Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 14, 1910, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, MAY 14,0 1910. 322 South 16th Street The Two Best Offers of This Secason tMEN’S SPRING SUITS BECAUSE the wholesale season had ended and he had no other way to dispose of his small lots, one of our New York makers sold us several hundred brand new Men’s and Young Men's Spring Suits at hardly more than half their worth. We have divided this purchase into two large lots which will be offered Omaha men Saturday at the two prices named below. Your own best interest demands that you come and SEE these wonderful values whether you buy or not. Offer NoOo. 1 Offer No. 2 $13.50 to $16.50 Suits $18.00 to $22.50 Suits This lot consists of suits, which if bought under \ 3! RS This lot contains many garments identical in ordinary conditions, would be everywhere considered f quality with those now shown outside this store, at as splendid values at $1 50, $15.00 and $16.50. ! i prices ranging from $20 to $25. Préactioally nll of this season’s corract styles are i You will find that almost eve v one of this sea : leally ¢ 1 son’s most popular new shades, such as sand tan, brown, included in the usmrhuvnl. The shades range from : kor fabdd f'” shades of gray, olive and dark mixtures are the new grays, browns and olives to the darker fabrics included amongst these splendid garments, preferred by many. Fhey’re exceptionally stylish and handsome and are superbly hand-tailored into perfect-fitting, retaining, long wearing suits, Fake your pick Saturday at Shoe Marke: Basement prices are an attraction— yes—a BIG attraction—but—the STYLES are ah at traction, too. In fact—even at $1.95 and $2.45—we show styles—far—FAR—in advance of others. For instance—the newest ankle strap pump for la- dies’ wear—it's decidedly swagger—and has been dubbed the ‘‘Short State Street Stub.” The State Street Stub’’ is made up in gun metal or patent leather and it's ‘‘chic indeed. You'll enthuse over the ‘‘Stub’’—and you'll en- thuse over a score of OTHER ankle strap pumps shown here, too—at the same—low—prices. Just say to yourself: ‘‘I WILL carry my shoes home; I WON'T ask to have them charged!'’ These are the only resolves you'll have to make to buy Shoe Market Basement shoes—at a saving. If you buy ladies’ ‘‘low cut’’ shoes anywhere else you're going to pay considerably MORE for 'em—if you get the same STYLE and the same LEATHER. So you'd better NOT forsake the Basement. These suits are well tailored, perfect fitting and . shape will agreeably surprise you in both wear and looks. Take your pick of this lot Saturday at— Special 25¢c ‘‘PARIS” GARTERS— The no metal kind for summer, Saturday, at— 15c Special BENGALINE SILK TIES— A narrow four-in-hard, worth 50c X of any man’s money, Saturday— ‘“The House of High Merit.”’ SOGS SSOSCOTTSTEooSSSSY ) q n Bl i low er, - J s base-nothin more or | designed. The work of these G lifts, 1 ix inches below mean water, with a max- | mile thick at it 0 g d 4 atun %, | walls they re—culverts, dra! TRUTHABOUT PANAMA CANAL | imum variation of elghteen thches. ‘Should | less than a big, easy hil squarely scross | which 15 the ! 5 LRRA e g raiderapai gIF-(8 most complicated on the | y,q heing mounded as a chi 0 a deeper channel ever become necessary, | the valley. It Is neither the largest nor | whole canal, Is well under way. The ex-[pies Parts of the sides {hlmm ulds mud by however, by reason of a much greater in-| the most spectacular dam ever constructed, | cavation, most of it rock eut, has prac-|yr up: huge monolithe hard, m"w:r 33 are up; huge monoliths hardening in raw, = g crease In the draft of ships than is now |but when you stand there and look it over | tically been completed—80 per cent at the mprehensive Summary of the |crease in the d s Pl 80 per ¢ e | red casings of stesl. The floor o A Comp v anticipated, It would be a simple matter to it seems like a pretty big proposition. That | end of January—and 21 per cent of the con- | u finiehe. 