HIE OMAHA BUND AY 15KE: 0(TO?En 27, 1007. Siphon for the New Catskill Mountain Aqueduct a Wonderful Feat V ...-. v -i .J . ( v I - f mt-i J j -" . , 4 V ' ...... 1 ' ,. . . . V ' v' , . - - " )' . v. .'.; "v " 9. U i that i I f would I V bulldlt liltVK or THK ZnOSSfAG, OfiS TMK fffCU T ft STORM. jeAf7 AND THK CROSS OAS JS'DK S"MOWS WEZ?E A SHAFT js aetNG siswrr. oh the; ex-rKir cs:rT is BfezAHHECK SOtsVT U? wjr THrtocrGht vvy rcrs TH S.G U EVl CT1 f' fAS& Q .A T'lrSfAfEZ.. TW TOPK. Oct. 20.-The borings N Into the bod of the Hudson river off Btorm King mountain, which have been In progress during the last year under th direction of engineers of lha am New York Board of Water Supply, have flow reached a depth sufficient to justify certain definite conclusions as to the char acter and location of the great siphon which mill carry the new Catnklll aqueduct tinder the river. It has frequently been contended that the planning and building the new aqueduct will be. In addition to Its probably larger cost. far great achievement than the construction of the Panama canal. In tha opinion of an eminent enirlneer this Is especially true as to the system of tunnels provided for. Of all the tunnels the siphons are the most Interesting, and they will be of a magnitude never before approached In the Mstory of civil engineering. What Is probably at present the largest siphon of Its kind In existence, that which carries the new Croton aqueduct under tha Ifarlem river, at a point between High and Washington bridges, has a drop of something' over 400 feet from tha aqueduct to tha horizontal tunnel beneath the bed of the Harlem. On the Catskill aqueduct thera wlll be not one but many siphons which will carry the water far deeper be neath valleys than this, while the greatest siphon of all, thit at Storm King, may ba three tlmea as deep. It will carry the waters from tha Asho- . kan dam possibly 1.000 feet below the sur- face of the Hudson, with a vertical drop kan dam possibly 1.000 feet below tha sur from the aqueduct grade to from 1.000 to i.900 feet. Tha exact depth will depend on the result of the operations now being car ried on to determine the character and lo cation of the bed rock beneath the river. The work of planning this Btorm King atphon and Its approaches and of construct ing It will constitute the greatest single feature of the aqueduct. Nothing like It has ever before been attempted. Two Tear hava already been spent In prelimi nary work. Barring accidents, the siphon Will ba completed December SI, 191L The object of the tests now being carried c by boring apparatus and diamond drills Mtthe river off Storm King Is to determine the depth below the river surface of the bedrock which joins Btorm King and Breakneck. It was until recently supposed by geologists that the depth below river level of this bedrock was not very great at this point, the river proper being only about ninety feet. Tha operations of the last year have shown that bedrock Is between 609 and 709 feet under the surface at places, with a probability of still greater depths toward the middle of the river. The siphon must be cut through the solid rock, with at least ISO feet of bedrock above the roof of tunneL The Catskill aqueduct as a whole ts very far from being the generally level water way that one might suppose. There Is, It Is true, a general gTSde of about 400 feet elevation established for the aqueduct, but the crossing of deep valleys compels a con stant deviation from this grade. The section embracing the Storm King crossing and Its approaches, about seven miles long. Is shown in part in the drawing. The Moodna siphon, also there pictured, would attract more attention were not Its 'Importance overshadowed by the neighbor ing crossing at Storm King. Near Vails Gate the aqueduct approaching tha Hudson along the normal 00-foot grade comes to the Moodna creek watershed. In order to pass It the aqueduct will drop per pendicularly Into the earth for 000 feet and run horiaontally In a tunnel for three or four miles, at a grade 2C0 feet below sea level, straight toward Storm King. It will be bored through Hudson river slate and then through granite and gneles. Passing under the Moodna and the vil lage of Comwall-on-IIudson, whose Inhabi tants will be made aware of Its building only by the occasional tremor of a blast far beneath their feet, the tunnel will ter minate directly under the summit of a low shoulder of Btorm King. There It will rise tot feet, within the heart of the hill, back to normal grade, and follow the side of the mountain a mile of so toward the river, partly by tunnel and partly by cut and oorer construction. It might be asked why bore a second perpendicular shaft since the deep Moodna tunnel, at inn poini oniy mile rrom ine river, must at the river bank dive still deeper? In other words, why climb 600 feet nly to drop back the same