a f: lawx. r Poleless Streets Mark Omaha's Progress as a Modern Municipality V " .. N . -A- VIEW DOWN IE T took Omtht thirteen yean to bury Ka electrlo wtrea In the buslneia district and remove the wooden poles. The task has just been completed and the people bave not yet done talking . about the Improved looks of the streets. The thoroughfares seem wider, certainly are better lighted and are much safer to traverse. Aa long as even the telegraph and signal wires remained In tha air there was danger of breakage and contact with tha trolley wires and consequent menace to Ufa and property, because a wire meant to carry a small load becomes tremend ously dangerous when asked to transmit high potential currents. In tha district bounded by Eighth and Eighteenth streets, Jsckson street and Cap itol avenue tha city Is now free from poles and aerial wlrea. Telephone conduits ex tend to the city limits on some streets and altogether something Ilka 11,000,000 la Invested In underground construction. The city now ranks well In this respect with other municipalities of the country. It means another stride toward ideal cMo environment. Naturally the existing Im provements are only beginnings and tha future should bring much more. Beads Begins AsMtatlaa. Mayor Oaorg Bemla appears to have keen the original underground wire man gonoac city officers of tUe.paaC Published , 1 1 ' ".;,..-' i'"-, DIOQINO ( A Vast Region of (Copyright, 190, by Frank O. Carpenter.) nl respondenoe of The Bee.) For I T I the lut wMk I have been mov ing about through different parts of the inland empire. I entered It from British Columbia by tha Great Northern railway, going first to Spokane. From there I traveled both east and west, and I am now here on the Columbia river In tha Big Bend country at Wanatchee, In tha Wens tehee valley. I despair of giving you an adequate con ception of this part of tha United States. Tha Inland empire was to a large extent a desert until a few yeara ago; and now It la only in tha northwest that the people have begun to appreciate its value. The formation la so curious that one should see tt for himself to properly know It. In brief. It lnoludea tha vast region lying be tween tha Bitter Root and Cascade moun t XM TUB WENATCUEJB , r FARNA11 STREET TODAY. .reporta how him trongljr Advocating the elimination of poles and overhead wlrea In 1893, after he had aerved a year of hia first term, and again In 1804. His refer ences had the virtue of plain speaking. During the year between the two reports the telephone company had on its own initiative put Its wires below the surface 'In the business district and the mayor, In 1894, 'was able to point to the accomplish ment as successful demonstration of his Ideas. He emphasised the necessity of burying the telegraph wires, and curiously enough these wires were the last to be so treated. Not disappearing from overhead until 1901 HHf an Wire Jfalaavnee. Tha esthetlcal, as well aa the utilitarian trend of Mayor Bemis' mind was shown In his annual message of 1893, when ha aald concerning the "wire nuisance": One of the live Issues which should re ceive the attention of the council Is tha electric wire nuisance. It Is a question In my mind whether we should not boldly take the bull by the horns and follow tha example set b New York by cutting down every one of the unsightly telegraph poles which disfigure our business streets and clear out the overhead wires, whioh are a constant source of danger every time there la a flra, to say nothing of tha ap pearanoe of the business streets hemmed In a forest of poles. The granting of authority for tha erection . of poles by the several oompanles has been taken from the nanus oi me enter ot tLr9 department and such permission i I. TRENCH FOR CONDUIT. tains, which la drained by tha Column! a river and lta tributaries. It comprises most of Idaho and a large port of eastern Wash ington and Oregon. It equals In extent all of the New England statea, together with New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Maryland, and It - haa mi'.lVons of acres which are yet to be settled. t ' This territory was onoa a vast sea almost one-fourth tha slza of the United Statea proper. It is more than 700 miles wide and 1.000 miles long. It was penned In by tha mountains, and lta waters rose until they finally broke out through tho canyona which now form parte of tha Bnake and Columbia river valleys. They cut their way down to a depth of Z.000 feet and drained the sea, leaving an Immense plain of allu vial soil 3,000 feet above tha level of tho ocean. This soil of the inland empire is made of the droppings