The Syracuse Journal, Volume 3, Number 38, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 January 1911 — Page 2
Syracuse Journal SYRACUSE, . - - IND There are sinpieasanter things In this world than a surfeited coal bin. ■nils is a great little country, and we havfe the census figures to prove it It is said that a new United States gun is the most powerful. Surely; why not? A Brasilian revolt has come to be about as serious as a hunting season in this country. A Maryland man wants a divorce because he is afraid of his wife. But who of us isn't? Under a new law it is a crime tc treat In Tacoma. Tacoma must b« the original tightwad town. A woman gets a place as a wire less operator because the C. Q. D heroes are said to be lazy. They are planning to keep tab on the people who have domestic troubljes. Just as if that would stop them! An (advertisement says that every home should have a talking machine. Evidently the man who wrote it Is not married. A man in Michigan dislocated his Jaw by laughing over his wife's joke-. The reverse never would or could have happened. A Philadelphia man committed suicide with a safety razor, but so far we haven’t heard of a woman cutting her corns with one. If last summer’s geranium pot were not so heavy it might be covered with velvet and thus become a very stylish hat for your daughter. What did Woodrow Wilson mean when he told the governors assembled In Louisville that they had come tc Kentucky for “stimulation T’ A Minnesota man, just as the unAertaker was about to embalm him, Mt up and cried: “Hello, Bill!” Such conduct Is almost indecorous. When the Ohio river takes a notion Io fill up and go on a prolonged spree there Is nothing to do but stand bach and let the old thing have Its way. A St. Louis man has Invented 6 soundless soup spoon. This notable addition to the elegancies of society may be followed in time by the knife lees pie. Is ft worth while to designate the exact status of the person who moralizes on the blessings of poverty and does nothing to relieve the curse of poverty? Now that the long hatpin Is being assailed by hostile legislators, outraged femininity will probably take to wearing machetes or snickersnees In public: places. A New Jersey girl advertises that jhe will not marry any of her acquaint ances but wants a stranger for a hus band. Doesn’t she even want to be in iroduced to him first? The man charged with cruelty bj his wife on the ground that he made her shave him, is no doubt an inno cent riiartyr, if the facts were known Probably he was merely adopting tide means of Inflicting a penance upon himself. That he enjoyed the opera tton isi inconceivable. The otherwise safe and sane clt> sens of Massachusetts have just fin Ished a three-year-old pool game. Poolomania, although not violent ox dangerous to the innocent bystanders Is well nigh Incurable. Its one re deeming feature Is that the victims labor under the illusion that they ar« enjoying themselves. The: New Jersey mayor who wai horsewhipped by an irritated lady ap peared before the grand jury to haw her Ihdicted for “unladylike" beha vlor. If she had been content with a tongue lashing he would probablj have conceded her the privilege oi her sex, but her rudeness In using a horsewhip in addition hurt his feelings too much for meek endurance. Dr. Lydston asserts that grafting is caused by a germ which makes its primary bite when you get very much oc cupled with your paper as the conduo tor- comes along for the fare. On that theory the pay-as-you-enter car should act as a sterilizer for that particulai microbe. At all events, If the bug can be suppressed the vital qunetion la whether ft will cure the mow violent cases that take the form of getting on the inside of railroad contracts and re organization schemes. Somebody has Invented a substitute lor the hobble skirt? the new arrangement being alleged to be just as hid •otas, but less dangerous. However, the element of danger is what makes the hobble skirt interesting; A gallant New York court holds that a girl cannot be made to give up en gagement gifts after the engagement Is broken. The cupidity of a man tri lymphs over even his self-conoeit if it require* a court decision to convince irfxn that It requires all the gifts she has to console the fair one for hto toe*
New Neura 1 of IfcMrrtiaij Ay Y. jhWmartis
When Seward First Met Weed
