THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: . WEDNESDAY, .DECEMBER 23, 1903. f i i ' I mi run. Wl'iilf-V'lWf11?!11" ""-"i" MW!H ',!. i?" I iBiiilif mil I IE B , Siiipii j i .jl- n-n-i...i., " 1 - mi 'r"nt i - M I uTTTTH A 17 WEAL 1UI ' 1 ' I ' Something from nothing a garden from a desert. Such is the history of Irrigated Sections. Take land that sells for 50 cents an acre, put water on it, and it sells for what! There are quarters of land in irrigated sections of Colorado that cannot be purchased for ; and which earn a remunerative interest on that valuation. And yet you can purchase Irrigated Lands where the soil is perfect beyond ' belief, where the water supply is plentiful and inexhaustible, where climatic condi tions are healthful and for from $15.00 an acre up. THE REASONS : T.he North Platte Valley, extending from Bridgeport, Neb., to Guernsey, Wyo., and the Big Horn Basin, Wyoming, have been but recently made available for settlement by the extension of the Burlington Railroad into those sections. ; The Irrigating Companies must have settlers along their ditches and they offer sub stantiaj inducements in the shape of low-priced water rights and lands. ow Long Will This Condition Continue? None may say surely, but it won't be for long and the sooner you invest the cheaper will"' you' be able to do so, for the advance is just as sure as has been the advance in the price of similar lands inother sections. 5. ' ( Write me for further information. -Francis, .Gee'I Pass. Agent, Omaha A : ' . ; t u t If I ; .',. a; i.. ... . ." 4 ii !! ; i -i i 1 i I! i