13 THE BEE: OMAHA. TUESDAY. OCTOBETt 24, 1911. YAKIMA SENDS ITS FRUITS Alio Alfalfa and Spudi Are Here 'rom Wonderful Valley. BEE INDUSIBY 13 F10FITABLE Phtrrah Shew ml !. ApUt True, Flftr tears OIA, riaatea 7 Cathalles at Walt wast MlMlaa. Th vJ!y of th Tak:ma, Weihlnrton, rich byond calculation In lu i.aiural rurca, la rprntxl at th Omaha Land 8 ho by biff booth In the aoutb m part of the Colireu:a. Thl exhibit la In charr of fJf mai. -ll. H. Morten. A. T. Rets. Uo(l Juiilai- and V. S. Hunt. It waa etnt t Yalma and Ben ton eojnta and IikIu.V- all tho product cf tha countlaa, aileji6 at random from amcnpr (ha farmer. Alfalfa, potato, atrwbv:rie. a-rui, pplca, peaches and ptais are grown abundantly In tha yalky tnd the i..brta at the Land Bhow nu i.i.eitlon of tha poaalbllltl of t. Ma:, ".utter." aald Mr. Millar, "thee txiih.:, c. not do u juetlo. for w c.u th.I h.u.J to aihlblt hr; but, hu uoii ..i.c J of tha advisability of It tn product wiu thar4 hastily from Carmeta and are raally not aa good a w can prod w e aod aa produe every yaar." Savarel commercial club of Takluia alloy town joined force to present their product to th pttrona of th Land Bhow aad laur will atnd th cama tua with other exhibits to tb Chicago (bow. In addition to tbe nurnsreua farm prod ucts ihown, a aerie of large photogiapb of Induatrle and loculHIe In th valley wo exhibited. The be Industry la a profitable one and extensively followed, thousands of eolonio being located In Yakima and Benton counties. A curloalty exhibited In thl booth and on that tell better than word th won derful fertility of th famous Yakima valley la th photograph of a fruit tree, fifty year old, planted by tha Cathollu t Whit Swan mission. Tha photograph show an Indian standing stolidly under tha great tree, th branches of which art bowed to th earth with fruit Sacramento Land -Products Are Shown Th 6acramonto valley, "land of bloom nd beauty, I described, and product from It ar exhibited at tha Land Show by th Trowbrldge-Bolster company of Oajiaha. who have gathered a rar eel lactlon of wine, truita, grains and graaeea and have literally amotbarod th booth they occupy, in th canter of th hag Coliseum. Every occupation carried on In th val ley I described and Illustrated with lab orate photograph aad froo llteratur, which la being dlstrlbutt-d to tha visi tor. Btatlstlcs on tha production of th lead, th expense accompanying Irriga tion, pWatlag and harvesting of crop have bma prepared and ar being given to thee Interested. A Portaaat Tetaa, . W. Ooodloo. Dallas. Texas, found a aura cur for malaria and btllonsaea In Dr. King Now Ufa Ml la, jsc Kor at by lieatost Drug Co. Training Virgin Praire Sod by Means of Modern Machinery A - vr if -iV: Mi Tr - .7 . v : vr Li 1 1 ' ' i ,y " - J: : ' . 1 ENTERTAIN MANY TEACHERS ire Thousand Visitori Will Be Here Duiinj the ConTestion. J ADITS WILL ACT AS GUIDES TJIKUK GANGS OS I'LOWK DllAWN i;v Kl I .m'TiiilS UUIiAKIKG 1(W AC HUB OF PKAlHIli LAND A DAY. Nona of tha exhibits at tb Land Bhow la attracting more attention than ih great gaa traction engine which are playing ao Important a part In th de velopment of th west. Every farmer, very land man, ovoryone who la Inter ested In tho opening up of tho thousands of acre not yet put under the plow, real ise whai the great entclnee mean in the work of transforming arid acres Into fer tile: fields and making the bar prairie to blossora like the rose. Tb remarkable Illustration accompany ing Uila article ahowa three of these en gines at work on a tract of 22,;0u acres la Chynao county, Colorado. The thre engines have broken thl aeaaon more than s.OOi) acres of tough prairie sod, averaging better than KX acre a day. tauh angina pull tn ti-lnch plow, and th thr turn over a com bined furrow width of thirty-five feat An automatic aelf-steeiing device make It possible for on man to run both an gina and plows. An exhibition of plowing by thes ma chine will b given at Thirtieth and Kpencer streets tills afternoon. Strange to say, It la only within th laat decade that many farmer hav awakened to tho fact that bora traction la a very expanalv and Inefficient form of power. For ao many years th fanner has been uaed to raring for his horaea that he ha come to take tha labor aad asp" aa a matter of course, not real ising that the average annual cost of maintaining a farm work horse l ap proximately too and that all h get a out of tho animal lu return is three hour of work a day througout th year. It la only within th laat tew yaar that farra r generally hav begun to reallso what heavy expenao they ar under In hous ing, feeding and taking car of their horses through th long winter, whan thy ar doing prmctloaaly no work, in order that thoy may hav thetn whn tha aeaaon of aoUv work begin. Thr ta a good deal of work In caring for a horse, if It Is properly car4 for, ar.c' that must b men to do It and thei men must b boused and fed and paid. 