distance after a mile's progress T The answer which the endneers give sounds surprising enough. They tell us that It Is cheeper. It Is explained that every foot that the aqueduct ts carried below the established grade means so much more resistance, caused by the effort of the water to retain Its original level. The force exerted In thie way by a great body of water carried at 600 feet below grade Is so great, they say, that the added cost of providing for force by strengthening the aqueduct be much greater than the oust of building a fiOO-foot shaft to allow the water's escape back to grade and another shaft to conduct It later down fcito the Storm King tunnel. It will be seen by the drawing that the great drop Into the tunnel beneath the Hud son Is provided for not by a single shaft, but by two shafts connected by a horizon tal section TCO feet In length. A simitar ar rangement ts provided for on the opposite Ide of the river, where the water will oome up Into the Breakneck mountain. The reasons for this method of construc tion are the same as thoite which apply In the case previously discussed. From a con struction point of view the drop, so far as practicability la concerned, m'ght Just as e'ly be arranged for by rreans of a single ehatt as by two shsfts. The 700-foot hori soniai section would then oecouie a con tinuous fart of the river tunnel Itself. The ame arraraement could be effected on the opposite end Of tbe tunneL TIAm, however, weuld add LfcO feet et exceedingly doep tunnel where the pressure of the confined water would be something enormous. It must be noted that the Inside diameter of the completed tunnel will bo nearly fifteen feet, or large enough to ac commodate a rnllroad ti-atn. It should be further understood that the Immense floods of water pouring through It will lift themselves out of the tunnel bacic to grade, a distance almost as gTeat as tha height of Btorm King Itself, and this with out any mechanical aid. Theso facts may make plain to the lay mind why It Is de sired to keep these deep tunnels as short as possible. Tho eastern arm of the siphon will rise within the moss of Breakneck, well back from the front to avoid the danger of being exposed or otherwise injured by rock slips from Its precipice, and will approach tha surface of the mountain near tha north west ridge of Its slope. Resuming its horrltontal course at tha fO-foot grade the aqueduct will then tunnel southeastwardly through tha mountains, and coming out on the south side Just east of the old quarry follow the contour df Breakneck valley around to the north slope of. Mount Taurus or Bull H11L It will plunge straight through that elevation In a tunnel over a mile long, soma 6,700 feet In all. Here will be found the opposite of the conditions presented In the Hudson river crossing. Instead of being about a thou- sand feet below sea level It will be burled In the Bull Hill tunnel by a solid mass of " - Tht tha Tatest amount of rock which granue more man a tnousana reel inicit. will overlay the aqueduct along tta course. Bouth of Bull Hill several other moun tains must ba pierced before the aqueduct emerges from the Highlands at Pecksklll, one tunnel being some two miles long. Two shafts are already under construe--tlon for the engineers at either land end of the Storm King siphon. They may be described at the present time as experi mental laboratories. One of the moat Interesting tests to be carried on In them will be the search with drills for evidences of water bearing faults or flaauree In the bedrock underlying tha river. None of the tunnels Is to be ex- cavated under the air chambwr method of Pioneer Builder of Churches (Continued from Page One.) and hundreds of shovelera were pressed Into service. After three straight weeks of plowing and shoveling the rescuers came within reach of the snowbound train. The occupants were given a square meal for the first time in ten daya and hauled Into Laramie. This Is accounted the record ex perience of a snowbound train In the his tory of American railroads. $ Called from the Front. The completion of the Overland road re-" volutlonlzed missionary conditions. Popu lation Increased rapidly along tha railroad, towns began developing on permanent lines, and with this growth came ministers to re lieve those who labored at the outposts. Having completed a church at Cheyenne and the foundation of one at Laramie, Father Kelly was called to Omaha and assigned to less onerous tasks. He was then GO years of age, the last ten of which called Into action all the seal, devotion, courage and physical endurance which he possessed. It comprised the formative period of the country west of the Missouri river, the time of toil and struggle, of obstacles overcome and lines of progress definitely established. In the succeeding years Father Kelly's activities were confined to Omaha, his home city. With the