Show GARLAND TIMES THE LOCAL NEWS The Misses Vida Peterson la Hall attended the stock Ogden Monday Cash Paid for Cows and Horses i Reverse IF YOU ARE NOT IN THE HABIT OF TRAETING Monday tf evening your grain and hay chopped- Work done at your own home Call J W Earl Fielding Bell Phone and Mrs Oluf Johnson attendfuneral services held ror John Bowat Perry on Tuesday Mr tV ed en They Are Delicious UTAH on Monday S A C at Tremonton In the future these meetings will be held on the second Saturday of each A special Invitation Is exmonth tended to the leaders of clubs and all organizations Mr Ofcdtn Useless Dead Call Brigham Have YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT YOU ARE MISSING d and Delshow at Mr and Mrs Geo A Beal acre guests of Mr and Mrs Ross Heppler YOURSELF TO LIGHT LUNCHES AT OUR COUNTER Call GARLAND u and Mrs A R Capencr visitors during the week were Mrs John Pierce and daughter Miss Leone were Brigham visitors Monday Mr Wm J Stoddard an uncle of Mrs J If Ktrkham died In the Idaho Falls hospital and was buried at Firth Idaho last week The Garland vuy good "work” These meetings second Tuesday o'clock with Mis ervisor All are tend Relief Society held a meeting on Tuesday will be held on the of each month at 2 J G Rhodes as sup- kindly Invited to at Braided Rugs— made from your out clothing Just the thing for winter floors— Mrs Chas Hartman worn The relatives and a few friends of went to her Mrs John J Shumway her Wednesday honie and surprised On Tuesday night Mr John Benson evening on the occasion of her birthbana M Gacldie attended and Mr J day anniversary quet and- - business meeting of the Og den Gateway Scout Council Mrs D E Manning went to Salt Lake City where she will Monday Mr Johnson Oluf attended the spend the week with relatives and Mrs stock show at Ogden Wednesday friends Johnson with Marion and Helen aclinn to Ogden and visited companied Mr Myron J Richards and son with relatives during the day Ralph Richards attended the funeral Suits dry cleaned and pressed $100 services of Mrs John Bowen held at Perry Tuesday all next week U S Cleaners BLUE BELL CHILI & TAMALES CHOICE CANDIES Blue Bell Confectionery F A DRIGGS Manager THE SWEETEST PLACE IN TOWN and Mrs Royce Lcfand of City were guests Monday evening of Mr and Mrs George Ilenrie Mr Mr and Mrs Frank Collins of and Farl ColGpokane Washington lins of Wendell Idaho spent Wedneswith J W McDowall and day evening rm Our Combined Mills family Mrs Brigham day afternoon Munns Are Manufacturing FAVORITE LAYING MASH The Buy these guaranteed Products of your dealers Accept no substitutes — Better Feed Grinding Service T W INNES D D T E BETENSON S Dentist Physican Bank Both Phones Residence Bell 64 J Office Farmers Office Hours 9 a m to 5 p m and M D Surgeon Building Telephones: Bel! Farmers 14 Garland Utah Bank Building GARLAND UTAH NOTICE TO WATER USERS OF GARLAND CITY All water rentals are due and payable in advance on the first day of each month If payment Is not made by the 15th of each month water will be shut off without further notice and will not be turned on again until the back tax is payed together with a of $300 penalty for delinquency By order of the City CounciL DELLA HALL City Recorder Louis Petersen Barber Shop UTAH GARLAND A GOOD PLACE FOR A GOOD HAIRCUT OR SHAVE A NEW LINE OF THE BEST IIAIR TONICS AND FACE LOTIONS IN STOCK Utah Idaho Sugar Co Come and Try Them Submit Phosphate Study (Continued Tremonton : —: Utah CHAS J TRIBE TITE BARBER Good Ilalrcuts —Good Cheerful ft' 7 "5 Shaves Service FT it TT7 KING AND KNIGHT m The Best from Page 1) to the production of good seed and thrifty seedlings stimulatesPhosphorous of the fine especially the development feeder roots This gives the plant greater and feeding power and produces a rapid early development of the crop Phosphorus deficiency is more injurious In dry seasons than in wet ones because of the effect it has on root development The ripening of small grains is hastened by phosphorus This would tend to reduce rust locoes Phosphorus produces an especially vigorus sugar beet seedling and early growth The tonage is increased without any loss in per ent sugar and the lowering of per rent sugar caused by heavy its use by manuring is ourome J!' A V'l A Co&Is SPRING 7 K f1 CANYON I A C Garland Mrs J T Bigler and Mrs J G lecture on organD Porter of the Daily To Your Door i '' Are You Having a Heavy CREAMED Milk Delivered at Your DOOR If Not Then Your Milk Money is Not Working For You The Way It If You Want The Best Money Can Buy Should in MILK Call The McDowall