. Busyman's Magazine, July-December 1907. ain, and it does not seemunreasonable to assume that Canadamay soon be able to feed the MotherCountry. Of course not all the wheatcan be exported. Beside the item ofhome consumption—a growing fea-ture, with the expansion of city life—there is an amount needed for seed-ing, requiring on the average a busheland a half to every acre shall not, therefore, have 171,-000,000 bushels to export as soon asthat amount is harvested, but eachyear the golden stream of wheat flowswider and swifter and deeper down tothe lakes, and the development of onl


. Busyman's Magazine, July-December 1907. ain, and it does not seemunreasonable to assume that Canadamay soon be able to feed the MotherCountry. Of course not all the wheatcan be exported. Beside the item ofhome consumption—a growing fea-ture, with the expansion of city life—there is an amount needed for seed-ing, requiring on the average a busheland a half to every acre shall not, therefore, have 171,-000,000 bushels to export as soon asthat amount is harvested, but eachyear the golden stream of wheat flowswider and swifter and deeper down tothe lakes, and the development of onlyone or two additional years wouldcover the shortage. Thus it will beseen that the day when western Can-ada has fully earned its title of JohnBulls bread-basket is not remote. If it is true, and few will gainsayit, that the seat of the new-foundstrength of our neighbor to the northlies in the prairie country, then it maybe stated without fear of question thatthe story of Canadian wheat is, infact, the story of Canada. ^m ^-mm :4^t*^.. The Deputy By B. M. Sinclair in Lippincotts Lots of people have showed a consum-ing curiosity over the Bill Brunerbusiness, and why he wasnt cinchedwhen the gang he headed was brokeup and scattered. I know why, allright, and Im here to elucidate. Im some patriotic, and so when oldCullen, the sheriff, hazed me into acorner at Malta and asked me if Iwouldnt help round up Bill Brunerand his gang, and said his deputywas laid up with a boil on his neck,and wouldnt I help him out, I permitsmy self to be swore in—especiallywhen Cullen remarks that theresgood money in it if we bring in BillBruner and collect the reward, whichhe said hed split in the middle withme. Two of the Bruner gang hadbeen pinched and sent up for six yearsapiece, but that didnt stack up veryhigh, unless Bill himself was put wherethe coyotes couldnt bite him. SoCullen was good and anxious togather him in; election day wasntso far off yuh had to go to the cal-ender to hunt it up,


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