of silt wanked down from VALLEY. WHIRS LAND 13 WORTH 5 ""v'- . ' ''. ' 4 miiHt now be secured from the mayor and council, but It Is my opinion that the time has como when the erection of those tower- Ing poles with their numerous cross bars lining both Bides of the principal streets should bo stopred. It has been prsptlosily d;-munstiatud that telei?rapti lines work as well, if not better, underground as on high poles, and the telegraph companies should be compelled to put their wires under ground the same aa the telephone company is noin-g. We had an example Just, a week ago of the danger of the overhead system when the firemen were delayed ten or fifteen minutes In erecting their extension lad ders at the Continental block fire and were afraid all the time of coming In contact with the deadly electric light wires. There can be no doubt that these overhead wires cause a loss of thousands of dollars an nually by delaying the fire department, and they should be done away with. Why Time Win Seeded. A hint aa to some of the causes why the t -. , . . 1 .1 KI . ah .. 1m contained I In the remarks ot ' the samo contained In the remarks of the same officer a year later. In betraying IrrUobiUty- because of the nonenforoeraent of a council resolution. He aald: In my message to the council one year ago I referred to the forest of poles which line our main thoroughfares and recom mended that the most- stringent measures be adopted to do away with this unsightly and dangerous nuisance. Since that time it has been practically demonstrated In this city that an underground system of wlrea Is no visionary theory. Anyone can satisfy himself on that score by using a telephone for a few moments. All the telephone wires In the central part of the city are under- rapidly disappearing. We should be Tory mi ujM: t t,' 1 1 J Desert Land Now the mountains, and In addition a vast amount of volcanic ash. Ashes are one of the best fertilisers known. Those made from Canada hardwood are now selling to farmers for 22 a ton. They are used largely for orchards and grain raising and they form a food for the land which will last for many years. The Inland empire has the same constituents In Its soil; but Its ashea coma from volcanoes. In crossing tha Big Bend country I saw lava everywhere. In some places the plains are covered with It, and In others It rises Into bluffs and broken fragments streaked with sulphur. Along the Columbia river there are streams of lava which look s though the molten mass had hardened as It rushed against tho wind. In other plaoes It had turned to a gravel, and again It has split up into angular-shaped rocks of even else, looking for all the world as though It had been run through a stono wn jirfin i ii - - - TO 11.000 AN ACRJC. THE OMAIIA SUNDAY BEE: JUNE : t ; ? " i;' ' i F - ' ) . V! LOWERING ONE OT THE GIANT POLES. grateful to the telephone company for thus voluntarily taking the Initiative In a matter which Is of such Importance to the city. jn accordance with the suggestions mnde a .year ago, steps were taken to compel tna reniovl from the utrefts of poles which were unnecessary or unuHPd, but the matter neVer progressed bevond the preliminary tage. The city electrician was ordered to investleate the number and location of these poles and he reported 712 polos as unnecessary and 290 poles unused. A reso lution was passed ordering the street com missioner to remove certain of these poles, and that ended It. That resolution Is probably reposing peacefully In the In side pocket of some official and the poles con tinue to multiply as heretofore. I say most emphatically that tho tele graph companies must be compelled to follow the example of the telephone com pany and place their wires underground. If the council will co-operate with mo In this matter we will soon be rid or the un sightly and dangerous wires which form a network above our main streets. As a ha.lnnln In thl. wapIt T ropn m and (hnt be'take "at oc7 to have 'the poi re arJ flfe a,arm w)res , tne centra, pa"rt tne clty placed m the ducts of the sub- ways of the telephone company provided for in tne franchise or saia company. It be- InR stipulated that these ducts are to be for the exclusive use of the city free of charge. This should be followed by a vbrorous and relentless war on telegraph f3les. Let us proceed In a regular and egal manner and If the telegjrmh com panies refuse to comply let us follow the example of New York and other cities and cut down the poles. Benefits ( Darted Wires. A prominent Insurance Inspector In a cnt PPr tb benefit of under.. SAWINO OFF THE POLE crusher to make paving material. It