he didn't. Tills is but a Single iustuuce uf what has been accouipliriied by boy who have carried routes to start them on a useful career. The faihor in a family of boys and girl died and left bis wife and children stranded. The oldest boy took to defivering paper-- , kept the wolf from the family door, and carried himself th rough school biside. It 1 a fact that boys who have graduated from the United States military school at Wftst Point have paved their way to such an education by wearing out sola leather on newspaper route. Found Business sn Paptr Routt. One of the finest shoe store in a Wisconsin town 1 now owned aud operated by two )oung men who only a few years ago formed an IniercrilnK before ilsy light picture seven limes a week. The boy walked on either aide of n cart to which was hitched a dog. The can wa loaded with Chicago newspaper. By right the dog should be a partner In tha aiioo store, for ha helped to earn the vest egg I lint went to purchase a stock for the business. When rain descended In torrent and the wind from the li ke sifted snow Into the faces qf boys and dog. the cart kept rolling, subscriber got their papers, and th town got one of the stanchest business htnia-- of its commercial life. , e iuu-.win- - s S u ! uj g.-i- bu-hc- wt-.i- l bii'-l'l'- :, s - shifted. And shown u tin- - world with its glory and strife UH'KYElt I1E1.YAK OUR BUTCHERS man. touched s Oh. glorious thought! nor pain aorro-- Have left there one trophy, or brok en one heart. that lift their proud The mountain peaks to the rkles, Seem spurning tbe earth with its toils and Us cares; Crowned monarchs. no dynasty ever can rise. Thy sway m usurp or thv glory lo wear. God forun-- d ihee ;i ti : is 4 , Choicest . EATS s The Market Affords Ug-de- e. 1 - S. (5. DYE. Clerk of the board iff Educailuu uf Weber County. A lierfevt Ut PtrlHl I'hu. Greenwell Bros. Butchers For Fine Meats Twenty -- Fourth St. 35S ' Lindsey FOR ARID aura to get (h 1 at heat this market. AND PISH ;t., POULTRY BEST. THE Either Phoa 219. .7 Washington Avenue ,2478 MEAT MARKET FOR VOUR CHOICE. MEATS MEATS WE HAVE THE CEST. ' TRY Ul FISH AND POULTRY IN SEASON. Wa pleas tvaryo 171; PLoaea-I- nd. a. Ball Bell Phone 171-y- ; lad. 248, '!l- X7Xk. Washington Avenue 23 1 1 , I 2321 Washington Avenue it WM. WILFORD, Proprietor. BIELS We Keep the MEAT MARKE f Best Meats jloaay Iwy; no Inferior win bulled at BALLARD & RINCKERS Street 173 25th . meats IS THE PLACE TO BUY YOUR MEATS FRESH AND CHOICE. FRC8H FISH ARRIVE EVERY DAY. r 5 aid Just phoaa s w assure you bL th Both phenaa 6IS. J .1 .if 331 Twenty-Fourt- St. h ELITE Meat Market Phones Ball Your Cuts Are Ours Tha Finest Maata n th market ara always feud hare. lad. 843; Bell S3. C. H. GREENWELL, JR Proprietor. Phone foot', W Our matt Phons Ind. Home Mad 274. W. W. STONE, Prep. : it: s THE ARMOR Meat Market FINE SELECTED MEATS FRESH AND CURED. FIIH Spacialti: and Street I to pleas. Everything first-clas- 138. TWENTY-FOURT- ! Groceries and Choice Meats of AH Kinds Str 18 15! BEATS THEM ALL FOR Gama and Fish fn Season. handle Neth'ag but Prim Beef. Bath Phene Id. Twenty-Fift- h Prop. Fresh and Salt Meats. REGIONS. ; MARKET 2323 Washington Avenue A, WRIGHT, Xll-k- NEVADA 126 . considered desert lands, for thr growing of special arid land crop requirfraction of th moisture ing but neceiaary.for tbe growth. of ordinary We plant such a corn and wheat. hr said, ! are finding new plants. fiom the far table lands of Turkefur powrr, grea',1 stan and the s;pea of Russia and giheria, which a row luxuriantly under v FOR EXTRA CHOICE Meat Market exDr. Fairchild, an ggrirultural work of tbe of and in charge plorer, introduction of new seed and plans, i says that the greates surprro-- will be in tbe utilization of what are now ar Ton Meat Market DEC. 14TH ANR 15TH, PLANTS i TriE CENTRAL LONDO N 844-5o- Choice Meats 39-s- lid EXCU8ION TO'CHICAGO y FOR POULTRY AND FISH IN SEASON. ; Phone Bell lai, 198, hotel. l:r Fred L. Keller Whelasala and Retail ; A few days later ibe Atlanta man recognized at the same hotel the bat he bad