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Show V TITE Thursday, March 23, 1905. U G TA-H-FA-RMI- N r- water supply a drawback is turned into an adfor irrigation purposes in Utah vantage. The fact that it does this year is Exceptionally good. not rain at all to speak of during "While there has not been so large $ie summer months, was at first a snowfall in this valley this year considered an insurmountable as last, yet the late rains meant obstacle to the successful raising of crops. This feature, however, is a great advantage once irrigation is established, because there is no danger of Hoods, or of crops getting too much water. For instance, in the raising of sugar beets; if the beets get water too soon, the result is a large beet without enough saecharinematter and if they do not get it .soon enough, the result is a dried up beet, winch is alike valueless for sugar making. This does not occur in a region where there is no rainfAll during the summer, and inhere there is water available fq- irrigation purposes, and it accounts for the successful result of beet sugar raising in ltah, as against failure in other states. While the farmers of Utah have accomplished .wonders by the use of irrigation.yet the system is only in its unfancy. Fully s of tliKprecious water, each drop of which is worth money, gofs to waste every there is no way because spring, of storing it up for use when summer the need during To build reservoirs to months. store it. is such an immnese undertaking that private Individuals have not the means to do it, and private .corporations which have undertaken it have not proved successful as a rule. The Utah pioneers now have the satisfaction of seeing their work taken up and supplemented by the United States government, under the Reclamation Act whereby the moneys derived from the sale of pubic lands will be used for the construction of storage reservoirs. the expense to be gradually paid back by the lands to be benefitted. This work is now un-dway, and necessarily takes considerable time to complete it. But Uncle Sam does not do things half-waand within the next few years this entire intermmin-tincountry will be transformed By storing up the water, instead of TUO.lMJf) acres under irrigation, as at present, there will be o'er 3,000,000; and. yielding crops in the same abundance as the present cultivated area yields, Utah will be the foremost state in the Unon in agriculure and horticulture. The crops raised in the valleys will more than make , up for the room taken up hv the mountains, which will still go on yielding their many millions in metals and furnishing aprofitable market for crops that can be raised. The population of the state will necessarily be quadrupled, because, with twenty acre farms each supporting a family three-fourth- er n all-th- e nr A Sure Money Maker On the Farm 11 When you buy a Cream Separator you cheat yourself if you dont get the machine that makes and saves the most money for you. Cream, repairs and oil all represent money. SUnited States Cream Separator . bolds the worlds record for clean skimming saves cream every day that other separators lose. Substantial and simple extremely durable. No joints to work loose, no ratchet pin to break off, no exposed gears to be injured no repairs. . Perfect adjustment of working parts no oil wasted. You cant make your cows pay you as they should without a U. S. Cream Separator. Write for free illustrated catalogue i The Vermont Farm Machine Company mVoii1' Vurtoua at rt Icnn, Mlwnolbi Oaatu, la Ciraw, Wk, Sion City. la, Lalia Buffalo, Utah, Saa Irancneo, Cal. Portland, 511 Cny, N. Y., Portland, Me., Montreal ami Skerfatooka, Qub, Hamilton, Oak Addrw ail letter to BUow alia, Vu , Qm. f - - . t a ' , i - - of theWest. Orb, . . ThC book is TEA Rock Island Trains and substantially bound. the features of Under words between you and your Other Flags is the Notes on Europe, written after his rettfrn grocer Schilling's Best. from abroad, and giving in brief They mean more than tea. from" a resume of the many interYur (rocar rrturu your mq 4 a 4aa'l lik. It. esting things he saw. Cloth Bound. 