Britton Weekly Sentinel. (Britton, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 45, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 25, 1909 Page: 3 of 8
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COUNTRY WHOSE SOIL SPELLS
WHEAT AND OUT OF WHOSE
FARMS THOUSANDS ARE
GROWING RICH.
WHAT PRESIDENT TAFT AND
OTHERS THINK OF CANADA.
Another Fat Year fop the Canadian
West.
Our Canadian neighbors to the north
are again rejoicing over an abundant
harvest, and reports from reliable
sources go to Bhow that the total yield
at 1909 will be far above that of any
other year.
It is estimated that $100,000,000
■will this year go into the pockets of
the Western farmers from wheat
alone, another $60,000,000 from oats
and barley, while returns from other
crops and from stock will add $40,-
000,000 more. Is it any wonder then
♦Sat the farmers of the Canadian
West are happy?
Thousands of American farmers
have settled in the above mentioned
provinces during the past year; men
who know the West and its possibili-
ties, and who also know perhaps bet-
ter than any other people, the best
methods for profitable farming.
President Taft said recently in
speaking of Canada:
"We have been going ahead so rap-
idly In our own country that our heads
have been somewhat swelled with the
Idea that we are carrying on our shoul-
ders all the progress there is in the
world. We have not been conscious
that there is on the north a young
country and a young nation that is
looking forward, as it well may, to a
great national future. They have
7,000,000 people, but the country is
still hardly scratched."
Jns. J. Hill speaking before the
Canadian Cub of Winnipeg a few days
ago said:
"I go back for 53 years, when I
came West from Canada. At that time
Canada had no North-West. A young
boy or man who desired to carve his
own way had to cross the line, and
today it may surprise you—one out
of every five children born in Canada
lives in the United States. Now you
are playing the return match, and the
North-West is getting people from the
United States very rapidly. We
brought 100 land-seekers, mainly from
Iowa and Southern Minnesota, last
night out of St. Paul, going to the
North-West. Now, these people have
all the way from five, ten to twenty
thousand dollars each, and they will
make as much progress on the land In
one year as any one man coming from
the Continent of Europe can make, do-
ing the best he can, in ten, fifteen, or
twenty years."
It is evident from the welcome
given American settlers in Canada
that the Canadian people appreciate
them. Writing from Southern Alberta
recently an American farmer says: —
"We are giving them some new
Ideas about being good farmers, and
they are giving us some new ideas
about being good citizens. They have
a law against taking liquor into the
Indian Reservation. One of our fel-
lows was caught on a reservation with
a bottle on him, and it cost him $30.
One of the Canadian Mounted Polico
found him, and let me tell you, they
find everyone who tries to go up
against the laws of the country.
"On Saturday night, every bar-room
is closed, at exactly 7 o'clock. Why?
Because it is the law, and It's the
same with every other law. There
isn't a bad man in the whole district,
and a woman can come home from
town to the farm at midnight if she i
wants to, alone. That's Canada s idea ;
how to run a frontier; they have cer-
tainly taught us a lot.
"On the other hand, we are running
their farms for them better than any
other class of farmers. I guess 1
can say this without boasting, and the
Caandians appreciate us. We 'urn
out to celebrate Dominion Day; they
are glad to have us help to farm the
country; they know how to govern,
we know how to work."
Another farmer, from Minnesota,
who settled in Central Saskatchewan
some years ago, has the following to
say about the country:—
"My wife and I have done well enough
since we came from the States: we can ;
live anyway. We came in the spring of j
1901 with the first carload of settlers',
effects unloaded in these parts and
built the first shanty between Sas-
katoon and Lumsden. We brought
with our car of settlers' effects the
sum of $1800 in cash, to-day wo are
worth $40,000. We 'proved up' one
of the finest farms in Western Canada
and bought 320 acres at $3 per acre.
We took good crops off the land for
four years, at the end of which we
had $S000 worth of improvements in
the way of buildings, etc., and had
planted three acres of trees. Two
years ago we got such a good offer i
that we sold our land at $45 per acre. ,
From the above you will see that we I
have not done badly since our ar-
rival."
Prof. Thomas Shaw of St. Paul. Min-
nesota, with a number of other well
known editors of American farm jour-
nals. toured Western Canada recently,
and in an interview at \\ innipeg said i
in part: —
"With regard to the settlement of
the West I should say that it is only i
well begun. I have estimated that in
Manitoba one-tenth of the land has
been broken, in Saskatchewan one-
thirtieth and in Alberta, one-hundred
and seventy-fifth. I am satisfied that |
In all three provinces grain can be j
grown successfully up to the sixtieth
parallel and in the years to come your
vacant land will be taken at a rate
of which you have at present no con-
ception. We have enough people in
the United States alone, who want
homes, to take up this land.
