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Show t ! - -- I'l THE PROVO POST PORTABLE SWINE-HOUS- ELBERT HUBBARD ARE. ECONOMICAL ES VRiTESOMUTAH THE MERCHANT AND THE COMMUNITY AIID MORMONS- A SUCCESSFUL CONTEST Tlte Kisall town niercli.int is a necessity and kasf'SundayrrriTrng onenf the most sue cessful contests ever given Provo took place in thaFAvhicli is necessary, should be protected. The the Stake tabernacle. It was highly educational cornu, umty'Tiocds his wares 'll; much as lie needs and those participating- in the events are to he 7 (Continued from " the human heart Nothing more cruel, wicked, buu-and unreasonable wa 'ever attempt a than the enforcement of the Edmunds congratulated upon the splendid effort put forth. Utah But not evetx small town merchant is alive The 'Mutual .Improvement associations Stake be to are the his and congratulated upon obligations. to his opportunities literary Jhesecon-testHiidniusical.abilitydevelopedthrongh M any oil heuTfa by llic way side because of s Surely those who took part are all their indifference to the rights of the public. At least there were no losers on the of. r , s. win-ncT- tFarmcra Type of Sunlight Hog Mouse. One piece 1 In. by 12 In, by 18 ft. ) (By jr. a. The proper housing of swine Is best fot B;des anj ends. One piece 1 in by 6 in. by 12 ft. accomplished by using a central hog house with s number of colony pens. for braces and cross pieces for doors. The large central house Js wellw- suited j -T- hirty-six pieces O. G. battens 10 ft spring-farrofor winter shelter-sn- d j long for sides. r ingi Thrporable"bou8es'Ere-espe-TBIrteefinpTeceirinby 'T2 lu. by . different foruseful housing 10 ft for roof. dally classes and sizes of hogs In separate For a shingled roof It a ill require fields, particularly during summer or i 130 feet of rough lumber 14 feet long j after farrowing. . , and six bunches of shingles laid - Portable hog houses have been used four and one-haInches to the satisfactorily for a good many years. weather,., A shingle roof is preferable, They are quite generally, in use by practical farmers sunlight hog swine where , house may be constructed 24 feet by breeders of pure-bre- pro- fuller in gram Sunday night. Of course all could not get Fifty years ago the town merchant nat the favorable decisions of the judges, but every his store and waited for the business to' come to one who took part, scored a decided victory. him. rt e -p- lace-i-arth oratorical contest and gave a splendid ution under the title of Margins, and Stanley Garnmell delivered a masterful oration on the The retold stones Were subject of Jb C kmrtesy. intensely interesting and the musical numbers were superb. Surely those who took part in the I iitmd s ,bow,coik1 acted J improvement ast have and many he-iadvantages lie his luistJer store if clean, judging from-la Jf keeps his goods fieatly displayed, . his advertisement .Sunday eveuing's program they were made the best of. he running regularly 'in the local newspaper epuhlie eye and the puhlie follows its Me believe in the spirit of peace, but it will eygf 7 But a clean store, neatly displayed goods require something more than belief to anchor it and newspaper advertising are not the only down. -o- requisites to a successful mercantile career, reer. A year ago we termed it rivers of blood The country merchant should not bank" too Today an ocean is inadequate. o much on the fact that he is a necessity. , , ' lf t i (j d a ..w-okj- - th f . of-th- J oo TTiTsEouTd T5erogre3sfeibiistantlybid-din- first The- - "- g for trade devising' means of bettering th of society. condition of the consumers and acquainting them society. - 1 soe mty 4 has no reference, to u t y-- of But this o of the fact. He should consider their welfare as well as Ills own. . , o one-hal- f con-sit- e t high o When the war ends foreign governments The merchant should have oue creed and that might raise a little eoin by selling their subma-tine- s to rich Americans, for pleasure craft. One creed should never he broken : lie should treat will for us. do his all customers alike, never misrepresent goods and1 keep his shelves wplL stocked with truth. A single shot laid an Austrian arcluluke low in novo lie should join ami bu.siplunged Europe into the bloodiest war of all ments for building up and expanding the interests of the eommusity, for success is history and countless millions. of shots have been unable to restore puttee. -- Most country towns have a few such mer s n their midst and the community is the pliant !! 