The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 26, 1916, Page 3

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* Stee ss Diversification Shown in Trip Over Slope _ With Recent North Dakota Telling Blows Delivered to One and Lectures. Conditions Better Than a Few Years Ago When Farmers Were Struggling To. Make.a Living Raising Wheat | Only, - (From Dakota Farmer) On Monday morning October 9th we left Aberdeen for Linton, N. D. We were making a trip of.four days on the: Northern Pacific Special. Live- stock Train, ‘and about ten years ago Wag the last time we went. over most of this territory. The morning was one of those ‘bright, clear, frosty mornings which we have the pleasure of enjoying only in this northwestern country of high altitudes. The thresh- ing machines could. be seen in oper- ation here and there all of the way to Linton. About half of them were Crop Idea by — Demonstrations ve’ made it. We ‘may now look back and criticize their systems’ of farming, but they paid the bills, bore the grief that accompanied their hardships, and haVe won’ out. We may. still complain because they do not do just as they should, or just as we think they should, ‘or just “as we think would be best for them to do, but they are still paying the. bills and, bearing the grief if there is any. A Livestock Country. After all, this thing of the town | fellow worrying about the farmer is Livestock Special see . FARM HOME OF JAKE MEHRER IN THE MOTT DISTRICT. eleven carloads of feeders, from way up in northwestern Canada, that had just been unloaded to consume the grass on the prairies, Still there were many disappointments because wheat did not make a crop. And so the trip went on up the line. At Carson we had an unusually large crowd. There were thirty: autos to greet the speakers. Farmers brought their wives who were deeply interest- ed, There was a good sprinkling of the good hardy German farmers in the audience. Nearly all of them were raising corn, several had alfalfa, but there were no silos. All they need to be well-fixed is a little more alfalfa to balance the corn, and the silo to make | Duteh lunch” for the cattle during} the winter, Dairying Interest at Flasher, Flasher was a very interesting point Just opposite the depot there were several stacks of splendid alfalfa hay. A beautiful schoolhouse of the most modern construction stood over yon- der on the hill, The teachers brought | heir well-behaved children to the; rain, much better behaved than to be | BY WINONA WILCOX “Fussing” is college slang which is creeping into the vernacular. The word is particularly offensive to very nice mothers who confuse it with “spooning,” although it denotes something more refined than that. They also dread it as “steady com- pany,” but it denotes nothing half so serious as that. “Fussing is paying attention with- out intention,” according to a college man’s interpretation. Mothers, instead of trying to elim- inate the expression from their daugh- ters’ vocabulary, and the experience That, At Least, Is How Winona Wilcox Describes Fussing; She Declares Observing It May Save Girls Many a Heart-Break PAYING GIRL ATTENTION. WITHOUT INTENTION and But she thinks she has. She begins TO TRUST HER FEELINGS even at the age of 16. The young girl hunts for romance in the angle of a post- age stamp on an envelope, in the in- tensity with which Prince Charming express his gratitude for a dance. “Woman at amy age has an unfor- tunate ingenuity for confusing the simple’ courtesies she receives from man with the devotion SHE desires— and thus ‘come half of her mistakes in marrying. Girls have a theory—although Cu- pid only knows where they ‘get it— F Purely selfish proposition on: his part.| 1:5 pack waa 2 ve i ‘ er ature <+ jg} found in any of our larger towns. A ideal love comes early and lasts bringing joy to the farmers and hope | We have come to appreciate that tite | vie Nak es Sea enone wowed. Hp nowy they Se eae aes tmonent i8| oad: deat af dairying te being done |{rom their daughters’ lives, might bet- | (oat e8 or nas a0 Te a aciie to’ the wives, because at that time) success of the town lies in the-coun-| Hal" @ little whiter, but he has a growing qiite rapidly. We found one|@ 0") yy cher, but the interest is|ter turn both to their profit. ation. Although he expects to chance about one-half of them were thresh- ing flax, oats or barley. The other half were bringing discouragement’ to the farmer and his ‘wife, but teaching diversified farming as no other instru- ment can téach it to the farmer. They were teaching what The Dakota Farmer, has -been trying to teach for try; that when the business inéreases the town grows and the town people have a plenty; ‘but «whenever the country people are hard up the town people. are in distress. That is the reason we town fellows are all inter- ested about better agriculture. The farm. yonder seven miles from town lighter heart than ever. The first thing he said was “Mr, Chamberlain! I've got me a home.” And