Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 29, Number 27, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 2 September 1908 — Page 7

THE RING AND THE OSTRICHES — . By FRANK RUSSELL

Billy Nutzel and me wuz trappln’ and huntin’ down here together In Patagonia for 'bout three year, an’ had got a thunderin’ big lot of furs an’ skins. Billy sez to me one day, as how it ’ud be best to take ’em to ’Frisco and sell ’em there, as we couldn’t git half the wuth of ’em here, an’, besides, we oughter have a bit of a spell, anyway, so 1 says bueno, we’ll go. We hit the trail fur Punta Arenas, where nearly all our furs wus, and where we’d have to ketch a boat. There wusn’t nuthin’ but these cargo tramp steamers in the straits then, and the feller in the office there sez as how no boat won’t come for awhile, so we put up at the Gaucho hotel, run by a Austriaka, to wait till she happened along. We’d been in this shack a couple o’ days, an’ one evenin’ I wus down in the barroom, havin’ a quiet time by myself, when all of a sudden I hears Billy, yelling fer me to come there quick. Well, I grabs my old 44, thinkin’ he’s in seri’s trouble, and tears .back to his. room. ■ “Sit down,” sez he, “I got a bally good scheme.” I stowed away the gun, disgusted, and gave ’ins some advice ’bout frightenin’ people with heart trouble, which he took on hotis us. “Look here,” he sez, “we’re goin’ ter make our forchin this trip, shore. We’ll rig' up a couple o’ inkybaters, and fill ’em with awstrich eggs, an’ ’bout the time we git to ’Frisco they’ll be nearly ready to hatch, an’ we can sell ’em alive to these rich sports, and mebbe soind-to a circus or menagery. They’ll fetch a fat price, an' we’d oughter git a pile o’ coin out

uv 'em.” Billy was propel "loco 'bout this scheme, an’ kep’ tellin’ it over an’ over again, an’ laffln’ an’ whackin’ the table with his fist, and plannin’ how we'd spend the money, 'til blamed if he didn’t git me roused up, too, an’ so' I said we’dd give it. a trial, bein’s it ’ud cost nothin'. I’d never seen a inkybater on dooty before, but Bill he’d been on a farm up in Santa Fe, where there wus lots uv ’em, and then he’s a mighty handy chap with the tools, is Bill, so betwixt us both we rigged up a couple of big boxes, and got some sperit lamps off'n a schooner, an' put some rings in the boxes so’s to hang ’em up in the boat with ropes, to keep ’em from rockin’ In bad weather. That took a couple o’ days, an’ then we started out in camp with the hosses an’ some cargo baskets with wool in ’em, to fetch th'e You know how plentiful is awss3sSk eggs now in December? Well, they’s a lot more plentiful than days, ah’ we got the hosses loaded in no time. We got the eggs to Punta Arenas, and filled up the inkybaters. Betwixt ’em they held more'n 400. All over the outside of the boxes we painted In Spanish and English: “Handle with care” an’ “Delikit contents.” Purty soon the old boat hove in sight—Englishman she wuz.’bout 5,000 tons. When ever’thlng wuz aboard, Bill went ’round to the first mate, tellin’ him ’bout our inkybaters, an’ paid ’im ten dollars to let us put ’em up for’ard in an empty storeroom. So we drove some big staples in the ceilin’ an’ swung up the boxes. Ever’thing wus goin’ so easy that me an’ Bill wuz gettin’ more confident in the scheme ev’ry minit. w ’ A woman and two kids was the only other passengers on board, ’cause in them days mighty few people went up the west coast. We figgered the eggs 'ud hatch out ’bout a week after -we got -to ’Frisco, ah’ T'rec kb ri they "would ' hav¥," foe ; Mt When we got up here to Callao an’ loaded a bit of cargo, a feller, with a bunch of soldiers, come aboard, ah’ said the plague had broken out an’ we gotter stay in quarantine. Welt, the plague got wuss an’ wuss, an’ we had to lie there for three weeks befo’ we got away, an’ the cap’in us the boat wasn’t half as mad as me an’ Bill, ’cause we foresees that the awatriches are going ter hatch on board an’ cause trouble. After we left Callao we couldn’t git inter any other port ’tfl after a bunch of ufflshuls had nosed round fur a couple of .days, an’ finally the cap'in sez that we’d be two months behind time when we got to ’Frisco. One tfjjbrnin’ jest befo’ we got to Panama, Bill had a look at the eggs, an’ comes back madder’n a freshsheared ram. He says: “The awStriches are cornin’.” We hired the carpenter to make crates for ’em, an’ it kep’ ’im working overtime to keep up with the demand. Bill wouldn’t let me do nothin’, said he’s a proper burd flnanceer, an’ wus goin’ ter keep herd on ’em hisself. The cap’in wus a bit sore ’bout this sudden cargo- o’ live stock, but Bill giv 'im a roll of fox skins an' a guanaco capa, an’ some furs to the other officers, so they’s Bill's friends then, an’ the first mate told the cook to save all the teavin’s an’ put ’em in a basket outside-tlre galley, where Bill, could get it handy to feed the chicks., ■ , —-Jk Out o’ the whole lot o' eggs nearly 400 hatched; hut a few died, so we

