Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 19, 1909, EDITORIAL, Page 3, Image 11

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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 19, 1900.
V
4
GUNNISON TUNNEL IS READY
Pretident Taft to Open th Big: Irri.
gation Project
a sn miles or mammoth tube
Haa Takea Foir an m Half Yrirt (
Work t4 SR, OOO.OOO, bat la E.
ected to Reatore 1B0,
OOO Acres.
I " '
A dosen or mora years ago the traveler
through Colorado who took the narrow
gauge train at Ballda for tha wonderful
ellmb over Marshall Pass and through the
Black canyon waa aura to have hla atten
tion called to a great red brick hotel,
which aeemed strangely out of place In a
half-asleep town of a thousand or so.
Tha hotel was typical of a day that Is
tone In Colorado. Every brick In It was
hauled over the, mountain by wagon at a
time when there seemed no end to the
mineral wealth of the state and when for
tunes were made and spent In a year or
a month.
Now Colorado has discovered that there
are other ways of getting rich than by
reining and that agriculture Is one of
them. Tha western part of the state has
for many years had aectlons famous for
their fruit In fact tha Rocky Ford can
taloupe Is a native of the 'state. But the
great problem has been water.
That problem the government la solving,
and one of the many duties that will fall
on President Taft on hla western trip will
be t open the great Qunnlson tunnel, the
first project undertaken by the United
States reclamation service.
This six miles of cement lined tube has
cost Uncle, Fam more than $r,O0O,ono. but It
doesn't follow that he will not get all orj
most of It back directly and a great many
mora millions Indirectly. The tunnel Is to
'water 150,000 acres, and perpetual water
rights are to be sold only to actual settlers
who have ten years In which to pay. with
out Interest. Multiply 160,000 by 3T and the
problem of financing the tunnel Is solved.
1 This region where It la predicted M.000
persons will soon make their homes Is the
Unoompahgre valley, through which runs
tha disappointing river from which It gets
Ita name. The river at one time furnished
enough water for Irrigation purposes, but
gradually it died out. SetUsrs who had
built up prosperous farms moved away and
young orchards were abandoned. Finally
there were 40,000 acres under cultivation
and perhapa four tlmea that much land ly
ing Idle Just as good land, but useless
without water. '
Ten miles awery through picturesque
acenery, delightful to the visitor, but useless
to the farmer, ran the Gunnison river,
mountain fed and rock lined with a never
falling supply of water. There was the
problem to Join tha wasted water of the
Ounnlson to the wasted land of the Un
compahgra valley.
The state tried it first and spent some
$X,000 drawing up plana to show the prac
ticability of the 0,000 foot cut through
granite and sandstone. It waa twenty
years ago that Colodado began lta work,
and now the federal government has fln-
k lshed It after four and a half years of
actual dlgglryg.
The two gangs working In the bore met
on July 6 of this year at a point In the
tunnel 10,813 feet from the Gunnison river
end. With that the hardest work is over
and now all Is In readlneaa for the presi
dent to start the flow of water.
The tunnel Is the most remarkable feat
ure of thla great enterprise. It runs west
from the Gunnison river for S0.600 feet.
It la lined throughout with cement and
meaaurea Inside 11x13 feet. From Its west
ern end runs tha main canal, which Is
thirty feet wide at the bottom and eighty
three at the top. With an average depth
of ten feet of water this means about 1.S00
cublo feet a second.
Irrigation la the, chief, but not the only
use of the tunnel and canals. After leav
ing the bore there is a drop of S72 feet,
and thla will be used for a power plant
which It Is confidently predicted will light
with electricity all the farmhouses which
are expected soon to spring up.
One thing the government is determined
en, and that la that only Teal settlers
ahall come Into this newly watered ter
ritory. As a matter of fact there is now
m land onen for free settlement, but the
i control of the water rights gives the fed-
8 eral authorities the whip hand In regulat-
j ing the district.
Jay ' The statement of conditions obtaining In
me vauey imn irinmi mm ,.-,. v.-.
of tha purchase of unwatered lands.
