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Show Big Developments in Carey Valley, Idaho - . (Special Correspondence.) u ARET, Idaho, March (, 1911. The building o f a huge con dam and erete. multiple-arc- h an adequate canal ay stem; the establishment of the Ugr beet seed Industry; the building of a sugar factory And a flour mill; the erection or drug store and at hptel 'gn are some of the thlnga which are realized and in proapect fpr the Carey valley. The Carey Drug com-- 1 pany bad Its formal opening. March 1. Considering the handsome building In which it I housed ,and the excellent rtoek of goods and modern equipment, one is safe in saying there ia no better In Blaine county. Bert Seed Production.' The United Slates Beet Seed com-- , pany, which established its Industry here in tha fall, of 1917, now Includes within its local plantation, 1800 acres ,nd ia fast extending its holdings to ' an aggregate acreage of 2500 or 3000 acres. It Is estimated it will produce ' 1,800,000 poudds of aug&r beet seed lhl year from the "mother beets-whicit now has pitted on the ground. Work Commenced on Doan. Work has already commenced on Ihe dam, and gravel, lumber. . cement and other materials are being rapidly ' accumulated at the reservoir site so that construction operations may begin just as soon as spring pens. A construction (amp has already been established there, as also at Priest, the nearest railroad point on the Hailey branch of the Oregon Short Dine, where a new sldtng and warehouse are being --installed to- - take care of the heavy shipments required during conTha Atlas Pevelopmant struction. company of Salt Lake City. t which George C. Thompson ia the president, hu the contract for building the works and all construction machinery and equipment are already on the c -- , M ground. System to Cost $800,000. Tbe project is to be constructed In three units, each unit complete in Itself. The completed first unit will east 9809,000. Enough water hae been sold and securities made available for the construction of the first unit. If during such construction sufficient se- curities are made available for the second unit, then the system will be enlarged accordingly. A unique system of financing has been worked cut on this project by which individual mortgages upon the lands are given to secure the payment of shares of water stock, fot which the No payfarmers have subscribed. ments down of any kind are required xnd the farmers are given four years in which to discharge the principal of their obligation In this connection, be- Xhus the January 1, 1922. turners will have two years use of the water before payments therefor begin. Water costs 940.00 per share. It to to complete the first unit during the present year and mak available Irrigation water for all present subscribers for 1920. President Heber Q. Hale of the Boise stake, who has been largely inatru-mentin working out the plan under wririch tbe project to now constituted. Is giving his personal attention to the enterprise and will spend a good portion of hla time on the project during the course of construction. Opportunities for Settlement. Excellent opportunities are available on this project for new settlement and home making. While all of the ginning -- al lands are now In private ownership, yet the average holding IE altogether too large for irrigated land, and as a ' consequence , these, large tracts are; either iir whole or in part made avail- Schqol Houses and Grounds By EmU Bwnen, Gardener and Assistant Horticiiluirlat, Utah Agricnknral College. TnJiape Costs More N a recent trip through the state been spared to secure all the modern my attention was. called to the conveniences which the architect has desired in csrrylngout hla work. Howschool houses and their surroundever. the grounds surrounding such as seen from ing the iear.""It wps buildings often have remained unimindeed a great' surprise io note-hoproved, with no shade trees or windfew of tbe schoolhouses had made any breaks or attempts of any kind made towards mg the same. It attempt whatever toward beautifying should bebeautify realised that until such imtheir grounds by plantings of any kind. provements have been made a very In some instances the schoolhouses important phase of the architecture been left unfinished. bore evidence of having boon built hasThere to no school ground too small many years ago. indicating that the to plant a row, of