what w word that word “home” is. He told us that he had gone up there and filed on a homestead about nine years ago and held it until he could make proof without paying anything for the land. good old-timer there who had changed back to feeding because he cannot get the helpto take cure of the cows, But generally the tendency is toward the dairy, and everywhere it is to get and raise more cat And there is no country better for it than the country surrounding Linton. We had a splen- greatest in dual-purpose cattle. John Christiansen of New Salem gave these people some excellent advice. He told cows for a number of years until they finally got them up to an average of 140 pounds of butterfat per year About ten years ago when this was them how they sorted their common} “Fussing” may save a girl a heartbreak. ; The average young woman is apt |to mistake all the symptoms of first love. Queer, isn’t it, that nature has not qualified woman to distinguish the various degrees of man’s interest, many something on an external love, he doesn’t dream about it every time he takes a new girl to a dance. Man takes fussing lightly. He nev- er intends to be a hypocrite, but he really wouldn’t have the least inter- est in “paying atiention without. in- tention” unless he were, for the time, 38 Jeers. They Were producing the |is just a factory in the suburbs, that | He is happy and contented in his old, 4id meeting, probably 200 grown Deo-/ ott chest standard they introdue-|fiendship and devotion? It upsets all/ . perfect artist. He is by nature an results of the one-crop system at alis all. The difference between the|age and it made us happy to see him Ple, farmers and their wives, grown- oe en Se nail Aud. aby one’s theories of evolution to discover} nature an unconscious but accom- wheat: farmer .and the diversified|so. As the farmers came in they be-/UP young men, aud then in addition|/@d Purebred dairy ee that woman, who so much needs to} plished actor when it.comes to his time when the farmer ‘hoped for such different results, : «The Trip to Linton. From Aberdeen west and north to Linton probably one-quarter of the land. in sight of the Milwaukee track was under cultivation. On this one- fourth of the land the farmers and their sons, and sometimes the women of the house had worked hard early and late during the season in an ef- fort to make a crop—generally ‘of wheat. A field of corn was a rare sight on this “entire trip except in OnAsortwe.ieeatition.:-We. could: not | help but feel, as we rode along, the} farmer with livestock is that the wheat farmer works during summer, then he sits around about four or five months of the year while the other farmer works and his factory gan discussing the different systems of | farming they’ were following. Some were contending that the white faced cattle were better than the blacks; others that the Holsteins were better to these nearly us many more young ‘people from’the schools came down af- ‘ter 4:00 o'clock. Everybody was in- terested. -Everyboly asked questions, ‘A good many farmers after the |meeting was over, still d g the | diferent phases of farming, different j crops, different systems, with the men | from the agricultural college and the ,others who accompanied the train. West of the Missouri. We left Linton Monday evening and jawakened in the morning at Mandan, | About 8 o’clock we left there and roll- ed slowly along down the banks of the their average is 300 pounds per cow, and some farmers are getting 400 pounds of fat from each cows they milk during the season. Someone ask- ed him at this point about selling the steers. John told them that he could get better than $100.00 each for his heifers before they freshened the first time, and he thought it a shame to ask a cow that had been giving $90.00 worth of butterfat and would raise a heifer like this to also produce a pre- mium steer. It seems as though he is about right. Plenty of Rough Feed. Farther up the road at Elgin the know the difference between true love and false, has not developed any in- | \tuitive faculties to guide her. way with a maid. FUSSING IS A SCHGOL WHERE GIRLS CAN LEARN_HIS\ METHODS. ALLIES HAVE, | WAR FLEET IN AMERICAN WATERS er there shall: be gradual concerted disarmament. In all these questions the United | States renounces its historic and tra-, ditional policy of; isolation. Wa re- nounce the George Washington — in- junction against entangling foreign al- liances and recognize that the world ig a ‘smaller place than’ it was in Washington's days and that neighbors are brought close by three thousand miles of ocean rather than remote. sreytpornarets and! discouragement i Missouri. At 9:30 we found an inter- band met us. And a peculiar coin- Our country demands that the : country, and particularly in inl j ested crowd of 60 at Ft. Rice. This ]|cidence was that they had a successful rights as the most powerful neutral houses. ‘We do not mean. by this that | fl R| | litle burg sits there nestled in the|creamery in the