ba;.' II took It. He wcul south und clayed at tbe boa few .leys hia former visit. ld ho bad occupied One day when he entered tbe dining room lliere was naly one hal on lb il. rack. He placnd Ills own Whan be left the dining room aud picked up thr one bat left he found It waa the on be had list then ibe year before. New Turk Tribune. i AND t all POULTRY asn. ST. Lard just Sausage. All Meats ara Strictly FiratClas in Every Lina. Pbon pbon ns and w will taka care of you. Bell 477-k- : Ind- 'i Sid V tnill :? To Buy the s un- nor j r i v The Places l, Ugdeu to Chicago and return, Union Pacific R. R. Ticket via lie, untrodden by to return nntll Jan. 3th, 19CC. by bis greatness, by his art. , j ' Notice 1 krieby g:v.u ihat an election will be held iu VWbcr t'ounty outside of Ogden t'iii. ou Wednesday, December 0. 1805. for ihs puipnse of for lecthig n Board uf Eduvatiou Weber County tichoui District, une member will be elected from each iff tho bva repreaeniauvo precincts. 1 reel uct No. 1 iuclndi-- North Ogden. Hau-dalPleasaut View and liarnsvlllc. Precinct No. 2 includes Hooper. Roy, Kanearille. Tayiur and West Weber. Preclimt No. 5 Wilson, Marriott. Burch Cmk. ITiverdale and r Uintah. Preciiu-- No. 4 includes Plain City, Poplar, Parr West. 81aterv.ilo. retry and Warren. Precluct No. f.. lu. cliiih-llmitsvlllc. Edm aud laln-riyThere will be polling places at Huntsville, Kduu. iJbcrty, North Randall. Pleasant View. Jlarris-villPlain City, Warren, BUiterville, Farr Went, Marriott, Wluu, Uutvh rrrek, Uintah, Riverdule. lluy, Kauos. vilie. Wen Weber and Hooper. Pulls will ba open from 7 o'clock a. m. until 7 p. iu- Allans How boundless they seem in their grand solitude; No whisper, no echo of sorrow or glee. May rise ihrough the air, or on their silence intrude. s NOTICE OF SCHOOL ELECTION con Thy plains spread afar like Eieraiiys a f Cai-an- divine. I fl - moth-erof-pie- I love thee. O beautiful land of ihe West! Great temple of Nature, 1 bow at thy shrine, And worshiping there with the purest, the best, My soul floats away lo my Maker 4 J - THE LAND OF THE WEST. 4 r j a Unscathed 3' s uiv-uui- d pun makes good sense tha edges meet with a clivk like tha Msdes of a sharp pair ef ehean. Bmnrtime tho very thought fit tight to gel her ia autagouisiiv id.'utity, as wbeu Ibe man said of the temperam- rxhorter that be would be a good M low if be would euly lei drink alone, or when Disraeli (if it was bn wrote to the youth who had sent blui a first novel: I thank you very lun.-lt-. I shall loss no time In reading ltf or aa when a tuau, seeing poor piece of ctrptu-try- , said, That rtilrken roup looks aa ExIf aom man bad tntde It himself. of thought! quisite iervere lttcralui Aud the name absolute punning, tha very self diwlruvlwu of a proposition, was the old death thrust at a pour poet by the friuod who said. His poetry FAT CROWE. will be read wbea Miakenpears and It was a flu Homer are forgotten. Crow .Pat Crowe ia on the ocean; Pul double edged Made of speech until la on th act. same vruue fellow, Heine, 1 think, And here's a health to you. Pa1. Crowe, It to a wire edge by adding, slisrpeurd wherever you may be. aud not ill iheit," a banality that Pat Crowe is !n the county jail; Pal dulled Its )iarfevtlon forever. J. A. Crowe Is on the square. Atlantic. iu May They tracked him past the sun snd moos and nailed him In hia lair. RtairSiSI l.anar Rainbow. I recall many lunar rainbows during Pal Crowe. ou are n dandy; your feet the half century slure 1 was an observnr always mates. serve me. one In We've Jailed you, Pat, twenty ant boy aud. If memory towns and seventy-sevestales. double luuar rainbow. But ihe moat Y'ou'ra her and there and everywhere; perfn-- t of tlnae lies that 1 retail 1 saw ou lk edge of Darlington, B. C. youre all acros the world. a road hading uorib. with exThr'a ne'er a ling In any land buL 1 was Infields east ami west; hence uiy over yon's unfurled. tensive oiportunity. The full moon had Just You fought with Alexander; you bled risen above Ibe tope of the distant with Mary woods, and the bow In the west