trees along the teachers and pupils of such schools borderline, and none so large that It offer an opportunity to plan had endured tbe burning sun of the would not with groups of trees a lay-osummer and the sharp wipd and bliz- for give planted in such a manner as towindzards of the winter during these years. protection to the building as a for as well as necessary serving break, This has all been due to In able for purchase at prices ranging from 940 to 9100" per acre, the average "price being about 98 per acre for fll tf first class agricultural lAnd. The pro moters claim it cannot be duplicated elsewhere for less than twice this price. - This land to for the most part pretty- well improved and some of it V contains reasonably good dwellings and other buildings What water these several places require wilt be made up from cotsts the reservoir and the purchasers will A of course 'assume these water payall steadily transportaments. which are- payable between the and 128. It , to thus years tion Have charges" scree of planned to colonize thousands not shads to, the. playgrounds besides neglect of these lands during the- coming in and having planted a number of trees beautifying the same. reservoir The summer. and giving ol xpring which would have served both for I know of no place in the state canal construction are offering good located lawhere where a schoolhouse is shade and for a windbreak. The steadily in cost. opportunities for hand and team conditions are such that trees will not bor. The local settlers company, which the Utah Ag grow. There are trees suitable for department, to causing these works to be built and the which to offering these lands forcolo- - ricultural college to making an effort every locality, and considering ntaation is the Carey .Valley Reservoir -Mo convince the public of the impor- - value of such trees, they can be secosts a f which W. tance of such planting, and It stands cured, very reasonably. company of Carey, Ida.,-othewith public.' In must instances F. Rawson to the president, to which ready to assist with do collect books, accounts. hilling practical sugges- some encouragement from the teacher, company aU- - Inquiries should be ad- tions and any other help that-madressedbe would take pride in assisting in such an planting, and would also manifest deslrsd. Location, Climate, Crop. interest in the upkeep of the same. If costs to install a It is that The location of the -- project to the pupils are given the privilege of aroand the town of Carey, situated around schoolhouses would mot only planting trees on the school grounds, about six miles northeast of Priest on be a comfort to the teacher' and pu- it should be under the supervision of costs a some experienced person in order to the Hailey branch of the Oregon Short Line railroad. The Carey valley con- pils but would add much to the beauty soak the undertaking a success. An of of tha structure as well. In many tains approximately 25.000 acret-appropriate celebration of Arbor .day-maland. . through budding-to constructed" In choice.. . agricultural help to promote the general sencosts to a excellent No beautiful fashion. which flows the expense has timent of Jpttle The site Wood river of the dam and reservoir is at the concosts move a fluence of the three branches of "Fish creek. The sol! to of an alluvial volin canic ash formation, very rich p humus. costs a string a circuit,, Carey to on about the same latitude ID you ever think of the reg-- 1 of slope that Just gravitate as tbe famous Idaho Falla country and to a we cannot more this some'uPwarla son express pole. the altitude to about tbe same, namewhy the bark on the Impetus of trees Is M rough and broken truly perhaps) undermatter ly 4,900 feet above sea level. The clidead all whjJe jfe; gravitates same, mate br also about the except The bark being a dead excres-- 1 downward. Imagine a noble fir, eight; there is possibly more snowfall here of item of in winter and less wind in .summer. cence, not permeated by life and feet through at its base, 175 feet to' 250 hlhllmb faultless' The experiments carried on by the growth, exert it full strength against' fhe fim supplies costs in symmetry, straight as the line of United States Beet Seed company show the growth and expansion of the part sight, clean as a granite shaft. What j a greater productivity and quicker recovers. It therefore gets broken. a miracle to the eye that can see. and