TTTE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 19fT. Why Swelter! PECOS VALLEY DEVELOPMENT Water Supply from Artesian Weill ii Least of Troubles. SOIL IS OF RICH, SANDY LOAM Rnawell Coaatrr, nrlni In Close Prom. Imltr Texas, la AHorrd of an lallraltrd Market for Apples. ROB WELL, N. M., Jun 1. (Special.) In the Pecos valley of New Mexico the great possibilities are Just beginning to be appreciated. The wonderful artesian wells which mad Irrigation ao ilmple In the earlier year of the vallejr'a history kept the people from seeing the greater possi bilities. Now that the higher landa are being developed by pumping the country around. Boa well la taking on activity which It never before haa known. The Pecoa valley varies In width from six to ten mllea and la about fifty miles long. The water supply la all from an arteetan flow, which la fed by underground treama which coma fioin the mountains to the west. The supply U replenished each year by the melting snows and rains In' the mountains, and the water supply w jaj ivmsi ui me vauey a iruuuiea. The climate la Ideal. The altitude of Roawnil la 1.800 feet The annual rain fall la about fifteen Inches, coming In the summer when most needed for the grow ing crops. The winters are dry, and the temperature seldom goea below 20 degrees above sero. The summers, while hot, are not unpleasant Although the thermometer Sometimes registers as high aa 100, the lack of humidity makes the shads very pleasant on the hottest day. The nights ars always cool enough for blankets, even following the hottest days. The Roawell country Is stout ths south ern limit, where good apples can b grown. Texas haa never been able to grow good apples to any extent, but the Pecos valley in the vicinity of Roswell is wonderfully adapted to fruit culture. Ths fact that It lies close to Texas places a wonderful market right at the door of the Roe well applo country and makes fruit culture Very profitable, the orchardlsta realizing a net profit of from 1300 to $000 an acre a year off of their crops. The soil la a rich sandy loam, which, while admirably aulted to growing good healthy fruit trees, is also well adapted to almost every crop. Alfalfa makes big yields here, going aa high as seven tons on the five and alx cuttings which are ob tained each year. Celery, strawberries and other small fruits and vegetables produce wonderful crops, and delicious favors. Cantaloupes are said to equal If not sur pass the famous product which comes from the Rocky Kord country of .Colorado. The development now is principally on the higher landa where the land Is above the flow Una of the artesian water. This artesian water Is being lifted now, and thousands of acres of what has heretofore been barren land, because of lack of water. Is now being reclaimed and turned into a garden spot. This higher land Is best for prchards and ths future for these Mo tions la brighter than would be Indicated by ths already brilliant records of the lowar land. Dig projects are being flnanoed, ex perienced agriculturists are being brought In from other states and irrigated sections, and the country Is taking on new life. As an example of this devedopment the ll.OOO-acre tract which lies at ths northern limit of the city of Roswell might be cited. Here the pumping, M bolng dons by elec tnolfyY'a hew ptan't bring erected for that purpose. Something like forty miles of iamwarfa Help II fad ' rU-jiaawsai IT Andrew Carnegie once suggested as an epitaph for his own tombstone what he said was the secret of his success : u Here lies a man who surrounded himself with men abler than himself. Many able people are working for you, scientists, inventors, manufacturers, all trying to male something yea want. Do you u their brains and their efforts "lurround yourself with them" or do you plod along by yourself, year behind the times Take your own home. Have you your share of modern im provements there money-saving. labor-saving, health-promoting) One of the mo.t important of these is a New Perfection Cook-stove. A New Parfecboa stove sever overheats a kitchen. It saves your strength, h save, fuel and tame. With ths New Perfectwe oven with the glass doori Tyesj caa go oa wuh your iroaiog or any other week, and still be sore at a (Uses tke ioint is KanUftlAal BtOfMrl. sias . a a ... Qii.Cook-stwc I transmission or trolley lines have ben constructed. Some sixteen wells have been put down, and mora are being ' started. About forty miles of road have been built and twelve miles of shade' trees have been planted. Itevelnpment has be n started on about 3.000 acres of this tract. Between three and four hundred acres of this has been put Into apple orchards, and the remainder Is being