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Show PAGE SIX THE PROVO POST Gnu mu V f o .p ' the Uiiited Elates. Postmaster James Clo e re. ceived,the following notice from FIGHT INSECT PESTS the department today; See. 496, Postal Laws and Regu- Lltioiia haa hacn amended an flint The Juvenile Court work for 7, as Postmaster Clove Gets Order it now : reads, in paragraph ' the state, of Utah lias just been follows Against SendingTlad Seed Nursery stock, including field sumed up and the record sent out r jjro Mail. ' grown florist stock, trees, shrubs; showing the standing of the varvines,' cuttings, grafts ious counties. Utah County has plants, scions and buds which carry in- been d compared by Judge The Post Qffiec department has jurious insects) may be admitted shows that this counto the mail only wThen accompannmle a ruling which will prevent ied ty is being well cared for by the by a certificate .from a state or probation ofictr and that the owe district from sending - seeds government inspector to the effect containing in sect pests from, one that said nursery stock has been judge is liandlihg'many eass. As a whole the children violating the place to another and thus acting inspected and found free from law are cheeked after one or two as a common carrier Ter the disnotices, although some cases have ease which is doing(Tmueh damV required trial and action by the age to the fruit and vegetable crop ADVERTISED LETTERS. court. For the year ending December - Lake-Thea- tre iemaiujwgdu Prm a Bnsd. flffk 1 ,1 9 1 1 Fthe rCWermtrrctmvitt ions . April 21,11)12. - to the Industrial School, 9 under 4 NIGHTS BEGINNING WEDLADIES, usupeuded sentence and 31 cases Johnson, Mrs. NESDAY, MAY 1 continued under god behavior, vAIeMiliam Elizabeth. MATINEE SATURDAY while 87 were placed on proba. Charles Frohman Presents GENTS, tion. The most trouble Fuller W. L. officers came-uiule-r Drove, 15. A. the heads of malicious mischief, Maycock, Gean, violating fhe , curfew ordinance, Murray, W. truancy, petit larceny, trespass Murray, and miscellaneous offenses. all oer Wahl-qmstrkn- For ?About Half Price We bought a Drummers Line of , Samples at Greatly Reduced prices, Genuine Bargains. Come early and get fifstHdiceT7'a3 See East' Window or Display -- Saif- y - exper-ieneed-byA- L MAUDE ADAMS c - NOTICE TO PUBLISHERS -- 4-2- publishers will be received' by the clerk of the Board until Monday, June 10, 1912, at 8 p. nij. for furnishing school text books in the following , subjects. Smoot Lumber Go. r ing, Arithmetic, Grammar, Geo-- , U. S. History, Drawing, Music, Spelling, Writing and supplementary ! texts in the foregoing subjects, Of the above, approximately two thousand of each will be needed At the time and place specified, the Board of Educations ill- - meet and publicly open and read all proposals that have been received, and will make its decision within thirty days PORTLAND CEMENT, PLASTER PARIS AND HARD WALL PLASTERS, BUILDERS HARDWARE, WIRE AND SLAT FENCE, NATIONAL FIELD AND HOG FENCE. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Lumber, Doors, Windows, Mouldings, . Lath, Shingles, Etc., , Phones No. 20 and 40. . Office and Yard opposte R. R. Freight" Depot. - Fletcher & Thomas Company " PROVO, UTAH. and retail prices, at which the publish- 4 er agrees to furnish each book within Provo City, during the full time that is required, by law. The publisher or publishers whose proposals shall be accepted, must enter Into a wtitten contract with the Board of Education and shall give a bond with two suffic ient sureties in a reasonable sum to be fixed by the Board, the faithful performance of suefi contract- - All bidders will be required to 'give the price of books f o. b. at point of ship o. bf Provo City. Right