T1HV 0MA1IA SUNDAY ,: XOVKMlUrilT HUO.' Utali Home of lowan Who Has Done Irrigation Wonders ft ,f,' " ' II ' J ,. ,.::--;C: ,-.;U-;V vvv -v 'A .. T' ' '' ' " ' ' ' V f '-'. . " " I T" mini, i .-rr-Ti ' --- 11 " " "" , f V ;" ' '.-',- ; - v .owwwrll BT LKONAKU KOWL'JK, SPKCIAU COll REISPONDKNT THK OMAHA I)EK. .ATTSON, IjUD, Nov. 12. (Ppeelal Correspondence.) Crelnhton. Carinlrharl. Went. Uailey! F nilllsr enoiiKh. urpn't they? Woven Into the history; the tinalo of the old and the new weet; H was strange enourh to hoar them echoed out here In this I'tah valley one plrHBBtit Hunday afternuon. Little (Inxhea of the pat; half rraned acratchea on niem oiy'a Blate, the inarklntia of them came out clfar enouKh a the white-pulled flock nutiter, seated In front of tin open grate; where the poplar wood crackled' and Bpat out little tongues of flame across the broad striping of an old-fanhloned rs car pet, dlhcouiscd of Ms riayK an a teumstci ; the daya when those other tnen were build ing the Union Taclflo railway Into the ro mantic distances of the west; across the broad plains; through the purpled hills nd over the ellver rivers of the "way-out wonder land." Do you know that liuv In a while It (rows almoct remarkable to me to find that wherever there Is a better building thun usual; a better kept farm; a finer looklnK flock of sheep; a little better home; that some man from Iowa or Kansas or Ne braska la behind It all. There Is some thing about the frugality of those mid vest boys; their thrift; their Industry, that ems to take them over all the roujh places; that smoothes the road before them; that takes out the "thank-ye maims" and make for at green, a hearty, a well-provlded-for, old ane. And so It was with me thla Hunday afternoon. The home la the best In all this broad valley; there were 8,000 sheep In the fold, all ready to go to the dipping ground at Ooshen; the horses were fine stock; and over the whole of the 4.0 acres there were the marka of Intelligence; of foresight; of Rood hue bandry. We drove to a alghtly knoll, where West mountain dips down Into I'tah lake, wiere we could overlook It all. And fairer mht the eyes of man have never dwolt IIPOQ. The night before. It had rained, and the heavy clouds still durkled about the snowy peak of tUamond mountain; a lofty hill of the Wasatch range. Fleecy clouds were tumbling, pell mell, down Its slopes. browned and darkened by the frosty touch of the mid-October nights. To the left of il. far up on the lofttert peaks, snow was falling, lower down it had turned to rain, which streams, like a flood of silver, through the sun, yet lower it hud tinned to a nMst and through thrs thee was a lainbow, wondrously colored: lis many hue Just touchliif a dip in the hills, as though there Were a lis obduiaglun pot o" gold there and these were the hues: thu inflection of gigantic tuva. The eye dw!ls for a long whl!-j u such a sight; one thinks that niuhe the ae of mnaclex is not past and Is g'.ad of the day and the op portunity that brings such a scene. In front of this the grern field swept about the umbrageous beauty of the little ton of layson. as a flood of emeralds might pan - and swirl about mint obstruction In the Klream. There are yellow patches, golden in the sun. stubble fields, and. In the far thest distance a drove of pigs, moving bits f ebon, foraged In a eomfluld, once green, cit now yellow with the age of the old .tar. Through It all ran a go'.den roaJ; its Una fence sometimes lost by distance; cad merged Into the yellow field j as though it were liquid ajid had broadened Into goldn pools; lakea, swollen for a space only to be drawn back again and thenoe on nd on, over the green hills and Into the blue spauea of the dlstanoe where the Mouds. the goldeb road and the purple hills remej to meet, Just under the rainbow's aich. And in the tnldet of thle waa the farm- trd. About the home large enough for moer house the splreUke poplar kept y X PJ 2a 1 1 - f V'1 i- l J3 ASt A rtO t sentinel, and from the chimneys, wraiths of blue smoke curled and lout itself In the Indigo distance of the hills. The fold, with Its buildings, weather-beaten and silvered by the years, lay hard by; the gate stand ing hospitubly open; the barns filled with grain and hay; the firewood corded against the north wall a realised dream of peaca, plenty and comfort. I spoke of It, turning to him aa I did ao, and the flesh of him pinked a bit as he answered: "My home for many years; I've been bere iort.v-two." Thts Is the Utah valley, where