1ta o1 ,“"”:'_Ild 1“,:‘:; i s all b S ey ules to parties that have been missed by BRIEF CITY NEws the cnumerators. Progress of the Work. dredge to any further required depth, and | pile of rock and earth will have a head of | creto work on the upper lock had also | rush whisties bioaine 3 peiei | ®uits to Recover Indian Landa n.nm-—‘ | that without any interruption of canal|only ~»mmr»m-o feet of water against it, [ been put in at that ti That means that | shouting, all in :‘u:::n I‘.;:\»«l.::”:::“.;u?m(\ The United States as guardian and trus- | tratfic. Two breakwaters will be built off |and that for but about 500 feet of its|at the present rate the locks should be fin- | the bods of the c 3 c o :::n:::::::: argess-Granden G0, |teo for Ws-tac-we Reese Harlan, an Omaha | FACTS FOR THE LAY READER|ji0n (o protect the canal entrance and to| length, but it will hold a lake, the area |ished in three and one-halt years. And | e oo sarth. ‘Thavs datiin Best Dry Cleaning of garments. Twin|Indlan, has brought suit in the circuit | _ make passage possible even during the|of which will be over 164 square miles, with thelr completion the whole canal will Ay :fl'.’,r,.‘,\,f \'.’fl'l" l;u{ -||‘ American City Dye Works, 407 South Sixteenth. court of the United States against Thomas | A wmy of Twenty-Five Thousand Men | violent “northers” which sweep in at times| Right In the middie of the valley, and, | be considered done. bit proud. The bl e Y L. Slhan to recover $2,464 for land rentals of - during the winter months, incidentally, of the dam, rises a small hill - he biggest work of its kind s ational Life Insarance Co—i810 erty alleged to bel to the plaintige| Fushing the Enterprise Toward of rock—Spillway hill, they call It, because Flight ot T, ever undertaken going on relentlessly, day e e Ik e S :\'l:)rpe"/\)ugu:lg? AZoa.w';J::: u"“lll::n”:ll:::!fi here a concrete-lined rock cut will take| There will be three flights of locks at |after day, and in some places day and Stors Your Fine Furs in Moth-proof | T E T AUFustid 19007 the detann- care of the surplus water Which the rivers | Gatun, arranged in pairs, each hay- |NiEht. Twenty-five thousand and more men hults, Nominai cust. Shukerte, 1560 &8¢ | 0 oeizeq upon the property of the plain- pour down during the rainy season. The[!PS & usable length of 1000 feet | SWArMINg over the line of the canal, super- MR, | tft, now in littgation, without any right spillway 18 to have a channel 300 feet wide, | 0d @ Width of 110. They will be built of | VIsing, organizing, drafting, surveying, some in law and has since continued In posses- desgned for a run-off capacity of 110,000 cmu-rg.e throughout, thick, solld concrete, :l'l‘ i\‘“'l“lhr;-u-lw of locomotives and steam slon of the property and has appropriated | faull-finding manifested by Panama canal | (he swamps and boks of the coust lowlands. | upic feet a second. That fs about finished; | the Water level being regulated by valves | Shovels, others sweating in the dust of con- o Drotits ad proteds from 1t use t6 nye | Investigators Is presented in “The Truth | On both ends togetlier, however, De(Ween | iy cut has been completed, the concrate |In the heavy side and conter walls which |Creto mixers, stll® others blasting rock, use and benefit. About Panama Canal,” n the May num-| 00" o o 2 {a5a | floor 16 down, &nd the whils' thtmseives,| PErMibAER WAter o flow; it knd iut of the | TREIHE endless lines of trains, or digging, i ber of the Columblan Magasine. -Gerald | WOk, some of them old French. machines| o q wey) under way. chambers through openings in the lock [I8EINE. And they are working in one of The timely use of Chawberlain's Cough | Mygatt, the author, put in three weeks |and two of the :‘“j"l“‘k"l’l‘;""’ “’"l“ big | atun Dam. floors. For safety in operation there will |the most nealthful and sanitary commun- Remedy will prevent preumonia. looking over the great work in March last 10":'“ ""Y"‘_‘"‘- they. lool e—now In use | oot of Spillway hill little work on the | be double steel gates at each end of each |!tles on earth—a place that five years ago \| and sketches conditions as they are at the | '? New York harbor. actual dam construction has been done— |lock, with a heavy protective chain in addi- | *#8 & reeking mud hole of yellow fever present time. His aim is to give the reader | A fourtmile breakwater is being thrown | inays pecause there got to be some | tion to arrest the movement of any vessels, | #nd Pestilence. a comprehensive view of the progress