174 



THE IRBIGATION AQE. 



you on 



30 Days' Free Trial 



WE PAY THE FREIGHT 



An offer for the farmer who wants the best fence produced at 

 the lowest 'price a life-time fence can be made for. Advance Fence 

 isn't just a boundary line. It stands for system and advanced value 

 in property. Any farmer who subdivides his land into plots for 

 crop rotation is systematizing his farm business. A built-to-last, 

 sound-value, substantial-looking fence means to the owner of the 

 land, and every man who works on it, exactly what a modern, 

 substantial factory or office building means to every man doing 

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ADVANCE FENCF " The Fence That ' s 



A%L/ V MPIVrE I E PI \* K. Made JB E | gjn ,, 



Is An Investment That Pays Big Dividends 



What the farmer puts money and protection into, he's going 

 to get money and protection out of. 



Advance Woven-Wire Fence is the best looking, strongest con- 

 structed, longest lasting fence on the market. To prove it, we make 

 our great offer. If the fence isn't O. K. to you, and more, send it 

 back at our expense. 



We sell to you direct no middleman therefore the price is 

 right- one profit only after making. 



Advance Fence is made of Solid Wire, not wire cut and spliced 

 again. A cut wire weakens. Our stay wire is continuous, woven 

 in with the main top and bottom wire running the entire width of 

 the fence from one stay to the next. Made of the best basic, open- 

 hearth steel, galvanized with a heavy coat of 99-per-cent-pure spelter 

 that means rust proof. 



Advance Fence always stays taut straight and handsome. Prove 

 it for yourself. Write to us for all particulars. Remember, we pay 

 freight and guarantee safe delivery. Don't pay two prices Write us 



toda >'- ADVANCE FENCE CO., Box 101, Elgin, III. 



New American 

 Turbines 



will improve your water 

 power because they are 

 EFFICIENT, POWERFUL and 

 DURABLE. 



Our line of 



HEAD GATES 

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 Don't forget that a 

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 Send for Catalogue 25. 



The Dayton Globe 

 Iron Works Go, 



Dayton Ohio 



UTAH. 



At the election of the Oneida Irrigation District 

 corporation Jas. G. Taylor and S. J. Callan were elected 

 directors. 



Attorney Geo. W. Bartch has secured a judgment 

 against the Millard Land and Irrigation Company for 

 $1,000.50 as attorney's fees and one thousand shares of 

 the capital stock. 



Stockholders in the Blue Cliff Canal Company are 

 considering the advisability of a consolidation with the 

 Provo Reservoir Company at Prove. The majority of 

 the stockholders are said to favor the plan. 



The Hatchtown State Reservoir project in Garfield 

 county is nearing completion and it is reported that water 

 will be supplied for the 1910 season. Funds for this proj- 

 ect were taken from the Reservoir Land Grant and as 

 the land is sold the money is returned to the State. 



Litigation between the city of Salt Lake and the East 

 Jordan Canal and Irrigation Company is now pending be- 

 fore Judge M. L. Ritchey. The city attempts to condemn 

 a right of way through the East Jordan canal. The irri- 

 gation company is fighting to prevent condemnation. 



The Pneumatic Water Lift Company, formed for the 

 purpose of exploiting an apparatus for the elevation of 

 water, has filed articles of incorporation at Ogden. Capi- 

 tal stock is placed at $100,000. E. G. McGrif is president 

 and C. D. Ives, secretary and treasurer. 



J. Lauritzen of Richfield is promoting a project to 

 reclaim land in that vicinity by storing waters of the 

 Virgin river. He is said to have interested Chicago 

 capitalists. Another project for the reclamation of 50,- 

 000 acres with water from the Virgin river has been pro- 

 nounced feasible by engineers and it is claimed that pro- 

 moters are now trying to secure funds. 



The Pacific Land and Water company has filed 

 articles of incorporation with capital stock at $300,000. 

 It is proposed to reclaim 40,000 acres in the northwestern 

 part of Utah, and the southern part of Idaho. This dis- 

 trict is commonly known as the Emery tract in Box 

 Elder county. Following are the officers: James H. Pat- 

 erson, president; Robert A. Lafount, vice-president; C. N. 

 Strevell, secretary; F. A. Druehl, treasurer, and Harold 

 A. Lafount of Logan, general manager. The active man- 

 agement of the company will be with Mr. Lafount at 

 Logan. 



Utah capital is interested in a $3,000.000 project known 

 as the Truckee-California Irrigation Company for the 

 reclamation of an immense tract of land in Nevada. O. B. 

 Bercrland of Gunnison is president and W. G. Tollestrup 

 of Salt Lake City is secretary. It is planned to tap Inde- 

 pendence lake not far from Floriston, Nevada, and carry 

 the water down Independence creek to be stored at the 

 Junction of the latter stream with the Little Truckee river 

 from whence it will be sent through a canal to a dis- 

 tribution point near White Lake. Lands to be reclaimed 

 are in the vicinity of Reno. Plans for construction call 

 for a 6,000-ft. tunnel. 



WASHINGTON. 



The Lower Yakima Irrigation Company of Richmond has 

 added 100 acres of land to its project. Two new pumping 

 plants will be installed. 



It is announced that the Post Falls irrigation project will 

 be completed by June first of this year. The total cost of the 

 work is estimated at $1,000,000. 



The Okanogan Irrigation & Improvement Company pro- 

 poses to begin active work, on its high line ditch in the spring. 

 The project will irrigate 14,000 acres. 



C. P. Devine has filed on the waters of Winas creek and 

 proposes to carry a supply through a ten mile system of 

 canals to irrigate a large tract of land. 



The irrigation company at Kennewich has secured an 

 additional '2,000 acres which it proposes to irrigate by pump- 

 ing. New machinery will be installed in the plant. 



Spokane men are said to have purchased 900 acres in the 

 vicinity of Hell Gate with the intention of installing a pump- 

 ing plant for irrigation. The capital of the new company is 

 $50,000. 