town. Up around El in the world be considered. i : »| | hills, overlooking the river, and with a|gin it is a little more rolling than it President Wilson was urged months these people ‘até going to be hungry! this’ winter... Almost without an ex- ception there will be enough to buy the necessities of life. But how many | of these farmers and their wives had{ the hope that there woiild be enough ‘| over and above buying necessities to; Provide ‘some of the luxuries of ‘life | also, This particular section of North | and South Dakota is one of the most exclusively small grain sections to be found in the two states. ‘Naturally some of these people will this fall and winter blame the country for the fact that they cannot have or enjoy some REPRESENTATIVE SCENES IN MOTT COUNTY. is running the entire year. the factory in town runs continually, | It is ex.! actly the same proposition as when- ; one that the Short- uperior to all of them than the Jers horn breed t ocean of grass all around it, Far- at this point were particularly sted in dairying. They wanted to know about pit silos. They wanted jto know about feed that they could raise for their cattle. A few of them were growing wheat but most of them were milking a few cows while doing 80, It was just threshing time in that neighborhood. .We saw three of four | ditterent farmers who had to leave in ~ their automobiles: because, they said, the machine was coming pretty quick. From there we rolled over into the is some places, just right for a com- bination of grass, grain, corn and al- falfa. One farmer had a pit silo and was delighted with it. There were many inquiries about it. Farmers here were very largely German, some of them coming 17 miles to meet us. Across the country we saw lots of hay, alfalfa, and straw-stacks. There was a good deal of corn around there for feed. New Leipzig Ships Cream. At New Leipzig the next morning we found a splendid crowd all anxious (Associated Press) Boston, Dec. 26.—The presence on this side of the Atlantic of a formid- able fleet of Allied warships was in- dicated definitely today. ssels are known Officially as commerce pro tectors, They are heavily armed and dis- |guised. For obvious reasons, their ex- act locatioa are not revealed, but the arrival recently in American waters of this newest unit of the British and French naval forces was made known from a source that hardly can be mis- ago to call a conference of the neu- tral powers. If the answer to this informal note is not encouraging, his next step unquestionably will be to call that neutral conference. Through this the interests and rights of neu- tral powers will be formulated and presented to the warring nations ‘and influence will be brought to ‘bear on the belligerents to adjust their quar- rel and end the war. 3 DURANT 1S SENTENCED ol is y A But everyone was interested in cat-' pAseryati p s eda on, | to learn about the cow. They are ship | taken. phathe luxuries they would like to or closes down five or six months inj tle. What a great omen for Linton! seasrvalonend ere q He Soler ping from 20 to 35 10-gallon cans of - — Grass. poke ‘ A It was a greater proposition for her of farmers, Many of them had come {cream three timies a week. That is a ‘ Sibley Butte ‘Farmer Sentenced to 15 ; waver there is one crop that was ream Can Displacing Elevators. to have the farmers talking of their, tg the meeting in their automobiles, |VerY g00d average for this time of Days’ Imprisonment and. $75 and wonderfully good all over this great But let's get on with that trip, The interests this way, than it would be to: although we were then on an Indian |year, but they could easily be making Costs by Judge ‘Nuessle. area. :And, the acreage of it was al- elevators at Eureka are “very many; have a prospect of getting quite a con- reservation. Grass grew as before, In| 200 cans per week and still have grass ,. ‘ 4 most ‘unlimited. There was grass of them gone. Instead of the ox team, ‘siderable sized factory. It means a’ tye stockyards wes a very ordinary |to spare. Alfalfa has been tried there F. J. Durant, Sibley ‘Butte Lovneiy aa cases BQiNg .to, Wa e, and: a, splendid crop |." the cow and the horsé*hitehed to lot of factories that will me running bunch of scrub stock shipped in from | and made a splendid crop. Some of! farmer, found guilty of assault an tl “of ‘it, as Yar as we could see during gethér, many ‘of these same people. the year around if th people get gt, Paul, Outside the reservation, and them had it but not nearly all of them. i ‘ battery in the district. court at the re- the entire trip. Grass, the richest that | 2°W Come to town in the automobile. ito raising cattle, corn, oats and alfalfa in. some instances on it, men ‘ had | More seems to have been done in that cent session, was this morning sen- , ever grew from a soil; grass that Instead of trying ty take their en-|as well as wheat. ‘ | worked all saumitaer, tryin: to grow | Vicinity with alfalfa than with corn : tenced to ‘15 days’ imprisonment and Nature provided without price; grass| tire crop to town in two or three Towns Dependent on Country wheat while this grass was growing |There were no silos. Two young heal- amerced $75 and costs | amounting to that .peyer fails: grass, the feed of weeks in poesia they are ‘now mar-| The ‘Linton. countr m little dif-.to aitharg tas Gaus, Gr be consumed |thy preachers were in the audience, | about $200, by Judge Nuessle. Be Up and the antelope, the best ptlng something every time they 60-/rerent than a’ good deal of that sec- by cattle that had to be shipped in {and Were very much interested. About FIRING ON BORDER. animals could find in American country when they waft roaming it from Washing- ton to Florida; grass that if properly uséd makes more money for the farm- er who uses it than any crop of grain growing in any country; grass that the cattle would conyert into money while the farmer planted his wheatr other crop; grass that is the richest feed in the summer and the best of hay in winter; more grass is going to. waste this year in this section It is a can of cream at ofie time, 3! case of eggs at another, a few hogs at} another, once in a while some steers, and so on. No, not’as much of it'as; there should bg, because there is still oceans of grass going to waste. But it is much ‘better than it used to be, and these people have made it so. _. Not All the Farmers’ Fault. ‘As we view situations of’ this kind it often occurs to us that possibly we have been blaming the wrong party all these years for the lack of tion of the Dakotas. They have more cattlemen around there. They have been raising cattle for a good many years, but mostly for fepding. Just ; Cows would raise the calves—better ones than they were getting from St. Paul. ‘A little farther up the road we saw 20 women canie to the-meeting at the early hour of 9:30 in the morning. The Mott Country. At Mott we found tie largest crowd of the entire trip. It is beautifully sit- uated, or rather located. The railway comes in from the east on the table- land. The business portion of the town is hidden down behind the hills along the banks of the creek. Mott has a flouring mill, electric lights, | three banks, and other business enter- prises in proportion. The country is (By United Pri ‘Washington, Dt ‘Specifica- tions that the proposed $11,060,000 ar- mor plate plant to be constructed by the United States will not be 200 miles nearer the coast or any of the | Great Lakes, eliminate practically all Ohio cities, except Ironton, Secretary Harding told the United: Press today. (By Associated Press.) El Paso Texas, Dec. 26 Firing in the vicinity of the Third Kentucky outpost near the border last night caused another genera! alarm at the camp, following Sunday's skirmish be- tween Mexican snipers and the sol- diers 6f this battalion. Investigation developed the fact that the trouble during last night occur on the Tex- as side of the Rio Grande, where a Christmas dance was being keld by Mexicans. ca than was grown jn any of the cotton livestock in this. great _ northwest slightly rolling. We noticed that very). ‘i states except Texas, country. We have all be blaming it many of the houses in the country, ‘. Holds Christmas Service. « We pride ourselves sometimes on| 0 the farmer. I wonder. if it is not have trees planted around. We heard The Knights Templar gathered in . our intelligence, our good judgment. fact that the interest ratés have some wonderfui reports of yields ‘ the Masonic temple Christmas morn- our ability to make money, our great | been so high that. many farmers hesi- around Mott this year. We were in- : ing at 11 o’clock, to observe their an- independence; then why do ‘we work | tated to go into livestock for that rea- formed M. F. Swindler had thresh- NO BREAD nual Christmas service. Forty dol- ' ourselves to ‘death plowing, sowing,| 0"? I wonder if the bankers and ed $2,100.00 worth of alfalfa seed from lars was donated (by the Templars to ‘reaping in the heat of summer while the merchants have not been partly 14 acres, Now don’t laugh;: It sounds the Salvation, ary, {ky used for this gnormous waste is going on in} t® blame for so much wheat growing pretty big, and.it may possibly be a benevolence work in tHe city. ‘The eur Sian? It \grass did not grow so| in, this northwest’ country?, —- mistake. We are going to write Mr. | order was well represented. readily, these. same'men and women| , The writer well remembers "when | Swindler and ask him to write us aj (United Press) : cope “would work ‘Just as hard to get -{t to| the only question we were asked when letter about it. Basil Johnson had| Buenos Aires, Dec. 26.