sponse from the soil than in the Idaho it Now let us suppose that by a trans- the heart that knows! This enormous Falls, or other districts where the shaft of Umber has upward company to operating. i position of values tbs bark of the tree just as surely as a gravitated pendulum gravi- Tbe crops which are successfully comes to be as considered of downward. the effect tales being valTaking in thia and abundantly produced ley are alfalfa and other kinds of hay, more importance than tbe tree. Then for the cause, it might be argued ThsT even lev the various kinds Of cereals, vegeta- the bark must not be broken. Hence the rigid strength of the timber causes practically Not so. bles. including sugar beets, and all the the tree must die. This illustrates the tree to grow upward. leads The and to upward hardy fruits. The valley surrounded the essence and point of view of stand-patisguides. Itself fixing the upright posiby good and abundant open range and According to It, the bark of tion. the direction being toward the forest reserves, making sheep and the tree becomes more Important than point of maximum light and space. j. stock raising one of the chief indus- the tree itself. According to It, man Set a stone against a tiny sprout j tries of the people. a tool, a process, a sya- - and see how its tender shoots will The population of the valley to be- havinga made creed these by a marvelous 'soon turn, seeking again its upward tween 1,500 and 2.000 people, largely tern, transformation of values become of course. In this way the direction and ' Mormon.1 The Carey ward to situimportance compared with haue of the future .tree trunk is ated within the Boise stake and has surpassing the mere human being who made fixed. . the handsomest ward chapel in the them! So the past to strewn with the j The law of dead matter is to h stake. of these things. The world ftate toward a point, the law of life Mill In not Flour will and in fossilized the stay coop of is to gravitate sway from that point, j Sugar Factory the past where the.standpatter to ever Materialist Prospect. philosophy has taken for to it. it It breaks a his granted that the laws of dead matter ' trying lot and imprison Shea have been procured . diheart Its skin continuby In the shedding done bv the work of preliminary quite readily comprehended Chat It is well tha nerves of intellect are the laws also of life. rection of the establishment in the ously. life grow too deep for the standpatThe living tree gravitates toward Carey valley of a sugar factory and a ter to with reach the then) of need paralyzing light and liberty; dead matter towards flour mill. There ia great of his charge needle, direction It the hypodermic in, darkness and bondage. Laws restrict-- 1 talk of building a new hotel.1 Several new is better for him and for all. Ing the religious and political free-- 1 dom of mankind emanate from the modern homes were constructed durSoil, moisture, best, and air help a abodes of death and darkness, where ' ing the past, year and others are con- tree to to life when grow, It present; they truth and light are unwelcome and templated during the present year. is safe to say that Carey valley Is rap- contribute aa effectually to Its rapid hated. Materialist philosophy is the life when is absent. witwill Life, and oatural expression of a materialistic decay the larger the number of high pro- nests furnished respectively with no' own and Its into idly coming as a Fine Art ducers there are in a flock the larger nest egg, hens egg, wooden egg and ness during the next two years the not the environing circumstances, la age which seeks to cramp the life and Farming J can as 'we see, the to on will be the proportion of eggs laid plaster of pans egg: 100, 194, 208 and key in order to become contentedly growth greatest development, In its history. In Ancient Holy Land during ft the one hand; snd, the absence of spirit c increased in goods. the forenoon. 