The limit of lartd privately owned, for
which water will be furnished to one head
of a falmly, Is ISO acres. Land privately
owned must be listed with th Water
(Users assoclstlon before government water
I will be furnished for lt
The one restriction which prevails on all
lands to which government water Is fur
nished Is that there must be an act-.ial
bonaflde settler on the lend. These lands
cannot be held Indefinitely for speculation
by nonresidents, nor can they be held by
nonresidents and rented to others.
Purchasers of land watered by the gov
ernment will be allowed at least one year
to establish themselves as residents or to
dispose of their holdings by private sale.
Lands not so settled upon or disposed of
are to be sold at auction, after due ad
vertisement under the direction of the
Water Users association.
The holder of an irrigation homestead
entry proves up on his land after five
years In the regular way and completes
paying for his water In ten years. In case
of sale or relinquishment, another actual
settler must take the place of the original
entry man on the land and must spend a
complete term of five years on the home
stead, though, of course, only ten pay
ments In all have to he made on the water
rights, no matter how many times It
changes occupants.
Tne reclamation service, besides build
ing the tunnel and constructing the canals
to bring the water from the tunnel's moulh
over to the Uncompahgre river, has ac
quired all tha Important canals and irri
gating systems from the Uncompahgre.
These will be reconstructed this fall and
coming winter into one comprehensive and
complete Irrigation system.
Fruit la the thing these farmers who
don't hava to depend on rain expect to
grow rich on. Marvelous stories are told
of tha Colorado apples and peaches. But
it Is not enough to have your water ready
on tap; orchard heatera are used In the
spring to prevent the frost from killing
the blossoms. Moreover, the irrigated
orchard of Colorado looks very little like
the old-fashioned orchard of our New
England forefathers, where pigs and cat
tle rooted In the grass and email attention
was paid to the Individual trees.
"Clean cultivation" is what they call the
western system. After the first year or
two tha ground between and under the
trees is kept perfectly bare. Not a blade
of grass, , not a weed Is allowed. With
that and spraying the eager farmer to be
Is assured that he can send his fruit to
market with the guarantee of not a worm
to a carload of apples.
Sugar beets, onions, alfalfa, everything
In fact, except corn, these are aome of the
crops that can be raised In this once de
serted district, but It Is the fruit farms
that turn out the stories of salea of fl.SOi)
worth of peaches or 11,000 worth of pears
to tha acre.
oooocooooooocoooocoooooccoooocoocooooooooooouo
3 1 !
m ALE F TFURMOTUOS
n. j 'sa'rixvV a j. raw 'aw
Of the 150.000 acres Included in the Un
compahgre Valley reclamation project
nearly 100,000 acres Is land which has long
belonged to private parties. The other
M.000 acrea lies for the most part above
tha lines of the canala built from the Un
compahgre river many years ago and Is
more or less rough, remote and Inaccessl
i ble.
The greater part of the government land
was filed upon as homesteads as soon as
It waa certain that the canal would bo
built. The balance has been withdrawn
from aottlement. None of this government
land la now open for settlement. None of
It will be offered fur settlement until hltfh
line laterals are built to water It.
The greatest opportunities In the Uncom
pahgre valley are and Kill be in the way
SIXES THAT BECOME NINES
Novel DvtIoo of a a Inventor's that
Becomes Nearly Perpetual
Motion.
Is the figure "6" lighter than the figure
"9?" Or, to put it In another way. Is the
figure "" heavier than the figure "6?"
Still again, will figures, so placed on the
spokes of a wheel that such figures will
be "9s" going down and "6s" going up,
keep the aforesaid wheel revolving con
tinually without any motive power?
Theae tthoughta were extracted from tha
mind of a man who watched what purports
to be a perpetual motion device In full oper
ation. The machine is the Invention of W.
L. Saunders, 1004 Fort Dearborn building,
and he has had a copyright and patent on
everything connected . with the device In
order to protect his invention from possible
rivals. He does not state to what use his
Invention will be put.
The machine is about eighteen lnchaa
high and twelve Inches at tha base. It
Consists of thirteen glass spokes running
from a steel and cork axle, and at the end
of the spokes Is. a blown glass affair with
the figure "9" on It from one point of view,
from another point of view It haa the figure
6" painted on It.