Future Statesman Was Dumped In the Mud at Politician’s Feet When Stage Coach Was Upset by Careless Driver. In his old age, say from 1870 to his death in 1882, Thurlow Weed, the most skilful Whig politician of his day, who made William H. Seward governor of New York and United States senator, who named Zachary Taylor for the presidency and Millard Fillmore for the vice-presidency, and who, at the birth of and during the first years of the Republican party, was a national power, was one of the most delightful story tellers to be found anywhere. He had a vast fund of anecdotes, many of them being vividly descriptive of our political life from 1820 until 1875. It was during the story telling period of this great politician that 1 came to know him well, and many an evening I spent with him listening to his reminiscences and watching him sip the “night cap” prescribed for him by his physician—a tablespoonfu* of Jamaica rum and a little sugar in a glass of water. “Mr. Weed," I said to him one evening, when the name of William H. Seward had cropped up In the course of our conversation, “when did you first meet the senior member of the powerful and how historically famous political firm of ‘Seward, Weed and Greeley?’ ’’ “After my service as a printer’s devil and as an apprentice, and when I had become fairly competent as a journeyman printer and was seized of an ambition to become the editor of a dally newspaper, I found my way to Rochester, then a thriving little town, where they were beginning to manufacture on a large scale by rear son of convenient water power,” said Mr. Weed. ’.'There in the early twenties —it was 1822, to be exact —I became editor of the Daily Telegraph and spefedily found myself attracted to and then deeply interested In politics. It was at this period of my career that I met Millard Fillmore, Albert H. Tracy, a great lawyer of his day, and others, and It was while I was with the Telegraph that I began to hear more or less vaguely of a newcomer in Auburn who was described as a very promising young lawyer. I remember hearing some one say that this William H. Seward was a good speaker, and that he was sure to be heard from sooner or later In politics. “Well, one evening—I do not re-
Old Vanderbilt Rule Discarded
Commodore’s Advice Was Against the investment of Money in Real Estate Because Sale May Be Slack. “After Commodore Vanderbilt had become very prominent as a railroad organizer and a financier, he, of course, was constantly sought after for advice and counsel respecting investments by those who felt on suffl* oent terms of friendship with him,** said Senator Chauncey M. Depew, whose business connections with th* Vanderbilt interests date back to th* days of the commodore. “But, no matter how strongly he was importuned, the commodore never gave any specific advice as to the investment of sums of money. He was never willing to take that responsibility. I think he felt that if he recommended certain investments and they turned out badly he would be criticized. Furthermore, he made it an inflexible rule not even by so much as a hint to ad vise any one to buy securities of the railroad properties which he controlled. I mean by that he was unwilling to influence any of his friends in such a manner as would lead them to invest their money in Vanderbilt stocks or bonds. If they chose to do that of their own free will and accord in the open market and without any urging on his part, that was another matter. “Some of the appeals that were made to the commodore for financial counsel were comical and greatly amused him. It was in reply to one such appeal that he made the epigrammatic answer which has passed into tradition: ‘The first thousand dollars is the hardest to get.’ And it was another appeal which brought from him the terse statement that it is easier to make a fortune than it is to keep one after it has beep mad*. "There was one persistent friend, and a good one, too, who was constantly asking the commodore for general advice respecting the investment of money. Even that the commodore did not like much to give; but at last he said to the tempter: 1 will give you the best advice that I can if you win call upon me in the course of a lay or two, and I hope you will h««d it after I have given it to you.’ “Os course, the man was greatly ’leased to think that he had at last iroken dow n the commodore’s reserve —-that he wm finally to be taken into
member the precise date, but it was In the early twenties—l was standing In front of the tavern in Rochester awaiting the arrival of the stage coach from Syracuse. The coming and departure of the stage coach was the exciting event of the day in Rochester; the Erie canal had not then been completed and such a thing as a steam railroad was undreamt of, though it was to become a reality a few yean later. At the time I speak of there had been a heavy rain for several days, so that the road was very muddy, a circumstance that delayed the arrival of the coach. But my friends and I loitered in a little group In front of .the tavern until it finally put in an appearance some two hours late and just before dusk. “Wheeling up in front of the hotel, the coach became stuck In a bad mud hole that was there, and in the attempt to extricate his vehicle—you can imagine the picturesque language that accompanied the efforts —lo and behold! the perspiring coachman suddenly upset the coach, and the next thing I knew there came sprawling in front of me a little man whom I hastened to relieve. He was covered with mud from head to foot. For a moment he was a little confused. I took
Locomotive Not Stephenson’s