put Into corn, oats, alfalfa, beans, melons and various other crops until fall when the greater part ot It will go in or chard. The land Is divided Into small tracts of from ten to forty acres, and these are be ing taken tip rapidly by farmers and men from the cities of the middle western and eastern statea Alexander McPherson, for eighteen years horticulturist for the state of Idaho, Is In charge of the development on this Berrendo tract, and he Is very enthuslaaUo over the prospects for ths valley. "I have never seen such great opportuni ties as we have here," said he. "Wi have all the good features of the other irrigated sections and we certainly have many that they lack. Here Is land available adjoining a city of 10,000 people, a city of fine homes, good schools and large churches. The cli mate Is' all anyone could ask and ths op portunities for making money are un limited." Irrigation Project For Lost River Land Financed in Chicago Hawley, McDougll and Robinson Attend Conference and Approve Decisions. CHICAGO, June 16. (Special.) The big Lost river irrigation project is to be com pleted with the least possible loss of time. James B. Clinton, Jr., the Boise banker, who has heavy financial Interests In the gigantic undertaking, was here for several days in consultation with leading local financiers, and aucceeded In forming a strong group to underwrite the bonds of the company. In the syndicate are the Continental Commercial National bank-, the First National bank and ths Chicago Title and Trust company. Representing ths atate of Idaho in the negotiations have appeared Governor Hawley and Attorney General McDougall, who express themselves as being entirely satisfied, with the arrangements com pleted with the bondholders, through W. D. Rellly, chairman of the ' bondholders' committee and manager of ths underwrit ing syndicate. State Engineer Robinson of Idaho, was hers working out ths de tails of the plans that have been gen erally agreed upon between himself and the company's, engineers. The arrangements Just completed be tween the Idaho financial interests, those In Chicago and ths Idaho state officials, mean that the work will be resumed with the least possible loss of time and will be rushed to completion. Mr. Rellly haa given assurances $hat operations will be begun Just as soon' as ths Aubt'rifcrs can shape up the legal matters. As part of ths plan It has been de cided to Install cement drops on ths Powell tract, at ths lower end of tha Mackay segregation, which embraces much rich land, so that tha settlers there will have the benefit of this year's flood waters. The Mackay, flam wfll be completed as rapidly as the work can he done. It will bo 120 feet high, aa originally planned, but win be more massive and specially, rein forced. Won lyTws MXioa satisfies Mea sad Beys. WsyBotyea? 'Porakiiiicni tMKMu.il a abaarbaa and vcBbbtae'. il fas btauw it it kail sad ail sin rew nit without bona dumay. Buy s nil now. Yau will be gUe IS "."s , P, U 'Psnaluul label. Shim and Drawan pa tarment 50c 25c Man's Union Suits $1.00 Boys' Union) Suits Ms On in matt raa Writs for Buauatad booUat Chalmers Knlttina Co. Vukuujtas tU sautarsao, a L 111 J sjuppjiai. is ' ' Htiu..'i urr, , ct r"''l V-IS finTlnf-ill-'-i wilhmmt thU Uhmtmrm mm Tortuknlr" for All U.J. .L i i i i ... lea lurquoaa liuo -"7 ? sill Haaiom.tr tuoad tWauLut T Tao 2- sad -Ww ana caa ks bad wilb or Mnm a raaoaat tan, wbtcb nsuadwaa akap aWbsa, kwl racaa, om. OaaUn ovarrwbara ; ar writs far da scrviwe svcaiW Is the ssefsal tsia J Standard Oil Company Incorporated I - 1 JUDITH BASIN TRANSFORMED Extension of Jawbone Road Proves Big Boon to Lewiston. TOWNS GROW LIKE MUSHROOMS Prosperity Now Covers tke Basin Like a Mantle (osslrr la Berom lna Fa mono for Dry Fa ran lnj. 1 HELENA, Mont., June 16, (Special. ) Surrounded on ail sides by mountain ranees the extensive Judith basin in Fergus county remained for years an Isolated paradise for stockmen. Lewtstown, ths county seat, became ths supply point for a rich mlnlne; region and for a stock country which extended for fifty miles on all sides. It was ths busiest and most prosperous town without railroad communication la ths northwest. States left for many points and ths streets were crowded with passing freight teams of ten span of horses or more. If one wanted to get to Lewlstown he would have to take the long stage ride from Fort Benton or Great Falls on ths Great Northern, from Billings on ths Northern Taclflc or from Harlowton on a ahort railroad from the west locally known as the Jawbone. Many merchants and others who witnessed ths animated sosnes on ths streets and knaw of tha amount of money that waa In elrculaUon frowned upon tha proposal