"What you must do in Western Can-
ada Is to raise more live stock. When
you are doing what you ought to do
in this regard, the land which is now
selling for $20 per acre will be worth
from $50 to $100 pre acre. It Is as
good land as that which Is selling for
more than $100 per acre in the corn
be'l' would rather raise cattle in West-
ern Canada than in the corn belt of
the United States. You can get your
food cheaper and the climate Is bet-
ter for the purpose. We have a bet-
ter market, but your market will im-
prove faster than your farmers will
produce the supplies. Winter wheat
cap be grown in one-half of the coun-
try through which 1 have passed, and
alfalfa and one of the varieties of
clover In three-fourths of it. The
farmers do not believe this, but it is
true."
Keeping pace with wheat produc-
tion, tho growth of railways has been
quite as wonderful, and the whole
country from Winnipeg to the Rocky
Mountains will soon bo a net-work of
trunk and branch lines. Three great
transcontinental lines are pushing
construction in every direction, and
at each siding the grain elevator is
to be found. Manitoba being the
first settled province, has now an ele-
vator capacity of upwards of 25,000,000
bushels, Saskatchewan 20,000,00, and
Alberta about 7,000,000, while the ca-
pacity of elevators at Fort William
and Port Arthur, on the Great Lakes,
Is upwards of 20,000,000 more.
Within the provinces of Manitoba,
Saskatchewan and Alberta there are
flour and oatmeal mills with a com-
bined capacity of 25,000 barrels per
day, and situated along some famous
water powers In New Ontario, there
are larger mills than will be found .
anywhere in the Prairie Provinces. I
Last year the wheat crop totaled
over 100,000,000 bushels. This year;
the crop will yield 30,000,000 more. A
recent summary shows that on the 1st
of January, 1909, the surveyed lands
of the three western provinces, totaled
134,000,000 acres, of which about 32,-
000,000 have been given as subsidies to
railways, 11,000,000 disposed of in oth-
er ways and 38,000,00 given by the
Canadian Government as free home-
steads, being 236,000 homesteads of
160 acres each. Of this enormous ter-
ritory, there is probably under crop
at the present time less than 11.000,-
000 acres; what the results will be
when wide awake settlers have taken
advantage of Canada's offer and are
cultivating the fertile prairie lands,
one can scarcely Imagine.
Public Sentiment Aroused.
Every state west of the Mississippi
except IdahS, Wyoming, Utah. Ne-
vada and New Mexico has now joined
the fight against tuberculosis. State
sunitoriu for the treatment of tubercu-
losis patients have been now estab- \
lished in Minnesota, Idaho. Missouri,
Arkansas. North Dakota, South Da-
kota and Oregon. State Anti-Tuber
cuiosis associations have been organ
ized and are at work In Washington
Oregon, California, Arizona, Montana,
North Dakota, Colorado, Nebraska,
Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Minnesota, j
Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas and Louis-
iana. in all these states, strenuous ef-
torts to wipe out tuberculosis are be
ing taken.
Pathos Out of Place in Schools.
In an address at a teacher's insti-
tute Miss Martha Sherwood said that
sad and pathetic stories should have
no place in tho public schools. She
declared the pupils' great need is hu-
morous stories and the kind that
make children roll on the ground
with laughter. "Anything to make
them laugh, and laugh loudly," she
said. "It makes them grow, puts
sunshine into their lives and develops
contented men ami women."
Statf. or Ohio City or Toledo. T
Lucas County. f 5'
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he la senior
partner or the firm of f. i. chenky A Co.. doing
business in tho City of Toledo. County and State
aforesaid, and that s^ld tlrrn will pay tin- sura of
ONF. HCNDRKl) DOLLARS for each and every
oas" of Catarrh that cannot bo cured by the use of
IIai.i. s Catarrh Clue. „„„„
FRANK J. CHF.NFV.
Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence
this; <>th day of Dcceniber. A. 1>.. 1886.
. —, A. W. GLEASON.
j sral ^ Notary Public
TTall s Catarrh Cure la taken Internally and act*
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the
sysw in. bend for tcstltnoni:iK free.
1 . .1. (IIKN E Y «L CO.. Tolsdo, (X
Sold by all DruaKixts. TV.
Take Hall's Family l'Uls for constlDatloo.
"Soft and Nice."
ghe—George, dear, do you love me?
He—Yes, Darling; very much.
She—Say something soft and nice to
me.
He—Oil, custard pie!—Judge.
Desperate But Effective.
