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JB The Bowbells Tribune Published on Friday of each week at Bowbells, Ward County, N. D., By THOS. B. HURLY. Entered as second-class matter Juty 24,1908, at the post office at Bowbells, N, Dak., under the act of March 3. 1879. Subscription Rates:/ To any point in U. S., per year $1.50 To Canada, per year, in advance 2.00 COUNTY AND CITY OFFICIAL PAPER. HAVE THE TRIBUNE FOLLOW YOU. Any of our friends In the city or coun try who contemplate spending the win ter in the east or an extended visit to friends at a distance, should have The Tribune follow them, for in this way they can keep informed about affairs at home and count confidently on receiv ing weekly all the news of Bowbells and country tributary that is worth record ing. The Tribune will be mailed to any address anywhere in the United States at regular subscription rate of $1.50 per annum, and address changed as often as desired. WHERE CLIMATE IS SOLD. In Arizona, Southern Califor nia, New Mexico and nearly half of Texas, but especially in Ari zona, there are large tracts of land which will grow without ir rigation nothing but cactus and sage brush, but which have yet been bought up at trivial figures by speculative holders, and which are being offered to actual set tlers at astonishingly high prices. One such company that controls an area in Arizona three times as large as the state of Delaware and having nearly the area of New Jersey, is sending out high ly embellished statements, pic turing Arizona as a garden spot of the Lord and offering the des ert land at from $100 to $200 per acre. The statements that are made in the pamphlets that are sent to inquirers for these lands are calculated to mislead thousands. The lands must be artificially watered to produce anything marketable, and when there is an established irrigation plant the water generally costs the landholder from $30 to $40 per acre per annum. As soon as the virgin fertility of these lands is used up the holders must not only buy water, but artificial fertilizers to produce crops. So long as only a few thousand acres of these lands are under cultivation there may be found a profitable market in the mining towns and mining camps, but the whole population of Arizona is less than 200,000 and the home markets are, therefore, exceed ingly limited. The moral of these observa tions is that a much better agri cultural opportunity is to be found right here in North Dako ta than can be obtained at an ex travagant cost in any of the Southwestern states. e o pie who go to Arizona or Southern California and buy land from one or another of the irrigation syn dicates really buy the climate, and pay an exorbitantly high price for it. If they go with a small capital they will b* apt to buy on conditions that will keep them at work the rest of their natural lives to get free from the clutches of the water companies and the land speculators. North Dakota is a far better state than Arizona for those with money to invest in agricultural lands to come to and certainly it is a good state for the farmers who are al ready here to stay with. LINKING WITH CANADA During the past twenty years development of the resources of British North Ameriea has pro gressed at a ratio of activity which has given the Canadian provinces a rating as potential* factors in world commerce and world indus trialism that they did not before possess. There are not many Americans who are aware of the extent to which in comparatively recent y ears American capital has been seeking investment in Canada. The Monetary Times, a nsessmppBBssflMBB financial journal, published i n Toronto, has gathered infornia-. tion concerning American indus trial investments in the Domin ion, and sums up the results of the inquiry in the following table 168 companies aver aging capital $600, 000 $100,800,000 Investments in Brit ish Columbia mills and timber 50,000,000 Investments'in Brit ish Columbia mines Packing plants Implement distribut ing houses Land deals in British Columbia Total 50,000,000 Land deals in Alber ta, etc 10,000,000 Investments in lum ber and mines in Alberta 5,000,000 5,000,000 4,000,000 2,000,000 $226,800,000 The foregoing table does not, probably, anything like account for American investments in Can adian enterprises, as American capital is largely invested in the stocks and bonds of Canadian railroads and other incorporated enterprises. And it is difficult to trace the extent of such invest ments. The statement supplied y the Monetary Times does, however, serve to indicate that the United States and Canada are being united by commercial affinities which eventually will demand the letting down of the political bars between th^ two countries. Not only is American capital finding its way into Canada in constantly swelling flow, but dur ing the past ten years American farmers have been treaking across the wheat provinces in a way that has made Canada one of the three leading wheat-grow ing countries in the world. Dur ing the past year the value of Canadian imports from the Unit ed States was more than double the value of the imports from Great Britain and nearly thirty times as great as the imports from either .France or Germany. And though the Dominion found her. best market in Great Britain, the commodities sold in the Unit ed States possessed