—Fear of a “grow by planting it and cultivating it as they now work ta grow wheat to sé to the-elevators. However we may farm in this<great northwestern country, and ho matter where we go to investigate agricultural conditions, we ‘always find rich soil, prosperous we went to ‘borrow money was how much wheat. we were going to sow, or how much we had in? The writer well remembers when we all wanted to get out of the wheat business, but the speaker who came to us. told us that we had to have 10 or 20 cows 7,000 pounds of sweet clover seed | worth about $1,300.00 or $1,400.00 from a small irregular patch which had pro- duced weeds until he sowed clover. They are growing beans around Mott. One Illinois man had from seven acres $800.00 worth this year. Several other bread famine increased today when several more makers joined the. city- wide strike. Chances of settlement of the strike were unchanged. SETTLEMENT NOW: BUY HOUSE (By Samuel Hamilton, M. D.) The subject of drinking water. with meals has been misunderstood. poonle. tig. ferme, Sood homes, where vr dh perce bleed: g/saw "we men who came there from Illinois are | In recent years: investigation by nae used. a3 be Dosis of aihels tout fare te ire iH ie Hates | growing them successfully, ' Hee ot ee Suse vations Ob ‘ pelts a poner band, WHT | cid a’ Cutted-ahd blower, and’ all the ‘A Progressive Farmer | (IP 10 GARRANZA sles is ‘ sue as: Pan on, Gri . ‘ated: crop, whatever it . Just outside of Mott is the farm of aviov, Fowler, Hawk, prove that an may be, is depended upon, and ‘the! crop sold in its natural condition, we find soil already depleted or growing poorer’ year by -year, high interest | rates“and.a discouraged people. ~~ Things Are Better. But, things are better in this coun- try .than they were just a few years ago. Wherever one looks out of the train window ‘he ‘sees scattered over! the prairies where originally’ stood the ‘sod or adobe house, neat, com- modious farmhouses, with sufficient other incidentals that go with ideal dairying before we could ‘expect. to thake a success of it. “He was a theoretical fellow. He geneéra@ly had professor attached to his ‘name on the bill. Probably he was not'’a prof sor, but he just had the college side of the proposition. But~we would have to pay 10 per cent. interest on all this amount of money ‘in addition to what we already owed; yes, and sometimes it was 12 per cent., and in the early days it was 8 per cent. a W. J. Steer. He brought to the meet: | ing a good roan Shorthorn bull, im- | ported by J. J. Hill from England. | He is a very- good type of what is call- ed a dual-purpose animal. Mrs, Steer was in at the meeting and was much interested. Their daughter is taking | the full agricultufal course at the North Dakota Agriculaural college. She is not stopping with the things that are ethical, but is taking stock- judging and all the other work that Mrs, Steer is a daugh- (By United Press.) Vashington, Dec. 26.—Settlement of difficulties between Mexico now de- pends upon Carranza’s signing the troop withdrawal protocol, officials here said today. TRADITIONS BRUSHED ASIDE BY WILSON Continued from page 1. abupdance of water taken during di- gesfion is necessary in good bodily housekeeping. To drink a pint of hot water ‘before meals is good practice, and those suffering from a catarrhal condition of the stomach will find benefit in adding about 10 grains (one-sixth of a level teaspoonful) of baking soda, drinking it an hour be- fore each meal. Those who are ine clined to hyper-acidity should drink slowly a pint of medium cold water; two hours after meals. month. We went. home from such the boys take. that submarine cables, radiograms and| Jf your kidneys are sick, or you barns to take care of the stock, Many; meetings more discouraged — than ter of the late John Armstrong, of De| the telegram have brought all na-| suffer with lumbago or rheumatiem at of them strictly modern and of ample capacity. The roads have been; im: proved. Here and there some en- thusiastic farmer with the right spirit has not only undertaken to build a house, but to make a home. He has Planted some trees and fenced the garden. The place has the appear- ance of permanency rather than of only a stopping place until money enough can be made to move to town. The outlook is splendid. — A Former Great Wheat Center. About noon we reached Eureka, S. D.° This little city only a few years ago boasted of being the largest orig- inal wheat marketing center in the world. We think it’ was true. At that time, if -we remember correctly, they counted more than 20 elevators along the Milwaukee railway within the limits of the town. Farmers came for 60, 80 and some of them for 100 miles from the north and west to market,their wheat at the price some- body might fix for it that morning in Minneapolis, Chicago or Liverpool. In many instances the whole family came, each member driving some kind of a team hauling “as much wheat as the team could handle. They Were a tired looking group when they when we went. The fault has not all been with the farmer by any means. Neither is it all with him yet. In many localities in The:Dakota Farmer Empire interest rates are still higher than a farmer can afford to pay for breeding stock. Possibly the man who borrows for a short time can either purchase steers'or a ‘bunch of lambs and