How John B. Jervis Improved on the Englishman’s Design, Making Engine Suitable to American Roads. Dr. Plimmon H. Dudley Is probably the best-known man of science In the world in his particular field, which is the relation of metals to railroad rails and other railroad use. It was his metallurgical studies that made possible the development of the modern high speed locomotive. Recently he returned from England, where he attended the international railway congress. “While there,” said Dr. Dudley, "I took time to run down to Newcastle-on-Tyne to see what remains of the plant where George Stephenson, who is popularly though erroneously looked upon as the Inventor, in toto, of the •railroad locomotive, turned out his first locomotives. I had pointed out to me the shop in which Stephenson built the first two locomotives that he sent to the United States, and In this connection I was surprised to learn
the confidence of an expert in financial investment. You may be sure he was in the seventh heaven of delight during the interim, and with shining expectancy he appeared before the commodore at the appointed time. . “ *You want to know my advice about investing money, do you?’ the commodore drawled. 'Well, sonny, I will give it to you in a few words, and I hope you will heed it In the first place, never buy anything that can’t sell right off and with a fair chance of selling at a profit. And In the second place, never Invest your money fti real estate, because you can’t tell whether you caw sell right off or not That’s the best advice I can give you, and I wonder If you’ll follow it?* “It was advtce that the commodore’s sons and his grandsons followed religiously,” continued Senator Depew. “Indeed, the Vanderbilt family, up to and including the third generation, never bought real estate for investment” And the senator might have added that today this Vanderbilt rule is being strikingly broken in New York by Alfred, of the fourth generation, who is Investing several millions of dollars in a hotel enterprise. (Copyright, 19». by E. J. Edwards. AH Rights Reserved.) First Principles. Mrs. Newcomo had never done any cooking, for at the time of her marriage one>of the old family servants was turned over to her; but when Norah fell ill, Mrs. Newcomo reassured her about the kitchen work. "You have nothing to do but lie here and get well, Norah,” said the young mistress, patting the cook’s hand, “except thafi I may ask you one or two questions “Now today Mr. Newcome and I are going to have a very simple dinner. I ordered it, and it’s come home, ready to cook. We are going to hav* sausages, baked potatoes, lettuce, and some of your delicious bread, and io® cream and cake fron the confectioner’s. “Now I only want to ask you two things. About how much butter do you put in the pa® to fry the sausages, or shall Lose lard? And is there any particular kind of soap to use in washing the lettuce?” —Youth’s Companion. An Inference. Mlggles —Come home and break bread with me tonight, old man? Wiggles— No, thank you. My wife does her own baking, too.
that in as I picked him up, and I also noticed that he was sandy-haired and very quick in movement, but nowhere near my height “I succeeded in brushing a good deal of the mud off him, and he thanked me and asked me my name. I told him. ‘My name Is William H. Seward,' he said in reply, “and again I have to thank you for your courtesy.” Then he put out his hand and we gave each other a hearty shake.” Mr. Weed smiled happily. “Yes,” he said, “In that unceremonious and undignified manner I was presented to William H. Seward, or, it may be more accurate to say, he presented himself to me. And from that moment our friendship began and was continued until the day of his death.” (Copyright, 1910. by E. J. Edwards. AU Rights Reserved.) Trouble at the Museum. “What Is that horrible smell?” asked the manager. “The living skeleton called the In-dia-rubber man a ’rubber-neck,’ and he’s burning with Indignation,” explained the obese lady. No Hurry. Mother Bird —You have been In your nest long enough. Fledgling—That’s nothing. Men were in their nests 50,000,000 years before they learned to fly.—Harper’s Bazaar.
authoritatively that at least one locomotive that Stephenson made for American use was his largely in name only. “It was In 1830 that John B. Jervis, who died in 1885 at the advanced age of ninety, became chief engineer of the old Albany & Schenectady railroad. That year, I believe It was, the road received from George Stephenson and put Into service a locomotive called ‘John Bull.’ But, despite the sturdy character of its name, it didn’t work very well. The grades were too heavy and the curves too sharp, two difficulties that Stephenson did not have to contend with to such a degree in his native land. “The failure of the locomotive to live up to the expectations of its purchasers proved a sore disappointment, and no one was more chagrined than the rotors chief engineer, who, nevertheless,’made up his mind that the difficulties must be overcome. To this end he made a minute study of the mechanism of the ‘John Bull,’ finally reaching the conclusion about two years later that the problem of taking the curves easily and without danger of wreck would be solved by giving the locomotive a swivel truck. He had already decided that the grades could be overcome by increasing the steam power of the locomotive —a