OCR Text |
Show March 15, 1937 | ‘THE BERYL COLONIZER ile oek | Oo Chemists Land Find Beryl and Water ee designate the of Sample following No. 1—sustained analysis: alkali, cause not any a sufficient rive quantity : to concern, ‘|Calcium oxide (CaQ)........ 3.88 %. “We also made several tests of Potassium oxide (K20).... 0.60 © the surface water, which occurs in -|Phosphoric anhydride.......... 0.17 water-bearing gravels at a depth - EDITOR’S NOTE: The recent announcement by Dr. Corlis R. Humus 0.35 of from 7 to 16 feet from the sur-_ ‘Under the direction of the Kinney that a rare oil, valuable in the manufacture of costly per-. Nitrogen 0.08 '|face. These waters were practically officials of the Union Pacific sodium carbonate jJumes, was being obtained from the flower tips of the desert sage, pure. The following table shows Railroad, we have had the Gwihite elisa): sess: 0.018 inspired Hon. Charles R. Mabey, former governor of Utah, to write the exact findings, in grains per gallon: sage. to the desert salutation brilliant poem—a ‘responsibility of making sev- Sodium chloride, this Governor (common table salt)........ 0.002 Total solids 33.00 Mabey has given us the privilege of publishing the poem in this eral analyses of soils and the Oss-onmenitiatvom <2. ie. 6.43 first edition of the Beryl Colonizer. : underground waters of the Sodium sulphate Chlacke alka a: none Sodium carbonate (black This appearance of the poem is dedicated to Peete Beryl District in Bee as alkali) — none “Our deductions would be that covered empire of Southwestern Utah. ern Utah. Sodium Chloride (common chemically the soils are extremely “We found these soils to be ex- rich and therefore shoul@ be very table salt) 11,95 All hail to the ever victorious sage, Sodium sulphate (white _|tremely fertile, containing a high productive. The pride of Nevada, the boast of the age! | alkali) 3.20 percentage of marle, or lime con“Our Héteprainations for detriAs common as sin and as bitter as gall, “We would say without hesitatent, which is an absolute necessity mental alkaline salts in the soil It covers the earth with a pallid gray pall. . to soil fertility. They contained were very gratifying. We found no tion that such water is ideal or irrigation purposes.” Henceforth and forever a wonderful aid much potassium oxide, phosphoric trace of what is commonly known anhydride, humus and nitrogen. To the timorous maid, © as black alkali in the samples, and SMITH- EMERY CoO. Excellent Quality ‘By HON. CHARLES R. MABEY _ The impertinent jade : And the barber that paints with his greasy pomade. Low-born “A typical and rejected, a twisted-up shrub, | sample—which we found but a slight trace of white Los Angeles, CAMPB A pariah of plants, a contemptible scrub, Now brother to frankincense, hyssop and myrrh And all of the other sweet perfumes that stir The titilant nose of the dandified blade, — The wistful old maid, The dowager staid And the dignified dame of the fashion parade, My earlier, happier memories pine _ For days when the homlier virtues were thine, Thou beneficent boon to the rough pioneer, | Whose fuel had come from the buffalo queer: Thy ambrosial incense in redolence rose Wherever he chose His home to enclose | And from the rude camp of his Indian foes. Nor can I forget the boiling hot vat, The creaking old mill and the horses ‘thereat, ‘As juices were turned into messy molasses, The holiday friend of the lads and lassies, ‘By thy odorous fumes, nor the mangled-up mass . Of contorted. begasse - With the sticky morass Of skimmings that lurked in the edge of the grass, ‘As herdsman and huntsman I also recall, _ The bleating of sheep and the maverick’s bawl, The slosh of my shoes as my feet wallowed through The keen-scented sage when besprinkled with dew. ATT The pungent aroma was sweeter. by far Than Russ samovar, Synthetic coal tar, Or fetid gum resin from famed Kandahar. Likewise I remember two things with regret,— Along with the others I never forget,— _ The sage that I drank and the necklace I wore, Asafetida-filled from the old country store; The one for the gullet, the other to smell, A mixture so fell That the witches in hell Sit re a Might use it with profit in weaving a spell. And now shall these regions, bewhiskered with sage, _ Respond to the touch of this glorified age, And tractor-drawn drillers shall give to the sod The seed of the shrub once implanted by God, And crystalline waters in rivulets flow... Down row upon row Of plantlets that grow For over 18 years, Campbell & Budlong have manufactured deep well turbine pumps. On the hillside above and the valley below. that time, ind sage shall be found in the chemist’s compound, and tens of thousands of installations have proved the quality and Along with the other sweet savors renowned, The gingers, angelicas, nutmegs and thymes, superiority of these pumps. And all of the sesins I need in my rhymes, ‘And barbers shall query, “Some sage on your head?” My druggist has said They use it instead Offering many new and exclusive features, Of camphor and nard in embalming the dead.” Campbell & Sweet perfumes may come from the islands of spices signed to meet sand conditions that are found - And - thousands Ia chemists concoct their infernal devices To win the applause of the critical nose Till it cannot distinguish petroleum from | rose, But the perfume that captures the doctor’s diploma, pumps have beem to some degree in all new wells. _and type of pump de-' Every size is built so that it can be changed in the bowl unit to meet the most =, economical conditions of pumping water in See these Write for Complete information! = 0 : Ti pumps at work at the Beryl Colony. ‘I toast you the oe but versatile sage, The hope of the barber and pampered old age, The brother to nectar, ambrosia and wine, That sits where the kings and aristocrats dine, The warrior whose deeds win the knight’s accolade From the dowager The innocent maid staid, And the dandy that rides in the fashion parade. CAMPBELL AND 1849 MONTEREY bg SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA 2 - _ And wormwood and cinnamon ancient with age, Compared with the modern, more vigirous sage, SO give me its fragrant, rejuvenant juices To kill what produces The wrinkles and sluices On faces of matrons and obsolete duces: the well in which it is installed. ak Away with the weak citronellas and ointments, The almonds and aloes are sad disappointments, on : In Cairo or Roma, In Cork or Tacoma, Is the sage with its piquant, nersiatent aroma. | Budlong |