Produce Phone 93-oAnd Have a Bottle of That Carefully Prepar- - ham city Tuesday visiting in Brig- For Sale-Six and eight weeks old for spring delivery Place pullets Elias Jensen your order now Third north & third east Brigham Phone 151W City Utah Next Tuesday at two o’clock the Garland Relief Society will hold their regular literary class Mrs Oluf Johnson will give a review of Hamlin Garland’s book entitled “The Son of the Middle Border” All are kindly Invited to attend this class Mr and Mrs E J Holmgren Mr and Mrs J M Gaddle and Mr and Mrs P C Pctterson were Ogden visitors on Tuesday where they took in a stock show and a show at night It rr ed Milk Delivered To You ilN J4 Maybe You Wish a Pint Half or Quart of That Delicious Sweet CREAM or a Dozen or so of Those Carefully Selected Strictly Fresh EGGS The Best Milk And Eggs are as Close to You as Your Phone Wctwai 0 PRODUCE Tremonton WE Phone Utah 98-o- DELIVER Mrs George Summers and children visited with her parents cf Bothwcll Mr and Mrs George Ilenrie on Monday G:o"gc’ Ilenrie nude a' business trip to Brigham City the fust of the week Mrs H L Moore and son Ray and i r- J When You Need Fire Insurance — Theft Insurance— Bonds or ' Want To Buy or Sell Real Estate or Secure Loans on Your Farm or Hom CONSULT John J Shumway Bank Building Phosphorus also has a very marked Phones: Bell 129 Bear River S effect upon beets following alfalfa and efsweet clover by overcoming the fects frequently observed when beets are grown after these crops ' MWHPttiUiMaMwaaaoM The amount of phosphorus removed from the soil varies with the crop The relation of the tops remains the A part of the field was fore seeding The requirements of several of our same when the lack of phosphorus Is phosphate rock with add given an ordinary coat of manure and not entirely too great the same as In may be apprincipal crops are given below: Phosphate fertilizers manure and 200 lbs another portion 29 or 2 tens lbs the case of complete fertilization Alfalfa plied before seeding with the seed The manure 26 6 lbs 50 bu Wheat "Greater lack of phospho'rus The best results are of phosphorus fertilizer 1500 pounds after seeding and phosphate produced 8 lbs ipears 80 bu In another way Oats In such cases secured when the fertilizer is drilled more beets than the manure alone lbs 276 bu the to leaves available seedling the dark green take such a po- This makes It Barley In case of the fertilizer without man 35 bu ll 5 lbs jsltion that the peticles Corn lie on the Into the seed bed before planting 2 was 23 9 lbs ground 15 tons as horizontal as possible but Thi makes It available to the seeding ure the profit to the grower allowance Sugar Beets when acre per 300 bu 216 lbs the beginning of the blade Potatoes the as soon as it begins to draw Its was made for the cost of the fertilizer include stimuleaves not do the soil turn and point upward so that nourishment from the These figures and applying It and hauling the increased straw corn stover beet Tops or potato the tips are in a vertical or nearly lates the early development already oe vines tonnage This was over 400 per cent vertical position Such a type of leaf mentioned and which Is so desirable It is very evident that the removal position however is not always an In- Certain brands are so strong that on the Investment In 1913 a diseased condition appearof the crops named removes consider- dication of lack of phosphorus but they cannot be safely sown with the An aped ln a field during June able quantities of phosphorus from the may be a peculiarity of an Individual as they injure seed In any quantity soil beet plication of phosphate between the the germination of the seed 22 stopped thp disease rows on June numthe a winter large past During "Greater lack of phosphorus reafter planting is and produced about two tons per acre Sowing fertilizer ber of Neubauer tests were made by gardless if the abnormal leaf position this beet the Experimental Station of the Great described occurs or not is also char- only advisable when it cannot be sown The grain crop following Western Sugar Company Some very acterized by the appearance of deep before or in case a lack of phosphate crop still showed the effect of the wheat on the the after becomes SI crop the only apparent On a fertilizer May facts connection ith in interesting dark brown or even black has started The rate It Is to be applied treated portion was much larger than the effects of cropping and manuring spots on the leavescompletely These spots upon the available phosphorus were which are of an