41 holier for their presence jl m o- - -- o ' uniforms? . - th-i- worl- No one can visit Ttah now and the towns, cities, villages, farms, ranches, schools. out being thoroughly impressed utn the excellence and worth of the moral qualities of these people. and.,-college- t bell-hop- loriua-clou- s x spot. Go out ten miles, get off the cm and walk five miles, stopping at the houses and visiting with people along the way. Or take an auto and go south forty mites to Provo, as I did. If you have time visit the country schools, see the childrep, talk with the teachers, talk with the farmers at their work, with the women caring for the poultry and fruit, see the Jally boys and girls at tlftlr games or tasks, aneTyou will be' 3E. convinced Jhat honesty, truth and right intent animate these people. They average high -- In the days of polygamy no woman ..was., 3,2- - r- 9r. .A "fv 'Sf y Jtrs" keep" tli e gouT.s the people Such business men are successful because ot their methods of business and their very attitude the quality they want. J breathes success. . -- They have many customers beeause the adm i re a- - Lustier. ... 7 " u Tibs town is located in anTriTsirouITXaT B Sell those goods m. - waul at a fair margin of profit th gOtfdrrOTfrt.Tnth'-irrrt- nr irriird him to the fact that is la as much to his awaken But it dejiends upon us alone. interests as to yours to keep his money iu circuWe have some good business men in Provo. lation at home. . They are well supplied with brains a id AVl.en yop coiiime the consumer that joi tlose brains are capable of aeeomphshing great have the goods that he wants and that they cat --h ihmgs. ed h err nhyrtpl y-- as vpT! he will keep Ids money at home by trading a Individually they can do much, but I! i " i homm a e v n t i TTi u o ze 'ond e o r n t ce tlvc!y re t g ey a d-4e- '; -- 1 i 1 1 of this eomuiunitv. The poeple want a live community and are willing to support live busifiess men. The money that is being daily sent away Who is in the live class. for goods might just as well be spent at our men Speak up! local stores and would be if the merchants arose S Speak up. gentle . -- iR-i- mt exception. Victor Hugo once 8aki.ShaU-s--poare needs no monument he has his keep the Eomr Then advertise persistently nva&.The. -- ovs-,by. l.T thereby competing in quality and price with the outsider. splendid community - tyrannized, were no heartbroken women, no suicides, no outcasts, no insanity Mcrmon women, from the t me they reached the Salt Laid Valley, were economically free. These Mormon women had big families. They brought their children ue to wo-- :, to be useful. They lived 4 hey mo ved with nature. They hacf a firm hold on- for whichciviIB.a- tion has never feund a substitute. They were industrious, economical, tern aerate, honest These virtues still aljidov Jn Utah they arelhe rulernot -- -f- 8, Visitors at Salt Lake who wish to get their information from other th u hack drivers and barbers, would do well ta tai e thh Interurban Line that runs every half hour from Salt Lake City to Ogden. Here Is a distance coveting thirty-similes through a tract of country that is an actual garden to? J " t -- 'j You invariably find "their advertisements -j - ; in the local "papers telling of the merits of the vare3 they .Inre to sell and giving the people to the opportunities before them. . It. is the easiest, thing i n the. world to keep which they are .clearly ctk that - information the inonev at home for consumers are imt fools. titled. - , aiiJ--ferred I As another evidence that America is drift- toward war, we now refer to baseball suits" - as o deia b: j ly - It was a New England Idea, by the New England conscience New England conditions, ' to a people living ..uier totally different conditions f,0M those which existed in New England Th Is wiBeTnetrnowf uliy-f- c no w7Y7 and understand. The patience that the Mormon peo pie have shown has been one of r chief claiml to the respect of d.