THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1910. Tim Omaha Daily Beel roVNPED BT EDWARD ROSE WATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. ' - Entetjnd at Omaha postofflce as eecotid elats matter. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. ral!r fc"e (Including flundsr). PT week.lSo I)a1ljr Ro (without flunday), per week 1Vj Jily Fee (without ftunday), one retr..W W bally He and Sunday, on year O0 t'ELIVERI BT CARRIER. Kvenlng Bee (wttheut Sunday), par WMklo Kvenlng He (with Sunday), par wee...10e Sunday Hee. one year 12 60 Saturday Boa, on year l.M Address all complaints of Irregularities In delivery to City Circulation Department OFFICES. Omaha The Beo Rulldtnt South Ornaha Twenty-fourth and N. Counrll piiiff-li Srott Street. Mncnln 61 LlttJa Building. Chlraro I.rp4S Marquette Building. New York-Rooms 1101-1102 No. M Wlt Thirty-third Street. Washington 725 Fourteenth Street N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communlcatlona relating to news and editorial matter should be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order payable to The Bee Publishing Company. Only J-eent atampa received In payment of mall accounts. IVreonal check, except on Omaha, or eaatarn exchange, not accepted. STATEMENT OT CIRCULATION. State of Nebraska, Ftoagla County, es.i Oeorse B. Tuchork, treasurer of Tha Bee Publishing Company, belnir duly sworn, says that tha actual number of full and complete copies of The Dally. Morning-. Evening and Sunday Bee printed during tha month of February, 1910, was aa followa: 1 48.140 49,800 4,3TO 4 48,970 43,030 ...... 41,740 1 43,110 43,080 4a,10 10. ......... 4&..80 11 43,700 It 43,100 K 43,100 1 40,830 .... 49,470 .... 49,880 .... 49,880 .... 49.6M .... 43,770 41.980 11 49.990 it 43,570 tt 43,040 14 43,810 ti 43,930 .... 43,440 tT 41,700 It 43,070 Total 1 1 11 QOO He turned copies...... J90 Net total l ia nia Dally average. ..""""irrSJK aQORQB B. TZSCHUCK. S ,.,, . , Treaeurer. unecrlbed In my preeence and aworn to before me UK J.ih day of February, lUi BOBfiRT HUNTEh, Notary Public erlke-a leoviagr tha elty tem porarily ahQHl Itare Tha Be aumll to them. Address will ba Mary never suspected that her "lit tle lamb" would be worth f 10. From all reports those Iowa reform school girls need a little more reform ing. Tha next, thing . In Order will be Mayor "Jim'i annual clean-up procla mation.' ' A base ball pitcher gun has been In vented. Better make it rapid Are and give It to the umpire. Take note that the bbek beer season has arrived on schedule time In spite of the 8 o'clock Ud law. A pound of platinum costs in the neighborhood of 710. "but it may yet have a fat rival in the pork chop. Interviews that are not printed in the World-Herald would probably make still more interesting reading. A Chicago servant left 1 5,000 to the family by whom she had been em ployed for thirty years. Sort of a re bate. Since Japan gives assurance that "war with the United States is incon ceivable," we would better order those other two battleships at once. The newest disease is "appendicu lar gastralgia," whatever that is, and fear Is expressed in some quarters that that is "what is thi matter with con gress." It might be a good plan to leave the mortgage on the old Webster home stead up in New Hampshire so that It will seem more as though Daniel were still alive. v ;!, If someone could get a corner on all the cold wave Jokes perpetrated at the expense of Mr. Fairbanks the cold storage monopoly need not be such a depresslAg matter. That Los Angeles man who has two extra ribs which he Is planning to have removed should take warning from the trouble Adam got into when he had one of his taken out. ' It la an even guess that J. Plerpont Morgan will bring-home several blocks of Roman ruins for bric-a-brac in that famous collection of his. And next time h will have a corner on Roman ruins. .... Senator Dolliver's declaration that "the time has come when plain Eng lish must be used by congress in pass ing legislation," is something of a slam on the Jaw-makers who have heretofore been on the job. James A. Patten is a humorist, all right. . While blowing himself to a trip to Europe, he la objecting because "the American people are too extrava gant." They really have to be when be is boosting prices of 'what they must buy. The Industry of the World-Herald correspondents in searching out folks to stand for interview' boosts would Indicate that they expect to connect with the 150,000 with which Candi date Hitchcock recently replenished his war cheat. A death from typhoid, fever in the state penitentiary it Lincoln is re ported, tho victim having been in carcerated there for eight months, so that be could '.not possibly have Im bibed the germ on the outside. Here Is where the Missouri river certainly has