397 pages. Price, $1.25, Postage Prepaid. To our subscribers we will furand leaving a handsome balance, nish the book for $1.00 the rural districts will be thickly populated, which in turn will creFor An Impaired Appetite. ate such a demand for manufactured articles, of "all kinds, that Loss of appetite always results factories can be profitably con- from faulty digestion. All that ducted in the cities, employing is needed is a few doses of thousands of workmen. The new Chamberlains Stomach and Liver interurban electric lines being Tablets. They will invigorate the built will facilitate the moving stomach, strengthen the digestion of crops and carrying of mer- and give. you an appetite like- jt chandise. These different fac- wolf. These Tablets also act as tors. working slowly but surely a gentle laxative. For sale by all to the same end, make the out-o- druggists. c , for Utah very bright indeed. Catholic. One of Commenced December 24, 19(14 Colorado to the East4Daiiy' To Omaha and Chicago. Denver. No. 42 No 6 Leaves.... Leaves.... 11:30 a.m. 10.-00p.r- Colo Springs. Pueblo 11:45 a.m. 10:00 p.m. 8:30' pan. ' To Kansas City and St. Louis No. 10 No. 16 Denver. Colo. Springs. Pneblo Leaves.... 2:15 p.m. 2:30 p. m. 1:05 pjn. Leaves,... 7:50 p.m. 8:05 p. m. Going Somewhere? Address - - E. DRAKE. DUUPaaa Agent, Fnv Agent, O. A. BIBLE. Trev. k -In- ICO West 2nd 8outh 8t Salt Lake City. ter-Mountain Ilerbine is a boon for sufferers from aneamia. By- - its use the blood is quickly regenerated and The the color becomes normal. is The revived. drooping strength diminished. Health, langour is tone and vigor predominate. New life and happy activity results. Mrs. Belle II. Shirel, Middles-borougI have Ills., writes: been troubled with liver complaint and poor blood, and have found nothing to benefit me like nerbine. I hope never td be without it. I have wished that I had known of it in my husbands lifetime. 50c. Sold by Riter Bros. b Drug Co. h, 30 Acre Irrigated Farm Near gan For Sale. C. B. $LOAT, General Agent Passenger Department, Denver, Colorado. OwnSlorllMR Gives Health, Vigor And Tone. - i IvI uy) s 'vAGSzzrzn UTAH. ae The outlook for h I UURN AL,f LOG AK Y The two most significant PRODUCTIVE snow in the mountains, and the reports are that the snow is fully as deep as last year. It is the snow in the mountains which counts for irrigation purposes. The mountains are the storehouses from .which the supply is drawn during the hot summer months, long after the snow in the valleys has fnelted. During thtT spiring months there is plenty of water, as the snow in the valleys and lower foothills is melting, and the water goes to waste. which we The warm weather had have during February, followed by frosts, has put a coat of ice over the snow in the mountains, which will serve to keep it still longer from melting, thus making it available later in the summer when most needl'd to ripen crops. for The system of irrigation raising crops, first put in practice by the early pioneers ofUtah, has been developed into a great science, with wonderful results. The ground in the valleys, covered with sagebrush, apparently a desert waste, was found to be the. world the most fertile in when supplied with water. The soil is practically an alluvial de posit, which has been accumulating for countless ages, and if given a drink of water during the hot summer months, it shows its appreciation by yielding crops so phenomenally large as to be almost beyond belief. The eastern farmer, depending upon casual rainfall, and harvesting crops which there are considered good, but here would be considered meager, would shake his head in disbelief, when told that Utah lands held sugar beets to the - value of $15(1 per acre, small fruits $500 to $800 per arce, wheat $50 to $70 per acre, potatoes 900 bushels per acre, onions, 1,100 bushels, and other crops in like proportion . lie would not be able to understand how a man with twenty of acres of land in Utah could, after supporting his family and paying all expenses, put $2,000 a year in the bank.Yet this very thing is done in Utah, year after year. It is not only the fertility of the soil which makes it possible, but the further fact that in Utah The farmer can practically make it rain whenever Jie wants to. In other words lie can turn on the water in the irrigation ditch, and the crops get the benefit of a copious rain, just at the right time. When they have had enough, the water is turned off. Thus by a little ingenuity, what was apparently TRI-WEKKL- ... I Cache Valley Time Card The Chicago, Milwaukee' and St. Paul Railway1 NORTH BOUND LEAVES Mixed No. 15 Daily II Daily Pocatello 2:45 p.m. .2:30 a.m Salt Lake 5:45 ...11:45 p.m 7:15 ....1:25 Ogdeu Cache Jet 8:55 ....5:30 a.m Mendon 9:13 ....6:00 9:30 ' ....6:25 Logan Smithfleld 9:48 ....7:00 ' Richmond 9:59 ....7:42 Franklin 10:18 ....8:15 No. When Going East, See That Your Tickets Read Via This Popular Route. , THE SHORT LINE -- OM AHA & CHICAGO STEAM HEATED