221. life, to decay on the other. The philos"Whoso looketh into the perfect Hens give considerable attention to Cnn'- alert nests were found to be At Gederah, a Palestinian colony the matter of choosing the nests in more attractive to the hens than exopher has said that environment ia law of liberty, and eonttnueth therein, Cleanliness is What . ot the determinator of life but we see doves which they lay. They usually visit a posed ones The relative number of being not a forgetful hearer, but celebrated for its large flocks Lowers Poultry Deaths here that life by its presence causes he S doer of the work, this man shall he ahich are the common property of number of nests and spend some time eggs laid In each kind was respec- Its of fact the on absence the In of the the by blessed growth, them before selecting the nest in tively 113 and 100. village, his deed. (James, decay, knowledge environment remaining the same. that one of our company was the ag- which they finally lay. Such a one is no longer under" bondConcealed nests furnished with nest Cleanliness in the care of poultry ricultural expert of the Zionist Com-Considerable variation was found In eggs were found decidedly more age. I death I to the reduce have often thought of the tons barton .rough to the village inn, in has been found ROBERT STANLEY BENNETT. length of lime hens spend on the' tractive to the hens than exposed used Salt Lake City. the evening, a group of some 12 ta-or nest in laying. The average was found without nest ergs. Ill one case 91.7 rale from 42 to 7 per cent, as reported 4nd tons of timber in the great trees 15 farmers who. seated about the to be one hour and 35 minutes for per cept of the total eggs produced In a circular just published by tbe ble, discussed in scientific spirit and each of two tests made with While were laid In such nests and In another Kansas Agricultural Experiment stawith a knowledge of the best scien- Leghorns, one hour and 45 minutes, case 87. (j, per cent. A tific methods in a way to suggest an and one hour and 49 minutes respee-- 1 -- Habit- does not seerri "to playl a tion. The authors are . Dr. L. D. In two testa with It. I. Reds and strong part m determining the part'e-tw- o agricultural college seminary rather tively BushnelL. head of the bacteriology dehours and 16 minutes In one testiuUr nest In which than a group of peasant farmers, the chooses to partment. and Dr. J. G. Jackley. forwith a flock of While Plymouth ! lay fronr day to day.ahea Nor of citrus problem merly in that department, but now ib Bocks. were farmers. At least one nest for four or they ordinary peasant each . California. The animat husbandry department favor of lot 2 receiving tankage. , When the total time spent by the five hens seems to- - be required to These men had all, in their Removal of manure and other re- of the University of Idaho has just Comparing lots I and 4. .lot 3 gained been university or gymnasiumyouth, hens on nests when not laving was fully me.-- the needs of the stuaverage fuse and the destruction of . insects 1.34 lbs. per hog daily, requiring 464 in Russia and had foregone added to the total time spent when farm fjock. and bacteria are important in keeping completed a hog feeding test. The iba grain per 100 iba. gain. Lot 4 dents of an for or two about hours' average laying, the twice eggs professional Gathering daily, para poultry plant sanitary, the authors hogs used in this experiment were a making a gain of 1.37 lbs. per head opportunities business activities in their Jewish na- lor each egg produced was found In ticularly during warm or wet weather " point out. Most agents that destroy mixed lot of spring shoat averaging daily, requiringA 697 lbs. of grain for tionalistic, Jdeala. and Lheir own spiritual each-easwill prevent cons. durable deterlora- difference pf bacteria-- will also destroy insects, 132 pabnds, divided Into lots of four, 100 lbs. gain. ibs. The proportion Of the total time tion In the quality of egg produced-spen- t development in the land of bead dally gain in favor t of lot 4. Jsrael. on before and after the One had a son in the agrithough many commonly used Insect fed In dry lots, twice daily. These per but 133 lbs. mors to cultural department of the University egg was actually delivered varied requiring destroyers have little, effect on shoats wars fed for a period of 28 produce 100 lb, gain In lot 4,grain " receiv- of California, another in Cornell uni- greatly. Poplar Trees Are Passing. No correlation was found between The apparatus for disinfecting need days (beginning November 3 and end- ing tankage. versity, and all were keen to learn Comparing lots 8 and (, lot 6 made from our expert how they might im- - the rate of egg production of different not be expensive. For a small coop ing December T). an average daily gatn of 1.3 lbs. per prove their methods and increase the hens snd the average length of time Tourists especially from the east a hand atomizer to desirable. For a The plans of the experiment were head, requiring 610 Iba grain per yield of their farms. As evidence spent on the nest In laying each greatly admire the long straight rows ofjthcy large building a bucket spray; pump as follows; 100 lbs. While of f made an the aesthetic life ofj, the community egg. gain. or knapsack sprayer to more desirable, of the tall Lombard y poplar trees aa of 1.2 Ihe. peril might add that our Hcns frequently: visited the nest hostesah.ad.