- g 5 whole-hearted- they f tea find.it more satisfactory eetwithiiourpotwillei.rho quarter hut a few animals together, building should face the south. .TA The farmer who produces swine for most substantial building may be built the market and depends on a large j with ends and sides, six feet in height, central hog house will also find a few j of solid concrete, eight to twelve i portable pens very useful In separ- - inches thlck'Nine windows are swine. of odd lots placed in the first elevation) four of ately housing which are continued to the floor to Some farmer? prefer a shed roof e cot. Six form door openlnge. The top hog house to the feet four inches wide and eight feet low roof Is eight feet and the top of long makes a good size house. In the the high roof 14 feet from the ground, rear it is provided with a door two Movable partitions are provided and feet stored above to give separate pens feet vide aD(l two and j for 20 sows at farrowing time. The a same as front lower the dze long, door which is placed diagonally oppo- - j flood Is pf solid concrete, and so that by opening all the doors it crete feeding floors are laid outside makes a coor house in summer. On on both sides of the building. The the other hand.by closing both lower dimensions and height of this build-Tnsecure the maxidoors and "opening" an'upper'dooF mum amount of sunlight, for early which is put in above the lower door In front, so that ample ventilation is spring farrowing. provided, it makes a warm house for It is very' Imcold winter weather. portant to hare a door at the top in AVOID EGG EATING front for It is a serious mistake to BY PROPER FEEDING build these houses with but one opening, as is sometimes done. There is no ventilation whatever, and in warm Hens Seldom Indulge In Habit weather the house becomes suffocating. The upper front door is arGrit . . While bn Free Range ranged with a wooden ratchet on the Is Quite Essential. back side, by means of 'which it may be held in any desired position. By having hinges on the top, the storms Wrong feeding is the commonest and hot sun cannot enter, ard yet air cause of hens eating their eggs. They can circulate freely without causing Beldom do it in the Bummer when they a draff oh 'the ahlmalsT' 'areTbfi Tre'eTrng''S:TlihlC"tK0'JWls To build the shed roof house, conget everything that their system struct the rame-eight feet long by craves. It is the craving for some-- -- s 1 - - law. 11 EdwinUairdnf-lrovn-touk-fi- front page) Buccecd, legislation must be in ln1(, with thfr ebb and flow of the tides ct the community cash' Today the successful merchant is a hunter lie must go out gunning for .customers and Jiis ammunition is hisstock in trade and ills gun is the . local newspaper. Country people of today are as intelligent and up to date as7 their city cousinahd they gaulhc,incrchant hv his own actions. - j) plays The Mormon people need no deLarge Portable Hog House With Temporary Shade Roof Attached A Most Excellent Arrangement for Summer. fense. Schools, colleges, parks, six four inches wide on seven thing that is lackin in the winter hotels, good roads, paved streets, Joists six feet ration that causes egg eating. ?y four-inchappy homes and great, smiling by I'rualy j,he thing that Is lacking is stretches of fertile farms, well tilled, long, and bwo pieces of two-incfour-incnailed, across the ends- - of come term cf animal food to take the are tongues that tell their own story. Iiace cf the bugs and worms the fowls the Joists. This will make the been has .reallynot Utah the.fiaor.six feat four inches, iiciv up in the summer. Meat scraps diUon-fo- r cut or tone milk skim should --be green Beneath wide and eight feet fed. Hens v,ont lay well, anyhow, un- been tapped. Less than 10 per cent the Q'ame are nailed threffstwo-inc- h as ome one of these enters Into the of her available tillable land Is under four-incless which srtye-hf" pieces JT runners for moving the buildlngNhe rations. the plow. And the extent of the Soft shelled two house is built six feet inches hi