ws With Dconi Keurncy slanged the perfect, ihe span of ibe bow was tus Chinks; with Jason sought the terially ls than the span of a sun fleece. ralubow, but It dcplh. or thickness, Your bark 1 ou the sea, Pat Crowe; was proportionately tiiiu-- greater. The your bile ain't half so bad. ralnlww colors were distinct, but pale, When first w heard of you. Put aa If tbe arrh were built of pale Crowe, wc atill were but a lad. aud they changed aad faded less rapidly thin .the suu rainbows Twas you who kidnapped and I have seen. climbed the Arctic pole. When In ciiup on Johns ialaud, We recognized you at. a glance be- Booth Carolina, I saw a brilliant an cause you wear a mo: rainbow with one foot of the arch so . The things that you hare don.-- Pat near we could stand ou If or paa beCrowe, were clearly gainst ihe hind and in front of It, but we did nut law. Cor. Beirut Ifle dig for gold.-MaThe things you might, have done, oh Ainerhau. Pat, they nearly break your Jaw. A Hsl glory. Oh. Patrick Crowe. lubavo yourself; i.Ala.l tuau told a A Birmingham go out and rob a train. omawbat remarkable hat story tha A hundred boys you've kidnaped, Pat ; uther day, voneblug for lm truth by a thousand you have slain. that he was the wearer of ou Arrest yourself whereer you will, saying He walked lulu the dinthe bate. of from Labrador to Guam, room of r.n Atlanta hotel one day. ing Wa'll down the story with our murit putting bis lieside the one other on tbe and neve fori a qualm. batravk. When be left the dining room Go any gait that suits your tasie. be he found that hia list usd )eeu taken ami the other one left lu Ila pirn. Ivanhoe or Mara: Make love to Carrie Nation, or do There waa uotliicg lo do but lake It and be content. He rauic worth, aad hold-tip- s on the cars. Live any life you care to, Pat; be at a hotel the list swapping perform-am- t wea again repealed. Borne one Lazarus and Dives But do not lav us. Patrick dear; took from tbe dining room La track tha one taken l.y the stry teller from vita we'd miss yon from our lives. Vast, silent they - i.-a- Ki.-si- tov. u r - ( !: owe th. ir energy with which :;!. larg.-- itU CiOun T t i- i Bv J. 1.. in. Scores of the mvii I lilting S'.j c ;Le L'ui:el Oth. i,anil Whicil great ou b'-sl;f.h. moisture, iitc'.iu ti. : .'I...-!.iniiffo.-di. iu.r. I miht a good ; spl.'lictid tuiape plants. -i la it -, .ii . ibai is capable of j tioti XtS.r corn. ;he airghuin. inlti- - . Encircled . !.:oan.a;u. and occau, reiui.rioui . of brume Us well us new l.it.d: o' i.sg ;hi- laiuo of ten a nu put!1: ; oai o!..- - oi i.cjt-of arid laud. anil twrirya uf woitdc.-fiidroua.?. Eu:iroucd ar.-- t ' The lu.uNi.'oui :!.ci' securely nilj when l bell." said j rcfistii s powers the or spi. -i Mi.k A. cereal epecialidt of aud a lie- of oilier. We art coc-iTill emtii au-- ; glut 1c no longer lm ii.tu-d- l',.r!.on. id Plain Industry, ly fiiuliuK new gryjbs aud forage pi.ia , r- rna.i! on mi average, the wridih of the iu ihe .uucausue, in Algeria. Turi.e I lPi-sJfo.c from the bSth to stan ami uli-'- r dry euiinirh.- - whb:i O laud of si.;. ;i Mielch out ill) with will bring lmd vw.l be.to.id :he lund ct,I;lca;io:i iniunis.--area- a Strong u of the : rent American dtsi .;. iel.Mug capacity for half :1 And wik'ii.nt. i.u. ugr thy future of ii.i vu; t.iva of thirty ls per iiuwr liKiked upjii u ubsoliuely iiah' : ;o acre aud of the other half of fifteen tor agricul Litre, ii is a --oinewliai sinI'li.iOSon: I hoi: h am) i, uv.il all gular tiling that no nu ll uic a rk- ,r tb cuaru;-- , ' focaroui wheat will grow with cal of ibe reairv cf thc-n- - fat. a a- Disclose all o varied i of tb:s regiou, but onr i.'U ii: 'be of rainfall and yield fifteen 1U i ill-j bukh.-lhave already proved vi 'nit to the acre, whore ordinary 1 This have said to be actual tuct-- . not All pulse a.e s.tMvu. ti;e cold eluiut wheat Is an absolute 'failure.. bushels more than the average tlkwirlcs. arc hf i i us apa.-- t flC,u the wart. Tha; un: of life; J No dreamer are wc. t!.,have iv. s JuTwttn Our OT AMERICA PAPER i vm FIE jhhimm;, ij:rEiini:n |