aa alibi. - Presidential Difficulties. When President Taft spoke feel ingly not long ago about the criticism to which his administration had been subjected he drew attention to . the difficulties besetting the great office which he occupies. It is no easy task to be the chief executive of a critical people. It Is not an easy task to be the leader of a nation of ambitious people with widely diversified Inter ests and with sharply conflicting po litical Ideas. Within the history of our republic many subdivisions and bureaus have grown up under the administrative de partments, a tremendous volume of business has fallen upon the judiciary and the work of the legislative branch hag Increased almost beyond Its power of accomplishment. While this has been going on the progress of the country as a whole has made many changes and reforms necessary. Everyone knows, of course, how these changes and reforms can best be brought about without reference to the conditions at Washington, and when the administration does not do things forthwith aa demanded then the guns of criticism are trained upon the president. Heretofore every subdivision, com mission and bureau has had the ear of the publlo sometimes over the head of the department chief. The same thing has been true with regard to the policies of former administrations and everyone desiring publicity and political advertising has had an open door to the press. In fact, the public has often indicated a preference for the word of a subordinate over the word of the chief and with that as a basis many movements have sprung up to decry the administration. And the worst criticism which has arisen at this time has been the charge that President Taft has suppressed in formation because of his Insistency that Information for the public shall come through the responsible head of the department itself. Of course, no administration is free from mistakes some mistakes are inevitable, considering the complex governmental machinery which must be moved in all accomplishments. When a man- has been given a great task to perform with complicated and delicately 'running machinery to be used In its performance, he has a right to expect a fair chance to make things go and to look for support, rather than obstruction, from those who are professing' the same purpose. Dr. Wiley on High Prices. According to Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, chief of the bureau of chemistry of the Agriculture department, the deep down cause of the high prices is the desertion of the farms .by the "city struck country boy.V The lights and dazzling show of city life, together with Ane- accumulation o great ..for tunes' in . commerce,, , have lured the country boy away from the homestead and from the basic occupation of cul tivating the' soil. As a consequence Dr. Wiley says the number of .non- producers to be fed is increased and the number of producers has de creased. To this condition he attri butes the present high cost of farm labor as well as the high prices of farm produce. As an explanation of the fact that the total amount of the agricultural products are vaauy greater now than they were In former years, the ratio between the amount produced and the amount necessary for food, in this country alone, indi cates to him a decided increase in the demand over the supply. The great ' pure food expert refer to the well-known fact that for years the country boy has been "going to the city to seek bis fortune." -That he has found It In many cases is true, but that he has not in many others is also true, as evidenced in every city by the number of laborers, small salaried clerks, masons and carpen ters of country birth and breeding. While the east abounds In abandoned farms the west raises a cry for help as every harvest comes around and the percentage of farmers to total popu lation has dwindled to less than 40 per cent. In addition to this he cites to the large number of fruit and sugar orchards in the east, and especially in Ihe northeast, which have been felled for lumber. We may be thankful, however, that Dr. Wiley does not leave us entirely without hope. The equilibrium to which all natural forces tend will have to be restored by repopulatlpg the farms or at least stopping the exodus and that is precisely the direction to which the increased prices of food stuffs are pulling. wli'D" Hog! Wlth pork bringing 11 cents a pound on foot, the bog Is in a fair way to become enthroned as the' king of the barnyard. Only, a short time ago ."the American hog was a humble sort of a citizen," as a well-known humorist has said. He was fed on slops from the kitchen, sour milk and that grade of corn which would not sell, while be received a soft' berth only at butchering time In the fall. His grunt did not sound like a dollar sign In those days