(Copyright, by Shortatory Pub. Cos.) t

had ,’bout 360 left. An’ you oughter seen ’em grow! The cap’in promised Bill he could turn ’em out on deck ever’ Sat’day fur a run-a-roun’, an’ when he’d open the boxes they’d be all over the deck, for’ard an’ aft, in five minits. They’s great han’s to swaller things —burnt matches, .cigarette stumps, buttons an’ bits of iron, an’ tHey wus alius pickin’ at nail heads an’ bolts an’ spots o’ paint. One Sat’day Bill let ’em loose, and they’s arscamperin’ ’round deck for more’n two hours, when I hears a yell from aft. I thought one of them kids with the woman had fell overboard, so I tears back along the deck, shuckin’ off my coat, an’ I sees the woman hot-footed after a awstrich, but it gets mixed up with the crowd and they all run for’ard together. I asks her whut’s the trouble, an’ she begins to cry an’ says the awstrich has done swallered her dimin’ ring, and that Bill has got to cut ’em all’open till he finds it. I told her I’d see Bill and see what he sez, and started off, and she looks for the cap’in. She sets forth that she left the ring on ’ey toilet stand, an’ went up on deck fer a walk. When she comes back the wus standin’ in her room, an’ she druv ’im back upstairs, an* when she went to git the ring it wus gbne, so she chases the burd till they git mixed up together. She reckons there’s only one thing to do, and that s to git a knife an’ examine ’em all inside, till we gits the right one. Everybody knowed how bad the awstriches wus ’bout swallerin’ things, spechully shiny things, so of course we thought the ring was inside one of the burds. “How much is this here ring wuth?" sez Bill, “I’ll pay you fur it,” But the woman sez it wus a present from ’ her first husband, an’ had a dimin’ in it as big as her thumb, an’ she wouldn’t take a thousand dollars fur it. Well, they Jawed fur an hour, till Bill thinks of a scheme to git the ring without slaughterin’ the burds; so he hustles round fur the doctor to

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“I Hears a Yell from Aft,” make ’em sick, but they wouldn’t divulge the ring that ’erb way. We sees right off that this scheme is no good, and Bill sez: “Suppose we leave ’em fur a few days, an’ mebbe have terrible rough weather, an’ they’ll git seasick, an’ fling up the ring.” Ever’body nacherally roared, ’cept the woman—she got proper red-headed. “You're gittin’ right foolish,” sez to Bill. “Them burds gotter be :BfeQiM.:C!Ebt.,off;’, Bill sees there's nothin’ else tor'do, so we gits a knife aach, an’ begins the investergation. The woman toilers, too, allowin’ she’s goin’ to watch that we look good. I wus- to do .the kiiliri’' an’ skinnin’ (’cause the skins wus wuth a good bit) an’ Bill an’ the woman wus goin’ ter do the prospectin’. * We worked all that day, killin’ an’ skinnin’ and prospectin’, an’ found ever’thing in the world Tnsij|e uv ’em ’cept the ring. We started again the next mornin’, and pretty soon had all the awstriches killed ’cept five, an’ still no ring in sight. ’Bout that time here comes them two bally little kids, on the hoti jump. “We found yer ring tindCr the bed, mommer,” one of ’em hollered. Well, I thought Bill wus a-goin’ to massaker the whole crowd. He jumped up on a for’ard hatch, flung his hat overboard, an’ cussed for 20 minits, without takin’ - breath, and done a proper war dance the whole time. “If any you gangle-legged shakes wants to champeen this here let ’im ’proach to ’is death, an’ 111 trash his face like a spiled pertater,” he„ howled out; but everybody was safe under coyer, an’ he had the boat to hisself. s After ’while he got tired an’ set down, but. still a-cussin’, so I. went out to ’im to pacify: Tzn. “Don’t take it so hard, Bill,” I sez, “We’ll be in ’Frisco pretty soon, an then we can'go back to Patagonia fur anuther crop of awstrich eggs.” And that’s why we’re here.