Knicker—So Jones lias a good
scheme?
Hocker—Yes; he carries a little dy
namite to blow up any auto that runs
over him.
For the Remain-
ing; Days of
this W eek
and all of next week we have decided to
continue the "Special Holiday" and close of
the season prices we have established for the
month of December.—The throngs of eager sat-
isfied buyers in our store from 7:30 in the morning
till late at night is pleasing evidence that the people
appreciate the wonderful bargains we are giving in
every department of our Big House Furnishing
Store.
i > 4 O
^ C *■
Buffets! Buffets!
Here we are for the dining room. The best assortment
we've had yet. $18.50, 20.00, 22.50, 25.00. 35.00 and up to
$65.00. Come in and see one for a Christmas gift for the
wife.
Davenports and Couches
These take the place of the folding bed and the regular set
tit) bed—a combination piece of furniture to fill the need ot the
extra bed in each home. See our $22.50, 25.00, 35 00 and 50.00
Davenports. Velour and leather and imitation leather coverings,
the wood finishes in golden oak, early English and Mahogany.
• J;7$ ■
'?};■■!' r '
See this Elegant
Opera Seat
Deep, spacious, roomy Rock-
er. Tolished Quartered
Golden Oak. A bargain at
$5.00 for a Christmas flyer.
Special at $2.50. One to
each customer.
a
Morris Chairs
Wouldn't one of these
just about fill in where
you want that extra
chair—and look at the
solid comfort you get.
'rices $7.50,10.00,12.50
and up to $25.00.
The Shopper's Paradise located in our basement. China and Ait
Department. Thousands of dollars worth just the right goods for presents.
- •••
3Ba£sc
Pictures in new subjects,
effects, Medalions.
photographic
20 per cent discount on all these goods
except Haviland and Domestic Queens-
ware and dinner sets.
Rosenthal Bavarian China, Old Dutch
ware, Maddox fancy ware, Booths Sici-
lian china, Cauldien Placques, .Japanese
tea sets, vases, mugs, steins, statuary
pottery and all the novelties for home
decoration.
L
A
M
P
S
o" .-3
i ***\
Jr
Splendid oil lamps, gas lamps, electrics
in wood and metal, Right up to the
minute in style and design.
A dealer sold imitation Spearmint,
liis customer gave it to a friend. The
dealer lost his customer. The cus-
tomer lost his friend.
What a young man earns In the day
time goes into his pocket, but what lie
spends in the evening goes into his
character.—Dr. Cuyler.
IX) NOT ACCKI'T A 8CIISTITCTK
when yen want IVrry Davis' Painkiller, as nothing
Is as good i"i rheumatism, neuralgia and similar
t roubles. 7U years in constant use. i5c, 3oc and Me.
I have lived to know that the great j
secret of human happiness is thiR—
never suffer your energies to stagnate.
ARC VOITR CtOTHES PADEDf
T'sp Red Cross Ball Blue and make them
white i:gain. Large 2 oz. packagc, 5 cents
A woman isn't necessarily level
headed because her bat is on straight
Trade With us
DOC & BILL
The People's favorite Store
The House
Furnishers
8-10 Grand Avenue
I'HONK ;e
You will be Satisfied
Prayer.
If you believe in prayer, don't pray
to be delivered from your enemies;
pray that you may never hear what
your friends say about you behind
your back.—Atchison Globe.
The One Universal Tonic.
Air is the only tonic of which it may
be safely said that It disagrees with
no onu.
Seriously Injured.
While hunting near Switzler this
morning tedward Sweeney of Knox-
ville, Tenn . accidentally shot himself
in the right bbbvbgkqcmfwyanhrdl.
Columbia University MiBsourlan.
Unnecessary Accomplishment.
Stella—"Here is a schedule that says
you can feed a family on $20 a month.
Bella—"Well, if you have enough
brains to do that you ran catch a hus
band with plenty of money."
Motherhood.
Motherhood la a spiritual relation,
and it should be coterminous with the
kingdom of womanhood. No woman Is
worthy of the name who has not in
her the mother heart.—Mrs. Arthur
Somervell.
Society's Division.
Byron: Society Is now one polished
horde formed of two mighty tribes—
the Bores and Bored.
A Sign. Uncle Ezra Says:
When a man permits himself to be "stick to the farm, but don't neces-
badly henpecked it Is a sign that his i sai.ny> when you are away frum home,
! wife could tell something if she would. , iet t^e farm stick to you."
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Hunt, Lena. Britton Weekly Sentinel. (Britton, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 45, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 25, 1909, newspaper, December 25, 1909; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc142756/m1/3/?q=led+zeppelin: accessed June 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.