The Omaha Sunday Bee. TART THREE HALF-TONE PAGES ONE TO TOUR, FOR ALL THE NEWS THE OMAHA BEE BEST IN THE WEST VOL, XL. NO. 45. Outdoor Clubs of Omaha Source VP' .v ZEZLP3TKR tt&s. HAFPT. zzazzowezoB UTDOOR recreation tn Omaha has caught Ol fast hold of young and old alike, and la I having a development along most whole I FTL - . A I . A be discussed In this article comprises the organized effort of people of like tastes associated In congenial groups. It takes no account of the great heart hold that basa ball, organized and amateur, has on all classes every day that games can be played. How much financial strength Is Involved In the furthering of the campaign for outdoor recreation In Omaha and lta immediate vicinity? Probably $500, 000. And the number of individuals and families directly affected must run far into the hundreds; In directly, into the thousands. Clubs that can properly be listed under the head of outdoor organizations in this city comprise the Omaha Country club, Happy Hollow club. Field club, Diets club, Prairie Park club, Omaha Rod and Gun club, Omaha Gun club, South Omaha Country club. Miller Park club, Council Bluffs Rowing association and the recently organized Omaha Aero club. About every one in the list has its own particular grounds where its activities are carried on, and several oi them have quite costly club houses. Country Club Is "High Society." First in prominence, perhaps, though not In mem bership, is the Omaha Country club, having lta grounds and club house on Military avenue, near Ben son.' By the completion recently of a purchase of the McShane tract the Country club now owns a beautiful stretch of seventy-eight acres, rolling, green and' most elegantly calculated to make good golfers better. The property stands an assessment of $65, 000, $20,000 of which represents Improvements. The Country club is made up more largely of so ciety people than any of the others, yet It has the rep utation of being a place where real good fellowship shines through the exercise of cordial hospitality on many occasions. Borne of the functions carried out by this organization are on an elaborate scale; but It is on the links where its beaux shine with greatest satisfaction to 'themselves. Golf la the one great study at the Country club, with tennis, croquet and the like as the recreation features. Beginning August IS, the Omaha Country club will be on its metttle as an entertainer, as well as in the line of athletic management. On that date the opening rounds will be played in the Transmlssisslppl golf tourney, for which more golfers are expected to enter than in any similar event anywhere in the country. The officers of the Country club this year are W. J. Foye, president; E. H. Sprague, vice president; Lawrence Brinker, secretary; Frank J. Burkley, treasurer; board of directors, W. J. Foye, E. H. Bprague, Frank J. Burkley, V A. Redick, F. H. Gaines, Frank Colpetzer, C. F. Montgomery, J. R. Bcoble and Jerome P. Magee. Happy Hollow an Elegant Club Home. The Happy Hollow club, located on the old Patrick homestead, is also something of a whale in the society line, but it is also very strong on the more sqber ath tetle exercises. There are men in this organization who have the reputation of being so wrapped up in the expert chase of the little white ball that they will forget to attend meetings where money is to be made. The dub owns about twelve acres of ground surround ing the club house and leases eighty-six acres addi tional from the Dundee Realty company. The elegant and pretentious Patrick home adjusted Itself most admirably to the purposes of high-toned club life, but the organization has had so healthy a growth that an addition coating $4,000 la now being made for the better accommodation of the members and guests. Family parties, in the social line, are very popular among the Happy Hollow folk. The Improvements at this recreation center are assessed for $30,000, and the value of the grounds brings the total invest ment close up to $100,000. Its officers are Robert Dempster, president; W. L. Belby. secretary and treas urer; A. T. Austin, vice president; board of directors, Robert Dempster, A. T. Austin, J. L. Webster, S. A. Searle, Joseph Polcar, W. L. Selby, W. B. T. Belt. E. A. Benson and H. K. Burket. Field Club Large and Cosmopolitan. Strongest In membership of all the outdoor elabs Is the Field. This organization has its club house, golf links, tennis courts and base ball diamond on property owned by Douglas county. It is part of the tract originally bought for a poor farm, and the county hospital U located on cue end of the la ad. 'A? -re.