Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 31, 1903, EDITORIAL SHEET, Image 11

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    The Omaha Sunday Bee.
I PAGES 11 TO 20.
EDITORIAL SHEET, jjj
ESTABLISHED JUNE 10, 1871.
OMAITA, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 31, 1003.
SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS.
Our Great June Clearing: Sales Are Now On
Bargains That Will Make the Town Hum
Smart Jewelry Snaps
Ladies' Belts Several hundred very natty stitched Wash
Delta made of snow white canvas with nickle or
gilt square or oval buckle tho prettiest white
waist buckle yet won sizes '22 to .'SO
DO dozen Belts of fine imported soft leather very styl- O CCp
ifh shape in mottled brown and drab or morocco. . .
10c
Children's Slippers worth $1.2
for
June Sale Shoes
JT?J Look ill Shoe Department for
Greatest Bargains in Chil
dren's Slippers ever offered.
48c
Women's Oxfords patent tips worth $t.2,V
Women's (iore Front Princess worth .fl.7."
Women's Southern Button Oxfords worth .fl.no . J
THE BEilETT C08BPAHY
Over Three Hundred Thousand Dollars Worth of
the Best Bargains in Merchandise Ever
Seen in the West!
Great June Bargains in Dress Goods
All Profits Given to Customers
Infants' red, blue or brown Moccasins
for '
Infants' Soft Sole, cloth top, Shoes
for
Men's Shoes lace made of box calf and vici kid
worth $2.50 at ,.
...5c
5c
1.50
Music--June SalesMusic
r
t
Beginning Monday and continuing for thirty days we will
hold the greatest FIANO, OltGAX and SHEET MUSIC and
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE sale ever known in the west. We
will just knock the bottom out of all music prices. Call and in
vestigate. Write for catalogue.
Thi3 week we will sell sheet muslc'70c,
50c, 40c, 30c and 25c sheet-musicy repre
senting the most popular, classical and
catchy airs by the cleverest pz
carposers:.. I5c-l Oc-O C
23 PIECES PLAIN WHITE HABUTAI
WASH SILKS, 33c quality, for IQf
this sale, yard Iz7j
100 PIECES COLORED TAFFETA AND
IMPERIAL TWILL SILK, (iOc and $1.00
quality, all colors, for this sale lOr
per yard J
New Silk Department.
3,000 YARDS OF FINE WASH FABRICS
Ends of different lines selected from our
immense stock will be placed on sale Monday
this line includes dotted and plain silk
mulls, St. Gall Swisses, mercerized vestings,
in stripes and oxford weaves, in white and
colors, Egyptian tissues, etc., the goods sell
regularly at 40c, 50c and 75c yard, will go
on sale in our wash goods depart'- "J Etp
ment at, yard
YARD WIDE MUSLIN all the best brands
of bleached muslin, fine and heavy
makes, worth up to 10c, at, yard...
MADRAS GINGHAMS all colors,
regular 9c quality, at, yard
PILLOW CASES good muslin, 45x
36, ready-to-use, at, each
CHILDREN'S SUMMER VESTS
LADIES WHITE UNDER VESTS, low neck
and no sleeves, finest summer gauze, Qlp
20c quality, at. 03
CHILDREN'S STOCKINGS finest" loug
staple cotton, regular made, colors,
tan; worth 20c, for this sale
CHILDREN'S BLACK LACE STOCKINGS
sizes 5$ to 8 J, fine silk 25c quality 1 Zp
for the June sale
BOYS' HEAVY RIBBED STOCKINGS
never sold at less than 25c, for 1 OP
this sale lW2v
WOMEN'S SATIN FOULARD DRESSES
the nobbiest street costume, were formerly
sold at $15.00 and $18.50 dur- 11 HA
98c
4C
C
7c
AND
DRAWERS Vest low neck, short sleeves,
drawers ribbed and lace knee, colors, ecru
and white, sizes 1(J to 34, regular 1 Olp
price 20c and 30c, for this sale.... 12
G reat women's suit sale Monday on second floor
Three tremendous bargain lots $S.93, $9.90 and $17.50. Every purchaser o a suit
gets a chance to win an Alaska Beaver Coatrwcrth $150, or an Alaska Seal Coatr-wortli
$350. ".distribution on July 6th. ,
iug this sale
WOMEN'S WniTE AND COLORED WASH
WAISTS fine organdy, India lin'vn, nat
ural linen, madras zephyr and Scotch ging
ham, mercerized sateen and embroidered
swiss. ihese waists were sold at ei.ou, i.o,
$1.69, $2.00 and $2.25 all will
go on sale Monday at
WOMEN'S nOUSE WRAPPERS Heavy
percale, lawn and cambric, all sizes, dark and
light patterns, former price QQ.