the United States government Is building Its great .Strawberry valley Irrigation project. And I waa talking to J. 3. McButh, president of I the Strawberry Valley Water Users' asso ciation. I was looking over the 470-aere farm whloh he owns and tills; I was apeak lug of hie home; his sheep and his horses; when he told me he waa from Iowa, Al most I could have said: "I knew It." He was and In different. Of few words, and those mildly spoken, generous, he yet re tains In hie early 'tiOs, the thrift and fru gality that has made Iowa one of the wealthiest states of the union. Even as I talked to him he told me of the prepara tions he was making to go to. Goshen the dipping pens at S o'clock the next morn ing. For forty-two years he has lived In the Utah valley; for forty-two years he iiMS been the moving spirit In every enter firtee that had Its object the betterment of the country or of his fellows. For forty two years ho has fought the good fight, winning fortune, place, power, wife and homo out here In the new went; and still fighting for the children and grandchildren that cluster about his kneea, climb upon his hack and tousle the hair of grandpa. Do you think It was easy to get him to talk of himself? Not much! I had to croFs-examine like "a 1'hlladulphla law yer." learning as X went along this golden truth! Urtt wius. industry Is a faithful soldier; thrift a good messenger; frugality a fine aorvant: but grit, nerve, daring, win; win in spite of everything; win lor every mun; for uie, for you, as they win now; as they have always won for "Jlai" McUeth. lie was in years old when he left a job as a f .ti in hand nine miles from Iowa City. He was a well paid farm hand, getting u tauu month, but he had enough to take htm to Omaha, then a shanty town, on the muddy banks of the Miaxouri. The builders ut i.iiiii.adr ei- at work. Oieighlon was stringing the telegraph wires; tne scream of iocoutullveM pieioeU tho black bights of the vall.y and their red eyei. gleamed In the Council 111 ulfs yards, buffaloes wen being hunted; Indians Were being trailed gold wax being washed from creeks and tlu salting sun beukoned and called. 1 here i mii man?, many buys who answered the I Kim voice; but at tjiiiaha thu glamoi ! laded for "Jiiuinla" Mlttii. farm hand. auu us ji.meu tne uuiui ti.at John A. Webt sending out to the constrilctiuu camps of the l ulon i'aclfio light or-way. He was called a "mule skinner" in those da vs. and ! at ljiraiiile though theie was no 1-aianuc tlHli-lie buckled himself Into Ins lines and Kent to scraping the biack plains of Wyo ming into eoine suit of a grade tor the "sieani cars" to run on. Those were the days when a man with a plow guided bis mules with one hand while he held on to a carbine with the other; the days when the Indiana resented the coming of the while man a mobsters; daya when soldiers guarded workmen and the pony eg preen brought the letters and newt from heme. Perhaps there were not so many Umota- tiona then; perhaps there were more, aod Jim- McEetb didn't yield to Uiem easily as boys do nowaday At aar rate he saved his money and before he got te Ogden be had three mule teams of his own and was contracting the labor ef six mules, two men and himself to the contractors, leaning some) money snrery month aad s 'mi 4 irtenu .? 1 doing aa well, proportionately, or better than any man on the Job. The winter of '08 found him at Ogden and from there he went down to Bait Lake City, thence to Utah valley and on Into I'ayeon, then a thriving Mormon settlement seven miles from Utah lake, a orystal Jewel set be tween the emerald bills of the Oqulrrh and Wasatoh ranges of mountains. It was a good plaoe to winter the stock, for It was mild and feed was plentiful. Of his days at Payson, Virginia City and t)eer jLiodge, of his Nevada trips little need be said. He bought and sold cattle, settled his own disputes, left decisions to the flip of a coin, the drawing of a lot and abided by the cast; neither complaining when It went agalnat him, nor gloating wrten he got the best of It. He won and married Diana Elmer, a Mormon girl; no small triumph for a Uentlle In those days, and, finally, In "78, bought the beginnings of his Payson farm and settled down; the farm and family growing as the procession of the years swept past. Eight years ago, one morning;, John H. Dixon, the mayor of Payson, drove out to McBeth's and asked him to be one of the party to go over 'Into Strawberry valley, a cup In the bills, beyond Diamond mountain, fifty