The Omaha Daily Bee WEATHER FORECAST. For Nebraska One-rally fair. For loaa - Warmer. For weather report see Phb 3. NEWS SECTION PAGES ONE TO TWELVE VOL. XL NO. ih; OMAHA, MONDAY MOKNINU. .JANUARY 1911 TWKIA'K PACIKS. SStXULK COPY TWO t'KXTS. KNAPP TELliSHOW' 1 Mayor W. S. Pershing I'EO 1LE MAY & . V t llfl L Expert of Department of Agricultur Says it Depends Upon Directed Effort. FARMER HAS GREATEST CHANCE No Such Thing ai Poor Soil in the Country. NATION IS SLAVE TO FASHION Expecti to Lire According to the Dictatei of Appetite. LONG LIFE WITHIN EASY REACH l.lttle mln nt Mlllo Kroaomlea Within Reach of .til, Whlr-h Wool Trll Knorntmalr In Aaareaate for Welfare of the rablle. XKW YORK. Jn. ;?.-tPpecll Telegram! "Tlier In no such thing a bad soil In th Fitted Slate. The matter la. there Ia a poor man on tha top of good soil." Till statement wan made at the Saturday Itim-henn of the T.unchenn club yesterday by pTof. Seamen A. Knapp. chief expert of the Department of Agriculture. There was delighted applause l.y the biggest crowd th club baa had at such a meeting till icir. There are l,Of,nno,of acre of land on which ther ia constant loaa by eroalnn. Im proper tillage, floods, atorm, etc. Pla cing thla loss at $1 aa aora, aa a eonaerva tlve eatlmst ll.ono.ono.nno la lost to the country each year that could be saved If proper method were tiaed." Laying down the prostioaitlon that folka are alaveH to fashion, not only In clothea, but In food, the expert aald: We are not fed according to the pht loaophy of what will produce the beat re aulta. but according to the dictates of our appetite. If the people of the Vnlted States would only aave 130 a year apiece cn their food and' clothea, which could eall be done. It would mean that the country would benefit 11,000.000 a year. The avrrag llto In thla country la thirty-three year. If properly fed and clothed, there la no reaaon why the average life of the Individual should not be Increased to fifty year. The Increase of Juat ona year of ltfo would menn a savin to the people of merlca of IS.OOO.Ono.OOO a year." As reined lea for preaent condltlona Prof. Knapp said farina ahould be run on a busi ness basla. Juat aa are manufactures, and that the only way to teach this Is through personal contact. Along thla line, he aald, tli a Department of Agriculture haa put a representative In every district of the south; has org a nixed a department for the In struction of boya, with an enrollment of tt.2;!6 at th end of laat year; haa organised girls' clubs, where the proper canning of farm products Is taught, and haa taken means to help farmers' wives. Another conclusion Knapp enunciated til that "gardens are at the bottom of the hi h cost of living." lie, Said tTleivVa.rA.-S&.OOO.OOO ""1'dren idle." w liu might be producers If they were only taught properly to till a garden. "And this la not an expensive job," he taJd. "If they would only give me one " bJf of una battleship I could put demon strators In every county In the country. I van flaht oft more foreign Invaders with a pumpkin, carrot and a beet than with all your armaments." John Jay's Example 1Q HAT tf"l MPTXT RlllQ ! lo IJCXL tU JLlUVV XtUlU Honorary System at Columbia Runs Against Snag in the Way of Old Precedent. NEW TOrtk'. Jan. S.-(Spec!al T .legram ) The proposition to Induce the honorary stem at Columbia, Which waa Inaugu rated a few dayt ago by the students in the senior class of the school of applied science, la threatened with failure because of the example set by John Jay, a mem ber of th elaas of 176-1. and later the flrat chief Justice of the Vnlted States. The honor system depends for its success upon th willingness of the students to report rases of cheating to the faculty and stu dents oiK8fd (o It have recalled an Inci dent In Jay's student career. John Jay, of tha class of ITU, refused to bear infar matlon aaa net a classmate, though or dered to do so by th president of the college, when a number of student had seen fekytarkinfr ttnd suffered suspension from college in hla senior year because of aili'li refusal. The students have adopted resolutions that they follow the example of John Jay. Methodist Church at Utica Burns to Ground Explosion of Lantern Carried by Min ister's Son Sets Off Destruc tive Blaze. ITICA. Neb.. Jan. 2;.- Special Tele gidm.l The explosion of a gasoline lan tfin In Die huuds of V"l;er Kllbin, son of tie mmUtti- of the TTelhodlal chuich. liiusrd the destruction of the eluuch by i flie tills evening Young Mr. Kllbin nai iiily escaped Injury when th lantern ex p'tul'd. but succeeded in apparently ex tinguishing all trace of the blaze, which Matted near the altar, f nm the burning ill. V hen the ount; man reached the out side be noticed tlirtHiglt the window that a serious blase was creeping up the wsll behind the altar. Me summoned the fire but the building burned to the ground. rte rtin nt and a haid fight was made. Tliv loss waa t;.lj0 and the Insuiance V.'00. HIGH STREET CArTtEPS INCONVENIENT IF HOBBLED Uuwteu of PrUarr Petltloa Street Itallna) tompaaj to t.rt tars I p to Date. PROVIDENCE. R- I.. 'Jan. K.-tgpecial Telegram - In an effort to harmonir.e th bubble skirt and th accommodations pro- i !ed toona by the local street ra'lway l uiiii anM X4 of the most Influential women f this city and state, member of the Uhcilc Islund Women's clubs, petitioned tie citv council to Institute a crusad fur 111, It. un.l alirtrter ( rn trilllrt TMra lhe hobble skirt Is now specifically re- feii-d to lii the petition, but It Is no s crt ll.t in the deliberation uf the slp-icr- j fumlfiud the real animus of th agitation, - ei Reminiscence! of Time When 1 w and Mule Formed Team and " Land Wat Cheap. . ".: ' Perschlng. mayor of the town of i Colo., and otherwise prominent In l community, la at the Ijtnd Show wuh a dlaplav of crops raised without Irrigation.- He' has had this exhibit at Pitts burg, Chicago and .St. Louis before coming to Omaha. Mr. Perfhlng la exhibiting a cube of chocolates eolnrrd soli, fourteen Inches square and two feet derp, showing the earth to be Just aa rich at two'feet as It Is at the surface. Thla display haa at tracted more attention than anything elae In the booth. t Mr. Perahlng tella an Interesting atory about a trip he made to Omaha many years ago. "I commenced farming near Blair. Neb., over forty-thrre ycara ago." aaid Mr. Perahlng. "not having an autd or a team of my own. then 1 made my first trip to Omaha with a neighbor by the name of Johnson, who drove a cow and a mule together. Starting at daylight we could not cover more than twenty miles by nightfall. ' Mr. Johnson made the trip to Omaha to have two plowshares sharp ened, and to sell II worth of butter and eggs." Mr. Terahlng Is full of reminiscence. . "I planted the flrat ahade trees In the town of Blair for A. Castetter. the first banker In Blair. I went through the alegea of drouth and grasshoppers, and It waa tha general belief In those days that none but the river counties would ever amount to anything. It took eighteen years after 1 flrat went there for the choice land to reach a value of $15 an acre. "At a Fourth of July celebration !n those early days Judge Bowen In a speech said some of his hearers would live to see the day when the land in Washington county would be worth 150 an acre, but he was generally discredited. The land he had reference to haa since sold for aa high as KiO an acre." Speaking of Colorado he eaya: "We have land in Colorado that can be bad close to good railroad towns at from 112 to 126 an acre that will soon be worth from 130 to SI.'? an acre. A great mlatake 1 aa made by the government in paaaing a bill giving 320 acrea for a homestead. Aa a rule those making proof on 100 acres do not have more than ten or fifteen acres under culti vation, and not half plowed or cultivated at that. "The ones who have made the most money arfe those who have from forty to eighty acres well plowed and cultivated. If the government had given but forty acres and furnlBhed It broken up one foot deep, which would be cheaper than the expensive Irrigation systems, there would be mora homes, more development, a greater production and a leas number of failures. "Omaha Is entitled to great credit for the efforts made In turning the tide of Immi gration westward. At the same time Omaha wll reach a rich reward a few yoars later by seed rown on .good. ground In this way." . .' " " ', t- , : Tiny Child is Dead After Being Frozen By Parents' Neglect ,lv Inhuman treatment at the bands of t,i. mother and atep-father, the tiny body I of J-year-old Kraut Stehr, covered with bruises that tell their own pitiful story of mistreatment at home, will follow to the grave the feet which were amputated from the baby'a legs last Thursday, after they had been allowed to freeze In the Stehr home and had become so Infected with gsngrene -before a physician waa called tha one dropped off of Its own weight and the other was about to drop off when the surgeon s knife waa applied. The child died this afternoon In the arms of his aunt, who tells a story that con vlcts both Stehr and bis wife of cruelty Mrs. Stehr failed to appear when notified hat the child was dying. The step-father Is In the county Jail pending an Investtga lion. The aunt says little Kaurt was made to aleep In a kitchen aher where there was no atove even tn twenty-seven be low seron weather. Bruises covering his body are from a strap with which Stehr lashed him. she says. It was Chriarmas eve that neighbors noticed the child's feet were suffering. Other children danced about a Christmas tree, but he cried and then his father foroed him to dance. It must have been before that that the two feet had been frozen as he slept In the kitchen shed, It la thought A neighbor heard the child calling from an out-building during the New Year bliz zard, when the temperature was twenty seven below zero. "Papa, papa." the child called, but th doors were shut and no answer came. After taking him to th hospital to be operated on at command of county in- j thorlties, the mother and step-fsther never I Inquired as to the child's condition. The i iiiniK,r ram, a htm after three cta.v remaining but a rrtoment. He pushed her face back and said, "Go away." Mrs Stehr says her husband Is not the child's father. II never told anybody in Germuny ho the father waa and she won't tell In America. Stehr is quoted by his slstrr-ln-la as having called the child ! a pest. He frequently clubbed the tot over the neck with a stick, the sister-in-law The eommuullv Is wrought up. Find Flag that - " It 'XT' From Enemies by Girl s Kissi NEW VORK. Jan. J.(Spe. lal Tele gram. I-An old confederate flag, wrapped In a newspaper, found Irt a Brooklyn street by a policeman and carried to the station, proved to be an object which has beer, treasured ainm its capture at Yorktown. on th folds of which a sentimental girl once knelt and ktesed when It waa bring trampled In the dust dining the recon struction period. John J. iinyder, a mer chant, was found to li tlte owner of the j flag. The flag had been given his father by m.niiwr or 1 ""!""'r vt nl, n j Vorklow n. i n'nl lh' the Kimball famil, a brought it back from was a big dam vo CONGRESS MAKES GOOD PROGKESS Little Likelihood of Extra Session, Though Senate is Talking Against Time. FAIR RESULTS ON BIG BILLS House Has Passed Many of Larger Appropriations. SENATE LEADERS NOT DISTURBED Declaration Made that Windup Will Be Satisfactory. WAYS AND MEANS MEETS FRIDAY Democrats Will Then Select Member ship of Holes Bod j- and Mas) Oat Tariff l.eaislallon Prnsrsai. WASHINGTON. Jan. K When republi can leaders In congress were asked If there Is likely to be an extra session because of the congested condition of the calendars In both branches they Invariably answer In the negative. They Insist. In spite of the extra session gossip, that the present abort aeaainn la not Jammed more than was the short aeaslon two yrars ago. so far as ap propriation bills are concerned. Comparison proves the truth of the lead- era claim. Already the house has passed the Indian, rivers and horbors, pensions, legislative, urgent deficiency and army ap propriation bills, and la nearly through with the poatofflce bill. Two years ago the house had passed only the pensions, legis lative. District of Columbia and naval bills In the aame time. It Is true the senate has paaaed only the urgent deficiency bill, but two years ago only the legislative bill had been passed. Leaders Not Disturbed. Senate leaders are not dtaturbed by the situation. Two years ago. thirteen big ap propriation bills were passed In the laat four weeka of the aeaslon. and the republi can leaders say what has been done can be done. Some senators believe there has been no particular effort made to prevt conges tion and that appropriation bills have been delayed to kill off general legislation. It would surprise no one now If members op posed to votes on the Lorlmer case, the resolution providing for the election of aenatora by direct vote of the people, the tariff commission bill, and other contro versal matters, should be victorious in their effort. The ship subsidy bill la being used as a buffer and there are several treaty matters that may be brought In If needed to kill time. War and Means Meetluar. Gossip among democratic members of the house Is directed toward the meeting called for next Friday night of the fourteen dem ocrats of the new ways and means com mittee. Theee will select the democratic members of a new rules committee and map out a program for ('he preparation of tariff legislation. It Virtual! ia conceded that Ttepresen'ta tlve -Henry of Texas, once a speakership candidate and leading minority member of the Judldary committee, wll! head the new Pnnsylvani -edomw aBtar Htet toln tmh rulea committee In succession to Dalzell of Pennsylvania, the retiring republican chair man. The committee will not be enlarged, the change In the political complexion of the house leaving that committee with six democrats and four republicans. Instead of six republicans and four democrats as at preaent. Besides Chairman Henry, the democrats whose names have been brought forward In the conferences over the rules commit tee personnel Include: Hard wick of Georgia, Fitzgerald of New York, PoU of North Carolina, Littleton of New York, Garrett of Tennessee, Wilson of Penn sylvania and Graham of Illinois. l-'lfaaeratd's tmhltloa, Mr. Fitzgerald Is a candidate for the chairman ship of the appropriations com mittee, which may eliminate him from the rules committee, of which he is now a minority member. Mr. Pou was on the ways and means committee, but gave way to Mr. Kltchln of his own state. In the selection of t a, .rmanships of com- mittees Chairman I'nuerwood and his col- leaguea on the ways and nieana committee, which Is vested with that function under the action of the recent caucus, will be guided by several considerations, mainly, qualification and seniority of service. Sen iority, however, will be upset In many cases. Mr. Underwood Is noncommittal aa tn the probable makeup of committees, but eaya no names have been decided upon, There are conferences constantly among the democrats ot the house and gossip resulting therefrom has allotted several of the chairmanships In this way: Rules, Henry of Texas; judiciary. Clay ton of Alabama; Interstate commerce. Adamson of Georgia; military. Hay of Vir ginia; postofflce, Lloyd of Missouri; agri culture. Lever of South Carolina; naval, Padgett ot Tennessee; public buildings and grounds. Sheppard of Texas; Indian af fairs, Stephens of Texas; appropriations, Fitzgerald of New York, and public lands, Robinson of Arkansas. James look. After Busk.. ,,, ... . ..... , , , Besldes these. Ollle James of Kentucky. - , , ' one of the ataunchest lieutenants of s;,. i, i. , , .,. " Speaker-elect Champ Clark, and of Char - , ., . man Vnderwood of the waya and ineana committee, is now a member of the bank- ing. and currency committee, and would like to be chairman. Mr. Flood of Virginia would like to head the foreign affair, com- mittee and Mr. Pou of North Carolina would like to head the District of Columbia (Continued on Second Page.) Was Once Saved Kimball s lawn To this affair were in vited the descendants of the Dutch, who constituted the aristixracy of the section. The house was brilliantly lighted and the lawn glowed and danced In the wavering Illumination. During the dame some of the men put the confederate flag on the ground, and the girls and men daneed over it. This was In the feverish time of the war, w feeling aa high and enmities bitter. But there was an interruption. "Hii.n" cried one of the young women, a guest oflUre,y furcln lo "n H'oughts. In the the house, and she ran out to the lawn ,'',,1"r "charge ot thla work, however, broke through the ranks of th dancers'""' l'ure"u ''" hvt" ' ''"""cable aid and knerllng down. klsed the flag. This lo ""' lm'",U"' "r' m" uil '"" avl biuke by the dauc. The Pa, you atnt blowecf me no Smohe "S I 50 -O lOrVg'. But Father promisec Mama he wouldn't srnoKc any more From the Chicago Evening Post. WORK AHEAD OF LEGISLATURE One-Fourth More Bills Introduced Than at Former Sessions. SHELDON'S STAFP HAS BEEN BUSY LrarslaHrr- V It Dewartmesit Drafts Unit Array of Measures for Nebraska Lawmakers Attltade of Goveraor. (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Jan. 22. (Special.) The fourth week will be an easy, on for the members of the leg'slature. Neither house will convene .tomorrow until late In the afternoon and an adjournment will be taken In the house and probably in the senate also to Wednesday morning. The members of the house will leave Tuesday morning for Omaha ami spend the day there aa the guewta of the Iand Show, the live stock dealers and the Omaha Com meiclal club. The session of the senate will be very light during the remainder of the week, because nine members those who are on the committee on public lands and build ings will be gone all the week on a tour throught the state. This will block legis lation and the upper house will not show any great disposition to take radical action with one-fourth Its membership lacking. Soraethlnir DoIiik Soon. Members of the legislature expect to be j able to adjourn about April 1. two or three i days earlier than in 1WW. Although there j have been no afternoon aessloiis in the ' house this laat week and no terrific energy dloplayed In the senate, the very Important I matter of the election of a senator has been disposed of. the house has before It for consideration ?0O bills of various sorts, of which It haa passed two and ! sent a number through their proper com- j mittees, and the senate has nearly half aa many well started toward a final dls- position The measures which have been occupying most of the preliminary politics of this ses sion are beginning to make their appear ance and the fireworks may begin at any ' time. The county opilon measure has been drawn up In caucus In Its essential form and a number of apportionment bills are sighted on the horizon. Attltade of Governor. The position of Governor Aldrlch with reference to the legislature Is beginning to be fairly well determined, although he has ,u 7 " -.o the house haa been considering. The dem- . , ., ocrats have been enpreaa ng the opinion , " ,, ...... , ,, . , . , that tJoveinr A drich is Inclined to he tair 1 ... . ., ,, . .. ... .with both the majority and the minority. 1 . "" OW" "'"'" on record are at.ongly ! fKa'?Kt. ' "y,nVf T"'y ?"XW " I I A II ...I. I, 1 . ...l,lU u -,.,.u.. a d"l'"ltlon tu carry that out In hi. on ' ",mre f "'" Wrk ') " "nnil"PIU mo" democrats In the senate will vote for muni of the republUan bill that the governor I known to favor, excepting of comee. county option, which the democrat are op posed to and uliich .'they think lias no chnce of going throuKh." It ia a fact noticeable that there la some niiMrusi oi me governors pus." izz ..... u..a....... I.. it,.. mIMrust of the governor's possible attitude j K republican mocrats are not considering him In the light uf a part.- J can backer of the minority, l.ralalallte Itef erence. ! Legislation is b- lliK materially facilitated I this n -.-'on by the use the members arc making of the legislative reference bureau, where Librarian A. E. Sheldon offers his I services to draw up a bill to fit anv case ' or occaxion. This making of bills by proxy I resulld fitiFaMroualy for tiustafon o Saunder. aa lias already ben recorded 1 when he introduced from t lie bureau with- out ever examining It. and fouim tn lhr,uLv mortally wounded by Attllo Alusto. 1, newspapers thai it served ti purpose en-Wm ,Hd come all the way across the seas tCuuliiiued ua becond Page.) Spoiled Child a Blessing Sm - m - m - Financier Gives Large Contribution to Memorial Fund Man Who Will Hot Divulge Name Presents Hundred Thousand to Washington Project. NEW YORK. Jan. 22. The purpose of the George Washington Memorial association was advanced today when $100,000 was do nated by a New York financier. Thla gift practically makes sure the collection of 1500,000, which the association lias aet itself to get before a site Is decided upon. The donor prefers, for the present, not to dis close his name. The proposed memorial building Is to be practical In plan and construction and of the most durable character. It la to furnish a home and gathering place for national, patriotic, scientific, education!, literary, art, medical and similar organization's, which may need such accomodations It will contain a great auditorium, and rooma for large congresses and small meetings, of ficea and research rooma. It la purposed to raise S2.0O0.0OO for the building and an additional SOOO.000 as an endowment for maintenance so that con ventions and societies can use the building without charge. Two million dollars of thia total will be raised by popular subscription, so that the memorial may be really a gift of the peo ple, and the association Is not encouraging further big individual donations. Girls Use Gasoline; One Dead, Two Burned Candy Party Ends with Destruction of House by Flames in Spring field, S. D. SPRINGFIELD, 8. D., Jan. 22-As the result of a mistake in using gasoline In stead of kerosene in attempting to re plenish a fire In a kitchen atove, Zera Brown, 8 years old, lies dead at her home In this city. Delia Dawes. 14 years old, and Charlotte Dawes. S years old, are also seriously burned and not expected to live more than a few hours. Hilda Crosby, 9 years old, was badly burned, but It Is ex pected that she will recover. The home of the two girls, belonging to George Dawes, valued at 110.000, was almost completely ! gutted. ; The accident happened while the four 'girls were In the kitchen of the Dawes home making candy late this afternoon. Krcd ,,aw(i ,,rothr of , ,wo ; throujfh , and rarrej Qut lhe ' four girls in the kitchen and later brought out Mrs. Tllton, an aged woman, from an apartment on the second floor. Italian Lover Kills Girl After Broken Troth from Vendetta NEW YliliK, Jan. -J --A romance of ltalv pc ial Telegram. I with the lovers enaratrd by their families because of a long-standing vcnddla. found its end today in llohoktn. l.nlirinK the lioinc of iu-r step-father, where she had lx n sent from Italy six months ago, Krancesca Lombardl. IK wars old. mils shot in the hack and prub- after Her. arriving only I'rlday. He then sent a bullet into hi. own brain, falling ,1. ad lK S.de lh- girl. I The romance Ik Av clliio prov im-l-. u,i ... . ii.i ,.. . . "i .: , : , I (font sec why you cofit blow mc no smoke oKE RINGS! I woncfer tf he put her op "to that 2,, GOD MANIFEST AT LAND SHOW Rev. J. E. Hummon Tells of the Won derful Lessons Found There. WORKS OF THE LAND ABE GREAT Ttalrter.AKtM-a 4tta Cmsrrea tt Sr All Means to Seo the La ad how . aa) to Lear a of4he Sow Coontrr. "God Manifest at the Land Show" was the subject of a most forceful sermon preached yesterday morning by Rev. J. E. Hummon, pastor of the Kountze Memorial church. He took for hla aubject. Psalms 111: i. "The works of the Lord are great, sought out of all of them that have pleasure in them. He hath made hla won derful works to be remembered. He hath allowed his people the power of his works.'' "Every child of God should rejoice In the coming to our city of the represent atives of the soil In th various parts of this great land," said Mr. Hummon, "and accordingly should congratulate the enter prising press. The Omaha Bee and Twen tieth Century Farmer, for the thoughtful consideration of that sphere of life and Its opportunities which at tnia time Is at tracting the attention of almost our en tire population. Every man who has 2o cents should see the Land Show and if you do not havu It and borrowing ia not agalnat your principle of finance, make a loan but by all means see the Land Show. "t personally have no time for the aver age show. A great deal of nonsence and worthless stuff Is brought before the In dulgent publlo and often out of sympathy rather than Interest la supported. But this Institution which at preaent la the talk of our city, and which Is commanding the attention of our cttlsenshlp as well as the cltlienshlp of men and women from a distance, ia moat worthy worthy of the thorough support and diligent atudy of every thinking man. I commend this dis play of the product of the soil and the men whose labor and toll has made It possible to your thoughtful consideration. "Now, methlnks I hear someone say our pastor Is advertising the I -and Show this morning Instead of preaching the gospel. And It may be that aome will go away from this place 'his morning with the thought that ou, time has been misspent. But God haa put It into my mind to call at tention to thla matter and I may say I have been so wonderfully Impressed with the thought of God In the whole procedure that I consider this occasion as an oppor tunity to impress the same thought upon my brethren In the lrd. "That there Is a great Infinite, supreme, personality, there are few only In our age who would venture to deny. He who has never read a God la lure, pape In the Bible, but who lias been an observer gf the things which do appear ran but ar- tContinued on Second I'age. ) Naples. Many years previously, so many that the present generation forgot Just when, a vendetta had been declared by the Mustn and lmibardl families, l ot this did not deter Attllo. nor did It prevent pretty j Fiancesi-a from listening to tho love tain i I of the handsome young soldier, j Soon neighbors negan to talk. News of I what was going on reached the girl's I brother. He forbade her to meet her ad- miter, but mecltnua went on uvirt ti. i,TutUrr Krancesca to America in,.. .i, h-.i ., . tne was to marry another, a rich man In , Kr(,at ne4v cou;ltry ,," ' fr " . " I 1 , " u. , .:.... fr""" - .v, . i n,e ",ri wtt!' ,Hk" ,o "" '""''"" j sue nas uui a uare cnance lu recover 10WA HAS DAY AT Gil EAT LAND SHOW Special Program Carried Out for Visitors from Hawkeye State Afternoon and Evening-. TYPICAL SUNDAY CROWD ATTENDS Maurice Connolly and P. G. Holden Speak for Iowa. WADLEIGH MAKES AN ADDRESS General Passenger Agent of Rio Grande Praises Show. AD MEN HAVE BOARDS TONIGHT Woodmen of WorM and fl Cloh Will Observe Today at Land low, M Men Mnklnsi Original Oemnnat ra t Inn Tnrtnr at ihr Land hovr. Iowa Dav tvno.'""n of the World Pay. Ad Club Day. Snerlal proa-ram bef Inning at '.o o ehvn In 1''" evenlna on main smse. A"ditorlum. Address of welcome, Mayor Jamea C Pnhlman. Sonas bv 'Tawallans. Vddresa, "Iowa." by Maurice Connelly, Dubuque. Cornet anlo. Miss Nettle Heller. Ahlrss "Ptter Crops and Better Men. Pro' P. G IMIden. "Dixie." hv Tjind Show Concert band. Address, "Woodcraft." J. C. Root. Omaha publicity performances, by Ad club. Woodmen drill teams attend In uniform. Thla la Iowa day at th Tnd Show. A special program for the lowana will h riven on the main alaga of the Auditorium In the evening, beginning at K:Sn o'clock. FeatureH for the entertainment of the Woodmen of th World will be Included In the program. The Omaha Ad club will he In attendance. Th Ad men will apeak for themaelves with an original aeries of dem onxtratlnns. Maurice Connolly of Dubuque and Prof. P. G. Holden of Ames will speak In th evening for Iowa. Attendance at the Land Show yesterday was typical of Sunday crowds. All Omaha, waa at the show. Thouaunds walked through the long aisles to see the fruits of the aoll from the great west and north west. Music by the Land Show Concert band, cornet soloa by MIhb Nettle Keiter. songs by the native Hawaiian "octet and enter taining lectures constituted the amuse ments