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Show LABOR AND SUPPLY BUREAU I SERVICE It a I ' at Wanted Hect toppers, $1 per ton for topping and loading, at Trenton. K Young man to run milk wagon, Ilen-m Ilen-m eon. Carpenter, llenson. Men with 2k teams to haul heets. Housekeeper, M middle-aged lady, Logan. Young IB man on farm, Smithfleld. Two ex-ijn ex-ijn perlenecd lady Btenographers, Logan. K Sis men for the winter, $2.2G per B day and hoard, Logan. Men to con-Si con-Si tract for topping -10 acres of heets, 'S3 at Uenson. Ten men on street work, IfR Logan, $3 for eight hours. 9m Wo can furnish Students during ASK afternoons and Saturdays. Men to Jjjft So on farms with their families. j19 Clerks and office help, both men and Wk women. Men to run engines, heating VmK" plants or servo as night watches. fB Wo can assist you In finding fruits, ft. vegetables, horses, cows, buggies, lltfl wagons, farm machinery, etc. . . Hmt Wanted Men with teams to con- UfR tract for tho digging, topping and UK hauling of of eighteen acres of beots, .K near Logan. 3M Wanted Applo pickers and pack- H ers. Can use girls or Btudcnts after- iK noona and Saturdays. Work by con- )m tract in Logan and vicinity. jj" Inquiry Is frequently made at tho 1H bureau concerning new fields of en- fwgr deavor, something out of tho old 9B beaten paths. t Is very apparent that as a community, we have had a tend- iB ency to follow along the few lines J5 that tho other fellows pursue. The i opportunities for more diversified W fields of endeavor and Investment Jsft aro here, and tho man who utilizes I S them will be tho rich man of tho M future. It was the Bessemer process I M of making steel that made steel kings. S 'Tho new process of treating low grade !' copper ore that made posslblo the for-m for-m tunes that came to those who ven-M ven-M tured Into a now field. Timo was j when tho sugar industry was new iff d strange to us. Wo view these fw achievements now from the after Effl standpoint. Wo aro prono to think Vm that every opportunity has been jH seized. Now opportunities and now HI fields still lie before us, and we are M no moro obscuro than theso then until un-til tried ventures wcro a few years ago. f Sir William Crooks warned tho 'J world that tho human family stands JK in dangor of -starvation through tho M, lack of land fertilizers. Tho potash fm fields of Gern nny aro closed to us ijw and the- pt' no beds of Chile will M soon b ' laustod. Potash Is now W worth tn times what It was beforo S (ho war. Interest has revived In Its Jffl manufacture from wood ashes. Tho 4 high price prevailing now renders w tho business profltahlo. Tho con-m con-m structinn of a plant is simple and in-fjB in-fjB expensive. Ashes can bo secured 5 from sawmills dumps, household ash m pilot), brush lots, etc. It would re-iK re-iK cult in burning for- a purposo all " 3! rcfiiRo that is combustiblo and that K Is now permitted- to decay In and H nrnund our cities. Ono hundred and H fifty pounds of potash can ho ob-ffil ob-ffil talncd from n ton of ashes. At a pot-M pot-M ash factory In Michigan, ashes aro iM procured for$3.G0 a ton, and, after m treatment, tho potash brings $8.00 h por ton. b Offlco In Commerclal-Doostors' Wm rooms. Phono GG. |