irregular shape ap- will depend upon the strength of the on the untreated of the fertilizer and the requirements The results of the harvest on this brought to light pear first at or close to the edges of solL wheat field were surprising Equal It appears that alfalfa and svcci leaves but in some cases During the past two or three years areas were studied one which clover reduce the available phosphorus may nppear ln the middIe Qf the they had eaI have been secured very striking results been treated in 1927 and one which The relative amounts or available surface Rrom these spots the leaves plant food are given in what Is called begin to die off with a deep dark by an application of superphosphate had not The yields were as follows: both in Increasing yield and ln prevent 437 Bu per acre the Neubauer value The lower the brown or black color without Untreated any ing disease 586 Bu per acre Treated value the smaller and the higher the yellow color appearing tons A field that was producing The kemals from the treated porvalue the greater the amount of avail“When such pronounced Indications acre without treatment produced tion of the field were noceably larger able plant food per cf lack of phosphorus the root 1815 tons when 100 pounds of 45 per and better developed than those from Our studies have not yet been ex- and top are held black apicar in growth the tensive enough to determine any def- sugar of the beet is lowered al- cent superphosphate was applied be the untreated portion inite relation between soil types and though os a rule only slightly The phosphorus deficiency At Wheatland total amount of sugar obtainedjiow- course soils containing cvert Wyoming decreased due to the decrease much grit and gravel and underlaid in yield The number of leaves develwith gravel at a depth of three or oped decreases aith greater lack of more feet appear to be the' most dephosphorus” ficient If soil is naturally deficient in These soils contain considerable phosphorus or has become so through lure which occurs In strata at varying improper handling n can be only depths from the surface In northern brovht bacc to a productive cond! Colorado soils overlaying shale by the ad(JlUon of Mme form of jtion ayar to bo natura”y deficient in phoruho:us The first crops on th- -e wPs af- - jphorus xhere arc or tor th y are btohen out of too sod ap- - phjluS beanrr fcrtn ers among of v tut h pear to respond to applications raw phosphate rock bone ruel phosphate fertilizer bone blade Th eras meal arJ superHie sugar beet is very sensitive to phosphate are the moot errrpionly usphosphate deficiency Beets graven On ed Raw phosphate becomes rocic rush lands may be idcnufied by very slowly avalkib’e when applied to f disci muon: a soil thoicfcrc is rot suited to ores OF THRIFT SAVING IS THE FOUNDATION of phosp-- h There 'V iun peeking rf resets are quick ltqalred Bore "s there is taken for granted a reel rrcai end bom black are usually ruie l‘ least a cmdtl msl rjrn'3 cf expensive than WHY NOT START A SAVING ACCOUNT superphosphate theretuier nutrients Eir-- e excess cf nit-- - fore less profitable than the cheaper s er the grTn color of superphosphates Thomas meal is a WITH US TODAY the plants to turn to a d'eper green tm liter more ne fust sim of lack cf phosphorus is ured in Europe than in thiscummomy country a pea ng n the this drrk grcen cu is a phosphate rock Superphosphate lca es cr other phosphate bearing matcrid "If thers is onlv r treated with sulphuric acid The cheap ’y est and therefore the moss phosphorus the da k rt0’ co profitable ' on 7 form under certain cm to use ln the great pialns a a indication of ths Ir is a superphosphate made by t cat )t 'J& H ros lrt crs Mined In Utah Alfred Midi aelis Coal Yard Bell Phone 23 J Don’t break up your Radio Parties to Amos and Andy while listening Just Phone the BLUE BELL and have your Ice Cream and Candy delivered OUR SERVICE THE BEST Mrs George Clark Mrs J W Garrett RhodeB attended the ization given by W - 0 and Community Mr E Lewis Johnson and Messrs E Anderson and Elmer Anderson attended the stock show at Ogden Monday of this week mi innnnm Home the - GarlaBd— Farm— Buieau C remonton Milling Co T was a SunMrs Chas section — will meet at the home of the president Mrs J T Bigler Thursday night Miss Ruth Johnson of the High School faculty will give a review of a Chinese play of FAVORITE DAIRY MASH UTAH’S FAVORITE FLOUR PRIDE OF UTAH FLOUR A complete line of other mill stuffs Garland-- Marriott of guest Have Us Deliver Fresh Milk Utat Trenionton Banking Company ( "rr V- 3 i i |