- ii it;! l! ! f A U3I TENNIS AT The Field club has under lease 163 acres, which It has highly improved for its purposes. At the beginning of Its occupany some discouraging conditions existed, but the original minds of the then officers solved the difficulty by renting a brigade of goats, the most op timistic animal, aside from the mule, on four legs. Harry Morrill, then secretary, drove the goats up from the South Omaha stock yards and turned them loose on the succulent brush and bramble, refuse and tin cans, old paper and abandoned building material. With the quiet persistence of warriors laying siege to the castle wherein the sleeping beauty was im mured, the goats, with gusty appetite, cleaned up the ground as slick as a new whistle. Then the land scape artists of the club enlarged the golf links, laid awake nights to frame up new hazards, and generally fixed things so that every new member assuming to master the game undergoes a rather stiff Initiation. The Field club gives a series of hops and otfeer social functions throughout the 'season, and H has entertained very acceptably some large parties of a civic nature, aa In the case of the visit of Colonel Roosevelt last year. The club has also managed a good many tournaments for the tennis cracks of the country, its courts having a high reputation. This year the Field club will be host for the National Clay Court tennis tournament, one of the greatest things of Its kinu in the world of genteel outdoor sport. The tournament will open August 5. No prettier prospect lies outdoors than that of fered in the Field club grounds. The organization has spent large sums of good coin in making ita home place moHt attractive, and its improvements are as sessed at $25,000, which is a very conservative f'.gure. The present officers are: Dr. V. H. Sherraden, presi dent; L. D. Carrier, vice president; J. W. Hughes, secretary; Philip Potter, treasurer; board of directors: G. E. Haverstlck, S. 8. Caldwell, G. F. Epeneter, J. B. Lindsay. Dietz Club a Pioneer In Outdoor rieaaure. When one mentions the name of the Dietz club It recalls the fact that this group of lovers of out door sports was a pioneer in its line. Several of the original organizers are still connected with the club and they have the satisfaction of knowing tnat it has developed into a real live-wire tenter for real outdoor fans. At Its new location, on the bank of Carter lake, the club has establiahed what is really a community given over to the joy of sensible living, in which sport of a healthy and varied nature consti tutes a principal element. Bungalows and boats are two main equipments of which the club is proud, and some of the married people on the club list have lived on the Dietz reservation all winter. For the younger members of the club base ball and tennis offer he a bm as fc. If 0 .... . ' 1 I . 1 " 5. t"v " With Arr ..7 . OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 23. 1911. JUU THE FIELD CLUB QOLFINQ - OTTA7TA greatest attraction, varied with dances and other social affairs, given at intervals winter and summer. Expert fishermen, and women, are not few in this organization, and they claim to know more about the family habits and tastes of the Carter lake denizens than even the oldest fishing sharp that frequents the shores of the lake. On the Dietz club grounds, besides a pretty little clubhouse, are twenty-five more or less pretentious summer residences, which will easily average a value of $350 each., The clubhouse cost $2,500, and the club maintains a pumping system of its own. For lighting purposes it uses the current of the Omaha Electric Light company. The present officers are: President, George Johnson; vice president, E. E. Laf ferty; secretary, Percy E. Gwynne; treasurer, James R. Ward; board of directors: J. J. McMahon, Andrew Anderson, Charles O'Neill, E. E. Eisenhart, W. H. Platner. Rod and Gun Club Has a Little Town. For the Omaha Rod and Gun club it can be said that no livelier bunch Uvea on the shore of an en ticing lake anywhere. The club owns several acres where it makes It3 home and has the use of consider able more ground. Its members have erected summer homes to the number of fifty, and some of them are good enough to live in all the year round were the owners bo disposed. The grounds are well cared for, excellently lighted and running water Is handy. The club members take a keen Interest In the en forcement of the game and fishing laws of the btate. A fleet of launches, rowboats and canoes Is kept con tinually In service during the season, and many of the boys and girls have established fine reputations as sailors under the Instruction of the old salts who honor the club with their patronage. Councilman Sheldon is official Instructor in the art of angling, with City Engineer Craig as official reviser and censor of fish stories. The officers are: A. P. "hitmore, president; R. S. Bacon, vice president; A. E. Ander son, secretary; A. F. Bloom, treasurer; board of di rectors: G. N. Aulabaugh, G. V. Craig, 8. S. Hamilton, W. S. Ting, W. Loftus, S. F. Prentiss, E. P. Berry man, C. A. Clihe, D. C. Eldrldge. Prairie Parkers Are Esthetic, The Prairie Park club is a neighborhood organi zation, com poised of home owners in the pretty set tlement of that name just north of Ames avenue and west of Twenty-fifth avenue. Several tennis courts are laid out in the park, and the younger men and the girls of Prairie Park can hold their own with the players of most any club. Horticulture and floricul ture are the hobbies that engage the attention of the grownups of Prairie Park, the ambition