THE LAND OF GRAIN —BY— ' JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD Author of "American Farmers Building a New Nation In the North"— “Canada—The Land of Greater Hope"—“The Invasion of Canada by American Farmers"—"A Thousand Miles on Horseback Across the Dominion Provinces," Etc., Etc. Not so very many years ago the majority of people in the United States laughed at the prediction that the day was coming when Western Canada would far outstrip this country in the raising of grain—when, in other words, it would become the great bread-basket of the world. During the past three or four years the enormous production of grain in the Dominion West has thinned the ranks of those who doubted the destiny of Canada’s vast grain growing regions; the crops of this year will dispel the doubts of the remaining few. From Winnipeg westward to the foothills of Alberta, over a country nearly a thousand miles in width, the grain production this year will be something to almost stagger the belief of those hundreds of thousands of American farmers whose average yield is not more than from ten to fifteen bushels of wheat to the acre, and who are finding that their product is also outclassed in quality by that of their northern neighbors. The enormous grain crop of this year in the Canadian West may truthfully he said-to he the,production of. “a few pioneers.” Only a small centage of the unnumbered millions of acres of grain land are under cultivation, notwithstanding the fact that tens of thousands of homesteads were taken up last year. And yet, when all the figures are in, it will be found that the settlers of the. western prairies have raised this year more than 125,000,000 bushels of wheat, 100,000,000 bushels of oats and 25,000,000 bushels of barley. It has been a “fortune making year” for thousands of American farmers who two or three years ago owned hardly more than the clothes upon their backs, and whose bumper crops from their homesteads will yield Them this season anywhere from |I;SOQ to $2,500 each, more money than many of them have seen at one time in all their lives.

Very recently I passed through the western provinces from Winnipeg to Calgary, and in the words of a fellow passenger, who was astonished by what he saw from the car windows in Manitoba, we were, metaphorically speaking, in a “land of milk and honey.” The country was one great? sweep of ripening grain. In fact, so enormous was the crop, that at the time there were grave doubts as to the possibility of GETTING ENOUGH BINDER TWINE TO SUPPLY THE DEMAND. A situation like this has never before been known in the agricultural history of any country. Before I made my first trip through the Dominion west I doubted very much the stories that I had heard of this so-called “grain wonderland” across the border. I believed, as unnumbered thousands of others believed, that the stories were circulated mostly to induce immigration. I quickly found that I was wrong. As one Alberta farmer said to me a few weeks ago, “If the whole truth were told about this' country I don’t suppose you could find one American in ten who would believe it.” ■ This year the. prospects of the wheat crop of Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Alberta are an average of over TWENTY-FIVE BUSHELS,, TO THE ACRE, and that this grain is far superior to that raised in the states is proved by our own government statistics, which show that American millers are importing miU lions of bushels of B “Canadian hard” to mix with the home product in order that THIS HOME PRODUCT MAY BE RAISED TO THE REQUIRED STANDARD. It js a peculiar fact that while the Dominion Government is anxious for its western provinces to fill up with the very best of immigrants,, there Has been no blatant, or., sensational advertising of those lands. For this reason it is probable that not 6ne American farmer out of fifty knows that Canada wheat now holds the world’s record of value —that, In other words, it is the best wheat on earth, and that more of it is grown to the acre than anywhere else in the world. A brief study of climatic conditions, and those things which go to make a climate, will show that the farther one travels northward from the Montana border the milder the climate becomes —up to a certain point. In other words, the climate at Edmonton, Alberta, is far better than that of Denver, 1,600 miles south; and while thousands of, cattle and sheep are dying because of the severity of the winters in Montana and other western states, the cattle, sheep and horses of Alberta GRAZE ON THE RANGES ALL WINTER WIT ft ABSOLUTELY NO SHELTER. This is all largely because sea-currents and air-currents fcave to do with the making of the climate of temperate regions. For instance, why is it that California possesses such a beautiful climate, with no winter at all, while the New England states on a parallel with it have practilfhlly six months of winter out of twelve? It la because of .that. great sweep of warm water , known as the “Japan current,” and this same current not only affects the-westernmost of the Dominion provinces, but added to its influence are what are known as the "chinook winds”—steady and undeviating air-currents which sweep over the great wheat regions of Western