The machine, so called. Is guaranteed to
run aa long as the materials In it with
stand the ordinary wear and tear. It la
Inclosed In a small glass case, put there
to show that no wires make the device go
or that no other unseen articles are used
to make the perpetual motion device keep
Its momentum. The glass wheel and the
glass blown bulbs with the figure "9" or
yt" painted on them turn to the left con
tinuously. Back of the wheel Is a card which Is
supposed to Inform the Inquisitive person
who Is wondering why the wheel turns
without any visible means. It reads aa fol
lows: "The '6' going up on the right be
comes a "9' going down on the left. The '
being so much more than the overbal
ances the latter, causing the wheel to turn
continuously."
Some of the people believe the card,
othera don't, but at least the card Is as
near as anyone has come to a true solu
tion of the problem of the little wheel's
motion. Chicago Inter-Ocean.
IT'S SIMPLY WONDERFUL
The business we have been doing the past three weeks ha3 broken, all
previous records more new accounts opened than in any three weeks in our
business history. This SEPTEMBER SALE has given to people the oppor
tunity to SAVE from 25 to 50 PER CENT on their furniture, carpet and
stove purchases, and the manner in which people have been buying indicates
VERY CLEARLY that they appreciate GENUINE BARGAINS when of
fered by THE PEOPLES STORE. There are hundreds of articles that are
GREATLY REDUCED in price awaiting you at this store. Remember, your
money has a double buying capacity during this great September sale.
BUY YOUR HOME OUTFIT
(taring thla sale. You will SAVK from "5 50 KK C'KXT, averaging
fully 33 'a I'KH CHXT, If you make your rturtiiases wow.
CASH OK EASY 1MKNTS.
THREE ROOMS FURNISHED $7f ZZf
COMPLETE FOR IbBHJ
TERMS t7 CASK. tS M01TTXX.T.
Our home outfits are the only outfits In the city that are complete
home outfits in every sense of the word. They Include, besides the neces
sary furniture, carpets and stoves, such articles as window shades, lace
curtains, crockery, tinware, etc. goods not found with outfits elsewhere.
O $26.50
FOR THIS GUARANTEED
STEEL RANGE
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TURKS 92.50 Di, , " , ktkk L. A NOE offer ever
Unquestionably, this Is the greatest bTbhl.
made to tW public of Omaha . These fotreTt are made of
itive guarantee of glv ng B RUaie that Insures lasting
".T Vu8 SoflffUh duplex grates, and are
September Sale of Carpets and Rugs
Ingrain Carpets, extra heavy quality, Brussels effects, worth 73c, silt
price, per yard .4O0
Zxtra Brussels Carpets, our usual $1.00 -quality, noted for its strong
wearing, sale prloe, per yard 70o
Brussels Bugs, size 11x9, mnde of extra heavy grade of Brussels Car
peting, very handsome pattc.-ns. worth $17.60. sale price 110.73
Wilton Velvet Bugs. These handsome rugs are closely woven of a
guaranteed quality of Wilton Velvet Carpeting, worth $27.60, sale
price avr.Bo
rSPall '
$13.50
handsomely nickel trimmed,
FOR THIS MASSIVE
SIDEBOARD
TEX MS 91.00 CASK. BAX.ABCB "BAST."
Exactly like llliixtrHtlon ami positively the
most remurkrthle SlhKHOARD value that we have
offered for some tliiuv They are finished In a
beautiful quartered oak affeot and are rubbed and
polished to a piano brilliancy. Thev have a large
French bevel plate mirror of high brilliancy. One
small drawer la lined for silverware.
$10.75
BUYS A BEAUTIFUL
BRUSSELS RUG
rvrn-M ai.rio CASK. BALANCE "BAST."
These rugs are made of a special grade of
Brussels cnrpetlng that Is noted for Its strong wear
ing ouslitv. The colors are woven Into the fabric
and will last as long aa the rug-itsclf. These rugs
are an actual $17.50 value.
W Pay
Freight
to All
Stations
Within
800
Miles
of
Omaha.
C0 "7SS BUYS THIS BEAUTIFUL
f0a9 CHASE LEATHER COUCH v
The frames are of solid oak, highly polished, and the
upholstering is in genuine chase leather that Is guar
anteed to wear bttter than genuine leather. These
couches ure a most remarkable value at tho above low
price.