$1.25, all at O
WOMEN'S SUITS The prices we will make
on women's suits during this sale and the
seal and beaver coat that will be given to the
purchasers will make this the most' attrac
tive suit sale ever known.
Snaps in Crockery
Decorated flow blue Cups and Sauc
ers set of six
50 China Cuspidors for
each
Wash Bowls and Pitchers
for ,
English Semi-Porcelain Dinner
Plates each
25c
25c
75c
5c
June Sale of Entrancing Millinery
$30 Imported Pattern Hat Made of two shades of dolicate cream chiffon
trimmed in the soft light shades of lavender chrysanthemums- - -4 r? f
special bargain 10vlJ
$25 Pattern Hat Made of folds of liifht erven and deep lavender chiffon
trtmmed with flowers of the most superb colorings 75
$20.00 Cream Chiffon Hat trimmed with light pink roses. 10.00
$14.00 Pattern Hats at 10.00 and 8.50
Choice of any $12.00 and $10.00 Hat in t!io house at 8.00
Trimmed Pique Hats 3.75 to 98c
Tinted Foliage six sprays to bunch always sold rj
at $1.00
Big Snaps in
Hardware Dept.
Tomorrow for one day only
we will sell a good Sweeping
Broom at 14c good well made,
stout carpet broom i A
x-xw
at.
14-lnch Lawn Mower
at
16-Inch Lawn Mower
at ,
Two-burner Gasoline Stove
the good kind
Three-burner Gasoline Stove
the good kind
Willow Clothes Basket
at
Globe Wash Board
at
Wood Spice Cabinet
at
Palm Table Mats set of
six
.2.38
.2.48
.2.98
.3.98
...40c
...15c
...32c
32c
Picnic Plates 3c
Groceries
Spaghetti, 1 pound package ?c
Table Syrup, can . 8c
Salmon. 1 pound can lcic
Rice, good, pound 5o
Prunes, California, pound 6c
Coffee, fresh roasted, pound 9o
Tea. Sittings, pound 15c
Bennett's Laundry Soap, bar 2Vic; 10 bars 26c
Free, Monday
Iced Dnttermllk delicious
refreshing Invigorating;.
FREE IX BUTTER DEPT.
Candy June Sales
Marshmallows, special, per pound 12c
Fresh mii, vanilla flavored, most delicious
confection In the market.
Mixed Candy, per pound 9r.
Gum Drops, per pound 8s
Cigars and Tobaccos
Cigar Special Lillian Russell, a regular
6-cent cigar, each -'se
Two for be; 10 for Sic.
Drugs June Sales
Pure Medicinal Wines and Whiskies.
Old California Port Wine per pint 2So
rti.t i 'u Itfurniu Kherrv Wine..
Old White Port pint bottle.
Old Wlille Port quart bottle
Old Prentice pint
J. W. Harper Kye 7-year old pint..
Bushmill s (Irish Whisky) quart
26c
41
80c
. 60c
. r.o
.$1.45
Listerlne genuine 6c
l.iRtnrlTi. trenuine small 20c
Crystal Tonic fo
Pierce's Favorite Prescription Ojo
Pierce's Pleasant Pellets "Uc
Carter's Pills 16e
Genuine Persian Insect Powder pound 3'Jc
PnrA I'arls Oreen nound 18c
I'ure Powdered Borax pound loc
English Moth Balls pound Oc
TRUNKS! TRUNKS!
BIO SALE THIS WEEK
Tho season for trunks, valises and
telescopes is at hand. We're troinir in
start it by selling a, carload of these
goods just arrived at prices that positively
Canntt be Equaled Else
where in the City.
For example we're eel ling a
Trunk Metal covered, three rg
hardwood slats, well made, Uyr
24-inch, for 7
Telescope Canvas covered heavy
strawboard, leather straps, j q
heavy leather tips, 14-inch, IXf
for.