exception of a few years at Lincoln he has been attached to old St. Phllomena's cathedral, acting as pastor during vacancies, and as anslstant until advancing years relieved him of re sponsibility. He did not like the responsi bility of parish management, preferring the duties of assistant to the honors of the other. Simplicity marked every phase of his life, whether on the altar or In the world outside the church. He avoided elab orate ceremonies when possible. An In stance Illustrating the dominant trait of modesty occurred when he was appointed aft.rw,r(J , . form,dab docu. ment enumerating his powers, duties and Tner, llm. doubt that tne ,under,nf of tren(th and ,nduranc wer requli;d strong abiding faith that made him so gen responsibilities. His associates at the the ties which bound him to the old home ,i...,.i .i,. . .. .i. i- i..inn to. k.. i cathedral Jollied him about the honors of his new position and the necessity of living up to dignity imposed. That was too much. A few days after he conferred his power to grant dispensations upon a fellow priest, and later the "formidable document" was foi'fid In a waste basket, to which Father Kelly had consigned It. Treatment of Pledge Takers. The native trait of love of humor did not shine In Father Kelly. If he Inherited tha gift of wit. It waa held In check or crushed by the earnestness of his devotion. n one occaslon- l lea8t' th 'tent flr burst into a flame, producing amusing suits. The priest waa a great favorite an ons; drinking men desiring to "take the plejge. Ills earnest counsel and heart touching "God bless you" turned countless numbers of men from danger to paths of sobriety and usefulness. Soma would re peat tha pledge-taking and dishonor tt aa quickly aa a loaded schooner hove In sight. For this grade of booxsrs Father Kelly de cided heroic treatment was necessary. He compounded a "medicine" constating of thickened Missouri water flavored with ginger, tobacco sauce and like things and obl'tred each chronic pledge-breaker to drink a glass of the dope aa proof of good faith. It Is related that few of the chosen victims balked at the test, most of them gulped it with evident relish. One day a taller far advanced toward dipsomania took the treatment cheerily and waa taken to the hospital a few hours after. Father Kelly waa thoroughly scared when the Bewa waa breub.l bXm. lie hurried to tha dV T ?17J vr , construction such as Is employed In the shield driven tunnels about New York. They will be dug much after the manner of railroad tunnels. Their exeavntlnn will ol rauroaa tunneis. rneir excavation win be largely a matter of plain drilling and blasting. It is Important, therefore, that there shall be no leakage of water In the case of the Hudson river siphon from the river bed above. More important still, there must be no leakage from the high pressure aqueduct upward Into the rlvor bottom. This will be partly guarded against by al lowing for 130 feet of rock between the tunnel and the ancient river bed, The second precaution, the search for faults In the rock, has already been thor oughly gone Into theoretically. As soon as the shore shafts now building have reached a sufficient depth the drill will be set to work probing for trouble. Should a fissure ItEV. WILLIAM KELLY. hospital and sought the dootors, telling what he had done and pleading for help. They assured him his dope did not cause the man's Illness, but advised him to quit dispensing free medicine. To this he readily assented, the mixed medicine was banished and practical Joking soionv r abjured. Father Kelly was more attached to SL Phllomena's cathedral than any priest called to that aanctuary. To him the locality was holy ground. One block east, Eighth and Howard streets, where stood the pioneer church of St. Mary, he took the vow. of priesthood and entered upon - , erectln "thf dral building his energy and devotion holds first rank. For fully a quarter of a century his home was within the shadow of Its pire. ne was as niucn a part of the parish as the , cathedral Itself, so firmly was his life Interwoven mith lLa Axlatenc. banished his unfailing cheerfulness and hastened his death. When on Wednesday a week at. he work of stripping the cathedral residence begun, the Venerable I ; .'" ' ' ' ' " r jf - .. J -A-.! . - ,- . n ..... . . ."X - LOSl& TOi; TIZIV dTS'Kri.X, sAOCSZ: over1 wHgne, ba dlscov'f- the drill would be withdrawn and a second drilling made lower down In the shaft, then a third from a point still lower down and so on until It was con- cluslvely proved that tha fissure had run out. In order to determine whether there ex- Ists a fault so deep that It would be lm- possible to locate the tunnr' out of reach, the eia!reers asked the co-operation of the geologists. The conclusion that the scien- tlsts arrived at was that a fault of large proportions probably does not exist in the