more than eighty times the value of those sold to France. a* There is a constantly growing community of interest between Canada and the United States which more and more as time progresses will view with dis favor that obstructive political boundary line. Hon. L. B. Hanna announces that under no circumstances will he be a candidate for a feeat in the United States Senate at the coming election. This leaves some of the servile little organs another guess or two. As the Forum says, Mr. Hanna likes the work of the lower branch of Congress as far as he has exper ienced it. He was extremely fortunate in his committee ap pontments, being on Indian af fairs and agriculture, and these positions will enable him to look after North Dakota affairs more promptly and effectually than he could have done otherwise. His place on. Indian affairs is invalu able to him in securing the open ing of the Fort Berthold reserva tion, in which movement he is deeply interested and has the co-operation of the people of the entire state in his efforts in that behalf. That honesty is the best policy is being proved by an unusual number of contemporary illustra tions. Ill-gotten gains are every where bringing their winners to justice, to ruin and to prison. But still, honesty as a.policy is showing no decisive signs as yet of ruling the world. Congress is to inquire into the cause of the high r&te of living. But then, evei\ Congaess itself often proves' a very expensive luxury to tfie country. There is now every evidence of a lively but comparatively harm less war in Washington for sev eral months to come. The sale of malt of-any kind, whether intoxicating or not, has been declared illegal in this state by a decision of the Supreme Court at Bismarck handed down on Friday of last week, the 7th inst., in the case of the State of North Dakota vs. the Fargo Bot tling Works and the American Bottling association. The case was appealed from the District Court of Cass county, and the Supreme Court upholds the de cision rendered by Judge Pollock in the lower court. A train recently wrecked in the Southwest revealed the fact that several carloads of peanut shells were on their way .to breakfast food companies in the west. It has long been expected that we must have peanut politics, a s witness some of the statesmen through this Bowbells country, but it,s rather hard to have the shells thereof ground in our food. A press dispatch relates the fact that a jury in Long Island City found a man not guilty of carrying a concealed weapon, but asked the judge to warn him hot to do so again. This will confirm those critics and cynics who maintain that the average intelli gent American jury is a joke. Tesla promises a new wireless lamp which will revolutionize the problem of artificial illumination. Electricity has been the wizard of $re past year no one will doubt that it may prove the miracle worker of the new one. According to a press report a man in Tennessee last week tried conclusions with his mother-in law in a pistol duel. He was killed. This ought to settle the question of superiority for some time to come. A convict i n the Minnesota state prison has succeeded i n growing a mammoth lemon. As if those of the ordinary size hand ed out day after day to unwilling recipients were not large.enough. Now it is the Tobacco Trust that is at the bar of the Supreme Court, and as a result it is opined by an exchange that its methods are appropriately to be smoked out. Gomper's fight against the Steel Trust is far more to his credit than his fight against the laws of the land. KEEN IMAGINATION. The Way One of His Lectures Affected Louis Agassiz. Children are not the only holders of the precious key of the imagination. The finest minds often keep the power of "make believe," much to their own and the world's benefit. That such'a possession coupled with ardent enthu siasm makes demands on the nerves and strength is shown In the following anecdote, related by the late Moncure Daniel Conway in his autobiography. He was at one time a pupil of that fa mous man of science, Louis Agassiz,, One particular lecture Agassiz de voted to displaying some fossils of sau rlans, newly come into his collection. He made the subject a text for a gen eral review of the chain of reptilian life. As he proceeded,- darting off to the blackboard to Illustrate, comparing the extinct with the contemporary fauna, he became more and more animated. His face reddened with excitement until at last be said: "Gentlemen, I ask yon to forgive m? If today I end the lecture at this point although the hour Is not out. I asstire you I have been describing these, ex? tlnct creatures until they have taken on a sort of life. They have been crawling, hissing, darting about me.' I have heard the crawling and hissing until I am really exhausted. I regret It, gentlemen, but I trust you will ex cuse me." ".••{ Our admiration for the grand teach «r was such- as to make us break! through aU rules, and we gave him a: hearty cheer. He bowed low to M, and quickly disappeared. EYE EXERCISE. On* Method by Ayhich Poor Viatel^ May Be Improved. 