Canvas Suit Case Heavy canvas
covered, brass mountings,
linen lined, copper riveted
throughout, for
Leather Suit Case. Genuine
leather over steel frame, heavy
leather corners, large Drags
lock aovl mountings,
for
98c
3.98
Thers'e-a- .newness sr freBhnoss a
variety about our stock that will attract
you the prices will do the rest.
Whatever you want from the sim
plest telescopes up to the finest, most
finished examples of the trunkmaker's
art.
We Have IT and at
THE LOWEST PRICE
3EE
SEBRASliA MAN IS ECUADOR
Characteristic! of the People and 6ketches
of City and Country.
IEEDTIME AND HARVEST ON THE FARM
frlltlv Methods in I ' .
Waste that Hesalts Hospl
talltr Simplicity
of 4ne Jiatlves.
A Nebraakan traveling for business and
pleasur. In Ecuador give, an entertaining
drJertptlon of the country and it. people
in a private letter to a clergyman In
Omaha. The writer say. In part:
In October last I went to the interior of
Ecuador, visited Ibarla. Quito. La Tacunga
Rlobamba. Ambato. etc.; w CaUpaxI
Chlmbaraao. CaUcachl and .ome of the
other .now-capped mountain, of the An
deau range. Catapaxl is beautiful, i torn
the .ummlt of the divide 1 aw the waters
h.ir tourneys for the Paclftc and
Atlantic Everywhere wa. evidence of the
early fathers of the church. I dare may
that the mo.t marked evidence of their
work la shown In the Indian., who retain
.in, . wonderful tenacity, la spite of
cruelty and oppression of centuries, the
latth. This was nior. conapiuuuu. (
wonderful to me than the old cathedrals
and church edifice, of one kind and an
othei. In Quito I aw workmen opening
a new doorway through the wall of the
cathedral. I meaaured the thickness of
the wall; H wa. nine feet, brick and
mortar, and the opening not yet effected.
There m.y hve been aeveral feet of wall
yet to penetrate. The Jesuit, have by
far the handsomest church. Jt wa. begun
In the colonial day., before the .uppreselon
of th. order and flni.hed after their
restoration. 1 found some wonderfully
clever men of different nationalities among
their group In Quito. They .howed roe over
their place In Quito. A wonder It la. The
library U a trea.ure.
Ca.toma of the People.
Th. custom, of the Interior people are
very dletinct from ours. Moat noticeable to
me wa. the tilth, poverty and lndu.try of
the working people the Indian and half
breed. Their system of agriculture Is mo.t
primitive. They plow with a pair of oxen
bitched to a croa. .tick, and In thl. way
only scratch the surface of the .oil, as they
haVe don. .Inca the coming of the Bpanlsh,
some 400 year. ago. The driver of the oxen
direct, hi. animal, with a .harp .teel lance
In the end of a long .tick, which he use.
quite frequently while following In the
furrow behind the plow. At harvest time
they gather their crop, by mean, of a
small hand hook, many of them working
abreast In a Meld of grain. Catching the
stack, of grain with one hand they quickly
rut close to the .oil with the hook in
th. other hand. Then thl. is all moat
carefully gathered. Little children only
able to walk go about picking up any stray
head of grain that may have been over
looked by the older people. From thl. on
they work a. we do until the threshing,
aad then come, the waste. They tear down
the .tacks and scatter the grain about and
then turn on a herd of cattle, and by shout
and prodding they keep the cattle In a
circle and constantly going. When they
think the threshing completed they throw
all In the air on a windy day and let the
wheat, barley or whatever the berry may
be fal to the ground and the chaff blow
away. But much of the grain Is trampled
Into the earth and never recovered. The
entire proceeding, from the preparation of
the .oil for the seed to the marketing of
the grain, excepting alone the stacking.
which i. always well done, appears like
baby play In comparison with our methods.
Their root crops are better handled.
Nearly everything Is grown under Irri
gation. The irrigation system, are remark
ably well done. One plant, very old, I wa.
told, which I think would have puzzled a
modern American engineer to Imitate, waa
very ingeniously handled by the Indians.
The water was taken out of a river at a
point where the banks were perpendicular
and diverted Into a tunnell which was con
machlqul, and as he trot, along he get. a
certain quantity of thl. .tuff in his finger,
and with the proper motion of the arm he
tosses It home, and while his fingers never
get nearer than twelve Inches of hi. lips,
ao expert Is he at the game that bis calcu
lation 1. unerring and he never misses his
mark. Children, when they begin on this
food, spot their faces up considerable and
some of them look a. though they had gone
through a Pari, carnival, but the grown
people never have a mark of a bad shot.