-le.tl- Lot 1 received one part barley, one average dally gain By using some form of pump, disincommon in Salt Lake City and coun419-J ba. grain per 100 hog requ snd considerable on lrlng there In lime aflerrion IBs spent for long drive fectants can be forcibly ittjectedinta part peas. lbs. gain. A difference of 3,4 lbs. av- early ty. While the wood of this tree to did when nol to In days Jaffa they order lay. she at that cracks and crevices that application Lot 2 received one part barley, one erage daily gain and 111 lbs. less grain tend a concert a rare treatmight Nests were found to be mueh more worthless from a commercial view, during by brootp.or brush would fall to reach. 100 lbs. gain in favor of lot 6 re- war ' to per the hens when they con- the trees are not without time, m de possible by Col. attractive The Important point to t soak levery part peas' plus tankage. advantage; ceiving tankage. Storrs, the mil tary governor of Jer- tained at least one egg and to become It Lot 3 received one part nook and corner with the disinfectant. barley, 7 receiving Lot grows bery tapidiy, may be planted less as the number of - eggs attractive made i straight who barley a d usalem, secured ' J furlough Many farmers keep on hand so three parts peas. an average dally gain of 3.03 lbs. per for a young It ssian Jewish violin-to- t. was Increased to more than three or from slips stuck Jn the soil in the called stock dips which are coal tar Lot 4 received one part barley, head, requiring (33 lbs. of grain per serving In tl. English army. In four. early, stands very close plant100 lbs. gain. preparations These products are. as three parts peas plus tankage. Hens eggs were found to be more spring, order that he mbM raise funds for and a rule, very thorough and satisfacshades a great deal of ground, ing Lot 8 received three parts barley, Lot 8 receiving straight peas made the as effective neat used when than egg of a school of the common - an average dally gain of 1.25 lbs. per musicestablishment leaves and tall graceful tory "germ destroyers A safe rule to one part peas. or its. glossy china The glues egg. In Jerusalem, fey giving S series of growth make it of rare follow in their use la to use tod much Lot, received three parts barley, head, requiring 10- - lbs. of grain for of concerts in the cities of the land, relative number neof eggs laid In nests form habit but-thone too 100 lbs. than Common nest egg. china egg, beauty rather furnished with little. land part peas plus tankage. planting of Lombardy gain. at rt he conclusion of the and Lot 7 received barley. In summary statement, we would Immediately hens egg, was respectively 100, poplar and Caroline poplars should good disinfectants are carbolic acid,' concert our hostess srdrove home, Lot f received peas. cease. People planting these trees are and 269. used in' a' 8 per cent solution. Potasto be- - 198Wooden The rations were mixed according periment. that the most, economical rlvlnthe atwork ofln tf morning, nest eggs Were found to wasting both time and . money. sium permanganate In about a 1 per our breakgin preparing to wet. -fed above the and "The oyster "shell bark louse and Otar 62 the' nest combination of barley and peas Xor fast and the luncheon which we were proportions, cent solutlon ia somewhat undesirmors than the- - as of Ihe hens egg the bark borers are killing the' poplar able because pf jbe dark- - red stains Lob number. 