to build a railroad to conn'', ths Judith basin with the rest of ths sorld. Selfish stockmen were there, too, who wished to keep ths country Iso late i so that they might continue In un dlstvrbed use of ths publle lands aa a free range. This condition continued until about sight years ago, when tha Jawbone railroad was extended to Lewlstown. Farming began on ths Rock creek bench, ths flourishing town of Moore sprang into being' and the character of the country as a farming region was established. Three years ago ths Great Northern opened a line through the Judith basin which connected at Great Falls and Billings with transcontinental lines. Ths Jawbone was acquired by the Milwaukee, whose new line through ths state crossed ths, southern boundary of Fergus county, following- the Mussslsnell river. The Judith basin woks up, and ths transformation of this range country into a region of farina which then began has proceeded In the most astonishing manner. Lewlstown and Moors grew rapidly and new towns sprang up Uke mushrooms. Back of the towns were ths farms and ths farm ers who were making good. Grain ele vators became familiar and suggestive fea tures ot the landscape. Ldwlttsna Springs Forward. When released from Its laolaUon Lewis town i prang forward In great bounds and sudderly found Itself a center -of railroad activity. Both ths Great Northern and tha Milwaukee have purchased rights-of-way for entrance into the town.' Ths latter road la to build a branch from the MuaselshsU valley through Lewlstown on to Great Falls, and ths former a line which will connect Lewlstown with Its Billings and Northern branch at a point tweaty miles west of the city. Ths long branch Una of the Groat Northern -which la to be built from Mondak is expected to pas-through the town. It will open for' settlement a great farming region In Ihe eastern part ot the state, soma ot whiaii Is now 100 miles from any railroad. . Tils rsglon In the rapidity of its deevlopment Is likely to rival tha experience of the Judith basin tn the last three years. Not to be outdone In ths race to reach the fertile Judith basin, the Northern Pacific haa projected a Une from Glendivs to connect with tha Great Northern at a convenient point near ths western edge of ths basin, whence) a track to bo used by both roads will be laid to Helena, opening up a new country, where the lines of the two roads cross, Ths con struction ot these roads will vaaUy in crease ths area that may be farmed with profit, but whether he Is sitting aa a dele gate In a development congress, or as a representative in a secret society, religious, political or business convenUon ths Judith basin man is apt to rise to remark when occasion offers that Fergus county la something- of a farming county "right now." It is computed, he will point out, that there- are to be harvested In the Judith basin this year 167,000 acres of winter wheat, 81,000 acres of spring wheat. UJXX) acres of oats and 9,000 acres of flax a total ot S0S.000 acres. In an ordinary good year ths average yield per acre Is thirty bushels. Ths wheat crop may amount to 0,000,000 bushels and require ,000 freight cars to handle it. To transport ths 600,000 bushels of oats and ths 162,000 bushels of flaxseed, ths estimated yield, 182 cars will be required. Ths crop from 8.000 acres of potatoes will fill too cars. Tou may esti mate how many miles of track would bo filled with ears loaded with these crops if all trains were started at ones. Ths fig ures furnished are astonishing, and the development haa Just begun. However, even ths old partisan 'of ths stage lines and the freighting outfits will admit that the new methods ot transporta tion are better than the old, and that the transformation ot ths oountry Is something ho never dreamed ot aa oosalble. The stockman, too, la reconciled to the new conaiuons. iie Knows that much moun tainous and rough land will always be de voted to (rasing and that the coming of railroads and the settlement ot the country baa enhanced the value of his deeded land 600 per cent. Most of ths big ranches that ware situated nsar the railroad1 have been out up Into farms. The former ranch owner, become the town capitalist, is using his money In enterprises for the devi.,. ment of ths resources of the country. No longer he entertains ths cowman's and aneepman s long cherished and freaiv . lated opinion that Montana was destined to remain a grazing country. Some old stockmen have turned tha oowpuncher's quirt or ths aheepherder'a staff into Du.. shares and ars extolling the merits of the country as a dry farming region. Times nave cnangea ana men have chand -.. them. Prosperity now covers tha Juititn oasm aa wiin a mantle. What will the