When crossing a stream I have seen them
take drink the same way.
I wish I wa. tourist enough to have car
ried a kodak and snapshot a few objects
and sights for you for Instance, a fOur
deck coop of chickens strapped to the back
of an Indian woman going to market and
her baby perched on top of the chicken
coop and her hands busily employed spin
ning cotton or wool always occupied, they
are never Idle.
In Quito, at 8:80 dally mass at the
Cathedral, all the bells are rung at the
struoted parallel with the river, but on a i consecration. Then the people generally all
lighter grade, for a distance of two miles
until good, open ditching ground was
reached. At distances of about 100 yards
there were openings made in the face of the
wall which allowed the excavators on the
work to enter the line and prosecute the
wcrk of the tunnel from many points of
attack. It must have taken years to con
struct that tunnel.
Hooky Koada to Travel.
At one point on my' road I had to cross
a stream. Rio Provldencla it was called.
Why that and not Hlo Diablo I cannot un
derstand. From the point where I began
the descent to the stream to the top of the
bank on the opposite side was a distance
of certainly not more than one mile across.
yet my pocket barometer showed that from
the first descent to the water was more
than 6.000 feet, by sig-iag route. Then I
had to make the same ascent by the same
sort of roadway on the opposite side to get
on me plain again. The entire formation
wa. volcanic and Interesting.
My entire Journey covered a distance of
over 1,000 miles, all made on foot, horse and
muleback and on top of a diligence, and
from sea level to over 11000 feet altitude.
Scenery from the densest of tropical
Jungles where one's vision, owing to the
dense growth of vegetation, la not more
than fifty feet and the rainfall la more
than tiM Inches per annum, to the other ex
treme of dry, barren wastes on the par
amaa and the nights are terribly cold.
(tlUrtal aad Primitive Kraut.
I was favored with the hospitality of Gen
eral I'lasa, liberal president of the republic,
at a banquet and enjoyed the courtesies of
the archbishop and bishops who are Just
now engaged In a great struggle with the
government for having paasud a com
pulsory civil marriage law at the last con
gresa. I also feasted on parched corn and
machlqul with the lonely Indian when I
could find nothing else. This machlqul
stuff is a great game to play at. It is a
sort of flour made from pounding wheat,
barley, corn and other grains between
mne. i nen wnen ine Indian goes on a
trip he I. pretty well laden with cargo sus
pended from his shoulders and forehead
so that hi. arm. and hand, are free. He
always ha. conveniently suspended from
over the city stand uncovered, some go
down on their knees. In the Plaza Ban
Francisco, which I. the market place of the
city, at thl. hour Is crowded with hundreds
of people. A very pretty sight It Is, too.
Th. Indian. In their picturesque co.tume.
of bright color, and the eity people, ail
bartering and trading, a perfect Babylon
of voices. At the sound of the bell all is
hushed and quiet and nearly all are down
on their knees uncovered. Then when the
bell ceases they are up and at It again like
a tt.il aenny fair.
Wayside Scenes
On my way in after going several days
on foot I found a horse for myself and
one to carry my baggage, and thus was
able to dismiss my cargadores. My bag
gage was quite enough cargo for the poor
Deast that was burdened with It, and so
the owner had to go on foot, driving the
pack horse before him. As we entered the
city of Ibarla, going over the bridge that
marks the city's limit, my guide stopped
before the cross that is cut In the solid
stone cap, uncovered, blessed himself,
bowed his head and assumed the most
humble attitude and remained so about a
minute. Then, as If startled from a night
mare, be ran after his poor horse that
was nibbling a few blades of grass several
paces In advance and began to beat the
poor beast frightfully, as though the theory
of transmigration of the soul had Just been
revealed to Mm and be commanded to
punish the soul of the suffering one. When
I reached my destination I paid him off
and a little more in addition. He again
put on the humble and uncovered, care
fully wrapped his hands In his poncho
aa If to Impress me that he would not
deign to pollute me by so much as a touch
of the hand, but with the covered hands
he grasped the hand that gave the money
and In a most chivalrous manner as these
people of all classes and all ages can do-
bent to kiss the same. He was to take back
a saddle I borrowed, but ss In the old
song, "he never came back again." I have
paid the owner $30 fur the aaddle and we
are now looking for my gallant knight
errant
A Slraager la Tom
I arrived In one little pueblo on my way
j tnto Quito after crossing the paramo of
gry, and like a professional mendicant
made straight for the house of the cura.