of | Ut to one of the small off-shore islands, | piace for the rivers to run until they can |But more than that, no ship or boat will be Completion—~Culebra Cat | The Paclfic Entrance. The nine-mile sea level channel at the Pacific end has also already been mainly completed, and In much the same way as A gratifying ‘variation from the spirit of | the Atlantic division, by dredging through the swamps and bogs of the coast lowlands. and Gatun Dam. Mormons to Salt Lake—Sixty Mormon converts passed through Omana Krday, while enroute from the Atlantic coast to Salt Lake City. The Savings Eabit once formed leads to independence. One dollar starts an ac- count with Nebraska Savings and Loan Ass'n, 106 Board of Trade Bidg., Omaha. Memphis Profemsor visite Schocis— | CONVENIENT LOOPHOLE IN srofessor K. K. Ltterbach of : o » 3 Tenn., yestariay visitad the Grualis schvcs, THE CHILD LABOR CASES | o national enterprise, free from technical |/ ©7 account of storms, for (ov seldom | bo turned through the spillway itself. But |allowed lo pass (hrough any of the locks Seventeen M Professor Utterbach is supervisor of draw- details 100, ‘BUt’ to ANFaBE Ehoatihg ot (he shas. | 2} (e SES Sis:A good deal i geing S, [under it own power. Mast look acsidents ore g and manual training in the Memphis | Two Defendants, Admitting Guilt of | The sallent facts of the article follow: |, %e /PG iy e S R0 C s Cpat | They started out by dumping two parallel "a:\w dhamwm-d from lack of control or Y schools, and is making & short tour of Rair Canoscnis Beesye. trowm The Panama canal, to all intents and |yt (rom FUICSEIVInE BTeR CRECRR lllnu of rock, aboui 1,20 feet apart, from ity lv-‘rvsumdvmsx:nlls. 5 Electric_towing ()ung D()Ctors ome of the prineipal cities. the Responsibility. purposes, will not be a cn\n:ilkul ‘:lr::,lhu‘l Al e medt DacUIIAr CHINETE IRIT ot the :;2 l'-:‘;’\klfi‘:nsfRl‘hrha\flllll‘:v;j‘p:)y‘x“[;:ll»clllll‘\ll(:e‘ |:’f(l‘:mf,nu\reslu“n \(.: .‘us:" u:i (::hl ::‘.‘:::l os Plano Company—Suit s | lake—a broad, fresh-water lake, thirty-two | pasitic end of the c , . ) 3 ssel—one Rh o boTTiat. ot T eourt prtote. dudsw Keonely i Loopholes for the escape of two men |miles long and with an area of 164 square | A\l:h’;-’-gur(:‘ln::"T,l.l,-:s._:‘;m::,r.m..,‘.;"2“'{ the rock was dumped indiscriminate |80 to speak-—and not & steamer will be al- Class Graduates from the Omaha in which A. 8. Ritchie 1 suink the J. V. | charged with violating the child labor law | milcs, @ lake which will flood the COUNtEY |qafly rise and fall of from twenty to twen- | one, #1d dirt. - They got those two lines |lowed to turn tts own propeilers while Medical College Next Steger Pla company for $2,000 for at-|were sought out and made available for in some places far beyond the ten-mile ¢y two feet, cleven feet above and eleven N"Hsh“eb Itl'. like two separate dams, | going through. his will mean efficiency, Th\ll"ldly torney fees alleged to have been earned a|the dismissal of the defendants in Judge | limits of the canal zone, from Within seven feet below mean water. That means noth- :""f then began filling In the space be- |speed and safe TRy decade ago. Mr. J. V. Steger, head of the | Crawford’s court Friday morning. With |miles of the Atlantic to a distance of but | ween with impervious material pumped in | The Gatun flight is situated in a bed of " a ing, as far as a lock canal is concerned, plano house, is here to testify in the case. | complete admission of the evidence that|nine from the Pacific side o> tae Isthmus. | by dredges. The rock “toes” of the east- Third Trial in Damage Suit—Limond Hans, & teamster, I8 making a third ef- fort in district court to recover $10,000 from the Amerlcan Transfer company. Hung | uries have previously resulted. Hans was triving a wagon for the transfer company \When the accident happened which was | king bolt. Young Woman Back to School— 80t expedite ..».\ Hanley, manag due, the plaintitf asserts, to & defective | Express company to produce witnesses. Sherman was first to be set free when it | their business concerns had employed boys | Most persons do not realize that. They much under the legal age, Sherman-McConnell B. Kirkendall Kirkendall Shoe company ‘Under the same of the Omaha Meuam{vr tull ork is st | picture the waterway as a big ditch, which |of the Atlantic entrance, to allow for ths g‘m";"‘(‘f‘:‘jflm’l’l“:":I‘:u‘“‘:“‘!'