harvest bs when flvs times as many fertile acres, yet untitled, shall bs Drodunn. v uya ( MONTANA EXPECTS BIG CROPS RaUafsUl and Other Factors Work Toward Heavy Prodaetloa la Fields. GREAT FALLS. Mont. Jons 1. Business men who havs lived In this sec- lion for rorty-nvs years and havo mads a fortune here say there never haa h . year ot greater promise than this one. ao far as ths promise of rood earned. The wheat, alfalfa and hay crops re now ass urea, ana the smaller eropa havs quits as gooa a promise for heavy ylalds. This has been a SDrlnsr Of Inn aa4 " auit rainy weal her &d. mim (ha umHb Ot April usually Is a dry month, mora than twice ths amount of precipitation fell this year, the total equalling almost an Inch. May haa added more than two Inches, whereas less than an Inch has been Its customary share. Ths fields are all green and fine and ths soli Is full of moisturs, and ths farmers are as happy aa children over the outlook. As a result of this, land values have been of confidence pervades all this part of Montana. The sheepmen, stockmen and the farmers say this Is a year that means a large profit to them and the herds and flocks on ths hills reflect the same feeling with fuller bodies and sleeker coats than havs been seen at the ssme time if ever be fore. Montana will be on the map this year, all declare, when Its yield has been reckoned and changed Into money by the producers. Asparagus Grown in Williamette Valley Small Grain Farming; on Ranches is Given Up for the Prolifio Root Crop. EUGENE, Juno lb.-Small grain farming on ranches of from 400 to 1,000 acres has gone out of fashion In the upper Willam ette valley, to a large extent, and has been succeeded on the rich alluvial bottoms, alon gwater eourses, by asparagus, celery, rutabagas, onions and other prolific bear ing root crops. Several cannery men of California and other sections have visited the asparagus fields here and have pro nounced them the best for thslr age they havs ever seen. Ths harvest of tha "grass" Is now in full swing. Lata spring rains have held back the product, but over a ton a day Is now being hauled to the city mer chants and express offices for shipment to Portland from ons small farm of fifty acres. Asparagus begins to produce Its commercial crop the second year and la excellent the third year. Lane county as paragus Is selling at 10H cents this spring, while asparagus from eastern Washington is sslllng at S cents, and California mar kets havo gono to pieces because of a rate fight among certain producers of the Sac ramento valley, according to reports. The demand for the green tips Is strong. The tubers grow yery fast in the bottom sub Irrigated aoils.. Onions, too, are a highly remunerative crop, the valley lands yielding all the way from 1,000 to 15,000 pounds per acre. There haa been a demand for 70,000 pounds of Australian reds tills season, which local markets were unable to get, the supply being cleaned up. Celery Is a demonstrated success here, also. It ths acreage tor certain root crops wars as sured, ths local fruit cam. . y man says, a big Industry would at once be established for canning beans, and other vegetables for ths market. The local fruit growers havo a very successful co-operative cannery. Paunpla Plants Betas InataUlod. Nine pumping plants are being installed In the Moses Lake district in eastern Washington, ninety-five miles west of Spo kane, - where several thousand ' acres, or land will bs devoted to apple and other fruit trees. Gunther Carlberg, president ot the Valhalla Orchard company, which Is planting ono tract of 330 acres, says the soil of ths valley, whloh is formed by tho Weber, Flannlgan and Walker coulees, and. Is called Vaeuna, meaning "the goddess ot rural leisure," Is ohlefly volcanic ash, free from stones and sand. .Water from an un derground stream is reached at from twen ty to thirty-three feet. The district was originally settled by German-Russians, who made the land productive by dry farming methods. of Quality mounted to the Purity hat kept Bottled only at the sAnheuser-Bu3ch Brewery , St. Louis, Mo. LARGE ORCHARDS PLANTED Apple Growers Unusually Actire in State of Washington. INSTALLING PUMPING PLANTS Twenty-Two Thousand Acres of Lsutd ia Owyhee County, Idavho, to Be Watered Under Carey Aet Plan. 6 PO KAN IS, Wash., June 18. (Special.) One of the show features of ' a private Irrigation plant Just completed on the Tremolo tract In the Spokane valley, four miles east of Spokane, la a well with four compartments 100 feet below the surface and an elevator service for the accommo dation of visitors. Ths well, which was constructed at a cost of 110,000, has a capacity of 60,000 gallons an hour, and Is used to supply