'i he modern gas ,tt..o.or, when, if la not wo.k.og, ntuli't m car no av tentlon, and abto.u.e'.y no expense' can fce thargiu to lu other than interest on the Investment and depreciation, both of which should also b charged In figur ing th expens of hori traction but seldom ar. Th tractor stands allot and old in lu shod all wlnUr long, un less It Is desired to uses It for sawing wood or some other form of stationary work. At a turn, of the rrank It la ready to do th work of thirty horaea. Tho mo ment Ita motor ceasea to work tb ex pense, other than Interest and deprecia tion stop absolutely. In considering th valuo of a tractor, tho fh-st point In Its genersi utility or .the all-around serrlo which It per form. Th tractor, for Instance, which ran be used only on hard, firm ground, s In breaking, or for stationary work, such as thrashing, I an expense invest ment for th farmer, bnraua be must keep a large number of horaea through out the year In order to do the many other klnda of work. The modem gas tractor, with Ita light weight and high. wid wheela, can travel, with eaa over oft ground and can, therefore, be used In drilling, harrowing, discing and har vesting, m addition to th heavier work of breaking and threshing ; It, therefor, provide th farmer with a portable power plant with which he can do prac tically an hi work and which .enable him almost entirely to do without horaea In farming, aa perhaps In no other business, almost everything depend upon doing thing at th proper time and get ting them done quiokly. Horse can do only so much, and th farmer can work hi horse only so many hours a day. The engine owner can work hta angina night and day If he want to, plowing fifty to seventy-five acres every twenty four hours, and keeping It up without fear of tiring his engine or wearing it is in Juki this particular that the modern gaa tractor ia worth so much to the farmer. The greatest value la not In Ita ability to do hu plowing and other farm work at a much lower cost than that of doing It with horses, but in the fact that It enables him to do hi work Just when ha wants to do It. and to get through with It quickly, while soil and weather conditions ar Just right. Tho modern gas tractor of thirty-horsepower will break from twenty-five to forty acre a day. tubbl-plow twnty-flv to fifty acres, harvest sixty to 100 acres. Furthermore, th tractor enable the farmer to perform two or three different operations. In one trip across ths field that la, to pult several different Imple ments, ons behind th other. Farmer frequently plow, harrow and drill at one operation. With four tan-foot drills and two twenty-foot drags behind, two men can drill and drag 100 to 150 acres a day at leu than 20 cents an acre. With tha modern gas tractor the farmer can plow as he never could with horses. Plowing la tough work for Worses at best, and the farmer has a natural disinclination to overwork them by throwing his plows In a deep' as he would if ho had no regard for the source of his power. Th tractor owner haa no compunctions on this score; ha can "sock 'em In" good and deep, with no fear of tiling his engin or wearing It out. Fur thermore, he can take the time to "plow mor thoroughly, becaus he can cover o much greater an area In a given time. Th tractor enable the farmer not only to'plow more deeply and to do bis plow ing in less tlm. but also to get his threshing out of th way earlier and thus turn to hi fall plowing earlier. In a word, th modern farm tractor doe away to a large extent with the Distillate Engines Run at High Speed Silent, high-powered distillate engin. running at high speed, have ba plaoerf on a linoleum floor at th Land show In th center of Machinery hall by tb Alamo Manufacturing c:r-veny f HUla dale, Mich., and the dUpla Is attracting hundred of Land Bhow , eopl daily to an Investigation of the efficiency of th Alamo crude oil machine. F. M. Bceaon Is In charge of th ex hibit and assisting hlra 1 "Buatr" Brown, an expert from the factory and one of the Inventor of the Alamo en gines. The light for the exhibits at the hall ar aacured from thl exhibit, which also opera tea tour moving plotur machln uaed by th lecturer in illustrating their descriptions of the western and mlddl wtrn atatee. On of th exhibit on th Alamo spac which has attracted more than the usual attention given by th layman to a ma chine demonstration is a moving picture apparatus. This machine Is of six horse power and Is one' of the most economical aad perfect moving picture mechanism rar lnvav,d. A