and he was. the least recognized of the domestic ani mals. But a fat hog today Is worth more than a fat steer was In 1894. The market is calling for hogs of all degrees of fatness and the farmer with a pen full of hogs nay ride in automobiles. The rise In the price of bogs began about a year ago as a direct result of the law of supply and demand so we are told by the Journal of Commerce. In the fall of 1908 the price of com was especially blgh ' ft-4 ' the farmer sold his surplus, preferring to make the big margin of profit from the corn rather than to run the risk of smaller profit by feeding to hogs and cattle As a result, many hogs were marketed fattened only on alfalfa. Last fall when the price of hogs was up a little and corn was down, every kind of a hog was sold, big, little and fat and razorback, leaving the supply of hogs in the country now small. The high price of beef has increased the de mand for pork and the price is still soaring. The present price of meat has added anothgr incentive to the "call of the farm" for the average man who Is inclined that way. There Is no ques tion of the profits to be realized from the soli. Some states are even dis cussing the advisability of a "hog spe cial" as an educational feature of the spring agricultural campaign. It really seems queer that farmers have to ba urged to get better seed corn and wheat, raise more and better fruit and raise more hogs and cattle when there Is so much profit In all of these things for the farmers tbemselves. Ahead of the Game. Our old friend, Edgar Howard, has again gotten ahead of the game and, If voicing the democratic sentiment, as he claims to do, the purpose of Ne braska democrats is to get rid of the direct primary and restore the old con vention system at the earliest oppor tunity. Judge Howard seizes upon an alleged remark of Judge Cobbey, who complies our statutes, to the effect that in hi.? opinion the decision on the so- called nonpartisan judiciary act killed the whole primary law, for a excuse to say that he will shed no tears if the law is dead. Further than that, this democratic oracle declares: Tha convention plan of making nomina tions Is really the Ideal plan, provided all the people would participate In the party primaries. Nothing; could come closer to the rule of tha people than the convention system, If only some meani might be de vised to draw the people to actual part In the township and ward primaries. We thought tho Nebraska primary law would get nominations closer to tha people, and yet we have seen primary nominations made under that law with only a handful of voters participating. For our part, we want to see a primary law which will encourage all voters to take part If we can't get that kind of a law, then we are quits ready to return to the convention plan. Judge Howard has here shown his hand, but has shown it prematurely. So far as anyone knows, the direct pri mary still prevails in Nebraska just as it would havj prevailed had no fake nonpartisan Judiciary law been perpe trated. The decision of the supreme court adverse to that law does not af fect any other law not at issue. As a matter of fact three of our supreme judges are now sitting, on. the bench who were nominated by direct primary and elected after that decision, as were also all the county officers elected last fall in this state. The direct primary is being used right now for the various municipal elections in Nebraska, and so far as anyone knows will continue in force until some legislature changes it. There is nothing to prevent any political party in Nebraska from resorting to the con vention plan and using the primary simply for ratification. Just as the dem ocrats do in Wisconsin. Perhaps that is the ideal plan. If so, we will, join Judge Howard in advocating that it be tried out. A Joseph's Coat. Notice is officially served that the Anti-Saloon league had nothing what ever to do with calling the Nebraska county option convention recently held in Lincoln and that the County Option league formed on that occasion is en tirely separate and distinct from the anti-Saloon league. This is interest ing information, but does not alter the situation. It simply reminds us of the old days of the three-ring political cir cus when "the allied reform forces" exhibited in one end of tha tent as democrats, at the other end as silver republicans and in the middle as pop ulists. So our versatile prohibition agitators are simply clad in a Joseph's coat of many hues. They meet today as the anti-Saloon league, ' tomorrow as a county option convention and the next day as the allied church societies, each time under some other color of the rainbow. The same speakers talk and the same auditors listen to the same old speeches, and they resolute under one name endorsements of what they, themselves, have