miles away and Investigate the pos sibilities of an irrigation project to have Its headwaters there and to Irrigate, through a system of canals, the 60,000 acres of land In Utah valley. His Judgment was needed and was asked for. Mr. MoUeth, now, Is frank enough to say that he did not believe In It; that he did not think It feasible; that he said so, but that he also said that if enough of the people about blin, his neighbors, did believe In it, he would be one of them to see whet could be done. Thlw was characteristic of the man. He bowed to the will of the majority and went. With him went Heber Jex, the mayor of Spanish Fork; and State Senator Honry M. Gardner. They took with them Knglneer Sevier and once on the ground this en gineer told them of how the thing might be dune. A great reservoir site waa to be found; Strawberry river was to be Im pounded; a tunnel was to be driven through the Wasatch hills, and a diversion dam was to be built far upon the west slopes if thore mountains. It was all easy enough !f the money could be had; but the dif ficulties were almost Insuperable and a mass meeting of the people of the valley was called to meet at the town of Spanlxh Fork. That meeting appointed a committee of which Mr. Mclteth wns one ami It set to work, first to measure the run-off of the rUrawb-rry river and Horse creek. The general land office, gave permission to go on the Uintah Indian reservation to make reservoir and water locations. The committee did this, with Mr. Mthetli, ty this time an enthusiastic and tireless worker. The Utah Mate I,and Hoard granted some financial assistance and the state engineer surveyed the reservoir for the purpose ef making the water filings. These were so made that tliey covered the two rivers. Hy this time It wsi d covered that no private enterprise; no Capital which the fanners of the valley Could control could finance and prosecute to successful completion so gigantic an en terprise aa this was proving to he. Discouraged? Not a hit of It. J. S. McBeth Is nut one of the "discourasable" kind. The whoU project was then called to the attention of the reclamation service of the United Slates government. United States Senators Heed Bmoot and Suther land took up the matter s that the gov ernment signified tts willingness to take up and finish the project. Here, however, a proviso wss ir.aie that all water rights should be equal and this was thought Im possible. Applied socialism was too new for the minds of the Utuh valley farmers to grasp at once. It wan thought, and many of those who had been full of hope taa t tUr beels lu despair. Not so J. 1 6. , McBeth. He persisted, rounded up his committee and in ninety days had written 1,300 contracts with Individual owners of the water; baa assigned these contracts to the United States government and the re clamation service took hold. The project then became an assured success. Ttday, as I write, the project is over one half completed. The tunnel has been driven more than ten thousand feet Into the mountains; the dam for the reservoir Is built; roads have been constructed up the mountain side; telegraph lines make Utah is Store House of Wealth in Its Resources State ii Reported oa Eve of a Great Revival in Commercial and In dustrial Affairs. SPANISH FOKK. Utah, Nov. li.t Spe cial Correspondence.) "I believe that so soon as the tastern people know more of Utah, this State will experience the most decided revival, commercially, Industrially and agriculturally, of any state In th west." This Is the belief of Franoee M. Snell. oashler of the First National bank of Spanlah Fork, Utah. Mr. Snell la a native born Utahan. This city Is his birthplace and he has lived here the greater portion of his life. He says he has seen these cities on the Utah lake grow, slowly, conservatively, but surely, and believes that the future of them, within the next few years is greater than in the past half century. "Utah is the pioneer of Irrigation; in a modern sense, we began that system of farming In this state and successfully de veloped It throughout the' whole of this Intor-mountain region. That we have not done the same big things here as else where Is partly due to the es.st with whloh we have made money here; so easily as not to require much effort; and partly due to the fact tliut we have lived within our selves, paying but little attention to the world ot hUblle, effort and hurry. "Long ago we mastered the secret of successful dry tanning and we huve raised aa much grain on any of