4, and 8. war fed one fattening hog is one part barley snd to taka with us. "Asia Magazine: tree in Balt Lake county. The rough used as a nest egg. A pound tankage per day the second one part peas. Any of the combinathatresult when It comes in eontact week, and two pounds tankage per tions are better than either barley or of nests furnished with nocomparison nest egg. trunks and largo swelling are very with the akin or clothing. Formalin exglass egg. hens egg and wooden egg noticeable on the late plantings of peas- fed alone, and peas alone are in an I per sent solution' to very good, day thereafter to the close of the Nesting Habits of Hem resulted in the following relative num- - Carolina poplars, and dead limbs and more economical than barley when fed but to irritating to tha nose and eyes periment. - ' ' test "was twofold; alone. The of ber of ec this purpose ' among, tha---'-- ' being laid ' in each differ-- : dying tree arq jvouceabia of the worker. Bichloride of mercury AK'culturai CaUege isauesfentty furntshed first, to determine-- th most ecto our data, it Is advisable The nest; TOO. 160. 184 Lombardy poplaj-s- . According r (corrosive sublimate) in a 1 to 1.000 onomical ot 233 respectively. 'following summary combinations of barley and td feed "tankage" In combination with and Th oyster-she- ll experiments scals tnfestspopetatioirto effective- but IS VCry" poison- peas for fattening hogs. Second, to c A homemade-piast- er nstt lr. ashr-bbtThe- - above state- - on the nesting habits of the hen: andtha rtver willows. barley and peas. ous apd oonrodea the metal so that it determine cent egg was found equal to the wooden Th the advisability of. feeding man I. prove tree in lots 1 and 7toof willows along; the Jordan rivet L could la metal- pump. tankage with various combinations of In tots 8 ' the neats our laying and and to occupied the creeks egg 8 hens Lot superior ar$ dying from this ' egg for makh the and,. gain In some caaea dry. quicklime, or barley and poas. Increasing the attractiveness -- pf the scale. n,d most economical of thentlre : The relative of hens ready nest. chloride of lime, sprinkled over a Th following numbers show per The scale to easily Identified. It is a Comparing lots 1 and 2, lot 1 gained tegt foul or decomposing mass to more 1.31 lbs. per hog daily, requiring 474 inch In In lots 3 and 4. tha ad-- 1 1 eave thk e V'Pnet after laying the relative number of eggs laid ,in scale about different "tbe of of convenient and effective than, k fluid pounds of grain to produce 100 lbs. dittoncomparing perioda during a dark color and glossy. Itlength, bears of tankage to lot 4 as' follows: To 9 a,m., 17.7 was 2 SVvSS a a mads Lot disinfectant. 1.67 of to aa oyster resemblance lbs., gain. Justifiable. It seemed that gain surprising cent, jlo 11 sjn., 8.5. per cent, One of the very best shell in miniature. The scales are disinfecting per hog dally requiring 47.14 iba, grain protein content of the ration caused per 11 a.nv. ter I p.m., 27.3 per cent; 1 stuck tightly to the bark and in the agents to the direct rays of tha sun. per 100 lbs. gain. A difference of .21 Increased consumption of feed; and, to 3 p.m., 9.5 and 2 to 6 p.m., 7 HEAD STUFFED FROM 1st fall, the insect under the scale However, Its penetrating power ia lim- iba daily gain per hog and 27 pounds at the same time not producing satiscent. per lOO to less eggs and dies. The eggs hatch in lba gain iji factory gaina t lays ited to a thin surface, layer and conproduce grain, COLD A OR CATARRH A study of individual nesting recearly spring snd the young scales have sequently thick clumps of filth are not Teat. of ords shows that a large per cent pf Summary legs and run around on the tree for a completely sterilized. Several hours' wdhere hens a to uniform closely few days, tben settle down, insert ri ' Sayg Cream Applied in Nostrils 1 2 I action should be allowed even for thin schedule of egg .production both with their lohg beak in the bark of the Opens Air Passages Right Up. layers. to daily egg production and the tree regard Imand out suck life the Juices. I: A spraying mixture long used with time of day spent on the nest in laymediately after they settle down a tc success for cleaning and disinfecting, ' ing. a or scale protective covering grows Instant relief no waiting. consists of ordinary whitewash M to Your Hens which lay regularly every oth.a them, their legs drop off or diswhich has been added eoough crude s SB fi&tfou. er day lay at about the same hour slogged nostrils open right up; the sir pver and they remain In a fixed cldOH- of cresol.tb Crb0ll Hens which lay two eggs passages of your head clear and you appear each day. tbe remainder of theift- - life. place 9 can breathe No more maka a 8 per cent solution. on consecutive days and then mins freely. hawking. It they are accidentally removed or za , one e3 The disinfectant la aided directly by day, lay