Canada. There are good scientific reasons why these regions are capable of producing better crops than our own western and central states, but best of all are the proofs of it In actual results. This year, for instance, as high as one hundred bushels of oats to the acre will be gathered In Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta, ani some wheat will go AS HIGH AS FIFTY BUSHELS TO THE ACRE, though of course this is an unusual yield. Last spring it was widely advertised in American papers that Alberta’s winter wheat crop was a failure. In fact, this is Alberta’s banner year in grain production, as it is Saskatchewan’s and Manitoba’s, and from figures already in it is’ estimated that Alberta’s wheat will yield on an average of THIR-TY-FIVE BUSHELS TO THE ACRE. In many parts of the province returns will show a yield of as high as FIFTY bushels to the acre and it is freely predicted by many that when the official figures are in a yield of at least forty-five instead of thirty-five to the acre will be shown.

At the time of my last Journey •through the Canadian West, when my purpose was largely to secure statistical matter for book use, I solicited letters from American settlers in all parts of the three provinces, and most of these make most interesting reading. The letter was written by A. KaltenbrUnner, whose postoffice address is Regina, Saskatchewan. "A few years ago,” he says, "I took up a homestead for myself and also one for my son. The half section which we own is between Rouleau and Drinkwater, adjoining the Moosejaw creek, and is a low, level and heavy land. Last year we put in 100 acres of wheat which went 25 bushels to the acre. Every bushel of it was ‘No. I.’ That means the best wheat that can be raised on earth—worth 90 cents a bushel at the nearest elevators. „We also threshed 9,000 bushels of first class oats out of 160 acres. Eighty acres was fall plowing AND YIELDED NINETY BUSHELS TO THE ACRE. We got 53 cents a bushel clear. All our grain was cut jn the last week of the month of August. We will make more money out of our crops this year than last. For myself, I feel compelled to say that Western Canada crops cannot be checked, even by unusual conditions.” An itemized account shows a single year’s earnings of this settler and his son to be as follows: 2,500 bushels of wheat at 90 cents a bu5he1....... : .$2,250 9,000 bushels of oats at 53 cents a bushel i... 4,770 Total - $7,020 It will be seen by the above that ?t*his man’s oat crop was worth twice as much as his wheat crop. While the provinces of western Canada will for all time to come be the world’s greatest wheat growing regions, oats are running the former grain a close race for supremacy. The soil and climatic conditions in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta are particularly favorable to the production of oats, and this grain, like the wheat, runs a far greater crop to the acre-than in even the best grain producing states of the union. Ninety bushels to the acre is not an unusual yield, whole homesteads frequently running this average. And this is not the only advantage Western Canada oats have over those of the United States, for in weight they run between forty and fifty pounds to the bushel, while No. 1 wheat goes to sixty-two pounds to the bushel. In fact, so heavy is Canadian grain of all kinds, and especially the wheat, that throughout the west one will see cars with great placards upon them, which read: “This car is not to be filled to capacity with Alberta wheat.”*"' When I made my first trip through the Canadian West a few years ago I found thousands of settlers living in rude shacks, tent shelters and homes of logs and clay. Today one will find these old "homes” scattered from Manitoba to the Rockies, but they are no longer used by human tenants. Modern homes have taken their place —-for it has come to be a common saying in these great grain regions that, “The first year a set Her-is in the-land he earns a living; the second he has money enough to build himself a modern home and barns; the third he is independent.” And as extreme as this statement may seem to those hundreds of thousands of American farmers who strive for a meager existence, it is absolutely true. I am an American, as patriotic, I believe, as most of our people—but even at that I cannot but wish that these people, whose lives are such an endless and unhappy grind, might know of the new life that is awaiting them in this last great west —this “land, of greater hope,” where the farmer is king, and where the wealth all rests in his hands. As one American farmer said to me, “It is hard to pull up stakes and move a couple of thousand And so it is—or at least it appears to be. But ''ln a month' it can be done. And the first year, when the new settler reaps a greater harvest than he has ever possessed before, he will rise with 200,000 others of his people in Western Canada and thank the government that has given him, free of cost, anew life, anew home, and new hopes—which has made of him, ip, fact, “A man among men, a possessor of wealth among his people.” : 9 Thoreau’s Sensible Answer. When the forest-haunting hermit Thoreau lay on his deathbed, a Calvinistie friend called to make inquiry regarding his soul. “Henry,’’ he said, anxiously, “have you made your peace with God?” "John,” replied the dying naturalist, in a whisper, "I didn’t know that God and myself had quar- j reled!”