ment, and reserved iq by the Board of Education to accept or reject and or all' bids, or any part thereof. , Boards of Education of Provo City, Oix Utah. . EVAN WR1DE, Pres R. EUGENE JONES, Clerk. Dated April 16, 1912. t - GET VOIR SEED FROM THE Wtfl. : WHY HE WA8 r UTE, - -- IRlO GRANDE f EXCURSION RATE3. t , -- 1What made you so JateP I met Smithson. . Account Htudentsand Teacher. no Is ou reason Well, that why meeting im Salt Lake the Denver should be an hour late getting home & Rio Grande will make A' rate of 1 to supper. one single fare to Salt Lake City I know, but I asked him how he and return on April "26111, with was feeling, and he insisted on telling final returm limit of April 27tk. me about his stomach trouble. Rate will be open to all. Did you tell him to take Chamber YVM. H. M1TCII ELL, A gent. Iains Tablets? "Sure, that is what he Sold by all dealers. . needs.. WANTED ' this office. Clean- - cotton, ragss at . JOonit let lice eat. up your-val- ttable poultry when its so easy to thereafter. j got rid of them." Con s Lice ' The bids and terms from publishers 1ovviler, Lice Liquid, key and Head must be accompanied by sample cop- Lice Ointment are guaranteed to ies of the books proposed to he fur- do the work quickly. Get a pracnished, together with a statement of tical poultry lioolc free from Car the introductory, exchange, wholesale penter Seed Co. 8 MILL WORK A SPECIALTY - v - - -- P. 0. Box 488. -- - llasftdos. "Rasmussen, L. II, - OF TEXT BOOKS Sergent, M r. in Rostands Masterpiece K. T. ' Wall, : CHANTECLER If not called for in two weeks pursuant to law, the Board of EduMail Orders containing check pay-- - they will be sent to the Dead Let cation of Provo City, Utah,, hereby able Salt Lake Theatre, Salt Lake terOffiee. gives notleeT of its intention to adopt JAMES CLOVE, PrM. text books for use In the Public 'City) Utah, and with self address .sed envelope now received. - RegSchools of Provo City, for a period of WANTED Male clerk, ladies five years from the first day of July, ular seat sale MONDAY. Prices Orchestra, $2; Balcony, $2 and and gents furnishings. Call Ilar-ry- . 1912. 6 Meisel. Springville. $1.60; Dress Cede, $1; Gallery 50c Separate and sealed proposals from 7- i E ROYLANCE COBiPMY WE REALIZE THAT ALL FARMERS ARE NOT ABLE TO DO SO ON ACCOUNT OF THE HIGH PRICES OF SEED. BUT IN ORDER TO ENCOURAGE THE INCREASING OF THE ACREAGE WE HAVE IMPORTED SEVERAL CARLOADS OF SEED FROM COLORADO AND WANT EVERY GROWER TO PLANT1 ALL THE SUITABLE GROUND HE; HAS, IFYOU ARE NOTABLE TO PAY US NOW WE WILL CARRYYOU UNTIL YOU HARVEST YOUR CROPS THIS FALL, BECAUSE WE WANT MORE PGTATOES PLANTED WE MUST WAKE UP. WE ARE GOING IDAHO SHIPPED 4000 CARS FROM TIIEIR,1911 CROP, COLORADO ABOUT 9000 CARLOADS, UTAH LESS THAN 500 CARS. FROM THE 1912 CROP. .WE FURNISH COUNTY UTAH FROM ADVANCING. POTATOES US OF 1000 CARLOADS LET SHIP DOWN HILL. COLORADO AND IDAHO ARE LATE. TOO IS COME BUT AND GET YOUR SEED BEFORE IT THE SEED, YOU FURNISH THE GROUND. DONT DELAY, IN ORDER THAT YOU MAY KNOW THE KIND OF SEED POTATOES WE HAVE, BELOW IS AN EXACT COPY OF A LETTER JUST RECEIVED FROM THE MAN OF A WHOM WE BOUGHT OUR SEED POTATOES, SO THAT THERE IS NO QUESTION ABOUT THE QUALITY.