river gorge bedrock. Four big plledrlver scows strung across the narrows of the Highlands are the of eight lnchea diameter. Thus the boring points from which the engineers have been pipes continued to extend like sections of a groping for the rast year for Information telescope, down through silt, clay, sand, about the ancient gorge of the Hudson bo- gravel, cobblestone and boulders to bed neath which the aqueduct must pass. Thiy rock by the addition successively of six, began by lowering flfteen-lnch pipes In to four and finally two and a half-Inch pipes. dean was beside himself. He could not believe that the time for removal had come. From his own room he would walk into the hall, then Into the rooms of his associates and back again, sighing at the wreckage he saw, and striving to suppress the tears the scene brought forth. That iiifc-ht was tha first in years he had spent away from the cathedral. Early next morning he was at the old home. But it was deserted. Every room was stripped. Everything proclaimed definitely and sl- lently that the end had come. Overwhelmed by a realisation of tho ruin he turned away, broken In spirit and sobbing his grief. To a parishioner who met him with a cheerful salutation his only answer was, "Good-bye, my child, good-bye." As events proved it was his last "Good-bye." In the local biographies of Father Kelly, his record as a collector has been given prominence. That he waa a successful collector the record shows. Indeed he pos sessed a delicacy of touch velvety In its smoothness, a touch so gentle that a second experience would not be Unwelcome. It was the cause for which he labored, his manifest sincerity, his unselfishness and devotion which made him successful. Ha was, flrs of all, a church builder among pioneers and a pioneer among church builders west of the Missouri liver. To be a succeesful church builder nowadays, one must be successful in reaching the means "herewith to build. It was a far greater " """ vk iniriy ana iorty 'ar " of the humble build'ngs reared by Father Kelly have been sue- Ja by more elaborate and costly struc- Mre. out for each he laid a foundation "ndurlng as the republic. "T7Ti . . "J"" ' J-' th, cf th. 0maha with which he was Intimately associated for aimo,t half a century" says Rev P A. McGovern. pastor of the abandoned cathe- draI who hmA hMn M a faithful aon to the KrA father for nlna r mi.i "ti. a pioneer, and suffered aU the hardships t tt. . "" ' .' . ii.v lie bvuuiir m wiuwn our fathers had cometo break the virgin soil, to rear primltlva dwellings which would protect them from the rigors of cold and storm, to establish villages and towns and sSHSSOCBZ VAXXST KILXTA&T BAJO-A sTOCCEafJFUL lit .:v;w: the water until their lower ends rested In the river mud. Water was then forced Into a smaller twelve-Inch pipe, contained within the larger pipe. This water, rising In Its escape in the space between the two pipes, brought up with it the mud which It dislodged. The two pipes during this operation gradually sank deeper Into the river bottom. After they had reached a depth of, say, too feet and the Increasing friction made further work difficult, a ten-Inch pipe waa Inserted and the silt and sand forced up between that and the twelve-Inch pipe, Later on a still smaller pipe was Inserted open up channels of communication between them so too were religious Influences neces- aary to soften and refine the character of those hardy men, who had spurned the comforts of the more populous east and turned towards the setting sun to find new homes for themselves in the wilderness. "It was not alone a strong constitution and robust health, but a spirit of patience and Christ-like gentleness that would be a necessary qualification for the 'man of God' who could hope tl evangelize such settle- menta For " w" Grange body of men that crossed tha Missouri In the early GO'S to build up this great commonwealth of Nebraska., Besides the hardy sons of Ohio and western New York, there were adven turous Irishmen and sturdy Germans from the banks of the Rhine. All of these needed the refining Influences of religion, and, above all, the example of truly a post olio men who could show forth In their own lives the lessons of virtue which they preached. To this class belongs the vener able priest whose death has cast a gloom over this city and diocese. He . waa one of those men whom Almighty God raises up as a benediction o their generation, and whose kindly deeds live long In the mem try of posterity. "Many were the difficulties he met with, many the trials he suffered In the long years of his missionary career, but his simple, unaffected faith sustained him In every crisis. In saying that he founded a large number of churches, we form no Mt)m,te of his llfe-werk, for we must re- mfmb(lf. that these churches were built in ,Darceir settled communities, with slender nwl at