comparatively simple matter — and with these two ideas in mind he set out and designed a locomotive incorporating them. Then he had an engine, which he called ‘Experiment,’ built at the West Point foundry. That was In 1832. “We may safely say that the ‘Experiment’ was a successful one. The West Point foundry, however, was not adequately equipped for locomotive manufacture, so ft was decided to send the plans and specifications of the ‘Experiment’ to Stephenson and ash him to build a locomotive along those lines for the Albany & Scheeectady. He did so, the locomotive In time reached this country as a Stephenson product, and, being taken by boat to Albany, was put into service on the Albany & Schenectady, fulfilling from the start everything expected of it in the way of surmounting grades and taking curves. “The use of the swivel truck as applied to locomotives Mr. Jervis gave to the world, and the principle is in operation to this day. Nor was that these only Important work that Mr. Jervis did on behalf of transportation. “He took a prominent part in the building and then the enlargement of the Erie canal. The Hudson River railroad between New York and Albany was largely constructed by his plans and under his supervision. As president of the Rock Island he was a leader in railway development west of the Alleghanies, and within two years after he had become president of the old Pittsburg & Fort Wayne railroad, in 1861, he brought its stock up from a value of eight cents on the dollar to a point where it paid a yearly dividend of ten per cent Yet the only public monument so far as I know, that perpetuates his memory is to be found in the name of the town of Port Jervis, N.,Y.” (Copyright, 1910, by E. J. Edwards. AU Rights Reserved.) -Oh, Wad,” etc. Willis —"It was a rotten show! The awfullest ever!” Gills —"Yea, indeed. When I think of all the dried-up, rank, rotten horseplay that those theatrical managers are giving us under the name of ’humor’ it makes me —by the way, what have you got there?” Gills —“The Sunday Frazzle.” Willis—" Good. Lemme see th* funny part a minute, wm Puck.
HINT TO PICTURE LOVERS Easy Way to Gain Appreciation of Your Fine Works of Art by the Neighbors. I’m speaking now to the man who admires good pictures and who perhaps has a gallery of them. Many of your neighbors do not properly appreciate your Corots and your Israels and your Mauves and your Daubignys and your Constables and Turners. Let us suppose you have a Corot depicting a dance of wood-nymphs. Take your penknife or your wife’s hatpin and stab holes in the hands of the nymphs. Then paste tissue paper of different colors, orange and purple and crimson, behind the holes. Now place powerful electric lights behind these holes and your nymphs are carrying fairylights and you have intensified the interest in Corot. Say you have a Constable in which there is an old English church in a rural landscape that only Constable could have painted. Illuminate the clock in the same way and set a chime of bells behind it that may be set ringing by pushing a button. If there is s’ cow in the picture, contrive to make her moo. Now call in your friends, press the button, light the lights, make the bells chime, and the cow moo and your neighbors will appreciate Constable. —C. B. Loomis in The Delineator. WANT BARGAINS IN PEWS Thrifty Church-Goers Who Seek Cut Rates Sometimes Will Overlook All Other Considerations. Ministers have so many things to worry about that it is pretty hard to add» the bargain-hunting habits of their parishioners to their other cares, but some of them are doomed to shoulder that extra burden. Old members of the congregation are not likely to go out hunting cut-rate pews in other churches, but newcomers who are just deciding upon a church home all do it. “A reduction of two dollars a year in pew rent will fetch the bargainhunter every time,” said a sexton. “Only last week a young woman who expects to make her home in this city concluded that of all city churches of this denomination she liked ours best and would take a pew here, but when she found she could get a pew that suited her about as well In another church for three dollars a year less she let all other considerations go by the board and identified herself with that church. The cut-rate pew hunter is a recognized feature of modern church life. Because a new member elects to join our congregation does not at all signify that he shares our religious convictions or likes the pastor and our service; it may mean that we charge less for the pew he likes than another church up street” A Little Lapse. Very conscious people stumble Into blunders almost as often as the slapdash. And theij slips are usually worse, because they have to do with particularly horrid contingencies they are morbidly anxious to avoid. For example, a married pair, most solicitous of the susceptibilities of their guests, asked a certain gentleman, head of a famous piano forte-making firm to dine. “My dear,” said the wife, “you know Mr. Steckmeyer Is dining with us tonight, and that he dislikes the slightest allusion to his business in any shape or form.” “Very