of the mem bers being to create a ten-acre prospect that will serve as ah example not only for Omaha, but for the coun try. This club is affiliated with the American Civic association, which sends slides all over the country in a campaign to booet the city beautiful Idea. At the beginning a decision was made to have no alleys, no fences, no ash piles or accumulations of any sort of rubbish, and the memberbhip of ihm dub finds Its of Pride and Pleasure OV27TSY czem 7( COUNTBY CLUB St 4 , m a. m ml TfTT.Xm BARK 0QLFCZO3 ZSES. COVSOL ZLUZtS JZdWnff? ASSN principal recreation in cultivating flower beds, shrub bery and hedges, with tennis and grass-cutting as side lines. Outdoor picnics and patriotic celebrations are features. The officers of the Prairie Park club are: President, John J. Ryder; vice president, 8. M. Mor gan; secretary, M. J. Curran; treasurer, O. T. Alvlson. Gun Club is One of the Kent. Just now the Omaha Gun club is concentrating its attention on the preparations necessary to carry off with eclat and high reputation the Western Handicap shouting tournament.. This event will be opened August 8, and will bring the crack marksmen of the whole west to Omaha for a week. The club controls a ten-acre reservation just over the Douglaa street bridge, on the Iowa side, where it will have high class accommodations prepared for lta guests. Among the local membership of this club are some of the best trap and wing shots in this section, and some of the mightiest hunters of small and large game. They rove far afield during the open seasons, and some great bags have been placed to their credit as the result of good work on moor, meadow and upland, and in the mountains of adjoining states to the west. The present officers are: President, Henry 8. Mc Donald; vice president, George Loom la; secretary treasurer, W. B. Townsend. Miller Park Club Hm Free links. The Miller Park club maintains the only free golf links In Omaha at Miller park, through the courtesy of the park board. The club also has a tennis court, snd has established a locker plant for Its members in the basement of the Miller park pavilion. It has been carefully managed ana Is growing in membership steadily. Some improvements have been made this year in the links, and the club experts to have a most successful season. The officers are: President, W. S. Wilmoth; vice president, B. C. Miner; secretary, W. Lucas; treasurer, George Edwards. South Omaha Club May Disband. At this time the prospects are not bright for the continuation of the South Omaha Country club. Talk of disbandment and the placing of the grounds on the market is prominent, but an element of the mem bership Is endeavoring to prevent disbandment, and snems to have tome hope of succeeding. The tiuh has maintained a very homelike clubhouse on the ia- SINGLE Vl'Y FIVE CENTS. a?-'A I terurban line below South Omaha and Its golf links have been brought to a very satisfactory degree of completeness. Aquatic Sport at Manama. Across the river one ipf the livest organizations for the encouragement of outdoor sport is the Council Bluffs Rowing association, which maintains a club house and rowing course on Manawa. Its regattas) j have bad the effect of arousing a healthy Interest In sailing and rowing and other aquatio sports. The officers are: Emmet Tlnley, president; V, V. Everest, vice president; Perry Badollet, secretary; Charles R. Hannan, jr., treasurer; board of directors: IL J. Haws, commodore; B. L. Banford, vice commodore; Charles E. Walters, Fred B. Empkle, Byron L. Reed, Clubs Discharge a Large Duty. All of these clubs, adding so much to the general pleasure of their members, fill a distinctive role la the social life of the city. While some hold the ad mission fees and dues so high that no family in ordi nary circumstances can afford to belong, even i( it cared to, most of them are democratic and cosmo politan in the best sense. In all, characer and con duct is held to be the essential element of eligibility, and the standard la well maintained throughout the whole membership. The commodious and excellently appointed club houseB furnish the necessary room for the largest social functions, and the club kitchens are matters of boast among the numerous gourmets and minor connoisseurs who know and appreciate good cooking. The service, too, has been organized to the point where little or no fault can be found by the most captious. Stewards and house committees of the larger clubs are experts in their particular line, for when competent persons develop the right kind of talent they are kept Aside from the purely social side, the outdoor clubs or, more properly, clubs which make outdoor sport and pastime the basis of their club life furnish renters strong enough to organize and handle In good shape the local, interstate and national tournament in the different lines of eport. and thus nil a large duty that reflects favorably on the hospitable reputa tion of Omaha. As will be noted from mention made above, three such great tournament are already dated for Omaha this seanon, with club organization a sjponsors and manarvr. ) I f