_’{:z”“ "'k gl Drug |it 1s not. KFor only nine miles through |passage of deeply laden vessels at ebb streams o atery the | Culebra cut will the work be very much |tide. i rains off and the sandy clay settles, dry- like what the average mind seems to have | The real ditch digging part of the work || "0 OfF a0 ;m';‘l'“‘” u::ivr :‘“'If‘“;d"r\ L | concelved. And when it is finished, even [is at what has come to be known as the| i SOV SI BREKUE TR0l Ro Bavd D) | that Culebra section will form part of the [Culebra cut, extending for the nine miles e st as was given fl"°"""""“"¢"l¢ka itselt. Provided you're going from |from Bas Obispo to Pedro Miguel. Here| (o, o y : shed—and it won' New York to San Francisco by boat five [the range of the Cordilleras, which is the | Wheh ‘,‘:fi‘:‘ffil :,'_“qfl nl';‘“:“d ‘:'," L i :“ years from now, this is what will happen | connecting link between the Andes and the o b hings off and rip- except that the 500-foot channel will be ern half of the dam are abc y given a depth four feet greater than that 4 e kIRt mud pouring in day and night. The water solid as concrete, solid rock at the extreme left of the valley C2' COlle#®, which is the college of medicine as you approach the dam from the Carih bean side of the isthmus, The whole work, dam and all, is being built on solid rock, or on hard, impervious material much like that of the dam itself, overlying the rock stratum, Working Force in Action. Picture a long, deep cut with sheer ver- ticle sides, a cut as broad as two or three city blocks, stretching from the shade of the University of Nebraska, will receive their degree as doctor of medicine from Chancellor Avery Thurscay evening at the First Congregational church, Omaha. Following are the names of the members of the class: W. N. Anderson, Osceola; ¥. L. Barbour, Omala; George Buol, Ran- dolph; 1. 8. Cutter, Omaha; 1. R. Carson, Fremont; R. G. Miller, Ord; N. H. New- man, Omaha; R. R. Reed, Randolph; C. &, § s ; R e i . Remy, Alnsworth; J. E. Olsson, L ; Mamie Gensen, over whose going to school [ was found that though his concern had |when you get to Panama. Rockles, runs down to only a little more :,::,,.m;,,;m:,:‘:: :;,:m‘:m‘:‘m“m“ s ‘“‘;” is Rish tooky wRLVIS g snd (che Jonk | ST Loty Ormatini' B lyor--d,::,'.":o.:" there has been some contention in juvenile | hired one particular boy and evidently | At Colon, on the Caribbean side, you will|than 00 feet above sea lovel. ~ On the | F4 TIE A€ TRE TOrE WOT b ready | three-quarters of @ mile toward the wea.| o, '"'p 5 Mg o0 e Grana tsiand: C. R tourt and who has been in the Detention |Others under 16 years old, he himaelf Was | run into a broad, deep channel, which has |Pacific side the siope is sudden, on the f ot TAEUEET e (AM WIT KU fuons | Pleture W swarming with negro 4 thiors | Stewart, Nickerson; . A. Swensory Oak hifgh e - o] i y v 3 o) b a foreman, the lower end ed 4 i 8 A . home recently, ran away from that institu- [ not directly responaible for the legal lapse. | aiready been dredged out of the soft, sea- Atlantle rather more gentle; but in the | L "0 "okt ireace it will be 398 B cabilain iaike wod {tches, | 18Nd; Miss Jeannette Throckmorton, Chari- Hom and was brousht back by her mother, | Mr. Kirkendall in his own defense argued | jovel swamp land for seven miles, in to [nine-mile tilckness of the range there was | ¢ (& L 8 loke AuFace It Wil be S| with rough-laid tracks o '““l"“" ton, la.; J. C. Waddell, Pawnee City L e . ; st | that there Was no way for an employer to | ¢ *he: . £ you |In the first place a whole lot of materfal | . ottom over | Steam shovels, locomotives, rock trains, all | ‘00 '} ; i i Inasmuch as Mrs. Jensen h‘x‘\\ in n.n‘n:; plll“: Know o & surety ihe-troe “:’ o “w‘m’mu 1|‘)](re‘),u]|:1 \\::“se:”:?:::“. rmiu: 5 by taer neee o o it uris!12.0 feet through, The slopes are 80 guntle| werking 868 jarring snd squesling to- | lTh Commencement address will bo de- ther schools, er o 3 ‘ 3 o d : be down, not ou i > Birine . oted physic \d author of New Y. :«I-‘n:’rrnrd, her bringing back the child is |to do If the boys lie about their age?” he | yalley to the other. That