We
Positively
Every
thing We Sell
Ho
Matter
What tha
Price.
We are now showing a complete Una of base burners,
heating stoves and rangea. Wa are sola agents for Oold
Coin bass burners. All sold for caah or oa very easy pay-ments.
Ws guarantee to save
yon much money If yon
attend thla SEPTEMBER
ALB of furniture.
Your Credit
Is Always
Good Here.
The Best
Values in
the City.
$26.50
run v-uir nriiiT.nti ruirr
run ima ccnuiiruL unHot
LEATHER BED DAVENPORT
TEBMS $3.50 CASK, BALANCE "EAST."
Positively the greatest BKU DAVKNPOKT value ever of
fered you. The frame Is of solid oak, highly polished, and the
upholstering is in genuine (Jhase leather.
16 rARNAM STREETS. OMAHA.
$14.75
FOR THIS HANDSOME
BRASS BED
Kitwura ai sn flin. a A T.1HCI! EAST."
This is positively the very best BllASS UKD proposition
offered In the city. They have large, two Inch posts, strongly
reinforced, and the entire bed is heavily lacquered and can be had
In satin or polished finish.
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Woman's Work
Activities of the Organised
Bodies Along tha Lines of Un
dertaking of Concern to Women.
Lifelong- Bondage
to dyspepsia, liver -oomplalnta and kidney
troubles Is needless,
guaranteed remedy.
Lrug Co.
Electric Bitters is the
60c. Hold by Beaton
3
V
II
All Five
Toes Have
5reathing Rooml
There ara mora chil
dren's ills caused by improper
hoes than you would ever imagine, and
such ills are not only found in corns, bunions.
enlarged joints, etc., but often the entire nervous
system is effected.
This has hn ikmnKatlrallv demonstrated rerwntt.
- , . , ' i -
It voor child ja fretful irritable, five its feet at least soma
Consideration by trying jmt once a pair of
"WOLFE'S-COLUMBUS"
GJ3ZQ SHOES
for Children
V X00 win aots the Improvement Immediately, because these
: MJUlf miM DUUIOn Dltun', Hn Th.. .11 I.. In
oive the bones and moacles of ths foot
a chance to develop and grow. Relieve the strain oa the
"V"" vromoim a correct walk and oamac. Be
aidea th.lr healthful Tr
" TT ne nou economical, because of thair
. wmn quaiitiea. Our (oaraaVMi "Good
" w. w flu, - ui nrst sua dealers sell 'am.
Th Woll Bros. Sao C.
COLUMBUS, OHIO.
Bu authority of the Board of DIrtcors,
the education committee of the General
Federation of Women's Clubs makes the
following announcement:'
A scholarship of $1,500, to be held at
either Oxford, Cambridge or London uni
versity, for the year beginning October,
1910, will be awarded to an American wo
man by the General Federation.
The scholar shall be selected from
among the graduates of American colleges
of good standing. The age of the success
ful candidate, when she enters upon her
scholarship, shall not exceed 27 years, and
she shall be unmarried. She Is expected to
enter either upon undergraduate work for
honors or upon research work in which
ever of the above named universities she
may arrange with the committee of selec
tion to register.
Kach candidate competing for the schol
arship shall take in October, liKiS, the same
qualifying examinations as are provided
by the Khodes Trust for the college men
who are competing for the Cecil lihodes
scholarships. She must also file with the
undersigned secretary of the committee of
selection, and with her state federation of
ficer with whom she haa her Initial corres
pondence, duplicate copies of credentials
In retard to her good health, her mental
and normal qualities, her literary and
scholastic attainments and her promise
of distinction.
Admission to examinations will be al
lowed only upon the written certification
of a candidate for this privilege by the
national chairman of the General Feder
ation, whose address Is given below.
This permit will only be issued upon the
request of a state federation president
or chairman of education. Therefore
any college graduate wishing to enter
this competition must first make her can
didacy and fitness known to one oaf the
two federation officers of the state whose
addresses are given later. If her qualifica
tions are deemed adequate to warrant the
great courtesy ot examination acconu-u
by the Hhodes Trust, then this offUer
may formally present her name to the
national chairman of education for a per
mit to enter the examination.