done under an other name. Some people will be fooled, but when Joseph's coat comes oft they will see what is behind it. It is suggested that Omaha put an upper limit on the height of buildings and draw the line at twelve stories. Omaha has tot as yet been seriously troubled with skyscrapers, but has a far greater grievance against the ten story buildings all on one floor. A lower limit on the height of buildings that will prohibit the erection of new structures of . less than three stories facing the main thoroughfares would be quite in order. Banker Gurney of Fremont rein forces his opposition to postal savings by saying before a congressional com mittee that while the legal rate of in terest Is 10 per cent In Nebraska, "it has gotten so that we hardly ever charge more than that now." One well known Nebraska banker got in trouble not long ago by writing letters.- It seems that it is no longer safe for a Nebraska banker either to write or talk. The Commercial club is to make an effort to help the census taker bring Omaha's population up to where it should be. The Commercial ' club could have helped the census taker most noticeably by bringing about the consolidation of Omaha and South Omaha before tne crnui date. Ilu the time for bringing that about soems to have been allowed to slip by without even a serious attempt. The University Democratic club has resoluted denunciation of the enforced retirement of President Crabtree of the Peru Normal. It will now be up to the Peru Normal students to form a democratic club: and denounce the enforced retirement or Colonel Bryan and Governor Shallenberger from the university extension lecture circuits Mill, there Is room for doubt whethei the democrats would have been so averse to providing automobile transportation for. the vice president and speaker If "Sunny Jim" and. "Un cle Joe" were not republicans. Judging from the samples we have had, Dr. Cook could be elected to the United States senate from Arkansas without much trouble. - Arkansas is the place for him if he only knew it. The slow movements of the camel must nave been rather Irksome to Colonel Roosevelt, unless he is so blamed tickled to get back to civiliza tion that he does not care. Judge Norrls is said to be debating with himself whether to run for sena tor, governor or congressman. Now, If he were only triplets! Abased Rights of the Pnbllc. 6U Louis Republic. Either or any party to a labor contro versy which adopts the attitude that there is "nothing to arbitrate" Is reactionary ana lrritatlngly unjust to tho public. The public often has been damned, but in the last analysis it refuses to ba damned. I Freight Hate Boost enjoined. Philadelphia Record. Eight railroads have been enjoined by a federal court from increasing tha rat on coke from Connellsvllle to Buffalo until the Interstate Commerce commission shall determine tha reasonableness of the In create. Tha complainants were Buffalo steel companies, wblqh said that the In crease would amount to, a discrimination against them and In favor of the steel in terests of Pittsburg, and Gary Ind. , Emulating the West. Philadelphia Press. The farmers' Instruction trains one has set out on a three days' tour through South Jersey which are a comparatively new ag ricultural feature, in the east, are an old story in the middle weBt. The railroads, co operating with the state agricultural col lege, have been Instructing western farm ers for several years In the science of the soil. It is obvious that It pays the rail roads to do this ah Increase of crops means more business. It pays the state In advan cing land values. ""Above all, it pays the farmer. So, all around,' It Is an admirable economlo movement. ' ' ' ' EXPURGATED LITERATURE. Contents of School Books Provoke " : Obfeetlon. '"'" Plilledelpriiaf Record. It 1s becoming' -bJ" hard to find things that rnay be' tatasJflVri the public schools that? it may be toddessary to turn 'them back excluslVely-'to' the ' three Re, and- In view of the fact that the children are not over-educated In 'reading, writing and arithmetic, 'with a little spelling and geog raphy on the side,! this result would not be wholly deplorable. School books are manufactured for the most part In the north and camps ef confederate veterans have repeatedly denounced the sort of his tory of the civil war which the grand children of tha men who followed Lee and Johnston and Jackson are learning from their books. We can't blame them much; If our school histories of the revolution were made In England we should scruti nise them very closely. The Hebrews of Cincinnati have had the reading of "Shylock" in the publlo schools stopped, though it seems to us that the Christian olvllliatlon, of the Shakespearean era suffers In that drama a good deal more than Its victim does. Of course