THE IERIGATION AGE. 



283 



RIFE AUTOMATIC HYDRAULIC RAM 



RUNS CONTINUOUSLY 

 NO ATTENTION 

 NO EXPENSE 



PUMPS WATER BY WATER POWER 



Large Capacity Rams for Irrigation 



Operate* under 18 In. to go ft. fall. .-. Elevates water 30 feet for every foot fall used. 

 80 per cent efficiency developed. .-. Over 4,300 plant! in successful operation. .-. In- 

 formation and estimates promptly and cheerfully furnished. Catalog Frje. 



RIFE ENGINE COMPANY 



126 Liberty Street, 



NEW YORK, U. S. A. 



BOOKS ON 



Irrigation and Drainage 



THE IRRIGATION AGE has established a book 

 department for the benefit of its readers. Any 

 of the following named books on Irrigation 

 and Drainage will be forwarded postpaid on 

 receipt of price: 



Irrigation Institutions, Elwood Mead 81.25 



Irrigation in the United States, F. H. Newell 2.00 



Irrigation Engineering, Herbert M. Wilson 4.00 



Irrigation and Drainage, F. H. King 1.50 



Irrigation for Farm and Garden, Stewart 1.00 



Irrigating the Farm, Wilcox 2.00 



The Primer of Irrigation, cloth, 300 pages 2.00 



Practical Farm Drainage, Charles G. Elliott 1.00 



Drainage for Profit and Health, Waring 1.00 



Farm Drainage, French 1.00 



Land Drainage, Miles 1.00 



Tile Drainage, Chamberlain 40 



Addren 



THE D. H. ANDERSON PUBLISHING CO. 



112 Dearborn Street, CHICAGO, ILL. 



HONES 



Every man's ideal is a pleasant, happy HOME, sur- 

 rounded by modern advantages, in a congenial climate, 

 and located in a growing, resourceful and prosperous 

 community. Washington county, Idaho, possesses these 

 advantages to a fuller degree than any other section of 

 the United States. Her fruit is 

 incomparable, and includes every 

 variety known to horticulture out- 

 side of the tropics. Her irrigated 

 farms produce crops of hay, grain and vegetables that 

 are the marvel of farmers in the Middle West. Her 

 cattle, and horses and 



sheep com- '|TM[ OT T1U1U V mand to P 

 prices in the 1 1| J 1 world's mar- 



kets. Her -lL * WVX1X1* {orests wil , 



make a lumbermen's paradise. Her mines of gold, 

 silver, and copper rank with the richest discovered. 

 To call her climate "Italian" 

 would be flattery to Italy. Ex- 

 treme heat, extreme cold, cyclones 

 and drouths are unknown. The 

 U. S. Weather Bureau reports 336 sunshiny days in 

 Idaho in 1904. Weiser, the county seat of Washington 

 Co., is a modern little city of 3,000 population, on the main 

 line of the Oregon Short Line R. R., owns its water and 

 electric light plant, has modern sewerage and is the 

 gateway to the stock, timber and mining sections. 

 Splendid business openings, and great opportunities for 

 farmers are offered. Don't delay. Investigate! Write 

 for illustrated booklet and special information to Sec- 

 retary Weiser Commercial Club, Box K., Weiser, 

 Idaho. 



IDAHO 



ABOUT 

 THE 

 SOUTH 





About theSouth" Is the name of a 84-page illustrated pamphlet Issued by the Passenger Dept. of the 



ILLINOIS CENTRAL R. R. CO. 



in which important questions are tersely answered in brief articles about 



Southern Farm Lands, Mississippi Valley Cotton Lands, Truck 

 Farming, Fruit Growing, Stock Raising, Dairying, Grasses and 

 Forage, Soils, Market Facilities and Southern Immigration 



along the lines of the Illinois Central and Yazoo & Mississippi 

 Valley railroads, in the States of Kentucky, Tennessee, 

 Miisissippi and Louisiana, including the famous :: :: :: 



YAZOO VALLEY OF M.SSISS.PPI 



Send for a free copy to ). F. Merry, A. G. P. A., I. C. R. R., Dubuque. Iowa. 

 Information concerning rates and train service to the South via the Illinois Central can be had 

 of agents of connecting lines, or by addressing A. H. HANSON, 0. P. A., Chicago. HI. 