5 "Have you. a high roof?" was the ap-? pfirently Irrelevant question put byt the distinguished oculist to the womani who bad complained of having. bad ipyes. "Higher than the roofs of the? fcurroundinghousea "Oh, yes,": 5 said the vfoman. "a good? ileal higher." "Then what I want you to do," sajd| be, "is to go up there every day and! wffl" do you more gootTthan glasses. One trouble with your eyes, and with many pairs of eyes in New York, Is that you exercise them so little at long range. They are used to looking at short distances only. Long distance looking is good for eyes.. Persons who habitually have a wide expanse of sea or plain to gaze upon very seldom have weak eyes. Of course you can not move out to the plains, neither can you spend a life on the ocean wave, but you can let your sight travel across the Hudson river every -day, and I advise you to do it."—New York Press. Vagaries of Memory. The vagaries of the old man's mem ory are indeed curious.' Lord Hough ton told Sir-Mountstuart Grant Duff that he had once been present when Lord Lyndhurst and Dr. Lushlngton were asked what was the most inter esting thing that they remembered. "Oh," said Lyndhurst, "undoubtedly the day which I spent with Washing ton at Mount Vernon." v "Oh," said Lushlngton, "undoubtedly the week which I spent with Burke at Beacons field." Naturally they were asked,to tell something of what had passed on these occasions, but neither of them could remember anything whatever. There is much to be said for assisting the memory of good things with a diary, as Sir Mountstuart himself did. —London Chronicle. Paid For a Peep at Royalty. In the eighteenth century the Lon doner could look at royalty on Sunday for a modest fee. In a guide to Lon don, published in 1767, It was said, "At St. James' chapel royal by knocking at the side door and slipping a shilling for each person into the hand of the verger who opens it you may have ad mittance and stand during divine serv ice in the presence of their majesties, and for a shilling each person more you may sit In their royal presence, not in pews, but in turnup seats on the side of them." A Vague Idea. During his first visit to a farm little Willie came Into the house crying softly. "What Is the matter, dear?" asked bis mother. "I went out to see the cows, and they didn't give nothing, but milk."" sobbed the boy. "What did you expect?" inquired the mother. "I'm not sure what I expected," re plied Willie, "but, mother, where does beef tea come from?"—Judge. A Hint. "Yes," said the young student thoughtfully, "when I get Interested In a subject I never stop until I have em braced It thoroughly." "That's nice," was the hesitating re ply. "Do—do you think I'm an inter esting subject?" Great Expression. "They tell me, Grimley, that your daughter sings with great expression." "Greatest expression you ever saw. Her own mother can't recognize her f6.ce when she's singing."—Home Her a Insects' Wings. The wings of the housefly vibrate S83 times a second those of the honey bee 440. Every one complains of the badness of his memory, but nobody of his judg ment.—La Rochefoucauld. Qualified. Parke—I don't know what I am ever going to. do with that boy of mine. He Is careless and absolutely. reckless of consequences, and be doesp'taeem to care for any one. Lane—Good! You can make a taxicab driver out of him -ilfe: y-Vy v: A Precaution. "Dickey," said his mother, "when you' divided those five caramels with 'yopr slater did you give her three?" '.'Noy. ma. I thought they wopldn't ?ome out even, so ate. one.'lore I be gan to divide/'—United Prefebyterlan. To Friends and Patrons «0» We do not want the old year to close without you receiving our sincere thanks for the patronage you have given us and the pleasant busi ness relations w e have enjoyed. In reviewing the business of the year past, we believe that in general it has met the expectations of all of us. We have harvested pot only a large crop, but one of the most valuable crops our country has ever grown. In view, therefore, of these present conditions, we believe trade for the coming year will be of larger proportions, and that 1910 will register a new record in point of prosper ity It is our desire that this letter shall not only contain our thanks and confidence in the future, but that it shall also convey to you our best wishes for the New Year. As it advances may it bring to you an increased measure of pros perity and Happiness. Very sincerely yours, DONOVAN BROS. THE UP-TO-DATE HARDWARE MARCHANTS Bowbells, North Dakota. NORTH STAR R. R. SCHUDAR Contractor and Builder Livery Feed and SALE STABLE Phone No. Plans Specifications and all Necessary Material Fur nished on short notice. Also shop work of all descrip tions. ALL WORK GUARANTEED. Bowbells, N. D. ROGERS LUMBER CO. Your crops may not have been as good as you wished but is that any reason you should let your machinery go to rot. A covering of lumber will do more good than a covering of snow. C. W. HAYES, v OOD LIVERY service on short notice, with competent and careful drivers if desired, and at rates that will please the most impecunious. FARMERS bring your horses to my barn and you can rest assured of them being properly cared for. D. W. SIVER, Proprietor. THE OLD HADWIN BARN L. SMITH, Prop. We solicit a share of your patronage. Our rigs are the best and we have a good place to stable your horses while in town. Charges Right—Give Us a Call 90 Bowbells, N. D. Hardware Stoves and Ranges Paints, Oils .and Varnishes, etc. First class andjip-to-date. Call in and see us. T. O. HUNTER, Prop. I I I