the stag Irishman and the atage Jew have been driven from the contemporary stage, and it. is not entirely . aafe.upw to caricature anybody except an , American, who, of course, has no friends. ' A delicate-minded teacher in the Brook lyn sohools some years ago excluded Long fellow's "Building of the Ship" because with poetic licensenot to say llcentous ness he pictured the hulk rushing Into the arms of of the ocean. Now a Boston woman, not southern, but painfully anxious to efface all trace of sectionalism, de mands that ".Barbara Fritchle" be pro scribed on the ground that the lines A shads of sadness, a blush of shame, Over the face of the leader cams. The nobler nature within him stirred, are an unwarrantable reflection upon the southern manhood that followed "Stone wall Jackson through Frederlcktown, Per haps we had better, confine school history to the Greeks and Romans, though there may be too many descendants of the Romans in this country,, and in Boston, at least, too many descendants of the Greeks, to .make even this wholly safe. Our Birthday Bok - Karen 18, IS 10. Grover Cleveland would be 73 If he were alive. William Sulier, the red-headed Tammany congressman, . was born March -18, 1863, at Elizabeth, N. J. Mr.' Sulxer has orated at least once for the edification of Omaha democrats at their Jackaonlan feast. Victor Murdock, the militant insurgent congressman from Kansas, Is S3 today. Ha was born In Kansas and edits a news paper when he is at home attending to his own business. General Charles Morton; In command of the Department of the Missouri, Is cele brating his sixty-fourth birthday, which Is a prelude to' hi retirement from active service. General Morton has a notable military record.' 'He entered as a private at the opening of 'tha civil war and goes out as a brigadier general. John L. Webster, lawyer' and orator, was born March IS. 1847. Ha Is a native of Ohio, but has been practicing law In Omaha for many years. )I presided over tha con vention that framed oar state conatltion, and has aspired to various offices from member of congress to vice president. In the Interval he has achieved a reputation of being the best drestd man In Omaha, with particular emphasis ou his fancy vests. H. F. Curtis, general agent for tha New York Central St. Louis railway; was born March 18, 1S64, at Nprth East, Penn. He was . educated In Mlnneaota and has been la bis preecut position since 1W3. Slashing Red Tape ' Proposed Beorg-anliatlon of ' the Boat-ess Methods of the tf-loa Paolf le KaUroad. Chicago Evening Post. One of the most radical and Interesting departures In the theory and practice of business organisation is being worked out on the Union Pacific railroad. It Is known as the "unit system of org-nliAtion," and while It comes as a relief to the more rigidly organised businesses, It Is not with out Its significance for large bsslness oper ations In general. It Is not, to tell the truth, very well de scribed by Its nam. Nobody would guess what the cheme comprised from looking at Its title. But It can be expjalned aim-' ply as an attempt to unite the minor ex ecutive officers of the division In working for the interests of the company Instead of for their own particular department In spite of a vast deal of nonsense about Its "system," the average large organisa tion Is frequently built up on the most completely feudal lines. There Is the "big boss" at tho top. and a handful of denart- ment bosses below, each endeavoring to "make a showing" for his own department. each one Jealous of Interference and quite vnable to prevent the company's affairs In general from going to pieces If the crisis in question does not come clearly within his province. The relation between these minor barons Is formal in the extreme. Letters pass back and forth; the files are glutted with Correspondence tending to ex hibit the demands and Derformanops nf 'my department," and the red tape which the American business man professes to scorn is woven In and out and around about some of the simplest "family" transactions. That is the sort of thing which the Union Pacific railroad hopes to abolish through the reorganisation of its system. Under the new scheme the minor executive of ficers of each division the master me chanic, train master, division engineer. chief dispatcher and what not are made assistant superintendents. While each one or inese assistant superintendents Is still Interested primarily in his own department ne nevertheless has the power and author ity, when necessary, to step Into any situa tion and command It. If he happens to be on the spot at an ugly mlx-up at the roundhouse he can take charge until the right man reaches the spot. Each is en couraged to work and think for the whole division, and not, primarily, for his own department f Major Charles