is bard to imagine a mora desolate, thirsty lsnd than this, when undeveloped. There are no trees, no green bushes, and afl Is bleak and bare. It la a desert, and no one would Imagine that it would raise enough to feed a Jack rabbit. k Still right In tho midst of such territory vast wheat fields are now to be seen. Thera are patchea of green everywhere. Farms have grown up In the midst of the bleakness and tha desert lself Is yielding forty and more bushels of wheat to tha acre. As I passed through on tha railroad I saw many ragged little Stations of wooden one-story buildings. The only lsrge struc tures In them were wheat sheds and ele vators, with here and there a flour mill. These sheds are filled with grain at tha time of harvest. They will not hold tha crop, and the overflow Is stscked up In bags outside. This inland empire Is now ' producing something like 60.OCO.000 bushels of wheat In one year, and still the Big Bend country has been hardly touched. The Mate of Washington alone produced SOjO.Oro bushels last year, and the pros pect is that it will do better this. Hew iMuiu ot tbe West. I hsve-been writing considerable about Canada and Its wheat belt. The Canucks have an empire yet to develop, and they think that Uncle Sam has reached the maximum of his farming possibilities. There was never a greater mistake. Wo are discovering new lands every yesr. and some 6f the best parts of our country are yet to be reclaimed. A great deal of the Big Bend region can be farmed without Irrigation, and there are reclamation projects on- hand which will redeem millions of acres. This very land through which I have been riding could have been bought LNsut a decade ago for S or 10 cents an acre. .The North ern Pacific Railroad company owned a vast quantity of It, consisting of altemsto sections for fifty miles along Its track. It had the lands examined by scientific ex perts, and on the basis of tlfelr representa tion a great deal of the conoesslon . went for a song. The same' lands are -now worth 330 and upward per acre. They aro producing wheat, and tt Is believed they . will conttr.ue 'a yield for a generation without fertilisation. The lands along tho Great Northern railway are equally good, and the whole region will rapidly settle. Take the bleek and bare hills Just oppo site this town of Wenatcbea. Tbsy aro . being cut up Into farms and will soon bo covered with wheat. A short time ago yott could not have givea them away, and now they axe worth a good price aa farming 3,. 1906. i. i- i f'r .. ... r , u . ground wires to a municipality as follows: Enhanced appearance of tha streets. Increase of private and public safety. ' Removal of II flit obstructions from ground and second floors. Improvement of service by corpora tions. Ellnilnntlon of Interference with work of fire department. - Underground wire systems are the log ical . outcome of the development of elec tricity and the growth of cities. As the original cost of conduit Installation Is from four to five times and more greater than the first cost of pole lines, It is not dif ficult to understand why service companies did not discard aerial construction at the beginning. But as the business of these companies . has Increased conditions chanrred so as to make conduits highly de sirable from an economic point of view. To be popular and profitable, a public rvk corporation finds It must depend , th, meaBure upon the quality. contmulty and aafety of IU services. In , . . . . ',., ,.., are conducive to none of the three. Poles break down, high winds and branches of trees throw the service out of Joint and sleet and rain storms are capable of put ting out of business the best pole lines that can be built. The public has little use for an electrlo light and power or tele phone company, that does not work In times of stress. During a recent winter In New England the damage to pole lines azceeded tbe loas ! VV3 Devoted lands. They aro cultivated without Irriga tion, and to the surprise of the sclentlflo wiseacres are producing wonderful crops. Grata from tho Desert. I find that grain Is now being grown all along the Columbia, and hero and there almost everywhere throughout tho Inland empire. Tho land Is handled on a mighty scale, the finest of agricultural machinery being used. There aro steam plows now turning tha soU which will cut nine fur rows at a time, and steam harvesters, ona of which will reap and thrash fifty acres of wheat in a day. Such mrohlnea cut a swath fourteen feet wide and deliver tho grain in bags. The expenses of cultivation are so reduced that wheat Is now grown at a cost of 28 cents a bushel, which means a net 100 per cent profit I hear all aorta of fairy stories as to big crops. yOKTI-JLCRI ORCllARD LV 'f .N.t 1 ., . .w ..... . .... 