hl, dgpogal. If we speak of his ,,..,- lournevs. we must remember! that they were made for the most part on . horseback or by stage, without any of the j modern conveniences of travel. If we apeak of his lodgings, we csnot forget that they frequently the sodhousas of the plains, "hose clay floors furnished his only couch, 'However, what we admire more than te1va tabors was the ehtla-llke con- Adence In Ood which prompted them. His constant advice waa: Trust In God and k. wn rv.KiMa it thia '' - .. ...... tlmately for many years, and he has al- ways shown that same gentleness of char- acter that endeared him to all with whom he came In contact. OBOAlOZATIOs -- - s 'i . , T . " 1 i . ' w .we rtTien the bedrock was reached a diamond drill was Inserted In the smallest pipe and eores of rock brought up for examination. One of these drills was lowered through pipe sections to bedrock over 600 feet below the surface. Borne remarkably fine beds of pure blue slay of great value were they situated on the river bank were discovered In this work. Borne large boulders have been en countered which It was necessary to blast out of the way. At the depth at which they occurred the water Is very cold, often as low as 7 de grees, which was sufficient to chill dyna mite to a temperature at which It would not explode. The difficulty was overcome by forcing the dynamite down through a pipe In company with a warmer volume of water, a wire being attached to the de- scendlng explosive, which was Immediately set off by electricity when it reached the point desired. The pipe wss raised out of harm's way Just before the operation. A dlscoursglng accident happened to one of the big drills last summer which had reached very deep bedrock after nearly a year's work and taken out about nine feet 0f core. It had been Intended to go a llt- tie further down, but one night a river boat broke Its steering gear, and, drifting down upon the scaffold supporting the drill near the scow from which it is worked, bent KahWi C739-741 FROM OMAHA Ate (or oar 111 nitrated TourUt roldr. .... . (t-Jt X 1 mi, w y 1 i- cr. 'r ' -rTJ'ITLa m s25 the drill badly and broke tha diamond drill ahnrp off within tha deep down granite. The Interest attached to the Hudson river crossing project from a geological standpoint is partly due to the facts dis closed as to the nature of the gorge thrpugu which the ancient Hudson flowed and partly to the fact that the dimensions of this gorge are fur greater than many geologists believed them to be. Only two years ago tha author of a bul letin issued from the state geologist's of fice. In discussing the prehistoric valli-y of the Hudson, assorted his belief that the old rock bottom of the river might be found at a depth not very great. Oft New York City, where a doicn or more tunnels will soon pentrate the mud of the river bottom, he though It might ba only a few hundred feet deep, while among the highlands it would ba still nearer the surface. The engineers of the Water Supply board have already followed It down to a depth, off Btorm King mountain, between 600 and 700 feet below river level, with a probability or finding it at a still lower depth. But even this depth is shallow, compared with that at New York City. According to the figures given out soma time ago by the geologist of the Water Supply board, the rock off Manhattan Is land has been scoured out to the enormous depth of S.00O feet. New York, In fact, he states, was once a mountain 3,000 feet high, bounded by the gorges up the North and East rivers. According to this theorjr the ' continent waa once very much highe:- above sea level than now. The present drowned delta of the Hudson may be traced far out through the harbor below the city. The coast is still sinking at the rate of a foot or more a century. As the land gradually sank the old river gorge filled with silt, especially off New York. In the Highlands It Is largely with boulders and other drift material, left there during the glacial period. The accompanying drawing Is one of tha first published pictures of this old Hudson, rock valley, and was made possible only through the researches of the last twelva months. ID BRAND vCblletfeClothes OME tailors would be happy if they could make clothes half so good. But, 1 they would charge twice as much. More ginger and Btyle and quality than you should expect for the Senior price. your dealer hasn't thett Clothe$ in$tock, we'll gladly direct you to one who ha. Send J0 cente in etnmpe for et of Clever ColUgt Poet ere ready to frame. One-way, aecond-ciasa "Colonist" tickets to California and Paclflo Northwest on aal dally via tbe Rock Island ' Tonr choice of four dally trains and the two beat routes to the Coast. DAILY TO OCT. 31 Tickets food In personally-conducted Tourist sleeping cars on payment of berth, rate. r. w. kimnroiD, a 9t An BVock Xslaad Uaea, OKUi, MUM, Mfll X It". A