Concento they call the parochial residence
here. I found the cura and all fits house
hold at evening devotions In the church.
In the interior the convento always Joins
the church. When finished with the de
votions the cura received ma and without
asking who I was, where I was from, my
business or religion or anything else, simply
said, "I see you are a stranger. You are
welcome to the best I have and you have
at your disposition the poor cura of Mach
Ungul." I was then provided with a good
supper and given the best bed he had.
Certainly no one could have done more nor
shown more genuine hospitality than this
young cura. The next morning he was up
early for his first mass at 6 a, m., and in
sisted upon me using one of his saddle
horses to the next town. On my return I
stopped to call and pay my respects. He
was absent In an adjoining parish, which
he also looks after. Ills major-domo In
sisted upon having prepared for me some
breakfast, and while waiting for breakfast
some of the people of the town came in
to have a look at me and to size me up,
so to say. I observed the major-domo
holding earnest conversations with those
people. When about to leave, after break
fast, the cura returned, and well for me,
too, I believe, that he did; for It appears
that some of the hot heads of the place
would have It, In spite of the major-domo's
protest, that I was a missionary and they
were going to give me a warm reception.
After delaying awhile the cura rode with
me through the principal street and out on
to the highway for several miles, and gave
me a nice note to the cura in the next
town, Otavale. Only the week previous a
clodhopper from Adams county, Nebraska,
with a Jayhawker companion, went Into
Otavale to convert the heathen. They were
very promptly told that they were not
wanted In the plaoe and to "move on," but
they persisted In distributing their tracts.
bibles, etc., and annoying the Inhabitants
of the place with personal solicitations.
Then the people rose up In their wrath and
there was a "hot time In the old town
etc. Our Indiscreet missionaries were not
looking for martyrs' crowns, but only an
opportunity to earn their salaries, so they
fled to the barracks and sought and secured
protection from the soldiers for three days
and nights, and then were got out of town
and back to Quito without further Incident.
o rointrr Like Ours.
I am Inclined to fancy If our Nebraska
missionary friend has recovered from his
fright nnd stopped running, he Is to be
found down on the Little Blue getting ready
for next season's "crops," and If he Isn't
there It's because he hasn't stopped run
ning yet. As a Nebraskan I am not very
proud of his discretion or valor. The
Simpson Institute of Kansas City that sends
out these chaps probably ha. a vacancy
to fill In Ecuador. It 1. very strange, but
a fact, that the laws of Ecuador, a Catholic
country, and the state religion is the Cstho
11 o religion, prohibit a Catholic priest com
ing here from other countries and officiat
ing, yet her doors are wide open for the
clergy of any and all other denominations
to come here and labor.
somewhere somehow a pouch of corn or Mijando, about 1. 30 p. m., cold and tun
HOW TO LIVE WITHOUT WORK
Omaha Man Solves Another Phase of So
ciety's Great Problem.
MODERN PARADISE AN ENTICING DREAM
Co-operative Colony That Will Hun
by Compressed Air, Electricity,
Water Power nnd Windmill.
When Fund. Are Donated.
by electric power, and the coHt of generat
ing electricity will, no doubt, be but a
mere trifle.
The cook will use the electric range,
which may be of any desired length and
Intensity of heat, and may be as artistic
as any piece of parlor furniture. Artistic
electric heaters, or radiators, will do the
heating when cold, and electric fans pro
duce cool breeze when too warm. Brilliant
electric lights will furnish the light.
Electric motors will run the machines in
the co-operative mansion, mills and fac
tories. Every machine will perhaps have a
small separate motor attached to It as
part of the machine Itself; so that few. If
any, belts will be left In the whole of the
coming factory.
The local riding, hauling and farming
will all be done by electrio automobiles,
each class specially designed for the work
It Is Intended to perform. Some are con
structed for fust, easy riding on smooth
hnnl.v.i.Ju A(r nthftr. ftp heuvv h;( 11 1 1 Tl if
Prof. Henry Oelrich of Omaha comes d n ,V and b,iii others for agrl-
to the front with the latest solution of at , cultural work.
i . m , v, niiMtlnnl over Wmcn W uhvh evciy iraovu w "' -
leant one of the questions over u , . pr itnBlve. eoultab e co-
lie i , i ,. n th. .1 ! T- futtirA frtrtMl-tt
Don't he cross, cheer up on a cold bot
tle of Champagne, and let It be Cook's
Imperial Caua Dry CbampagD,
modern sociologists have pondered.
has solved, to his own satisfaction at
least, the question of how to make life one
"long, sweet dream," and has given wrm
to the public, or such of It as cares to
Invest, his clan In a pamphlet under the
title of "Modern Paradise The Grandest
Dwelling Place on Earth."