'T'WV.) '.";.- . " ... '( " - ----- - v S'-'-Ct ' " ' '--..... 'lis? ' ' - - 'v-vrv Wt vv -iv'A - ' .- - -V-,; it:-'? VIEW DOWN FARNAM STREET by shipwreck along tha contiguous coast. If a company Is going to lose large sums directly from moods of the weather and Indirectly at the hands of disgusted patrons, directors are bound to seek means of Improvement, and this Is exactly what has taken place. As long as life and prop erty hasards alone wer9 to be considered the pole lines would do. Telephone Company Experiences. Telephone companies have been among the biggest sufferers from storms. These concerns have found, too, that the wire capacity of a street haa a Urr'.t which they are often In sore need or extending. The limit of a pole line is about 250 wires. A single cable will hold four times as many, but a conduit system has an estlmited ca pacity of over 400 times tho stoutest pole line ever built. Morse the Pioneer TUtnter, Curiously enough the first wiring dona was underground, making the conduit con struction older than tho aerial. A portion of Morse's telegraph Invention was a method for burying wires. The first tele graph Una was built In 1E4S between Bal timore and Washington and" the first seven miles out from Baltimore were laid under ground. The wires were placed In lead pipe and laid In a plow . furrow. They proved Inoperative. Luckily, perhaps, a foreman was unable to bury wires In a ton viaduct and pressed for a substitute. .,, (.ffi I- H f, i r BUILDING A CONDUIT to Fruit Farmers ssy single acres have produced seventy bushels of wheat, and one quarter aectlon Is cited as turning out 10,000 bushels of oats In one year. Speaking of tho wheat along tho Colum bia. I had a chat the other night with T. A. Da vies, general manager of tho Colum bia and Okanogan Steamship company, whose boats run about lbO miles up tho Columbia and Okanogan rivers, through a country not reached by tho railroads. Ho aaya that bis vessels brought mors than 1.000,000 bushels of wheat down to tho Great Northern at Wenatcheo last year and that a great part of tho country la be ing put under 'wheat, Tha farmers haul tho grain to tho river landings and pile it there in bags In mounds. At one station last fall 38,000 sacks, containing 90.000 bushels of grain, wero traught in for shipment, and there TuD INLAND EMPIRE WHICH PBODUCXD 3 ,S.t-J'-l " LAST JANUARY. Invented wooden poles with cattle horn for Insulators. The schema worked and aerial construction followed. ' Omahf Well Vp o Country. Omaha does not appear to be hopelessly behind the rest bf tho country In tha matter of protection from wlros. An In surance man said not long ego: "It Is perhaps within the past ten yeara that the attention of the average munici pality has been forcibly directed to tha dangerous condition of the older types of overhead wiring. It has usually waited for some calamity to rrystallxe publla opinion and bring a united demand for relief, but of late years civic pride has led to a number of agitations to secure tha removal of unsightly pole lines from tha principal streets." The local telephone company started to bury Its wires In lttS and has kept pretty steadily at It ever since. Tha electrlo light and power company went under ground In the business district In 1903. The telegraph companies began last year to put their wires in conduits, and tha work of changing over to the underground system was completed this spring. During; the last few weeks tho Western Union and the Postal companies have been saw ing down the Immense poles that stood on the downtown streets. Last year the electric light conduit district was extended on the south from Jackson to Leaven worth street. MANnOLE. and Grain were stacks of bags all along the river. In many placea tho river runs 2.000 feet below tho level of tho wheat fields, ami tha bags aro carried down to tho boats on aerial trams, tbe wheat carrying tha empty cara back. Mr! Davlas haa now aeven boats on this! river carrying wheat, fruit and passengers. Ho tells mo that tho country la rapidly Bottling and that from tho shore of tho river eastward is a vast expanse of wheat fields. There aro also dairy farms and. farther up, mining settlements. Tha cat tho country begins at tho mouth of tho Okanogan, and beyond it la a rich mining region. Ail along tha way aro little valleys de voted to fruit, somewhat similar to tha Wenatcheo valley, where this letter It written. These aro being opened up to (Continued on Pago Seven.) 10,010 I s 'I