The examinations are given- in mathe
matics. Latin and Greek. The trustees
I have decided that any candidate from the
I'niled States who pasties the qualifying
examination in mathematics and Latin
shall be eleglble, although he may not
pass the examination In Greek. The same
rule will be applied to the women candi
dates for the scholarship. The examina
tions are to be held October 10 and 20, next,
in every state of our country. Announce
ments regarding the time, place and gen
eral conditions may be obtained from thd
secretary of any university in the vicinity
of the candidate.
The papers are read and rated at Ox
ford by official examiners and returned to
the national chairman. The committee of
selection then submits the names of the
successful competitors to the state edu
cation officers, who determine which one
of their candidates shall be deemed In
scholarship and promise of distinction to
beat represent the Interests of the state.
The final selection between the various
8tate candidates shall rust with the com
mittee of selection. Any s'.ate may sub
mit a candidate, but if the chglce
shall finally rest between a candidate
from a state which has contributed lowa-d
the scholarship and a candidate from a
non-contributing state than preference
ahall be given to the candidate frurh the
contributing Hale.
In this state, the application may he
made to either Mrs. F. IL Cole, 1S10 Spen
cer street, Omaha Neb., r to Miss M.
Josephine McHugh, 2219 Dodge street, Om
aha, Neb., who are respectively the presi
dent and chairman of education in the
State Federation. Full credentials must
be sent with the applioatlon. After the
local officers have given their written ap
proval of the candidacy, the permit to en
ter the examinations Is granted upon Its
presentation lo Miss Gill. A copy of all
credentials should be filed at tho same
time with Mrs. Potter. Their addresses
are given below. '
Miss I.aura Drake Gill, chairman of the
Education Committee, G. F. W. C, 1326
19th St., Washington, D. C.
Mrs. Frances Squire Potter, secretary of
the Committee of Selection, University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn.
A decided innovatum In local Young
Women's Christian association work was
the visiting of the stores and office build
ings of the city where young women are
employed, by the association's board of
directors last Thursday. The object of the
visit was a desire on the part of the bourd
to personally meet the business men of
the city and present to them the work of
the association in Its greatly broadened
scope as It Is to be can led on during
the coming winter.' Several thousand
copies of the prospectus were distributed
and time was granted by employers for
discussion of them. Wholly inadequate
quarters have greatly limited the associa
tion's work In the past, and It Is not yet
generally understood how extensive It is
to be now that the new building makes It
possible.
The Society of tht Fine Arts will open Its
winter's work Thursday, October 7, when
a meeting will be held at the Public Li
brary. Mrs. Howard Baldrlge will act as
leader, her subject to be "Tha French
j Salons of 1909" and "Artists' Life in
Paris. Mrs. Baldrlge has spent the sum
mer abroad, much of the time having
been passed in Paris. She will return home
about October 1.
a hard spell of weather and a long winter.
In Bummers before a mild winter there Is
always a fine crop of apples. The present
condition, by the way, too, means a hard
winter for the lover of applejack.
"As a clinched I might say that the cab
bages are onto the fact that we are going
to have a record-breaking winter. When a
man says 'cabbage-head' to mean an ig
noramus he doesn't know what he Is
talking about, for the cabbages are the
wisest of vegetables. Every head of cab
bage on my farm this summer Is growing
thick, tough leaves and all because they
are providing warm coverings for the cold
weahtre that they know we are going to
buck up against this winter. New TorK
Press.
Teachers to Get Vacations.
DES MOINES, la., Sept. 18 (Speclal.)
State Superintendent Rlggs has fcent let
ters to all county and city superintendents
asking them to use their influence to have
the fall vacations fixed so that tho teach
ers can attend the state teachers' conven
tion to be held in Des Moines Jor Novem
ber 4 and 5. The convention has annually
been held during the holiday week be
tween Christmas and New Year's, and thla
year Is changed to an earlier date as an
experiment. If Vacations are fixed at that
time teachers can attend without losing
time.
Bible lu Kverr l.anaoncej.