water for domestic and Irri gation purposes to IV) acres of land, upon which nearly $60. .J has been expended. The well- is cement lined and the water Is delivered in cement pipes, while the do mestic supply Is carried In steel piping. Tha tract Is owned by the Eshleman-Burr company of Spokane, which will develop It as orchard land. Thirty-six thousand apple trees of stand ard varieties "have been planted on the Chelan Butte orchards, S00 acres, near Chelan, Wash., where Irrigation with tank wa-ons will bs carried on until MS, after which a pumping plant will be Installed. '' ' UPON THE STRONG WINGS and Purity over fifty years ago "The Old Reliable9 top of the world's bottled beert and never ending fidelity to Quality and it at the top iU mildne. and exquisite taste also helped to build its popularity. Why go about in stuffy attire, when the Palace offers codI $12, "two piece" Summer Suits At Single breasted? Yes. Double breasted t Yes. Tho late light grays and tans! Yes. Half lined with serge or alpaca! Yes, sure! Froper cuff bot tomed trousers! .Certainly. Don't balk at tho price. These suits have both the goods and the get up, but the big, bulky prices of others are missing. Same price $0.75 takes choice of a "leader lot" of men's $12 qualitied THREE-PIECE suits. Light weights; stunning grey or tan 6tripes, grey mixtures, herringbones, etc.,' and EACH suit KKAI.LY worth a DOZEN dollars. clothing company COR.i4 The trees are set out according to a regu lar schedule, each acre containing thirty five Winesap, ten Delicious, ten Spltsen berg, ten Newtown rippln or White Win ter Pearmatn, and as fillers twenty each of Rome Beauty, Jonathan and Stayman Winesap. The company, which Is headed by 0. I Pratt, has installed a temporary pumping plant capable of lifting 100 gal lons of water a minute to a height ot 212 feet, where are two tanks, each ot 6,000 feet, tor storage purposes. Idaho Land and Investment company of Parma Is planting an orchard five miles In length along the western, boundary line of Idaho. There are 2,000 acres In the or chard, which begins at a point two miles north of Parma and ends two and a lu miles above Kyssa. Fourteen hundred acres of land has been set to apple trees. In the center of the orchard has been platted the townslte of Apple Valley. The settlement Is entirely, almost, ot farmers, formerly residents of the state of Iowa, who ' are developing five and ten-acre tracts. . Twenty-two thousand acres of land in Owyhee county, Idaho, will be watered under a Carey act plan by the Idagon Ir rigation company, headed by W. H. Abel ot Portland, Ore., and his associates, who have financed the project The tract Is to a recognised fruit belt along tha Snake river, bordering Idaho and Oregon. Twenty-one miles of canal has already been constructed, and several thousand dollars expended upon construction work on the reservoir at the headquarters of Succor creek, from which water is to be supplied to the lands. Active work has The Anheuser-Busch Co. of Nebraska Coo. ICrug, Gen. Mgr. Family Supplies by Courts? eV Cds Gladstone Bros. artiksaoW'Ja J & DOUGLAS been started on the extension of the project and it will be pushed to completion. Stephen O. Jayne, manager of ths federal government's, irrigation . projects In tho northwest, with headquarters In, SpoVanS, said on returning from a trip through tha Columbia River valley that ths farmers In the AUe.ll a and White Bluffs districts are keenly Interested In the possibilities of dairy farming and hog raising. "These localities under irrigation ' will raise large crops of alfalfa," he added. "The settlers are considering the matter of getting dairy cows and feeding them al falfa, also going Into hog raising on an extensive scale. The cultivation of alfalfa is needed for building up the fertility of the soil, which Is naturally lacking in humus. Alfalfa, too, Is a means ot getting a quicker return on Investments than fruit raising. In the valley, away from' ths rail ways, it is worth 120 a ton and on board the cars It brings 21 a ton. Three or four crops can be raised in a season, equaling about seven tons to the acre. It Is good for the land, enriching Instead of exhaust ing it. Another point is, that It increases the water holding capacity ot the soli, an Important matter where water Is scare or has to bs pumped." Store at Cherry Creek, 8. IJ., Darned, PIERRE, S. IX, June 16. (Special Tele gram.) A telephone message received her today from Cherry Creek, tells of tha burning there of the Traders store, owned by H. T. Robinson and John M. Robb. They carried a stock of about $20,000 with but little Insurance and the loss will be a heavy ons on them. The Key to the Situation Bee Want Ads.