eggs which are easily wealth stored In the Rocky founconstant tains is in front and three feet high in the roken In the nest are ' incomputable. tation to the hens. The cause of rear. Seven 12 foot boards cut in two can be used for boarding the soft knelled eggs is either not enough front of The house. The small space lime from which the hens can make The Provo' Foundry & Machine left at the top m?y be closed by a sheila or the hens being too fat. -company has been awarded a contract s Ground oyster shells kept where the Two batten or frieze boerd. by the gas company for the Installashould be securely Inserted in hens can help theipselves is about the tion of an additional complete boiler cheapest way of supplying lime. To ie..nAlct.the.J.o.isl.fcrStta,chment, concrew when the house Is to be moved. A prevent the hens from getting too fat) and steam brick work, foundation, to see Insure that they taka a proper ajpount of shingled rorf is necessary rtfro-- hEtrooUsyj.aa(LJhatvjatTCQarsff,firx.ksJF.ecd.jUu, pipinggr and stack. grain.. in ..Iftlejc.sQ water m-- t. L4. Ct o Is what should be desired. This improvement is madela pur Portable, hog house eight by auanceof, the. ppUcy. pf .the. gas comtw elve feet ma be constructed on the pany to keep its plant at all time same plan as the small ebed roof in perfect operating condition so ft It will accomhouse Just described. J " modate from eight to ton mature hogs the in service. Further imruption eat or twenty or more growing pigs. By they passes through them undi work constructlngi;k.rart,tlonJn themlAlle gested. The fowls will feel hungry provements at the companys for" differtwo Then the house can bV used ent tots of pigs or for two sows at they are apt to eat eggs but not to tern will be made during the summer, farrowing time. Being provided with lay very many or look very thrifty., four doors in front and one In the Small pebbles,, broken crockery or. rear, it is well ventilated, and may be stones will do for grit Have the nests rather low. A hen hdjusted Jo suit many conditions. shade may be attached to the house must stand tip In the nest to eat eggs. If the nest is too low to allow her to during the summei. This house has proved vey. satis- stand up she cant eat the eggs. factory where it has been found de- Gather the eggs two or three times a sirable to keep more animals in a lot day and dont hare too many nests. than can be accommodated tv the Nests which the hens are not using ties Headache Powders r smaller houses. Hswever, It la more wlh eggs laying in them are a temptave at once 10 cents difficult to move and does not differ tion to the hen3. package, greatly from a small stationary bous in that respect. The hill of lumber Value of Chief Crops in 1914, for this house Is as follows; The value pf the principal farm - You take a Dr. James Head'1 Powder and in just a few moment B'sH pieces. 2 In, ty 4 in. by 12 ft. crops was: ft your head clears and all neuralgia Corn, 21,702,399,000; wheat, Three pieces 2 In. by 6 in bv 12 ft the 9u'c5l distress vanishes. Its Two pieces 2 In. bjr 4 in. by lg ft cotton, Hl9.616.000; oats, and Surest relief for headache, whetho potatoes, Biy ' pieces 2 in. by 4 in by 15 ft $499,431,000; $198,609.Q0A; dull, throbbing, splitting or nerJ Three pieces 2 in. by 4 in. by 14 ft. barley. flG3, 903.000; sweet potatoes, racking. Send someone to the drV r-.- t store and get a ,dime package tm. ricces 1 ifi. by 12 In by 12 ft $41,291,600; tobacco, $101,411,000; -r- ye, $37,018,000: (roug-fur fleer).- sugar beets, $27,050, Quit - suffering it's 0 needle. lieadif14 you get Dr, June Eight pieces 1 in. by 12 In. by 14 ft 000; rice, $21.f'49,000; flaxseed, $10,-Si- sure be ro th511?' tlieu Powders tlieie .y.ill rleces 1 in. jy 12 In. by 12 ft.. 540,006; buckwheat, 12,892,000. pointuient. h h h jet ln. h eye-bolt- k y sm-- AOBorx 'ses; V eurng-iEXp.enV is Are less than any other concern in the State; hence we- - can-s- ell you a piano for considerably less thah any one else) Piano sold by us go direct from fac tory to your home. We hasaved manyothersmany dolthe same for you. lars, let IvA-larg- f, . KmMTLSJ 5S5: ' TOtatfneiaWfitrtSaf -- $779,-063,00- 0; x n |