good,” answered the husband, "better steer clear of musical topics altogether.” So they discussed politics, golf and the drama and all was well. Towards 11 came the sound of wheels and the footman made an announcement. “Hey, what’s that?” said the sensitive guest. The host cleared his throat raised his voice, and with a last inward congratulation that “shop” had been successfully avoided, declared across the assembled company, “Mr. Steckmeyer’s piano is at the door.” Laying a Foundation. “Pardon my abruptness. Miss Citronella, but will you marry me?" “Marry you, Mr. Bonser? Marry you? Not if you were the last man on earth!" Pondering a moment, he took a small memorandum book out of his pocket and checked off a name. “Well,” he said, “there’s no harm done. It is due you, however, Miss Higgins, that I should explain. You have heard, I presume, of the Great American Novel, but have not seen it, because it has not yet appeared. I am about to write ft. But in order to fit myself for the task I need one or two experiences. I wish to undergo the pangs of a rejected lover. I have not yet succeeded —and you are the eleventh. I may have to be rejected by half a dozen more girls before I experience the necessary emotion. Good evening, Miss Higgins” Counter Diplomacy. “I think you will like this goods, madam,” urged a salesman in a Euclid avenue shop. “It is just the thing for a stout, middle aged lady.” “Sir!” squealed the customer in a rage. The clerk saw his faux pas and recovered himself quickly. “Pardon me,” he smiled, "I mistook you for the young lady who was in here yesterday looking for something for her grandmother. Now that I look at you again, I see that this was an older person. Now, if you are buying for yourself, we have something over here that—’’—Cleveland Plain-Dealer-
GRACE AT CLIFFORD’S INN Quaint Custom at Dinner Which Recalled Days When All Lawyers Were Connected With Churoh. The purchase of Clifford’s Inn as the headquarters of the Knights Bachelor recalls the quaint form oi grace. After dinner, when the table cloths had been removed and before wine and dessert had been placed on the tables, a loaf made in the form of a cross of four small arms wai handed to the senior member of the Kentish Mess who presided at the table. He then with a small hammer knocked once on the table, and every one, including the principal and the rules, then stood up. Then with his right hand he raised the loaf up above his head to the full extent of his arm and brought it down with a thump on the table. This he did three times, and then slid it down the full length of the table to the vice-president, who arrested it in its career and handed it to a servant in attendance. This ceremony was symbolical and of origin dating from the days when all lawyers were either actually ecclesiastics or at least connected in some way with the church. Ths knock was merely to attract attention and had no symbolic meaning. But the bread made in the form of a loaf with sou? small arms symbolized the bread of life centered on the four evangelists. The three blows upon the table were an invocation of the trinity. The bread being slid down the table symbolized that this bread of the gospel was spread over ths world. Finally, the bread was removed to be given to the poor, re minding us of charity.—Law Times. YOUTH SHOULD BE TOLERANT Must Practise Self-Denial and Pay to Old Age the Attentions So Welcome to It. Young people are happier together without the constraint of elderly company, still they should not openly avoid that company, or make their riders feel out in the cold. There is a certain type of girl to whom an elderly person is always a frump or fogy, an object of ridicule, and to be avoided or ignored as much as possible. Self-denial is necessary to make youth tolerant of age, but the attentions of youth are so welcome to the elder that this is a virtue whfteh may be said to bring its own reward. The young girl should listen patiently to the old man's story, though it may possibly be a little prosy, and idle should be ready to play or sing -sr do anything in her power, with :weet willingness, immediately when asked. She does not realize how wonderful Mid beautiful it seems to her elders that here is a bright being with the vorld at her feet and all the pleasant years before her. A glad heart and a bright young face mean much in a gathering of people where there are sure to be some heavy hearts, some sorrow-lined countenances. The young men always gravitate toward the pretty girls, yet it is a question whether their admiration of them is more spontaneous and more sincere than that of the older ones, who look wistfully at them, recalling happy days that are no more, and humming under the breath some such song as “O, Don’t You Remember Sweet Alice, Ben Bolt?” The Longevity of Birds. It is not always easy to estimate the duration of the life of a bird. Possibly captivity shortens the bird’s life; on the other hand, the wild bird does not die of old age, but as the result of an accident, or at the hands of an enemy. According to Naumann, the naturalist, the nightingale lives for