the woret of our dry farms in the most unproductive years as the highest average of the mid-west ' slates. Our fruit, especially peaches, takes I lie lead over all oiher sections In the west snd wii w evei 11 Is known It is must eagerly j ought fend brings the highest prices. Tlie! first sugar factory making sugar from the! beets to tho table was established at Salt ! lk City, and by tirst, 1 mean tho very (lift on the Ameilcau continent. Utah j may really be said to have tiie greatest number of sugar factories over Its eeuil- j le-Mrlcted area of any oilier section tu tlilti country. J he farmers make money rais ing tlie roots, the working men make' money through employment at tlie factory, and the cities inake money tliiougii having the factories, weighing stations, and sllc-! ing plants, located near them. In almost every dairy product I'tah excels any oilier! stale and tlie I'tali Valley surpasses the i rest of I. tali. I "In addition to this wa have mountains of copper, solid lakea of asphalt, greet areas of roal, Inrxiiaustlhle supplies of Iron, salt enough to last the universe fur an aeon of -centuries; gold, sliver and oil, ' all eon tribute to make of this Blate the most promising field fur Invesiuieiit and settlement in all the west." That s the way F. M. Hnell. cashier of the Airst JsaUyuui Utua f tia4uau i'ura 'C&rZrRN HZfiDZ ITWORK ItTP' hA: Mtfi'LaO UTAH. . Mii M Ufl . H- . if communication easy; Ihe great electric power plant and the diversion dam Is com pleted and In operation. Land Is Increas ing In value; thousands of cach trees have been planted on the sunny "benches" along the hills; new houses are being built; and town and oountry have taken on an air of smiling and hopeful prosperity. And thla shows just what "grit" will do. The kind of grit they have In Iowa; the sort of grit that acquired three mule teams between Laramie - and Ogden; the variety of grit that won a Morman girl for a. FRANCIS M. aNELL. fc' Pauls a Fork, Utah. believes In his state and valley. He is a conservative banker. The First National Is cap! tallied at 25,n00, and has 1150.000 on deposit. Spanish Fork Is located In the heart of the 60,000 acres to be developed by the United States iirigatlon project known as the rltr.iwberry Project. It Is a city of about 3,000 population, located on the main line of the Halt Lake. Los An geles A Han Pedro and the Klo Grande railways. It Is the logical market town for all of the gieat area now being re claimed and the citizens, a merchants and banks expect great things when the water is finally turned on and the fruit tiees have actually come to bearing. The gov ernment la using all possible speed in hast ening this project to completion, and it Is believed that the work will be consum mated at the earliest possible moment. MEN OF YEARS JOIN THE ELKS O. IVtin Jubu II. Ilnlbert Are Takea lata the !. I Order Friday Marat. Two of the oldest mm ever Initiated into the local lodge of the llenevolent Protective Order of Kike were taught the mysteries of the order in the Llks' home Friday night. They are O. Pegau. 78 years young, and John II. Hulbcrt, 71 years young. Mr. Huibcrt is bailiff for Judge Lee H. Kslclle In the criminal Ulviiiuu of district court E. Wakely, tlie Nestor of Iougls county bar, is the only man of more advance 1 age ever Initialed by the local Kiks. He is 17 .Several ouog men also were liuUated Friday tagw 'twvsi mii r r : V'Vr'--: '- 1 ! 5 ' i i V. ? i . a wife. Persistence; keeping at. It; nerve; that's what did it The beginnings were small and Inconsequential: the conclusion Is that the United States Government has. expended two millions of gold to reclaim sixty thousand " of acres of the most beautiful valley In all this wide world. And "Jim" McBeth, with his grandchil dren playing about his knees; tousling his hair, crowing on the laps of their mothers, sits in front of the grate fire, In ills just complete I10.000 home, getting ready to make a 3 o'clock start for Goshen and the Idaho People Are Enthusiastic Over the Big Land Show Western State to Have Exhibit at the Land Products Show in Omaha Soon. BOISE, Idaho, Nov. 12. iSpectal.) Idaho la enthusiastic over the Western Land Products exhibit Displays from this state at the two National Corn expositions In Omaha have brought splendid results hy bringing good settlers to the state and also by attracting the attention of the people of the east to the splendid quality of the products of the state. "I can trace ITiO.OOO of business to the dis play we