Hlnes. who has been work ing out the details of the scheme, gave the western Railway club a fairly typical IIIui tratlon of the situation which they hope to meet: - "But now, when we have a blockade. In. stead of having to send two or three of ficials to one place, we hope that one man can perhaps go down and clean It up. If required by stress of weather or otherwise, we can scatter our officials where thev can do the most good. We have probably all of us been through blockades, we have probably all chased around engine houses at J or. 4 o'clock in the morning, and we nave heard a man say: 'Now, this Is not up to my department, It Is up to the other: my part la all right.1 And some railroads have gotten up a special blank to show engine was ready first- or whether the train was ready first and there la a long argument as to how many hours the power was In service, and the result is that they chase the engines out on the road and they die because there Is a blockade of trains there. We expect to eliminate this whole question of whether the train was ready first or" the engine was ready first ' "we claim that the time of our officials Is too valuable to continue to be taken up In hese personal that Is what they amount to differences of opinion as to why certain things were or were not done. We want to move the train, and not talk so much about why It did not move. That Is what we are all here for to move the train," i The simplification has been real. It is said. The number of letters written has been cut by 80 to 60 per cent, and many other gains are claimed for It. And Its larger significance the major ex pressed very well when he said: "All this system claims Is to reflect what la a general tendency today In organization the world over In various lines of work. This stystem happens to be adapted to rail way woflc on the Harrlman lines. The navy has bean going through a similar process. This system means In Its last analysis de centralisation. In nearly every line of ac tivity today decentralisation Is the order. Tour branches of government work have! Deen aeoentrausea in the last year and a half. The national bank examiners have been decentralised, the forestry servloe has been divided Into districts, the Post- office department has Increased the number of its districts, the quartermaster's depart ment of the army bas been decentralised to a considerable extent The big corpora tions Ilka the telephone oompanic are In troducing similar principles." It may bo that in the next few years, with this somewhat revolutionary acheme In operation, the Union Pacific will take the place of "Jim" Hill's roads as tho 'school for railroad prtsidents." XTSSONAL NOTES. Word has been received that Dr. Cook Is coming home. No certainty about It. how ever. Cook himself may have sent the word. Dr. J. C. White of Boston has discovered that motoring causes women to become bald. If hair that Is clinched by nature will not cling what hope can women have for continuing the sport when they enter tha wig stage?. E. It Petery of Denver, Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, 80 years old, gave up only two weeks ago his dally Job of carrying newspapers. For sixty years be hasn't worn socke, and he says he hasn't had cold feet In all that time, Mrs. Ellen H. Richards of the Massa chusetts Institute of Technology faculty lays the present high cost of living di rectly at the door of her own sex. She asserts that man Is driven daily . nearer and nearer poverty by woman's extrava gances. Barney Kelly and Thomas O'Connall, two of the oldest locomotive engineers on the Southern Pacific, each over 70 years of age, have ben retired on pensions. For over forty-five years they have handled the throttle, and tor several years have been pulling the Red Bluff local between that city and Sacramento. Millionaire and president of seven cor porations at the age of 45, Daniel Waldo Field of Brockton has gun back to school to make up the education he lost In outh. Ha la tha richest student in his own right at Harvard, and tha oldest. He probably la the only Harvard student that has made bis millions himself before going to college. I Tronblea Just Ileitlanlnar, . Philadelphia Bulletin. Theodore Roosevelt's constitution I said to have restated successfully all the dangers of tropical fevers and "the sleeping sick ness." The Indications now are that it will be subjected to a much more severe strain unless its owner manages to side step some of the banquets which are wait ing for him. TE1IIS MQUTKJt SOD FROM ERIN Reverence kona Imported Tnrf and Shamrocks mi t hlrnao. -ome nrte aqnares of Irlnh sod. sprrnkled with growing shamrock, brviiffht o Chi cago ror the festlvltlrs of St. Patrick's dsy. became an Irlnh shrine for two days before President Taft stood unon It whllo addressing