eight or nine years, the canary from twelve to fifteen, and the blackbird twelve years. It is a fact that the vulture was kept in a cage in the zoological garden in Vienna for 118 years, and that in the same garden was a falcon one hundred and sixty-two years old. Living in the same garden was an eagle known to have lived for one hundred and four years. The mean age of eagles is 60 years, and Von Humboldt saw in South America a parrot which spoke a language spoken by a people who had vanished from the earth more than one hundred years before that time. Brain Drill With Fingers. Brain drill with the fingers is the latest recommendation to those who would be efficient!! It is not a system of message that is recommended, but simply the regular use of the hands. Tie knots, sew, do fretwork, anything and everything, in fact, that calls for manual skill you want to have an active, resourceful and versatile brain, people are told. The truth of this statement Is said to lie in the fact that in every manual act the hand is directed by the brain. Every act reacts upon the brain, strengthening and stimulating IL Cause for Smoking Out A youngster who lives in a neighborhood where disease makes frequent fumigations necessary returned from his first visit to the country with the astonishing information that Farmer Jones’ coons and woodchucks had been laid up with scarlet fever. The summer teacher abhors nature faking, so she admonished him not to tell fibs. "But that ain’t no lie,” said ha. "Didn’t I see the tree they lived to wld mo own eyes, an’ didn't I hear Mr. Jones tail how he had to smoke ’em •tor
FREE ADVICE TO WOMEN Women suffering from any form of illness are invited to promptly com. municate with Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, read and answered by women. A wo-
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II TLxt ii ivol*
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A Christmas Criticism. Orville Wright, discussing flying la New York, said to a reporter: “The French claim to make the best machines, but our foreign order books tell a different story. “Our foreign order 'books give the game away like the little Dayton boy at the Christmas treat. He got trona the tree at this treat a pair of trousers, and, waving them around his head, he electrified the entire Sunday school by shouting in a loud and joyous voice: “ ‘Oh, ma, these pants must be new. Pa never had a suit like that.” In the Old Days. Eve had just tied a garland et maple leaves about her ankles. “What on earth are you up to, my love?" asked Adam. “I am trying on my new hobbleskirt, sweetheart,” returned the partner of his joys with a sweet smile." — Harper’s Weekly. Burning Money. Mlobbs —How did he make his money? Slobbs—ln smoking tobacco. Blobbs —Is that so? I’ve been smoking tobacco nearly all my Ufa, but I nevpr made any money at it— Denver Times. A Brush With Madam. Artist —Madam, it is not faces alons that paint, ft is souls. Madam—Oh, you do interiors, then. —Boston Transcript.
CONSTIPATION Muny on ’ i Paw Paw Pills are unlike all other laxative* or* cathartics. They coax the liver into activity by gentle methods. They do not ra scour; they do not —. gripe; they do not but they do 1 start all the secretions of the liver and stomach in away that soon puts these organs in a healthy condition and cor* , rects constipation. Munyon’s Paw-Paw Pills are, a tonie to the stomach, liver and nerves. They invigorate instead of weaken; they enrich the blood instead of impoverish it; they enable the stomach to get all the nourishment from food that is put inte These pills contain no calomel, nq dope, they are soothing, healing and stimulating. They school the bowels to act without physic. Price 25 cents. 44 Bu. to the Acre heavy yield, bntthat's what John Kennedy of mon ton, Alberta,Western Canada, got from 40 acres of fepring Wheatin 1910. Reports from otherdistrictsiu that proynee showed other exceiII sT|Vja>l^. lent resu Its—such a s 4.jL|j|l|nM,wWßßßiiMWfcv UW bushels of wheat I from 120 acres, or 831-J yLdfeMT' I bu. per acre. 26,80 and 40 ■ Jn»l iI W I bushelyieldswerenum- ■ I crons. As high as 182 w I*l A I bushels of oats to the IUF/'I J acre were threshed from IKfiS* si Alberta fleldsln 1910. nvAK&ffil T,ie silver Cu p I MWtißa a 1 the recent Spokane AUwrt a Government for Western Canada. Free homesteads of ISO iFVfeg acres, and adjoining pre- ' in the choicest districts. Ki^Sz/Ttlol 1 Schools convenient, cllfl|;[t| mate excellent, soil the w'fni f li Hi very best,railways close at M/Hlmi hand, building lumber u/ll 1 cheap, fuel easy to got and fUU 1 vWKII reasonable in price, water IM L XnHuk easily procured, mixed IBt F farming a success. ■» K'Xyt Write as to ben place for setIE3 tlement, settlers’ low railway WH TL’Jv rates, descriptive illustrated ■B WAX ‘'Last Best West” (sent free on ■oWV VfeAt application land other inform:,-ulsl-'iJV’ tion, to Sup’t of Immigration, j-lgr, I *vSc== Ottawa. Can. .orto the Canadla n -tJB£ Government Agent. («>) » It hfm. Jrt Dwr Truths Ttntell* I Ib4lmw«s, Indiana, or luadu tawMMtl MslSlfrx' Mrst. toher BdWM.Tdth.Btlo. ]