- -- --Z , READ THE LETTER - WW AULT, COLORADO, APRIL 19, 1912. THE WM. M. ROYLANCE CO., PROVO, UTAH. . ", DEAR SIRS . I have your communication of the 18th, and note vvliat yon have to bay. in regard to the attacks of the Agricultural papers, also Ihedatly papers on the potato question. is in at we it than here the as of are eenter more seed vital the of the States United is Size that Ault, in the is a of district not its JPirst greatest potatoes question say that there scd question potato district in Coloradopand in fact do not take the back seat on potato raising for any section of the country. Therefore.it behoves us to pay particular attention to the . Trof : Filch,1 potato expert of the Colorado State Agricultural College, lectured to our farmers in this dictrict about two weeks ago on potato growing and the seed. , --rI was at that meeting and the question of of our last years seed came up for discussion. - The Professor recommended to our people that theJbest seetf to plant wasJhe seed that they now have from their last years crop. culls. nubbins and inferior and from heed came "this to Tour papers seem dwell on the point that vines, Now, let me say right heredhat the vines in this district last year were extra large and strong, and as for the size, it Is customary in most all localities to call a small potato, CULL, especially at digging time. Now these potatoes that I shipped you grew from good prolific vines", also yielded a good crop for the season of 1011.' I wish to state right here that I know that farmers right here in this district, during this month of April have bought some of the larger potatoes from.the same lot as I shipped you and paid the farmer at his cellar $2.00 per ' ' ' hundred. . , t ' Now, jour Agricultural periodicals cannot say, or should not say that the experts of Colorado are all wrong on this question and that they are the only- ones that are right, and ' es' . pecially' when they do not know what kind of vines' or crop the seed eomes from, t seed that to Last fall a representative of the MexicanjDonsul came to Denver purposely inspect potatoes theyjiad ordered fromjme through a Cqaimission Jjonse there. He was so Veil "pleased that he bought Twelve (12) cars at" that timerandwould have bought more, but 1 could not get' them sorted as quickly as he desired to have them, owing to the fact that their . planting season was upon them at that time. I also shipped 12 cars to Memphis, Tenn. And three 3) ears sent to the Kelly Mere.Co. of Clieyenne, Wyoming, only forty miles from where they were raised, the27 ears that I have mentioned were all the same kind of potatoes that 1 have shipped you, and were bought for seed, and they all came back from stock that had been secured for eating purposes Now, as. for the color of potatoes: In this district we have a variety of soil,' some of it is of a very sandy loam, potatoes raised in such soil ary brighter in color, -- and are usually a little smoother than the potato that is and black, and if a little damp at digging time it sticks to the potato, thus making it darker in color, and not so smooth as , a elayJoam. This soil js heavy raised or grown in what we call . -. rr ir if ditn m rn r waitaiV9irr Ine lighter sou grown potato. Now, Gentlemen,' I thing that I have gone into this matter at length, to show you what other people have had to say, also what their attitude" has been in regard to the value of this ' ZT1'5'- seed In question. r from w as grown from-gooan affidavit the or much loss to of the time I seed I that without that J5ut if it will-aiget expense, growers shipped can, you prolific vines, and you any, v seed. perfectly healthy . . ' llopiiig that this Will clear the way from anjr. further unpleasantness, and jhat we will be able to do a greater business in the future I am, ' 4 r wJ - Yours truly, f. WM. T. MALER. r v WE HAVE ALSO JUST RECEIVED A CARLOAD OF THE FAMOUS SWIFTS ARSENATE OF LEAD. DONT USE ANY OTHER KIND IF YOU DONT WANT WORMY FRUIT. ' 3 PHONE US YOUR ORDERS FOR HAY AND GRAIN. WE HAVE PLENTY ON HAND', . , r lct.-ni- e are-calle- d ! - , D o 5T o G) to ' . . - nr ii imirmniinTurniiiTn tin iimnmTifiiiTnr-- wiiti TTwnniSniimfl Ibirf il mnniiiA ... irfi ( d d - -- -- - 1 -- , The TWm;' MrEpylance Plant Potatoes - 1" Co.; .TnutrandProduce Pldhi Potdtoes -- r |