stand the rates, but: when it comes to* buying a bunch of cows and making them ‘pay for themselves we are against an entirely different proposition. ‘Then, too, the time’ for which the money can be procured is a question to ibe considered by every farmer who borrows. ‘At Linton, N. D. “ But we have loitered’ by the way- side on our trip. We reached Linton shortly after noon. The people were coming in for the meeting. The farm- ers were. listening for the train. Among the group we met a number of old acquaintances who had moved up into that new country. Before we had been in town long we were hailed bya man on whose face Father: Time had left his tradks. He recognized the writer but we did not recognize him for a moment. Then he told us WITH THE NORTH DAKOTA LIVESTOCK SPECIAL. The upper picture shows the dairy cattle, and the next beef who he was, Ole Megard: We had cattle, which were from the North experiment station. Smet, S. D., who was one of the pio- neer Shorthorn breeders of Dakota territory. His herd was largely of the Bates blood. The cows Mr. and Mrs. Steer are using in their dairying at Mott are descended from this herd. They should certainly be useful cattle. Mr. Steer has two silos and modern barns. Mrs. Steer remarked that those barns would make a good house | in a little while, but that a good house | would never make a good barn. And there is so much in that philosophy; | so much of the heroine in the woman | who sees it that way and is ready to; put up with her share of the inconven- ience, and sometimes a little more than her share. H A Favored Section. i It was a great trip. That is a great | growing country. It is the ‘young man’s country. There still are some j homesteads in the rougher lands, but | even these make good stock farms. With two railroads, the Northern Pa-! cific and the Chicago, Milwaukee &/ St. Paul, with Mott at the crossing | point, it seems as though the country | from Mandan to Mott, and from. Mo- bridge to Mott, was particularly favor- ed. tions—wearring or non-warring—into hourly and almost. momentary com- munication. ‘A Tradition. The necessity that the United States act as a mediator for the ad- justment of peace views was a tradi- tion. Germany has invited a peace conference of her own motion. The Jnited States was left to do nothing or to do what President Wilson now has done—to throw onto the diplo- matic table the same kind of an un- official, diplomatic -plan. The United States through Presi- dent Wilson has spoken. It has said in effect that no neutral nation is un- concerned with the great war and the terms of the peace settlement. The United States is greatly con- cerned with the sttler@ent of this war and with the terms on which it is settled. The United States proposes’ to do all in its power to exert influ- ence on both these questions. It pro- poses to take part officially or in some other way in the final arrangement by which wars are supposedly to be de- creased and the affairs of the world got in better shape. Neutral Rights. times, pain in the back or back of the neck, take a little Anuric before meals. This can be found at any good drug store, and was first discov- ered by Dr. Pierce of the Surgical Institute, in Buffalo, N. Y. When run-down, when life indoots has ‘brought about a stagnant condi- tion in the circulation—most evety- one is filled with uric acid—especials ly is this so of people past middle This uric acid in the blood often auses rheumatism, lumbago, swell- ing of the hands or feet, or a ibag- like condition under the eyes.’ Back- ache, frequent urination or the pains and stiffness of the joints and high blood-pressure. are also often noticed. Everyone should drink plenty of pure er and exe: 1 the open air as much as possibl I have found that Anuric is an antidote for this uric acid poison and that it will dissolve the accumulation of urie acid in the body much as hot water dissolves sugar. WHEN YOU ASK FOF | | | Neutral rights on the ocean in the | world commerce and rights of all kinds will be involved in the -final peace parley. The question will be considered whether there shall be a world league to enforce peace, wheth- | The | third picture shows Prof. Peters. of the-experimental station. demon- strating beef catile at the Temvik meeting; in the fourth D. E. wil- lard explains the dairy type of cattle, while in the fifth Director Thomas Cooper is opening the meeting at Stanton. —Courtesy of Dakota.Farmer. reached Eureka after having spent one day and sometimes two nights sleeping by the roadside. But they were doing the best they could to make themselves a home, and they s BUTTER y NORTHERN known him years ago in South Da- kota. He had been a little unfortun- ate, er at least not quite as successful as some of the others. Hé was now several years older than he was then. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUI- NINE Tablets. Druggists refund mon- ey if it fails to cure. E. W. GROVE’S

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