ELECTRIC LIGHTED SOLID VE8TIBULED ARRIVES Preston 10:35 p.m.... 9:10 BETWEEN- a.m SOUTH BOUND Lo- LEAVES Close Connection in Union Depot at Omaha with all Lines from the West, and at Chicago with all Eastern Liuea t Together with House, Granary, Cellar, Barn 20x40, 5 tons hay new Surrey, "Wagon, Harness, Bobs, Sulky Plow, Mower, Rake, 1 Cow, 2 Pigs, and 20 Chickens. Price Must be sold at once. C. S. Williams, Commercial Agent vi , ' it ' , , ' A , . j U West Second South 8t., Salt Lake City. 106 $3,000. Logan Real Estate and Loan Co. Over First National Bank, Logan, Utah. W 1LLIAM THE SIGH OF THE SHORTEST LIHETO JENNINGS BRYANS NEW BOOK For further information apply to THE GREAT SOUTH W. W. WOODSIDE, Agent. Under Other Flags. Travels, Speeches, Lectures. when In Zion stop st Salt Lako Since Mr. Bryans European tour a year ago he has been be- sieged by requests for copies of his letters describing his travels The letters, together abroad. with a number of his lectures and other public addresses, have been gathered together and published in book form. - The European letters contain Mr. Bryans account of what he saw and learned while in Europe, and present interesting views of Ireland, England Scotland, France, Switzerland, "Germany, Russia, Holland, Belgium and the Netherlands, together with a description, of his visits with Count Tolstoy and Pope Leo. His. Thanksgiving address, delivered before the American Society in London, 1903, is also included. In this volume appear Mr. Bryans accounts of his visits to Cuba and Mexico, and he writes entertainingly of the Birth of the He also inCuban Republic.cluded his lectures on A Conquering Nation, and The Value of an Ideal, both of which he has delivered a number of times before Chautauquas and Other gatherings. Other articles in the volume are his addresses on Imperialism, cfelivered on the notification of his The Atnomination in 1900; written tractions of Farming, for the Saturday Evening Post;' Peace, the address delivered at the Holland Society dinner in 1904; his St Louis convention speech seconding the nomination of Senator CockrelL 41 Naboths British Rule In InVineyard, address at the grave of the dia, Philo Sherman Bennett, and an account of his recent trip to the Grand Canyon entitled Wonders - .t farming, thats the place. to go. Unexcelled facilities for raising live stock. This LAND OF PLENTY convent Ask me about iently reached via the Santa Fe direct cheap rates and free literature. City's Laadlng Hotel The Kenvon DON PORTSR, WEST (i i m't If you wish to,i invest io land or engage in fruit or truck i Propr K C. Europaan Pan. 11.00 and up. American Plan, IZ.SO and up WARREN, General Agent Salt Lake City, UtahT No. 411 Dooley Block, I, , Rates: St to St.80 Par Day. .. sa tf 1 .,-- 4'.:t ',., Cullen Hotel The S. C. EWINO. Prop. Salt Lake City : Utah THE NEW YORK WORLD Tho EDITION THRICE-A-WEE- Road Wherever the English Lan guaga Is Spoken. w Glenwood. Springs, Aspen. Leadville, . Paeblo, Colorado Sgrings, Denver, Omaha, Kansas City, St. Louis. Chicago, and all points east. Coat ecting at Ogden Union Depot with all Southern Pacific The only Transcontinental Line a I O.egoa.Siort Line Trains. Lake Salt City. ,, directly through siting Splendid Equipped Fast Trains Daily Between OGDEN AND DENVER Via Three Separate ani Distinct Scenic ely f i t i : ? THROUGH I r To Denver l , - Omaha, I AND Kansas change, . , ,. PULLMAN ' 5 1 City. St. free Raining '' SLEEPING ORDINARY I K3on boxes sold hi ! ' CARS ( Chicago Chair Cars. , .: ' . Louis and . without - PERSONALLY CONDUCTED EXCURSIONS. DINING CARS, Service a la Carte on all through trains. ' For rates, (oldera, free illustrated-- ; booklets, ete., Inquire of your nearest ticket agent, , ipeolfylng tbe Bio Grande xovte, tr address I. A. BENTON G. A. P.D., Salt Lake i U 13 months. m J To Gure a Gold in Gns Day Tcks Laxative Eroino Quinine Tetictj '(.& Ttb t!S2tCTC pst Seven ; . " The Thrice-a-WeeWorld has made special arrangements for the year 1905. Its already great news service has been extended and, as heretofore, it will report all important events promptly, and impartially. An original and striking feature of the Hhrice-a-Wee- k World in 1905 will be itg serial publication of the strongest and best fiction that has ever appeared in the columns of any newspaper. ' The Thrice-a-Wee- k World's regular subscription price is only $1 per year, and this pays for 156 papers. We offer this unequaled newspaper and The Journal to gether one year for $3.50. , 4, , Qconlc Lino to l : I. Two Dart. - ca every Lcl 2Sw |