WHAT THE TRADE MARK MEANS TO THE BUYER Few people realize the importance of the words “Trade Mark” stamped on the goods they buy. If they did It would save them, many a dollar spent for worthless goods and put a lot of unscrupulous manufacturers out of the business. When a manufacturer adopts a trade mark he assumes the entire responsibility for the merit of his product. He takes his business repution In his hands —out in the limelight—"on the square” with the buyer of his goods, with the dealer, and with himself. The other manufacturer —the one' who holds out "inducements,” offering to brand all goods purchased with each local dealer’s brand sidesteps responsibility, and when these inferior goods "come back” It’s the local dealer that must pay the penalty. A good example of the kind of protection afforded the public by a trade mark is that offered in connection with National Lead Company’s advertising of pure White Lead as the best paint material. That the Dutch Boy Painter trade mark is an absolute guaranty of purity in White Lead is proved to the most skeptical by the offer National Lead Company make to send free to any address a blow-pipe and instructions how to test the white lead for themselves. The testing outfit IS being sent out from the New York office of the company, Woodbridge Building. PICNIC FOR THE PUP. # His Devotion to Duty Rewarded by Strange Luxuries. * A Boston bulldog owned by George H. Clapp whs so determined to capture a woodchuck which he had chased into its den that he followed after and staid in the hole all night When the dog had got his jaws about the enemy he found that he could not get out owing to the small size of the animal’s hole. Rather than lose his prey the. dog retained his hold on the woodchuck over night, and was helped out by his master in the morning. The dog was nearly exhausted, and revived after feeding and drinking in a curious manner. He consumed about two quarts of unguarded ice cream, which had been set aside for a party, and capped the climax by falling into a bucket of lemonade. —Worcester (Mass.) Telegram. PRECISE.

Miss Sentimental —Tell me, are you sure, Milton, that I’m the first you’ve asked to marry you?” Mr. Manyack—Do you mean this present month or do you include last as well? Not Guilty. “Now, Mrs. McCarthy,” said counsel for the defense, "please tell us simply as you can your version of this affair. It is alleged that you referred to Mrs. Callahan in disparaging terms.”— "Not a bit av it. I didn’t say annything about disparaging nor disparagus nor anny other garden truck, except that I said she had a nose loike a squash and her eomplixion was as bad as a tomato in the lasht stages. Yez can see for yersilf if it ain’t the truth.” Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought The people of Paris, 2,714.000, could stand on 0.29 of a square mile, and the population of Chicago on about 0.22 of Lewis’ Single Binder costs more than other 5c cigars. Smokers know why. Your dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111. It takes a woman with sound judgment to generate silence. Mra. Window's Soothing Syrup, ror children teething, eoftena the gutne, reduces to--Bsmmtlon,Uypaln. cures wind coUo. 25c a bottle. Pride and prejudice make an unsatisfactory pair to draw to. Feet Ache—Ue Allen’* Foot-Ease Over3o,oootestimonials. Refuse imitations. Sendfor free trial package. A. 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. A woman is known by the acquaintances she cuts.

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are now offering a limited amount of stock in a Hlieep Ohmpany which*we are organizing in South-western Montana. If you are interested in a good dividend paying proposition write us for description and holdings of the Company. Johnson A Boone, Dillon, Beaverhead County, Montana.

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