302 THE IRRIGATION AGE. 



Two Delegates duly accredited by each reg; 1 ' rly organized Irrigation, Agricultural, Horticultural 

 or Forestry Ciub, Association or Society in the United States. 



Two Delegates duly accredited by each Irrigation Company. 



Two Delegates duly accredited by each Agricultural College, and by each College or University 

 having chairs of hydraulic engineering or forestry in the United States. 



Two Delegates duly accredited by each regularly organized society of engineers in the United 

 States. 



Appointment of Delegates should be made as early as possible, and notice of appointment with 

 full name and postoffice address of Delegates forwarded without delay to the National Irrigation 

 Congress Headquarters, Sacramento, California. 



Delegates appointed to this Congress should communicate with the Board of Control at Sacra- 

 mento, in order that accommodations may be reserved. 



The Board of Control, consisting of prominent citizens of California, supported by unanimous 

 sentiment throughout the state, and aided by committees representing various portions of the state, 

 have arranged a splendid program of entertainment, and will accord Delegates a cordial welcome. 



Special railway rates have been made for delegates to the Congress and will prevail over all 

 transcontinental lines. 



All tickets will include a free trip to San Francisco, where rebuilding operations are being carried 

 forward on a scale so vast as to render that city today the greatest and most interesting exhibition of 

 man's constructive genius, civic pride and commercial enterprise ever witnessed in the world. 



Special excursions will enable Delegates to see California. These will cover the Sacramento and 

 San Joaquin Valleys, with their great farms, vine-yards, orchards and irrigation districts. They will 

 penetrate the mountains, pass through magnificent pine forests to the great mining districts of the 

 Mother Lode and to the famous copper belt of the north and rich gold mines of the Siskiyous. 



These excursions will extend to the famous vintage district and giant redwoods of the north 

 coast counties, to the beautiful Santa Clara and other delightful valleys of the south coast, to sea 

 coast resorts of world-wide fame, to the palatial hotels and beautiful landscapes of the southern coun- 

 ties, to the Yuma project and Imperial Valley, where the border land between the United States and 

 Mexico has been transformed from a desert to a garden. They will extend from the Klamath country 

 where the National Government is building in California and Oregon a great irrigation system, to the 

 Truckee-Carson irrigation project in Nevada and on to the great mining districts of southern Nevada, 

 where mines of fabulous wealth are attracting the attention of the civilized world. 



Tickets may be purchased via Los Angeles, the splendid southern metropolis of California, via 

 Portland, the rose city of the Northwest, or via the bustling and rapidly growing cities on the shores 

 of Puget Sound. 



Delegates who desire may come via the northern line and return via the southern, or vice versa, 

 and thereby traverse the entire Pacific coast of the United States, a territory rich in natural resources 

 and scenic beauty. 



Information relative to the Congress, Interstate Exposition and Program will be furnished upon 

 request from the Irrigation Congress Headquarters, Sacramento, California. 

 Sacramento, California. THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, 



July 3, 1907. By W. A. BEARD, Chairman. 



THE BOARD OF CONTROL, 



GEO. W. PELTIER, Chairman. 

 Approved : 



GEO. E. CHAMBERLAIN, President. 



D. H. ANDERSON, Secretary. 



DOUBLE-POWER WIND MILL. row, of Pewaukee, Wis., he says : "The Double-Power 



mill is a dandy in a gale, because the governor keeps her 



steady when other mills are in danger, and in these 



The experience of practical men is always valuable strong winds she develops great power. In a light wind 



when you want to inquire into the merits of any imple- she runs steady and strong." There are many other 



ment or tool that is offered for sale. The Prairie Far- things that we might say in regard to this mill, but we 



mer has carried an advertisement of the Double-Power believe it will best pay our readers to send to the above 



Mill Co., of Appleton, Wis., for a long while, and we are company for its illustrated catalogue showing up the 



constantly having inquiries from our readers asking mill in detail. From the Prairie Farmer of Chicago, 



whether this mill will do all that is claimed for it. A issue of December 22, 1904. 



practical man from the Prairie Farmer office has gone We are pleased to receive this endorsement from a 



to the factory at Appleton, Wis., and examined into paper well known for its conservatism, which has won 



every detail of its construction, and besides he has seen a large circulation and wide success by its own merits, 



the mill in actual work and has interviewed many who We feel that this endorsement is worth preserving, 



have used the mill during the past year. In every case Money could not have purchased it. 

 the mill has fulfilled even more than is claimed for it DOUBLE-POWER MILL Co., 



by its makers. In a recent letter from George McKer- Appleton, Wis., U. S. A. 



