Inglenook, The (1907) . his heart with sudden pity, lit his eye with misty light:? Go, your lover lives, cried Cromwell, curfew shall not ring to-night! —Author Unknown. the: INGLEINOOK. You Are Losing Money By. not making a trip and investigating our Cheap Lands in the PANHANDLE OF TEXAS We own 100,000 acres, close to the thriving town of Texline, Dallam Co.,ranging in price from $ to $ per acre. PEOPLE WHO SHOULD BE INTERESTED :ers Parties wanting better climate for members of family who have poor health. Rent_ _wanting homes of their own. Parents desiring lands for childr
Inglenook, The (1907) . his heart with sudden pity, lit his eye with misty light:? Go, your lover lives, cried Cromwell, curfew shall not ring to-night! —Author Unknown. the: INGLEINOOK. You Are Losing Money By. not making a trip and investigating our Cheap Lands in the PANHANDLE OF TEXAS We own 100,000 acres, close to the thriving town of Texline, Dallam Co.,ranging in price from $ to $ per acre. PEOPLE WHO SHOULD BE INTERESTED :ers Parties wanting better climate for members of family who have poor health. Rent_ _wanting homes of their own. Parents desiring lands for children, or people of means whowish an investment that will pay 20 per cent interest if the land is rented—without con-sidering the fact that the land will double in \-alue in less than two years. See our landeither on your way out or coming back from California in May. Write US to-day forfor free illustrated Booklet descriptive of the Texas Panhandle. The North Texas Land Co., 250 Market Street II-13-I5 TEXLINE, TEXAS. Many of the Brethren in Illinoisand Iowa are prosperous. They havecomfortable homes, big substantialbarns first-class stock, modern farmmachinery, and are both comfortbleand happy. Others of the Brethrenwho are equally industrious, equallyintelligent and equally upright lackmaterial prosperity. The prosperous Brethren are farm-ing fertile land. Those who find dif-ficulty in making both ends meet arelocated on lands of meager productivepower. It is not the difference in the men. The cause of the distinctive differ-ence in the prosperity of the Brethrenis the quality of the soil that they cul-tivate. Those who move from poorland to fertile acres soon become well-to-do. Those who change their loca-tion from rich land to poor land soonbecome poor. The labor and expenditure neces- sary to raise a crop are if anythinggreater on poor than on rich lands, yet poor lands mean poverty and richlands mean opulence to those whowork them. The richest lands of Iowa and Illi-nois
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