made at your city last year," said C. J. Blnsel to the writer, when dis cussing plans for the exhibit In January, "and today I received order for five acres ot our Holse valley apples as a direct re sult of the work we did at Omaha" The Southern Idaho Irfugue of Commer cial cluliB Is planning a display which will ttlf regardless of digestion and nutrition. He might almott at well eat thav ings for all the good he gets out of his food. The result is that the stomach growt "weak" the action of the orgnnt of d!g:inn and nutrition are impaired and toe man suffer the miseries of dyspepsia and tbi agonies of nervousuM. To Btt-euithtm th atomach, restore th activity vf tha tana ol digestion and nutrition mad brmta VP tho nrrev lis Dr. Pierce' a (ioldcn Med!ctl Vlacorery. it ia ma uw falling remedy, mad haa tho confidence ot pbyslclaoa ma well ma thm praise ol thousands mealed by Urn uae. la the strictest tense "Golden Medical Discovery" temperance medi cine. It contaiut neither intoxicants nor narcotics, and it at free from aloohol at from opium, cocaioe and other dangerout drugs. All iniin.dientt printed oa itt outside wrapper. - Don't let a dealer delude you for his own profit. There it no medicioA for stomach, liver and blood "just as good" at "(iolden Medical Discovery." ((i w g- v r j j la a safe Investment. The older it gals, the iiOQU VlOllil n.ore It lncr.vos in value. Our collection of old and new west, and among them are a great number of goto VIQX.IBK made by auch makers as Curatoll Urulll, Martin, Horumeniar and many others. PRICES range on complete outfits (Including case, bow, rosin, chin rest and extra tet of strings) from t'-OO up. fcod for cash or ea-iy payments. We also carry a full lino of llolton Cornets, Wahbum Mandolins, rttirtnn Guitars, Uanjos and Mandolins, Accordi-ena, Flutes, licoo o. Clari nets, Mouthhurps, Autoharpx, Metronomes, Hnure 1'iriims, llase Drums, Ch1ne.se and Turkish Cymbals. Hwiss Jlusio liuies and the finest line of string ros ax, i. xaBTarmxBTTB., ouh mices are the lowest. A. HOSPE CO. 1513-1515 Doalas St OIIAUA, NtB li 'J - - LrM. '-'j-r''l,F'" ' ,. 3" i.-f '! ' '' dipping pens, where his 5.000 sheep ain folded, tomorrow morning. He has had grit. He has had nerve, and he says; "From the time I left Omaha until now 1 I have never seen the day when I couldn't , meet all my obligations, cent for cent, antl have a little something left over." it's all right to grow and expand and become "big," but It Is another thing to grow and play safe while you are doing ' It Almost any "dreamer" oan do the first, but It takes grit; pure grit to do ton ' Sui'OIld. show the people of the middle west soin of the great possibilities of their state and their exhibit will be the most unique ona which has ever been put on at a land show. It will not only be one where the apples, grain and potatoes of this section will bo displayed, but the live stock, corn and other Industries will be shown. Besides they will run a series of features eaolt day which will "keep tilings popping" all the tlino. Omaha people will be watching Idaho from January 18 to M. W. O. P. 'tightwads sad Others. The members of the Antl-Tif litwad oluu. organised by the gliis of a ivaiisas high, school fur the purpose of boycutung the young men who show no disposition to buy leu cream and soua water for their girl friends, will probauly be unpopular with, the members of a soul sty organised In Chi cago some years ago under the queer Dims of "We Pay Our Own Way olub." The originator of the movement, apeaklng of It, said at the tlinui "The members of this body are young women who work for their living. Nearly all have escorts to and from their places ot business. Thte w-Uu bave none expect them. We Ilka the company and don't wish to consume a lot of time twice a rlsy insisting on paying our own cat fare, r-o we have oigaiilaud and wear the 'We Pay' pin. Uy paying our own way w sain time fnr conversation, keep out Independence and the hoys save tbelr nick els without running the chance of buiug" calle.l atlugj'."--Nciv i'oik Tiioun. The Tenderfoot Farmer It wet one ol these experimental farmers, who put freest spectacles on bis cow and fed her itiavinfa. Hii theory was that It didn't matter what the cow ate to long at sbe wat led. The questions ol digestion and nourishment had not entered into his calculations. It't only a "trnderloot" farmer that would try such tn experiment with a cow. But manv a farmer feeds kirn- VIOLINS is one of the largest In the 5 'J I u i I '