Briefly, Prof. Oelrich proposes to erect
on a plot of ground four miles square and
containing about 10,000 acres of most fer
tile land, a plant which will comprise a
compartment house, a power plant and a
workshop or manufactory. These build
ings are to be located In the center of the
plot of ground, and around ara to be the
broad fields from which the co-operators
in the scheme will gather such bountiful
crops that they will not only always have
plenty, but will be able to reap enormous
profits. Here Is the way the author de
scribes the plant in his 'own words:
The writer feels confident that under
the moat efficient mode of co-operative
living and working, from two to three
hours of pleasant, self-employed labor a
day would produce abundance of wealth to
all perhaps more than S10 worth of it a
Extensive, equitable co-operation is the
basis of the author', state of .oclety a.
unvested In Modern faraaise.
Five hundred or more cultured men and
wnmsn rn.nrwnitii together as equal part
ners, sharing among themselves the annual
froducts of their labor In proportion to the
Iitm each devotes to a certain kind of
, economic labor for the association, or ac
.nrrtln. in n:ilfAhlA lilecework.
Th. M-nnerutora live tonether In a mag-
nlnrent mansion, locuted in a fine park
In th router or a lartre proaucuve mrm
four miles square, containing about lo.Ouu
Part of the co-operative mansion is useu
for public departments; such as a lare,
clean, cheerful kitchen, one or more ar
tistic dining halls, commodious parlor, of
different sizet. a store department, a res
taurant, barber shop, pub'le and private
baths, a fine hall or theater, a splendid
library, a well-tilled laboratory, a tine
printing outfit, a magnltleent art gallery,
museum, conservatory and automobile par
lors; complete mall, water, elevator and
telephone systems; a sanitarium, nurser
ies, kindergartens, instruction rooms, con
versation halls, and such other conveni
ences as the association -might from time
to time desire.
bo Corporation Hold Here.
Every member has also an elegant privets
apartment In the mansion, affording tho
most exclusive privacy when dealred. These
private apartments may each be independ
ent, or In suites of two or more rooms to
suit the taste of the occupants. All de
partments, both public and private, are, of
course, conveniently arranged and elegantly
furnished.
In Modern Paradise there will be no need
for the steam enplne and the horse: no
need for fuel, gas and oil lam(s. Prac
tically ail the mechanical wotk will be duns
orlnclpally of
farmer, seated
automobile riding. Tho
In his comfortable auto-
Instead of water wheels are oporated.
During the summer most of the mem
bers can engage In agricultural work; dur- .
lng the winter, in manufacturing, etc.
Money Come. !!,
After having disposed of these details of
architecture he comes to the more material
phase of his dream. This he approaches
without waking up and thus discusses it:
It Is true that several million dollars will
be required to purchase, improve and fur
nish sueh a complete co-operative premise,
as is htre contemplated; but we must also
bear in mind that we are living in an oge of
philanthropy an age In which many
wealthy men and women are making
munificent gifts for the purpose of promot
ing the welfare of humanity in various way. -and
that In the course of time It will
not be difficult to personally Interest one or
more wealthy philanthropists, who will he
willing to donate some of their surplus mil
lions for the purpose of preparing such an
elegant home, where they, with many other
congenial associates, may spend their re
maining davn in an earthly paradise, a real
Eden, replete with fraternity ami human
bliss.
TVisft pluirmln nalirallu tii.i t wkll.
mobile cab, will hitch It to wagon, plow, itii.T. . Z . .J Z
seeder, reaper, etc. When too cold he. heats finance, his Utopia is not exhausted by that
it with electricity, wnen too our ngnis u, operation, lor no proceeds with equal
and women can run these f1?'"'0t!;le' facility to construct the affair, after having
easily adjusted machines as well as men. 1nllH
' so expeditious that the wave of Aladdin's
Nor does
How to Meat Niagara.