will be the Gatun Calebra Cat, LY 4a810 o0’ of the OhEInEiTEL (hak :;‘,;" _‘::,, "',';"k.h,r:: -«:‘::‘fn four Soware| P vobart H WaLolt of I,lur‘flln‘ U.;:... halled as the growth of a civic conscience | 8%ked. dam—but 1t won't lock like a dam at all, [ The proposition of taking a X0-foot hill | yon't be o dam. 1Nl be a small moun- | gulf, busy moving cables, with | the | o¢ the college, will preside, and Dr. Harold : State Commissioner of Labor Maupin and | oo Hota ane il ki as ek |and cutting a pie-shaped plece out of it " gulf, bus oving. cables, with great|c 3 . Ly el Labor Inspector Gepson, who had flled the | tres ot o wea beach - ) inle [down to forty feet above the sea—the water | **i buckets siiding out to the center, dumping | #1ff0rd of Omaha, assoctate dean, will also ;. | Labor cctor Gepso ed the : |down to fc et above the sea— r % , [@ 3 { that of & sea beach. At the left Is a triple | Although the da R o ¢ ity il 5 take part in the graduatic erc! e N e auran ) Mol complaings, exblathed that. an . smployer| fiists ot locks= purt . therm la bullt airesay |SWI£A08 1880, e efghiy=(ove Cast, BULHAS | ouier rosors brearon oo ol of 0P PAI-| masmerol WU oncimte to the floor. tar| S0 BRVC /0 ©)8 RTACHATEN, eXaroen A Wattles an: 1l tor Caldwell wppearsd 1| ould communicats with RIm OF the | e ae yeer soamor up 16 the level ot tne | €8N8l Will bo forty-five feot deep—and to | Suer Tooord-bresker, ep i n the one | below, and then snappink back for load stasppilese s SO DY “;| thelr o 8 ot IE8 ikitan | aonoct, utarities \for defibite; IRCOGINON 1a ks eiuntyctive feet Abave:the'men, . You | DAV, the . bottom (o6 ~that' atiog. il |go <5 0K SA107 800 Fove Nasvly bullt | attep-lena. Down i the bottom pigmy | 2o SO SIVIR BEE, 150 AR Wilh e gy i g e e natate of |about each boy when doubt existed. e, O e or o |10 Seet ~wide, that 1 s mdod e of a-Job | for. /"2 WOrk 1t will be callad upon:to do, | men are working. ofi the giant, éollapaile |08 2010k of s aime mater, States National bank and the estate o WAl Bt aeie. aition w Dav 16 iiq | TIAY POs anothor boat & v, Lot e L One hundred million euble vards of rock ¥ similar construction ever at-|steel forms into which the concrete falls, | ption will follow in the parlors of w. Mn:’xh“lh‘v‘-l .»-u;lvn{ll;nl\ is ;,m ALl Rl i pat xsbmm L..u:.«d.. ‘v]n |»Mr‘u o ([M"Il\ of traffic Inj. 4 dirt, to be exact. One can hardly | t®™Pted. the locks—and they are the same | settles down and hardens—for the whole | th¢ church for the graduates and their snment by Mr. Marsh of his share | d *"| both directions at once. | in the eatate of his father, W. W. Mapsh, | ifquired Mr. Kirkendall 4 | to the bank. Included in Mr. Watties' | “They would be taking a risk under the On Gatun Lake. realize the magnitude of the work without | ("TOUEhout the canal—are the largest ever [ fabric of the locks, floor, walls—and what | friends aw,” sald Mr. p gREE ‘ b There Is now & rough average of about testimony was & statement that the bonds | " uid My, Maupin Now vou're on Gatun lake, and the cap- | seeing it with his own eyes. — 0 E 0 0T T R didedies chod ecause its | [OTLY feet, or slightly over, still to be taken of the Omaha & Councll Bluffs Street Rail- | i vid e Al INR|n gives she Sull wpaed Jiomle beoauise (R | N0 Ty st et e Var~tha. aitab £ s were worth par January 1|Chansed.” Rnnounced the defendant a wide, clear channel, with but an easy | h, from way compans At this polnt Judge Crawford Intervened. | turn nere and there, and long, clear |!lttle OF nOthing at she two ends to about of this year. . “L can't see any way to avold fining you | straightaways In between, and the ship |S°VentY-flve fect at the highest point. And Census Being Finished Up—The enum- |gg and costs.” he said, “except under the | keeps on thus for twenty miles or more. | N3t mMeans that some work has been sators have practically completed their {poing | raised for Mr. Sherman, that your | Then hills loom up ahead, and the channel | 3% 3 . Th p ; work and the fag ends of the census are | corporation Is responsible and not you in- | narrows from 1000 feet to 80, and then | Det™een the cut and the Gatum dam 20w being gathered up by the speclal | giviaually. T ! ten ot tast yon saga|thers will have to be little excavation