According to the lOMh report of the
British and Foreign Bible society the
Bible will soon be printed In every lan
guage and dialect known throughout tha 1
world. Complete Bibles or portions of the
Bible were Issued last year in 418 differ
ent languages. During the year six new
translations were added to the list. Be
sides these languages there are complete
Bibles or portions of the scriptures made
In embossed type for the blind In thlrty
one different languages.
At $ 3"And Upward AreFini sheo
WITH
Mamma mumJinammS nimsi isi isii
'Jl-I.,' L I... JJ,:.J - I.. I .I...IL1 N 'II i .1 II I .
1NDN-ELA5J1D
r pf?3 Hose Supporters
U GUARANTEED TD OUTWEAR ANY CORSET
GET YOUR DUDS IN ORDER
Jersey's Hard Winter Prophet Sounds
a Chilly Warning
Note.
Columbus Roarty of Greenwood Lake,, a
noted New Jersey weather prophet, has
thrown a chill Into the natives by announ
cing a hard winter. Before giving out his
private tips he was in earnest confab lth
the corner grocery "man. Columbus was
Inquiring about the market quotations on
goloshes and ear muffs, and drove a hard
bargain by trading a fat pullet that had
stopped laying and set of mosquito screens
for the cold weather protectors.
The prophecies of Columbus Roarty he
refuses to call them prognostications or
even predictions have been accepted for
thirty years as only a little in advance
of fact. He la so sure about the weather
that he always buys his winter supplies
In summer and the reverse. 11 his prophe
cies are based on signs from nature. After
he had traded wltb the grocer he gavt
out the signs:
"We're going to have a mighty cold win
ter," said Columbus. "Everything points to
a cold fall and rlproarlng winter. For
one thing, have you noticed this season's
corn. Every ear has grown long whiskers.
and that's a sure sign. The corn seems t
have the sense of a Morris county granger
In this respect. A wise farmer II grow i
good crop of whiskers as winter advances
The harder the winter the longer and
thicker the whiskers. Tha same way with
the corn. I've never noticed longer breex
ers than they have thi.sseason.
"You may have noticed too, that the
sunflowers blossomed early. That means
that we will have an early frost and early
snow. We will have a billiard of the lVSs
brand along about the middle of Novem
ber. Then, look at the apple trees. I
can't remember when we had such a poor
crop. That means that the trees are stor
ing up all their sap and energy agaiust
" III 352 !
!; BACK-RESTING I:
i''...'!!..";'1'!!'!.!'.' .!'; i!i
tii 1 " ' ' 1 1 1 11 bit, ' 1 1 ' ' ! ; 1 ' ' .'.'A. i
''ill'!.' fr1"'" 1 i'rvi 1 1 ' ! 1 1
:; ;:;i!:v';;;,', .ii 1 1:; :!
y. 'Mi' ; :"n;:.'. :'!.! hi:
,'7 Hi'.. .,' !'.
LEADERSHIP
Leadership means initiative
originality, improvement; doing
things first and better.
Aside from the Nemo inventions,
there ha3 been no radical improve
ment in corset-making for years.
Changes in style, of course models
longer or shorter, deeper curves or
straighter lines, at Fashion's whim;
but these are mere details that, are
common to all. f ,
We've Always Led!
We'll Always Lead!
This season vwe take another step
far in advance, and finish all Nemo
Corsets (at $3.00 and up) with the
new Lastikops Hote Supporters,
which have the patented non-elastic
top, and are guaranteed to outwear
any corset. Every woman knows
what that means to herself.
And there's no extra charge for
this. When you buy a Nemo, you
. can always count on getting the
most for your money in style, in
comfort, in durability.
"Self -Reducing"
$3.00, $4.00, $5.00, $8.50 and $10
The Corset that Never Had a Riral
Twelve different models a perfect fit for
every type of stout figure.
The new No. 403 has a low bust, extra
long skirt, and tha new Jielief Bands.
i
im. -.'ii i ar sal
:': 403 lA W
llOELF-rtEDUCINC
"Back-Resting"
"It ReaU Your Back" $3.50
A Marrel for Slender and Median Figures
Every Nemo Corset is a patented epecialtu. which
does something for you that no other corset can do.
Every Nemo is hygienicaUy perfect cannot injure
the health, but actually preserves it
The word "Nemo" on a corset stands for correct
style, absolute comfort, an greatest durability.
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