thirty horse-power distillate engine, operating under full load, on a aeventecn aad one-half kllowat generator, on a pint f fuel per horse-power hour, I another demonstration of Alamo efficiency given Land show visitors. Perhaps none of the other machines shown by Mr. Beeson la calling forth ao much approbation a the five borse-power engine which operates a four-Inch cen trifugal pump and circulates water over a space to show an Ideal irrigation sys tem. This laat exhibit was completed Monday afternoon. All generators used on the Alamo apace are of Weatlnghousa manufacture. element of uncertainty In farming and places It more nearly upon a modern, sclentlflo baals. v Committees Have Beea Appellate, ta Meat aad Take Car of Dele-a-ate Waa Will Come ia vrarxas Neat Meatb. Arrangements for tha comfort and en tertalr.mtnt of tha 5,000 visitors who are xpee'ed here when tha annual con vention of tha Net ra nk Teachers asso ciation begins, are rapidly being formu lated by Sune.-intend.ant of Schools B. U. Oraff, who la at tha head of the commit tee on arrangement. Mr. draff Is plan ning to have tha high school cadeta patrol the city In uniform during the three days that the convention Is In ses sion, to ao as guides and furnish Infor mation to the visitor. Three committee have been appointed from the ranka of th local school teachers by Superintendent Graff to meet the delegate at the depots and to direct them to the hotels. With the arrange menea being made by Publicity Manager E. V. Farrlsh of the Commercial club tha meeting here will doubtlessly eclipse anything of the kind ever held by the association. If you have anything to exchange, ad- the It in the Omaha Dally Bee. Weak Heart Many people safer from weak hearts. They may expert enoe shortness of breath an xertion, pain aver th heart, or dizzy feelings, oppressed breathing after meal or their eye becom blurred, their heart is not sufficiently strong to pump blood to tb extremities, and they have cold hand nd feet, or poor appetite boeause of weakened blood supply to the stomach. A heart tonic and alterative should be taken which ha no bad after-effect. Such is Dr. Pierce's Goldea Medical Discovery, which containa no danxeroua narcotics nor alcohol. Tb Ingredients, as sttrsUd under eatb, ar Stone rest (Celllanmlm Canada; s), Blaodraat (Stnrulairtm Casatfsnsta), dolden Seal root Hydrastis Uh4m (), Quean' root (Stilllarla SVvica), black Cherry bsrk (Prunut Virginians), Mandrake rot (Podophyllum Ptltmtum). with trlpl ref.ned tivcerln, prepared In e scientific laboratory la a way that no druggist could imitate. This tonio contains no alcohol to shrink up the red blood corpuscle ; but, oa th other hand, it increases their number and they become round and healthy. It help the human system in the constant manufacture of rich, red blood. If help th stomach to assimilate or take up th proper clement from tbe food, thereby helping digestion and curing dyspepsia, heart-burn and many uncom fortable symptoms, stops excessive tissue waste in convalescence from fevers for the run-down, anemic, thin-blooded people, the " Discovery " ia refreshing nd vitalizing. Stick to this asfe and sane remedy, and refuse alt " just a good ' medicines offered by the druggist who is looking for larger profit. Nothing but Dr. Pierce's Goldea Medical Discovery will do you half as much j-jod. Th Key to the Situation The tlslng Columns. Bees VISIT THE WILLAMETTE VALLEY EXHIBIT AT THE LAND SHOW and se what wa grow, than come and see ua and let us tell you all about the country. We are here to serve you. The World Investment Co. 804 BRAN DEIS BLDG., OMAHA NEB. ia f Now is tlie Time to Select the Location for a Farm Home The products from every state in the west are represented by samples shown in the booths of these states at the Omaha Land Show, and you are there given the opportunity to look them over and decide just what section is best suited to your requirements. Purchase price of land and crop yields are important items and you can secure this information at the booths. Remember when looking over the exhibits that the states showing the best crop yields and the highest quality of grains, fruits, grasses, etc., are found in the UNION PACIFIC COUNTRY Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, California, Idaho, Oregon and Washington. The lecture program today includes two illustrated talks by Wm. Bruce Lef fingwell; author, traveler and lecturer, both to be giveu in Lecture-Hall "A." 4:30 p. m.--"Development of the West." 9:30 p. m.--"Ye lowstone National Park" Dr. Frederick H. Milloner will give his demonstrations of the Wireless Telephone in the "Stop" ai sT2J, CIFHC IBOOTH at the Booth Showing the Electric Block Signal u,, ,.