agents. The Bee slips continue to be of | e cage was forthwith dismissed ong for the nine-mile passage through |TCrey the lopping oft of a few knolls here eral of them being received daily. The let-! along for th P & OUER | 4nd there near the rise of the continental ter carriers have been enlisted n the work | was prevented by G. W. Cloyd, Plunk, Mo., | choose..where the channel gets down to|C2tUn there will be no digging at all: i . £ gathering up the belated schedules, and | who healed his dangerous wound its mintmum width of 30 feet, enough for| ™, 288 Oblspo at the foot of the hillef some instances, as In South Omaha. |Bucklen's Arnlea Salve {wo vessels to pass in comfort and with [Seion et g, S00d desl of excavating P T e TR el ol gl g wo vessels | which will prove most useful. But for all lots w”npo-n» but mot enough for & twenty- |of the twenty-three miles of what will be | knot clip. ope e or! o ents fin- | You are through before you know it, and (:;:1 l';h.l?‘:,:,;,k,,;;‘:n'g“,‘,I,‘,t"“.‘::,; _:'": Into the Pedro Miguel lock, which lets the | pler even than the work on severa! canale ship down thirty feet into & little lake or | nich have been bullt In the eastern states basin a mile long, at the far end of Which |There were a couple of xivers to contral are the two twin locks of erlflol:en;‘ com- | rivers which would rise higher than the pleting the descent to the sei. And then |canal excavations, Fi . {t's a run of nine miles throush & stralght, | ter of wo or three Py A broad, lowland channel—most of that, t0o, | simple. has already been dredged—and you are out Great Reduction at KILPATRICK’S Saturday at 9 a. m. We Place on Sale EveryTrimmed Hat in Stock at Locks and Dams. in the Pacific. That's all. The bulk of the| The key 2 24 (ft * pleces of the whole canal ar e Tlme Cel’tlilcates o[ - canal length lies In Gatun lake, right|the dams and locks—the dam and double through Culebra cut to the Pedro Migel |flight at Miraflores, the twin single-lift / L ' lock, a distance most of which can be cov-{lock at Pedro Miguel, and more than both Milliner with Ze. For sale by The report made to the comptroller under date of March 29, 1910, shows that this bank has of locks at Gatun. The locks throughout into three parts; the sea level entrances, |the line of the waterway will be uniform the cut through the divide of the Cordil- [the two minor dams are but little out of leras at Culbebra, and the dam and lock |the ordinary. And so a general description 1 construction at Gatun, Pedro Miguel and [of the work and progress al Gatup should 3 /2 % Interest Miraflores. Each of these brings in work [Eive a fair idea of the whole work of a different character. tun is the Atlantic water gateway of pald on certificates running for twelve 3 On the Atlantic side the canal will con-!the isthmus. Here it Is that two or three | sist of & sea level channel 500 feet broad | good-sized rivers—the Chagres and the montha. and forty-one feet deep, extending from | Gatuncilla and several others—pour in to- deep water In the Caribbean to Gatun, | gether and swirl out between two low-lying seven miles Inland. This portion of the ranges of hills inio the Caribbean. Back | work i already been practically com- | of Gatun the country spreads out for miles | - ° / pleted, and s put to daily use by the tugs | of bog and swamp and soggy morass, the | l rst Natlondl and cement barges running into Gatun. |territory which will form the bed of the | Although the rest of the canal will have a | new lake. Nature could hardly have de- 1 minimum depth of forty-five feet, the|slgned a better place for a glgantic dam 'g‘| n I‘ ‘)f Omilha Atlantic channel has been given only a|and splliway and a flight of locks. N forty-one-foot depth on account of the Acro the 7.600 feet between those two fact that the average oscillation of the tide [low ranges the dam Is belng thrown-—a is only about @ foot, six inches above and [dam 15 feet high and over & third of a . sz 034 278-61 .ref::lf:\:\llxlnl;l‘\'r‘n':nf‘::;edm“ S of these the great dam and triple flight | " Deposit l . ooy About 100 Misses’ Hats Regular $7.50 and $5 Hats only $3 50 @ NO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS Thomas Kilpatrick & Co.

Other pages from this issue: