6 THF, DEE; OMAHA. WEDNESDAY, FEHRUAKY f), 1910. Tim osiaiia" Daily Ber FOUNDED Bf EDWAriD ROSEWATER VICTOR ROSE WATER EDITOR. Entered ft Oiiuiiit puttoffice aa secund clss matter. . i , TERMS m gmSCRIPTION.' Tally Bee (Including Funday). per week.lfco lolly Hp (without Pun1v), pr week.lOe I 1 1 j- Hee (without Punday), one year.. $4 W lally H and Punday, one year (00 Delivered by carrier Evening Pee (without Punday). per wk. te Evening Bee (with Sunday), per wek...lOe Sunday lit, one year........... 12. SO pmuniB nri", one year v Address all complain of Irregularities In delivery to City Circulation Lepartment OFFICES. -Omnhs The Bee Building. South Omaha Twenty-fourth and N. Council llluffs-15 Prett Street . Lincoln GU l.lttl B'llldlti. Chicago 1M8 Marquette Building. New York Rooma I101-110J No. M West mi iy-inira mreex. Washington 726 Fourteenth Street, N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news and editorial matter should b addressed: Omaha Bea, Editorial Department. HF.MilTAtKS. "Remit by draft, express or postal order payable to TTIe Bee Publishing Company. Only J-cenf stampa received In payment of mall accounts. PersobsJ rhecka. except on Omaha or eastern exrhanses, not accepted. STATKM1INT OF CIRCULATION. Ktate of Nebraska. Douglas County, ss.: George B. Ttxcbuck, .treasurer of The Bee Publishing ComjMnjr,! being duly sworn, says that thr actual mini iter of fill and complete copies -of ,The Dallv. Morning. Evening and Hundaw Bee printed during the month of Jantiarv, 1914. waa aa follows: 1 42,440 IT 43,639 t 41,700 IS 43,700 I 43,430 18 43,680 4.......... 4a,36 . 20..:........ 43,680 S. .... I... '. 43,400 Ml 43.5M .... 43,400 21 43,090 7 . t ....... 43,490 '-'St....', 41,350 ( . 43,479. 24.... ...... 43,000 41 TOA ' ' OR AAA 10.. , 43,290 , ,2 43,090 11.... 44,430, ., t7... ....... 43,680 12.... 43,600 21 43,830 13 43,400 ' 23 43,660 14......... 43,490 - tO.... IS. ..'."43,570 "' II.... 1 41,770 41,400 43,970 Total .1,314,330 6,659 Returned copies. Net total , 1,304,665 Dally average 43,876 GEO RUB II. TZSCHUCK. Treasurer. Subscribed In nil praunra and ewnm to before ma this 31st day of January, 1910. ROBERT HUNTER, Notary Public. Sabaerlbera leaving fh cltr teas pnrarlly ahoald fcara "Ik Be dialled them. - Address will k-a I'kaagtd aa ttu aa reacsted. , A breakfast food trust? Perhaps! But don't dare let anybody get a corner on bacon, eggs and pancakes. Governor Shallenberger has a new peroration. Hurray! But the apos trophe to the flag is still on tap for suitable occasions, Senator Brown wants to know what Las Inflated the watered stock of the Washington Gas Light company. Water gas, of course. It Isn't half so much of a wonder .that a woman is willing to pay her taxes as It is that her taxes were smaller than she expected. , King Guatav st Sweden has had his royal appendix removed. .'The operation Is pronounced a success and yet King fiustav is really expected to recover. A press despatch carries this very suggestive sequence of thoughts: "Yes terday a second operation waa per formed. . Funeral services tomorrow." A former Nebraskan has Just landed the postmftBte'.rshlp of ' Los Angeles, paying 6,000 a year, 'Give a Ne braska man half a chance and he will get to the front. Manila is certainly becoming Ameri canized. A recent city election in that city brought to light wholesale bribery and fraud. Sounds like the olds days of county seat wars! Mayor "Jim" will be down on the speaker's list at the forthcoming dem ocratic Valentine party. Mayor "Jim" is a candidate for governor "and don't care who knows it.1' Two men were frozen to death in Philadelphia during the recent cold snap. The Quaker city has always been slow4, but Its circulation must also be getting sluggish. The chances are (air tbnt the fight in Missouri regarding the cause of the death Of Colonel Swop will cot cease .until the entire fortune- of that famous millionaire h.id been exhausted. The Rock Island . Is planning to shorten its. mileage between Omaha and Chicago. Inasmuch as the short est road fixes the rate, excess mileage is a liability rather than an asset. Prof, Otto Jensen suggests . that a syBtein of spelling bo introduced whereby each person can "have a sys tem of his .own" spelling Just as he pleases. What a blessing to some of us. There Is not an unpaved street in Omaha whose abutting property own ers would not gladly have It called a boulevard for a little while to get It paved at the expense ot the park fund. James A. Cook, the American rail way conductor, got off with two years and ten months' Imprisonment. But, Incidentally, ,that does not let Dr. North Pole Cook out He'll never get off as easy as that. The American hen is getting so aristocratic and high priced that the "chicken thief" stands a gobd show of social Immunity whitewash along with the government land grabber and the man who steals a railroad system. A Harvard professor says that a per son ca live on 10 cents a day. His theory Is Interesting to a great many people. But the point or It all Is, Did he learn how, from experience born ot necessity or d!1 he nork It out for advertising purposes? Timber Waste. In a recent meeting of the Trletate Lumber Dealers' association, made up by dealers In the states of Kentucky, Indiana and Illinois, a vigorous protest was made against the wanton waste of lumber In the country. The associa tion wont on record .unanimously for unlfcri.. state laws in favor of the .con servation, of the forests. One of the members characterized the waste of timber as "The crime of the age." Among other things said at the meet ing was the following: How long will this thing go on? I often drive out from my houe at Ilopklnavllle, Ky., and see where farmers have destroyed treea and It seems like a crime to me. Many valuable treea have been killed just because the farmers wanted to cultivate the land. No thought. It seemH, has been made of the forests. In France they began to plant and cultivate trees over 100 years' ago. Recently at Clarksvllle, Tenn., a Urge manufacturing company built a barb wire fence about a farmer's land In order to get the old rail feme that encircled It. The fence waa made of walnut rails. In Florida today pine lumber Is used as fuel In the fiiKlnes on the railroads. A great deal of timber Is destroyed In this way. Many valuable-treea are also killed In the turpen tine belts just for the purpose of setting the turpentine. Here Is a chance for Taft and Bellinger to take a hand and make themselves Immortal. . t When lumbermen agree on the point of conservation of timber and the for ests, the country has reason to feel a sense o( hope. . But, really, have the lumbermen a right to complain of the waste of timber o;i the part of the farmer? Has the larmer wasted as much timber without tnought of re planting as the lumberman has? It is a good thing to take up, and no matter who brings the topic up, It ought to be made a subject for wide discussion. We are beginning to feel pinched in the matter of timber and the pinch is tightening. The words of Glfford Plncbot come back and one Is compelled to think of the work he has done for the preservation of the forests, but his recent plea for the united action of congressmen and senators for the enactment of the bill calling for the withdrawal of all public lands suitable for planting forests is a practical effort along this right line. The . American people are so busy making money that they seldom stop to think of conserving or preserving anything, much less that which will require years for conversion Into cash. But there is plenty of time to prevent much more denuding of the country of its forests and the government is busy Let others get busy also. Importation of Farm Produce. When one reads that during the last year farm produce to the amount of $647,000,000, or almost half the total imports of the year 1:109, was brought into the United States from outside countries, it suggests that our farmers are not doing their full duty., But a closer inspection relieves thK appre hension. The imported article! are of a nature that have not. yet been pro duced In America in sufficient quan tities to supply the demand for con sumption. Sugar leads, with . tobacco second. Hides and skins and hay are the other articles that really enter Into competition with the home grown, and these constitute rather. morexhan half the total of farm produce Imported. Of the articles that are tyu produced at home, and which do not compete with the output of the American farms, silk, coffee, tea, sisal, manila fiber and Egyptian cotton make up the list. The United States Is still the best market in the world for this sort of produce, and will remain so as long as the pros perity of the people Is such that they can maintain the ' standard . of living now set. In the report Is nothing alarming, for over against it is set the figures of the $8, 000,000,000 output' of the farms for 1909,' and the present promise that the coming season will find the farmer as energetic, and as forehanded as ever. Roosevelt a Feminine Character t The February Issue of the Forum has made the statement that ex-President Roosevelt Is a feminine man or, to use the words of the writer, "Has a feminine type of mind." But it U carefully brought out that the word feminine docs not mean effeminate. The author goes on to describe the "feminine type of mind" as the ability to see only one thing at a time and to be predominated by one all prevailing motive. He says that women do not take into consideration all conse quences, but Just see the desired thing to bo accomplished. "Wearing mental blinders," so to speak, and never shy ing at a single thing by the way, but going straight as a line toward the single goal. Now, supposing that said writer really knows how women think, also granting that he really knows how any one thinks, what has he proved? The habit of seeing one thing at a time and one goal at a time Is so common that in reality it ean be ascribed to most people of both sexes who make a suc cess, of profession or business. The history of popular government proves that lta leaders are men of single prin ciples and bend everything toward the accomplishment of such. C Now, If this peculiar method of thinking Is feminine,, which must mean that the 'majority of women think that way, It looks as though the writer had proved too much. Most men think that way. too, so it must be that he Intends to make us all'femtnlne. It looks as though the author had aide tracked the old name "hobby" and sub stituted the word feminine In Its place. If a hobby with a vigorous and yirllp mental grasp la characteristic of the feminine mind. It Is easy to account for the militant sutirftgrette, Carrie Nation, Mary Ellen Ler.se and some others. But that is a rather disquieting thought. It is a well known fact that no two people think exactly alike, so where is anyone going to draw the line between the rule and the exception? We might also ask which exception Is to be taken as the rule? Grand Jury Instructions. In view of the fact that the local grand Jury Is to begin Its sittings next week . various suggestions are being made as to the subjects of Investiga tion which should be Included in the Judge's Instructions. Borne of the ad vice volunteered indicates clearly that those tendering it do not understand the functions of a grand Jury and do no. know the scope of the Judicial in structions.. The grand Jury la a body of inquisi tors, constituted by law, with full power to bring in true bills against offenders where there is sufficient evi dence of guilt to warrant prosecution. The grand Jury la not a general smell ing committee to poke Into people's private affairs where- there is no sus picion of law-breaking. Conspiracy is prohibited by law and people who con spire to throttle competition or raise prices are Indictable, but business men attending to their own concerns In a lawful way are. not subject to grant Jury surveillance. The grand Jury receives instructions from the Judge as to any unusual mat ters that savor of lawlessness by com mon notoriety and the Judge is like wise required by statute to direct at tention to certain particular classes of offenses. But whether the Judge does or does not give specific instructions to inquire Into any matter properly within its Jurisdiction, that cannot pre vent the grand Jury from acting on its own information, or Information brought to its notice by private citizens. Instructing a grand Jury gives 4 Judge great opportunity for playing to the galleries and raising dust to make people believe terrible things are hap pening and being carefully covered up when nothing but the ordinary run of petty crime has occurred. We have had altogether too much of that In the past, and there is no crying demand for another Installment. Honor of the Navy. The court-martial In session at Bos ton may appear to be Investigating a tempest in a teapot, but it Is really charged with a most Important duty. Not only will the question of how far a man may go in the direction of visit ing the displeasure of his fiancee on its object, and what form his monitory action may assume, but It will also settle a much vexed question as to who Is charged with the care and keeping of the honor of the navy The dual nature of the inquiry and' the social smoke It - has engendered have In a measure' obscured the real issue, but from this distance the fact seems plain enough. . . , ,j In the first place, has a paymaster, who is not a graduate of the Naval academy, the right to assume that in his own 1 person he represents the "naval set," and, acting under that assumption, has he the further right to Insist on an invited guest absenting himself from a ball given by the "set," and is he Justified in punching the head of the guest In question when the latter ventures to demur at the assump tion of responsibility. This weighty question lurks behind a tremendous volume of testimony adduced at the hearings. It has resounded from Maine to Texas, and from Puget sound to the wave-kissed sands of Palm Beach, from Saskatchewan to Panamaall ears are strained to catch the answer. The secretary of the navy declined, wisely, to accede to the hushing up of. the af fair, and at least one of the senators of the United States has lent his Influ ence to the bringing about of a possible solution. When it Is settled whether a pay master has the right to punch the head of a visiting sawbones, and whether a surgeon of the navy has a right to ques tion the conduct of a fellow practi tioner who does not happen to be connected with the sea-going establish ment, the old world will settle back squarely on its gudgeons and revolve as usual. Till this is determined, though, do not wonder that the uni verse is slightly askew. The city clerk at Lincoln refuses to recognize the validity of a petition for the resubmission of the question, "Wet or Dry?" because each signer of the petition did not write after his street address the words, "Lincoln, Ne braska." This official who, of course, wants to keep the town dry, haa doubt less persuaded himself that this la the proper course and his action Is typical of the ridiculous extremes to which one-idea folks sometimes go. Just suppose Lincoln were wet Instead of dry, and it was the drys Instead of the wets who presented the petition, im agine the vituperation that would pour down on the head of the recalcitrant clerk, to say nothing or accusations of sell-out to the brewers and saloons. It's a poor rule that doesn't work both ways. Purchases of real estate for Im provements alwaya help build up a city, while purchases of real estate for purely speculative purposes block Im provement and retard a clty'a growth. Omaha la fortunate In having so far autfered comparatively little from the speculative element In Its real estate transfers, and it la to be hoped the speculative element will be kept In the background. Is the old war spirit dead? Recently in the United States senate a bill was Introduced allowing the confederate veterans' to use government tents for their great reunion. Only one man voted against the bill. It must have been rather humiliating to Senator Heybum of Ids ho to te the only one to protest against the action, but then he had his say out, anyway. Referring to the scramble for the democratic nomination for United States senator, a headline In the Lin coln Star says,. "Hitchcock Fiizled Out." Now we protest. Just because Congressman Hitchcock's charges of land office extravagance have fizzled out it does not follow that his sena torial ambitions have fiizled out. A Pennsylvania clergyman has de cided that he will no longer perform a marriage ceremony unless the bride groom can show an income of at least $2,000 a year. That means be Is either making a foolish New Year's resolu tion or else he ought to be investigated on the charge ot unduly raising the cost of living. 6BBBssBBBSBsasaSBBHBsaBasaBsa6jBBaaaBjBaBaBBas John L. Sullivan has Just married the sweetheart of his boyhood, a Bos- tonlan spinster. It would be supposed John L. had, experience enough In the ring business not to choose a partner on a long-term contract who Is dead sure to lick him the- first round and make him bow In submission forever. Judging from the number of widows, both grass and weeds, who are being taken in by fortAne-huntlng confidence men, It la evident that there should be a more rigid enforcement of game laws on the Indiscriminate trapping and snaring of feathered songsters and speckled beauties. , It Is announced that "Dave" Francis wants to be senator from Missouri. We thought Grover Cleveland's former secretary of the interior had been' listed by Governor Shallenberger for president In 19 It. "Dave" can't put much faith In : our Nebraska governor' ability to. deliver. Spectacular 1.1 fe Ravers Cleveland Plain Dealer. Of all recent Inventions and discoveries none outranks the wireless telegraph In Its appeals to human admiration. It Is a life saver of the most spectacular kind. Keep 'Km Moving, Washington Herald. Now that Mr. Bryan has denied his re ported candidacy for another democratic presidential nomination, somebody, will again trot out his reported candidacy for a senatorial .seat, of course. Now Will Voa Be Good T "Boston Herald. The pork packers say that they are feed ing: a population IS per cent larger than they were ten years ago, from a supply of hogs 24 per cent smaller than it was then, and that these hogs are fed on corn which costs 100 per" cent more now. Is It, any wonder, they say, that prices are high? Economy In the t'ronpectns. .-i; iPlUsburg Dispatch. i " ' Breakfast fUd -manufacturers, Mrhlls the people ar(t'3tnaTilns the experiment of 'living without fiie'a,, propose to form a combina tion. Theyllege that their combination will be' formed for the purpose of reducing prices, to the consumers. All the com binations wer formed for that purpose. In the public prospectus, but none of them In the sequel.', . ,. EVILS OF COLD STORAGE. Methods of Suspending Law of Supply and Demand. Philadelphia Record. Cold storage, properly employed, fur nishes a moans of conservation and the prevention of waste that should inure to the general benefit. In pTactlce It las been made to serve as a means of maintaining higher prices In the season of plenty and of intolerable prices In the season of lesser supply. When prices are naturally declln. Ing they are checked, to be afterward pushed to unnatural limits as opportunity is created by squeezing the market through a combination of cold storage speculators. This is perhaps the most flagrant ocr I easluji of the Intrusion of the middleman between producer and consumer with the 'Object of despolllno; both. The worst pavt I nf , V. a V m 11- mif nf It,. A If f Ifll 1 1 V l' . .110 , 1 , 1, V , , , I , J UUV V ..IV ....... u.. encountered in devising any change or remedy which shall preserve the benefit of cold-storage while defeating Its evil working. The most feasible suggestion Is to regulate the time of storage so as to prevent deterioration, and to enforce due publicity In order, that the purchaser may know what he Is getting. February 6, 1610. George Ade, the funny man, is 44. He claims membership In the so-called Horsier School of Literature, because he, happens to be born In Indiana. General Charles F. Mandrson Is cele brating his- seventy-third blrtiiday today. General Manderson la a native of Philadel phia. "He served In an Ohio regiment dur ing the War, and at Its close returned to Cantop to practice law, removing In 1M3 to Omaha. 'He helped frame the constitu tion of Nebraska, served ttvo terms In the United 1 States senate and was for four yeurs president of that body. Later ho became general solicitor for the VJurllnp ton road in Nebrsska, retiring about two yearsago, and now Is part of the business world only ' as president of the National Fidelity and Casualty company. John C. Howard of the Webster & How ard fire Insurance agency, was born at Hartford. Conn., Febtuary 9, 1.561. Ho came to Omaha In 1SSS, working f.-.r four years for the Tootle ft Maul wholesale dry goods houue and then went into the fire Insurance business. Allen B. Romano, electrician with the Nebraska Telephone company, was born at Iouisvllle, Ky., February I). U70. tie got started as operator ot the fire and po lice' alarm bf the city and continued in that position until the work was trans ferred to the telephone compsny. Alvin F. Bloom, with J. F. Bloom A Co., monuments, was born at Red Oak, Ja., February . 18&S. Mr. Bloom worked In the business offices of The B before he went into partnership with his father three years ago. Rr. Carl A. Tumquiat,. pastor of Swed ish Evangelical Mission church, was bo-n In Hweden February , 1S71, coming to this country ,in If I. He studied at Autfuetlnu oollege at Rock Island, III., and North Park seminary in Chicago, from which he graduated into the ministry In WT. Ho Is ! o tern lory of the Evangelical allsitlon Our Bjrthday Book j - ; 'JZ : !i War Time Boycott tory of Attempt to Shake Dowi Zstortiofiste rrteea of ST -rtes at Close of tba Olvll War Will history repeat Itself In the anti-meat boycott of the present timet Forty-five years ago a similar wave of public Indig nation swept over the country, directed against the uplift ot prices of the neces saries of life following the close of the civil war. At that time, too, thousands promised to do without meat until exorbi tant prices were reduced. Clubs were formed to protest against overcharges clubs of a different sort were used to en force abstention; the government was asked to Intervene; combinations were as sailed because they were, In popular fancy, solely responsible for high prices. People lost sight of the altered conditions wrought by war, and clamored for Imme diate return to prices of ante-bellum day. When the war ended, relates the New Tork Kvenlng Post, prices were higher than ever before far higher than they ever have been slnco. Wheat was $2.60 a bushel, corn $1 85. pork $40 a barrel of 100 pounds, beef 20. . , The protest of the people against these charges was quite as spontaneous as now. Just how It started would be hard to say; likely enough It was In much the same way. But the hold It took on the people was remarkable. Sevnn men, going home one evening from business in lower New York, agreed that they and their families would do without meat for sixty days; within a week their entire neighborhood was with "them. Newspapers encouraged the movement In strongest terms. The New York Times, In Its editorial columns of June 28, 18U6, put the matter to its read ers as follows: "Every family that leaves the butcher severely alone acts simply with common sense. Diminished consumption was never yet known to fall In reducing the price ot any articles of large supply, nor will It fail In the cane of meat. The whole cause of the present complaint is that a number of speculators are trying to train the public into paying permanent exorbitant rates. They think that if they can hold out against public Indignation for a while people will get used to extortion. But thin Is a mis take. Prices must come down, and the sooner these speculators succumb the bet ter." Pitiful little Incidents were frequent. The following plalntltlve letter Is typical of tose which appeared at the time: "I am a clerk In a store and live in a tenement house. All last winter I could hardly afford to buy meat, nor can I buy enough now. There are no reckless, ex travagant persons round where I live, and the man I buy a little meat of haa few rich customers. The little bits of beef and mutton we poor people buy costs so much that, as my wife says. It Is like eating money. Why, a dollar Is nothing!" It Is literally true that there was a vast number of people In New York City not to mention the rest of the country to whom the question of actual life and death depended In a large measure on the price of food. Yet some of the poorer people entered Into a controversy over causes of the exorbitant level of prices, contending that the anti-meat movement would have no good effect. One man, in a publics letter, stated that he was earning $20 a week, but thought prices were too high, because wages were-too high.' , He declared tnat it was the retailer who had the public at his mercy; that whole sale quotations had gone down, but that retail prices had gone up. Ho added: "Ljok at our restaurants! Flour, butter, suKar and coal are about one-third less In price than they were a year ago. Why then do not the restauranta lower their, prices? Because there are plenty of people with money In their pockets -to patronise them. ' Money was never so plentiful as now and never was spent so lavishly as at present. Enter any theater, barroom or restaurant and you will find there a class of men who formerly could not afford to patronize such places. I have repeatedly seen rough-looking fellows that apparently earned their living by manual labor dining at first class restaurants on delicacies that 1 cannot afford to purchase. Our aoldlers, army teamsters and others are returning with pockets full of money. 'Having earned It like hors-s, they spend It like - . This, with the present high rate of wages, tends to keep prices at their present standard." Many others, who were at a loss to Ex plain their high food billB, appealed to the newspapers for tha reason. Here, is the answer given by one of them: "Your butcher will say that meat is higher now, owing to what? The price of gold? But, you will say, gold Is only 138 cents in paper for a gold dollar, so that cannot be the reason. The bad season? No, nor that either; the weather and crops were never so fine. The army wants the meat In the field? Why. the boys have come home. Short supply of cattle? There were considerably more cattle In market this week than were wanted or sold! No, there la no reason but that avaricious speculators put up the price, and you grumble and submit to be fleeced. Learn resolutely to shut your basket up empty, rather than submit' to extortion. "There can be no hesitation as to what the ultimate result will be, and every per son who abstains from meat will hasten it. There are many great hotels whose proprietors can help In the matter; their customers, at all events, will find on the various bills of fare plenty of substitutes for meat." So, after that, the butchers were made to bear the brunt of public indignation. In a naive little note some one wrote that butchers "once" had been gentlemen. As a matter of fact, while they were not primar ily to blame for the' extreme level' of prices prevailing, they greatly aggravated the situation by Jacking their figures above the point necessary to show legitimate profits. They paid the penalty by being, socially, almost ostraclstd. How did the boycott succeed? It would be hard to say. Conditions then were rad ically different from what they are now, so that, periods cannot be taken aa a pre cedent. Six months after the boycott be gan the following newspaper item ap peared: "A year atfo, in the heat of the rebel lion, at w'holesald we were paying an av erage of nearly 50 per cent more thun we are paying today for provisions. At re tall. In the shops of petty dealers, the poor housekeeper pays aa much this week aa he did, a year ago. This would not be, had we a market system worth the name, or If Industrious citisens of limited means would combine to make their purchase of the principal article . of every-day con sumption In common. A carcass of good mutton, well divided among four at this season, might be bought at just about one half what It Is retailed at per pound in the butchers' shops." Evidently the butchers are making up for smallor sales by securing larger profits. The appeals ' to the people to shun the meat shops continued, but It la clear that some of tht m were backsliding, fur prices could not have been maintained so long I- iF CAKE, .'.V .1 I V4ftrWy Ilot biscuit 1 4 i fC T--7 r'. t'V hot breads. 47T V '--- 'VAW Pastry, arc V i (v- "V lessened In cost f KSWH' ,: ) A? and Increased I p Q 'Jg In quality and i l -vholcsomcncss. V and save money and neaita ,.OKl Ldl. llaaHi aTsWJIrTl i f M HH 0f" unless demand was at least keeping- up a moderate pace with supply. In tha following year, 1806, came the Overend-Guerney panto at London, which resulted In a violent readjustment In the financial markets here as well abroad, and this, with the contraction of this country's own Inflated currency, brought prices sharply downward. Then the man and his wife who thought eating meat was like eating money, were enabled to go back to their meat diet without thinking of how many nickels each bite of beef or mutton was costing. ' . PERSONAL NOTES. Slrce the court at Danbury, Conn., has placed a heavy monetary penalty upon the striking hatte-, the expression "mad as a hatter" acquires a new meaning. Moses Harmon, the Kansas apostle of free love, who published " his paper, Luci fer, In Chicago for several years after it became too hot for him in Kansas, died In Los Angeles, Cal. He established hl free love paper In Valley Falls, Kan., thirty years ago. Robert Underwood Johrson, who has been chosen to succeed Mr. Glider as llio editor of the Century Magasine, has b?en on the staff of that magazine for thirty seven years almost since Its first publi cation. He Is a chevalier of the Legion of Honor of France and cavallere- of the Crown of Italy, Celonel Perry Fyffe, who was recently appointed by President Taft, is on his way to lake charge of the police of the Cans zone. The new chief Is a soldier and ai: editor. When appointed to hln prencnt position he was managing editor of the Chattanooga News. He was graduated from the University of Kentucky and Is a lawyer. Meteorites that were brought from the Arctic by Commander Peary have been purchased by the American Museum of Nat ural History. The price paid, It was learned, Was In the neighborhood of $40,000. It Is understood that Commander Peary made a present of the meteorites to Mrs. Pe6ry and thtt they were sold by her to the museum. In a, wojodchopper at r work, , near -Wf1 home! 'Mrs. Albert ftolly of Wabash, Tnd., recognized her husband, 'hom she hud not seen since he marched away to the civil war, forty-seven years ago. She believed he was killed In battle and sold her home and moved, awey. He could not find her when he returned froin the south and be came a wandering carpenter. - this) mt the Old Block. Boston Transcript. James P. Piatt,, the United States circuit Judge who rendered the Danbury decision In Connecticut, is a son of the late Orvllle H. Piatt, long an honored senator from Connecticut, and one of the leaders of tho Judiciary committee 'of that body which framed the anti-trust act. Some objections were raised to the confirmation of the younger Piatt, but his charge to the Jury In this case reads like that of a man pos sessed of much of the courage and clear sightedness which characterized his father. We put Pure Milk and Cream into Swift's "Premium" Buttenrie We get the best grade of milk and cream possible to secure. We test it wefuUy fdr quality we make sure it is fresh and sweet To this unadulterated milk and cream we add the highest grade of butter fats irr.th'e form of pure olco oil made from selepted beef suet and neutral of a high quality made from the choicest "leaf" fat ( These arc churned together by the butter process Result: a food product that is creamery butter, plus nutritious and wholesome ingredients, which give you great food value. . - ' . i , Sweet, pure, clean Swift's "Premium" Butterine in cartons wrapped in vegetable . parchment-ren-cased in a wax-lined box. It comes to you with all its butter, taste and butter flavor good to look' fit, better to eat. Ask your dealer today. Made only by Swift liauc tne lood at Home MERRY' JINGLES. i One reason why I must abhor The meat trust, I regret, . Is that 1m will not 'trust me for The meat I'd like to ge. , Clirlntlan Science Monitor. iiia wooa to ourn; uia wine to annul A privilege enjrtyed bv few ' a But all may sing this little thing! "Old ftfua to tusle! Old-steak to chew!" -New York Mall. " 'Tl a ciirloiis fact," snld the govern ment shark. As he read about commons and PrjL "That an KiiRllshman votes with his ay 'fr aud his noes, i. And expresses his applauso with his 'ears." Harvard Lampoon. The little lkmh that Mary had The beef trust has one ice. T And, oh, it mskes us awful sad Tho way they've raised the price. -Baltimore American Taiior. rniior, wiii you be Valontlno. srood sir. to me? If you willI'll gladly call .. Winter, summer, sprlnc and fall, .. . And, as nature ko ns the rose, I will let yoU mnke thy clo'es Judge. He had heard the sweetest Singing In an operatic etvlei . .He had heard the bells whose, rinsing Bring a sweet and rextful smile; He had listened to the tinkle Of the brook ht In the dell i And had henrd the latest wrinkle . From tho orchestra, so swell. The phonograph selections He could mention them off4iand. He had marched In all directions. To the mnvtc of tho hftnd. But the ham and egKiet frying ' tjT Just before the breakfast call Mnrte the tuno, there's no denying, That was sweetest of them all.." V.'nshlnKton Herald. PICTURES OF MEMORY. ALICE CARRY. ' Among the beautiful pictures ' That bans: on memory's Wall, In one of a dim old forewt, That seemeth best, of all. , . Not for its gnarled oaks olden, Dark with the mistletoe; Not for the violets golden That sprinkle the vale below; Not for the m-llk-whlte lilies That lean from the fragrant hedge. Coquetting all day with the sunbeams, And stealing thnlr golrlon ertffe; N6t for the vtnesjon the- upland-' s Where the bright red berries rest. Nor the pinks,, nor the pals, sweet cowslip It seemeth to me the.best. ,.f I once had a little brother With eyea that were dark and deep v In the lop of that dlrn old forest ( 9 He lteth In peace asleep. f Light as the down of the thistle, Kre-p as the winds that blow, We roved there the, beautiful summers The summers of long ago. But his feet on the hills grew weary, And on of the autumn eves , , I made for my little brother A bed of yellow leaves. Sweetly his pale arms folded ' My neck In a meek embrace. As the light of immortal beauty. Silently covered his face; ' And when the -arrows of sunset ' Lodged In the tree-tops biiRht, ' He fell In his salnt-llke beauty, . (, . Asleep by the gates of light.. Therefore,' of all the pictures ' That hang on memory's wall,, The one of the dim old forest Seemeth the beat of alt. ..... -U. - -1) -Si 4 m 'f " ft Company, U. 8. A.