tha Irish Fellowship cluh. The son was placed on a rough tablo and ex hibited In an alcove of the La 8alle hotel. Toung and old, rich and poor. Inst year's Immigrant, and the young American re moved by generations from Ireland went by the hundred to pay their tribute, relates the Tribune. Some laughed, some were merely curious, some went at the orders of those dear to them, but many went as devotees go to the shrine of a saint, as a man goes to his loved ones Sra ve. Men removed their hats as thev ap proached and more than one woman kissed the green grass and wept, regardless of the staring crowd. A detective was placed on guard for a time, but It was fmind thet he was not needed. The sod had voluntary guardians, and It would have been a brave man who would dare to touch It. Every one was curious about the sham rocks, and took great delight In discovering them. The turf was In fino condition, and the shamrocks green and numerous In spite of the fact that It was cut In mid winter, subjected to a Jolting voyage of 1,000 miles by land and 3,000 miles by water In rough crates, confined for some dsys In a pent house on the roof of a Chicago sky- "Ff, nu again removed ana stood on end In the electric lighted rotundn. For a time one dear old lady constituted herself an apologist and custodian for the sod, telling strangers how the president of the United States waa to have the privilege of standing on It and explaining how a little care, and water, and sunshine would bring It to Its natural green' luxuriance, and she told them of the beauties of Ire land. 'How long Is this going to be here?" asked a man, who evidently had run sev eral blocks to get there. When tcld It would be open to public -Inspection for two more days he was much relieved. "I Just heard about It." he explained, "and If this was the only day I was going right out to gei my mother and bring her down, ishe1 been talking of nothing else for weeks, and feeling bad because only the few who AnntJ . .1 I . . - . . ,. T v."iv iu mo Banquet couia see 11, Uee! She 11 be glad tonight." a man, evidently a wealthy traveler, watched tha crowd for a time and then walked over and asked what was the at traction. When he was told It was the Irish sod from which President Taft Is to speak he took off his hat and stepped for ward, remarking: "My mother came from Galway." A big young man who looked like a col lege student escorted his mother Into the room. As she pointed oix the shamrock she said to another woman: "It's many, many a year since I came downtown, and I. never expected to again, but when I read of this I knew I had to come down once more; sj sent for Jack and he brought me. Isn't it wonderful?" a snort time afterward 'a venerable woman wrapped In costly furs, a woman with a stern face and a "proud walk," en tered. She looked at It with her glasses and without them, wiped them -and wined her eyes, caressed It and slipped a pinch of grass ana shamrock Into her purse. She left and came back again. Then the tears came and she knelt and kissed the sod and hurried away. A stout poorly dressed woman with big rough red hands stood and watched the sod for a long time, glaring Jealously at every one who -touched It Suddenly she spoke! '- -t . - . i - "What are they goln' to do with It after the aright?' -! v.v ?-, t-ili-'i la, t "Put It tn seme park,"- was the answer. ''But they must put it In consecrated ground," she said, 'fit wouldn't be fit to put it Just anywhere. Sure, if they don't bless the ground I don't believe the sham rocks would grow there." . Perhaps she thought' some one smiled. "TIs true!1' she declared, defiantly. Every fut of -Irish ground Is holy with the footsteps, sure an', the blood, too, of saints and heroes." The man, whose mothe? was from Qal- way, had been standing by. - "This has been worth the trip from New York," he said. "My mother will be glad to hear I have seen and touched the ould sod." While the devout Irishwoman at the hotel was demanding that the sod be kept holy, Leo J. Doyle, chairman of the general re ception committee of the Irish Fellowship GOLD sterilize things and wholesome GOLD DUST does more than clean it steril izes and leaves your kitchen things sanitarily safe. The ordinary soap-washed utensil is not fit to eat from, because soap does not cleanse as thoroughly as it should does not kill germs of decay wnicn are bound to lurk in oft-used utensils. Besides its cleansing virtues, GOLD DUST has the merit of doing" work quickly, and saving your strength. It will do most ot the cleaning without your assistance, and do it too, in a quicker and more thorough man ner than will soap, or any other cleanser. GOLD DUST makes pot and pan spick and Span. . Made by THE N. K. Makers of FAIRY GUCKERT & HcDONALD, Tailors We are now dlflplaying a moit complete line of foreign, novel- tlea tor spring and aummer wear. Your early inspection la invited, aa It will afford an- opportunity of choosing from a large number of exclusive, style-.' . ' ' We import in "single .tilt lengths," and, a suit cannot be clupU-' ' cated. - t . ; An order placed now may be delivered at your- convenience,-' -317 South Fifteenth SUeetESTAEI,ISnED;ie37;; rlub, waa receiving an,.. 'Tt : petition from the Sisters of Nt- .' nIu lvtve a convent at Iji Grange, to oMaln for thorn a "bit" of the sod, promising to preserve It carefully forever In. the shapa ef a -miniature Ireland. ... . . . . I Tins o tiih ilr.nT, T Systematic Roost in Price of Una' WortH InveaOa-aflag. ' Boston Henrtd. The allegation by The Omaha Bee. on the authority of " members "of the South Orraha Live Stock exchange, that present record-breaking prices for hogs and pork are the reault of a corner which la being engineered at Chicago, ought to receive at tention from the senators at Washington, who have ' professed a desire to discover all the causes of the Increased cost of liv ing. Here is a specific! Instance which beam all the earmarks of speculative manipula tion of an Important food product. If th senators will demand the preeence of th pork packers with their books, and will trace the repeated Increase In the last two months to their Irreducible causes, we shall have much light not only on the cause of the Increased price of pork, but on the Increase In other 'food prices, where similar conditions may be traced through slirllar processes to Identical cause. I LAUGHING OAS. 'I suppose life In the suburbs remi t.' attention to many details." Yes, replied Mr. Crosslots. I have an noyed my wife terrlHy by forgetting to take down this "for sale' sign when we had invited company." Washington. Star. "We Included our congressman In the 'grace' we said at the breakfast table this morning." "Why was that?" "We ate the free seeds he sent us." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Two chorus ladies were at one of Victor Herbert's concert . on , complimentary tickets. "My," exclaimed one ' of them, with a glance at her program, "hasn't Mr. Her bert a tremendous repertory 1" "Well, I wouldn't exactly say that," re- i piled her friend: "but he is getting pretty. 1 fat " Rvervhrwlv'a Mimiln. O "Pefore elections you Invariably say It Is all over except the shouting." "Yes," replied Senator Sorghum; "but I take oare not to say whether we ere going to shout for Joy or revenge." Washington ar. :- .--t-v ,. Father What makes you so extravagant with my money, slrT Son Well, dad, I thought you wouldn't like to apend it yourself after working so hard for It Boston Transcript . "Why so gloomy, old chap?" "The doctor has ordered my wife to Spend two months In the country." "I Snderstand, my poor fellow." "But you don't understand! She won't go!" Judge. Lady Caller (confidentially to her hostess) My dear, why doesn't the dean pad his legs? Wife of the Dean (pathetically) But my dear, he does I London Punch, "I'm afraid," said Deaoon Hardesty, shaking his head, "we'll have to take our new preacher in hand and Straighten up his doctrinal a bit." '- . "Why, he ain't preaching .heresy. Is he?" asked Brother Keepalong. "Well he come mighty close to It. When I asked him the other day If he didn't think that the upbraiding of conscience would be one of the worst tortures of the lost souls in perdition, he said: 'Nonsense, deacon! Nobody that has a conscience will ever go there 1 "Chicago Tribune. THE CONVERSATION. W. D. Nesblt In Chicago Post. The parlor light was low and dim, Yet not too dim Snd not ton Inw He talked to her, she talked to him Yet what they said they did not know. They talked about the latest play. They chatted nf tha imv.ii But somehow ach one. seemed, to say r w'wfai ,ipng.. .wuq,.smiitt. ana jookv Theytolked about the flood In France, , u i win pow at England a polls, ,. Of an amusing circumstance. Of chocolate, of breakfast rolls,' ,; -' ' Of making change on trolley care, ..- Of Dloturea In a marazlna. Of what they put in good cigars. i now to crana a Dig machine. They laughed at some unconscious Joke, , ii-y juukcu ner miest pnotograpn, They talked about the city's smoke. And of her uncle's enltanh. They gravely spoke of politics. Of how fair woman's lack of guile Would do away with graft and tricks BUi- more they said with look and smile. At last he said that he must go; It took some time to say- "Good night" The parlor lamp burned c1m and low, out outn ineir neans were giaa ana lisrht. In conversation aptly led The evening had been - nicely spent Though neither knew what either said, imwu Knew just wnai me outer meant DUST will your kitchen make them and sanitary 753 . 00LD p(TSTTiM4fcmrwrk j r FAIRBANK COMPANY SOAP, the oval cake. -Ill fit -fi 4 X s I, it 's