..1.. n..(lAn lh.n aeems to nft I . . . i
1HO Villi tutD.w.., - I miliy CJC 111 CUJIipUriHOIl.
Can tne electric current wo pi i . -MKn rhera for tho Wnnlln. hi.
.nnmb.iiv than all that it would fcj u . cease mere, tor the peopling of hi.
persede, and is It more m harmony with
modern civilisation?
Practical experience concl jal.'My demon
hot nfier a thorough installation
of the best class of power plant, electricity
may be generated at a very low cost oi
production at places where favorable
water power may be utilized. The Niagara
Falls power plant Is a good example of
this kind It Is run by water, and exerts
fifty thousand horse power.
It Is true that natural waterfalls favor
able for industrial purposes are few. but
wc btlicve there is no limit to the num
ber of srtilli-lal ones that may be con
structed at almost any desirable place, and
how easily tills may be done we shall now
endeavor to demonstrate briefly by wj. js
and Illustrations.
The Triune Power plant, or artificial
waterfall, here designed is. we bellove an
efficient coml'nitlon of -Und. water (or
compressed air) and electric power.
A large artificial lake, a thousand or
more feet square, is constructed by build
ing a high embankment for enclosing a
larite Quantity of water. Into this elevated
lake powerful windmills continually puniD
the water to a high head, perhaps slx'y
or even 1U0 feet. From this elevated lake
the water can le rushed against a series of
water wheels located In the power house
at the foot of the lake. With such a high
head a comparatively small quantity of
water exerts an enormous force for run
ning dvnamos.
Tha steel towers of the windmills can be
firmly Imbedded In the heavy embankment
siirroiimllns' the elevated lake, so that
nothing less than a regular tornado could
wreck the poweriul windmills.
After the. water has tierformed Its work
at the wheels, it flows into an excavate 1
luke, which extends all around the elevated
one. Prom this excavated lake the busy
windmills are again and again pumping
the water into the elevated lake, so that
the same water may be used over and over
again. Originally the water can be pumped
out of the earth.
Work for the Idle Wind.
Compressed air instead of water may alsi
be used, and In many respect. It would
even be preferable.
A large cylindrical reservoir, perhaps 4,000
feet long and ten feet In diameter, for the
storage of compressed air, placed around
a square 1,0J feet on a side and several
feet below the surface of th. earth. To
this huge steel reservoir the steel towers
of the windmills can be firmly bolted.
The power house of the Triune Power
plant contains three principal mechanisms.
The water wheels, the dynamos and a largo
series of electric storage battery cells for
stoiing large quantities of electricity tor
future use.
When compressed air Is used, air engines
I
paradlso comes next, and here ha halt,
scarcely longer than did the Maker when
He decided to add mankind to the animal.
collected in the original Garonn of Eden.
Not out of the dust of the earth ara they
to be derived, but from the very select of
mankind. Hear him:
The selection of members is perhans the
most importunt as well as the most critical
feature of the whole organisation. No
financial contribution should be required of
the members, and no one shquld be ad
mitted solely on the strength of his mere
wenlth. The requisite amount of culture la
all that the members should be required to
furnish, and only those who feel spontane
ously Inclined to proceed In the direction
outlined by the association should enter aa
members. Any man or woman who would
know how to live In harmonious, co-operative
life would, therefore, be eligible as a
probationer.
Matters of Detail.
Other details are handled with the same
delightful disregard for materialistic condi
tions, and arrangements are made for the
common ownership of property for the divi
sion of such profits as may result from the
surplus of production, for the sustenance
of each member and his security In the en
joyment of peace and prosperity under ths
beneficent workings of the plan. Occupa
tions, recreations and amusements are nil
worked out, and the author In his rhapsody
concludes:
Many men and women would also pass
much of their time In the eleerant Inven
tor's shop and the gallery of fine arts,
richly equipped with all kinds of the finest
tools and machinery. Perhaps more useful
Inventions and works of art would originate
In one such prosperous colony than in all
the world besides, and the introduction of
ever so many labor-saving Inventions will
never throw any one out of employment
there. Everybody would there learn to
play, to work, to think and to rest, and
there would be abundant time for all of
them.
The subject Is pursued through several
additional pages of the pamphlet, but the
professor shows no signs of awakening,
even at the end, for he proposes to sell his
little work of twenty-nine pages st 50 cents
per copy, and to devote a portion of the
profits to bringing about a realization of ths
dream he has so plainly Set down.