the first egg of the cycle snufflihg, blowing, headache, dryness. disturbed they die as they have no aS No for t the lime and to both an insecticide and nxa. SU. B&.S, breath at a at definite struggling nlkht; power ot affixing themselves to the hour of the j certs;n a germicide. The whitewash also aids Num ber "of Hogn Fr Lot. egg of tbs cycle your cold or catarrh disappears. tree after once growing a shell, .i Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream during a definite period In the aftermechanically by filling the small Length of feeding Spraying to necessary to kill this inBalm noon.from now. period, Most hens laying three eggs in your druggist cracks and crevices, thus preventing Apply sect." J'Blackleaf 40 or any tobacco daye a this little of a the first mites from getting into or out of the Average egg comparativefragrant, antiseptic, solution at tbs rate of one pint to fifty cypie lay weight (Iba) j. ly early in the forenoon, the second besting cream in Vour nostrils. It gallons of water will control this pest building. . , Initial 28$ , ,,, one in later somewhat, th penetrates Curative measure for sick birds Final , , through forenoop every air panage if applied in th spring when the 3 S3 " and th third on at a definite period of th bead. soothes th inflamed or scales are not advised by tba authors except GralfMlbe.) ,,,, are moving. . . 46 Total swollen mucous membrane and relief the Hens of afternoon. mors In csss of especially valuable-dndivl-laying Further will information be Average dally per head. .1.11 than three eggs in a cycle lay larger comes ,lnstantly. v . , duala They give, however, a chart of Grain upon request. 70 Total (lbs.) of stuffed-otheir It's fine. the p VT. Dont eggs during proportion stay JOSEPH diseases and symptoms, "with sugges- Average daily FOX. - ' . just bead. $.21 per forenoon a hens a or than with smaller cold Advercatarrh room Pest laying nasty 152 City Crop tions as to treatment Inspector, . 474 Per 100 iba gain ... number of eggs In a cycle. Therefore, tisement and Cosnty Building. " ' years material and labor have increased, and been advanced. That means that every operation the telephone servicejjas increased Tj'OR ut J9-2- self-evide- nt tree-planti- It mbre to operate switchboard, keep the the and the It more It more to repair telephone. more take out telephone. more to telephone. It g. It Lessons From a Tree It and the-Facif- ic - I telephone. more to set new Every piece - wire repair 1 equipment and every more. And Meanwhile j Our revenues maintain an V ill I -- The Mountain States Telephone gravt-rubbis- and Telegraph Company -- , , m at-t- he j Hog Feeding Experiment frult-ralsin- g. I i - e. SHOULD TAKE t j the-nes- bac-terl- a. , 1 Xwktag Like Pis is te Pst sa First, Health y Flesh ssS to laerssss Strength, Vlgse aad Nerve Fsree. Is 1 Judging from the countless preparaand treatments which are contin-I- y b advertised for the purpose fj making thin people fleshy, develop- arms, neck and bust, and replacing ugly hoi tions Iowa and t'ha a curved lines, of health and beauty, are . there s v I d s n tly ' thousands .. of men.and wsmen whs keenly feel their vice, thin'sirs ness - -- Thinness- and weak- usually dus to starved ' nerves Our bodies-nee- d more phosphate than Is contained In modern foods Phyiloians claim there nothing that will supply this th orgsnlc phos-pns.C7knownw11 among druggists as to inexpensive and la which old If c M. I Drug Dept In Salt moat all druggist under 72 City Sand er money Lf7arnt a f satisfaction the nerves directly fding the by cells with PP'yIng body Pi' phosphoric food elements, wel a quickly produces (Phosphate met fw n r f o rmat Ionia t heafipear a nce ; U elbt frequently being ionisM ,ThU Increase ln welgh also carries hmlth V lner1 mP'ove menl In the te bitro-Wiospha- Z.-- 'k .f whtoh nrirTwyi 0Par, hull eyes become bright, and th the bloom of lo.w U k? . Georgia Hamilton. and t.h,n fru reporting her writes: "Bltre- fh kB. experience, trtnVfnJ1 b brought shout a magls with ma I gained IIso well.T.l""'?. "aver before feltbltro-phoAlthough Wste rrvL.!! vaxurpassed for relieving sleeplessness and general we,i, 1 hou,d ht. owing to Its g tua I properties; be cy " T e.'er-fwho does aot desire to flesh Brrt a- fl,,h-growln- -- - 4 Advertisement. e -- -- - -- ; -- of-pa- s ed average-neBrtjr-5-p- er i one-eigh- th -- . , 1 hP ? ail tag I T , - .... i sun-pli- ed 1 i |