of the dsy. The fish exhibit In the basement adjoining the lecture halls proved one of th moat Interesting displays to the Sunday visi tors. A number of railroad officials de voted a part of their day of reat to the Inspection of the show. Frank Walters Sara a Word. Frank Walters, general manager of th Northwestern system, looked over th highly specialised alfalfa display mad by his road. He pronounced It good. "Wo'v apent a lot of money at this enow," b re marked. ' - - "Horry f Interrogated a Jesting visitor at his side. '... , "Not a hit of It. Best Investment ver," answered Mr. Walters., "We'll get it back and make a profit, too; on this display in the results that It will show along the lines of the Northwestern." Frank A. Wadlelgh, general passenger agent of the Denver & Rio Grande rail road, arrived Sunday to Inspect the Land Show. Last night h proceeded on to hi headquartera at Denver, "The beat land show I hav seen." said Mr. Wadlelgh after he had made the rounds of the big display and was seated at last In front of the big panoramic display which forms the background of the exten sive showing made by the Colorado ex hibitors. "1 am glad of the showing that Colorado Is making here, and I'm especially proud of the share the Denver at Hlo Grande has In the show. "We owe much to The Omaha Bee for the conception of the Land Hhow Idea, which has made possible, this purely west ern display, and much to the men who have carried the ahow project through to Ita successful consummation In the seen laid out before us here." Mr. Wadlelgh waa shown about the land products display by Fred A. Khank, wuo covered Colorado territory for the Land Stow In the preliminary arrangements for the showing made by the state here. Thu railroad man was more than satisfied wltu the big display made by hla state. "The Land rthow and Ita lessons embody the same alms that our western railroads arj working toward," continued Mr. Wad lelgh. "We are trying to Instill agricultural education Into the minds of our people a-i well aa to bring new people tn. No farmer or farm Investor can visit the Land rJhow and get away without getting a world ot' Ideas which will bring him money and some measure of prosperity to those In hie circle of Influence. "The ahow has today given me some Ideaj that 1 will be glad to utilise In our agri cultural educational campaign which we are to carry on along the lines of the Denver ac Hlo Grande by special exhibit trains. We will have displays of products and Illustrated lectures by specialists. We have been working In this direction In the Improvement of the otato crop for aome lime. Now we propone to generalize the movement for all of the fields of agii- I ,'iilluru im-l iiiImiI In imr mft I, in ln,,PMU.l j ,rmi(Se Mnovk, tnc rM,t of tho c,fort vcr. I )y i ...rilM lMnd nww and its lessons will , nucoinnllsh the same result. ticca, ish oi the Land Sliuw we will unquestionably sec bigger crops in the wholo west and greater acreage under cultivation." "The Land Show Is a proposition so deep that it will take a great deal of time to Mil in up It's manifold benefits, not only to Omaha, but to Nebraska and the people of the great weM In general," s.irrl Henry tii-iIng, president of the Ad club. "As an Oiuabu proposition It deaervts not only tha KitatcKl of prute, but will Miow Its Im mediate results In the business to be de rived from the counties and states from which exhibits have been made. In talking with a treat many exhibitors I find that they are all loud In their pruhe of Omaha and particularly the enterprlce shown by The Omaha Hce and twentieth Century aimer, In making Milch a decided hui ccks In all pliascK of tho Land Show. Thrn the inert hams, manufacturers and Jobbers mui-t certainly feel that l,y art deriving a great benefit without one cent of epenso directly to them The Land Show im biinifing lo them customer and prospective ciiMouii'ia from all over the ,, , , , I lh'! ""'" ""'" railroads are (ei- , luinly doin their share tow.rd rn.kln. US i.and Mio.v a success. I : t- f am apprecJa- Mr. G rljifc lias formulated a plaa